- Europe. The
stress in
pirozhki is on the last syllable: [pʲɪrɐʂˈkʲi].
Pirozhok (Russian: пирожо́к, romanized: pirožók, IPA: [pʲɪrɐˈʐok] , singular) is...
-
Pirozhok (Pie) is the name of maxi-single
released by
Verka Serduchka in 2001. The
single contains 3
songs and
piano versions of
these songs. The music...
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European baked good or more
specifically from its
small version,
known as
pirozhok (literally "little pirog"). In the 18th century,
Volga Germans (ethnic...
-
sweet rather than savoury; the
Russian cousin to the
Jewish knish is the
pirozhok (пирожки́). The
traditional food
spread to
neighbour countries, migration...
-
Oleksandr Boldyryev (vocals, guitar)
Andriy Pyvovarov (b****, vocals) Ivan
Pirozhok (trombone)
Viktor Kondratov (drums)
Artem Dmytrychenkov (trumpet) Serhiy...
-
Soviet veterans condemned the
turret hatches of the
early models.
Nicknamed pirozhok ("stuffed bun")
because of its
characteristic shape, it was
heavy and hard...
- fish, mushrooms, cabbage, rice,
buckwheat groats or potato.
Pirozhki pirozhok,
piroshki Russia,
Ukraine Savory or
sweet The
generic word for individual-sized...
-
planks of wood
taken from
local birch and pear trees.
Pirozhki (singular:
pirozhok;
diminutive of
pirog [pie]) are
small stuffed buns (pies) made of either...
- make
several degrees of diminution: пирог (pirog, a pie)
becomes пирожок (
pirozhok, a
small pie, or an
affectionate name),
which then may
become пирожочек...
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Pirozhkov (Russian: Пирожков, from пирожок
meaning pirozhok, a
small pie) is a
Russian masculine surname, its
feminine counterpart is Pirozhkova. It may...