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Nürnberg (disambiguation)

Nürnberg or Nuremberg may refer to:

Usage examples of "nurnberg".

Major Nurnberg was a rather short, stout woman who took her usually dull job quite seriously.

Major Nurnberg was evidently going to play it cautiously, for which her boss could hardly blame her.

Anne Blenheim issued a few final orders to Major Nurnberg and others who had come up, it seemed only to argue with her, out of their own protective holes.

Gervinus of Nurnberg, whom I guarded in prison, or any other man, could transmute metals.

Was it not at the onfall at Nurnberg, when I led the right and you the left wing of the heavy horse?

My situation in Nurnberg demanded that I should become a Protestant, and I became one.

Let him explain now, quickly and without circumlocution, if he really wishes my pardon, why, after going to Nurnberg to marry a bag of gold, containing a few millions, he has now returned to Berlin.

Arriving in her surface office again, Anne Blenheim issued a few final orders to Major Nurnberg and others who had come up, it seemed only to argue with her, out of their own protective holes.

By ten they had reached the city of Nurnberg where they turned south on the E6, sometimes passing through vast federal parklands, at other times passing quaint little villages and the matrix of welllaid-out farms, the land beginning to rise up toward the Alps at the foot of which lay the city of Munich, headquarters of the BND-the German Secret Service.

Just then the Nurnberg clock commenced striking the hour, accompanying each stroke with a very soft and mellow little chime of bells that sent fairy-like echoes through the quiet room.

The ambassadors came from Scandia, from Muscovy, from Arabia, from the lands of the Greeks and the Bulgars, from Ukrainia, from Nurnberg and Catalania.

I admit my bias and my mixed motives, and having admitted them, state frankly that the Nurnberg of Communism is yet to come.

Israel Finkelstein, Ruth and Harry Fitzgibbons, David Gill, Eva Hajdu, Diana and Philip Harari, Jane Henderson, David Henn, Ilona Jasiewicz, Raz Kletter, David Landes, Constance Lowenthal, Fiona McKenzie, Alexander Marshack, John and Patricia Menzies, Oscar Muscarella, Andrew Nurnberg, Joan Oates, Kathrine Palmer, Colin Renfrew, John Russell, Jocelyn Stevens, Cecilia Todeschini, Randall White and Keith Whitelam.

A comparative statement of the cost of spices for a period of years was reported to the Diet of Nurnberg (1523).

Similar complaints had been made at the Diet of Augsburg (1518), and were repeated at the Diet of Nurnberg (WREDE, op.