How do you actually write blyat in Russian?
Hey everyone,
I wanted to ask, how do you actually spell blyat in Russian?
Is it блият or блят, I wrote this off the top of my head, but I think I would take the first one, so блият
Hey everyone,
I wanted to ask, how do you actually spell blyat in Russian?
Is it блият or блят, I wrote this off the top of my head, but I think I would take the first one, so блият
I received the following sentence: The only problem was that the machine that takes your impressions was broken. Now I have corrected: The only problem was that the machine that takes your impressions was broken. That sounded logical to me, but now the person needs an explanation, and I just can't divide this sentence into…
I wonder the Russians (Russian Germans) who came to us in the 90s, how well can they identify Russian speakers when they speak German? I know that I unfortunately speak German with a slight accent; I've had to listen to that all my life from many native Germans and Russian speakers too. Until now I…
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I constantly see people on various platforms writing King Baldwin(V) with a w instead of a u. How does this happen and which letter is correct?
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As far as I know, it means Bljatch. And that’s what you’d write:
блять
Just enter the word in Google translators, then you’ll see if there’s a correction or something.
блядь.
With softness sign at the end.
LG
But if I’m not there, then it’d be blyada, or it’d fade a because of the softness sign
No, it’s just “d.”
For “There” there’s another a to the end, then you have the Russian word for yes.
LG
Because it’s very vulgar.
And why not use it?
It’s called blyadj. And it’s a word you shouldn’t use.
ups, right, mistakenly with я.