. . "Zek"@en . . . "\"Zek\" is a Russian slang word for \"prisoner\" or \"inmate\", coming from \u0437\u0430\u043A\u043B\u044E\u0447\u0451\u043D\u043D\u044B\u0439 (zakliuchyonnyi) which was usually abbreviated to \"\u0437/\u043A\" in Soviet paperwork, and pronounced as \"\u0437\u044D\u043A\u0430\" (\"zeh-KA\"), usually in reference to a person who'd been imprisoned by the Soviet Union in the infamous gulag system for crimes against the state."@en . . . "\"Zek\" is a Russian slang word for \"prisoner\" or \"inmate\", coming from \u0437\u0430\u043A\u043B\u044E\u0447\u0451\u043D\u043D\u044B\u0439 (zakliuchyonnyi) which was usually abbreviated to \"\u0437/\u043A\" in Soviet paperwork, and pronounced as \"\u0437\u044D\u043A\u0430\" (\"zeh-KA\"), usually in reference to a person who'd been imprisoned by the Soviet Union in the infamous gulag system for crimes against the state."@en .