(a.) Of or pertaining to the Celts; as, Celtic people, tribes, literature, tongue.
(n.) The language of the Celts.
Example Sentences:
(1) But right now all my focus is on Falkenbergs.” Larsson’s appeal to Celtic is clear.
(2) Group A Villarreal, Borussia Mönchengladbach, FC Zurich, Apollon Limassol Group B FC Copenhagen, Brugge, Torino, HJK Helsinki Group C Tottenham Hotspur , Besiktas, Partizan Belgrade, Asteras Tripoli Group D Red Bull Salzburg, Celtic , Dinamo Zagreb, FC Astra Group E PSV, Panathinaikos, Estoril Praia, Dynamo Moscow Group F Internazionale, Dnipro, St Etienne, FK Karabakh Group G Sevilla, Standard Liège, Feyenoord, Rijeka Group H Lille, Wolfsburg, Everton , Krasnodar Group I Napoli, Sparta Prague, Young Boys, Slovan Bratislava Group J Dynamo Kyiv, Steaua Bucharest, Rio Ave, AaB Group K Fiorentina, PAOK, Guingamp, Dinamo Minsk Group L Metalist Kharkiv, Trabzonspor, Legia Warsaw, Lokeren
(3) In its more loose, common usage, it's a game in which the rivalry has come to acquire the mad, rancorous intensity of a Celtic-Rangers, a Real Madrid-Barcelona, an Arsenal-Tottenham, a River Plate-Boca Juniors.
(4) "Celtic fans still regularly belt out The Ballad of Willie Maley," writes Mark Sheffield.
(5) Then again, any show attracting reviews as bad as Celtic have had in the last week would be lucky to survive any longer at the Festival and this performance has left them on the fringes of European football.
(6) It is the largest space ever captured on the indoor Street View, and there are various addons, such as specially curated virtual exhibitions – Celtic Life in Iron Age Britain, for example – and a Museum of the World microsite linking objects on a timeline.
(7) Updated at 4.58pm BST 4.46pm BST Half time: Shakhter 1-0 Celtic 45 mins Mouyokolo does the most blatant of bodychecks on Finonchenko around the half-way line and gets his name in the yellow book for his troubles.
(8) All of which is knocked into a cocked one by the achievements of Martin O'Neill's Celtic.
(9) In the woodlands between Moravia, Lower Austria and Bohemia, mentioned by Ptolemaios under the Celtic name "Gabreta" (wild goats' wood, cf.
(10) In 1830, the Celtic seaboard nations made up nearly 40% of the United Kingdom; that dropped throughout the 19th century due to the Irish famine and emigration.
(11) Updated at 6.04pm BST 5.31pm BST 75 mins "Genuinely surprised that Matthews and Ambrose were left on the bench for Celtic today," says a shocked Michael Cafferky.
(12) His performance was encapsulated by the shrug that was his simple response to a Celtics fan who threw beer on him after the game .
(13) "Celtic did not create anything but scored two goals," he said.
(14) Their search has not enjoyed the most auspicious of starts with Rodgers, who recently signed a one-year rolling contract at Celtic, having distanced himself from the position and the West Ham co-chairman David Gold ruling out Bilic leaving.
(15) His face was found carved into tree trunks all over Celtic lands and his hold over the early Britons was so powerful that early Christians relented and adopted the green man's image as a force for good and a symbol of new life and renewal.
(16) Legia believed he was free to play after missing the two games against St Patrick’s Athletic as well as the first leg against Celtic in Warsaw.
(17) It was good to get back on,” said Griffiths, who then turned his attention to the fourth-round cup tie against the League One side, where Celtic will look to keep their treble dreams alive.
(18) Pulis had wanted to do all his business early and has cut a frustrated figure with reinforcements far from forthcoming, but there should be a flurry of deals completed today: Wayne Hennessey has undertaken a medical and should complete a £3m move from Wolverhampton Wanderers; Celtic have accepted a bid of around £800,000 for Joe Ledley , who is out of contract in the summer and also undertaking medical tests; Ivan Ramis spent Thursday at Palace's Copers Cope training ground and may arrive from Wigan Athletic, his move hinging upon the extent of cruciate knee ligament damage from earlier in his career; the Blackburn centre-back Scott Dann is in Beckenham to talk terms over a proposed switch from Ewood Park.
