Do you mean "what are people from Germany called?" In that case they are called Germans.
You might be asking for German names, too? I'm not really sure. But here are some popular German names:
Girls: Leonie, Lena, Jana, Julia, Anna, Grete
Boys: Maximillian (Maxi), David, Karl, Hans, Georg, Erik, Caspar, Stephan
Are you perhaps asking about slang names for people of German descent? In World War I and II, the Germans were known as "The Hun," "Jerry," "Krauts," and often too generally "Nazis." Other, less offensive, often poetic names include, "Almain," and "Teuton." Awigman
Not only is it the German word to "have", It is also a German family name. There are about 365 people in Germany by that name.
Germans.
There is no German Jewish name (or German): Sharp. I believe there is no such German word, at least because of the combination SH. In German it is written: SCH.but, the name Scharf (means: sharp in German and Yiddish) is well-known in Jewish People.
It is an Old German name meaning 'army of the people'.
yids/kikes
His ethnicity is unknown, but people assume he's German because of his last name.
It's a German-American last name that stems from the Swiss-German last name Leuthhold,which means 'rule,reign,people + tribe.
holocaust
"Dieter" is a common German name derived from the Old High German name "Theudahar," which means "people's army" or "warrior of the people."
Yes. Although it's not as common as it once was, German parents still name their infants Adolf. The meaning of the name is 'Noble, majestic wolf.'
The name Dresden is generally a boy name. It means "people from the forest." It is a name that comes from German origin.
Your name is dein Name (informal) or Ihr Name (formal) in German. The name "Hunter" in German is "Jäger"