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Recent Examples of dachaYevgeny, 24, quit his job as a mechanic and is hiding at a relative’s dacha far from Moscow.—
Natalia Abbakumova,
Washington Post,
16 Oct. 2022 Putin could then be forced to retire, like Khrushchev, to a dacha in the countryside.—
Scott D. Sagan,
Foreign Affairs,
16 Mar. 2022 Stalin was encouraging but noncommittal, parking Mao in a dacha outside Moscow while hard bargaining dragged on for weeks.—
Michael Schuman,
The Atlantic,
9 Mar. 2022 At my family’s dacha on the outskirts of Moscow, much of our summer abundance from the garden is canned, pickled, frozen, or somehow preserved for the long winter ahead.—
Irina Groushevaia,
Bon Appétit,
24 Feb. 2022 See All Example Sentences for dacha
Sinister Wisdom operated out of a little white brick cottage Nicholson bought in East Charlotte at 3116 Country Club Drive, which Mecklenburg County added to its prospective historic landmark list in 2021 to be considered for the designation.
—
Laura Horne,
Charlotte Observer,
30 June 2026
There are also plenty of other lodging configurations across the vast property, including full-sized cottages.
In 2015, he was charged in Amador County in connection with a strip poker game at a youth camp, ultimately pleading no contest two years later to providing alcohol to a minor.
—
Sharon Bernstein,
Sacbee.com,
30 June 2026
Some of them have been training together for nearly two months because Aguirre arranged a monthlong training camp ahead of the World Cup.
Beneath the cabin’s modest character is a geothermal system, which uses the steady temperature of the ground to help heat and cool the home.
—
Bridget Borgobello
July 03,
New Atlas,
4 July 2026
When tragedy struck, the couple was at their own cabin, while Brooke and Blair were staying with their grandparents Mike, 77, and Charlene Harber, 75, at a friend's place a couple of doors down.
Travelers are also paying more for luxurious experiences, such as staying in their own over-water bungalow in the Maldives.
—
Kathleen Wong,
USA Today,
29 June 2026
The Pope, Leo XIV, is an American from Chicago’s bungalow belt, and, after him, the second most prominent American Catholic is Vance himself—a youngish convert from small-town evangelical Protestantism, a Marine veteran, and an alumnus of Ohio State and Yale Law.