「soviet」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)2ページ目
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Button (Russian: Пуговица) is a | Soviet animated film directed by Vladimir Tarasov and |
All of a sudden, a | Soviet agent begins to chase after Sasha. |
Chagan was a | Soviet underground nuclear test conducted at the Semi |
Sedmaya pulya) is a | Soviet Ostern film of 1972 directed by Ali Khamraev. |
A | Soviet propaganda poster presenting the Soviet engage |
sian: Лев Матве́eвич Финк, 1910-1988), a was a | Soviet physicist. |
исович) (August 5, 1941 - June 14, 2010) was a | Soviet cosmonaut who was twice named a Hero of the So |
to Masters', Group I, with 11.5/15, becoming a | Soviet Master. |
орьевич Модзалевский; born 13 April 1943) is a | Soviet Olympic fencer. |
Given a unique opportunity to snatch a | Soviet SS-N-5 SERB nuclear missile without the knowle |
n: Надежда Денисовна Шитикова; born 1923) is a | Soviet Olympic fencer. |
Persistent Memories: Pyramiden - A | Soviet Mining Town in the High Arctic. |
стья; Zvezda plenitelnogo schastya; 1975) is a | Soviet film. |
Ilya Mazel (aka Ruvim Mazel, 1890-1967), a | Soviet painter |
In 1961 he was exposed as a | Soviet agent by Polish defector Michael Goleniewski. |
At the end of the war Conze ended up in a | Soviet POW camp. |
so known as Tsiklon-3, GRAU index 11K68, was a | Soviet, and subsequently Ukrainian orbital carrier ro |
Leo Mazel (1907-2000), a | Soviet and Russian musicologist |
а Николаевна Князева; born 9 August 1954) is a | Soviet fencer. |
(Born January 2, 1949 in Moscow, Russia) was a | Soviet Olympic swimmer. |
he Gold Medal game after an altercation with a | Soviet player. |
Vitaliy Trukshin is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed during the 1970s. |
1944 г. (БС-3)) was a | Soviet 100 mm anti-tank and field gun. |
The 11th Guards Army was a | Soviet field army active from 1943 to 1997, which tra |
ransliteration: Priklyucheniya Buratino) was a | Soviet children's musical film, made in 1975 at Belar |
иханов; 24 September 1937 - August 1999) was a | Soviet fencer. |
00 - 14 May 1987), born Lisa Rozensweig, was a | Soviet spy. |
This team was directed to create a | Soviet capability to build missiles, starting with a |
RDS-4 (also known as Tatyana) was a | soviet nuclear bomb. |
ara convinces Shah to help Bond by attacking a | Soviet airbase. |
Gennady Bukharin (born August 10, 1929) is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the late 1950s. |
910, Kharkov - 17 February 1984, Moscow) was a | Soviet military leader awarded the highest honorary t |
isation internationale des journalistes) was a | Soviet bloc front organization. |
eresa (sometimes listed as Vasiliy Beresa is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the early 1980s. |
Actual Russian Title: Солнечный круг) is a | Soviet Russian song, written for children. |
ichy Raion - 16 September 1939, Vitebsk) was a | Soviet major, pilot and twice recipient of the honora |
There was a | Soviet Red Army Artillery School (a military academy) |
The 16th Army was a | Soviet field army active from 1940 to 1945. |
Georgiy Fedotovich Zakharov was a | Soviet general officer, mainly notable for his servic |
He was alleged to be a | Soviet spy in the Venona Project transcripts. |
's country and take up residence in another: a | Soviet citizen who defected to Israel. |
ч Крейн; 3 April 1907 - 17 October 1989) was a | Soviet Jewish mathematician, one of the major figures |
Vladimir Kotyrev (born 1931) is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the early 1950s. |
1874 - 1935) was a Russian revolutionary and a | Soviet politician. |
Kukuruza (Russian: Кукуруза - "maize") is a | Soviet and later Russian country rock group that was |
In 1930 Ramishvili was assassinated by a | Soviet spy in Paris. |
ов, November 18, 1899 - August 11, 1980) was a | Soviet aircraft pilot, one of the first Heroes of the |
a-3 ("duga" means "arc") or "Steel Yard" was a | Soviet experimental over-the-horizon radar (OTH) syst |
