English phrases Russians CAN'T TRANSLATE

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Пікірлер: 135

  • @DarkDragonRus
    @DarkDragonRus12 күн бұрын

    Soo, "the problem of the Russian language" is not that you can't translate English words into Russian but that Russian have many ways to translate them that are more context sensitive. Which makes Russian language more accurate. It's sounds to me that the video is mislabeled and should be called "Russian phrases that English can't deferentiate".

  • @jakezufall8479

    @jakezufall8479

    5 күн бұрын

    There are far more English words than Russian. The Russian language is archaic and incomplete

  • @atblazer
    @atblazer12 күн бұрын

    "to hang out" можно перевести и буквально - "зависать". "Давай зависнем" - "Let's hang out"

  • @rzhanina

    @rzhanina

    12 күн бұрын

    и много кто сейчас говорит "зависать"? мне кажется, это выражение из разряда "не так ли"

  • @atblazer

    @atblazer

    12 күн бұрын

    @@rzhanina да постоянно слышу и сам использую (27лет). Плюс вопрос стоял что это "непереводимо", хотя и в русском и в английском используется одно и тоже выражение. И буквальный перевод означает тоже самое что и английская фраза)

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    Translate the following sentence: "Let's hang out at the computer club" xD

  • @rzhanina

    @rzhanina

    12 күн бұрын

    @@DarkDragonRus и будет фраза из 00х

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    @@rzhanina которую могут говорить как посетители, так и компьютеры)

  • @elamoore7897
    @elamoore789715 күн бұрын

    i wanted to say how helpful i have found your channel. started learning russian 2 years ago. this place has helped me stay motivated with easy to watch quick lessons that keep me inspired and wanting to learn more. ❤

  • @Yupppi
    @Yupppi12 күн бұрын

    I heard "it's impossible to have fun in Russia". I really enjoy the sentiment that you don't just leave things hanging in Russian like "let's do something" and in the end nothing gets done, you have to be active and decisive about it.

  • @Bread992
    @Bread99215 күн бұрын

    Tbh I think you can say "have fun" as "повеселитесь там!" but what Feodor suggested (хорошо вам провести время) is more default and formal.

  • @Rilintar-live
    @Rilintar-live14 күн бұрын

    I'm russian and recently caught myself at trying to say "good for you" in russian as an answer to "I have passed my exam", and at the time I came to "рад за тебя". It's funny that I chose English feeling in my mind and couldn't express it, I stumbled.

  • @EddyJean-claude

    @EddyJean-claude

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Rilintar-live I'm american(not by birth) n have been learning russian for only 8 months. Immediately, браво для ты came to mind. Is that a wrong sentence?

  • @Rilintar-live

    @Rilintar-live

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@EddyJean-claude we usually don't say "bravo" but in this situation you do can just say "bravo" without "for you". You can say "молодéц", "рад за тебя", "неплохо", "хорошо", "прекрасно"... But literally "bravo for you" doesn't exist in Russian. "Рад за тебя" translates as "I'm glad for you". "Я" throws out. But russians are usually very tolerant to improper Russian if you are a tourist. And your "браво для ты" will understand, and help you anyway. P.S. you forgot cases. When you use "для" you should use genitive case of "ты" - "тебя".

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    *с сарказмом* ну молодец, чё Или как часто говорят в моей семье: "Возьми дырку от бублика".

  • @user-gl9tt9kq7o

    @user-gl9tt9kq7o

    12 күн бұрын

    @@EddyJean-claude just say молодчик или клёво, very close in meaning to the slightly disdainful good for you, depends on context and intonation of course. браво is also ok, but a bit sugary.

  • @sitteenose
    @sitteenose15 күн бұрын

    To hang out is a fairly recent addition to the spoken English language it really doesn't make sense but we all know what it means Loving the videos

  • @EddyJean-claude

    @EddyJean-claude

    14 күн бұрын

    @@sitteenose recent being like 30+ 😭

  • @wolfie854

    @wolfie854

    14 күн бұрын

    And mainly used in the US in this meaning. Not a British English usage.

