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Meaning of Côte d'Ivoiran | Babel Free

Adjective CEFR B2

Definitions

Adjective. [B2]

Examples

“Local community employees are defined across our sites as follows: […] Bonikro – Employees with Côte d’Ivoiran nationality.”
“This being said, there are several suitable conclusions to be made about Franco-Ivorian economic ties. Firstly, French monopolies over logistics and utilities are explicit. It can be inferred from that, that French companies receive special treatment from the Côte d’Ivoiran government, mostly in the form of favorable contracts.”
“The initial two laboratory confirmed cases of Lassa fever in Ghana were both fatal and originated in the Ashanti region at the end of 2011, approximately 200 km away from the Côte d’Ivoiran border (Dzotsi et al. 2012).”
“According to the research funding database Dimensions, there are currently 36 active grants focused on maternal mortality in rural communities. The geographic spread is broader than the studies we already have on the ISRCTN Registry – with projects involving Native American, Bangladeshi, Côte d'Ivoiran and Ethiopian populations, though most of the funding is being directed towards studies within the USA.”
“He feels his grandmother may also be of partial Ghanaian or Cote d’Ivoiran descent because those are the only places where he sees people who look like her and her several siblings.”
“Mr President, I would also like to give you an update on my call for asylum for Cote d’Ivoiran President Laurent Gbagbo and first lady Simone Gbagbo as a way to end the ongoing bloodshed, and begin the reconciliation process that this country so desperately needs and deserves.”
“The Senufo Female Statue, carved by an artist known as the Master of Sikasso, is a Cote d’Ivoiran rare piece that sold for a record $12 million last November.”
“We were the leading producers and exporters of cocoa and oil palm produce in the Western and the Eastern regions, respectively. It is painfully funny that we speak of the glorious days of our great country in the past tense. The groundnut pyramids are buried in the wombs of history; we import our oil palm products from Malaysia and Cote d’Ivoiran cocoa farmers laugh in the faces of our impoverished cocoa farmers.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.

See also

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