Yeah lol!! I know!
Too bad, the user is deactivating this account asjjskskn i want to see more krikalev stuff lmao
NASA photo, 2000, Exp. 1 era.
Krikalev: “Boys, do you know why zey gave us these flowers? Eeet is because I am so pretty. Tee hee.”
LOVEEEEE😤😤😤💕💕💕🌟🌟🌟🇷🇺🚀🚀
(1) Sergei Krikalev prepares to don a training spacesuit at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center
(2) Krikalev smiling smugly proudly in front of a photo of the Discovery shuttle
Who's this @cosmo-naute
Apollo-Soyuz delegation in the USSR, early 1970s. Shortly afterwards, a snowball fight broke out between the Americans and the Soviets. The Soviets won.
Soviet Soyuz rocket
New Crew Arrives at the International Space Station via NASA https://ift.tt/2sIo8wl
Adjectives are negated by placing “мар” (mar) after them. So чипер, beautiful, becomes чипер мар, “not beautiful”. You don’t need to worry about vowel harmony here. In Chuvash, adjectives are not declined to agree with nouns. ватă - Old (of a person) кивĕ - old (of a thing) аслă - older, senior кĕçĕн - younger, junior çамрăк - young çĕнĕ - new пысăк - big пĕчĕк - small ăслă - clever (minimal pair!) ухмах - stupid шултра - large вĕтĕ - tiny хаклă - expensive йÿнĕ - cheap лайăх - good аван - good начар - bad вăйлă - strong (вăй on its own means strength, and adding лă/лĕ makes it an adjective) вăйсăр - weak (by putting сăр/сĕр on the end, we create a word meaning “without x” so “weak” is literally “without strength”) сивĕ - cold. A fairly useful word in Chuvashia honestly. ăшă - warm вĕри - hot нумай - many сахал - few вăрăм - long, high, tall çÿлĕ - tall лутра - short, low тÿрĕ - direct пылак - sweet тутлă - tasty йÿçĕ - sour ырă - good, kind усал - mean хӳхӗм - beautiful, прекрасный илемлĕ - beautiful кăлтăклă - inadequate (кăлтăк= a mistake, a shortcoming) кăлтăксăр - perfect, impeccable вăтанăç - shy савӑнӑҫлӑ - joyful телейлĕ - happy кăсăк - interesting кукăр - crooked лапчăк - flat çăмăл - light, easy хытă - hard йывăр - heavy çинçе - narrow, thin, slender сарлака - wide анлă - wide, open (like a field) сайра - rare тарăн - deep хаяр - sharp, cruel кирлĕ - necessary. This is used like нужен in russian- you can say “мана ручка кирлĕ” for example, as “I need a pen”, just like “мне нужна ручка” нÿрĕ - damp йĕпе - wet ăнăçлă - lucky, successful алама - dirty, rubbish таса - clean юлхав - lazy There are two ways of doing a comparative in Chuvash. You can use the suffix (та)рах/(те)рех like -er in English- so you could use it if asked to pick between options, for example- “Мĕнле йÿнĕрех?” “Which is cheaper?” “ку йÿнĕрех/йÿнĕтерех” “this is cheaper” you use тарах and терех if the word ends in в, л, м, н, р or й. The second way is to use the inferior noun in the ablative case (ран/рен/тан/тен) and not decline the adjective. “вăл манран ăслă” would be “he is cleverer than me”. To form the superlative, you don’t decline the adjective, but instead place the word чи in front of it. So to say “my mum is the best!”, you’d say “манăн аннем ЧИ лайăх!”. By adding -хи after the comparative form, you can make an adjectival noun meaning “the -er one”. So you could take the adjective “пуян”, make the comparative as “пуянрах” and then add хи as “пуянраххи” to create a noun meaning “the one who is richer”. The same suffix works for non-comparative nouns, but the difference is instead of using х, it reduplicates the final consonant, or if it ends in any vowel other than ĕ/ă, it replaces that vowel . So вăрăм could become вăрăмми, “the one who is long/high”. Likewise шурă, white, becomes шурри, “the white one”. By adding the suffix скер, which doesn’t vary. you create a similar thing, but in this case it means “one of the x ones”. So пуянскер would be “one of the rich ones”, and пуянрахскер would be “one of the richer ones"
Some intensifiers чăн - extremely, truly; питĕ, пит, питĕрех - very, extremely, superlatively; ытла, ытах, ытлашши - too, very; майсăр - very, extremely, incredibly; темĕн тĕрлĕ - unusually майĕ çук - indescribably. акăш-макăш - unusally, unbelievably, very
ah, thank you so much to mention me on this @la-francaise-de-coeur. makes my day :,,,)
Musa Manarov is a Azerbaijani cosmonaut who has spent 541 days in space.
Important : this only works if you can still access your blog!
Changing your password is important, but it won’t do you any good if your hacker still has an opened session on your blog and can still access it. So the first thing you wanna do is close your hacker’s session.
For that you need to go in your blog’s settings:
On the new page opened, scroll all the way down. There, you can see something called “Active Sessions“. The first and oldest one (”current session” in green) should be yours, the new one should be the hacker’s session. To close your hacker’s session, click the gray X next to it.
Now that their session is closed, they can’t access your blog anymore unless they enter the password again.
So don’t lose time, go all the way back up and change your password immediately. Make also sure your hacker didn’t change your email address.
Now you should be safe from your hacker. But it won’t prevent you from getting hacked again.
If you really want to be safe from hackers, you should turn on the “Two-factor authentification” option (on the same page).
It requires you to enter your phone number, which is a bummer. But if it’s turned on, everytime you wanna log on (so not if your session is already opened, but only if you log off and try to log on again), it will send a code on your phone that you’ll have to enter (in addition to having a password).
That way if someone tries to hack you again, even if they get your password right, they won’t be able to enter your blog without having that code.
There it is. I hope it will help some of you, since I see more and more people noticing blogs being hacked
Pamir | 19 | eng/ind | mostly cosmonaut/genshin/language related
228 posts