All 50 Uses
Nazi
in
Prisoner B-3087
(Auto-generated)
- "The Nazis won't be so bad," an old Polish woman on the sidewalk next to me said as I watched them.†
p. 8.3Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- No one will buy from us with Nazi soldiers telling people, 'Don't buy from Jews.'†
p. 9.9Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- "See how easy it is to keep your faith when the Nazis take it away along with everything else," Moshe told him.†
p. 11.6Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- The Nazis were walling us in.
p. 14.3 *Nazis = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- My father and uncle had lost their shops, had their inventories seized by the Nazis, just as Uncle Moshe said they would.†
p. 15.6Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- The Nazis even took people out of the ghetto to work elsewhere in Krakow.†
p. 17.2
- The Nazi rubbed his hands together, stomped his feet to clear the snow and cold from them, and walked around the corner, out of sight.†
p. 21.4Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- The Nazis had let him keep it to bake bread for the soldiers.†
p. 21.9Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- But if the Nazis find out...†
p. 23.8
- All I cared about was getting out of our crowded house for some freedom and fresh air, but my parents were still worried I'd be snatched up by the Nazis.†
p. 26.8
- The Nazis also took Jews away to work in Krakow's factories.†
p. 26.9
- A Nazi.†
p. 28.2Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- The Judenrat were the Jews the Nazis put in charge of the ghetto, and they had special police officers who had to take orders from the Nazis.†
p. 28.5Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- The Judenrat were the Jews the Nazis put in charge of the ghetto, and they had special police officers who had to take orders from the Nazis.†
p. 28.6
- She just stared at the Nazi and trembled.†
p. 28.9Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- The other families in our flat scrambled to give the Nazi officer everything they had squirreled away: little bits of jewelry, a pocket watch, a handful of zloty.†
p. 29.5
- The pigeons were all gone now, just like Mr. Immerglick; he died a year before the Nazis came.†
p. 33.7Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- It was the first thing I'd heard her say since the Nazis burst into our flat.†
p. 35.1
- THE PIGEON COOP BECAME OUR HOME, AND NO Nazi was the wiser.†
p. 37.1Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- And once a week—on the Sabbath—the Nazis would conduct "Resettlements," when they came and took more people away.†
p. 37.9Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- The members of the Judenrat were hated throughout the ghetto for working with the Nazis.†
p. 39.1
- But any man the Nazis assigned to the Judenrat who refused was shot or hanged, so I didn't see what choice they had.†
p. 39.1
- The Nazis have ordered me to give them seven thousand Jews, to be deported from the Krakow ghetto tomorrow morning.
p. 39.9Nazis = a member of Hitler’s ruling party or regime
- Because the Nazis have promised not to take him and his family, and people will do anything to protect their families.†
p. 42.1Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- When it was clear none of us was a Nazi we all hurried on our way without a word, but we were even more cautious than before.†
p. 44.8Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- Before the Nazis, I would have been at the synagogue once or twice a week ahead of time, practicing for this.†
p. 46.4Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- Across the street was a building that had been turned into a hospital, and I watched through a hole in the blanket as the Nazis pushed sick people out the door and down the steps.†
p. 49.7
- As I watched, the Nazis walked up behind the sick people from the hospital and started to shoot.†
p. 50.2
- Something to stop the Nazis.†
p. 50.9
- I've seen what the Nazis think of us.†
p. 53.2
- But on the third day, when the sun rose, there were no more trucks in the streets, no more gunshots, no more Nazis.†
p. 54.4
- Rumors were whispered in the streets: that shootings in the woods were too much trouble for the Nazis.
p. 55.5Nazis = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- When the Nazis came looking for Jews to deport, all the people who lived on the streets found places to hide.†
p. 56.7Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- I skirted down Limanowskiego Street, ready to duck behind a busted-up piece of furniture or hide in a pile of old rags if I heard the Nazis coming.†
p. 56.9
- The Nazi officers marched by in the street in front of me.†
p. 57.3Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- The Nazis grabbed them as they were coming back from buying bread.†
p. 58.9Nazis = members of Hitler's political party who thought they were superior to all others; or those who identify with them
- Maybe I should just go and give myself to the Nazis, I thought with bitterness, with defeat.†
p. 59.5
- No matter what the Nazis did to me, no matter what they took from me, I would survive.†
p. 59.8
- THE NAZIS SNATCHED ME UP ONE DAY WHEN I was at work.†
p. 62.1
- Aunt Gizela and little Zytka went for a voluntary selection in Zgody Square, in hopes that the Nazis meant what they said about resettlement.†
p. 63.1
- Were the Nazis lying to us?†
p. 63.3
- But just outside the truck were Nazis with machine guns.†
p. 63.5
- The women I worked with begged to be able to tell their families back in the ghetto good-bye, to tell them where they were being taken, but the Nazis didn't listen.†
p. 63.9
- I almost laughed—in truth I had been a prisoner since the Nazis walled off the Krakow ghetto, but now I finally looked the part.†
p. 65.3
- He was a kapo, he told us, a prisoner who'd been put in charge of other prisoners by the Nazis, so they wouldn't have to deal with us all the time.†
p. 65.5
- They could not work, so the Nazis shot them.†
p. 69.4
- We were lined up in row upon row while the Nazis checked the numbers on our uniforms against the tally on their clipboards.†
p. 70.3
- The truck bounced to a stop, and the Nazis ordered us out.†
p. 74.3
- "The entire ghetto must be cleaned," one of the Nazis told us.†
p. 74.8
- It wouldn't do for the Nazis to notice me for any reason.†
p. 77.3
Definitions:
-
(1)
(Nazi) Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
or:
derogatory term for a person who is fanatical in their belief of superiority and their determination to control others - (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)