Russian language Essays

  • The Influence of the Russian Language on Russian Culture

    3183 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Russian language belongs to the Indo-European family, along with other east Slavonic languages Belarusian and Ukrainian. The Russian language, fairly young, came from a common predecessor: Common Slavonic, which was divided as the Slavic people immigrated in around the 5th century AD. Brothers St. Cyril and St. Methodius, in 863 AD were sent to Moravia (currently the Czech Republic) to translate the Gospel into Slavic. This script was later known as the Glagolitic script. The old Cyrillic alphabet

  • Syntax of Negation in Russian Language

    1656 Words  | 4 Pages

    Syntax of negation in Russian Different languages express negations in different ways. In this paper we will try to see how negation system of the Russian language can be interpreted within the boundaries of syntax. In modern Russian language negation is primarily expressed by the negative marker ne, which normally precedes the verb. However there are some exceptions when an adverb can be inserted between ne and a verb: Mi ne vsegda hodim v trenazherniy zal. We NEG always go to gym

  • Essay On Russian Language

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    freshman year Russian language class, I was certain I had made a mistake in choosing to study Russian. I chose Russian because, after four years of French in high school, I wanted the challenge of a new language in college. I wanted to push myself. Russian was a completely new language to me. French and English share the same alphabet and have words in common. I could understand Urdu, my parents’ first language, and if I wanted to improve I had family ready to teach me. In my mind, Russian was the perfect

  • The Sociolinguistic Situation: Past, Present and Future in Bashkortostan

    1452 Words  | 3 Pages

    within the Russian Federation. Looking back to its history, Bashkortostan with a surface of 143,000 sq km and more than four million population, has been a significant region regarding its ethnic and linguistic diversities (Gorenburg, 1999; Grimes, 2000). According to Gorenburg (2003), Bashkortostan was the first autonomous republic which the Communist government created to prevent the dominancy of a Tatar-Turkic republic. Thereafter, Bashkir and many other ethnic groups and Turkic languages have been

  • Kazakhstan: The Ethnic Controversy

    2098 Words  | 5 Pages

    suppressed due to the domination of the Russian language. Research on linguistic studies has shown, “language conflict is a result of ideologies that determine the goals of society” (Smagulova, 2006, p308). As Russian became the dominate language in schools, knowledge of the language became key to social mobility. Although there have been several attempts in Kazakhstan to restore the national language, all proposals have been seen as discriminatory. Despite the language conflict in Kazakhstan and Kazakh

  • Nihilism In Russia

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nihilism is more than repudiating, believing in nothing, and lack of morals and principles in Russia. It does include these characteristics, however there is more to it then what is on the surface. Before we can discuss what nihilism is for the Russian, we have to examine what chained of events occurred that ultimately created this subculture. During Alexander II’s civic reforms, various oppositional movements emerged challenging the empire. Alexander II restored to some extent polish autonomy, expanded

  • Modest Mussorgsky Essay

    1209 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Five, The Mighty Handful, and The New Russian School all depict the five Russian composers who came together in 1856-57 in St Petersburg. Their ultimate goal was to portray and produce a Russian style of music , and this is exactly what they would accomplish. Though one of "The Five" goes farther than this with his works, this being Modest Mussorgsky. Mussorgsky was a composer born march 21st 1839, with one of the most controversial names and spellings of a name. He was born to wealthy land owners

  • The Ukraine Crisis

    1906 Words  | 4 Pages

    Viktor Yanukovich was impeached and quickly fled the capital. An interim government formed around Oleksandr Turchynov as the acting president. Germany and the US quickly recognized this new government, while Russia did not. In late February, pro-Russian militias began taking control of Crimea, a part of eastern Ukraine. Gradually they dominated the peninsula and effectively took control of it. Soon after, the Crimeans held a referendum, and overwhelmingly decided to join Moscow. The West and interim

  • Importance Of Business In Kazakhstan

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    more countries are interested in doing business in Kazakhstan. Every country has its own unique culture and history, which influences on the way of doing business. Business in Kazakhstan is done in both Kazakh and Russian languages. It is important to be able to communicate in both languages. In Kazakh culture the decision making is mainly hierarchical. Older people have more respect and power than younger. The culture requires an appropriate behavior and those with lower hierarchical place should address

  • What is Church to a Russian- American?

