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Tatar people from the Russian Empire (17 P) U. Ukrainian people in the Russian Empire (2 C, 119 P)
The family name alone (Петров, Petrov) is used, much more rarely, in formal communications. It is commonly used by school teachers to address their students. Informally, Russians are starting to call people by their surnames alone for irony. the form "first name + patronymic" (for instance, Иван Иванович, Ivan Ivanovich):
The Ket people share their origin with other Yeniseian people and are closely related to other Indigenous people of Siberia and Indigenous peoples of the Americas. They belong mostly to Y-DNA haplogroup Q-M242. [4] According to a 2016 study, the Ket and other Yeniseian people originated likely somewhere near the Altai Mountains or near Lake Baikal.
Russia, as the largest country in the world, has great ethnic diversity.It is a multinational state and home to over 190 ethnic groups countrywide. According to the population census at the end of 2021, more than 147.1 million people lived in Russia, which is 4.3 million more than in the 2010 census, or 3.03%.
Pages in category "Russian dictionaries" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D.
The Ossetian language is part of the Eastern Iranian branch of the family of Indo-European languages. [1] Most countries recognize the Ossetian-speaking area south of the main Caucasus ridge as lying within the borders of Georgia , but it has come under the control of the de facto government of the Russian-backed Republic of South Ossetia ...
Title page of the first volume of the Russian Biographical Dictionary Portrait of A. A. Polovtsov by Boris Kustodiev. The Russian Biographical Dictionary (RBD; Russian: Русский биографический словарь) [a] is a Russian-language biographical dictionary published by the Imperial Russian Historical Society and edited by a collective with Alexander Polovtsov as the ...
Siberian Yupiks, or Yuits (Russian: Юиты), are a Yupik people who reside along the coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in the far northeast of the Russian Federation and on St. Lawrence Island in Alaska. They speak Central Siberian Yupik (also known as Yuit), a Yupik language of the Eskimo–Aleut family of languages.