The Hindenburg - vertaling naar Engels
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The Hindenburg - vertaling naar Engels

GERMAN AIRSHIP
German airship Hindenburg; The Hindenburg; Airship LZ129 Hindenburg; Airship Hindenburg; LZ 129; Hindenburg (airship); LZ129; D-LZ129; The Hindenberg; D-LZ129 Hindenburg; Lz-129; Hindenburg airship
  • ''Hindenburg'' under construction
  • Lounge, with the world map painted on the wall
  • Dining room
  • Propaganda leaflet dropped from ''Hindenburg'' during the ''Deutschlandfahrt'', quoting Adolf Hitler's March 7 Rhineland speech in the ''Reichstag''
  • ''Hindenburg''-class airship compared to largest [[fixed-wing aircraft]]
  • Hindenburg galley in 1936
  • The ''Hindenburg'' after its first flight to Rio in April 1936. Note the temporary repair of the lower fin after the accident at ''Die Deutschlandfahrt''.
  • ZR-3}} is moored upper right.
  • Live radio broadcast
  • ''Hindenburg'' in 1936, with reporters and film crew
  • March 29, 1936 plebiscite ballot
  • Zeppelin passenger lapel pins
  • ''Hindenburg'' on its first flight on March 4, 1936. The name of the airship was not yet painted on the hull.
  • Flag of the Deutsche Zeppelin-Reederei GmbH

The Hindenburg         
Hindenburg, l"aeronave più grande costruita dai tedeschi e incendiatasi in fase di atterraggio nel New Jersey (USA)
separate the sheep from the goats         
PRONOUNCEMENT OF JESUS IN THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW
Matthew 25:31; Matthew 25:41; Parable of the Sheep and the Goats; The sheep and the goats; The Sheep and Goats; Separates the sheep from the goats; Separating the sheep from the goats; Separate the sheep from the goats; To separate the sheep from the goats; Sheep and the goats; Matthew 25:31–46; Matthew 25:31-46
distinguere il grano dal loglio
end of the world         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
End of The World; The end of the world; The End of the World; End of the world (disambiguation); End of the World (disambiguation); End of all life; End of the World; The End of the World (movie); End Of The World; The End of the World (song); The End of the World (film); End of the earth; End of planet Earth; The End Of The World; End Of the World; The end of the earth; End Of the World (song); The End Of The World (song); End of the World (film); The End of the World (album); End of the World (song); End of the world (astronomy)
n. fine del mondo, apocalisse

