The AI-powered English dictionary
(now historical) Germany. quotations
The x. of Awgust Maximilian emperowr of Almayne came to kynge Henry of England besyde Terwen, and there the emperowre had wages of the kynge.
c. 1541, The Chronicle of Calais, London, published 1846
The merchants who owned the goods claimed that the King of Almain was the lord of the town, and the Bishop could not do justice in the matter.
1994, Marianne Constable, The Law of the Other, page 162
plural Almains
(now archaic, literary, poetic) A German.
A kind of dance. See allemande. examples
comparative more Almain, superlative most Almain
(now archaic, historical) German.