In Russian, "Chernobyl" (Чернобыль) translates to "wormwood," which refers to a type of bitter herb. The name is derived from the plant's association with the region, as it is commonly found in the area. The term has also taken on a broader significance due to the Chernobyl disaster of 1986, symbolizing the catastrophic nuclear event and its aftermath.
Chernobyl its a Ukrainian city, and located at north of Ukraine. THERE IS NO ONE RUSSIAN CITY, my stupid friend.
Yes.
Chernobyl fallout! (It's a joke)
It was not a Russian city. It was a Ukrainian city called Chernobyl (Чорнобиль)
None, but the nearby town of Pripyat was evacuated
Perhaps the Chernobyl incident in the Ukraine caused Ukrainians to move to Russia therefore contaminating Russians
You probably mean at Chernobyl in the Ukraine, in 1986
http://www.endtime.com/politics-and-religion-radio *** Check out the April 27th program. It is on this subject in great detail.
Павел is Paul in Russian.
It's in cyrilic the Russian alphabet. Translated will mean: Roscosmos =Russian cosmos. Like the NASA but Russian.
See the UNSCEAR report referenced as a link below
"Russia". If you mean to ask 'what is 'country' called in Russian, that is 'страна' (strana). If you mean to ask what a Russian country house is called, that is 'dacha' (in Russian: дача).