「soviet」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)11ページ目
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The | Soviet Union's position at 500 meters in the second s |
In 1931 the mosque was closed by the | Soviet authorities. |
In the late 1940s, the | Soviet Union developed a new type of high-rise. |
papers, brochures, and leaflets, plans of the | Soviet Union were frequently described. |
n Unthinkable was a British plan to attack the | Soviet Union. |
He escaped after having been captured by the | Soviet Union forces and joined the Polish Armed Force |
roBasket 1971 including the final in which the | Soviet Union defeated Yugoslavia. |
China, the United States, and the | Soviet Union: Tripolarity and Policy Making in the Co |
The riot was put down by the | Soviet militsiya. |
Following the breakup of the | Soviet Union, twelve of the former Soviet Republics c |
He graduated military school and worked in the | Soviet Union as a railway engineer. |
Hero of the | Soviet Union twice, in March 1940 and 1965 |
Not to be confused with the | Soviet canoer Vladimir Ivanovich Morozov (1940). |
had tied twice (Sweden had tied Poland and the | Soviet Union) and won once. |
July 1938 on the far eastern frontiers of the | Soviet Union. |
ampion in the 1980s, after the collapse of the | Soviet Union, Paksas founded a construction company, |
Meltdown: Inside the | Soviet Economy (1990) ISBN 0-932790-80-1 |
ereafter, in May 1986, Souther defected to the | Soviet Union. |
ing in 1924, the Federation used stamps of the | Soviet Union. |
party's authoritarian style and support of the | Soviet Union. |
e most well-known Young Pioneer Palaces of the | Soviet Union. |
ough his handlers demand that he return to the | Soviet Union, Farrell refuses and leaves. |
rly a standout striker for Dynamo Kyiv and the | Soviet national team. |
asingly subject to political pressure from the | Soviet Union. |
bted Sun Yat-sen's policy of alliance with the | Soviet Union and CPC, he still needed aid from the So |
69 was the basic light off-road vehicle of the | Soviet Army, replacing GAZ-67s and Willys Jeeps. |
pics in Grenoble, he won a gold medal with the | Soviet relay team. |
In 1973 the | Soviet Union invited Neto to Moscow and told him Chip |
dman was engaged in espionage on behalf of the | Soviet Union while working in Yugoslavia for UNNRRA. |
the following years, he faithfully served the | Soviet government. |
In 1945, she was transferred to the | Soviet Navy under Lend-Lease as T-522. |
It was launched by the | Soviet Union in 1977 as part of the Dnepropetrovsk Sp |
See Forced labor of Germans in the | Soviet Union for details. |
In honor of Nesterov the | Soviet Union established the Nesterov's cup for the b |
Nazi military in 1939, Herrnstadt fled to the | Soviet Union and came to reside in Moscow, where he a |
In 1972 he was a crew member of the | Soviet boat which finished fifth in the coxed pairs e |
He was banned during the | Soviet period. |
8, 1983, eight years after his election to the | Soviet Academy of Sciences, the most prestigious acad |
s, he went to Afghanistan to fight against the | Soviet Union. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1981 for FC TOZ Tula. |
In the absence of the | Soviet competitors, Szabo entered the competition as |
entral Committee of the Communist Party of the | Soviet Union from 1952 until 1961. |
The | Soviet government of Russia supported it as the exist |
was a conductorless orchestra in Moscow in the | Soviet Union that existed between 1922 and 1932. |
Ideology and Rationality in the | Soviet Model. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1984 for FC Dinamo Brest. |
With the | Soviet Union, by contrast, Czechoslovakia continued t |
He was awarded twice the medal of Hero of the | Soviet Union. |
about 240 men, crossed the border back to the | Soviet Union. |
player, he made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1987 for FC Dnepr Mogilyov. |
It remained in service with the | Soviet Navy through 1997. |
The company was founded in 1967 by the | Soviet government to operate in friendly states. |
She made her debut for the | Soviet National Team in 1989. |
The | Soviet news service TASS noted that by March 29 Salyu |
He died in the | Soviet Union. |
It was developed for the | Soviet ABM early-warning network. |
Poland was divided between Germany and the | Soviet Union. |
It was launched by the | Soviet Union in 1971 as part of the Dnepropetrovsk Sp |
He made his debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1991 for FC Spartak Moscow. |
He was then handed over to the | Soviet Union and sentenced to two times 25 years. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1989 for FC Chayka-CSKA Mosco |
Meanwhile, the | Soviet Union is invading a country in the Middle East |
He made his debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1986 for FC Dinamo Minsk. |
main center for the forensic psychiatry of the | Soviet Union and Russia. |
an forces were under the direct control of the | Soviet military command. |
most represented a symbol of resistance of the | Soviet regime, it was almost like a window on the Wes |
Constitutionally, the | Soviet Union was a federation. |
