快好知 kuaihz


moravia造句
1 Moravia is not so much another nationality in the blend but, rather, a district. 2 He was a Protestant mercenary from Moravia who foresaw Habsburg victory and joined up on the side of the emperor. 3 A group of Czech dialects spoken in Moravia. 4 Reconstructed round hut from Moravia, Czechoslovakia. 5 Heydrich was appointed Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. 6 Worn in Bohemia and Moravia only , and only by privates and ... 7 Cross-section of a hut found at Dolne Vestonice, Moravia, Czechoslovakia. 8 A member of an Anabaptist sect originating in Moravia and now living communally in parts of Canada and the northwest United States. 9 Other Moravia novels that became films include A Ghost at Noon, Contempt filmed in 1963 as Contempt, and Two Women filmed in 1961. 10 If Bohemia or Moravia are to be the scene of action , unless you mean to destroy all your cavalry . 11 A chance encounter in Moravia had provided him with a patron who was willing to fund his studies. 12 They moved around upstate New York—from Richford to Moravia to Oswego—and eventually settled in Cleveland,[www.] Ohio. 13 Sigmund Freud was born of Jewish parents, at Freiburg, in Moravia, 68 years ago. 14 In a broader meaning, it often refers to the entire Czech territory, including Moravia and Czech Silesia, especially in historical contexts, such as the Kingdom of Bohemia. 15 The university also plays a major role in the social and cultural life of the South Moravia Region. 16 It was also presented to all those who later participated in the creation of the protectorates of Bohemia and Moravia. 17 Christian missionary and theologian who with his brother Saint Methodius (82'-885) worked in Moravia, translating the Scriptures into Old Church Slavonic. 18 The empire's core consisted of Germany, Austria, Bohemia, and Moravia. 19 Sigmund Freud was born May sixth, eighteen fifty-six, in Moravia, in what is now the Czech Republic. 20 In 1918, Slovakia joined with the regions of Bohemia and neighbouring Moravia to form Czechoslovakia. 21 It is true that Sindelar played for Austria Vienna, the club of the Jewish bourgeoisie, and came from Moravia, from where several Jews had migrated to Vienna, but his family was Catholic.