「soviet」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)14ページ目
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World War II started, he was drafted into the | Soviet Army. |
In 1941 Nazi Germany invaded the | Soviet Union and their troops besieged the city of Le |
In August 1968 he was forced to go to the | Soviet Union along with other politicians, and when h |
erkassy when the Division was encircled by the | Soviet troops. |
He believed that the | Soviet government would find it difficult to force th |
Hero of the | Soviet Union (February 1, 1958) |
tion was a treaty signed between India and the | Soviet Union in August 1971 that specified mutual str |
emembers the name of the settlement before the | Soviet Union. |
n the meantime, her husband fell victim to the | Soviet Great Purge, in 1938. |
Rakita was one of the | Soviet Union's top sabre fencers in the 1960s. |
On 14 January, the | Soviet military demanded that Latvian laws be repeale |
NKVD in 1944 and kept in a prison camp in the | Soviet Far East until 1956. |
This policy was ultimately responsible for the | Soviet Union's ability to fight and ultimately defeat |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet First League in 1990 for FC Rostselmash Rostov |
It developed in the | Soviet era into a major centre for the production of |
was one of the best football coaches from the | Soviet Union. |
A map of the Transcaucasian region during the | Soviet era |
He was a member of the | Soviet team which won the silver medal. |
the defeat of the Reds in 1918, he fled to the | Soviet Union. |
The | Soviet Union presented Kravchenko's former colleagues |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1981 for FC Torpedo Rubtsovsk |
period of stagnation brought the crisis of the | Soviet system and reforms could not be long delayed. |
Torgayev spent 12 seasons in the | Soviet League before moving to Finland for two years |
ладимир Чучелов; born 28 September 1969 in the | Soviet Union) is a Belgian chess Grandmaster. |
with Grushina for the | Soviet Union |
In 1930, he emigrated to the | Soviet Union. |
The pact was unilaterally broken by the | Soviet Union on September 17, 1939, during the Nazi a |
They were in orbit during the | Soviet coup attempt of 1991. |
It was not until 1989 that the | Soviet authorities rehabilitated him. |
een built every year since the collapse of the | Soviet Union in 1991. |
938 and 1939, as the Finns negotiated with the | Soviet Union. |
For the | Soviet basketball player, see Sergei Kovalenko. |
mber of the same year a three week trip to the | Soviet Union was organized with the help of the Sovie |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1982 for FC Lokomotiv Kaluga. |
In the morning of 15 July 1944, the | Soviet artillery and mortars opened fierce fire prepa |
He also was Chairman of the | Soviet of Nationalities from 1989 to 1991. |
ified from the competition afterwards, and the | Soviet Union were eliminated from the team event as a |
During the 1956 Olympics, the | Soviet Union invaded Hungary. |
The partisan groups were formed by the | Soviet and Communist bodies on the German occupied te |
During 1946-1947, Zhdanov was Chairman of the | Soviet of the Union. |
career in 1991 with Traktor Chelyabinsk in the | Soviet Championship League. |
The | Soviet women repeated their bronze medal from 1972 an |
Throughout the evening the | Soviet offensive continued relentlessly backed by hea |
e Red Army, joining the Communist Party of the | Soviet Union in 1945. |
areer began in Moscow as the head coach of the | Soviet Union Military Fencing Team from 1976-1990. |
Department C (Espionage in the | Soviet Union and Japan) |
Meir, the first ambassador from Israel to the | Soviet Union, paid an unauthorized visit to the synag |
eration Barbarossa, the German invasion of the | Soviet Union. |
rossa when the Wehrmacht started to attack the | Soviet Union in 1941. |
ashington, D.C. where he was an Adviser at the | Soviet Embassy. |
During the Cold War, the United States and the | Soviet Union could have decided to attack us. |
In 1964 he was a crew member of the | Soviet boat which finished fifth in the eights event. |
As a player, he made his debut in the | Soviet First League in 1977 for FC Kuzbass Kemerovo. |
otterdam, he won the team competition with the | Soviet Union. |
Byshovets won the | Soviet championship four times (1966, 1967, 1968, 197 |
d developments prior to the dissolution of the | Soviet Union in 1991, see the article Soviet Union an |
he accompanied President Ronald Reagan to the | Soviet Summit in Moscow. |
Development of laser weapons in the | Soviet Union began in 1964-1965. |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1968 (see 1968 in film). |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1984 for FShM Moscow. |
He also won two World Championships with the | Soviet team (1960 and 1962) and the European Champion |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League B in 1991 for FC Kryvbas Kryvyi |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1985 for FC Prykarpattya Ivan |
He was executed by the | Soviet Union in 1926 in Baku. |
20) was an unmanned spacecraft launched by the | Soviet Union. |
He played 1 game for FC Spartak Moscow in the | Soviet Cup. |
In 1964 he was part of the | Soviet team that won the gold medal in the Olympicst. |
