russian

listen to the pronunciation of russian
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} Rusça

O Rusça da konuşabilir. - He can also speak Russian.

Çok iyi Rusça konuşan birini tanıyorum. - I know a person who speaks Russian very well.

{i} Rus

Tom'un Rusça öğrenmeye çalışmakla ilgilendiğinden bile şüpheliyim. - I doubt that Tom is even interested in trying to learn Russian.

Rusya, Polonya, Çek ve Bulgaristan'ın ortak Slav kökleri var. - Such languages as Russian, Polish, Czech and Bulgarian have common Slavic roots.

i., s
(sıfat) Rus
Russian leather
sahtiyan
Russian Federation
Rusya Federasyonu
russian fedaration
rusya fedarosyası
Russian roulette
Rus ruleti
Russian turnip
şalgam
russian dressing
rus sosu
russian formalism
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) rus biçimciliği
russian oak
kaya meşesi
great russian
büyük rus
white russian
beyaz rusyalı
expert in russian civilisation
rusça medeniyet uzman
in russian
rusça olarak
is there a russian restaurant nearby
yakınlarda rus restoranı var mı
Englisch - Englisch
A person from Russia
A domestic cat breed
Of or pertaining to Rus
A cat of this breed
Of or pertaining to Russia
An ethnic Russian
The Russian language
{n} a native of Russian, in the north of Europe
{a} pertaining to Russia
{s} pertaining to Russia or its inhabitants (large country in Europe and Asia)
Of or pertaining to Rus or Russia
Russian means belonging or relating to Russia, or to its people, language, or culture. the Russian parliament
{i} resident or citizen of Russia (large country in Europe and Asia)
{i} Slavic language spoken in Russia
A Russian is a Russian citizen, or a person of Russian origin. Three-quarters of Russians live in cities. relating to Russia, its people, or its language. Russian Formalism Russian Federation Aeroflot Russian Airlines Anglo Russian Entente Franco Russian Alliance Russian Civil War Russian language Russian Orthodox Church Russian Revolution of 1905 Russian Revolution of 1917 Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party Gosudarstvenny Universalny Magazin Russian: State Department Store
Of or pertaining to Russia, its inhabitants, or language
of or pertaining to or characteristic of Russia or its people or culture or language; "Russian dancing"
(160 million)
Wolk
X: Sona poltshok (Glis ) - Oreshnikovaa sona (Muscardinus) - Lesnaa sona (Dryomys) - Sadovaa sona (Eliomys) - Mbshevidnaa sona (Myomimus)
Requires Cyrillic localization kit (like InterType) English to Russian lexicon Russian to English lexicon
A native or inhabitant of Russia; the language of Russia
The nickname of a Russian is “a Bear,” or the “Northern Bear ”
a native or inhabitant of Russia
the Slavic language that is the official language of Russia of or pertaining to or characteristic of Russia or its people or culture or language; "Russian dancing
the Slavic language that is the official language of Russia
russ

He can also speak Russian. - He can speak Russian too.

He can speak Russian, too. - He can also speak Russian.

Russian Blue
A domestic cat breed
Russian Empire
The name of the Russian state in 1721-1917
Russian Orthodox Church
Any of a number of organizations based primarily in Russia and affiliated with the Eastern Orthodox Church of Christianity
Russian SFSR
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, the name for modern day Russia before the collapse of the Soviet Union (1917-1991)
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
The official name for modern day Russia before the collapse of the Soviet Union (1917-1991)
Russian alphabet
The 33-letter alphabet of the Modern Russian language, consisting of the following letters (presented in upper case (majuscule) and lower case (minuscule) pairs):

А а, Б б, В в, Г г, Д д, Е е, Ё ё, Ж ж, З з, И и, Й й, К к, Л л, М м, Н н, О о, П п, Р р, С с, Т т, У у, Ф ф, Х х, Ц ц, Ч ч, Ш ш, Щ щ, Ъ ъ, Ы ы, Ь ь, Э э, Ю ю, Я я.

