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Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2025

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  • When I was a kid Walmart had a policy that if something rang up for more than was listed on the shelf price you would get $3.00 off the item. How times have changed.

    My local Walmart doesn’t even seem to even want people shopping in the store anymore. They are constantly blocking off aisles with full pallets of products that haven’t been put away yet, the Walmart pickup workers are running through aisles and blowing through intersections with headphones on, and they never have any bags at the checkouts.




  • This is a thing that is avoided heavily in Russian because of general animosity towards LGBTQ topics in Russia. It can even be prosecuted as the Russian Supreme Court deemed the LGBT movement as an extremist group in 2023.

    There isn’t a concept of a singular “they” in Russian. Using “они” for yourself would sound very strange because it changes verb and adjective endings as well unlike in English.

    “Оно” is only used for inanimate objects.

    You can kind of get away with not using gendered pronouns/endings by using passive voice like: “Мне думалось” instead of “я думал/а”

    It will be easier on you and on whoever you’re speaking with in Russian to just choose between он/она (which ever you most closely present as) since so much of the language is grammatically gendered unlike English.


  • Most Russian surnames end in ов for men and ова for women. Their Patronymic middle names also change depending on sex.

    So a man named Ivan whose father’s name was Nikolai and surname is Fedotov would be:

    Ivan Nikolaevich Fedotov (Иван Николаевич Федотов)

    While his sister, Irina, would be:

    Irina Nikolaevna Fedotova (Ирина Николаевна Федотова)

    If you wanted to talk about their family as a whole their surname would become plural with a y at the end.

    Fedotovy (Федотовы)