Yes.
A Russian grandmother is the grandmother of a child, but she has to be Russian. Like a American or British grandmother is the grandmother to a child, but she has the respective heritage.The Russian term for grandmother is babushka.
Yes.
The name is in German-Jewish (or Ashkenazic) and means "Deerfield."
The Russian name for grandmother is "бабушка" (pronounced babushka).
Babushka is Russian for Grandmother or old woman.Babushka is the Russian word for Grandmother or Scarf.
Ashkenazi Jews aren't more strict than Sephardi Jews, this question is based on a false assumption.
Being Russian does not necessarily mean being Jewish, there are Christian and Muslim Russians too. Judaism is passed down through the mother, so if your maternal grandmother is Jewish, then you are Jewish. Jewish people from Eastern Europe and Russia are generally Ashkenazi, which is a group that has certain customs (rituals, foods, songs etc.) in contrast to Sephardim (Middle Eastern or North African Jews) who have different customs. Most Jewish Russians come from Western Russia, either from Ukraine, Belarus or the areas between those countries and Moscow or St. Petersberg. Those Jews are overwhelmingly Ashkenazi. However, Jews from the Caucasus region of Russia are more often Sephardic.
Babushka
The Russian for 'grandmother' is "babushka" (pronounced ba-boo-shka with the accent on first syllable).
babushka
babushka babushka
Jesus was a Jew who was born before the Jews were exiled to Europe - Eastern Europe "creating" Ashkenazi Jews and Wester Europe (Spain) "creating" Sefardi Jews.