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{{short description|Term for strong obscene profanity in Russian}}
{{multiple issues|
{{Refimprove|article|date=April 2009}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
]'s {{ill|Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch|lt=''Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch''|ru|Этимологический словарь русского языка Макса Фасмера}} (''Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language''). ], 1950–1958]]
{{Original research|article|date=April 2009}}
'''''Mat''''' ({{langx|ru|]; ] / ] ]}}, ''matershchina'' / ''materny yazyk'') is the term for ], ], or ] language in ] and some other ] communities.
}}


== Four pillars of mat ==
'''Mat''' ({{lang-ru|мат; матерщи́на / ма́терный язы́к / мáтный язы́к }}, ''matershchina'' / ''materny yazyk'' / ''matny yazyk''; {{lang-uk|матюки}}, ''matyuky'') is the term for strong ] ] in ] and some other ] communities.
In 2013, ] compiled a list of four lexical roots, with any words derived from these roots - nouns, adjectives, verbs, participles etc - of the Russian language which it deemed "absolutely unacceptable in the ]": ''khuy'' ("cock"); ''pizda'' ("cunt"); ''yebat''' ("to fuck"); and ''blyad'' ("whore"). Roskomnadzor defined the banned terms as follows: "Obscene designation of the male genital organ, obscene designation of the female genital organ, obscene designation of the process of copulation and obscene designation of a woman of dissolute behavior, as well as all linguistic units derived from these words".<ref name=iz20131225>, '']'', December 25, 2013</ref>


] writes that ''mat'' has thousands of variations but ultimately centers on those four words.<ref name="Putin">{{cite magazine| url=http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/putins-four-dirty-words|title=Putin's Four Dirty Words |first= David| last= Remnick|date= 5 May 2014|magazine= ]| access-date= 6 September 2017}}</ref>
== History and use ==
Obscenities are among the earliest recorded attestations of the Russian language (the first written mat words date to the Middle Ages<ref>]</ref>). It was first introduced into literature in the 18th century by the poet ], whose poetry, combining lofty lyrics with brutally obscene words, may be regarded as a forerunner of Russian literary parody.


Mat-words were included by Polish publisher ] in the 3rd and 4th editions of the '']'', which was printed four times in 1903–1909 (twice) and in 1911–1912, 1912–1914.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/search/?title=File:%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%80%D1%8C._%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BC_4_(%D0%94%D0%B0%D0%BB%D1%8C_1909).djvu&page=626|title=English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language|first=Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de|last=Courtenay|date=31 May 1909|via=Wikimedia Commons}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/search/?title=File:%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%80%D1%8C._%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BC_3_(%D0%94%D0%B0%D0%BB%D1%8C_1907).djvu&page=140|title=English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language|first=Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de|last=Courtenay|date=31 May 1907|via=Wikimedia Commons}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/search/?title=File:%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%80%D1%8C._%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BC_1_(%D0%94%D0%B0%D0%BB%D1%8C_1903).djvu&page=669|title=English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language|first=Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de|last=Courtenay|date=31 May 1863|via=Wikimedia Commons}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/search/?title=File:%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%80%D1%8C._%D0%A2%D0%BE%D0%BC_1_(%D0%94%D0%B0%D0%BB%D1%8C_1903).djvu&page=140|title=English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language|first=Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de|last=Courtenay|date=31 May 1863|via=Wikimedia Commons}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.rsl.ru/datadocs/doc_9784ni.pdf |title=В. И. Даль. Биобиблиографический указатель / Рос. гос. б-ка, НИО библиографии; Сост. О.Г. Горбачева. Ред. Т.Я. Брискман. Библиогр. ред. Е.А. Акимова. — М.: Пашков Дом, 2004. — С. 9—11. — 134 с. |access-date=14 April 2019 |archive-date=30 January 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190130221230/https://www.rsl.ru/datadocs/doc_9784ni.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> The inclusion of rude and abusive words became an obstacle to the reprinting of this version of the dictionary in the Soviet Union for censorship reasons.<ref>Предисловие от редакции // Толковый словарь живого великорусского языка. В 4 т. Том 1 / В.И. Даль. — 6-е изд. стер. — М.: Дрофа, Русский язык-Медиа, 2011. — С. III—XII.</ref>
The use of mat is widespread, especially in the army, the criminal world,<ref>(Russian)</ref> and many other all-male milieus.


=== Khuy ===
A detailed article by ] (translated by Andrew Bromfeld) analyzing the ], overtones, and ] of mat appeared in the 15 September 2003 issue of '']''.


