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Russian-language and was
The development of Russian-language opera was supported by the Russian composers Vasily Pashkevich, Yevstigney Fomin and Alexey Verstovsky.
Diaghilev then commissioned Prokofiev to compose the ballet Chout ( The Fool, the original Russian-language full title was Сказка про шута, семерых шутов перешутившего ( Skazka pro shuta, semerykh shutov pereshutivshavo ), meaning " The Tale of the Buffoon who Outwits Seven Other Buffoons ").
Russian literature refers to the literature of Russia or its émigrés, and to the Russian-language literature of several independent nations once a part of what was historically Russia or the Soviet Union.
In late 2007, " Beliy Plaschik ", the lead single from their upcoming Russian-language album was released.
The website of the Forward describes its formation: " In the fall of 1995 a Russian-language edition of the Forward was launched, under the editorship of Vladimir " Velvl " Yedidowich.
The decision to launch a Russian Forward in the crowded market of Russian-language journalism in New York followed approaches to the Forward Association by a number of intellectual leaders in the fast-growing émigré community who expressed an interest in adding a voice that was strongly Jewish, yet with a secular, social-democratic orientation and an appreciation for the cultural dimension of Jewish life.
He was denied books, but he learned Russian from soldiers captured on the Eastern Front and subsequently read Russian-language histories made available to him by Russian prisoners.
From 1912 he was a co-editor of the influential Russian-language journal Ukrainskaya zhizn ’ ( Ukrainian life ) until May 1917.
A Russian-language edition of the Black Book was published in Jerusalem in 1980, and finally in Kiev, Ukraine in 1991.
On 6 December 2006, Gaidar claimed in an op-ed published in both Russian-language and English-language publications that he was poisoned by adversaries of the Russian authorities.
During his lifetime, he was also known under the pseudonyms H. Insarov and Grigoriev, which he used in signing several articles for the Russian-language press.
" An article in the Russian-language Israeli newspaper Vesti was cited by Christopher Hitchens in 2001 as " a brilliant reply to
The first chapter of It's Me, Eddie, was published by an Israeli Russian-language journal.
Russian television is difficult to receive in Turkmenistan, the Russian-language radio station Mayak was taken off the air and the Russian newspapers were banned earlier.
Until 2005, the paper was owned by Independent Media, a Moscow-registered publishing house that also prints a Russian-language daily newspaper, Vedomosti, The St. Petersburg Times ( the equivalent of The Moscow Times in Saint Petersburg ) and Russian-language versions of popular glossy magazines such as FHM, Men's Health and Cosmopolitan.
With the more sophisticated audience — many Russian Jews were regular attendees of Russian-language theatre, and Odessa was a first-rate theatre city — serious melodramatic operettas, and even straight plays, took their place among the lighter vaudevilles and comedies.
The basement of this building was the location where the newspaper Novy Mir (" New World " or " New Peace "), a Russian-language Communist paper, was founded in 1916.
Her profession at that time was recorded as Russian-language teacher.
In 1864 a Russian-language school was opened there and in 1871 an Orthodox church of Intercession of Our Most Holy Lady was built at the main town square.
Pushkin's play was written in 1830, after he saw the premiere of Russian-language version of Mozart's Don Giovanni.
He was appointed Russian-language tutor to the future tsars Alexander II and Alexander III.

Russian-language and written
The vessel portraying a Russian intelligence ship has the name " Novo Sibursk " written on the hull at the bow in the Roman alphabet, and not the Russian-language Cyrillic alphabet.

Russian-language and by
In 1976, some stories by Dovlatov had been published in Western Russian-language magazines, including " Continent ", " Time and us ", resulting in his expulsion from the Union of Journalists of the USSR.
The Russian-edited, Russian-language Ukrainian newspaper Sevodnya (" Today ") reported that Gongadze had been abducted by policemen and accidentally shot in the head while seated in a vehicle, necessitating his decapitation ( to avoid the bullet being recovered and matched to a police weapon ).
A Russian-language edition of From Victoria to Vladivostok is being published by the Korpus company in Vladivostok.
* The Discovery of Sintashta ( a Russian-language article by two archaeologists who directed the excavations )
Logo. RTVi ( Russian Television International, previously known as NTV International ) is an international Russian-language private television network, with studios based in Moscow, New York and Tel-Aviv, as well as bureaus in Washington DC, Berlin and Kiev, which broadcasts by satellite and cable in Europe, North America, Israel andcountries.
* The first Russian-language recording was released in 1990, conducted by Prokofiev specialist Neeme Järvi with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, starring Nadine Secunde and Siegfried Lorenz as Renata and Ruprecht with Bryn Terfel, Heinz Zednik and Kurt Moll in Supporting roles.
The International Workers Aid society, known colloquially by its Russian-language acronym, MOPR, was established in 1922 in response to the directive of the 4th World Congress of the Comintern to appeal to all communist parties " to assist in the creation of organizations to render material and moral aid to all captives of capitalism in prison.

Russian-language and is
Access to Russian-language articles, journals, and particularly books is difficult unless their texts can be found online.
The words sastrugi / zastrugi are Russian-language plurals: the singular is sastruga or zastruga.
* Transliterated from Russian: " ВВС " is the Russian-language acronym for Военно-воздушные силы ( Voenno-Vozdushnye Sily )-" military-air forces ".
This includes both the traditional communities ( e. g., Lithuanians in the northwestern Belarus ( see Eastern Vilnius region ) or the Kaliningrad Oblast ( see Lithuania Minor )) and the communities that appeared during Soviet times such as Ukrainian or Belarusian workers in Kazakhstan or Latvia, whose children attended primarily the Russian-language schools and thus the further generations are primarily speaking Russian as their native language ; for example, for 57 % of Estonia's Ukrainians, 70 % of Estonia's Belarusians and 37 % of Estonia's Latvians claimed Russian is the native language in the last Soviet census of 1989.
" The copyrights of Testimony, however, belong to Volkov's American publisher, and it is not up to Volkov to allow or to deny a Russian-language publication of Testimony.
Nonetheless, in the Russian-language literature it is traditionally called " combinatorial scattering of light ".
Pyotr's grandson, Nikita Struve ( b. 1931 ), is a professor at a Paris university and an editor of several Russian-language periodicals published in Europe.
The Russian-language version of the acronym for the weapon is RVV-AE and it is also known as the Izdieliye-170 ( Product-170 ).
The network of Russian-language schools is being reduced.
The Kievskiye Vedomosti () is a local daily Russian-language newspaper, based in Kiev.
The language issue is still contentious, particularly in Latvia, where there were protests against plans to require at least 60 % of lessons in state-funded Russian-language high schools to be taught in Latvian ( in the first version of the Law on education this was 100 %).
Vardan Vardanovich Kushnir ( November 22, 1969 – July 24, 2005 ) was a notorious spammer of Armenian-Jewish descent who ran the American Language Center ( ALC ) and who is believed to have spammed the entire population of Russian-language Internet users with ads for his language courses.
Dnestrovskaya Pravda is a Russian-language newspaper from Tiraspol, the capital of Transnistria.
The Wild East (, Dikiy vostok, Dikij vostok ) is a Russian-language film created in Kazakhstan shortly after the dissolution of the Soviet Union released in 1993.

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