Expression (what). Happy hours are not observed. Scandal in a noble family

And Vaska listens and eats

Quote from the fable by I. A. Krylov (1769–1844) “The Cat and the Cook” (1813). Used when we are talking about a man who is deaf to reproaches and, despite any exhortations, continues to do his job.

And you, friends, no matter how you sit down,
You're not good at being musicians

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "Quartet" (1811). It is used in relation to a poorly functioning team, in which things are not going well because there is no unity, harmony, professionalism, competence, an accurate understanding of each of his own and common tasks.

And the casket just opened

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "Casket" (1808). A certain "mechanic sage" tried to open the chest and was looking for a special secret of his castle. But since there was no secret, he did not find it and “left behind the casket.”

And how to open it, did not guess,
And the casket just opened.

This phrase is used when talking about some business, an issue in the resolution of which it was not necessary to look for a complex solution, since there is a simple one.

And he, rebellious, asks for a storm,
As if there is peace in the storms!

Quote from the poem by M. Yu. Lermontov (1814-1841) "Sail" (1841).

And who are the judges?

Quote from the comedy by A. S. Griboedov (1795–1829) “Woe from Wit” (1824), words by Chatsky:

And who are the judges? - For the antiquity of years
TO free life their enmity is irreconcilable,
Judgments draw from forgotten newspapers
Ochakov times and the conquest of the Crimea.

The phrase is used to emphasize contempt for the opinions of authorities who are no better than those they are trying to teach, blame, criticize, etc.

And happiness was so possible
So close!

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" by A. S. Pushkin (1799–1837), ch. 8 (1832).

Administrative delight

Words from the novel by F. M. Dostoevsky (1821-1881) "Demons" (1871). An ironic expression meaning the rapture of power.

Hey Moska! know she's strong
What barks at an elephant

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "Elephant and Pug" (1808). It is used when it comes to someone's senseless attacks on someone who is obviously superior to his "opponent" (critic, detractor, aggressor, etc.).

Alexander the Macedonian hero, but why break the chairs?

A quote from the comedy by N. V. Gogol (1809–1852) “The Inspector General” (1836), Gorodnichiy’s words about the teacher: “He is a learned head - this can be seen, and he picked up the darkness, but only explains with such fervor that he does not remember himself. I once listened to him: well, for the time being I was talking about the Assyrians and Babylonians - still nothing, but how I got to Alexander the Great, I can’t tell you what happened to him. I thought it was a fire, by God! He ran away from the pulpit and, that he had the strength, to grab the chair on the floor. It is, of course, Alexander the Macedonian hero, but why break the chairs? The phrase is used when someone goes beyond the measure.

Afanasy Ivanovich and Pulcheria Ivanovna

The heroes of N.V. Gogol's story "Old World Landowners" (1835), elderly spouses, kind and naive inhabitants, leading a calm, measured, serene life, limited by purely economic concerns. Their names have become household names for people of this type.

Oh my god! What will Princess Marya Aleksevna say

A quote from A. S. Griboyedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824), the words of Famusov, with which the play ends. Used to denote cowardly dependence on walking, sanctimonious morality.

Ah, evil tongues are worse than a gun

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824), words by Molchalin.

B

Ba! familiar faces

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), Famusov’s words:

Ba! familiar faces!
Daughter, Sofia Pavlovna! shame!
Shameless! where! with whom!
Give or take, she
Like her mother, the dead wife.
I used to be with the better half
A little apart - somewhere with a man!

The phrase is used to express surprise at an unexpected meeting with someone.

Grandma said in two

So they say that it is not known whether it will come true. The expression is formed by truncation of the proverb "Grandmother said in two: either rain or snow, either it will or not."

Bazarov. Bazarovshchina

By the name of Bazarov, the hero of the famous novel by I. S. Turgenev (1818–1883) "Fathers and Sons" (1862). Bazarov is a representative of a part of the Russian raznochinstvo students of the 60s. XIX century, which at that time was fond of Western European materialistic philosophy in its simplified, primitive interpretation.

Hence “Bazarovism” is a collective name, meaning all the extremes of this kind of worldview, namely, passion for the natural sciences, gross materialism, emphasized pragmatism of behavior, rejection of traditional art and generally accepted rules of behavior.

The madness of the brave is the wisdom of life!
To the madness of the brave we sing a song

Quote from The Song of the Falcon (1898) by M. Gorky (1868–1936).

Beat the thumbs

The expression is used in the meaning: to spend time idly, to engage in trifles, to mess around. Baklusha - a piece of wood processed for dressing various items (spoons, cups, etc.). In handicraft production, beat the bucks - chip off chocks from a log for the manufacture of wooden handicrafts. Figurative meaning This is explained by the fact that the production of baklushas was considered by the people to be an easy task that did not require effort and skill.

beat with a forehead

The word "chelo" in Old Russian means "forehead". In ancient Russia, the “brow”, that is, the forehead, beat on the floor, falling in front of the nobles and kings in prostrations. This was called "bowing with great custom" and expressed the utmost degree of respect. From here came the expression “to beat with a forehead” in the meaning: to apply to the authorities with a request, to intercede. In written requests - “petitions” - they wrote: “And for this, your little serf Ivashko beats you with his forehead ...” Even later, the words “beat with his forehead” began to simply mean: “greet”.

Bet

Means: to argue about something. A pledge in Russia was called a pledge, as well as a bet, a dispute on a win or the bet itself. To fight meant "to bet, to argue."

Blessed is he who believes, he is warm in the world!

Quote from the comedy by A. S. Griboyedov "Woe from the mind" (1824), Chatsky's words. The expression is used to refer to overly, unreasonably gullible people or those who are too deceived by their iridescent plans and hopes.

Shoe a flea

The expression became winged after the appearance of the story by N. S. Leskov (1831–1895) “Lefty” (1881), which was created on the basis of a folk joke: "The British made a flea out of steel, and our Tula people shod it and sent it back to them." It is used in the meaning: to show extraordinary invention in some business, skill, fine craftsmanship.

Petrel

After the appearance in print of "The Song of the Petrel" (1901) M. Gorky in literature, the petrel became a symbol of the coming revolutionary storm.

There was a case near Poltava

This expression is the first line of a poem by I. E. Molchanov (1809–1881), published in the 40s–50s of the 19th century. and became a popular song. So they jokingly or boastfully talk about some incident.

You can be a good person
And think about the beauty of nails

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. Cited as a response to accusations of being overly concerned about one's appearance.

IN

You can't go anywhere in the carriage of the past

Quote from M. Gorky's play "At the Bottom" (1902), lyrics by Satin. Instead of "nowhere", "far" is often quoted.

To Moscow, to Moscow, to Moscow!

In the play Three Sisters (1901) by A.P. Chekhov (1860–1904), this phrase is repeated with longing by the sisters, suffocating in the mud of provincial life, but not having the will to get out of it. This phrase is used as a characteristic of fruitless dreams.

In some kingdom, not in our state

The traditional beginning of many Russian folk tales. Used in the meaning: somewhere, no one knows where.

There is no truth at the feet

Now used as a playful invitation to sit down. There are several possible origins for this phrase:

  1. according to the first version, the combination is due to the fact that in the XV-XVIII centuries. in Russia, debtors were severely punished, beaten with iron rods on their bare legs, seeking the repayment of the debt, that is, “truth”, but such a punishment could not force those who had no money to return the debt;
  2. according to the second version, the expression arose due to the fact that the landowner, having discovered the loss of something, gathered the peasants and forced them to stand until the culprit was named;
  3. the third version reveals the connection of the expression with pravez (cruel punishment for non-payment of debts). If the debtor fled from the right by flight, they said that there was no truth at the feet, that is, it was impossible to knock out the debt; with the abolition of the rule, the meaning of the saying has changed.

You can't harness it to one cart
Horse and quivering doe

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Poltava" (1829).

Everything should be beautiful in a person: face, clothes, soul, and thoughts.

Quote from A.P. Chekhov's play "Uncle Vanya" (1897); these words are pronounced by Dr. Astrov. Often only the first half of the phrase is quoted.

Great, powerful, truthful and free Russian language

Quote from a poem in prose by I. S. Turgenev "Russian language" (1882).

Ruler of thoughts

An expression from A. S. Pushkin's poem "To the Sea" (1825), in which the poet called Napoleon and Byron "rulers of thoughts". In literary speech, it is applied to great people whose activities had a strong influence on the minds of their contemporaries.

The power of darkness

The expression, which became a figurative definition of ignorance, cultural backwardness, became winged after the appearance of the drama by L. N. Tolstoy (1828–1910) “The power of darkness, or the Claw got stuck - the whole bird is abyss” (1886).

In all of you, Darling, you are good attire

Quote from the poem by I. F. Bogdanovich (1743-1803) "Darling" (1778):

In all you, Darling, outfits are good:
In the image of which queen are you dressed,
Are you sitting like a shepherdess near the hut,
In all you are a wonder of the world.

This line is better known thanks to A. S. Pushkin, who used it as an epigraph to his story "The Young Lady-Peasant Woman" from the "Tales of Belkin" cycle. It is used jokingly ironically as a ready-made compliment in response to women's requests to evaluate a new dress, hairstyle, etc.

All over Ivanovo

The expression "in all Ivanovo (shouting, yelling)" is used in the meaning: very loudly, with all your might. Ivanovskaya is the name of the square in the Moscow Kremlin where the Ivan the Great Bell Tower stands. There are several versions of the origin of this expression:

  1. on Ivanovskaya Square, sometimes royal decrees were read aloud, in a loud voice (throughout Ivanovskaya Square). Hence the figurative meaning of the expression;
  2. clerks were also sometimes punished on Ivanovskaya Square. They were mercilessly beaten with whips and batogs, which made them shout throughout Ivanovskaya Square.

troublemaker

This is the title of the novel (1940) by L. V. Solovyov (1898–1962) about Khoja Nasreddin, the hero of folk jokes among Azerbaijanis, Tajiks, Armenians, peoples of the North Caucasus, Persians and Turks. The expression "troublemaker" has become winged as a figurative description of people who rebel against indifference, bureaucracy, and various manifestations of social injustice.

The Volga flows into the Caspian Sea.
Horses eat oats and hay

Quote from A.P. Chekhov's story "Teacher of Literature" (1894). These phrases are repeated in a dying delirium by the teacher of history and geography, Ippolit Ippolitovich, who all his life expressed only well-known, indisputable truths. Used in the meaning: well-known banal statements.

In borrowed plumes

The expression arose from the fable of I. A. Krylov "The Crow" (1825). The crow, poking her tail with peacock feathers, went for a walk, confident that she was Pavam's sister and that everyone would look at her. But the Pavs plucked the Crow so that not even her own feathers were left on her. The crow rushed to her, but they did not recognize her. “Crow in peacock feathers” - they talk about a person who appropriates other people's dignity, unsuccessfully tries to play a high, unusual role and therefore falls into a comic position.

Get into a mess

The expression is used in the sense: to be in an unpleasant, awkward or disadvantageous position due to one's oversight or ignorance. The adverb "into a mess" was formed as a result of the merger of elements in the combination "into a mess." Prosak is a spinning mill, a rope loom, on which ropes were twisted in the old days. It was a complex network of ropes that stretched from the spinning wheel to the sled, where they were twisted. The camp was usually located on the street and occupied a significant space. For a spinner to get his clothes, hair or beard into a slip, that is, into a rope camp, meant, at best, to get seriously injured and tear his clothes, and at worst, to lose his life.

Vralman

The protagonist of the comedy D. I. Fonvizin (1744 / 1745‑1792) “Undergrowth” (1782), an ignorant German, a former coachman, one of the teachers of the landowner’s son, undersized Mitrofanushka. His surname, made up of the Russian "liar" and the German "Mann" (man), which fully characterizes him, has become a household name for a braggart and a liar.

Seriously and for a long time

Expression of V. I. Lenin (1870–1924) from a report at the IX All-Russian Congress of Soviets. About the new economic policy, V. I. Lenin said: “... we are pursuing this policy in earnest and for a long time, but, of course, as it has already been correctly noted, not forever.”

Everything will pass like smoke from white apple trees

Quote from a poem by S. A. Yesenin (1895–1925) “I don’t regret, I don’t call, I don’t cry ...” (1922):

I do not regret, do not call, do not cry,
Everything will pass like smoke from white apple trees.
Withering gold embraced,
I won't be young anymore.

Quoted as a consolation, as advice to take life calmly, philosophically, because everything passes - both good and bad.

Everything is mixed up in the Oblonsky house

Quote from Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina (1875): “Everything was mixed up in the Oblonskys' house. The wife found out that her husband was in connection with a French governess who was in their house, and announced to her husband that she could not live with him in the same house ... The wife did not leave her rooms, her husband was not at home for the third day. The children ran all over the house like they were lost; the Englishwoman quarreled with the housekeeper and wrote a note to a friend, asking her to find a new place for her; the cook left the yard yesterday, during dinner; the black cook and the coachman asked for a calculation. The quotation is used as a figurative definition of confusion, confusion.

All is well, beautiful marquise

Quote from a poem (1936) by A. I. Bezymensky (1898–1973) “Everything is fine” (French folk song). The Marquise, who has been away for fifteen days, calls her estate on the phone and asks one of the servants: “Well, how are things going with you?” He answers:

It's all right, beautiful marquise,
Things are going and life is easy
No sad surprise
Except for a trifle!

So... that's nonsense...
Empty business...
Your mare is dead!

All is well, all is well.

The coachman to the Marquise's question: "How did this death happen?" - answers:

With a mare that:
Empty business!
She burned down with the stable!
But otherwise, beautiful Marchioness,
All is well, all is well.

But for the rest,
beautiful marquise,
All is well, all is well!

All this would be funny
Whenever it was so sad

Quote from the poem by M. Yu. Lermontov “A. O. Smirnova "(1840):

Without you I want to tell you a lot
With you, I want to listen to you ...
What to do? .. Speech inexperienced
I can't occupy your mind...
All this would be funny
When would not be so sad.

It is used as a commentary on an outwardly tragicomic, funny, but essentially very serious, disturbing situation.

Take rubbish out of the hut

It is used in the meaning: to disclose troubles, quarrels concerning only a narrow circle of people. The expression is usually used in a negative way, as a call not to disclose the details of such quarrels (no need to take dirty linen out of the hut). It is associated with the ancient custom not to take garbage out of the hut, but to burn it (for example, in a furnace), since an evil person allegedly could send trouble on the owner of the hut by uttering special words over the garbage.

G

Galloping through Europe

This is the title of the travel essays of the poet A. A. Zharov (1904-1984), reflecting the fleeting impressions he made from his trip to Western Europe (1928). The title is explained by the fact that Zharov and his companions, the poets I. Utkin and A. Bezymensky, had to greatly reduce their stay in Czechoslovakia and Austria at the request of the police.

M. Gorky in his article "On the Benefits of Literacy" (1928) used Zharov's expression "gallop across Europe", but already at the address of some authors of frivolous essays on life abroad, informing readers of incorrect information. The expression is used as a definition of surface observations in general.

Hamburg account

In 1928 A collection of literary-critical articles, notes and essays by V. Shklovsky (1893-1984) was published under the title "Hamburg Account". The meaning of this name is explained in a brief program article that opens the collection: “The Hamburg account is an extremely important concept. All wrestlers, when wrestling, cheat and lie down on the shoulder blades at the order of the entrepreneur. Once a year wrestlers gather in a Hamburg tavern. They fight with closed doors and curtained windows. Long, ugly and hard. Here the true classes of wrestlers are established, so as not to cheat. The Hamburg account is necessary in literature.” In conclusion, the article mentions the names of several well-known modern writers who, in the author's opinion, do not stand up to the Hamburg account. Subsequently, Shklovsky recognized this article as "bullying" and incorrect. But the expression "Hamburg account" at the same time became winged, initially in the literary environment, as a definition of the evaluation of any work of literature or art without discounts and concessions, and then became more widespread and began to be used in the evaluation of certain social phenomena.

Hero of our time

The title of the novel by M. Yu. Lermontov (1840), possibly inspired by N. M. Karamzin's Knight of Our Time. Allegorically: a person whose thoughts and deeds most fully express the spirit of modernity. The expression is used in a positive sense or ironically, according to the personality of the person to whom it is applied.

