kaiser

listen to the pronunciation of kaiser
English - Turkish
English - English
An emperor of a German-speaking country, particularly the Holy Roman Empire (962-1806), the Austrian Empire (1806-1918), and the German Empire (1871-1918)
a person who exercises or tries to exercise absolute authority; autocrat
Wilhelm II, the King of Germany from 1888 to 1918. He was given the nickname 'Kaiser Bill' by the British in World War I
{i} German emperor; Austrian emperor
The ancient title of emperors of Germany assumed by King William of Prussia when crowned sovereign of the new German empire in 1871
is German for King or emperor It is derived from the Latin word, Caesar
Ze previous ruler of Deutschland He wore ze pointy hat, und always rode his horse, Noofenhoosen Adolf did not like Kaiser
the title of the Holy Roman Emperors or the emperors of Austria or of Germany until 1918
the German emperor
Kaiser roll
A typically crusty round bread roll supposedly invented in Vienna, made from flour, barm, malt, water, and salt, and whose characteristic feature is a five-spoked propeller- or pinwheel-like star on its obverse

Calvin: Help! A bee! A bee! Run for your life!Hobbes! Did you see it?? It was the biggest bee in the world! It was the size of a Kaiser roll! It must’ve weighed 70 pounds!.

Kaiser rolls
plural form of Kaiser roll
Kaiser's Crown
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) An Asian fritillary (plant) with a cluster of bell-like flowers at the top of a tall, largely bare stem. [Fritillaria imperialis.]
Kaiser Permanente
largest private health care organization in the United States
kaiser roll
rounded raised poppy-seed roll made of a square piece of dough by folding the corners in to the center
Henry J Kaiser
born , May 9, 1882, Sprout Brook, N.Y., U.S. died Aug. 24, 1967, Honolulu, Hawaii U.S. industrialist and founder of more than 100 companies, including Kaiser Aluminum, Kaiser Steel, and Kaiser Cement and Gypsum. He undertook his first public-works projects beginning in 1914, eventually building dams in California, levees on the Mississippi River, and highways in Cuba. Between 1931 and 1945 he organized combinations of construction companies to build the Hoover, Bonneville, and Grand Coulee dams and other large public projects. During World War II he ran seven shipyards, making steel in an integrated steel mill and using assembly-line production to build ships in less than five days. He established the first health maintenance organization, the Kaiser plan, for his shipyard employees; it served more than a million people and became a model for later federal programs. In the postwar era he dealt profitably in aluminum, steel, and automobiles
Henry John Kaiser
born , May 9, 1882, Sprout Brook, N.Y., U.S. died Aug. 24, 1967, Honolulu, Hawaii U.S. industrialist and founder of more than 100 companies, including Kaiser Aluminum, Kaiser Steel, and Kaiser Cement and Gypsum. He undertook his first public-works projects beginning in 1914, eventually building dams in California, levees on the Mississippi River, and highways in Cuba. Between 1931 and 1945 he organized combinations of construction companies to build the Hoover, Bonneville, and Grand Coulee dams and other large public projects. During World War II he ran seven shipyards, making steel in an integrated steel mill and using assembly-line production to build ships in less than five days. He established the first health maintenance organization, the Kaiser plan, for his shipyard employees; it served more than a million people and became a model for later federal programs. In the postwar era he dealt profitably in aluminum, steel, and automobiles
kaisers
plural of kaiser
kaiser

    Hyphenation

    Kai·ser

    Turkish pronunciation

    kayzır

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkīzər/ /ˈkaɪzɜr/

    Etymology

    () Originated 1150–1200 from German and Middle High German kaiser, from Old High German keisar, from Latin Caesar (emperor).
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