翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Russian Journal of Physical Chemistry B
・ Russian Kaleidoscope
・ Russian Kiln Site
・ Russian Knights
・ Russian lace
・ Russian lacquer art
・ Russian famine of 1601–03
・ Russian famine of 1891–92
・ Russian famine of 1921
・ Russian Famine Relief Act
・ Russian Far East
・ Russian fascism
・ Russian Fascist Organization
・ Russian Fascist Party
・ Russian Federal Communications Agency
Russian federal highways
・ Russian Federal Space Agency
・ Russian Federal State Statistics Service
・ Russian Federation Law on Refugees
・ Russian Federation Presidential Certificate of Honour
・ Russian Federation Today
・ Russian Fedora Remix
・ Russian Fencing Federation
・ Russian field
・ Russian Figure Skating Championships
・ Russian financial crisis
・ Russian financial crisis (2014–present)
・ Russian Five
・ Russian floating nuclear power station
・ Russian flu


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Russian federal highways : ウィキペディア英語版
Russian federal highways ((ロシア語:Автомобильные дороги федерального значения Российской Федерации) or Avtomobil'nye dorogi federal'nogo znacheniya Rossiyskoy Federatsii, meaning "Highways of federal importance in Russian Federation") are the most important highways in Russia that are federal property. The following motorways are designated as federal.(A February 7, 2007 order of the Russian Ministry of Transportation about highway ID numbers ) (Приказ Министерства транспорта Российской Федерации (Минтранс России) от 7 февраля 2007 г. N 16 г. Москва "Об утверждении Правил присвоения автомобильным дорогам идентификационных номеров") ( A Russian decree of December 24 1991 (RSFSR) about the list of federal highways ), with subsequent amendments by the Russian Federation (Постановление Правительства РСФСР от 24 декабря 1991 г. N 62 "Об утверждении перечней федеральных дорог в РСФСР" *All highways** that connect Moscow with the capitals of the neighbouring countries and with the administrative centres of the subjects of the Russian Federation. They are identified by the prefix "M" in the national route signs;** that are parts of the international road networks: European and Asian, identified by prefixes "E" and "AH" in the international route signs used simultaneously with the national route signs.*Some highways**that connect administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation with each other (national route sign prefix "P," which is the Cyrillic "R")**that are branching and bridging roads (national prefix "A"):*** access roads that lead to major transportation nodes and special objects*** access roads from the administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation which has no highway connection with Moscow to the nearest sea and river ports and to the international borders.***which interlink other federal highways.The federal highways are classified in Russia into two categories: "motorways/Avtomagistral" ((ロシア語:магистральная автомобильная дорога, автомагистраль), not the same as the English term motorway) and "other".==Federal motorways== Avtomagistral redirects here -->==Other federal highways==*M-1 "Belarus": Moscow - Smolensk to the border with Belarus (onto Minsk, Brest, Warsaw)*M-2 "Crimea": Moscow to the border with Ukraine (onto Kharkov, Zaporozhye, Simferopol, Sevastopol)*M-3 "Ukraine": Moscow - Kaluga - Bryansk - Sevsk to the border with Ukraine (onto Kiev)*M-4 "Don": Moscow - Bogoroditsk - Yefremov - Yelets - Zadonsk - Rostov-on-Don - Krasnodar - Novorossiysk. An only fully nationwide expressway as of June 2013.