In English, the Germans and Germany have several derogatory terms from the World Wars, e.g. "Jerry," "the Krauts," etc. There is the German term "Deutschland." Then there are the Latin terms Germania, Teutonia, Alemania, Saxonia, and historical names of entities that later became part of Germany or that Germany was a part of, e.g. Prussia, Saxony, Thuringia, Holy Roman Empire, First Reich, Second Reich, Third Reich, etc. Germany also has a full name "Federal Republic of Germany," and you can refer to it as the "Federal Republic" for short if the context makes clear you're talking about Germany. (East Germany was the German Democratic Republic.)
Deutschland.
Third Reich
Germany ,Italy and Japan
easter house
Hamburg, is one city in Germany that has a name that sounds like a popular picnic food. Another city in Germany with a popular picnic food name is Frankfurt.
In German, federal republic is "Bundesrepublik."
Pi is in the German language also "die Kreiszahl".
No. There is the Federal Republic of Germany (Bundesrepuplik Deuschland, Bund=Federation) and there was the German Democratic Republic (Deutsche Demokratische Republik), which was 'East Germany'.
Germany often refered to it as Fortress Europe.
One of the most famous beer festivals occurs in Germany called Oktoberfest.
The American name for West Germany was West Germany.
The same name that West Germany had - Federal Republic of Germany.