The hero is not my novel

Chatsky

But Skalozub? Here's a sight!
For the army stands a mountain,
And the straightness of the camp,
Face and voice - a hero ...

Sofia

Not my novel.

The expression is used in the sense: not to my taste.

Burn people's hearts with the verb

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Prophet" (1828).
Used in the meaning: ardently, passionately preach, teach.

Eye, speed, onslaught

Aphorism of the great Russian commander A. V. Suvorov. With these words, in his "Science of Victory" (written in 1796, first edition 1806), he defined the "three martial arts."

The stupid penguin timidly hides a fat body in the rocks.

Quote from "The Song of the Petrel" (1901) by M. Gorky.

Rotten liberalism

The expression of M. E. Saltykov-Shchedrin (1826–1889) from the satirical essay (1875) “Lord Molchaliny” (from the cycle “In the Environment of Moderation and Accuracy”), which has become synonymous with unscrupulousness, conciliation, connivance.

Hunger is not an aunt

So they say about a strong hunger, forcing you to do something. These words are part of a detailed expression written back in the 17th century: hunger is not an aunt; deeds.

Woe from Wit

The title of the comedy by A. S. Griboyedov.

D

Was it a boy?

In one of the episodes of M. Gorky's novel "The Life of Klim Samgin" (1927), the boy Klim is skating with other children. Boris Varavka and Varya Somova fall into a hole. Klim gives Boris the end of his gymnasium belt, but, feeling that he is being pulled into the water, he releases the belt from his hands. Children are drowning. When the search for the drowned begins, Klima is struck by “someone’s serious incredulous question: “Was there a boy, maybe there wasn’t a boy?” The last phrase became winged, as a figurative expression of extreme doubt about anything.

Yes, only things are still there

Quote from the fable of I. A. Krylov "Swan, Pike and Cancer" (1814). It is used in the meaning: the matter does not move, it stands still, and fruitless conversations take place around it.

Nice lady in every way

An expression from N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842): "Whatever name you think of, it will certainly be found in some corner of our state - the good is great - someone who wears it, and will certainly be angry ... and therefore we will call the lady to whom the guest came, as she legally acquired, for, as if, she spared nothing in order to become amiable to the last degree, although, of course, what a nimble agility crept through the courtesy female character! and although sometimes in every pleasant word she stuck out, wow, what a pin ... "

give oak

Used to mean "to die". There are two versions of the origin of this expression:

  1. The turnover arose on Russian soil and is associated with the verb zadubet - "to cool down, lose sensitivity, become hard."
  2. The expression originated in the south of Russia. It can be assumed that the dead were buried under the oak.

twenty two misfortunes

So in the play by A.P. Chekhov "The Cherry Orchard" (1903) they call the clerk Epikhodov, with whom some kind of comic trouble happens every day. The expression is applied to the unfortunate, with whom some kind of misfortune constantly occurs.

Noble Nest

The title of the novel by I. S. Turgenev (1859), which has become synonymous with a noble estate. This expression was used by Turgenev even earlier, in the story "My neighbor Radilov" (1847).

Things of bygone days
Traditions of antiquity deep

A quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Ruslan and Lyudmila" (1820), which is a close translation of the poems of one of Ossian's poems, created by the English writer James MacPherson (1736-1796) and attributed to this legendary ancient Celtic bard. Allegorically about old and unreliable events that few people remember.

In the bag

When they say "it's in the bag", it means: everything is in order, everything ended successfully. The origin of this expression is sometimes explained by the fact that during the time of Ivan the Terrible, some court cases were decided by lot, and the lot was drawn from the judge's hat. There is another explanation for the origin of the expression. Some researchers argue that clerks and clerks (they were the ones who dealt with all kinds of litigation), solving court cases, used their hats to receive bribes, and if the amount of the bribe suited the clerk, then "it was in the hat."

The work of helping the drowning is the work of the drowning themselves

In the satirical novel by I. Ilf (1897-1937) and E. Petrov (1902-1942) "The Twelve Chairs" (1927), a poster with such an absurd slogan, posted in the club at the evening of the Water Rescue Society, is mentioned. This slogan began to be used, sometimes in a slightly modified version, as a playful aphorism about self-help.

Cause time and fun hour

In 1656, on the orders of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich (1629–1676), the “Book called the constable: a new code and arrangement of the order of the falconer's way” was compiled, that is, a collection of rules for falconry, a favorite pastime of that time. At the end of the preface, Alexei Mikhailovich made a handwritten postscript: “A book adjunct or his own; this parable of the soul and body; do not forget truth and judgment and merciful love and the military system: there is time for business and an hour for fun. The words of postscript have become an expression that is often interpreted not quite correctly, understanding the word "time" most, and under the word "hour" - a smaller one, as a result of which the expression itself is changed: "time for business, and hour for fun." But the king did not even think about giving only an hour out of a whole time for fun. These words express the idea that everything has its time - both business and fun.

Demyanov's ear

The expression is used in the meaning: forced excessive treats against the desire of the treated; anything at all strongly suggested. It arose from the fable of I. A. Krylov "Demyan's ear" (1813). Neighbor Demyan regaled neighbor Fok's ear so much that he,

No matter how much he loved the ear, but from such a misfortune,
Grabbed in an armful
Sash and hat
Hurry home without memory -
And from that time on, not a foot to Demyan.

Derzhimorda

The character of N. V. Gogol's comedy "The Inspector General" (1836), a rude police officer who, according to Gorodnichiy, "puts lanterns under everyone's eyes for order, both the right and the guilty." His surname entered the literary speech in the meaning: rude, blindly fulfilling orders from above, the guardian of order.

Catch up and overtake

The expression arose from the article by V.I. Lenin "The impending catastrophe and how to deal with it" (1917). In this article, V. I. Lenin wrote: “The revolution did what in a few months Russia, in its own way, political line up with the advanced countries. But this is not enough. War is inexorable, it poses the question with merciless sharpness: either perish or catch up with the advanced countries and overtake them as well. economically". The same slogan is “catch up and overtake America!” was re-introduced in the 1960s. First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU N. S. Khrushchev (1894-1971). Quoted as a call to win a competition (usually economic) with someone. It is used both literally and ironically.

Dr. Aibolit

The hero of the fairy tale by K. I. Chukovsky (1882–1969) “Aibolit” (1929). The name of the “good doctor” Aibolit began to be used (at first by children) as a playfully affectionate name for a doctor.

Domostroy

Domostroy is a monument of Russian literature of the 16th century, which is a set of everyday rules and morals. These rules, set out in more than sixty chapters, were based on a well-established worldview that had developed under the influence of the church. "Domostroy" teaches "how to believe", "how to honor the king", "how to live with wives and with children and with households", normalizes home life and economy. The ideal of any household, according to Domostroy, is hoarding, which should help to acquire wealth, which is achievable only if the head of the family has autocracy. The husband, according to "Domostroy", is the head of the family, the master of the wife, and "Domostroy" indicates in detail in which cases he should beat his wife, etc. Hence the word "domostroy" means: a conservative way of life family life, morality, affirming the slave position of women.

Tear like Sidorov's goat

It is used in the meaning: to flog, to beat someone strongly, cruelly and ruthlessly. The name Sidor was often associated with the idea of ​​an evil or quarrelsome person, and the goat, according to popular beliefs, is an animal with a harmful character.

Darling

The heroine of the story of the same name by A.P. Chekhov (1899), an ingenuous woman who changes her interests and views as her lovers change, through whose eyes she looks at life. The image of Chekhov's "darling" is also characterized by people who change their beliefs and views depending on who is currently influencing them.

Breathe incense

So they say about a thin, weak, sickly-looking person who does not have long to live. The expression is based on the religious symbolism of the word "incense". In the church, incense is censed (they shake the vessel in which the smoking incense is located). This rite is performed, in particular, before the dead or dying.

E

There is life in the old dog yet

Quote from N.V. Gogol's story "Taras Bulba" (1842). Allegorically about the ability to accomplish a lot more; about good health, well-being or the great potential of a person capable of many significant things, although those around him no longer expect this from him.

There is something to despair

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824). Chatsky, interrupting Repetilov's lies, tells him:

Listen, lie, but know the measure;
There is something to despair.

There is rapture in battle
And the dark abyss on the edge

Quote from the dramatic scene of A. S. Pushkin "Feast during the Plague" (1832), song of the chairman of the feast. Used as a formula to justify excessively risky behavior.

F

Alive Smoking Room

An expression from a folk children's song performed when playing the "Smoking Room". The players sit in a circle and pass each other a burning splinter with the refrain: “The Smoking Room is alive, alive, the legs are thin, the soul is short.” The one in whose hands the splinter goes out leaves the circle. This is where the expression “Kurilka is alive” came from, used as a playful exclamation when referring to the ongoing activities of insignificant people, as well as the continuous activities of someone in difficult conditions.

living water

In Russian folk tales - magical water that revives the dead, giving heroic strength.

Live and let others live

The first line of the poem by G. R. Derzhavin (1743–1816) “On the birth of Empress Gremislava” (1798):

Live and let others live
But not at the expense of the other;
Always be happy with your
Don't touch anyone else's
Here is the rule, the path is straight
For the happiness of everyone and everyone.

Derzhavin is the author of this poetic formula, but not of the very thought embedded in it, which has long existed as a proverb in different languages. In Russia, its French version was also widely known - "Vivons et laissons vivre les autres". The authorship of this idea is unknown. But in any case, its Russian translation became an aphorism thanks to G. R. Derzhavin.

By Tsarina Gremislava, the poet means the Russian Empress Catherine the Great. According to legend, the expression "live and let others live" was her favorite proverb.

Allegorically: a call to be attentive to the interests of other people, to seek a compromise with them, a certain formula of coexistence that suits everyone.

Living Dead

The expression became widespread after the appearance of the drama "The Living Corpse" (1911) by L. N. Tolstoy, whose hero, Fedya Protasov, feigning suicide, hides from his wife and people of his circle and lives among the dregs of society, being in his own eyes a "living corpse" . Now the expression "living corpse" is used in the meaning: a person who has fallen, morally devastated, and also in general anything that has become dead, has outlived itself.

3

Out of reach

The expression belongs to Admiral F. V. Dubasov (1845–1912), known for the brutal suppression of the Moscow armed uprising. In his "victorious" report to Nicholas II of December 22, 1905, Dubasov wrote: the most irreconcilable and embittered fighters ... I cannot recognize the rebellious movement as completely suppressed.

For distant lands.
Far Far Away [Thirtieth] Kingdom

An expression often found in Russian folk tales in the meaning: far, in an unknown distance.

Forget and fall asleep!

Quote from the poem by M. Yu. Lermontov “I go out alone on the road”:

I don't expect anything from life
And I do not feel sorry for the past at all;
I'm looking for freedom and peace!
I would like to forget and fall asleep!

shabby look

This expression appeared under Peter I (1672-1725). Zatrapeznikov is the surname of a merchant whose factory produced very coarse and low-quality fabric. Since then, they have been talking about a sloppyly dressed person.

Smart language. Zaum

Terms created by the poet and theorist of futurism A. E. Kruchenykh. In the “Declaration of the word as such” (1913), the essence of “beyond” is defined as follows: “Thought and speech do not keep pace with the experience of inspiration, therefore the artist is free to express himself not only common language... but also personal ... not having a specific meaning ... abstruse. On the basis of this far-fetched false theory, futurist poets created words devoid of any subject-semantic meaning, wrote, for example, such verses: “Serzha melepet hailed ok rizum melev alik.” Therefore, the terms "abstruse", "abstruse language" began to be used in the meaning: a language that is incomprehensible to the broad masses, in general, is nonsense.

Hello, young, unfamiliar tribe!

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "I visited again / That corner of the earth ..." (1835):

hello tribe.
Young, unfamiliar! not me
I will see your mighty late age,
When you outgrow my friends
And you will cover their old head
From the eyes of a passerby...

It is used as a playfully solemn greeting addressed to young people, young colleagues.

green grapes

The expression came into wide circulation after the appearance of the fable by I. A. Krylov “The Fox and the Grapes” (1808). The fox, who cannot reach the high-hanging clusters of grapes, says:

Looks like he's good
Yes, green - there are no ripe berries,
You'll get the hang of it right away.

It is used to denote an imaginary contempt for what is impossible to achieve.

Hot spot

An expression from the Orthodox prayer for the dead ("... in a place of greenery, in a place of rest ..."). So in the texts in the Church Slavonic language is called paradise. The figurative meaning of this expression is “a fun place” or “a satisfying place” (such a place in old Russia could be a tavern). Over time, this expression acquired a negative connotation - a place where they indulge in revelry, debauchery.

AND

And the smoke of the fatherland is sweet and pleasant to us

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824), words of Chatsky, who returned from a trip. Recalling old Muscovites with sarcasm, he says:

I am destined to see them again!
You will get tired of living with them, and in whom can you not find spots?
When you wander, you return home,
And the smoke of the fatherland is sweet and pleasant to us.

Griboedov's last phrase is not a completely accurate quote from G. R. Derzhavin's poem "Harp" (1798):

We have good news about our side:
Fatherland and smoke are sweet and pleasant to us.

Derzhavin's phrase entered into wide circulation, of course, as a quotation from Griboyedov's comedy. Allegorically about love, attachment to one's fatherland, when even the smallest signs of one's own, native cause joy, tenderness.

And live in a hurry and feel in a hurry

Quote from a poem by P. A. Vyazemsky (1792–1878) “The First Snow” (1822). Taken by A. S. Pushkin as an epigraph to the 1st chapter of "Eugene Onegin". Allegorically: 1. About a person who, although in a hurry, cannot bring anything to the end. 2. About the one who seeks to take as much as possible from life, to enjoy everything, without particularly thinking about the price that will have to be paid for it.

And boring, and sad, and there is no one to give a hand

Quote from M. Yu. Lermontov's poem "Both boring and sad" (1840):

And boring, and sad, and there is no one to give a hand
In a moment of heartbreak...
Wish! What is the use of wanting in vain and forever?
And the years pass - all the best years ...

Allegorically about loneliness, the absence of loved ones.

And fight again!
Rest only in our dreams

Quote from the poem by A. A. Blok (1880-1921) "On the Kulikovo field" (1909). Allegorically about the determination to fight further to achieve the goal.

And the one who walks through life with a song,
He never disappears anywhere

Chorus of the popular march from the film "Merry Fellows" (1934), lyrics by V. I. Lebedev-Kumach (1898–1949), music by I. O. Dunayevsky (1900–1955).

Ivan Ivanovich and Ivan Nikiforov

Characters of "The Tale of how Ivan Ivanovich quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich" (1834) by N. V. Gogol. The names of these two inhabitants of Mirgorod have become common nouns for people who are constantly quarreling with each other, a synonym for squabbles and gossip.

Ivan Nepomniachtchi

IN in tsarist Russia, the captured runaway convicts, hiding their past, concealed their real name and surname, called themselves Ivans and said that they did not remember their relationship; in the police they were recorded as "not remembering kinship", hence their nickname "Ivan Nepomniachtchi".

I'm going to you

Prince Svyatoslav, starting the war, announced to the enemy in advance: "I want to go to you." N. M. Karamzin (1766–1826), transmitting a chronicle legend, cites Svyatoslav’s phrase in the form: “I’m coming at you!” Winged phrase received in the editorial: "I'm going to you." Used in the meaning: I intend to enter into a confrontation, dispute, dispute, etc.

A spark will ignite a flame

A quote from a poem by the Decembrist poet A. I. Odoevsky (1802–1839), written in Siberia in response to a poetic message by A. S. Pushkin (1826), addressed to the Decembrists exiled to hard labor (“In the depths of Siberian ores / Keep proud patience …”).

Allegorically about faith in success, the victory of one's business, despite its difficult beginning.

For the love of art

An expression from the vaudeville by D. T. Lensky (1805–1860) “Lev Gurych Sinichkin” (1839). One of the vaudeville characters, Count Zefirov, is dragging along pretty actresses, playing a patron of the local troupe. His favorite expression, which he repeats every minute: "For the love of art."

It is used in the meaning: out of love for the very cause, occupation, without any selfish goals.

