muzhik造句
- He's a real ` muzhik . "'
- Also, " muzhik " was deleted, recreated and deleted again.
- The muzhik dies calmly, exactly because he isn't a Christian.
- His researchers are said to have interviewed 4.5 million Russian muzhiks.
- Muzhik's vernacular is represented impeccably, without a trace of exaggeration or artificiality.
- He calls Yeltsin " a real Russian Czar . . . a real Russian muzhik.
- The notion of Russian muzhik as a human being entered the Russian literature viah Grigorovich ."
- There was indeed something of the muzhik " [ Russian peasant ] " about him.
- "A Muzhik Botching the Bast Shoes, an Old Woman Spinning Thread ", 19th Century, oil on canvas
- He has the wholesome if also rather menacing presence of a tough, large muzhik _ a Russian peasant _ of Cossack stock.
- It's difficult to see muzhik in a sentence. 用muzhik造句挺难的
- "A typical Siberski muzhik " _ in Western terms, the sort of fellow who would make a good fishing buddy.
- Olga Gryasnova, 51, used the word most often applied to Yeltsin by his backers : " He's a strong muzhik.
- The word they use to describe him is " muzhik, " meaning a combination of a strong man and a regular guy.
- "He's a muzhik, " she said, using a term that describes a tough peasant, a man of the people.
- Usually the main character of the skomorokh performance was a fun-loving saucy " muzhik " ( < C68 : ) of comic simplicity.
- A " muzhik " is a sturdy, dependable Russian peasant who works in the fields all day and can drink his share of spirits long into the night.
- DiCaprio's persistence in reaching the event after encountering two plane delays caused then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to describe him as a " muzhik " or " real man ".
- For what Mr . Khrushchev is showing the colonized countries who are watching, is that he, the missile-wielding muzhik is treating these wretched capitalists the way they deserve ."
- The deeply rooted Galicians, especially Ruthenians ( i . e . Ukrainians ) in the eastern part are barely educated and live roughly; they are more backward than the Russian " muzhik ".
- Boris Yeltsin is ideally suited to be Russia's president because the country has a feminine nature and needs a " muzhik, " or real man, according to Oscar-winning film director Nikita Mikhalkov.