Russian... The citizenship was Soviet, the nationality was and remains Russian. In the Soviet Union, on the documents that required it, you declared your citizenship and nationality. So, everything in Russia was built by Russians... The Soviets rebuilt the castles that were destroyed by the Nazis and preserved the palaces as a legacy of Russian history, not Soviet history, and the Soviets themselves never disputed that...
На станции «Площадь революции» московского метрополитена располагаются бронзовые фигуры людей. Располагаются они не в случайном, а во вполне определенном порядке, а именно в историко-идеологическом. У каждой скульптуры своя история и своя жизнь. У большинства - реальные прототипы. Всего 18 скульптурных композиций в 9-ти арках: Революция и начало гражданской войны 1. Крестьянин в лаптях и с винтовкой. 2. Матрос с пулеметной лентой, гранатой и револьвером. Гражданская война и Великая Отечественная 3. Летик-парашютист. 4. Матрос линкора «Марат» с сигнальными флажками и биноклем на шее. Создание границ и наращивание военной мощи 5. Женщина с винтовкой и значком на груди «Ворошиловский стрелок». В ногах у нее валяется бумажная цель. 6. Пограничник в буденновке с овчаркой. Индустриализация, НТР, стройки века 7. Рабочий с отбойным молотком. 8. Инженер, держащий в руках шестеренку. Позади него чертежи и чертежные инструменты. Сельское хозяйство 9. Птичница с курами. 10. Трактарист-хлебороб, держащий в руках колосья. Сидит на колесе хлобоуборочной машины. Образование 11. Девушка с книжкой. 12. Юноша с тетрадокой, весь обложенный книгами. Физическая культура и спорт 13. Юноша с футбольным мячом. 14. Девушка с метательным диском. Плоды просвещения, рождение будущего 15. Женщина с сыном. 16. Мужчина с дочкой. Новый Советский человек 17. Два мальчика с моделью аэроплана в руках. 18. Две школьницы, склонившиеся над глобусом и указывающие на его верхнюю точку - Москва.
It's so pleasant and unusual to see a good or just neutral review of Russia during this total antirussian hysteria in the west. We don't have to be enemies as politicians have always tried to spin off this cra3y idea of external threat in both of our countries. Hopefully people will understand that over years.
Каким-то образом в рекомендациях выпал этот ролик. Не понимаю зачем я его смотрю, если живу в Москве и частенько пользуюсь метро, но я рада что наткнулась на него)
This is an old generation of Metro stations, but many new generation metro stations are being built in Moscow, example from old to new: ua-cam.com/video/olkWaJ9Jfuo/v-deo.html
Male or female voice Today, on trains, autoinformers "speak" in male and female voices. Announcers alternate in the subway for a reason - stations are announced with a male voice when moving to the city center, and with a female voice when moving from the center. On the Ring Line, a man's voice sounds while moving clockwise, and a woman's voice sounds while moving counterclockwise. On the Filevskaya line, only a female voice makes announcements in the direction of the Kuntsevskaya line, and a male voice makes announcements in the direction of the Alexander Garden. The Kakhovskaya line also has its own system: from "Kakhovskaya" to "Kashirskaya" the voice is male, in the opposite direction - female. Why is this necessary? This was done specifically for the convenience of orientation of visually impaired passengers. This method of announcing stations was proposed by the Blind Society in 1984. The stations where the male voice "switches" to the female and vice versa were determined by the same Society of the Blind. Moreover, when following the train on the first and second tracks, these stations may be different. How to remember? People have even come up with a way by which it is easier to remember how to link the voice with the direction of movement: from home (from the outskirts, from the terminal stations) passengers are called to work (to the central stations) by the boss (man), and back to the family - by the wife (woman). Unusual voices We are all so used to familiar voices, Alexey Rossoshansky, Sergey Kulikovsky and Yulia Romanova-Kutyina, that announcements made by another voice immediately attract our attention. On special occasions In 2004, the Metro Voice campaign was launched in the capital's subway. Instead of the usual strict voices, the voices of famous actors sounded on the trains.
@@expatamerican3234 you won't believe it from 2017-2021 the announcement of the metro station in Moscow was duplicated in English it was made for the World Cup in 2018
Some stations are great. Be sure to make a continuation with an overview of the stations. It just takes your breath away sometimes. And another huge plus is that you can build a route online and easily get to any point of the city using only the metro. Without leaving it.
@@expatamerican3234 previously , in the Moscow metro , travel cost 5 kopecks and in the lobbies of each metro station there were exchange machines for 10 , 15 and 20 kopecks .And in the 90s , after the collapse of the USSR , payment for the train was carried out with tokens . And in 1999 , it was decided to abandon tokens in favor of paper magnetic cards .Many Muscovites remember the open-type turnstiles akp-73, their principle of operation was as follows: If the passenger paid for the fare, the green honey would light up and the passenger could walk safely, and if the passenger did not pay for the fare, the turnstile doors would immediately close. In the 90s , during the modernization of these turnstiles , it was decided to put a sound signal of the Oginsky polonaise , which is triggered when the turnstile closes . I remember how many passengers jumped over the turnstiles and Oginsky 's polonaise constantly sounded in the lobbies . Such turnstiles have been standing at metro stations since 1973-2018 , they were placed at metro stations open in the 30s , 40s , 50s , 60s and 70s and 80s and 90s , and at metro stations open in the 200s and 2010s and today closed - type turnstiles with glass doors are already being installed . I'll even show you how you looked at these turnstiles ua-cam.com/video/ZANNVXXlAv8/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/N51m9rWljww/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/ycI0uNz5vpg/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/GK8SGYpe1ZU/v-deo.html
Red Line from Sokolniki to Bibliteka imeni Lenina and Dark Green Line from Dynamo to some other .. Are the oldest, they created before WW2 times and used like protection of bombing. People are living there. Especially Mayakovskaya station is great cause that has polished armor with steal where Stalin make his second speach in 6 November of 1941 about German ideology
He must definetely consider visiting St Petersburg as well. Even though the underground system is way shorter, some stations (for example Avtovo) are even more luxuriously decorated. In fact, Avtovo was meant to be more beautiful still, but then WWII broke out, significantly cutting the budgets. Also, it is much deeper than the Moscow metro, because of the ground water levels. But yeah, even in Moscow alone you can ride metro for days and see different styles, very beautiful in different ways. It's, though, better to do it after, like, 11 PM, for the stations will be nearly empty.
@@alanmalan3819 let me correct you. The oldest stations in metro are in Red line (line 1) from Sokolniki to Park Gorkogo and in line 4 Smolenskaya -- Aleksandrovskii Sad. Line 2 opened later, but some people really lived there during 1941. My granddad hided from bobmbing in 1941 at station Krasnie Vorota. He was 5.
@@expatamerican3234 previously, in the Moscow metro, you could see Soviet subway cars with linkrust trim. for example, earlier on the Filevskaya line and on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line of the Moscow metro (Line 3 and 4), metro trains of the e series were operated, their modifications in these metro trains had a warm lamp atmosphere, plump sofas and walls were decorated with linkrust I also remember that there were Soviet AKP-73 turnstiles in the Moscow metro. The principle of operation of such turnstiles was on the principle of open doors; if the passenger paid for the fare, the green light turned on on the indicator and the passenger calmly passed through the turnstile, and when an attempt was made to enter unpaid passage, the turnstile doors instantly closed and pinched the stowaway and at that moment, a fragment of the oginsky polonaise sounded; akp-73 turnstiles worked in the Moscow metro from 1973-2018
@@expatamerican3234 then in the 90s and 2000s on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line and along the Filevskaya line of the Moscow metro (line 3 and 4) In the Moscow metro. One could see the e-series metro trains and their modifications produced at the Mytishchi Carriage Works in the 60s. Even in the Moscow metro, they conduct night excursions on the A series metro train of 1935, this is the same metro train of 1935 that opened the movement of metro trains in 1935 when the Moscow metro had just opened ua-cam.com/video/Yy9p4LG9ckc/v-deo.html and here are the very legendary insidious AKP-73 turnstiles that could pinch a passenger when he tries to pass without a ticket, I remember how in the 2000s and early 2010s many passengers jumped over these turnstiles and Oginsky's polonaise could sound without interruption ua-cam.com/video/GK8SGYpe1ZU/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/ycI0uNz5vpg/v-deo.html
You make excellent movies, my friend! I am a Polish guy living in Vancouver. I do speak Russian and want to go to Russia to visit. Since I am not vaccinated I do not want to end up in some funny situation because the nasty clowns running the Covid racket here, in Canada, change the rules very often at a whim.
initially, the dog's nose was touched by students for good luck before exams. students grew up and as adults touched the dog's nose before important things and just for luck. now students of some universities have another statue that is touched for good luck...
