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How to Interpret Ukraine's Turmoil

?????‚????????: Ukrainian thugs for hire


As I've been reading the news and blogs on events in Ukraine, I came across quite a few words that I didn't understand. So I thought a little primer on Ukraine news might be useful.

But as I began to compile my primer, it turned out to have a lot of Russian nouns, slang and otherwise, used to insult people in Ukraine. So with apologies:

?•???€?????°?????°??: Euromaidan. Although ???°?????°?? (maidan) is a square, the word ?µ???€?????°?????°?? refers to street protests over then-President Viktor Yanukovych's decision not to sign a trade agreement with the EU.

?????‚????????: Thugs for hire. These are the tough guys in tracksuits who act as agents provocateurs. The name comes from Vadym Titushko, a mixed martial artist who was part of a group that beat up some journalists in 2013. During the Kiev demonstrations the titushki were believed to have been brought in by the government to instigate violence.

???‚?µ???°?? ?‘?°?????µ?€?°: Stepan Bandera, a leader of the Ukrainian nationalist movement. He is admired by some as a fierce protector and advocate of Ukrainians and their state; he is reviled by others as a Nazi collaborator and violent opponent of everyone he considered a threat to Ukraine, including Russians, Poles, and Jews.

?‘?°?????µ?€?????†?‹: Banderists, used to describe the actual historical followers of Bandera and anyone who is perceived as a Ukrainian nationalist. In the latter sense, today ?±?°?????µ?€?????†?‹ is a synonym for fascist, anti-Russian, nationalist Ukrainian scum. ???‚?? ?????????µ?€?¶?????°?µ?‚ ???°?†?????‚???? ???° ?±?°?????µ?€?????°?????°???°?… ?? ???€???·?‹???°?µ?‚ ?? ?„?°???????‚???????? ?±?????‚?°??, ?‚?????? ?? ? ?????????? ?????€?????? ???µ?‚. (Whoever supports Nazis at Bandera-Maidan demonstrations and calls for fascist regime change is not welcome in Russia). Here ?±?°?????µ?€??- is used as a play on ?µ???€??- in ?µ???€?????°?????°?? (Euromaidan).

???????€?°?????°: derogatory term for Ukraine, apparently a mix of ?????€?°?????° (Ukraine) and ?????€?????»?? (Ukrainian kulaks or rich peasants; slang for a rich, greedy person). Used in phrases such as ???????€?°?????‹ ???¶?µ ?????° ?????? ???°?? ???µ?‚ (That stupid Ukraine hasn't existed for two days).

?—?°???°???µ???µ?†: Western Ukrainian. Used to mean anti-Russian, nationalist, fascist Ukrainians who live in the western part of the country. ?—?°???°???µ???†?‹ — ?????? ?????µ?????° ?±?‹?»?? ?…???‚?€?????°???? (Those Ukrainian nationalists in the west have always been sneaky devils.)

?????…???»: slang for Ukrainian, sometimes derogatory or condescending. In today's political rhetoric it seems to be used to describe a "bad Ukrainian," i.e., a Ukrainian who doesn't support Russia and Russian political positions. Since there isn't a slang word for Ukrainians in English, it's hard to translate. ?’???µ?… ?…???…?»???? ?? ???µ???????€?°?‚???‡?µ???????? ?????€?°?????‹, ???µ?‚??. (All you dumb Ukrainians — get out of democratic Ukraine)!

?????»?????‡??????: goons, thugs. Although in some literary contexts ?????»?????‡???? can just be a young man, in contemporary usage ?????»?????‡???? is a guy looking for trouble, a guy who is part of a criminal organization, or a guy who is part of a right-wing, reactionary, criminal group. ?¤?°???????‚???????µ or ???°?†???????°?»?????‚???‡?µ???????µ ?????»?????‡?????? (fascist or nationalist goons) were code words for anti-Soviet, fascist youth. The Russian Foreign Ministry statement included the term ???????????‚???????‰???µ ?????»?????‡?????? (aggressive young thugs) grouped with ?±???µ???????? ???· ???»???‚?€?°???€?°???‹?… ???°?†???????°?»?????‚???‡?µ???????… ???€???°?????·?°?†???? (armed fighters from ultra-right-wing, nationalist organizations) to describe Ukrainian demonstrators.

I'm not sure how this rhetoric is going to win the hearts and minds of Russia's Ukrainian neighbors. Remember: ?»?°?????????‹?? ?‚?µ?»?‘?????? ???????… ???°?‚???? ???????‘?‚ (you get more flies with honey, literally "a friendly calf nurses on two cows").

Michele A. Berdy, a Moscow-based translator and interpreter, is author of "The Russian Word's Worth" (Glas), a collection of her columns.

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