Really brilliant folks on this forum have been giving me meaning/context/stories, helping me to understand why I cannot find these words in dictionaries, even on-line.
This word бугръ stumps me.
Thanks
Really brilliant folks on this forum have been giving me meaning/context/stories, helping me to understand why I cannot find these words in dictionaries, even on-line.
This word бугръ stumps me.
Thanks
бугръ. Hmm, are you sure it was written exactly like it? I suspect it might have been бугры. If it was indeed бугръ, then you came across a word from before the Russian revolution in 1917. In those days they added ъ to any word that ended with a hard consonant.
Anyway, whatever that was I presume the word means бугор, which is a hillock or anything small protruding from an even surface of something, like a lump on somebody's skin for example.
I do not claim that my opinion is absolutely true.
If you've spotted any mistake in my English, please, correct it. I want to be aware of any mistakes to efficiently eliminate them before they become a habit.
This is a tough one
Spelling бугръ means that word is not from modern Russian because such spelling was used before the Russian language reform of 1918 -бугръ theoretically could be Old Slavonic of бугор which means a hillock or a humpCode:https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Реформа_русской_орфографии_1918_года
If you could give me a context I might be able to give you a better explanation
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