the bolsherviks were upset abot the russians trying to take control over them and gain there independance back
It wasn't Russia as a whole. It was the leader of the country. Vladmir Ilyich Lenin in 1918 made Russia Communist after the Russian Civil War, in which the Red Russians defeated the white Russians.
mother Russian is a just a way of saying Russia (: like mother nature. Russians take a lot of pride to themselves
You will have to check with your school, I know a student who did a polish gcse at my school.
If you want to be a doctor, you should take Geography for GCSE and not Drama.
Yes you can take GCSE Karate as part of your Phys Ed GCSE Course Check with KUGB on this link http://www.kugb.org/karate-gcse-alevels.php
no
Yes, you get bioligy, chemistry and physics, but it is a combined GCSE, it is good to take I did and came out with 2 A's
Because if you take GCSE you will have more opportunities to get in the university in Europe. But if you have the Change to do IGCSE then go for that its not that different but its a preferable side. :)
Most Russians in America are concentrated in large metropolitan areas such as New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago. These cities have established Russian communities with cultural centers, businesses, and social organizations that cater to the Russian population.
University's like it if you do a language at GCSE, but you shouldn't need it to be a lawyer.
Yes, Russian can be a proper adjective for things and people from Russia. But it can also be a proper noun (demonym) for a person from Russia (one Russian, two Russians).