''Khuy'' ({{lang|ru|]; {{audio|Ru-Khuy.ogg|хуй}}}}), often also written in Latin as "hui" or even "hooy" by Russian schoolchildren/beginners in their English studies, means "cock", "]", or for an equivalent colloquial register: "]". The etymology of the term is unclear. Mainstream theories include from ] (PIE) *''ks-u-'', related to ''хвоя'' (''khvoya'', "pine needles"), attributed to Pederson, 1908.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://monstar.nnover.ru/blog/abuse/27651.html#Comments| title= Comments| website= monstar.nnover.ru| access-date= 16 March 2007| archive-date= 9 May 2007| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070509170209/http://monstar.nnover.ru/blog/abuse/27651.html#Comments| url-status= dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.philology.ru/linguistics2/kovalyov-05.htm| website= philology.ru| trans-title= Russian Mat – Consequences of Destruction of the Taboo; Cultural taboos and their influence on the result of communication |author= Voronezh| year= 2005| pages= 184–197| script-title=ru:РУССКИЙ МАТ – СЛЕДСТВИЕ УНИЧТОЖЕНИЯ ТАБУ (Культурные табу и их влияние на результат коммуникации.)| access-date= 6 September 2017| language= ru}}</ref>
In modern Russia, the use of ''mat'' is censored in the media and the use of mat in public constitutes a form of ], or mild hooliganism, punishable under article 20.1.1 of the ],<ref>{{ru icon}} "нарушение общественного порядка, выражающее явное неуважение к обществу, сопровождающееся нецензурной бранью в общественных местах ... влечет наложение административного штрафа в размере от пятисот до одной тысячи рублей или административный арест на срок до пятнадцати суток" (''disorderly conduct displaying explicit disrespect to society, accompanied by obscene language in public ... is punishable by a fine from 500 to 1000 rubles or arrest up to 15 days'')</ref> although it is enforced only episodically,<ref>{{ru icon}} (''Detained in south-east Moscow, the hooligans will pay fines for mat'') at ], 01-23-2008</ref> in particular due to the vagueness of the legal definition.<ref>{{ru icon}} (''Department of communications will define "obscene language"'') at ], 06-24-2009</ref> Despite the public ban, mat is used by Russians of all ages and nearly all social groups, with particular fervor in the male-dominated military and the structurally similar social strata.<ref name=mikhailin>{{en icon}} {{cite journal|last=Mikhailin|first=Vadim|title=Russian Army Mat as a Code System Controlling Behaviour in the Russian army|journal=The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies|url=http://www.pipss.org/index93.html|issue=1|volume=2004|date=2004-09-29|accessdate=07-01-2009}}</ref> However, it is considered highly uncultured and very offensive in certain social circles in Russia, especially if women are present.


From PIE *hau-, related to ''хвост'' (''khvost'', "tail"), attributed to Merlingen, 1955; from ] хуй (''khui'', meaning "sheath" or "scabbard"). This was the etymology endorsed by the ] government and attributed to ], who claimed it was a loan word, imposed during the ]. Alexander Gorokhovski suggests the derivation from the ] ''huic'' (lit. ''"for that"'', used on prescriptions for genital diseases) as a ], because the old Russian ''"ud/uda"'' (from PIE root *''ud-'' meaning ''"up, out"'') became taboo in the mid-18th century.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.russki-mat.net/e/mat_Gorokhovski.htm | website= russki-mat.net| script-title=ru:Матерщина: седая древность и цветущая юность| trans-title= Foul language: gray antiquity and blooming youth| first= A. | last= Gorokhovsky| language= ru| access-date= 6 September 2017}}</ref>
== Key words and expressions==
The first volume of the ''Great Dictionary of Mat'' by the Russian linguist and folklorist Alexei Plutser-Sarno treats only expressions with the stem ''хуй'' (''khuy''), numbering over 500 entries; 12 volumes are planned.


