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  1. Plot. The film tells about the representatives of Soviet intelligence, who are trying to find in West Germany an orphanage with Soviet children, which is under the supervision of British intelligence. [3] Starring. Natasha Zashchipina [4] as Ira Sokolova. Lyonya Kotov as Sasha Butuzov.

  2. They Have a Motherland (Russian: У них есть Родина) is a 1949 Soviet drama movie directed by Aleksandr Faintsimmer and Vladimir Legoshin. It stars Natalya Zashchipina, Lyonya Kotov, and Pavel Kadochnikov. Actors. Natasha Zashchipina as Ira Sokolova; Lyonya Kotov as Sasha Butuzov

    • What Are The Origins of Motherland and Fatherland?
    • Who Uses Motherland?
    • Who Uses Fatherland?
    • When Did People Start Saying Homeland?
    • What Do Americans Say?

    Whether a particular group uses (their language’s equivalent of, if they have one) motherland or fatherlandis a matter of culture, tradition, or, in some instances, personal preference. In English, fatherland is the older of the two. It’s first recorded in the early 1200s and may be influenced by the Latin patria, meaning “fatherland.” Motherland i...

    The people of some countries have historically personified their country in feminine ways. To them, their home country is (in translation) the motherland. For example, a common personification of Russia is Mother Russia (Matushka Rossiya). During the movement for Indian independence of the late 1800s, the concept of Bharat Mata (or Mother India) em...

    Some cultures personify their lands as masculine. The German national anthem features verses that translate to “Unity and justice and freedom / For the German fatherland!” (German, Vaterland). The Netherlands (Dutch, vaderland), as well as the Scandinavian countries, have similar forms of fatherland. Among many others, people of the Slavic (e.g., C...

    We have yet another option in English: homeland. It can mean “one’s native land” or “the home of one’s ancestors.” It’s slightly younger than fatherland and motherland, attested in the early 1600s. Early uses of homeland have the sense of “domestic,” as opposed to “foreign,” e.g.,homeland business. This sense of homeland survives today in phrases l...

    Use of terms like fatherland and motherland can sound very nationalistic (e.g., We must protect the fatherland!) when it’s not deliberately meant to be quaint or playful (e.g., Since living abroad for a decade, I have come to miss some things from my motherland, like free refills of soda). Outside of political contexts, homeland can be more neutral...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HomelandHomeland - Wikipedia

    Motherland refers to a mother country, i.e. the place in which somebody grew up or had lived for a long enough period that somebody has formed their own cultural identity, the place that one's ancestors lived for generations, or the place that somebody regards as home, or a Metropole in contrast to its colonies.

  4. They must go to West Germany in order to find and return the children who were taken out of the Soviet Union by the Nazis and are now kept in atrocious conditions under the supervision of British intelligence.

  5. Há 2 dias · Definition of 'motherland' Word Frequency. motherland. (mʌðəʳlænd ) also Motherland. singular noun. The motherland is the country in which you or your ancestors were born and to which you still feel emotionally linked, even if you live somewhere else. ...love for the motherland.

  6. They Have a Motherland (Russian: У них есть Родина) is a 1949 Soviet drama movie directed by Aleksandr Faintsimmer and Vladimir Legoshin. It stars Natalya Zashchipina, Lyonya Kotov, and Pavel Kadochnikov.