saxon

listen to the pronunciation of saxon
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} Sakson

Hannover Aşağı Saksonya'nın başkentidir. - Hanover is the capital of Lower Saxony.

{s} Saksonca ile ilgili
{i} Anglosakson
{i} Sakson dili
saxon blue
Saks mavisi
saxon blue
{i} gece mavisi
Anglo-Saxon
Anglosakson
anglo saxon
anglosakson
west saxon
batı saxon
anglo-saxon
İngilizlere has olan
anglo-saxon
Ana dili İngilizce olan kimse
anglo-saxon
Anglosakson: V. ve Vİ. yüzyılda Büyük Britanya'yı ele geçiren Cermen ırkından oymaklara verilen ad
hiberno-saxon style
hiberno-Sakson tarzı
anglo saxon
eski İngilizce
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A native of Saxony
Of, or relating to the Saxons, Saxony, or the Saxon language
The language of the ancient Saxons
A member of an ancient northern Germanic tribe, that invaded England, together with Angles and Frisians about the year 600
{n} one of the people who conquered England in the sixth century, their language
{a} pertaing to the Saxons
In former times, Saxons were members of a West Germanic tribe. Some members of this tribe settled in Britain and were known as Anglo-Saxons
Something that is Saxon is related to or characteristic of the ancient Saxons, the Anglo-Saxons, or their descendants. a seventh-century Saxon church. a member of the race of people from northern Europe that came to live in England in the 5th century (Saxones ). Any member of a Germanic people who lived along the Baltic coast in ancient times and later migrated west as far as the British Isles. The Saxons became pirates in the North Sea during the decline of the Roman empire, and in the early 5th century they spread through northern Germany and along the coasts of Gaul and Britain. They fought Charlemagne (772-804) before being incorporated into the Frankish kingdom, and they settled Britain along with other Germanic invaders, including the Angles and the Jutes. Anglo Saxon art Anglo Saxon law Anglo Saxon literature Hiberno Saxon style Anglo Saxon
{i} member of an ancient Germanic people who invaded and settled parts of Britain; Old English dialect used in areas settled by the Saxons; Englishman, British man; person of Anglo-Saxon descent
{s} English, British; of Anglo-Saxon descent; pertaining to the Saxons, pertaining to the ancient Germanic people who invaded and settled parts of Britain
A native or inhabitant of modern Saxony
Saxon is a competitor of Xalan, an XSLT processor According to Norm Walsh, the DocBook king, Saxon seems to do a slightly better job of transforming DocBook XML than Xalan In Out-of-the-Box development, we generally use Saxon for DocBook transformation and Xalan in our Java code
700-1066
a member of a Germanic people who conquered England and merged with the Angles and Jutes to become Anglo-Saxons; dominant in England until the Norman conquest
One of a nation or people who formerly dwelt in the northern part of Germany, and who, with other Teutonic tribes, invaded and conquered England in the fifth and sixth centuries
Of or pertaining to the Saxons, their country, or their language
Of or pertaining to Saxony or its inhabitants
The language of the Saxons; Anglo- Saxon
of or relating to or characteristic of the early Saxons or Anglo-Saxons and their descendents (especially the English or Lowland Scots) and their language; "Saxon princes"; "for greater clarity choose a plain Saxon term instead of a latinate one"
Noun (Plural: Saxon) A member of the Germanic people that invaded English with the Angles and held power there for much of the first millennium
Anglo-Saxon
Also used in the sense of Anglo- Saxon
Saxon blue
A solution of indigo in concentrated sulphuric acid, used as a dye
saxon blue
{i} blue dye made by dissolving indigo in sulphuric acid
Anglo-Saxon
A light-skinned person presumably of British or other European appearance; a white person
Anglo-Saxon
A person of British or North European descent
Anglo-Saxon
Germanic peoples inhabiting mediæval England
Anglo-Saxon
Related to nations which speak primarily English; especially United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia
Anglo-Saxon
The inflected ancestor language of modern English, also called Old English, spoken in Britain from about 400 AD to 1100 AD
Anglo-Saxon
Descended from white English or North European settlers
Anglo-Saxon
Favouring a liberal free market economy
Anglo-Saxon
Related to the Anglo-Saxon peoples or language
Anglo-Saxon America
The parts of the American continent colonized or historically controlled by Anglo-Saxon people, principally the USA and Canada

The manifest destiny of Anglo-Saxon America was a favorite theme of Fourth of July orators.

Anglo-Saxon America
The controlling elite and institutions of the United States and Canada

Many expressed their desire to join Anglo-Saxon America by adopting their forms of Protestantism.