The first volume of the ''Great Dictionary of Mat'' by the Russian linguist and folklorist {{ill|Aleksey Plutser-Sarno|ru|Плуцер-Сарно, Алексей Юрьевич}} treats only expressions with the stem ''хуй'' (''khuy''), numbering over 500 entries; 12 volumes are planned.{{cn|date=December 2023}} The word ''khuy'' also appears in various other Slavic languages with the same meaning and pronunciation but not always the same spelling, such as the ] ''chuj''.
The key elements of ''mat'' are:
* ] (''khuy''; {{audio|Ru-Khuy.ogg|хуй}}) &mdash; ], or for equivalent colloquial effect, ]. The etymology of the term is unclear. Mainstream theories include: from ] (PIE) *''ks-u-'', related to ''хвоя'' (''khvoya'', "pine needles"), attributed to Pederson, 1908.;<ref> </ref> from PIE *hau-, related to ''хвост'' (''khvost'', "tail"), attributed to Merlingen, 1955; from ] хуй (''khui'', meaning "sheath" or "scabbard"). This was the etymology endorsed by the ] government and attributed to ], who claimed it was a loan word, imposed during ]. A Gorokhovski suggests the derivation from ] ''huic'' (lit. ''"for that"'', used on prescriptions for genital diseases) as a ], because the old Russian ''"ud/uda"'' (from PIE root *''ud-'' meaning ''"up, out"'') became taboo in mid-18th century.<ref></ref>
**"Иди на хуй" (''Idi&#769; na&#769; khuy'') (and numerous variations), literally "go to the dick", equivalent to the English "fuck off."
** хуёво (''khuyo&#769;vo'') — meaning "bad" like in "feeling oneself bad" or about something of bad quality
** охуенно (''okhuye&#769;nno'') — "very good" or "awesome"
** хуярить (''khuya&#769;rit'') — a placeholder for "to do something actively" for certain verbs, e.g, "to ride", "to run". Often requires a preposition, e.g., отхуярить - "to beat someone up", нахуярить = "to load", "to create a mess"
* ] (''pizda&#769;''; {{audio|Ru-Pizda.ogg|пизда}}) &mdash; ]
**"иди в пизду" ('''Idi&#769; v pizdu&#769;''), literally meaning "go into the cunt", using similar to "Иди на хуй" (see above).
** пизде́ц (''pizde&#769;ts'') &mdash; "deep shit" is often used as an exclamation. Also means death or end of something.
** пиздеть / пизде́ть (''pizde&#769;t''') &mdash; to lie, to talk a lot, occasionally used for simlpy "to talk".
** пи́здить (''pi&#769;zdit''') &mdash; "to steal" or "to beat somebody".
** пиздaтый (''pizda&#769;ty'') &mdash; literally "pussy-like", means "awesome", "stunning"; a superlative and/or admiring term that can be applied to any object or event.
** "получить пизды" (''poluchi&#769;t' pizdy&#769;'') — get beaten (physically and mentally) from someone
** "дать пизды" (''dat' pizdy&#769;'') - to beat someone
* ] (''yeba&#769;t'''; {{audio|Ru-Yebat.ogg|ебать}}) &mdash; to ]. From ] ''jebati'' and ] ''*h₃yebʰ-e-ti'', cf. ] οἴφω (''oíphō'') "to live in a marriage" and ] यभति (''yabhati'').
** "ёб твою мать!" (''Yo&#769;b tvoyu&#769; mat'''; {{audio|Ru-Yobtvoyumat.ogg|ёб твою мать}}) literally " (I) fucked your mother", an exclamation of discontent; sometimes used an exclamation of surprise
** "ёбаный в рот!" (''Yo&#769;bany v rot'') literally "fucked in the mouth", an insult, sometimes an exclamation of surprise
** "ёбнуть", to strike, to hit
** "ёбнутый" (''Yo&#769;bnutyi)- masculinum, ёбнутая (''yo&#769;bnutaya)-femininum, "mad", "delirious", "goosey", literally "hit (on the head)", from "ёбнуть"
* ] (''blya&#769;d''; {{audio|Ru-блядь.ogg|блядь}}) &mdash; ]; the word was not banned from literary use at the time of ], who used it to describe various heresies and various expressions based on these terms (as the form of word блудить, ''bludi&#769;t'', "to stray or fornicate").{{citation needed|date=September 2011}} Also, the 15th century merchant-traveler ] used it simply as "concubine," without any obscene connotations. However, in contemporary Russian usage блядь (or бля; ''blyad''' or ''blya'') are hardly considered neutral words. The word is often used as an emphatic interjection, often without intended offense, and sometimes just the opposite: "Во, бля, даёт!" - (approx.) "No shit, look at him!" - may be said, e.g., about a proficient dancer or a ] player.


=== Pizda ===
Additionally, the following words are considered almost as offensive, and can also be regarded as ''mat'':
''Pizda&#769;'' ({{lang|ru|]; {{audio|Ru-Pizda.ogg|пизда}}}}) means "]". A derivative of this word is the interjection ''pizdets''. This word, depending on the situation, can express a vivid form of almost any emotion, ranging from sadness and annoyance ("Pizdets, my girlfriend cheated on me", or "Pizdets, I missed my flight"), to an expression of joy ("Pizdets, my son has just been born!") <ref name="Putin"/>
* елда́ (''yelda'') &mdash; "big dick". Rarely used and considered old-fashioned.
* ] (''kher'') &mdash; "cock"; somewhat less offensive than "khuy"; the actual meanings of ''хер'' is the old Russian name of the letter ''Х'' ], which became strongly associated with the actual ''хуй'' (cf. the term "F-word" in English). The old word "''похе́рить''" (''pokhe&#769;rit'') which used to mean "to cross out," "to delete", now tends to be contaminated with the relatively new meaning of "хер" (i.e., obscene "penis"), thus achieving an obscene meaning, also.<!-- only illiterate people consider хер and похе́рить be obscene words. The latter word is almost neutral -->
* ] (''manda'') &mdash; ]
* ] (''pidora&#769;s''), a bastardization of '']'' "fag", meaning a ] male in Russian. The condensed forms ''pi&#769;dor'' (пи́дор), ''pedrila'' (педри́ла), ''pe&#769;dik'' (пе́дик) "faggot" are also used. More often than not (though not necessarily), refers to a passive pederast. Often used as a general term like "asshole" or "motherfucker";
* ] (''zalu&#769;pa''; {{audio|Ru-залупа.ogg|залупа}}) means "] head" (from old Russian "''lupit<nowiki>'</nowiki>''" - here, "to peel off" (like "lupit' yaytso" - "to peel off egg shell"); therefore, this is "what you can see when the foreskin is pulled back or removed"). "Zalupa&#769;ts'a" means "Playing the great man, giving oneself airs"; in '']'' by ], one of the inmates protests against something ("This is not sovietic!") and is punished for that; his comrades comment: "There was no need to ''zalupats'a''".
* ] (''drochi&#769;t'''; {{audio|Ru-дрочи́ть.ogg|дрочить}}) &mdash; "wank" (oneself or someone). ''drochi&#769;t's'a'' (дрочиться) - "to masturbate" (oneself). From Old Russian дрочити (to pet, to pamper)
* фарья´ (''far'ya&#769;'') &ndash; a dialectal variant of ''манда'' ("cunt"). Extremely rarely used.{{cn|date=August 2014}}


