I suspect Jack and the Beanstalk are the same guy and the same stalk in all English-speaking countries... So what are you trying to say? It's the same story all over the world.Originally Posted by JJ
Negative on folklore - it is different, otherwise we wouldn't have so many boffins prancing about the country collecting it. At the same time you're correct - it does have quite a lot in common with most other folklore stories all over the world - there's a plain at which they all meet.The folklore, superstitions, kid's games and even pronouncation more or less the same in Russia
I can. There's a world of difference between them. The accents are very different and they use different stress patterns in many common words. It's them "heducated" people that may sound the same in business situations, it tends to be the same in other countries - many people will more or less speak the literary norm at work (especially those whose jobs involve working with people) and lapse into their local dialects when speaking to friends and members of the family. Also many will code switch when speaking to people from other parts of the country, which was probably what was happening in your case.e.g. I cannot hear the diffrence between Saratov's, Moskow's and Smolensk's pronouncation.
I did. Some of them.Well, maybe you did not read сказы Бажова
Indeed I don't.you do not know where Полевской is
Is he the guy with the каменный цветок?and who is Данила-мастер
No, I can't. How does this phrase end?but I'm sure if I say "маленький мальчик нашёл пулемёт" you can finish this phrase.