I'm Russian. Why did I just watch a 10 minute video of how to speak my own language?
@Belomor2Kanal8 ай бұрын
Потому что мужик исполнил при тебе сложнейшие трюки. А это очаровывает.
@oofedguest21558 ай бұрын
это видео о трудностях русского языка, а не о том, как разговаривать на нем
@Ur_Quan8 ай бұрын
I suppose, it's the same reason people look at themselves in the mirror. It's often interesting how do you look (or in this case, sound) to other people.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
A little bit of self reflection won't hurt nobody
@AndreiBerezin8 ай бұрын
@LearntheRussianLanguage won't hurt nobody? Double negative, now that's gangsta!))) Either you borrowed it from AAVE, or, surprise! Russian language!
@Dmitriy_Obuhov8 ай бұрын
As a Russian speaker I really like how precisely and deeply the author described the main challenges in Russian. Definitely I would recommend this video to all Russian learners
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Thanks, happy to hear that!
@IvanPetrov-b8n8 ай бұрын
As a Ukrainian speaker, I really can say you better don't learn russian. Because Ukrainian was used to create russian and russian has not enough words and logic. This is why that "esperanto" looks so difficult. They can't decide how will be "familia" in russian. They are chauvinists and this is why they lose.
@AndreiBerezin8 ай бұрын
Sheeeit, I would recommend this video to any RUSSIAN
@AndreiBerezin8 ай бұрын
@@IvanPetrov-b8n ваше националистское словоблудие здесь неуместно, да и реплика ваша полна вранья
@IvanPetrov-b8n8 ай бұрын
@@AndreiBerezin Zwiebel Цибуля Ciboulette #лук «Российская грамматика» - одна из первых работ по российской грамматике, составленная в 1755 году М. В. Ломоносовым на основе более чем 10 лет систематизированного исследования значительного объема языкового материала ru.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Российская_грамматика
@_FosteR7 ай бұрын
In russian you read молоко and say малако. In english you read queue and say q. Thank you english
@fcuk_x7 ай бұрын
Here in US everyone drives on a parkway and parks in a driveway... Makes perfect sense!.. bomb, tomb, comb... I can go on forever....
@Havchik12356 ай бұрын
На самом деле это зависит от региона России. В Москве говорят МАЛАКО, а в Мурманске и Архангельске - МOЛОКО. Потому что в Москве значительная часть слов с буквой О произносятся через букву А, а в Мурманске и Архангельске наоборот. So that’s why both variants of мoлоко are actually acceptable. А в Коми и Марий Эл тараторят так, что большинство русских не успевает за их речью. Это не говоря уже о народах, у которых вообще свой язык есть. Они значительно обогащают русский язык своим акцентом или словами из своих языков, а в свой язык добавляют заимствования из русского для слов которых в их языке не существует. Так и живём.
@celitell6 ай бұрын
Exactly!!!😂
@vasilromano90936 ай бұрын
@@Havchik1235неправда! В Мурманске произношение более Московское, Акающее. Вот в Архангельске и Вологде ( считается севером России) - там да, Окающее
@Havchik12356 ай бұрын
Понял, буду знать. Думал, что Мурманск тоже с поморским говором.
@EgorYouTube7 ай бұрын
По твоей речи видно , что ты провел очень большую работу над произношением . Даже представить себе не могу , насколько это сложно . Вообще красавчик
@tevlag72557 ай бұрын
@@acaciaacacia6314 девушка его
@nikolaymukhametov48347 ай бұрын
@@acaciaacacia6314 наш слоняра
@MichaelKonovaliuk6 ай бұрын
почему пробел до и после знаков препинания? Кааааарл
@EgorYouTube6 ай бұрын
@@MichaelKonovaliuk карл, если говорить о том , как правильно , то пробел не ставится до знака препинания , но мне похер
@apitoriaru58016 ай бұрын
по лицу судя, парень с изрядной долей русской крови. Может репатриант просто.
