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  • ==Russia==
    1 KB (168 words) - 18:43, 11 March 2011
  • |Countries=Russia, other post-Soviet states, Germany, Israel, the United States, Canada |OfficialLg=Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, certain regions in n
    2 KB (207 words) - 07:38, 10 August 2014
  • Skolt Saami is spoken in the borderland area between Russia, Norway and Finland. ...ve in Russia.<ref>Elisabeth Scheller. 2011. The Sámi language situation in Russia. ''Ethnic and linguistic context of identity''. Helsinki: SUS. 79–96 ISBN
    4 KB (499 words) - 19:41, 14 March 2013
  • Lezgian is spoken in Russia (southernmost part of Daghestan Republic) and northern Azerbaijan.
    1 KB (110 words) - 16:46, 4 February 2013
  • Kildin Saami is spoken on the Kola peninsula in northwesternmost Russia. *Scheller, Elisabeth. 2011. The Sámi language situation in Russia. ''Ethnic and linguistic context of identity'', ed. by Riho Grünthal and M
    3 KB (391 words) - 18:51, 4 February 2013
  • Kirgiz is spoken mostly in Kyrgyzstan, but also in neighboring areas of Russia, Tajikistan and China. ...speakers in Kyrgyzstan,<ref>Berdullaev 2001</ref> and 233,321 speakers in Russia. No official figures are available for Tajikistan and China, but Comrie<ref
    3 KB (334 words) - 16:33, 4 February 2013
  • ...in Georgia and the Russian Federation (in the ''Region'' North Ossetia of Russia).
    2 KB (204 words) - 17:10, 18 July 2014
  • ...a member of the young generation from the middle class who, in the Tsarist Russia of the mid-nineteenth century, started fighting for social rights and democ ...hts, and sent to Siberia. He was allowed to return to the European part of Russia only in 1883. In 1889, he came back to his home town Saratov, where he died
    7 KB (1,099 words) - 13:09, 28 November 2007
  • ...19th century. In Germany, Förstemann (1846, 1852) and Drobisch (1866), in Russia, Bunjakovskij (1847), in France Bourdon (1892), in Italy, Mariotti (1880) a ...proach to study the vocabulary of a text, which is still popular today. In Russia, Zipfian linguistics was conducted particularly by Michail V. Arapov (1988;
    7 KB (952 words) - 12:44, 5 October 2007
  • ...cipline in its own right, Bunjakovskij’s article represents – not only for Russia – one of the earliest quotations where the possibility and reasonability
    5 KB (776 words) - 13:12, 28 November 2007
  • ...an important 19th century advocate of statistical-mathematical methods in Russia. In fact, Papp credits Budilovič for having published the first letter fre
    8 KB (1,177 words) - 12:42, 28 November 2007
  • ...ёnovič Budilovič (1848-1908) - A Forerunner of Quantitative Linguistics in Russia?. ''Glottometrics 7''. 94-96.
    8 KB (1,050 words) - 18:12, 27 June 2008
  • | [[Adyghe]] || ady || Russia || [[Northwest Caucasian]] || [[Northwest Caucasian]] || 532 | [[Avar]] || ava || Azerbaijan, Russia || [[Nakh-Daghestanian]] || [[Avar-Andic-Tsezic]] || 766
    91 KB (8,054 words) - 23:49, 30 August 2022
  • ...ёnovič Budilovič (1848-1908) - A Forerunner of Quantitative Linguistics in Russia?. ''Glottometrics 7''. 94-96. <br>
    25 KB (3,495 words) - 15:57, 29 June 2014
  • ...in the mountainous Tsunta district of southern and western [[Dagestan]], [[Russia]].
    50 KB (8,020 words) - 17:31, 2 March 2018