*M-6 "Caspian": Moscow - Tambov - Volgograd - Astrakhan; redesignated as P22*M-7 "Volga": Moscow - Vladimir - Nizhny Novgorod - Kazan - Ufa*M-8 "Cholomgory": Moscow - Yaroslavl - Vologda - Arkangelsk, Entrance to the city of Kostroma*M-9 "Baltia": Moscow - Volokolamsk to the border with Latvia*M-10 "Russia": Moscow - Tver’ - Velikiy Novgorod - Saint Petersburg, entrance to the cities of Tver' and Novgorod*M-10/A-181 "Scandinavia": Saint Petersburg to the border with Finland; also designated A181*M-11: Moscow – Saint Petersburg, a motorway under construction*M-18 "Kola": Saint Petersburg - Petrozavodsk - Murmansk - Pechenga to the border with Norway; redesignated as P21*M-29 "Kavkaz": Krasnodar - Chechnya - Dagestan to the border with Azerbaijan (onto Baku); redesignated as P217*M-52 "Chuysky Trakt": Novosibirsk to the border with Mongolia; redesignated as P256*M-56: Yakutsk - Skovorodino to route M58 "Amur"; redesignated as A360*M-56: Magadan - Yakutsk; redesignated as P504*M-58 "Amur": Chita - Khabarovsk; redesignated as P297*M-60 "Ussuri": Khabarovsk - Vladivostok; redesignated as A370*A-119 "Vyatka": Cheboksary - Syktyvkar, entrance of the city of Kirov; redesignated as P176

Russian federal highways ((ロシア語:Автомобильные дороги федерального значения Российской Федерации) or Avtomobil'nye dorogi federal'nogo znacheniya Rossiyskoy Federatsii, meaning "Highways of federal importance in Russian Federation") are the most important highways in Russia that are federal property. The following motorways are designated as federal.〔(A February 7, 2007 order of the Russian Ministry of Transportation about highway ID numbers ) (Приказ Министерства транспорта Российской Федерации (Минтранс России) от 7 февраля 2007 г. N 16 г. Москва "Об утверждении Правил присвоения автомобильным дорогам идентификационных номеров") 〕〔( A Russian decree of December 24 1991 (RSFSR) about the list of federal highways ), with subsequent amendments by the Russian Federation (Постановление Правительства РСФСР от 24 декабря 1991 г. N 62 "Об утверждении перечней федеральных дорог в РСФСР" 〕
*All highways
*
* that connect Moscow with the capitals of the neighbouring countries and with the administrative centres of the subjects of the Russian Federation. They are identified by the prefix "M" in the national route signs;
*
* that are parts of the international road networks: European and Asian, identified by prefixes "E" and "AH" in the international route signs used simultaneously with the national route signs.
*Some highways
*
*that connect administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation with each other (national route sign prefix "P," which is the Cyrillic "R")
*
*that are branching and bridging roads (national prefix "A"):
*
*
* access roads that lead to major transportation nodes and special objects
*
*
* access roads from the administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation which has no highway connection with Moscow to the nearest sea and river ports and to the international borders.
*
*
*which interlink other federal highways.
The federal highways are classified in Russia into two categories: "motorways/Avtomagistral" ((ロシア語:магистральная автомобильная дорога, автомагистраль), not the same as the English term motorway) and "other".
==Federal motorways==
==Other federal highways==

*M-1 "Belarus": Moscow - Smolensk to the border with Belarus (onto Minsk, Brest, Warsaw)
*M-2 "Crimea": Moscow to the border with Ukraine (onto Kharkov, Zaporozhye, Simferopol, Sevastopol)
*M-3 "Ukraine": Moscow - Kaluga - Bryansk - Sevsk to the border with Ukraine (onto Kiev)
*M-4 "Don": Moscow - Bogoroditsk - Yefremov - Yelets - Zadonsk - Rostov-on-Don - Krasnodar - Novorossiysk. An only fully nationwide expressway as of June 2013.
