User talk:Matthias Buchmeier/German frequency list-270001-275000

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Latest comment: 4 years ago by User123o987name in topic Errors, missing
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Errors, missing

[edit]

Some of the terms are linked [[[like this]]; maybe those should be fixed to [[this]].

A missing term is Oberstgruppenführer/Oberst-Gruppenführer (from ober- ("uppermost") +‎ Gruppe (“group”) +‎ -n- +‎ Führer ("leader")); see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer. It is a military rank higher than Obergruppenführer. "Obergruppenführer" and "Oberstgruppenführer"/"Oberst-Gruppenführer" are terms which were used in Nazi Germany, the TV series "The Man in the High Castle", and probably other media which expresses the German language. My etymology for "Oberstgruppenführer" differs from Oberst/oberst because I based it on ISBN 671-47825-7 (http://cidhal.mayfirst.org/cidhal/node/24793) which states "'oberst 1. adj. uppermost, topmost, top; highest (a. fig.); fig. chief, principal; rank, etc.: supreme; 2. [... odd symbol where two daggers cross to make an X (haven't been able to find the Unicode of this symbol)] m (-en, -s/-en, -e) colonel."

Also should Rommel have a "German" section?

Examples:

+ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2763282/Since-Hitler-cool-Outrage-jokey-comic-strip-book-called-Hipster-Hitler-turns-murderous-Nazi-dictator-trendy-geek.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin_Rommel

As indicated by "+", I read all of that Daily Mail page, thought it was good/interesting as a source on a book, and in it a German named Rommel is mentioned. --User123o987name (talk) 00:07, 10 January 2020 (UTC)Reply