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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RutheniansRuthenians - Wikipedia

    The Ruthenian language (Ruthenian: рускаꙗ мова, рускїй ѧзыкъ) was an exonymic linguonym for a closely related group of East Slavic linguistic varieties, particularly those spoken from the 15th to 18th centuries in the East Slavic regions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RutheniaRuthenia - Wikipedia

    Rusyn (the Ruthenian) has been an official self-identification of the Rus' population in Poland (and also in Czechoslovakia). Until 1939, for many Ruthenians and Poles, the word Ukrainiec (Ukrainian) meant a person involved in or friendly to a nationalist movement.

  3. Ruthenian (German: Ruthenisch; Hungarian: rutén) was also the official designation for the spoken and written language of the East Slavs (present-day Ukrainians and Carpatho-Rusyns) living in the Habsburg-ruled Austrian Empire.

  4. Significado de Ruthenian: ruteno; 1850, de o relacionado con el pueblo ucraniano occidental (anteriormente Ruthene, en la década de 1540), del latín medieval Rutheni "los pequeños rusos," un derivado de Russi (ver Russia).

  5. noun. one of the Ruthenian people. the dialect of Ukrainian spoken in Ruthenia. a member of a former Orthodox religious group that entered into communion with the Roman Catholic Church in 1596 and became the “Uniate Church of the Little Russians.” Ruthenian. / ruːˈθiːnɪən / adjective.

  6. 27 de oct. de 2021 · metallic element, 1845, named by Russian chemist Karl Klauss, who first isolated it, from a name proposed earlier (1828) in reference to a metal extracted from ores from the Ural Mountains of Russia (see Ruthenian).

  7. What does the word Ruthenian mean? There are seven meanings listed in OED's entry for the word Ruthenian , two of which are labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.