Crossword clues for iraqi
iraqi
- Tikrit native
- Sayid of "Lost," e.g
- Saddam, for one
- Saddam Hussein, for one
- Persian Gulf citizen
- One who spends dinars
- One from Baghdad
- Native of Kirkuk
- Najaf native
- Kuwaiti neighbor
- From Baghdad, say
- Dialect of Arabic
- Citizen of Basra
- Baghdad local
- Baghdad citizen
- Unoccupied Middle Easterner, as of last month
- Tikrit resident
- Spender of dinars
- Samarra native
- Salah ad Din denizen
- Resident of Baghdad or Basra
- President Jalal Talabani, for one
- President Barham Salih, e.g
- Person from Mosul or Baghdad
- Person from Basra
- Person from Baghdad, say
- Persian Gulf figure
- Operation Red Dawn defender
- Operation ___ Freedom
- Operation __ Freedom (2003-2011 conflict)
- One in the Gulf War
- Neighbor of a Syrian
- Native of Basra?
- Native of Basra, perhaps
- Native of Baghdad
- Mesopotamian, today
- Mesopotamian, now
- Man from Mosul
- Like many dinar spenders
- Kurd, maybe
- From Baghdad?
- From Baghdad, e.g
- From Baghdad
- Faisal II subject
- Euphrates swimmer
- Citizen of Baghdad
- Chemical Ali, e.g
- Certain Arabic speaker
- Basra denizen
- Baghdadi, say
- Baghdadi, for one
- Baghdadi, e.g
- Baghdadi daddy, e.g
- Baghdad dweller
- Baghdad denizen
- Baghdad dad, for example
- Arab Spring protestor
- Al Anbar resident
- Kirkuk denizen
- Basra native
- One barred from a U.N. no-fly zone
- Persian Gulf tongue
- Neighbor of 26-Across
- Baghdad native
- Gulf war loser
- Al Hillah resident
- Saddam Hussein, notably
- Neighbor of a Turk
- Many a Kurd
- Dinar earner, perhaps
- Modern-day Mesopotamian
- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, e.g.
- Like some Bedouins
- Baghdad resident
- Operation ___ Freedom (2003)
- Modern dweller in ancient Ur
- Like some dinars
- Dweller along the Tigris
- Ramadi resident
- Syrian's neighbor
- From Basra, say
- Nouri al-Maliki, for one
- Saudi neighbor
- Many a dweller along the Euphrates
- A native or inhabitant of Iraq
- One from Kirkuk
- Kirkuk native
- Hilla native
- Saddam Hussein, e.g.
- Native of Mosul
- Arabic dialect
- Thief of Baghdad, e.g.
- An Arab: his quatrain regularly recalled
- Middle Eastern fuel qualifier when refined
- Mesopotamian fragments of interred remains are quite interesting
- Eg, native of Baghdad
- Eg, Baghdad native
- Asian returned intelligence on terrorists
- Native of, eg, Basra
- Form of Arabic art originally covered by Irish TV show
- Arab lipread quip, missing odd bits
- Lyricist on panel game is a foreigner
- Rebel army leads intelligence in retreat from Baghdad
- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, e.g
- Beginnings of international rejection are quite injurious for Saddam, say
- Is to protect right? Answer question for person from former war zone
- At start of intifada, gunmen question one Arab
- Middle Easterner
- Dinar spender
- Mosul resident
- Basra resident
- Mosul native
- Man from Baghdad
- Gulf War soldier
- Fertile Crescent dweller
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Iraqi \Iraqi\ adj. of or relating to Iraq or its people or culture; as, Iraqi oil; Iraqi terrorists.
Syn: Iraki.
Iraqi \Iraqi\ n. a native or inhabitant of Iraq.
Syn: Iraki.
Wikipedia
Iraqi or Iraqis in plural may refer to:
- Something of, from, or related to the country of Iraq
-
Iraqi people, persons from Iraq, or of Iraqi descent. For information about the Iraqi people, see Demographics of Iraq and Culture of Iraq. For specific persons, see List of Iraqis.
- Iraqi diaspora
- Iraqi Arabic, the colloquial form of Arabic spoken in Iraq. See also Languages of Iraq.
- Iraqi cuisine
- Someone or Something of, from, or related to Persian Iraq, an old name for a region in Central Iran
- Fakhr-al-Din Iraqi (1213–1289)
- The Iraqis (party), a political party in Iraq
- Iraqi List, a political party in Iraq
Usage examples of "iraqi".
Iraqi intelligence sources reported that Iranian forces in Khuzestan, which had formerly included two divisions distributed among Ahvaz, Dezful, and Abadan, now consisted of only a number of ill-equipped battalion-sized formations.
By the end of the Mongol period, the focus of Iraqi history had shifted from the urbanbased Abbasid culture to the tribes of the river valleys, where it would remain until well into the twentieth century.
He stressed that this step would pave the way for ending the alien rule that the Iraqis had experienced since the latter days of the Abbasid caliphate.
The flow of Iranians into Iraq, which began during the rein of the Achaemenids, initiated an important demographic trend that would continue intermittently throughout much of Iraqi history.
In July, an Iraqi delegation traveled to Afghanistan to meet first with the Taliban and then with Bin Ladin.
Bin Ladin declined, apparently judging that his circumstances in Afghanistan remained more favorable than the Iraqi alternative.
As we prepared for an invasion, our airwaves would be filled with the voices of experts warning of the millions and millions of people who might die from an Iraqi WMD attack.
Large numbers of Iraqi front companies and businessmen operate out of Amman, and naturally, with them come large numbers of Mukhabbarat personnel.
Iraq, and its society is too heavily penetrated by Iraqi intelligence for Amman to be able to easily handle the risks of participating openly.
Moreover, Germany had given the Turkish military Patriot antimissile interceptors, a move intended to protect the Turks against an Iraqi missile attack, but which the Bush administration hoped would make Ankara more receptive to the idea of opening a northern front.
Turkey later offered peacekeeping troops, but the Iraqis saw their offer as an attempt by Ankara to meddle in Iraqi affairs and would not accept them.
By the end of the 1930s, pan- Arabism had become a powerful ideological force in the Iraqi military, especially among younger officers who hailed from the northern provinces and who had suffered economically from the partition of the Ottoman Empire.
Fifteen years later, still under the leadership of Mullah Barzani, the Kurds had organized an armd resistance against Iraqi rule.
So we are equally despised by the Iraqis, the Iranians, the Chinese, Russians, Kazakhs, Armenians, Azeris, and so on.
Uday hopscotched their way across western Iraqi, moving from Bija, Mayadin, and Maah until they made their way to what they thought would be a safe haven in Damascus, Syria.