  • @NeonBeeCat

    @NeonBeeCat

    14 күн бұрын

    Its a phrasal verb

  • @EddyJean-claude

    @EddyJean-claude

    13 күн бұрын

    @@wolfie854 so what is the Briton term, then?

  • @wolfie854

    @wolfie854

    13 күн бұрын

    @@EddyJean-claude Maybe 'hang about'? But it's not exactly the same. Maybe 'knock about with' ?

  • @romanbykov5922
    @romanbykov592212 күн бұрын

    translating words is not translation, and the statement that something is "untranslatable" is sheer BS. Anything that can be said in one language can be said in another. And it's not about translating words.

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    To be more accurate, every known concept in one language can be translated into another. There is many words that just don't have concepts or "mental images" for more tribal languages that make direct translation without showing or explaining the concept impossible and then the word to describe it concept in the language of whoever explains it is more likely to become "lended" word for this concept in the language like "hentai" or "carousel". Or some mutation of this word, like tea for chai or hanbabao for hamburger.

  • @romanbykov5922

    @romanbykov5922

    7 күн бұрын

    @@DarkDragonRus это я и имел в виду, всё верно.

  • @AestheticCoconut509

    @AestheticCoconut509

    6 күн бұрын

    Exactly!

  • @campbell1446
    @campbell144615 күн бұрын

    Not too late to sign up for Fedor's summer Russian bootcamp! No, I'm not getting paid to say this. 😊

  • @TBiz81
    @TBiz8112 күн бұрын

    You’re an amazing teacher. I love your style. Please keep doing everything that you are doing.

  • @chadbailey7038
    @chadbailey703814 күн бұрын

    Great video. I love topics like this. I think you did one about the saying: “ I’m excited!” Which was helpful. Because I always wondered how to express that idea

  • @kishka7
    @kishka714 күн бұрын

    I am Russian American - grew up speaking Russian and English in California. A GREAT challenge for translation is to translate popular American rock n roll songs into Russian. For example the Stones - Ley's Spend the Night Together. I tried Billy Joel's "For the Longest Time" - I came up with "Na Vecki Vek". It's quite a challenge - ESPECIALLY to maintain the rhythm and sense of the song!!!

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    Na Veki Vechniye / На Веки Вечные is the Russian for "For the Longest Time" And yes, translating poetry and song lyrics is way harder than translating regular text, one must be fluent in both languages to do this. So it would sound beautiful and kept the meaning.

  • @natashacollier5248

    @natashacollier5248

    14 күн бұрын

    Where’s the accent on your KZread name? 😂

  • @kishka7

    @kishka7

    13 күн бұрын

    @@natashacollier5248 The first syllable. KISHka7. Kishka in Russian is a tube or intestine. It can also refer to a garden hose. I simply took the TUBE in KZread and used it. I'm always mixing Russian and English in sign-on things and passwords. makes it interesting !

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    You absolutely shouldn't mention how you "generate" your passwords lol

  • @DarkDragonRus

    @DarkDragonRus

    12 күн бұрын

    Если бы ты ночью распрощалась со мной. Все равно осталась бы музыка. Делать болше нечего, я так вдохновлен тобой. Не было такого в мои века... Как-то так? Я вообще не думаю, что "На века" тут подходит. Какой-то дополнительный смысл закладывает, которого не было в оригинале и банальное "очень долго" подойдет лучше.

  • @marcplanet4776
    @marcplanet477615 күн бұрын

    How about “зависать” for hang out? Mы зависали в баре.

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    Yes, “зависа́ть” is exactly the word that Russians came up with to translate "hang out" literally. But it also has other meanings. When said about computer or other device it means "to freeze", stop working from excessive load or an error, can be also said in this exact sense about a person. When said about flying object it means holding the same position in the air, like helicopter or drone or somebody in the highest point of a jump.

  • @marcplanet4776

    @marcplanet4776

    14 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher Yes, we would say “hover” in English for the last meaning you mentioned.

