Eastern-european in a Sentence
  • Their second song, "Out in the Woods," is unbearably poignant with aching cello and strange, pained Eastern European strings.
  • One of the problems of the EU in the past had been its exclusivity which had effectively blackballed Eastern European communities for many years.
  • The waitresses are all Eastern European and have a very brusque manner.
  • It begins rather in the manner of Eastern European folkmusic, and has a neoclassical chorale at the end.
  • What follows, in this Cannes Camera d'Or-winning gem, is an absurdly comic farce in the best Eastern European tradition.
  • I'm not certain about it tho, but she did have an accent that sounded vaguely eastern European.
  • She has also curated exhibitions (in Liverpool and London) for local and Eastern European artists since 2003.
  • Anyone who opposed American imperialism had to be on the side of the angels and so the eastern European Communists were the good guys.
  • The M. I. B. Are said to have a dark possibly oriental, eastern European look to them.
  • Well, we say Kabbalists, but the prospect of any 18th century Eastern European freethinking mystical geniuses popping in is fairly remote.
  • The agency focuses on supporting on-going humanitarian efforts for orphanages in several areas worldwide, including China, Russia, and other Eastern European countries.
  • It occurs much more often in people of Eastern European and Russian Jewish (Ashkenazi) ancestry, affecting one out of every 450 live births in this population.
  • The highest risk seems to be in people of Eastern European and Russian Jewish (Ashkenazi) descent.
  • Canavan disease-A serious genetic disease more common in the Eastern European Jewish population that causes mental retardation and early death.
  • Tay-Sachs disease is particularly common among Jewish people of Eastern European and Russian (Ashkenazi) origin.
  • In 1991, he joined All My Children as Dimitri Marick, an Eastern European nobleman who made Erica's heart swoon.
  • World music can means Gaelic music, Flamenco, classical Indian sitar, Eastern European folk, or reggae music, to name only a few.