All 50 Uses
consulate
in
The Bourne Supremacy
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- You never picked up anything, any rumors or backstairs gossip from our Asian embassies or consulates?
Chpt 2 *consulates = diplomats appointed by governments to live in foreign countries
- Do not think of involving the authorities, or your consulate in a reckless attempt to compromise the taipan.†
Chpt 10consulate = a diplomat appointed by a government to live in a foreign country and help its citizens visiting that country; or the offices of that person and assistants
- The property was leased by the United States Consulate at the direction of the National Security Council.†
Chpt 11
- To any inquiries, the consulate was to comment only that during the next month numerous representatives of the American government and American industry would be flying into the colony at various undetermined times, and security as well as the efficacy of accommodations warranted the lease.†
Chpt 11
- It was all the consulate knew.†
Chpt 11
- Here in Hong Kong it's the consulate!†
Chpt 12
- The consulate, my darling!†
Chpt 12
- It was both too late and too soon to go to the consulate.†
Chpt 12
- The Consulate of the People's Republic.†
Chpt 13
- Because there was no waiting period and the applicant did not appear at the consulate.†
Chpt 13
- You said your client has sources in the consulate.†
Chpt 13
- Speaking English to the interpreter who translated accurately for the officer of the guard, he had claimed to be a bewildered executive instructed by the consulate on Queen's Road in Hong Kong to come to the airport to meet an official flying in from Beijing.†
Chpt 13
- She called the Canadian consulate and was told how to get there by bus.†
Chpt 14
- If things were as Marie thought they were and alarms had been sent out to friendly consulates, Staples might feel compelled to co-operate.†
Chpt 14
- Embassies and consulates constantly sought favours from one another.†
Chpt 14
- There was a consulate car waiting for her at the kerb, the maple leaf insignia printed on the door.†
Chpt 14consulate = a diplomat appointed by a government to live in a foreign country and help its citizens visiting that country; or the offices of that person and assistants
- Then, too, there were deeper concerns, matters of security and espionage, the former covering visits of senior government officials, the latter involving means of protection against electronic surveillance and the gaining of sensitive information through acts of blackmail against consulate personnel.†
Chpt 15
- She had saved the careers of two attaches in her own consulate, as well as those of an American and three British.†
Chpt 15
- There is no Canadian embassy in Hong Kong, but there is a consulate.†
Chpt 15
- You didn't alert friendly embassies — consulates?†
Chpt 15
- The Canadian consulate,' said Havilland.†
Chpt 15consulate = a diplomat appointed by a government to live in a foreign country and help its citizens visiting that country; or the offices of that person and assistants
- The consulates like you.†
Chpt 17
- He hasn't come to the consulate, hasn't even called our head honcho, who wants to get his picture in the papers with him.†
Chpt 17consulate = a diplomat appointed by a government to live in a foreign country and help its citizens visiting that country; or the offices of that person and assistants
- The consulate quietly leased a house in Victoria Peak, and a second marine contingent was flown over from Hawaii for guard duty.†
Chpt 17
- Why didn't the manager call the consulate and talk to a military attache?'†
Chpt 17
- 'Smart corporal,' broke in Staples: 'Unsmart consulate,' said Nelson.†
Chpt 17
- The next morning down at the consulate.†
Chpt 17
- And suddenly the whole consulate knew there was a sterile house in the colony.†
Chpt 17
- A woman stopped you in Garden Road when you were leaving the consulate.†
Chpt 17
- The consulate's been most co-operative.'†
Chpt 17
- Not the Canadian but the American consulate.†
Chpt 17
- That's the Canadian consulate, not the American.'†
Chpt 17
- She identified herself as Marie Webb and said that perhaps her husband had come to the consulate looking for her.†
Chpt 17
- Among other things, the major here established the fact that she did go to the Canadian consulate.†
Chpt 17
- The American consulate.†
Chpt 17
- After all, a highly agitated woman says her husband's missing but she won't go to the police, won't enter the consulate.†
Chpt 17
- To begin with, he himself went through a two-day seminar with her four years ago, and he ventured that probably a quarter of the consulate had done the same.†
Chpt 17
- He's quite popular with the consulate crowd.'†
Chpt 17
- But the woman refused to go to the police; she even refused to come inside the consulate.†
Chpt 17
- So much of a connection that he did not dare use his consulate phone to call Staples.†
Chpt 17
- Nelson is working for someone in the Canadian consulate — and whoever it is, is in touch with Webb's wife.'†
Chpt 17
- If I can, we'll pick up whoever it is in the consulate.'†
Chpt 17
- I want cameras, telephone taps, electronic surveillance — whatever you can manage — on every single person in that consulate.†
Chpt 17
- Everyone else, from the Hong Kong and Kowloon police to the 'specialists' who worked the American consulate gathering information for payment gave Nelson as clean a bill of health as was respectable in the territory.†
Chpt 17
- 'Because I do have several photographs in my vault at the consulate,' lied Catherine Staples.†
Chpt 17
- Insert the consulate disk and search it through the computer.†
Chpt 17
- I'm bringing her in to the consulate under the full protection of my government.†
Chpt 18
- If you doubt that, I suggest you call your consulate.†
Chpt 20
- The scant information was so electrifying that all concentration was riveted on the crisis, and Catherine Staples telephoned her consulate telling the High Commissioner that she was not well and would not attend the strategy conference with the Americans that afternoon.†
Chpt 20
- ...Oh, yes, the young man from the consulate.†
Chpt 20
Definitions:
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(1)
(consulate) the offices where a consul works; or a consul (a diplomat appointed by a government to live in a foreign country, help its citizens visiting that country, and protect its commercial interests there)
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(2)
(meaning too rare to warrant focus) Consulate general references a building that serves a consul general (a high ranking consul).