The book A Day With Corps Students in Germany was written by author Lees Knowles Here you can read free online of A Day With Corps Students in Germany book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is A Day With Corps Students in Germany a good or bad book?
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Ovid alludes to the tying of a lighted torch between two foxes in order to do damage to hay and straw. Probably, the idea came from the Phoenicians who derived it from Samson, whose feats of strength were reflected by the Greeks and Romans in their tales of Hercules. An alleged derivation of Fuchs is from Fex, or the Austrian pro- -vincialism Geek, meaning a fop or dandy, connected with the verb fexen, to dress and behave like a fop or dandy, wearing hats, ties, &c. , of peculiar shapes and col...ours. Fex, moreover, is used in Austria not only for a dandy, but also for a person who has such a passion for some occupation, sport, or art, that people, who do not understand his hobby, think him foolish. For instance, Musik-fex, Berg-fex, Stall-fex, are A FORMER SeNIOREN-CoNVENT DiENER, OR SERVANT, OF THE FIVE CoRPS, WEARING THE SC-StUERMER AND GUARDING A SCHLAEGER OF EACH CORPS. A DAY WITH CORPS-STUDENTS IN GERMANY people who are deeply interested in music, mountaineering, or horses. In this sense, it gives a notion of keenness about anything, which is so aptly conveyed in the characteristic German verb schwaermen.
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