Find the word definition

Crossword clues for kramer

Gazetteer
Kramer, ND -- U.S. city in North Dakota
Population (2000): 44
Housing Units (2000): 43
Land area (2000): 0.158364 sq. miles (0.410162 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.158364 sq. miles (0.410162 sq. km)
FIPS code: 43500
Located within: North Dakota (ND), FIPS 38
Location: 48.691202 N, 100.707492 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 58748
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Kramer, ND
Kramer
Wikipedia
Kramer

Kramer is a Dutch and Low German word for a small merchant, hawker, or retailer and is a common occupational surname. It can also be an Anglicized version of the High German surname Krämer. For a list of people named Kramer, see Kramer (surname). The following are named after people with the name "Kramer":

Krämer

Krämer (transliterated Kraemer or infrequently Kreamer) is a German surname, originating from the Austrian term for " merchant". It may refer to:

  • Ado Kraemer (1898–1972), German chess player
  • Alexander Krämer (born 1952), German scientist, professor of public health at Bielefeld University
  • Bernd Krämer (born 1947), German computer scientist
  • Bob Kraemer (born 1950), former Canadian Football League player
  • Clementine Krämer (1873–1942), German writer and Jewish activist
  • Franz Kraemer (1914–1999), Canadian radio producer
  • Gudrun Krämer (born 1953), German scholar of Islamic history
  • Jacob Kraemer (born 1990), Canadian actor
  • Johann Victor Krämer (1861–1949), Austrian painter and photographer
  • John Krämer, Carthusian writer of the fifteenth century
  • Joe Kraemer (born 1964), former Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Joe Kraemer (born 1971), American film score composer
  • Josef Krämer (1878–1954), German gymnast, track and field athlete, and tug of war competitor
  • Ingrid Krämer (born 1943), East German diver
  • Ludwig Krämer (born 1939), legal figure in the development of environmental law
  • Michael Krämer (born 1985), German footballer
  • Moritz Krämer (born 1980), Swiss singer-songwriter
  • Nicholas Kraemer (born 1945), British harpsichordist and conductor
  • Otto Maria Krämer (born 1964), German church musician
  • Samuel Kraemer (1857–1937), American rancher, farmer, and businessman
  • Stefan Krämer (born 1967), German football coach
  • Walter Krämer (born 1948), German economist
  • Werner Krämer (1940–2010), West German international footballer
Kramer (musician)

Mark Kramer (born Stephen Michael Bonner in New York City in 1958), known professionally as Kramer, is a musician, composer, record producer and founder of the New York City record label Shimmy-Disc. He was a full-time member of the bands New York Gong, Shockabilly, Bongwater and Dogbowl & Kramer, has played on tour (usually on bass guitar) with bands such as Butthole Surfers, B.A.L.L., Ween, Half Japanese and The Fugs (1984 reunion tour), and has also performed regularly with John Zorn and other improvising musicians of New York City's so-called " downtown scene" of the 1980s.

Kramer's most notable work as a producer has been with bands such as Galaxie 500 (whose entire oeuvre he produced), Low (whom he discovered and produced), Half Japanese, White Zombie, GWAR, King Missile, Danielson Famile, Will Oldham, Daniel Johnston, and Urge Overkill, including their hit cover of " Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon".

Kramer (surname)

Kramer is an occupational surname of Dutch or Low German origin or it is derived from the High German surname Krämer ( or ).

In Middle Low German in the Late Middle Ages, Kramer only referred to a traveling merchant. The meaning later changed to "merchants trading with different, rather small things".

Kramer (Capital MetroRail station)

Kramer is a Capital MetroRail commuter rail station in Austin, Texas. It is located in Northwest Austin near the corner of Kramer and Braker Lanes. At 1 mile walking distance, Kramer is the closest station to The Domain (Austin), a major high-density business, retail, and residential center.

Usage examples of "kramer".

In the stern hold of Kyllikki, Jordan Kramer and Gerrit Van Wyk lifted the heavy casque from Marc's head, then helped him from the body armour.

He had most of his material now thanks to his interviews with Kramer, but I couldn't tell him those interviews were worthless and that Kramer was only playing the role of a Croesus while the true millionaires, especially the ones from Texas, were dull as dishwater.

Steven Hopp, Emma Hardesty, Frances Goldin, Terry Karten, Sydelle Kramer, and Lillian Lent read and commented invaluably on many drafts.

And although Our dear sons Henry Kramer and James Sprenger, Professors of Theology, of the Order of Friars Preachers, have been by Letters Apostolic delegated as Inquisitors of these heretical pravities, and still are Inquisitors, the first in the aforesaid parts of Northern Germany, wherein are included those aforesaid townships, districts, dioceses, and other specified localities, and the second in certain territories which lie along the borders of the Rhine, nevertheless not a few clerics and lay folk of those countries, seeking too curiously to know more than concerns them, since in the aforesaid delegatory letters there is no express and specific mention by name of these provinces, townships, dioceses, and districts, and further since the two delegates themselves and the abominations they are to encounter are not designated in detailed and particular fashion, these persons are not ashamed to contend with the most .

Kramer could not imagine anything more wildly improbable in the world than that the man whose combat operation he had betrayed should bring him a box of chocolates, bunch of flowers, light novel or whatever else was appropriate.

Here the text as given in The Ancient Near Eastern Texts breaks off, but Kramer adds in a footnote to his introductory summary of the myth a surprising addition recently discovered.

Smith and Kramer displayed detailed knowledge of Russia as they led him through his secondary education.

High on a far hill, Kramer saw a second castle, this one built entirely of yellow stone.