Learn some English? I am more fluent in English than any other language. How about you learn some Ukrainian if you want to live in my country, yes my country debil.
Well quite understood your a Moscal living in a Ukrainian city, and telling me what a Ukrainian city is. Go to Siberia Maloros Moscal and dont pollute our country.
That would be fine, as long as the change you speak of happens naturally, though a shift in demographics, and not through imposition and persecution by the authorities or the nationalist thugs (often one and the same thing), as has occured before...
Kharkov has always been a Russian-speaking city. When I was 5 and had just learned to read, I remember asking my mom why all the store signs were in a foreign language, LOL. I grew up without knowing a SINGLE person who spoke Ukrainian as their mother tongue. So much for Ukrainian nationalists, who would now like to remake history.
So, there is no need to correct anyone--why not just let people keep their memory of this city, and its name, as they have always known it?
@Enayze whats a maloros moscal? and very nice city i want to live there someday :)
mikepasek 1 year ago
Learn some English? I am more fluent in English than any other language. How about you learn some Ukrainian if you want to live in my country, yes my country debil.
Enayze 3 years ago
Well quite understood your a Moscal living in a Ukrainian city, and telling me what a Ukrainian city is. Go to Siberia Maloros Moscal and dont pollute our country.
Enayze 3 years ago
beautiful video, sublime music, thanks Neder, I am Italian came often Kharkov, this city is in my heart
vlad62x62 3 years ago
That would be fine, as long as the change you speak of happens naturally, though a shift in demographics, and not through imposition and persecution by the authorities or the nationalist thugs (often one and the same thing), as has occured before...
eleguaaugele 3 years ago
Lets hope that will change within a couple of decades.
Enayze 3 years ago
Kharkov has always been a Russian-speaking city. When I was 5 and had just learned to read, I remember asking my mom why all the store signs were in a foreign language, LOL. I grew up without knowing a SINGLE person who spoke Ukrainian as their mother tongue. So much for Ukrainian nationalists, who would now like to remake history.
So, there is no need to correct anyone--why not just let people keep their memory of this city, and its name, as they have always known it?
eleguaaugele 3 years ago
OK THANKS FOR CORRECTION
bilalc15 3 years ago
Its not Kharkov, its Kharkiv.
Enayze 3 years ago
is it for a reason everybody's leaving it?:)
ardkore22 3 years ago