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clementine

[ US /ˈkɫɛmənˌtaɪn, ˈkɫɛmənˌtin/ ]
[ UK /klˈɛmɪntˌa‍ɪn/ ]
NOUN
  1. a variety of mandarin orange that is grown around the Mediterranean and in South Africa
  2. a mandarin orange of a deep reddish orange color and few seeds

How To Use clementine In A Sentence

  • The growth curve of the fruit of Marisol clementine fitted a single sigmoid curve well.
  • Daniel, I'm not sure if I followed your point about dualism, but the Jewish Christians who produced the Pseudo-Clementine literature had a high but not Nicene Christology that was adoptionist and viewed Jesus as the legitimate son of Joseph - there's a lot of intriguing family resemblance between their views and the Gospel of John. When Did The Word Become Flesh?
  • Well, not feeling so hot that Christmas AM, I oped for simplicity - a big bowl of puffed Kamut grains and a mug of green tea, followed by a few pieces of melon from the platter, a clementine orange, and eventually a couple pieces of 70% Lindt chocolate from a bar that was in my stocking! Archive 2008-12-01
  • Score after score of decreta, decretales, Sextuses, and Clementines, and chestsful of the dreariest theological disquisition impress upon the weary searcher the fact that academic libraries were usually even more dryasdust than monastic collections, and he begins to understand how prosperous law may be as a calling, and to have an inkling of what is known, in classic phrase, as a good plain Scotch education. Old English Libraries; The Making, Collection and Use of Books During the Middle Ages
  • This time she brought sour cherries in kirsch syrup, and blood oranges in clementine syrup.
  • Demonstrators at an Almeria port last week broke open trucks and destroyed thousands of boxes of clementines from Morocco.
  • In one experiment, Clementine beamed radio signals into shadowed craters near the Moon's south pole.
  • If you can't find fresh mandarins, you can substitute canned (drain the syrup first) or clementines, another sweet, juicy member of the mandarin family.
  • Tangerines are actually a type of mandarin orange as are clementines, but here in the US, the names are used interchangeably.
  • The idea was that no one can really tell the difference between a clementine, a satsuma and a mandarin.
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