fritz

listen to the pronunciation of fritz
English - Turkish

Definition of fritz in English Turkish dictionary

be on the fritz
(deyim) Arızalanmak, arızalı olmak
go on the fritz
(deyim) Arızalanmak, arızalı olmak
on the fritz
(deyim) Arızalı, bozuk

I’m afraid the air-conditioning is temporarily on the fritz.

on the fritz
bozuk

Lambda sensörü yine bozuk. - The lambda sensor is on the fritz again.

on the fritz
heba olmuş
English - English
a name used to represent the German people as a whole

But if Fritz is stationed in that patch of woodland, we've got no chance!.

a German person (used in a nominal sense)

You! Fritz! Tell us where the ammunition's kept!.

South Australian term for devon, processed meat
The state of being defective
{i} male first name
(Old Fritz) Frederick II the Great, King of Prussia (1712, 1740-1786)
A computer nerd at Sunnydale High School, Fritz appeared in "I Robot -- You Jane " He was controlled by the demon Moloch and helped him try to kill Buffy, kidnap Willow, and kill fellow student Dave, whom he hung Fritz was later killed by Moloch
This ist an alleged meat product It is good Can be used as adjective: "Adolf ist good like Fritz!"
A top commercial Chessbase program written by Frans Morsch Fritz is one of the strongest and most popular Chess programs and it will be challenging Kramnik to a Human versus Comuter Chess match in 2002 Experimental versions of Fritz usually plays under the name Quest
A condition in which something does not work properly: Our television is on the fritz. be/go on the fritz if something is or goes on the fritz, it is not working correctly = be/go on the blink. Haber Fritz Kreisler Fritz Lang Fritz Reiner Fritz Strassmann Fritz Thyssen Fritz Zwicky Fritz
Fritz Haber
born Dec. 9, 1868, Breslau, Silesia, Prussia died Jan. 29, 1934, Basel, Switz. German physical chemist. After early research in electrochemistry and thermodynamics, he developed, with his brother-in-law Carl Bosch (1874-1940), the Haber-Bosch process for making ammonia. Intensely patriotic, he directed Germany's World War I chemical-warfare efforts, under which poison gas was introduced. His versatility and his wide-ranging and important work brought him fame and honour, and he was awarded a 1918 Nobel Prize. In 1933 the Nazi Party's anti-Semitic policies led him to resign as head (since 1911) of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institute
Fritz Kreisler
After touring internationally as a teenager, he quit performing to study medicine. Returning to the violin, he scored successes in Berlin and Vienna (1898). He toured Europe and the U.S. until the start of World War I, and he premiered Edward Elgar's Violin Concerto in 1910. After recovering from a war wound, he resumed touring (1919-50). His concert programs frequently included many charming short pieces that he wrote, among them "Viennese Caprice" and "Pretty Rosemary
Fritz Kreisler
orig. Friedrich Kreisler born Feb. 2, 1875, Vienna, Austria died Jan. 29, 1962, New York, N.Y., U.S. Austrian violinist and composer. He entered the Vienna Conservatory at age 7 and finished his musical studies by
Fritz Lang
an Austrian film director, who worked in Germany and the US and had an important influence on the development of the cinema. His films include Metropolis (1926), Fury (1936), and The Big Heat (1953) (1890-1976). born Dec. 5, 1890, Vienna, Austria-Hungary died Aug. 2, 1976, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S. Austrian-born U.S. film director. He studied architecture in Vienna and served in the Austrian army in World War I. While recovering from war wounds, he began to write screenplays. He found work at a movie studio in Berlin, where he later directed successful films such as Between Two Worlds (1921), Dr. Mabuse (1922), the two-part The Nibelungen (1924), the expressionistic Metropolis (1926), and M (1931). After making the anti-Nazi film The Last Will of Dr. Mabuse (1933), he left Germany for Paris and later Hollywood. His U.S. films, which equal his German films in their intensity, pessimism, and visual mastery, include Fury (1936), You Only Live Once (1937), Ministry of Fear (1944), Rancho Notorious (1952), and The Big Heat (1953). Many of his films deal with fate and man's inevitable working out of his destiny
Fritz Reiner
born Dec. 19, 1888, Budapest, Austria-Hungary died Nov. 15, 1963, New York, N.Y., U.S. Hungarian-born U.S. conductor. After piano studies with Béla Bartók, he conducted opera in Budapest (1911-14) and Dresden (1914-22). In 1922 he immigrated to the U.S., where he conducted orchestras in Cincinnati (1922-31) and Pittsburgh (1938-48). From 1953 to 1962 he led the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, which under Reiner first won international acclaim. He also taught conducting at the Curtis Institute (Leonard Bernstein was among his students). A stern taskmaster, he inspired devotion on the part of many players
Fritz Strassmann
born Feb. 22, 1902, Boppard, Ger. died April 22, 1980, Mainz, W.Ger. German physical chemist. He helped develop the method of rubidium-strontium dating widely used in geochronology. Beginning in 1934, he joined Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner in their investigations of the radioactive products formed when uranium is bombarded by neutrons. In 1938 they discovered lighter elements produced from the neutron bombardment, which were the result of the splitting of the uranium atom into two lighter atoms (nuclear fission). In 1946 he joined the faculty at the University of Mainz, where he established the Institute of Inorganic Chemistry (later the Institute of Nuclear Chemistry), and he directed the chemistry department at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (1945-53)
Fritz Thyssen
born Nov. 9, 1873, Mülheim, Ger. died Feb. 8, 1951, Buenos Aires, Arg. German industrialist and financial backer of Adolf Hitler. Thyssen entered the family iron, steel, and coal business and inherited his father's fortune and empire in 1926 (see Thyssen Krupp Stahl). He created a family business trust that came to control more than 75% of Germany's ore reserves and employ 200,000 workers. Distressed by the rise of socialism in Germany, he supported Hitler and helped finance his rise to chancellor. But Thyssen opposed Hitler's later policies and fled to Switzerland in 1939, enabling Hitler to confiscate Thyssen's fortune (about $88 million). Thyssen was arrested in France (1941) and imprisoned by the Nazis. After the war, he was convicted as a "minor Nazi" and ordered to pay 15% of his property in restitution
Fritz Zwicky
born Feb. 14, 1898, Varna, Bulg. died Feb. 8, 1974, Pasadena, Calif., U.S. Swiss astronomer and physicist. He received his Ph.D. from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and moved to the U.S. in 1925 to work at Caltech, where he remained until 1972. In 1934, with Walter Baade (1893-1960), he proposed that supernovas are a class of stellar explosions completely different from novas. He conducted an extensive search of neighbouring galaxies for supernovas and discovered 18; only about 12 had been recorded previously in the entire history of astronomy. In the years 1943-46, with Theodore von Kármán and others, he helped develop early jet-propulsion systems
on the fritz
Out of order, malfunctioning, broken. (Used of electrical or mechanical appliances.)

I'd record it, but my VCR’s on the fritz again.

be on the fritz
(deyim) (of a machine etc.) stop working properly
go on the fritz
(deyim) (of a machine etc.) stop working properly
on the fritz
not working properly, out of order
fritz

    Hyphenation

    Fritz

    Turkish pronunciation

    frîts

    Synonyms

    boche, jerry, kraut

    Pronunciation

    /ˈfrəts/ /ˈfrɪts/

    Etymology

    () Unknown. See on the fritz, which appeared in 1902. Possibly from German name Fritz, or onomatopoeia.
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