Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word KIEL


KIEL

Definitions of KIEL

  1. A capital city in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
  2. A city in Wisconsin.

4

Number of letters

4

Is palindrome

No

4
EL
IE
KI
KIE

14

4

29

31
EI
EIK
EIL
EK
EKI
EL
ELI
ELK
IE
IK
IKE
IL
ILE
ILK

Examples of Using KIEL in a Sentence

  • In 1914 he accepted a call to a professorship in Königsberg, and later that year assumed a professorship at Kiel.
  • It runs through the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, from Brunsbüttel to the Holtenau district of Kiel.
  • With around 220,000 inhabitants, it is the second-largest city on the German Baltic coast and the second-largest city in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, after its capital of Kiel, and is the 36th-largest city in Germany.
  • It offers a number of joint programmes in co-operation with the University of Flensburg and the University of Kiel.
  • Following the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, the Treaty of Kiel signed on 14 January 1814, Frederick VI ceded the Kingdom of Norway to the King of Sweden.
  • Øresund, along with the Great Belt, the Little Belt and the Kiel Canal, is one of four waterways that connect the Baltic Sea to the Atlantic Ocean via Kattegat, Skagerrak, and the North Sea; this makes it one of the busiest waterways in the world.
  • She was laid down on 21 April 1942, by Germaniawerft of Kiel as yard number 668, launched on 7 January 1943 and commissioned on 20 February, with Oberleutnant zur See Horst Hepp in command.
  • In Kiel-Holtenau begins the world's busiest artificial waterway, the Kiel Canal, that connects the Baltic to the North Sea.
  • Mommsen studied jurisprudence at Kiel from 1838 to 1843, finishing his studies with the degree of Doctor of Roman Law.
  • Husum is located on the North Sea by the Bay of Husum; 82 km W of Kiel, 139 km NW of Hamburg and 43 km SW of Flensburg.
  • Although the Eider is navigable for small craft from its mouth on the North Sea to Rendsburg, the town's importance rose in 1895, when the Kiel Canal was finished.
  • The district consists of the Wagria peninsula between the Bay of Lübeck and the Bay of Kiel, the island of Fehmarn, the eastern part of the region called Holstein Switzerland and the northern suburbs of Lübeck.
  • While still a law student in Kiel he published a first volume of verse together with the brothers Tycho and Theodor Mommsen (1843).
  • During the 1860s, Conrad Kiel established a ranch at the modern-day intersection of Carey Street and Losee Road in what would be North Las Vegas.
  • The Sheboygan River enters the city from the Kiel Marsh at the southwest edge of the city under a railroad trestle, meanders through downtown under a wooden footbridge and vehicular bridge, and exits the city in the east side of the city.
  • is spoken in Holstein, the southern part of Schleswig-Holstein in Germany, in Dithmarschen, around Neumünster, Rendsburg, Kiel and Lübeck.
  • However, the significance of Takagi's work was first recognized by Emil Artin in 1922, and was again pointed out by Carl Ludwig Siegel, and at the same time by Helmut Hasse, who lectured in Kiel in 1923 on class field theory and presented Takagi's work in a lecture at the meeting of the DMV in 1925 in Danzig and in his Klassenkörperbericht (class field report) in the 1926 annual report of the DMV.
  • Born in Lübeck in 1663, Francke was educated at the Illustrious Gymnasium in Gotha before he studied at the universities of Erfurt and Kiel — where he came under the influence of the Pietist Christian Kortholt — and finally University of Leipzig.
  • In 1933, Reitsch left medical school at the University of Kiel to become, at the invitation of Wolf Hirth, a full-time glider pilot/instructor at Hornberg in Baden-Württemberg.
  • Construction on Graf Zeppelin began on 28 December 1936, when her keel was laid down at the Deutsche Werke shipyard in Kiel.



Search for KIEL in:






Page preparation took: 226.81 ms.