As a Russian I would not use the word simplistic to describe English. I'd rather use the word analytical (which is also how English language is classified in linguistics). The word order in English is such that it allows to be more effective in conveying reasons and thoughts in a more structured manner. Russian language in contrast is, and I agree here with Lex, more emotional and has words that convey suffering in a more poetic and colourful way.
@Orlington17 Жыл бұрын
whats "more emotional" means? I would say russian is just more diverse and has more means to express feelings, it has a complex form of word formation which allows russians to improvise with it and be understood
@MinimaAmoralia Жыл бұрын
@@Orlington17 maybe emotional is not the right word, idk. What I have in mind has something to do with the way definitions work in everyday language. The first thing that comes to my mind are philosophical terms like being, validity, existence, meaning etc. In Russian language these words have imprecise and almost esoteric connotations. It's not surprising though, because Russia (the 17th-19th century one) isn't famous for having academic philosophers (compared to Germany, France or England). Instead, philosophising was done in literature by Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and the likes. So most words that Russians use to talk about life are infused with poetic definitions, which in turn evoke an emotional, rather than rational reflection. ps. These are my personal quasi-ethnographic observations. I am sure that anthropologists who study Russian culture and language are better qualified to make these comparisons. Anyhow, both English and Russian languages are great in their own ways imo.
@XXXX-yc6wv Жыл бұрын
Lex specified American English. As a native English speaker from outside the US, I agree it is simplistic. US English is clunky and unimaginative. The 20th century has given it a swagger and bravado that other English forms don't have, but otherwise it is archaic and borderline moronic. UK English is far closer to the sorts of things Lex is expressing here in ways that US English simply isn't.
@amjan Жыл бұрын
What a silly statement. There are analytical languages that are very complex. English is a simplistic analytical language. "The word order in English is such that it allows to be more effective in...." LOL, no, it doesn't allow anything. It's constrictive in nature! The word order in English is imposed, so it doesn't allow for shit and means nothing.
@arnavrawat9864 Жыл бұрын
@@amjan English is excellent for expressing arguments. Simple, basic tools work the best when it comes to productivity.
@mortanafidler Жыл бұрын
Some Russians don’t swear at all, some never swear in front of women and elderly people. English allows you to think in structures. It really helps your brain. It’s super useful. Russian allows you to be more creative and spontaneous.
@juser-abuser9 ай бұрын
English is more creative than russian.
@dmy_tro9 ай бұрын
"Some" is the key here. An average russian swears everywhere with everyone. It's kinda considered inappropriate but nobody cares.
@mortanafidler9 ай бұрын
@@dmy_tro that’s your social circle then. Most people know how to hold their tongue.
@mortanafidler9 ай бұрын
@@juser-abuser first, you have to speak both languages to correctly compare. Second, you have to define what creativity is. The variety of Russian is mind blowing. Check the Russo-English dictionary for the word GO, for example. And I don’t even touch on the topic of stylistics.
@juser-abuser9 ай бұрын
@@mortanafidler >first, you have to speak both languages to correctly compare Sure. >Second, you have to define what creativity is. Address that to OP. >The variety of Russian is mind blowing. The variety of what? >Check the Russo-English dictionary for the word GO, for example Check the Russo-English dictionary, like any dictionary. Average Russian dictionary for example has 200 thousand words, English has 1 million words. >And I don’t even touch on the topic of stylistics. Please don't, you don't understand English stylistics at all.
@KB-cq4cy Жыл бұрын
Apart from my native Bulgarian, I also speak Russian, English and German. German is like it's made by an Engineer - everything has a very specific place and purpose and you shouldn't fuck up with it, lest it breaks. English is more liberal than German in that regard and it also has more words with unique meanings while German tends to form new words via suffixes and prefixes. Both languages are very practical and they both have the baggage of European science and technology which they had to accommodate in some form during the formation of Europe. Russian and Bulgarian on the other hand don't have this rationalistic baggage and although they can be used for conveying precise meanings, German and English are better for that. Russian, meanwhile does explode when one needs to express emotion, I agree with Lex, because you can improvise with words etc. to fit the exact emotional state that you're in. Bulgarian is also very good in this regard and while both languages have their own emotionality, Russian, because of its overcomplicated grammar and ability for word formation is probably better for poetry. Anyway, all these languages are very beautiful each in its own way and convey different parts of the human condition.
@dmy_tro9 ай бұрын
all slavic languages are like that. There's nothing unique about russian language.
@georgiykireev96789 ай бұрын
@@dmy_tro Bulgarian isn't, which is why the other guy has that perspective
@shtein44769 ай бұрын
@@dmy_tro Ofc it's ukrainian saying this.....
@Ewan_Gaming9 ай бұрын
@@dmy_troukeville xoxol detected. Repeat even more.
@lanakim89639 ай бұрын
А ничего, что во всем мире пользуются Периодической таблицей Менделеева. Но на западе не упоминается этот факт. Там говорят просто периодическая таблица, это так коробит запад. Что химическая таблица Менделеева изобретена русским ученым. А ничего, что русские первые в космосе, это все тоже наука и научный язык. Русский язык синтетический. Он совмещает в себе как старые, древние формы, которые до сих пор используются, так и современные, новые слова. Русский язык, язык науки тоже. Возьмём например атомную энергетику. А вы знали, что в России изобрели вечную переработку ядерных отходов? Конечно нет). А уже как 2 года работает такая АЭС в России.
@Hydralisk77 Жыл бұрын
Just an example. Russian name "Pavel" can be shortend as "Pasha" (friendly way), "Pashka" (a bit diminishing and derogatory but ok if a friend says it), "Pavlukha" - (same but more friendly and a bit patronizing), "Pakhan" (same but more diminishing - like a street talk version), "Pashenka" (with love and tenderness), Pashechka (even more love and tenderness), Pashul (with love but with a hint of familiness to it like a wife to husband sorta way), "Pavlushka" - (with love to a kid but a bit diminishing), "Pavlushenka" - (like a loving and caring mother to a child), "Pashulechka" (with UTTER love and tenderness like to a very much loved little baby who has just done smth very qute)...and just dont get me started on "Pashgun", "Pavlos" etc... And what do we have in English? "Paul", "Pauly" and...I dont know...may be "Paulster"? But...with all that said as a foreigner I love how English speakers find ways to make such hitting and clever jokes and sayings with English which are truly unique. A lot of times when I laugh at English jokes and asked to translate - I struggle.
@oldscratch3535 Жыл бұрын
@@victoriaseawatch5407 It seems like Russians use different variations of the same word to convey meaning and emotion while English speakers use tone, inflection, cadence, and intonation to convey different emotions and meaning using the same words. Maybe that's why I find Russian speakers so dry and unemotional. The emotion is in the words and not their voice. For instance, saying "I hate you" in English can mean several different things depending on how I say it and the circumstances in which I say it. You can do something I dislike very much and I actually hate you. You can do something for me with ease with which I was struggling with and I can say it in a joking, self deprecating, and appreciative way. I could say "I'm going to kill you". That could mean I'm actually going to do it, or that you're annoying me and you should stop what you're going, or it could be said in a joking way in response to something someone did. Each one is dependent upon tone of voice and the scenario in which it was spoken. Would Russians have 18 different variations for each scenario? If so, it seems like a very convoluted way to communicate. I prefer the more concise way that depends upon the situation and inflection.
@interneda989 ай бұрын
That’s literally true for all Slavic languages though.
@p_snimon_enis98508 ай бұрын
Ahmm... I'm called Paulo. In Portuguese you can also modulate it to Paulinho, Paulão, Paulito, etc.
@igorpi257 ай бұрын
Pavlik is might be most popular variant actually
@rezagrast7 ай бұрын
You can make up tons off variations with suffixes but usually people use 2-3 of them. Russian Language wouldn't lose anything if "pavlukha" never existed.
@rosslovesthedark Жыл бұрын
My whole life changed once I started reading Russian Literature. Of course, it's English translated, but there's something unexplainable in the words, the only way to know is to read it. I wish I could experience them in their true language, but I'm still grateful for the positive impact so many Russian writers have had on my life.
@slayerhuh40410 ай бұрын
If you could recommend one book to start with from Russian authors what would you suggest?
@MegaMandero10 ай бұрын
@@slayerhuh404 Try Crime and Punishment
@vrsimulo123410 ай бұрын
Yup@@MegaMandero
@GhastlyCretin10 ай бұрын
@@slayerhuh404Start with 'The Cat In The Ushanka'. It's bleak and grueling but a very rewarding read 👍
@slayerhuh40410 ай бұрын
@@GhastlyCretin lol took me a minute to get that one..
@davidlakhter2 жыл бұрын
that's an interesting point about how much of the culture are you missing if you don't know the language
@MrJ4ckie9 ай бұрын
Otoh he's talking about Russian so there's nothing to miss
@dmy_tro9 ай бұрын
@@MrJ4ckie the most based comment in the comments section. All this "philosophical" bs Lex is trying to push is just that, it's bs. There's nothing great in russian literature except the volume. Saying this as someone who speaks Russian, has read all of those "great" writers and has a kinda soviet education.
@dmy_tro9 ай бұрын
@@medved3027 more "meaning" and "culture" in russia? That's the best joke I've read here so far.
@岩男沢山9 ай бұрын
I'm an accidental immigrant to Japan. Without going into detail, it is absolutely true that language is the entryway to understanding culture.
@deniskravchenko72028 ай бұрын
They say knowing two languages is like having two eyes :-)
@dennischi459810 ай бұрын
As a Chinese, I’m impressed by this man’s knowledge as he compares the Chinese education system as similar to Russian’s. The workload is heavy and the pace is fast. How students and teachers view and approach the material is also very different from the American way.
@plectro33329 ай бұрын
I was recently teaching in China and I was surprised to see the exact same time spacing of lessons as we had in Slovakia, which was also part of USSR and adapted the same teaching style. 45 minute teaching session, followed by a 10 minute break, this repeats throughout the day with the exception of the "10 A.M. break" which is 20 minutes, and also a longer break for lunch. In the Slovak language we even have a word for the "10 A.M. meal" which is normally eaten during this 20 minute break, "desiata", stemming from the word for 10, "desať" . China was a bit of a culture shock in how vastly different it was in absolutely every aspect of life. But then there's the school system which was *precisely* the exact same I grew up with in Slovakia.
