милиционер

Kazakh edit

Alternative scripts
Arabic ميليتسيونەر
Cyrillic милиционер
Latin militsioner

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Russian милиционе́р (milicionér), from German Milizionär.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [mʲɪlʲɪt͡sɨɐˈnʲer]

Noun edit

милиционер (milisioner)

  1. police officer, policeman, militsia officer (during the Soviet period and in some post-Soviet successor states)
  2. (historical) militiaman

Declension edit

Related terms edit

Russian edit

 
Russian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ru

Etymology edit

Borrowed from German Milizionär.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [mʲɪlʲɪt͡sɨɐˈnʲer]
  • (file)

Noun edit

милиционе́р (milicionérm anim (genitive милиционе́ра, nominative plural милиционе́ры, genitive plural милиционе́ров)

  1. police officer, policeman, militsia officer (during the Soviet period and in some post-Soviet successor states)
  2. (historical) militiaman

Usage notes edit

  • In the Soviet Union and many Eastern Bloc states, as well as in some post-Soviet successor states (until 2011 in Russia), the police was known as мили́ция (milícija). As a result, during the Soviet and early post-Soviet period, the term полице́йский (policéjskij) referred mainly to foreign (Western Bloc) or pre-revolutionary police forces.

Declension edit

Synonyms edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

See also edit