  • @rusinkaRus

    @rusinkaRus

    9 күн бұрын

    В своей компании мы ещё иногда говорим «давайте затусим». Правда, никто из нас не тусит по барам и дискотекам, в нашем случае это означает просто собраться вместе либо дома, либо на природе))))

  • @longarm498

    @longarm498

    5 күн бұрын

    @@rusinkaRus Мне кажется, но я могу ошибаться: " тусоваться" и другие производные от этого слова, пошли из уголовной "фени", тусовать колоду карт, при тусовании карты(пиплы) собирают вместе.......!

  • @michaelpellegrini7682
    @michaelpellegrini768211 күн бұрын

    Good job and good info

  • @IsraelJudah-ms9iw
    @IsraelJudah-ms9iw14 күн бұрын

    You are so awesome. Thank you for this! This is so important. These tools will be put to good use!

  • @Benkerosadon7890
    @Benkerosadon789013 күн бұрын

    Big Guy Fedor, I signed up for your boot-camp course yesterday. I still have to finish the exam. I will do this today. 😀Cheburashka

  • @legurl53
    @legurl5314 күн бұрын

    Мне очень нужно было эти фразы! Огромное спасибо Федору! Джессика Хартселл ❤

  • @DarkDragonRus
    @DarkDragonRus12 күн бұрын

    0:16 - повесилиться. Sometimes оторваться or побеситься. 2:02 - желаю повесилиться or удачно оторваться

  • @maksimsmelchak7433
    @maksimsmelchak743315 күн бұрын

    Спасибо большое.

  • @EddyJean-claude
    @EddyJean-claude14 күн бұрын

    You forgot the 3rd meaning of "to go out". Which is dating sm1 romantically...or go on a date. Ex. I've been going out with for 3 months now. As....I've been dating her .....

  • @bshthrasher
    @bshthrasher14 күн бұрын

    The word Тусова́ться is rarely used like this lately, with time it has transformed into shorter and more common Туси́ть. Words Тусо́вка and Ту́са are used like 50/50, depending on context, because they mean both a group of people and a party. Well, this sounds funny because party is exactly a gathering of invited people (partners) in the first place. But in Russian "тусовка" is a slang word so it's not used for political parties or romantic partnership, for those there's a formal word "па́ртия" borrowed from English as is. So here we come to an important conclusion - in English "party" means any gathering whether it's for serious business or just to idle, but "тусовка" means a gathering only to idle / celebrate / have fun, for serious stuff there are different words. Some examples of the slang usage: Можно у тебя потуси́ть немного? - Can I hang out at your place for a while? Зату́сим / Тусанë́м сегодня? - Shall we hang out today? Ну, чё, погнали туси́ть? - Ok, so, let's go hang out / have some fun? Приходи, у нас тут ту́са! - Come, we're having a party here! Здесь такая стрë́мная тусо́вка собралась, что я собираюсь свали́ть... - There's such a weird crowd here that I'm gonna leave... I've highlighted it, but remember, letter Ё is always stressed. картёжник - card player платёж - payment And don't forget to use the letter, because the meaning change can be huge, like for example: передохнём - we'll take a rest передо́хнем - we'll die out

  • @marcplanet4776

    @marcplanet4776

    14 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher Great explanation, thanks! Also, it looks like the verbs тусить, затусить, потусить don’t have a first-person singular form (I can’t say я тусу). So, in this case you’d have to use тусовать /тусоваться? Я тусую or я тусуюсь

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    @@marcplanet4776, the correct form is "я тушу́", it's totally usable. But in a different context it can be also used to say "я тушу́ огонь" - "I'm putting out fire" or "я тушу́ овощи" - "I'm stewing vegetables". "Я тусуюсь" is also fine. Я тушу́ / тусу́юсь здесь уже 3-й час. - I'm hanging out here for over 2 hours now.

  • @marcplanet4776

    @marcplanet4776

    14 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher ok, I thought that «я тушу» referred only to the verb тушить (put out, extinguish, as you mentioned). Interesting that it can be used for the verb тусить as well.

