Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - Übersetzung nach russisch
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Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - Übersetzung nach russisch

POLITICAL UNION (2003–06) IN THE BALKANS
Serbia and Montenegro/History; Geography of Serbia and Montenegro; History of Serbia and Montenegro; Yugoslavia/Geography; State of Serbia and Montenegro/History; Serbia and Monternagro; Federal Republic of Yugoslavia; FRY; Geography of Yugoslavia; Serbia-Montenegro; Music of Serbia and Montenegro; Serbia & Montenegro; Serbia And Montenegro; Serbia Montenegro; Srbija i Crna Gora; Serbia and Monte Negro; Federal republic of Yugoslavia; Serbia nad Montenegro; FR Yugoslavia; State Union of Serbia & Montenegro; State Union of Serbia and Montenegro; Serbian-Montenegrin; SiCG; Transportation in Serbia and Montenegro; Union of Serbia and Montenegro; Commonwealth of Serbia and Montenegro; Confederation of Serbia and Montenegro; Third Yugoslavia; Former Republic of Yugoslavia; State Union Serbia and Montenegro; Serboslavia; Music of The State Union of Serbia and Montenegro; Federal republic of yugoslavia; Geography of serbia and montenegro; Milosevic's Yugoslavia; Serbia and montenegro; Former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia; Serbie-et-Monténégro; Serbie-et-Montenegro; SCG (country); Државна заједница; Србија и Црна Гора; Državna zajednica; Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Milošević era, and the Kosovo War; Federation of Serbia and Montenegro, Milošević era, and the Kosovo War; Yugoslav Federal Republic; Serbia and Montenegro; Yugoslavia; Serbia and Montenegro/Geography; The State Union of Serbia and Montenegro; Savezna Republika Jugoslavija; SR Yugoslavia; SR Jugoslavija; Dissolution of Serbia and Montenegro; F.R. Yugoslavia; Yugoslav Ministry of Internal Affairs; DZSCG; DZ SCG; FR Yugoslav; Sport in Serbia and Montenegro; Montenegro and Serbia; Rump Yugoslavia; Republics of Serbia and Montenegro; SUSM; Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro); Yugoslavia (Federal Republic of)
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  • national football team]] during the [[2006 FIFA World Cup]]
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  • Mascot of the [[EuroBasket 2005]], hosted by Serbia and Montenegro
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  • Map of the territorial subdivisions of FR Yugoslavia