@p529.9 ай бұрын
@@plectro3332same school day in germany
@marcusaurelius49418 ай бұрын
As a Russian zoomer I don't see that at all
@nathanhiggers46068 ай бұрын
@@marcusaurelius4941 I was lucky enough to get into a really "old-school" soviet-like school in 2010's and I've seen all of this
@Sirzhatina8 ай бұрын
@@marcusaurelius4941maybe you should try zooming better
@ButterDog42069 Жыл бұрын
As a Russian person I was expecting something weird and a little naive, but was actually super surprised by how well he explained everything regarding the langauge, it's pretty much spot on
@amcmillion3 Жыл бұрын
Lex is Russian.
@ButterDog42069 Жыл бұрын
@@amcmillion3 I know that, doesn't stop him from not sounding russian at all
@diagorasofmel0s11 ай бұрын
USSR was the reason behind the great leap forward for the peasantry and proletarians. one thing i have noticed is wherever communists and socialists got organized they started to educate their people from South America to china they started teaching, and in Afghanistan the primary target of american backed mujahideen were the school teacher who were thought of as communists and killed on sight without reason or if they were actually communists or not.
@StillAliveAndKicking_10 ай бұрын
@@diagorasofmel0sThe only difference between Mujahadeen and Communists is the group they exterminate. In fact Mao killed intellectuals en masse.
@alexr13610 ай бұрын
@@ButterDog42069ты просто по английски недостаточно хорошо говоришь. У него есть акцент восточноевропейский
@IgorMikeshin Жыл бұрын
Russian swearing is spot on. There's so much you can do with one simple stem, both positive and negative, and we have at least five of them. For instance, you can use the stem that literally means "dick" to express admiration, magnitude, disgust, embarrassment, and much much more
@onemorejoe1 Жыл бұрын
The same thing applies to fuck in English
@roseforeuropa Жыл бұрын
Maybe you are referring to the six grammatical cases in Russian (compared to only two in English). This makes Russian insanely difficult to correctly speak, even for many Russians, but on the flip side makes it incredibly precise and/or poetic. I've got a little taste of this in learning German which is a four-grammatical case system.
@IgorMikeshin Жыл бұрын
@@roseforeuropa I'm now actively learning Finnish, which has 15 :)
@hanspeter0007 Жыл бұрын
You guys are so poethic
@CatholicFrog Жыл бұрын
English has the same thing with the word fuck 😂 fuck can be good bad admirable cute sad broken etc
@michaciemniewski9791 Жыл бұрын
Swearing in Slavic languages is on a completely different level. In English, swearing is flat, boring, and limited.
@PyromaN93 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely god tier obscene lexic is the best feature of Slavic languages.
@piskishomo5 ай бұрын
Just an example
@XLLGGX5 ай бұрын
not if you're from scotland
@ReptilianAnusWizzard4 ай бұрын
Slavs can swear for a whole Hour without repeating one line😂
@DaēnāVanguhi4 ай бұрын
мусорщики 😅
@Skyeboiii Жыл бұрын
That last bit Lex mentioned about how much of the culture he is losing not being able to speak that cultures language perfectly expresses the eye opening experience I had when I started to learn Spanish. If you've only spoken your native language for your entire life it's amazing how eye opening the journey of learning another language really is. It's hard to explain to someone that hasn't really dove into learning another language but the way Lex puts it hit the nail on the head for me. I highly recommend that anyone should start learning another language, particularly one from any culture you're curious about, without worrying about how "hard" or "easy" that language is perceived. Once I started, I now have constant FOMO of how much I don't understand about the way other cultures communicate and can't wait to learn more.
@RudyBoy Жыл бұрын
Couldn't agree more
@loganchase-buter9972 Жыл бұрын
@@RudyBoyI agree w y’all. I think it forces you a part of your brain that is never used and causes you to start thinking actively and helps you with word selection. Language is sooo massive it’s underneath the whole worlds nose. Learning Russian has improved my English and I haven’t practiced English since high school.
@TR4R10 ай бұрын
I guess for people used to the order and efficiency of the so called first world it can be kinda shocking to see how chaotic and messy Latin American societies are. It's something cultural, I guess. Sometimes we're more relaxed but sometimes this disorganized lifestyle can become fatiguing. Our literature is kinda violent, but I guess not as much as Russian (after all, our history has not been an easy ride, but poverty and misery have been more important than war itself). And there's a lot of unknown literature that's only read in some countries where it was written.
@matthewburrow308910 ай бұрын
When I studied Mandarin it opened me up immensely and there is way to how the language manifests itself in you. You think the language, it becomes part of your mannerisms, it comes through in many ways. I found myself when I spoke Mandarin moving like a Chinese person when gesturing, doing things in a Chinese way when practicing even though I am of European descent. It just came naturally when adding emphasis in speech. This was not some kind of pantomime or mimicry exercises. English also seems more open in its simplicity in how other cultures can transpose these things on top of it -- it is not truly odd for another culture to learn English and still manifest itself, however. Perhaps this comes from English being in itself a hybrid language.
@ahwhite202210 ай бұрын
@@loganchase-buter9972learning Russian taught me English grammar, an endeavor at which all of my teachers in grade school and high school had wholly failed.
@AymenDZA Жыл бұрын
Languages are always more than just their "spoken" form, a language opens you up to whole new cultures and worlds, new ways to experience and share said experiences, there's even studies out there that show that the way your brain works and even your personality changes depending on which language you choose to speak, and of course. They carry the weight and history of the land and it's people with it. Fascinating stuff.
@kamchatmonk Жыл бұрын
One Chinese youtuber that has a channel in Russian about Chinese culture, nuances, way of thinking and other everyday life differences between Russia and China once said, "when you learn a different language, it's like you gain a different soul. I now have two souls in me - my Chinese soul and my new Russian soul". There's definitely truth to her words. As a Russian who speaks fluent English, I often catch myself thinking in different languages depending on subject. Knowing English expanded my way of thinking. I wonder if it's too late for me to learn Chinese...
@karoliscizauskas8330 Жыл бұрын
@@kamchatmonk never too late to learn a new language i think. Its worth atleast attempting to other cultures, see the world through others eyes.
@DanceNightAtDiscoFright Жыл бұрын
That about personality changing is true. I'm basically an american when speaking english, very polite when speaking standart german and more distanced when speaking my northern german dialekt, in stark contrass to my more warm american dialekt.
@dixonhill1108 Жыл бұрын
You don't need to speak a different langauge for that. It's almost funny that Lex speaks a very sterile english, and thinks it lacks poetry. The brits are way better at word play. That's more of an American thing.
@clxwncrxwn10 ай бұрын
The Culture is in the language.
@_scabs6669 Жыл бұрын
So nice to see Lex open up. On his podcast he just asks the questions
@Svetlana_Zakirova10 ай бұрын
As a Russian, English is for business and law. Russian is for poetry and feelings
@kiz11a9 ай бұрын
I can understand using English for business purposes when dealing with people outside of Russia. The use of English inside of Russia for law or business is a laughable concept.
@agsdjklshadsabn8 ай бұрын
@@kiz11ayeah well the majority of russians don't speak english, there's also not many immigrants who speak english so russians have no reason to speak english if they're in their motherland... russian is pretty much the english of slavic countries from my understanding, many people can speak/understand russian in countries other than russia (ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, moldova & more)... so yea unless you own a massive company doing international business you're probably not worried about speaking english
@DmitryPustovit8 ай бұрын
+rocket science a d nuclear physics
@MrEstranged8 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-vp9eyyou are Ukrainian, yes?
@MrEstranged8 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-vp9ey lol. Nabokov was a writer, not a poet.
@SwapBlogRU Жыл бұрын
Lex is right about education being more intense in Russia than it is in America. I'm Russian myself, I studied in US schools until the eighth grade. Funnily enough when I was in seventh grade - they put me in an advanced mathematics group in my school, where we studied algebra and what have you (we were two years ahead of the rest of the class). Then our family moved back to Russia in the late 90's, and after eighth grade in an American school I started eighth grade in a Russian school (so I lost a year, because of that I was 18 when I graduated and almost wound up in the Russian army as a conscript in result, but that's a different story). And the thing is that if I wouldn't have been assigned to that advanced group back in the States - I would've been two years behind my Russian peers in mathematics. Turns out that in Russia they begin to study mathematics at the American 9th grade level starting from seventh grade.
@rahulvats95 Жыл бұрын
We in India use Soviet Physics Books by Krotov, Irodov, Landau & Lifshitz for tough practice problems for Engineering entrance exams. These are timeless classics. The Soviet physics books have a special character to them, especially the math heavy approach to explanation and problems.
@ПышкинМышкин Жыл бұрын
@@rahulvats95 Oh my God, these textbooks influenced me so much that just the word “Landau” evokes flashbacks of post-traumatic syndrome in me. And I just studied 4 volumes out of 10! I'm still sure that I look crazy only because I know how to use the "Stationary-action principle" to derive the entire equation of mechanics and electrodynamics!
@JorgeM27010 ай бұрын
Americans tend to score below average in math, average in reading, and above average in science. These scores typically average out to the US having somewhere around the 25th strongest education system in the world. American education does seem to breed creativity, though. Americans seem to be quite creative problem solvers; and they don't lack confidence, for better or worse.
@artennsa689910 ай бұрын
@@JorgeM270 yes we Russians see it too, we respect Americans and american style of conversation for that and try to learn from you.
@QualityPen10 ай бұрын
@@JorgeM270Hmm, I think there’s a difference between the American and Russian approach. The American approach is to encourage students to come up with a way to solve the problem on their own, which takes longer but cultivates creative and out-of-the-box thinking. The Russian approach is to show students a proven way to solve the problem which is quicker but more conformist. This could explain why Russians aren’t great at innovating new solutions but are great at engineering and optimizing solutions in fields which are already well-developed. As one example, during the late Cold War the USSR was lagging behind the USA in electronics/computers because the USA was busy innovating and moving that field forward while the USSR played catchup. So, American fighter planes had better radar, avionics, and longer ranged missiles. However, Soviet fighter planes had better aerodynamical properties because this was a very well-established field by that time and the Soviet engineers excelled at optimizing solutions. Since then the gaps in both capabilities have diminished a little, with modernized Russian planes getting more modern electronics and American planes incorporating more advanced aerodynamical features. Another example is space launches. America leads innovation with companies like Space-X developing new technology such as reusable rockets, but Russia again leading optimization with the Soyuz series of rockets being for decades the safest and most cost-effective way to get humans into orbit, including all ferrying of American astronauts to the ISS between 2011 and 2020.
