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Definition of Khabarovsk
1. Noun. A city on the Amur River on the border of China and the capital of Khabarovsk.
2. Noun. An administrative territory in Russia on the eastern coast of Siberia.
Group relationships: Siberia, Russia, Russian Federation
Definition of Khabarovsk
1. Proper noun. A large city in the far East of Russia, administrative centre of Khabarovsk kray. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Khabarovsk
Literary usage of Khabarovsk
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Siberia To-day by Frederick Ferdinand Moore (1919)
"khabarovsk is at the northern point. The Amur, flowing in a general westerly
direction, bending southerly along the northern boundary of the Manchurian ..."
2. Planned Invasion of Japan, 1945: The Siberian Weather Advantage by Hatten Schuyler Yoder (1997)
"LIBERTY IN khabarovsk Friendly Reception. EVERYONE WORKED strenuously to set up
the MOKO Base, but there were times when specific personnel would be ..."
3. In the Uttermost East: Being an Account of Investigations Among the Natives by Charles Henry Hawes (1903)
"THE Ussuri railroad, by which I was to reach the river Amur, is 475 miles in
length, and connects Vladivostok with khabarovsk. ..."
4. Through Siberia, the Land of the Future by Fridtjof Nansen (1914)
"CHAPTER XV THE USSURI REGION, VLADIVOSTOK AND khabarovsk The Maritime Province,
... In all these figures the garrisons of Vladivostok and khabarovsk are ..."
5. The Coming Struggle in Eastern Asia by Bertram Lenox Putnam Weale (1909)
"CHAPTER IV khabarovsk AND THE AMUR PROVINCE THE town of khabarovsk stands pleasantly
enough, on commanding river-banks, high above the great Amur, ..."
6. The Cold War in Asia edited by James G. Hershberg (1996)
"Two interesting documents from the khabarovsk archive concerning S bio-Soviet
border-tensions appear in translation by Elizabeth Wishnick in this issue of ..."
7. A Ribbon of Iron by Annette M. B. Meakin (1901)
"Chapter XIX khabarovsk—THE USSURI RAILWAY IT was towards the close of the
seventeenth century that the Amur province began to figure in the annals of ..."