A Russian friend just sent me videos of the concert in Moscow. According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the number of participants in the rally in Moscow in support of Russian army, at the stadium and beyond, has already exceeded 200,000 people. This is the largest rally in the Moscow in a very long time.
I saw in the background https://files.catbox.moe/sktxa3.png:
Za мир без нацизма
(For a world without Nazism)
За Россию
(For Russia)
I'm not sure why they substituted the Roman Z for the Cyrillic З, but maybe it was for the rest of the world and not Russian speakers.
I thought perhaps it was an N toppled on it's side (N=Nato) or more likely a fallen N for Nazi.
I like that.
The letters Z and V written on the Russian heavy equipment denote the regions that the associated regiments originate from. The letter Z signifies the word Zapad, which translates to West, therefore the Western Regiment. The letter V signifies the word Vostok, which translates to East, therefore the Eastern Regiment.
Thank you
Thanks for answering this repeatedly. For some reason it keeps coming up
I did it the other day, though less perfectly. No effect. Some believe Z is Russian for Q.
Keq