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Seifert

American  
[sahy-fuhrt] / ˈsaɪ fərt /

noun

  1. Jaroslav 1901–1986, Czech poet: Nobel Prize 1984.


Seifert British  
/ ˈsiːˌfət /

noun

  1. Jaroslav (ˈjærəslæf). 1901–86, Czech poet and journalist, noted esp for poems dealing with the German occupation of Prague during World War II. Nobel prize for literature 1984

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Example Sentences

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Archer, who began by beating the bat four times in a maiden, was unlucky not to take a wicket early, which allowed Tim Seifert and Finn Allen to build a partnership of 64.

From BBC

Rashid had Seifert stumped before Brook twirled through his tweakers - Ahmed having Rachin Ravindra caught mid-wicket in the 12th over.

From BBC

"Both parties have extended effort, money and propaganda on their current position," Dr Roger Seifert, an industrial dispute expert from the University of Wolverhampton said.

From BBC

However, Seifert believes support they are receiving from mega pickets and other union groups could be encouraging them to continue striking.

From BBC

"People from within the Labour party could have acted as an honest broker, because unite is a big donor to the Labour party so you would have thought that senior people within the Labour party would have wanted to get involved," Seifert said.

From BBC