One can be sure that DKW would love to add a Chinese race to his international roll of honour.
What does DFC stand for?
DFC stands for DKW (Dampfkraftwagen) Fanatik Club (French car club)
This definition appears rarely and is found in the following Acronym Finder categories:
- Organizations, NGOs, schools, universities, etc.
See other definitions of DFC
Other Resources:
We have 186 other meanings of DFC in our Acronym Attic
- Abbreviation Database Surfer
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- Disaster Finance Center
- Discounted Cash Flow
- Disk File Controller
- Distinguished Flying Cross
- Distributed Feature Card (Cisco)
- Distributed Forwarding Card (Cisco)
- Diverse Field Crops (various locations)
- Division de la Formation et de la Communication (French: Division of Training and Communication; French Ministry of the Interior)
- Division of Family and Children (Indiana FSSA)
- Divorced Female with Crohn's
- Documentum Foundation Classes (Java classes)
- Dole Food Company (est. 1851; Hawaii)
- Dominique Ferricelli Consultant (French business consulting company)
- Don't Freakin' Crash (polite form) :-)
- Donors Forum of Chicago (Chicago, IL)
- Double Foyer pour Cheminée (French fireplace company)
- Downloads for Change (website)
- Drug Facts and Comparisons (reference book)
- Drum File Control
- Dubai Festival City (United Arab Emirates)
Samples in periodicals archive:
Example 1: DKW Corporation has 1,000 shares of stock issued and outstanding.
This is where I bought my first motor car: an Auto Union Sonderclasse DKW 1000 cc, three-cylinder, water-cooled two-stroke engine with front-wheeldrive and four-speed gearbox.
Majestic Concorde hasn't run over fences since October, which suggests to me that DKW reckons he has a handy mark and doesn't want to ruin it.
The Horch company, which was founded in 1899 and began manufacturing cars in 1901, was unified with three other car manufacturers - Audi, DKW and Wanderer - to form Auto Union, or what is today known as Audi.
The Horch company, which was founded in 1899 and began manufacturing cars in 1901, was unified with three other car manufacturers - Audi, DKW and Wanderer.
By 1932 the then four leading automakers -- Audi, DKW, Horch, and Wanderer -- joined forces to become Auto-Union, symbolized by the four rings of the Audi trademark today.