Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Mikael Persbrandt is Maria's volcanic husband, Sigfrid, a dock worker, boozer, womanizer, and occasional wife-beater who is jealous of his wife's camera, as well he might be, and whose head swirls with vague ambitions.
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He appears under various disguises and names, but usually as a one-eyed old man, cowled and hooded; sometimes with another, bald and ragged, as before the battle Hadding won; once as "Hroptr", a huge man skilled in leechcraft, to Ragnar's son Sigfrid.
The Danish History, Books I-IX Grammaticus Saxo
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Sigfrid, the Archbishop of York, went to Sweden to preach the Christian faith and he converted the Swedish King, Olof Skottkonung, and all his army at Husaby in Sweden.
Sweden's Relationship with the British Empire and with Canada in Particular 1944
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Sigfrid_, the oldest print of which dates from the year 1726.
The Nibelungenlied Translated into Rhymed English Verse in the Metre of the Original George Henry Needler 1914
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At the great spring hosting (champ de Mai) of Paderborn, in 777, many Saxon converts were baptized; Wittekind (Widukind), however, already the leader and afterwards the popular hero of the Saxons, had fled to his brother-in-law, Sigfrid the Dane.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux 1840-1916 1913
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Whatever Sigfrid, the successor of Hartwig, accomplished in the brief period from 1178 to 1184 was undone under
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability 1840-1916 1913
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He derived his information from Sigfrid, a monk of
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne 1840-1916 1913
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Consequently Clement VI appointed Sigfrid, a Swedish Dominican, Bishop of Stavanger by papal provision in 1351.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 16 [Supplement] 1840-1916 1913
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Heremōdes is considered by Heinzel to be a mere epithet = _the valiant_; which would refer the whole passage to Sigmund (Sigfrid), the eotenas, l. 903, being the Nibelungen.
Beowulf Robert Sharp 1879
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Heremôdes is considered by Heinzel to be a mere epithet = _the valiant_; which would refer the whole passage to Sigmund (Sigfrid), the eotenas, l. 903, being the Nibelungen.
Beowulf Robert Sharp 1879
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