The US has so much space

https://lemmy.world/post/14364409

The US has so much space - Lemmy.World

You can drive for 138 hours from Ruasia and end up in Russia:

Google maps don’t let me zoom out to show entire route.

EDIT: you can drive in Russia without leaving it for 161 hours:

Wait, it’s not even the longest. Magadan, anyone?

From Zapolarniy to Magadan, 1 hour more:
Is there actually a road connecting those points?

Yes, but it’s mostly gravel at the last stretch. And it’s harsh, especially in winter, gotta make sure your car is in perfect condition and is full of fuel. There’s a reason it’s called “the road of bones”

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/R504_Kolyma_Highway

R504 Kolyma Highway - Wikipedia

Okay, help me out here. What is the little letter after н and before и? I learned to read curious from Serbian and they didn’t use it.
Заполярный? Ы. If you pronounce it as e/i you can get “cute”(мило) instead of “soap”(мыло).
How is it normally pronounced?
Операция «Ы». Чтоб никто не догадался.

YouTube

So it’s sort of an ü? That’s what my brain hears in the video.

Checking against the ipa missions on Wikipedia, I get that ы is the close central unrounded vowel while ü is the close front unrounded vowel. Listening to the audio samples on those pages, I literally cannot hear the difference.

Close central unrounded vowel - Wikipedia

There is small difference, but close enough. Yes.

Yeah, I can feel the difference when I say it, but… Well, suffice to say it’s not a sound in any of the languages I speak well.

Thanks for indulging a curious language nerd.

so is it like the sound in “way” or more like “tree”?

Neither. But ‘й’ sounds like ‘y’ in "way“.