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Answer for the clue "Certain South American ", 8 letters:
bolivian

Alternative clues for the word bolivian

Word definitions for bolivian in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bolivian \Bo*liv"i*an\, a. Of or pertaining to Bolivia. -- n. A native of Bolivia.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bolivian may refer to: Something of, or related to Bolivia Bolivian people Demographics of Bolivia Culture of Bolivia

Usage examples of bolivian.

Behold why the caoutchouc trees, the quinquinas, the products of South America were missing in this country, which was neither the plateau of Atacama nor the Bolivian pampa!

In fact, Ehrlich has not even adopted the lifestyle of an average Bangladeshi, Bolivian, Kenyan, or Chinese.

But the money would in fact be used to collateralize a loan from a Roman bank to a bank in Panama and then shipped on to the Bolivian government.

Reporters shoved microphones at people and asked leading questions-in a Bolivian shoe factory, a Hassidic community in upstate New York, a firehouse in Queensland, Australia.

Quechua, rather than the Tucana or Jibaran of our Brazilian Indians, was not strange, because many of the Bolivian Indians speak Quechua, and the boy was discovered within fifty miles of Bolivia, even if on the wrong side of the mountains.

About the only adventure you seem capable of is the kind that ends up with you running out of the bank into the guns of the entire Bolivian National Guard.

Arnaldo Sanjines, a Bolivian working for the Inter-American Agricultural Service in La Paz, tells of stopping at a tiny farm to demonstrate a steel plow to an Indian using the same primitive plow his ancestors used 500 years ago.

Comment on kidnapping of USIS official Tom Martin by Bolivian tin-miners.

The New Incas, a nationalist movement led by Peruvian and Bolivian Indians, had taken Mendoza and were advancing rapidly on Buenos Aires.

The would-be assassin was a Bolivian painter named Benjamin Mendoza who allegedly practiced black magic and witchcraft.

Poverty would end, and so would the tyrannies of government and every Bolivian would get their own e-mail address.

The courageous editor of the Bolivian newspaper Gente published an investigative series exposing the sweetheart deals between the US-European investors and politically connected Bolivians.

Had it not been for the shadow of her unrevealed assignment, the CNN cameraman, with his camera on the floor beside his chair, seated discreetly three tables away, and the escort of ragged Bolivians lurking somewhere near, she would have felt like a tourist, privileged to have been shown both the best and the worst of Rio.

IMF, the World Bank and an alphabet soup of agencies which work to suck the blood of Bolivians and steal the gold from Tanzania.

Style section and a few news wire paragraphs in the New York Times, for the mainstream media, the Bolivians simply vanished.