لا لايجب أن تؤثر
M. A. O'Brien has written: 'New English-Russian and Russian-English dictionary (new orthography)' 'New English-Russian and Russian-English dictionary'
'An gleski'.
Eugene A. Carpovich has written: 'Russian-English science and engineering dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Russian, Engineering, Russian language, English, Science 'Russian-English atomic dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Russian, Russian language, English, Nuclear energy, Science
The Russian word for "Russian" is русский, pronounced ROOS-ski. If you want to write it in English, you can write it as russky.
Galina Kruberg has written: 'A Handbook for Translating from English Into Russian: Part 1' 'A Handbook for Translating from English Into Russian' -- subject(s): English, English language, Russian language, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Translating from English, Translating into Russian
O. S. Akhmanova has written: 'Akhmanova Russian dictionary' 'The philology of translation' 'Linguostylistics' -- subject(s): Language and languages, Style 'The theory of syntax in modern linguistics' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Syntax 'Russian-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Russian, Russian language 'Russian-English, English-Russian dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Russian, Russian language 'Diccionario de Geografia' 'Verbal and non-verbal equivalence in Shakespeare translation' 'O psikholingvistike' -- subject(s): Psycholinguistics 'Anglo-russkii slovar' = English-Russian dictionary' 'English-Russian and Russian -English Dictionary' 'Phonology, morphonology, morphology' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Phonology, Russian language, Word formation 'The theory of syntax in modern linguistic'
пака (paka) is Russian for goodbye.
Shootka is a Russian equivalent of the English word 'joke'.
T. A. Sofiano has written: 'English-Russian geological dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Geology, Russian, Russian language
The Russian word for "go" transliterated into English letters is "idti."
Russian is the English equivalent of 'rusa'. The Spanish word functions as an adjective or as a noun in a Spanish sentence. It may refer to the Russian people or to the Russian language.
Vladimir Kotchine has written: 'Russian-English automotive dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Russian, Automobiles, Russian language, English