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Dirty Russian

Couverture
5 Avis
Ulysses Press, 2009 - 198 pages
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Next time you’re traveling or just chattin’ in Russia with your friends, drop the textbook formality and bust out with expressions they never teach you in school, including:

• Cool slang
• Funny insults
• Explicit sex terms
• Raw swear words


Dirty Russian teaches the casual expressions heard every day on the streets of Russia:

What's up?
kak de-LA?

I really gotta piss.
mnye O-chen NA-do pos-SAT.

Damn, you fine!
blin, nu ti i shi-KAR-nii!

Let's have an orgy.
da-VAI u-STRO-im OR-gi-yu.

This is crappy vodka.
d-ta VOD-ka khre-NO-va-ya.

Let's go get hammered.
poi-DYOM bukh-NYOM.

I'm gonna own you, bitch!
ya te-BYA VI-ye-blyu!

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Entertaining!

Avis d'utilisateur  - acc2012 - Overstock.com

Great compilation of slang and colloquialism which is not available in most language study guides. Consulter l'avis complet

Review: Dirty Russian: Everyday Slang from "What's Up?" to "F*%# Off!"

Avis d'utilisateur  - Michael - Goodreads

Terrible. Who is supposed to be the audience for this book? While it provides an interesting variety of current slang, the pronunciation guidance is poor and only occasionally is there more than a ... Consulter l'avis complet

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À propos de l'auteur (2009)

Erin Coyne has held various jobs in Russia including a Peace Corps volunteer and an NGO program director in Ukraine and Armenia. She has spent more nights drinking on the streets of Moscow than she will ever admit to and filling far too much time taking long train trips through Eastern Europe, going to concerts, and hanging out in seedy bars and rock clubs doing "research." She is currently working on a PhD in Slavic Linguistics at UC Berkeley. Erin's husband Igor Fisun is a native of Kiev, Ukraine where he worked for a several years in water bottling factory before quitting his 9-5 to pursue freelance engraving. He currently hangs out in Berkeley bars teaching the clientele how to curse in Russian.

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