Thread 211692730 - /int/ [Archived: 1043 hours ago]

Anonymous Russian Federation
6/13/2025, 6:38:22 PM No.211692730
1496834932282
1496834932282
md5: 759083cf7eeb51f593b18ce631e3fdb3🔍
I was surprised to know Polish is actually closer to Russian than to Ukrainian

>Polish
Kot
>Russian
Kot
>Ukrainian
Kit

>Polish
Oiciec
>Russian
Otec
>Ukrainian
Batka

>Polish
On
>Russian
On
>Ukrainian
Vin

Etc
Replies: >>211692805 >>211692884
Anonymous Germany
6/13/2025, 6:40:19 PM No.211692805
>>211692730 (OP)
these are only some select words
meanwhile Polish is way closer to Ukrainian and other Slavic languages, while Russian is closer to Turkish and other Turkic languages
Replies: >>211692848 >>211692885
Anonymous Denmark
6/13/2025, 6:41:27 PM No.211692848
>>211692805
Go back to Oinkraine
Replies: >>211692881 >>211692972
Anonymous Germany
6/13/2025, 6:42:21 PM No.211692881
>>211692848
VPN off HIVan
Anonymous Bulgaria
6/13/2025, 6:42:26 PM No.211692884
>>211692730 (OP)
>batka
kek
here it's a slang for roided out guy with tattoos
Anonymous Russian Federation
6/13/2025, 6:42:26 PM No.211692885
uom83awcg7uf77r0g6c8b69sx6ustp3e
uom83awcg7uf77r0g6c8b69sx6ustp3e
md5: 36f73ab7c53bf228350a5aa25063e8bc🔍
>>211692805
>while Russian is closer to Turkish and other Turkic languages
Hohol linguistics enters the chat.
Replies: >>211692972
Anonymous Germany
6/13/2025, 6:45:05 PM No.211692972
>>211692848
>>211692885
>During the Tatar-Mongol rule, Russia was partly using their silver coins called deng and imitating the Horde coins. This is where the Russian word for money, 'dengi,' comes from. Between 1374 and 1380, the Moscow Duchy commenced the first nominal minting of Prince Dmitry Donskoy's coins.
One of the most striking examples but it's generally a rule. As a Polish person who stayed for over a year in Russia I was surprised how many loanwords from nomadic/central asian languages Russians use in daily life, to the poin that language itself sounds more Turkic than Slavic
Replies: >>211693021
Anonymous Russian Federation
6/13/2025, 6:46:16 PM No.211693021
1649779270105
1649779270105
md5: f28b20f75a874f48a87e3aca4d8d838e🔍
>>211692972
>As a Polish person
Replies: >>211693068
Anonymous Germany
6/13/2025, 6:47:23 PM No.211693068
>>211693021
You will never be a real slav Marat
Replies: >>211693117
Anonymous Russian Federation
6/13/2025, 6:48:43 PM No.211693117
162770725394958016
162770725394958016
md5: 4008557768c07afc6d262a936b72ff1f🔍
>>211693068
Hohol has twice as many loanwords from Turkish languages as Russian does, Tenghiz.
Replies: >>211693164
Anonymous Germany
6/13/2025, 6:49:55 PM No.211693164
>>211693117
No it doesn't
Ukrainian language is just Polish vocabulary with Russian grammar
Russian language is Polish grammar with Turkic vocabulary
Replies: >>211693282
Anonymous Russian Federation
6/13/2025, 6:53:21 PM No.211693282
>>211693164
>While a precise number is difficult to pin down, a significant portion of Ukrainian vocabulary, estimated at 13-15% of the total vocabulary, is of Turkic origin, including words like "мaйдaн" (public square), "бepкyт" (golden eagle), and "чaбaн" (shepherd). This figure includes words directly borrowed from Turkic languages, as well as words that have traveled through Turkic languages from other sources like Persian
> The maximum estimate is 2000 Turkic words in Russian. Most likely, this is an overestimation.
>Among these words there are many ethno-cultural and historical concepts, including national dress, cooking, plants and fruits, military terminology