Examples of using "Иван" in a sentence and their english translations:
John is sad.
My name is Ivan.
John loves Mary.
Ivan Mazepa is not a traitor.
John is good at mathematics.
He is not Ivan The Terrible.
He is not Ivan The Terrible.
Ivan would go to Jose's greengrocer,
Ivan Mazepa wasn't a traitor.
John and Peter are inseparable friends.
Our fellow countryman, Ivan Petrovich Pavlov,
John went to America by air.
John loves Mary.
Ivan the Terrible killed his son in 1581.
Money talks.
His son, Ivan IV, was crowned the first Tsar of Russia.
Tom and Mary didn't drink the milk John poured for them.
John took a key out of his pocket.
Ivan could come and help him arrange the water bottles of the shelves,
Money talks.
Tom and Mary say they don't think John is able to do that.
Tom and Mary said they don't think John can stop Alice from doing that.
"C-R-O-A-K! C-R-O-A-K! Dear husband of mine, Tsarevitch Ivan, why are you so sad?" gently asked the frog.
But few know that at the end of his life Ivan Petrovich realized that
Baptist Ivan Moiseev was killed in 1972 for preaching the gospel while serving in the army.
Tom and John are both competent alchemists. Tom often shows himself to be the more skillful, but both experience explosions in the lab.
Tom and Mary had two sons: Paul and John.
Ivan Groznij wanted to move the Russian capital from Moscow to Vologda, but in Vologda a brick fell on him and he changed his mind.
Tom and Mary had two sons: Paul and John.
Whenever the school bell rang, Ivan would stare into space and drool. Several failed exorcisms later, his parents realized that he was the reincarnation of one of Pavlov's dogs.
In modern professional tennis, winning a big tournament is considered a greater achievement than winning several smaller tournaments of the same combined value. Hence, top players typically concentrate on bigger tournaments and only play a few smaller ones in between. Consequently, top players play and win fewer matches than before. Since Ivan Lendl won 106 out of 115 matches he played in 1982, nobody won more than 90 matches in a single season, except Roger Federer, who went 92-5 in 2006.