From a beautiful distance

An expression from N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842): "Rus! Russia! I see you from my wonderful, beautiful far away, I see you ”(almost the entire 1st volume“ dead souls was written by Gogol abroad). It is cited as a playfully ironic designation of a place where a person is free from ordinary worries, difficulties, problems.

A hut on chicken legs

In Russian folk tales, Baba Yaga lives in such a hut. This figurative name comes from those wooden log cabins, which in the old days, in order to protect them from decay, were placed on stumps with chopped roots.

Zest

The expression arose from a folk proverb: "Kvass is not expensive, the zest in kvass is expensive." It became winged after the appearance of the drama by L. N. Tolstoy "The Living Corpse" (1912). The hero of the drama Protasov, talking about his family life, says: “My wife ideal woman was... But what can I say? There was no raisin - you know, is there a raisin in kvass? - there was no game in our life. And I had to forget. And you won’t forget without a game ... ”It is used in the meaning: something that gives a special taste, attractiveness to something (a dish, a story, a person, etc.).

TO

Kazan orphan

This is the name of a person who pretends to be unhappy, offended, helpless in order to arouse the sympathy of compassionate people. This expression in the time of Ivan the Terrible (1530–1584) jokingly they called the Tatar princes who, after the conquest of Kazan, converted to Christianity and sought honors at the royal court. In their petitions, they often referred to themselves as orphans. Another option is also possible: after the conquest of Kazan, many beggars appeared who pretended to be victims of the war and said that their parents died during the siege of Kazan.

Like a squirrel in a wheel

An expression from the fable of I. A. Krylov "Squirrel" (1833):

Look at another businessman:
Busy, rushing about, everyone marvels at him:
It seems to be torn from the skin,
Yes, but everything is not moving forward,
Like a squirrel in a wheel.

The expression is used in the meaning: to constantly fuss, to bother without visible results.

No matter what happens

The words of the teacher Belikov from the story of A.P. Chekhov "The Man in the Case" (1898). Quoted as a definition of cowardice, alarmism.

How did you get to this life?

Quote from a poem N. A. Nekrasova (1821–1878) "Poor and elegant" (1861):

Let's call her and ask her:
"How did you come to such a life? .."

It is used to express bewilderment, regret about the troubles that have befallen a person.

As under each leaf
Both the table and the house were ready

Quote from the fable "Dragonfly and Ant" (1808) by I. A. Krylov. The expression is given to characterize easily, easily achieved material security.

Like water off a duck's back

Because of the fatty lubrication of plumage, water rolls off the goose easily. This observation led to the appearance of this expression. It is used to refer to a person who is indifferent to everything, nothing at all.

How beautiful, how fresh the roses were...

This line is from a poem by I. P. Myatlev (1796-1844) "Roses". It is used when sadly remembering something joyful, bright, but long gone.

Capital to acquire and innocence to keep

An expression popularized by M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin (“Letters to Aunty” (1882), “Little Things in Life” (1887), “Mon Repos Shelter” (1879), etc.). It is used in the meaning: to satisfy one's selfish interests, while trying to maintain the reputation of an unmercenary person, an altruist.

Karamazovshchina

A word that came into wide use after the publication of F. M. Dostoevsky's novel The Brothers Karamazov (1879–1880). This word denotes an extreme degree of moral irresponsibility and cynicism (“everything is allowed”), which are the essence of the worldview and morals of the main characters.

Karataev.
Karataevshchina

Platon Karataev is one of the heroes of Leo Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace" (1865–1869). His humility and mild-mannered attitude to every manifestation of evil (“non-resistance to evil”) expresses, according to Tolstoy, the essence of the Russian peasantry, genuine folk wisdom.

Kisey young lady [girl]

Apparently, for the first time in literary speech, this expression came from the novel by N. G. Pomyalovsky (1835–1863) “Petty Bourgeois Happiness” (1861). Used in the meaning: cutesy, pampered girl, with a limited outlook.

wedge wedge kick out

Denotes "to get rid of something (bad, heavy), acting as if it does not exist, or resorting to exactly what caused it." The expression is associated with chopping firewood, in which logs are split by driving a wedge into a slot made with an ax. If the wedge gets stuck in the wood without splitting it, then it can be knocked out (and at the same time split the log) only with a second, thicker wedge.

Kolomna verst

So called long and thin people. In the 17th century, by order of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, on the “pillar” road (that is, the road with milestones) between Moscow and the royal summer residence in the village of Kolomenskoye, distance measurements were re-measured and “versts” were installed - especially high milestones, from which and this expression went.

Who lives well in Russia

The title of the poem by N. A. Nekrasov, the first chapter of which was published in 1866. Seven peasants, arguing about

Who has fun
Freely in Russia, -

they decide not to return home until they find an answer to this question, and they go around Russia in search of someone “who will live well in Russia.” Quoted as a playfully ironic commentary on all kinds of sociological research, polls, their results, etc.

Kondrashka had enough

So they say in case someone suddenly died, died (about an apoplexy, paralysis). There are several versions of the origin of the turnover:

  1. phraseologism goes back to the name of Kondraty Bulavin, the leader of the popular uprising on the Don in 1707;
  2. Kondrashka is a euphemistic name for death, serious illness, paralysis, characteristic of popular superstition.

Ends in the water

The expression is associated with the name of Ivan the Terrible. Repressions against the population under this king sometimes took on such a scale that even Ivan himself was embarrassed. In such cases, to hide true scale executions, people who died from torture were secretly thrown into the river. To hide the ends in the water means to cover up the traces of the crime.

The horse didn't roll

It is used in the sense: nothing has been done yet, before the start of the matter is still far away. The origin of the turnover is connected with the habit of horses to wallow before being allowed to put on a collar or saddle, which delayed the work.

box

The character of N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842): "... one of those mothers, small landowners who cry for crop failures, losses ... and meanwhile they are gaining a little money in colorful bags placed in drawers of chests of drawers. All the coins are taken into one bag, fifty dollars into another, and quarters into the third, although it seems as if there is nothing in the chest of drawers except linen, night blouses, cotton hanks, and a torn coat, which then turns into a dress, if the old one will somehow burn out during the baking of holiday cakes with all sorts of spinners, or it will be worn out by itself. But the dress will not burn and will not be worn out by itself; the old woman is thrifty, and the coat is destined to lie torn open for a long time, and then go to the niece of the great sister, along with all other rubbish, according to the spiritual testament. Korobochka's name has become synonymous with a person living in petty interests, a petty scopid.

Blood with milk

So they say about ruddy, healthy person. An expression from Russian folklore, where folk ideas about the beauty of color are combined: red like blood and white like milk. In Russia, a white face and a blush on the cheeks have long been considered a sign of beauty, which was evidence of good health.

The cuckoo praises the rooster
Because he praises the cuckoo

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "The Cuckoo and the Rooster" (1841):

Why, without fear of sin,
Does the cuckoo praise the rooster?
Because he praises the cuckoo.

L

Unusual lightness in thoughts

The words of the boasted Khlestakov in N.V. Gogol's comedy The Inspector General (1836): “However, there are many of my works: The Marriage of Figaro, Robert the Devil, Norma. I don't even remember the names; And all by chance: I didn’t want to write, but the theater management says: “Please, brother, write something.” I think to myself: “Perhaps, if you please, brother!” And then in one evening, it seems, he wrote everything, he amazed everyone. I have an extraordinary lightness in my thoughts.

Climb on the rampage

It means: in rage and blindness, go contrary to common sense to obvious death, "run into" trouble. "Rozhnoy" in the old Russian language (and now in local dialects) was called a pointed stake. When hunting a bear, the daredevils, going at it, put up a sharp stake in front of them. Ran into trouble, the bear died. Of the same origin and the expression "shove against the pricks" or, conversely, "you can't trample against the pricks." Hence the “no gouges” in the sense: there is nothing.

Extra people.
Extra person

From the "Diary of a Superfluous Man" (1850) by I. S. Turgenev. The image of the “superfluous person” was very popular in Russian literature of the 19th century. as a type of nobleman who, in the current socio-political conditions, does not find a place for himself in life, cannot fulfill himself and suffers from this, languishes with inactivity. The very interpretation of the "superfluous person" - namely, as a completely definite social type - served for many authors of those years as a form of indirect, non-political protest against the conditions of life that had developed in Russia.

Usually the expression is used in relation to people who are somewhat similar to these heroes of Russian classical literature.

Beam of light in the dark realm

The title of an article (1860) by N. A. Dobrolyubov (1836–1861) dedicated to A. N. Ostrovsky’s (1823–1886) drama The Thunderstorm. Dobrolyubov considers the suicide of the heroine of the drama, Katerina, as a protest against the arbitrariness and tyranny of the "dark kingdom". This protest is passive, but testifies to the fact that the oppressed masses are already awakening to the consciousness of their natural rights, that the time for slavish obedience is passing. Therefore, Dobrolyubov called Katerina "a ray of light in a dark kingdom." Allegorically: a gratifying, bright phenomenon (a kind, pleasant person) in some difficult, depressing situation.

Better less is better

The title of the article (1923) by V. I. Lenin. The phrase is a symbol of the priority of quality over quantity.

Love for all ages

Quote from the poem "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. It is used as a playfully ironic comment about the ardent, youthful feelings of an elderly person.

Cannibal Ellochka

“William Shakespeare's dictionary is estimated by researchers to be 12,000 words. The vocabulary of a negro from the cannibalistic tribe "Mumbo Yumbo" is 300 words.

Ellochka Shchukina easily and freely managed thirty.

This is how chapter XXII, part II, “Cannibal Ellochka” begins in the novel “The Twelve Chairs” (1928) by Ilya Ilf and Evgeny Petrov.

In the lexicon of the bourgeois Ellochka, such words as “famous”, “gloom”, “horror”, “lad”, “taxo”, etc., serve to express all her miserable feelings and thoughts. Her name has become a household name for people who fill their meager speech with fictitious catchphrases and vulgarisms.

Lasy to sharpen

The expression "to sharpen lyas" means "to talk nonsense, to engage in frivolous, pointless conversation." The expression comes from a simple old work - the manufacture of balusters: chiseled posts for railings. Lasy - presumably the same as balusters, balusters. A baluster was a turner who made balusters (in a figurative sense - a joker, a joker, a joker). The baluster craft was considered fun and easy, not requiring special concentration and giving the master the opportunity to sing, joke, chat with others.

M

Manilov. Manilovshchina

Manilov is one of the heroes of N.V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842), a landowner, sugary-sweet in dealing with his family and guests, a sentimental, fruitless dreamer.

Disservice

The expression arose from the fable of I. A. Krylov "The Hermit and the Bear" (1808). It is used in the meaning: an inept, awkward service that brings harm, trouble instead of help.

Dead Souls

The title of a poem by N. V. Gogol, whose main character Chichikov, with a speculative purpose, buys "dead souls" from the landowners, who, according to documents, were listed alive before the next census. The expression has become winged in the meaning: people who are fictitiously listed somewhere, as well as people who are “dead in spirit”.

Petty-bourgeois happiness

The title of the story (1861) by N. G. Pomyalovsky. Used in the meaning: life without high goals, aspirations, filled with petty, everyday worries, acquisitiveness, etc.

A million torments

The words of Chatsky in the comedy by A. S. Griboyedov "Woe from Wit" (1824):

Yes, no urine: a million torments
Breasts from a friendly vice,
Feet from shuffling, ears from exclamations,
And more than a head from all sorts of trifles.

The expression became popular thanks to the widely known article “A Million of Torments” (1872) by the writer Ivan Goncharov (1812–1891), who rethought in it Griboedov's expression in the spirit of his time - spiritual, moral torment.

It is used jokingly and ironically: in relation to all kinds of nervous, long, various troubles, as well as to heavy thoughts, doubts about any important matter.

Bypass us more than all sorrows
And the lord's anger, and the lord's love

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit", the words of the maid Lisa. Allegorically: it is better to stay away from the special attention of people on whom you depend, because from their love to their hatred is one step.

Mitrofan

The protagonist of the comedy "Undergrowth" (1782) by D. I. Fonvizin is a silly landowner's son, a spoiled undergrowth, a lazy person, incapable of learning. His name has become a household name for people of this type.

I don't like your gift
The road is your love

An expression from the Russian folk song "On the pavement street":

Ah, my dear is good,
Chernobrov, soul, handsome,
Brought me a present
Dear gift,
Gold ring from hand.
I don't care about your gift
The road is your love.
I don't want to wear a ring
I want to love my friend.

The meaning of the expression: it is not the cost and sophistication of the gift that are important, but the feelings that it is intended to express.

My universities

The title of an autobiographical story (1923) by M. Gorky; He calls universities the school of life he passed through.

The expression is often used with the replacement of the word "my" with another appropriate for the occasion.

To the young everywhere at we are dear

Quote from “Songs about the Motherland” in the film “Circus” (1936), text by V.I. Lebedev‑Kumach, music by I.O. Dunaevsky. It is used both literally and ironically, according to the situation.

Milk rivers and kissel banks

An expression from a Russian folk tale. It is used as a figurative definition of a carefree, free life.

Molchalin. Silence

Molchalin is the protagonist in A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), a type of careerist, obsequious and modest in front of his superiors; he defines his virtues in two words: "moderation and accuracy." His name and the word "silence" that arose from him became synonymous with careerism, subservience.

Moscow ... how much in this sound
Merged for the Russian heart!
How much resonated in it!

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. Expresses admiration for the capital of Russia, the historical, national features of Moscow, its appearance.

We all learned a little
Something and somehow

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. It is used when it comes to amateurism, shallow, superficial knowledge in any area.

We cannot wait for favors from nature, it is our task to take them from her

The expression belongs to the Soviet genetics biologist and breeder I. V. Michurin (1855–1935), who in practice, on a large scale, showed the ability to change the hereditary forms of organisms, adapting them to human needs. It is quoted ironically about the absurd, objectively harmful to the interests of mankind plans to "conquer" nature. The phrase is a symbol of consumer attitude to nature.

We plowed

Quote from the fable of I. I. Dmitriev (1760–1837) “The Fly” (1803):

A bull with a plow to rest trudged through labors,
And the fly sat on his horns,
And they met Mukha on the road.
"Where are you from, sister?" - from this was a question.
And she raised her nose
In response, she says: “Where? -
We plowed!

The quotation is used to characterize people who want to show that they took an active part in some kind of work, although in reality their role was insignificant and they ascribe to themselves other people's merits.

We were born to make a fairy tale come true

Quote from the poem by P. D. German (1894–1952) “All the Higher”, dedicated to Soviet pilots:

We were born to make a fairy tale come true
Overcome space and space.
The mind gave us steel arms - wings,
And instead of a heart, a fiery engine ...

The poem set to music gained wide popularity, and its first line became winged. It is used ironically in relation to socialist doctrines and political slogans that have discredited themselves. It is also used as a playful compliment to oneself.

H

To the grandfather's village

In A.P. Chekhov’s story “Vanka” (1886), a nine-year-old peasant boy Vanka Zhukov, brought from the village to Moscow and apprenticed to a shoemaker, writes a letter to his grandfather. “Vanka folded the sheet of paper he had written in four and put it in an envelope, bought the day before for a penny ... After thinking a little, he dipped his pen and wrote the address: “To the village of grandfather.” Then he scratched himself, thought, and added: "Konstantin Makarych." The expression "grandfather's village" is used jokingly when talking about an inaccurate address or its absence.

At the bottom

“At the Bottom” is the title of M. Gorky’s play, first staged at the Moscow Art Theater on December 18, 1902. The first edition of the play, published in Munich that same year, was entitled “At the Bottom of Life”. According to I. A. Bunin, Leonid Andreev advised Gorky to give the play the name "At the Bottom", instead of "At the Bottom of Life".

These expressions are used when talking about the lowest rung of the social ladder, about the actual "falling out" of normal life.

At the dawn of a misty youth

Quote from A. V. Koltsov's (1809–1842) poem "Separation" (1840), set to music by A. Gurilev (1803–1858) and other composers. Used in the meaning: once upon a time, a long time ago.

