Crossword clues for kirov
kirov
- Whom Baryshnikov danced for in the '60s
- Russian ballet troupe's ex-name
- Russian ballet name
- Russia's Mariinsky Ballet, formerly
- Renowned Russian ballet company
- Renamed Russian ballet company
- Nureyev's company, once
- Noted ballet academy name
- Mariinsky Ballet's former name
- Mariinsky Ballet, as it's known internationally
- Mariinsky Ballet, as it's also known
- Mariinsky Ballet company, familiarly
- Major Russian ballet company, familiarly
- Former namesake of the Mariinsky Ballet
- Former name of a famed Russian ballet company
- City of central Russia
- Ballet company for which Anna Pavlova once danced
- Bolshoi rival
- Russian ballet company renamed in 1991
- Company for which Rudolf Nureyev once danced
- City NE of Gorki
- Soviet ballet troupe
- St Petersburg ballet company, founded c. 1740
- Long-haul flyers go and see new centre of Hiroshima rebuilt
- Revolutionary drink sweetheart uncovered
- Big name in Russian ballet
- Russian ballet
- Russian Olympian Nikolay
- Rudolf Nureyev's one-time ballet company
- Former name of the Mariinsky Ballet
- Big name in ballet
- Baryshnikov's old company
- Word on Pavlova's résumé
Wikipedia
Kirov may refer to:
Kirov is a Slavic male surname, its feminine counterpart is Kirova. It may refer to
- Aleksandar Kirov (born 1990), Bulgarian association football player
- Aleksandr Kirov (born 1984), Kazakhstani association football player
- Anton Kirov (born 1990), Bulgarian association football player
- Atanas Kirov (born 1946), Bulgarian Olympic weightlifter
- Ivaylo Kirov (1947–2010), Bulgarian Olympic basketball player
- Lyudmil Kirov (born 1976), Bulgarian association football player
- Nikolay Kirov (born 1957), Russian Olympic runner
- Panayot Kirov (born 1958), Bulgarian Olympic wrestler
- Petar Kirov (born 1942), Bulgarian Olympic wrestler
- Sergey Kirov (1886–1934), Russian revolutionary
- Vasil Kirov (born 1975), Bulgarian association football player
The Kirov series is a long chain of linked novels written by John Schettler in the science fiction genres of alternate history and time travel. Based on the premises of the The Final Countdown, Kirov novels deal with a consequences of modern warship - Russian battlecruiser Kirov - being thrown back in time and forced to take part in the events of the World War II and other global conflicts. As it is placed right in the middle of the war zone and too powerful to be ignored, battlecruiser and her crew need to find their way through the formidable opposition, which is proven to be very difficult, despite vast technology advantage and historical knowledge. Books have a significant focus on the psychology of the people involved and establishing both emotional and rational reasons to their actions.
Usage examples of "kirov".
Kirov was insisting we grant loans to companies that had no collateral, no creditworthiness whatsoever.
Kirov spoke slowly, his voice so quiet as to be a whisper, and immediately Gavallan sensed the control, the ironfisted discipline, that governed his emotions.
KGB chief in Kirov had called his bosses in Moscow, who called Kalinin early that morning.
He had slept deeply on the five-hour shuttle Aeroflot Tupolev from Novosibirsk, via Sverdlovsk, Perm, Kirov and Vologda - but a sleep interrupted when he was jerked out of unconsciousness each time the plane landed.
Otter and his gang underdeck found you and then helped us track Kirov before he could split the tunnels.
Kirov walks and their arms against each other, how did he hide his life that he poured into her, how did he hide his unstoppable hands on her breasts, and his lips on her, and all the things he had said to her?
The result had been the destruction of eight Theban battle-cruisers, four heavy cruisers, and six light cruisers in return for Dunkerque, Atago, three destroyers, and heavy damage to Kirov and two of the forts.
Kirov had instructed the FSS commander to concentrate his resources on the train and bus stations--- places where Beria would most likely have entered the city--- and on the airport.
Suddenly the Kirov was inside a box of blue-white magnesium light.
This is the same bunch that built the Kirov class with a nuclear reactor and an oil-fired steam plant.
But between the police, the militia, and the security forces, Kirov had more than eight thousand men scouring the city, all searching for a single face.