jemandem den letzten Nerv töten - translation to English
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jemandem den letzten Nerv töten - translation to English

SMALL NATURAL LAKE AT THE GRIMSEL PASS IN THE CANTON OF VALAIS, SWITZERLAND
Lake Toten; Toten lake; Toten-See; Toten See; Toten Lake; Lake of Toten; Toten-see; Totensee

jemandem den letzten Nerv töten      
jar on someone, drive someone crazy, annoy someone greatly, drive someone nuts
Den Helder         
  • Marleen Barth, 2015
  • 470px
  • Dick Ket, Autoportrait, 1932
  • Satellite image (May 2007)
  • Edith Bosch, 2012
  • ''[[Lange Jaap]]'' lighthouse
  • The watertower of Den Helder
MUNICIPALITY IN THE NETHERLANDS
Den Helder, Netherlands; The Helder; History of Den Helder
Den Helder (Stadt im Westen Hollands)
opium den         
  • "A New Vice: Opium Dens in France", an illustration from Le Petit Journal, 5 July 1903.
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Opium Den (disambiguation)
Opiumhöhle, Unterschlupf von Opiumrauchern

Definition

den
¦ noun
1. a wild animal's lair or habitation.
2. informal a person's private room.
3. a place where people meet secretly or illicitly: an opium den.
¦ verb (dens, denning, denned) (of an animal) live in or retreat to a den.
Origin
OE denn, of Gmc origin.

Wikipedia

Totesee

Totesee (Germanized: Totensee) is a small natural lake (18 ha or 44 acres) at the Grimsel Pass in Switzerland. The lake lies immediately to the south of the natural watershed and cantonal boundary at the pass. It is therefore in the canton of Valais, and it would naturally drain into the river Rhône in the valley below. However a dam has been constructed to enable its use as a reservoir, increasing its size and raising its level by 16 metres (52 ft). As part of this work, an aqueduct supplies water to the Grimselsee, which drains into the river Aare and thus forms part of the Rhine catchment.

In November 2006, the lake's entire trout population died, possibly due to algae.

The name Totensee (also: Lake Toten, literally "Lake of the Dead") is said to be derived from soldiers of Duke Berchtold V of Zähringen driven into the lake by the people of Valais after the Battle of Ulrichen in 1211.