I haven't been to Moscow but I would assume that the Moscow underground has to be much cleaner and safer, without crazy homeless people, youth gangs, people zonked out on drugs.
and who's fault is that they are like that in New York? and in the US generally. Who make profit on to sell drug and share it with those who refuse to stop it ..etc
There are actually two parallel undergrounds in Berlin remaining from the city's division to Western and Eastern parts. They are still not very well integrated into one system.
My guess it is a lot better than New York's , which has had few investments the past decades and nearly falles apart ! I knew that Moscow had a big metro, with impressive station interiors, but I did not that the past decade it had 250km of new line expansions ! Including a circular line (like they are building with the Grand Paris Express as well) . These new lines will have shortened travel times for sure.
Moscow metro is really beautiful and convenient, not to mention that you may spend hours riding in all directions and switching the lines having paid just once on the entry ;)
@@expatamerican3234 Not only architecture, as an engineer, I am struck every time by the complexity of this system, it is a whole underground city. However, as well as the design of the first metro stations, they were supposed to cause a futuroshock and suppress with their monumentality those who were in the capital for the first time. No wonder the USSR was called the Red Empire, they copied Roman principles.
Была во многих Метро NY, LONDON, ROME, PARIS ... , было иногда просто страшно, как будто идешь по тюремным корридорам. А в NY был случай, мы с дочкой сидели рядом с американкойбелой, а напротив негритянка. Ей что то не понравилось во взгляде нашей соседки, так она стала так на нее орать, да с матом, что мы испугались и выскочили из вагона. А другие даже ухом не повели. Было это в 2003 году.😱
субтитры теперь должны работать, если вы зайдете в настройки. затем перейдите к субтитрам и выберите автоматическое создание для русского или любого другого языка.
It seems since Sanctions begun USA citizens increased in Russia... Especially white conservative Christian families... But I find British and Australian Christians also increasing, Here's also a growing amount of White South Africans especially Boere, I know they get fast track visas and a faster path to citizenship, a big amount of them are farmers who flee South Africa due to the genocide going on there on them, but they are highly skilled and are doing very good in Russia and acquire farmland too with the help of Russian government this solves 2 problems-Blacks can have the land (farms), Boere lives are spared... Russia is a awesome country I really love it here much better, safer and Cheaper then most Western countries and things are only getting better
По совокупности, пожалуй, да, даже для меня циничного критика. Хоть это уже и не город моего детства, но могу представить какое впечатление он производит на приезжающих.
Oh my God, the first frames of the video and I recognize a place where I was born and was living for decades. I loved every meter of the ground that you've filmed. Thank you.
0:01 don't forget there is Moscow 2 metro. a 400 km long metro that is 300 meters underground in Moscow 4:04 "we made palaces for the people" by Stalin 5:10 The best thing about Soviet products is that they are simple and easy to repair. So trains, cars and trucks that are 40 years old can still run.
It is true that the metro that we see is about 20% of the total volume of the metro system, not counting military facilities. And the Metro itself is a giant defense system and shelter for hundreds of thousands of people in extreme cases. It is necessary to pay attention to the shut-off sections of the hermetic locks at the entrance of most stations, which will close automatically if threatened. After all, there are still technical systems, transport, ventilation, emergency tunnels for evacuation. And yes, there is a system of tunnels at the - 300m mark, but they are uninhabited and serve for the engineering systems of the underground city. I would not be surprised that there are their own reactors. ps. This is widely known, but any specifics are prohibited. Even collecting such data can lead to 5 years in prison.
@@ИгорьИсаков-з4р Достаточно посмотреть профильные ресурсы (со схемами предлагавшимися к постройке в 60х) и понять что Метро-2033 с Метро-2 полная фигня) с технической точки зрения. Малых объектов вроде Бункера.703 (ныне музей) не один десяток, сделан он из бывшей вентшахты, а под ними... п.с. Как в Москве открыли за последние 10 лет СТОЛЬКО станций? Часть тоннелей УЖЕ была), впрочем часть перегонных тоннелей используемых сейчас ранее так же относилась к секретным.
я думаю что метро во всех крупных городах России воплотило потребность народа в красоте и духовности . Церковь долгое время подвергалась гонениям и запретам . Но именно в церквях русский народ веками реализовал свою потребность в красоте и духовности . в церкви красиво..... Когда у реки перекрывают русло .., река ищет другой путь и прорывается в другом месте . Золотой блеск московского метро это подтверждение что русские не могут жить без красоты. Им это нужно как воздух .
На 5:00 это не винтадж! Это обычный состав типа 81-717/714, известный как "номерной". Прекрасные составы, до сих пор ездят. В них самая хорошая вентиляция, между прочим.
Вообще-то, их начали строить перед Олимпиадой-1980. Они тогда свою букву в названии не успели получить, а только заводской индекс "81-717/714". До них были составы типа "А", "Б" и т.д. до "Е" и "Ж". А 717 не успел получить свою литеру, поэтому его прозвали "номерным", обычные люди этот набор цифр запомнить не могут. Вот если автор сумеет увидеть настоящий ретро-состав типа "Еж", тогда это будет считаться винтажем! Кстати, в ролике автора про безопасный район такой состав винтажный состав мелькнул, коричневого цвета. Он, правда, тоже не настоящий ретро, это номерной, отделанный в стиле ранних составов. Но хоть на вид ретро.
@@janisjersovs2441 technically u're right. But it is polite to call every woman девушка, cause we know that every woman likes to be considered young and beautiful. So it is no harm to make them feel a bit better
@@expatamerican3234 there's a great book with very nice illustrations called "Moscow Metro. Guide". It was published in 2008 and it is on sale now on Ozon (cheap as chips!). Lots of new stations have been built since 2008, but the book is about the "historic" stations, so the year of the book is irrelevant. I used to buy this book as a present to my foreign friends. Highly recommend.
@@stanislav7411 Moscow is the Capital of a facist Country!!! Putin = Hitler Putin = Mass Murderer There are no Tourists in Moscow! All Airlines boycot Russia....
По поводу обращений. Незнакомые люди к молодой девушке обращаются "девушка". К более взрослой "женщина", редко "бабушка" но это не совсем прилично считается так обращаться к женщинам, особенно мужчинам. Часто бывает, что взрослую женщину так же называют девушка, не смотря на возраст. В кругу близких принято называть по имени, к старшим "тётя", к пожилым "бабушка". К молодым мужчинам обращаются "молодой человек", а к взрослым "мужчина", к пожилым "дедушка". Все зависит от вашего возраста, обычно пожилых людей "бабушка и дедушка" называют молодые люди. Очень сложно в общем у нас тут, возможно, меня даже поправят и напомнить кое-чего еще
Все верно. Только еще учитывается разница в возрасте между обращающимся и тем, к кому обращаются. Если взрослый мужчина, назовет женщину лет на 10 старше бабушкой, может почувствовать на себе гнев.))) Ребенок может любую взрослую женщину молодую и постарше назвать тетей, пожилую бабушкой - это нормально. Но бабушками лучше называть только тех женщин, кто уже явно проиграл борьбу за молодость, или перестал за нее бороться. )
Обращения "мужчина" и "женщина" звучат немного вульгарно. Более вежливая форма - обходиться без прямых обращений. Просто достаточно сказать: извините пожалуйста, ...
In some old metro cars you can read small metal plates and find their year of production. The oldest I've seen is 1952, usual green ones are a bit younger, fron 60s-70s
The beautiful station between minutes 4 and 5 is called Kievskaya. It's named after the city of Kiev - the capital of Ukraine. Mosaics and murals depict daily lives in Soviet Ukraine. In fact, there are three!! "Kievskaya" stations in Moscow: on the dark blue, light blue and brown lines. Not any other place deserved three stations named after it!
The Moscow metro is a relic. Living proof that we live on the ruins of a more outstanding and beautiful highly developed civilization. We still use its toys, but we can hardly build something as beautiful and inspiring, something as progressive in relation to today, something as great as that country.
@@vita.k9908 а для пущей объективности - в конце ноября, ну и вообще в любой холодный месяц, коих в Раше предостаточно, когда в этом самом Питере даже у крыс от холода и ужаса хвосты в трубочку сворачиваются, ибо жить там хоть сколько-нибудь теплокровным существам категорически невозможно! 💀
@@Север29.ру банальность скажу, ни для кого абсолютно новостью не являющуюся: там не живут - там выживают. Кстати, на кой чёрт плодятся дальше (не крысы - люди) - вот это вопрос, на который действительно ответа сыскать решительно невозможно.
