All 20 Uses
Nazi
in
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
(Auto-generated)
- It was an eight-foot Nazi banner.†
p. 14.9Nazi = Hitler's fanatical and oppressive political party in World War II Germany
- I found myself having to explain that, no, I was not a Nazi and that I had used the flag to create a time warp in order to stop some very inconsiderate filmmakers, who were not Jewish as far as I knew.†
p. 15.3
- The rabbi wrote me a letter asking how I happened to have a Nazi flag handy.†
p. 15.5
- That was a Nazi dagger I saw on a table in the rear parlor.†
p. 15.6
- "I have several," said Williams, "plus a few sidearms and a hood ornament from a Nazi staff car.†
p. 15.7
- And so it happened that I spent that extraordinary evening in Mercer House in the company of Jim Williams and his Faberge trinkets, his pipe organ, his portraits, his Nazi banner, his game of Psycho Dice and—briefly but memorably— his tempestuous young friend, Danny Hansford.†
p. 129.2
- Furthermore, he suspected the Nazi flag episode was more than a lighthearted attempt to foil a crew of moviemakers.†
p. 144.4 *
- Do you know about the Nazi flag incident?†
p. 151.9
- With so much talk centering on Jim Williams—his origins, his career, his exploits, his everything—the incident of the Nazi flag came in for a good bit of rehashing.†
p. 178.7
- Some people, even a few Jews like Bob Minis, dismissed the Nazi flag episode as insignificant—"It was stupid," said Minis.†
p. 178.8
- "I'm sure he doesn't actually think of himself as a Nazi," said Joseph Killorin, an English professor at Armstrong State College.†
p. 178.9
- But come on, Nazi symbols are not totally bereft of meaning.†
p. 178.9
- In the South, among extreme chauvinists, you sometimes find a strange affinity for Nazi regalia.†
p. 179.1
- There is a terribly social gentleman here in Savannah who sometimes wears Nazi uniforms to costume parties—anyone can tell you who I'm talking about; he's known for it—and he says he does it for shock value, but the deeper meaning is still there.†
p. 179.2
- Displaying a Nazi flag would be one way of demonstrating that.†
p. 179.4
- At the time the book came out, he had cornered the market in Nazi daggers, swords, and bayonets.†
p. 197.4
- He had bought sixty German arms factories together with their stocks of abandoned Nazi weapons.†
p. 197.4
- He has a Nazi hood ornament on the desk in his study.†
p. 231.2
- He has a Nazi officer's ring with the skull and crossbones on it.†
p. 231.2
- Mrs. McLeroy looked toward Mercer House, half-expecting to see Jim Williams drape another Nazi flag over his balcony.†
p. 367.9
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)