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    @@marcplanet4776, the logic is similar to the pairs писа́ть - пишу́, беси́ть - бешу́. Туси́ть -> тушу́, but this form is different тусова́ться -> тусу́юсь.

  • @user-ow6sc4fy8p

    @user-ow6sc4fy8p

    8 күн бұрын

    Я будучи носителем русского могу с тобой согласиться

  • @commentonly6053
    @commentonly605314 күн бұрын

    А сказать "Повеселись"? Не пойдёт для have fun?

  • @randomnoname6657
    @randomnoname665713 күн бұрын

    Думаю, что я мог бы заменить "have fun". Есть слово веселиться, но можно добавить приставку "по" ( [по]веселиться). Таким образом, если моя девушка уходит на мероприятие/вечеринку/встречу, то при прощании, я мог бы сказать "повеселитесь" или "желаю повеселиться". Что, по своей сути, полностью передает смысловую нагрузку фразы "have fun".

  • @ilyasboudibi6999
    @ilyasboudibi699913 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much 👍❤😊

  • @benjilinus5963
    @benjilinus596311 күн бұрын

    Да лана, можно сказать "Повеселитесь там сегодня 😊".

  • @abnauau
    @abnauau12 күн бұрын

    Более подходящее для русского в "makes sense" - это АРГУМЕНТ. Аля: "Аргумент. Убедил. Так и есть"

  • @DobriyAh
    @DobriyAh13 күн бұрын

    hang out = зависнуть

  • @genevievefosa6815
    @genevievefosa68159 күн бұрын

    There is the classic question and answer sequence, of a mother to her son: "Where did you go?" "Out." "What did you do?" "Nothing." I wonder if that would even translate to Russian.

  • @alexg9996
    @alexg999612 күн бұрын

    Well we can say "хорошо повеселиться", I don't.. really see anything wrong with that.. When she'll come back, I could ask "повеселились?". Like, that would not be something out of the ordinary

  • @kishka7
    @kishka714 күн бұрын

    For a GREAT musical translation from English to Russian of a well known musical check out "CHICAGO". Get the sound track. Then find the Russian translated version done by Phillip Kirkorov. YOU WILL BE AMAZED!! The Russian singers he uses sound PRECISELY like the American singers. The fascinating part is many of the idioms in the words when translated into Russian ARE MORE ACCURATE and EXPRESSIVE!! When my wife found the translation online I listened to it and was TOTALLY AMAZED!!!!

  • @jarvisa12345
    @jarvisa1234514 күн бұрын

    When you were discussing ‘have fun’ or ‘hang out’ I was expecting ‘гулять’ to be mentioned.

  • @NobleLabs
    @NobleLabs14 күн бұрын

    Serious Learner here: It seems that the website link in the description is not taking me to the website. (Serious Learner - started learning about 2 years ago for my fiancée (and possible professional opportunities) and I am planning to try for the TRKI soonish.)

  • @zloychechen5150
    @zloychechen515011 күн бұрын

    I'd say тусоваться in the modern implication is a completely direct translation of "to hang out ". Or even "тусить", which is a second order slang.

  • @AliJolikov
    @AliJolikov3 күн бұрын

    If Russian doesn’t “have fun” then “having fun” doesn’t exist.

  • @robbo415
    @robbo41514 күн бұрын

    Do you know why U in English often becomes В in Russian? Like autobus > автобус, Europe > Европа, Australia > Австралия? Is it related to the Latin root?

  • @manukartofanu

    @manukartofanu

    5 күн бұрын

    Unlikely. Autobus and Europe have Greek roots. And it's too easy to provide examples of words that begin with "ау" and come from Greek. Аудит (audit), аудитория (audience), аура (aura), аутентичный (authentic).

  • @ruralsquirrel5158
    @ruralsquirrel515814 күн бұрын

    Hmmm, here I was thinking "to have fun" is untranslatable into German.

