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GERMAN |
Teutonic |
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GERMANIC |
Teutonic |
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GOTH |
An olden teutonic person |
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PANTEUTONIC |
Of or pertaining to all the Teutonic races. |
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TEUTONIC |
The language of the ancient Germans; the Teutonic
languages, collectively. |
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TEUTON |
A member of the Teutonic branch of the Indo-European, or
Aryan, family. |
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ANGLO-SAXON |
The Teutonic people (Angles, Saxons, Jutes) of
England, or the English people, collectively, before the Norman
Conquest. |
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TEUTONICISM |
A mode of speech peculiar to the Teutons; a Teutonic
idiom, phrase, or expression; a Teutonic mode or custom; a Germanism. |
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INDO-GERMANIC |
Pertaining to or denoting the Teutonic family of
languages as related to the Sanskrit, or derived from the ancient Aryan
language. |
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FREYA |
The daughter of Njord, and goddess of love and beauty; the
Scandinavian Venus; -- in Teutonic myths confounded with Frigga, but in
Scandinavian, distinct. |
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MALL |
Formerly, among Teutonic nations, a meeting of the notables
of a state for the transaction of public business, such meeting being a
modification of the ancient popular assembly. |
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SAXON |
One of a nation or people who formerly dwelt in the northern
part of Germany, and who, with other Teutonic tribes, invaded and
conquered England in the fifth and sixth centuries. |
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SCALD |
One of the ancient Scandinavian poets and historiographers;
a reciter and singer of heroic poems, eulogies, etc., among the
Norsemen; more rarely, a bard of any of the ancient Teutonic tribes. |
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VANDAL |
One of a Teutonic race, formerly dwelling on the south
shore of the Baltic, the most barbarous and fierce of the northern
nations that plundere... |
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STRONG |
Applied to forms in Anglo-Saxon, etc., which retain
the old declensional endings. In the Teutonic languages the vowel stems
have held the origi... |
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FRIESIC |
The language of the Frisians, a Teutonic people formerly
occupying a large part of the coast of Holland and Northwestern
Germany. The modern di... |
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ARYAN |
One of a primitive people supposed to have lived in
prehistoric times, in Central Asia, east of the Caspian Sea, and north
of the Hindoo Koosh ... |