@gvozdenkuronja74142 жыл бұрын
lol, such an American question from Joe, "whose language is better?" 😀😃😄
@anarchymatt2 жыл бұрын
It was more nuanced than that. He meant in reqards to expressing yourself eloquently. English gives me a way to be very specific in what I'm talking about and Japanese is a very general language that is heavily context-dependent. All the languages are different and interesting in their own ways which will lead to strengths and weaknesses.
@raymundod52242 жыл бұрын
@@anarchymatt Yeah, but just the fact that he's priviledging eloquence as a “goal” to be attained or at the very least as something desirable -because for anglo people “it makes sense” to be eloquent- IS very American. Note he could have asked which language is more poetic/beautiful/practical/interpretive but he chose the most productivity-like criterion to ask. That IS very American.
@VATA_OFFICIAL_CHANNEL2 жыл бұрын
I think Joe means that he wants to understand the differences between languages..
@lo0k3r Жыл бұрын
Only he didn't ask such question, fool. Don't twist it.
@_scabs6669 Жыл бұрын
And such a Russian answer from Lex: "Ours." ... .. . Russians are humorously arrogant while Americans are competitive
@AuthenticProducer2 жыл бұрын
as a Belarusian, I can easily say, he spoke facts right there
@oleksandrpylyavskyy Жыл бұрын
I'm Support Ukraine Not Belarus And Russia , You Guys Terrorist .
@AuthenticProducer Жыл бұрын
@@oleksandrpylyavskyy Олександр спасибо. Скоро и мой народ «террористов» поблагодарит вас за эту полезную информацию.
@oleksandrpylyavskyy Жыл бұрын
@@AuthenticProducer Вы - террористы. Вы забрали жизни невинных украинцев. Вы бомбили наши города.
@JustRandomSymbols Жыл бұрын
It's so rare that I get to see my fellow countrymen on the internet Жыве Беларусь!
@bohdanvinter6929 Жыл бұрын
Жьіве Беларусь!
@KirillFrolov778 ай бұрын
As a person who was born and raised in Moscow, but who also lived in the english-speaking west for many-many years (and I also speak French well enough just to confirm my thesis), I could say that the languages are most definitely different. And they are different in not a trivial way. There is a kind of deep matrix of core meanings (like "what life really is" kind of meanings) behind each language, and by adopting one language or another, you actually are switching between these matrices of looking at things. You can establish word translations and so on, but words don't have meanings by themselves, they are built into a surrounding predominant feeling of the world. And this unspoken, unconscious part is actually lost in translation. This is why the most talented translations are more like adaptations rather than translating the precise meaning into another language. For example, there are no equivalent words in Russian for "challenge" or "commitment", and there are no really close equivalents. It means that Russian don't have those mental constructs corresponding to the precise meaning of English words above, but there are other ideas that have slightly different connotations and meanings. It means that when you translate those words, you have to take it into account. It also means that Russians don't see the world in terms of "challenges" and "commitments", their approach is different. In this sense the Russian world is different because it projects different meanings onto things. The western school of sovietology understood this, but, one way or another, it is now lost and we appear to be lost in translation... When it comes to swearing.... I'd be more cautious and careful in my judgement. First, I wouldn't glorify swearing the Lex does. In a normal situation, swearing is inappropriate (way more than in a typical social situation in the US, it can be a sign of indecency). But at the same time, Russian swearing could very sophisticated, especially given that words in Russian could be easily modified to convey the tiniest nuances of meaning. On general, the ability to create new words on the fly to use them as tools to convey the nuances meaning is something that gives Russians ability to see what English- or French-speakers will never see. The language defines what's possible in the world. And Russians are particularly good at creating new words (and therefore things described by those words) out of thin air, as an act of fun.
@АлександрОрлов-п9ч8 ай бұрын
Why "вызов" is a bad translation for "challenge" though?
@KirillFrolov778 ай бұрын
@@АлександрОрлов-п9ч simply because 1) it doesn't reflect the whole set of meanings of "challenge" (to challenge a status quo (to disrupt), challenging situation (a difficult situation that isn't easy to overcome), challenge (as something that involves competition), etc. and 2) "вызов" has its own set of meanings that have nothing at all to do with "challenge": "вызов такси", "вызов к начальнику", "вызов" (as in phone call). And even with the meaning it has, it's completely artificial, other than in govt. presentations and speeches, people don't talk like that. My ears are bleeding when someone says "вызов". Or you can try translating "adjustment". :-)) same story.
@st59748 ай бұрын
Вызов is a weaker version of challenge which is closer to calling
@АлександрОрлов-п9ч8 ай бұрын
@@st5974 well, it's not 100% precise, but I don't think that it's lacking substantial part of its meaning I mean, harsh circumstances can "бросить вызов" to you, which is very close to be "challenging" Can someone provide any example of usage of this word that cannot be translated to russian without loosing its substance? I can think of this - you cannot translate the word "challenger" to russian gracefully, but this alone doesn't mean that russian has no concept of challenge
@sugarsugar97018 ай бұрын
@@st5974испытание не то ?
@alexmedvec4571 Жыл бұрын
He's right. In Russia you wear emotions on your sleeve and the language is very direct. In American language, there alot of beating around the bush and hidden meanings.
@neilreynolds38588 ай бұрын
Yeah, I'm an American and the beating around the bush drives me crazy. Just spit it out! I was raised in a subculture of America that's almost extinct and it was plain spoken and nobody had time to listen to blather.
@alexluna4043 ай бұрын
Bro after learning some Russian and speaking with natives this is so accurate, they all are so well spoke and well mannered it’s so surprising. And even when they speak it’s so eloquent over the simplest of things Russia is beautiful
@urphakeandgey63088 ай бұрын
I speak Japanese and English. I'm a half kid and grew up in both countries. Anyway, I agree with Lex on being unable to "fuck with words" in English. In Japanese, you can use more or less the exact same words, but modify the sentence or grammar in a way that conveys a lot of meaning, intent, and emotion. In English, everything mostly comes down to the words you use as well as expressions, phrases, and idioms. When speaking IRL, how you say something also plays a big role. I think English uses a lot more expressions and idioms than Japanese for this reason. English speakers often don't realize how much of what they say is not literal, but that's probably the best part of English. When using expressions, it forces you to form vivid imagery for such analogies. It also forces people to act out and/or gesture what they say a bit more. Japanese people hardly do that because you can convey a lot of that through the language alone.
@TheFormActually Жыл бұрын
Lex is kind of missing the point of why there is a massive difference in "emotion" between English and Russian. It has nothing to do with wars and how they gave it weight. Although it sounds very romantic, it has nothing to do with it. As all Slavic languages, Russian is very grammatically complex, especially when you compare it to English ( there are even more complex slavic languages ). Also a bigger vocabulary. In combination, it allows you to construct sentences that carry much more weight. And express tiny nuances which you simply cannot do in English. You can say the sentence with same meaning in many, many different ways.
@fergal2424 Жыл бұрын
yeah, it was weird to hear him just throw it on the wars as if it's the only thing that's influenced slavic languages.
@TheFormActually Жыл бұрын
@@fergal2424 yeah, I was expecting a much more intelligent answer from him tbh, especially since that is part of his heritage as well. I hope he isn't flashing it as some "trophy" and actually speaks donkey version of it. On top of it AS IF no other country before in history, went through wars and suffering... really, really weird answer...
@Morning_star7778 Жыл бұрын
I feel like you pulled that out of your ass but Lex didn't, thereby making whatever you just said that less credible
@seaweather Жыл бұрын
Do you speak Russian?
@sniffinglue7236 Жыл бұрын
You're probably both wrong just saying.
@EazzyBeezie2 жыл бұрын
The moment I heard Lex start speaking Russian. My eyes were open. I’ll never look at him the same. He’s not a nerd in a suit, he’s the rad Russian!
@korzhamir54802 жыл бұрын
His accent is about the same as Habibs accent in English, let’s just say he wouldn’t cut it as a spy
@korzhamir54802 жыл бұрын
But he is right about the depth of the language especially the cussing part we use it a lot as word binder, and he is right about the school education Russians don’t choose classes, classes choose us 😂
@en3525 Жыл бұрын
cringe
@OGRE_HATES_NERDS Жыл бұрын
wtf
@ansgaar Жыл бұрын
Hes actually jewish
@koyaaanisquatsi9 ай бұрын
As a Russian American I do find English language a bit simplistic compared to Russian. English is easier to speak as words are shorter and it's great when it comes to writing music lyrics, but Lex's notice about "fucking with words" in Russian is so spot on, you can take p much any Russian word and change the ending of it to convey a myriad of different meanings, possibilities or your own relationship to what you are saying, It's kind of hard to explain. Also yes Russian pre-college education is no joke I still have low-key PTSD from the workload I got back in middle school and high-school. When I came to the US at the age of 18 everyone seemed so dumb (sorry for being blunt) and college math in America was what we got in grade 8th. I do feel there is more freedom here in the US though with what you can do with your life afterward (more career choices, possibilities and opportunities), and that's what matters
@cristianro8428 Жыл бұрын
Never thought of it that way. The language carries the burdens and suffering of past. As a Spanish speaker, never agreed (and hated) the over the top romanticism and servile way to communicate. But it is instilled in our roots and heritage. Great way to convey an epiphany.
@evr1349 ай бұрын
Servile? How? I'd say we are quite rude 😂
@hajka78872 жыл бұрын
As a Russian, everything Lex said is spot on!
@pacoperez10122 жыл бұрын
As a human I say Slava Ukraini!!