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia         
Союзная республика Югославия
Yugoslavia         
FORMER COUNTRY IN SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE FROM 1918–1992
History of Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia/History; Yugoslavia/People; Jugoslavija; ISO 3166-1:YU; Demographics of Yugoslavia; Politics of Yugoslavia; Jugoslavia; Yougoslavia; Jugoslavije; Југославија; South Slavia; South slavia; Changes in Yugoslavian Religious Demographics; Former Yugoslav; Former Yugoslavian; Yugosavia; Yugo.; Changes in yugoslavian religious demographics; People of Yugoslavia; Demographics of the former Yugoslavia; Yugosalvia; Northern Yugoslavia; North Yugoslavia; Jugo-Slavia; Yugoslav state; YUGOSLAVIA; Ugoslavia; Yugoslawia; Jугославиjа; Yugosla; Yarinca; Yugo-Slavia; Government of Yugoslavia; Iugoslavia; Yugoslav history; Yugoslavija
Yugoslavia noun Югославия; Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Социалистическая Федеративная Республика Югославия; СФРЮ
Ethiopia         
  • Orthodox priests dancing during the celebration of ''[[Timkat]]''
  • The Ethiopian National Defense Force soldiers during ceremony in [[Baidoa]], [[Somalia]] to mark the inclusion of Ethiopia into the African Union peace keeping mission in the country on 22 January 2014
  • Emperor Haile Selassie I]] seen celebrating the finding of the cross at [[Meskel Square]] (1971)
  • Ethiopian cavalry during the [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War]] in 1936
  • Jubilee Palace]] (1942)
  • [[Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital]]
  • Light rail]] in [[Addis Ababa]], Ethiopia
  • Street in Addis Ababa
  • Entrance of [[Addis Ababa University]]
  • Typical Ethiopian cuisine: ''[[injera]]'' (pancake-like bread) and several kinds of ''wat'' (stew)
  • Alwan Codex 27 – Ethiopian biblical manuscript
  • Street scene in [[Adigrat]]
  • Ethiopian ''Blessed Coffee'' branded bags in the United States. Coffee is one of main exports of Ethiopia.
  • An Ethiopian girl about to receive her [[measles]] vaccine
  • Obelisk of Aksum]]'s return to Ethiopia from Italy, showing the date of its departure and return according to the [[Ethiopian calendar]]
  • Declining child mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa and Ethiopia since 1950
  • Community health care workers
  • Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia [[Hailemariam Desalegn]] meeting with former US Deputy Secretary of Defense [[Ash Carter]] in Addis Ababa.
  • website=BBC}}</ref> he lived in exile in Zimbabwe as of 2018.
  • Red Terror]]
  • The [[Obelisk of Axum]] dates from the 4th century
  • The Royal Enclosure at [[Fasil Ghebbi]], [[Gondar]]
  • Emperor [[Fasilides]] (r. 1632–1667) was a major figure of [[Gondarine period]]
  • A proportional representation of Ethiopia exports, 2019
  • al-Shabaab attacks]], the [[Tigray War]] zone, and the redeployment of federal troops from the southeast to the north.
  • [[Oromo Liberation Army]]}}
  • [[House of People's Representatives]] is the lower house of the Ethiopian [[Federal Parliamentary Assembly]]
  • Prime Minister [[Abiy Ahmed]] receiving the [[Nobel Peace Prize]] in Oslo in 2019
  • The [[Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation]] headquarter in Addis Ababa
  • Aksumite]] scribes
  • ENDF soldiers marching in 2019 parade
  • [[Giyorgis of Segla]], prolific religious author in the [[Late Middle Ages]]
  • [[Gondar]] skyline
  • [[Hager Fikir Theatre]] in April 2006
  • Homo sapiens idaltu]]'' hominid skull
  • Emperor [[Iyoas I]] (r. 1755–1769) prematurely murdered at his reign by ''Ras'' [[Mikael Sehul]] in 1769
  • Kibish]] has the site of oldest fossil of human bones believed to be 195,000 years old along with [[Omo River]]. The skull remains are 40,000 older than in Herto, Ethiopia.
  • Aksumite king]] called [[Endubis]], 227–35, at the [[British Museum]]. The inscriptions in [[Ancient Greek]] read "ΑΧΩΜΙΤΩ ΒΑΣΙΛΕΥΣ" ("King of Axum") and "ΕΝΔΥΒΙΣ ΒΑΣΙΛΕΥΣ" ("King Endubis"), the Greek language was the [[lingua franca]] by that time so its use in coins simplified foreign trade.
  • [[Köppen climate classification]] of Ethiopia
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site]].
  • [[Mahmoud Ahmed]] performing in 2005
  • zones]] of Ethiopia
  • Former Prime Minister [[Meles Zenawi]] at the 2012 [[World Economic Forum]] annual meeting
  • Menelik]] and general [[Ras Alula]] in 1879–1889
  • Helena]] in 326 CE
  • A mosque in [[Bahir Dar]]
  • [[Mountain nyala]]s in [[Bale Mountains National Park]], one of several wildlife reserves in Ethiopia
  • Karo people]] in the [[Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region]]
  • Rural area in the [[Simien Mountains National Park]]
  • Plants in a laboratory of [[Ethio-Parents' School]] in Addis Ababa
  • Ras [[Seyoum Mengesha]], Ras Getachew Abate and Ras Kebede Gubret with [[Benito Mussolini]] on 6 February 1937 in Rome, Italy, after the Italian occupation of Ethiopia
  • Layout of the [[Grand Renaissance Dam]]
  • language=en-US}}</ref>
  • Former Foreign Minister of Ethiopia [[Tedros Adhanom]] with former U.S. Secretary of State [[John Kerry]]
  • [[Semien Mountains]] landscape, 2009
  • Emperor [[Susenyos I]] was the first emperor converted to Roman Catholic in 1622, stressing the populace attitude of Orthodox Tewahedo Christianity
  • Mojo]]
  • The [[Kingdom of Aksum]] at its peak in the 6th century
  • President]] [[Reuven Rivlin]] in May 2018
  • alt=(2014)}}
  • Semien Mountains]]
  • Tsegaye Gebre-Medhin in 1980s
  • Ambo]] and [[Waliso]] in Oromia Region
  • The Sultan of Adal (right) and his troops battling Emperor [[Yagbea-Sion]] and his men.
  • Aksumite composer Yared credited as forebear of traditional music for both Ethiopia and Eritrea
  • Emperor [[Yekuno Amlak]] portrait allegedly from the 18th century
COUNTRY IN THE HORN OF AFRICA
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia; ISO 3166-1:ET; Ityop'ia; Etiopia; Ethiopai; Ethiopioa; Æthiopia; ኢትዮጵያ; Ethiopean; FDRE; Ītyōṗṗyā; Ityoppya; Ityop'pya; AEthiopia; Etheopia; Name of Ethiopia; ʾĪtyōṗṗyā; Abissinia; Abysinna; Federal Republic of Ethiopia; Ethopian; The Democratic Republic Of Ethiopia; Names of Ethiopia; Etymology of Ethiopia; Ityop'iya; Ityoṗṗya; Prehistory of Ethiopia; YeʾĪtiyoṗṗya Fēdēralawī Dēmokirasīyawī Rīpebilīk; የኢትዮጵያ ፌዴራላዊ ዴሞክራሲያዊ ሪፐብሊክ; F.D.R. Ethiopia; Etiophia; Exports from Ethiopia; FEDERAL DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF ETHIOPIA; Ye-Ityoppya; Ethoipia; Entoto Observatory and Space Science Research Center