The | Soviet Politburo was indeed riding the propaganda mac |
usion of the war, he was taken prisoner by the | Soviet Army. |
s years later he won the bronze medal with the | Soviet boat in the eights competition. |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1930 (see 1930 in film). |
assador to Czechoslovakia and from 1956 to the | Soviet Union. |
gifted center, he was a regular fixture on the | Soviet national ice hockey team in the 1980s; after t |
He was a prisoner of war in the | Soviet Union where he died in 1946 at Saransk. |
, 1921 between representatives of Iran and the | Soviet Russia. |
lso in attendance was Nikita Khrushchev of the | Soviet Union. |
On the | Soviet right flank, the Soviet-Mongolian Cavalry-Mech |
Stoliarsky is one of the founders of the | Soviet violin school. |
Unlike the | Soviet Constitution, however, the Prague Manifesto wa |
In 1945, she was transferred to the | Soviet Navy under Lend-Lease as T-281. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1990 for FC Dynamo Leningrad. |
became a member of the Communist Party of the | Soviet Union during that period. |
ended on October 6, 1939, with Germany and the | Soviet Union occupying the entirety of Poland. |
tions were held for the Supreme Soviets of the | Soviet Union's constituent republics. |
Both the U.S. and the | Soviet Union (USSR) launched artificial satellites fo |
his is from the operetta "White Acacia" by the | Soviet composer Isaac Dunayevsky. |
ajority of the newbuildings were built for the | Soviet Union. |
ssioned 21 May 1945 and was transferred to the | Soviet Navy as T-281. |
rthern Lights pipeline system was built in the | Soviet Union from the 1960s to 1980s. |
n's World Trampoline Champion representing the | Soviet Union. |
l on the World Championship as a member of the | Soviet Union team. |
Unfortunately, with the collapse of the | Soviet Union, the production of Purcari wines was sto |
n M. The Russians in Germany: A History of the | Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949 (Belknap, 1995) |
During the following two months the | Soviet forces stood still. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1977 for FC Shakhtar Horlivka |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1956 (see 1956 in film). |
The | Soviet RGD-33 is an anti-personnel fragmentation stic |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1990 for FC Znamya Arzamas. |
After the | Soviet Union was disbanded, he opted to play for the |
tary film by Andrei Zagdansky, produced in the | Soviet Union during the perestroika period. |
n January 4, 1987, Davydov was playing for the | Soviet Union's team at the 1987 World Junior Champion |
) is a retired high jumper who represented the | Soviet Union. |
Many graduates became Heroes of the | Soviet Union. |
ned the entente between Czechoslovakia and the | Soviet Union. |
He did, however, seek the participation of the | Soviet Union in an alliance to include France. |
ideen commander during the "Jihad" against the | Soviet occupation forces. |
e was never any question of extradition to the | Soviet Union. |
was signed by multiple Communist Party of the | Soviet Union leaders, including Mikhail Gorbachev. |
une 1940, with the first German attacks on the | Soviet Union, people with Russian citizenship were in |
Test 219 was a nuclear test conducted by the | Soviet Union in the atmosphere via air drop. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1989 for FC Tighina Bender. |
In 1935 the | Soviet Union signed treaties with France and Czechosl |
e last goal of FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk in the | Soviet Top League. |
le islands, where it was in combat against the | Soviet Red Army at Paramushir during Soviet invasion |
Palmnicken was conquered by the | Soviet Red Army at the beginning of April 1945 during |
Dzhordzhikiya was a member of the | Soviet team which won the silver medal at the 1952 Ga |
The most common view is that the | Soviet Union was motivated by a desire to ensure Urho |
On the other hand, on the proposal of the | Soviet government, the Afghan consulates in Russia an |
The arms depot was constructed by the | Soviet Union in 1984. |
In 1945, she was transferred to the | Soviet Navy under Lend-Lease as T-274. |
In 1976 she was the coxswain of the | Soviet boat which won the silver medal in the quadrup |
rin near Zhlobin (now in Belarus), then in the | Soviet Union in 1924. |
The | Soviet Union and Hungary fielded competitive water po |
g the war's end in 1945, it was annexed by the | Soviet Union and renamed Gvardeysk ("guard town") in |
The | Soviet IR367 was given the responsibility to defend S |
t Olomouc as a youth volunteer and opposed the | Soviet military presence. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1963 for FC Dynamo Moscow. |
The naval pressure persuaded the | Soviet Union to withdraw the missiles, easing the cri |
He participated on the | Soviet team that won gold medals at the 1988 Summer O |
After the dissolution of the | Soviet Union and Ukrainian independence the monastery |
The | Soviet offensive, Operation Bagration, which commence |
