German

1. прилагательное германский; немецкий 2. имя существительное 1) немец, немка 2) немецкий (язык)

Большой англо-русский словарь

German

Смотри germane

Большой англо-русский словарь

German

I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Medieval Latin Germanus, from Latin 1. a member of any of the Germanic peoples inhabiting western Europe in Roman times 2. a. a native or inhabitant of Germany b. a person of German descent c. one whose native language is German and who is a native of a country other than Germany 3. a. the Germanic language spoken mainly in Germany, Austria, and parts of Switzerland b. the literary and official language of Germany 4. often not capitalized a. a dance consisting of intricate figures that are improvised and intermingled with waltzes b. chiefly Midland a dancing party; specifically one at which the german is danced II. adjective of, relating to, or characteristic of Germany, the Germans, or German

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary

German

I. adjective Etymology: Middle English germain, from Anglo-French, from Latin germanus having the same parents, from germen having the same parents or the same grandparents on either the maternal or paternal side — usually used after the noun which it modifies and joined to it by a hyphen Example: brother-german Example: cousin-german II. noun obsolete a near relative

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary

German

j*r'mn A human language written (in latin alphabet) and spoken in Germany, Austria and parts of Switzerland. German writing normally uses four non-ASCII characters: "ä", "ö" and "ü" have "umlauts" (two dots over the top) and "ß" is a double-S ("scharfes S") which looks like the Greek letter beta (except in capitalised words where it should be written "SS"). These can be written in ASCII in several ways, the most common are ae, oe ue AE OE UE ss or sz and the TeX versions "a "o "u "A "O "U "s. See also ABEND, blinkenlights, DAU, DIN, gedanken, GMD, kluge.

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