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Russian World War II Dictionary - A Russian-English Glossary of Special Terms, Expressions and Soldiers' Slang (Hardcover)
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Russian World War II Dictionary - A Russian-English Glossary of Special Terms, Expressions and Soldiers' Slang (Hardcover)
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The Great Patriotic War (GPW) of the Soviet people against Nazi
Germany, known in the West as the Eastern Front of WWII, continues
to attract a number of military historians from different countries
around the world. The frontline veterans' reminiscences occupy a
prominent place among most important documents of that time. In
contrast to official documents, these recollections reproduce the
so-called truth of the foxholes, the genuine spirit of the war.
Along with their honesty, the WWII veterans' reminiscences are full
of idiomatic expressions, specialized terms and abbreviations
peculiar to that war. Regardless of their language, the memoirs
reproduce the wartime vocabulary of the authors' nationalities, and
reading them can be a difficult task for uninformed readers. As a
consequence, special dictionaries appeared in print and later on
Internet web sites. Unlike most of the Allied countries, no war
jargon/slang dictionary has been published in Russia. This glossary
is intended to begin to fill that gap. Several sources of the Red
Army serviceman's slang were peculiar to the Soviet experience. The
upheaval of the 1917 October Revolution and following Civil War,
and the fundamental changes wrought by the political and social
reforms and campaigns in the 1920s-1930s affected the Russian
vocabulary substantially. The fact that the overwhelming majority
of Red Army soldiers and officers came from rural households, and
brought their local idioms and expressions into the trenches, also
enriched the war vocabulary. Every army has its traditions and
slogans, many of which were revived in the Red Army during WWII.
All of the aforementioned sources and others contributed to the
Russian wartime vocabulary. The authors began this glossary as a
translators' aid, but now they believe it will also be of interest
to military historians and linguists who work with original Russian
military sources, especially of the Second World War period.
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