=== Yebát' ===
Offensive words or meanings that are almost never considered mat, but are used together with it:
''Yebát{{'}}'' ({{lang|ru|]; {{audio|Ru-Yebat.ogg|ебать}}}}) means "to fuck (somebody)". This verb expresses a unilateral action and always requires (or implies) a ]. The mutual action expressed in English with verbs "to copulate", "to have intercourse" is rendered in mat by the ] of the verb, ''yebát{{'}}sya'' ({{lang|ru|]}}): "to fuck each other". Historically, women have been perceived as sexually submissive, so the verb mostly refers to an action of a man. In modern times it may refer to a woman's action, in contexts when she initiates (or plans to initiate) the intercourse or plays an active role. See the wiktionary entry for some figurative uses of the word.
* ] (''muda&#769;k''; {{audio|Ru-муда́к.ogg|мудак}}) &mdash; "stupid ass", "git". Also historically means "castrated piglet".{{citation needed|date=October 2013}}
Another often-used derivative is ''mudi&#769;lo'' (муди́ло) which only bears an abstract offensive meaning and is somewhat equal to "motherfucker." Sometimes, ''mudak'' and ''mudilo'' are used as equivalents of "moron," e.g. Вася - полный мудило, ему жена изменяет, а он радуется (''Va&#769;sya - po&#769;lny mudi&#769;lo, yemu&#769; zhena&#769; izmenya&#769;yet, a on ra&#769;duyetsya,''). Translation: Vasya is a complete moron: his wife cheats on him, but he's still glad.
* ], муди, мудя, муды; (''mudye&#769;'', ''mudi&#769;'', ''mudya&#769;'', ''mudy&#769;'') &mdash; "]". e.g. Тянуть муде к бороде. Tyanu&#769;t' mudye&#769;. k borodye&#769;-"To pull the balls to the chin".="To hesitate". Rarely used and considered old-fashioned or regional.
* ] (''su&#769;ka'') &mdash; meaning "bitch" (female dog); an offensive reference to a woman, but also has a unisex meaning of "traitor", "rascal", "scumbag"; it has a dangerously pejorative connotation in the criminal world (see ]). English "bitch" about an unpleasant girl is maybe more equivalent to Russian стерва (''ste&#769;rva''), which is a rude word but not a major profanity (accepted in written texts). However, сука старая (''su&#769;ka sta&#769;raya''), literally "old bitch", refers to a mean old woman
* су́чка (''su&#769;chka'')&mdash; literally "little bitch", meaning "whore", "prostitute", "wanton", "jilt"


=== Blyád' ===
==Historical poetry with ''mat''==
{{Redirect|Blyat|the album by Capital Bra|Blyat (album)}}
], ''"A Holiday in Peterhof"'' - ''"Петергофский праздник"'', 1834:
''Blyád''' ({{lang|ru|]; {{audio|Ru-блядь.ogg|блядь}}}}) means "]".<ref name=Putin/> In the ] the word блѧдь (блядь in modern orthography) – ''blyad'', meaning: "deception, nonsense, insane, adulteress",<ref>]. </ref> is preserved in the ] in three meanings: "deception, delusion", "idle talk, trivia" and "debauchery, adultery".<ref>]. ] – </ref>

To enhance the expressivity, the word may be combined with the non-''mat'' insult "suka" ({{lang|ru|]}}, ]) to form "suka, blyád" (сука, блядь) especially among Internet users and memes, an approximate analogue for the expression "fucking shit". The term is popular in the '']'' video game community in the stylized form of "rush B, cyka blyat".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Villanueva |first1=Jamie |last2=Heath |first2=Jerome |title=CS:GO Dictionary: A Complete Guide to Counter-Strike Slang |url=https://dotesports.com/counter-strike/news/csgo-slang-guide-dictionary-23242 |website=Dot Esports |date=3 March 2021}}</ref>

== History and use ==
Some claim that the term ''mat'' derives from the Russian word for mother, a component of the key phrase "Ёб твою мать", "yob tvoyu mat{{'"}} (fuck your mother).<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.russki-mat.net/e/mat_VEvrofeyev.htm |title= The Unique Power of Russia's Underground Language| last= Yerofeyev| first= Victor|authorlink=Viktor Yerofeyev| date= 12 October 2003| website= russki-mat.net}}</ref>{{better source|date=October 2023|reason=not an expert in linguistics, nor refers to one}} However there is a Russian expression "благим матом" (''blagim matom'') which has no relation to obscenities, and whose etymology is unsure as well.<ref></ref>

Obscenities are among the earliest recorded attestations of the Russian language (the first written ''mat'' words date to the early Middle Ages<ref>]</ref>).

]'s 1834 ''"A Holiday in Peterhof"'' (''"Петергофский праздник"'') is one example of the usage of ''mat''.


