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Thread: Весёлые картинки и другое смешное или не очень

  1. #741
    Завсегдатай Throbert McGee's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by strannik View Post
    LOL!

    The accidental joke isn't really translatable, but it's sort of analogous to this vintage advertisement:



    (Петушки is the name of a town in the Moscow region, but the slang word петушки -- literally "small roosters" -- is more or less equivalent to US English "faggots." So Петушки голосуют за Путина! can be interpreted either as "The town of Petushki votes for Putin" or "Fags vote for Putin.")
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  2. #742
    Властелин
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    Quote Originally Posted by Throbert McGee View Post
    LOL!

    The accidental joke isn't really translatable, but it's sort of analogous to this vintage advertisement:



    (Петушки is the name of a town in the Moscow region, but the slang word петушки -- literally "small roosters" -- is more or less equivalent to US English "faggots.")
    I didn't know that.
    What's funny in this picture?

  3. #743
    Завсегдатай Throbert McGee's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marcus View Post
    I didn't know that.
    What's funny in this picture?
    This advertisement was from Britain in the very early 20th century. The slogan "Have you a little Fairy in your home?" was a play on words -- it meant either "Есть ли у вас дома немного мыла марки «Fairy»?" or "Есть ли у вас дома маленькая фея?"

    However, in modern US English slang, "Have you a little fairy in your home?" would be understood as something like "Есть ли у вас дома маленький гомик?" ("Fairy" is a somewhat rude slang term for a male homosexual, but it's less rude than "fag".) And if I'm not mistaken, "гомик" is a rude word, but sounds mild in comparison with "пидор".

    P.S. Even today, the "Fairy" brands of soaps/detergents are rarely sold in the US, because the name sounds Too Gay. But when I lived in Moscow in the early 1990s, you could buy imported British мыло для посуды under the trademark «Ultra-Fairy» Washing-Up Liquid. To American ears, this sounded incredibly hilarious -- something like "Ультра-Гомик"!
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  4. #744
    Почтенный гражданин pushvv's Avatar
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    Блин, как теперь посуду мыть Т_Т

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  6. #746
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    Quote Originally Posted by Throbert McGee View Post
    P.S. Even today, the "Fairy" brands of soaps/detergents are rarely sold in the US, because the name sounds Too Gay.
    I just remembered a rather similar example...



    "Одноразовые ватные тупферы" (English: "disposable cotton swabs") were first sold in the US -- beginning in the early 1920s -- under the trademark "Baby Gays", believe it or not!

    Within a few years (sometime before 1930) the trademark was lengthened to "Q-Tips Baby Gays" (the "Q" stood for "quality"). By the end of the 1930s, the "Baby Gays" part had been dropped and the brand has been known to this day as "Q-Tips." (And in US English, "Q-tip" is widely used as a generic term for "одноразовый тупфер", just as "to Xerox" is often heard as a synonym for "to use a photocopying machine.")

    However, "gay" in the sense of "homosexual" is most likely a neologism from (approximately) the WW2 era, and even then, it was very obscure slang that was heard only within the small гомосексуальное подполье of American cities like New York and San Francisco. And this slang sense probably remained completely unknown to most heterosexuals until, perhaps, the late 1960s.

    In short, although the name "Baby Gays" sounds extremely funny today, it could not possibly have had the slightest bit of homosexual meaning back in the 1930s when the manufacturer of "Q-Tips Baby Gays" decided to change the product's brand-name. (I read somewhere that the name was actually changed because of a trademark lawsuit -- a much smaller company was already selling infant shoes under the trade-name "Gay Babies"! So, possibly, it was an example of a small business attempting to get some fast money by suing a larger and richer company for "infringement.")
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  7. #747
    Завсегдатай Throbert McGee's Avatar
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    LOL!

    Again, I'm reminded of similar examples from advertising:

    В 1960-ых годах, шведская компания Electrolux продавала свои пылесосы в Великобритании с рекламным девизом "Nothing sucks like an Electrolux". (Дословно "Ничего не сосёт эффективнее, чем Electrolux", а в американском слэнге, "Ничего хуже чем Electrolux нет.")




    И вот пакета лапши "быстрого приготовления" (анг. -- "a package of instant noodles") из Ямайки:



    As the joke goes, "The English-speaking world is made of many different countries separated by a common language."))))
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  8. #748
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    And in US English, "Q-tip" is widely used as a generic term for "одноразовый тупфер"
    I'm not sure if this is true in Britain or Australia, however. But if you are in need of a small stick with cotton on the end to clean the snot out of a baby's nose (for example) I can guarantee that 100% of Americans and Canadians will understand the question "Excuse me, do you have a Q-tip?"

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    Завсегдатай it-ogo's Avatar
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    Looks like more and more regular words are involved to the sphere of tabooed concepts. The same tendency is in Russian.
    "Россия для русских" - это неправильно. Остальные-то чем лучше?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lampada View Post
    LOL! (I think that "со всякой фигнёй" is pretty close to English "with all sorts of random crap.")

  14. #754
    Dmitry Khomichuk
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    В чём прикол первой картинки?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Doomer View Post
    Ahaha, it looks exactly like Paul G. (well, like his avatar)!!!!
    And the comic strip itself is hilarious.
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    Quote Originally Posted by pushvv View Post
    What is the point of this joke?
    All blacks seem to whites similar?
    Please correct my English

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    Spring has come to Sakhalin, Russia


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