释义 |
Definition of Sovietologist in English: Sovietologistnounˌsɒvɪəˈtɒlədʒɪstˌsəʊvɪəˈtɒlədʒɪstˌsoʊviɪˈtɑlədʒɪst A person who studies the former Soviet Union. Example sentencesExamples - This is an echo of the position taken by Jaques Sapir, the French Sovietologist and economist.
- Academic Russia watchers, formerly known as Sovietologists, survived the collapse.
- It was the mischievous irony of historical proportions and not the accumulated wisdom of Sovietologists that celebrated its triumph.
- He is the elder son of the renowned Sovietologist who left an important mark on the politics of the cold war - and perhaps the current era as well.
- They should go back and read what Sovietologists were saying as recently as the 1980's.
- Turgeon identified the peak of his career as a Sovietologist as his sojourn at Moscow State University as a Fulbright-Hays scholar in the fall of 1978.
- In the West, former Sovietologists became ‘instant’ experts on the region and on ‘transition.’
- During my many years as a Sovietologist, I got to know not a few ex-Communists, some of whom became good friends.
- In the 1950s and 60s, Marxist-Leninist rhetoric was looked at askance even by professional Sovietologists, few of whom accepted that the Party could produce real believers.
- From California he went to New York and studied at the Russian Institute at Columbia University where he became associated with Abram Bergson, a preeminent Sovietologist.
- His complaint, voiced at the end of the book, that current insular research and publishing habits of Sovietologists and Americanists have led to impartial and sometimes flawed analyses, has considerable merit.
Derivatives adjectiveˌsəʊvɪətəˈlədʒɪk(ə)lˌsoʊviətəˈlɑdʒɪk(ə)l The Medvedevs continued writing, but they were lonely witnesses, better known in the West and in Sovietological circles than among their own countrymen. Example sentencesExamples - Traditionally, western Sovietological economists thought of the Soviet economy as comprised of two spheres.
- If you disagreed with that premise, you were ostracized from the academic Sovietological community.
noun səʊvɪəˈtɒlədʒisoʊviəˈtɑlədʒi mass nounThe study of affairs and events in the former Soviet Union. she used her knowledge of Sovietology as a springboard for her political career Example sentencesExamples - Any discussion of his views on Sovietology and comparative economic systems must now face the fact that many of his ideas seem wrongheaded.
- This period generated some of his most influential work in the area of conventional Sovietology, with his work on price indexes in the Soviet economy standing out for special notice.
- In the West, Sovietology viewed the Stalin era as totalitarian through massive ‘indoctrination.’
Definition of Sovietologist in US English: Sovietologistnounˌsoʊviɪˈtɑlədʒɪstˌsōvēiˈtäləjist A person who studies the former Soviet Union. Example sentencesExamples - It was the mischievous irony of historical proportions and not the accumulated wisdom of Sovietologists that celebrated its triumph.
- From California he went to New York and studied at the Russian Institute at Columbia University where he became associated with Abram Bergson, a preeminent Sovietologist.
- His complaint, voiced at the end of the book, that current insular research and publishing habits of Sovietologists and Americanists have led to impartial and sometimes flawed analyses, has considerable merit.
- Academic Russia watchers, formerly known as Sovietologists, survived the collapse.
- He is the elder son of the renowned Sovietologist who left an important mark on the politics of the cold war - and perhaps the current era as well.
- This is an echo of the position taken by Jaques Sapir, the French Sovietologist and economist.
- They should go back and read what Sovietologists were saying as recently as the 1980's.
- During my many years as a Sovietologist, I got to know not a few ex-Communists, some of whom became good friends.
- Turgeon identified the peak of his career as a Sovietologist as his sojourn at Moscow State University as a Fulbright-Hays scholar in the fall of 1978.
- In the West, former Sovietologists became ‘instant’ experts on the region and on ‘transition.’
- In the 1950s and 60s, Marxist-Leninist rhetoric was looked at askance even by professional Sovietologists, few of whom accepted that the Party could produce real believers.
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