Dictionary
moskva
proper noun
A river in Russia, a tributary of the Oka.
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Bar a sighting of him on the Moskva river, his life in the city was conducted discreetly until the documentary CitzenFour revealed that his long-term girlfriend had moved to be with him.
Alexander Zaldostanov, leader of the Night Wolves and a close Putin ally whose nickname is The Surgeon, but who is not travelling with them, confirmed to the Russian broadcaster Govorit Moskva that the bikers' next destination was Munich.
IN THEIR menacing black helmets and commando-style boots, the Moscow bailiffs look like an occupation force spreading fear and destruction along the banks of the Moskva river.
LIKE pagan gods, two giant statues of Stalin and Lenin once faced each other across the canal linking the Volga and Moskva rivers.
Moscow, Russian Moskva, city, capital of Russia, in the far western part of the country.
The 17,000-ton Moskva class of the Soviet Union, introduced in 1967, is a prominent example.
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At the age of four I could distinguish a baroque building from a rococo one, and by the age of 13 I loved [Venedikt Erofeev's profanity-filled novella of alcoholic rumination] Moskva-Petushki and Limonov [the nationalist opposition activist known for sexually explicit writing].
Other important links are the Volga-Don Canal, 63 miles long and completed in 1952, and the Moscow-Volga Canal, built between 1932 and 1937, which flows 80 miles from the Volga to the Moskva River at Moscow.
It is located on the Moskva River, 33 miles (53 km) west of Moscow.
Kolomenskoye, locality and former royal estate, on the right bank of the Moskva River, since 1960 part of the southeastern sector of the city of Moscow, western Russia.
The Gorodok (Citadel), an earth fortification rising about 150 feet (46 metres) above the Moskva River, was built during this period.
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