frankfurt

listen to the pronunciation of frankfurt
الإنجليزية - التركية

تعريف frankfurt في الإنجليزية التركية القاموس.

frankfurter
(Gıda) bir tür sosis
frankfurter
domuz ya da sığır etinden yapılan baharatlı bir tür sosis
frankfurter
sosis

Frankfurter adlı sosisli sandviçler ABD'de ilk kez 1860'larda satıldı. - Frankfurters were first sold in the United States in the 1860s.

Viyana sosisine Viyana'da Frankfurt sosisi denir. - Wiener sausages are called Frankfurter sausages in Vienna.

frankfurter
(isim) baharatlı alman sosisi
frankfurter
{i} baharatlı alman sosisi
frankfurter
{i} bir çeşit sosis
frankfurter
baharatlı sosis
frankfurter
frankfort bir çeşit baharatlı sosis
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Frankfurt-am-Main, a city in central Germany
Frankfurt-an-der-Oder, a city near Berlin Germany
frankfurter, hot dog sausage
City (pop., 2002 est.: city, 641,076; metro. area, 1,896,741), western Germany. Located on the Main River, it was the site of a Roman military settlement in the 1st century AD. It served as a royal residence of the Carolingians from the 9th century through the Middle Ages. A free imperial city (1372-1806), it lost its status under Napoleon but regained it in 1815. It was the capital of Germany from 1816 until it was annexed by Prussia in 1866. Its Old Town, once the largest surviving medieval city in Germany, was mostly destroyed in World War II; some landmarks survive, including its red sandstone cathedral, dedicated in 1239. International trade fairs have been held in Frankfurt since 1240; in the modern era, book, automobile, and computer fairs are popular annual events. The city's manufactures include machinery and printing materials, as well as the high-quality sausages known as frankfurters. Frankfurt is the birthplace of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Frankfurt am Main Frankfurt National Assembly Frankfurt school Frankfurt General Newspaper
{i} city in west central Germany
a German city; an industrial and commercial and financial center
Frankfurt-am-Main
Frankfurt, a city in Hessen, Germany, on the Main River
Frankfurt-an-der-Oder
Town in Brandenburg, Germany, on the Oder River
Frankfurt National Assembly
officially German National Assembly (1848-49) German national parliament that tried and failed to create a united German state during the liberal Revolutions of 1848. Meeting in Frankfurt am Main, it proposed a constitution that provided for universal suffrage and a parliamentary government, with a hereditary emperor. The assembly offered the crown to Frederick William IV of Prussia, but he was too conservative to receive a German imperial crown from any hands but those of the other German princes, and he refused. Lacking support from either Prussia or Austria, the assembly was forced to disband
Frankfurt am Main
City (pop., 2002 est.: city, 641,076; metro. area, 1,896,741), western Germany. Located on the Main River, it was the site of a Roman military settlement in the 1st century AD. It served as a royal residence of the Carolingians from the 9th century through the Middle Ages. A free imperial city (1372-1806), it lost its status under Napoleon but regained it in 1815. It was the capital of Germany from 1816 until it was annexed by Prussia in 1866. Its Old Town, once the largest surviving medieval city in Germany, was mostly destroyed in World War II; some landmarks survive, including its red sandstone cathedral, dedicated in 1239. International trade fairs have been held in Frankfurt since 1240; in the modern era, book, automobile, and computer fairs are popular annual events. The city's manufactures include machinery and printing materials, as well as the high-quality sausages known as frankfurters. Frankfurt is the birthplace of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Frankfurt school
Group of thinkers associated with the Institut für Sozialforschung (Institute for Social Research), founded in Frankfurt in 1923 by Felix J. Weil, Carl Grünberg, Max Horkheimer, and Friedrich Pollock. Other important members of the school are Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Herbert Marcuse, and Jürgen Habermas. After the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Horkheimer moved the institute to Columbia University in New York City, where it functioned until 1941; it was reestablished in Frankfurt in 1950. Though the institute was originally conceived as a centre for neo-Marxian social research, there is no doctrine common to all members of the Frankfurt school. Intellectually, the school is most indebted to the writings of G.W.F. Hegel and the Young Hegelians (see Hegelianism), Immanuel Kant, Karl Marx, Wilhelm Dilthey, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Sigmund Freud. See also critical theory
frankfurt on the main
a German city; an industrial and commercial and financial center
frankfurter
A moist sausage of soft, even texture and flavor, often made from mechanically recovered meat or meat slurry
Frankfurter
One who is from Frankfurt, Germany
frankfurter
{i} small smoked sausage containing beef or a combination of beef and pork
frankfurter
a smooth-textured sausage of minced beef or pork usually smoked; often served on a bread roll
frankfurter
A frankfurter is a type of smoked sausage. a long reddish smoked sausage (Frankfurt, German city where it was first made)
frankfurter
A hot dog or sausage
frankfurt

    الواصلة

    frank·furt

    التركية النطق

    frängkfırt

    المترادفات

    frank, frankfurter

    النطق

    /ˈfraɴɢkfərt/ /ˈfræŋkfɜrt/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'fra[ng]k-f&(r)t-&r, - ] (noun.) 1894. German Frankfurter of Frankfurt, from Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
المفضلات