Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The next Monday, the 8th, my father sent a telegram to the War Department in Washington that read something like: "I have a trunk in my basement that has complete, detailed maps of the entire telephone communication system in the Japanese Islands."
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Gradually, the whole war is centred on Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union, right across to the Pacific and including the Japanese Islands.
A Rude Awakening Aldiss, Brian 1978
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The trade and commerce of the Japanese Islands has always been considered of great importance in these islands; for, as the former are rich in metals and foods, what is needed here can be brought thence at moderate prices.
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The chain of the Kuriles contains at least ten active volcanoes; the Japanese Islands and the islands to the south of Japan twenty-five.
The San Francisco calamity by earthquake and fire Charles Morris 1877
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Mother Nature caused eruption 2009 in Japanese Islands, and now in Iceland under glacier.
Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local chinapoot 2010
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Mother Nature caused eruption 2009 in Japanese Islands, and now in Iceland under glacier.
Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local chinapoot 2010
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Mother Nature caused eruption 2009 in Japanese Islands, and now in Iceland under glacier.
Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local jsclerus 2010
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At around 400,000 B.C., the Reptilians colonized the largest land mass at that time; the continent Lemuria, which covered roughly the area of today's Pacific Ocean, from the Japanese Islands to the western coastline of California, also including the Australian continent, which is the largest remnant of Lemuria still above water to this day.
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At around 400,000 B.C., the Reptilians colonized the largest land mass at that time; the continent Lemuria, which covered roughly the area of today's Pacific Ocean, from the Japanese Islands to the western coastline of California, also including the Australian continent, which is the largest remnant of Lemuria still above water to this day.
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At around 400,000 B.C., the Reptilians colonized the largest land mass at that time; the continent Lemuria, which covered roughly the area of today's Pacific Ocean, from the Japanese Islands to the western coastline of California, also including the Australian continent, which is the largest remnant of Lemuria still above water to this day.
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