Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Alternative spelling of Belarusian.
  • proper noun Alternative spelling of Belarusian.
  • noun Alternative spelling of Belarusian.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • While he showed the Russian president to his suite, Stanislav Shushkevich, still at heart more physics professor than Belarusan head of state, retired to the more modest cottage he had chosen for himself.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • Just before leaving office, Yeltsin signed a treaty with the Belarusan leader Aleksandr Lukashenko on uniting their two states—the first concrete movement towards reintegration.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • While he showed the Russian president to his suite, Stanislav Shushkevich, still at heart more physics professor than Belarusan head of state, retired to the more modest cottage he had chosen for himself.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • On December 8, 1991, the leaders of the Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusan republics met near Minsk and effectively dissolved the country.

    Zero-Sum Future Gideon Rachman 2011

  • When Shushkevich presented this document, with its split hairs and squared circles, to his own Belarusan parliament, the deputies berated him for wasting their time with “such an absurdity” and asked if he had ever read a dictionary.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

  • Broader measures are readily available: To start, Western governments could reimpose visa bans and asset freezes on senior Belarusan officials that were lifted in 2008.

    Morning Bits Jennifer Rubin 2011

  • Events in Egypt are "very dangerous," McCain told a group of Belarusan students who are attending college here to escape repression at home.

    Democracy's unlikely look Fred Hiatt 2011

  • Lithuania has bravely given sanctuary to Belarusan dissidents, journalists and others, especially since Belarusan dictator Alexander Lukashenko's brutal Dec. 19 crackdown on citizens who rallied in downtown Minsk to protest an election he had just stolen.

    Democracy's unlikely look Fred Hiatt 2011

  • On December 8, 1991, the leaders of the Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusan republics met near Minsk and effectively dissolved the country.

    Zero-Sum Future Gideon Rachman 2011

  • Just before leaving office, Yeltsin signed a treaty with the Belarusan leader Aleksandr Lukashenko on uniting their two states—the first concrete movement towards reintegration.

    The Return Daniel Treisman 2011

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