@nicka332 жыл бұрын
@@pacoperez1012 v sostave Rossii
@g290002 жыл бұрын
@@pacoperez1012 lmfao
@pacoperez10122 жыл бұрын
What happened to Kherson, sukas? Orcs fled like scared rats, huh?
@EpsteinsRope Жыл бұрын
Slava Ukraini
@LePedantSemantique10 ай бұрын
I would extend this narrative beyond the language. Russian classical music is incredibly deep and passionate. I expect the same to exist in other Russian art forms.
@FranzJrob10 ай бұрын
Yes, you will find that they are masterfully unique and renowned in the arts and similiar; film, literature, philosophy, poetry, photography, architecture, langauge. My notable recommendation to Russian culture for anyone who asks would be to watch Andrei Tarkovskys, “Andrei Rublev” (1966). Stunning achievement of russian art.
@maxxiong309110 ай бұрын
@truetrannyanything Tchaikovsky is good imo, rimsy korsokov is well known as well although I’m not too familiar with his work tbh If you like piano, I cannot recommend rachmaninoff enough, his second piano concerto is probably the most accessible pieces of classical music around and is well loved, but I love his third one as well If you’re interested in soviet era Russian music Prokofiev and Shostakovich is good, although Prokofiev is probably not the most accessible composer for the general audience bar a few select pieces. Shostakovich 5th symphony is famous for being thought of as a protest against Soviet rule A lot of the music has really interesting stories behind them too, which help with the appreciation of it as well if you want to dive into that
@JT-rx1eo10 ай бұрын
I've always loved Russian classical music. Tchaikovsky to Rimsky-Korsakov to Khachaturian etc. (Spelling from memory so forgive the errors). Even my favorite classical trumpet player (for the Bolshoi Theater Orchestra) was a Ukranian/Russian - Timofei Dokshitzer.
@LePedantSemantique10 ай бұрын
@@JT-rx1eo Yes! Yes!! YES!!!
@di885910 ай бұрын
Three examples: Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and Rachmaninoff's Piano concerto nº3 in music, and Tarkovsky's Stalker in film.
@rendros88 Жыл бұрын
lex drinking game: take a sip every time he mentions the human experience, regardless of context.
@Disastrous_Macaron Жыл бұрын
😂
@Duke49th10 ай бұрын
And Joe mentioning "bear". You're drunk in 2 sentences 😂
@Rundik8 ай бұрын
@@Duke49thor elk
@Marusya514 Жыл бұрын
Russians are not hypocrites. They may seem cold but they can be the best friends ready to give their last piece of bread to you.
@neilreynolds38588 ай бұрын
My Russian neighbors saved my life when I was young. Luckily for me, they didn't think I was a fool so I was treated like part of the family. Being part of a Russian family is what our Russia "experts" have never experienced or they wouldn't act so stupid. They're not the kind of people that Russians are going to take to their hearts. Being part of a Russian family is what you want from life. I learned more history from them than I ever did in school. They were all brilliant.
@dragonhorseandbottle10863 ай бұрын
Aha, everyone who is nice and polite is a hypocrite.
@ivanrado343010 ай бұрын
What Lex is saying isn't just for Russian language. It's almost all Slavic languages. They are emotionally more expressive and as my first language is also Slavic language, I find myself struggling sometimes to express what I want to say in English. Some phrases just cannot be translated and words also that you want translate don't hold deeper meaning in English. Having such expressive first language where you can really and truthfully to yourself express the emotions you feel, other simpler language you find yourself struggling. Not just as romantic expressions, but as Lex said profanity also. Swearing in Slavic language is an art form to say most brutal things and still sound amusing. And insults are much more creative. Last thing, you don't know how much beautiful Russian woman is, until you hear her reading Russian poetry in Russian. Somethings you just cannot comprehend how beautiful and romantic there are.
@the_elena_valkova8 ай бұрын
True. Can confirm as a Bulgarian speaker who also understands Russian very well intuitively. It's their best quality.
@marcusaurelius49418 ай бұрын
Maybe it's more connected to a particular person's ability to express certain things in a given language? It's also such a common trope in almost all languages to say "Only in OUR language can you truly express such and such"
@Denyo6667 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-vp9ey You don't speak Russian to understand the comparison. I agree with him as someone who speaks both languages fluently.
@nuclearwinter3913 ай бұрын
That's true and valid for Latin languages too.
@TomorrowWeLive3 ай бұрын
What nonsense. English has far more words than Russian, hundreds of thousands more words, how can Russian be more diverse and more descriptive? And where is the equivalent of the Latin vs Anglo-Saxon register in Russian? You're just not well-read in English, that's all, you don't have a large enough vocabulary or a deep enough grasp of the etymology, nuances and connotions of words. Read Blood Meridian and get back to me. I swear, foreigners are so up their own ends. Do not mistake your ignorance of our tongue for its poverty.
@themeat862410 ай бұрын
Lex is one of my favorite people alive right now. Such a good dude.
@TomFromMars Жыл бұрын
Lex: you read them all, you read tolstoi, dostoievski... Joe: *silence*
@DanBlabbers10 ай бұрын
No he is saying, you as in the young Russians students had to read
@mistle_rat4 ай бұрын
I'm Russian and I speak English. I write fiction in English, so I understand the challenge. Honestly, I can't stand it when Russian-speaking people cry the blues while talking to the people abroad. ‘The Russian language is expressive because of the suffering of the Russian people.’ No, it is expressive because of its absolutely incredible word-building, because of prefixes, roots and suffixes, which can be used as blocks to build words; one prefix or suffix can fundamentally change the meaning of a word. For example, ‘бежать’ means ‘to run’. ‘ЗА_бежать’ means that a person rushed to a place where they stayed for a short period of time before leaving, while 'ПРИ_бежать' means the same thing, but the person stayed in the place instead of leaving shortly after they arrived. ‘У_бежать’ means 'to ran away'. At the same time, ‘ОТ_бежать’ means that the person ran a short distance away and stopped. The Russian language is richer because of word formation and the freedom of the word order in a sentence. This makes the language very flexible, in a way that a small change in the word or the word order can bring a whole new tone to a sentence. It has nothing to do with suffering. One can describe eloquently and with colours both joy and yearning in Russian, as well as, idk, the process of pouring milk into a glass. All thanks to the structural features of the language.
Жыл бұрын
The first big philological and grammatical ordering of the current Russian(state) language was made by Michail Lomonosov in the 18th century, but the modern use, poetry, sounding, and words were chosen by genius poets like Pushkin at the beginning of the 19th and then many authors. I think the activity and the freedom to use a wide mix of dialects and neighboring languages at that time greatly influenced the formation of the Russian language as we know it today.
@spicynoodles28 Жыл бұрын
Čau Jāni!
@badcopEGOR Жыл бұрын
Pushkin popularized the so-called "modern" Russian language. As a child I liked to read his poems. When I was in the 4th grade, I learned half of "Eugene Onegin" by heart)
@Jyp4Nk Жыл бұрын
Салют Латышам , я сам все детство жил в Риге и Юрмале)))
@SMD23088 ай бұрын
I often think what makes Russian language and literature so deep and philosophical is a combination of those long, dark winters, when conversation and reflection can arise, and also the influence of the more mystical Orthodox Church, compared with Catholicism and Protestantism in the west.
@GlassChicken10 ай бұрын
Russian is very hard to learn for an English speaker. I lived in St. Petersburg 2 years and spent 5 years trying to learn the language. It has 6 cases and there are many subtle meanings to different words and expression that are hard to grasp. I finally reached a point where I could watch Russian language videos and movies and understand most of what is said but I still feel I cannot speak the language in any meaningful way. I envy Lex that he can speak both languages well.
@2kdre49310 ай бұрын
It took me about a year and some change to be able to have a full conversation in Russian as a native English speaker so either your method was ineffective or you were inconsistent with your studies
@arseniikarmazin678110 ай бұрын
That's fun. I'm reading that on my way to Saint Petersburg 😅
@Khoukharev10 ай бұрын
@@2kdre493I don’t think the person above meant the ability to hold a conversation. I think he was talking about understanding all the nuances and subtleties.
@danseagal527310 ай бұрын
In any language there's a thing called context and shared knoweledge. Sometimes you just have to live it through to understand. For example you most likely won't understand a phrase "what else do you need, dog?", it may even sound as an insult. But no russian speaking native will ever see it this way. It's a line from one of the greatest russian comedies and most likely a person you are talking to will laugh. And for me as a russian native "pulp fiction" movie is a nightmare - i understood words, not the jokes before i've read explanations.
@vladvladovic476410 ай бұрын
" and there are many subtle meanings to different words and expression that are hard to grasp." Yeah..this is the hardest part of Russian, Ukrainian, Polish. Depending on context and situation, we can give a twist to a word which is different from original meaning
@arturorivas4520 Жыл бұрын
Russian may be a language that is expressive in more poetic ways but English can be easily understood through tough thorough thought, though!
@Sioolol Жыл бұрын
Just as french was once. Lingua franca changes from century to century.
@after_midnight9592 Жыл бұрын
English is the most easy language on the planet.
@acmaiden5236 Жыл бұрын
Seems like it flew under the radar, but I love what you did there xD
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
Indonesia is better language
@stuncakiemdealer5646 Жыл бұрын
@@after_midnight9592 it is not. It's the most easy language to learn for sure tho
@slod.3712 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me on reminding my american friends not to make fun of someones accent, because this means the person speaks another language besides English.
@trevorn2969 Жыл бұрын
In America, we like to make fun of many accents, especially other Americans accents. We learn about each other that way, but some of us don't realize it's rude to put that ridicule on people trying to learn English with an accent developed for not-english
@LoliLikesPedobear Жыл бұрын
The most hilarious time when Americans mock somebody asking to be mocked back is when they ridicule Brits for their accent. Or migrants to UK who learned to speak, you know, proper English
@slod.3712 Жыл бұрын
@@LoliLikesPedobear To me it just exposes the fake exceptionalism and ignorance of the anglosaxon folks in general. Not realizing that the person with the "accent" is the actual cosmopolitan, who is able to interact and connect with more people speaking more than one language. In most european countries you have to have two foreign languages before you can enter college. Some countries like Luxemburg or Switzerland speak up to 3-5.