*M-6 "Caspian": Moscow - Tambov - Volgograd - Astrakhan; redesignated as P22
*M-7 "Volga": Moscow - Vladimir - Nizhny Novgorod - Kazan - Ufa
*M-8 "Cholomgory": Moscow - Yaroslavl - Vologda - Arkangelsk, Entrance to the city of Kostroma
*M-9 "Baltia": Moscow - Volokolamsk to the border with Latvia
*M-10 "Russia": Moscow - Tver’ - Velikiy Novgorod - Saint Petersburg, entrance to the cities of Tver' and Novgorod
*M-10/A-181 "Scandinavia": Saint Petersburg to the border with Finland; also designated A181
*M-11: Moscow – Saint Petersburg, a motorway under construction
*M-18 "Kola": Saint Petersburg - Petrozavodsk - Murmansk - Pechenga to the border with Norway; redesignated as P21
*M-29 "Kavkaz": Krasnodar - Chechnya - Dagestan to the border with Azerbaijan (onto Baku); redesignated as P217
*M-52 "Chuysky Trakt": Novosibirsk to the border with Mongolia; redesignated as P256
*M-56: Yakutsk - Skovorodino to route M58 "Amur"; redesignated as A360
*M-56: Magadan - Yakutsk; redesignated as P504
*M-58 "Amur": Chita - Khabarovsk; redesignated as P297
*M-60 "Ussuri": Khabarovsk - Vladivostok; redesignated as A370
*A-119 "Vyatka": Cheboksary - Syktyvkar, entrance of the city of Kirov; redesignated as P176

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ==Other federal highways==*M-1 "Belarus": Moscow - Smolensk to the border with Belarus (onto Minsk, Brest, Warsaw)*M-2 "Crimea": Moscow to the border with Ukraine (onto Kharkov, Zaporozhye, Simferopol, Sevastopol)*M-3 "Ukraine": Moscow - Kaluga - Bryansk - Sevsk to the border with Ukraine (onto Kiev)*M-4 "Don": Moscow - Bogoroditsk - Yefremov - Yelets - Zadonsk - Rostov-on-Don - Krasnodar - Novorossiysk. An only fully nationwide expressway as of June 2013.*M-6 "Caspian": Moscow - Tambov - Volgograd - Astrakhan; redesignated as P22*M-7 "Volga": Moscow - Vladimir - Nizhny Novgorod - Kazan - Ufa*M-8 "Cholomgory": Moscow - Yaroslavl - Vologda - Arkangelsk, Entrance to the city of Kostroma*M-9 "Baltia": Moscow - Volokolamsk to the border with Latvia*M-10 "Russia": Moscow - Tver’ - Velikiy Novgorod - Saint Petersburg, entrance to the cities of Tver' and Novgorod*M-10/A-181 "Scandinavia": Saint Petersburg to the border with Finland; also designated A181*M-11: Moscow – Saint Petersburg, a motorway under construction*M-18 "Kola": Saint Petersburg - Petrozavodsk - Murmansk - Pechenga to the border with Norway; redesignated as P21*M-29 "Kavkaz": Krasnodar - Chechnya - Dagestan to the border with Azerbaijan (onto Baku); redesignated as P217*M-52 "Chuysky Trakt": Novosibirsk to the border with Mongolia; redesignated as P256*M-56: Yakutsk - Skovorodino to route M58 "Amur"; redesignated as A360*M-56: Magadan - Yakutsk; redesignated as P504*M-58 "Amur": Chita - Khabarovsk; redesignated as P297*M-60 "Ussuri": Khabarovsk - Vladivostok; redesignated as A370*A-119 "Vyatka": Cheboksary - Syktyvkar, entrance of the city of Kirov; redesignated as P176">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
==Other federal highways==*M-1 "Belarus": Moscow - Smolensk to the border with Belarus (onto Minsk, Brest, Warsaw)*M-2 "Crimea": Moscow to the border with Ukraine (onto Kharkov, Zaporozhye, Simferopol, Sevastopol)*M-3 "Ukraine": Moscow - Kaluga - Bryansk - Sevsk to the border with Ukraine (onto Kiev)*M-4 "Don": Moscow - Bogoroditsk - Yefremov - Yelets - Zadonsk - Rostov-on-Don - Krasnodar - Novorossiysk. An only fully nationwide expressway as of June 2013.*M-6 "Caspian": Moscow - Tambov - Volgograd - Astrakhan; redesignated as P22*M-7 "Volga": Moscow - Vladimir - Nizhny Novgorod - Kazan - Ufa*M-8 "Cholomgory": Moscow - Yaroslavl - Vologda - Arkangelsk, Entrance to the city of Kostroma*M-9 "Baltia": Moscow - Volokolamsk to the border with Latvia*M-10 "Russia": Moscow - Tver’ - Velikiy Novgorod - Saint Petersburg, entrance to the cities of Tver' and Novgorod*M-10/A-181 "Scandinavia": Saint Petersburg to the border with Finland; also designated A181*M-11: Moscow – Saint Petersburg, a motorway under construction*M-18 "Kola": Saint Petersburg - Petrozavodsk - Murmansk - Pechenga to the border with Norway; redesignated as P21*M-29 "Kavkaz": Krasnodar - Chechnya - Dagestan to the border with Azerbaijan (onto Baku); redesignated as P217*M-52 "Chuysky