Raion
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raion (mā siá rayon) sī chi̍t chióng tī kúi-nā ê āu So͘-liân kok-ka (chhin-chhiūⁿ oblast ê chi̍t pō͘-hūn) lāi sú-iōng ê hêng-chèng-khu tan-ūi. Chit-ê gí-sû goân-chū Hoat-gí ê "rayon".[1] It-poaⁿ lâi kóng, raion tī Bân-lâm-gí ê gí-kéng tiong, ē-tàng hoan-e̍k chò koān.
Bo̍k-chiân iáu ū kok teh sú-iōng chit khoán hêng-chèng-khu.
Kok-ka | Sò͘-liōng | Pī-chù |
---|---|---|
Abkhazia ê koān | 7 | first-level |
Azerbaijan ê koān | 59 | first-level, 18 other entities at that level exist |
Belarus ê koān | 118 | second-level below oblasts and Minsk City |
Moldova ê koān | 32 | first-level, 5 other entities at that level exist |
Lâm Ossetia ê koān | 4 | first-level, 1 other entity at that level exists |
Lō͘-se-a ê koān | 1731 | second-level below federal subjects |
Transnistria ê koān | 5 | first-level |
Ukraina ê koān | 490 and 118 city raions | second-level, numbers as of 2004, including Sevastopol and Crimea |
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