「pushkin」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 87件
at the Alexander Lyceum in Tsarskoe Selo (now | Pushkin), a southern suburb of St Petersburg. |
notable works were an opera Cygany (based on | Pushkin), a symphony in A, a symphonic poem Legenda ( |
Alexander | Pushkin addressed the Field Marshal in the famous ele |
He was often compared with Alexander | Pushkin, and the whole Silver Age of Russian Poetry w |
Despite the support of | Pushkin and Sergey Uvarov, the Russian minister of ed |
aucasus, Raevsky befriended a young Alexander | Pushkin and traveled with him to the Crimea. |
oetic language was distinguished from that of | Pushkin and other contemporaries by its liberal use o |
of Nikolai Gogol, Adam Mickiewicz, Aleksandr | Pushkin and others. |
ust 2010, with music video directed by Lauren | Pushkin and produced by PMA Digital. |
asium he became acquainted with the poetry of | Pushkin and Zhukovsky, and one of his friends, Kateri |
e defection was an undercover assignment from | Pushkin, and Bond in tow so he can gain control of th |
ents were the renowned Russian poet Alexander | Pushkin and Natalya Pushkina. |
She was a daughter of Alexander | Pushkin and his wife Natalya Goncharova. |
the words of Henri Troyat, Inzov "looked upon | Pushkin as a being set apart, who must be handled car |
a descendant of the Russian writer Aleksandr | Pushkin, as well as a descendant of Peter the Great's |
f the greatest Russian poets before Alexander | Pushkin, as well as a statesman. |
In July 2005 InBev bought the | Pushkin brewery and the Tinkoff brand name for €167 m |
square, called “Dumaskaya” with a monument to | Pushkin, canon extracted from French Fregate "Tiger" |
utionary emigration were still alive, and the | Pushkin Club provided them with an effective platform |
By 1956 it was clear that the | Pushkin Club needed a premises of its own; it managed |
The first meeting of the | Pushkin Club was held there in 1954. |
Russian poet Alexander | Pushkin dedicated her his poem "I wasn't born to amus |
The Alexandr | Pushkin entered service in 1965 with the Baltic Shipp |
Luckily, Bond suspects the truth and helps | Pushkin fake his death to force Koskov into the open. |
Delvig commissioned a portrait of | Pushkin from Orest Kiprensky which Pushkin bought fro |
Ribot) psychophysiology and the aesthetics of | Pushkin, Gogol, and Tolstoy. |
a dandy and aesthete, he set poems of Sappho, | Pushkin, Heine, Verlaine, Blok, Mayakovsky, Dante, cl |
The establishment of the original | Pushkin House coincided with the immediate post-Stali |
Pushkin House has existed in London since 1954 and ha | |
The story was romanticized by Alexander | Pushkin in his celebrated ballad "The Song of the Wis |
Military Engineering School of Soviet Navy in | Pushkin in engineering. |
d a translation of Eugene Onegin by Alexander | Pushkin in 1990 which was also influenced by Nabokov' |
MS Alexandr | Pushkin in the summer of 1970. |
pseudonym Alexandr Jan-Ruban), and translated | Pushkin into the English language, and Byron into Rus |
For example, he translated several stories by | Pushkin into Ossetic. |
who lived there: Gavrila Derzhavin, Alexander | Pushkin, Ivan Turgenev, Anna Akhmatova and others. |
The museum is in an apartment were | Pushkin lived in 1823. |
amed after a character in a poem by Aleksandr | Pushkin, made into the opera Sarema by Alexander von |
ed for the three writers and poets (Alexander | Pushkin, Maxim Gorky, Anton Chekhov). |
Fatma Gadri suddenly fell unconscious at the | Pushkin Moscow Drama Theatre, right before her final |
ichter's December nights has been held in the | Pushkin museum since 1981. |
y the Russian Museum in St.Petersburg and the | Pushkin Museum in Moscow. |
