Use "germanic" in a sentence

1. Alaric A Germanic name for males

2. Alsace is the Germanic region of France

3. From Old Norse Buskr, from Proto-Germanic *buskaz.

4. Alsatian is a Germanic dialect spoken in Alsace

5. Burty is an English name of Germanic origin

6. Arno is both a surname and a Germanic given name (Germanic root "arn-" from "aran", meaning "eagle")

7. Anglian (Noun) An Angle (member of a Germanic people)

8. Afrikaans is derived from Dutch, a language in the Low Franconian branch of the Western Germanic offshoot of the the larger Germanic family tree

9. Their leader, Ballomar, had formed a coalition of Germanic tribes.

10. Baldr (also Balder, Baldur) is a god in Germanic mythology

11. Brunhild (Germanic mythology) A shieldmaiden and valkyrie in Germanic mythology, a main character in the Nibelungenlied, Völsunga saga, and some poems of the Poetic Edda

12. After expanding his knowledge of the Anglo-Saxon and Germanic cultural heritage, he became Master in Germanic Philology at the Free University of Brussels (1961).

13. Anglian (not comparable) Of or pertaining to the Angles (Germanic people)

14. 3 The Franks were originally a loose confederation of Germanic tribes.

15. Here's a little video about a something that caught my interest recently: Anglish, a new "pure" Germanic variety of English with all of its non-Germanic voca

16. Brunhild definition is - a queen in Germanic legend won by Siegfried for Gunther.

17. [Middle English Banishen, from Old French banir, baniss-, of Germanic origin; see bhā

18. [Middle English Basten, from Old French bastir, of Germanic origin.] bast′er n

19. All from Proto-Germanic *Biton (source also of Old Saxon Biti, Old Norse Bit

20. Word Origin Old English Bathian, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German baden

21. From Middle English Burgeis, from Anglo-Norman Burgeis, of Proto-Germanic origin; either from Late Latin burgensis (from Latin *burgus), or from Frankish, both from Proto-Germanic *burgz (“ stronghold, city ”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerǵʰ-

22. [Italian Balcone, from Old Italian, scaffold, of Germanic origin.] bal′co·nied (-nēd) adj

23. Brunhild, also known as Brunhilda or Brynhild, is a female character from Germanic heroic legend

24. Early 19th century French, past participle of Blaser ‘cloy’, probably ultimately of Germanic origin.

25. From Middle High German Ange, from Old High German ango, from Proto-Germanic *ang

26. Alliterative verse has been found in some of the earliest monuments of Germanic literature.

27. Tacitus wrote disparagingly of the beer brewed by the Germanic peoples of his day.

28. Alette is used predominantly in French and Frisian, and its origin is Germanic and Latin

29. Charlemagne was a Frankish warrior king with the background and traditions of the Germanic peoples

30. The patterns of unstressed syllables vary significantly in the alliterative traditions of different Germanic languages.

31. Bock originally comes from the animal kingdom and there are similar words throughout all Germanic languages

32. Germany has a civil law system based on Roman law with some references to Germanic law.

33. Blanche definition, a female given name: ultimately from a Germanic word meaning “white.” See more.

34. Bertha is a female Germanic name, from Old High German berhta meaning "bright one"

35. The Affronty Germanic-style helm, and the closer-in, tighter-fitting mantling are the main differences

36. Some speculate that the origin of the Proto-Germanic word is Indo-European *Albho- meaning white.

37. Romulus Augustus, the last Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, surrendered to the Germanic King Odoacer.

38. Ruthless Germanic knightly order , armoured with lances and large maces, these knights love a good melee.

39. Batavian revolt: the rebellion of the Batavians (a Germanic tribe) against the Romans in 69-70 CE

40. Brunhild (bro͞on`hĭld), Brünnehilde (brün'əhĭld`ə), or Brynhild (brĭn`hĭld), mighty female warrior of Germanic mythology and literature.In the Nibelungenlied, a medieval German epic poem (see under Nibelungen Nibelungen or Nibelungs, in Germanic myth and literature, an …

41. In the Marcomannic Wars (166-180 AD), the fourth fought on the Danube against the Germanic tribes.

42. Beorma: beorma (Old English) Alternative forms beorm, Bearm Origin & history Proto-Germanic *bermô ("yeast, leaven

43. The Common Germanic stem ōþala- or ōþila- "inherited estate" is an ablaut variant of the stem aþal-.

44. 47 rows  · Anglic, Insular Germanic, or English languages encompass Old English and all the linguistic …

45. From Middle English Behoof, behof, from Old English behōf, from Proto-Germanic *bihōfą, from *bihafaną (“to get, receive”)

46. The Alar are a tribe composed of many of the people of the Germanic migration into Roman territories

47. Old English bróm is from a common West Germanic *bráma- (Old High German brâmo, "bramble"), from a Germanic stem bræ̂m- from Proto-Indo-European *bh(e)rem- "to project; a point", with an original sense of "thorny shrub" or similar.

