low countries in English

noun
1
the region of northwestern Europe that includes the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "low countries" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "low countries", or refer to the context using the word "low countries" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Luftwaffe was assured air superiority over the Low Countries.

2. What does Brabant mean? A historic region of the Low Countries

3. Paris's influence in the Low Countries was counterbalanced by England, which maintained important ties to the coastal ports.

4. This makes it the ideal destination for a daytrip or a weekend break. Brabant, gateway to the Low Countries

5. This book features Anabaptism of the Low Countries from its earliest traceable beginnings to the end of the sixteenth century

6. Historically, especially in the Middle Ages and Early modern period, the western section has been known as the Low Countries.

7. In 1813, he came nearest to any actual fighting, when he visited the British troops fighting in the Low Countries.

8. The term “Low Countries” refers to the coastal area between Germany and France, comprising modern-day Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg.

9. The House of Valois-Burgundy and their Habsburg heirs would rule the Low Countries in the period from 1384 to 1581.

10. The Renaissance was brought to Poland directly from Italy by artists from Florence and the Low Countries, starting the Polish Renaissance.

11. Belgian horse, breed of heavy draft horse descended from the Flemish “great horse,” the medieval battle horse native to the Low Countries

12. The course of the war saw extensive fighting in Italy, France, and the Low Countries, as well as attempted invasions of Spain and England.

13. TELLY WATCH When Holland's fourth went in jabbering Jon Babbled : "Now the Scots have a mountain to climb in the Low Countries."

14. The vocal music of the Franco-Flemish School developed in the southern part of the Low Countries and was an important contribution to Renaissance culture.

15. In the case of the Low Countries / Netherlands the geographical location of the lower region has been more or less downstream and near the sea.

16. Antwerp was one of Europe's richest and most inventive cities in the 1600s and 1700s, the Golden Age of the Low Countries (Holland and Belgium)

17. Beggarly, beggarly •Biyearly, really, yearly •Beardsley • lawyerly • immediately •hourly • cowardly • surely • marbly •pebbly •neighbourly (US neighborly) •dri… Britain, Ireland, France, and the Low Countries, sure / shoŏr/ • adj

18. Carillon (plural Carillons) ( music ) A set of bells , often in a bell tower , sometimes operated by means of a keyboard (manual or pedal), originating from the Low Countries

19. A little more than a decade after the incident, in 1548, the Dutch humanist and Catholic priest Lambertus Hortensius published a scathing account of Anabaptism in the Low Countries.

20. Although the Canon held several Benefices in the Low Countries, he lived in Bruges, one of the most important ports of the Hanseatic League, a rich and thriving business centre

21. In England, his commissions included the ceiling of the Banqueting House, Whitehall, by Rubens and paintings by other artists from the Low Countries such as van Honthorst, Mytens, and van Dyck.

22. Belgic Confession, Latin Confessio Belgica, statement of the Reformed faith in 37 articles written by Guido de Brès, a Reformer in the southern Low Countries (now Belgium) and northern France.

23. Through the Spanish possessions in the Low Countries, England had close economic ties with the Spanish Habsburgs, and it was the young Henry VIII's ambition to repeat the glorious martial endeavours of his predecessors.

24. But the city of Norwich had long connections with canaries owing to its 15th and 16th century links to Flemish weavers who had imported the birds to the Low Countries from the Dutch colonies in the Caribbean.

25. The Battle of Arras took place on 21 May 1940, during the Battle of France in the Second World War.Following the German invasion of the Low Countries on 10 May, French and British forces advanced into Belgium

26. Although Beguines were most numerous and best organized in the Low Countries, similar groups of pious laywomen existed throughout the Continent, and were known as papelardae in France, pinzochere in Italy, and beatas in Spain (see e.g

27. Alternative etymology derives Middle English beggere, Beggare, beggar from Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert (“mendicant”), with pejorative suffix (see -ard

28. Alternative etymology derives Middle English beggere, Beggare, beggar from Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert (“mendicant”), with pejorative suffix (see -ard : 4

29. Brabant Name Meaning Ethnic name (in France and England as well as Germany and the Low Countries) for a native of Brabant, a medieval duchy (capital Brussels), which extended from what is now central Belgium northwards into the Netherlands

30. An adjective referring to the Belgae, an ancient confederation of tribes; a rarer adjective referring to the Low Countries or to Belgium; SS Belgic, several ships with the name Belgic ware, a type of pottery; Belgic Confession, a Christian doctrinal standard

31. A Manual of the History of the Political System of Europe and Its Colonies by Arnold Hermann Ludwig Heeren, David Alphonso Talboys (1873) "The Austrian monarchy was Aggrandized by the possession of certain provinces, of Naples, Sardinia, Milan, and the Low Countries

32. With his experience it was logical that Marlborough took charge of the 8,000 British troops sent to the Low Countries in the spring of 1689; yet throughout the Nine Years' War (1688–97) he saw only three years service in the field, and then mostly in subordinate commands.

33. Indices of more than 30 sources; Conspectuses of more than 20 sources (Missals of Scandinavia and the Baltic region, Breviaries) ORBÁN Csaba Frigyes OPraem OCsF Activities Data entry Achievements Indices of more than 60 sources; Conspectuses of more than 30 sources (Missals of Northern and Central France, the Low Countries, religious orders)

34. Operation Bodenplatte (Baseplate), launched on 1 January 1945, was an attempt by the Luftwaffe to cripple Allied air forces in the Low Countries during the Second World War.The goal of Bodenplatte was to gain air superiority during the stagnant stage of the Battle of the Bulge so that the German Army and Waffen-SS forces could resume their advance

35. From Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert "mendicant," with pejorative suffix; the order is said to be named after the Liege priest Lambert le Bègue (French for "Lambert the Stammerer"); others claim it's from Middle English beggere or Beggare, from

36. From Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert "mendicant," with pejorative suffix; the order is said to be named after the Liege priest Lambert le Bègue (French for "Lambert the Stammerer"); others claim it's from Middle English beggere or Beggare, from

37. Beguine (n.) late 15c., from French béguine (13c.), Medieval Latin beguina, "a member of a women's spiritual order professing poverty and self-denial, founded c.1180 in Liege in the Low Countries."They are said to take their name from the surname of Lambert le Bègue "Lambert the Stammerer," a Liege priest who was instrumental in their founding, and it's likely the word was pejorative at first.