The record holder for writing radio dictations for national unity, Christina Goyaniuk, spoke sharply about the current dictation. She stated that for the first time in 26 years of participation she was not satisfied with either the text or its implementation, Suspilne reports..
Christina Goyanyuk, a 77-year-old Lviv resident who has been participating in the all-Ukrainian flash mob since its inception, said that the current dictation “knocked her down on the spot.”. The woman added that it was “not well read—and the text itself is stupid.”.
The author of the text entitled “We must live” was the writer Evgenia Kuznetsova, and it was read live by actress Natalya Sumskaya. According to Christina Goyaniuk, the announcer was unable to convey punctuation intonations, which made it difficult for participants to write down the text correctly.
“It would be better if the dictation was read by Pavel Vyshebaba (radio dictation reader in 2024). At least the punctuation marks were clear,” the record holder noted..
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Christina Goyaniuk has repeatedly become the winner of the Radio Dictation; she almost always writes it without a single mistake.. On the eve of the current flash mob, she noted that the success of dictation depends primarily on the professionalism of the reader: “The dictation must not just be read, but dictated - with the correct intonation and punctuation.”.
The author of the text, Evgenia Kuznetsova, responded to criticism by posting a message on Facebook. She noted with humor that Radiodictant had indeed fulfilled its unifying mission: “Now everyone is united by the idea that it was difficult to read and what kind of words they are in general, and when the text is made public, everyone will unite under the slogan “Why is there a comma?”? " You were warned!
Radio dictation of national unity is held annually on the Day of Ukrainian Literature and Language. Traditionally, it has a symbolic character - as a way to unite Ukrainians around the world around the language.