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Answer for the clue "___ Shaker ", 4 letters:
kula

Alternative clues for the word kula

Word definitions for kula in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Kula is a volcanic field located in western Turkey . Kula field consists of a broad area of cinder cones and maars . It is the westernmost volcano of Turkey. The volcanic character of the area was recognized in antiquity, when it was named Katekaumene (the ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A tower, turret or a steeple on the Balkans erected during the period of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman%20Empire domination on the area.

Usage examples of kula.

They wore the traditional del of the Mongol nomad and bowed when the Master of Sinanju, Kula and Lobsang Drom stepped from the parked limousine.

LAX, Lobsang Drom and Kula the Mongol looked to Remo Williams with expectation writ large on their faces.

Master of Sinanju, destined to be known as Chiun the Great, and I bring with me the Most Holy Lobsang Drom Rinpoche and Kula the Mongol.

Chiun blazed a trail through the snow sufficient for the Bunji Lama, Kula and Lobsang Drom to follow safely.

Kula said, his eyes reflective as he stared into his steaming kaoliang wine.

Boldbator, raising the nine-horsetail standard of Genghis Khan, and Kula, sipping kaoliang wine from a bladder, took positions on either side of them.

Luzon, 485-6 Kula Gulf, Battle of, 276 KUMANO, 457, 472 Kure, 49, 566 Kuribayashi, Lt.

From this point the western or Servian frontier passes northwards, leaving Trn to the east and Pirot to the west, reaching the Timok near Kula, and following the course of that river to its junction with the Danube.

The extensive trade networks which distributed goods over long distances were either maintained as the linking of innumerable short-distance contacts between neighbours, or by the few communities which were travellers and seafarers, such as the Trobriand Islanders, famous for the Kula ring network of exchange.

One day news reached the city that some kula herders had awakened to the sight of a single black-robed figure walking up the hill toward the old house.

The dark-robed figures were chanting softly, in what the more experienced townsfolk recognized as quaintly accented Sabirn, a hymn to Deese of the Forge—with proper reference to his Lady, Kula of the Wood.

After a time, the angel smith extracted the blade section and began to hammer the softer metal around the thin iron rod he had forged from leftover scraps of metal gathered from both Jirec and Kula.