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"No Russian" is the fourth mission of the 2009 video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 and its 2020 remaster. In the mission, the player controls Army Ranger PFC Joseph Allen, who—whilst undercover for the CIA with the alias Alexei Borodin in an attempt to gain the trust of Russian terrorist Vladimir Makarov—participates in a mass shooting by Makarov's group at a Moscow airport.
Pages in category "Internet memes introduced from Russia" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Russian President Vladimir Putin in June 2023. Grandpa in his bunker [1] [2] [3] (Russian: Бункерный дед, romanized: Bunkernyy ded; Ukrainian: Бункерний дід, romanized: Bunkernyi did), also translated as grandpa in a bunker, [4] [5] or bunker grandpa, [6] [7] is an insulting nickname for Russian president Vladimir Putin, which has become an Internet meme in Russia and ...
A NAFO "Fella" and a destroyed Russian tank in front of the Russian Embassy in Berlin. The meme was created in May 2022, when Twitter artist Kamil Dyszewski, under the handle @Kama_Kamilia, [8] started adding modified pictures of a Shiba Inu dog (the "Fella") to photographs from Ukraine. [3] NAFO, such as it is, was founded on 24 May 2022 with ...
Vice President Harris, former President Trump, and other politicians have been the subject of viral memes during the election cycle, with highlights including "Brat summer," "childless cat ladies ...
Pages in category "Internet memes related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
"To bomb Voronezh" [a] (Russian: Бомбить Воронеж, romanized: Bombit' Voronezh) is a Russian-language internet meme and political idiom, referring to self-destructive actions by the Russian regime that harm the population, akin to the English "cutting off one's nose to spite one's face". [2]
"In Soviet Russia", also called the Russian reversal, [1] [2] [3] is a joke template taking the general form "In America you do X to/with Y; in Soviet Russia Y does X to/with you". Typically the American clause describes a harmless ordinary activity and the inverted Soviet form something menacing or dysfunctional, satirizing life under ...