Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

the City
the Crane
the Depression
the English
the Fates
the Gloomy Dean
the Great Calamity
the Great Commoner
the Great Compromiser
the Great Depression
the Great Elector
the Great Hunger
the Great Starvation
the Green, White and Gold
the Hill
the Himalaya (current term)
the Indies
the Irish
the Irish Famine
the Iron Duke
the Jersey Lillie
the King of Swing
the Kingmaker
the Lady with the Lamp
the Little Corporal
the Nazarene
the Say Hey Kid
the Shiites
the Solent
the Street

Literary usage of

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Proceedings by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), Norton Shaw, Francis Galton, William Spottiswoode, Clements Robert Markham, Henry Walter Bates, John Scott Keltie (1884)
"Tlie Mountain Systems of the Himalaya and neighbouring Hanges of India. By Lieut.-Col. HH GOD WIN-AUSTEN, FBS, &c. Map and Sections, p. 112. ..."

2. The Edinburgh Review by Sydney Smith (1833)
"Excursions in India, including a Walk over the Himalaya Mountains to the Sources of the ... Tours in Upper India, and in Parts of the Himalaya Mountains; ..."

3. The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review by Isaac Smith Homans, William B. Dana (1854)
"The Himalaya is said to be the largest steamship in the world. ... The Himalaya is a screw steamer built of iron, and has engines of 7UO horse power. ..."

4. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1908)
"A MOUNTAINEERING EXPEDITION TO THE HIMALAYA OF GARHWAL.* By TG LONGSTAFF, M D. IT is probably from the snowy ranges of Garhwal that the words 11 ..."

5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and (1910)
"But the contrast between the Himalaya and the Peninsula is not confined to their ... In the Himalaya the geological sequence, from the Ordovician to the ..."

6. The American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by Charles Anderson Dana (1874)
"The mighty ridges which rise above the plains of Thibet, and run parallel to the Himalaya from NW to SE, compel both the Indus and ..."

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