    882 Words  | 2 Pages

    I am currently involved in Russian school, Sunday school, camps, wind ensemble, teens’ group, teens' choir, and youth group. There are so many engaging activities and groups that bring together our community, defining who we are as individuals and as a society. Russian school is a must for every Russian-American. I started attending Russian school when I was five years old and graduated when I was fourteen. The Russian school was started in our church to teach Russian children, who live in the Spokane

  • Public Interest Law

    690 Words  | 2 Pages

    youths on a river rafting expedition in Siberia with Project RAFT (Russians and Americans for Teamwork). For three weeks we worked side by side, literally dependent on cooperation and mutual trust for survival. In the evenings, while sitting in a circle around glowing cedar campfires, we held structured discussions on subjects ranging from nuclear disarmament to global warming and racism. At first we struggled to communicate across language barriers, but we quickly found common ground and successfully

  • The Story of My Parent's Emmigration from Ukraine

    2379 Words  | 5 Pages

    seen safer because there are legitimate laws that people follow and there has been no dictatorship yet! Canada is a stable and multicultural country with human freedom and rights that does not suppress the Ukrainian identity. One example of the Russians attempting to destroy the Ukrainian nation is Holodomor. During the occupation of Ukraine, Russia had a plan to destroy the Ukrainian nation as a political factor and social organism. The definition of Holodomor is death by forced starvation.

  • How Does Putin's Invasion Affect The United States

    1461 Words  | 3 Pages

    In March of 2014 the current leader of Russia (Vladimir Putin) stated Russian military forces would not invade Ukrainian soil. Yet, less than 24 hours later there were reports of Russian troops pushing into the Ukrainian province of Crimea. Did the first of many downright lies of Putin’s raise any red flags in America or the U.N.? Sadly they did not. Instead, playing the game let us see what Putin will say to these reports next. Putin still denied any invasion or use of military troops in Ukraine

  • Russia’s Invasion of the Ukraine: The Causes and Effects

    1450 Words  | 3 Pages

    have had a complicated history. Until 1991, Ukraine became completely independent from Russia. Since its early days, Ukraine has always had Russian roots simply because it was Russia. Most of the people who live in Ukraine speak Russian. Today, Ukraine is split in two, culturally and politically; the west being Pro-European supporters and the east being Pro-Russian supports. The two cannot seem to see eye to eye when it comes to political reasons in the country. Since 2010, the presidential election

  • Stress In The Workplace

    1682 Words  | 4 Pages

    Introduction In this essay it is my intention to show how stress appears in working environment, what causes it and how it affects the workplace. I will start by defining what stress is and how it might be perceived. Then I will take a look at the factors that cause stress and how these might show in result when working. I try to look at all the possible reasons for stress and through that hopefully to show how to avoid a stressful environment. I will not try to put straight answers on to paper

  • Discussion of Crimea's Recent Annexation to Russia

    1310 Words  | 3 Pages

    such instability did not culminate. In the transitional period following the Cold War, Crimea eventually assimilated into Ukrainian polity with minimal conflict (Sasse, 2007). Despite assimilation, the majority of Crimean people viewed themselves as Russian (BBC News, 2014). Along with strong et... ... middle of paper ... ...03/europes-gas-supply-ukraine-crisis-russsia-pipelines>. Polityuk, P & MacDonald, A, ‘Russia says it will respond if Ukraine interests attacked’, Reuters UK, 23 April 2014,

  • U.S. Interests in Crimea

    1399 Words  | 3 Pages

    In a recent White House brief, President Obama called the Russian invasion of Crimea a clear violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, and international law. When assessing the Russo-Ukrainian crises in Crimea, the commander of European Command (EUCOM) and the Supreme Allied Commander of European Forces (SACUER) must account for U.S. interests in the region before deciding a proper course of action. This essay aims to assess four of the United States’ national interests through

  • The Culture And Culture Of Russia's Culture

    1063 Words  | 3 Pages

    Are the majority of Russians burly commandos who consume a large quantity of vodka to keep warm in the Russian weather and dream about the day that the KGB and Stalin return? If you believe what you see in the movies, this could be the picture that comes to mind when thinking about Russia and their culture. Though if you are in pursuit of an accurate cultural awareness, there are many tools to help you reach this. Russia is a unique culture with different customs, language, politics, historical

  • One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch Literary Techniques

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    wishes to render the real-life situations he describes in so many of his writings-but especially in One Day-in real-life language. The author did not have to use any glossaries of prison argot, although the translator must; Solzhenitsyn simply drew on his own 8-years' experience in corrective labor camps. Artistic Use Of Blunt Language Many "unprintable" Russian words turn up in One Day, as it was first published in Novy Mir. Words like khub kren, yebat', govno and der'mo, khui, pizda

  • World Literature Paper. “Solzhenitsyn´s Use of Selected Language in One day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    World Literature Paper “Solzhenitsyn use of selected language in justifying the main essence of the story” Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a Russian writer of the emotional piece One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich uses Russian traditional oral style skaz ( from Russian ‘skazat’ - to say or tell) and it explains the author’s general skaz approach in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich - Solzhenitsyn uses skaz to emphasize the experience of the camps and life as a prisoner. In order to attain gulag