Cuts soles on the go

The expression originated from a Russian folk tale about thieves. The old thief agreed to take a young guy as a comrade, but with an agreement: “I’ll take ... if you steal from under wild duck eggs, but you will steal so much that she will not hear, and will not fly off the nest. - "What a wonder!" – answered the guy. So they went together, found a duck's nest and crawled to it on their belly. While the uncle (the thief) was still sneaking up, and the guy had already picked all the eggs from the nest, so cunningly that the bird did not move a feather; Yes, not only did he pick out the eggs, he casually cut the soles of the old thief's boots out of his boots. “Well, Vanka, there is nothing to teach you, you yourself are a great master!” So they jokingly talk about a clever, roguish person, capable of fraudulent tricks.

The song helps us to build and live

Quote from the "Merry Fellows March", lyrics by V.I. Lebedev-Kumach, music by I.O. Dunaevsky from the film "Merry Fellows" (1934).

The people are silent

The tragedy of A. S. Pushkin “Boris Godunov” (1831) ends with the following scene: the boyar Masalsky, one of the murderers of the widow of Boris Godunov and her son, announces to the people: “People! Maria Godunova and her son Theodore poisoned themselves with poison. We saw their dead bodies. (The people are silent in horror.) Why are you silent? Shout: long live Tsar Dimitri Ivanovich! (The people are silent.)"

The last remark, having become a catchphrase, is used when it comes to: 1. About the uncomplaining obedience of the people to power, about the lack of desire, will, courage to defend their interests. 2. About the silence of those present during the discussion of an important issue.

Our shelf has arrived

An expression from the ancient "game" song "And we sowed millet", known in many versions. This expression, as a rule, is used in the meaning: there are more people like us (in some respect).

Doesn't dance

The expression is used in the meaning: it doesn’t work out, it doesn’t work out the way it should. It arose from the story of N.V. Gogol "The Enchanted Place" (1832). The old grandfather, tipsy, started dancing, “the hell went to twist his feet all over the smooth place that was near the cucumber bed. I had just reached, however, halfway and I wanted to take a walk and throw some of my own thing with my feet at the whirlwind - my legs didn’t rise, and that’s all! .. I accelerated again, reached the middle - I didn’t take it! whatever you want to do: he doesn’t take it, and he doesn’t take it! Legs like wooden steel. “Look, devilish place! you see, a satanic obsession! .. ”He set off again and began to scratch fractionally, finely, lovingly to look; to the middle - no! doesn’t dance, and it’s full!

Don't tempt me unnecessarily

Quote from a poem by E. A. Baratynsky (1800–1844) "Reassurance" (1821), set to music by M. I. Glinka (1825):

Don't tempt me unnecessarily
The return of your tenderness.
Alien to the disappointed
All the lies of the old days!

Ironically about your disbelief in someone else's promises, assurances, etc.

I didn't have to go to the yard

So in the old days they talked about that “movable property” (especially about domestic animals), the acquisition of which ended in failure (the dishes were broken, the horse fell, etc.).

This expression is associated with the belief in brownies, who, according to our distant ancestors, were in charge of all the "house and yard", were their secret masters. Then "it was not necessary to the court" meant: the brownie did not like it.

Now the expression "did not come to court" is used in the sense of "inopportunely, not to your liking."

Don't be foolish

An expression from the tragedy of A. S. Pushkin “Boris Godunov” (1831), the scene “Night. A cell in the Miracle Monastery”, the words of the chronicler Pimen:

Describe, without further ado,
All that you will witness in life.

The expression is used in the meaning: no fuss, just.

Inspiration is not for sale
But you can sell the manuscript

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "The Conversation of a Bookseller with a Poet" (1825). Used in the meaning: the commercial interest of the artist does not contradict the freedom of his creativity.

Not salty slurping

The origin of this expression is due to the fact that salt in Russia was an expensive and hard-to-find product. The owner always salted the food: the one whom he loved and respected - more, and the humble visitor sometimes did not get salt at all. Today, "not salty slurping" means "being deceived in one's expectations, not having achieved what one wanted, having met with a bad reception."

I don't want to study, I want to get married

The words of Mitrofanushka from the comedy "Undergrowth" (1782) by D. I. Fonvizin: "The hour of my will has come: I don't want to study, I want to get married." Quoted as an ironic commentary on the moods of idle, lazy, narrow-minded teenagers who are only interested in entertainment.

Sky in diamonds

An expression from A.P. Chekhov's play "Uncle Vanya" (1897). Sonya, comforting the tired, exhausted uncle Vanya, says: “We will rest! We will hear the angels, we will see the whole sky in diamonds, we will see how all earthly evil, all our suffering will be drowned in mercy, which will fill the whole world with itself, and our life will become quiet, gentle, sweet, like a caress.

The phrase is usually used jokingly ironically as a symbol of unattainable harmony, peace, happiness, fulfillment of desires.

Break a leg

This expression was originally used as a "spell" designed to deceive evil spirits. So they admonished those who went hunting; it was believed that a direct wish for good luck could "jinx" the prey. Rude response: "To hell!" was supposed to further secure the hunter.

No one will embrace the immensity

Aphorism from "The Fruits of Thoughts" (1854) by Kozma Prutkov.

Nothing is new [not forever] under the moon

From the poem "Experienced Solomon's Wisdom, or Selected Thoughts from Ecclesiastes" (1797) by N. M. Karamzin:

Nothing new under the sun
What is, was, will be forever.
And before the blood flowed like a river,
And before the man cried ...

In the first line, Karamzin used a winged Latin expression, well known in Russia both in Russian translation and in the original language: Nil novi sub luna - nothing new under the sun.

The very work of Karamzin is a poetic imitation of the famous biblical text: “What was, will be; and what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun. There is something about which they say: “look, this is new”, but this was already in the ages that were before us ... "

Nozdrev. Nozdrevschina

One of the heroes of N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842): "Everyone had to meet a lot of such people. They are called broken fellows… Something open, direct, and daring is always seen in their faces. They soon get to know each other, and before you have time to look back, “you” are already telling you. Friendship will lead, it seems, forever; but it almost always happens that a friend will fight them that same evening at a friendly feast. They are always talkers, revelers, reckless people, a prominent people ... The closer someone got along with him, he was more likely to piss everyone off: spread a fable, more stupid than which it is difficult to invent, upset a wedding, a trade deal and did not at all consider himself your enemy ... Maybe they will call him hackneyed character, they will say that now Nozdryov is no longer there. Alas! those who speak thus will be unjust. Nozdryov will not be out of the world for a long time. He is everywhere between us and, perhaps, only walks in a different caftan. His name has become synonymous with an empty talker, a gossip, a petty swindler; the word "nozdrevschina" is synonymous with chatter and boasting.

ABOUT

Oh my friend, Arkady Nikolaevich, don't speak beautifully

An expression from the novel by I. S. Turgenev “Fathers and Sons” (1862): “Look,” Arkady suddenly said, “a dry maple leaf has come off and is falling to the ground; its movements are completely similar to the flight of a butterfly. Isn't it strange? The saddest and deadest is similar to the most cheerful and alive. “O my friend, Arkady Nikolaevich! exclaimed Bazarov. “I ask you one thing: do not speak beautifully.” Bazarov's phrase is characterized by excessive eloquence where simplicity, logical sobriety of judgment is required.

Oblomov. Oblomovism

Oblomov - the hero of the novel of the same name (1859) I. A. Goncharova (1812–1891), a landowner living a sleepy, lazy, inactive life filled with idle dreams. His friend Stolz, a businessman and practitioner, calls this life “Oblomovism”.

The expressions “Oblomov”, “Oblomovism”, the wingedness of which was greatly facilitated by the article by N. A. Dobrolyubov “What is Oblomovism?” (1859), have become synonymous with mental laziness, inactivity, and a passive attitude towards life.

Formed

In Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina (1875), the valet encourages his master, Stepan Arkadyevich Oblonsky, who is upset by a quarrel with his wife, with this word. This word, used in the sense of "everything will be settled", which became winged after the appearance of Tolstoy's novel, was undoubtedly heard by him somewhere. He used it in one of his letters to his wife back in 1866, urging her not to worry about various everyday troubles. His wife, in a reply letter, repeated his words: "Probably, all this will work out."

ordinary story

The title of the novel (1847) by I. A. Goncharov, which shows the life path of an enthusiastic provincial dreamer who turned into a prudent careerist official in St. Petersburg. The expression "ordinary story" characterizes stereotyped everyday or psychological situations.

Window to Europe

An expression from the poem by A. S. Pushkin " Bronze Horseman» (1834):

Here the city will be founded
To spite an arrogant neighbor.
Nature here is destined for us
Cut a window to Europe
Stand with a firm foot by the sea ...

In the first note to the poem, A. S. Pushkin considered it important to respect the copyright of the expression “window on Europe” and wrote: “Algarotti said somewhere: “Petersbourg est la fenetre par laquelle la Russie regarde en Europe”, that is, “Petersburg is a window through which Russia looks to Europe.”

Grandmother left horns and legs

A not entirely accurate quote from a song by an unknown author that has appeared in songbooks since 1855:

There lived a gray goat with my grandmother,
There lived a gray goat with my grandmother,

Fuck how! that's how! gray goat!
The grandmother of the goat was very fond of ...
The goat decided to take a walk in the forest ...
Gray wolves attacked the goat ...
Gray wolves ate a goat ...
Left grandmother horns and legs.

It is used jokingly and ironically about someone who has suffered a severe defeat, failure, etc.

Ostap Bender.
Grand schemer

In the satirical novels The Twelve Chairs (1928) and The Golden Calf (1931) by Ilya Ilf and Yevgeny Petrov, the protagonist Ostap Bender, a clever rogue who commits a series of fraudulent tricks, is ironically called the Great Combinator. His name and nickname The Great Schemer is applied to people of this type.

From Romulus to the present day

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. It is used ironically as a characteristic of a long story about something begun from afar, and also as a definition of something that has existed for a long time (Romulus is the mythical founder of Rome).

From young nails

The expression is found in many monuments of ancient Russian literature, for example, in the “Message of Nicephorus, Metropolitan of Kiev, led. Prince Volodimir" (XII century): "Cleanse from young nails" and in "The Tale of Uliya Murom": "Love God from young nails." Used in the meaning: from childhood, from a young age.

From joy in the goiter breath stole

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "The Crow and the Fox" (1808).

Where are you from, beautiful child?

A quote from A. S. Pushkin's drama "Mermaid" (1837), with these words the prince addresses the little mermaid.

The wingedness of this quote was facilitated by the opera by A. S. Dargomyzhsky (1855), written on the plot of Pushkin's drama. The quote is almost always given ironically, jokingly, as a question to someone who suddenly appeared.

Shelving

It is used in the meaning: to delay the execution of any business for an indefinite time. There are several options for the origin of phraseology:

  1. the expression dates back to the times of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, a box for petitions was nailed in front of his palace, these petitions were sorted out by boyars and clerks, many remained unanswered;
  2. the most insignificant and unhurried petitions and complaints were put aside in the long drawer of the desk in Russian offices.

Fathers and Sons

The title of the novel (1862) by I. S. Turgenev, which became in the 19th century. synonymous with the strife of two generations - the old and the young.

Oh, you are heavy, Monomakh's hat!

Quote from the tragedy of A. S. Pushkin "Boris Godunov" (1831), Boris' monologue. "Monomakh" in Greek - single combatant; a nickname attached to the names of some Byzantine emperors. In ancient Russia, this nickname was assigned to the Grand Duke Kievsky Vladimir(beginning of the XII century), from which the Muscovite tsars originated. Monomakh's cap is the crown with which Moscow tsars were crowned to the kingdom, a symbol of royal power. The above quotation characterizes some difficult situation.

Wanderlust

They were overcome with anxiety,
Wanderlust
(Very painful property,
Few voluntary cross).
He left his village
Forests and fields solitude ...
And he began to wander aimlessly.

P

Wash the bones

Used in the meaning: to discuss someone in his absence. The expression goes back to the forgotten rite of reburial: three years after the death of the deceased, the deceased was removed from the grave, the bones were cleaned of decay and re-buried. This action was accompanied by memories of the deceased, an assessment of his character, deeds and deeds.

Pechorin. Pechorinstvo

The main protagonist of the novel "A Hero of Our Time" (1840) by M. Yu. Lermontov, the embodiment of a social type, characteristic, according to the author, for his time, when deep, strong people could not find a worthy way of self-realization for themselves. Critic V. G. Belinsky wrote about this hero of the post-Decembrist stagnation that he was characterized by "a contradiction between the depth of nature and the pitifulness of actions."

The name Pechorin has become a household name for the Russian romantic hero Byronic type, which is characterized by dissatisfaction with life, skepticism, searching for oneself in this life, suffering from misunderstanding on the part of others and at the same time contempt for them. Hence the "pechorinism" - the desire to imitate Pechorin, "to be interesting", to play the role of a mysterious, fatal personality.

Feast in Time of Plague

The name of the dramatic scenes (1832) by A. S. Pushkin, the basis for which was a scene from the poem of the English poet John Wilson "The Plague City" (1816). Used in the meaning: a feast, a cheerful, carefree life during some kind of public disaster.

Bad is the soldier who does not think to be a general

In the work of A.F. Pogossky (1816–1874) “Soldier’s Notes” (1855), among the aphorisms modeled on proverbs, is: “The bad soldier is the one who does not think to be a general, and even worse is the one who thinks too much that will be with him." Dahl's dictionary contains a proverb: "A thin soldier who does not hope to be a general" (cf. "Every French soldier carries a marshal's baton in his satchel"). It is usually used to encourage, encourage someone in his enterprise, bold plan, idea.

Plushkin. Plushkinism

One of the heroes of N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842), a miser landowner whose stinginess reached mania. His name has become a household name for people of this type, and the word "plushkinism" is synonymous with painful stinginess.

By pike command, by my desire [by request]

An expression from a Russian folk tale: the wonderful pike caught by Emelya was set free by him, for this she made it so that any of his desires was fulfilled, he had only to say: “At the command of the pike, according to my desire, let this and that -then". Used in the meaning: miraculously, as if by itself.

Success is never blamed

These words are attributed to Catherine II (1729–1796), who allegedly expressed herself in this way when A.V. Suvorov was brought to court martial for the assault on Turtukai in 1773, which he undertook contrary to the orders of Field Marshal Rumyantsev.

However, the story about Suvorov's arbitrary actions and about bringing him to trial is refuted by serious researchers and belongs to the realm of anecdotes.

Algebra check harmony

An expression from the tragedy of A. S. Pushkin "Mozart and Salieri" (1832), from Salieri's monologue:

Craft
I set a footstool for art:
I have become a craftsman: fingers
Gave obedient, dry fluency
And fidelity to the ear. Dead sounds,
I tore apart the music like a corpse.
I believed harmony with algebra.
Then I already dared, tempted in science,
Indulge in the bliss of a creative dream.

It is used ironically about a hopeless attempt to judge artistic creativity, based only on the rational principle, excluding feelings.

Underground truth

Used in the meaning: the true essence of something. One of the types of torture in Ancient Russia was that the interrogated person was driven under the nails with needles, nails or wooden wedges in order to force him to tell the whole truth. The expression “to know all the ins and outs” is also connected with this.

Wait a bit,
Rest and you

Quote from M. Yu. Lermontov's poem "From Goethe" (1840):

Mountain peaks
Sleep in the darkness of the night;
quiet valleys
Full of fresh haze;
The road is not dusty
Sheets do not tremble ...
Wait a bit,
You will rest too.

Signed, so off your shoulders

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824). Famusov, in response to the words of his secretary Molchalin, that he brought business papers that require many certificates, says:

I'm afraid, sir, I'm deadly alone,
So that a multitude does not accumulate them;
Give free rein to you, it would have settled down;
And I have what's the matter, what's not the case,
My custom is this:
Signed, so off your shoulders.

This expression is applied to people who are superficially, formally related to the case.

After the rain on Thursday

It is believed that this expression is due to the fact that in the old days Thursday was dedicated to Perun, the god of thunder and lightning. Prayers were offered to him for rain, especially during a drought. People believed that he should be most willing to fulfill requests on "his" day, Thursday. And since these requests often remained unfulfilled, Christians began to be rather skeptical of this deity and, convinced of the futility of such prayers, expressed with this phrase their complete distrust of the god Perun. The expression "after the rain on Thursday" began to be applied to everything unrealizable, to that which is not known when it will be fulfilled.

