Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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He was manning a temporary fort, known as a Sangar, offering protection to his colleagues in Patrol Base Sangin Fulod when he was engaged in small arms fire.
News round-up 2010
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Early-music veterans Paul Agnew (a soothing Dieu du Sommeil) and Bernard Deletré (a funny, bibulous River Sangar) made vivid contributions, as did Nicolas Rivenq as Célénus; Marc Mauillon and Sophie Daneman as Sangaride's dueting confidants, who naughtily urge her to choose love over duty; and the incisive Ingrid Perruche as Mélisse, Cybèle's disapproving confidante, who thinks the goddess is slumming by falling in love with a mortal.
The Sad Tale It Tells Is Myth; Its Joys, Real Heidi Waleson 2011
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Next thing I remember, I was being dragged out of the mosque, said Sangar, a resident of Kandahar who like many Afghans goes by one name.
Bomber Hits Service for Karzai's Brother Maria Abi-Habib 2011
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Some of those firms do distribute beyond Texas, but they have told us that they did not distribute Sangar products out of state.
Food safety alert: Celery recalled after four people die 2010
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Our recall effectiveness checks showed that companies heeded the recall and disposed of any recalled Sangar products.
Food safety alert: Celery recalled after four people die 2010
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Update: We contacted Sangar, expressing our concerns that their celery or other produce could have been distributed beyond Texas.
Food safety alert: Celery recalled after four people die 2010
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It is known to have given good produce in Sangar and the Nerbudda; also in Mirzapore, as well as
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We had sailed from Hakodadi with a fair wind, through the strait of Sangar and out into the sea of Japan, shaped our course for
In Eastern Seas Or, the Commission of H.M.S. 'Iron Duke,' flag-ship in China, 1878-83 J. J. Smith
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From Sangar also horses were exported into Egypt, and in one of the Tel el-Amarna letters, the king of Alasiya in Northern Syria writes to the
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In hieroglyphic and cuneiform spelling, Sangar and Sankhar are the exact equivalents of the Hebrew Shinar.
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