mara


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  • noun

Synonyms for mara

hare-like rodent of the pampas of Argentina

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
It turns out, however, that the club owner's wife sympathises with Mara's plight, because she has been in such an ill-fated situation herself.
But despite negative reports of packed, camo-clad minibuses distressing wildlife, the National reserve is still teeming with game, and is also the only place to watch the Mara River's famous migration crossings.
Following that announcement came the news that Diamond had hired John Vitalo for the post of CEO of Atlas Mara. Vitalo joins the new institution from Barclays where he had held a number of senior managerial positions, including, most recently, as Chief Executive Officer, Middle East and North Africa since 2009.
Atlas Mara is the first listed cash shell targeting the banking industry in Africa.
With easy access to the Olurruk Mara Airstrip, The Address Masai Mara will target safari tourists to the Masai Mara.
MARA Systems Sales Manager Cesar Reis explains: "Nowadays, video and other media content delivered over the internet from sites such as YouTube often account for a significant amount of user traffic."
To become Lisbeth, Mara had to prove she shared her mettle.
"[He] cut my hair, shaved the sides, bleached the eyebrows, then dyed my hair black," Fox News quoted Mara as telling Vogue magazine.
Michael Francis Mara is so genial, authorities say, that even as he was robbing a bank, the cashier recalled he "looked like he was somebody's granddaddy".
While helping her sister find her toy on the shores of what the Europeans called Florida Elanu-Y-Mara or Mara is captured by pirates and taken aboard a slaver called the Devil Ray.
Twenty St Mark's parishioners - including the vicar, the Rev Jim Hunt - joined the capacity congregation, which included representatives from the 90 parishes with links to Mara, in Tanzania, East Africa.
Mara's Stories is a startling reminder of the children condemned to concentration camps, children who were housed with their mothers in the barracks.
"Eyes of the Calusa" by Holly Moulder is the story of Mara, a Calusa Indian from the southwest coast of Florida, who is captured by pirates and sold into slavery.