Category
page 2Soviet phraseology
bourgeois nationalism
nationalism of the ruling class under capitalism
Revolutionary terror
Wikimedia disambiguation page
And you are lynching Negroes
Soviet catchphrase
Sovnarkhoz
Sovnarkhoz (, sovet narodnogo khozyaystva, "Council of National Economy"), usually translated as Regional Economic Soviet, was an organization of the Soviet Union to manage a separate economic region.
Sovnarkhozes were subordinated to the Supreme Soviet of the National Economy.
socialist emulation
form of competition that was practiced in the Soviet Union
political rehabilitation
process of a politician fallen from grace returning to public life
New Soviet man
Archetype of the ideal Soviet citizen
Committees of Poor Peasants
Russian Civil War

ultra-leftism
In Marxism, ultra-leftism encompasses a broad spectrum of revolutionary Marxist currents. Ultra-leftism distinguishes itself from other left-wing currents through its rejection of electoralism, trade unionism, and national liberation. The term is sometimes used as a synonym of Italian left communism. "Ultra-left" is also commonly used as a pejorative by Marxist–Leninists and Trotskyists to refer to extreme or uncompromising Marxist sects.
Bitch Wars
prison gang murders in the gulag system
Great Russian chauvinism
ultranationalism of imperial colonial ethnic groups, described by Marxists
NEPman
REDIRECT New Economic Policy#NEPmen
Bourgeois pseudoscience
Term
friendship of peoples
concept advanced by Marxist Social Class Theory
Great Plan for the Transformation of Nature
Soviet agricultural and irrigation project
Life Has Become Better
song composed by Alexander Alexandrov
communism in 20 years
political slogan
Stalinka
thumb|Stalin's Empire style in [[Nikopol, Ukraine]]
Stalinka, Stalinist apartment buildings or Stalin-era buildings, are a common colloquial term for apartment buildings constructed in the USSR from 1933 to 1961, primarily during the rule of Joseph Stalin. They were predominantly built in the neoclassical style (Stalinist Classical). Stalinkas are solidly constructed multi-apartment buildings with full utilities, featuring non-combustible materials and typically at least two stories high.
The term Stalinka does not include other types of residential buildings from Stalin's era, such as barrack
Order about Family Members of Traitors of the Motherland
Legal category in Russian SFSR
vacation village
type of rural settlement in Eastern Europe
Brezhnevka
250px|thumb|right|In Varketili district of [[Tbilisi, Georgia, the mainstay of the apartment buildings are brezhnevkas]]
A brezhnevka () is a type of concrete apartment building that was built in the Soviet Union from 1964 to 1980 under the leadership of Leonid Brezhnev, after whom the building type is named. The brezhnevka was preceded by the khrushchevka.
Socialist-leaning countries
Third World countries which the USSR recognized as adhering to the ideas of socialism
Dizzy with Success
1930 newspaper article by I. Stalin
demokratizatsiya
1987 political slogan from Mikhail Gorbachev
Partmaximum
Partmaximum () was a limit on the salary of a member of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union, a maximum wage. Partmaximum was introduced in 1920 by a decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (ВЦИК) for all communists that held executive positions in Party, industry, government and Soviet trade unions. Their salary was not supposed to exceed that of a highly qualified industrial worker. If a communist had other incomes, e.g., honoraria or royalties, he had to transfer a specified percentage from the amount above the partmaximum into the Party funds.
self-criticism
in Marxism-Leninism, the method of criticising ones shortcomings as opposed to concealing them
Names of Soviet origin
named created in the USSR
Common European Home
geopolitical concept
wrecking
crime of sabotage in the Soviet Union
OZET
thumb|OZET poster in Russian and Yiddish (1929): "A Jewish landworker with every turn of the wheels of a tractor takes part in the building of [[socialism and you will help him. Buy a ticket for the OZET lottery."]]
OZET ( romanised: Obshchestvo zemleustroystva yevreyskikh trudyashchikhsya, Yiddish: געזעלשאפט פאר איינארדענען ארבעטנדיקע יידן אויף ערד אין פ.ס.ס.ר romanised: Gezelshaft far aynordnen oyf Erd arbetnidke Yidin in F.S.S.R) was the public Society for Settling Toiling Jews on the Land in the Soviet Union in the period from 1925 to 1938. Some English sources use the word "Working" inste
Shturmovshchina
Shturmovshchina (, storming) was a common Soviet work practice of frantic and overtime work at the end of a planning period in order to fulfill the planned production target. The practice usually gave rise to products of poor quality at the end of a planning cycle.
Great Construction Projects of Communism
USSR's megaprojects
Shock construction project
Smychka of the city and the village
thumb|Poster of the Leningrad Society for the Bonding of City and Country by Boris Kustodiev
Smychka () was a popular political term in Soviet Russia and the Soviet Union. It can be roughly translated as "collaboration in society" "union", "alliance", "joining the ranks". The generic meaning of the noun "смычка", derived from the verb "сомкнуть", is joining of two things: contact, joint, linkage, coupling, like joining the two opposite branches of a railroad whose construction was started from both ends.
Vsevobuch
Vsevobuch (), a portmanteau for "Universal Military Training" (), was a system of compulsory military training for men practiced in the Russian SFSR governed by the Chief Administration of Universal Military Training of the People's Commissariat of Military Affairs.
First Department
Prodnalog
thumb|"The Food Tax is the Flywheel of the State Mechanism"
Prodnalog (, from продовольственный налог, prodovolstvenniy nalog; "food tax";) is the Russian word for a tax on food production, paid in kind in the Soviet Union, and sometimes known as "the tax in kind". Prodnalog replaced prodrazvyorstka (introduced in 1919) and was introduced by a Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on March 21, 1921. Separate decrees were issued for taxes on particular categories of produce: bread, milk, eggs, meat, oil, etc., as well as on hay, wool, and tobacco. After paying the tax, the peasa
partisanship
individual's identification with a political party
Unpromising villages
Soviet term for uneconomic settlements
10 years without the right of correspondence
euphemism for execution in Stalin's Soviet Union