Pasternak

[ US /ˈpæstɝnæk/ ]
NOUN
  1. Russian writer whose best known novel was banned by Soviet authorities but translated and published abroad (1890-1960)
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How To Use Pasternak In A Sentence

  • In 1989, I walked into a church near Boris Pasternak's dacha and heard priests and babushkas reciting the litany with perfect recall as if seventy-two years of repression had never happened.
  • Collins Harvill had it in mind to publish a short volume about Pasternak.
  • He illustrated his argument with quotations from Pasternak.
  • The paper is a study of the historic theme of Doctor Zhivago, written by Boris Pasternak, the Russian writer.
  • Pasternak gave him a barely perceptible smile.
  • Collins Harvill had it in mind to publish a short volume about Pasternak.
  • Pasternak gave him a barely perceptible smile.
  • Pasternak locates ground zero in Cane Valley, 30 miles northeast of Arizona's gorgeous red rock country, Monument Valley. Judy Pasternak's Navajo uranium study "Yellow Dirt," reviewed by Ann Cummins
  • Antipov is the 'antipode' for Pasternak, he is the lost child who makes a violent myth of himself, bringing pain and destruction, ending in baffled suicide. Pasternak in Private
  • Take skyrwater and pasternakes and apples, & parboile hem, make a batour of flour and ayrenn, cast þerto ale. safroun & salt. wete hem in þe batour and frye hem in oile or in grece. do þerto Almaund Mylk. The Forme of Cury A Roll of Ancient English Cookery Compiled, about A.D. 1390
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