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#1 |
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Debate: how is KYIV pronounced? Ukrainians please weigh in
So I am in a debate with some dummies about how KYIV is pronounced. I was there a few months ago, I heard everything from KEE-iu, KEEV, Kee'ev, Kee-YIV, KEEw, and more. But I am a stupid American, unused to the complexities of life in the Eurasian steppes.
Please weigh in if you have any real personal knowledge. Gracias. ![]() |
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#2 |
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Do you want the Ukranian pronunciation or Russian?
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#3 |
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Ukrainians pronounce it Keev. Like it's one long syllable instead of two syllables.
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#4 | |
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I'm asking about the way the president of Ukraine says it. It's 9PM there, isn't anyone awake? |
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#5 |
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My brother lives there for several years. I pasted his response.
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#7 |
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#8 | |
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#10 |
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LOL, it's sounds absolutely identical both languages. The Ukrainian language is an ancient Russian mixed with some Polish words.
If you want to hear how Kiev sounds in Ukrainian, which is just a dialect of Russian language, type this in Google translate and click the "listen" button: КИЕВ It sounds like Keeyf.
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#11 | |
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![]() It's pronounced key-yuv in polish
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#12 |
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Indeed
![]() Russians (aka Ukrainians) say "f" instead of "v" at the end. Just like vodka "Smirnoff", which is actually "Smirnov". Or like Eastern Russians say "Moskva" and eastern Russians who live in Moscow say "Maskva".
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#13 |
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Feel free to use the Listen function of Google Translate.
Ukrainian: https://translate.google.com/#view=h...B8%D1%97%D0%B2 vs Russian: https://translate.google.com/#view=h...B8%D0%B5%D0%B2 vs English: https://translate.google.com/#view=h...l=en&text=Kiev Also, Wikipedia has it the way it's pronounced in Ukraine. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:U...1%97%D0%B2.ogg |
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#14 | |
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#15 | |
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If you are
then please type out or use IPA. |
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#16 | |
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In Boston, some people really do say "pahk de cah" with the ah sound like "can" for park the car, which most Americans say "park the car" but the above can also be read as the way some English say it, with the ah as "charge" but unvoiced "r". We're not idiots here people, this is beyond wikipedia. We are asking how native Ukrainians, regardless of their history, ethnicity, linguistic descent, patrimony, or tribe, consider the standard way to say KYIV. |
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#17 | |
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When I talked to my brother he said, "Well, the Russian way of spelling it is different from Ukrainian, but that's because the alphabet is slightly different. But it sounds the same to me whether someone is speaking Russian or Ukrainian. They might be able to tell a difference in pronunciation, but I can't." |
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#18 |
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Just a few words about "history, ethnicity, linguistic descent, patrimony, or tribe". Kiev is the first capital city of Russia. As we say: Kiev is a mother of Russian cities. After that the capital has moved to Moscow, then to St. Petersburg, then to Moscow again, but Kiev was the first one. So native language there is Russian. People in Kiev speak Russian w/o accent while people from Eastern Ukraine (e.g. Donbass) speak with a specific accent.
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and George W said new-cyoo-ler for nuclear. So maybe the president isn't the best example, although Zelensky seems smart
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#23 | |
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To sum it up. The Ukraine is a synthetic Russian country. The people who live there are ethnic Russians and they are speak Russian because its their native language (if you've been to Kiev you should know it). However they are not a part of Russian Federation anymore. I do respect their decision, but I can't consider them as a different nation anyway. Look the post above made by O MARINA. She's a Canadian citizen, who was born and grown up in Odessa (former Soviet Union and now the Ukraine). So who she ethnically is? Which nation she belongs to?
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But it's just outdated for centuries and nobody on planet Earth speaks it. According to Wikipedia Russian is 12th most spoken language even in the USA. A former United States National Security Advisor: Milla Jovovich (was born in Kiev): And others: As you can see, nobody of them speak ancient Russian (Ukrainian). They speak the modern Russian instead.
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Just a small challenge. I've posted a song in Ukrainian right above. Here is is the same song in Russian - will you find a difference? ;)
I swill post the Ukrainian version yet again here just to make it easier for you to compare. This the same song is being singed in Ukrainian by a native Russian youtuber: Can you non-Russians find any difference in Russian and Ukrainian versions? The thing I want to explain is that Russians and Ukrainians are same nation. The Ukrainian language is an ancient Russian and Kiev is a first Russian capital (it has never been Ukrainian). As a Russian I have to admit that the Ukraine is in fact more Russian than Russia. Sounds strange but it's true. They keep the ancient language while we have mixed it with the Western European words. So the modern Russian culture is more Western European (French, German and English), while the Ukraine still keeps the ancient Russian culture. For example. Ocotober in Russian sounds like Oktiabr. In Ukrainian it sounds like Zhovten. November in Russian sounds like Noyabr. In Ukrainian it sounds like Listopad. May in Russian sounds like May. In Ukrainian it sounds like Traven. So their language keeps the ancient Russian words, while the modern Russian uses Western European words.
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It's only logical that when you adopt a spelling of a city name, you take it from the language that's the national language of that country. In Russian, which was an official language in the country for a while, the city is named Kiev, however, the Ukrainians call it it Kyiv, so I'm siding with the second. This isn't very easy for a westerner to pronounce usually because you have no letter and no such vowel sound, so you're the best bet is: K-(like you've been jabbed in the stomach)-eev
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#28 | |
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#29 |
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I've been here for a little while, most people pronounce it "Key-yev"...
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Maybe in Belorussia. They say "f" at the and. Not "v".
