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Klaus English

Meaning Klaus meaning

What does Klaus mean?

Klaus

placeholder name for a person

Examples Klaus examples

How do I use Klaus in a sentence?

Movie subtitles

You can ask me anything, Klaus. It's our last evening together.
Come, Karl. Klaus!
Oh, by the way, is old Klaus Berger still alive?
I agree, I agree, but is old man Klaus still alive?
His chief of staff, Major General Klaus Kahlenberge also had no alibi that night.
Klaus, from Hamburg.
Give them to me. You can't Klaus.
I'm begging you. No, Klaus.
Please, Klaus.
Tell Klaus to give it to me. I need it. I can't stand it.
Klaus.
Klaus, why didn't I think of it before?
I don't know. Klaus would have killed you.
Did you hear that, Klaus?
Make him put me down, Klaus.
That will be arranged when you meet Klaus.
Klaus, the greatest elephant trainer in the world, presents his marvellous mastodonic mammals, gracefully ridden by 20 sultry sirens from the East, starring Angel, the sultans favourite.
Klaus, are you nuts?
Maybe you know a little more, Klaus?
You are crazy, Klaus.
Klaus, we have problems again with 12:17.
You can ask me everything, Klaus.
Klaus, cover!
Calm down, Klaus!
This year the incentive award goes to colleague Klaus Bernhard.
Sit down, Mr. Klaus.
That codfish, Mr. Klaus.
Klaus is 11 already.
And then Klaus Teichmann, upper sixth-form student and son of the defendant. - Present.
In chronological terms, and to help us understand what happened later, the daywhen your son Klaus first met Dr Boris Winkler seems to be important.
Klaus told me later that school was over, the kids were rushing out of the gates, he was heading for his motor scooter, and just at that moment, Dr Winkler came up and spoke to him.
Hello, Klaus Teichmann!
Is Klaus home yet?
Klaus isn't there yet.
Klaus is a star pupil.
Our Klaus will be more than that.
Klaus, it's your father you're talking about.
Klaus is sick?
I have to see Klaus Teichmann urgently.

News and current affairs

The first concept is represented by former prime Minister Vaclav Klaus, the second by President Vaclav Havel.
Klaus sees political parties as the backbone of any democratic system and sees little place for civil society in politics.
Klaus's vision of democracy had the upper hand for most of the past decade.
Klaus and his followers spearheaded the creation of well-functioning, standard political parties.
Unfortunately, Havel's vision of democracy appears complicated when compared to that of Klaus.
At the end of 1997, the second Klaus government collapsed under the weight of financial scandals.
Rather than learn from this fiasco, Klaus went on the offensive, claiming that he was a victim of a conspiracy hatched by Havel.
But his party, the Civic Democrats (ODS), lost the June 1998 elections to the Social Democrats (CSSD), whom Klaus vilified before the elections as a threat to democracy.
Klaus, Zeman and their parties also agreed to work together to limit presidential power and the independence of the Central Bank by changing the Constitution, as well as to change the electoral law in their favor.
Loss of control of the Senate also meant that Klaus's hope to replace Havel as president diminished.
Defeat prompted Klaus and Zeman to try to and gain control over Czech TV by packing its council of overseers with their sympathizers.
Realizing that the game was lost, the Social Democrats joined with Klaus's opponents in parliament on January 5th to demand Hodac's resignation.
Unrecognized by almost everyone, Czech society has moved beyond Havel and Klaus.
It rejects Klaus's truncated democracy, and, although it supports (to some extent) Havel's vision, Havel himself is no longer the motor of civil society in action.
Climate negotiators cannot answer that question, but innovators like Elon Musk of Tesla, and scientists like Klaus Lackner of Columbia University, can.
Klaus, who thought that the economically less successful Slovakia was holding the Czechs back, did not object.
For example, the Czech Civic Democratic Party, heavily influenced by Czech President Vaclav Klaus, describes Poland as the Czech Republic's chief ally and an example of how new members should approach the EU.

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