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Warsaw English

Meaning Warsaw meaning

What does Warsaw mean?
Definitions in simple English

Warsaw

Warsaw is the capital city of Poland.

Warsaw

(= Warszawa) the capital and largest city of Poland; located in central Poland

Synonyms Warsaw synonyms

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

Warsaw English » English

capital of Poland Warszawa

Examples Warsaw examples

How do I use Warsaw in a sentence?

Simple sentences

The capital of Poland is Warsaw.
I had to leave Warsaw and make my living somewhere else.
I live in Warsaw.
The architecture of Warsaw's Old Town has always fascinated me.
Warsaw is Poland's capital.
The ambassador was recalled from Warsaw.
The police in Warsaw were in the habit of searching people in the streets.
The train from Krakow to Warsaw had to stop because of a young Muslim who had started to say a Mohammedan prayer.
It's cold in my city, Warsaw.
In 1873 he moved to Warsaw with his whole family, and from that time taught German at the Veterinary Institute and at a secondary school.

Movie subtitles

In Warsaw, do remember.
I was wounded before Warsaw.
We're in Warsaw, the capital of Poland.
At the moment, life in Warsaw is going on as normally as ever.
Adolf Hitler in Warsaw when the two countries are still at peace. and all by himself?
And that's how AdolfHitler came to Warsaw in August, 1939.
Tomorrow at 2:00, I'm gonna look down on Warsaw.
Warsaw destroyed for the sake of destruction.
The Warsaw underground striking back. sabotage, destruction.
Professor, are you going to Warsaw?
So you are going to Warsaw.
Warsaw.
My people are fortunately out of Poland. but there is someone in Warsaw.
But he's supposed to be a Pole who lived in Warsaw.
And that's how Adolf Hitler came to Warsaw in August, 1939.
Tomorrow at 2:00, I'm gonna look down on Warsaw. He's gonna take me up 10,000 feet in the air. There's nothing wrong in that, is there?
Professor Siletsky? - Yes. My people are fortunately out of Poland. but there is someone in Warsaw.
Well, you lived in Warsaw.
But he's supposed to be a Pole who lived in Warsaw. She's the most famous actress in Warsaw.
All the way to Warsaw.
Going to the King in Warsaw!
They, fine Cossacks, faithful Ukrainian sons, were bludgeoned to death on the wheel and had their veins pulled out from them while alive at the Warsaw square!
Reverent Hetman, I demand to send a messenger to Warsaw.
Lady Helen, I brought you a gift from Warsaw, from the Order of jesuits.
He'll fall sick for ten days and you'll leave tomorrow for Warsaw.
I'm curious: why does a messenger from Warsaw visit him, why do you?
Tomorrow at 2:00, I'm gonna look down on Warsaw. He's gonna take me up 10,000 feet in the air.

News and current affairs

WARSAW - The eurozone is often considered an experiment - a monetary union without political unification.
She may even want to confirm that message by making her first official trip abroad not to Paris but to Warsaw or Vilnius.
WARSAW: The thirteen days that Pope John Paul II spent in Poland this summer will probably be the last that he ever spends in his homeland.
WARSAW: Around the world, democracy is on the march.
The World Forum on Democracy, held in Warsaw June 25 - 27 made a start, but it must be followed up.
A step was made in this direction in June 2000, when the Community of Democracy, bringing together more than half of the member states of the United Nations, was created in Warsaw.
WARSAW - One merit of the Berlin Wall was that it made obvious where Europe ended.
WARSAW - What was the Prague Spring, or the events of 1968 more generally?
NATO faced off against the Warsaw Pact, created by the Soviet Union and its allies in 1955.
What he doesn't understand is that the memory of Auschwitz is also the memory of the Battle of Britain, the bombing of Dresden, the occupation of Paris, and the Warsaw uprising.
Warsaw - When a friend dies unexpectedly, we recall his face, his smile, the conversations forever unfinished.
As a child, Geremek witnessed the degradation of those enslaved in the Warsaw ghetto.
WARSAW - The European Union's new member states from Central and Eastern Europe are required to join the eurozone as part of their accession agreements.
WARSAW - The global economy's glory days are surely over.
At a time when Russia was taking a more pacific course, NATO - unlike the Warsaw Pact - was not dismantled.
WASHINGTON, DC - Coal is emerging as a major topic of conversation at the United Nations climate-change negotiations currently taking place in Warsaw - and rightly so.
WARSAW - Had the August 1991 putsch against Mikhail Gorbachev not failed, the riots and death recently seen in Xinjiang could have been taking place in Russia.
In all of Warsaw, only a couple government candidates bothered to put up posters.
WARSAW - On September 11, 2001 at three p.m., Warsaw time, I was talking on the telephone with Poland's Consul General in New York.
Under the world's very eyes, a capital - Grozny, with 400,000 inhabitants - has been razed for the first time since Hitler's 1944 punishment of Warsaw.
Europe might still be home to dynamic young Polish communities, but they are in London, Dublin, Paris, Oslo, and Stockholm - not in Warsaw, Krakow, or Lodz.
The seat of the College of Europe in Natolin, near Warsaw, is a near perfect barometer to test the morale of Europe.
WARSAW - It was two decades ago this summer that communist rule began to implode from Tallinn in the Baltic to Tirana in the Adriatic, ushering in free elections, market reforms, and expanded civil liberties.
Thus, whether Europe effectively pursues its own interests in Eastern Europe will depend on coordination between the governments in Berlin and Warsaw, and between them and the EU in Brussels and the other member states.
The Polish freedom movement of 1968 lost its confrontation with police violence; the Prague Spring was crushed by the armies of five Warsaw Pact members.

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