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Andriyenko
Andriyenko or Andriienko ( uk, Андрієнко) is a gender-neutral Ukrainian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Denys Andriyenko Denys Andriyenko ( ua, Денис Андрієнко, born 12 April 1980) is a Ukrainian footballer who plays for FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih in the Ukrainian Premier League. Career Andriyenko began playing football in the Ukrainian Second League wi ... (born 1980), Ukrainian footballer * Mykhailo Andriienko-Nechytailo (1894–1982), Ukrainian painter {{surname Ukrainian-language surnames Patronymic surnames ...
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Denys Andriyenko
Denys Andriyenko ( ua, Денис Андрієнко, born 12 April 1980) is a Ukrainian footballer who plays for FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih in the Ukrainian Premier League. Career Andriyenko began playing football in the Ukrainian Second League with local club FC Dynamo Saky in 1997. He went on to play in the Ukrainian Premier League for SC Tavriya Simferopol and FC Metalurh Donetsk, both clubs sending him on loan spells to lower-division clubs. He joined Kryvbas for the first time in 2003. After one season, he left for FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Football Club Dnipro ( uk, Футбо́льний Клуб «Дніпро́», ) was a Ukrainian football club based in Dnipro. The club was owned by the Privat Group that also owns BC Dnipro and Budivelnyk Kyiv. In 2018 FC Dnipro was forced i ..., only to return to Kryvbas in late 2008. References External links *Player profile 1980 births Living people Ukrainian footballers People from Yevpatoria SC Tavriya Simferopol playe ...
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Mykhailo Andriienko-Nechytailo
Mykhailo Andriienko-Nechytailo (French ''Michel Andreenko'' also known as ''Mikhail Andriyenko-Nechitailo'' among other variations) (1894–1982) was a renowned Ukrainian Modernist painter and stage designer. In 1912–1917, Andriienko-Nechytailo studied under Roerikh, Rylov, and Bilibin at the art school of the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts in Saint Petersburg. In 1914–1916, he exhibited the composition ''Black Dome'' and his first cubist works in Saint Petersburg. In 1914, he participated in an international graphics exhibition in Leipzig. In 1917–1924, he devoted most of his time to designing stage sets for various theaters—in Saint Petersburg, Odessa, Prague, Paris, and for the Royal Opera in Bucharest. In Paris, where he lived from 1923, he also worked on sets for the films Casanova and Sheherazade and continued to paint in the cubist-constructivist style (e.g., ''Composition'' (1924), ''Construction'' 1924, or ''A Person'' 1926). In the 1930s Andri ...
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Ukrainian Surname
By the 18th century almost all Ukrainians had family names. Most Ukrainian surnames (and surnames in Slavic languages in general) are formed by adding possessive and other suffixes to given names, place names, professions and other words. Surnames were developed for official documents or business record keeping to differentiate the parties who might have the same first name. By the 15th century, surnames were used by the upper class, nobles and large land owners. In cities and towns, surnames became necessary in the 15th and 16th centuries. In 1632, Orthodox Metropolitan Petro Mohyla ordered priests to include a surname in all records of birth, marriage and death. After the partitions of Poland (1772–1795), Western Ukraine came under the Austrian Empire, where peasants needed surnames for taxation purposes and military service and churches were required to keep records of all births, deaths and marriages. The surnames with the suffix -enko are the most known and common Ukrain ...
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Ukrainian-language Surnames
Ukrainian ( uk, украї́нська мо́ва, translit=ukrainska mova, label=native name, ) is an East Slavic language of the Indo-European language family. It is the native language of about 40 million people and the official state language of Ukraine in Eastern Europe. Written Ukrainian uses the Ukrainian alphabet, a variant of the Cyrillic script. The standard Ukrainian language is regulated by the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (NANU; particularly by its Institute for the Ukrainian Language), the Ukrainian language-information fund, and Potebnia Institute of Linguistics. Comparisons are often drawn to Russian, a prominent Slavic language, but there is more mutual intelligibility with Belarusian,Alexander M. Schenker. 1993. "Proto-Slavonic," ''The Slavonic Languages''. (Routledge). pp. 60–121. p. 60: " hedistinction between dialect and language being blurred, there can be no unanimity on this issue in all instances..."C.F. Voegelin and F.M. Voegelin. 1 ...
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