[
US
/ˈdænzɪɡ/
]
NOUN
- a port city of northern Poland near the mouth of the Vistula River on a gulf of the Baltic Sea; a member of the Hanseatic League in the 14th century
How To Use Danzig In A Sentence
- To balance out the dbaggery of Danzig holding court in his 'brary, you should link to that vid of Danzing taking a beatdown from that singer from the Northside Kings after their show. Not the face of the one you love
- Lord Halifax, the British foreign secretary, deemed Danzig and the Polish Corridor to be "an absurdity. The New American
- In 1679 the Royal Society sent Halley to Danzig to arbitrate in a dispute between Hooke and Hevelius.
- The angry state of Prussia was now divided into two parts by the Polish Corridor, and Gdansk had become the so-called Free City of Danzig, yearning to unite openly with Prussia. Poland
- Peter the Great at once commissioned it from Danzig masters and presented it to her with a laudatory poem that glorified her military exploits.
- Even Toll enjoyed the Danzig number; he amassed his strength and to a shocked audience began to soft-shoe to the music.
- ** UPDATE** James Danziger "objects" on his blog to what he calls the implication that defining yourself as an 'artist' as opposed to a 'photographer' makes you more important and gives you a special privilege. Jonathan Melber: The AP Has No Case Against Shepard Fairey
- The Tin Drum (filmed by Schlöndorff), a satirical panorama of German reality during the first half of this century, which, with Cat and Mouse and Dog Years, was to form what is called the Danzig Trilogy. Günter Grass - Biography
- Danzig's already depleted currency reserves dropped steadily.
- His area of operations was the XVII Army Corps, based in Danzig, and the XX Army Corps, headquartered in Allenstein. Pursuit of an 'Unparalleled Opportunity': The American YMCA and Prisoner of War Diplomacy among the Central Power Nations during World War I