блядство (blyadstvo)
What does блядство (blyadstvo) mean? блядство (blyadstvo) is a Russian severe that translates to “fuckery / bullshit / chaos” in English.
Literal Translation
whoredom / debauchery
Meaning & Usage
"fuckery / bullshit / chaos"
An abstract noun derived from 'блядь' using the -ство suffix (like мастерство — mastery). It means a state of complete moral chaos, debauchery, or corrupt bullshit. 'Что за блядство тут происходит?' (What kind of fuckery is going on here?) encompasses the sense perfectly.
Examples in the Wild
Describing systemic corruption or an absurdly chaotic workplace: 'Полное блядство' (Total fuckery).
When to Use It
Context
- Expressing strong frustration or emphasis
- Only among very close friends who share this register
- As a spontaneous exclamation
Avoid
- Professional or formal settings
- Around elders or authority figures
- Public spaces — will cause genuine offense
- Mixed company or unfamiliar social groups
- Job interviews, meetings, or customer-facing situations
Cultural Context
The -ство suffix normally creates respectable abstract nouns: государство (state), общество (society), правительство (government). Attaching it to 'блядь' creates a word that sounds bizarrely formal for how vulgar it is — like saying 'the institution of fuckery.' This grammatical irony is part of its appeal. It implies that the chaos has become institutionalized.
More in Russian 🇷🇺
View all →идиот (idiot)
“idiot”
Same word, same meaning, borrowed from Greek via French like its English counterpart. But in Russian it has a literary weight that the English version lacks — Dostoevsky's novel 'Идиот' (The Idiot, 1869) gave the word a philosophical dimension. Prince Myshkin is the 'idiot' — genuinely good in a world that considers goodness stupid.
ёпт (yopt)
“fuck / shit”
A truncated exclamation — essentially the first syllable of 'ёб твою мать' bitten off at the moment of impact. It's what comes out when you stub your toe and don't have time for the full phrase. Technically still мат, but its brevity makes it feel slightly milder — like how 'sh-' cut off is softer than 'shit.'
долбоёб (dolboyob)
“dumbfuck / moron / idiot”
Idiot; stupid person; someone who 'fucks logs' (долбить = to chop/peck).
сука (suka)
“bitch / traitor / snitch”
Bitch (female dog); treacherous person; prison informant.
кретин (kretin)
“cretin / moron”
Another medical-term-turned-insult, borrowed from French like its English equivalent. In Russian, it sits at roughly the same severity as 'дебил' but sounds slightly more educated — the kind of insult an academic uses when they want to call someone stupid without sounding low-class themselves.
ёбаный (yobanyy)
“fucking / goddamn”
The all-purpose Russian adjective for expressing frustration, derived from 'ебать.' It works exactly like English 'fucking' as a modifier — 'ёбаный компьютер' (fucking computer), 'ёбаный дождь' (fucking rain). The word itself has a satisfying three-syllable weight that makes it feel more substantial than a quick exclamation.
чмо (chmo)
“loser / pathetic person”
A crushing insult meaning someone is pathetic, worthless, and socially beneath contempt. The word sounds as unpleasant as its meaning — the 'чм' consonant cluster is inherently harsh in Russian. A чмо isn't even worth getting angry at; they're pitied and dismissed.
дебил (debil)
“moron / idiot / retard”
Originally a clinical psychiatric term (дебильность was the mildest form of intellectual disability in Soviet classification), now a common insult meaning 'idiot.' The clinical-to-insult pipeline is the same as English 'moron,' 'idiot,' and 'imbecile' — all former medical terms repurposed as abuse.