Dutch Low Saxon
A non-standardized cluster of regional dialects of Low Saxon, influenced by Dutch, spoken in the northeastern provinces of the Netherlands, and recognized as a minority language by the European Union
Low Saxon
A language or group of related dialects of Low German, spoken in northern Germany and parts of the Netherlands, formerly also in Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Kaliningrad, Russia
Old Saxon
A west Germanic language historically tied to Anglo-Saxon and Old Low Franconian
anglo-saxon
the entire english race wherever found, as in europe, the united states, or india
Anglo Saxon art
artwork produced in England between the 5th and 11th centuries AD (influenced by Celtic, Roman, and Norse styles)
Anglo-Saxon
{i} member of the Germanic peoples in England before the 12th century; language of the Germanic peoples in England before the 12th century, Old English; English-man
Anglo-Saxon
The Anglo-Saxon period is the period of English history from the fifth century A.D. to the Norman Conquest in 1066. the grave of an early Anglo-Saxon king. An Anglo-Saxon was someone who was Anglo-Saxon. the mighty sea power of the Anglo-Saxons
Anglo-Saxon
{s} of or pertaining to the Anglo-Saxons
Anglo-Saxon
Anglo-Saxon people are members of or are descended from the English race. white Anglo-Saxon Protestant men. Anglo-Saxon is also a noun. The difference is, you are Anglo-Saxons, we are Latins
Anglo-Saxon
Anglo-Saxon attitudes or ideas have been strongly influenced by English culture. Debilly had no Anglo-Saxon shyness about discussing money
Anglo-Saxon
Anglo-Saxon is the language that was spoken in England between the fifth century A.D. and the Norman Conquest in 1066
Anglo-Saxon art
Painting, sculpture, and architecture produced in Britain from the late 5th century to the Norman Conquest. Before the 9th century, manuscript illumination was the predominant art form, with two schools: Canterbury produced works in the Classical tradition brought by Roman missionaries; a more influential school in Northumbria produced works inspired by the revival of learning encouraged by Irish missionaries. The curvilinear forms, spirals, and interlaced patterns of the Celtic tradition brought by Irish monks were integrated with the abstract ornamentation and bright colors of the Anglo-Saxon metalwork tradition. After the destructive effects of the 9th-century Danish invasions, the monasteries were revived and interest in architecture developed. Building activity consisted of small churches influenced by continental types, notably from Norman France (e.g., the original Westminster Abbey, 1045-50, rebuilt 1245). The monastic revival resulted in the production of many books and the formation of the Winchester school of illumination (late 10th century). See also Hiberno-Saxon style
Anglo-Saxon law
Body of legal principles that prevailed in England from the 6th century until the Norman Conquest (1066). It was directly influenced by early Scandinavian law as a result of the Viking invasions of the 8th and 9th centuries and indirectly influenced (primarily through the church) by Roman law. Anglo-Saxon law had three components: laws promulgated by the king, customary practices such as those regulating kinship relations, and private compilations. The primary emphasis was on criminal law, though certain material dealt with problems of public administration, public order, and ecclesiastical matters
Anglo-Saxon literature
Literature written in Old English 650- 1100. Anglo-Saxon poetry survives almost entirely in four manuscripts. Beowulf is the oldest surviving Germanic epic and the longest Old English poem; other great works include The Wanderer, The Seafarer, The Battle of Maldon, and the Dream of the Rood. The poetry is alliterative; one of its features is the kenning, a metaphorical phrase used in place of a common noun (e.g., "swan road" for "sea"). Notable prose includes the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a historical record begun about the time of King Alfred's reign (871-899) and continuing for more than three centuries. See also Caedmon; Cynewulf
Hiberno-Saxon style
Decorative style that resulted when Irish (Hibernian) monks went to England in 635. It mingled the Celtic decorative tradition curvilinear and "trumpet" forms, scrolls, spirals, and a double-curve motif with the interlaced zoomorphic patterns and bright coloration of the pagan Anglo-Saxons. Mediterranean art entered as an element when St. Augustine of Canterbury's mission arrived from Rome, introducing the human figure in art objects, but the style's basic characteristics remained geometric, with interlaced designs and areas of bright colour, as seen in the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Book of Kells. It was taken to Europe by Irish and Saxon Christian missionaries and there exerted strong influence on Carolingian art. See also Anglo-Saxon art
Old Saxon
The Low German language of the continental Saxons until the 12th century
White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
American who is of northern European heritage and belongs to the Protestant Church (considered to be the privileged class in the United States), WASP
anglo-saxon
a native or inhabitant of England prior to the Norman conquest a person of Anglo-Saxon (especially British) descent whose native tongue is English and whose culture is strongly influenced by English culture as in WASP for `White Anglo-Saxon Protestant'; "this Anglo-Saxon view of things"
anglo-saxon
of or relating to the Anglo-Saxons or their language; "Anglo-Saxon poetry"; "The Anglo-Saxon population of Scotland"
anglo-saxon
a native or inhabitant of England prior to the Norman conquest
anglo-saxon
English prior to about 1100
anglo-saxon
a person of Anglo-Saxon (especially British) descent whose native tongue is English and whose culture is strongly influenced by English culture as in WASP for `White Anglo-Saxon Protestant'; "this Anglo-Saxon view of things"
anglo-saxon
of or relating to the Anglo-Saxons or their language; "Anglo-Saxon poetry"; "The Anglo-Saxon population of Scotland
anglo-saxon deity
(Anglo-Saxon mythology) a deity worshipped by the Anglo-Saxons
old saxon
Low German prior to 1200
west saxon
a literary dialect of Old English an inhabitant of Wessex
saxon

    الواصلة

    Sax·on

    التركية النطق

    säksın

    النطق

    /ˈsaksən/ /ˈsæksən/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'sak-s&n ] (noun.) 13th century. From French Saxon, from Latin Saxonem, from West Proto-Germanic *Saxon- ( > Old English Seaxan), probably originally a derivative of Proto-Germanic *sahsan (“knife”).
المفضلات