Russian alphabet
The Russian alphabet used before 1918, consisting of the above letters plus the following four:

І і, Ѳ ѳ, Ѣ ѣ, Ѵ ѵ.

Russian ball
A type of juggling ball with a hard, shiny outer shell, filled with sand or another filler material designed to be more visible than beanbags
Russian balls
plural form of Russian ball
Russian doll
An issue or situation which repeatedly reveals more levels of complexity
Russian doll
One of a set of hollow nesting dolls, usually wooden and decorated
Russian dolls
plural form of Russian doll
Russian dressing
An American salad dressing, a spiced blend of mayonnaise and ketchup
Russian gauge
A railway gauge of 1,520 or 1,524 mm, used primarily in the former Soviet Union
Russian gold
A name for a gold-copper alloy more commonly called rose gold. The alloy was popular in Russia at one time but the term is now less common than it was
Russian roulette
A deadly game in which a person loads a single bullet in the cylinder of a revolver, spins the cylinder so that the location of the bullet is unknown, points the weapon at his/her head, and pulls the trigger. In its most lethal form, played by multiple participants each of whom takes a turn until the weapon discharges
Russian Bear
{i} nickname given to a clumsy person
Russian Civil War
(1918-20) Conflict between the newly formed Bolshevik government and its Red Army against the anti-Bolshevik forces in Russia. The unfavourable Treaty of Brest-Litovsk concluded with Germany caused socialists opposed to Vladimir Lenin to break with the Bolsheviks and join the right-wing Whites and their volunteer army under Anton Denikin. In an attempt to create another front in World War I, the Allies gave limited support to the Whites. The Moscow government responded to the growing anti-Bolshevik movement by expelling Menshevik and Social Revolutionary deputies from the government, and it began a campaign of "Red terror" that gave increased powers to the secret police (Cheka) to arrest and execute suspects. The Bolsheviks maintained control over the heart of the country, but the anti-Bolsheviks gained power in Ukraine and Omsk, where Aleksandr Kolchak and other dissident groups joined together to fight the Red Army. Confused by the struggles between communists, Russian Whites, and Ukrainian nationalists, the Allies withdrew their support by 1919. After early military successes against the Red Army, the White forces under Kolchak were defeated by early 1920. Other White troops under Nikolay Yudenich failed to take St. Petersburg. The last White stronghold in the Crimea under Pyotr Wrangel, Denikin's successor, was defeated in November 1920, ending the Russian Civil War
Russian Federation
{i} Russia (formerly Soviet Russia)
Russian Orthodox Church
The Eastern Orthodox Church that is under the leadership of the patriarch of Russia and has autonomous branches in other countries. the main religious group of Russia. It is a Christian church that began in the 11th century by separating from the Catholic Church. The Orthodox Church has very complicated religious ceremonies in which the words are mostly sung rather than spoken, and the it is closely related to the Greek Orthodox Church. Orthodox. Eastern Orthodox church of Russia, its de facto national church. In 988 Prince Vladimir of Kiev (later St. Vladimir) embraced Byzantine Orthodoxy and ordered the baptism of his population. By the 14th century, the metropolitan of Kiev and all Russia (head of the Russian church) was residing in Moscow; dissatisfied western Russian principalities obtained temporary separate metropolitans, but authority was later recentralized under Moscow. In the 15th century the church, rejecting Metropolitan Isidore's acceptance of union with the Western church (see Council of Ferrara-Florence), appointed their own independent metropolitan. Moscow saw itself as the "third Rome" and the last bulwark of true Orthodoxy; in 1589 the head of the Russian church obtained the title patriarch, putting him on a level with the patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. The reforms of Nikon caused a schism within the church (see Old Believers), and Peter I abolished the patriarchate in 1721, making church administration a department of the state. The patriarchate was reestablished in 1917, two months before the Bolshevik revolution, but under the soviets the church was deprived of its legal rights and practically suppressed. It saw a great resurgence following the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991). The Russian Orthodox Church in the U.S. became independent from Moscow in 1970