There are nearly 13 mln People who are registered as citizens of Moscow. But there are People who live in Moscow (even in their own apartments), but registered in pther cities. So, there are nearly 17-20 million inhabitants in Moscow
Also, this superb video which makes the Moscow Metro look and sound like a realm of grainy elegance and gothic mystery: ua-cam.com/video/t5iW58473mg/v-deo.html (the clip wasn't commissioned by the band, it's an amateur piece)
Америка классная страна, с большим удовольствием путешествовал по Нью-Йорку и другим городам. Но метро Нью-Йорка - это полный комшар...никакого сравнения с Москвой или Питером
We all appreciate old central stations for their beauty, but don’t forget about new stations, personally, I adore new modern stations of the big circle line (line 11), especially because newest “Moscow 2020” trains are running there (those are also running at the circle line (line 5) now).
@expatamerican3234 exactly. Took your suggestion literally, and being in Moscow did take circle line and did take almost every turn the metro takes. Today is a cold , dreary day. Riding Moscow metro is an intense pleasure. Bought monthly pass for the convenience, and now there's no limit. Criss-crossed Moscow in 4 days already. Bought tickets for Taganka, Kremlin, and Bolshoi performances . Visited Tretiakovka. Breathtaking. How am I doing so far? Btw , I didn't write y Eddie's email correctly. Would you help to connect? Found excellent places to eat GastroGalery in the vicinity of Kuznetsky bridge. Thanks for your reply. Stops !!!! Exactly what I meant 🙂
Hello! Where does the numbers about 3 million Americans in Russia came from? I've checked it, its not even close. I've met a lot of expats during my career, but non of them was American
I haven't watched any of your subway videos yet.. no time. But i do remember the subways from the 1980s to 2003. I suppose you have mentioned more than once that Khrushchev oversaw the construction of the first parts of the system...
@@expatamerican3234 you are more than welcome, new friend.. Much of the decorations in the original stations came from the churches that had been destroyed. The marble in some cases. The mosaic pieces redesigned with Soviet themes.. etc.. They had PLENTY of materials to work with.. An Orthodox person there can tell you much more.. I would love to see a video where you visit them with someone who knows that history... To a certain extent they became underground cathedrals..
@@expatamerican3234 ok. Thank you. As soon as i can...thank you.. JUST SAVED IT TO WATCH LATER. GLIMPSED A FEW OF THE BEAUTIFUL PAINTINGS AT THE START...
According to last year's census, the permanent population of Moscow is 13 million people. Together with the non-permanent (tourists, foreign workers, business travelers, etc.) - 15-16 million. If we count together with the suburbs, then the agglomeration has about 18-18.5 million permanent population, and 21-22 million cash population, including temporary
Да все 20 миллионов у нас. Многие не регистрируются, а просто живут. У нас же везде люди - в 3 часа ночи в парк пойдешь, и все равно вокруг другие люди ходят.
Ну 20 млн нету. Даже если посчитать с временным населением (туристами, иностранными рабочими итд), то будет миллионов 16. 20 это разве что если с пригородами - всякими Мытищами и Балашихами. В агломерата Токио вообще 38 млн живут из 126 млн страны и ничего)
@@dvaplustwo А давайте всех пересчитаем! А то ни меня, никого из моих знакомых уже вторую перепись все проигнорировали! Так что мы не верим "полученным" властями результатам. Мухлёж.
"Не верят" в основном всякие совки - пожилые русофобские психически искалеченные мущинки, воспитанные в матриархате либерал-марксистов КПСС. Перепись была проведена качественно, кстати многие переписались на Госуслугах. То небольшое количество, что скрылось и от очного опроса, и от Госуслуг, переписали по домовой книге. Погрешность если и есть, то сотые доли процента
Text on the wall at 7:24 is a text of an anthem of USSR (It's an entrance to Kurskaya station?) . Interesting fact - after restoration is was reversed to a first edition of anthem text, mentioning Stalin (Anthem performed without text because of this mention from 1956 to 1977 and after that lyrics was adopted removing this mention)
this is the text on anthem of USSR (1 version aka Stalin anthem). "(It's an entrance to Kurskaya station?)" no, this is the east lobby of Ploshad Revolutsii station. And after restoration of Ploshad Revolutsii nothing changed in anthem, but at Kurskaya lyrics changed.
Concerning the "different names for females of different ages": it is a little more complicated. "Тётя" ['tjotja], or its more tender variant "Тётенька" ['tjotinka] is seldom used nowadays, and is more characteristic of smaller children addressing grown-up females not old enough to be called "babushka". If you address a female who is older than a "devushka" but is not yet a "babushka" ['ba:-], you usually say "zhenshina" which literally means "woman", but a better English equivalent, in this case, is "lady": "Простите, женщина, ..." then your statement or question is like "Excuse me, lady...". In St. Petersburg, they use "дама" instead (['da:ma], lit. "dame"). If you are middle age, you do not say "babushka" to an old woman (unless she is really ancient-looking): a warm and polite address will be "matushka" ['ma:-] wich is a tender form of the russian word for "mother". it is also safe enough if you address any female older than you as zhenshina or (in St. P.) dahma, even old ones. If you address older or old women as devushkas it sounds comic bordering on ridiculous; but if you are clearly a foreigner, you will be excused, of course. BTW, the male variant of "matushka" (to a man old enough to be your father) is "papasha" [pa'pa:ʃa] (a somewhat familiar but still respectful form of the Russian word for "father", but not really implying that he is your father, unlike the English Dad or Daddy). Otherwise, it is "pahring" ("lad", but more nuetral in Russian) for a younger male, and "mushchina" [-'chi:-] for an older one. Whith children, it is "malchik" ['mal-] (male) and "devochka" ['dε:-] (female).
Most common unfamiliar addressation to (relatively) young male would be "молодой человек" (molodoy chelovek, young man). And I'd say that it's a polite to NOT emphasize the age of the person, especially if you are talking with woman. I mean you'd rather call the woman "девушка" than "женщина" ("женщина" than "бабушка") unless it'd be ridiculous. Most women would prefer to be called "девушка" until they will become "бабушка" :)
Hi from Russia 🤘 I teenage 14 years old. Those trains that from WW2 were created in late 70-s and it's building until middle of 00-s. P.s. might I have mistakes, I hadn't used Google translate.
Почти у всех скульптур на станции метро "Площадь революции" есть реальные прототипы . Матрос -сигнальщик с линкорна МАРАТ .. Это курсант морского училища Олимпий Рудаков . Когда делали скульптуру с него он был курсантом . В 1953 году он танцевал вальс с королевой Великобритании в день ее коронации. Но тогда он уже был капитан первого ранга . .
@@expatamerican3234 Вам действительно интересно ? у этого Рудакова история была еще интересней . В 1942 корабль на котором он проходил службу (был одним из командиров этого корабля ) был подбит фашистами и начал тонуть . Рудаков и еще 2 командира покинули корабль на шлюпке раньше чем остальные моряки . Все трое были приговорены к расстрелу . Но военный трибунал смягчил приговор и заменил расстрел на 30 лет тюрьмы . Рудаков попросился на фронт в штрафной батальон . Его просьбу удовлетворили и он Продолжал войну уже матросом на военном корабле . Совершил много подвигов. Его наградили ... и вернули звание . В 1953 он оказался в Лондоне ..... На военном параде посвящённом коронации Елизаветы второй . На этом параде присутствовали войска из разных стран . Ну а как он попал на бал я не знаю .... но он еще с сестрой Елизаветы долго поддерживал переписку . Там взаимная симпатия была наверно .....
Метро -- штука дорогая. Разговоры о метро начинают в городах с населением свыше миллиона-двух человек, где в будущем могут возникнуть проблемы с наземным транспортом и трафиком в целом. Да и рентабельность штука тоже немаловажная. Посмотрел в интернете какое население в Ярославле. Оказалось, чуть больше 577 тыс.человек. Маловато. Так что... если возраст и физические кондиции позволяют, вам есть над чем серьёзно поработать в плане увеличения населения города, Маша Блинова. Пусть даже -- "Ради метро стараюсь!", если других мотивов недостаточно. )
@@macb2818 Это официально 600К, а с приезжими из Вологодской и Архангельской областей + мигрантами из средней Азии как раз миллион и будет. Также много народу живет в пригородах, от которых до Ярославля не более получаса, а это уже область. С ними будет еще на пару сотен тысяч больше.