@8Sigurd7 ай бұрын
I'm Russian, who's trying to learn French. There are so many things that do not make any sense in French for me, but every time I get frustrated by exceptions or legacy rules, I imagine that at this very moment a person from France is trying to learn Russian and suffers more than I do. It comforts me.
@TwlthSprkl7 ай бұрын
Забавно, что русскому хорошо, если кто-то страдает больше чем он)
@NewbieFirst7 ай бұрын
Funnily enough, French is way more consistent with its rules compared to English and Russian, French is also way closer to Russian than English is, due to the influence it had on Russian cultural elite when the language was still consolidating. All in all French is probably the easiest language to learn for a Russian speaker outside of the Slavic group.
@cor197 ай бұрын
@@TwlthSprkl не больше, а вместе. Совместное страдание и покаяние занимают важное место в нашей картине мира.
@pushkin1726 ай бұрын
@@TwlthSprkl забавно как ты перевернул его слова
@delandel54966 ай бұрын
Да уж Французский язык сложный.
@okosmose7 ай бұрын
Как русскоговорящий могу сказать, что ваша речь очень впечатляет, реально лучший акцент и произношение из всех блогеров кто учит русский!
@ID-gu3oi7 ай бұрын
Я тоже офигел, видимо у его родного языка есть похожие звуки или что то такое
@ugusta80017 ай бұрын
@@ID-gu3oiон голландец и девушка у него русская😊
@vb90757 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@vb90757 ай бұрын
Тогда у пацана ментальность русская 😂 Девочка молодец, надеюсь она ему не запрещают экспрессивно высказываться
@justyourfriendlyneighborho9037 ай бұрын
Тоже заметил что очень хорошо звучит, и ещё не заметил ошыбок с грамматикой. Обычно иностранцы даже если хорошо говорят, всё равно делают ошибки с окончяниями слов, а у него вообще не заметил.
@maxtalin51747 ай бұрын
I've been using English at work as I'm a developer in UK company. Но мой родной язык русский. И каждый раз, когда меня начинают бесить фразовые глаголы, артикли, perfect tenses, conditional sentences, I start watching videos where foreigners explain how and why Russian is so difficult to learn. И сразу на душе спокойно 😅
@Lavr82.7 ай бұрын
спокойно от того что английский типа легче или что?
@Stigmith7 ай бұрын
Ну, у русских тоже проблемы при изучении английского. Практически зеркальная ситуация. По себе могу сказать что я до сих пор не понимаю seen и saw, и использую их по настроению. Так же You and me и You and I заставляли проморгаться. Поэтому можно утешать коллег с тем что переучиться найти склонение каждому слову, тоже было не просто.
@maxtalin51747 ай бұрын
Просто понимаешь, что русский гораздо сложнее и не очевидней чем тот же английский. Так что хорошо, что он нам по наследству достался.
@noakly5787 ай бұрын
@@Stigmith seen -v3 saw- v2 вроде ничего сложного
@ichernichenko7 ай бұрын
@@Lavr82.Нет, ему становится на душе лучше зная что другие страдают как он когда учять русский.
@eugenewhiting89287 ай бұрын
"Никто никому ничего не должен". There are four negations in the sentence! It seems to be very awkward for native English speakers.😂❤ Thank you for making me look at my language from the outside!
@watchmakerful7 ай бұрын
Yep, in Russian (and not only in Russian!) repeated negations amplify the effect of negation.
@eugenewhiting89287 ай бұрын
@@watchmakerful but in this case there is nothing to do with any emphasizing or amlifying!
@sObad3677 ай бұрын
nobody owns nothing to nobody
@eugenewhiting89287 ай бұрын
@@sObad367 nobody owes anything to anybody!
@sObad3677 ай бұрын
@@eugenewhiting8928 yes that's kinda the correct way, but I'm pretty sure the way I said it is fine in african american (vernacular) english cuz the say stuff like "ain't nobody" or "I ain't know nothing" all the time
@Kari_kapi7 ай бұрын
Это так прикольно: наблюдать как кто-то учит твой язык:) Удачи вам! А я пойду английский учить...
