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Definition of Hausen
1. Noun. Valuable source of caviar and isinglass; found in Black and Caspian seas.
Generic synonyms: Sturgeon
Group relationships: Acipenser, Genus Acipenser
Terms within: Beluga Caviar
Definition of Hausen
1. n. A large sturgeon (Acipenser huso) from the region of the Black Sea. It is sometimes twelve feet long.
Definition of Hausen
1. Noun. The beluga (''Huso huso'') ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hausen
1. a Russian sturgeon [n -S]
Medical Definition of Hausen
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hausen
Literary usage of Hausen
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal by Indiana General Assembly. Senate, Indiana, General Assembly, United States Congress Senate (1873)
"... hausen, Slater, Stroud, Williams and Mr. Winterbotham—19. So the motion to
adjourn did not prevail. Mr. Gooding demanded a call of the Senate by ..."
2. A History of Architecture in All Countries: From the Earliest Times to the by James Fergusson (1874)
"What remains of the once splendid palace of Barbarossa at Geln- hausen consists
first of a chapel very similar to those described in the last chapter; ..."
3. Meyers Grosses Konversations-Lexikon: Ein Nachschlagewerk des allgemeinen by Hermann Julius Meyer (1902)
"... hausen sowie, ganz in der Nähe, der Linie Winter- thur-Stein. Andelys (Les
Andelys, spr. ü>,»n«d'ii), ..."
4. The German Classics from the Fourth to the Nineteenth Century: With by Friedrich Max Müller, Wilhelm Scherer (1886)
"... immer ledig und frei' FRIEDRICH VON hausen. » [Scherer D. 154, E. 146.]
Aus einem ritterlichen Geschlecht, war mehrfach in Italien, nahm an dem Kreuzzug ..."
5. Selections from Early German Literature by Klara Hechtenberg Collitz (1910)
"FRIEDRICH VON hausen. 99. ZWIESPALT. • Es will mein Herze und mein Leib sich
scheiden; So lange waren innig sie gesellt! Mein Leib will einzig kämpfen mit ..."
6. The Theological Aspect of Reformed Judaism by Max Leopold Margolis (1904)
"3I We agree with WELL- hausen M that he who calls Empedocles and Aeschylus and
particularly Socrates and Plato heathens no longer associates a definite ..."