The cast of Tolko v myusik-kholle - 1980 includes: Igor Dmitriev as Rezhissyor myuzik-kholla Yelena Fetisenko as Tanya Viktor Ilichyov as Starosta kollektiva Olga Kuznetsova as Nadya Valentin Manokhin Sergey Migitsko as Rukovoditel opernogo kollektiva Lyubov Polishchuk as Tatyana Fyodorovna Igor Sklyar as Vanadi Mikhail Svetin as Direktor dvortsa Irina Yurevich as Lena
"Koshka" is pronounced as "KOHSH-kah."
The cast of Ya ne vernus - 2014 includes: Andrey Astrakhantsev as Andrey Lyutsius Olga Belinskaya as Teacher Vika Lobacheva as Kristina Galina Mochalova as Grandmother Polina Pushkaruk as Anya Laina Sergeeva as Verka Sergey Yatsenyuk as Dima Morozov Tatyana Zykova as Koshka
"Kot" is the Russian word for male cat, while "koshka" is the word for female cat.
KOT - masculine, pronounced as it sounds KOshKA - feminine, pronounced koshka with the stress on the first syllable - i have put the 'sh' in lower case as this wont let me type in cyrillic, but the 'sha' sound in Russian looks like a 'w' with a flattend bottom.
she cat-koshka, he cat-kot, kitten-kotyata, kittens-kotyonok.
Кот for male Pronounced "cot" Кошка for female Pronounced "coshka"
Bronislava Zakharova has: Performed in "Sladkaya skazka" in 1970. Performed in "Priklyucheniya Neznayki i ego druzey" in 1971. Performed in "Dnevnoy poezd" in 1976. Played Neznaika in "Neznaika v Solnechnom gorode" in 1977. Played Little Mouse in "Myshonok i koshka" in 1983. Performed in "Grafinya Sheremeteva" in 1994. Performed in "Starukhi" in 2003. Played Babulka na trotuare in "Tarif Novogodniy" in 2008. Performed in "Ischeznuvshaya imperiya" in 2008. Performed in "Terror lyubovyu" in 2009. Performed in "Nad gorodom" in 2010. Played Granny Lyuba in "Proshchaniye slavyanki" in 2011.
The cast of Admiral Nakhimov - 1946 includes: Nikolai Aparin as Sailor Nikolai Brilling as Captain Evans Nikolai Chaplygin as Kornilov Aleksei Dikij as Adm. Nakhimov Pavel Gaideburov as Lord Raglan Georgi Gumilevsky as Sailor Aleksandr Khokhlov as Napoleon III Leonid Knyazev as Pyotr Koshka Vasili Kovrigin as Baranovsky Boris Olenin as General Pelissier Vsevolod Pudovkin as Prince Menshikov Yevgeni Samojlov as Lt. Burunov Ruben Simonov as Pasha Osman Pyotr Sobolevsky as Ostreno Konstantin Starostin as Sailor Vladimir Vladislavskiy as Capt. Lavrov
Belaya koshka - белая кошка. If I'm not mistaken, it'd be reversed, as in Spanish - кошка белая. белая - be-YEL-a-ya (roughly). e makes a "ye" sound (as in yet); я makes a "ya" (as in yard). koshka is a good phoenetic spelling for кошка. But you may say "`Белый кот = White MALE cat = `Beliy kot". As for reversed variant "Кошка белая", it sounds encyclopedically, or as if you want to say that " No, it`s not black, but white".
Kot is the Russian word for cat. Russians also say Koschka (pronounced the way it looks) for "kitty."
Italy's cat- Itabby or Gino Germany's cat- Germouser Japan's cat- Japaneko or Tama (which is more common) America's cat- Americat Russia's cat- Koshka or Russicat Austria's cat- Caustria Romano's cat- Romacat
Kseniya Kuznetsova has: Played Koshka in "Provintsialy" in 2002. Played Tanya Skryabina (2004) in "Diversant" in 2004. Performed in "Aleksandrovskiy sad" in 2005. Played Zhena in "Rybalka" in 2005. Performed in "Admiral" in 2008. Played Marina in "Serdtze bez zamka" in 2012.