The West Germanic language of the Flemings. 佛莱芒语佛莱芒人使用的西日耳曼语
The West Germanic language of England, the United States, and other countries that are or have been under English influence or control. 西日耳曼语英国,美国和其它受或曾受英国影响控制的国家所使用的西日耳曼语
The Germanic element of English as distinguished from the French and Latin elements. 英语中的日耳曼语成分,不同于法语和拉丁语的成分
germanic
[ noun ]
a branch of the Indo-European family of languages; members that are spoken currently fall into two major groups: Scandinavian and West Germanic
<noun.communication> [ adj ]
of or relating to the language of Germans
<adj.pert> the Germanic sound shifts
of or pertaining to the ancient Teutons or their languages
<adj.pert> Teutonic peoples such as Germans and Scandinavians and British Germanic mythology
Germanic \Ger*man"ic\, a. (Chem.) Pertaining to, or containing, germanium.
Germanic \Ger*man"ic\, a. [L. Germanicus: cf. F. germanique. See {German}, n.] 1. Of or pertaining to Germany; as, the Germanic confederacy.
2. Teutonic. [A loose sense]
Something tremendously Germanic, unflurried by scenes and jealousies.
He had to tend to his Germanic image and few Germans, then or now, would have understood a hater of sausages.
Shiloh, which for years was called the "Dutch Colony" because of the Germanic background of many of its settlers, is located about 8 miles south of the town of Pelahatchie.
By 1996-97, the Treasury foresees the broadest measure of inflation running at Germanic levels of 2 per cent a year.
Andrew John Dechet of Vancouver, Wash., who studied flamenco guitar in Spain with Gypsies, is a Germanic language and literature major at Princeton.
The Germanic tradition called Yule remains popular in many areas, however.
Egyptology was born on the crest of a great wave of racism and anti-Semitism that swept Anglo and Germanic Europe in the early 19th century.
In Germany Witzigmann enjoys a reputation similar to those of Paul Bocuse or Joel Robuchon in France. Munich's chic tends to shun the more overtly Germanic.