@@macb2818 *❗️ ВСУ закрепились на левом берегу Днепра, войска рф отступают, чтобы не попасть в окружение, - росСМИ.* Это происходит в районе Антоновского моста, ВСУ сейчас расширяют плацдарм. *❗️ Ровнополь вернулся под украинский флаг: ВСУ освободили еще один поселок в Донецкой области, - сообщила Анна Маляр, заместитель Министра обороны Украины.*
Enkhsaruul Torguud You are wrong because in Moscow, a male or female voice announcing stops depends on the movement of a metro train to or from the center of Moscow...
А я могу объяснить про статуи и оружие. у нас оружие есть у статуй, потомучто оружие не нужно в бытовой жизни, так как и так безопасно. А нужно оно когда к нам идут угрозы извне, чтобы люди помнили, что у нас много недругов, которые постоянно лезут со своими уставами и какому то поколению придется за него взяться для защиты.
There is nothing worse than NY subway, it’s freezing cold on stations in winter and hot like sauna in summer, garbage all over and rats, don’t know what can be worse.
@@expatamerican3234 of course it’s possible, it’s clean in Istanbul Turkey, in Taipei Taiwan, in Beijing China, all big cities and somehow they maintain it clean. The budget NY city has in a year is 117 billion which is huge amount, if it was spent properly we should have good roads with no potholes and good infrastructure.
There are more than 500 trains in the Moscow metro, it is impossible to quickly replace them with new ones. There is a gradual update. And you didn't show the newest trains that run on the Circle Line. В московском метро более 500 составов, невозможно быстро заменить их на новые. Идет постепенное обновление. И вы не показали самые новые поезда которые ходят по кольцевой линии.
2:31 You have inaccurate data on the population of Moscow. According to the billing data of mobile operators for 2020, at any given time there were from 20-24 million people in Moscow. Ie, these are the people who actually live in this city, i.e. use the infrastructure, create passenger traffic on transport, load on electric networks, consumption of water, goods, etc., but at the same time they are not registered in Moscow, i.e. they are officially registered in other regions of Russia or other republics of the former Soviet Union.
If I ever get to visit Moscow and St. Petersburg, I think I could spend a day just going to different metro stations. I'm from the US and have never been to cities like New York that have subway systems, and I have no desire to do so.
Awesome Vid! I am Half Russian, with Family in Moscow, hopefully will visit this year! I just want to see the Moscow Metro, miss me with the politics!
We have a lot of Metro videos. This is just the first one. See our playlist: RAILS
I Love Russia 🇷🇺 from Germany 🇩🇪
Oh thanks. We have many German subscribers. What do you think is the reason?
Does the pension of 13,000 in Russia also touch you?
Лилия, Екатерина предложила немцам желающим работать, переезжать в Россию на плохие необжитые земли....
@@ХелгаТ земли Поволжья были не столь уж плохими и необжитыми.
no, it's not like any other metro in the world )) Moscow metro is a museum underground, it is saying al lot about the Russian culture.
I agree.
Метро в Санкт- Петербурге тоже очень красивое, чистое и безопасное😍
Soviet culture to be more precise :) it's symbolic when great palaces are created for people, not for kings
about Soviet culture
Russian... The citizenship was Soviet, the nationality was and remains Russian. In the Soviet Union, on the documents that required it, you declared your citizenship and nationality. So, everything in Russia was built by Russians...
The Soviets rebuilt the castles that were destroyed by the Nazis and preserved the palaces as a legacy of Russian history, not Soviet history, and the Soviets themselves never disputed that...
На станции «Площадь революции» московского метрополитена располагаются бронзовые фигуры людей. Располагаются они не в случайном, а во вполне определенном порядке, а именно в историко-идеологическом. У каждой скульптуры своя история и своя жизнь. У большинства - реальные прототипы. Всего 18 скульптурных композиций в 9-ти арках:
Революция и начало гражданской войны
1. Крестьянин в лаптях и с винтовкой.
2. Матрос с пулеметной лентой, гранатой и револьвером.
Гражданская война и Великая Отечественная
3. Летик-парашютист.
4. Матрос линкора «Марат» с сигнальными флажками и биноклем на шее.
Создание границ и наращивание военной мощи
5. Женщина с винтовкой и значком на груди «Ворошиловский стрелок». В ногах у нее валяется бумажная цель.
6. Пограничник в буденновке с овчаркой.
Индустриализация, НТР, стройки века
7. Рабочий с отбойным молотком.
8. Инженер, держащий в руках шестеренку. Позади него чертежи и чертежные инструменты.
Сельское хозяйство
9. Птичница с курами.
10. Трактарист-хлебороб, держащий в руках колосья. Сидит на колесе хлобоуборочной машины.
Образование
11. Девушка с книжкой.
12. Юноша с тетрадокой, весь обложенный книгами.
Физическая культура и спорт
13. Юноша с футбольным мячом.
14. Девушка с метательным диском.
Плоды просвещения, рождение будущего
15. Женщина с сыном.
16. Мужчина с дочкой.
Новый Советский человек
17. Два мальчика с моделью аэроплана в руках.
18. Две школьницы, склонившиеся над глобусом и указывающие на его верхнюю точку - Москва.
спасибо, я этого не знал )
Не хватает, конечно, информации о таких вещах в общем доступе. На табличках или, хотя бы, на сайте метрополитена. Спасибо огромное.
А собака где?
@@trololoev У пограничника. Поэтому все чекисты с Лубянки по дороге на работу ей нос натирают.
@@trololoev 6 Пограничник в будёновке с овчаркой.
It's so pleasant and unusual to see a good or just neutral review of Russia during this total antirussian hysteria in the west. We don't have to be enemies as politicians have always tried to spin off this cra3y idea of external threat in both of our countries. Hopefully people will understand that over years.
Как вы правы! Россияне никогда не считали американцев или жителей других стран врагами. Давайте жить дружно! ❤❤❤
Ну так и не будте нам врагами! А если вас принуждают то дерьмо все ваши "ценности"!!!
@@perseus9084 если вы меня считаете врагом, то зачем пишите? Я ясно выразилась - никогда мы не считали вас врагами. Никогда.
Beautiful Moscow! I plan to move to Russia permanently from Kazakhstan.
Oh wow.
Same here, just from Sweden.
I moved from Kazakhstan to the USA
, lived here for many years, now I want to move to Russia!
@@golden777empire И правильно! Россия будет последним спасительным островом для рушащегося мира...
Приезжайте,ребята! Давайте жить дружно!
Very beautiful métro, it's clean
As clean as a metro can be considering you have machines running non-stop underground and the cleanest in the world I would guess.
@@expatamerican3234 in Paris, métro stop at 1 am, and people not clean
Каким-то образом в рекомендациях выпал этот ролик. Не понимаю зачем я его смотрю, если живу в Москве и частенько пользуюсь метро, но я рада что наткнулась на него)
And this is not even our best video ;)
Не понимаю как мне тоже выпал ролик в рекомендациях, но безмерно рад этому. Житель окраины Москвы, в метро давно не спускался)
Looks beautiful, and a lot cleaner than here where I live in Scandinavia.
it is as clean as in a museum
I was in Stockholm and i liked your metrosystem too.
Thank you for showing us Moscow metro some almost like museum
I agree with you. I love it.
This is an old generation of Metro stations, but many new generation metro stations are being built in Moscow, example from old to new: ua-cam.com/video/olkWaJ9Jfuo/v-deo.html
Like a person who lives in Moscow I can say, that Moscow underground is the most beautiful in the world.
Male or female voice
Today, on trains, autoinformers "speak" in male and female voices. Announcers alternate in the subway for a reason - stations are announced with a male voice when moving to the city center, and with a female voice when moving from the center. On the Ring Line, a man's voice sounds while moving clockwise, and a woman's voice sounds while moving counterclockwise. On the Filevskaya line, only a female voice makes announcements in the direction of the Kuntsevskaya line, and a male voice makes announcements in the direction of the Alexander Garden. The Kakhovskaya line also has its own system: from "Kakhovskaya" to "Kashirskaya" the voice is male, in the opposite direction - female.
Why is this necessary?
This was done specifically for the convenience of orientation of visually impaired passengers. This method of announcing stations was proposed by the Blind Society in 1984. The stations where the male voice "switches" to the female and vice versa were determined by the same Society of the Blind. Moreover, when following the train on the first and second tracks, these stations may be different.
How to remember?
People have even come up with a way by which it is easier to remember how to link the voice with the direction of movement: from home (from the outskirts, from the terminal stations) passengers are called to work (to the central stations) by the boss (man), and back to the family - by the wife (woman).
Unusual voices
We are all so used to familiar voices, Alexey Rossoshansky, Sergey Kulikovsky and Yulia Romanova-Kutyina, that announcements made by another voice immediately attract our attention.
On special occasions
In 2004, the Metro Voice campaign was launched in the capital's subway. Instead of the usual strict voices, the voices of famous actors sounded on the trains.
