GET D!RTY Next time you're traveling or just chattin' in Russia with your friends, drop the textbook formality and bust out with expressions they never teach you in school, including: ¿ Cool slang ¿ Funny insults ¿ Explicit sex terms ¿ Raw swear words Dirty Russian teaches the casual expressions heard every day on the streets of Russia: What's up? kak de-LA? I really gotta piss. mnye O-chen NA-do pos-SAT. Damn, you fine! blin, nu ti i shi-KAR-nii! Let's have an orgy. da-VAI u-STRO-im OR-gi-yu. This is crappy vodka. d-ta VOD-ka khre-NO-va-ya. Let's go get hammered. poi-DYOM bukh-NYOM. I'm gonna own you, bitch! ya te-BYA VI-ye-blyu!
Faust (1859) Avant de quitter ces lieux Faust (1859) Alerte alerte Faust (1859) Je meurs par elle Pagliacci (1892) Si può? Pagliacci (1892) Nedda! Silvio...
Vollständige Antriebseinheit, bestehend aus Motor, Getriebe, Differentialgehäuse und Aufhängungseinheiten. Die Hauptreifen sind aus hohlem Gummi mit einem sehr guten Profilmuster sowie Seitenwanddetails, die aus erhöhten Rippen bestehen. Die Radnaben sind detailliert ausgeführt. Die Windschutzscheibe und die Seitenfenster bestehen aus klaren Teilen. Foto-ätzteile sind enthalten.
The Museum of Lacquer Art has what is probably the most important collection of Russian lacquer wares outside Russia. The works of art date to the period between the early nineteenth century and the 1950s, providing an extensive overview of the development of this flourishing art and craft. Monika Kopplin highlights the extraordinary variety of decorative techniques as well as the many stylistic features. The history and art history of Russia are reflected in the small format of the lacquer miniatures, painting a lively picture of the various eras. A comprehensive index of seals expands the catalogue into a reference book. Russian lacquer art can be traced back to Peter the Great, who had come to know this flourishing art and craft during his study trips in Western Europe. The first important work in this genre in the tsars empire was completed in 1722 in the form of the Lacquer Study in his palace of Monplaisir. A second significant event followed when the Korobov workshop, which was modelled on the Braunschweig-based Stobwasser workshop, was established in 1793 near Moscow. It is better known by the name of a later owner, Lukutin. A technical and artistic alignment with the German model was followed by an increasingly independent Russian development from the 1820s onwards. At first this found expression in specific decorative techniques, and later also in specifically Russian motifs.