Confound

It is used in the meaning: to lead to bewilderment, to put in a difficult position. A dead end is still called a “stupid”, that is, a street or lane that does not have a through passage or passage. In rural life, a dead end was a corner on the street formed by two wicker fences - wattle fences. Thus, a dead end is something like a trap that makes it impossible to either pass or drive forward.

Despicable metal

This expression is widely popularized by I. A. Goncharov’s novel “An Ordinary Story” (1847): “You have an uncle and a friend - do you hear? and if you need service, employment and despicable metal, feel free to contact me: you will always find both, and the other, and the third.

However, the expression was in use even before Goncharov's novel. So, for example, it is found in the “Workshop and Living Room” (1842) by P. Furman and in “Travel Notes of Mr. Vedrin” (1843) by A. I. Herzen. Used in the meaning: money.

Under King Peas

An expression used in the meaning: a very long time ago, in ancient times, "when King Peas fought with mushrooms."

The habit from above is given to us:
She is a substitute for happiness

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin.

Come to the hat parsing

Denotes to come somewhere too late, when everything is already over. According to the old Russian custom, when entering a room or a church, men took off their hats and folded them at the entrance. Each meeting, gathering ended with the analysis of hats. The latecomer came to the analysis of hats, that is, to the end.

Prosessed

An expression from a poem by V. V. Mayakovsky (1893–1930) entitled “Our way of life. Prosessed" (1922). Allegorically about those who like to arrange long and useless meetings, meetings, etc.

The delay of death is like

In 1711 BC, before the Prut campaign, Peter I sent a letter to the newly established Senate. Thanks to the senators for their activities, he demanded that they continue not to delay with the necessary orders, "before the passage of time is like death irrevocably." S. M. Solovyov in "History of Russia from ancient times" (1851 1879), quoting a letter from Peter I dated April 8 1711 according to the original, cites his words in the edition: “Before the passing of time is like an irrevocable death.” Winged words of Peter I received more short form: "Procrastination is like death."

Bird troika

An expression from N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842): "Oh, troika! bird troika, who invented you? to know that you could only be born among a lively people, in that land that does not like to joke, but spread out halfway around the world like a smooth one, and go and count miles until it fills your eyes. And not a cunning, it seems, road projectile, not captured by an iron screw, but hastily, alive with one ax and a chisel, an efficient Yaroslavl peasant equipped and assembled you. The coachman is not in German boots: a beard and mittens, and the devil knows what he sits on; but he got up and swung, and dragged on a song - the horses whirlwind, the spokes in the wheels mixed up in one smooth circle, only the road trembled, and the stopped pedestrian screamed in fright - and there she rushed, rushed, rushed! .. And you can already see in the distance, how something dusts and drills the air. Isn't it true that you too, Rus, that a brisk, unbeatable troika are rushing about? The road smokes under you, the bridges rumble, everything lags behind and is left behind. The contemplative, amazed by God's miracle, stopped: is it not lightning thrown from the sky? what does it mean terrifying motion? and what kind of unknown power lies in these horses unknown to the light? Oh, horses, horses, what horses! Are whirlwinds sitting in your manes? Does a sensitive ear burn in every vein of yours? They heard a familiar song from above, together and at once strained their copper breasts and, almost without touching the ground with their hooves, turned into only elongated lines flying through the air, and all inspired by God rushes! .. Russia, where are you rushing to? Give an answer. Doesn't give an answer. A bell is filled with a wonderful ringing; the air torn to pieces rumbles and becomes the wind; everything that is on earth flies past, and, looking sideways, step aside and give it the way other peoples and states!

bird language

This is how Professor of Astronomy at Moscow University D. M. Perevoshchikov (1788–1880) called the scientific and philosophical language of the 1820s–1840s, overloaded with terms and formulations obscuring the meaning.

Allegorically: incomprehensible professional jargon, inappropriate in everyday speech, as well as abstruse, artificial, broken language, alien to the rules and norms of the Russian language.

The bullet is a fool, the bayonet is well done

The words of the great Russian commander A. V. Suvorov (1730–1800) from the manual for combat training of troops, “The Science of Victory”, written by him in 1796.

Throw dust in the eyes

The expression appeared in the 16th century. Now it is used in the sense of "creating a false impression of one's capabilities." However, the original meaning is different: during fisticuffs, dishonest fighters took with them bags of sand, which they threw into the eyes of their opponents. In 1726, this technique was banned by a special decree.

Indulge in all the hard

Large bells in Ancient Russia were called "heavy". The expression "to hit hard" meant: to hit all the bells at once. This is where the catchphrase “go into all serious trouble” arose, which is used in the meaning: to stray from the right life path, start uncontrollably indulging in fun, extravagance, revelry.

There is another version, which claims that “going all out” meant “starting a lawsuit, a lawsuit; sue anyone."

Let the storm come on!

Quote from "The Song of the Petrel" (1901) by M. Gorky. Allegorically about the desire for cleansing upheavals and changes.

Ticket to life

Movie title based on the script (1931) by N. Eck (1902–1976) and A. Stolper (1907–1979). The plot of the film is about former homeless children, and now inhabitants of the children's labor commune, thanks to skilled educators, find their way in life, become worthy members of society.

Allegorically about something that gives a person reason to hope that a full of events, an interesting, arranged life awaits him ahead.

R

broken trough

From "The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish" (1835) by A. S. Pushkin. The expression is used in the meaning: loss of a brilliant position, broken hopes.

Cut into walnut

The meaning of "scold, criticize" arose from this turnover on the basis of the older one - "to do (something) very thoroughly and well." In its original meaning, the expression appeared in the professional speech of carpenters and cabinetmakers and was due to the fact that the manufacture of walnut furniture from other types of wood required a lot of work and good knowledge of the matter.

Cheer up, shoulder!
Wave your hand!

Quote from A. V. Koltsov's poem "Mower" (1835):

Cheer up, shoulder!
Wave your hand!
Buzz, scythe,
Like a swarm of bees!
Moloney, braid,
Shine all around!
Shut up grass
Podkoshonnaya…

Ironically, about the desire to "cut off the shoulder", to act imprudently, rashly.

Reason contrary to the elements

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), words by Chatsky.

Used in the sense: contrary to common sense.

Spreading thought along the tree

An expression from “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign”, a monument of Russian literature of the 12th century, first published in 1800: “Boyan is prophetic, if anyone wants to create a song, then it spreads with thought along the tree, a gray wolf on the ground, a shiz eagle under the clouds” , i.e.: “After all, the prophetic Boyan, if he wanted to compose a song for someone, then spread his thought along the tree, like a gray wolf on the ground, a gray eagle under the clouds.” The expression "spreading thought over the tree" among the commentators of the Lay received various interpretations. Some consider the word “thought” to be inconsistent with the other two members of the comparison - “rolling on the ground”, “shizy eagle under the clouds”, - offering to read “mysia”, explaining “mys” with the Pskov pronunciation of the word “mouse”; in the Pskov province, a squirrel was called a cape, even in the 19th century. Others do not consider such a replacement necessary, "not seeing the need to bring the symmetry of comparison to the utmost precision."

The word “tree” is explained by commentators as an allegorical tree of wisdom and inspiration: “to spread thoughts along the tree” - to create songs, inspired poetic creations. However, the poetic image of the "Word" "to spread the thought over the tree" entered the literary speech with a completely different meaning: to go into unnecessary details, distracting from the main idea.

Born to crawl cannot fly

Quote from the "Song of the Falcon" by M. Gorky. This poetic formula of Gorky coincides with the final maxim in the fable of I. I. Khemnitser (1745–1784) “The Man and the Cow”. The fable tells how a man, having lost his horse, saddled a cow, which “fell down under the rider ... no wonder: the cow did not learn to ride ... And therefore it should know: who was born to crawl, he can’t fly.”

Snout in fluff

An expression from the fable of I. A. Krylov "The Fox and the Marmot" (1813). The fox complains to the Groundhog that she suffers in vain and, slandered, was expelled for bribes:

- You know, I was a judge in the chicken coop,
Lost health and peace in business,
I didn’t eat a piece in the labors,
Nights did not sleep:
And I fell under anger for that;
And all by slander. Well, think for yourself:
Who in the world will be right if you listen to slander?
Should I take bribes? yes, I'm pissed off!
Well, have you seen, I will send for you,
That I was involved in this sin?
Think, remember well
- No, gossip; I often saw
That your stigma is down.

The expression is used in the meaning: to be involved in something criminal, unseemly.

FROM

From ship to ball

An expression from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin:

And travel to him
Like everything in the world, tired,
He returned and got
Like Chatsky, from the ship to the ball.

This expression characterizes the unexpected, abrupt change conditions, circumstances.

With a sweet paradise and in a hut

Quote from the poem by N. M. Ibragimov (1778–1818) “Russian song” (“In the evening, the girl is beautiful ...”):

Do not look for me, rich:
You are not dear to my soul.
What do I, what are your chambers?
With a sweet paradise and in a hut!

The meaning of the expression: the main thing in family happiness is not special everyday comfort, but love, mutual understanding, agreement with a loved one.

With a learned air of a connoisseur

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin:

He had a lucky talent
No compulsion to speak
Touch everything lightly
With a learned air of a connoisseur
To remain silent in an important dispute ...

With feeling, with sense, with arrangement

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824):

Don't read like a sexton
And with feeling, with sense, with arrangement.

Fresh legend, but hard to believe

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824):

How to compare and see
The current century and the past century:
Fresh legend, but hard to believe.

Northern Palmyra

Palmyra is a city in Syria that arose in the 1st millennium BC. e. In ancient times, it was famous for the splendor of its buildings. Northern Palmyra is the figurative name of St. Petersburg.

Homemade truth

The expression of Ostap Bender, the protagonist of the novel by I. Ilf and E. Petrov "The Golden Calf" (1931), used by him in the meaning: deep folk wisdom (skinny - dressed in a sermyaga, peasant clothes made of coarse unpainted homespun cloth).

There is no beast stronger than a cat

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "Mouse and Rat" (1816).

- Neighbor, have you heard a good rumor? -
Running in, the Mouse said to the Rat:
After all, the cat, they say, fell into the claws of a lion?
It's time to relax and it's time for us!
Do not rejoice, my light, -
The Rat says to her: -
And do not hope in vain!
If it reaches their claws,
That's right, the lion will not be alive:
There is no beast stronger than a cat!

Megillah

The expression arose from a “boring” fairy tale, which is teased by children who pester with a request to tell them a fairy tale: “Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white bull? - Tell. - You tell me, tell me, tell me a fairy tale about a white bull? - Tell. - You tell me, but I tell you how long we will have, but how long it will be! Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white bull? and so on, until one gets tired of asking and the other answers. The expression is used in the meaning: endless repetition of the same thing.

Puffer

The protagonist of A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), a colonel, a representative of the rough army of tsarist Russia, an ignorant and self-satisfied careerist. His name has become synonymous with a rude ignoramus, martinet.

Scandal in a noble family

Under this name, an anonymous vaudeville was staged in Moscow in 1874, the plot of which was borrowed from the German comedy Der liebe Onkel (Moskovskie Vedomosti, 1 Oct. 1874 G.). The vaudeville was published, also anonymously, in 1875 in St. Petersburg. The author of Russian vaudeville, and therefore the expression "scandal in a noble family", is N. I. Kulikov (1815–1891). This vaudeville remained in the theatrical repertoire for a long time, and its name became a catch phrase.

Skotinin

The protagonist of D. I. Fonvizin's comedy "Undergrowth" (1782), the type of ignorant and rude landowner-serf, whose surname characterizes his bestial nature. His name has become a household name for people of this type.

Miserly knight

The hero of the drama of the same name (1836) by A. S. Pushkin, a synonym for a miser, miser.

They won’t say a word in simplicity, everything is with an antics

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), words by Famusov.

Elephant not to be noticed

The expression arose from the fable "Curious" (1814) by I. A. Krylov. A visitor to the Kunstkamera saw small insects there, but to the question: “Have you seen an elephant?” - replies: "I did not notice the elephant." The expression “do not notice the elephant” is used in the meaning: not to notice the most important, important.

I would be glad to serve, it's sickening to serve

A quote from A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), the words of Chatsky, who, in response to Famusov’s offer to go to serve, thus determines his attitude to the service.

Laugh, right, it's not a sin
Over everything that seems funny

Quote from N. M. Karamzin's poem "Message to Alexander Alekseevich Pleshcheev" (1796):

Who calls the muses out of boredom
And gentle graces, their companions;
Verses, prose amuses
Themselves, domestic and strangers;
Laughing from a pure heart
(Laugh, right, it’s not a sin!)
Over everything that seems funny -
The one in the world will get along with the world
And his days will not stop
With sharp iron or poison ...

Look at the root!

Aphorism (1854) by Kozma Prutkov.

Sobakevich

One of the heroes of N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842), a type of rude landowner.

His name has become synonymous with a money-grubber, a rude person and unfriendly to everyone, as well as a retrograde.

Sun of Russian poetry

A figurative definition of the meaning of the great Russian poet A. S. Pushkin. This is an expression from a short notice of the death of the poet, published on January 30, 1837 in No. 5 of the “Literary Additions” to the “Russian Invalid”: “The sun of our poetry has set! Pushkin died, died in the prime of his life, in the middle of his great career!.. We have no more strength to talk about this, and there is no need to: every Russian heart knows the full price of this irretrievable loss, and every Russian heart will be torn to pieces. Pushkin! our poet! our joy, our people's glory!.. Really, we don't really have Pushkin anymore! You can't get used to this idea! January 29, 2:45 p.m. The author of this notice was considered the journalist A. A. Kraevsky, editor of Literary Additions. However, from the letter of S. N. Karamzina to her brother it is clear that in reality the author of this notice is V. F. Odoevsky.

broke!

The expression became popular after the production (1855) of the comedy by A. V. Sukhovo‑Kobylin (1817–1903) Krechinsky's Wedding. This is how the hero of the comedy Krechinsky exclaims, when all the machinations he had cunningly invented failed and the police came to arrest him.

Sleeveless (work)

So they say about carelessly, lazily, somehow done work. In ancient Russia, they wore outerwear with exorbitant long sleeves, the unrolled ends of which fell to the knees, and even to the ground. Naturally, without lifting such sleeves, there was nothing to think about work. Close to this expression is the second, opposite in meaning and born later: “To work with your sleeves rolled up”, that is, decisively, ardently, with zeal.

Tearing off all and sundry masks

From the article "Leo Tolstoy as a Mirror of the Russian Revolution" (1908) by V. I. Lenin. Revealing “flashy contradictions” in Tolstoy’s work, he wrote: “On the one hand, the most sober realism, tearing off all and sundry masks; on the other hand, the preaching of one of the most infamous things that exists in the world, namely: religion, the desire to put in place priests from public office, priests from moral conviction, that is, the cultivation of the most refined and therefore especially disgusting priesthood.

Allegorically: accusatory moods and corresponding actions.

Pick flowers of pleasure

An expression from N. V. Gogol's comedy The Inspector General (1836), Khlestakov's words: “I love to eat. After all, you live to pluck the flowers of pleasure. Used in the meaning: selfishly, carelessly enjoy the pleasures of life, not thinking about your family or social duty.

Stand before me like a leaf before grass!

An expression from a Russian folk tale. Ivan the Fool summons his magic horse with a spell: "Sivka Burka, prophetic Kaurko, stand in front of me like a leaf in front of grass." The expression is used in the meaning: appear instantly!

take a back seat

The word was introduced into literary speech by F. M. Dostoevsky. It first appeared in his story "Double" in 1843, used in the meaning of "shut up, droop, quietly, furtively hide."

Fate plays with man

The phrase from the song “Noisy, the fire of Moscow was burning”, which is a reworking of the poem “He” (that is, Napoleon) by N. S. Sokolov (1850).

Happy is he who visited this world
In fatal moments

Quote from the poem by F. I. Tyutchev (1803-1873) "Cicero" (1836). In ed. "Tyutchev. Lyrics "(1965): "Blessed is he who visited ..."

Happy hours don't watch

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824). This expression can be associated with the words from the drama "Piccolomini" (1800) by Schiller: "Die Uhr schlagt keinem Gliicklihen" ("The clock does not strike the lucky one").