ussian: Вера Анисимова; born 25 May 1952) is a | Soviet athlete who competed mainly in the 100 metres. |
It is named after a | soviet tatar poet Musa Jalil. |
Polikarpov I-17, a | Soviet single-seat fighter prototype |
ed by the Pennsylvania Keystones and then by a | Soviet Union team. |
In 1972, a | Soviet geological expedition discovered significant u |
Three mosaics with a | Soviet theme are present on both walls. |
Plot of the film is based on a | Soviet engineer who developed a fantastically powerfu |
охорович Лосюков), born 15 November 1943, is a | Soviet and Russian diplomat. |
sian: Андрей Васильев; born 27 June 1962) is a | Soviet rower. |
нович Толстиков) (1913 - December, 1987) was a | Soviet polar explorer, awarded by the Hero of the Sov |
several pieces of foreign equipment, such as a | Soviet SU-76M self-propelled howitzer. |
Sheepskin boots worn by a | Soviet aviator during World War II. |
рк) (December 5, 1909-December 30, 1978) was a | Soviet mathematician. |
e wargame was set in Europe and hypothesized a | Soviet invasion of Western Europe. |
Alexei, a | Soviet fighter pilot, is shot down in combat against |
(11 (23) August, 1893 - 28 October 1941) was a | Soviet general. |
is effort is the CIA's successful salvage of a | Soviet submarine in 1974. |
(Berenkov is a | Soviet agent who gets captured and interviewed by Muf |
в) (21 September 1944 - 4 November 2009) was a | Soviet biathlete. |
валов, December 30, 1929 - May 26, 2008) was a | Soviet athlete. |
A | Soviet Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 |
seva-Khertsberga (born November 16, 1944) is a | Soviet slalom canoer who competed in the early 1970s. |
R-31 (NATO designation - SS-N-17 Snipe) was a | Soviet SLBM missile. |
er 8, 1902, Moscow - September 20, 1999) was a | Soviet physiologist and biochemist, academician (1953 |
The 2nd Red Banner Army was a | Soviet field army of World War II that served in the |
nts in his first season with CSKA, including a | Soviet career-high 31 goals. |
Yevgeney Yatsinenko (born 1925) is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the late 1950s. |
He is referred to as a | Soviet source in the OSS in the Venona traffic under |
booklet in 1934 titled, “We are Fighting for a | Soviet Germany”. |
(1895, Smila, Ukraine - January 8, 1942) was a | Soviet Nazi collaborator. |
Aleksandr Mozhayev (born 5 August 1958) is a | Soviet fencer. |
One of her brothers, Isaac Spielrein, was a | Soviet psychologist, a pioneer of labor psychology. |
front line and was overrun and destroyed in a | Soviet offensive. |
Bayer was allegedly part of a | Soviet military intelligence (GRU) network. |
an: Виктор Кравченко) (born 15 May 1941) was a | Soviet athlete who competed mainly in the triple jump |
иков) (June 13, 1897 - February 1, 1957) was a | Soviet military leader. |
After defeating a | Soviet force at Olevsk on 21 August, Borovets establi |
ersation Jaruzelski had with Viktor Kulikov, a | Soviet military leader, Jaruzelski himself begged for |
(18 September 1922 - 26 September 1981) was a | Soviet chess master. |
n: Александр Быков; born 23 January 1953) is a | Soviet fencer. |
Nina Gruzintseva (born April 7, 1934) is a | Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the mid 1960s. |
анчиков; 30 July 1940 - 28 January 1972) was a | Soviet fencer. |
рилович Дралкин) (born November 3, 1911) was a | Soviet oceanologist, geographer and polar explorer. |
Bibrka was the site of a | Soviet prison and detention centre that detained Pole |
After the war is over, he is recruited as a | Soviet spy. |
sed to give their support to Lenin's idea of a | Soviet Republic. |
tion to extract intelligence from an abandoned | Soviet Arctic research station. |
er, best known as the authour of stories about | Soviet intelligentsia. |
Not all groups accept | Soviet control, and the Soviets deal with this on a c |
The party refused to acknowledge | Soviet Union and defended fascist Italy. |
In 1990, Mikhail Gorbachev acknowledged | Soviet responsibility for the Katyn massacre for the |
