commissars in English

noun
1
an official of the Communist Party, especially in the former Soviet Union or present-day China, responsible for political education and organization.
There are no aging commissars clinging on to party rule.
noun
    political commissar

Use "commissars" in a sentence

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

1. He is one of those Commissars.

2. Commissars are to be executed immediately.

3. New commissars replaced the provincial governors.

4. The regiments had political sections, commissars, instructors and secret service.

5. Article 11 appointed the executive authority, the Council of People's Commissars (SNK).

6. 9 In 1929 the Party representatives in the Red Army were renamed political commissars.

7. The Commissar is an officer from the Council of the People's Commissars

8. The Communist Party abolished the institution of political commissars—although it soon restored them.

9. The Council of People's Commissars published decrees and decisions that were binding throughout the USSR.

10. Commissar's training [edit edit source] The Commissars are known for their truly hardcore combat and ideological training

11. Behind a veil of revolutionary rhetoric, the Council of People's Commissars suppressed the masses' striving for liberty.

12. 26 Several Bolshevik commissars favoured such a compromise, but Lenin and Trotsky were adamantly opposed and negotiations broke down.

13. 23 Several Bolshevik commissars favoured such a compromise, but Lenin and Trotsky were adamantly opposed and negotiations broke down.

14. The Government was known officially as the Council of People's Commissars (1917–1946), Council of Ministers (1946–1978) and Council of Ministers–Government (1978–1991).

15. The Council of People's Commissars set up the Red Army by decree on January 15, 1918 (Old Style) (January 28, 1918), basing it on the already-existing Red Guard.

16. Following the October Revolution, Vladimir Lenin became the head of the new government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic which was known officially as the Council of People's Commissars.

17. However with following the Declaration of the Creation of the USSR in 1922 state powers of the institution were somewhat superseded by the Council of People's Commissars of USSR.

18. The Union-Republican People's Commissariats direct the branches of state administration entrusted to them, and are subordinate both to the Council bf People's Commissars of the Union Republic and to the corresponding' Union

19. Levine is part of a movement, epitomized by the hashtag #DisruptTexts, whose goal is to cancel classic texts from Homer and Shakespeare down to the present day and replace them with “young adult” books that mirror the pieties and attitudes of woke commissars of Correctitude.

20. Commissar (or sometimes Kommissar) is an English transliteration of the Russian комиссáр, which means Commissary.In English, the transliteration "Commissar" is used to refer specifically to the political Commissars of Soviet and Eastern Bloc armies, while administrative officers are called "Commissary"

21. ‘The code officer served as secretary and the Commissar as prosecutor.’ ‘We were led upstairs, extremely exhausted, to the smarmy Commissar's luxurious office with bedroom and en-suite bathroom.’ ‘The armies in which the left-wing Commissars remained influential had taken the old Taiping route to Changsha and Wuhan.’

22. The Commissariat, also known as the Officio Prefectus, is a faculty of the Departmento Munitorum overseeing the activities of the Commissar officer corps within the Astra Militarum.The Commissariat attaches Commissars to most Regiments of the Imperial Guard to inspire its men, boost morale, and if necessary take control when its commanders or soldiery are demonstrating a lack of …

23. "Commissar" was the title given to the bureaucratic leaders of the Soviet Union, used from 1917 to 1946.The title and rank of Commissar was also given to the military-political officers serving with the Red Army during World War II.Also known as People's Commissars, they were the heads of the various people's Commissariats (of health, justice, education