Very interesting
спасибо
@@expatamerican3234 you won't believe it from 2017-2021 the announcement of the metro station in Moscow was duplicated in English it was made for the World Cup in 2018
The Moscow metro system is really convenient
When it is not rush hour.
@@expatamerican3234 Я думаю в час-пик метрополитен любой страны не удобен.
The underground palace. Beautiful 💞
If you can avoid rush hour it is a great way to spend the commute part of your life.
I am planning to visit Moscow soon..
Some stations are great. Be sure to make a continuation with an overview of the stations. It just takes your breath away sometimes. And another huge plus is that you can build a route online and easily get to any point of the city using only the metro. Without leaving it.
Yes. I want to be more systematic about seeing all the best stations.
@@expatamerican3234 previously , in the Moscow metro , travel cost 5 kopecks and in the lobbies of each metro station there were exchange machines for 10 , 15 and 20 kopecks .And in the 90s , after the collapse of the USSR , payment for the train was carried out with tokens . And in 1999 , it was decided to abandon tokens in favor of paper magnetic cards .Many Muscovites remember the open-type turnstiles akp-73, their principle of operation was as follows: If the passenger paid for the fare, the green honey would light up and the passenger could walk safely, and if the passenger did not pay for the fare, the turnstile doors would immediately close. In the 90s , during the modernization of these turnstiles , it was decided to put a sound signal of the Oginsky polonaise , which is triggered when the turnstile closes . I remember how many passengers jumped over the turnstiles and Oginsky 's polonaise constantly sounded in the lobbies . Such turnstiles have been standing at metro stations since 1973-2018 , they were placed at metro stations open in the 30s , 40s , 50s , 60s and 70s and 80s and 90s , and at metro stations open in the 200s and 2010s and today closed - type turnstiles with glass doors are already being installed . I'll even show you how you looked at these turnstiles
ua-cam.com/video/ZANNVXXlAv8/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/N51m9rWljww/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/ycI0uNz5vpg/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/GK8SGYpe1ZU/v-deo.html
Red Line from Sokolniki to Bibliteka imeni Lenina and Dark Green Line from Dynamo to some other .. Are the oldest, they created before WW2 times and used like protection of bombing. People are living there.
Especially Mayakovskaya station is great cause that has polished armor with steal where Stalin make his second speach in 6 November of 1941 about German ideology
He must definetely consider visiting St Petersburg as well. Even though the underground system is way shorter, some stations (for example Avtovo) are even more luxuriously decorated. In fact, Avtovo was meant to be more beautiful still, but then WWII broke out, significantly cutting the budgets. Also, it is much deeper than the Moscow metro, because of the ground water levels. But yeah, even in Moscow alone you can ride metro for days and see different styles, very beautiful in different ways. It's, though, better to do it after, like, 11 PM, for the stations will be nearly empty.
@@alanmalan3819 let me correct you.
The oldest stations in metro are in Red line (line 1) from Sokolniki to Park Gorkogo and in line 4 Smolenskaya -- Aleksandrovskii Sad.
Line 2 opened later, but some people really lived there during 1941.
My granddad hided from bobmbing in 1941 at station Krasnie Vorota. He was 5.
Да, Москва очень крутой город!
А метро просто фантастика: и красота, и чистота и история.
Спасибо
@@expatamerican3234 previously, in the Moscow metro, you could see Soviet subway cars with linkrust trim. for example, earlier on the Filevskaya line and on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line of the Moscow metro (Line 3 and 4), metro trains of the e series were operated, their modifications in these metro trains had a warm lamp atmosphere, plump sofas and walls were decorated with linkrust
I also remember that there were Soviet AKP-73 turnstiles in the Moscow metro. The principle of operation of such turnstiles was on the principle of open doors; if the passenger paid for the fare, the green light turned on on the indicator and the passenger calmly passed through the turnstile, and when an attempt was made to enter unpaid passage, the turnstile doors instantly closed and pinched the stowaway and at that moment, a fragment of the oginsky polonaise sounded; akp-73 turnstiles worked in the Moscow metro from 1973-2018
Wow. Good info :)
@@expatamerican3234 then in the 90s and 2000s on the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line and along the Filevskaya line of the Moscow metro (line 3 and 4) In the Moscow metro. One could see the e-series metro trains and their modifications produced at the Mytishchi Carriage Works in the 60s. Even in the Moscow metro, they conduct night excursions on the A series metro train of 1935, this is the same metro train of 1935 that opened the movement of metro trains in 1935 when the Moscow metro had just opened
ua-cam.com/video/Yy9p4LG9ckc/v-deo.html
and here are the very legendary insidious AKP-73 turnstiles that could pinch a passenger when he tries to pass without a ticket, I remember how in the 2000s and early 2010s many passengers jumped over these turnstiles and Oginsky's polonaise could sound without interruption
ua-cam.com/video/GK8SGYpe1ZU/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/ycI0uNz5vpg/v-deo.html
I Adore Russian Subway (Metropoliten)! This is absolutely gorgeous place, and I`m not surprising at all, when people called Russia - Great Imperia.
Seems way cleaner than any metro-subway I have seen!
You make excellent movies, my friend!
I am a Polish guy living in Vancouver.
I do speak Russian and want to go to Russia to visit.
Since I am not vaccinated I do not want to end up in some funny situation because the nasty clowns running the Covid racket here, in Canada, change the rules very often at a whim.
Приезжайте в Россию. У нас отменен масочный режим и сертификат о прививках не спрашивают.
Thanks. I’m sorry.
@@ЕвгенияРаева-л4ъ В Канаде тоже отменили ковидное говношоу и даже недавно разрешили здоровым людям летать на самолётах!
@@sbelobaba , 👍👍👍👍
You are welcome!
initially, the dog's nose was touched by students for good luck before exams. students grew up and as adults touched the dog's nose before important things and just for luck. now students of some universities have another statue that is touched for good luck...
Wow. Thanks for telling us. I knew someone would know.
@@expatamerican3234 Elderly men or old people can also be referred to as "father". "Отец"
I haven't been to Moscow but I would assume that the Moscow underground has to be much cleaner and safer, without crazy homeless people, youth gangs, people zonked out on drugs.
Based on this comment you should go watch the other metro video: ‘Moscow is like what?’ It is easy to find if you look at the most viewed video list.
and who's fault is that they are like that in New York? and in the US generally. Who make profit on to sell drug and share it with those who refuse to stop it ..etc
Underground sure looks way better than one in Berlin
I haven’t been
There are actually two parallel undergrounds in Berlin remaining from the city's division to Western and Eastern parts. They are still not very well integrated into one system.
Москва --- любовь моя!!! Лучший город Земли!! А, побывала я во многих столицах Америки и Европы, так что поверьте нАслово
Спасибо
Да, точно - тоже побывала и до сих пор, к сожалению...
Лучший город земли... Который ненавидит вся Россия.
My guess it is a lot better than New York's , which has had few investments the past decades and nearly falles apart !
I knew that Moscow had a big metro, with impressive station interiors, but I did not that the past decade it had 250km of new line expansions ! Including a circular line (like they are building with the Grand Paris Express as well) . These new lines will have shortened travel times for sure.
Moskiewskie metro jest nie tylko piękne, dobrze zorganizowane, ale i czyste. A z tą czystością na Zachodzie i w USA nie jest najlepiej.
Same tak
Moscow metro is really beautiful and convenient, not to mention that you may spend hours riding in all directions and switching the lines having paid just once on the entry ;)
In other countries, payment is done differently?
@@ClydeSimonSound Interesting queston!
The greatest subway system in the world!except for the noise!
It gets the job done amidst beautiful architecture.
@@expatamerican3234 dont know about New York but nowhere in Europe do the trains arrive every minute with no delay!
@@splifstar85 unless someone falls on the tracks or something of that nature happens during rush hour, then it's a genuine clusterfuck.
@@expatamerican3234 Not only architecture, as an engineer, I am struck every time by the complexity of this system, it is a whole underground city. However, as well as the design of the first metro stations, they were supposed to cause a futuroshock and suppress with their monumentality those who were in the capital for the first time. No wonder the USSR was called the Red Empire, they copied Roman principles.
@@zloychechen5150 even in this case, the previous schedule will be restored in 30-40 minutes
Была во многих Метро NY, LONDON, ROME, PARIS ... , было иногда просто страшно, как будто идешь по тюремным корридорам. А в NY был случай, мы с дочкой сидели рядом с американкойбелой, а напротив негритянка. Ей что то не понравилось во взгляде нашей соседки, так она стала так на нее орать, да с матом, что мы испугались и выскочили из вагона. А другие даже ухом не повели. Было это в 2003 году.😱
Извини
@@expatamerican3234 за что извиняешься то?)
