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Soviet English

Meaning Soviet meaning

What does Soviet mean?
Definitions in simple English

Soviet

A Soviet is an elected council in a communist country.

Soviet

A Soviet is a citizen of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

soviet

an elected governmental council in a communist country (especially one that is a member of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)

Soviet

of or relating to or characteristic of the former Soviet Union or its people Soviet leaders

Synonyms Soviet synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Soviet?

soviet English » English

Soviet council central Sovietist

Examples Soviet examples

How do I use Soviet in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Hail the Soviet Union!
I was born in the Soviet Union.
Even now, many years after the Cold War, there is still much rancor between the Russians and the Germans, especially in areas once occupied by the Soviet Union.
Even now, many years after the Cold War, there is still much bitterness between Germans and Russians, especially in areas which were occupied by the Soviet Union.
Communism is the system practiced in the Soviet Union.
The Soviet troops started to withdraw from Afghanistan.
The Soviet Union took a hostile attitude toward us.
U.S.S.R. stands for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
The Cold War ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
USSR stands for Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Long live the Soviet Union!
In Soviet Russia, food eats troll!
In Soviet Russia, river swims you!
He defected to the Soviet Union in the 1950's.
The Cold War ended when the Soviet Union collapsed.
Brilliant papers by Comrade Stalin allowed Soviet linguistics to take the leading position in the world.
Yuri Andropov was elected Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on June 16, 1983.
In Soviet Russia, sentence writes you!
In Soviet Russia, lesson teaches teacher!
In Soviet Russia, television watches the audience!

Movie subtitles

As a Soviet functionary, Erlich was doing fine.
Greetings from Soviet Russia. Burn all the New York magazines and hang a portrait of Lenin in my office.
This morning, three Soviet agents arrived.
The French government has recognized Soviet Russia. and he doubts that they will risk a war for my poor sake.
Those jewels belong to Grand Duchess Swana. and were seized illegally by the Soviet government.
Soviet Russia will put all its might behind this case.
Won't it be rather embarrassing for a Soviet envoy. to disclose the circumstances under which she lost them?
France has recognized the Soviet.
Under the Soviet law, the jewels belong to the State.
As atoms in the cosmos of Soviet Russia.
Code is as Toad, playing there at the table, the local chief of Soviet agents, leads Leningrad section 3 for Paris.
Speculated the Soviet funds and lost 80 million francs and now will try to get high stakes money back.
Soviet police, no wrong?
This is Radio Moscow broadcasting over all of the Soviet Union!
Dear Madge! Greetings from Soviet Russia.
The Petrograd Soviet was building armed forces.
THE FIRST SOVIET SCI-FI MOVIE.
We had two Soviet delegates to dinner.
To the north of Tibet the Soviet imperialism has taken possession of the ancient silk roads, expanding it, and widening it to disintegrate the established daily life of Inner Asia.
Come, let's go back, then we can talk about heavy industry and nuclear research in the Soviet Union.
Des Etats-Unis. 'The United States.' Et de la Russie Sovietique. 'And the Soviet.
I am travelling under Soviet orders.
Even the Soviet?
Even the Soviet.
My orders are military, commanding me to duty by tomorrow noon. Others may disregard orders, not the Soviet.
This concerns us all, if not the Soviet.
Anything of concern to the rest of you is of special concern to the Soviet.

News and current affairs

For many of his supporters, it was President Ronald Reagan who, with his deliberate escalation of the arms race, pushed the Soviet economy to the brink, thereby fully demonstrating the superiority of liberal societies and free markets.
First, and perhaps above all, the revolutions of 1989 and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union put an end to global bipolarity.
This did not happen, because neither the Western Allies nor the Soviet Union supported it.
But the 1945 consensus was dealt a much greater blow precisely when we all rejoiced at the collapse of the Soviet Empire, the other great twentieth-century tyranny.
But much else collapsed with the Soviet model.
To many, myself included, NATO's enlargement to take in, among others, the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania -- which were once Soviet republics -- is an impossible dream come true.
On the contrary, expansion takes away the worries - be they real or imagined - that surround the situation of the large Russian-speaking populations that now live outside of Russia but within the borders of the former Soviet Union.
It was Japan, the high-tech country par excellence (not the latter-day Soviet Union) that proved unable to take adequate precautions to avert disaster in four reactor blocks.
Like former Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, the only other KGB man to rule Russia, Putin will become the party's general secretary.
As in the Soviet era, state and governmental officials will be reduced to party ciphers - the role that President Medvedev will play under General Secretary Putin.
Russia would be furious, because it fears that Kosovo's secession - whether or not it is internationally recognized - might fuel separatist movements in the former Soviet empire.
Yes, 8 May 1945 was a day of liberation to which the Soviet army contributed decisively.
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania reemerged from Soviet occupation.
Neither the Soviet experience in Afghanistan in the 1980's nor NATO's today vindicates the claim that troop numbers are what matter most on the modern battlefield.
In 1989, liberal democracy triumphed over the socialist ideology incarnated and promoted by the Soviet Bloc.
By contrast, 2009 is likely to pave the way to a new form of bipolarity, but with China substituting for the Soviet Union.
The old Cold War world order was based on the nuclear arms race between the two superpowers, the United States and Soviet Union.
During the Cold War, most Europeans tolerated America's tendency to lead unilaterally, because of the Soviet threat and the preponderance of US power.

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