State Institute of Russian Language
0 sources
State Institute of Russian Language
Summary
State Institute of Russian Language is a higher education institution[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- State Institute of Russian Language is located in Moscow[3].
- State Institute of Russian Language is in the country of Russia[4].
- State Institute of Russian Language is in the country of Soviet Union[5].
- State Institute of Russian Language's instance of is recorded as higher education institution[6].
- State Institute of Russian Language's instance of is recorded as institute[7].
- Alexander Pushkin is named after State Institute of Russian Language[8].
- State Institute of Russian Language's Commons category is recorded as Pushkin State Russian Language Institute[9].
- 1967 marks the founding of State Institute of Russian Language[10].
- State Institute of Russian Language's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 55.65335, 'lon': 37.52041}[11].
- State Institute of Russian Language's parent organization or unit is recorded as Ministry of Science and Higher Education[12].
- State Institute of Russian Language's official website is recorded as http://www.pushkin.institute[13].
- State Institute of Russian Language's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Pushkin State Russian Language Institute[14].
- State Institute of Russian Language's web feed URL is recorded as https://www.pushkin.institute/feed/[15].
- State Institute of Russian Language's rector is recorded as Margarita Rusetskaya[16].
- State Institute of Russian Language's category for employees of the organization is recorded as Q32217314[17].
Body
Founding
1967 marks the founding of State Institute of Russian Language[10].
Operations
State Institute of Russian Language's parent organization or unit is recorded as Ministry of Science and Higher Education[12].
Why It Matters
State Institute of Russian Language has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]