landgraf
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See also: Landgraf
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]landgraf (plural landgrafs)
- Alternative form of landgrave
- 1847, Washington M’Cartney, The Origin and Progress of the United States, Philadelphia, Pa.: E. H. Butler & Co., pages 58–59:
- Germany had its herzogs and landgrafs, each of whom had his territories, where he ruled, “monarch of all he surveyed.”
- 1868, “E´SCHWEGÉ”, in Chambers’s Encyclopædia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People, volume IV, London: W. and R. Chambers […], page 125:
- The only building of note is the castle, which was long the residence of the landgrafs of Hessen-Rotenberg.
- 1989, Jole Shackelford, Paracelsianism in Denmark and Norway in the 16th and 17th Centuries, page 264:
- The landgrafs of Hessen-Kassel were sympathetic to Calvinism, which created an intellectual atmosphere that not only tolerated Paracelsianism, not unlike that of Hemmingsen’s Copenhagen, but fostered religio Paracelsica as well.
Romanian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from German Landgraf.
Noun
[edit]landgraf m (plural landgrafi)
Declension
[edit]Declension of landgraf
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite articulation | definite articulation | indefinite articulation | definite articulation | |
nominative/accusative | (un) landgraf | landgraful | (niște) landgrafi | landgrafii |
genitive/dative | (unui) landgraf | landgrafului | (unor) landgrafi | landgrafilor |
vocative | landgrafule | landgrafilor |