Learn Russian swear words | Part 1. Russian insults

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  • Опубліковано 6 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 87

  • @hackyourrussian4091
    @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому +9

    Hello Russian language hackers!
    This is an unusual video on my channel but I believe that you need to know Russian swear words so that you will not put yourself in awkward situations. In addition, the topic of the origin of Russian swear words is really interesting. You will not find some harsh swear words in my videos simply because they are prohibited to use on TV and I don't like them myself. Once again, the intention of this video is not to teach you some bad Russian words but to give you some insights of when and why these words are used in speech. Here are the timestamps:
    0:52 - Interesting facts
    3:58 - "Light" offensive words
    10:31 - "Average" offensive words
    12:24 - "Strong" offensive words
    Have fun!

  • @ceedee4516
    @ceedee4516 5 місяців тому +13

    thanks for the tutorial, now i can speak with russian buddies in CS:GO/CS2

  • @tasori.phenom
    @tasori.phenom 5 місяців тому +11

    Видео реально очень хорошо описывает слова, которые на самом деле описать нелегко, это похвально

  • @mustangrt8866
    @mustangrt8866 11 місяців тому +6

    8:58 also in italian

  • @qpwoeirutyalskdjfhgzmxncbv-c2b
    @qpwoeirutyalskdjfhgzmxncbv-c2b Рік тому +19

    дурак means fool I think

  • @lilyofthevalley5586
    @lilyofthevalley5586 11 місяців тому +6

    Such a beautiful sounding language!

  • @StudyCom
    @StudyCom 4 місяці тому +2

    I love your way of pronouncing Russia.

  • @AndiTheGuitarMan
    @AndiTheGuitarMan 4 місяці тому +2

    6:09, whats the title of the cartoon? want to watch in russian :D

    • @гвоздикакофейкова
      @гвоздикакофейкова 2 місяці тому

      This cartoon is from the Melnitsa studio. It is "Иван царевич и серый волк" (Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf).

  • @davidwagner6116
    @davidwagner6116 2 роки тому +4

    I like learning words I can use. Learning words I can't use is even better. Speciba bolshoy!

  • @jamelabarrogo3749
    @jamelabarrogo3749 2 роки тому +4

    YES!!! THANK YOU, MA'AM! I CAN USE THIS FOR MY "FRIENDS"!

  • @038Dude
    @038Dude 2 роки тому +9

    Hahaha in the Netherlands we say "doerak" as well, and it's used in the exact same way, that's funny.

  • @Miastarot
    @Miastarot 6 місяців тому +6

    I love that most examples are used by our president he's great

  • @exarchyrel3056
    @exarchyrel3056 Рік тому +5

    I am going to use Russian swears for trolling 😂

  • @maximilienandrews2084
    @maximilienandrews2084 4 роки тому +8

    Наконец-то! I was waiting for this since a year назад. Отлично 👌 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏👍👍👍👍👍😘😘😘

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому +5

      Really? 😁 Well, it was a "light" version. There will be a new video soon with some stronger swear words 🤪😅

    • @ZONTMUSOR
      @ZONTMUSOR 8 місяців тому +1

      Хаахахах, я очень надеюсь что ты специально так написал. Это прям точь-в-точь тот мем, в котором девушка внезапно в простой речи вставляет английские слова. Только тут наоборот

  • @darlenezamora1277
    @darlenezamora1277 4 роки тому +16

    Extremely classy to ban swear words in public and public platforms. 🧚‍♀️

  • @tacticaltoaster9143
    @tacticaltoaster9143 Рік тому +12

    Bro this part 1 💀

  • @tsmartin
    @tsmartin 4 роки тому +4

    I remember hearing son of a bitch in the movie "Patton".

  • @user-bp6dq9yw2f
    @user-bp6dq9yw2f 4 роки тому +7

    Thank you very much for an interesting lesson.

  • @Ronlawhouston
    @Ronlawhouston 8 місяців тому +2

    I do think English has a very rich tradition of swear words. You can take one word, say shit, and use it in so many different contexts. It's probably one of my most frequently used words.

