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Jonas Jablonskis (Lithuanian pronunciation: [joːnɐs jɐbˈɫɔnskɪs]; 30 December 1860, in Kubilėliai, Šakiai district – 23 February 1930, in Kaunas) was a distinguished Lithuanian linguist and one of the founders of the standard Lithuanian language. [1]
Rage, titled Tokarev in most of Europe and Australia, is a 2014 American action crime thriller film directed by Paco Cabezas and written by Jim Agnew and Sean Keller. The film stars Nicolas Cage , Rachel Nichols , Peter Stormare , Danny Glover , Max Ryan , Judd Lormand and Pasha D. Lychnikoff .
Jonas Jablonskis (1860–1930), Lithuanian linguist who standardized the Lithuanian language; Jeremy Yablonski (born 1980), a Canadian ice hockey left winger who currently plays for the Binghamton Senators in the AHL; Johann Theodor Jablonski (1654–1731), German lexicographer
Later, they are joined by a group of peasants who have fled from Kolchak's forces. Tokarev and Dolgov form a small guerrilla unit made out of fugitives. As the White Army declares a general mobilization in Zubarevka, the villagers refuse to join. Tokarev enters the village and leads the male population into his partisan group.
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Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Jonas Wilkerson, character from Gone With the Wind. Michael Jonas, character in the sci-fi series Star Trek: Voyager; Jonas Taylor, character in an action horror movie The Meg; Jonas Kahnwald, character in the German sci-fi series Dark; Jonas Miller, character in the movie Twister. Jonas Hunter, the late son of Rip Hunter in Legends of Tomorrow.
Academic articles on Lithuanian language and attempts to standardize it were published by Jonas Jablonskis. Future President of Lithuania Kazys Grinius also contributed to the newspaper. [16] Because the publication was illegal, many authors used various pen names and pseudonyms that changed frequently; a few articles were unsigned.