{| border="0" align="center" width="80%" {| border="0" align="center" width="80%"
|- |-
| width="30%" | <poem>I won't pay, are you in shock? | width="30%" | <poem>And so I will not pay you:
Can't you enjoy a bit of whoring? However, if you are a simple ''whore''
Swallow your pride, it is an honour You should consider it an honor
To be acquainted with the cadet's ''dick''!<ref name=Putin/></poem>
To be impaled on cadet's cock!{{cn|date=June 2015}}<!-- editor Harald Forkbeard has translated from Russian into English -->{{dubious|date=June 2015}}</poem>
| width="30%" | <poem>Итак, тебе не заплачу я: | width="30%" lang="ru"| <poem>Итак, тебе не заплачу я:
Но если ты простая ''блядь'', Но если ты простая ''блядь'',
То знай: за честь должна считать То знай: за честь должна считать
Знакомство юнкерского ''хуя''!</poem> Знакомство юнкерского ''хуя''!</poem>
| width="30%" | <poem>''Itak, tebe ne zaplachu ya: | width="30%" | <poem>Iták, tebé ne zaplachú ya:
No yesli ty prostaya ''blyad'', No yésli ty prostáya ''blyad''',
To znay: za chest dolzhna schitat To znay: za chest' dolzhná schitát'
Znakomstvo yunkerskogo ''khuya''!</poem> Znakómstvo yúnkerskogo ''khúya''!</poem>
|} |}


''"Luka Mudishchev"'', prologue; this work was probably written at some time in the mid 19th century, but often it was ascribed to ], an equally obscene poet who lived in the 18th century:<ref>http://barkoviana.narod.ru/luka_preface.html «Лука Мудищев» — история и мифология расхожие заблуждения (''«Luka Mudishchev» - istoriya i mifologiya raskhozhiye zabluzhdeniya'', "Luka Mudischev" - The History and Mythology: Widespread Misconceptions) {{ru icon}} accessed Aug 8, 2008</ref> The prologue to ''Luka Mudishchev'', probably written at some time in the mid 19th century, was often ascribed to ], an obscene poet who lived in the 18th century:<ref>{{cite web| url= http://barkoviana.narod.ru/luka_preface.html| title= «Лука Мудищев» — история и мифология расхожие заблуждения («Luka Mudishchev» istoriya i mifologiya raskhozhiye zabluzhdeniya)| trans-title= ''Luka Mudischev'' The History and Mythology: Widespread Misconceptions)| language= ru| website= barkoviana.narod.ru| access-date= 8 August 2008| url-status= dead| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071217193936/http://barkoviana.narod.ru/luka_preface.html| archive-date= 17 December 2007| df= dmy-all}}</ref>
{| border="0" align="center" width="80%" {| border="0" align="center" width="80%"
|- |-
| width="50%" | <poem>Hear ye, matrons and widows fair, | width="30%" | <poem>Hear ye, matrons and widows fair,
Young girls with pussy still untouched! Young girls with ''pussy'' still untouched!
Let me tell you up front
My tale, before the hole gets punched
About fucking out there.{{cn|date=June 2015}}<!-- editor Harald Forkbeard has translated from Russian into English -->{{dubious|date=June 2015}}</poem> A few words about ''fucking''<!-- editor Harald Forkbeard has translated from Russian into English, corrected by JC Nelson 1.16 --></poem>
| width="50%" | <poem>О вы, замужние, о вдовы, | width="30%" lang="ru" | <poem>О вы, замужние, о вдовы,
О девки с целкой наотлёт! О девки с ''целкой'' наотлёт!
Позвольте мне вам наперёд Позвольте мне вам наперёд
Сказать о ебле два-три слова.</poem> Сказать о ''ебле'' два-три слова.</poem>
| width="30% | <poem> O vy, zamuzhnie, o vdovy,
O devki s ''tselkoy'' naotlyot!
Pozvol'te mne vam naperyod
Skazat' o ''yeble'' dva-tri slova.</poem>
|} |}


''Mat'' is also used in humor or puns by juxtaposing innocent words so that the result will sound as if an obscene word was used. An example is a ] song cited in '']'' by ]:<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://fedor-krjukov.narod.ru/o_KRJUKOVE/Chernov_o_KRJUKOVE.htm|title=А. Чернов. Запрещенный классик|website=fedor-krjukov.narod.ru}}</ref>
==Mat and humor==
<blockquote lang="ru">
A type of humor/puns is to juxtapose innocent words so that the result will sound as if an obscene word was used. An example is a Cossack song cited in '']'' (1928-1940) by ]:<ref></ref>
<blockquote>
:Щуку я, щуку я, щуку я поймала. :Щуку я, щуку я, щуку я поймала.
:Девица красная, уху я варила. :Девица красная, уху я варила.
:Уху я, уху я, уху я варила. :Уху я, уху я, уху я варила.
</blockquote> </blockquote>
Here "Уху я варила" ("I cooked the ]") may be reinterpreted as "У хуя варила" ("Cooked near the penis") or "Ух, хуй я варила" ("Ooh, I cooked a dick"). Here "Уху я варила" ("I cooked the ]") may be reinterpreted as "У хуя варила" ("Cooked near the dick") or even "Ух, хуй я варила" ("Ooh, I cooked a dick").

