White-
White- (бело-), a prefix used by Bolsheviks to designate their real and alleged enemies of all sorts, in analogy with White Army.
- White-Guardist ("белогвардеец"): a member of White Guard. The members of the White movement never applied the term "White Guardist" to themselves. Also, White-Guardists were called simply "Whites" ('белые', 'беляки') by the opponents.
- White-emigrant (белоэмигрант): any citizen of Russian Empire who left the country during the Russian Revolution and Russian Civil War (1917-1922). White emigrants were percieved as a threat to the Soviet state, a source of espionage and counter-revolutionary plots.
- White-Pole (белополяк): a term that appeared during the Polish-Soviet War, and later reemerged during the annexation of a part of Poland in the times of World War II.
- White-Finn (белофинн): a term introduced during the unsuccessful attempt to subjugate Finland in 1917-1918, and reintroduced during the propaganda related to the preparation of the Winter War against Finland.
- White-Chinese (белокитаец): a term denoting Chinese forces that fought together with the White Army in Siberia and the Russian Far East, as well as anti-communist Chinese during the Chinese revolutionary movement.
These terms were supposed to distinguish, e.g., "good Poles" from "bad Poles", and usually bore a derogatory gist.
To obtain a prefix "white-" in one's papers while being imprisoned in the Soviet Union automatically meant application of Article 58.