Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A German and Albanian language pop song, the lyrics features the theme of love and missing somebody. The official music video for the song was shot in Germany and was uploaded on 1 August 2019 onto YouTube in order to accompany the single's release.
Gin'yū Mokushiroku Meine Liebe (吟遊黙示録 マイネリーベ, abbreviated to Meine Liebe, which is German for My Love) is a series of dating sims by Konami for the Game Boy Advance and PlayStation 2.
Levi Wijk (born January 3, 1996), known professionally as Bunt (stylized as "BUNT."), is a German electronic folk DJ. "Bunt" is the German language word for "Colorful". [5]Bunt was formerly a duo comprising Wijk and Nico Crispin; Crispin left in May 2021. [6]
As though our love were now no more. There are out there, out there, so many girls, so many girls, Beloved treasure, I will be true. Even if I saw another lass, do not think my love is through: Let out there, let out there, let out there be many girls, there be many girls, Dearest love, I will be true. In a year, in a year,
Developments and discoveries in German-speaking nations in science, scholarship, and classical music have led to German words for new concepts, which have been adopted into English: for example the words doppelgänger and angst in psychology. Discussion of German history and culture requires some German words.
" Liebestod" ([ˈliːbəsˌtoːt] German for "love death") is the title of the final, dramatic music from the 1859 opera Tristan und Isolde by Richard Wagner. It is the climactic end of the opera, as Isolde sings over Tristan's dead body. The music is often used in film and television productions of doomed lovers. [1]
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Minnesang (German: [ˈmɪnəzaŋ] ⓘ; "love song") was a tradition of German lyric- and song-writing that flourished in the Middle High German period (12th to 14th centuries). The name derives from minne, the Middle High German word for love, as that was Minnesang's main subject.