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Examples

  • Wehn ai wuz livving in Stuttgart, sum frenz and ai wud offen go driving in teh Schwartzwald, traing to find the place wif the verree best Schwartzwalderkirschtorte!

    eeeeeeeeeexcellent. - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger? 2008

  • I lived in Germany in 1990-1991, and in the center of the little Schwartzwald town was a movie theater that only ran midnight cult movies.

    Archive 2007-12-09 2007

  • My family name, Schauble, is the name of an old German family from the Schwartzwald, or Black Forest area of Germany.

    Archive 2007-01-01 Bruce Schauble 2007

  • My family name, Schauble, is the name of an old German family from the Schwartzwald, or Black Forest area of Germany.

    And What is Your Name? Bruce Schauble 2007

  • I lived in Germany in 1990-1991, and in the center of the little Schwartzwald town was a movie theater that only ran midnight cult movies.

    VW's Favorite DVDs of 2007: David Kalat 2007

  • I know every foot in the Schwartzwald from Fribourg to Nideck.

    The Man-Wolf and Other Tales Erckmann-Chatrian

  • And the count still crouching motionless, but with his head now raised in the attitude of attention, his neck outstretched, his eyes burning, seemed to understand the meaning of that distant voice, lost amidst the passes and peaks of the Schwartzwald, and a kind of fearful joy gleamed in his savage features.

    The Man-Wolf and Other Tales Erckmann-Chatrian

  • Schwartzwald, and boat the bushes there, and breathe the free air, and bask in the bright sunshine amongst the hills and valleys -- here I find you, at the end of sixteen years of such a life, shut up in this red granite hole.

    The Man-Wolf and Other Tales Erckmann-Chatrian

  • The Schwartzwald, the Saxon Schweitz, nay, even the wild

    Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, No. 382, October 1847 Various

  • But to do full justice to its unearthly fascination, one ought to hear it chanted by night in a lonely glade of the Schwartzwald or Spessart forest, with the wind moaning as an accompaniment, and the ghostly shadows of the branches flitting in the moonlight across the path.

    Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 345, July, 1844 Various

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