English edit

Prefix edit

Ukro-

  1. Ukrainian.
    Synonym: Ukraino-
    • 1918 July 6, “Pledges Slovak Support”, in Bridgeport Telegram, volume LV, number 82, Bridgeport, Conn., page sixteen:
      On behalf of the Americans of Czech, Slovak and Ukro-Russian descent of Bridgeport, Anthony S. S. Ambrose who was marshal of their unit, No. 14 in the Independence Day parade, sent a message to George Creel, chairman of the Committee on Public Information at Washington, D. C. expressing their most sacred pledge to President [Woodrow] Wilson and the American people to remain steadfast in their determination to work unremittingly for American and Allied victory in this war until the end.
    • 1919 August 4, “Bolshevik Disturbers Try to Start Riot at Ukrainian Convention: Anti-National Element Forcibly Ejected From New Britain Meeting Recognized by Police as Thomaston “Reds”---Women Fight, Too”, in The Hartford Courant, volume LXXXIII, Hartford, Conn., section “A Free-for-All Meeting”, page 18:
      Rev. Joseph Pelechovyck, pastor of Ukro-Russian Church, presided, and Humphrey Kowalsky of New York, secretary of the information bureau of the Ukrainian national committee, spoke in English and Ukrainian.
    • 2020, Katie Trumpener, “Alexandra Exter, Panorama of the River (1936), Panorama of the Coast (1937), and Panorama of the Mountain (1938)”, in Katie Trumpener, Tim Barringer, editors, On the Viewing Platform: The Panorama Between Canvas and Screen, Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 63:
      In the late 1930s, the émigré Ukro-Russian Constructivist Alexandra Exter (1882–1949) published three panoramic “novelty books” with the innovative Parisian children’s publisher Père Castor.

Derived terms edit