Примери за използване на Bessarabian на Английски и техните преводи на Български
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The Bessarabian Bulgarians.
A day in the fire brigade; Bessarabian dreams.
The Bessarabian people of Glavan still preserve their language, as well as their customs.
I do not know why they are called"Bessarabian" Bulgarians.
Genadiy was born in the Bessarabian Bulgarian village of Suvorovo, in South Ukraine in 1973.
Хората също превеждат
Tavrian Bulgarians who are actually displaced in Zaporizhia Bessarabian Bulgarians are nearly 30 000.
Svetla is a Bessarabian Bulgarian from the Ukraine, who came in Bulgaria to find a better life.
This apart Bulgarians in the Balkans are Bessarabian Bulgarians and those in Tavria and Banat.
Bessarabian Bulgarians celebrated the Day of Bulgarian Education and Culture and Slavonic Literature.
In 1918 the supreme authority of the Bessarabian state- Sfatul Tarii, decided to unite with Romania.
Special attention is devoted to the themes which these three authors introduce to modern Bulgarian Bessarabian prose.
Children made Bessarabian Bulgarians cry with their voices in a concert for the Day of letters.
Among the rehabilitated, besides Krastiu Rakovski, there is another Bulgarian- Ignati Kazakov,born in Tvarditsa, Bessarabian governorate.
His parents are indeed Bessarabian Bulgarians, and after the war the young minority population was deported to the Urals.
Inside are mounted the bell and the clock mechanism,which was handcrafted by Bessarabian Bulgarians in Bucharest and was brought in 1764.
They are part of the Bessarabian Bulgarians as their number ranged from 20-something man to nearly 30,000 in Taraclia where they are 66% of the population.
Elisaveta's reasons to go to these lands are connected most of all with the many legends told in this country about Bessarabian Bulgarians.
Unofficially, Bolgrad is considered the capital of the Bessarabian Bulgarians because more than half of the population there is of Bulgarian origin.
The Taurian- also referred to as Priazovian- Bulgarians are part of the Bulgarian diaspora in Southern Russia,together with the so-called Bessarabian and Crimean Bulgarians.
On 7 December 1873 the Bessarabian region was transformed into the Bessarabian province and the Supreme Soviet of this region was disbanded.
The Bolhrad High School played a major role in the development of national self-awareness among the Bessarabian Bulgarians in the second half of the 19th century.
The history of the formation of the community of Bessarabian Bulgarians living on the territory of what are today two countries- Moldova and Ukraine- is described in a new book.
Before the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia andNorthern Bukovina and the creation of the Moldavian SSR in 1940, the Bessarabian part of Moldova, i.e.
Concentrated in the south,they are divided into two main groups- Bessarabian Bulgarians and Tavrian Bulgarians, all descendants of settlers from 18-19 century.
To the north in Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Donetsk and Lugansk areas live more than 10 000, butis displaced/ migrated part of Tavrian or Bessarabian Bulgarians data have not found.
That is the root of the great love of Bulgaria Bessarabian Bulgarians of today still cherish, even though many of them have never been to the country.
There are 25 906 Bulgarians in the entire Russian Federation and the Crimea, buthow many of them are Bulgarian citizens at work and how many Bessarabian Bulgarians displaced by the Soviet authorities, no one can and probably not want to say.
Yona Tukuser as a Bessarabian Bulgarian born in Ukraine focuses on hunger which affected her compatriots during the general hunger in Ukraine. According to her, these are the some of the most dreadful pages from the history of the 20th century.
In 1812, the territory of modern Moldova was liberated from Ottoman rule and incorporated into the Bessarabian province of the Russian Empire, which had a great influence on the development of the culture of the region.
Summing up the history of the education of the Bessarabian Bulgarians, we can conclude that it is in fact a history of contradictions between the aspirations of Bulgarians to teach their children in their native language and the state policy of Russia, Romania, the USSR and the Republic of Moldova.