    • @class87srule
      @class87srule 4 місяці тому +1

      English swear words are largely based on Anglo-Saxon and our Scandinavian heritage.😅

  • @Miastarot
    @Miastarot 6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for including the history 💜

  • @descent2oblivion
    @descent2oblivion 4 роки тому +10

    Ууу это так хорошее видео 😎👌
    With this words now I can become a hardbass compositor ⁦🇷🇺⁩😉 haha I'm joking but these are the kind of words they use a lot in that music 😅
    I liked a lot the video!
    Great work as always Mila 🤗
    Всего доброго и хорошего дня! ⁦☺️⁩

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому +1

      😅 Большое спасибо тебе, Эммануэль! Я рада, что тебе понравилось 😁❤️

    • @descent2oblivion
      @descent2oblivion 4 роки тому

      Да, мне очень нравится!
      Спасибо за всё ⁦☺️⁩

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому

      Пожалуйста ❤️

  • @algitablozyte9580
    @algitablozyte9580 4 роки тому +3

    Now I get why russians swear in Lithuania since it's not forrihibited in Lithuania. And I didn't heared it when I was in Russia

  • @CrèmeTropBrûlée
    @CrèmeTropBrûlée 4 роки тому +3

    In the first video, why does he say so many "бы" in the very same sentence ?

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому +2

      Well, normally there should be 2 particles "бы" in this sentence as it is an imaginary situation with a condition. But since there is no strict order of words in Russian sentences, in a fast speech Russian people tend to put more words or particles than needed (by mistake). Though it does not affect the meaning of his idea in this situation 😊

    • @CrèmeTropBrûlée
      @CrèmeTropBrûlée 4 роки тому +1

      Hack Your Russian I see, thank you for the explanation :p

  • @jelleehalor1795
    @jelleehalor1795 3 місяці тому

    None of these swearwords is actually really strong

  • @ericrose3877
    @ericrose3877 4 місяці тому +1

    Wonderful instruction to us. Westernrs can always use more insults!

  • @tyronethelost_boy940
    @tyronethelost_boy940 Рік тому +1

    NOT THE STOVE-

  • @mattrivera8587
    @mattrivera8587 4 роки тому +3

    This was funny... I liked it

  • @lisakorotkikh3943
    @lisakorotkikh3943 4 роки тому +4

    Cooool 😍

  • @Texasmilitarydepartmentvid9654

    Remember children we say Yebat Tebya Cyka.

  • @MrRonnyGreat
    @MrRonnyGreat 5 місяців тому

    Каким образом пелевин попал в один ряд с классиками? Он неплохой писатель, но до остальных не дотягивает по моему скромному мнению

  • @jenoyestewart1516
    @jenoyestewart1516 3 роки тому +1

    Are you afraid to swear? I realize that Russians don’t like to swear to foreigners.

  • @user-bp6dq9yw2f
    @user-bp6dq9yw2f 4 роки тому +2

    Learn Russian swear words | Part 1. Russian insults
    How to swear in Russian. Learn the origin of Russian curse words and have fun with Russian movies and TV-series. This video is made not to encourage you to swear in Russian but to undestand the real meaning of these words and to see in which situations they are usually applied.
    Russian swear words{MAT] first appeared approximately in the 12th century.
    There is a myth that they were introuduced into Russian language during the Mongolian invasion. Many swear words were considered holy and were used in special rituals to summon ancestors. In fact these swear words were not seen as bad words until the 18th century, many of them just signified certain organs and body parts {symbolized a new cycle of life}. But overtime they transformed and got negative meaning. Nevertheless, many Russian writers and poets often used swear words in their works and in oral speech.
    Among them are: Alexander Pushkin, Leo Tolstoy, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Anna Akhmatova, Ivan Bunin, Viktor Pelevin and others. They believed that , no matter their meaning these words were a part of the language, as well as a powerful tool to express emotions.
    HUMOR TV-SHOW KVN
    -Now imagine what would be if there were no Russian swear words.
    A щac{ сейчас} представьте чтобы было
    бы ,если бы не было русского мата .
    -Darling, I have broken your car.
    Дорогой , я разбила твою машину.
    Dorogoy , ya razbila tvoyu mashinu.
    -What a pity!
    Жаль !
    Zhal' !
    {{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}
    There are approximately 10,000 Russian swear words{including derivatives}.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    TV- SERIES: INTERNY
    -Come on! Where are you going?
    Ну давай ! Ну куда ты ?
    Nu davay ! Nu kuda ty ?
    -Russians have such expressive swear words.
    У русских такой выразительный мат.
    U russkikh takoy vyrazitel'nyy mat.
    -And how diverse it is!
    И такой разнообразный !
    I takoy raznoobraznyy !
    -Once you think that you know everything, and then your hear a new word.
    Вот уже думаeшь, что всё знаeшь, а вот какое-то новое слово.
    Vot uzhe dumaesh', chto vso znaesh', a vot kakoye-to novoye slovo.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Russian “MAT” ranks the 3rd in the world for number of swear words {after English and Dutch}
    Ругaтьcя Мaтoм= To swear
    INTERVIEW WITH MR. VLADIMIR PUTIN-RUSSIA’S PRESIDENT
    -Vladimir Vladimirovich, do you swear when you know for sure that you were not being filmed? If yes, then at whom?
    Владимир Владимирович, вы ругаетесь матом ,когда точно знаете что вас не снимают ? Eсли да, то на когo ?
    Vladimir Vladimirovich, vy rugayetes' matom ,kogda tochno znayete chto vas ne snimayut ? Esli da, to na kovo ?
    President Putin: It happens…only at my self.
    Прeзидент Путин: Бывает… на себя только.
    Prezident Putin: Byvayet… na sebya tol'ko.
    {{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}
    It is prohibited to swear in public places: on the street, in public transport,
    Stadiums, shopping centers, etc.
    Fine: 500-1000 rubles/ arrest for 15 days.
    In 2002, Vladimir Putting has signed a law banning all swearing in films, television broadcasts, theatres and the media. It is quite funny, because you’ll hear anyway a lot of swear words in Russian Tv-sereis and movies, and some Tv shows as well.

