Found 2 items, similar to flemish.
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: Flemish
Flemish
adj : of or relating to Flanders or its people or language or
culture;
“the Flemish population of Belgium”;
“Flemish
painters”
Flemish
n 1: an ethnic group speaking Flemish and living in northern and
western Belgium
2: one of two official languages of Belgium; closely related to
Dutch [syn:
Flemish dialect]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Flemish
Flemish
\Flem"ish\, a.
Pertaining to Flanders, or the Flemings. -- n. The language
or dialect spoken by the Flemings; also, collectively, the
people of Flanders.
[1913 Webster]
Flemish accounts (Naut.), short or deficient accounts.
[Humorous] --Ham. Nav. Encyc.
Flemish beauty (Bot.), a well known pear. It is one of few
kinds which have a red color on one side.
Flemish bond. (Arch.) See
Bond, n., 8.
Flemish brick, a hard yellow paving brick.
Flemish coil, a flat coil of rope with the end in the
center and the turns lying against, without riding over,
each other.
Flemish eye (Naut.), an eye formed at the end of a rope by
dividing the strands and lying them over each other.
Flemish horse (Naut.), an additional footrope at the end of
a yard.
[1913 Webster]
German
\Ger"man\, n.; pl.
Germans[L. Germanus, prob. of Celtis
origin.]
1. A native or one of the people of Germany.
[1913 Webster]
2. The German language.
[1913 Webster]
3.
(a) A round dance, often with a waltz movement, abounding
in capriciosly involved figures.
(b) A social party at which the german is danced.
[1913 Webster]
High German, the Teutonic dialect of Upper or Southern
Germany, -- comprising Old High German, used from the 8th
to the 11th century; Middle H. G., from the 12th to the
15th century; and Modern or New H. G., the language of
Luther's Bible version and of modern German literature.
The dialects of Central Germany, the basis of the modern
literary language, are often called Middle German, and the
Southern German dialects Upper German; but High German is
also used to cover both groups.
Low German, the language of Northern Germany and the
Netherlands, -- including
Friesic;
Anglo-Saxon or
Saxon;
Old Saxon;
Dutch or
Low Dutch, with its
dialect,
Flemish; and
Plattdeutsch (called also
Low German
), spoken in many dialects.
[1913 Webster]