See ] for more.
The contemporaneous use of ''mat'' is widespread, especially in the army, police, blue-collar workers, the criminal world, and many other all-male milieus, with particular fervor in the male-dominated military and the structurally similar social strata.<ref name= mikhailin>{{cite journal |last=Mikhailin|first=Vadim |title=Russian Army Mat as a Code System Controlling Behaviour in the Russian Army|journal=The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies |url= https://journals.openedition.org/pipss/93|volume=1 |date=29 September 2004 |access-date=24 May 2018}}</ref> An article by ] (translated by Andrew Bromfeld) analyzing the ], overtones, and ] of mat appeared in the 15 September 2003 issue of '']''.<ref>{{cite magazine| url= http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2003/09/15/dirty-words-2| date= 15 September 2003| title= Dirty Words| first= Victor| last= Erofeyev| page= 42| magazine= The New Yorker| access-date= 6 September 2017}}</ref>

In the context of the ], two mat phrases were popularized internationally: "]" and "]" ("Russian warship, go fuck yourself"), as expressions of the Ukrainian defiance.

===Legal issues===
In 2013 ''mat'' has been banned in Russia in all ], printed and electronic.<ref name="Putin"/> <ref name=iz20131225/> Since July 1, 2014, ''mat'' has been banned in Russia from all movies, theatrical productions, and concerts.<ref name="Putin"/>

In modern Russia, since the times of the ], the use of obscenities in public aggravates a ] and may lead to its qualification as petty ], punishable under article 20.1.1 of the ],<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.consultant.ru/popular/koap/13_21.html#p5511 | title= Article 20.1 | work= ]| date= 8 December 2003 | quote= нарушение общественного порядка, выражающее явное неуважение к обществу, сопровождающееся нецензурной бранью в общественных местах ... влечет наложение административного штрафа в размере от пятисот до одной тысячи рублей или административный арест на срок до пятнадцати суток" ('disorderly conduct displaying explicit disrespect to society, accompanied by obscene language in public ... is punishable by a fine from 500 to 1000 rubles or arrest up to 15 days')| via= consultant.ru| publisher= Government of Russia}}</ref> although there was no clear legal definition what exactly constitutes an obscenity.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://old.lenta.ru/news/2009/06/24/strict/ |script-title=ru:Министерство связи определит понятие нецензурной речи| trans-title= Department of communications will define 'obscene language'| website= ]| date= 24 July 2009| language= ru}}</ref>


== See also == == See also ==
{{Commons category|Russian mat}}
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* '']'', a Russian ska/punk band famous for its vulgar lyrics * '']'', a Russian ska/punk band famous for its vulgar lyrics
* '']'', a Russian metaironic horror hard-rock band famous for its vulgar lyrics
* ]


== Notes == == Notes ==
{{reflist}}
<references/>


== External links == == External links ==
*{{Commonscatinline}}
* - The online version of the Dictionary of Russian mat by Alexei Plutser-Sarno {{ru icon}}
* – online version of the ''Dictionary of Russian Mat'' by Alexei Plutser-Sarno {{in lang|ru}}
* *
*] article.] *
* Full text of the New Yorker article. *, ''The New Yorker'' via russki-mat.net
*. First play in Russia to be written entirely in profanities. Productions of this play have always been surrounded by controversy: in Russia by Andrei Zhitinkin, with actors Oleg Fomin and Sergei Chonishvili; in France by ] with actors ] and ]; in Germany and Switzerland the parts were played in French and German by ] and Roberto Guerra.
*Mikhailin, Vadim, 2004, Essay: , The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies
*. First play in Russia to be written entirely in profanities. Productions of this play have always been surrounded by controversy: in Russia by Andrei Zhitinkin, with actors Oleg Fomin and Sergei Chonishvili; in France by ] with actors ] and ]; in Germany and Switzerland the parts were played in French and German by ] and Roberto Guerra.


{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2010}}
{{Sexual slang}} {{Sexual slang}}
{{Profanity}} {{Profanity}}




{{DEFAULTSORT:Mat (Russian Profanity)}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Mat (Russian Profanity)}}
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] ]
] ]
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Latest revision as of 04:09, 23 December 2024

Term for strong obscene profanity in Russian

The mat-word "хуй" ("khuy") in Max Vasmer's Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch [ru] (Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language). Heidelberg, 1950–1958

Mat (Russian: мат; матерщи́на / ма́терный язы́к, matershchina / materny yazyk) is the term for vulgar, obscene, or profane language in Russian and some other Slavic language communities.

Four pillars of mat

In 2013, Roskomnadzor compiled a list of four lexical roots, with any words derived from these roots - nouns, adjectives, verbs, participles etc - of the Russian language which it deemed "absolutely unacceptable in the mass media": khuy ("cock"); pizda ("cunt"); yebat' ("to fuck"); and blyad ("whore"). Roskomnadzor defined the banned terms as follows: "Obscene designation of the male genital organ, obscene designation of the female genital organ, obscene designation of the process of copulation and obscene designation of a woman of dissolute behavior, as well as all linguistic units derived from these words".

David Remnick writes that mat has thousands of variations but ultimately centers on those four words.