@dudebro2852 Жыл бұрын
yeah im sure people never make fun of americans when they speak other languages with an accent
@MarikHavair8 ай бұрын
People with funny accents should be mocked rigorously as should you.
@Fernando.Gil.8 ай бұрын
5:03 I married into a Russian family (I'm Mexican) and my mother in law works for a museum in Moscow, it was shocking to see a serious line of people outside waiting to enter the museum on a weekday, of course you have the Instagram girls who you can assume are there only for the pictures, but it was a lot of people of a very blue collar background, and they appreciate art, and KNOW about it. My in laws aren't wealthy, but they have an impressive collection of books, and every other family member I visited the same. That was very nice to see. I live in the US, in Los Angeles to be more precise, and I have asked many locals about this or that museum, and they have never been there, they don't even care, or they have been just because the school takes them... Actually a couple of days ago I met this guy at a friend's wedding, and when I asked where he lives, he said "By this and this in Pasadena" (For the non locals, Pasadena is an old money neighborhood) and I said "Oh, by the Norton Simon Museum!" He said yes, and then clarified that he has never been there. How can you live walking distance from one of the most beautiful museums in the city, and never even take a look??? And this is an educated person! Don't get me wrong, I have met some amazing people here, but this disinterest is very noticeable. Now, the Russian language is absolutely fantastic! I find it easier to comprehend using Spanish as a reference (maybe because I'm native, but I think the fact that it is a Romance language helps too) than English.
@DixieLane3048 ай бұрын
Russian is not a Romance language, but Slavik
@Fernando.Gil.8 ай бұрын
@@DixieLane304 I know is not a romance language, but in my experience I've found certain sounds fairly similar... Except for that damned "ы" 🤦🏾
@Fernando.Gil.8 ай бұрын
Oh!! And maybe "ц"
@PUARockstar8 ай бұрын
Moscow has 15 millions inhabitants officially, more in reality, and way more many people are visiting/staying for a while. Of cource their museums will be filled.
@kbab33333 ай бұрын
@@PUARockstar Huh??? Bangkok has higher population and fewer museums which are half empty. What's your point?
@EasyGameEh Жыл бұрын
imo russian really shines with its freedom to change natural word order on a whim and drop some parts of the sentence out if needed. when i think in english as a native russian speaker i have no issues in struckturing my thought process, but if i need to translate something that's already "spoken" in russian then boy, oh, boy. granted, proper writing in russian tends to adhere to strickter rules, but speaking language is much more fluid.
@richardswaby6339 Жыл бұрын
structuring, stricter
@EasyGameEh Жыл бұрын
@@richardswaby6339 u mab bro?
@richardswaby6339 Жыл бұрын
@@EasyGameEh I don't know what you mean. I was just trying to be helpful. I wasn't trying to insult you. Sorry.
@EasyGameEh Жыл бұрын
@@richardswaby6339 "i don"t question your loyalty, only your judgement"
@richardswaby6339 Жыл бұрын
@@EasyGameEh ??????? OK. Now I am guessing that you spelled those words with a 'k' deliberately to strike up an argument so I retract my apology and am done speaking with you. You can communicate with youself from now. Bye.
@Tanya-pe8dj2 жыл бұрын
Russian humor is everywhere in Russian language and cursing also
@pacoperez10122 жыл бұрын
Is blowing up warships and ammo depots because of cigarrettes considered Ruzzian humour?
@TheManinBlack9054 Жыл бұрын
@@pacoperez1012 you should stop watching all that propaganda. It makes you very anti-human and more hateful
@russhl125 Жыл бұрын
@@pacoperez1012 no, but you surely would be considered a joke, witnit
@osvansalinas11418 ай бұрын
If you think vulgarity and rudeness are humor, then yes, there's plenty of humor in Russia 😅
@kazimierzmalewicz36045 ай бұрын
@@osvansalinas1141 whatever simpleton
@BlueMorningStar Жыл бұрын
I’m a native English-speaker who learned Russian, and as far as emotional depth of the two languages go, I think it mostly just depends on which one you grow up in. For me, English has a much wider emotional pallet ranging from the profound to the absurd that I just don’t feel in Russian because I didn’t grow up with it building those deep, deep emotional connections. It’s funny talking with my wife or her family who are all native speakers. Sometimes I’ll stumble into some topic or trigger phrase that comes with a ton of emotional baggage I had no idea about and completely ruin dinner with the in-laws.
@AndRei-yc3ti Жыл бұрын
If you think English is more capable of expressing emotion than Russian - you dont know Russian well enough. Russian has a greater vocabulary and is far more complex. You have to "feel" the language
@pavelborisov515 Жыл бұрын
@@AndRei-yc3ti I think English has a wider vocabulary (because of Latin and French words) but Russian is better for creating new words and much more sophisticated in grammar
@BlueMorningStar Жыл бұрын
@@AndRei-yc3ti This isn't true. Regarding vocabulary, even a cursory glance at dictionaries for the two languages shows us that Russian language dictionaries typically contain about 200,000 unique entries while English dictionaries can contain up to one million depending on how comprehensive they are. There's a lot of historical and technical reasons why English has this monster vocabulary, but one of the big ones is because it has a relatively simplified grammar compared to Russian. English often has to mint completely new words with unique word stems to express something whereas Russian can just use prefixes and suffixes and such in order to mutate existing words to fit new purposes. Languages are all vehicles of expression, and if speakers of a given language aren't able to express nuanced ideas through one means (complicated grammar and case system in Russian), then they'll find another way to do it (massive vocabulary in English). The idea that a language can be intrinsically better at expression is an ethnocentric notion. It's one that I'm frankly uncomfortable with given how that kind of rhetoric has been used, both historically and today in Ukraine, to justify punishing and killing people just for speaking their native tongue instead of "The Great Russian Language."
@AndRei-yc3ti Жыл бұрын
@@BlueMorningStar after researching the topic English has about 170,000 unique words vs Russian 150,000 that is not a significant difference. And yet despite that Russian is able to express nuance and emotion far better than English can. This is why if you have a good translator, some English works often read better in Russian than English. Try reading the Count of Monte Cristo, For whom a bell tolls or even The Catcher in the Rye in both languages and tell me that it is worse in Russian. English is a far simpler language which ironically lemds itself quite well to science but makes it struggle in philosophy (for example there is an excellent translation in Russian for Aristotle eudamonia which does not translate to English). I speak both languages fluently and have from a young age, I understand the nuances of both languages and unquestionably the depth of emotional expression of which English is capable is far lower than that seen in many other languages The fact that a language can be better at expressing than another one is not an ethnicentric notion though - languages evolved in a particular historical and cultural context leading to the development of certain words. As for Ukraine, as a Ukrainian, nobody is punishing Ukrainians for "speaking their native tongue" (dont get me started on how Ukrainian isnt a native tongue for most Ukrainians and how its been pushed on the population by West Ukrainians). But thats a different matter entirely.
@AKU666 Жыл бұрын
@BlueMorningStar Finally someone observed that from native English perspective, my native is russian and it's feels more emotional depth probably because of that nativeness effect. If try compare english and russian in terms of pros and cons from my perspective: English pronunciation is nightmare for example words like queue, thought. English have far more easy declensions than russian (often i even forget how to properly do declension in russian) One average word in english seems (not sure) have more meaning than one russian average word. I think russian cursive was made by satan...
@aaronleblanc92769 ай бұрын
His description of general fear and anxiety when going to school reminds me of band rehearsal.
@milanserafimovski87169 ай бұрын
Here we are. I am Slav, not a Russian but proud to say that I am filly fluent in Russian. At a time of strictly forbidden Russian culture in the Western society people are starting recognising the values of it. There will be no future for all of us if we try to discredit or erase others history, language, culture...
@SensPiotr8 ай бұрын
When it was forbidden? In the 60's? Выйди из своего мирка
@anonymm31528 ай бұрын
@@SensPiotrЯ думаю что автор имел ввиду нынешняя ситуация с русофобии на западе, из-за войны.
@SensPiotr8 ай бұрын
@@anonymm3152 русофобия не так массова, как это рассказывает роспропаганда. Массово осуждается правительство. Приедь в любую западную страну, заговори на русском и всем будет пох.
@anonymm31528 ай бұрын
@@SensPiotr Я сам живу в западной стране, я это уже знаю. Русофобия не массова, но она есть. К сожалению, любовь к русской культуре часто интерпретируется как поддержка настоящей власти.
@Serg1one.Ай бұрын
Hi. It will not be a loss for Russia and those people who know Russian or want to learn another culture. But it will be a loss for Russophobes. Привет из России и всего хорошего.
@Εύροκλύδων Жыл бұрын
No, this is a misconception. Russian is a native language for me. Yet, every language has the complexity to reflect deep human emotion - it's a matter of which language you're most fluent in. Every language uses different tools, but in the end - all languages can be used very eloquently. It's just English is often used as an international language of commerce/culture. Therefore, people use a more basic register. But English has the full capacity to be very elevated and deeply emotional.
@Xind0898 Жыл бұрын
You are both right and wrong; all languages have the potential to convey profound emotional eloquence, yes, but at the same time, it's also a misconception that all languages are equal when it comes to the 'naturalness' and 'accessibleness' to exploit that potential.
@victoriaseawatch5407 Жыл бұрын
Yes, somebody should've told Shakespeare that he couldn't express deep human emotion in English and should learn Russian or Spanish instead. Lol
@Xind0898 Жыл бұрын
@@victoriaseawatch5407 to be honest , i always felt shakespeare is overrated, due to english dominance i guess
@cmmndrblu10 ай бұрын
I'm inclined to agree with your point from a year ago- I frequently hear people say their native language is the richest- however, that being said, there are objective measures available such as bodies of literature and general literacy rate which give an idea of how deeply a language permeates its own society. English is the current lingua franca, and is used all over the world in a highly transactional way, it's the language of science and commerce. Additionally, languages have features, if something has a highly inflectional morphology for example you have a lot of ways to play with and build words to refine what you're trying to say in a way that might be done with a clause in another language. You can do things with Chinese that you can't do with English (like the conciseness of their written poetry, some poems can also be read from different directions and produce new meanings, on the flipside there are about 1600 syllables in use in Chinese and way way more in English. At the end of the day there may be something deeper to what Lex is saying about Russian, but at the same time, I think it's commonly felt that one's "mother tongue" is the most expressive.
