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Tolstoy's new book

Some years ago my wife was teaching Russian at university and was one day confronted by a very excited student who had discovered a hitherto unknown masterpiece by Leo Tolstoy entitled 'Sunday'. His moment of glory was sadly short-lived when he was informed that Voskresenye (which does indeed mean Sunday) may also be translated (depending on context) as Tolstoy's somewhat better known work 'Resurrection'.

Sent by: Howard

Comments

Andrei, moscow russia 2011-06-19

just to make things clear here.
Sunday is voskresen'ye whereas Resurrection is voskreseneeye with an extra letter added .

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Alexander, St.-Petersburg, Russia 2011-01-17

As it was noted in earlier comment, normally Voskresenye - resurrection

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Bertie Wooster 2008-08-17

y is a consonant not a vowel ...

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Georgia 2008-09-02

In some contexts "y" can be either a vowel or a consonant, such as in the name "Lyn".

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Valeri 2006-08-12

Not quite! Voskresenye means only resurrection. Sunday is translated into Russian as Voskresen'e (one vowel less). The difference in prononciation is indeed negligible.

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Alya 2006-07-27

Voskresenye - resurrection; voskresen'e - Sunday. A minute one-letter difference.

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