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Madariaga
[ mah-thah-ryah-gah ]
noun
- Sal·va·dor de [sahl-vah-, thawr, , th, e], Salvador de Madariaga y Rojo, 1886–1978, Spanish diplomat, historian, and writer in England.
Example Sentences
“We do not have any official notification from the Vatican about the existence of a complaint of this type,” Josefina Madariaga, director of Opus Dei’s press office in Argentina, told the AP.
Zacarias Madariaga, head of environmental health for the region, said eight teams of body collectors were picking up 10 to 15 corpses a day from homes, five times more than at the outset of the pandemic.
The other, the short-tailed cane mouse, is also involved in the transmission of zoonotic diseases such as hantavirus and possibly Madariaga virus, an emergent encephalitis virus.
Over the next several years, as international donors sought to strengthen Nicaragua’s democracy, more than 4,000 civic groups were established, according to Felix Madariaga, the Harvard-trained director of a think tank in Managua, the Institute for Strategic Studies on Public Policy.
When the protests erupted in April, “the civil society had awakened. The press was really playing a fundamental role in energizing the population in its search for freedom,” Madariaga said.
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