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 Russian ['rʌʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 俄国人, 俄语

a. 俄国的, 俄语的




    russian
    [ noun ]
    1. a native or inhabitant of Russia

    2. <noun.person>
    3. the Slavic language that is the official language of Russia

    4. <noun.communication>
    [ adj ]
    1. of or pertaining to or characteristic of Russia or its people or culture or language

    2. <adj.pert>
      Russian dancing


    Russian \Rus"sian\ (r[u^]sh"an or r[udd]"shan; 277), a.
    Of or pertaining to Russia, its inhabitants, or language. --
    n. A native or inhabitant of Russia; the language of Russia.

    {Russian bath}. See under {Bath}.

    1. So far, his aides have been broadcasting news to ham radio operators on a make-shift short wave transmitter installed in the sixth floor of the Russian Parliament.
    2. One of the grievances in Lithuania, for instance, is that the Lithuanians are short of food because half of what they produce is shipped to the Russian republic.
    3. Gorbachev's decree also was denounced by Russian parliament leader Vladimir Isakov who told the official Tass news agency that Gorbachev, the Soviet president, overstepped his authority.
    4. Russian suspicion of the West has historic roots that go deeper than Communism.
    5. D'Abo was born in London to a British father and a Russian mother.
    6. On Saturday, dissident sources said police surrounded the apartment building across the street from the government offices of the Russian republic, where the first meeting was held, but did not break it up.
    7. Vorotnikov was first deputy premier of the Russian republic in 1975-1979, but lost the support of the Kremlin leadership in the last years of President Leonid I. Brezhnev and was made ambassador to Cuba.
    8. Still, the ducks ruffled feathers in Santa Rosa, Calif., when environmentalists opposed a race on the Russian River.
    9. Students stuck taking Russian by default don't give their teachers much joy.
    10. Newly elected Russian President Yeltsin called for the resignation of the Soviet government and said he would seek sovereignty for the republic.
    11. If Mr Soskovets' tough line - rather than Mr Yeltsin's quiet granting of soft loans - is to be the new rule in Russian economic policy, then Russia could be poised for one of the most serious political battles it has yet faced.
    12. Food shortages also were caused by Russian purchases of Estonian agricultural products for hard currency.
    13. The Russian parliament will elect the president from among its members.
    14. My father is very troubled about it." She is speaking Russian, too, and her father looks pained.
    15. Then we were given the contemporary Romanian play Vlad the Impaler, a quasi-historical piece about that prince, begetter of Dracula and allegory of Ceausescu; and the Russian Yerofeev's Moscow Train, that ran through wild country to Moscow Station.
    16. "We agreed that when we watched the speech, we would drink a toast to Gorbachev's health." The disapproval of the Russian government goes deeper than nostalgia and sentimentality.
    17. Yesterday's incident, which Russian coastguard officials described as 'necessary', suggests Moscow intends to take a tougher line in enforcing its sovereignty.
    18. It has also prevented many Russian businesses from buying badly needed raw materials and equipment from the West.
    19. "One young man said he was Russian.
    20. He was the music director for a Soviet radio station in Moscow from 1931-37, and conducted soloist Sergei Prokofiev, the Russian composer, pianist and conductor.
    21. But then he sat down and chatted for 20 minutes about China's open-door policy and investment prospects. We received much the same treatment from the intent-looking Russian woman who rushed in waving a sheaf of forms.
    22. The Russian Party was founded at a first congress in the Kremlin in June, when Polozkov was elected its leader.
    23. Russian Social Democrats meeting in Moscow in early May spent much of their time debating whether local chapters would have to obey central authority.
    24. Another U.S. banker who also sits on an advisory committee questioned the present committee system: "The Russian slang word for committee roughly translates into a dog with four hind legs," he said.
    25. Shaw, who has been to Graceland 36 times, said he decided last year to find a Russian fan to sponsor.
    26. The same banks had outstanding loans of less than Dollars 300m lent to customers inside Russia. By this June, all Russian banks held about Dollars 15.5bn abroad, according to central bank figures.
    27. The congress is much more loyal to Gorbachev and to the central government than te smaller Russian Supreme Soviet legislature, which Yeltsin easily controls.
    28. Aluminum analyst Stewart R. Spector, author of the Spector Report, predicts Russian exports could fall by "several hundred thousand tons."
    29. Yet now, when the Russian parliament asserts its prerogative to guide the reform process, they are told that some kind of emergency, presidential rule and the suspension of parliament, are preferable.
    30. Russian State Bank Chairman Georgiy Matyukhin, however, said after his meeting with Messrs. Brady and Greenspan that a single Soviet currency is likely to remain in place for at least the next two years, if only for practical reasons.
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