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Shabby hostel with nothing inside, in part of Africa
Answer for the clue "Shabby hostel with nothing inside, in part of Africa ", 7 letters:
lesotho
Alternative clues for the word lesotho
- Basutoland (formerly)
- Country hotel, so exotic
- Country of southern Africa
- He loots (anag) — southern African kingdom
- Enclaved African land
- Country encircled by South Africa
- Country of two million surrounded by a single other country
- A landlocked constitutional monarchy in southern Africa
- Country, an enclave of South Africa, capital Maseru
Word definitions for lesotho in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Lesotho (; ), officially the Kingdom of Lesotho , is an enclaved , landlocked country in southern Africa completely surrounded by South Africa . It is just over in size and has a population slightly over two million. Its capital and largest city is Maseru ...
Usage examples of lesotho.
A consortium to which the company belongs faces new charges of bribery, this time over another dam project in Lesotho in Southern Africa.
We went to the mines, just as people did from Lesotho and Mozambique and Malawi and all those countries.
In December 1982 the South African military raided Lesotho and killed forty-two members of the A.
Quebec a true part of Canada any more than Lesotho saw itself as part of SOUTHAF.
For all I knew, she had been expecting to materialize in Lesotho or Rio de Janeiro.
The result was the country known today as Lesotho, which is completely surrounded by South Africa.
However, the fact remains that for the two centuries since, Lesotho has been entirely overshadowed by the much more compelling story of South Africa as a whole.
In her sixties, in socks and sandals, floral dresses scoop-necked for the climate showing the weathered hide of her bosom as two worn leather cushions crumpled together, she bore her trophies from Nigeria, Ghana, Angola, Mozambique, from Tanzania and Kenya, from little Swaziland and Lesotho, back to America.
Native states whose formation from chiefdoms happened to be witnessed by Europeans in the 18th and 19th centuries include the Polynesian Hawaiian state, the Polynesian Tahitian state, the Merina state of Madagascar, Lesotho and Swazi and other southern African states besides that of the Zulus, the Ashanti state of West Africa, and the Ankole and Buganda states of Uganda.