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4 comments

Comment from: Becca [Visitor]
I just found this blog- it's really interesting and gives me a chance to keep up my Russian. Thanks for posting!
08/30/10 @ 06:14
Comment from: Albert R. [Visitor]
Cool post. Is that the "yer" I hear about now and then?
And now I know how to saw "player" in Russian! Вот это да!

Don responds: Yes, indeed. Ъ was the back yer (perhaps pronounced like the ‘u’ in ‘put’, and Ь was the front yer (perhaps pronounced like the ‘i’ in ‘pit’). The fall of the yers vastly complicated Slavic morphology. Nowadays the Slavic languages have the most astonishing consonant clusters. It is sometimes said that there is one word in the Russian language that has six consonants in a row with now intervening vowels. I leave it to you to sleuth it out. (Actually, I remember spotting one with seven once, but I was too lazy to note the source. I've regretted that lapse ever since.)
08/30/10 @ 17:11
Comment from: Shady_arc [Visitor]
"контрстратегия" is one of them.

There is a number of words with 5 consonants in a row, such as "ангстрем", "усердствовать", "постскриптум" or "контрпример"
08/31/10 @ 03:35
Comment from: gamelton [Visitor] · http://gamelton.wordpress.com/
Shady_arc, and what does "контрпример" means? I have never heard it in spoken language.
09/01/10 @ 04:56

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