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Teutonic

[ US /tuˈtɔnɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or pertaining to the ancient Teutons or their languages
    Germanic mythology
    Teutonic peoples such as Germans and Scandinavians and British

How To Use Teutonic In A Sentence

  • The bewhiskered individual, who looked like a Scotsman, had the Teutonic name of Von Blix, and spoke with a strong American accent. Chapter 14
  • Germania" sets out to counter anti-German prejudice by celebrating the quirky, often cosmopolitan aspects of German history and culture that are at odds with the caricature of a monolithic, ruthlessly efficient and aggressively Teutonic state, associated first with Prussian expansionism and then, notoriously, with the totalitarianism of the Third Reich. Teutonic Temptations
  • Welschen und in Tiutschen richen_, 'in all Welsh and Teutonic kingdoms.' The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare
  • The Teutonic languages derive from Primitive Germanic.
  • The third fundamental cause of the War was the desire of the Teutonic powers to control the small nations of the Balkan peninsula.
  • The coach was a masterpiece of Teutonic engineering.
  • It is the peculiarity of most of these German laws, in the only shape in which we know them, that, besides the _allod_ or domain of each household, they recognise several subordinate kinds or orders of property, each of which probably represents a separate transfusion of Roman principles into the primitive body of Teutonic usage. Ancient Law Its Connection to the History of Early Society
  • But it seemed odd -- to an absurdly sensitive, non-Teutonic mind it seemed somehow to lack justice -- that the picture-framer, after having been ruined, must risk his life in order to snatch from the catastrophe the debris of his career. Over There War Scenes on the Western Front
  • Anyone who believes the national stereotype of the Germans as humourless might like to ponder the following Teutonic rib-tickler: How did the Grand Canyon originate?
  • By the way Lance, I applaud your use of alliteration and assonance; "Teutonic turd peddler" is so much more poetic than "German shit merchant. 10,000 BC IS A CRITICAL DARLING
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