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Alaska English

Meaning Alaska meaning

What does Alaska mean?
Definitions in simple English

Alaska

Alaska is one of the states in the United States of America (USA). Alaska is the 49th state that joined with the United States of America.

Alaska

a state in northwestern North America; the 49th state admitted to the union Alaska is the largest state in the United States

Synonyms Alaska synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Alaska?

Alaska English » English

Last Frontier AK Inuit Fairbanks Eskimo-Aleut Alas.

Examples Alaska examples

How do I use Alaska in a sentence?

Simple sentences

It isn't as cold here as in Alaska.
Tom likes the extreme cold of Alaska.
Millions of wild animals live in Alaska.
Many Americans protested the purchase of Alaska.
I like the extreme cold of Alaska.
Mary likes the extreme cold of Alaska.
Fowler has visited 48 states, with Hawaii and Alaska to go.
Here we took the boat for Alaska.
Anchorage is the largest city in Alaska.
Juneau is the capital of Alaska.
Canada borders Alaska.

Movie subtitles

In the great Gold Rush, Alaska was the hope and dream of men, the ruthless siren of the Far North, beckoning thousands to her icy bosom. Beckoning thousands to her unknown regions.
Now they were homeward bound and they were leaving the hardship and toil of Alaska to live in the land of milk and honey.
Courtesy of the Navy Department, we are now able to take you to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, where over a national hook-up we will endeavor to bring you a description of the actual launching ceremony of the Navy's capital ship, the USS Alaska.
In the name of the people of the United States, I christen thee Alaska.
The law's working in 45 states. It ought to work all right in Alaska.
He's in Alaska by now or the South Pole, that is if he has the price of the gas.
I've dug in Alaska and Canada and Colorado.
Tell him I went to Alaska.
I've decided to buy Alaska.
Buy Alaska?
He can't be serious about buying Alaska.
But if he's decided to buy Alaska, he'll buy it.
Or have you forgotten that there is no safety for you or for me either until we reach Alaska?
I must get to Alaska immediately.
There was something from Alaska this morning. A baby seal, I think. You move like a broken-down truck horse!
Courtesy of the Navy Department, we take you to the navy yard, where we will endeavor to bring you a description. of the launching ceremony of the U.S.S. Alaska.
The law's workin' in 45 states. Why not alaska too?
At this moment I'm playing in a tin hut somewhere in Alaska, a camp in Australia, a makeshift theatre in the Caribbean, or North Africa.
I'm sorry, Mister. We just got back from Alaska.
No, he's, um. he's stuck on a remote construction site in Alaska, which, now that I'm saying it out loud.
If it isn't a tunnel in Colorado it'll be a bridge in Alaska or a dam across the Pacific.
We've got a cannery in Alaska.
Maybe I was imagining things up in Alaska.
Every jet outfit in Alaska is probably scrambling to head us off.
Your father can be in Nome, Alaska tomorrow.
George, a wonderful thing about Alaska is that matrimony hasn't hit up here yet.
All that gold in Alaska?
Tell Jenny I'm here from Alaska with tokens from George Pratt.
You'll be happy to hear he's in fine health, and I'm here to fetch you back to Alaska for the wedding.
Another thing about Alaska, the polar bear.
Have you ever been to Alaska?

News and current affairs

His choice of Alaska's Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate shook up the presidential campaign.
But they also point to the upside: the oil industry, in its never-ending search for more reserves, need not beg Congress for the right to despoil Alaska.
What makes a market economy a market economy, I thought, is the fact that you can always find a Texaco or a BP, Elf or Statoil petrol station, or a Seven Eleven store in Alaska, South Carolina or Tokyo.
Paradoxically, the boldest course would be for the government to stop managing these revenues and turn over a large fraction of these funds directly to the people, as is done in the US state of Alaska and the Canadian province of Alberta.
Alexander II sold Alaska; Lenin withdrew from Ukraine in exchange for peace with Germany; and Gorbachev pulled back from central Europe in an effort to end the Cold War.
He recently signed a lavish infrastructure bill that included, among other payoffs to political supporters, an infamous bridge to nowhere in Alaska.
A more promising one lies beneath the permafrost of Prudhoe Bay, the big oil-producing region on the arctic coast of Alaska.
Given that other high-level figures - for example, Dmitry Rogozin, who last October endorsed a book calling for the return of Alaska - are also highly nationalistic, a successor to Putin would probably not be liberal.

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