Padonkaffsky jargon or Olbanian is a cant language developed by a subculture of Runet called padonki. It started as an Internet slang language originally used in the Russian Internet community. It is comparable to the English-based Leet. Padonkaffsky jargon became so popular that the former President of RussiaDmitry Medvedev jokingly suggested that Olbanian be taught in schools.
Origin and etymology
The term Olbanian is an alteration of Albanian, although Albanian is not used to create Olbanian slang. Learn Olbanian! is a popular phrase that was coined in a 2004 incident in LiveJournal when an English language user found a post written in Russian, which he didn't understand and was unable to translate. He asked what language was being used. He was jokingly told that the post was in Albanian. He questioned why people were posting messages in Albanian by saying:
Because? It's LIVEJOURNAL. An American website. Not an albanian; ! site. Plus, being an American means that the rest of the world should have to cater to me. But that's just mypointofview.
In reaction to this comment, an Internet meme started, urging the English language user to Learn Albanian! and flooding him with email messages, text messages, and calls to his personal cell phone. Eventually, the English language user wrote an apology in Russian, explaining that he had mastered the Albanian language. Since then, the request to "Learn Olbanian!" became a friendly response to anyone using incorrect grammar or when saying something that doesn't make sense. An invitation to "Learn Olbanian!" was directed at Madonna in 2006, when in her blog she used an electronic translator to address her Russian fans and called them "Russian ventilators" by mistake.
The unstressed letter is replaced by, and sometimes the other way around. The unstressed letters,, and are also interchangeable. The consonant may become or, the suffix becomes, becomes, becomes, etc. Examples: превед, аффтар afftar, йад, etc.
On July 6, 2006 in an online conference, Vladimir Putin was asked this question: "PREVED, Vladimir Vladimirovich! How do you regard MEDVED?" This became the most popular question, with 28,424 votes. No answer was given, but the Associated Press, reporting on the questions collection process, interpreted Medved as a reference to then-vice-prime-minister Dmitry Medvedev. Another popular question in the same conference was: How does one patch KDE2 under FreeBSD?