mobnik
English
Etymology
From mobik, likely influenced by vatnik (“unintelligent Russian patriot”) and, more generally, the -nik suffix associated with Slavic languages.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /məʊbnɪk/
- (US) IPA(key): /moʊbnɪk/
Noun
mobnik (plural mobniks)
- Nonstandard spelling of mobik (“Russian conscript”).
- 2023 February 2, Malcolm Nance, Twitter:
- So now a Russian Mobnik who has had enough can be caught and executed by North Koreans enforcers. Amazing.
- 2023 November 21, Michael Weiss, Twitter:
- Compared to last year when hordes of prisoners died for Bakhmut, Russia's losses come in the majority now from the rows of mobniks.
- 2023 December 17, EUvsDisinfo, Twitter:
- Absurdity at its best - claiming to preserve Russian soldiers' lives while its bloody meat-grinder consumes tens of thousands of Russian mobniks and 'Z-warriors'.
- 2023 December 30, Jason Jay Smart, Chuck Pfarrer, “ANALYSIS: Perception vs. Reality – Russia Is Losing, Not Winning”, in Kyiv Post:
- The plain truth is that Russia can no longer win its war in Ukraine. Not with the force posture it has now, not with the tactics and leadership it has, and certainly not with the conscripted army of untrained convicts and mobniks that it is hustling onto the battlefield.
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