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The phrase "allow pyongyang" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing permissions or actions related to Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea.
Example: "The international community must consider whether to allow Pyongyang to participate in the upcoming negotiations."
Alternatives: "permit Pyongyang" or "let Pyongyang".
Exact(3)
Direct food shipments from abroad, if that transpired, would allow Pyongyang to avoid such scrutiny.
It is safer to allow Pyongyang another hollow victory than to humiliate it before the world.
A visit would only allow Pyongyang to neglect its relations with South Korea, slowing negotiations on issues like reduction of tensions and promotion of family reunions.
Similar(57)
Some analysts contend that these kinds of programmes are too small to bring about change in North Korea – and that's part of the reason why Pyongyang allows them to happen.
The US State Department said Pyongyang had also agreed to allow UN inspectors to monitor its reactor in Yongbyon to verify compliance with the measures.
If Pyongyang wanted to open up, the authorities could allow more access, even if it is under a more intense system of restriction than the Chinese currently use.
PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — A private delegation to North Korea that includes Google's executive chairman, Eric E. Schmidt, is urging North Korea to allow more open Internet access and cellphones, although it is unclear how that message is being heard by a leadership that has long depended on a near-total ban on outside information to maintain its totalitarian rule.
I'm glad to hear it, since Restaurant Pyongyang employees are not allowed to leave the property until they go back to North Korea.
Pyongyang-based diplomats, of course, are allowed to know little of ordinary life in North Korea; they live in a world of rumour and propaganda.
"While it is too soon to reach a definitive conclusion, new evidence is accumulating that suggests: 1) the shutdown may have allowed the North to remove a limited number of fuel rods, possibly failed, from the reactor; and 2) Pyongyang may be preparing to restart the Radiochemical Laboratory, which separates weapons-grade plutonium from waste products in spent nuclear fuel rods," the analysts said.
7 p.m. 8) COMMUNIST KITCHEN There's no need to reserve a table at Restaurant Pyongyang (4 Airport Road 855-63-760-260 855-63-760-260 855-63-760-260 855-63-760-260
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com