@@МаксимК-я4ы в американской культуре, когда люди тебе сострадают, имеют ввиду : « я понимаю, как ты себя чувствуешь», они говорят извини.
@@svetlanaanokhina7307 Они говорят "I am sorry". Что можно перевести на русский и как "извини", и как "мне жаль", "я сожалею".
Это точно, помню был шок от метро Рима. Темно, грязно, страшно...
I hope you love to live in Moscow! Best wishes! Be happy and healthy!
субтитры теперь должны работать, если вы зайдете в настройки. затем перейдите к субтитрам и выберите автоматическое создание для русского или любого другого языка.
No subtitles, I'm training my English when listening your videos. 🙂
It seems since Sanctions begun USA citizens increased in Russia... Especially white conservative Christian families... But I find British and Australian Christians also increasing, Here's also a growing amount of White South Africans especially Boere, I know they get fast track visas and a faster path to citizenship, a big amount of them are farmers who flee South Africa due to the genocide going on there on them, but they are highly skilled and are doing very good in Russia and acquire farmland too with the help of Russian government this solves 2 problems-Blacks can have the land (farms), Boere lives are spared... Russia is a awesome country I really love it here much better, safer and Cheaper then most Western countries and things are only getting better
Correct.
You might also go look for fossils in the Moscow Metro. There are ammonites and nautili here and there in marble and limestone.
Interesting
Лучший город в Европе... без преувеличения)
Да
Also the Largest
По совокупности, пожалуй, да, даже для меня циничного критика. Хоть это уже и не город моего детства, но могу представить какое впечатление он производит на приезжающих.
Ахахахаххах, вы были в Европе?
@@nattvarg были
You should have shown a bit more the guys playing violins. I think they performed Vivaldi. It was amazing!!!
I miss Moscow so much! Thanks
Oh my God, the first frames of the video and I recognize a place where I was born and was living for decades. I loved every meter of the ground that you've filmed. Thank you.
Отличное видео, посмотрел с удовольствием! Надеюсь, что иностранцам нравится наше метро :)
0:01 don't forget there is Moscow 2 metro. a 400 km long metro that is 300 meters underground in Moscow
4:04 "we made palaces for the people" by Stalin
5:10 The best thing about Soviet products is that they are simple and easy to repair. So trains, cars and trucks that are 40 years old can still run.
Thanks for more information
@@expatamerican3234 all Moskow metro station ua-cam.com/video/V9rhEdNQesw/v-deo.html
It is true that the metro that we see is about 20% of the total volume of the metro system, not counting military facilities. And the Metro itself is a giant defense system and shelter for hundreds of thousands of people in extreme cases. It is necessary to pay attention to the shut-off sections of the hermetic locks at the entrance of most stations, which will close automatically if threatened.
After all, there are still technical systems, transport, ventilation, emergency tunnels for evacuation. And yes, there is a system of tunnels at the - 300m mark, but they are uninhabited and serve for the engineering systems of the underground city. I would not be surprised that there are their own reactors.
ps.
This is widely known, but any specifics are prohibited. Even collecting such data can lead to 5 years in prison.
@@elusive6119 завязывай с тяжёлыми наркотиками... или скоро моявится Метро-3,4,5...🤣
@@ИгорьИсаков-з4р Достаточно посмотреть профильные ресурсы (со схемами предлагавшимися к постройке в 60х) и понять что Метро-2033 с Метро-2 полная фигня) с технической точки зрения. Малых объектов вроде Бункера.703 (ныне музей) не один десяток, сделан он из бывшей вентшахты, а под ними...
п.с.
Как в Москве открыли за последние 10 лет СТОЛЬКО станций? Часть тоннелей УЖЕ была), впрочем часть перегонных тоннелей используемых сейчас ранее так же относилась к секретным.
The oldest trains (that blue with white lines) are from the 80s. For some reason they’re usually met on the Green line
я думаю что метро во всех крупных городах России воплотило потребность народа в красоте и духовности . Церковь долгое время подвергалась гонениям и запретам . Но именно в церквях русский народ веками реализовал свою потребность в красоте и духовности . в церкви красиво..... Когда у реки перекрывают русло .., река ищет другой путь и прорывается в другом месте . Золотой блеск московского метро это подтверждение что русские не могут жить без красоты. Им это нужно как воздух .
Спасибо за ваши слова.
На 5:00 это не винтадж! Это обычный состав типа 81-717/714, известный как "номерной". Прекрасные составы, до сих пор ездят. В них самая хорошая вентиляция, между прочим.
Спасибо за информацию
Вообще-то, их начали строить перед Олимпиадой-1980. Они тогда свою букву в названии не успели получить, а только заводской индекс "81-717/714". До них были составы типа "А", "Б" и т.д. до "Е" и "Ж". А 717 не успел получить свою литеру, поэтому его прозвали "номерным", обычные люди этот набор цифр запомнить не могут.
Вот если автор сумеет увидеть настоящий ретро-состав типа "Еж", тогда это будет считаться винтажем! Кстати, в ролике автора про безопасный район такой состав винтажный состав мелькнул, коричневого цвета. Он, правда, тоже не настоящий ретро, это номерной, отделанный в стиле ранних составов. Но хоть на вид ретро.
Девушка I think means unmarried young woman, not sure.
@@janisjersovs2441 technically u're right. But it is polite to call every woman девушка, cause we know that every woman likes to be considered young and beautiful. So it is no harm to make them feel a bit better
@@janisjersovs2441 A married girl does not cease to be a girl in the eyes of others🙂
Moscow metro is a pearl of the city
Brother, I wish you a million subscribers!!!
Thanks Doc. Help me out and share these videos with the west. That is what we need.
@@expatamerican3234 OK brother ! I will do it !!!
Славянский бульвар station (first one you show) is built in the style of Métro de Paris. Hence the Art Nouveau style of its décor.
Oh really. Cool. Thanks.
@@expatamerican3234 there's a great book with very nice illustrations called "Moscow Metro. Guide".
It was published in 2008 and it is on sale now on Ozon (cheap as chips!). Lots of new stations have been built since 2008, but the book is about the "historic" stations, so the year of the book is irrelevant.
I used to buy this book as a present to my foreign friends. Highly recommend.
Moscow is the coolest city in Europe!!! 👍👍👍💖
🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦
@@wolfgang6915 Biden TV moment
@@stanislav7411 Moscow is the Capital of a facist Country!!!
Putin = Hitler Putin = Mass Murderer
There are no Tourists in Moscow! All Airlines boycot Russia....
Try St. Petersburg
Я бы исправила. Москва самый лучший город в мире ☮️❤❤❤
Your videos make me miss Moscow, especially riding the in the Moscow Metro! I worked and live there years 2012-2015☺
Thanks for sharing this.
По поводу обращений. Незнакомые люди к молодой девушке обращаются "девушка". К более взрослой "женщина", редко "бабушка" но это не совсем прилично считается так обращаться к женщинам, особенно мужчинам. Часто бывает, что взрослую женщину так же называют девушка, не смотря на возраст. В кругу близких принято называть по имени, к старшим "тётя", к пожилым "бабушка". К молодым мужчинам обращаются "молодой человек", а к взрослым "мужчина", к пожилым "дедушка". Все зависит от вашего возраста, обычно пожилых людей "бабушка и дедушка" называют молодые люди. Очень сложно в общем у нас тут, возможно, меня даже поправят и напомнить кое-чего еще
Спасибо, что поделился
Часто слышу обращение "сударыня"
Все верно. Только еще учитывается разница в возрасте между обращающимся и тем, к кому обращаются. Если взрослый мужчина, назовет женщину лет на 10 старше бабушкой, может почувствовать на себе гнев.))) Ребенок может любую взрослую женщину молодую и постарше назвать тетей, пожилую бабушкой - это нормально. Но бабушками лучше называть только тех женщин, кто уже явно проиграл борьбу за молодость, или перестал за нее бороться. )
Обращения "мужчина" и "женщина" звучат немного вульгарно. Более вежливая форма - обходиться без прямых обращений. Просто достаточно сказать: извините пожалуйста, ...
@@eugen-gelrod-filippov Вы видимо любите поесть в Теремке)
In some old metro cars you can read small metal plates and find their year of production. The oldest I've seen is 1952, usual green ones are a bit younger, fron 60s-70s
The beautiful station between minutes 4 and 5 is called Kievskaya. It's named after the city of Kiev - the capital of Ukraine. Mosaics and murals depict daily lives in Soviet Ukraine. In fact, there are three!! "Kievskaya" stations in Moscow: on the dark blue, light blue and brown lines. Not any other place deserved three stations named after it!
