- kolektývne hospodárstvo. The
Russian terms for
members of a
kolkhoz is "
kolkhoznik" (male) and "kolkhoznitsa" (female). As a
collective farm, a
kolkhoz was...
-
languages and accents, seen as a sign of a
poorly educated rural dweller, "
kolkhoznik". "Не успел я узяцца за яйца как масла ишчэзла" (I had
hardly seized the...
- collective-owned farm. Just as the
members of a
kolkhoz were
called "
kolkhozniks" or "kolkhozniki" (колхозники), the
workers of a
sovkhoz were called...
-
originating in Slavic-speaking environments: Čelnik
Chetnik Druzhinnik Gopnik Kolkhoznik ****uruznik
Narodnik Namestnik Oprichnik Patatnik Peredvizhnik Podkulachnik...
- Колхозникул (Colhoznicul, The
Kolkhoznik)
Moldavian SSR 1956 Vārpa (Grain ear)
Latvian SSR 1956 Колхозчу (Kolkhozchu,
Kolkhoznik)
Kyrgyz SSR 1958 Хосилот (Khosilot...
- of
Berlin 2 Adam
Reichert (1869–1936) 1919 1920 Teacher, journalist,
kolkhoznik 3
Alexander Dotz (1890–1965) 1920
World War I parti****nt,
Russian statesman...
-
remaining losses were
among civilians,
including 15,355
peasants and
kolkhozniks.
Soviet archives state that
between February 1944 and
January 1946 the...
- паразитического образа жизни в сельском хозяйстве). It was
usually applied to
kolkhozniks who
failed to
carry out
their corvée (trudodni, "labour-days"). The term...
-
almost all
Soviet employees with the
exception of some 4 to 5
million kolkhozniks, all of
which were
independent from the government. The All-Union Central...
-
person by
their characteristics. For example: колхозчи to mean колхозник (
kolkhoznik,
collective farmer) in
Standard Russian; тракторчи
instead of тракторист...