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Answer for the clue "Sibelius is one ", 4 letters:
finn

Alternative clues for the word finn

Usage examples of finn.

Violet Bathurst had already informed Finn of my acquaintance with the King.

Norwegians, Spanish Falangists, Finns, Ukrainian nationalists, Serbs, Croatians, Dalmatians, Montenegrans, Latvians, Esthonians, Lithuanians, Dutch, Flemings, Walloons, a few Swiss nationals, Bessarabians, Turks, even one or two Syrians have turned up.

Finn led the way, surprisingly catfooted for such a bulky, clumsy-looking man, his HK54A2 with the drum mag and built-in silencer in his beefy hands.

Not very civilized, and definitely short on the comforts, but the farther we get from Finn, the better.

In the coffee houses, Finn found a great clamouring of people ready to pay twenty or thirty shillings for a portrait, because they believed in the future again and could even foresee a time when these same portraits would hang in the houses of their grandchildren on grander walls than any they would ever live to own.

Anaconda Copper bought out all the other small mills and set up their big Bonner unit, obviously a lot more efficient than these little one-saw outfits up in the sticks, the Hellmouth Finns stuck.

It seems Ellen Finn was a kayaker and could get around the river without making much noise.

Though he knew that Finn was next door in the conference room, waiting for him, he went over and stood at the big windows for a little while, looking out at a slice of the Meadows Center.

John Tinker Meadows looked directly into his eyes and Finn Efflander managed to endure that penetrating directness without looking away.

Three years ago he was hired by the Security Section of the Meadows Center, hired by a stone-eyed man who had once been with the FBI, and approved for employment by a big lazy-looking man named Finn Efflander, provided his credentials checked out.

Finn, and they cannot afford to compromise their reputations and their futures by becoming entangled with those Meadows people and their anti intellectual message.

Finn Efflander hesitated, torn between loyalty to his organization and his people, and a dirty glee at what he thought might happen at Meadows Center under Harold Sherman.

After Finn left, John Tinker Meadows looked over at the wall at the familiar photograph of Matthew Meadows standing beside General Dwight D.

They were probably Finns of the branch now represented by the Votiaks and Permiaks, forced northwards by later immigrants.

Jews, forcibly Russified the Poles, Finns and Armenians and, as a result, increased the enemies of Czarism, and convinced them of the need for a final change.