@Aizen_souske00001Ай бұрын
Iam learning russian and i need someone to practice the language with so i hope you can help me and be my friend +iam a girl!!
@dasegot6 ай бұрын
As a russian, I'm very proud of all people who can say even "hello" in russian. When I worked as a cashier at the grocery store, one day a four koreans (two girls and two boys) came and they said "здравствуйте", "ещё напиток" и "до свидания" and it was so cute! Don't be afraid, just try to talk!
@мориморка8 ай бұрын
As a Russian speaker, I want to tell you about you have a very good speech and pronunciation. Well done 👍
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ApenaUmCanal8 ай бұрын
I'm in the very beggining, using the Assimil Course. I feel like a child getting literate for the first time. New alphabet, absolutely new words... It's very fun, but at the same time scary. My goal is to be able to read poems and prose in russian, especially the old authors like Pushkin, Lermontov, Gogol, etc. And be able to have a good conversation. Hope i can get this level in 2 years
@cloudslady34008 ай бұрын
sorry to break your dream... but you will struggle more than you think with russian.... speaking in two years is not realistic...wait to see the grammar...😔 i held my laugh when you said understanding poems in two years.. well good luck with that.. 🤣
@AKEri68328 ай бұрын
I love Gogol's books very much
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
It's a bit difficult to say without knowing your background (native language, language learning experience, age, etc), but I think if you take a solid approach that should be possible. Now, you won't understand 100% of those books and poetry, but even native speakers cannot haha.
@LOVE-1688 ай бұрын
@@AKEri6832Gogol is a dark personality,he is a mentally ill person.
@LOVE-1688 ай бұрын
these poets, writers use the old Russian language, many words are not used in the modern world.
@andrrrrrray7 ай бұрын
когда вы перешли к теме совершенных и несовершенных глаголов, я прям прослезился. в таких логических мякотках и есть прикол русского языка. и самим русским далеко не всем легко это даётся - я помню начальную школу, как многие тупили на подобных темах и хватали двояки. эх, смотрю на вас, и тоже захотелось изучить какой-нибудь новый сложный язык, дать себе новый вызов, так сказать. вы молодец.
@lonely_nomad7 ай бұрын
попробуйте учить Китайский
@watchmakerful7 ай бұрын
Да, особенно если соответствующие глаголы совершенного и несовершенного вида имеют разные корни, например "класть" и "положить".
@turanturk58677 ай бұрын
Я до сих пор туплю ахахах
@ЕвгенийПрокофьев-р9р7 ай бұрын
Слово "Мякотках" вызвало даже у меня ступор =D
@Alexandra-pz9qd7 ай бұрын
А я не тупила 😊
@LastOfGamers7 ай бұрын
I was trying to learn russian during covid but stopped, then when I went to Moscow and St. Petersburg last month and stayed for 4 weeks I loved the culture and its people and continued to learn the language!
@humble_reader7 ай бұрын
I love St. Petersburg too, but to understand russian culture, you should go to towns and villages, St. Peterburg is the second capital of Russia (not official) I'm Russian and my English isn't good enough but I hope you can understand my comment😅
@LastOfGamers7 ай бұрын
@@humble_reader oh yes your english is perfect my friend 👍 and yes I agree with you I should visit the villages next time for sure! I have met some great people in both moscow and Petersburg and language was not a barrier at all because kindness was the key to a great communication!
@LastOfGamers7 ай бұрын
@@humble_reader I forgot to ask, are you from a town or village? Which villages do you recommend?
@humble_reader7 ай бұрын
@@LastOfGamers I am from the city of Krasnodar. It is a million-strong city in the south of the country. As for the villages, they're all about the same, haha. As for towns, I would recommend going to Novorossiysk, it is not far from my city, next to the sea. I haven't traveled much because I'm only 17, but coastal small towns have their own atmosphere, in my opinion😅 I'm moving to St. Petersburg soon because I fell in love with the city when I was there with my family.