Sons of Lieutenant Schmidt

The first two chapters of the satirical novel by I. Ilf and E. Petrov "The Golden Calf" (1931) tells about clever swindlers who derive various benefits by posing as the sons of Lieutenant Schmidt, the leader of the revolutionary uprising of sailors in Sevastopol in 1905, who was shot at judgment of the royal court. The name "sons of Lieutenant Schmidt", which has become winged, is applied to crooks of this type.

Cheese forest flared up

The expression “cheese forest flared up” comes from the proverb “A damp forest caught fire because of a pine”, which means that a big trouble can arise because of a mere trifle.

A plot worthy of Aivazovsky's brush

Quote from A.P. Chekhov's play "Uncle Vanya" (1897). This phrase is pronounced by Telegin. In response to the words of the old nanny about the quarrel between Voinitsky and Serebryakov: “This morning they made a fuss, shooting is a shame,” he remarks: “Yes, a plot worthy of Aivazovsky’s brush.” Before Chekhov, this expression is already found in the journalism of the 1860s and 1870s, and in a slightly different form - “worthy of a brush” by someone - it was in use even earlier; for example, in Pushkin, in a note in Lit. gas.", 1830, we read: "The image of Sorvantsov [in Fonvizin's Conversation with Princess Khaldina] is worthy of the brush that painted the Prostakov family."

T

Table of ranks

This is the name of the list of officials of the military, civil and court departments, established by the law of Peter I (1722) on the procedure for public service in Russia. Allegorically: a comparative assessment of merits in a certain area of ​​professional activity.

So he wrote dark and sluggish

A quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" by A. S. Pushkin (1828), a description of the poems of Vladimir Lensky:

So he wrote dark and sluggish,
(What we call romanticism,
Although there is no romanticism here
I don't see...)

Theater begins with a hanger

Aphorism of one of the founders of the Moscow Art Theater K. S. Stanislavsky (1863–1938). There is no such aphorism in his writings, but oral rumor ascribes it to him. A phrase close in thought to this aphorism is found in a letter from K. S. Stanislavsky to the wardrobe department of the Moscow Art Theater dated January 23, 1933. Answering “a greeting on the day of his seventieth birthday, he wrote: “Our Art Theater differs from many other theaters in that in The performance starts from the moment you enter the theater building. You are the first to meet the incoming spectators ... "

dark kingdom

This is the title of an article (1859) by N. A. Dobrolyubov, devoted to the analysis of the plays of A. N. Ostrovsky. Speaking about the various types of merchant tyranny depicted by Ostrovsky, Dobrolyubov made a generalization and showed the life of feudal Russia as a “dark kingdom”, “stinking dungeon”, “a world of dull aching pain, a world of prison, grave silence”. "Nothing holy, nothing pure, nothing right about it dark world: the tyranny that reigns over him, wild, insane, wrong, drove away any consciousness of honor and right ... And they cannot be where human dignity, freedom of the individual, faith in love and happiness and the shrine of honest labor are thrown into dust and brazenly trampled by tyrants ” . The expression "dark kingdom", after the appearance of Dobrolyubov's article, began to denote not only the world of tyrant merchants or a dark and inert environment in general, but became a symbol of autocratic serf Russia (see Ray of Light in the Dark Kingdom).

Timurovets

The hero of the story by Arkady Gaidar (pseudonym of A.P. Golikov, 1904–1941) “Timur and his team” (1940), pioneer Timur decides, together with a team of peers he has assembled, to take care of the families of soldiers who have gone to the Red Army. The story of Gaidar, who managed to see the extraordinary in Everyday life, gave birth among schoolchildren social movement Timurovites, who in their behavior are equal to the brave, active, honest and generous Timur. The hero of the story became a model for numerous young patriots who helped the Motherland during the difficult years of the Great Patriotic War.

pip on the tongue

A pip is a small, horny bump on the tip of a bird's tongue that helps them peck at food. The growth of this tubercle may be a sign of illness. Painful hard pimples can also appear on a person's tongue; they were also called pips and considered a sign of deceit. From these observations and superstitions, the incantation formula was born: “Pip on your tongue!” Its main meaning was: "You are a liar: let you have a pip on your tongue!" Now the meaning of this spell has changed somewhat. "Pip on your tongue!" - an ironic wish to someone who expressed an unkind thought, predicted an unpleasant one.

The darkness of low truths is dearer to me

The deceit that elevates us

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Hero" (1831).

At

In the middle of nowhere

The expression means: very far, somewhere in the wilderness. Kulichki is a modified dialect word kulizhki (from kulig) meaning " forest clearings; places burned, cut down and adapted for cultivating the land, as well as islands in the swamp. Kulizhki were, as a rule, far from villages and villages, hence the meaning of the expression: “in the middle of nowhere” - very far away, no one knows where.

Terrible age, terrible hearts

Quote from the drama by A. S. Pushkin "The Miserly Knight" (1836). Sometimes it is quoted inaccurately: instead of "terrible" - "iron".

Mind, honor and conscience of our era

From the article “Political blackmail” (1917) by V. I. Lenin, in which he characterizes his party (Bolsheviks) in this way. Speaking against the Russian press of a different, non-Bolshevik orientation, calling its journalists “blackmailers” and “slanderers”, V. I. Lenin wrote: “We will stand firm in branding blackmailers. Let us be adamant in examining the slightest doubts by the court of class-conscious workers, by the court of our party, we believe in it, in it we see the mind, honor and conscience of our era ... "

Quoted ironically about a party claiming leadership, special moral qualities, special knowledge.

Mind Chamber

The word "chamber" in the Old Russian language meant a large room in a stone building. Then it began to be applied to various institutions located in such vast buildings: the Armory, the Faceted Chamber ... All sorts of meetings usually took place in the chambers, the boyars in them “think of the sovereign's Duma”. Hence the expression “mind chamber” arose, which depicted a person who was equal in mind to the whole assembly of sages. In the future, however, it acquired an ironic meaning: now they say this more often about fools than about smart people.

Moderation and prudence

With these words, in A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), Molchalin defines his two virtues.

Humiliated and insulted

The title of the novel (1861) by F. M. Dostoevsky. The expression is used as a characteristic of people who suffer from the arbitrariness of officials, the powers that be, from difficult living conditions, etc.

A helpful fool is more dangerous than an enemy

An expression from the fable of I. A. Krylov "The Hermit and the Bear" (1808):

Although the service is dear to us in need,
But not everyone knows how to take it:
God forbid to contact the fool!
A helpful fool is more dangerous than an enemy.

Learn, learn and learn

The slogan that arose from the article by V. I. Lenin “Better less, but better” (1923): “We must by all means set ourselves the task of updating our state apparatus: firstly, to study, secondly, to study and thirdly, to study and then check that science among us does not remain a dead letter or a fashionable phrase (and this, there is nothing to hide, it happens especially often with us), so that science really enters into flesh and blood, turns into an integral element of everyday life fully and truly."

F

Famusov

The protagonist of A. S. Griboedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), an important Moscow gentleman, holding the post of “manager in a government place”, a careerist bureaucrat, obsequious to those above him and arrogant towards his subordinates. Some commentators explained his surname as derived from the Latin word fama (rumour); others explain its origin from the English word famous (famous, famous). This name has become a household name for people of this type.

Physicists and lyricists

The expression opposing the meaning of physicists-scientists working in the field of exact sciences, the meaning of poets, arose from the so-titled poem by B. Slutsky, published in “ Literary newspaper» October 13, 1959.

Filkin's letter

The author of this expression is considered to be Tsar Ivan IV, nicknamed the Terrible by the people for mass executions and murders. To strengthen his power, Ivan the Terrible introduced the oprichnina, which terrified all of Russia. In this regard, the Moscow Metropolitan Philip, in his numerous letters to the tsar - letters - sought to convince Grozny to dissolve the oprichnina. The obstinate Metropolitan Terrible contemptuously called Filka, and his letters - Filkin's letters. For the bold denunciations of Grozny and his guardsmen, Metropolitan Philip was imprisoned in the Tver Monastery, where Malyuta Skuratov strangled him. The expression "filkin's letter" has taken root among the people. In the beginning, they simply talked about documents that had no legal force. And now it also means "an ignorant, illiterate document."

Frenchie from Bordeaux

An expression from the comedy by A. S. Griboedov “Woe from Wit” (1824), the words of Chatsky:

In that room, an insignificant meeting:
A Frenchman from Bordeaux, puffing his chest,
Gathered around him a kind of vecha
And he said how he was equipped on the way
To Russia, to the barbarians, with fear and tears...

It was used ironically at the address of some arrogant, boastful foreigners.

X

Khlestakov, Khlestakovism

The hero of N.V. Gogol's comedy The Inspector General (1836) is a liar and a braggart. His name has become a household name; "Khlestakovism", "Khlestakovism" - shameless, boastful lies.

Walking through the torments [ordeals]

The expression goes back to ancient belief Christians in the walk of the souls of dead sinners through torments, or through "trials", for forty days, when demons subject them to all kinds of tortures.

In the Soviet press, this expression became especially popular after the appearance of the trilogy of A. N. Tolstoy (1882/83‑1945) “Walking through the torments” (1920–1941) from the era of the civil war, which tells about the painful ideological searches of its heroes and the difficult trials that fell to their lot. Denotes difficult, various life trials, one after another that befell someone.

housekeeping man

The title of an essay by M. E. Saltykov-Shchedrin from the cycle “Little Things in Life” (1886). In the face of the "economic peasant" Saltykov depicts the type of "honest", "reasonable" middle peasant, whose only goal in life is the creation of personal prosperity.

Although the eye sees, but the tooth is numb

Quote from I. A. Krylov's fable "The Fox and the Grapes" (1808). Already in the middle of the XIX century. this expression was considered a folk proverb and was included in collections of Russian folklore.

At least a stake on your head

So they say about a stubborn, unyielding or indifferent person. To cut a stake means to sharpen a stick (stake) with an axe. The firmness and strength of the head of a stubborn person is emphasized.

textbook gloss

An expression from V. V. Mayakovsky’s poem “Jubilee” (1924), written for the 125th anniversary of Pushkin’s birth; in this poem, referring to Pushkin, the poet says:

I love you, but alive, not a mummy,
They brought a textbook gloss.
You, I think, during your lifetime - I think - also raged.
African!

This expression characterizes the "varnishing" of reality, its embellished image.

C

Princess Nesmeyana

In a Russian folk tale, Princess Nesmeyana is the tsar's daughter, who "never smiled, never laughed, as if her heart did not rejoice at anything." It is figuratively called a quiet, shy girl.

H

What would you like?

So M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin called the newspaper Novoye Vremya, which became famous in the 70s and 80s of the 19th century. its political venality, unscrupulousness and adaptability to the political elite (the articles "In the Environment of Moderation and Accuracy", "Lord Molchalin", "All the Year Round", etc.). This is a common phrase with which lackeys turned to the gentlemen, waiting for orders.

man in a case

Title of the story (1898) by A.P. Chekhov.

The protagonist is a provincial teacher Belikov, who is afraid of any innovations, actions that are not allowed by the "bosses", as well as reality in general. Hence his favorite expression: "No matter what happens ...". And, as the author writes, Belikov “had a constant and irresistible desire to surround himself with a shell, to create for himself, so to speak, a case that would seclude him, protect him from external influences.”

As a common noun, this expression began to be used by its author himself. In a letter to his sister M. P. Chekhova, he wrote (November 19, 1899): “The November winds are blowing furiously, whistling, tearing roofs. I sleep in a cap, in shoes, under two blankets, with closed shutters - a man in a case.

Jokingly ironically: a person who is afraid of bad weather, drafts, unpleasant external influences.

Man - that sounds proud

An expression from M. Gorky's play “At the Bottom” (1902), the words of Satin: “Man! It's great! It sounds… proud! Human! You have to respect the person."

The darker the night, the brighter the stars

Quote from a poem by A. N. Maikov (1821-1897), from the cycle of the 80s of the XIX century. "From Apollodorus the Gnostic":

Don't say there's no escape
What are you exhausted in sorrows:
The darker the night, the brighter the stars...

What are you laughing at?
Laugh at yourself!

A quote from N. V. Gogol’s comedy “The Inspector General” (1836), the words of the Governor: “Look ... look how foolish the governor is ... Not only will you become a laughing stock, there will be a clicker, a paper maraca, they will insert you into a comedy. That's what's embarrassing! Chin, the title will not spare, and they will all bare their teeth and clap their hands. What are you laughing at? Laugh at yourself!"

Chichikov

The hero of N. V. Gogol's poem "Dead Souls" (1842), a sly careerist, sycophant, swindler and hoarder, outwardly "pretty", "decent and worthy person". His name has become a household name for people of this type.

Reading is the best teaching

What to do?

The title of a socio-political novel (1863) by N. G. Chernyshevsky (1828–1889). The novel deals with the problems of socialism, the emancipation of women, displays the types of "new people" - revolutionary figures, and expresses the dream of a happy life in a communist society.

What does the coming day have in store for me?

Quote from the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1831) by A. S. Pushkin. This phrase gained wide popularity thanks to the opera by P. I. Tchaikovsky (1878) - Lensky's aria (“Where, where have you gone, my golden days of spring ...”).

What a commission, creator,
To be an adult daughter's father!

Quote from A. S. Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit” (1824), words by Famusov. (The word "commission" here means: troubles, difficulties.)

What we have, we do not store, having lost, crying

An aphorism from "The Fruits of Thoughts" (1854) by Kozma Prutkov, who repeated the name of the vaudeville (1844) by S. Solovyov.

What will pass will be nice

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "If life deceives you" (1825).

What is good and what is bad

The title of a poem for children (1925) by V. V. Mayakovsky.

W

Walked into a room, got into another

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824); Famusov, finding Molchalin near Sophia's room, angrily asks him: "Are you here, sir, why?" Sofya, justifying the presence of Molchalin, tells Famusov:

I will not explain your anger in any way.
He lives in the house here, a great misfortune!
Went to a room, got into another.

Shemyakin Court

The expression is used in the meaning: wrong, unfair court; arose from an old Russian satirical story about Shemyakin's court, which denounced the arbitrariness and self-interest of the feudal court. This story, dedicated to the personality of Prince Dmitry Shemyaka (died in 1453), enjoyed wide popularity; it was preserved in many manuscripts of the 17th and 18th centuries. and served as a plot for popular prints and books.

Inside out

Used in the meaning: quite the opposite, inside out. "Shivorot" in Muscovite Russia was called the embroidered collar of boyar clothes, one of the signs of dignity of a nobleman. In the days of Ivan the Terrible, the boyar, subjected to royal anger and disgrace, was often put on a skinny horse with his back forward, putting his clothes on him too inside out, topsy-turvy, that is, vice versa. In this form, the disgraced boyar was taken around the city, to the whistle and hooting of the street crowd. Now these words are also often used in connection with clothing, meaning to wear something inside out, but their meaning has become much wider. Topsy-turvy, that is, not at all like that, on the contrary, you can tell some story and, in general, act contrary to generally accepted rules.

Wide is my native land

The first line of the chorus "Songs about the Motherland" from the film "Circus" (1936), lyrics by V.I. Lebedev‑Kumach, music by I.O. Dunayevsky.

Noise, brother, noise

Quote from A. S. Griboedov's comedy "Woe from Wit" (1824), words by Repetilov.

I

I don't know any other country like this
Where does a person breathe so freely

Lines from the chorus of "Songs about the Motherland" from the film "Circus" (1936), text by V.I. Lebedev‑Kumach, music by I.O. Dunayevsky.

I'm going, I'm going, I'm not whistling
And when I get there, I won't let go

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Ruslan and Lyudmila" (1820), song III.

I erected a monument to myself not made by hands,
The folk trail will not grow to it

Quote from A. S. Pushkin's poem "Monument" (1836). The poem goes back to the ode of the Roman poet Horace, from which Pushkin took the epigraph: “Exegi monumentum” (“I erected a monument”). From Pushkin's poem arose the expression "a monument not made by hands", used in the meaning: a grateful memory of someone's deeds.

I am a king - I am a slave, I am a wormI'm God

Quote from G. R. Derzhavin's ode "God", (1784).