CANY activity was found in areas like the | Soviet Union, America, Japan, and even Germany. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1977 for FC Spartak Kostroma. |
For the military rank of the | Soviet Red Army, see Combat (military rank). |
shed the novel Two Steps From Heaven about the | Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. |
Starostin competed for the | Soviet Union at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, w |
He travelled to the former DDR and the | Soviet Union. |
“ We started criticizing the | Soviet Army a little bit too early. |
It was liberated on May 9, 1945 by the | Soviet Army. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1990 for FC Shakhtar Donetsk. |
He made his debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1982 for FC Spartak Moscow. |
y launched Operation Barbarossa, attacking the | Soviet Union on a wide front. |
itvinov was appointed by Vladimir Lenin as the | Soviet government's representative in Britain. |
a crime novel by Martin Cruz Smith, set in the | Soviet Union in the year 1991. |
of "Pathoheterodoxy", to show the way that the | Soviet Union would have characterised Soviet dissiden |
The | Soviet War Memorial, is a vast war memorial and milit |
After the fall of the | Soviet Union through 1996 he held the Ukrainian citiz |
Nikolai Ryzhkov, a former Premier of the | Soviet Union, was born in this city in 1929. |
Among the | Soviet tank commanders, starshina S. F. Smirnov destr |
When Germany's assault on the | Soviet Union began in June 1941, Finland remained for |
just before turning 20, Oswald traveled to the | Soviet Union, the trip planned well in advance. |
Cuba followed the | Soviet lead, and Stevenson was deprived of the chance |
adeusz Chciuk took active part in fighting the | Soviet and German occupiers. |
Having failed to vanquish the | Soviet Union in one quick strike, Germany now had to |
The Philosophy of the | Soviet State |
s 9 months old, her parents emigrated from the | Soviet Union to France. |
ied out his compulsory military service in the | Soviet army (1969-1972), in Budapest, Hungary. |
professional in 1988 with Dynamo Minsk of the | Soviet League. |
21 April 1946 by the merger of the SPD in the | Soviet occupation zone with the Communist Party of Ge |
While the | Soviet allies supported the invasion, other members o |
Nazi Germany invaded the | Soviet Union in 1941. |
The | Soviet Union deployed MRVs on the SS-9 Mod 4 ICBM. |
After the dissolution of the | Soviet Union in 1991 it constitutes the Autonomous Re |
The | Soviet designation was Project 265 |
On November 7, 1944, the | Soviet army occupied the village. |
While still a student he played all over the | Soviet Union with leading national orchestras, and in |
He was part of the | Soviet team which won the bronze medal in the 1956 to |
Unfortunately, David Bronstein from the | Soviet Union got no visa for a visit to Texas. |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1943 (see 1943 in film). |
The | Soviet Union dissolved in December 1991. |
See also Divisions of the | Soviet Union 1917-1945 |
The film ends with the | Soviet army's victorious onslaught. |
The | Soviet deportations from Bessarabia were part of Jose |
He coxed the | Soviet boat in the coxed fours competition when the f |
ks worked on the initial invasion plans of the | Soviet Union. |
yukov served several positions within both the | Soviet Union and the Russian Federation. |
His troops fought against the | Soviet cavalry elite Konarmia of Semyon Budyonny. |
Timoshinin represented the | Soviet Union at the 1988 Summer Olympics, and Russia |
e Royal Navy as HMS Brighton, and later to the | Soviet Navy as Zharkiy. |
played under its name after the breakup of the | Soviet Union. |
He played for FC Shakhtar Donetsk in the | Soviet Cup. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1974 for FC Metalist Kharkiv. |
Church as consisting of three parts during the | Soviet period: 1. |
ana ignored calls by the United States and the | Soviet Union to normalize relations. |
ied out his compulsory military service in the | Soviet army (1972-1974). |
was an anti-tank hand grenade developed by the | Soviet Union in 1940. |
tation was observed on October 17, 1979 in the | Soviet Union. |
The | Soviet Union clinched their third consecutive gold me |
rebellion which was backed by Vietnam and the | Soviet Union. |
United Kingdom, China, The Netherlands and the | Soviet Union. |
McLlwain, who responded by cross-checking the | Soviet player. |
For the | Soviet statesman, see Yevgeny Fyodorov |
These have developed from the | Soviet Soyuz spacecraft. |
In 1921 the monastery was closed by the | Soviet government. |
cientific, and industrial installations in the | Soviet Union and, until the late 1960s, controlled So |
In 1939 Stryi is part of the | Soviet Union (Ukrainian SSR) (see: Polish September C |
Turkic Muslim rebels backed by the | Soviet Union were revolting against the Republic of C |
It took part in the | Soviet invasion of eastern Poland in 1939. |
er father signed away Estonia's freedom to the | Soviet Union in 1940. |
a transmitter was operated on the site by the | Soviet Foreign Service. |
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