Associations to the word «Albert»
Noun
- Wembley
- Quentin
- Baptiste
- Hans
- Rosen
- Nuremberg
- Brussels
- Charles
- Pts
- Bloch
- Ulrich
- Johannes
- Johann
- Dubois
- Wolfgang
- Katy
- Meade
- Karel
- Gottfried
- Parsons
- Moritz
- Carlton
- Bartlett
- Watson
- Joachim
- Parry
- Guillaume
- Architect
- Pathologist
- Chemist
- Jacques
- Windsor
- Vii
- Ghent
- Stade
- Braun
- Tucker
- Forster
- Lucien
- Alberta
- Danzig
- Freud
- Costello
- Savoy
- Oskar
- Concert
- Jean
- Rene
- Hahn
- Karl
- Walther
- Schleswig
- Pierre
- Violinist
- Tnt
- Herman
- Raoul
- Queen
- Swiss
- Barnes
- Yeomanry
- Eugene
- Jr
- Lillian
- Chadwick
- Reich
- Winslow
- Alfred
- Marie
- Mayer
- Claude
- Yves
- Frances
- Botanist
- Eldest
- Baseman
- Antwerp
- Laureate
- Equivalence
- Pinto
- Siegel
- Simone
- Belle
- Mccartney
- Nassau
- Becker
- Brahms
- Meyer
- Announcer
- Dylan
- Vaccine
- Brandt
- Anton
Verb
Adverb
Wiktionary
ALBERT, proper noun. A male given name.
ALBERT, proper noun. A constituency in Belize
ALBERT, proper noun. A city in Kansas
ALBERT, proper noun. A rural municipality in Manitoba
ALBERT, proper noun. A town in New South Wales
ALBERT, proper noun. A ghost town in Texas
ALBERT CHAIN, noun. A chain used to make easier access to a pocket watch in the watchpocket of a waistcoat. The Albert style went to a T-bar finding that tucked into a buttoned buttonhole of the waistcoat. From there a further small length of chain hung, to which the wearer attached decorative charms such as fraternity or lodge symbols. The double Albert was a chain draped between both watchpockets, with the T-bar and pendant chain in the middle. With the passing of their use as a functional item, Albert chains are still used as jewelry, worn in any number of manners.
ALBERT CHAINS, noun. Plural of Albert chain
Dictionary definition
ALBERT, noun. Prince consort of Queen Victoria of England (1819-1861).
Wise words
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more
value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an
idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words,
but a great deal in a few.