the chief architects of U.S. policy toward the | Soviet Union. |
y of his father Fritz, who was executed in the | Soviet Union in 1941. |
The | Soviet boat has fewer weapons but higher sustained sp |
After the | Soviet Union dissolved, it was proved that Oda and Yo |
MS Ivan Franko was a cruise ship owned by the | Soviet Union's Black Sea Shipping Company. |
in the 1980s, Madagascar drifted away from the | Soviet Union and back towards France. |
Krummlauf to the PPSh-41 were conducted by the | Soviet Union. |
lies: The United States Army Air Force and the | Soviet Voenno Vozdushnie Sily 1941-1945 |
Under the unification of the | Soviet Union from 1922 to 1991, Russian language cont |
rs later he won his second gold medal with the | Soviet team, in the 1968 Olympic tournament. |
munist parties, such as the Yevsektsiya in the | Soviet Union. |
ca, Asia, South Africa, Eastern Europe and the | Soviet Union. |
It was almost impossible to tour outside the | Soviet Union then, especially due to the KGB. |
Mecklenburg however, was part of the | Soviet zone and became later part of East Germany. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1988 for FC Torpedo Kutaisi. |
portant for holding together the system of the | Soviet satellite states. |
1930-1992 the mosque was out of use due to the | Soviet authorities. |
After the album was released the | Soviet concert administration put in effect interdict |
was in the hands of the 8th Guards Army of the | Soviet Union. |
he Russian Navy, formerly having served in the | Soviet Navy. |
He retired from the | Soviet space program in March 1993. |
The government appealed to the | Soviet Union to recognize the independence of the rep |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1988 for FC Stal Cheboksary. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet First League in 1980 for FC Spartak Ordzhoniki |
He immigrated to the | Soviet Union, taking up a position in Moscow. |
hen he was still performing as a member of the | Soviet team. |
In 1968 the practice spread to the | Soviet bloc with self-immolation of Czech student Jan |
Eastern martial arts expert and served in the | Soviet Red Army as a physical training instructor. |
He holds titles of the | Soviet Union master of sport, Distinguished coach of |
lgaria did not join the German invasion of the | Soviet Union that began on 22 June 1941 nor did it de |
It fought exclusively against the | Soviet Union between June 1941 and May 1945. |
In 1935 he returned to the | Soviet Union, and in 1937 he was back Romania. |
turned to the United States convinced that the | Soviet system was superior to the West. |
he became the third most decorated man in the | Soviet Union. |
In 1988 the Supreme Court of the | Soviet Union decided that he had not been guilty of a |
In 1934, the | Soviet Union joined the League of Nations. |
Having successfully obtained asylum in the | Soviet Union, they stayed in Soviet territory until t |
Patriarch Tikhon excommunicated the | Soviet leadership on January 19, 1918 (Julian calenda |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1969 (see 1969 in film). |
The | Soviet government established a biological research c |
His band was touring about the | Soviet Union and made several recordings from 1954 un |
igence officer for the Armia Krajowa after the | Soviet Union invaded eastern Poland (now western Ukra |
The accident later lead the | Soviet Government to review and the suspend the ambit |
Group fought aroung Lieksa and Kuhmo where the | Soviet 54th Division was defeated with motti tactics. |
As a player, he made his debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1981 for FC Tsement Novorossi |
He was the chief designer of the | Soviet atomic bomb, and stayed with the Soviet nuclea |
In 1960 he performed the first in the | Soviet Union intraocular lens replacement operation. |
A list of films produced in the | Soviet Union in 1963 (see 1963 in film). |
The | Soviet adaptation features sequences of fighting and |
me Lieutenant Colonel (or Podpolkovnik) of the | Soviet Air Force on 12 June 1962 and on 6 November 19 |
In 1964 he was part of the | Soviet team which won the gold medal in the Olympic t |
was a major Finnish defensive line against the | Soviet advance. |
bination of the US aviation code "NC", and the | Soviet equivalent "CC CC". |
As a player, he made his debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1989 for FC Dynamo Moscow. |
Mirza Jabiyev - Hero of the | Soviet Union. |
(see Forced labor of Germans in the | Soviet Union) |
By the collapse of the | Soviet Union, Spartak Vladikavkaz were the only non-M |
The family had emigrated in 1923 from the | Soviet Union to Berlin. |
The embassy was located in Moscow, the | Soviet Union's capital city. |
He then fought against the Mongols and the | Soviet Union during the Pei-ta-shan Incident. |
Lend-Lease aid to the | Soviet Union was nominally managed by Stettinius. |
2 by the Gestapo, allegedly for spying for the | Soviet Union and for membership of the Red Orchestra |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet First League in 1987 for FC Rostselmash Rostov |
tions were held for the Supreme Soviets of the | Soviet Union's constituent republics. |
entify Kosmos 521 as being associated with the | Soviet ASAT programme until records were declassified |
The | Soviet Army's 3rd Rifle Division was an infantry divi |
