Dacha in a sentence as a noun

Maybe the dacha was legally owned by an uncle or by grand parents.

The Russians I asked cannot recall anyone who didn't have a dacha in Soviet times.

Soviet dacha owners often used long range interceptor fuel tanks for shower water tanks.

The concept of a “dacha” became hugely important in subsistence.

A party boss could use a luxurious government dacha, but could not leave it to his children because he did not own it.

Most of my memories of it are from my grandparents' house and dacha, since I lived there until I was 5 and that's where it was given to me.

This is probably something they talked about over tea at Putin's government dacha a few days before.

This reminded me of an article I read about "dachas" in Russia, which are basically allotted garden plots with a small house that tons of every-day Russians have.

If every family had a dacha, and a family consist on average of 3-4 persons, then 25-33% of the total population had a dacha, consistent with the last part of the sentence.

Yes, the bureaucrats suck and the party establishment are bastards, but summer in the dacha is fantastic, getting drunk with friends is a brotherly experience and there is Masha waiting for me hopefully to form a nice family.

Instead of following Darby's example, Snowden decided to flee to another country, almost immediately hand over details of NSA offensive operations against China in order "ingratiate himself to the people of Hong Kong and China"[6], and is now apparently living a quaint little dacha with his girlfriend under the protection of the Russian government.

Dacha definitions

noun

Russian country house