  • @mardimardi2110

    @mardimardi2110

    14 күн бұрын

    Hab Spass! / Habt Spass! (Spass haben) 😄🙋🏻‍♀️

  • @Ravege98
    @Ravege9812 күн бұрын

    Can you translate: Surely, you can’t be serious. I am serious… and don’t call me Shirley.

  • @zerobi9468
    @zerobi946814 күн бұрын

    In Australia at least, "to go out" can also mean "to go on a date (with someone)" or "to be in a (romantic) relationship". I'm not sure if this meaning is used outside of Australia though.

  • @HelenA-fd8vl

    @HelenA-fd8vl

    13 күн бұрын

    We use it in that sense in the UK, too.

  • @larsswig912

    @larsswig912

    5 күн бұрын

    it's a general expression in English, not just in Australia or UK.

  • @BaH4o3eH
    @BaH4o3eH19 сағат бұрын

    What about "Fair enough"?

  • @manukartofanu
    @manukartofanu5 күн бұрын

    Да можно сказать по-русски "повеселись там" вместо "have fun" в английском уходящей жене. В чем проблема?

  • @KOZMOGRAFX
    @KOZMOGRAFX14 күн бұрын

    Trying to translate an exact phrase word for word is a difficult exercise when the English phrase itself doesn't DIRECTLY mean what the words suggest, which is why it's better to use the closest match of the intended message. To "hang" means to suspend something with a rope or over an edge, and "out" is basically the opposite of "inside", so trying to translate the words "Let's hang out" directly is like saying "Let's go outside to hang or suspend ourselves with ropes", which would be a head scratcher. The intended message is "let's get together just to relax and/or not do anything in particular". One could then have fun trying to explain what "hang out" alludes to, like "being a couple of full sacks hanging in storage, not going anywhere or doing anything urgent or productive".

  • @manukartofanu

    @manukartofanu

    5 күн бұрын

    It’s funny that sometimes figurative meanings in different languages coincide. And "hang out" is just such an example of such a phrase. "hang out" can be correctly translated literally as "зависнуть," and in the figurative sense, it will mean exactly the same in Russian as in English. "Let's hang out" translates to "Давай зависнем."

  • @samtkach5255
    @samtkach525511 күн бұрын

    Let's hang out= давай потусуемся

  • @mother1911
    @mother191114 күн бұрын

    привет, видела твое видео про перевод тик токов янчика, но как насчет разбор русских мемов и шуток? я думаю, что иностранцам может быть интересно узнать больше о такой части русских

  • @Notyourbis
    @Notyourbis14 күн бұрын

    I don't know if it's the same in Russian or not,but in Arabic there are way more phrases to say "it doesn't make sense" than "it makes sense"

  • @ayadalkh
    @ayadalkh14 күн бұрын

    Спасибо большое

  • @zeinababdulkarim6833
    @zeinababdulkarim683312 күн бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @wariolandgoldpiramid
    @wariolandgoldpiramid13 күн бұрын

    Nah, the phrase "Давайте вместе проведём время" isn't one that was in my social circles. It feels more natural to suggest "Давайте (вместе) сходим куда-нибудь" - how about we go somewhere nice.

  • @CHEMICmusic
    @CHEMICmusic15 күн бұрын

    I am having fun.... HeT.

  • @marcplanet4776
    @marcplanet477615 күн бұрын

    And what about “развлекайся” for (have fun!) ?

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    It is used sometimes. More often by parents to the kids and quite rare between peers. The reason is pretty simple, in Russian “развлекайся” sounds like a permission and not like a wish towards other person. And it is exactly because we hear it from parents when we grow up so it has this condescending tone to it like "I allow you to have fun". Of course there's nothing wrong with the word itself, it is absolutely fine in terms of meaning, literally it means "entertain yourself".

  • @marcplanet4776

    @marcplanet4776

    14 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher Thanks, that’s helpful. Would the meaning change if i used the perfective form of the verb: развлекись! ? I have the impression that when we use the imperative of the verb in imperfective form (развлекайся) it has more of this tone of permission like you said.

