Russian Humor

Living with a Russian, it always gets to this:

7 thoughts on “Russian Humor

  1. Excuse me, never met a Russian during all my years on active duty in NATO. I remember that Europeans in general didn’t bathe as often as Americans. but don’t get the joke.

    What am I missing?

    Dreidel

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    1. Back in the 19th century, when a Russian merchant or aristocrat would get an unexpected sum of money, he’d be likely to go to a drinking establishment and hire gypsies to entertain him while he drank. “Going to the gypsies” means spending money in an outrageous, decadent way.

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  2. Hey, Clarissa, why is your damn website refusing to post my innocuous comments for the hundredth time??

    What does WordPress have against an old man like me?

    Dreidel

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  3. “always gets to this”

    I’m a little confused… from what you’re written previously, I’d assume you were the one more likely to go to the gypsies, but the comment in green is a very mom thing to write…..

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    1. I might go to the gypsies but I’d never call it that. I’m not Russian, after all. 🙂

      In actual reality, “going to the gypsies” entailed buying a toy she wanted and I refused to purchase and then going to Applebee’s to celebrate. Even our gypsy visits have become incredibly tame.

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  4. “I’d never call it that. I’m not Russian”

    I can’t even think of a similar expression in Polish…. There might be a regional one in the East where russian influence is stronger but where I am if someone gets a windfall the last thing they want is for anyone else to find out…

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    1. Ukrainians don’t need to go to the gypsies for entertainment. We entertain ourselves and others all day long. :-))) Russians need to be extracted from their gloomy self-immersion by an external force. Hence the Gypsies.

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