Trakt": Novosibirsk to the border with Mongolia; redesignated as P256*M-56: Yakutsk - Skovorodino to route M58 "Amur"; redesignated as A360*M-56: Magadan - Yakutsk; redesignated as P504*M-58 "Amur": Chita - Khabarovsk; redesignated as P297*M-60 "Ussuri": Khabarovsk - Vladivostok; redesignated as A370*A-119 "Vyatka": Cheboksary - Syktyvkar, entrance of the city of Kirov; redesignated as P176">ウィキペディアでRussian federal highways ((ロシア語:Автомобильные дороги федерального значения Российской Федерации) or Avtomobil'nye dorogi federal'nogo znacheniya Rossiyskoy Federatsii, meaning "Highways of federal importance in Russian Federation") are the most important highways in Russia that are federal property. The following motorways are designated as federal.(A February 7, 2007 order of the Russian Ministry of Transportation about highway ID numbers ) (Приказ Министерства транспорта Российской Федерации (Минтранс России) от 7 февраля 2007 г. N 16 г. Москва "Об утверждении Правил присвоения автомобильным дорогам идентификационных номеров") ( A Russian decree of December 24 1991 (RSFSR) about the list of federal highways ), with subsequent amendments by the Russian Federation (Постановление Правительства РСФСР от 24 декабря 1991 г. N 62 "Об утверждении перечней федеральных дорог в РСФСР" *All highways** that connect Moscow with the capitals of the neighbouring countries and with the administrative centres of the subjects of the Russian Federation. They are identified by the prefix "M" in the national route signs;** that are parts of the international road networks: European and Asian, identified by prefixes "E" and "AH" in the international route signs used simultaneously with the national route signs.*Some highways**that connect administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation with each other (national route sign prefix "P," which is the Cyrillic "R")**that are branching and bridging roads (national prefix "A"):*** access roads that lead to major transportation nodes and special objects*** access roads from the administrative centers of the subjects of the Russian Federation which has no highway connection with Moscow to the nearest sea and river ports and to the international borders.***which interlink other federal highways.The federal highways are classified in Russia into two categories: "motorways/Avtomagistral" ((ロシア語:магистральная автомобильная дорога, автомагистраль), not the same as the English term motorway) and "other".==Federal motorways== Avtomagistral redirects here -->==Other federal highways==*M-1 "Belarus": Moscow - Smolensk to the border with Belarus (onto Minsk, Brest, Warsaw)*M-2 "Crimea": Moscow to the border with Ukraine (onto Kharkov, Zaporozhye, Simferopol, Sevastopol)*M-3 "Ukraine": Moscow - Kaluga - Bryansk - Sevsk to the border with Ukraine (onto Kiev)*M-4 "Don": Moscow - Bogoroditsk - Yefremov - Yelets - Zadonsk - Rostov-on-Don - Krasnodar - Novorossiysk. An only fully nationwide expressway as of June 2013.*M-6 "Caspian": Moscow - Tambov - Volgograd - Astrakhan; redesignated as P22*M-7 "Volga": Moscow - Vladimir - Nizhny Novgorod - Kazan - Ufa*M-8 "Cholomgory": Moscow - Yaroslavl - Vologda - Arkangelsk, Entrance to the city of Kostroma*M-9 "Baltia": Moscow - Volokolamsk to the border with Latvia*M-10 "Russia": Moscow - Tver’ - Velikiy Novgorod - Saint Petersburg, entrance to the cities of Tver' and Novgorod*M-10/A-181 "Scandinavia": Saint Petersburg to the border with Finland; also designated A181*M-11: Moscow – Saint Petersburg, a motorway under construction*M-18 "Kola": Saint Petersburg - Petrozavodsk - Murmansk - Pechenga to the border with Norway; redesignated as P21*M-29 "Kavkaz": Krasnodar - Chechnya - Dagestan to the border with Azerbaijan (onto Baku); redesignated as P217*M-52 "Chuysky Trakt": Novosibirsk to the border with Mongolia; redesignated as P256*M-56: Yakutsk - Skovorodino to route M58 "Amur"; redesignated as A360*M-56: Magadan - Yakutsk; redesignated as P504*M-58 "Amur": Chita - Khabarovsk; redesignated as P297*M-60 "Ussuri": Khabarovsk - Vladivostok; redesignated as A370*A-119 "Vyatka": Cheboksary - Syktyvkar, entrance of the city of Kirov; redesignated as P176」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.