Usage examples of "trinidadian".
If Holly could get her on this Trinidadian trip or even on the coral reef study.
But she did use the advantage she seemed to have gained to ask her father if she could go with Holly on the trip charting the progress of Trinidadian land crabs and when they returned, share her flat until they both went up to Oxford.
Maybe before the advent of blusher she was something additional, something Polish or Trinidadian, but to eyes that rested on glossy pages of fashion magazines, she was one name.
Hercules, the Trinidadian man on duty, was chatting with radio pen pals from across the world.
But the man who had paid them was a senior terrorist in the Jamaat al-Muslimeen, the principal Trinidadian group on the side of Al Qaeda.
Eventually he hired Sunshine, a tall Trinidadian man, for five hundred dollars a week to drive him around and guard him with an Uzi.
The village would be as much fun as the real Caribbean, but cleaner, with no guiltinducing Bahamians or Trinidadians gazing through the fence.
In the eyes of many of the Trinidadians working for Frikkie, these trinkets would be a sure sign of wrongness.
Chicago and Albany, in Yugoslavia and Puerto Rico, in Finland and New Zealand and Framingham, Massachusetts, among Japanese men living in Hawaii and Japanese physicians living in Japan, among West Australians, Trinidadians, and British civil servants, among 276,802 men followed for twelve years by the American Cancer Society, among 87,526 women nurses and 51,529 male health professionals in separate studies at Harvard, and among 123,840 patients at the Kaiser Permanente medical centers in the Bay Area.
If Saint Andrews was known for anything, it was for its cuisine: the inhabitants claimed to have been jerking chickens before the Jamaicans, currying goats before the Trinidadians, frying flying fish before the Bajans.
The U-boat has its whip aerial up, is monitoring the usual frequencies, and hears the Trinidadian steamer fire up her radio and send out an SOS.