"Thrace"相关例句(18)
3.The favorite land of Mars was, according to Home, the rough, northerly Thrace.
4.It is also possible that viticultural knowledge reached Greece via Asia Minor or Thrace.
5.What gift does Kara Thrace give to Admiral Adama before her calamitous flight in "Maelstrom"?
6.To whom does Kara Thrace give her statue of Aurora before her seemingly final mission?
7.Why is Kara Thrace worried about Sam Anders just before the Cylons attack and occupy New Caprica?
8.During which event do Lee Adama and Kara Thrace revisit a secret experience that they shared on New Caprica?
9.a Thraco-Phrygian language spoken by the ancient people of Thrace but extinct by the early Middle Ages.
10.Who was flying patrol with Kara Thrace the first time she dove into the strange storm in "Maelstrom"?
11.Recently, at the end of "Crossroads, Pt. 2", where does Kara Thrace tell Lee Adama that she has been?
12.How is Kara Thrace able to take Lee Adama by surprise during the first test flight of the Blackbird fighter craft?
13.It is not surprising, therefore, to find the Greeks of Western Thrace suspicious of the Turks, and the Turks of the Greeks.
14.Turks form the largest minority within Greece; many (from 100 000-120 000) live in Western Thrace, a remote region on the Turkish border.
15.98 While the events of which we have spoken were taking place in Pannonia and in Germany, a fierce rebellion arose in Thrace, and all its clans were aroused to arms.
16.A small river and ancient town of southern Thrace in present-day western Turkey. The culminating battle of the Peloponnesian War, in which Lysander and the Spartans destroyed the Athenian fleet, took place at the mouth of the river in405 b.c.
17.The Balkan Wars were two wars in South-eastern Europe in 1912-1913 in the course of which the Balkan League (Bulgaria, Montenegro, Greece, and Serbia) first conquered Ottoman-held Macedonia, Albania and most of Thrace and then fell out over the division of the spoils.
18.An ancient city of Thrace on the site of present-day Istanbul, Turkey. It was founded by the Greeks in the seventh century b.c. and taken by the Romans in a.d.196. Constantine I ordered the rebuilding of the city in330 and renamed it Constantinople.