The language of native aspens

An expression from an epigram (1884) by I. S. Turgenev to N. Kh. Ketcher (1809–1886), the translator of Shakespeare, whose translations are distinguished by their exceptional closeness to the original, which often harms poetry:

Here is another light of the world!
Ketcher, friend of sparkling wines;
He pereper to us Shakespeare
In the language of native aspens.

The expression is used ironically about clumsy translations from foreign languages ​​into Russian.

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SOME RUSSIAN EXPRESSIONS

We often say well-established phrases without delving into their meaning. Why, for example, do they say "goal like a falcon"? Who is a "smoker"? Why, finally, “they carry water on the offended”? We will reveal the hidden meaning of these expressions ...

✏ Goal like a falcon

"Goal like a falcon", we say about extreme poverty. But this proverb has nothing to do with birds. Although ornithologists say that falcons really lose their feathers during molting and become almost naked!

"Falcon" in the old days in Russia was called a ram, a tool made of iron or wood in the form of a cylinder. It was hung on chains and swung, thus breaking through the walls and gates of the enemy's fortresses. The surface of this weapon was even and smooth, simply speaking, bare.

The word "falcon" in those days was used to refer to cylindrical tools: iron scrap, a pestle for grinding grain in a mortar, etc. Sokolov was actively used in Russia until the advent of firearms at the end of the 15th century.

✏ The smoking room is alive

"Smoking room is alive!" - an expression from the old Russian children's game "Smoking Room". The rules were simple: the participants sat in a circle and passed each other a burning torch, saying: "The smoking room is alive, the smoking room is alive! The legs are thin, the soul is short." The one in whose hands the torch was extinguished left the circle. It turns out that the "smoking room" is not a person at all, as one might think, but a burning chip of which in the old days they illuminated the hut. She barely burned and smoked, as they said then "smoked".

Alexander Pushkin did not miss the chance to exploit this linguistic ambiguity in his epigram to the critic and journalist Mikhail Kachenovsky:
- How! Is the Kurilka journalist still alive?
- Lively! still dry and boring
And rude, and stupid, and tormented by envy,
Everything squeezes into its obscene sheet
Both the old nonsense and the new nonsense.
- Ugh! Tired of the Kurilka journalist!
How to put out a smelly splinter?
How to kill my smoking room?
Give me advice. - Yes ... spit on him.

✏ Poor place

The expression "hot spot" is found in the Orthodox prayer for the dead ("... in a place of hotness, in a place of rest ..."). So in the texts in the Church Slavonic language is called paradise.

The meaning of this expression was ironically rethought by the raznochintsy-democratic intelligentsia of the time of Alexander Pushkin. The language game consisted in the fact that our climate does not allow growing grapes, therefore in Russia intoxicating drinks were produced mainly from cereals (beer, vodka). In other words, green means a drunken place.

✏ They carry water to the offended

There are several versions of the origin of this saying, but the most plausible seems to be the one connected with the history of St. Petersburg water carriers. The price of imported water in the 19th century was about 7 kopecks of silver per year, and of course there were always greedy merchants who inflated the price in order to cash in. For this illegal act, such unfortunate entrepreneurs were deprived of a horse and forced to carry barrels in a cart on themselves.

✏ Shabby look

This expression appeared under Peter I and was associated with the name of the merchant Zatrapeznikov, whose Yaroslavl linen manufactory produced both silk and wool, which were in no way inferior in quality to the products of foreign factories. In addition, the manufactory also made very, very cheap striped hemp fabric - motley, "shabby" (rough to the touch), which went to mattresses, bloomers, sundresses, women's headscarves, work dressing gowns and shirts.

And if for rich people such a dressing gown was home clothes, then for the poor, things from shabby clothes were considered “going out” clothes. The shabby appearance spoke of the low social status of a person.
✏ Sith friend

It is believed that a friend is so called by analogy with sieve bread, usually wheat. For the preparation of such bread, flour is used much finer grinding than in rye. To remove impurities from it and make the culinary product more “airy”, not a sieve is used, but a device with a smaller cell - a sieve. Therefore, the bread was called sieve. It was quite expensive, was considered a symbol of prosperity and was put on the table to treat the dearest guests.

The word "sitny" in relation to a friend means the "highest standard" of friendship. Of course, this turnover is sometimes used in an ironic tone.

✏ 7 Fridays a week

In the old days, Friday was a market day, on which it was customary to fulfill various trade obligations. On Friday, the goods were received, and the money for it was agreed to be given on the next market day (on Friday of the next week). Those who broke such promises were said to have seven Fridays a week.

But this is not the only explanation! Friday was considered to be a free day from work before, therefore, a loafer was characterized by a similar phrase, for whom every day is a day off.

✏ Where Makar did not drive calves

One of the versions of the origin of this saying is as follows: Peter I was on a working trip to Ryazan land and communicated with the people in an "informal setting". It so happened that all the men he met on the way called themselves Makars. The king was very surprised at first, and then said: "From now on, all of you will be Makars!"

Allegedly, since then, "Makar" has become a collective image of the Russian peasant and all peasants (not only Ryazan) began to be called Makars.

✏ Sharashkin office

The office got its strange name from the dialect word "sharan" ("trash", "bad", "rogue"). In the old days, this was the name given to a dubious association of swindlers and deceivers, but today it is simply a "undignified, unreliable" organization.

✏ Not by washing, so by rolling

In the old days, skilled laundresses knew that well-rolled linen would be fresh, even if the wash was not done brilliantly at all. Therefore, having sinned in washing, they achieved the desired impression "not by washing, but by rolling."

✏ Drunk in zyuzyu

We find this expression in Alexander Pushkin, in the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin", when it comes to Lensky's neighbor - Zaretsky:

Falling off a Kalmyk horse,
Like a drunk zyuzya, and the French
Got captured...
The fact is that in the Pskov region, where Pushkin was in exile for a long time, "zyuzey" is called a pig. In general, “drunk like a zyuzya” is an analogue of the colloquial expression “drunk like a pig.”

✏ Share the skin of an unkilled bear

It is noteworthy that back in the 30s of the 20th century it was customary in Russia to say: “Sell the skin of an unkilled bear.” vk.com/anti_maydan This version of the expression seems closer to the original source, and more logical, because there is no benefit from the "divided" skin, it is valued only when it remains intact. The original source is the fable "The Bear and Two Comrades" by the French poet and fabulist Jean La Fontaine (1621-1695).

✏ Retired goat drummer

In the old days, among wandering troupes, the main actor was a learned, trained bear, followed by a “goat” dressed up with a goat skin on its head, and only behind the “goat” was a drummer.

His task was to beat a homemade drum, calling the audience. Surviving by odd jobs or handouts is rather unpleasant, and here also the "goat" is not real, retired.

✏ Three years of waiting for the promised

According to one version - a reference to the text from the Bible, to the book of the prophet Daniel. It says: "Blessed is he who waits and reaches a thousand and thirty-five days," that is, three years and 240 days. The biblical call to patient waiting was jokingly rethought by the people, because the whole saying sounds like this: "The promised three years are expected, and the fourth is denied."

✏ Leavened patriotism

The expression was introduced into speech by Peter Vyazemsky. Leavened patriotism is understood as a blind adherence to obsolete and absurd "traditions" of national life and peremptory rejection of someone else's, foreign, "not ours."

✏ Tablecloth track

In one of Ivan Aksakov's poems, one can read about the road, which is "straight, like an arrow, with a wide smooth surface that the tablecloth lay down." So in Russia they saw off on a long journey, and they did not put any bad meaning into them.

This original meaning of the phraseologism is present in explanatory dictionary Ozhegov. But it is also said there that modern language the expression has the opposite meaning: "An expression of indifference to someone's departure, departure, as well as a wish to get out, anywhere." An excellent example of how ironically stable etiquette forms are rethought in the language!

✏ Shout all over Ivanovskaya

In the old days, the square in the Kremlin, where the bell tower of Ivan the Great stands, was called Ivanovskaya. On this square, clerks announced decrees, orders and other documents relating to the inhabitants of Moscow and all the peoples of Russia. So that everyone could hear well, the clerk read very loudly, shouted all over Ivanovskaya.

✏ Get to the bottom of a person

The expression to crack a man came to us from those times when coins made of precious metals were in use. Their authenticity was checked by a tooth: if there is no dent, the coin is real.

✏ Dance from the stove

To dance from the stove means to act according to an approved plan once and for all, without using any of your knowledge and ingenuity. This expression became famous thanks to the 19th century Russian writer Vasily Sleptsov and his book The Good Man. This is the story of Sergei Terebenev, who returned to Russia after a long absence. The return awakened childhood memories in him, the most vivid of which are dance lessons.

Here, he stands by the stove, legs in third position. Parents, yard servants are nearby and watch his progress. The teacher gives the command: "One, two, three." Seryozha begins to make the first “pas”, but suddenly he loses time, his legs tangle.
- Oh, what are you, brother! - Father says reproachfully. “Well, go about five to the stove, start over.”

✏ Pull the gimp

What is a gimp and why should it be pulled? This is a copper, silver or gold thread used in gold embroidery for embroidering patterns on clothes and carpets. Such a thin thread was made by drawing - repeatedly rolling and drawing through ever smaller holes.

Pulling the gimp was a very painstaking task, requiring a lot of time and patience. In our language, the expression to pull the gimp is fixed in its figurative meaning - to do something long, tedious, the result of which is not immediately visible.

✏ Dusty story

In the 16th century, during fisticuffs, dishonest fighters took sandbags with them, and at the decisive moment of the fight they threw it into the eyes of their rivals. In 1726, this technique was banned by a special decree.

At present, the expression "splurge" is used in the sense of "create a false impression of one's capabilities

Very often you can observe how people from different walks of life and different age categories dilute their speech with well-known phrases and expressions. For example: “This sofa is already breathing its last! We'll have to buy a new one soon." Or: “My neighbor from the first floor from morning to evening washes the bones for everyone who lives in our entrance.”

However, in order to be truly an educated person, it is not enough to use well-aimed expressions to the place. It is best if you are familiar not only with their meaning, but also with their origin!

The meaning of famous phrases and expressions

  1. Augean stables
    Legend has it that King Augius was an avid horse breeder with over 3,000 horses in his stables. However, for some reason, no one ever cleaned the stables for 30 years. One of the exploits of Hercules was that he cleaned out the stables of King Augeas. To do this, the bogatyr diverted the bed of the Alpheus River into the horse stall and washed all the manure with a stream of water. Since then, the expression "Augean stables" has been applied to everything neglected or polluted to the last limit.
  2. Pour in the first number
    In the old days, it was customary to flog school students. Some were flogged for the cause, others for prevention. It often happened that the student got especially hard. In such a case, he could be released from further vices, up to the first day of the next month.
  3. Blue blood
    The Spanish royal family and nobility were proud to trace their ancestry back to the Visigoths and never mixed with the Moors who entered Spain from Africa (unlike the common people). Since the commoners were swarthy, and the nobility had blue veins on their pale skin, they were proud of this color and proudly called themselves "blue blood". Today, this expression is used to refer to the aristocracy.
  4. Money doesn't smell
    Once the son of the Roman emperor Vespasian reproached his father for imposing taxes on public toilets. Then the emperor showed him the money received from this tax and asked if they smelled. The son gave a negative answer. So there was an expression "money does not smell".
  5. Get to the handle
    In Russia, kalachi were baked with a handle by which they were carried. After the kalach was placed on the table, the handle was broken off and, for hygiene reasons, thrown away. These pens were picked up and eaten by beggars and dogs. Hence the expression "reach the handle" - that is, to impoverish, to sink.
  6. Breathe incense
    According to Christian custom, a priest confessed a person who did not have long to live, communed and censed around him with incense. As a result, to designate a sickly person (and in modern language also for a barely working device), the expression “breathes its last”.
  7. It is not worth it
    In times when there was still no electricity, gamblers often gathered to play in the evening and used candles as lighting. It often happened that the stakes and winnings of the winner were so small that even candles did not pay off. This is where the expression “the game is not worth the candle” was born.
  8. How to drink to give
    Lists of criminal jargon of the 18th-19th centuries have survived to this day, in which the expression “give to drink” is a synonym for the word “poison”. In those days, poisoning was considered one of the most reliable and safe ways for a killer to get rid of a disturbing person.
  9. Scapegoat
    According to the Hebrew rite, on the day of the absolution of sins, the high priest put his hands on the goat's head and thereby laid on him the sins of the whole people. This is where the term "scapegoat" comes from.
  10. Cast pearls before swine
    The process of throwing small pieces of glass in front of pigs is a really pointless undertaking. But the original text of the Bible (which is where the phrase comes from) speaks of people throwing precious pearls into the feeder of pigs. The fact is that once the words "pearl", "beads" and "pearls" meant precisely different varieties of pearls. And only then, with the development of industry, glass beads began to be called beautiful word"beads".
  11. On the seventh sky
    The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 BC) in his essay "On the Sky" suggested that the sky consists of seven motionless crystal spheres, on which the stars and planets are approved. Also, the seven heavens are mentioned in various places in the Qur'an: for example, it is said that the Qur'an itself was brought by an angel from the seventh heaven.
  12. Wash the bones
    According to the ideas of some peoples, every unrepentant sinner, if a curse weighs on him, after death comes out of the grave in the form of a ghoul or vampire and destroys people. To remove the spell, you need to dig up the remains of the deceased and rinse his bones with clean water. Today, the expression "wash the bones" means an analysis of a person's character.
  13. Latest Chinese Warning
    In 1958, the Chinese government was extremely outraged that the US air force and navy were supporting Taiwan and issued its angry note, called "Last Warning." The world shuddered in horror and held its breath in anticipation of the Third World War. When, seven years later, China issued the 400th note under the same name, the world howled with delight. Since, apart from pieces of paper with threatening words, China had nothing to oppose to the States, Taiwan nevertheless retained its independence, which, by the way, Beijing still does not recognize.
  14. After us at least a flood
    This phrase is attributed to the French king Louis XV, but memoirists claim that it belongs to the favorite of this king, the Marquise Pompadour (1721-1764). She said it in 1757 to console the king, dejected by the defeat of the French troops at Rosbach. It is possible that this phrase is an echo of a verse by an unknown Greek poet, who was often quoted by Cicero and Seneca: "After my death, let the world perish in fire."
  15. With a twist
    The image of a raisin - some small piquant detail that gives a sense of sharpness and unusualness - was given to us personally by Leo Tolstoy. It was he who first coined the expression "a woman with a twist." In his drama The Living Corpse, one character says to another: “My wife was an ideal woman ... But what can I say? There was no zest, - you know, is there a zest in kvass? - there was no game in our life.
  16. Take a selfie
    The expression entered our lexicon not so long ago - in the late 2000s - early 2010s. Denotes a type of self-portrait when a person captures himself on the camera. Selfies are most often taken from an arm's length holding the device, so all images in the photo have a characteristic angle and composition - at an angle, slightly above or below the head.

And what expressions do you use in your speech? Share this article with your friends. It's really interesting!

12 catchphrases, the meaning of which is not known to everyone

Editorial response

Winged expressions help to express thoughts more accurately, give speech a more emotional coloring. They let in a few short but exact words express more emotions and convey a personal attitude to what is happening.

AiF.ru recalls the meanings of some Russian phraseological units.

quiet glanders

Initially, this expression meant to secretly dig a mine or a secret tunnel. The word "zappa" (translated from Italian) means earthwork shovel.

Borrowed in French, the word turned into the French "sap" and got the meaning of "earthworks, trenches and undermining works", the word "sapper" also arose from this word.

In Russian, the word "sapa" and the expression "quiet glanders" meant work that is carried out with extreme caution, without noise, in order to get close to the enemy unnoticed, in complete secrecy.

After widespread use, the expression acquired the meaning: carefully, in deep secrecy and slowly (for example, “So he drags all the food from the kitchen on the sly!”).

Nothing is visible

According to one version, the word "zga" comes from the name of a part of the horse harness - a ring in the upper part of the arc, into which a rein was inserted so as not to dangle. When the coachman needed to unharness the horse, and it was so dark that this little ring (zgi) could not be seen, they said that "you can't see it at all."

According to another version, the word "zga" comes from the Old Russian "sytga" - "road, path, path." In this case, the meaning of the expression is interpreted - "so dark that you can not even see the road, the path." Today, the expression “nothing is visible”, “nothing can be seen” means “nothing is visible”, “impenetrable darkness”.

