krai
See also: krâi
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Russian край (kraj, “province, edge”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɹaɪ̯/
- Homophone: cry
Noun
- (administrative division) A region or province in Russia.
- 1996, Bohdan Harasymiw, “Republic and CC CPSU Apparatchiki”, in Soviet Communist Party Officials: A Study in Organizational Roles and Change, Commack, N.Y.: Nova Science Publishers, →ISBN, page 198:
- Organised similarly on a territorial basis, their tasks were formulated as follows: ‘they should know by whom party propaganda is being conducted in the corresponding oblasti and kraia, […]’
- 2017, Roland Boer, “From Creative Naming to Cultural Revolution”, in Stalin: From Theology to the Philosophy of Socialism in Power, Singapore: Springer, →ISBN, chapter 6 (Towards a Theory of the Socialist State), section 2 (Affirmative Action), footnote 44, page 163:
- For example, in 1937 there were 11 union republics, 39 oblasti and kraia, 22 autonomous republics, 52 autonomous regions and okrugs, 3307 districts and 62,484 village soviets (Davies et al. 2003, xviii).
- 2025 April 15, Stephan Rindlisbacher, “Ukraine and the RSFSR: How to Find a Common Border”, in Borders in Red: Managing Diversity in the Early Soviet Union (NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies), Ithaca, N.Y.: Northern Illinois University Press, →ISBN, pages 68–69:
- The heads of the newly established kraia within the RSFSR were in a rather privileged position. Nikolai Eizmont, party secretary in what would become North Caucasus Krai, laid claim to about 15,000 square versta (17,000 square kilometers) with approximately 600,000 inhabitants in eastern Ukraine.
Translations
a region or province in Russia
|
See also
Anagrams
Portuguese
Noun
krai m (plural krais)
- (administrative division) krai (a type of state-level subdivision of Russia)
Tok Pisin
Alternative forms
Etymology
Verb
krai