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Wagner
[ wag-ner vahg-neror, German, vahg-nuhr ]
noun
- ·Գܲ [hoh, -n, uh, s], John Peter, 1874–1955, U.S. baseball player.
- ·ٴ [ot, -oh, awt, -oh], 1841–1918, Austrian architect.
- 龱· [rich, -erd, rikh, -ah, r, t], 1813–83, German composer.
- Robert F(erdinand), 1877–1953, U.S. politician.
- his son Robert F(erdinand), Jr., 1910–91, U.S. politician: mayor of New York City 1954–65.
Wagner
/ ˈɑːɡə /
noun
- WagnerOtto18411918MAustrianARCHITECTURE: architect Otto. 1841–1918, Austrian architect, whose emphasis on function and structure in such buildings as the Post Office Savings Bank, Vienna (1904–06), influenced the development of modern architecture
- Wagner(Wilhelm) Richard18131883MGermanMUSIC: composer ( Wilhelm ) Richard (ˈrɪçart). 1813–83, German romantic composer noted chiefly for his invention of the music drama. His cycle of four such dramas The Ring of the Nibelung was produced at his own theatre in Bayreuth in 1876. His other operas include ղԲԳäܲ (1845; revised 1861), Tristan and Isolde (1865), and Parsifal (1882)
Example Sentences
Supervisor Don Wagner pointed out that the 226 inmates who were referred to ICE constituted a small part of the more than 48,000 bookings that occurred in the jail last year.
Sen. Robert Wagner from New York introduced a bill modeled on the program in 1939, but Germany’s invasion of Poland pushed it off the agenda.
Psaki, who currently has programs on Sunday and Monday, replaces Alex Wagner, who will remain with the network as a senior political analyst.
The military which seized power in coups in 2020 and 2021 hired Russian mercenaries from the paramilitary group Wagner to help improve security in the country.
He’s come a long way from victory No. 1 at Murray State, even if the Racers’ 92-68 victory over Wagner on Nov. 22, 2003, did include more than a few Cronin staples.
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