different between baltic vs marshrutka

baltic

English

Adjective

baltic (comparative more baltic, superlative most baltic)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of Baltic (very cold)
    • 2012, Craig Robertson, Cold Grave ?ISBN:
      'We're staying out at the Lake of Menteith and it's baltic out there. They reckon the lake could freeze over again if this weather gets worse.'

Friulian

Adjective

baltic

  1. Baltic

Romanian

Etymology

From French baltique

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?baltik]

Adjective

baltic m or n (feminine singular baltic?, masculine plural baltici, feminine and neuter plural baltice)

  1. Baltic
    Lituaniana este o limb? baltic?.
    Lithuanian is a Baltic language.

Declension

baltic From the web:

  • what's baltic amber
  • what's baltic states
  • baltic meaning
  • baltic what language
  • what is baltic dry index
  • what is baltic birch plywood
  • what is baltic ethnicity
  • what is baltic birch


marshrutka

English

Etymology

From Russian ?????????? (maršrútka), colloquial shortening of ??????????? ?????? (maršrútnoje taksí, routed taxicab), from ???????? (maršrút, route), referring to a planned route that something follows, and ?????? (taksí).

Noun

marshrutka (plural marshrutkas)

  1. (transport) A share taxi in the CIS countries, the Baltic states, and Bulgaria. The role of the modern marshrutka is similar to that of the minibus in other countries, except that some implementations of marshrutka allow passengers to stand.

Translations

See also

  • matatu
  • dolmus (dolmu?)

Finnish

Etymology

From Russian ?????????? (maršrútka)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?m?rsrutk?/, [?m?rs?rut?k?]

Noun

marshrutka

  1. marshrutka (share taxi in Russia, usually a minibus operating on a fixed route)

Declension

Synonyms

  • reittitaksi

marshrutka From the web:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like