Ништяк (as seen on the doggie's body) was a new word for me. Apparently it conveys the same slangy positivity as "Everything is awesome!" from The Lego Movie.
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Ништяк (as seen on the doggie's body) was a new word for me. Apparently it conveys the same slangy positivity as "Everything is awesome!" from The Lego Movie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h59YBnqsh30
Funny Scary Snowman Prank
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQygJanGiL8
Танцевальная музыка разбудила ребёнка.
This is a personal photo and "не очень смешное", but I didn't know where else to put it:
Attachment 1097
Вынув пирог из духовки, я почему-то начал петь "компьютерным" голосом:
Forms FORM-29827281-12:
Test Assessment Report
This was a triumph.
I'm making a note here:
HUGE SUCCESS.
It's hard to overstate
my satisfaction.
(I have never played Portal, but this is one of my 7-year-old nephew's favorite songs on YouTube! He's made me listen to it more times than I can count...)
Speaking of Slepakov's good old songs on YouTube :D
http://youtube.com/watch?v=-e00TPb9HmI
Aha, the penny drops! (Or, as we might say in the US, "the light bulb has gone on" -- "the penny drops" sounds extremely UK).
P.S. If you're wondering why "the penny drops" means "I finally understand", it's a reference to antique coin-operated amusement machines from early 20th century Britain -- some of these were primitive rolling-ball games (ancestors of pinball); others had clockwork-operated puppets, often with "horror" themes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnLBoYGmq1o
But apparently, the penny would sometimes become stuck in the slot, so you would have to hit the machine a few times in order for the "penny to drop" and make the mechanism work.