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** Romanized Russian: Dogovor o druzhbe, sotrudnichestve i vzaimnoy pomoshchi
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** and Romanized
** and Russian
** Danube Cossack Host, an Imperial Russian Cossack Host formed from descendants of the Zaporozhian Cossacks
** Russian original was written in 1970, distributed by samizdat, and eventually printed as Восленский М. С., Номенклатура.
** In many languages ( e. g., Czech, English, French, Interlingua, and Russian ), the sets of relative and interrogative pronouns are nearly identical.
** Many languages, such as Bulgarian, Swedish, Norwegian, Frisian, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Polish, Ukrainian, Dutch and most Occitan variants, use trilled rhotics.
** Table of contents, bibliography of On the Origin of Species – links to text and images of all six British editions of The Origin of Species, the 6th edition with additions and corrections ( final text ), the first American edition, and translations into Danish, Dutch, French, German, Polish, Russian and Spanish.
** 101. mendelevium, Md, named after the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, credited for being the primary creator of the periodic table of the chemical elements ( 1955 ).
** The First Chechen War ( 1994 – 1996 ) – the conflict was fought between the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria.
** The Second Chechen War ( 1999 – ongoing ) – the war was launched by the Russian Federation starting 26 August 1999, in response to the Invasion of Dagestan and the Russian apartment bombings which were blamed on the Chechens.
** and o
** Some masculine singular nouns, e. g. syn → synu, dom → domu, bok → boku, brzuch → brzuchu, worek → worku *, nastrój → nastroju *, deszcz → deszczu, miś → misiu, koń → koniu, Poznań → Poznaniu, Wrocław → Wrocławiu, Bytom → Bytomiu ** In a few cases, a vowel change may occur, e. g. ó → o, or a vowel may be dropped.
** Feminine nouns ending in-ia, e. g. Kasia (" Katie ") → o Kasi (" about Katie "), Austria → w Austrii (" in Austria ")
** All neuter singular nouns ending in-kV ,-chV ,-iV ,-uV ( V being o or um ), e. g. jablko → jablku, ucho → uchu, akvárium → akváriu, vakuum → vakuu
** Masculine inanimate nouns ending in a soft consonant ( c, č, ď, dz, dž, j, ľ, ň, š, ť, ž ), e. g. ovládač (" remote ") → o ovládači (" about the remote "), tŕň → tŕni
** Feminine nouns ending in a soft consonant or a soft consonant followed by a, e. g. vôňa → o voni, kosť (" bone ") → o kosti (" about bone ")
** Vowel harmony: the final syllable of a disyllabic word adopts a preceding open ⟨ e ⟩ or ⟨ o ⟩ if the final vowel is an unstressed -⟨ a ⟩ or -⟨ e ⟩; e. g. terra (' earth, land '), dona (' woman ').
** Some minor lines are omitted from various scenes, such as Lavinia's " Ay, for these slips have made him noted long " ( 2. 3. 87 ), Titus ' " Ah, wherefore dost thou urge the name of hands ,/ To bid Aeneas tell the tale twice o ’ er ,/ How Troy was burnt and he made miserable?
** Auckland College of Education ( ACE ) ( Te Kura Akoranga o Tamaki Makaurau ) ( Auckland and Whangarei )
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