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5 Sentences With "mutterer"

How to use mutterer in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "mutterer" and check conjugation/comparative form for "mutterer". Mastering all the usages of "mutterer" from sentence examples published by news publications.

On the new season of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, the character Lillian, played by Carol Kane, gets back together with her old boyfriend, alleged real-life murderer and world-class mutterer Robert Durst, here played by Fred Armisen.
The Muttereralmbahn is an aerial tramway in Mutters, Tyrol, Austria. In 1954, the first cable car leading from Mutters to the popular Mutterer Alm ski resort was opened. This facility, known for its characteristic egg-shaped cabins, was shut down in 2000. A new aerial tramway with 8-person cabins was opened on January 5, 2006.
When Rubeus J and his subordinates were defeated by Venoct, Rubeus J states that he answers to Hardy Hound who is more stronger than him. ;Hardy Hound :A towering lion dog Yo-kai of the Charming Tribe who is friends with Rubeus J. ;Wobblewok :A black mass Yo-kai in a giant rice cooker. See Shady Tribe for more information. ; / Mass Mutterer :A humanoid man-faced poodle Yo- kai who resembles Manjimutt in prison attire.
The logical outcome of this tendency is the historical novel with Pytheas as the main character and the celebration of Pytheas in poetry beginning as far back as Virgil. The process continues into modern times; for example, Pytheas is a key theme in Charles Olson's Maximus Poems. Details of Pytheas' voyage also serve as the backdrop for Chapter I of Poul Anderson's science fiction novel, The Boat of a Million Years. The Stone Stories trilogy by Mandy Haggith (The Walrus Mutterer, 2018; The Amber Seeker, 2019; The Lyre Dancers, 2020) revolve around Pytheas of Massalia's journeys.
The term is said to have been coined by the Anglo-Irish cleric Henry Crumpe, but its origin is uncertain. The earliest official use of the name in England occurs in 1387 in a mandate of the Bishop of Worcester against five "poor preachers", nomine seu ritu Lollardorum confoederatos. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, it most likely derives from Middle Dutch ' ("mumbler, mutterer"), from a verb lollen ("to mutter, mumble"). The word is much older than its English use; there were Lollards in the Netherlands at the beginning of the 14th century, who were akin to the Fraticelli, Beghards and other sectaries of the recusant Franciscan type.

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