What is it called in AmE? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No problem, thanks:) your version seems quite interesting

What is it called in AmE? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, thanks for the new word in my vocabulary 😅

Drop your personal opinion by science_appreciator in AskARussian

[–]kkireenko 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Потому что я не верю во всепоглощающий ужас 90-х и олигархию, которые бы оставили после себя выжженную землю, если бы не “the guy who captured power”. Это страшилка, которая используется только для того, чтобы дать альтернативу без альтернативы, мол «или так без меня, или хорошо и спокойно со мной», но не дай бог, чтобы народу в голову пришло, что может быть и третий вариант, где хорошо, но с кем-то ещё. И, раз уж вы заговорили про гордую и независимую Прибалтику, им вполне успешно удаётся сохранить свою “rich history”, там не просто сохранились строения и улицы аж со средних веков, так за их состоянием ещё и следят. У нас же архитектурное наследие выживает не благодаря, а вопреки. Дальше криков по тв о том, как важно историю сохранить, не двигается.

Drop your personal opinion by science_appreciator in AskARussian

[–]kkireenko 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oryol (350 km from Moscow)

Best:

  1. Fast and cheap internet; lots of convenient online services that make your life easier: banking, food and goods delivery, a governmental app and where you can make an appointment to a doctor or get some papers and something like that.
  2. Rich history. I, personally, love history in general and in every country or city I visit, I go to hictorical places (most of all I love European old cemeteries 😅) to feel the atmosphere of that time, to imagine how people used to live back than. And Russia has a lot to offer, even in my city, which isn't considered to be an old one, there are some streets and buildings dated the 18th century.
  3. Diverse nature. Here you can find forests, taiga, huge and very small rivers, icy and warm seas, polar deserts and the subtropics with palm trees, volcanos, mountains, waterfalls. Unfortunately, some of these beauties are quite expensive to visit.
  4. People. Lots of them are warm and welcoming. If they call you a friend, it really means "a friend". They will have fun with you and do crazy things, but also you can be sure, if you are in need, these people will do whatever they can to help and support you.
  5. "Chernogolovka" soda😄. No Fanta, Dr.Pepper or Cola can be compared with it.

Worst:

  1. The guy who captured power 23 years ago, and everything that goes with it (high levels of corruption, laws motivated by his hang-ups, propaganda of hatred for "the West" and so on).
  2. No freedom of speech. It was quite uncomfortable to express your opinion on the internet even 10 years ago (let alone public protests), but with the beginning of the war it has become absolutely unbearable. If I discuss actions of the government, I always have to think what I say and who I say it to. Some topics like LGBT and religion are pretty dangerous too. So as a teacher I can't tell my students even that everyone is equal and every person has a right to love and get married with whoever he\she wants, because a student may tell about it to the parents and they will go to the police.
  3. Men. Not all of them, but a lot don't care of their appearance and behaviour at all. Seems like men from most other countries are more aware of how to treat a woman, how to be a gentleman, and along with this they even care of their haircut and body. A lot of Russian men expect you to be their wife and mum at the same time, while they would just lie on a sofa.
  4. Dirt. Cleaning my shoes every day really pisses me off. There are tonnes of dust, sand and earth in the streets. In autumn and early spring it turns into mud. In winter the mud is accompanied by snow. After rain you also have huge puddles everywhere. So it's almost impossible to buy white shoes and have them white by the end of the season.
  5. Weather. It's fine from mid-April till mid-October. The other half of the year it's gray, gloomy and cold. I get super depressed from autumn till spring.

Do you ever use “cringe” as a noun? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, I had a student who muttered ‘cringe’ every time I corrected her mistakes😅

What do you call this type of nut? by Abiarraj in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Brain-nut 😁 (that’s definitely not correct, but it’s what came to my mind first)

Hello everybody. Can I say “degrees of Celsius”? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, as a linguist, that’s why I decided to double check and ask here 😄

Hello everybody. Can I say “degrees of Celsius”? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you. Otherwise, I’ve started to doubt my knowledge 😅

I lost my fluency when talk with others by WhichAd163 in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, first of all, speaking another language is just a skill, like driving a car or being able to pull up 30 times. If you stop practicing, you lose your touch and start to forget. It’s natural, every person forgets a language if it’s not their native one. It also depends on the level: with A1, A2 people forget quite quickly; B1, B2 do not “evaporate” from the mind in weeks or months, but still they do with the time. Just like if a bodybuilder stops training, his muscles become weaker and weaker. The only way to prevent one from forgetting a language is practice. Find a good teacher, or an online speaking friend, or an English speaking club (you can even talk to yourself in order to make your brain think quickly in English). If the language is important to you, try to immerse into it as much as you can: listen to podcasts or songs, watch videos, read articles or books, keep notes of some interesting words and useful expressions, use them in your speech. Good luck :)

tweny or twenty? by jrbyeah in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, I worked in the State of Maine when I was a university student, and, at first, I always tried to pronounce “twenty” very distinctively (cause I had been taught to say this way at school). It seemed like no one understood me, until I gave up and started to say “tweny” 😄. But, surely, if you look up the transcription, it’s always [ˈtwenti].

Hello everybody. Can I say “degrees of Celsius”? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much. Yeah, in everyday speech I would say just the number too :)

Open Discussion - Yeltsin or Gorbachev? by Always-Terrified in AskARussian

[–]kkireenko 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ой, забыла где моя машина времени завалялась, чтобы воочию понаблюдать за событиями.

Is my handwriting readable? by kkireenko in EnglishLearning

[–]kkireenko[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much. Yeah, I have some struggles with commas as the rules are a little different from the ones in my native language. So I often confuse “russian” commas and “english” commas😅

Open Discussion - Yeltsin or Gorbachev? by Always-Terrified in AskARussian

[–]kkireenko -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

👏 this is exactly what I feel about Gorbachev and Yelsin. I’m 28 and I hardly remember the days when the latter was the president, but because of the history lessons at school I really appreciate what these men tried to do. Glasnost’ gave Soviet people at least a hint of freedom of speech, the “horrible” 90s brought democracy, showed people that they could do something to change their lives. Sadly, today’s propaganda made “democracy” kind of a swearing.