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Kars

American  
[kahrs] / kɑrs /

noun

  1. a city in NE Turkey.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“There’s full expansion, regular preaching. They’re establishing cells, they have a lot of presence,” said Kars de Bruijne, senior research fellow and head of the Sahel program at the Clingendael Institute.

From Seattle Times • Nov. 7, 2023

Marjoleine Kars teaches history at the University of Maryland Baltimore County and is the author of “Blood on the River,” about a massive 1763 slave rebellion in Dutch Guyana.

From Washington Post • Feb. 25, 2022

Mazmanyan’s descendants were from Kars, in today’s Turkey, and were survivors of the genocide.

From Slate • Dec. 4, 2020

FoxViewCommons seemed to be a plase Yumans came to put there Kars.

From The Guardian • Oct. 21, 2017

In 1855 he was at the famous siege of Kars, under General Fenwick Williams; when a force of 15,000 English were shut in by an army of 50,000 Russians. 

From A History of Horncastle from the earliest period to the present time by Walter, James Conway