Russian Revolution
the events of 1917, when the Russian people overthrew their tsar before the communists took over under the leadership of Lenin
Russian Revolution of 1905
Unsuccessful uprising in Russia against the tsarist regime. After several years of mounting discontent, a peaceful demonstration was crushed by Tsar Nicholas II's troops in the Bloody Sunday massacre. General strikes followed in St. Petersburg and other industrial cities. The revolt spread to non-Russian parts of the empire, including Poland, Finland, and Georgia. Antirevolutionary groups, including the Black Hundreds, opposed the rebellion with violent attacks on socialists and pogroms against Jews. By October 1905, general strikes had spread to all the large cities, and the workers' councils or soviets, often led by the Mensheviks, became revolutionary governments. The strikes' magnitude convinced Nicholas II, advised by Sergey Witte, to issue the October Manifesto, promising an elected legislature. The concessions satisfied most moderates, though the more ardent revolutionaries refused to yield, and pockets of resistance in Poland, Georgia, and elsewhere were harshly suppressed as the regime restored its authority. While most of the revolutionary leaders, including Leon Trotsky, were arrested, the revolution forced the tsar to institute reforms such as a new constitution and a Duma, though he failed to adequately implement various promised reforms
Russian Revolution of 1917
Revolution that overthrew the imperial government and placed the Bolsheviks in power. Increasing governmental corruption, the reactionary policies of Tsar Nicholas II, and catastrophic Russian losses in World War I contributed to widespread dissatisfaction and economic hardship. In February 1917 riots over food scarcity broke out in Petrograd (St. Petersburg). When the army joined the rebels, Nicholas was forced to abdicate. A provisional government, headed by Georgy Lvov, was appointed in March and tried to continue Russia's participation in World War I, but it was opposed by the powerful Petrograd workers' soviet, which favoured Russian withdrawal from the war. Other soviets were formed in major cities and towns, choosing members from factories and military units. The soviet movement was dominated by the Socialist Revolutionary Party, followed by the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks. Between March and October, the provisional government was reorganized four times; Aleksandr Kerensky became its head in July; he survived a coup attempt by Lavr Kornilov but was unable to halt Russia's slide into political and military chaos. By September the Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, had achieved majorities in the Petrograd and Moscow soviets and won increasing support among the hungry urban workers and soldiers. In October they staged a nearly bloodless coup (the "October Revolution"), occupying government buildings and strategic points. Kerensky tried unsuccessfully to organize resistance, then fled the country. The congress of soviets approved the formation of a new government composed mainly of Bolsheviks. See also April Theses; Aleksandr Guchkov; July Days; Russian Civil War
Russian Romance
novel written by Meir Shalev (Israeli author)
Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party
Marxist revolutionary party that preceded the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Founded in Minsk in 1898, it held that Russia could achieve socialism only after developing a bourgeois society with an urban proletariat. The party split in 1903 because of the argument between the Bolshevik wing, led by Vladimir Ilich Lenin, and the Menshevik wing, led by L. Martov, over Lenin's proposals for a party composed of professional revolutionaries. Party members were active in the Russian Revolution of 1905. In the turmoil of the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks broke completely with the Mensheviks and changed their name to "Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik)
Russian citizen
