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Ateş

Ateş is a Turkish word meaning "fire", and may refer to:

Ateş (newspaper)

Ateş was a Turkish newspaper. It was published from 1995 to 1999. It had been acquired in August 1998 from Dinç Bilgin's Sabah group by Korkmaz Yiğit.

Usage examples of "ates".

The mail of a dozen likely candidates, intercepted thanks to a man in the mailroom who had been caught organizing a Super Bowl pool on Museum time.

Director Frederick Collopy and Vice President Roger Brisbane of the New York Museum of Natural History, where the latest homicide was discovered.

Most importantly, she needed a careful series of accelerator mass spectrometer C-14 dates on the sixty-six organics she had brought back from last summer’s survey of southern Utah.

It would cost $18,000, but she had to have those damn dates if she was ever going to complete her work.

The murders took place before 1897 and were probably clustered around the dates of the coins—that is, the 1870s.

Just researchers and doctoral candidates, or the occasional wealthy patron with an interest in the history of science.

Middle East peace talks, mayoral election debates, earthquake in Indonesia.

And encircling the rest was the greatest treasure of all: a medical chain saw, a long, thin band of metal covered in sharp serrated teeth, ivory hand grips at each end.

So I purchased a beautiful tract in the Gates of Heaven Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.

He’d looked into Fairhaven’s past, to his early business associates, but they were either full of phony praise or simply refused comment.

Now that she had the money for the carbon-14 dates, she could get back to real work.

Once she had the dates, her work on the Anasazi-Aztec connection could begin in earnest.

It had been crowded with tall wooden tenements with names like “Brickbat Mansion” and “The Gates of Hell,” tenanted by violent alcoholics who would stab a man for the clothes on his back.

She would excavate this site with the greatest care, sifting through his old laboratory layer by layer, bringing all her skills to bear in order to capture even the smallest piece of evidence.

At Pendergast’s request Proctor, his chauffeur, had delivered a variety of items from the Dakota apartment: a small table, a Tiffany lamp, and an array of medicines, unguents, and French chocolates, along with a stack of obscure books and maps.