@LastOfGamers7 ай бұрын
@@humble_reader wow interesting! I know krasnodar my friend told me about it when i was going to St. Petersburg and told me that it is one of the growing beautiful cities by the sea next to Sochi! I will definitely visit it! Yes I agree about St.P it is my top fav city so far.. thank you so much for your response and plz let’s stay in touch so that when I go to Krasnodar and Novorossiysk I will need your guidance about the places if you don’t mind 🙏 спасибо большое
@abberata7 ай бұрын
I am a native Russian speaker and a language nerd so just for fun I’ve taken a course of teaching Russian as foreign language. And damn…. I’ve always known it’s a hard language but looking at it from a foreigner’s perspective…. it’s just intolerable. Prepositions literally made me cry. Rooting for anyone who is brave enough to start this language
@ernstkrudl48958 ай бұрын
Great, I "learned" some Russian at high school (not compulsory) for 3 years, one hour per week. 55 years ago. My motiv was to also learn a slavic language. German native, English fluent, Latin, French soso. Anyway visited Russia some years ago , Moskva and St Peterburg. Amazing how many signs I could read, buy tickets, dine out, it was fun. Presently reviving/learning two other languages from the past , but Russian is on my scope for after them. I like your entry lesson, nothing new, but very well presented. Spion in German is very close with Russian, in writing and pronounciation. Kitan for China/-ese is a very interesting historical root. All the best. I would prefer to call Russian a rich language, not a difficult one.
@sskp61687 ай бұрын
You're absolutely right there is a lot of russian words derived from german language. My favorite one is Апельсин what means an Orange! German word Apfelsine litteraly translated as an Apple from China. There is a funny word Шаромыжник.This word means a bogan and this came from french language Cher Ami.
@ernstkrudl48957 ай бұрын
@@sskp6168 bogan Я не знаю.
@sergsuper7 ай бұрын
@@sskp6168апельсин ладно, но вот глаз - тоже из немецкого. Во всех славянских языках остались очи
@LearntheRussianLanguage7 ай бұрын
I really like шлагбаум
@nataliexhjztew92517 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguageШлагбаум это просто прелесть. А ещё немцы подарили нам такие слова, как стул, шкала, абзац, бухгалтер, бутерброд, вахта, валторна, гастроль, гастарбайтер, кафель… много всего. Сейчас учу немецкий и просто диву даюсь. Замечтательный язык! И произносить почти все удобно. А вот голландский мне кажется очень сложным именно в произношении.
@zgt54707 ай бұрын
As Russian, I must say that your accent almost can't be noticed. That's a great job!
@mdegtiarev7 ай бұрын
Какая бесстыдная лесть!
@yuranduran7 ай бұрын
@@mdegtiarev я бы не назвал лестью. Акцент есть, но он действительно незначителен.
@Ivan_the_IV7 ай бұрын
@@yuranduranда ладно, абсолютно очевидный акцент
@NoAndrei6 ай бұрын
@@Ivan_the_IV очевидный, но не резкий и не режет слух
@jazzochannel6 ай бұрын
@@mdegtiarev You will live a long time before you hear another non-russian, non-former-soviet person reproduce Russian with such fidelity. I'm almost 40 and have thus far encountered 3-4 people on the internet or IRL who learned Russian as adults and have a passable Russian pronunciation.
@msbull1008 ай бұрын
Dude your language skills are just amazing. You can easily swith between both your non native languages and you are doing it without accent !
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Next time I can add some Dutch in the mix haha. Thanks for the comment!