Mat-words were included by Polish publisher Jan Baudouin de Courtenay in the 3rd and 4th editions of the Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language, which was printed four times in 1903–1909 (twice) and in 1911–1912, 1912–1914. The inclusion of rude and abusive words became an obstacle to the reprinting of this version of the dictionary in the Soviet Union for censorship reasons.

Khuy

Khuy (хуй; хуй), often also written in Latin as "hui" or even "hooy" by Russian schoolchildren/beginners in their English studies, means "cock", "penis", or for an equivalent colloquial register: "dick". The etymology of the term is unclear. Mainstream theories include from Proto-Indo European (PIE) *ks-u-, related to хвоя (khvoya, "pine needles"), attributed to Pederson, 1908.

From PIE *hau-, related to хвост (khvost, "tail"), attributed to Merlingen, 1955; from Mongolian хуй (khui, meaning "sheath" or "scabbard"). This was the etymology endorsed by the Soviet government and attributed to Maxim Gorky, who claimed it was a loan word, imposed during the Mongol yoke. Alexander Gorokhovski suggests the derivation from the Latin huic (lit. "for that", used on prescriptions for genital diseases) as a euphemism, because the old Russian "ud/uda" (from PIE root *ud- meaning "up, out") became taboo in the mid-18th century.

The first volume of the Great Dictionary of Mat by the Russian linguist and folklorist Aleksey Plutser-Sarno [ru] treats only expressions with the stem хуй (khuy), numbering over 500 entries; 12 volumes are planned. The word khuy also appears in various other Slavic languages with the same meaning and pronunciation but not always the same spelling, such as the Polish chuj.

Pizda

Pizdá (пизда́; пизда) means "cunt". A derivative of this word is the interjection pizdets. This word, depending on the situation, can express a vivid form of almost any emotion, ranging from sadness and annoyance ("Pizdets, my girlfriend cheated on me", or "Pizdets, I missed my flight"), to an expression of joy ("Pizdets, my son has just been born!")

Yebát'

Yebát' (еба́ть; ебать) means "to fuck (somebody)". This verb expresses a unilateral action and always requires (or implies) a direct object. The mutual action expressed in English with verbs "to copulate", "to have intercourse" is rendered in mat by the reciprocal form of the verb, yebát'sya (еба́ться): "to fuck each other". Historically, women have been perceived as sexually submissive, so the verb mostly refers to an action of a man. In modern times it may refer to a woman's action, in contexts when she initiates (or plans to initiate) the intercourse or plays an active role. See the wiktionary entry for some figurative uses of the word.

Blyád'

"Blyat" redirects here. For the album by Capital Bra, see Blyat (album).

Blyád' (блядь; блядь) means "whore". In the Old East Slavic the word блѧдь (блядь in modern orthography) – blyad, meaning: "deception, nonsense, insane, adulteress", is preserved in the Church Slavonic in three meanings: "deception, delusion", "idle talk, trivia" and "debauchery, adultery".

To enhance the expressivity, the word may be combined with the non-mat insult "suka" (сука, bitch) to form "suka, blyád" (сука, блядь) especially among Internet users and memes, an approximate analogue for the expression "fucking shit". The term is popular in the Counter-Strike video game community in the stylized form of "rush B, cyka blyat".

History and use

Some claim that the term mat derives from the Russian word for mother, a component of the key phrase "Ёб твою мать", "yob tvoyu mat'" (fuck your mother). However there is a Russian expression "благим матом" (blagim matom) which has no relation to obscenities, and whose etymology is unsure as well.

Obscenities are among the earliest recorded attestations of the Russian language (the first written mat words date to the early Middle Ages).

Mikhail Lermontov's 1834 "A Holiday in Peterhof" ("Петергофский праздник") is one example of the usage of mat.

And so I will not pay you:
However, if you are a simple whore
You should consider it an honor
To be acquainted with the cadet's dick!

Итак, тебе не заплачу я:
Но если ты простая блядь,
То знай: за честь должна считать
Знакомство юнкерского хуя!

Iták, tebé ne zaplachú ya:
No yésli ty prostáya blyad',
To znay: za chest' dolzhná schitát'
Znakómstvo yúnkerskogo khúya!

The prologue to Luka Mudishchev, probably written at some time in the mid 19th century, was often ascribed to Ivan Barkov, an obscene poet who lived in the 18th century:

Hear ye, matrons and widows fair,
Young girls with pussy still untouched!
Let me tell you up front
A few words about fucking

О вы, замужние, о вдовы,
О девки с целкой наотлёт!
Позвольте мне вам наперёд
Сказать о ебле два-три слова.

 O vy, zamuzhnie, o vdovy,
O devki s tselkoy naotlyot!
Pozvol'te mne vam naperyod
Skazat' o yeble dva-tri slova.

Mat is also used in humor or puns by juxtaposing innocent words so that the result will sound as if an obscene word was used. An example is a Don Cossack song cited in And Quiet Flows the Don by Mikhail Sholokhov:

Щуку я, щуку я, щуку я поймала.
Девица красная, уху я варила.
Уху я, уху я, уху я варила.

