Nicosia
[ nik-uh-see-uh ]
/ ˌnɪk əˈsi ə /
noun
a city on and the capital of Cyprus, in the central part.
Definition for nicosia (2 of 2)
Cyprus
[ sahy-pruh s ]
/ ˈsaɪ prəs /
noun
an island republic in the Mediterranean, S of Turkey: formerly a British colony; independent since 1960. 3572 sq. mi. (9250 sq. km). Capital: Nicosia.
OTHER WORDS FROM Cyprus
pro-Cy·prus, adjectiveExample sentences from the Web for nicosia
British Dictionary definitions for nicosia (1 of 2)
Nicosia
/ (ˌnɪkəˈsiːə, -ˈsɪə) /
noun
the capital of Cyprus, in the central part on the Pedieos River: capital since the 10th century. Pop (Greek and Turkish): 211 000 (2005 est)
Greek name: Levkosia, Leukosia Turkish name: Lefkoşa
British Dictionary definitions for nicosia (2 of 2)
Cyprus
/ (ˈsaɪprəs) /
noun
an island in the E Mediterranean: ceded to Britain by Turkey in 1878 and made a colony in 1925; became an independent republic in 1960 as a member of the Commonwealth; invaded by Turkey in 1974 following a Greek-supported military coup, leading to the partition of the island. In 1983 the Turkish-controlled northern sector declared itself to be an independent state as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus but failed to receive international recognition. Attempts by the UN to broker a reunification agreement have failed. Cyprus joined the EU in 2004. The UK maintains two enclaves as military bases (Akrotiri and Dhekelia Sovereign Base Areas), which are not included in Cyprus politically. Languages: Greek and Turkish. Religions: Greek Orthodox and Muslim. Currency: euro and Turkish lira. Capital: Nicosia. Pop (Greek): 838 897 (2011 est); (Turkish): 265 100 (2006 est). Area: 9251 sq km (3571 sq miles)
Cultural definitions for nicosia
Cyprus
Island republic in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, south of Turkey and west of Syria. Nicosia is its capital and largest city.
notes for Cyprus
People of Greek origin make up four-fifths of the population, and those of Turkish origin compose the other fifth. Conflict between the two led to a Turkish invasion that divided the island in the 1970s.