Examples of Nazi regime in a sentence
Contemporary observers, both inside and outside Germany, believed to witness a Wirtschaftswunder (economic miracle).1 Even after the defeat of the Nazi regime, Germany's economic policy received attention.
He spent the rest of the Second World War, living lavishly as Hitler’s guest, the Nazi regime paying him enormous sums.
The CRT has also taken into account, among other things, various laws, acts, decrees, and practices used by the Nazi regime and the governments of Austria, the Sudetenland, the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, the Free City of Danzig, Poland, the Incorporated Area of Poland, the Generalgouvernement of Poland, the Netherlands, Slovakia and France to confiscate Jewish assets held abroad.
Euthanasia”: A confusing term, abused under the Nazi regime and misused in present end-of-life debate.
Management informed us that a team comprised of members from private industry and the Capital Revolving Fund Reference Group for Affordable Housing evaluated the submissions and selected two proposals for the second stage of evaluation.
Gedurende de eerste vier decennia na de bevrijding werd het discours over de Tweede Wereldoorlog in Nederland bepaald door het heldere onderscheid tussen schurken van het Nazi- regime en helden van het verzet.
The Tribunal’s formation was in response to the most heinous atrocity in the history of humankind—the extermination of six million Jews and several million other “undesirables” by the Nazi regime.
For example, Waldinger (2012) finds no peer effects in a study that exploits the dismissal of scientists by the Nazi regime in 1933 as a source of exogenous variation in group composition.
Although it was still possible during the year to file claims for artwork confiscated by the Nazi regime, the claims period for other types of property had expired.
The Commission conducted the Holocaust Survivors Claims Program pursuant to a September 1995 agreement between the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany settling the claims of certain individuals who, as U.S. nationals, suffered “loss of liberty or damage to body or health” through persecution by the German Nazi regime.