{i} citizen of Russia
Russian cosmonaut
Russian astronaut
Russian czar
{i} names for the kings of Russia before the revolution
Russian doll
A Russian doll is a hollow wooden doll that is made in two halves. Inside it are a series of similar wooden dolls, each smaller than the last, placed one inside the other
Russian dressing
Salad dressing, such as mayonnaise, with chili sauce or ketchup, chopped pickles, and pimientos
Russian language
East Slavic language spoken by about 170 million people in Russia, former republics of the Soviet Union, and émigré communities. For many non-Russian ethnic groups both within and outside contemporary Russia, it is a common second language and lingua franca. Since the Middle Ages, Russian has gradually expanded its speech area from its historical locus in the upper Volga and Dnieper River drainages northward and eastward. Russian speakers penetrated Siberia in the 16th century and reached the Pacific in the 17th century. Russian became a full-fledged literary language in the 18th century, when it finally displaced Church Slavonic (see Old Church Slavonic language). Dialect differences in Russian are not great, considering the enormous territory over which it is spoken, and the upheavals of the 20th century eroded such distinctions as exist
Russian republic
{i} Federal republic founded in 1991 with the breakup of the former Soviet Union
Russian roulette
If someone plays Russian roulette, they fire a gun with only one bullet at their head without knowing whether it will shoot them. a game in which you risk killing yourself by shooting at your head with a gun that has six spaces for bullets but only one bullet in it
Russian roulette
If you say that someone is playing Russian roulette, or that what they are doing is like playing Russian roulette, you mean that what they are doing is very dangerous because it involves unpredictable risks. You are playing Russian roulette every time you have unprotected sex
Russian roulette
deadly game in which one spins the cylinder of a pistol loaded with one bullet then points it to one's own head and pulls the trigger
Russian thistle
A red-stemmed, prickly Eurasian plant (Salsola kali var. tenuifolia) that is a troublesome weed in western North America
russian agency
an administrative agency of the Russian government
russian almond
Asiatic shrub cultivated for its rosy red flowers
russian bank
solitaire with two players using separate packs
russian church
It forms a portion, by far the largest, of the Eastern Church and is governed by the Holy Synod
russian church
The established church of the Russian empire
russian church
The czar is the head of the church, but he has never claimed the right of deciding questions of theology and dogma
russian dandelion
perennial dandelion native to Kazakhstan cultivated for its fleshy roots that have high rubber content
russian dressing
mayonnaise with horseradish grated onion and chili sauce or catsup; sometimes with caviar added
russian federation
a federation in northeastern Europe and northern Asia; formerly Soviet Russia; since 1991 an independent state
russian monetary unit
monetary unit in Russia
russian olive
deciduous shrubby tree of Europe and western Asia having gray leaves and small yellow fruits covered in silvery scales; sometimes spiny
russian orthodox church
an independent church with its own Patriarch; until 1917 it was the established church or Russia
russian revolution
the revolution against the Czarist government which led to the abdication of Nicholas II and the creation of a provisional government in March 1917 the coup d'etat by the Bolsheviks under Lenin in November 1917 that led to a period of civil war which ended in victory for the Bolsheviks in 1922
russian river
a river in northern California
russian roulette
a stunt in which you spin the cylinder of a revolver that is loaded with only one bullet and then point the muzzle at your head and pull the trigger
russian thistle
prickly bushy Eurasian plant; a troublesome weed in central and western United States
russian-speaking
able to communicate in Russian
Black Russian
A cocktail containing vodka and a coffee-flavoured liqueur such as Kahlua
I don't speak Russian
Indicates that the speaker is unable to speak the Russian language
Little Russian
inhabitant of Little Russia, Ukrainian

