英:[ˈrʌʃn]
美:[ˈrʌʃn]
英:[ˈrʌʃn]
美:[ˈrʌʃn]
俄国的,俄罗斯的;俄语的;
俄国人,俄罗斯人;俄语;
Rus·sian
ruh shn
noun
a native or inhabitant of Russia
a member of the dominant Slavic-speaking ethnic group of Russia
a person of Russian descent
a Slavic language of the Russian people spoken as a second language by many non-Russian ethnic groups of the Soviet Union and its successor states
"俄罗斯的本地人或公民",来自1530年的中世纪拉丁语 Russianus,源自 Russia(参见 Russia)。俚语或口语中的 Russki, Ruski "俄罗斯人"(1858年起)源自俄语 Russkiy。Russian roulette 可追溯到1937年。1915年起,用于沙拉的 Russian dressing。这个表达方式 scratch a Russian, find a Tatar,从1842年开始频繁出现并成为关于这个话题的常识,可能源自法语原文。
The first known use of Russian was in 1538
saddle1 of 2noun
a padded and leather-covered seat for a horseback rider
a padded part of a harness
a bicycle or motorcycle seat
something like a saddle in shape, position, or useespecially: a support for an object
saddle2 of 2verb
to put a saddle on
encumber sense 1, burden
sacredadjective
set apart in honor of someone (as a god)
a mountain sacred to Jupiter
holy sense 3
the sacred name of Jesus
religious entry 1 sense 2
sacred songs
deserving respect or honor
a sacred right
sacnoun
a pouch in an animal or plant often containing a fluid
a food-storage sac
Sabbathnoun
the 7th day of the week observed from Friday evening to Saturday evening as a day of rest and worship by Jews and some Christians
the day of the week (as among Christians) set aside in a religion for rest and worship
RVnoun
recreational vehicle
Ruthnoun
a short narrative book of canonical Jewish and Christian Scriptures see bible
rustyadjective
affected by or as if by rust
less skilled and slow through lack of practice or old age
of the color rust
Russiannoun
a person born or living in Russia
a Slavic language of the Russian people
1 The Russians were censuring his behavior in front of his friends and the world press.
2 And there were sections of the city where different foreigners lived—Japanese, White Russians, Americans, and Germans—but never together, all with their own separate habits, some dirty, some clean.
3 When a spectator from Moscow asked for an autograph, Bobby signed it using the Russian Cyrillic alphabet, needing to change only a few letters.
4 Bobby peered over the chessboard, scanning and evaluating—attempting not just to suggest a Russian conspiracy, but to prove it unequivocally.
5 The Russian Mafia did not take too kindly to a Westerner muscling in on their market, and so decided to send a little message.
6 The Hindi kid would soon learn what the British learned earlier in the century, and what the Russians would eventually learn by the late 1980s: that Afghans are an independent people.
7 There were others, in all about a dozen, including Baba and me, sitting with our suitcases between our legs, cramped with these strangers in the tarpaulin-covered cab of an old Russian truck.
8 “She was in the forest. A Russian cornered her. She followed me here. She has a couple potatoes. Now, leave me alone,” I said.
9 But no Proto-Indo-European word can be reconstructed for “gun,” which uses different roots in different modern Indo-European languages: “gun” in English, “fusil” in French, “ruzhyo” in Russian, and so on.
10 Before the Russian Revolution, about 80 percent of the population were peasants who worked in the fields like their medieval ancestors.
11 I couldn’t stand to look at her, at the streaks of dead Russian splattered down her sleeve.
12 The airline was accused of playing Russian roulette with passenger safety.
这家航空公司被指责将乘客安全当儿戏。
13 A variety of Russian goods are forwarded through Sweden.
各种俄国货都是由瑞典转运来的.
14 With her eyes swollen like that and her high cheekbones, she looked almost Asian, like a certain kind of Russian.
15 While waiting or serving his sentence, he’d probably get infected with TB—it was estimated that 80 percent of all Russian prisoners had bacilli in their bodies.
16 “Maybe everybody needs Russians. I’ll bet even in Russia they need Russians. Maybe they call it Americans.”
17 The Red Army had held the invasion back from the Soviet capital, but it was the wretched Russian winter that really turned the tables.
18 Sazonov, as he recalled the meeting years later, replied that it was not possible to stop the Russian mobilization that was now under way.
19 “Yep, we need a bomb shelter. The Russian Commies say they are planning to bury us, but I’ve got news for them—we are going to survive whatever atom bomb attack they throw our way.”
20 In 2019, the Russian had 13 goals and six assists in 24 playoff games for the Guelph Storm.
4 俄语的
5 俄国语的
6 苏俄人
10 俄罗斯人的
12 俄罗斯文化的