[i:θi'əupiə]

существительное

география

Эфиопия

Definition

грип
ГРИП, ГРИПП, гриппа, ·муж. (·франц. grippe) (мед.). Инфекционная болезнь - катарральное воспаление дыхательных путей, сопровождаемое лихорадочным состоянием; то же, что инфлуэнца
.

Wikipedia

Serbia and Montenegro

Serbia and Montenegro (Serbian: Cрбија и Црна Гора, romanized: Srbija i Crna Gora), known until 2003 as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, FR Yugoslavia or simply Yugoslavia, was a country in Southeast Europe located in the Balkans that existed from 1992 to 2006, following the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFR Yugoslavia) which bordered Hungary to the north, Romania to the northeast, Bulgaria to the southeast, Macedonia to the south, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the west, and Albania to the southwest. The state was founded on 27 April 1992 as a federation comprising the Republic of Serbia and the Republic of Montenegro. In February 2003, it was transformed from a federal republic to a political union until Montenegro seceded from the union in June 2006, leading to the full independence of both Serbia and Montenegro.

Its aspirations to be the sole legal successor state to SFR Yugoslavia were not recognized by the United Nations, following the passing of United Nations Security Council Resolution 777, which affirmed that the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia had ceased to exist, and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was a new state. All former republics were entitled to state succession while none of them continued SFR Yugoslavia's international legal personality. However, the government of Slobodan Milošević opposed any such claims, and as such, FR Yugoslavia was not allowed to join the United Nations.

Throughout its existence, FR Yugoslavia had a tense relationship with the international community, as economic sanctions were issued against the state during the course of the Yugoslav Wars and Kosovo War. This also resulted in hyperinflation between 1992 and 1994. FR Yugoslavia's involvement in the Yugoslav Wars ended with the Dayton Agreement, which recognized the independence of the Republics of Croatia, Slovenia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as establishing diplomatic relationships between the states, and a guaranteed role of the Serbian population within Bosnian politics. Later on, growing separatism within the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija, a region of Serbia heavily populated by ethnic Albanians, resulted in an insurrection by the Kosovo Liberation Army, an Albanian separatist group. The outbreak of the Kosovo War reintroduced Western sanctions, as well as eventual Western involvement in the conflict. The conflict ended with the adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244, which guaranteed economic and political separation of Kosovo from FR Yugoslavia, to be placed under UN Administration.

Economic hardship and war resulted in growing discontent with the government of Slobodan Milošević and his allies, who ran both Serbia and Montenegro as an effective dictatorship. This would eventually cumulate in the Bulldozer revolution, which saw his government overthrown, and replaced by one led by the Democratic Opposition of Serbia and Vojislav Koštunica, which also joined the UN.

The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ended in 2003 after the Federal Assembly of Yugoslavia voted to enact the Constitutional Charter of Serbia and Montenegro, which established the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. As such, the name Yugoslavia was consigned to history. A growing independence movement in Montenegro, led by Milo Đukanović meant that the Constitution of Serbia and Montenegro included a clause allowing for a referendum on the question of Montenegrin independence, after a period of three years had passed. In 2006, the referendum was called, and passed, by a narrow margin. This led to the dissolution of the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro, and the establishment of the independent republics of Serbia and Montenegro, turning Serbia into a landlocked country. This can be considered the last act which finalized the dissolution of Yugoslavia.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
1. He had been president of both Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
2. Neighborhood children refer to it as the "haunted house." Property records show the owner as the Embassy of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
3. We think a picture will emerge that the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (since renamed Serbia–Montenegro) was the motor behind what happened in Bosnia." Loose union Serbia–Montenegro for its part is expected to repeat its argument that the ICJ has no jurisdiction to deal with Bosnia‘s claim, as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) – replaced in 2003 by the loose union of Serbia and Montenegro – only became a member of the UN in 2000.
4. But after Slovenia and Croatia declared independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1''1, Bosnia and Herzegovina organised a referendum on independence as well – prompting most Serb members to leave Parliament in disgust.
5. Resolution 1244, apart from touching upon the future status of Kosovo, affirmed all UN members‘ respect for the sovereignty, territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the successor State of which is now the Republic of Serbia.
Übersetzung von &#39Federal Republic of Yugoslavia&#39 in Russisch