From 1982-1984, Chornovil served in the | Soviet Army. |
mation newly available to the public, from the | Soviet archives, following the dissolution of the Sov |
once located near Berestechko was razed by the | Soviet army. |
On 3 January, the | Soviet command sent four more divisions to meet the t |
It was built to the design of the | Soviet architect Yakov Belopolsky to commemorate 5,00 |
Simultaneously, the | Soviet authorities replaced all communist party and a |
Ryzhak was part of the | Soviet team which won the bronze medal in the 1956 to |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1989 for FC Zvezda Gorodishch |
pecies, Embasaurus minax, was described by the | Soviet paleontologist Anatoly Riabinin in 1931. |
On 8 May 1984, the | Soviet Union issued a statement that the country woul |
unker were led out to try and break out of the | Soviet encirclement. |
served as deputy commander of the army in the | Soviet Far East. |
The | Soviet Union also possessed weaponized ricin. |
In December 1948 he was deported to the | Soviet Union since Vilnius had been under Soviet juri |
apsed, the two German states reunited, and the | Soviet Army was being withdrawn back to the Soviet Un |
After the | Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 he was arrested by |
In August 1920 the family emigrated from the | Soviet Union to Manchuria. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1984 for FC Spartak Tambov. |
In 1952 he was part of the | Soviet team which finished seventh in the Olympic wat |
but six of his victories were claimed over the | Soviet Air Forces in over 700 combat missions. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1988 for FC Krylia Sovetov Ku |
The | Soviet Union returned her in June 1949 to Britain, wh |
He originally competed for the | Soviet Union and then Belarus after the Soviet dissol |
Soon after the German invasion of the | Soviet Union Arctic Convoys were sent by the Western |
They were granted exit visa just before the | Soviet invasion of 1968. |
ary exercised a large influence throughout the | Soviet Union. |
During the | Soviet era to 1959, were subregional center in Drohob |
After the service in the | Soviet Armed Forces (1988-1990) he worked at a resear |
India was the first country outside the | Soviet block to establish diplomatic relations with M |
He was a star in the | Soviet Union prior to this, earning a gold medal at t |
He studied the violin under the | Soviet violin master David Oistrakh and at the Juilli |
952 he won the silver medal as coxswain of the | Soviet boat in the eights event. |
These fears were minimized by the | Soviet announcement that troops were going to be with |
Cup of the | Soviet Army (3) 1985, 1986, 1989 |
The 1984 games were boycotted by the | Soviet bloc, thereby removing the main competition. |
She was transferred to the | Soviet Union under lend lease the same day as T-596. |
The | Soviet factory ship is part of a US-Soviet joint vent |
player, he made his professional debut in the | Soviet Top League in 1976 for FC Shakhtar Donetsk. |
eputies, Kamenev was the acting Premier of the | Soviet Union. |
In 1944, Belarus was liberated by the | Soviet Union and Jewish partisans were drafted into t |
ar, to discourage everyone from disobeying the | Soviet union. |
Butyrskaya originally competed for the | Soviet Union. |
The First All-Union Census of the | Soviet Union in 1926 recorded 8,570 Ottoman Turks liv |
result of over 50 years of experiments in the | Soviet Union and Russia, the breeding project was set |
After the breakup of the | Soviet Union, the observatory fell into hard times. |
e Nazis during the Holocaust by fleeing to the | Soviet Union. |
In 1945, she was transferred to the | Soviet Navy under Lend-Lease as T-596. |
reign Affairs Sir Alexander Cadogan, while the | Soviet delegation was led by Soviet Ambassador to the |
She organized resistance groups among the | Soviet forced laborers and worked to supply them with |
ans were granted Lublin Voivodeship, while the | Soviet sphere of interest included Lithuania. |
ah's Witnesses came into the conflict with the | Soviet power, primarily because of their refusal to j |
Many - including some within the | Soviet Union itself - argued that Zionology exhibited |
She belonged to the | Soviet Northern Fleet and carried the identification |
After the | Soviet occupation in 1940, Soviet authorities attempt |
Because of the | Soviet led counter-boycott of the Los Angeles games, |
Investigations after the war pointed to the | Soviet submarine L21 as being responsible for the sin |
llowing that time, it housed only those of the | Soviet sector. |
He made his professional debut in the | Soviet Second League in 1991 for FC Dinamo Gagra. |
s poetry was widely distributed throughout the | Soviet Union. |
Operation Barbarossa, the German attack on the | Soviet Union. |
On November 20, 1957 the | Soviet Union issued a stamp for the 10th anniversary |
The collapse of the | Soviet Union led to the restoration Republic of Eston |
commissioned 21 May and was transferred to the | Soviet Union. |
acht troops and civilians who were fleeing the | Soviet army advance, which was sunk by a Soviet subma |
th the national team came in a 3-1 loss to the | Soviet Union on February 3, 1979. |
comes from the period of 'dark times' with the | Soviet Union seems unlikely. |
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