ure in November of paintings belonging to the | Pushkin Museum in Moscow as hostages in a trade dispu |
The | Pushkin Museum is still a main depositary of Troy's f |
ter The Hermitage in Saint Petersburg and the | Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow. |
um of Modern Western Art in Moscow and in the | Pushkin Museum in Moscow. |
out of Turkey to Berlin and today kept at the | Pushkin Museum in Moscow. |
Odessa | Pushkin Museum is a museum dedicated to the Russian p |
Having sold his collection to the | Pushkin Museum in 1909, Golenishchev settled in Egypt |
These paintings formed a nucleus of the | Pushkin museum's collections of Western art. |
Thucydides; cast of a bust at Holkham Hall ( | Pushkin Museum) |
Cast of Polyhymnia, | Pushkin Museum, Moscow |
Reconstruction, in a patinated cast at the | Pushkin Museum, Moscow |
His personal exhibitions were in | Pushkin Museum-Reserve (1964), and in Leningrad (1972 |
n of arts, and the major private donor to the | Pushkin Museum. |
ectoliter state-of-the-art brewery in 2002 in | Pushkin near St Petersburg. |
Russian: Певческая башня) is a water tower in | Pushkin, near St. Petersburg (Russia). |
zabeth Mayer and Marianne Moore, re-issued by | Pushkin Press in 2001 and the New York Review of Book |
In 2005 a new edition was published by | Pushkin Press, New York, titled 'Inevitable', without |
a step to be compared, perhaps, only with the | Pushkin revolution. |
For last accommodation of Alexander | Pushkin, see All Russian Pushkin Museum. |
an literature, translating works by Aleksandr | Pushkin, Sergey Yesienin and Vladimir Mayakovskiy. |
of the verse novel Eugene Onegin by Alexander | Pushkin set to music by Tchaikovsky (mainly The Seaso |
A chance meeting introduced her to Aleksandr | Pushkin some twenty years later. |
967, Delaunay took part in a demonstration on | Pushkin Square protesting the arrest of Alexander Gin |
The vestibule is located in the | Pushkin Square, while the station is named for the wr |
Pushkin State Museum, Moscow, Russia | |
In 1830-1831, he co-edited with | Pushkin the Literaturnaya Gazeta (1830-1831), which w |
d his ideas in October-November 1956 to G. M. | Pushkin, the soviet ambassador and to Walter Ulbricht |
Natalia was a daughter of Alexander | Pushkin, the renowned Russian writer who ranked, howe |
Potemkin, the Russian national poet Alexander | Pushkin, the composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, freet |
's daughter Maria's youthful frolics inspired | Pushkin to write some of the most famous lines in Rus |
the Soviet crew immediately embark aboard the | Pushkin to escape, beginning a new search for another |
from | Pushkin to Solzhenitsyn |
Studying the works of | Pushkin, Tolstoy, Gorki and other Russian literature. |
In the | Pushkin tragedy and the Mussorgsky opera, Otrepyev is |
odical Northern Flowers (1825-1831), in which | Pushkin was a regular contributor. |
an article in Helsingin Sanomat the Alexandr | Pushkin was popular amongst Finnish passengers sailin |
In the early 1820s, Alexander | Pushkin was one of his subordinates at Kishinev. |
Some time later, the | Pushkin, which had lost contact with the USS Nathan J |
front of the hall is a monument of Alexander | Pushkin who spent 13 months in Odessa. |
guage because it is the birthday of Aleksandr | Pushkin, who is "recognized as the father of Russian |
was its connection with the writer Alexander | Pushkin, who stayed there in 1831 and had been inspir |
It was made famous by Alexander | Pushkin who visited the place in 1821. |
eached the success equal to that of Alexander | Pushkin with The Monk (1825), a verse tale in which t |
ateur theatricals" and "recited the poetry of | Pushkin with something close to genius" (Adler, 1999, |
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