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 Translation for 'neighboring country' from English to Finnish
NOUN   a neighboring country | neighboring countries
geogr.
naapurimaa {noun}
neighboring country [Am.]
geogr.
naapurivaltio {noun}
neighboring country [Am.]
Partial Matches
kiint.
naapuritontti {noun}
neighboring property [Am.]
kiint.
naapuritontti {noun}
neighboring lot [Am.]
kiint.
naapuritontti {noun}
neighboring plot [Am.]
naapurialue {noun}neighboring region [Am.]
geogr.
naapurivaltio {noun}
neighboring state [Am.]
mus.
kantrimusiikki {noun}
country music
mus.
countrymusiikki {noun}
country music
geogr.
rajanaapuri {noun}
neighbouring country
geogr.
sisämaavaltio {noun}
landlocked country
ulkomaa {noun}foreign country
ekonomia
kehitysmaa {noun}
developing country
isänmaa {noun}mother country
geogr.
naapurivaltio {noun}
neighbouring country [Br.]
autot.
maastoauto {noun}
cross country vehicle
alkuperämaa {noun}country of origin
geogr.
maa {noun} [valtio, kansakunta]
country [state, nation]
geogr.
naapurimaa {noun}
neighbouring country [Br.]
urheilu
hiihtolatu {noun}
cross country ski track
20 translations
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Usage Examples English
  • On 24 January 2008, Greece's premier Costas Karamanlis visited Turkey a full 48 years after the last Greek premier and uncle of his Constantine Karamanlis had visited the neighboring country.
  • is the process by which one powerful country makes a smaller neighboring country refrain from opposing the former's foreign policy rules, while allowing it to keep its nominal independence and its own political system.
  • The 2nd Division of the United States Army deployed to Texas City in 1913 to guard the Gulf Coast from incursions during the Mexican Revolution, essentially encamping nearly half of the nation's land military personnel there, due to the perceived double threat that the Mexican Revolution might spill over across the border or that the neighboring country might become a German ally in the incipient World War.
  • The victory remains a source of national pride to Ecuadorians as a rare case when "Ecuador" bested a "neighboring country" by force.
  • Colombians have historically found refuge in its neighboring country during times of civil unrest.

  • These are civilians who have been forced to flee their homes, but who have not reached a neighboring country.
  • Before 19th century end, when the border was still in dispute, people from the south of the neighboring country were gradually arriving to settle in surroundings of the lake.
  • His real plan is to start a war with the neighboring country of Guilder by killing Buttercup and framing Guilder for the murder.
  • If necessary, national borders could be crossed by police forces of the respective neighboring country for capture and arrest.
  • The term "strategic depth" has been used in reference to Pakistan's utilization and contact with Afghanistan following the neighboring country's Soviet intervention, to prevent encirclement from a hostile India and a USSR-supported Afghanistan.

  • This created a fear in many Khmer that the neighboring country was out to conquer and erase Khmer identity.
  • As well as bordering Mtwara Region in the neighboring country of Tanzania, it borders the provinces of Nampula and Niassa.
  • On the international front, Carazo had to deal mainly with the radical changes in the neighboring country of Nicaragua, which had been under the control of the Somoza dictatorship for decades, whose rule Costa Rica had always opposed.
  • It became the first city in Afghanistan to connect itself by rail with a neighboring country.
  • On 2 August 1990, Iraq invaded and occupied the neighboring country of Kuwait.

  • According to data from the World Bank, the present mortality rate is still very high, over seven times higher than in neighboring country Spain.
  • Some foreign visitors sometimes engage in what is known as a "visa run": leaving a country—usually to a neighboring country—for a short period just before the permitted length of stay expires, then returning to the first country to get a new entry stamp in order to extend their stay ("reset the clock").
  • Certain countries around the Caucasus have very simple backbone networks; for example, in 2011, a 70 year old woman in Georgia pierced a fiber backbone line with a shovel and left the neighboring country of Armenia without Internet access for 12 hours.
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© dict.cc Finnish-English dictionary 2024
Contains translations by TU Chemnitz and Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (German-English only).
Links to this dictionary or to individual translations are very welcome!