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Definition of Markova
1. Noun. English ballet dancer (born in 1910).
Generic synonyms: Dancer, Professional Dancer, Terpsichorean
Lexicographical Neighbors of Markova
Literary usage of Markova
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reindeer, Dogs, and Snow-shoes: A Journal of Siberian Travel and by Richard James Bush (1871)
"For markova.—Buying Horses.—Destitution.— Feeding the Men on Horse-meat. ...
IMMEDIATELY upon his arrival at markova, after his tri[i up the Anadyr, ..."
2. Travel and Adventure in the Territory of Alaska: Formerly Russian America by Frederick Whymper (1868)
"... reached the markova, he found there the other members of his party, who had
been brought up from the mouth of the river by the direct route. ..."
3. The Voyage of the Vega Round Asia and Europe: With a Historical Review of by Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld (1885)
"On the 18th October, by which time we believed that Menka would be already at
markova we were again visited by him and his son-in-law. ..."
4. Proceedings by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), Norton Shaw, Francis Galton, William Spottiswoode, Clements Robert Markham, Henry Walter Bates, John Scott Keltie (1880)
"Menka mentioned that on the following day he was going to markova, a small
settlement inhabited by Russians on the River Anadyr, near the ancient ..."
5. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science by Kansas Academy of Science (1898)
"New applications of continued fractions, by A. markova, 52 pp. ( Russian. ...
On a differential equation, by A. markova, 18 pp. ( Russian.) Vol. IV, 1896. ..."