Grad
see also: Etymology of Grad
Grad is a current termination meaning city in the Slavic Langues. In Russian, one also meets the form - gorod with the same significance.
The ancients Slaves were recognized to build installations whose fortifications were out of wood. The Proto-Slavic rebuilding for such installations is gord , related with the German word gard . The word was then transformed into grad .
Grad plays the same part as Stad in the Swedish language.
Bosnia-Herzégovine
Bulgaria
- Belogradchik
- Blagoevgrad
- Botevgrad
- Dimitrovgrad
- Momchilgrad
- Razgrad
- Zlatograd
Croatia
-
Ivanić Grad
- Novigrad
- Stari Grad
- Biograd Na Moru
Hungary
Montenegro
Macedonia
-
Gradsko
Russia
- Dimitrovgrad
- Kaliningrad
- Kitaï-gorod (historical quarters of Moscow)
- Leningrad/Pétrograd
- Nijni-Novgorod
- Novgorod
- Stalingrad/Volgograd
- Zelenograd
- Zelenogradsk
- Zvenigorod
Serbia
Slovenia
-
Dravograd
- Gornji Grad
- Grad (občina)
Ukraine
- Sharhorod
- Vyshhorod
- Oujgorod
- Kirovohrad
- Novohrad-Volynskyi
- Novgorod-Seversky
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