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New Delhi
in a sentence


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  • I have summoned Dr. Kumar from New Delhi.†   (source)
  • Accra Berlin New Delhi Budapest.†   (source)
  • They radioed their Base Camp on the Rongbuk Glacier to say they were on top, whereupon the leader of the expedition, Mohindor Singh, placed a satellite telephone call to New Delhi and proudly reported the triumph to Prime Minister Narashima Rao.†   (source)
  • The Raison Strain has already entered the air space of London, Paris, Moscow, Beijing, New Delhi, Cape Town, Bangkok, Sydney, New York, Washington, D.C., Atlanta, and Los Angeles.†   (source)
  • New Delhi was the example.†   (source)
  • I am thinking also of Yasmine Gooneratne, now teaching at a university in Australia, whom I met just last year at an International Writers' Conference in New Delhi.†   (source)
  • Rome, Madrid, New Delhi: the list was long.†   (source)
  • In a Spanish-language broadcast heard here today, Radio Tokyo announced that the Big Three meeting in New Delhi has approved preliminary plans for flying desperately needed vaccines and antitoxins to uncontaminated cities in Europe, North America, and Australia.†   (source)
  • They had lost a war, most of them had no jobs, many were sore as could be over the terms of the Treaty of New Delhi, especially the P. O. W. foul-up — and they knew how to fight.†   (source)
  • According to the scenarios, there were seventeen possible consequences of American-Soviet interaction following the destruction of New Delhi.†   (source)
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  • That was the sliver of justification underlying the attempted coup d'etat just before the Treaty of New Delhi, the so-called 'Revolt of the Scientists': let the intelligent elite run things and you'll have utopia.†   (source)
  • He had one of us apes summarize the negotiated treaty of New Delhi, discuss how it ignored prisoners of war …. and, by implication, dropped the subject forever; the armistice became a stalemate and prisoners stayed where they were — on one side; on the other side they were turned loose and, during the Disorders, made their way home — or not if they didn't want to.†   (source)
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