@Cyborg_Lenin9 ай бұрын
Sure, but we are talking apples to apples. Russian is far deeper when it comes tonformulating sentences, it's a richer language and you can easily feel that if you read English poerty. It's stale and clunky even at its best, there is a feeling that something is missing.
@yurijedi49 Жыл бұрын
I learned the point that Lex is making here through comparison of my first and second language's most linguistically experimentative writers. The things someone like Clarice Lispector can do with Portuguese (or _to_ Portuguese, as some'd say) are notoriously untranslatable, and this isn't really the case with, for example, the Beat guys from the US. But, to play devil's advocate, there is indeed something to be said about the great simplicity and constraint of English. Others in the comments have mentioned how the English form allows ease of analysis and how this might have contributed to their mastery of science and technology, but you don't have to flee the poetic realm to defend English: just think of how rigorously elegant British poetry and prose has been. Shakespeare's sonnets were composed in English! What I see when I read English poetry is a great effort to say much with little, and this has value too. What I mean to say is: constraint has a wonderful effect on human creativity.
@TennessisET10 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, I still can't "feel" in English ((((( May be someday...
@JurajGrossmann9 ай бұрын
you might find the expression: I can only feel free within boundaries" paradox while only boundaries let us differentiate
@Tehz135910 ай бұрын
I started learning Russian a while ago. I don't know why really, I just think it's a cool language. If I were to go to Russia I could probably get by, but one thing I really haven't been able to wrap my head is the grammar and all the little nuances of it. But that can be said for almost any language. All of that is much harder to learn as you get older. That's why you can teach kids languages pretty easily, even multiple at the same time. One thing I disagree with Lex is that English is less emotional. At least not inherently. Maybe Modern American English is. But the English of past centuries was very poetic. When most modern Americans read old literature in English, it's poetic to the point where it can be hard for us to fully comprehend it. Maybe American English majors can comprehend it just fine, but common folk, not really.
@mastersafari534910 ай бұрын
There's no need to be focused on grammar if you're not learning a language as a linguist. I learned English as a second language after Russian and I wouldn't be able to explain a single grammatical rule. Tbf, I'm not sure if I can do it in Russian either. When you really know the language you just feel it.
@DotNetCookbook10 ай бұрын
That's the point, if you can not really comprehend a language in some form, that means this language is not well suited for this form.
@marcusaurelius49418 ай бұрын
Ironically, that is not something you can say about any language, Russian has quite a unique set of grammatical and phonological features, while what Lex said in the video can indeed be said about most languages (and it gets so tiring to hear from speakers of any language about how their particular language is the most expressive and untranslatable)
@AndreiBerezin3 ай бұрын
Let me encourage you to dig deeper into the language and perfect your skills, because it pays eventually. Russians love to hear foreigners master our language. We love to encourage and never make fun of your mistakes. KZbin is astronomically full of Russian content including our brilliant movies from the 20th century which are the essence of our soul. Just keep on and make sure you visit some day
@my_Lord_please_note_that3 ай бұрын
Just some words to say "a dog" Собака - dog Собачка - cute/little dog Собачонка - little, weak dog Сука - female dog Кобель - male dog Пёс - adult male dog Псина - bad/big dog (male/unknown sex) Пёсик - little/cute male dog Дворняга - stray dog
@@my_Lord_please_note_that most of these don't really count because you are just changing the form a bit. It's not a different word. You can count these: 1. Sobaka (sobachka etc) 2. Suka 3. Kobel 4. Pes 5. Dvornyaga In English, after a quick search I discovered these words for dog: 1. Dog (doggy, doggo) 2. B*t*h 3. Hound 4. Pup (puppy) 5. Mongrel 6. Cur 7. Pooch 8. Tyke 9. Canine
@JohnDoe-iq9bz2 ай бұрын
😂😂I found that out with other words too. Russian is a unique and beautiful language but it's complex af. One has to have a genuine passion for learning the language. Just learning it for the sake of learning it won't take one so far.
@_freedomordeath_5 ай бұрын
Even russian gangsters are philosophical and play chess 😂
@62Cristoforo10 ай бұрын
Language is the medium AND the message, so said Marshall McCluhan
@DataLog10 ай бұрын
I experience this in Croatian language. It definitely allows you to express yourself in many more ways. You can also adjust the words and grammar allows you to pack in much more information without adding words.
@AnotherEarthling66610 ай бұрын
I find so many points in common with Italian language and how the educational system worked up to about 15/20 years ago. Current young generations are basically illiterate and ignorant compared to their older siblings or parents and society reflects this lack of values and education. I would love to learn Russian, it’s so fascinating to me
@jonathanmcculley37282 жыл бұрын
I’d say that you’re missing a major part of the culture if you can’t speak, or at least understand the language. They are inseparable. I can speak Japanese, not perfectly of course, but I can perform any daily function in it. And there’s so much about the social structure and history that is inherently ingrained in it when I speak or read. It’s something you just have to know to be able to understand, no real substitute.
@Mak7even2 жыл бұрын
Konnichiwa 🍚
@OhayouKaminari2 жыл бұрын
ぞうですね
@roseforeuropa Жыл бұрын
いや、言葉以上文化の雰囲気と国の魂が必要だと思います。
@MegaMerlin201110 ай бұрын
I studied a year of Chinese in college for my International Studies degree. The Chinese department had strict expectations they wanted us to learn not just to speak Chinese, but also to be able to read and write it. We had to practice writing chinese characters. It was totally different from a Chinese beginner course I had years ago that focused on learning to speak and understand the pinyin system. When writing chinese characters, we had to keep the lines straight even though many Chinese use quick/sloppy handwriting (I used to teach English in college in China).
@dennischi459810 ай бұрын
I went through elementary school and 7th grade in China before coming to the U.S: I still remember the absurd amount of practices and memorization I had to do after all these years 😅
@Gabriel-no6wv Жыл бұрын
Good to know that Russian is that "complex". I have choose Japanese as a first language to master because of my passion to the country and I had chosen Russian as the second (now I'm sure), but now I have a motive, because of my passion to languages.
@GatecrasherUA Жыл бұрын
Good luck, because it is punishingly complex, even compared to Asian languages...
@Jonpo Жыл бұрын
a bit weeb
@sayantanmazumdar3 Жыл бұрын
You just chose two difficult languages to learn. It would be quite an impressive feat if you only master one of them and get proficient in the other. Good luck on your future endeavours!
@sayantanmazumdar3 Жыл бұрын
@ Jonpo, A lot of Japanophiles have preceded weebs.
@Hlebka Жыл бұрын
Mastering the Japanese means at least passing a JLPT N1 as a first step
@tomeryaha6151 Жыл бұрын
You can be emotional in every spoken langauge. The reason you cant be emotional in your second langauge is because you learned it, which is kind of logic process so your logic part of your brain took part while yor mother langauge you acquiered when you were small, thus the more emotional parts of your brain took part of the process.
@Limpass610 Жыл бұрын
Is there no way to assimilate the second language into emotional/nativity style? Because even though I got really close with English, Meaning: the accent of the region I'm in, some of the lingo, and some cultural cues. I cannot, for the life of me, swear, curse out somebody, or banter as easy in english without sounding awkward
@Cnd2Mn Жыл бұрын
I think he means that more can be put into a one word because of the huge possibilities of changing it outside of a sentence.
@-John-Doe- Жыл бұрын
@@Limpass610 English as a global language is extremely watered down. I've met plenty of people who are completely fluent but everyone knows it's not their first language so the communication is different.
@OldTimer16s Жыл бұрын
I disagree. I learned english in my late teens and became truly proficient in my early twenties- and there is no doubt in my mind that english is the best language to articulate emotions in. Keep in mind that I grew up bilingually, albanian & german, and none of those two languages measure up to english.
@user-hx9xi1sj2r Жыл бұрын
It’s not about being emotional in another language. Every language has tools to express them but some tools are better than others. In Russian, I don’t have to yell and repeat swearing words to express how insanely mad or happy I am, for example. You have words for that. It’s true the way you express yourself in a language is always up to you. But it’s also true that Russian swearings are unmatched. It’s basically an entire language.
@ipredictacatastrophe4370 Жыл бұрын
Dude, I went from a public Russian school to a private expensive English school. I was cruising for like 3 years, because I've learned everything before.
@4grammaton Жыл бұрын
For me it was the opposite. I went from a private expensive school in England to a Russian school and was crushing it because I had acquired skill sets by year 6 that don't get acquired by Russian students until university, if at all.
@ipredictacatastrophe4370 Жыл бұрын
@@4grammaton А именно какие скиллы ты подразумеваешь? Я точно разницу в пользу русской школы заметил, в плане среднего образования. Жду ответа, мне очень интересно
@maximhornby5493 Жыл бұрын
@@ipredictacatastrophe4370 мне тоже интересно
@adrianalexandrov7730 Жыл бұрын
@@4grammaton I'm kinda interested, too, as the two above. Cause from my experience Russian school was nothing special. Like we have kinda decent calculus and physics in Russia. Chemistry in England would be far better, I assume. But that would require of you to get Russian notation right. Same with biology. Like 9th grade US biology books are far superior to Russian ones, but you'd get stuck with translation, IMO. So what skills exactly are so much superior?
@ikipemiko Жыл бұрын
Totally correct. When I saw what us pupils are studying in math at high school - I was surprised at the incredible low level of usa schools. However the college, universities is where students can thrive because they are ( still) the best.
@olekzajac5948 Жыл бұрын
As for swearing, it's a feature of pretty much all Slavic languages. And I think it has to do with the fact that Slavic languages have more grammatical forms (cases; masculine, feminine and neutral forms etc.).
@PyromaN93 Жыл бұрын
And very rich amount of suffixes and prefixes. If you want tell someone that he is total dickhead - you can't find better langage group for such task.
