「foreign」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)21ページ目
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Nirupama Rao-current | foreign secretary of India |
British | Foreign Secretary David Miliband urged the immediate |
and was elected vice-president (1919-20) and | foreign secretary (1920-24). |
Former Indian | foreign secretary and ambassador to the United States |
assist the former British prime minister and | foreign secretary Sir Anthony Eden with his memoirs. |
She was the wife of Labour | Foreign Secretary, Michael Stewart. |
Najmudddin Shaikh, Former | Foreign Secretary, Pakistan |
In his two brief terms as | foreign secretary, Malmesbury pursued a cautious, Con |
Lord Curzon, the British | Foreign Secretary, was the co-ordinator of the confer |
statesman Viscount Palmerston, who served as | Foreign Secretary, Home Secretary and Prime Minister. |
Ernest Bevin: | Foreign Secretary, 1945-1951 (1983) on British roles |
rey Howe, former Chancellor of the Exchequer, | Foreign Secretary, Leader of the House of Commons, an |
tic Service where he was speech writer to the | Foreign Secretary, George Brown. |
e was unveiled by David Miliband, then the UK | Foreign Secretary, on 19 March 2010. |
Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon, three times | Foreign Secretary, was his grandfather. |
The United Kingdom's | Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, said that his coun |
In 1925, the British | Foreign Secretary, Sir Austen Chamberlain had famousl |
He privately opposed the policy of the | Foreign Secretary, Sir Samuel Hoare, of trying to app |
After his term as | Foreign Secretary, he was appointed Ambassador to Vie |
Lord Palmerston, who took over as British | Foreign Secretary, agreed to the Arta-Volos borderlin |
David Miliband, former UK | foreign secretary, has similarly called the strategy |
r 1940: Anthony Eden succeeds Lord Halifax as | Foreign Secretary. |
who held several Cabinet positions, including | Foreign Secretary. |
805 - Lord Mulgrave succeeds Lord Harrowby as | Foreign Secretary. |
to Prime Minister of India and former Indian | foreign secretary. |
nd future Prime Minister the Earl of Rosebery | Foreign Secretary. |
irst Cabinet, was returned to his position as | Foreign Secretary. |
Seal before becoming de facto England's first | Foreign Secretary. |
as Secretary of State for the Colonies and as | Foreign Secretary. |
decides that such things are better left the | Foreign Secretary. |
Exchequer while Sir Anthony Eden returned as | Foreign Secretary. |
Afghanistan border on the direct order of the | Foreign Secretary. |
ecretary from 1848 until 1858, when he became | foreign secretary. |
Lord Clarendon succeeds him as | Foreign Secretary. |
he returned to International Headquarters as | Foreign Secretary. |
f the Hoare-Laval Pact, Eden succeeded him as | Foreign Secretary. |
In 1950 he became the head of the | foreign section of the UHVR which he chaired until 19 |
Bhutto also contracted | foreign security firms for her protection. |
hines constantly help to reduce the number of | foreign seeds gathered. |
As they improve, the amount of | foreign seeds they may pick up decreases. |
Foreign seeds can be caught anywhere, including these | |
in became editor and proprietor of Campbell's | Foreign Semi-Monthly Magazine in 1843. |
Shaikh joined the | Foreign Service of Pakistan in 1961. |
danger, reflexive accusations of it can deter | Foreign Service Officers from providing accurate anal |
He passed Japan's | foreign service examinations and joined the foreign s |
George Washington University, then joined the | Foreign Service in 1941. |
Royal Navy from 1953 to 1955, and entered the | Foreign Service in 1958. |
training for the development of United States | Foreign Service and Civil Service professionals, and |
as the Director General of the United States | Foreign Service and Director of Human Resources. |
e Department in 1962, serving until 1970 as a | Foreign Service Officer. |
ity of Rome La Sapienza he joined the Italian | foreign service in 1958. |
His postings in the | foreign service included ambassadorships to Ethiopia |
Choi has served in various capacities in the | foreign service of the Republic of Korea. |
Patterson entered the | Foreign Service in 1973. |
Johnson entered the | Foreign Service in 1935. |
He resigned from the | foreign service in disgust at the U.S. intervention t |
ownfield's first assignment after joining the | Foreign Service in 1979 was in Maracaibo, Venezuela. |
A career | Foreign Service Officer, William Brownfield is the fo |
ng professor at the Edmund A. Walsh School of | Foreign Service at Georgetown University. |
born 1949) is an American diplomat and career | Foreign Service Officer. |
eak of World War II, Salinas joined the U. S. | Foreign Service and was a special assistant to the am |
After continuing his | foreign service career in Hong Kong he returned to Ja |
His father was a U.S. | Foreign Service officer, and he spent his childhood i |
January 27, 2011) was a former United States | Foreign Service Officer and diplomat. |
Lake joined the | Foreign Service in 1962. |
His brother, Malcolm, was a | Foreign Service officer who represented New Zealand a |
