The came from the Northern and Western parts of Europe above the Roman Empire.
They came originally from the east from modernday Russia, as all people who speak Germanic languages (or that's what I've heard real history experts say), altough their languages were originally much similiar to Finno-ugrian languages. You can't, however, call the people "Germans" until they developed a language that is at least close to what German is nowdays... but anyway, east is propably where they originally came from.
No, "originally" is actually an adverb that is used to describe when something first existed or happened. It is not a conjunction that joins words, phrases, or clauses.
Germans drive on the right side of the road.
The plural form for "German" is "Germans."
French originally give us piquenique sometime during the 1690s
Gasses were invented well before World War 1. The Britons originally thought that gas was not a weapon but it was the french who through out the first gas grenade. Chlorine gas was first made by the Germans.
Boche is a pejorative noun for the Germans in French. That was originally a military slang term.
Most of them are ethnic "Germans" (originally from the Teutonic tribes of a few thousand years ago).
were the Germans defeated in a major battle for the first time in the war?
The Germans was the first one to discorver Denmark
Poland
Tschecheslovakia
No the English were the first
A German sausage covered in cheese. Chiss was originally made in Mexico but was stolen by the Germans.
The Germans, Romans, and Vikings.
Quakers and Germans
Germans...I think.