Crossword clues for hirt
hirt
- Jazz man
- Jazz great Al
- Dixieland Al
- Trumpet man Al
- Trumpet great Al
- Musician nicknamed "Sugar Lips"
- Jazzman Al
- Trumpetman Al
- Trumpeting legend Al
- Trumpet legend Al
- New Orleans name
- Musician from La
- Musician at the first Super Bowl
- Java trumpeter Al
- Java man
- Horn great
- Herb Alpert contemporary Al
- Fountain contemporary
- Fountain collaborator
- Dixieland trumpeter Al
- Bourbon Street trumpeter
- Al, the trumpeter
- Al of Dixieland
- "The Happy Trumpet" trumpeter
- "The Green Hornet" theme trumpeter
- "Java" jazz player
- "I Want a Big Butter and Egg Man" trumpeter
- "Cotton Candy" musician
- "Cotton Candy" jazzman
- "Beauty and the Beard" trumpeter
- 'Java' musician
- "Java" player Al
- Trumpeter Al
- Al from New Orleans
- "Cotton Candy" trumpeter
- "Java" trumpeter Al
- Big name in Dixieland
- "Java" man
- "Java" blower
- "The Green Hornet" trumpeter
- "Honey in the Horn" jazzman
- “Java” trumpeter Al
- "Sugar Lips" jazzman
- Trumpeter on the "Kill Bill" soundtrack
- "Sugar Lips" trumpeter Al
- "Honey in the Horn" trumpeter
- Musician from La.
- Trumpeter from New Orleans
- Jazzman Al ___
- Musician Al
- Al the trumpeter
- "Our Man in New Orleans" jazzman
- Al, the New Orleans trumpeter
- Horn blower Al
- Jazz trumpeter Al
- He has trumpet, will pump it
- New Orleans jazzman
- Al of music
- Dixieland jazzman Al
- Dixieland trumpeter
- "Java" jazzman
Wikipedia
Hirt
Hirt is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Al Hirt (1922–1999), American trumpeter and bandleader
- Aloys Hirt (1759–1837), German art historian and archaeologist
- August Hirt (1898–1945), German SS officer
- Egon Hirt (born 1960), German alpine skier
- Ferenc Hirt (born 1967), Hungarian businessman and politician
- Hassan Hirt (born 1980), French long-distance runner
- Hermann Hirt (1865–1936), German philologist and Indo-Europeanist
- Peter Hirt (1910–1992), Swiss racing driver
- Susanne Hirt (born 1973), German slalom canoeist
Usage examples of "hirt".
September, 1944, the Allies made an advance on Belfort, and Professor Hirt ordered Bong and Heir Maier to cut up these bodies and have them burned in the crematory .
It is supposed that conditions in which the periosteum is exposed are favorable to the progress of the disease, and, according to Hirt, workmen with diseased teeth are affected three times as readily as those with healthy teeth, and are therefore carefully excluded from some of the factories in America.