Results 271 to 280 of about 346,641 (319)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Ukrainian-English, English-Ukrainian Dictionary

The Modern Language Journal, 1993
With over 10,000 up-to-date dictionary entries and phonetic transliteration of both Ukrainian and English words, this reference provides an invaluable tool for travellers, students and business people. Features: Includes both script and romanisation; 10,000 total entries; Basic Ukrainian pronunciation guide; Revised with menu terms.
Victoria A. Babenko-Woodbury   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Armed Ukrainians in L’viv: Ukrainian Militia, Ukrainian Police, 1941 to 1942

Canadian-American Slavic Studies, 2014
Who were the Ukrainians who participated in the exterminatory violence that swept eastern Galicia following the German invasion of the USSR in June 1941? Records show that they represented diverse political and demographic strata. Those most distant from nationalist roots, however, demonstrated the highest lethality and greatest willingness to serve as
openaire   +2 more sources

Ukrainian Past, Ukrainian Present

1993
The state and the Ukrainian triumvirate in the Russian Empire, Orest Pelech from savage Ukrainian steppe to quiet Ukrainian field - Ukrainian ethnographers and Imperial Russia in the reform era, Catherine B. Clay A.N. Pypin's defense of Ukraine - sources and motivation, Alexis E.
openaire   +2 more sources

Ukrainian Orthodoxy and the Ukrainian Project

Russian Politics & Law, 2014
The author analyzes the evolution of inter-Church and Church–state relations in post-Soviet Ukraine in the context of Ukrainian nation building and Russian–Ukrainian relations.
openaire   +2 more sources

Interference of Standard Literary Ukrainian in the Speech of Canadian Ukrainians [PDF]

open access: possibleCanadian Slavonic Papers, 1983
AbstractLa langue ukrainienne parlee au Canada traverse une etape de transformation assez complexe que l’on appelle “canadianisation” et qui, par consequent, est a la base d’une variante canadienne de la langue ukrainienne. La “canadianisation” est le resultat de multiples contacts avec d’autres langues, et celui de l’interference linguistique ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Ukrainian Diaspora

2010
The term diaspora refers to communities of people who share the same cultural or "home" background but live permanently in different countries throughout the world, who retain a form of their identity, and maintain a real and/or symbolic relationship with their "home" country.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Ukrainian History Textbook: Introducing Children to the “Ukrainian Nation”

Nationalities Papers, 2001
As Ukraine approaches its tenth year of independence, it seems an appropriate moment to ask what type of nation it has become. The process by which Ukrainians determine the boundaries and characteristics of their national identity is dynamic, and has been the source of debate at many levels of Ukrainian society.
openaire   +2 more sources

Ukrainians and Poles

2006
In the middle of the seventeenth century, Orthodox clerics trained in the rhetoric and languages of the Polish Renaissance and Reformation settled in Moscow. Ukrainian clerics, for example, all but controlled the Russian Orthodox Church. The Cossacks profited from Pereiaslav to free themselves and much of Ukraine from Poland, but then under Hetman ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Toward an Understanding of the Russian-Ukrainian War Impact on University Students and Personnel

Journal of Loss and Trauma, 2023
Anton Kurapov, Richard Isralowitz
exaly  

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy