Caspian Seain a sentence
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In Iran, "vacation" meant going to the Caspian Sea.† (source)
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But when I see it on his table I'm taken aback by what I overlooked at age eighteen: the Caspian Sea, for example.† (source)
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About 4,000 years ago, the primitive Indo-Europeans lived in areas bordering on the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.† (source)
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He had helped with the designing of her revolutionary drive system and had inspected the model, which had been running on the Caspian Sea for some years in absolute secrecy.† (source)
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I called your sister-in-law several times, but she said you went to Caspian Sea.† (source)
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Fortunately for the daroga, a corpse, half-eaten by the birds of prey, was found on the shore of the Caspian Sea, and was taken for Erik's body, because the daroga's friends had dressed the remains in clothing that belonged to Erik.† (source)
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If it were fully landlocked like a lake, this odd gulf might dry up completely; on this score it's inferior to its neighbors, the Caspian Sea and the Dead Sea, whose levels lower only to the point where their evaporation exactly equals the amounts of water they take to their hearts.† (source)
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That summer, we headed for our annual weeklong vacation by the Caspian Sea.† (source)
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Thirty-two meters long and diesel-electric powered, it was based in the Caspian Sea, far from the eyes of imperialist spies, and kept in a covered dock, hidden from their photographic satellites.† (source)
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We could Stow away on a ship and cross the Caspian Sea to Russia.† (source)
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The drive between Tehran and the Caspian Sea is one of the most beautiful stretches of land I have ever seen.† (source)
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After a week of following the model around the north end of the Caspian Sea in an electrically powered launch, trailing the best passive sonar array his country had yet made, he thought he had found a flaw.† (source)
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"I've never been to Caspian Sea," I said, adopting Helen's habit so characteristic of English-speaking Europeans and Asians of dropping the article "the".† (source)
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Or we'd try to be more bucolic, mentioning being south of the beautiful Caspian Sea, "where the famous caviar comes from."† (source)
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No-ruz continued during its second week with what was termed a "holiday" along the shores of the Caspian Sea, which sits due north of Tehran and forms a portion of the Iranian-Russian border.† (source)
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Every so often, I would toss out some piddly story about the caviar vendors beside the Caspian Sea or the smell of nasturtiums in my aunt Sedigeh's garden, and the Frenchman went gaga.† (source)
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