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#31 | |
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![]() Many things are written in Ukrainian in Kiev and other places instead of Russian, restaurant menus, shop signs, etc. The further west you go the more Ukrainian is spoken. Maybe it would be better to get an opinion from a Ukrainian on this thread instead of a Russian.
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I’m surrounded by people from Fall River and they usually use Bahstahn accents with Portuguese accents. You hear a mixture of accents and it’s confusing. I say Fall River but most pronounce it Fall Reeve. New Bedford is pronounced NewBeffa by most immigrants. Worcester is mispronounced by almost everyone. Woostah is correct but you’ll hear Werchester and Woresistah too. This area has Indian names and cities and towns like Mattapoisett and Acushnet seem easy to pronounce but it’s comical to listen to people. Kiev was said with one syllable by my Russian great-grandmother. Kyev was her way. Monday I see my Russian doctor with a thick accent and I’ll ask him his pronunciation of it. I think he’s from Belarus and my people are from Pinsk and Minsk.
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#35 | |
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If Sid70 is not a good example, let's listen to the Ukrainian president. Which language does he speak if it's not an official public speech? Actually he often switches to Russian even when he speaks officially like a president of the independent Ukraine. Yes, he actually uses some Ukrainian words there but he does it to mock the Ukrainian politicians. This video says a lot IMHO. By the way. Zelensky has became so popular in the Ukraine after TV series "Servant of The People". Guess which language was used there? No? Here you go then: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWx...SgCIK6SyzDgirQ Actually in this TV show you can see how exactly it works. When a president takes an oath, he speaks Ukrainian. When official state news hosts speak on camera they speak it in Ukrainian, because this language is enforced. But when they communicate to each other, they always use the modern Russian. The ancient Russian known as Ukrainian may sound very melodic but it is too outdated to be used for casual daily communications.
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#36 | |
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I'm not disputing that most Ukrainians speak in Russian but it's wrong to say that Ukrainian is not used. I've met Ukrainians who only speak Russian and don't know Ukrainian, and I've met ones who believe that Ukrainian should be spoken first before Russian. It's one thing I've learned, you don't talk politics with Ukrainians until you really know them!
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#37 | |
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![]() ![]() ![]() I lived there around year (in Ukraine in various places, not the capital Kiev). To put it simple - it is a bilingual country. There are regions where Russian is spoken and written more and regions where Ukrainian is spoken and written more. But I would say that both sides understand both Russian and Ukrainian. To the extent that they may communicate with each other without problems. Ukrainians are eastern Slavs like Russians, but it doesnt mean that they are Russian. Also, lets define here "Ukrainians", because this one will be tricky. Ukraine is kind of diverse country. People from Donbass are different than ppl from Lviv, the latter are different than people from Rakhiv, which are different than people from Berehove, Bilhorod, Kamianets Podolsky, Chernivtsi, Odessa, Kiev etc. I would say that the "Ukrainians" that are like "Russians" live mostly on the east, like Kharkhiv etc. Also, as from "Russians" from Siberia, as far as I know, there are various local tribes that live there - among white Russians - that are as far from Russians as Chinese. Of course, both Russians and Chinese have one thing in common - they belong to Asia, not Europe :P:P |
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#38 | |
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Wrong. "Я" in Ukrainian means "Я". There is no English "I". The Ukrainian language is an ancient Russian and it has no relation to the British one. It's a Slavic language and there is no "I" and other shit like that.
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This is the modern Ukraine: ![]() Which exactly part of it is not Russian or an annexed territory taken by Stalin from Poland? It's a synthetic territory made by Russian czars and Soviet dictators. What the most famous Ukrainian guy Taras Bulba say when Polish barbarians burned him alive? Ah?
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#39 | |
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Or probably his shout was just as loud as the shout of the Polish officers killed in Katyn by the Russian/Mongolian hordes of Stalin and NKVD. yeah, Katyn, not Khatyn. |
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Over 3 millions of Ukrainians have died. Over 3 millions of central Russians have died. Over 1 millions of Kazakhs have died. Over 5.42% of Soviet Union people have died. So what? What do you want to say with you post? Why don't you consider Russia as the most affected nation? Only the Georgian Republic has not suffered. How come?
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Skip it at 0:38 mark and listen how a native Ukrainian guy from Kiev (the president of the country BTW) says "KIEV". He clearly says "Keeyf" with an "F" at the end. Any questions?
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Говно. Вылеей в раковину. Лучший коньяк делают в Армении. Он куда лучше всяких французских xo. Вот реально.
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#47 | |
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Though there may be many ways to say it, and hear it, Zelensky says "Kee'eef" and that is what I'd vote for, as a non-native. |
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When i first read you saying that i thought you were full of shit. but going back in my mind and remembering pronunciations a little closer it really is annunciated with an f by any Russians I have spoken with or heard, but being a westerner my mind probably hears v instead. The distinction between the two is almost nothing, also why your language doesn't differentiate the two specifically with the alphabet, which is most likely why you are only hearing an F sound yourself. I think it stems back from the Soviet days. Nobody in the west would pronounce it Sofiet Union. The V is the most prominent consonant in that word. So we take that V and use it for anything else where you would use the "B" or what you would use for an F sound. B is also used as a v sound in spanish so there is also that distinction.
So essientially we can all be right here and are pretty much arguing semantics.
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#49 |
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German does that too, a lot of languages do. Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her is Fom to US speakers
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#50 | |
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And stop all these talks about the Ukraine as a different nation. For many centuries it was called Malorossia (Rossia means Russia in Russian) - it literally translates as a small Russia. Belorussia is also a Russian word. It means "White Russia". The Moscow Russia was called the Great Russia. So all those nations are Russian. They are different countries, but the people who live there are the same. They may hate each other, but genetically and ethnically the are the same people.
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