The German word Korn refers to any time of grain, such as wheat, barley or rye. It does not refer to what the Americans call corn, which is Mais (maize) in German.The German word for rye is Roggen
Japanese-Americans, German-Americans, and Italian-Americans.
i beieve that the element zinc is from the latin americans
Americans
Don Heinrich Tolzmann has written: 'German-American studies' -- subject(s): German Americans, Study and teaching 'German Achievements in America' 'Upper Midwest German biographical index' -- subject(s): Biography, German Americans, Indexes 'German-Americana' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Civilization, German Americans, German influences 'Covington's German heritage' -- subject(s): Genealogy, German Americans, History 'German Cincinnati (OH)' 'German-American biographical index' 'Ohio Valley German biographical index' -- subject(s): Biography, German Americans, Indexes 'Germany and America 1450-1700' 'The First Germans in America' 'German-Americana A Bibliography' 'The German-American experience' -- subject(s): German Americans, History, Miscellanea 'Cincinnati's German heritage' -- subject(s): Ethnic relations, German Americans, History, Social conditions
German- Americans and Irish- Americans were commonly called hyphenateds during the WWI area.
The word "Berger" means "salvager" according to the dictionary, but I also know a lot of US Americans with that last name, which originates from the word mountain in German (Berg) or the French word for shepherd.
The Amish originated in German speaking portions of Switzerland, and in Germany. Because the German word for "German" is "deutsch," many English-speaking Americans misheard or mispronounced the word when the Amish spoke it and called them "Dutch." Thus the ongoing confusion between German and Dutch origins for this group.
people
Chre is not a German word
According to the 2000 U.S. Census 0.41% of Americans speak only German at home.
"mit" is the German word for "with".