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  2. Orc (slang) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orc_(slang)

    Orc (Cyrillic: орк, romanised: ork), plural orcs (Russian and Ukrainian: орки), is a pejorative commonly used by many Ukrainians [1] to refer to a Russian soldier [2] [3] participating in the Russian-Ukrainian War and Russian citizens who support the aggression of Russia against Ukraine.

  3. Talk : List of ethnic slurs/removed entries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:List_of_ethnic_slurs...

    (Russia) a person from the Western world. Originally was a spoken form of буржуа "bourgeois" (in Marxist meaning) Čefur A derogatory term for a person of South Slavic/Balkan descent (Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian, Albanian, etc.) with extremely chauvinistic and racist connotations. Četnik, Četo

  4. List of terms referring to an average person - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_terms_referring_to...

    The name "Vasya Pupkin" (Russian: Вася Пупкин) may be used to denote an average random or unknown person in the colloquial speech. [60] [61] For a group of average persons or to stress the randomness of a selection, a triple common Russian surnames are used together in the same context: "Ivanov, Petrov, or Sidorov".

  5. Vatnik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vatnik

    Chadskiy created a group for the character on VK called RASHKA - THE SQUARE VATNIK. Rashka is a derogatory nickname for Russia, derived from the English pronunciation of the country's name with the Russian -k- diminutive suffix attached. [11] [12] [13] Chadskiy's original drawing has been reproduced and modified many times. Features that are ...

  6. Inside Putin’s Russia: Ice Swimming and Gangster Slang ...

    www.aol.com/inside-putin-russia-ice-swimming...

    In Filip Remunda’s documentary “Happiness to All,” the Czech filmmaker portrays a characteristically off-kilter protagonist – and one who projects invincibility somehow tinged with doom.

  7. Gopnik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopnik

    A Russian gopnik squats in a stairwell in a khrushchyovka building (2016) A gopnik [a] is a member of a delinquent subculture in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and in other former Soviet republics—a young man (or a woman, a gopnitsa) of working-class background who usually lives in suburban areas. [2] [3] The collective noun is gopota (Russian ...

  8. Moskal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moskal

    At that time, since the 1654 Pereiaslav Agreement of Cossacks with Moscow the majority of Russians in Ukrainian lands were soldiers of the Imperial Russian Army (and in fact at that time the term "moskal" was synonymous with the word "soldier"), as well as Russian bureaucrats, Russian nobles that were granted estates there, and merchants. All ...

  9. Comrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comrade

    The term "citizen" did not seem sufficiently pro-revolutionary as many monarchists identified themselves as 'Russian citizens and loyal subjects of the sovereign-Emperor'. In contrast being called "comrade" implied a kind of revolutionary zeal and exceptionalism.