@miume8 ай бұрын
Lex is absotely right. How much we could learn from other cultures, gaining access to a cultural patrimonium, the baggage of hundreds or thousands of years conveyed through language. Absolutely fascinating
@zhulikkulik9 ай бұрын
I don't think we swear more than Americans or British. We have more words for swearing tho. Compare the famous scene from “Blood and Concrete” in original and Russian voiceover😂
@plamantin2937 Жыл бұрын
french and russian are very similar for me in terms of possibility for swear, concept, poetry and much more
@EmilRadsky-ll8kx9 ай бұрын
French influence is huge on Russian culture. Every intelligent in Russia used to know French as a second langugage, it was mandatory. Pushkin, the father of modern Russian language, knew French and there's a myth that he made up his own death, moved to Paris, changed his identity to Alexander Dyuma and continued writing books.
@guyd79249 ай бұрын
initially Pushkin knew French better than Russian, this blew my mind when I was 10@@EmilRadsky-ll8kx
@EmilRadsky-ll8kx9 ай бұрын
@@guyd7924 Exactly
@shivabreathes10 ай бұрын
This is one of the more interesting conversations I’ve heard on the Joe Rogan podcast. I speak multiple languages, including Japanese, which I learned from scratch when I lived in Japan (2000-2004). Lex is indeed right, when you learn a language, you can suddenly communicate cultural nuances which are almost impossible to convey adequately in English. In Japanese, there’s a way of expressing things that’s very respectful, soft and subtle. You can say “no” or “I disagree” very politely, almost without actually saying it. The art of polite conversation in Japanese is almost an art form in itself, and they appreciate it when somebody takes the time to learn their language and express themselves the way they do. It was great to hear Lex’s thoughts on Russian. Each language is like a treasure house. He’s absolutely right in wondering, what am I missing because I don’t speak Mandarin etc. What are we missing by not speaking Arabic? Persian? Greek? Etc.
@comment686410 ай бұрын
Dostoyevsky was not a poet, he was a novelist. Pushkin is the great Russian poet. And i'm sorry, not all Russians swear. This is something that developed strictly in the 20th century in soviet communist times. Nothing to do with the hundreds of years old Russian language itself. There was no swearing in Russian literature. People who were born before the revolution and grew up outside of the soviet union and especially those who are religious use curse words extremely rarely.
@BlitzOfTheReich Жыл бұрын
Russian is more economical with its use of words. Hence, you can convey very advanced ideas with so few words (hence, poetic).
@Rundik8 ай бұрын
Many languages have that. German for example: Schadenfreude, Heimweh
@alexplough40362 жыл бұрын
A few years ago, russian government wanted to introduce a law that would have prohibited the usage of profanity. The initiative fell apart because they admitted that it is not possible to give orders and control their implication without swearing in the army, police, construction, etc. It`s a joke btw. partially
@BogdanOfficalPage Жыл бұрын
Actually this is false. Cursing in public places in illegal in Russia 😢
@LoliLikesPedobear Жыл бұрын
@@BogdanOfficalPage and nobody gives a f to enforce it
@delaHackerRocker Жыл бұрын
Lex really is a beautiful human being. Joe often talks a lot, but when he has Lex on he really listens more than usual.
@CharlottePrattWilson8 ай бұрын
I tried to learn Russian in 1991 at a nearby university. It’s very, very difficult. Different alphabet.
@jamiepatrick9810 Жыл бұрын
Lex is my favourite podcaster ATM.
@danielgoncalves13822 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I was born in Brazil so that I can speak native Portuguese. English is fairly easy to learn, though hard to become perfect in pronunciation, but you don't miss much of the culture in despite of it. English is awesome for science, technology, but it loses a lot in the human side, as in pt as an example you can make it much broad as you become more linguistically proficient. What matters most in a language is its culture, history, people, literature, music.
@DannieKamete2 жыл бұрын
I disagree. Your first language is always going to seem more poetic, expressive, and sentimental to you. English poetry and literature are some of the greatest on earth. How you understand English as an L2 or L3 speaker is different to how an L1 English speaker understands it.
@Lyonessi2 жыл бұрын
@@DannieKamete this. The usage of the English language stretches far, if you try submerging yourself in a great book of the past you can find the language at a more tender yet expressive state it's really both fascinating and enlightening.
@DaviRenania Жыл бұрын
@Dannie Kamate Not really. English struggles a little more in poetic expression compared to every romance language. English has a rich literary production due to the amout of folk poetic forms the culture assimilated and how well educated the population was. But it is still a baby compared to french or any other romance language really. For exemple, poorly educated latin america has a disproportionate amount of great writers for their education level.
@irreadings Жыл бұрын
I think mainstream culture English is very poor compared to literary English. If you read somethink like Pale Fire by Nabokov you can see that English isn't lacking any expressive capacity. It's just that such vocabulary and sentence-making isn't as used. I've grown with both languages side by side and I feel as if I have two L1s. I can express myself equally well in both. It's just that I'm more used to talk about some things in one language and other things in the other.
@franciscofarias6385 Жыл бұрын
I'm Brazilian too, and I always found English more expressive than Portuguese, especially in the way nouns can freely become verbs. But I disagree that the existence of many great English language literature is an evidence for it, there will be great literature for any big enough language.
@wthoutanymmries Жыл бұрын
i'm russian. the first time i watched a movie in english (the first Iron man) i almost cried because it was so dry and unemotional to me same happened with my first book (Bob the Cat. a story brimming with emotions and it felt like i was eating dust in comparison to russian translation). this was ~7 years ago. now most of the content i consume is in english due to professional reasons and me being a weeb (official russian dubs are unheard of which sucks). I learned how to percieve emotion in spite of the simple unchangeable frozen structure of this language though my conversational skills are still not that good. i've put all my points into comprehension and rarely have a chance to practice speech
@Y.M... Жыл бұрын
You're the walking stereotype of the "sorry for my bad english" meme, where the speaker actually ends up demonstrating almost perfect grasp of the language. I mean that as a compliment.
@wthoutanymmries Жыл бұрын
@@Y.M... oh wow. thank you. i do actually end up using the wrong tenses or articles more often than i would like. my native language just works in a different way. honestly my spoken english is an exercise in mimicry at this point which means i'm in need of a grammar lesson
@Матфей-ы9у Жыл бұрын
@@Y.M... да не стереотип это, иной раз русскому вообще не понятно, понятен ли он на английском.
@Егор-с5к6и8 ай бұрын
As a russian speaker I wouldn’t agree with point about swearing. It really depends on who you are speaking to. For example, in army or among students in university swearing isn’t special at all, but it’s better not to swear in front of eldery people and women.
@rickl10998 ай бұрын
I’ve always had the feeling that English has been simplified to a certain extent in terms of vocabulary. There are so many English words that have died out in order to streamline the language. My feeling is that this has happened because English has been adopted as a global language for better or worse.
@patrick_on_here991410 ай бұрын
Without knowing much about Lex Friedman, I’d posit that his perspective on the differences between English and Russian speaks to his exposure to which particular sociolects in each language. If there are ten things I learned studying linguistics, one is that people tend to overestimate the differences between languages and the impacts these have.
@DrakesdenChannel Жыл бұрын
As a linguist and writer, it is possible to match the sentiment-rich eloquent nature of Russian within English, but the requirement of language proficiency is steep. Similarily, it doesn't communicate the context as it does in Russian, rather confusing the listener.
@sebastiansullivan4770 Жыл бұрын
could you show or recommend an example?
@DrakesdenChannel Жыл бұрын
@@sebastiansullivan4770 Yes. The Russian equivalent of "Do you really have to do that?" under emotional intention would be "Must you truly do such a brazen thing?"
@sebastiansullivan4770 Жыл бұрын
@@DrakesdenChannel thank you.
@TheInfectous Жыл бұрын
@@DrakesdenChannel isn't this kind of missing the point? English isn't spoken this way regardless of emotion, yes you can phrase things as eloquently (perhaps I don't speak russian) but communication is a two party event. If the listener is expected to think you're weird for wording something eloquently then you almost as a rule can't do it because the meaning will be warped, when warping is expected to happen almost ubiquitously across contexts and environments for a given language I think you can say that it loses the ability. Written word is different and you often can but man, spoken english, at least in the Americas, has seemed to take a nose dive off a cliff in terms of acceptable articulation in the last 30 years.
@DrakesdenChannel Жыл бұрын
@@TheInfectous Eloquence has a purpose beyond aesthetics, it conveys information precisely by increasing complexity. Slavic languages tend to infer more context from specific speech than English. Thus, the level of speech complexity infers specific meaning in daily life. "I didn't get milk." - casual "Milk I have not received." - charged. The difference is immediately understood regardless of intonation. Some of this can be found in older British English, but not much elsewhere.
@onsec2 жыл бұрын
It's the same for danish i feel, very good for communication, tons of "recent" wars during the middle ages, being centered in Europe, land entry to Scandinavia.
@Born2Prank1 Жыл бұрын
My dad is danish, and my mom is russian, so i know both languages. I completely agree. The funny thing that Denmark and Russia have in common is the sarcastic and ironic humor.
@fred96ful10 ай бұрын
I speak 3 languages each of a different background (English, Italian, Romanian) and I can say that English is the best for describing scientific things, any kind of science. I don't know if simplicity is the right word, but English language has less grammar rules and it allows you to explain things in a faster way. On the other hand Italian and Romanian (which are not so similar as you might think) are much better for poetry, for novels, for describing one's feelings and emotion. Although they have so many grammatical rules that it is difficult to create a period that makes sense and is grammatically correct.
@olganikonova71034 ай бұрын
I find it so strange that many people in the comments call Russian more philosophical, as it is much, much easier to read philosophical works in English: Russian does not have anything similar to “ to be” word/concept ingrained in the language to play with - try reading, say, Heidegger in Russian translation - it’s impenetrable, whilst in English it reads logical and fine. I would say Russian is a more mystical language, better suited to discuss the unknown, uncertain, elusive things. The great thing about English is its surgical precision with a million of dictionary words, but when something is yet to be sorted I find Russian - language and mindset that goes with it - to be more intuitive. But again, even for bilingual people one language is usually more native, so to speak, and am a mere learned C2 in English.
@AuroRapsody11223 ай бұрын
I find russian language very lego-like. Anything can be transformed into anything: verbs into nouns, adjectives and back. Same with curses. Amazing outlet for complex emotions!!
