Dec 11, 2007 18:36
16 yrs ago
1 viewer *
Russian term

бабья писька

May offend Russian to English Art/Literary Poetry & Literature
Но я тебя подержу в изоляторе. Месяц, другой, третий... Ну, что ты смотришь на меня, как бабья писька?

An interrogator is threatening a suspect, trying to intimidate him. I'm looking for creative options. Thanks in advance.

Discussion

SirReaL Dec 12, 2007:
IMHO, "old bitch's" is way too strong for "бабья."
Mark Berelekhis (asker) Dec 11, 2007:
Hi Yuri and Jack. Of course, I considered both of these, as well as others, but the translation still seems empty to me. It's not nearly as vivid as the source. My question is more about how to 'spice it up' and make it as colorful an insult as the original.

Proposed translations

+1
57 mins
Selected

old bitch's cunt

If you want crude I still remember my college fraternity vocabulary :-)

Surprisingly I didn't find писька in Galler's Soviet
Prison Camp Speech, which has a rich vocabulary
Peer comment(s):

agree Mark Vaintroub
9 hrs
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you everyone for your help! While 'female genital' and 'old prick at a wedding' are great, 'what are you gawking at me for, like an old bitch's cunt?' just sounds too good."
+2
12 mins

pussy

I doubt there is anything that will sound more natural... peehole maybe
Peer comment(s):

agree Kirill Semenov
37 mins
agree tutta_karlson
1 hr
Something went wrong...
56 mins

female genital

намеренно безграмотно
Something went wrong...
17 mins

twat

Possibly more common in UK English than US, it means a vagina but is commonly used as a term of abuse.

Twat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

For other meanings of "Twat" and similar, see Twat (disambiguation).

Look up Twat in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Twat has various meanings, clearly dependent upon which regional dialect. It is generally used as a vulgar synonym for the human vulva,[1] vagina, or clitoris, and is be used as a derogatory epithet. In British English, "twat" is often pronounced /twæt/ (to rhyme with bat). In other areas (eg. Australia, New Zealand and North America) it is also pronounced /twɒt/ (to rhyme with watt), as was common in British English usage in the past.

The word possibly originates from the Old Norse thveit meaning cut, slit, or forest clearing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twat

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 hr (2007-12-11 20:19:21 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

Does it have to be female? I am thinking of "spare prick at a wedding".
Something went wrong...
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search