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fritz

/frits/US // frɪts //

弗里茨,弗里兹,弗利兹,弗里奇

Definitions

  1. 1
    • : fritz out, Informal. to become inoperable.

Examples

  • Mondale — who went by the nickname “Fritz” — was a pillar of Minnesota Democratic politics for a generation, and came to national prominence in 1976 when then-Georgia Governor Carter selected Mondale as his running mate.

  • The third is that, even without a PhD, you see a problem with Fritz’s analysis.

  • Fritz’s PhD allows him to do the math himself, he assures you, but he passes along a formula that he derived from Excel.

  • Michael immediately saw how to incorporate it into the K-theory that he and Fritz had developed, and he quickly had the statement of the general index theorem in hand.

  • Though that can generate huge waves offshore, it doesn’t do too much in terms of raising sea level far away from the coast, says Fritz.

  • Hitchcock also met Fritz Lang, who was later to work in Hollywood.

  • And then she tasted the Fritz Briem Berliner Weisse 1809, and everything changed.

  • I ordered the same beer she had, and for the next two hours, we drank this refreshing brew: Fritz Briem Berliner Weisse “1809.”

  • In a comic moment, one man suffered a brain fritz and said he had read something about the defendant being “related to Obama.”

  • McMahon, who succeeds Fritz Winans, was the former CEO of St. John.

  • Balsamo waited until Fritz returned, when he went back to the private inner house, fastening all the doors.

  • Fritz is lodged there; has a magnificent bed: poor young fellow, he alone now makes the business of any meaning to us.

  • We would see Fritz disappear round a traverse and we simply could not stand still and let him go, or let the other fellow get him.

  • He arrests, punishes and banishes, where there is trace of cooperation or connection with Deserter Fritz and his schemes.

  • In certain sordid times, even a "Failure of a Fritz" is better than some Successes that are going.