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JKR or Jkr. may refer to: Janakpur Airport (IATA code: JKR), an airport in southeastern Nepal; Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai, an international karate organization; J. K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series; Johnson-Kendall-Roberts model, a mathematical model in contact mechanics; Jones Knowles Ritchie, a British design agency
The Malaysian Public Works Department (Malay: Jabatan Kerja Raya Malaysia (JKR); Jawi: جابتن كرجا راي مليسيا ) is the federal government department in Malaysia under Ministry of Works Malaysia (MOW) which is responsible for construction and maintenance of public infrastructure in West Malaysia and Labuan.
It is the largest Wikipedia written in any Slavic language, surpassing the Polish Wikipedia by 20% in terms of the number of articles and fivefold by the parameter of depth. [4] In addition, the Russian Wikipedia is the largest Wikipedia written in Cyrillic [5] or in a script other than the Latin script. In April 2016, the project had 3,377 ...
Great/fine - Отлично (Otlichno) (at-leetch-na) No problem - Нет проблем (Net problem) (Niet problem) That's a good question - Это хороший вопрос (Eto khoroshiy vopros) Good luck - Удачи (Udachi) Of course - Конечно (Konechno) (Konyeshna) See you later - Увидимся (Uvidimsya) (uveedimsa)
In the Russian language, fantasy, science fiction, horror and all other related genres are considered a part of a larger umbrella term, фантастика (fantastika), roughly equivalent to "speculative fiction", and are less divided than in the West.
In his 1833 verse novel, poet Alexander Pushkin mentions the strangeness of some words even then: "No pantalony frak, zhilet/Vsekh etikh slow na russkom net " [128] ("But pants, tailcoat, vest/There are no such words in Russian").
Goli otok, an uninhabited island in the northern Adriatic Sea, where Russian PoWs were jailed during WWI The Resurrection of Christ chapel in the Mirogoj Cemetery in Zagreb, built in 1928, architect Andrey Shavtsov NDH′s Poglavnik Ante Pavelić, minister Andrija Artuković and Germogen (Maximov), head of the Croatian Orthodox Church (1942)
Vyacheslav "Slava" Kolotilov (Konstantin Khabensky) is a natural science teacher from a coastal Caspian village called Palchiki (diminutive of fingers) who is passing through Moscow seeking luck as a novelist without much success.