A blind man leads a blind man, but both of them cannot see. (last)

"Darkness hangs over the earth: you can't see it..." ( Anton Chekhov,"Mirror")

dance from the stove

Vasily Alekseevich Sleptsov. 1870 Photo: Commons.wikimedia.org / Published in St Petersburg, 1903

The expression "to dance from the stove" first appeared in the novel of the 19th century Russian writer Vasily Sleptsov"Good man". The book was published in 1871. There is an episode in it when the main character Seryozha Terebenev recalls how he was taught to dance, but the “pas” required from the dance teacher did not work out for him. There is a phrase in the book:

- Oh, what are you, brother! - Father says reproachfully. - Well, go back to the stove, start over.

In Russian, this expression began to be used, speaking of people whose habit of acting according to a hardened scenario replaces knowledge. A person can perform certain actions only “from the stove”, from the very beginning, from the most simple and familiar action:

“When he (the architect) was ordered to plan, he usually drew the hall and the hotel first; just as in the old days, college girls could only dance from the stove, so his artistic idea could only come and develop from the hall to the living room. ( Anton Chekhov,"My life").

shabby look

At times Tsar Peter I lived Ivan Zatrapeznikov- an entrepreneur who received the Yaroslavl textile manufactory from the emperor. The factory produced a cloth called “stripe”, or “stripe”, popularly called “mesh”, “mesh” - a coarse and low-quality cloth made from hemp (hemp fiber).

Clothes were sewn from shabby clothes mainly by poor people who could not buy something better for themselves. And the appearance of such poor people was appropriate. Since then, if a person is dressed sloppily, they say about him that he has a shabby appearance:

“The hay girls were poorly fed, dressed in shabby clothes and given little sleep, exhausting them with almost continuous work.” ( Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, "Poshekhonskaya antiquity")

Sharpen laces

To sharpen folly means to idle talk, to engage in useless chatter. Lassy (balusters) are chiseled curly columns of railings at the porch.

At first, “sharpening balusters” meant having an elegant, whimsical, ornate (like balusters) conversation. However, there were few craftsmen to conduct such a conversation, and over time, the expression began to mean empty chatter:

“They used to sit in a circle, some on a bench, some simply on the ground, each with some kind of business, a spinning wheel, a comb or bobbins, and they would go and go to sharpen their laces and babble about a different, experienced time.” ( Dmitry Grigorovich, "Village").

Lying like a gray gelding

To lie like a gray gelding means to speak fables without being embarrassed at all. In the 19th century, an officer served in one of the regiments of the Russian army, a German named von Sivers-Mehring. He liked to tell the officers funny stories and fables. The expression "lies like Sievers-Mering" was understandable only to his colleagues. However, they began to use it throughout Russia, completely forgetting about the origins. Sayings appeared among the people: “lazy as a gray gelding”, “stupid as a gray gelding”, although the horse breed has nothing to do with this.

Bullshit

According to one version, the expression "bullshit" comes from "lying like a gray gelding" (in fact, these two phrases are synonymous)

There is also a version that the expression "bullshit" came from the name of one scientist - Brad Steve Cobile, who once wrote a very stupid article. His name, consonant with the words "bullshit" correlated with scientific nonsense.

According to another version, "bullshit" is an expression denoting a stupid statement or thought; appeared due to the beliefs of the Slavs that the gray horse (gray with an admixture of a different color) was the most stupid animal. There was a sign according to which if you dream gray mare then in reality the dreamer will be deceived.

Androns ride

"Androns are coming" means nonsense, nonsense, nonsense, complete nonsense.

In Russian, this phrase is used in response to someone who tells a lie, inappropriately puts on airs and boasts about himself. In the 1840s, on the territory of almost all of Russia, andretz (andron) meant a wagon, various kinds of carts.

“And you don’t have to scold my house! “Do I scold you?.. Cross yourself, Petrovnushka, the androns are coming!” ( Pavel Zarubin, "Dark and bright sides of Russian life")

Biryuk live

The expression "to live with a biryuk" means to be a hermit and a closed person. IN southern regions In Russia, a wolf is called a biryuk. The wolf has long been considered a predatory animal dangerous for the economy. The peasants perfectly studied his habits and habits and often remembered them when speaking about a person. “Oh, and you have grown old, little brother! Dunyashka said regretfully. “Some kind of gray has become like a biryuk.” ( Mikhail Sholokhov, Quiet Don)

Mikhail Golubovich in the movie Biryuk. 1977

to play with spillikins

Spillikins are various small household items that were used during the ancient game. Its meaning was to pull out one toy after another from a pile of toys with fingers or a special hook, without touching or scattering the rest. The one who moved the adjacent spillikin passes the move to the next player. The game continues until the whole pile is taken apart. By the beginning of the 20th century, spillikins had become one of the most popular games in the country and were very common not only among children, but also among adults.

In a figurative sense, the expression "playing spillikins" means to engage in trifles, nonsense, leaving aside the main and important:

“After all, I came to the workshop to work, and not to sit back and play spillikins.” ( Mikhail Novorussky"Notes of the Schlisselburger")

Pies with kittens

In Russia, they never ate cats, except in severe famine. During long sieges of cities, their inhabitants, having exhausted all food supplies, people used domestic animals for food, and cats and cats were the last to go.

Thus, this expression means a catastrophic state of affairs. Usually the proverb is shortened and they say: “These are the pies”, in other words, “these are the things”.

Leave unsalted slurping

Illustration for the fairy tale "Shemyakin Court". Copper engraving, first half of the 18th century. Reproduction. Photo: RIA Novosti / Balabanov

In Russia in the old days, salt was an expensive product. It had to be transported from afar off-road, taxes on salt were very high. When visiting, the host salted the food himself, with his own hand. Sometimes, expressing his respect for especially dear guests, he even added salt to the food, and sometimes those who were sitting at the far end of the table did not get salt at all. Hence the expression - "to leave without salty slurping":

“And the more she spoke, and the more sincerely she smiled, the stronger the confidence became in me that I would leave her without salty slurping.” ( Anton Chekhov"The lights")

"The fox missed the live and went away slurping unsalted." ( Alexey Tolstoy"The Fox and the Rooster"

Shemyakin Court

The expression "shemyakin court" is used when they want to emphasize the unfairness of any opinion, judgment or assessment. Shemyaka - a real historical person, Galician Prince Dimitri Shemyaka, famous for its cruelty, deceit and unrighteous deeds. He became famous for his tireless, stubborn struggle with the great Prince Vasily the Dark, his cousin, for the Moscow throne. Today, when they want to point out the partiality, unfairness of some judgment, they say: “Is this criticism? Shemyakin court of some kind.

The Russian language, famous for its figurativeness, is full of idioms used by everyone. We understand contemporary meaning such phrases as ““ pea jester ” or“ places not so remote ”, but where did they come from and what do they really mean?


We publish an amazing selection of stories and facts about popular Russian idioms.


1. Where did the expression "goal like a falcon" come from?

When a person is extremely poor, they can say about him: "A goal is like a falcon." The falcon (with emphasis on the second syllable) here is not a bird, but an ancient wall-beating weapon that was used during the siege of fortresses. It was smooth-hewn wood or cast iron, without protruding parts, which is why it was called naked.


2. What wish for a good journey has become synonymous with the phrase "get out"?

Initially in Russia, especially in conditions of bad roads, the expression "Good riddance!" was a wish for a good path, clean and smooth. Later, the meaning of the phraseologism changed significantly: to say so means to make it clear to the interlocutor that no one is holding him here.


3. Where did the expression "pea jester" come from?

Since the time ancient rome the belonging of the clowns was a rattle made from a bull's bladder, into which peas were poured. In the medieval theater, jesters beat other actors and even spectators with such a rattle. When the tradition reached Russia, our buffoons began to additionally decorate themselves with pea straw, hence the expression “pea jester” was fixed in the language.


4. What did Alexei Mikhailovich mean when he wrote: “Time for business, hour for fun”?

The expression “Time for work, hour for fun” was first used in a collection of falconry rules, published at the direction of Alexei Mikhailovich. The tsar personally made this addition to the preface, bearing in mind that one should devote time both to work and to fun - rest. At the same time, the word "hour" is used here not in the sense of 60 minutes, but as a synonym for the very concept of "time" to avoid repetition.

Nowadays, this proverb is often interpreted literally: work should be devoted to much more time than entertainment.


5. Where did the expression “like plywood over Paris” come from?

The expression "Like plywood over Paris" has been found in literary sources since the mid-1970s. Most likely, it owes its appearance to the 1975 film The Ballooner, a biographical drama about the wrestler and circus performer Ivan Zaikin, who decided to quit everything and become an aviator. He goes to study in Paris, and in one of the episodes he manages to take to the skies on a plywood airplane. The film ends with a plane crash and other failures of the protagonist.


6. Where did the expression "suck in the pit" come from?

Previously, the depression under the ribs above the xiphoid process of the sternum was called the "spoon". By itself, this word has not been preserved in the language, but is used in the expressions "sucks in the stomach" and "aches in the stomach" when we talk about an unpleasant feeling during hunger or excitement.


7. Where did the expression "pull the gimp" come from?

A gold or silver thread, which in the old days was used to embroider decorations on clothes, is called a gimp. To get it, it was necessary to pull out a metal wire with tongs for a long time. This is where the expressions “pull the gimp” and “gimp” came from in the sense of doing boring monotonous work or delaying the execution of some business.


8. Where did the expression "The smoking room is alive" come from?

In the old days in Russia, children, among other things, played "smoking room". A burning splinter was passed around the circle, and the one in whose hands it went out was considered a loser. During the game, it was necessary to sing: “Alive, alive Smoking room, alive, alive, not dead!”. It was from here that the expression “The smoking room is alive” arose, which can be used in relation to a person who is in good health and continues to do his job, although they thought about him that he had already disappeared or died somewhere.


9. Where does the expression "places not so remote" come from?

In the pre-revolutionary Russian legislation there were two categories of references: "to remote places of Siberia" and "to not so remote places of Siberia". The second phrase turned from an official term into an allegorical turn. Now, when talking about prison, we often use the expression "places not so remote."


10. What is the original meaning of the expression "The exception proves the rule?"

The expression "the exception proves the rule" is used in most cases in a completely different sense from the original. The phrase is of Latin origin: "Exceptio probat regulam in casibus non exceptis", it was first used by the ancient Roman orator Cicero. In the translation, it is the second part of the phrase that is important: the exception confirms the existence of a general rule where these exceptions are not specified. For example, road sign"No parking on Sundays" refers to the rule that allows parking on other days.


11. Why did the Indians at one time intensively breed cobras, and then abruptly stopped?

Once the British, during the colonial occupation in India, decided to reduce the number of breeding cobras, for which they announced a reward for their heads. The local population rushed to destroy the snakes, thereby reducing their number, but then, on the contrary, switched to breeding them for easy money. After the abolition of rewards, the remaining cobras were released into the wild, contributing to the fact that the snake population only increased compared to its original value.

Since then, the expression “cobra effect” has been attached to any action aimed at solving a problem, but as a result worsening it.


12. Where did the expression "topsy-turvy" come from?

During the time of Ivan the Terrible in Russia, one of the signs of the dignity of a nobleman was an embroidered collar, which was called a collar. If any boyar was subjected to royal anger and disgrace, he was usually put on a skinny nag with his back forward, after turning his clothes inside out. Since then, the expression “topsy-turvy” has been fixed in the meaning of “on the contrary, wrong.”


13. Why is it said about a lucky person that he was born in a shirt?

When a person is lucky, they say that he was born in a shirt. The word "shirt" in this expression appeared not so long ago, but earlier it was pronounced as "born in a shirt", and it had a purely practical meaning. The fact is that the shirt was called not only clothes, but also the amniotic sac in which the child is during pregnancy. Sometimes during childbirth this bubble does not burst, and the child is born in it, which, according to superstitious ideas, promises him happiness and luck in life.


14. Where did the expression "the last Chinese warning" come from?

In the 1950s and 1960s, American aircraft often violated Chinese airspace for the purpose of reconnaissance. The Chinese authorities recorded every violation and each time sent a “warning” to the United States through diplomatic channels, although no real action followed, and such warnings were counted by the hundreds. This policy has given rise to the expression "the last Chinese warning", meaning threats without consequences.


15. Why are sensational newspapers called tabloids?

The term "yellow press" originated in the United States at the end of the 19th century. By this time, two newspapers, the New York World and the New York Journal, had gained great popularity, which relied not on ordinary news coverage, but on presenting sensations to readers and emotional presentation of the material. In 1895, the New York World began publishing comic strips by Richard Autkalt, full of satire and scathing political commentary, featuring a boy in a yellow shirt as the protagonist. A year later, Autkalt was lured to the New York Journal, and now both newspapers began to publish similar comics.

That is why journalists of more serious publications called such newspapers yellow.


16. Where did the high-five greeting come from?

The word "past" used to be called a brush or palm. There was also a greeting expression “Give me a spank!”, Which was later reduced by one letter and transformed into “Give me five!”. The abbreviated phrase is believed to have gained particular popularity due to the similar idioms of the English language " high five!" and "Give me five!".


17. Why do photographers say: “A bird will fly out now!”?

Previously, in order for all the children in a group photo to look into the lens, photographers said: “Look here! The bird is about to fly!" This bird was quite real at the beginning of the era of mass photography - though not alive, but brass.

In those days, cameras were far from perfect, and in order to get a good picture, people had to freeze in one position for several seconds. To attract the attention of restless children, the photographer's assistant at the right time raised a brilliant "bird", which, moreover, already knew how to make trills.


18. Where did the expression "hang all the dogs" come from?

When a person is accused of something, you can hear the expression: "They hung all the dogs on him." At first glance, this phrase is absolutely illogical. However, it is not associated with an animal at all, but with a different meaning of the word "dog" - burdock, thorn - now almost never used.


19. Where did the expression "To the wrong steppe" come from?

In the operetta "Wedding in Malinovka" one of the characters jokingly distorted the name of the two-step dance, calling it "To that steppe." From here, the expression “To the wrong steppe” has spread among the people, meaning “to go in the wrong direction” or “to speak inappropriately.”


20. Where did the expression "raspberry ring" come from?

The expression "crimson ringing", which refers to the melodic singing of bells, has nothing to do with either the robin bird or the raspberry, but comes from the name of the Belgian city of Mechelen (or Malin in French transcription). It is this city that is considered the European center of bell casting and music. The first Russian carillon (a musical instrument for playing a melody on several bells), ordered by Peter I in Flanders, corresponded to the Mechelen standard.


21. Why does the expression "return to native Penates" need to be pronounced differently?

The popular expression "return to native land", meaning return to your home, to the hearth, is more correct to pronounce it differently: "return to native land". The fact is that the Penates are the Roman guardian gods of the hearth, and each family usually had images of two Penates next to the hearth.


22. What idiom in many European languages ​​​​corresponds to the Russian expression " White crow»?

An analogue of the Russian expression "white crow" in many European languages ​​is the idiom "black sheep". Although if we call a white crow just an exceptional member of society, then by calling a person a black sheep, Europeans also hint at the undesirability of finding such a member in society. In this sense, the idiom is close to another Russian expression - "black sheep".


23. Where did the expression "quiet glanders" come from?

The word sape means "hoe" in French. In the 16th-19th centuries, the term "sapa" was used to designate a method of digging a trench, ditch or tunnel to approach the fortifications. Gunpowder bombs were sometimes planted in the tunnels to the castle walls, and the specialists trained to do this were called sappers. And from the covert digging of tunnels came the expression "quiet glanders", which today is used to denote cautious and inconspicuous actions.


24. Which expression about useless work was literally carried out by medieval monks?

The expression "tread water in a mortar", which means doing a useless thing, has a very ancient origin- it was used by ancient authors, for example, Lucian. And in medieval monasteries, it had a literal character: the guilty monks were forced to crush the water as a punishment.


25. Where did the expression “the case burned out” come from?

Previously, if a court case disappeared, then a person could not be legally charged. Cases often burned down: either from a fire in the wooden buildings of the courts, or from deliberate arson for a bribe. In such cases, the defendants said: "The case burned out." Today, this expression is used when we talk about the successful completion of a major undertaking.



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