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Chekhov

or Tche·khov

[ chek-awf, -of; Russian chye-khuhf ]

noun

  1. An·ton Pa·vlo·vich [an, -ton pav-, loh, -vich, uhn-, tawn, puh-, vlaw, -vyich], 1860–1904, Russian short-story writer and dramatist.


Chekhov

/ tʃɛˈkəʊvɪən; ˈtʃɛxəf; ˈtʃɛkɒf /

noun

  1. ChekhovAnton Pavlovich18601904MRussianTHEATRE: dramatistWRITING: short-story writer Anton Pavlovich (anˈtɔn ˈpavləvitʃ). 1860–1904, Russian dramatist and short-story writer. His plays include The Seagull (1896), Uncle Vanya (1900), The Three Sisters (1901), and The Cherry Orchard (1904)


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Derived Forms

  • Chekhovian, adjective

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Example Sentences

Cynthia Ozick has called this peerless master of the short story “our Chekhov.”

The play even makes reference to Chekhov, giving it enough elitist cred for some voters.

Readers familiar with Chekhov, Gogol, Pushkin or Turgenev have already tasted some 19th-century Russian gothic literature.

We all know about Tolstoy, Chekhov, and Dostoevsky, but what about their compatriot, Nikolai Leskov?

Chekhov has talked about this, that any designation besides writer (Russian writer, whatever) was a diminishment.

This spelling has been adopted here, rather than Chekhov, since it is more familiar to the public.

I came to Yalta for a few days, and one evening I met Chekhov on the quay.

The ready acceptance of Chekhov has been one of the few successful features of this irresponsible output.

In 1912 they brought out a volume containing four Chekhov plays, translated by Marian Fell.

"The High Road," found after thirty years, is a most interesting document to the lover of Chekhov.

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ChekaChekhov, Anton