A well-defined ethnical line is all that separates the Slovaks from the Magyars and the Little Russians.

Old Russian
The Old East Slavic language
White Russian
Of or related to Belarus, literally "White Russia," or its language
White Russian
The Belarusian language
White Russian
A cocktail consisting of coffee liqueur, vodka, and milk
White Russian
(Russian history) A Russian who supported the tsar in the 1917 Revolution and the Russian Civil War (1918–20), and afterwords
White Russian
A strain of marijuana containing very high THC levels - in excess of 22%
White Russian
A Belarusian person
White Russian
Of or related to Russians with tsarist sympathies in the period directly following the 1917 Revolution
Aeroflot -Russian Airlines
National airline of the former Soviet Union. Founded in 1928 as Dobroflot, it was reorganized as Aeroflot in 1932. During the Soviet era Aeroflot was the world's largest airline, with about 15% of all civil air traffic. After the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, Aeroflot surrendered its monopoly over commercial air travel in the former Soviet states. It was renamed Aeroflot-Russian Airlines in June 2000
Anglo-Russian Entente
(1907) Pact in which Britain and Russia settled their colonial disputes in Persia, Afghanistan, and Tibet. It delineated spheres of influence in Persia, stipulated that neither country would interfere in Tibet's internal affairs, and recognized Britain's influence over Afghanistan. The agreement led to the formation of the Triple Entente
Federation of Russian States
Russia
Franco-Russian Alliance
or Dual Alliance (1894) Political and military pact between France and Russia that was one of the basic European alignments of the pre-World War I era. In the event of war, France wanted support against Germany, and Russia against Austria-Hungary. The alliance was formalized through an exchange of letters in order to preserve secrecy, and it was to be in force as long as the opposing Triple Alliance. The alliance was renewed and strengthened in 1899 and 1912
Gosudarstvenny Universalny Magazin Russian: State Department Store
abbreviation of Gosudarstvenny Universalny Magazin (Russian: "State Department Store") Largest department store in Russia. Situated in Moscow's Red Square, it occupies a huge, ornate building (constructed 1889-93) that once housed more than 1,000 shops. GUM now includes about 150 shops selling food, clothing, home appliances, watches and cameras, and many other goods. It functions more like a Western-style shopping mall than a department store and is a popular tourist attraction
Great Russian
A Russian. Used formerly in distinguishing ethnic Russians from other constituent peoples of the Soviet Union or the Russian Empire
Izvestiya Sovetov Deputatov Trudyashchikhsya SSSR Russian: News of the Councils
formerly in full Izvestiya Sovetov Deputatov Trudyashchikhsya SSSR (Russian: "News of the Councils of Working People's Deputies of the U.S.S.R.") Russian daily newspaper published in Moscow, the official national publication of the Soviet government until 1991. Founded in 1917, it grew rapidly in circulation. Restrictions during World War II and under Joseph Stalin slowed its growth, but it was transformed into a lively, readable daily under the editorship of Alexei Adzhubei, Nikita Khrushchev's son-in-law, while remaining an instrument of the state. Following the Soviet Union's breakup, it became an independent, employee-owned publication whose liberal editorial policy often put it at odds with both unreconstructed communists and Russian nationalists
Old Russian
The Russian language as used in documents from the middle of the 11th to the end of the 16th century
Russians
plural of Russian
Russians
Russies
Telegrafnoe Agentsvo Sovetskovo Soyuza Russian: Telegraph Agency of the Soviet U
formerly TASS in full Telegrafnoe Agentsvo Sovetskovo Soyuza (Russian: "Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union") As TASS, the official news agency of the Soviet Union from 1925 to 1991. It was renamed ITAR-TASS in 1992. The main source of news for all Soviet newspapers and radio and television stations, it was also a major international wire service. After the Soviet Union's 1991 breakup, TASS was reorganized into the Information Telegraph Agency of Russia (ITAR), reporting on news of Russia, and the Telegraph Agency of the Countries of the Commonwealth (TASS), reporting on news of other countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States. ITAR-TASS dispatches on matters of public policy and international affairs reflect the official position of the state
great russian
a member of the chief stock of Russian people living in European Russia; used to distinguish ethnic Russians from other peoples incorporated into Russia
the Russian language
language which is spoken in Russia and in countries from the former Soviet Union
russian

    Silbentrennung

    Rus·sian

    Türkische aussprache

    rʌşın

    Aussprache

    /ˈrəsʜən/ /ˈrʌʃən/

    Gemeinsame Collocations

    russian federation

    Videos

    ... But my app isn't actually translated into Russian. ...
    ... Russian and try to help those guys out. ...
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