(19) In one way they were right to state the obvious – because Celtic were utter plod at the back – but hubris is best not displayed until you are beyond the reach of vengeance, as opposed to being about to walk into the fortress of the foe you have just mocked.
(20) Pint from £3.20 Brigantes Bar & Brasserie Brigantes Bar and Brasserie, York This bare, plain drinking space – stripped wooden floor, blue and cream colour scheme, Celtic cross logo – looks a bit like an O'Neill's, but the beer range is worlds away from the Oirish chain.
Teutonic
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Teutons, esp. the ancient Teutons; Germanic.
(a.) Of or pertaining to any of the Teutonic languages, or the peoples who speak these languages.
(n.) The language of the ancient Germans; the Teutonic languages, collectively.
Example Sentences:
(1) It was the negative influence of his former disciple, that teutonically resolute Austrian chap that mislead il Duce; we Italians were less ruthless with the Jews – that was the gist of his speech.
(2) She has been forced by the markets and by political manoeuvring among her peers to ease up on the Teutonic discipline and loosen the rules in order to bring down the costs of borrowing for the eurozone's vulnerable.
(3) This could be observed on population samples from the Central German Highlands and from Southern Germany as well as on samples from the utmost Western Teutonic settlement: Greenland.
(4) Only 18, the son of a US serviceman and a German mother speaks English with a distinct Teutonic twang and is likely to be a game-changing option from the bench.
(5) Starting with standards arising from the relationship between medicine and art in classical antiquity, biblical tradition and teutonic-pagan antiquity, this article roams through german literature from the Middle Ages up to the 20th century, from Hildegard of Bingen to Gottfried Benn and Alfred Döblin, guided by the question, how strongly medical knowledge and medical practise are reflected in the poetry of writing physicians.
(6) Oddly, given that the design dated to the order's birth at the height of the first world war, it looked rather Teutonic, as if it might have been happy jiggling up and down on the chest of a Prussian general.
(7) I did once work on a building site in West Germany and also spent a dismal night sleeping rough in Berlin in 1989, so I know a thing or two about Teutonic triumph and disaster.
(8) The old English proverb – maybe it is also an old Teutonic one – is the default response of the German chancellor whenever there is a crisis in Europe .
(9) However, as compared with Roman soliders the Teutonic-Nordic warriors of the "Völkerwanderungszeit" were obviously inferior as far as permanent physical stress is concerned.
(10) At first sight it was the Teutonic bloc centred on Berlin with a veritable diktat: no debt relief for Greece , no “haircut”.
(11) The early Teutons were characterised by great and strong stature, tendence to dolichocephalie and were of spectacular vigour.
(12) It claims the government has sold Poland’s labour force into Teutonic sweatshops offering “junk” contracts.
(13) By the end of the month, Teutonic taste for Greece had plummeted by more than 30 % - unprecedented for a country where Germans, even more so than Britons, have long led the league table of arrivals.
(14) It is linked up with a similar study on Teutonics of protohistorical periods (Wurm 1986a).
(15) He took the flap from the cheek, but his son Antonio Branca took the reparative flap from the upper arm, and this "Italian method" was first described by the knight of Teutonic Order Heinrich von Pfalzpaint in 1460.
(16) VELDEN produced many evidences in favour of the hypothesis the Teutons to be a mixture of the Old European Cro-Magnons speaking an archaic ural-altaic idiom with the Indo-Europeans immigrating into Europe from Asia.
(17) I hope he wasn't contrasting that to any supposed English flamboyance because Pearce's team are functional pragmatists as per the Teutonic cliche.
(18) Our cause was noble, he submits: we were fighting for European freedom against irksomely expansionist Teutonic tyranny.
(19) Greeks reacted with outrage to the proposals today, with many taking to the airwaves to complain about all things Teutonic.
(20) The problem of the Teutons' origin has been considered to be open up to this day though some scientists have worked on this field since 1912.