- Look up
zavada or
závada in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Závada may
refer to:
Závada (Opava District), a muni****lity and
village in the Moravian-Silesian...
- Look up
zavada or
závada in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Zavada or
Závada (Czech/Slovak feminine: Závadová) as a
surname may
refer to:
Barbora Závadová...
- Clay
Pflibson Zavada (born June 28, 1984) is a
former professional baseball pitcher who
pitched in
Major League Baseball for the
Arizona Diamondbacks in...
- Vilém
Závada (2 May 1905 – 30
November 1982) was a
Czech poet,
translator and journalist.
Závada was born in to the
family of a
metal worker, his father...
- Pál
Závada (born 14
December 1954 in Tótkomlós, Hungary) is a
Hungarian writer. He is a
member of the
Slovak minority in Hungary, but he
writes in Hungarian...
-
Závada (Hungarian: Érújfalu) is a
village and muni****lity in the Veľký Krtíš
District of the Banská
Bystrica Region of
southern Slovakia. "Hustota obyvateľstva...
- Paština
Závada (Hungarian: Pásztorzávod) is a
village and muni****lity in Žilina
District in the Žilina
Region of
northern Slovakia. In
historical records...
-
Závada (Hungarian: Nyitrazávod) is a
village and muni****lity in the Topoľčany
District of the
Nitra Region, Slovakia. In 2011 had the
village 591 inhabitants...
-
Závada (German:
Zawada bei Beneschau, Polish: Zawada) is a muni****lity and
village in
Opava District in the Moravian-Silesian
Region of the
Czech Republic...
- and
directed by Dénes Nagy,
based on the
novel Természetes fény by Pál
Závada. The film
stars Ferenc Szabó, László Bajkó, Tamás
Garbacz and
Gyula Franczia...