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Location; Country: Russia: Physical characteristics; ... Snezhnaya is the name of one of the seven nations of Teyvat in the video game Genshin Impact. See also
Snezhnaya, a river in Russia with the feminine form of the placename Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
Snezhny (Russian: Сне́жный, lit. ' snowy ') may refer to several places in Russia: Snezhny, Chelyabinsk Oblast, a settlement in Snezhnensky Selsoviet of Kartalinsky District of Chelyabinsk Oblast; Snezhny, Khabarovsk Krai, a settlement in Komsomolsky District, Khabarovsk Krai
The Snow Queen (Russian: Снежная королева, romanized: Snezhnaya koroleva) is a Soviet 1967 fantasy drama film, directed by Gennadi Kazansky and based on the eponymous 1844 fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen. [2] [3] On a frosty winter evening, the Snow Queen kidnaps Kai and turns his heart into a piece of ice.
The 2011–2013 Russian protests, which some English language media referred to as the Snow Revolution (Russian: Снежная революция, romanized: Snezhnaya revolyutsiya), [13] began in 2011 (as protests against the 2011 Russian legislative election results) and continued into 2012 and 2013.
The Upper Kolyma Highlands (Russian: Верхнеколымское нагорье, romanized: Verkhnekolymskoye Nagorye) is a highland area in Magadan Oblast, Far Eastern Federal District, Russia. The biggest town in the highlands is Susuman. [1] [2] There are large deposits of gold, tin and rare metals in the Upper Kolyma Highlands.
The Far North is known for its extremely harsh climate. People who work there, other than the inmates of labor camps that constituted the Gulag system of the Soviet Union and the inmates of corrective labor colonies in present-day Russia, receive an extra grade of payment, referred to as the "Northern Bonus" (severnye nadbavki Russian: северные надбавки).
The settlement began in 1955 as Residential settlement number 2, a name which it had until 1957 when it received town status.It was successively known as Kasli-2 (1957–1959), Chelyabinsk-50 (1959–1966), and Chelyabinsk-70 (1966–1993), after the relatively close city of Chelyabinsk.