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For and Germanic
For example, preposition stranding occurs widely in Germanic languages and has a long history in English.
For the first time, the term " Kingdom ( Empire ) of the Germans " ( Regnum Teutonicorum ) was applied to a Frankish kingdom, although Teutonicorum at its founding originally meant something closer to " Realm of the Germanic peoples " or " Germanic Realm " than " realm of the Germans ".
For example, what makes Germanic languages " Germanic " is that they share vocabulary and grammatical features that are not believed to have been present in Proto-Indo-European.
For example, the Germanic, Slavic, Romance, and Indo-Iranian language families are branches of a larger Indo-European language family.
For example, Germanic and Iranian have a genetic relationship via Proto-Indo-European, but they do not form a valid taxon within the Indo-European language family, whereas in contrast Iranian and Indic do via Indo-Iranian, a daughter language of Proto-Indo-European that subsequently calved into Indic and Iranian.
For the most part, generals in the border regions are proclaimed emperor by their armies to halt the invasion of Germanic tribes.
For decades they were allies of Charlemagne in his wars against Germanic Saxons and Slavic Veleti.
For the first century AD, we are quite well informed about the Chatti, mostly thanks to Tacitus, who provides important information about the Chatti's part in the Germanic wars and certain elements of their culture.
For temple buildings of Germanic paganism, the Old Norse term hof is often used.
For example, in 1933 Sigmund Feist postulated a creole origin for the Germanic languages.
For example, the booklet of the Absurd album Asgardsrei depicts the Knights Templar, the Teutonic Knights and the Waffen-SS as warriors of the " Asgardsrei ", which the bands define as a term for an alleged godly and Germanic group of warriors.
For the next 200 years the Chauci provided Roman auxiliaries through treaty obligations, but they also appear in their own right in concert with other Germanic tribes, opposing the Romans.
For example, Tacitus reports Germanic human sacrifice to ( what he interprets as ) Mercury, and to Isis specifically among the Suebians.
For instance, many of the Germanic states ( as well as English Reformation ) converted to Protestantism in an attempt to slip out of the grasp of the Pope.
For example, the Germanic language family would receive probability and confidence percentage values of + 100 % and 100 %, respectively.
For instance, one is shown being carried by an armored knight or soldier in the Caesar Tapestries in the Historical Museum of Bern, depicting Julius Caesar's battle against the Germanic leader Ariovistus.
For four years Gallienus had been too distracted by Germanic invasions and other usurpers in the east to turn his attention to the situation to his north and west.
For instance, statues of ancient Slavic gods were " discovered ", inscribed with Germanic runes, or folk songs and stories were " recorded " in which half of the Slavic pantheon is described as picking flowers or merrily dancing around a bonfire.
For example, most modern English speakers consider a " cordial reception " ( from French ) to be more formal than a " hearty welcome " ( from Germanic ).
For example, the common form of the triquetra symbol is a trefoil, as are some versions of the Germanic Valknut.
For example, the earliest form of the Germanic languages may have been influenced by a non-Indo-European language, purportedly the source of about one quarter of the most ancient Germanic vocabulary.
For this reason the bracteates are a target of iconographic studies by scholars interested in Germanic religion.

For and etymology
For the etymology, see Cyrus ( name ).
For etymology ( origins ) of demography
For information on the etymology of " Manila " see History of Manila.
For the detailed etymology, see Wiktionary.
For the etymology of the element Geat / Gaut / Göt and Goth, see Geat.
: For etymology and similar terms see Octave.
For example, a person studying the ontological roots of human languages ( etymology ) might ask whether there is kinship between the English word seven and the German word sieben.
For an etymology and history of the surname, see Brooks ( surname ).
For the etymology of tian, Schuessler ( 2007: 495 ) links it with the Mongolian word tengri " sky, heaven, heavenly deity " or the Tibeto-Burman words taleŋ ( Adi ) and tǎ-lyaŋ ( Lepcha ), both meaning " sky ".
For etymology, see pallium.
For etymology of the name see Moravian Slovakia and Hungarian exonyms.
* For the etymology of " Matanzas " see Matanzas River.
For an alternative etymology from Persian via Arabic and ultimately Greek, rather than Latin roots, refer entry under Kameez.
For a discussion of the etymology of these words, see the entry under varus.
For its meaning, etymology, translations, and so forth, see Wiktionary.
: " For the moment this is held up, because I am having the matter of the etymology: ' Invented by J. R. R. Tolkien ': investigated by experts.
For the etymology and meaning of the word in English and other Germanic languages, see our article " walnut ".
For a large number of words in any language, the etymology will be uncertain, disputed, or simply unknown.
For a better understanding of the etymology of aya huaca or aya waka, it must be considered that aya does not only mean deceased or ancestor in the physical sense of the corpse or skeleton, but also in the symbolic and spiritual sense of the soul, consciousness and energy that departs the body, temporarily at night and definitely at the end of the life, but continues circulating in all vital processes, as the cycles of water, light and seasons, that move along with the Earth ; for that reason, aya is also related to the pale red or yellowish colors of twilight and of dawn, as well as to the paleness of newborns and dying persons, while huaca is the name of sacred places or objects.
For more on the word's history, see etymology of kebab.
: For the history & etymology of South Tottenham see Tottenham.
For the etymology, meaning, and pronunciation of the name, and for the Hiberno-English slang word, see Wiktionary.
For its etymology see Isis – Etymology.

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