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    @@marcplanet4776, good thinking, that makes sense! Yeah you can use it ofc, but it doesn't sound natural as a standalone word, a native would say it like this for example: Ладно, развлекись там! - Ok, have fun there! Or like this: Развлекись по полной! - Have fun to the fullest!

  • @manukartofanu

    @manukartofanu

    5 күн бұрын

    @@marcplanet4776 "Развлекись" sounds unnatural, and this form is more likely to sound like a command, simply because it is rarely used. "Развлекайся" is a frequently used form, and it doesn't sound like permission, it's a wish. Perhaps someone is traumatized by their mother from childhood. But that's not your problem, guessing how someone was traumatized by their mother in childhood. Especially when learning a new language. In general usage, it is simply a wish. Similarly, "выздоравливай" is often used as a wish. Also, be careful when constructing phrases with interjections. They can change the meaning of a phrase to the opposite with different words. And I advise you to check what people tell you in dictionaries. Even native speakers sometimes misunderstand the meaning of words or phrases. The phrase "Ладно, развлекись там" is more likely to be perceived as permission than your original version. Simply because the word "ладно" is used in situations where you reluctantly agree to something.

  • @PianoElipse
    @PianoElipse6 күн бұрын

    1:30 сам виселица

  • @xpavpushka
    @xpavpushka12 күн бұрын

    Мне интересно будут ли у тебя уроки "уличного" русского. Например сокращения до "мож пойдём куда?". То есть максимально ленивая речь :D

  • @EddyJean-claude
    @EddyJean-claude14 күн бұрын

    Just thought of another. "Chill out"!! I'd love to hear the russian translation for that😂

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    Chill out! = Остынь! (letter O is unstressed so it sounds as A, the word literally means - get colder)

  • @marcplanet4776

    @marcplanet4776

    14 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher I’ve also heard the youth slang чилить or чиллить, which sounds like a direct borrowing from English.

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    14 күн бұрын

    @@marcplanet4776, that's right, and they borrowed it not because there wasn't a direct translation, maybe it was because they didn't understand the combination of "chill" and "out" completely or maybe just to sound cooler, maybe both, and sometimes foreign words are even getting borrowed just for fun :)

  • @EddyJean-claude

    @EddyJean-claude

    13 күн бұрын

    @@bshthrasher always to sound cooler.....it's a youth thing. We did it ✌

  • @Gregory47342
    @Gregory4734214 күн бұрын

    Я понимаю is how I say It makes sense. I guess I am not quite right. Thanks for the suggestions.

  • @romanovtoly
    @romanovtoly11 күн бұрын

    "Повеселись там" - плохой вариант?

  • @calicojack7264
    @calicojack726415 күн бұрын

    Going OUT OUT...

  • @kakayato_akasia
    @kakayato_akasia10 күн бұрын

    Весели́ться🥳 Ви́селится💀

  • @airflight9350
    @airflight935019 сағат бұрын

    Hang out - отрываться

  • @ShaareiZoharDaas
    @ShaareiZoharDaas14 күн бұрын

    чтобы повеселиться

  • @Mark_888
    @Mark_88812 күн бұрын

    А в чём проблема сказать - Повеселись или повеселитесь..?

  • @bruxsa

    @bruxsa

    11 күн бұрын

    Вот да. Хорошо вам повеселиться - это не просто возможная конструкция, но и часто используемое выражение.

  • @manukartofanu

    @manukartofanu

    5 күн бұрын

    Проблема в том, что тогда видео не запилишь, что якобы всё намного сложнее, чем буквальный перевод. Не, оно, конечно, бывает, но тут явно все примеры мимо.

  • @thenebula7734
    @thenebula77344 күн бұрын

    Everything is easy to translate. Hope in comment below everything is solved

  • @mitchyoung93
    @mitchyoung9311 күн бұрын

    Как сказать -сонскрин- на Русском

  • @EddyJean-claude
    @EddyJean-claude14 күн бұрын

    I just searched the term "running on empty" in russian. N I'm pretty sure the translation's not correct.