Окружная, Выставочная, Кунцевская
The Moscow metro is a relic. Living proof that we live on the ruins of a more outstanding and beautiful highly developed civilization. We still use its toys, but we can hardly build something as beautiful and inspiring, something as progressive in relation to today, something as great as that country.
What about new "big sircle line" its also beautiful
That’s me always have to touch the dog’s nose when I am in Moscow. Once there was a queue to do it in the rush hour 😂
Wow
Тетя- это то, как говорят дети😂 ну а взрослые говорят «женщина». А приятный эквивалент этим двум- Сударыня:)
Спасибо за ответ.
Смешной
👍😁А к молодым "тетям" можно применить "барышня" и "дЕвица"!
Кто не хотел бы иметь русскую тетку? :)
Лучше - девушка)) женщинам очень нравится💓 мне точно
First time on this channel. Like it. Best wishes
Thanks. Share with your friends.
@@expatamerican3234 I have already
❤ Лучший город Земли!
Please go to Santkpeterburg show us even more beautiful
I just came from there this summer but I was busy with my kids and did not film anything. I will go back.
@@expatamerican3234 Приезжайте в конце мая, когда включат фонтаны!😊
@@vita.k9908 а для пущей объективности - в конце ноября, ну и вообще в любой холодный месяц, коих в Раше предостаточно, когда в этом самом Питере даже у крыс от холода и ужаса хвосты в трубочку сворачиваются, ибо жить там хоть сколько-нибудь теплокровным существам категорически невозможно! 💀
@@vladimirvspiozdner2294 как же тогда там живут?
@@Север29.ру банальность скажу, ни для кого абсолютно новостью не являющуюся: там не живут - там выживают. Кстати, на кой чёрт плодятся дальше (не крысы - люди) - вот это вопрос, на который действительно ответа сыскать решительно невозможно.
In capitalistic countries you use rich materials for rich people, in communist countries they use marble for metro.
The closer you are to the center, the more historic is the underground.
Thus, the most distant underground look very modern
I was in German and French metros, I was really scared to be there: homeless people, rubbish, awful smell, br.br.br.br
You may find the oldest metro train (carefully restored) on the red(#1, Sokolnicheskaya) line, which was the first metro line built in Moscow.
There are nearly 13 mln People who are registered as citizens of Moscow. But there are People who live in Moscow (even in their own apartments), but registered in pther cities. So, there are nearly 17-20 million inhabitants in Moscow
Russian cities certainly changed since 1990 for better. Russian government did great job.
Эти станции были построены ещё в СССР, причём всё самые красивые станции это СССР
@@itahurruha5012 Славянский Бульвар и новая наземная платформа Кунцевской открылись уже в РФ
@@itahurruha5012 множество красивейших станций открыто после СССР.
You are rocking on this subject thank you
Thanks. I wish I had had time to show more. I will get to it later though.
Also, this superb video which makes the Moscow Metro look and sound like a realm of grainy elegance and gothic mystery:
ua-cam.com/video/t5iW58473mg/v-deo.html (the clip wasn't commissioned by the band, it's an amateur piece)
Америка классная страна, с большим удовольствием путешествовал по Нью-Йорку и другим городам. Но метро Нью-Йорка - это полный комшар...никакого сравнения с Москвой или Питером
Awesome my city😊 Yes, the metro in Moscow captures.
And these aren’t even the new ones ;)
0:24 Мужик, я конечно понимаю что ты уверен в себе, но переходя дорогу всё-таки лучше повременить со съёмкой и смотреть по сторонам.
Moscow metro system is the most beautiful in the world.
About devushka, tetya and babushka - it was pretty nice, thank you)
We all appreciate old central stations for their beauty, but don’t forget about new stations, personally, I adore new modern stations of the big circle line (line 11), especially because newest “Moscow 2020” trains are running there (those are also running at the circle line (line 5) now).
6:13 yeah, the dog`s nose it`s for luck :) love this cute tradition :)
Wouldn't it be awesome to name lines as you go? Thx
You mean the stops?
@expatamerican3234 exactly. Took your suggestion literally, and being in Moscow did take circle line and did take almost every turn the metro takes. Today is a cold , dreary day. Riding Moscow metro is an intense pleasure.
Bought monthly pass for the convenience, and now there's no limit. Criss-crossed Moscow in 4 days already.
Bought tickets for Taganka, Kremlin, and Bolshoi performances .
Visited Tretiakovka. Breathtaking.
How am I doing so far?
Btw , I didn't write y Eddie's email correctly. Would you help to connect? Found excellent places to eat GastroGalery in the vicinity of Kuznetsky bridge.
Thanks for your reply.
Stops !!!! Exactly what I meant 🙂
@@nbach2202 you need Eddie’s email? Message me on Telegram. It is very random nowadays my ability to get to UA-cam comments.
@expatamerican3234 thanks for reply
У нас все девушки в любом возрасте
Hi, i from moscow and i love our new trains with screens
I agree
Moscow natives let us know if we got something wrong.
don't forget there is Moscow 2 metro. a 400 km long metro that is 300 meters underground in Moscow
It's like entering a palace or five star hotel
Hello! Where does the numbers about 3 million Americans in Russia came from? I've checked it, its not even close. I've met a lot of expats during my career, but non of them was American
I haven't watched any of your subway videos yet.. no time. But i do remember the subways from the 1980s to 2003.
I suppose you have mentioned more than once that Khrushchev oversaw the construction of the first parts of the system...
No. I did not. Thanks for commenting here.
@@expatamerican3234 you are more than welcome, new friend..
Much of the decorations in the original stations came from the churches that had been destroyed. The marble in some cases. The mosaic pieces redesigned with Soviet themes.. etc.. They had PLENTY of materials to work with..
An Orthodox person there can tell you much more..
I would love to see a video where you visit them with someone who knows that history...
To a certain extent they became underground cathedrals..
@@lindaphillips4646 then you probably want to watch our newer video: ‘Stalin’s Metro Circle’
@@expatamerican3234 ok. Thank you. As soon as i can...thank you..
JUST SAVED IT TO WATCH LATER. GLIMPSED A FEW OF THE BEAUTIFUL PAINTINGS AT THE START...
@@lindaphillips4646 :)
Да, собака приносит удачу. Я помню, как перед экзаменом по термеху я специально ездила на Площадь революции , чтобы потереть ей нос) Сдала))
Спасибо большое 😊 👍😎
Да. Спасибо тоже
@@expatamerican3234 Вам нужно больше подписчиков. Постраюсь делиться ссылками. Хорошего Вам дня и удачи во всех делах!!!
According to last year's census, the permanent population of Moscow is 13 million people. Together with the non-permanent (tourists, foreign workers, business travelers, etc.) - 15-16 million. If we count together with the suburbs, then the agglomeration has about 18-18.5 million permanent population, and 21-22 million cash population, including temporary
Да все 20 миллионов у нас. Многие не регистрируются, а просто живут. У нас же везде люди - в 3 часа ночи в парк пойдешь, и все равно вокруг другие люди ходят.
Ну 20 млн нету. Даже если посчитать с временным населением (туристами, иностранными рабочими итд), то будет миллионов 16. 20 это разве что если с пригородами - всякими Мытищами и Балашихами. В агломерата Токио вообще 38 млн живут из 126 млн страны и ничего)
@@dvaplustwo А давайте всех пересчитаем! А то ни меня, никого из моих знакомых уже вторую перепись все проигнорировали!
Так что мы не верим "полученным" властями результатам. Мухлёж.
"Не верят" в основном всякие совки - пожилые русофобские психически искалеченные мущинки, воспитанные в матриархате либерал-марксистов КПСС. Перепись была проведена качественно, кстати многие переписались на Госуслугах. То небольшое количество, что скрылось и от очного опроса, и от Госуслуг, переписали по домовой книге. Погрешность если и есть, то сотые доли процента
@@dvaplustwo Покажите расчёт погрешности, пожалуйста.
Very interested! Thanks
Text on the wall at 7:24 is a text of an anthem of USSR (It's an entrance to Kurskaya station?) . Interesting fact - after restoration is was reversed to a first edition of anthem text, mentioning Stalin (Anthem performed without text because of this mention from 1956 to 1977 and after that lyrics was adopted removing this mention)
this is the text on anthem of USSR (1 version aka Stalin anthem).
"(It's an entrance to Kurskaya station?)" no, this is the east lobby of Ploshad Revolutsii station. And after restoration of Ploshad Revolutsii nothing changed in anthem, but at Kurskaya lyrics changed.
