Frankfurt

//ˈfɹæŋkfə(ɹ)t//

"Frankfurt" in a Sentence (16 examples)

It was named after Frankfurt, a German city.

The 2011 Women's Soccer World Cup will end in Frankfurt, Germany.

My father stayed a few days in Frankfurt.

Oh, my God! Frankfurt is in Germany, not in the Middle East!

I'm batching it this weekend because my wife is visiting her brother in Frankfurt.

Tomorrow we shall go from Frankfurt to Munich.

When we arrive in Frankfurt, we must call our friends.

"Cultural Marxism" was a critique of popular culture by the Frankfurt School of critical theory, a discipline which used knowledge from the social sciences to revise Marxist theory. In modern usage among right-wingers, "Cultural Marxism" has become a substitute term for the Nazi-era conspiracy theory "Cultural Bolshevism."

In this April 11, 2018, file photo, two boys push their scooters through a park with green blossoming trees in Frankfurt, Germany.

Mary quit her job as a corporate lawyer in Frankfurt and decided to travel the world.

Thomas was born in 1986, at a US military hospital in Frankfurt, Germany, to a mother born in Kenya and a US citizen father who eventually spent more than a decade in the military, where he repaired Army helicopters.

The poor third-quarter results from Frankfurt had the broadest impact because they spotlighted the vulnerability of the listed German universal banks to the financial crisis spreading from Asia.

Despite this risk, little has happened in the six months since Frankfurt cut interest rates causing one to wonder how different Draghi is from his predecessor.

Sample of frankfurts procured from Stanley Kwiatkowski, Grand Rapids, Mich. Contains excessive amount of cereal.

Frankfurts of the highest quality are prepared generally from a mixture of approximately half beef and half pork.

As a kid in the 50s, (before we became infested with the current mish-mash of liquorice allsorts) pork fritz, devon, sliced ham, frankfurts, pork sausages...were all about as common a staple as you care to name. Even the Italians and Greeks of the time ate (and continue to eat) the stuff!!

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.