Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/28/2012

Nothing to Shout About

Ау: Helloo! Where are you? Anybody home?

This year, бабье лето (what Americans call Indian summer) seems to have lasted a total of just one day, but all the same dacha life continues to have its pleasures. The damp and relative warmth are still creating paradise for the modern hunter-gatherer.

After stripping our yards of every possible гриб (mushroom) in the categories of safely съедобный (edible) and the more anxiety-producing условно-съедобный (edible with reservations), our little band of mushroom hunters moved to the fields and woods.

Everything was a delight for the senses: the scent of rich, loamy earth, the blindingly bright yellow leaves dancing down from the trees to the forest floor, and, best of all, the calls of our invisible friends floating on the air through the dense woods: Ау! Ау! (Where are you? Where are you?)

Sorry. Fall makes me lyrical.

Ау is called out in Russian whenever you want to know where someone is or to find out if anyone at all is there. You are most likely to hear it in the woods or the dark: Ау! Где вы? Откликнитесь, пожалуйста! (Hey! Where are you! Please respond!)

But you might also hear it when your significant other comes home: Входная дверь отворится, потом хлопнет, и я услышу: “Милый, ау!” (The front door will open, then slam shut, and I’ll hear: “Honey! Where are you?”) There is even a lovely verb, аукать (to call out): Я громко аукал, однако мне не отвечали (I called out loudly, but no one answered).

There are, of course, less esthetically pleasing ways to shout in Russian. Кричать can be used for any shout or cry: кричать от боли (to cry out in pain); кричать от восторга (to shout with delight).

Alas, with кричать, you need to pay attention to prepositions and case endings. Он кричал об этом means “He shouted about it” — that is, he spoke angrily about something. Маша кричала на него means “Masha yelled at him,” while the less common Маша кричала его means “Masha yelled for him.”

Кричать can also be used in the sense of testify: Какие-то мелочи в поведении, в манере вести себя и говорить просто кричали о том, что богат (Some small aspects of his behavior, his bearing and his way of speaking made it obvious that he was rich). Or the tip-off might have been his million-dollar Rolex.

Another verb, орать, is almost a synonym of кричать, only it generally implies screaming rather than shouting and is slightly more likely to be derogatory. Орать can refer to any noise — human, animal, natural or mechanical — that is very loud. If someone says: Птицы орут на рассвете (the birds start screaming at dawn), chances are he’s not enjoying their morning serenade. It can also refer to anything that screams visually: У них этот белый диван просто орёт! (Their white couch sticks out like a sore thumb!)

After an afternoon of shouting, screaming, and ау-ing in the woods, our band of mushroom hunters found each other. We showed off our laden baskets and tossed out a few dubious mushrooms.

Then I thought to ask: Если крикнешь в лесу “Ау” — что в ответ? (If someone shouts Helloo! in the woods, what should the reply be?) The answer — clearly from experience — was: Не кричи! Я же рядом! (Don’t shout! I’m right next to you!)

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





This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment


Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook



Also in Opinion

There's Just One Nationality — Mathematician

Nationalism is an infantile disease. It is the measles of mankind."

Russia's New Propaganda Minister

After Monday's announcement that historian Vladimir Medinsky was appointed the culture minister, critics quickly labeled him the new propaganda minister. Medinsky's academic ethics and historical distortions may raise serious questions, but for the Kremlin, he has three important attributes that are much more important: He is a model United Russia leader, a firm Putin loyalist and a skilled sophist.

Spinning Medvedev's Government

Were this 2008 and not 2012 — and had Dmitry Medvedev been named prime minister without having first served a full term as president — then the composition of his new government might have created a generally positive impression.

New Government Faces Old Problems

A longstanding platitude shared by both the Kremlin as well as domestic and foreign analysts is the need for Russia to diversify its economy away from energy dependence and reduce its non-oil budget deficit.

Putin's Postman Delivers Nothing at the G8

In the mid-1990s, former President Boris Yeltsin fought hard for the right to sit as equal at the same table with the leaders of the world's seven leading democracies. Using a lot of political wrangling, Moscow finally secured permanent membership in this elite club where the real heavyweights are supposed to solve the world's most pressing problems.

Russia Stays Home

Just three days before his return to the Kremlin as president, Vladimir Putin met behind closed doors at his residence in Novo-Ogaryovo, outside Moscow, with U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, who was there to transmit President Barack Obama's renewed determination to strengthen cooperation with Russia.



print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment



To Our Readers

The Moscow Times welcomes letters to the editor. Letters for publication should be signed and bear the signatory's address and telephone number.

Letters to the editor should be sent by fax to (7-495) 232-6529, by e-mail to oped@imedia.ru, or by post. The Moscow Times reserves the right to edit letters.



Most Read
MarketGid