10 August 2015, 12:24
vashperTwo girls sit on the roof
Two girls sit on the roof, one girl is good and the other one is evil, and throw bricks at bystanders. The evil girl hit 3 times, and good girl 5 times. Why? Because good always triumphs over evil.
10 August 2015, 15:46
DocEdNew translation program desperately needed.
10 August 2015, 18:22
BriceI think if it is read as "The evil girl hit three people, and the kind girl five people", the fatalistic irony so common in Russian humor will be apparent.
11 August 2015, 20:07
KenscoI thought it was funny, dark, but funny; but I'm not going to laugh at Vashper's jokes if he doesn't start laughing at mine.
12 August 2015, 19:21
BriceRussian humor isn't necessarily intended to evoke laughs.
13 August 2015, 02:44
wasbeemanAn American visiting England asked a local how do they have such lovely lawns? The Brit replied, "it's really quite simple. You take a good piece of sod and roll it daily for 500 years".
I thought this joke was rather pointless but every Englishman I've told it to practically rolled on the floor with laughter.
13 August 2015, 17:48
vashperquote:
Originally posted by Brice:
I think if it is read as "The evil girl hit three people, and the kind girl five people", the fatalistic irony so common in Russian humor will be apparent.
Although I don't see anything particularly "fatalistic", you're absolutely correctly understood the joke. This is the irony of modern mythology, may be partly anti-Western, but not much.
But for God's sake, I don't understand the difference between "The evil girl hit three people" and "The evil girl hit 3 times" , and I find it hard to understand why one phrase is clear and the other not.
13 August 2015, 17:53
vashperquote:
Originally posted by Kensco:
I'm not going to laugh at Vashper's jokes if he doesn't start laughing at mine.
This, Kensco, is market thinking and the pressure on the partner