17 adjectives to describe german

Let us be rid of him at any cost, and live in peace, like honest Germans.

We spent some time in what we had been led to suppose the hottest place, Clifton Park, in which there was a band of music and several thousand persons, chiefly Germans, though with a good sprinkling of Irish servant-girls with their lovers and brothers, with beer and ices; but we saw no rudeness, and no more impropriety, no more excitement, no more (week-day) sin, than we had seen at the church in the morning.

Lleweney Hall was the residence of Robert Cotton, Esq., Mrs. Thrale's cousin german.

The form is that of a nail, having a globular head, formed of the four petals of the corolla, and four leaves of the calyx not expanded, with a nearly cylindrical germen, scarcely an inch in length, situate below.

Still less were we prepared for the brutal treatment which the English practised on us defenceless Germans.

"Bermondsey Bill," who used to be The idol of the N.S.C., Began to fight in 17 P.T. instructor, very keen, Teaching recruits to jab the faces Of dummy Germans at the bases.

If all intelligent peoples are Germans, then Prussians are only the least intelligent Germans.

There are good, even magnificent forces in the German nation; there are still noble-minded, high-thinking Germans who yearn to work in the great civilizing world enterprises.

We'll hear what you've been doing to these peppery Germans.

Never could it have been done with four pre-war Germans!

"MR. JONES, SIRHIM WOT KILLED SEVENTEEN GERMANS IN ONE TRENCH WITH HIS OWN 'ANDS'AS CALLED FOR THE GAS ACCOUNT, SIR."

And this never was (as some silly Germans say) a worship of pride and scorn; mankind never really admired pride; mankind never had any thing but a scorn for scorn.

The bulk of the Roman army fought steadily and stubbornly, frequently repelling the masses of assailants, but gradually losing the compactness of their array and becoming weaker and weaker beneath the incessant shower of darts and the reiterated assaults of the vigorous and unencumbered Germans.

Never could it have been done with four pre-war Germans!

Failing to obtain payments in due time, estates will be sequestered and become the property of wealthy Germans.

If one asked him "Why are we at war with Germany" this regular soldier would scratch his head, struggle to find a reasonable answer, and mutter something about "them bloody Germans," and "giving a hand to the Froggies."

The old Curé, the Abbé Fossin, at the age of seventy-eight, spent himself in devoted service to the wounded Germans who filled it.

17 adjectives to describe  german