  • @user-bp6dq9yw2f
    @user-bp6dq9yw2f 4 роки тому +1

    EXPLANATION:
    -Son of a b*tch!
    Сукин сын !
    Sukin syn !
    A very strong insult. It means “bastard,son of a b*tch”.
    What is interesting is that this expression was often used in Russian literature because it was a popular coclloquial expression from peasants.
    So if you read a Russian novel and find this word don’t be surprised. It’s fine, just don’t use it in speech ever.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    MOVIE: IVAN VASILIYEVICH: BACK TO THE FUTURE
    -Here you are son of a b*tch !
    Вот тебе, сукин сын !
    Vot tebe, sukin syn !
    -Kesha, this is not funny!
    Кеша, это не остроумно !
    Kesha, eto ne ostroumno !
    -You are a villain; oh my God!
    Ты негодяй. Боже мой !
    Ty negodyay. Bozhe moy !
    -Villain, son of a b*tch!
    Негодяй, сукин сын!
    Negodyay, sukin syn!

  • @всёпонятно-ю2к
    @всёпонятно-ю2к 6 місяців тому +1

    10:51 ещё "лошпед" :D

  • @ARusPro
    @ARusPro 4 роки тому +3

    Мила, очень интересное видео, большую работу проводишь) Одна маленькая опечаточка там у тебя: "свинья" всё-таки feminine, хотя и может быть использовано по отношению к мужчине, конечно)

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому +1

      Привет 😊 спасибо за комментарий 🤗 да, я поставила masculine не по признаку рода существительного, а потому что в качестве оскорбления это слово используют в отношении мужчин (чаще всего) 🐷 хотя, ты права, нужно было уточнить 🤔😉

  • @alfredjones6130
    @alfredjones6130 2 роки тому +1

    9:10. I see Jodie lives on in all countries

  • @jamelabarrogo3749
    @jamelabarrogo3749 2 роки тому +1

    3:29 Let's just say I'm glad I born in my home country since our very own former president tends to curse a FUCKING LOT.

  • @two-spikes
    @two-spikes 6 місяців тому +3

    зачем я это смотрю?

    • @xv-79
      @xv-79 4 місяці тому

      Н А Д О.

  • @kirkhammett1211
    @kirkhammett1211 4 роки тому +4

    ваше выражение лица такое классное :)

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому

      😅 Спасибо) я об этом не думала 😁

    • @dimasik514
      @dimasik514 4 роки тому +1

      @@hackyourrussian4091 тк вы правда русская?

    • @hackyourrussian4091
      @hackyourrussian4091  4 роки тому

      @@dimasik514 да 😁 а вы сомневались?

    • @dimasik514
      @dimasik514 4 роки тому

      @@hackyourrussian4091 ну малоли 😂

  • @Deibi078
    @Deibi078 Рік тому +1

    12:10 lmao

  • @christopher_D_wilson
    @christopher_D_wilson 10 місяців тому +1

    spasibo

  • @rinazachka
    @rinazachka 4 роки тому +2

    duRRak, duRRak 😂😂

  • @DinikinDinikin
    @DinikinDinikin 9 місяців тому +1

    Насчет "оленя". Это не от выражения "наставить рога", а от уголовного слэнга. "Олень" - это "лох", наивный, глупый человек. Таких когда-то называли "сохатыми" (compare - просохатить стрелку). Сохатыми называли жителей деревень (от сохи), которых было легко обмануть. А вот уже от сохатых пошло слово олень.