  • @haroshea

    @haroshea

    14 күн бұрын

    Nice question! You can try this construction: " через не могу" ( even though I can't ) "Я работаю через не могу." = I work even though I can't work. "Я держусь через не могу" = I'm staying strong even though I can’t staying strong. etc. This pattern is very common in spoken Russian.

  • @EddyJean-claude

    @EddyJean-claude

    12 күн бұрын

    @@haroshea just found one closer. Функционирование без горючее. Would native russian speaker more likely say that?

  • @bshthrasher

    @bshthrasher

    6 күн бұрын

    @@EddyJean-claude, we don't really say it like that, but yeah, if you said "я уже на пустом баке работаю" (I'm working on empty tank already), or "у меня топливо закончилось" / "у меня горючее закончилось" (I'm out of fuel) people would get what you mean of course. Usually when we're tired we say "я без сил" = I'm exhausted, or "я валюсь с ног" = I'm falling off my feet. Drivers have an idiom "я обсох", which means "I'm dry / I've dried out", they use it when tank goes empty on the road, non-drivers would be having a hard time understanding this one properly in a different context :)

  • @fratnov
    @fratnov2 күн бұрын

    Fun doesn’t exist in Russia

  • @AvidAfrican
    @AvidAfrican14 күн бұрын

    Kaifuit)

  • @PatGunn
    @PatGunn13 күн бұрын

    "Sovereignty of neighboring countries" is apparently a difficult thing to say or think in Russian.

  • @ghaliamostafa
    @ghaliamostafa9 күн бұрын

    It seems so difficult to learn Russian 😢

  • @zhizhail4711

    @zhizhail4711

    5 күн бұрын

    It's not true. There are many children who can speak Russian from the age of 3-4. So, this language isn't hard, even if kids can speak it. (jk)

  • @Marat_Kazey
    @Marat_Kazey3 күн бұрын

    I have fan. В Москве жара

  • @RobAllbanks
    @RobAllbanks15 күн бұрын

    So you can’t have fun in russia🤷🏾‍♂️, you are right, some things can’t be translated 🤦🏾‍♂️🫡

  • @SunriseLAW
    @SunriseLAW12 күн бұрын

    My understanding is that expressions that cannot be directly translated are called IDIOMS. For example, "I am all ears" means "I am listening carefully" and it loses its intended meaning when translated.

  • @aaronnester5132

    @aaronnester5132

    12 күн бұрын

    Being an idiom has nothing to do with translation.

  • @manukartofanu

    @manukartofanu

    5 күн бұрын

    Well, not exactly. It's just a comprehensible idiom. In Russian, you can say "Во все уши," and it will mean the same as "I'm all ears."

  • @Almira_Heree
    @Almira_Heree15 күн бұрын

    27 second ago 😨😨

  • @gegemec
    @gegemec11 күн бұрын

    Can Russian's say "Our war on Ukraine is a crime against humanity for which we are all culpable" ... Maybe not though for reasons other than linguistics.

  • @i-Fall

    @i-Fall

    11 күн бұрын

    Did you really open the video to write such a comment? Really, man?

  • @bhangrafan4480
    @bhangrafan44808 күн бұрын

    "I love NATO".

  • @Antagon666
    @Antagon66612 күн бұрын

    I have another one: "I surrender" or "My bad" or "I shouldn't have invaded sovereign country" or "I'm sorry"

  • @olmetothai
    @olmetothai13 күн бұрын

    Putins troll We dont care

  • @user-gl9tt9kq7o
    @user-gl9tt9kq7o12 күн бұрын

    Hang out ещё и "болтаться" как в "молодняк болтается у гаражей" - "the kids are hanging out in the garage", перевод естественно с поправкой на особенности быта и жилой застройки.

  • @RubelHoccen-nv2kx
    @RubelHoccen-nv2kx14 күн бұрын

    ❤❤❤