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ukrainian English

Meaning ukrainian meaning

What does ukrainian mean?

Ukrainian

the Slavic language spoken in the Ukraine of or relating to or characteristic of Ukraine or its people or culture

Synonyms ukrainian synonyms

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

Ukrainian English » English

אוקרײַנער אוקרײַניש Ukranian

Examples ukrainian examples

How do I use ukrainian in a sentence?

Simple sentences

When in Ukraine, I always speak Ukrainian.
The Ukrainian language is very melodious.
In Ukraine I always speak Ukrainian.
Ukrainian girls are the most beautiful girls in the world.
I don't speak Ukrainian.
We watched Ukrainian movies with subtitles in Esperanto.
The Ukrainian security forces are trying to occupy the towns and villages between Donetsk and Luhansk in order to cut off those two important cities from each other.
She's Ukrainian.
He's Ukrainian.
I'm Ukrainian.
Are you Ukrainian?
In Ukraine, I always speak Ukrainian.
I don't understand why they moved the soft sign in the Ukrainian alphabet; it seemed much more logical for me when it came at the end.
Sasha the Ukrainian says that Russian vodka has more alcohol content than does Ukrainian vodka.
He has Ukrainian citizenship.

Movie subtitles

Ensanguined national assets of the country, buried treasures sealed by a mystery and shrouded in legend lay in the Ukrainian land for ages.
They dig soil in search of vaults, want to steal our Ukrainian treasures.
Trains began to travel in Ukrainian steppes.
More than one mother cried for her son both on the German and Ukrainian soil.
He is studying on a worker's faculty, burdened with scientific figures and formulas, striving to find a real secret of zvenyhora, the secret of the Ukrainian treasures.
The Ukrainian prince will deliver a lecture about the death of Ukraine due to the Bolsheviks. At the end of the lecture. Before respected audience's eyes he will shot himself dead with his own revolver.
From the Ukrainian Front.
You seem like Ukrainian girl.
You'II be lodged at a Ukrainian college.
You look Ukrainian!
And we're Rybalko's motorized infantry, the 1st Ukrainian Front.
Is he Ukrainian?
Due to the collapse of the Polish government, they are moving to protect the Ukrainian nationals.
No, my father is Ukrainian, partly of German descent.
We served together on the Ukrainian front.
I was on the 1st Ukrainian Front, he on the 2nd.
I'm a tall, middle-aged Ukrainian.
A tall, handsome, middle-aged Ukrainian.
It's all because this Ukrainian bitch botched the job on my wax on my bikini line.
Serjoza, the Ukrainian.
Ukrainian Independence Day.
Is that why you hung out with that Ukrainian kid in school?
Bullshit. All we're finding is Ukrainian cranes.
Your colleague's Ukrainian, eh?
There's a powerful Ukrainian film playing.
It's the Ukrainian land that's no longer accepting blood, tears of tortured children, fathers, grandfathers and great grandfathers of ours!
They, fine Cossacks, faithful Ukrainian sons, were bludgeoned to death on the wheel and had their veins pulled out from them while alive at the Warsaw square!
That's ukrainian horse-meat.
Commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front Marshal Konev The front's troops have breached the enemy defenses.
And we're Rybalko's motorized infantry, the 1st Ukrainian Front. Our own!
And now you'll hear the best soloist of the first Ukrainian, the former Voronezh, and the future soloist of the Bolshoi Theatre.
Listen, shall we ever hear the best soloist of the First Ukrainian?
We must decide. Either you're an officer of the Imperial Army. or a Slovak. or a Ukrainian. or a Jew.
Ukrainian.
That's what we need, a Ukrainian.
Spin your web better and do it faster. or will von Kubinyi replace a Ukrainian?

News and current affairs

Experts would remind us that Kazakhstan had never been a country, and that Ukrainian claims to independence are historically dubious.
In fact, an informal state-building alliance of convenience emerged between key non-communist Ukrainian nationalists and key pro-sovereignty, ethnic Russian communists.
If so, the presidency would most likely cease to be a potential source of ethnic polarization, thereby strengthening the common identity that both Ukrainian and Russian citizens are committed to upholding.
But, given widespread government corruption and inefficiency, such a program would have to be administered directly by a joint EU-Ukrainian task force.
Nearby member states, especially those whose languages are similar to Russian and Ukrainian, should be able to mobilize quickly the required technical expertise.
Of course, no one should expect the Ukrainian government to trust the word of a country that has just annexed part of its territory.
One was the Ukrainian poet and nationalist Vasyl Stus.
In contrast to Russia, Ukrainian politicians like President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko have shown that they are keen to break with the communist past.
But anti-immigration parties are gaining ground across western Europe; they could make huge political capital out of potential Ukrainian membership.
Manufacturing plausible-sounding objections to Ukrainian membership is easy.
The Ukrainian Government is broke, and will most likely have to default, or to reschedule its foreign debts, or to borrow new funds to repay the old, in 2000.
Both the Polish and the Ukrainian experiences have convinced me that the will to live in dignity is the most powerful engine of human action, an engine that is capable of overcoming even the greatest fear.
Indeed, on Europe's doorstep, the show trial and imprisonment of former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko is jeopardizing her country's international economic standing.
For example, the EU's foreign ministers should invite their Ukrainian counterpart to give a briefing on Ukraine-Russia relations at their next meeting.
Moreover, the delayed implementation of key elements of the EU's association agreement with Ukraine is clear evidence that, at the moment, Russia dictates the terms of EU-Ukrainian engagement.
The Ukrainian people have demonstrated the power of Europe's values.
If Yanukovych has not amnestied Tymoshenko by then, the EU can, as the Polish MEP Jacek Saryusz-Wolski suggests, wait for a Ukrainian president that will uphold EU values.
Many plaintiffs who brought such lawsuits - Russian and Ukrainian oligarchs, Arab princes, African dictators, and unscrupulous bosses - had little chance to prevail.
Even in Ukraine today, despite the escalating civil conflict, the country's 15 nuclear power plants have remained untouched (though even with new defensive measures taken by Ukrainian officials, this could easily change).
And now, though Britain was a signatory of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum guaranteeing Ukrainian independence, only France and Germany attend any serious negotiations.
This should include the provision of defensive lethal assistance to Ukrainian forces; after all, strength deters and weakness provokes.
After a Ukrainian television crew filmed the site in 1989, part of it was deliberately destroyed.
But no high-level Russian or Ukrainian official attended.
Indeed, the very notion of an independent Ukrainian state is openly questioned by Russia's leaders, Putin included.
Likewise, conspiracy websites in the countries of northern Europe claim that Germany's eagerness to support Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko against Russian President Vladimir Putin is a reenactment of Hitler's subjugation of Ukraine.
The moral and strategic vision of the 1990's has exhausted itself and come to a grinding halt after the shock of the Russo-Georgian war and the recent Ukrainian election.

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