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Oblasts

Oblasts is a term with two principal uses in English. As a geographic designation, an oblast is a first-level administrative region in several Slavic-speaking countries, varying in powers and structure by nation. As a biological term, oblasts appears in the names of certain immature or precursor cell types, though more commonly the suffix -blast is used to indicate such cells.

Geographically, oblasts function as subnational units with their own local governance, capitals, and administrative centers. The

Biologically, the term is encountered in the names of several immature or precursor cell types. The plural

In summary, oblasts denotes both a set of administrative regions in several countries and a family of

concept
is
most
associated
with
Russia,
Ukraine,
Bulgaria,
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
and
some
neighboring
states.
In
Russia,
oblasts
are
federal
subjects
with
regional
governments
and
constitutions;
there
are
46
oblasts.
Ukraine
uses
the
term
for
its
24
regions,
though
the
system
has
undergone
reforms
and
changes
in
status
for
various
territories.
Bulgaria
has
28
oblasts,
Kazakhstan
14,
and
Kyrgyzstan
7.
Each
oblast
is
typically
divided
into
districts
(raions)
and
municipalities,
and
the
degree
of
autonomy
or
fiscal
authority
varies
by
country.
oblasts
commonly
appears
in
examples
such
as
osteoblasts
(bone-forming
cells),
chondroblasts
(cartilage-forming
cells),
myoblasts
(muscle
precursors),
and
neuroblasts
(nerve
cell
precursors).
An
embryoblast
refers
to
the
inner
cell
mass
of
the
blastocyst
that
gives
rise
to
the
embryo.
These
uses
share
a
Latin-Greek
etymology
related
to
forming
regions
or
buds,
but
they
are
unrelated
to
political
oblasts
beyond
the
linguistic
root.
immature
cell
types
in
biology,
two
distinct
meanings
that
share
a
historical
linguistic
lineage.