View Full Version : Русский
SyTH88
August 27th, 2004, 02:36 PM
Русский Русский Русский
Herman van Houten
August 28th, 2004, 04:15 AM
Looks cool. :)
That is one of the reasons I still use the Microsucks Browser instead of Mozilla. I like to see those non-latin letters, even though I have no idea what they mean.
SyTH88
August 28th, 2004, 03:49 PM
Looks cool. :)
That is one of the reasons I still use the Microsucks Browser instead of Mozilla. I like to see those non-latin letters, even though I have no idea what they mean.
This is Russian.
Это Русский.
Herman van Houten
August 28th, 2004, 04:41 PM
You are right, Mozilla does it better! :D
Intrepid
August 28th, 2004, 09:55 PM
Pусские стоят гордый.
SyTH88
August 28th, 2004, 11:56 PM
Pусские стоят гордый.
Ok ok, take it easy on me i only been in Russian for one week now, mercy, mercy, mercy!
:D :p
SyTH88
August 29th, 2004, 12:47 AM
Translation: Russians are/stand proud/proudly.
I can't wait till i have my vocabulary developed a bit more. Right now its agnoizing since I can't pronounce alot of words because I don't know how to sound the letters out, we didn't get through the whole alphabet yet, just far enough to learn a few words. We got to hello, goodbye (both of the goodbyes, even the one that would in the word of the instructor get you slapped if you used it.) who are you and I am ______.
Anyhow, I'm enjoying it thus far, just need to buy myself something to mark my keyboard with so I know where the cyrillic letters go instead of having to look at a book. :)
Also, my Oxford English/Russian dictionary is in my trunk. :(
Heck, tonight I was over a friends house and he asked me how to say a bad word in russian, only thing I could pronounce worth a damn right was the slang word for prick, can't pronounce the word nigger yet since I don't know how to pronounce the letter ы.
Intrepid
August 29th, 2004, 05:54 AM
Originally Posted by SyTH88
I can't wait till i have my vocabulary developed a bit more. Right now its agnoizing since I can't pronounce alot of words because I don't know how to sound the letters out, we didn't get through the whole alphabet yet, just far enough to learn a few words. We got to hello, goodbye (both of the goodbyes, even the one that would in the word of the instructor get you slapped if you used it.) who are you and I am ______.
Anyhow, I'm enjoying it thus far, just need to buy myself something to mark my keyboard with so I know where the cyrillic letters go instead of having to look at a book.
Also, my Oxford English/Russian dictionary is in my trunk.
Heck, tonight I was over a friends house and he asked me how to say a bad word in russian, only thing I could pronounce worth a damn right was the slang word for prick, can't pronounce the word nigger yet since I don't know how to pronounce the letter ы.
It's a real "bear" to learn, ain't it? The cyrillic letters have had me throwing things all over the house. I don't know if I'll ever learn it. One thing that has helped me, though, at least in conversational Russian, is the Pimsleur sets. You might be able to find them on some P2P networks, I'm not sure. Now, if someone talks veeery slowly, I can somewhat understand them. I hardly ever talk to Russians, so it seems to fade quickly.
Good luck.
Originally Posted by J.P. Slovjanski
The letter you refer to, is ...
Are you originally from Eastern Europe?
SyTH88
August 30th, 2004, 12:27 AM
The letter you refer to, is called 'yerih', it is pronounced like 'i', but with slight difference that I cannot describe in written words. Nigger should be pronounced Ne-gr(roll the r at the end, it is like the word for Tiger).
Living Language sells the Russian Complete Course(can be found at Barnes & Noble or Borders) which is about $25.00 and comes with 3 CDs as opposed to tapes.
If you are not familiar with Slavic languages it is far easier to learn Serbo-Croatian. Serbian Cyrillic is easier to read than Russian, but I started taking Russian first so I never had a choice.
The local college here doesn't have Slavic languages, just spic, gook, chink, nip, dune coon, German, Italian, french and polish I think.
SyTH88
August 30th, 2004, 12:30 AM
Also the other reason I took Russian is because once I complete making all those DVDs for Tom Metzger, I plan on putting in a Russian subtitle in the PAL version. That way I can help throw gasoline on the fire in Russia.
Herman van Houten
August 30th, 2004, 02:52 AM
I disagree. They can learn from us and we can learn from our aryan brothers and sisters.
http://www.nationalism.org/
http://www.nationalism.org/vvv/vv.gif
Common words help to get the alphabet remember fast. Pronunciation can be learned by listening to songs while reading lyrics.
SyTH88
September 1st, 2004, 12:45 AM
Polish is a Slavic language but it is probably the most difficult. I would recommend learning French, as you might one day be interested in joining the French Foreign Legion. I would recommend learning Japanese because I am told that Japan offers an excellent example of a working racial state. They don't have a pejoritve term like "racism" in Japan. They call it order.
I STRONGLY am against mixing anything from the American "Movement" in Russia. It will only confuse certain young people and keep them from finding a place in Russia's existing successful nationalist organizations.
my bad, no polish. Chinese, Italian, French, German, Russian, Spanish and Arabic is all they teach.
SyTH88
September 1st, 2004, 12:49 AM
Polish is a Slavic language but it is probably the most difficult. I would recommend learning French, as you might one day be interested in joining the French Foreign Legion. I would recommend learning Japanese because I am told that Japan offers an excellent example of a working racial state. They don't have a pejoritve term like "racism" in Japan. They call it order.
I STRONGLY am against mixing anything from the American "Movement" in Russia. It will only confuse certain young people and keep them from finding a place in Russia's existing successful nationalist organizations.
Russia has a pretty vicious movement already going. They have already killed one turd of a university professor. So its not like stuff from the US would hurt them, it might actually be gasoline on the fire already brewing in Russia.
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