View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Liège.
Liège
Liège meaning
A free and independent person; specifically, a lord paramount; a sovereign. | A king or lord. | The subject of a sovereign or lord; a liegeman.
Synonyms of Liège
Liège vertaling naar Nederlands
Example sentences (15)
Currently, Liège has lots of “small things that offer a real alternative”, as Jonet says.
Images from cameras at Liège Airport are already being sent to the prototype in Stenokerzell.
Central square in Liège is where we’re supposed to be tomorrow afternoon, thunderstorms are forecast, what could be finer.
All three would prove crushing German victories, at Liège and Namur against the Belgians, at Maubeuge against the French and at Antwerp against a combined Anglo-Belgian force.
Communication routes between these small centres only became populated later and created a much less dense urban morphology than, for instance, the area around Liège where the old town was there to direct migratory flows.
Consequently, few days later, Teobaldo was moved to leave Liège, and it is said that he undertook a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Indeed, because of the Austrasian origins of the Carolingians in the area between the Rhine and the Maas, the cities of Aachen, Maastricht, Liège and Nijmegen were at the heart of Carolingian culture.
Judith Oliver noted five Merovingian female saints in the diocese of Liège who appeared in a long list of saints in a late 13th-century psalter-hours.
Liège was well fortified and surprised the German army under von Bülow with its level of resistance.
Phillipe Gigot, a Belgian philosopher and Victor Tedesco, a lawyer from Liège, both joined the Communist League.
The abbey at Stavelot was founded ca 650 on the domain of a former villa near Liège and the abbey of Vézelay had a similar founding.
The baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège in modern Belgium (before 1117) is an outstanding masterpiece of Romanesque brass casting, though also often described as bronze.
The Benin Bronzes are really brass, and the Romanesque Baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège is described as both bronze and brass.
The Liège of August 1939 was the last major event before World War II.
Visconti was appointed Archdeacon of Heinault in the diocese of Liège on 9 September 1246, perhaps as a reward for his services.