Germans
in sentence
127 examples of Germans in a sentence
It is estimated that up to 10 million were expelled, and with their descendants they make up today almost double that number--almost one in four
Germans.
But are
Germans
serious about the EU, which has ensured seven decades of peace in what previously was by far the most violent part of the world?
As unemployment remains stubbornly high and incomes stagnate in much of the eurozone, the temptation to blame “the Germans” is becoming ever stronger.
Germans, by contrast, think they are playing a “discipline game.”
Germans
– for once not so ironically – often present themselves as world champions at “coming to terms with the past”; and their new capital’s architecture – derided by some as “antiquarian masochism” – literally gives this ethos concrete expression.
A second reason is that
Germans
are fed up with being Europe’s scapegoat – blamed for their neighbors’ ills while being asked to take on risks and provide generous financial transfers.
Gauck told
Germans
in no uncertain terms that they had to be willing to use force, at least as a last resort, and reproached those of his fellow citizens “who use Germany’s guilt for its past as a shield for laziness or a desire to disengage from the world.”
As a result, the SPD was weakened and the CDU/CSU strengthened - and now, nobody knows exactly what most
Germans
do want.
That way, both
Germans
and other Europeans can trust Germany to be a positive force for change.
He evidently thought that this would strengthen his hand; instead, it merely strengthened the position of those
Germans
convinced that the time had come to let Greece drop out of the euro.
Yet this is exactly what some
Germans
have recently proposed.
With the passage of time, enlargement has become more unpopular, not less: at last count, only 20% of
Germans
are keen on the idea, and 68% are unenthusiastic.
For starters,
Germans
are convinced that they have weathered the crisis extraordinarily well.
Germany’s experience with hyperinflation in the 1920s and its subsequent embrace of “ordoliberalism,” in which the government avoids interfering in the economy, has “rendered
Germans
allergic to macroeconomics,” Eichengreen writes.
When my fellow Greeks ask me why I am running simultaneously in Greece’s national election and in Germany as a candidate to represent
Germans
in Brussels, my answer will be: Because our European crisis is one, even if it manifests itself differently in Greece and in Germany.
And when German voters ask me, “Why are you, a Greek, seeking our vote here in Germany to represent us in the European Parliament?”, my answer will be: Because the policies that are depriving so many
Germans
of hope were first tried and tested in the dystopic laboratory that was Greece.
Germans
refer to this solution as a Schuldenbremse (debt brake).
Likewise, Joinville is a southern Brazilian city settled in the late nineteenth century by relatively uneducated
Germans.
While only 3% of Spanish and 4% of French people with tertiary education live abroad, 7% of Italians and 9% of
Germans
do.
East
Germans
wanted to unify the German state for the sake of the unity of their nation: “We are one people” was their motto.
But on the night of November 9th, when the wall and the barbed wire which had failed to irrevocably divide
Germans
over many decades of bitter separation began to crumble, communism's collapse became irreversible.
Older
Germans
can still remember their famous victory over a superb Hungarian team in 1954.
Given the history, it is no surprise that Poles do not want to sell to Germans, and luckily few
Germans
are interested.
For years,
Germans
complained that France was incapable of domestic reform, and that the French did not understand the meaning of “federalism” in the context of the European Union.
For
Germans
this question was not easily answered, though clearly our family was liberated in every sense.
The Evolution of the Refugee CrisisLONDON – As they celebrate Christmas,
Germans
are also remembering the dead from last year’s attack on a Berlin Christmas market by a migrant who had been denied asylum.
The economy is humming, unemployment is low, and most
Germans
are better off than ever before.
Havel’s stand for human rights – whether on behalf of unpopular minorities such as the Roma or unpopular former minorities such as the three million Sudeten
Germans
who were expelled from Czechoslovakia after World War II – helped to ensure that he was more celebrated internationally than at home.
Merkel, who will likely be elected to another four-year term as chancellor on September 24, told
Germans
that they “can do it.”
Germany also featured in PISA 2000, recording below-average performance and large social inequalities in education – an outcome that stunned
Germans
and initiated a months-long public debate.
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