During World War II, German prison camps were primarily referred to as "KZ," which stands for "Konzentrationslager" or concentration camps. These camps were used for the detention, forced labor, and extermination of political prisoners, Jews, and other targeted groups. Additionally, there were "Vernichtungslager," or extermination camps, specifically designed for mass killings. Notable examples include Auschwitz, Dachau, and Treblinka.
The Reichsmark.
Adolf Hitler the Fuhrer
Because the German Air Force practiced dive bombing in Spain during their civil war.
the central powers or the triple allience
Franz von Rintelen, a German immigrant and businessman, was killed by an angry mob in the United States during World War I, reflecting the intense anti-German sentiment of the time. He was lynched in 1918 in a case that exemplified the hysteria and violence directed at German Americans amid wartime patriotism. This tragic event highlights the broader societal tensions and xenophobia that emerged during the conflict.
German soldiers during World War I were called "Huns" by the American soldiers. The Germans called their soldiers "The Bosch" during World War I.
An informal word for a prison that starts with 's' is slammer.During World War II, a German POW prison was called a stalag.
German- Americans and Irish- Americans were commonly called hyphenateds during the WWI area.
Erwin Rommel
They were called V-2 Rockets.
droughtnot
The submarines were either called "submarines" or "U-boats." The German submarine was called the "U-boat"
German submarines were referred to as U-boats during the world wars.
The German airforce was called the Luftwaffe.
Erwin Rommel, a German General during World War 2, was nicknamed the "Desert Fox."
In World War I the German Airforce was called the Luftstreitkrafte. In World War II the German Airforce was called the Luftwaffe.
They are actually called 'u-boats', and they were employed by the german military.