relating to or characteristic of a nation; common to a whole nation
a city in southwestern California, south of San Diego, site of numerous naval facilities; population 58,680 (est. 2008)
the total amount of money which a country’s government has borrowed
the network of high-voltage power lines between major power stations
the body controlling steeplechasing and hurdle racing in Great Britain
an area of countryside, or occasionally sea or fresh water, protected by the state for the enjoyment of the general public or the preservation of wildlife
a historic highway that in the early 19th century led from Maryland through the Appalachian Mountains to St. Louis in Missouri. It was once the major route for western expansion
an annual horse race established in 1839, a steeplechase run over a course of 4 miles 856 yards (about 7,200 metres) with thirty jumps, at Aintree, Liverpool, in late March or early April
a large expanse of forest that is owned, maintained, and preserved by the federal government
a right-wing UK political party, formed in 1967, with extreme reactionary views on immigration
(in the US) the primary reserve military force partly maintained by the states but also available for federal use
one of the two major leagues in American professional baseball
an Australian political party established in 1914 (as the Country Party) to represent agricultural and rural interests
a political party that held power in South Africa from 1948 until the country’s first democratic elections in 1994. Formed in 1914 as an Afrikaner party, it favoured racial segregation and instituted apartheid
a trust for the preservation of places of historic interest or natural beauty in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, founded in 1895 and supported by endowment and private subscription. The National Trust for Scotland was founded in 1931
a person who is not a naturalized citizen of the country in which they are living