Sieg Heil

Etymology
, from +, a common chant at political rallies in Nazi Germany, translating as "victory brings salvation" or alternatively as "salvation [to] victory" on the model of.

Translations

 * Arabic: زِيج هَايْل
 * Bulgarian: зиг хайл
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 勝利萬歲
 * German: Sieg Heil
 * Greek: Ζήτω η Νίκη
 * Hebrew: זיג הייל
 * Japanese: ジークハイル
 * Korean: 지크 하일
 * Marathi: झीक हाइल
 * Persian: درود بر پیروزی
 * Russian:
 * Swedish: hell seger
 * Ukrainian: зіґ хайль

Verb

 * 1)  To perform a Nazi salute while chanting Sieg Heil.

Etymology
lit. 'health, victory'.

Interjection

 * 1)  Sieg Heil

Usage notes

 * became the salute of the Nazi Party in the 1920s. It developed into the so called, the use of which was later made obligatory to all Germans in the Third Reich. After WWII, the public use of any form of the Hitler salute was criminalized in Germany and Austria. In Germany it is punishable with up to three years in prison.