Hymns of the Soviet Republics

Nemesis6

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http://www.hymn***/15-union-republics/index-en.html

I thought I'd share this with you. Since I'm learning the Russian language, I found that page one day. It has the songs of all the former 15 Soviet republics with lyrics. I think their languages are quite interesting. Most are Turkish dialects written in Cyrillic. Like in Azerbaijan, that's the language I've found is most like the modern Turkish language. When you come down way South(Tajikistan), they're actually speaking a Farsi dialect, still in Cyrillic of course, and still, if you look at a language like that of Kirghiztan, they're far from the Turkish language, and not associated with the language of their neighbors Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Interesting enough, all of the hymns start out in some way like the Soviet national Anthem. I guess they can't stray too far. Some of these countries are moving toward the latin script, where, when they try, for example, they use C for J, like the Turks.

I just find it strangely fascinating. For example:

Чу дасти рус мадад намуд,
бародарии халқи совет устувор шуд,
ситораи ҳаёти мо шарорабор шуд.
Гузаштаҳои пурифти хори мо
ба ҷилва омаданду дар диёри мо, диёри мо
устақил давлати тоҷикон барқарор шуд.

That's Tajik. Transliterated, it goes:

Chu dasti rus madad namud,
barodarii khalqi sovet ustuvor shud,
sitorai hayoti mo sharorabor shud.
Guzashtahoi purifti khori mo
ba jilva omadandu dar, diyori mo, diyori mo
ustaqil davlati tojikon barqaror shud.

I transliterated that myself. With final touches from a fellow Wikipedian. I feel so proud! :)

Disclaimer: I'm not a communist-wannabe! :)
 
I really wish I could read Russian and not just speak it.
 
I'm working on one of those speaking-only courses on the side. And it's a little frustrating that they use the roman alphabet and spell the words phonetically. Especially when I'm presented with words I already know. Makes it a little harder.
 
I speak and write in Russian :naughty:

though havent practised the latter for years
 
Commie setup succeeded, close the thread and eliminate the posters.
 
It's pretty much just greek and latin, letters wise. Except for the iota. Dunno where they got that.
 
I will ask you to cover your mouth when you sneeze.
 
I used to work for the KGB.

Watch out for teh Putin mate :O

<_<

>_>

ALL CLEAR!

^_^

ps... Reto styver antwer ti amilij... aruja ir kpa oritawer!!!!!
 
"[He] Needs verification of current ideological belief."

-Central Daily

"May require a loyalty check."

-Donga Daily

"PRIORITY ALERT......Code: Lockdown, Amputate, Contain"

-Overwatch


All those quotes can be attributed to this thread. :p
 
Maybe I should get into the history of these countries. They all have this backdrop of alphabetical changes. I know that, for example, in Kazakhstan, in 1927, they stopped using a variant of the Arabic alphabet, this was brought on by a Russian attempt to introduce the Latin alphabet. Apparently, this wasn't broadly accepted. After the Soviets properly annexed their country, they went to Cyrillic, and in October 2006, the President talked about changing to the Latin alphabet. Yikes.

http://www.omniglot.com/writing/kazakh.htm

Read about it there.

By the way, I'd tell Samo to keep it clean, but the majority doesn't know, so... :-P
 
Holy shit, but that's crazy...the effects on the soup industry alone would be...catastrophic!
 
I resent the notion that laughing at my jokes is a not a valid use of this forum.
 
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