The Russian Five refers to a group of Russian-born Ice Hockey players who played together for the Detroit Red Wings in the mid-1990s. The players were Sergei Fedorov, Slava Fetisov, Igor Larionov, Vladimir Konstantinov, and Vyacheslav Kozlov. They played a key role in the Red Wings' success during that time, helping the team win multiple Stanley Cup championships.
The number five is written as "пять" in Russian.
A typical Russian school week consists of five days, from Monday to Friday. Each day usually includes around 5-7 lessons, with breaks in between.
The Russian immigrants spoke Russian.
The proper adjective for Russian is "Russian."
The Russian word for "Russian" is русский, pronounced ROOS-ski. If you want to write it in English, you can write it as russky.
The Russian Five can refer to the five famous Russian composers of the 19th century, or the powerful all-Russian hockey line of the 1990s Detroit Red Wings.
The number five is written as "пять" in Russian.
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Balakirev.
tchaikovsky (apex)
Russian turtles do not get very big. The average Russian turtle is between five and nine inches.
The Five, or the Mighty Five, or the Mighty Handful, were a group of Russian composers who believed in using Russian folk music as the basis of their concert music. They were Mily Balakirev, Alexander Borodin, Cesar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky and Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
The Russian Five were Russian hockey players who played in the NFL. Igor Nikolayevich Larionov, Vyacheslav Anatolevich "Slava" Kozlov, Sergei Viktorovich Fyodorov, Vladimir Nikolaevich, and Konstantinov, Viacheslav Alexandrovich "Slava" Fetisov. They were also called the Big Red Machine. They played in the 1980s.
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Russian elements
The Mighty Five was not a band. It was a term invented in 1867 by the Russian music critic, Vladimir Stasov, to describe a circle of composers who typified the Russian spirit in music. The five were Mily Balakirev, Alexander Borodin, Cesar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky and Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov. They tended to compose in a more deliberately Russian style than Piotr Tchaikovsky, who was composing at the same time or Mikhail Glinka, the first true Russian composer of symphonic music, who was the forebear of all the others. The group was variously known as The Five and The Mighty Handful.