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Kissinger
[kis-uhn-jer]
noun
Henry Alfred, 1923–2023, U.S. statesman, born in Germany: U.S. secretary of state 1973–77; Nobel Peace Prize 1973.
Kissinger
/ ˈɪɪԻə /
noun
Henry ( Alfred ). born 1923, US academic and diplomat, born in Germany; assistant to President Nixon for national security affairs (1969–75); Secretary of State (1973–77): shared the Nobel peace prize 1973
Example Sentences
Rubio is the first person to hold both roles simultaneously since Henry Kissinger molded Nixon's foreign policy into his own ghoulish image.
That gives new meaning to the quip once offered by Henry Kissinger, in a different context: “It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be America’s friend is fatal.”
It was an earlier US President, Richard Nixon, and his secretary of state Henry Kissinger who had laid the groundwork for wooing what was then Mao's China.
American diplomat Henry Kissinger frequently picked up a racquet, as did many of the other high-profile visitors.
University of Oxford Associate Professor of Quantum Computing Aleks Kissinger said the new chip was "very promising".
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