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Taranto

[tah-rahn-taw, tahr-uhn-toh, tar-, tuh-ran-toh]

noun

  1. Ancient Tarentuma fortified seaport in SE Italy, on the Gulf of Taranto: founded by the Greeks in the 8th century b.c.; naval base.

  2. Gulf of, an arm of the Ionian Sea, in S Italy. 85 miles (137 km) long.



Taranto

/ ˈtaːranto, təˈræntəʊ /

noun

  1. Latin name: Tarentuma port in SE Italy, in Apulia on the Gulf of Taranto (an inlet of the Ionian Sea): the chief city of Magna Graecia; taken by the Romans in 272 bc . Pop: 202 033 (2001)

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Taranto called the 1977 law “an eyes-open congressional grant of broad emergency authority in this foreign-affairs realm” that said the president may “regulate” the “importation” of dangerous products including drugs coming into this country.

He said he found the dog - who, he says, he saw as a "brother" - on Friday morning in his kennel at the Endas search and rescue training centre in Taranto, Puglia.

From BBC

"Our study offers a vivid picture of communities using the cereals they cultivated to prepare breads and 'focaccias' enriched with various ingredients and consumed in groups," explains Sergio Taranto, lead author of the study, part of a doctoral thesis carried out at the UAB and La Sapienza.

This year, the club scene staples led by singer/multi-instrumentalist Jenn Taranto uncorked their first full-length set of swirling dream-pop, released through France’s Icy Cold Records and Seattle’s estimable cassette label Den Tapes.

In Julius Taranto’s debut novel, ‘How I Won a Nobel Prize,’ a physicist follows her mentor to a university staffed with canceled luminaries.

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