@anarchymatt2 жыл бұрын
It's funny to hear him talk about Russian in this way, when most of my Russian exposure is gachi music XD
@roseforeuropa Жыл бұрын
My exposure has primarily been Klava Koka, Creme Soda, Grivina, and Maya Boyka.
@oddozx Жыл бұрын
Richness of language and history does not make the contemporary culture of the nation any better. Modern Russian culture does not produce anything, ANYTHING of value. Its degeneracy upon degeneracy, copying worst of the west and making it even worse. So yeah, dont look for any wisdom, culture or depth from modern Russia, its gone for good. Saying that as a Russian.
@prismgames10 ай бұрын
Lex oozes with intellect, it’s so refreshing to hear an actually well balanced and good willed individual speak
@elemonix43342 жыл бұрын
You’re not biased. In Russian, everything rhymes. That’s why you have the greatest literature in Russian! (But “simplistic” English can = Hemingway).
@cypher8388 Жыл бұрын
good reflection. Sometimes I got this insight, about how much i'm loosing because i still don't know another language. this has moved me to keep learning languages through literature.
@daniltanyigin58208 ай бұрын
That’s a great analysis! As being Russian I can add that Russian language also is more tough in prononciation. There are lots of word with multiple hard consonants in the beginning. In my case, having a stater speech disorder, it is much easier to speak English clearly than Russian
@miguelnascimento2847 Жыл бұрын
Funny he mentioned portuguese. I know nothing about russian language but the phonetics of it always sounded alot like portuguese to me, there are alot more sounds used in both russian and portuguese than in english
@Oscarrrrrrrrrrr Жыл бұрын
Haha yeah, Portuguese to me sounds like a Russian speaking Spanish.
@jazura2 Жыл бұрын
Definately. Portugese from Portugal (not Brazil)
@CaughtInp10 ай бұрын
i remember the meeting Putin had with Khabib and reading the subtitles was like poetic!
@OlegTar6 ай бұрын
russian subtitles or english subtitles?
@benjaminattwell143010 ай бұрын
This is literally what every person says about their native language. Of course you can express yourself better in the language that you were raised with. Of course it's more poetic or more emotional, especially for those that have learned English for technical terminology or for other such purely utilitarian reasons.
@FedkaSlovanich10 ай бұрын
russian is the best to swear in, also alot of russian words are fun to say same with polish and slovak
@TomorrowWeLive3 ай бұрын
Finally one sane person
@leouxdesign7 ай бұрын
When he mentioned the rewriting from memory and you should not to make any mistake, god I so hated that tests, it always was so painful. Always was bad at it.
@РукиТрясуки8 ай бұрын
I would say russian is more flexible because you can adjust words and construct sentences in the way you like and they will be correct. That’s also bad for the tools like google translate that have hard time translating russian into english. English is more strict/stiff in this sense
@annafedorova_sf9 ай бұрын
Simplistic isn’t quite the right term, I’d say English is an EFFICIENT language. It’s certainly simpler, and it’s very adaptable - you can be innovative with it when you know and use it well, that’s not just a Russian thing. Vladimir Nabokov was a language genius who mastered English and brilliantly demonstrated how pliable it is. His translations in both languages settle this Russian vs English debate for me. I’ve found my favorite phrases of his in both languages, and they were equally mesmerizing. Also, English introduces MANY neologisms into Russian, and Russian readily absorbs them and tweaks ‘em in various quirky ways. I’ve done the opposite for various Russian words in English, and English speakers totally resonated with that. Just wordplay. DO IT ;) I will say, the more languages you can express in a conversation, the more fun you’ll have with random wordplay. Like, the other day it occurred to me that “hippopotame” sounds exactly like “и попа там” (…well, while playfully swinging my butt in the air like a cat, when hanging out in bed with my guy).
@fredengels81889 ай бұрын
there are other factors to consider, such as the tone, the subject in question, the educational background, etc.
@planetofthegames2843 Жыл бұрын
весьма точно Лекс высказался, но есть пара неточностей и преувеличений в плане "давления". Для американцев это может и видится неким давлением в школах, но в целом наша школьная система допускает очень много обязательных ненужностей, что делает ее схожей больше с армией. К такому давлению ты привыкаешь и все всё прекрасно понимают, понимают, что знать всё - невозможно и относятся к неудачам снисходительно. Ты будешь учить все, даже если тебе это нахер не надо, но со временем понимаешь зачем тебе преподавали "ненужные" предметы. Угадайте с кого наша школьная система брала пример. Не будем показывать пальцем, но это Британия)) у меня была очень хорошая и дружная школа, я не хочу, чтобы граждане иных стран считали, что в России все ужасно и страшно. Только вот наши граждане сами так считают и их можно понять. Моя школа скорее исключение из правил, ибо есть тысячи школ, где учителям плевать на учеников, а ученики беспризорники, которые с малолетства ведут себя неподобающе. Достаточно посмотреть на статистику абортов среди девушек 15-17 лет, статистику смертей от отравления всякими наркотическими веществами или некачественным алкоголем. Однако, тех, чье детство было счастливым больше. По крайней мере хочется верить
@adrianalexandrov7730 Жыл бұрын
It all depends on a teachers, bro. Been through Russian school and the most were kinda stuck in proving their authority. Like "ты что самый умный?", "делай как говорят!" ("are you the smartest one here?", "do as you're told!"). And it totally kills the mood to research something on your own and bring it to the teacher to discuss. Not all, but many are like that.
@planetofthegames2843 Жыл бұрын
@@adrianalexandrov7730 согласен с тобой, есть такая хуйня к сожалению. Чист провинциальное мышление - задавить стремления ребенка, а не направить в нужное русло. Поэтому важно детям помогать, но если например родителям похуй, то тут уж никто не поможет. Так и живем)
@adrianalexandrov7730 Жыл бұрын
@@planetofthegames2843 Yeah, the only caveat is that I went to school in Saint-Petersburg. Like second largest city. So it's not just some redneck stuff. And I don't really mean to shit on our public schools, I've had some good teachers as well, but this "are you the smartest one?" attitude, when you clearly point to a teacher how they're in the wrong and where they could improve... That's really infuriating. Well past this, but a lot of youth still get through it every day.
@loam Жыл бұрын
I think English also has all the means to express variety of emotions, just need to know it deeply, there are words one never hears in most films/TV shows, etc; like 3-4 years ago I tried to read "A Song of Ice and Fire" in English and there was so many words I didn't know about, I had to open dictionary 20-30 times per page)) And prior that I've read "The catcher in the rye" in English and opened dictionary much-much rarer, may be couple times per 1-2 pages. In russian language they just used more widely, may be that's the difference.
@Anton_Sh. Жыл бұрын
This.
@Andyground1110 ай бұрын
You can't really compare it because it's embedded in the grammar: images-cdn.9gag.com/photo/a1YA3p2_700b.jpg
@christhomas-asevado52128 ай бұрын
Seeing and experiencing the world in a language other than your mother tongue is absolutely eye opening, awesome and makes one a better human being. I speak several languages, understand but do not yet speak a few more which I am currently studying. The Russian language is rich, complex and nuanced. Doors to tradition, literature, a people's history and much more open when one begins to learn their language. Learn other languages to open your minds.
@Alec72HD8 ай бұрын
People have lifes. But (one) second language is doable and rewarding.
@igorpi257 ай бұрын
Английский великолепный язык для описания и моделирования. Очень много способов точно высказать мысль, так чтобы оно имело форму и направление. Иногда для филосовских или научных разговоров на руссском не хватает такого инструмента. Да, и во многих языках тоже, в частности тюркских языках, не хватает этого аппарата.
@Yellow_Flannel Жыл бұрын
So Theo Von speaks in Russian English. His language is absurdity at all times and he knows exactly how to explain himself.
@supermassiveblackhole6559 Жыл бұрын
As a Russian who speak English I would say that Lex is 100% precise describing Russian high school education system
@Flahtort Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but he not describing that generally it sucks. 50/50, one teacher - god, second - garbage.
@robf1557 Жыл бұрын
Russian is one of three languages that I want to master in my lifetime, among Japanese (which I am doing first and its going pretty well so far, I'm at the N5 level right now) and Turkish. Turkish mainly because my best friend is from Turkey and I want to be able to communicate better with all of his relatives (plus swearing in Turkish is probably the most fun thing ever, a well-placed ''ananı sikim'' is priceless). Russian because I want to read the classic literature in Russian, straight from the source, no translation. It's gonna take a long time but I am more than prepared!
@alexanderkuptsov61178 ай бұрын
Another Russian here. I'm rather fluent in English, but one thing that I notice about myself when I speak English, I become way more sarcastic. Partly because I've watched House M D a lot an he's one of my fav characters (another one is Avasarala from The Expanse who's also very sarcastic), partly because I find the rhythm of English is much better for that. English isn't more simplistic than Russian, it's just different. Some meanings can't be fully conveyed in English, yes, but such things can be said about Russian too.
@kiraform9 ай бұрын
Spot on, Lex!! An accurate description and a very familiar sense of longing when you don't know more languages. How much more are we missing out...?
@MECHANISMUS Жыл бұрын
All languages are able of the same things. Every nuance of life can be conveyed in any language. Feelings are always shortsighted and people just want to be dramatic about what they feel.
@cz5696 Жыл бұрын
you have this totally backwards
@dgurevich110 ай бұрын
As far as i know, russian is the only language where you can take any sentence, rearrange the words in any order and it would still be grammatically correct.
@xxxxxxxyyyyyyy9 ай бұрын
Ukrainian as well.
@dgurevich19 ай бұрын
@@xxxxxxxyyyyyyy I'm pretty sure every slavic language does that. but I mostly know russian.
@Heldarion9 ай бұрын
I assume you're exaggerating a bit, but being a Slovenian I understand your point. All permutations of words in a simple sentence would get you a grammatically correct word order like 90% of the time (albeit with different meanings), while the other 10% of the time you would still understand the intended meaning, but people will ask you if you're having a stroke, speaking like that.
@dgurevich19 ай бұрын
@@Heldarion This is a special design feature that lets you speak the language while drunk.