48. From Middle English Burgeis, from Anglo-Norman Burgeis, of Germanic origin; either from Late Latin burgensis *burgus or Frankish

49. It is the earliest Germanic language that is attested in any sizable texts, but it lacks any modern descendants.

50. [1] The Anglo-Saxons were a cultural group formed by Germanic people that moved from mainland Europe to Britain

51. Belgae: the current view is that the Belgae were a cross between celtic and germanic tribes, tall with blond hair

52. What does Batavian mean? From the ancient Germanic tribe of the Batavi, living in the region of Batavia around Nijmeg

53. It is the most widely spoken Germanic language, accounting for at least 70% of speakers of this Indo-European branch.

54. Instead, he proposed that other pieces of Germanic literature contain "kernels of tradition" from which Beowulf borrows and expands upon.

55. Brahmanism is the orthodox religion of India, the most ancient of all Indo-Germanic faiths of which there is record

56. It is believed that chickens were introduced to the Scandinavian region by germanic tribes from the south around 400 BC.

57. Afrikaans Afrikaans is a Low Franconian West Germanic language descended from Dutch and spoken mainly in South Africa and Namibia

58. Barons And Baronesses Barons and Baronesses originate from the old Germanic term “Baro”, which translates as “Freeman” or “Soldier” in Latin

59. Byre m (nominative plural byras or byre) child, son, descendant; young man, youth Etymology 2 From Proto-Germanic *buriz (“hill, elevation”).

60. The Aesir are closely linked to other Germanic and Indo-European cultures, but the Vanir seem to be exclusive to Scandinavia

61. Bode - Boda is messenger in Germanic, hence "Bode"; at first, a Bode was a command—then an omen or premonition

62. A collection of useful phrases in Afrikaans, a West Germanic language descended from Dutch and spoken mainly in South Africa and Namibia

63. Alsatian (the historic germanic language of Alsace) is a declining language, spoken mostly by the region's older residents or in rural areas.

64. Albert Leroy Andrews was a Professor of Germanic Philology at Cornell University, an amateur Bryologist, and Honorary Curator of the Wiegand Herbarium

65. Ballocks Meaning: "testicles," from Old English beallucas, plural diminutive, from Proto-Germanic *ball-, from PIE root… See definitions of Ballocks.

66. And the cultural boundary Germanic techno movement (acid house, drum 'n' bass, trip hop, trance, etc..) Sought resources to produce his compositions.

67. The Goths have left behind the only text corpus of the East Germanic language type: a 4th-century translation of the Gospels.

68. What does Anglish mean? A register of English that gives preference to words of Germanic origin over words of Latin or Greek origin

69. Middle English (in Addle (adjective)): from Old English adela ‘liquid filth’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch aal and German Adel ‘mire, puddle’.

70. Barbarians is a German series based on the historical Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, where united Germanic armies ambushed several Roman legions

71. They also provided most of the emperor Augustus' elite regiment of Germanic bodyguards (Germani corpore custodes), which continued in existence until AD 68.

72. Borrowed from Old Norse Æsir, plural of áss "(pagan) god, member of the Aesir," going back to Germanic *ansu-

73. It was the cultural boundary Germanic techno movement (acid house, drum 'n' bass, trip hop, trance, etc..) Sought resources to produce his compositions.

74. According to a user from Switzerland, the name Bading is of German origin and means "Follower of Bado, a Germanic tribe leader"

75. 1400, from Old French bastir "build, construct, sew up (a garment), Baste, make, prepare, arrange" (12c., Modern French bâtir "to build"), probably from Frankish or some other Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *bastjan "join together with bast" (source also of Old High German besten; see bast).

76. From Middle English Blench and Blenchen, from Old English blenċan (“to deceive, cheat”), from Proto-Germanic *blankijaną (“to deceive”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰleyǵ-

77. Bush itself is a thicket of Scandinavian (Old Norse Buskr), Germanic (Old High German busc), and Romanic (Medieval Latin busca) influences and cognates

78. BOLLOCKS Meaning: "testicles," 1744, variant of Ballocks, from Old English beallucas "testicles," from Proto-Germanic… See definitions of bollocks.

79. Charles derives from the Germanic name Karl, meaning "man" or "freeman", and is a royal name in multiple European countries

80. Permeating incurable anti-germanic magnifying glass apocarpous undespotic unforgiving chondromata unconjectured kragujevac Arglebargled acoemetae preminister classicistic unfunnily VIEW MORE 4 Syllable Words Starting with?