Similar words: bottom line, streamline, streamlined, abraham lincoln, trembling, dreamlike, remit, remand. Meaning: ['kremlɪn] n. 1. citadel of Moscow, housing the offices of the Russian government 2. citadel of a Russian town.
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61. The new rulers in the Kremlin had launched the policy of perestroika, in fact a retreat in internal and foreign policy from the logic of the Cold War.
62. This election season, the Kremlin went out of its way to prevent a true liberal, center-right party from running in the Duma elections.
63. After a stop to lay a wreath at Russia's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Mr. Obama will head to the Kremlin for a private meeting with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev.
64. Furnished in Russian imperial style, the 2,370 sq ft suite has views of famous Moscow sites including the Kremlin and Red Square.
65. A pragmatic choice, the Brits said, though royalists blamed a secret Kremlin hand in British policy.
66. The Kremlin be fed up with endless new demands and delays.
67. Why did the right wing have so much power within the Kremlin?
68. The Kremlin also opposes a U.S. plan to deploy a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic to offset a potential threat from Iran.
69. Only a few months before the hijacking attempt,[http://sentencedict.com/kremlin.html] the Kremlin had called for a public relations counteroffensive that would paint Zionism as “a vanguard of imperialism.”
70. She also wrote critically about the arrest and trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the oil tycoon jailed after falling out with the Kremlin.
71. But the further he went, the more interested he became in the growing crowds about the Kremlin, and he forgot to keep up the sedateness and deliberation characteristic of grown-up people.
72. The Kremlin has become more candid about the severity of their economic condition.
73. Presidential economic advisor Andrei Illarionov, the lone dissenter in the Kremlin on most aspects of its economic policy, has resigned, Russian news agencies reported Tuesday.
74. Barring some kind of revolution, this amounts to the prospect of another Kremlin leader for life, a tradition that stretches back 450 years to the reign of Ivan the Terrible, Russia's first Czar.
75. But Yevgeny Volk says Kremlin talk of diversification and mobility amounts to sloganeering.
76. The Kremlin has massively rewritten history, approving textbooks that rehabilitate Stalin as an effective manager.
77. In the Kremlin, the rulership by committee will bring more jockeying for power.
78. Some experts say it's a stage-managed Kremlin theater production, a "good cop, bad cop" act designed to keep the opposition off-guard and the public guessing.
79. Mystifying deals and decisions suggest that the money trail runs all the way to the Kremlin.
80. On Christmas Day in 1991, the Hammer and Sickle Flag of the Soviet Union was lowered for the last time above the Kremlin and replaced with the Russian flag.
81. That, plus infighting or palace coups inside the Kremlin, where Russia's real political competition takes place.
82. Medvedev also repeated Moscow's insistence that a deal must be linked to U.S. plans for a missile defense system in Europe — a plan that has infuriated the Kremlin.
83. On Friday at the Valdai club, Mr. Putin ruled out competing against Mr. Medvedev, his hand-picked Kremlin successor, in Russia's 2012 presidential elections.
84. Another document is a note from the head of the KGB in 1959 informing then Kremlin leader Nikita Khrushchev that important Katyn files had been destroyed.
85. But none of this stops Kremlin from being anti - American and autocratic.
86. The coincidence of the two shows exemplifies the glitzy entertainment and sabre-rattling that are so close in Kremlin ideology.
87. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has dismissed military intelligence service, the Kremlin has said.
88. Kremlin officials dismiss talk of dead ends as pointless whining and alarmism from liberals.
89. There are echoes here of the last Kremlin - dweller who embraced pragmatic foreign relations Mikhail Gorbachev.
90. When I recall these events after 40 years, I see not only revolt, but also the great illusion that it might be possible to outfox the Kremlin and painlessly move society from communism to democracy.