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Ludwig

[ luhd-wig, lood-vig, -wig; German loot-vikh, lood- ]

noun

  1. E·mil [ey, -meel], Emil Cohn, 1881–1948, German biographer.
  2. a male given name: from a Germanic word meaning “famous warrior.”


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Example Sentences

This is an improvement on the Permanent International Peace Bureau, Charles Albert Gobat, and Ludwig Quidde.

It took 20 more years for Ludwig to actually move into the still-unfinished complex.

It was built for “Mad” King Ludwig II, who announced construction of the castle in a letter to his confidant Richard Wagner.

With names like Nestor, Clarissa, and Ludwig, the characters are equally referential.

“I was there in the parking lot when all this happened,” Ludwig says.

And there is one other person that never will comply with her: the lawful Wife of Eberhard Ludwig.

He appointed George tutor of his poor son Ludwig; whom he left at the early age of ten, in an evil world, and evil position there.

Ludwig also—his biography reads 142 like that of Hadrian—was an enthusiastic admirer of art.

“As there are men born to command an army, so Cornelius was born to be the head of a school of painting,” said King Ludwig.

But that would declare her marriage with Eberhard Ludwig to be a farce, she reflected.

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inveterate

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