Slang term for a German ( fritz was/is a German name)
There were many names for the Japanese during WW2, some that I know of were "Tojo, slants, and nips."
Ack-Emma is the phrase that means in the morning and was used during World War 1.
Jerry, Fritz, Kraut, Nazi,there are many more but those are a few of the English ones most people used.Please beware that they are offensive.
Doughboys.
Almost any where in the world. Yankee is a slang term used for usa americans. During USA Civil war, the term was used for soldiers fighting on the side of Lincoln.
Fritz.
It is American/English slang, origins during the second world war meaning ridiculous. There is some argument that it derived from an earlier French word 'decalcomanie'
An Alleyman is military slang for a German, especially during the First World War.
No. there are 'slang" words that are kept out of the dictonary until they are prove to have real meaning
The dentist's name who lived with Anne Frank was Fritz Pfeffer. He shared a hiding place with Anne and her family during World War II in Amsterdam.
The world nappy in Britain is an article of clothing worn by babies or a diaper. The word is old and not used anymore and has no slang meaning in their country.
Movida, meaning "party" in Cuban street slang, is a live room featuring the sounds of world music.
Dr. Fritz Klein was a physician during World War II who performed cruel experiments on the prisoners at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. He was tried and sentenced to death after the camp was liberated in 1945.
There were many names for the Japanese during WW2, some that I know of were "Tojo, slants, and nips."
To have a punt = to have or make a bet. eg I'll have a punt on England beating Portugal in the World Cup.
Fritz was a derogatory term for a German person.
'Jerries' was British army slang during the second world war for Germans. In the first world war, British soldiers were known as 'Tommies'.