  • @alexwhite5218
    @alexwhite5218 2 місяці тому

    The origin of the Mat. The forbidden fruit is sweet and the mate is biting, brief, succinct, clear. The whole Russian mat entirely comes from the languages of the Finnish peoples of the so-called Mordvins (Moksha, Erzya) and means Diving a Snake into a Hole, Nest or Hollow, and this is a fact, and everything else is a cheap manipulation from different languages, which does not support any criticism, Needles, Tail, Writing, etc. The whole triad of the so-called Russian mat and plus the word mat are logically explained only from the languages of the so-called Mordvins (Moksha, Erzya), i.e. 4 hits out of four, the puzzle is completely assembled, this cannot be done from other languages. The mat cannot be pronounced because its basis is not Russian at all. The word Mat itself comes from Moksha words: Matt- lie down or go out, Matte- lay down or extinguish, Matyma- laying down or fading, Matymat - laying down, fading. The expression about Laying or Lining with a three-storey Mat fits here. The word Mats in Moksha sounds like SotnyMat, which in a different meaning means "Ties" and, accordingly, a swearing person is a hundred in a different meaning "Tied" or "Tied" with invisible fetters, and swearing is a Hundred in a different translation "Tying" or "Binding" with invisible fetters. The main swear words for the sounds "X", "P" and "Y" come from the languages of Mordovia, more precisely from Moksha and Erzya, namely from words pronounced in different dialects, like GUI -SNAKE or KUI -SNAKE and PISA - Mink, Burrow or Nest, Hollow. Logically, it turns out that the Snake "dives" or "dives" into a Burrow or Nest. In addition, an obscene word beginning with the sound "Y" is in tune with the Moksha word Yupatt (Yupatt) - Dive, Jump, dive, jump. For example, in Moksha, two nests or two minks sound like a "pussy cafta", where a cafta is two or two. There is also a different meaning of the Moksha word PISYDA - Get stuck from the word Pisyndyma - Getting stuck. The swear word with the letter "P" even sounds like something in between a PUSSY - a mink, a nest and a Pad - a female genital organ. By the way, the Moksha and Erzya word PAPA means penis. There are no genera in the languages of Mordovia, i.e. Gui (Kui) - it can be both a Snake and a Snake. Involuntarily, a connection with the tempting serpent appears. It is worth noting that spermatozoa are also serpentine in shape, small snakes or snakes from the languages of the Mordvins sound like Guynat or Kuynat, and the snake sounds like Guynya or Kuynya, involuntarily consonant with the word X-nya. Alternatively, the Slavic-speaking migrants who were coming changed the word Gui they heard from the local population, changing the sound of "G" to "X". In some English-language Hollywood films, a penis is compared to a snake, and even in Russian there is a phrase "strangle a boa constrictor", the meaning of which is also associated with a male organ. As a reminder, the Mordvins of the non-Slavic peoples are the closest geographically to the capital of Russia - Moscow, and Moscow was on the territory of the Finnish Meshchera people, and the Finnish Meshchera people spoke the languages of the Mordvins (Moksha, Erzya). They will do anything to hide the Finnish past of Russia, and Mordvins (Moksha, Erzya) belong to the Finnish peoples.

  • @munismort
    @munismort 2 роки тому +3

    Зачем, ребята, мы это смотрим? Что нам тут учить?

  • @KirillBon
    @KirillBon 8 місяців тому +1

    4:10
    ua-cam.com/video/N-8jkDqR58U/v-deo.htmlsi=W8-gFNtzv2GHdh-U
    Не благодарите.

  • @SebCityLife1312
    @SebCityLife1312 Місяць тому

  • @aymericvinramarony7448
    @aymericvinramarony7448 Рік тому +1

    интересно но почему говорить по-английски? это всё портит...тем не менее Спасибо

  • @nellidivina5280
    @nellidivina5280 3 місяці тому

    Идиот, I think sometimes means that someone is coming

  • @coreyschottgun8228
    @coreyschottgun8228 3 роки тому +1

    Lot's of ways to insult men?

  • @JesusUCSB
    @JesusUCSB 7 місяців тому +2

    Slava Ukraine

    • @phreph1
      @phreph1 7 місяців тому +3

      Сало уронила

  • @j7ndominica051
    @j7ndominica051 Рік тому +1

    Mr. Putin curses at himself. There is a unique swear word that can be directed only at him. La la la la la la.