Peoples who are, or are related to, native speakers of a Germanic language.
1The general name by which they are known among the Teutonic peoples is need-fire.
2All of them were affected by the Protestant revolution, the Teutonic peoples permanently, the others transiently.
3The development of the country as a Teutonic people was checked and turned aside by this event.
4His "Germania" is a most valuable record of the early institutions of the Teutonic peoples.
5Tennyson's poem, "The Victim," is a vivid picture of human sacrifice among the Teutonic peoples:-
6In the first place it reflected and reacted upon the growing national self-consciousness, particularly of the Teutonic peoples.
7The author wrote " Teutonic Peoples," but the native compositor thought he knew better-andperhaps he did.
8They are valuable to you, as giving you a fair specimen of the laws of an old Teutonic people.
9These are among the most interesting and important of the literary memorials that we possess of the early Teutonic peoples.
10Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's reasoning when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic people.
11Between the Vistula and the Niemen lay the lands of the Prussians, a non- Teutonic people closely related to the Slavs.
12This was the restless, adventurous spirit of the Teutonic peoples of Europe, who had not as yet outgrown their barbarian instincts.
13The necessity of legitimate birth was coming to be recognized as indisputable, though it had not been by the early Teutonic peoples.
14The Teutonic peoples who remained outside what had been the limits of the Roman world continued to use their native tongues during the Middle Ages.
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Translations for teutonic people