As a | Foreign Service Officer, he was posted to Belgrade, Y |
received a State Department appointment as a | Foreign Service Officer. |
He joined the State Department as a | Foreign Service Officer in December of that year. |
After joining the | Foreign Service he served in several foreign countrie |
Menzies served in U.S. | Foreign Service posts in Hungary, East Germany, and B |
He was also chairman of the | Foreign Service Buildings Commission from 1926 to 193 |
Marian Dobson Duffel (1918-2010) | Foreign Service medical officer for the United States |
The current Director of the | Foreign Service Institute is Dr. Ruth A. Whiteside. |
er to serve as governor; he was a diplomat, a | foreign service officer |
Prior to that he served as a | Foreign Service Officer from 1962 to 1969, with assig |
Members to the | foreign service are selected every few years after an |
a following his graduation from the School of | Foreign Service at Georgetown University. |
the pseudonym of Carel Jan Schneider, a Dutch | foreign service diplomat and writer. |
an, French, and Russian<Ref: State Department | Foreign Service Institute> |
In 1996 Berg left the | foreign service for good, and became an adviser for c |
An Accidental Diplomat: My Years in the Irish | Foreign Service 1987-1995 (ISBN 1-902602-39-0). |
He joined the U.S. | foreign service in 1980. |
w degree, he scored third in his class on the | foreign service exam. |
From 1960 to 1963, he was a | Foreign Service Officer with the Department of Extern |
llege and New College, Oxford and joinned the | Foreign Service in 1951. |
Casey joined the | Foreign Service in 1988 and was first posted to the U |
Francisco, California before he joined the US | Foreign Service in 1994. |
nd at Harrow, he entered the Austro-Hungarian | foreign service and served subsequently in a number o |
tudied at the Georgetown University School of | Foreign Service from 1951-55. |
For twenty-two years, he served as a | Foreign Service officer with the U.S. Department of S |
He joined the U.S. | foreign service in 1949. |
Efird joined the United States | Foreign Service in 1977. |
He was the general inspector of the Norwegian | foreign service from 1986 to 1989 and the Norwegian a |
ommercial Studies Program at the Department's | Foreign Service Institute. |
graduated from the Edmund A. Walsh School of | Foreign Service with a Bachelor of Science in Foreign |
It is administered by the American | Foreign Service Association and each year honors the |
1957: Entered the United States | Foreign Service |
He re-entered the | foreign service in 1948. |
In 1920 he began a career in the | foreign service that would last four decades. |
A career | Foreign Service Officer, she was the United States Am |
or to be appointed as Director General of the | Foreign Service and the first African-American Direct |
Ronald K. McMullen is an American | foreign service officer and a career member of the Se |
orld War I, studied law and joined the German | Foreign Service in 1922. |
ed the United States Department of State as a | Foreign Service Officer in 1970. |
ons worldwide since joining the United States | Foreign Service in 1976. |
Pub. L. 96-465 - The | Foreign Service Act of 1980 - Oct. 17, 1980 |
Party out of power in 1953-1961, he left the | foreign service and returned to private life. |
He retired a Career Minister in the | Foreign Service and remained in Sri Lanka until 2006, |
In 1949, Duke joined the United States | Foreign Service an assistant in Buenos Aires and subs |
t was published in the November 1962 issue of | Foreign Service Journal, a monthly publication that c |
Muphy started his career in the United States | Foreign Service as Vice Consul in Salisbury, Rhodesia |
In 1950, Luard joined the | Foreign Service and after learning Chinese he was sta |
William J. Duiker is a former United States | Foreign Service officer and Professor of History at P |
He entered the US | Foreign Service in 1965 as Foreign Service officer-ge |
ctober 7, 1962) was a long-time United States | foreign service officer and diplomat. |
In 1971 he started as an officer of the | Foreign Service of Pakistan, he has also worked on va |
He later worked with the | foreign service in Nicosia, Cyprus, and The Hague. |
attended the Georgetown University School of | Foreign Service and graduated in 1966 with a Bachelor |
He received a Professional Association of | Foreign Service Officers (PAFSO) Award in 2003. |
his studies at Oxford, he joined the Canadian | Foreign Service in 1991. |
He joined the | Foreign Service in 1974. |
Training is carried out at the | Foreign Service Institute (FSI) of the United States |
ho held several high ranking posts in Turkish | foreign service and was assassinated by Armenian terr |
He joined the | Foreign Service in 1977. |
U.S. State Department and served in the U.S. | Foreign Service in many postings overseas. |
9, later becoming an official of the American | Foreign Service Association. |
Boucher is a | Foreign Service Officer with the personal rank of Car |
He also served as a | foreign service officer in Africa, including posts in |
Clarence Brown, retired | Foreign Service officer |
In 2004, Grossman attained the | Foreign Service's highest rank when the President app |