tz, recruits her to his concert program across | Soviet Union. |
stepfather of Flora Wovschin, the most active | Soviet spy revealed Venona project. |
These additional | Soviet military forces far outnumbered the armies of |
On 1944 he fled before the advancing | Soviet troops, as did many ehtnic Hungarians in Carpa |
ary, but could do little to stop the advancing | Soviet Armies. |
he was killed in a skirmish with the advancing | Soviet Red Army. |
-western Hungary, on the path of the advancing | Soviet Army. |
Later, the advancing | Soviet forces captured the area, and it became part o |
f Vyborg but were unable to stop the advancing | Soviet forces. |
nts were driven from the area by the advancing | Soviet army in 1944. |
A 1952 poster advertising | Soviet champagne. |
After | Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration return |
After | Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration return |
It is named after | Soviet astronomer Vladimir Aleksandrovich Albitzky. |
His family returned to Latvia after | Soviet Union occupied and annexed it in 1940. |
Station was named after | Soviet Russian astronomer Nikolai P. Barabashov |
After | Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration return |
It is named after | Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov. |
January 31, 1945, Yegorova was liberated after | Soviet forces overran the Kustrin prisoner camp where |
After | Soviet invasion into Czechoslovakia political ideals |
After | Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration return |
Three hours after | Soviet forces had crossed the border and started the |
Named after | Soviet conductor Yuri Temirkanov. |
Named after | Soviet composer Aleksandra Pakhmutova. |
It is named after | Soviet world war 2 hero Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. |
After | Soviet invasion of Poland, remnants of the Brigade fo |
After | Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration return |
y remains locked in military stalemate against | Soviet and Afghan troops. |
On 23 September 1981, he played against | Soviet Union for his debut. |
leg when fighting with the Mujahideen against | Soviet occupation in the 1980s. |
The Ju 87s effectiveness against | Soviet armour was not yet potent. |
tion Barbarossa scoring four victories against | Soviet aircraft. |
The treaty was to act as a dam against | Soviet expansion in the Balkan area. |
defended the area north of Lake Ladoga against | Soviet attacks. |
the Battle of Khalkhin Gol (Nomonhan) against | Soviet BT Tanks in 1939, the gun proved insufficient. |
crifice missions" (Selbstopfereinsatz) against | Soviet held bridges over the Oder River. |
Estonian military forces for fighting against | Soviet Army. |
ckel-mines around Petsamo, in Finland, against | Soviet attack in the event of a renewed war between F |
His father fought against | Soviet forces during the Soviet war in Afghanistan in |
With the German attack against | Soviet Union, ethnic Ukrainians hoped to establish an |
They operated in Belavezha Forest against | Soviet forces in anti-communist guerrilla operations |
formers had little hope of holding out against | Soviet pressure and ultimately were forced to accede |
sts were needed to provide warning of airborne | Soviet nuclear attack. |
Defeated Israel Akopkokhyan ( | Soviet Union) 3-2 |
orphanage named "Lusaghbyur" in Alexandrapol, | Soviet Armenia. |
Here you can download an emulator of all | Soviet Programmable Calculators |
l Assistance Treaty, Lithuania agreed to allow | Soviet military bases (marked in black stars) in exch |
to Gennady and Tatyana Selyutina in Alma-Ata ( | Soviet Union then, Kazakhstan now). |
nti-fascist, he has also written on the Alsace | Soviet Republic, on eugenicist Alexis Carrel, on Holo |
See also: | Soviet Jews. |
ced with the “volunteers” drafted from amongst | Soviet POW's at the nearest Nazi concentration camps. |
Dauria is an | Soviet 1971 historical action/drama set in Siberia, R |
