The ship reached Portsmouth in England after a seven-day trans-Atlantic crossing. |
|
After all, he views Spain as having recently opted to be part of the West rather than as part of a trans-Atlantic Iberian civilization. |
|
More would have made the trans-Atlantic voyage, but poverty had forced many into debt or indenture. |
|
Their ambitions worked out in a different way, became ensnarled in trans-Atlantic politics, and New France fell before superior English power. |
|
Do you see this as the future complicating factor in relations, trans-Atlantic relations? |
|
Revenue growth at trans-Pacific routes and trans-Atlantic routes was 21.4 per cent and 14 per cent, respectively. |
|
The South African document singles out the trans-Atlantic slave trade for censure. |
|
From the Beatles to The Office to Idol, there has been a trans-Atlantic conveyer belt. |
|
Michnik knows whereof he speaks and writes, unlike so many of those in the European media who are busy gnawing at the supports of the trans-Atlantic alliance. |
|
France, in particular, clung to the Gaullist illusion of its singularity and remained aloof to close trans-Atlantic ties. |
|
As the hours passed with cruise control taking the strain from the right foot and no clutch to worry about, it felt like piloting a trans-Atlantic flight. |
|
Unlike the trans-Atlantic bluefin, yellowfin and bigeye, blackfins are strictly limited to the Western Atlantic. |
|
He announced talks with the European Union to form a trans-atlantic Trade Area. |
|
Which is why the enormous trans-atlantic cloud's path over London creates the perfect storm, so to speak. |
|
This trans-atlantic element partly explains the trans-atlantic success. |
|
It's high, but you get about 35 milirems on a trans-atlantic flight. |
|
August 1 is an important day in the history of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade and a reminder as to why large numbers of Blacks never got a leg up on the economic ladder. |
|