Definitie

the
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
Note: 'The' is the definite article. It is used at the beginning of noun groups. 'The' is usually pronounced before a consonant and before a vowel, but pronounced when you are emphasizing it.
1.
You use the at the beginning of noun groups to refer to someone or something that you have already mentioned or identified.
A waiter came and hovered. John caught my look and we both got up and, ignoring the waiter, made our way to the buffet...
Six of the 38 people were Russian citizens.
DET
2.
You use the at the beginning of a noun group when the first noun is followed by an 'of' phrase or a clause which identifies the person or thing.
There has been a slight increase in the consumption of meat...
Of the 9,660 cases processed last year, only 10 per cent were totally rejected.
DET
3.
You use the in front of some nouns that refer to something in our general experience of the world.
It's always hard to speculate about the future...
Amy sat outside in the sun...
DET
4.
You use the in front of nouns that refer to people, things, services, or institutions that are associated with everyday life.
The doctor's on his way...
Who was that on the phone?...
DET
5.
You use the instead of a possessive determiner, especially when you are talking about a part of someone's body or a member of their family.
'How's the family?'-'Just fine, thank you.'...
I patted him on the head...
DET
6.
You use the in front of a singular noun when you want to make a general statement about things or people of that type.
An area in which the computer has made considerable strides in recent years is in playing chess...
After dogs, the horse has had the closest relationship with man.
DET: DET sing-n
7.
You use the with the name of a musical instrument when you are talking about someone's ability to play the instrument.
She was trying to teach him to play the guitar.
DET
8.
You use the with nationality adjectives and nouns to talk about the people who live in a country.
The Japanese, Americans, and even the French and Germans, judge economic policies by results.
DET: DET pl-n
9.
You use the with words such as 'rich', 'poor', 'old', or 'unemployed' to refer to all people of a particular type.
...care for the elderly and the disabled.
DET: DET pl-n
10.
If you want to refer to a whole family or to a married couple, you can make their surname into a plural and use the in front of it.
The Taylors decided that they would employ an architect to do the work.
DET: DET pl-n-proper
11.
You use the in front of an adjective when you are referring to a particular thing that is described by that adjective.
He knows he's wishing for the impossible...
I thought you might like to read the enclosed.
DET: DET adj/-ed
12.
You use the to indicate that you have enough of the thing mentioned for a particular purpose.
She may not have the money to maintain or restore her property...
We must have the patience to continue to work until we will find a peaceful solution...
= sufficient
DET: DET n to-inf, DET n for n
13.
You use the with some titles, place names, and other names.
The company was alleged to have leaked the news to the Daily Mail.
...the Albert Hall...
DET
14.
You use the in front of numbers such as first, second, and third.
The meeting should take place on the fifth of May...
Marco Polo is said to have sailed on the Pacific on his way to Java in the thirteenth century...
DET: DET ord
15.
You use the in front of numbers when they refer to decades.
It's sometimes hard to imagine how bad things were in the thirties.
DET: DET pl-num
16.
You use the in front of superlative adjectives and adverbs.
Brisk daily walks are still the best exercise for young and old alike...
DET: DET superl
17.
You use the in front of each of two comparative adjectives or adverbs when you are describing how one amount or quality changes in relation to another.
The longer you have been in shape in the past, the quicker you will regain fitness in future...
DET: DET compar DET compar
18.
When you express rates, prices, and measurements, you can use the to say how many units apply to each of the items being measured.
New Japanese cars averaged 13 km to the litre in 1981...
Some analysts predicted that the exchange rate would soon be $2 to the pound.
DET: DET sing-n
19.
You use the to indicate that something or someone is the most famous, important, or best thing of its kind. In spoken English, you put more stress on it, and in written English, you often underline it or write it in capitals or italics.
Camden Market is the place to be on a Saturday or Sunday...
DET

Wikipedia

LZ 129 Hindenburg

LZ 129 Hindenburg (Luftschiff Zeppelin #129; Registration: D-LZ 129) was a German commercial passenger-carrying rigid airship, the lead ship of the Hindenburg class, the longest class of flying machine and the largest airship by envelope volume. It was designed and built by the Zeppelin Company (Luftschiffbau Zeppelin GmbH) on the shores of Lake Constance in Friedrichshafen, Germany, and was operated by the German Zeppelin Airline Company (Deutsche Zeppelin-Reederei). It was named after Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, who was President of Germany from 1925 until his death in 1934.

The airship flew from March 1936 until it was destroyed by fire 14 months later on May 6, 1937, while attempting to land at Lakehurst Naval Air Station in Manchester Township, New Jersey, at the end of the first North American transatlantic journey of its second season of service. This was the last of the great airship disasters; it was preceded by the crashes of the British R38, the US airship Roma, the French Dixmude, the British R101, and the USS Akron.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor The Hindenburg
1. If anything, they are rearranging the deck chairs on the Hindenburg." A mixed metaphor, and lame as can be.
2. Since the Hindenburg disaster of 1'37, there have been worries about hydrogen‘s explosive qualities.
3. Other films in which she took less important roles included The Hindenburg, The Elephant Man and Honeymoon in Vegas, with Nicolas Cage.
4. The Olympic flag was broken out and a huge flock of pigeons took to the sky, spiralling towards the balloon of the Hindenburg airship, anchored above the stadium.
5. His other movies included The Set–Up, The Desert Rats, Helen of Troy, The Hindenburg, and Star Trek: The Motion Picture.