Following German and | Soviet invasion, Dobromyl was occupied by the Soviet |
olai Makarov was inducted into the Russian and | Soviet Hockey Hall of Fame in 1981. |
ue to disputes between American scientists and | Soviet scientists as to which had first isolated thes |
The communist party and | Soviet military authorities exercised strict ideologi |
Other armies (including German and | Soviet) also fielded and extensively used elite horse |
decessors was chaired by the United States and | Soviet Union. |
After joint Nazi and | Soviet attack on Poland, West Ukraine was occupied by |
938) was a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary and | Soviet politician. |
olution while Argentina, the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained from the vote. |
It is named after the Azerbaijani and | Soviet astrophysicist Nadir Baba Ogly Ibragimov. |
This occurred when the United States and | Soviet Union tested H-bombs within nine months of one |
Warsaw University, before the Nazi German and | Soviet invasion of Poland. |
o none; Belgium, France, the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained. |
Territory of the western Allies (blue) and | Soviet Union and its allies (red) in September 1945 |
Dictionary of 20th Century Russian and | Soviet Painters 1900-1980s. |
ay 1941 in Kaunas, Lithuania) is a Russian and | Soviet theatre director. |
ave workforce from the conquered countries and | Soviet POWs. |
This unorthodox mix of US and | Soviet enterprise led to the project developers being |
To counterbalance British and | Soviet influence, Reza Shah encouraged German commerc |
Russian colonists in Tashkent made Tsarist and | Soviet rule appear identical. |
me a sniper instructor of the Czechoslovak and | Soviet infantry, and was at some point an ambulance d |
(Stalin and | Soviet law viewed any Soviet who was captured alive a |
In Brest-Litovsk, a joint German and | Soviet victory parade was held. |
akub Egit (born 1908) was a Zionist leader and | Soviet soldier. |
They were not and both the Norwegian and | Soviet settlers were cooperative. |
8-1919) was a Ukrainian political activist and | Soviet revolutionary during the Russian Revolution. |
ferences between life in the United States and | Soviet Russia. |
On June 1, 1922 in Helsinki, Finland and | Soviet Russia signed an Agreement between RSFSR and F |
- February 11, 1956, Moscow) was a Russian and | Soviet astronomer, a corresponding member of the Sovi |
u|Александр Яковлевич Лернер}}), scientist and | Soviet refusenik. |
Battle of Salla was fought between Finnish and | Soviet troops near Salla in northern Finland during t |
with nine votes to none; the Ukrainian SSR and | Soviet Union abstained. |
hes for foreign wrecks, including Eurydice and | Soviet submarines including K-129. |
He was inducted into the Russian and | Soviet Hockey Hall of Fame in 1993. |
hting continued in the area between Polish and | Soviet armies and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. |
Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and | Soviet Empires. |
Up till the Nazi German and | Soviet invasions of Poland in September of 1939 it wa |
2000) was an American historian of Russian and | Soviet history. |
(born 24 March 1947) is a former Ukrainian and | Soviet footballer. |
After the German and | Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, Vilnius was occupi |
Britain and | Soviet Communism: The Impact of Revolution (London: M |
mbers of which 42 were rescued by Romanian and | Soviet boats. |
an Minister of Foreign Affairs Karl Selter and | Soviet Commissar of Foreign Affairs Molotov. |
e is the director of Department of Russian and | Soviet Studies. |
On Internal War: American and | Soviet Approaches to Third World Clients and Insurgen |
March 1944 the siege of Leningrad was over and | Soviet troops were on the border with Estonia. |
German and | Soviet units went on a joint victory parade in the st |
icting the various episodes from Ukrainian and | Soviet history. |
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