bialystok in English

noun
1
an industrial city in northeastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus; population 294,817 (2007).

Use "bialystok" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "bialystok" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "bialystok", or refer to the context using the word "bialystok" in the English Dictionary.

1. Bialys came to the United States from Bialystok, Poland, and they are sometimes known as Bialystok Kuchen

2. Bialystok, Poland– it's what gives the Bialy story a larger significance

3. Nowadays, Bialystok is an all- Polish city of about 300,000, near the eastern border with Belarus– white Russia.

4. Like these other Polish recipes, it originated in Poland—probably in the town of Bialystok—and is considered a …

5. Bialys, named for the Jews from Bialystok, Poland, is a delightfully chewy bread that is made with everything from onions to sundried tomatoes

6. Like these other Polish recipes, it originated in Poland—probably in the town of Bialystok—and is considered a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish food.

7. Ellen Bialystok and Xiaojia Feng give a reply: "The picture emerging from these studies is a complex portrait of interactions between Bilingualism and skill acquisition in which there are

8. The word “bialy” is a shortened version of Bialystocker Kuchen, or “bread from Bialystok, Poland.” For the wealthy, kuchen was an accompaniment to meals, while, for the poor, it was the whole meal

9. The word “bialy” is a shortened version of Bialystocker Kuchen, or “bread from Bialystok, Poland.” For the wealthy, kuchen was an accompaniment to meals, while, for the poor, it was the whole meal.

10. Within the borders of 22 June 1941 (and excluding the Belostok [Bialystok] region, which was assigned after the war to Poland), the number of Holocaust victims across the entire Soviet Union constituted 2.5-2.6 million people

11. Bialys show up anywhere there is a significant Jewish population -- they're Polish, by origin (from Bialystok!), but have been adopted by American Jews for just about as long as there have been American Jews