View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Lublin.

Lublin

Lublin meaning

A city in southeast Poland.

Synonyms of Lublin

Example sentences (20)

But they have chosen to play in Lublin because it is easy to get to and back from.

Played at a half-full Lublin Arena because of the war in Ukraine, next Tuesday’s second leg will be staged at Hampden because delayed construction work at Ibrox continues, meaning neither team will play their home tie in their own ground.

Poland's Motorway S19 will connect to Slovakia's upcoming R4 Motorway at Barwinek, after passing through Białystok, Lublin, and Rzeszów.

But just months before, his PO colleague Krzysztof Zuk, mayor of Lublin, banned that city's first pride march, citing security concerns.

Police picked up Lublin as he left the building the following day.

It was a question about which he had already thought long and hard, having published his series of philosophical lectures on the ethics of sexuality at the University of Lublin in a book called “Love and Responsibility,” in Polish, in 1960.

Participants attend an equality parade in support of the LGBTQ community in Lublin, Poland, on Oct. 13, 2018.

The exhibit also documents how students from the famed Lublin Yeshiva in Poland made a monthlong walk to Vilna, Lithuania, before proceeding to Shanghai.

All major cities of the province are connected with each other, however traveling from Kraków to Lublin is time-consuming, as trains have to take an extended route, via Kielce, Radom, and Dęblin.

An Eastern Galician dynasty drawing both from the Seer of Lublin 's charismatic-populist style and "rabbinic" Hasidism, it espoused hard-line positions but broke off from the Orthodox Council of Jerusalem and joined Agudas in 1979.

By the time of the Union of Lublin in 1569, there was not much difference between the administrative and judicial systems in force in Lithuania and Poland.

Following the Union of Lublin, Polonization increasingly affected all aspects of Lithuanian public life, but it took well over a century for the process to be completed.

In 1944, also in Lublin, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University was established.

In December 1918, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin was opened, becoming second university of Lesser Poland.

In early 1945, the lands of Lesser Poland were divided between three voivodeships – those of Kraków, Lublin, and Kielce.

Krakowiak is one of Polish national dances, other popular Lesser Poland's folk dances are Zbójnicki from Podhale and dances from Lublin.

Leiner's disciple Zadok HaKohen of Lublin also developed a complex philosophic system which presented a dialectic nature in history, arguing that great progress had to be preceded by crisis and calamity.

Lesser Poland's independent areas of the Home Army were located in Kraków, Kielce-Radom, and Lublin.

Polish linguists, at the Lublin School (see Jerzy Bartmiński ) in their research of Humboldt, also stress this distinction between the worldviews of a personal or political kind and the worldview that is implicit in language as a conceptual system.

Since 1 August 1944, the provisional government was officially headquartered in Lesser Poland's Lublin.