He briefly considered joining the U.S. | Foreign Service, but instead returned to Tulsa in 196 |
Before entering the | Foreign Service, Mr. Burns worked as Program Officer |
In 1775 he gained his first experience of | foreign service, joining HMS Martin on the Newfoundla |
Chiang began his career in the | foreign service, serving in the ROC embassy in Washin |
After retiring from the | Foreign Service, he became the head of the Hong Kong |
During twelve years with the Canadian | foreign service, MacLaren's postings included Hanoi, |
Foreign Service, based currently in Lima, Peru. | |
At the age of 20, he joined the | foreign service, and was posted as under-secretary to |
After his retirement from the | foreign service, he joined the staff at the Universit |
Her father was in the United States | Foreign Service, and she moved to Austria when she wa |
Joined | Foreign Service, 1933; FO 1933-36; Vienna, 1936-37; T |
After the EEAS, the EU's | foreign service, was formally established in December |
ed magna cum laude in 1977 from the School of | Foreign Service. |
Since 1993, he has been working in the U.S. | Foreign Service. |
In 1963, he joined the United States | Foreign Service. |
In 1912 he was hired in the Norwegian | foreign service. |
s served as a career diplomat in the Pakistan | Foreign Service. |
le in Hyderabad and joined the nascent Indian | Foreign Service. |
He later joined the United States | Foreign Service. |
She is a career member of the Senior | Foreign Service. |
ntil 1937, the year he applied for the German | Foreign Service. |
taught at the Georgetown University School of | Foreign Service. |
olumbia University and went on to work in the | Foreign Service. |
y held a variety of positions within the U.S. | foreign service. |
he 24th Director General of the United States | Foreign Service. |
mitter was operated on the site by the Soviet | Foreign Service. |
Six years later, Ernest joined the | Foreign Service. |
In 1998, she joined the Korea | Foreign Service. |
In 1959, he joined the United States | Foreign Service. |
In 1958, Dyess joined the United States | Foreign Service. |
r was American, and her father worked for the | Foreign Service. |
s, as her parents served in the United States | Foreign Service. |
ommended drastic changes to the United States | Foreign Service. |
serving in the Department of State within the | Foreign Service. |
5) was a career diplomat in the United States | foreign service. |
in out of power, he was again out of the U.S. | Foreign Service. |
mad has been a frequent guest lecturer at the | Foreign Services Institute. |
Also other | foreign services were not interested in using the fac |
002, she became a career member of the Senior | Foreign Services and a career Ambassador. |
Her use of | foreign settings and androgynous themes made The Rose |
area was inhabited mostly by castle serfs and | foreign settlers (Pechenegs, Walloons, Czechs and Ger |
city rights in 1498, the town attracted many | foreign settlers, most notably Jewish and Armenian. |
orean garrison would shoot at any approaching | foreign ship. |
The most famous incident was the firing on | foreign shipping in the Shimonoseki Strait off Choshu |
36, and in 1844 Angola's ports were opened to | foreign shipping. |
The U.S. Jones Act prohibits the use of | foreign ships and foreign crews in port-to-port shipp |
thought to have been the first bombardment by | foreign ships on Japan. |
When the armistice ended, | foreign ships abandoned the harbour of Gaeta. |
She was one of 84 | foreign ships seized by the United States under the S |
Occasionally she sighted | foreign ships such as the Peruvian Penaun and the Uru |
he course of action was therefore to keep the | foreign ships and their crews as "guests" of the Unit |
he Meiji period and was built for the sake of | foreign ships travelling to Japan. |
t the time, the port of Sakai was not open to | foreign ships, and the Tosa troops were in charge of |
United Kingdom, including crimes committed on | foreign ships. |
are eligible to seek employment on Indian or | foreign ships. |
Again ordered to | foreign shore duty in December 1928, he arrived in Co |
Did you ever see two Yankees part upon a | foreign shore |
They encountered on a | foreign shore |
Best Sex Scene In a | Foreign Shot Production - Euro Domination |
2009 AVN Award nominee - Best Sex Scene In A | Foreign Shot Production - Cherry Jul's Extreme Gangba |
2000 AVN Award - Best Sex Scene in a | Foreign Shot Production - When Rocco Meats Kelly 2 |
2009 AVN Award - Best Sex Scene In A | Foreign Shot Production - Ass Traffic 3 |
2009 AVN Award nominee - Best Sex Scene In A | Foreign Shot Production - Cherry Jul's Extreme Gangba |
2009 AVN Award winner - Best Sex Scene In A | Foreign Shot Production - Ass Traffic 3 |
ime in Ceylon/Sri Lanka, only matches against | foreign sides were classified as 1st class.) |
s accent can lead her to being mistaken for a | foreign singer. |
ttended performances that included Jewish and | foreign singers, long after they had been banned from |
dsay Anderson documented the tour in his film | Foreign Skies. |
thenaeus, an Argive; according to Plutarch, a | foreign slave bought from the marketplace. |
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