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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "jamaica" in a sentence

    jamaica example sentences

    jamaica


    1. She is from Jamaica and she also loosely Nigeria is her muse, this is where many of her stories take


    2. Bog Walk is a tropical watershed forest, and another attraction is Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge


    3. North America, for example, than in that to Jamaica


    4. If the tobacco of Virginia had been purchased, not with British manufactures, but with the sugar and rum of Jamaica, which had been purchased with those manufactures, he must wait for the returns of three


    5. Their consumption increases so fast, that, though in consequence of the increasing improvement of Jamaica, as well as of the ceded islands, the importation of sugar has increased very greatly within these twenty years, the exportation to foreign countries is said to be not much greater than before


    6. They had a commonality of a love for baseball, which was the only sport that Martin had had any success with as a teenager in Jamaica


    7. The returns from the great island of Jamaica, where there is still much uncultivated land, have, upon this account, been, in general, more irregular and uncertain than those from the smaller islands of Barbadoes, Antigua, and St


    8. Vincent's, and Dominica, have opened a new field for speculations of this kind ; and the returns front those islands have of late been as irregular and uncertain as those from the great island of Jamaica


    9. Later in the century, more Blacks, these from Jamaica, were brought into the country to build a railroad into the interior that would connect the port of Limon with San José


    10. Marijuana had long been in common use with the native people, and the Blacks from Jamaica had brought Rastafarianism, which encouraged and even glorified its use

    11. He'd heard about Shorty, and bolted the cruise at Jamaica


    12. They were even known to lead uprisings – and so the practice had been banned in Jamaica during the colonial period


    13. Laws had been created to stop the practice, and even though nowadays it was still illegal in Jamaica, Obeah was still very popular, especially among rural folks


    14. Flag decals for Jamaica and other Caribbean islands were proudly displayed on the windshields of cars that sat outside some of the houses


    15. Manda told her about her life in England, and Angie responded with tales about her own life in New York and what things had been like for her in Jamaica


    16. Remember that last hurricane that did nearly mash up Jamaica? Some people think it was Obeah that cause it


    17. She had been seven-years-old the summer their parents had sent them out to Jamaica, and she had hated every minute of the trip


    18. Manda could see why so many people made Jamaica their favorite holiday spot


    19. For a moment, she forgot why she had come to Jamaica


    20. The trip to Jamaica had been a success

    21. grabbed a book (The History Of Jamaica), walked up to Charlie Brown and said in a low


    22. for that blood you wouldn’t exist?’ And with the help of The History Of Jamaica he drove that


    23. churches in Jamaica they had to randomly show up in, and off all the roads on which


    24. Rios, a major tourist area on the north coast of Jamaica


    25. parts of Jamaica where most of the rich Embassy diplomats lived


    26. who were sent to Jamaica to assist the government with various projects


    27. From the moment she’d stepped foot on Jamaica she hated


    28. She lived in the US with her mother and would only come down to Jamaica


    29. when everyone in all of Jamaica seemed to come down to this one bank to waste their time


    30. Most of what he’d experienced living in Jamaica had already been

    31. her during her time in Jamaica


    32. returning to Jamaica was to make an appointment with a gynaecologist, who confirmed that I


    33. At that time a trend was growing in Jamaica where people would travel to the free-


    34. attending my first class Harry informed me that his contract in Jamaica was due to expire in


    35. almost forty years in Jamaica and had returned to her homeland


    36. goods she bought she could bring back to sell in Jamaica


    37. When she returned to Jamaica


    38. But before I could I had to return to Jamaica to see my sisters for one last time


    39. back in Jamaica were aware of this


    40. I had planned to use Zen to get Daveda and me out of Jamaica, but in the end he’d been

    41. Due to its English-influenced history, Jamaica shares the motherland’s


    42. Jan stayed in Jamaica with us for ten days


    43. A stranger to Jamaica who knew mostly


    44. Jamaica, for all its poverty and


    45. Even Joyce came to visit from Jamaica


    46. Life was still hard in Jamaica and many a time you had to stand in


    47. money? The last thing I remember him asking as he leaned over me was what Jamaica was


    48. up back in Jamaica with a young daughter to raise with only Major to turn to


    49. had I made my way out of Jamaica, but I was married, had two children and my own house


    50. I decided to ask my sister Grace, who at the time was still living in Jamaica,






































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    "jamaica" definitions

    a country on the island of Jamaica; became independent of England in 1962; much poverty; the major industry is tourism


    an island in the West Indies to the south of Cuba and to the west of Haiti