Cypriote


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Synonyms for Cypriote

a native or inhabitant of Cyprus

Related Words

of or relating to Cyprus or its people or culture

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
A grave mistake on the part of the Kurdish defense, allowed a Cypriote player to swivel and turn a Kurdish defender before firing past Kurdistan goalkeeper Didar Hamid, to ignite his side's recovery in the 40th minute.
One could imagine that he wears a privy coat because he fears Montano, recovering from the wound drunken Cassio gave him, or one of Montano's Cypriote friends.
For his part, Nicholas Coureas explores the role of the military orders in Cypriote commerce just after the fall of Acre.
An example of this is their interference in Cypriote domestic politics in 1460.
Chapters 3 to 8 deal with Barnabas as a Cypriote well-to-do and generous leader of the Christian community (106); his patron/client relation to Paul (195); the successes of "Saul" with Barjesus/Elymas (one person, 282) before proconsul S.
A large crowd gathered in the vicinity of the City Hall to watch the change as indicated on the faces of the clock which rests under the shadow of the restored Cypriote antique of Justice....
For Nicosia, the primary goal of such measures should be oto strive for the economic integration of the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriote communities and serve the ultimate goal of reunification of the island".
Cypriote Bronze-work in the Mycenaean World, Oxford.
Daszewski, 'Marble Sculptures in Nea Paphos, Cypriote or Imported?', in R.
"Two months later the greatly outnumbered defenders of the Cypriote capital of Nicosia capitulated on terms, which the Turks promptly broke, killing thousands of Christians-- both soldiers and civilians--and selling most of the women into slavery." Among the victims was Amalda de Rocas, one of 800 Cypriote women packed onto a ship bound for Istanbul, where they were to be sold as sex slaves.
Many of the studies are quite specialized: on slavery or on the Jews in Venetian Cyprus; on the loyalties of the Cypriote population; on the lasting contributions of the Genoese to the island's character and culture; on the effects of blights and famines.
(Later this year, they will also get a peek at some of the 2,000 Cypriote antiquities Ringling purchased from the Metropolitan Museum and decorative pieces from the Gavet-Vanderbilt-Belmont collection he snapped up in 1928.) And they will get unprecedented glimpses into how the collection and the museum came to be, through archival documents including letters, telegrams, auction catalogs and architectural blueprints of the Italian-styled museum.