Here "Уху я варила" ("I cooked the fish stew") may be reinterpreted as "У хуя варила" ("Cooked near the dick") or even "Ух, хуй я варила" ("Ooh, I cooked a dick").

The contemporaneous use of mat is widespread, especially in the army, police, blue-collar workers, the criminal world, and many other all-male milieus, with particular fervor in the male-dominated military and the structurally similar social strata. An article by Victor Erofeyev (translated by Andrew Bromfeld) analyzing the history, overtones, and sociology of mat appeared in the 15 September 2003 issue of The New Yorker.

In the context of the Russo-Ukrainian War, two mat phrases were popularized internationally: "Putin khuylo!" and "Русский военный корабль, иди нахуй" ("Russian warship, go fuck yourself"), as expressions of the Ukrainian defiance.

Legal issues

In 2013 mat has been banned in Russia in all mass media, printed and electronic. Since July 1, 2014, mat has been banned in Russia from all movies, theatrical productions, and concerts.

In modern Russia, since the times of the Soviet Union, the use of obscenities in public aggravates a disorderly conduct and may lead to its qualification as petty hooliganism, punishable under article 20.1.1 of the Offences Code of Russia, although there was no clear legal definition what exactly constitutes an obscenity.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Роскомнадзор накажет СМИ только за четыре матерных слова, Izvestiya, December 25, 2013
  2. ^ Remnick, David (5 May 2014). "Putin's Four Dirty Words". The New Yorker. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  3. Courtenay, Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de (31 May 1909). "English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language" – via Wikimedia Commons.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Courtenay, Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de (31 May 1907). "English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language" – via Wikimedia Commons.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. Courtenay, Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de (31 May 1863). "English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language" – via Wikimedia Commons.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. Courtenay, Владимир Иванович Даль, Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin de (31 May 1863). "English: Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language" – via Wikimedia Commons.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. "В. И. Даль. Биобиблиографический указатель / Рос. гос. б-ка, НИО библиографии; Сост. О.Г. Горбачева. Ред. Т.Я. Брискман. Библиогр. ред. Е.А. Акимова. — М.: Пашков Дом, 2004. — С. 9—11. — 134 с." (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  8. Предисловие от редакции // Толковый словарь живого великорусского языка. В 4 т. Том 1 / В.И. Даль. — 6-е изд. стер. — М.: Дрофа, Русский язык-Медиа, 2011. — С. III—XII.
  9. "Comments". monstar.nnover.ru. Archived from the original on 9 May 2007. Retrieved 16 March 2007.
  10. Voronezh (2005). РУССКИЙ МАТ – СЛЕДСТВИЕ УНИЧТОЖЕНИЯ ТАБУ (Культурные табу и их влияние на результат коммуникации.) [Russian Mat – Consequences of Destruction of the Taboo; Cultural taboos and their influence on the result of communication]. philology.ru (in Russian). pp. 184–197. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  11. Gorokhovsky, A. Матерщина: седая древность и цветущая юность [Foul language: gray antiquity and blooming youth]. russki-mat.net (in Russian). Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  12. Срезневский, Измаил Иванович. "Материалы для словаря древнерусского языка по письменным памятникам" ("Materialy dlya slovarya drevnerusskogo yazyka po pis'mennym pamyatnikam") – The Materials for a Dictionary of the Old Russian Language on manuscripts. Том 1 А–К (1893)/ С. 123
  13. Дьяченко, Григорий Михайлович. «Полный церковнославянский словарь» («Polniy cerkovno-slavyanskiy slovar»)«Complete Church Slavonic Dictionary» / С. 47
  14. Villanueva, Jamie; Heath, Jerome (3 March 2021). "CS:GO Dictionary: A Complete Guide to Counter-Strike Slang". Dot Esports.
  15. Yerofeyev, Victor (12 October 2003). "The Unique Power of Russia's Underground Language". russki-mat.net.
  16. Благим матом
  17. Obscene lexics in birch bark documents
  18. "«Лука Мудищев» — история и мифология расхожие заблуждения («Luka Mudishchev» – istoriya i mifologiya raskhozhiye zabluzhdeniya)" [Luka Mudischev – The History and Mythology: Widespread Misconceptions)]. barkoviana.narod.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  19. "А. Чернов. Запрещенный классик". fedor-krjukov.narod.ru.
  20. Mikhailin, Vadim (29 September 2004). "Russian Army Mat as a Code System Controlling Behaviour in the Russian Army". The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies. 1. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  21. Erofeyev, Victor (15 September 2003). "Dirty Words". The New Yorker. p. 42. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  22. "Article 20.1". Offences Code of Russia. Government of Russia. 8 December 2003 – via consultant.ru. нарушение общественного порядка, выражающее явное неуважение к обществу, сопровождающееся нецензурной бранью в общественных местах ... влечет наложение административного штрафа в размере от пятисот до одной тысячи рублей или административный арест на срок до пятнадцати суток" ('disorderly conduct displaying explicit disrespect to society, accompanied by obscene language in public ... is punishable by a fine from 500 to 1000 rubles or arrest up to 15 days')
  23. Министерство связи определит понятие нецензурной речи [Department of communications will define 'obscene language']. Lenta.Ru (in Russian). 24 July 2009.

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