Concerning the "different names for females of different ages": it is a little more complicated. "Тётя" ['tjotja], or its more tender variant "Тётенька" ['tjotinka] is seldom used nowadays, and is more characteristic of smaller children addressing grown-up females not old enough to be called "babushka". If you address a female who is older than a "devushka" but is not yet a "babushka" ['ba:-], you usually say "zhenshina" which literally means "woman", but a better English equivalent, in this case, is "lady": "Простите, женщина, ..." then your statement or question is like "Excuse me, lady...". In St. Petersburg, they use "дама" instead (['da:ma], lit. "dame"). If you are middle age, you do not say "babushka" to an old woman (unless she is really ancient-looking): a warm and polite address will be "matushka" ['ma:-] wich is a tender form of the russian word for "mother". it is also safe enough if you address any female older than you as zhenshina or (in St. P.) dahma, even old ones. If you address older or old women as devushkas it sounds comic bordering on ridiculous; but if you are clearly a foreigner, you will be excused, of course. BTW, the male variant of "matushka" (to a man old enough to be your father) is "papasha" [pa'pa:ʃa] (a somewhat familiar but still respectful form of the Russian word for "father", but not really implying that he is your father, unlike the English Dad or Daddy). Otherwise, it is "pahring" ("lad", but more nuetral in Russian) for a younger male, and "mushchina" [-'chi:-] for an older one. Whith children, it is "malchik" ['mal-] (male) and "devochka" ['dε:-] (female).
Most common unfamiliar addressation to (relatively) young male would be "молодой человек" (molodoy chelovek, young man).
And I'd say that it's a polite to NOT emphasize the age of the person, especially if you are talking with woman. I mean you'd rather call the woman "девушка" than "женщина" ("женщина" than "бабушка") unless it'd be ridiculous. Most women would prefer to be called "девушка" until they will become "бабушка" :)
Желаю вам добра, успехов и процветания!
Hi from Russia 🤘 I teenage 14 years old. Those trains that from WW2 were created in late 70-s and it's building until middle of 00-s. P.s. might I have mistakes, I hadn't used Google translate.
Почти у всех скульптур на станции метро "Площадь революции" есть реальные прототипы . Матрос -сигнальщик с линкорна МАРАТ .. Это курсант морского училища Олимпий Рудаков . Когда делали скульптуру с него он был курсантом . В 1953 году он танцевал вальс с королевой Великобритании в день ее коронации. Но тогда он уже был капитан первого ранга .
.
Очень интересно
@@expatamerican3234
Вам действительно интересно ? у этого Рудакова история была еще интересней . В 1942 корабль на котором он проходил службу (был одним из командиров этого корабля ) был подбит фашистами и начал тонуть . Рудаков и еще 2 командира покинули корабль на шлюпке раньше чем остальные моряки . Все трое были приговорены к расстрелу . Но военный трибунал смягчил приговор и заменил расстрел на 30 лет тюрьмы . Рудаков попросился на фронт в штрафной батальон . Его просьбу удовлетворили и он
Продолжал войну уже матросом на военном корабле . Совершил много подвигов. Его наградили ... и вернули звание . В 1953 он оказался в Лондоне ..... На военном параде посвящённом коронации Елизаветы второй . На этом параде присутствовали войска из разных стран . Ну а как он попал на бал я не знаю .... но он еще с сестрой Елизаветы долго поддерживал переписку . Там взаимная симпатия была наверно .....
@@ЛюдмилаК-х5з wow
Всё прикольно, только почему не была показана ещё одна интересная ветка МЦК или как её ещё называют МСС???
Я все еще открываю новые станции. Я не знаю, был ли я в том, о котором вы упомянули, но скоро выйдет еще одно видео о метро.
and a dog nose over at Ploshad' Revulutsii is good omen in Moscow culture. I used to rub every time I was there.
И я натирала 😂
В метро уютно, по-домашнему. И бабы самые красивые!
Абсолютно
The Slavyanskiy Bulvar Station reminds me the Slytherin House Harry Potter's fandom🐍
Haha
6:15 yeah it’s a good luck thing with that dog the UA-camr life of Boris touched it years ago
How did that work out for him?
@@expatamerican3234 he did a good video
@@gate7clamp I mean his luck.
@@expatamerican3234
Значит он хорошо потер нос этой собаке . Это приносит удачу😊
@@ЛюдмилаК-х5з ;)
А в Ярославле метро появится наверное только когда Москва расширится до его пределов.
Хаха
Метро -- штука дорогая. Разговоры о метро начинают в городах с населением свыше миллиона-двух человек, где в будущем могут возникнуть проблемы с наземным транспортом и трафиком в целом. Да и рентабельность штука тоже немаловажная.
Посмотрел в интернете какое население в Ярославле. Оказалось, чуть больше 577 тыс.человек. Маловато. Так что... если возраст и физические кондиции позволяют, вам есть над чем серьёзно поработать в плане увеличения населения города, Маша Блинова. Пусть даже -- "Ради метро стараюсь!", если других мотивов недостаточно. )
@@macb2818 Это официально 600К, а с приезжими из Вологодской и Архангельской областей + мигрантами из средней Азии как раз миллион и будет. Также много народу живет в пригородах, от которых до Ярославля не более получаса, а это уже область. С ними будет еще на пару сотен тысяч больше.
Ну, вот в Долгопрудном скоро будет, а там и до Ярославля Москва дорастёт.
@@macb2818 *❗️ ВСУ закрепились на левом берегу Днепра, войска рф отступают, чтобы не попасть в окружение, - росСМИ.* Это происходит в районе Антоновского моста, ВСУ сейчас расширяют плацдарм.
*❗️ Ровнополь вернулся под украинский флаг: ВСУ освободили еще один поселок в Донецкой области, - сообщила Анна Маляр, заместитель Министра обороны Украины.*
Thank you!
Thanks for the comment :)
Which lines are above ground? I've heard very few.
I know of 2 and we just rode them for our newest full video that posted on Friday. Take a look and let us know what you think.
In Moscow man announce stations but ST.Peterburg lady announce used to be 30 years from now
Thanks for sharing. I didn’t notice. I will ask my wife if it is still the case.
Enkhsaruul Torguud You are wrong because in Moscow, a male or female voice announcing stops depends on the movement of a metro train to or from the center of Moscow...
Man announces if you travel to downtown, if female-you going out!
В Москве станции объявляют и женщины и мужчины в зависимости от направления движения поезда.
@@rodjarrow6575 true. however i don't have the slightest idea if it helps. moscovite, 33 years of age.
А я могу объяснить про статуи и оружие. у нас оружие есть у статуй, потомучто оружие не нужно в бытовой жизни, так как и так безопасно. А нужно оно когда к нам идут угрозы извне, чтобы люди помнили, что у нас много недругов, которые постоянно лезут со своими уставами и какому то поколению придется за него взяться для защиты.
no Moscow Central Circle?
That is in our fast food video :)
There is nothing worse than NY subway, it’s freezing cold on stations in winter and hot like sauna in summer, garbage all over and rats, don’t know what can be worse.
Yes. It is too bad because as we can see it is possible to have a clean metro in a big international city. Share this video 😎
@@expatamerican3234 of course it’s possible, it’s clean in Istanbul Turkey, in Taipei Taiwan, in Beijing China, all big cities and somehow they maintain it clean. The budget NY city has in a year is 117 billion which is huge amount, if it was spent properly we should have good roads with no potholes and good infrastructure.
@@mshvidogio wow! That is a big budget.
@@mshvidogio117 Billion US$?????????????? 💀
There are more than 500 trains in the Moscow metro, it is impossible to quickly replace them with new ones. There is a gradual update. And you didn't show the newest trains that run on the Circle Line.
В московском метро более 500 составов, невозможно быстро заменить их на новые. Идет постепенное обновление. И вы не показали самые новые поезда которые ходят по кольцевой линии.
You can see new trains in my other videos. I just wanted to show some of the Museum style stations.
2:31 You have inaccurate data on the population of Moscow. According to the billing data of mobile operators for 2020, at any given time there were from 20-24 million people in Moscow. Ie, these are the people who actually live in this city, i.e. use the infrastructure, create passenger traffic on transport, load on electric networks, consumption of water, goods, etc., but at the same time they are not registered in Moscow, i.e. they are officially registered in other regions of Russia or other republics of the former Soviet Union.
If I ever get to visit Moscow and St. Petersburg, I think I could spend a day just going to different metro stations. I'm from the US and have never been to cities like New York that have subway systems, and I have no desire to do so.
Yes that time has passed for now. Like going to Western Europe. You will enjoy your day in a Russian metro. It is beautiful and smooth.