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It is the largest Wikipedia written in any Slavic language, surpassing its nearest rival, the Polish Wikipedia, by 20% in terms of the number of articles and fivefold by the parameter of depth. [4] In addition, the Russian Wikipedia is the largest Wikipedia written in Cyrillic [5] or in a script other than the Latin script. In April 2016, the ...
In 2020, in a report on the Two Sessions (plenary sessions of the National People's Congress and Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference), CGTN Russian used "Party of crooks and thieves", a derogative term to describe United Russia, in its video to introduce China's efforts to contain corruption, resulting in criticism from some ...
The Czech Wikipedia reached half a million articles in the afternoon of 16 March 2022. [14] The statistics at this time also revealed there were 2,500 active editors and 34 administrators, 70 articles were being created per day on average, and the most actively edited article was the one on the Russian invasion of Ukraine . [ 14 ]
Hello - Здравствуйте (Zdravstvuyte)/ Привет (priviet) How are you? - как дела? (Kak dela) What's your name? - Как вас зовут?
Going Vertical, also known as Three Seconds (Russian: Движение вверх, romanized: Dvizhenie vverkh) is a 2017 Russian sports drama film directed by Anton Megerdichev about the controversial victory of the Soviet national basketball team over the 1972 U.S. Olympic team, ending their 63-game winning streak, at the Munich Summer Olympic's men's basketball tournament.
Na solnce, vdol' riadov kukuruzy; Nakhimovtsy; Nebesnaya komanda; Neposlushnaya; Never Gonna Snow Again; Night Mode (film) Nika (film) No Looking Back (2021 film) Non-Orphanage; Normalny tolko ya; The Nose or the Conspiracy of Mavericks; Nuremberg (2023 film) The Nutcracker and the Magic Flute
Czech Television was established by the Czech Television Act of the Czech National Council (Act No. 483/1991 Coll.) on 1 January 1992, as a public television service for the citizens of the Czech Republic, with property transferred from Czechoslovak Television.
The BBC's first Russian-language broadcast was a translation of a speech by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill on 23 June 1941. [1]The first programme of the Russian section of the BBC was hosted by Sonya (Betty) Horsfall on 24 March 1946.