@msbull1008 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage it would be greate 😃 👍
@DonPetrushka7 ай бұрын
Well, to be fair he's got his accent in Russian. You can clearly say he's not a native speaker. But still his pronunciation is one of the best I've heard from foreigners so far
@TheTorrezzz7 ай бұрын
Бро, респект тебе за то, что выбираешь такой язык в столько противоречивые времена. Мне прям приятно. Ты, уже лишь благодаря этому факту, производишь впечатление личности со своим мнением и хорошего доброго человека. Удачи тебе в будущем. Неважно, насколько хорошо ты выучишь русский язык, но продолжай всегда так же слушать своё сердце и оставаться человеком🤍
@12345_qwerty7 ай бұрын
У него уже разговорный уровень, видимо он его выучил до всех этих событий. Да и русский язык сам по себе никакого отношение к войне не имеет, как и немецкий к нацистам не имел
@TheTorrezzz7 ай бұрын
@@12345_qwerty вот вот. Ты это многим другим объясни) Это один из международных языков, и куда лучше поддерживать его уровень, особенно у тех, кто в подобных странах родился, чем деградируя, уходить в "традиции" и выбирать язык с меньшим количеством носителей. Это странно, люди повторяют друг за другом, а по факту не отдают себе отчёт, как забиваются сами лишь в меньшие масштабы.
@DonPetrushka7 ай бұрын
Большинство людей не учат русский из-за того, что он весьма сложный. А не из-за того, что один русскоговорящий террорист из русскоговорящей страны отправляет других русскоговорящих террористов в другую русскоговорящую страну
@12345_qwerty7 ай бұрын
@@DonPetrushka сомнительное утверждение… по поводу террористов я согласен. Но учить язык это всегда сложно и именно это и притягивает
@Пень1Бук16 ай бұрын
Даже в 40ые и 50ые годы прошлого века не было никакой ненависти к немецкому языку или культуре, и национальности в целом. Потому что когда люди разумные то и решения принимают рассудительные. А если человек глупый, и ему скажут, что солнечный свет убивает радиацией, то он просидит всю жизнь в подвале, и сердце остановится от ненависти
@GraceCanadaful6 ай бұрын
Russian is a beautiful, soft language. Its structure is the same as all Slavonic languages. Sposiba vam za vashu programu.
@paprika_pol6 ай бұрын
Are you not a Russian speaker? Does Russian really sound soft? I have often heard that it sounds very rude to foreigners because of our hard sounds and the letter R, especially for Germans
@gene_b6 ай бұрын
Soft? Are you from Mordor?
@ЛиДжан-щ6ю5 ай бұрын
No, you from Mordor@@gene_b
@hannaR_2 ай бұрын
@@paprika_polRussian sounds very soft, I speak several Slavic languages, and the Russian sounds the softest of them all to me...
@roz4727 ай бұрын
Great video and thank you! This is a refresher for me and you have inspired me to re-learn Russian. The cases were definitely a struggle for me, so were the imperfective and perfective verbs. My approach used to consist of taking references (from samples of native speakers dialogues/charts with examples) and memorize them from there. As you can see, I never really learned the grammars thoroughly and in isolation for me to be able to use them independently (in daily conversations). However, even if I did not know the grammars well, my vocabularies helped me a ton to have a small conversations with the native speakers and they were able to understand me. It is important to MAKE MISTAKES and to LEARN FROM THEM. It is crucial to our learning journey because it reinforces what we have forgotten and challenge the ones we already know. Best of luck to everyone learning the Russian language, удачи с вами! 🤗
@Sabrinaanir7 ай бұрын
Hi 😿
@Творческаяартель2Влад2-е3х8 ай бұрын
Не знаю ни одного иностранца, который хоть как-нибудь умел говорить на русском, и его не поняли бы. На мой взгляд труднее понимать разговорный русский.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Ну да, для этого просто надо много общаться)
@ДмитрийШайтура8 ай бұрын
Конечно, в любом случае поймут, возможно переспросят где то. Но поймут.
@Levon_RnD7 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguageYou even know using the single bracket sign like Russians do, impressive😂
@pixelvania7 ай бұрын
Думаю, что это утверждение будет верно для любого языка ))
@LubimijKot7 ай бұрын
Так то да, но выразить свою мысль простыми словами легко.. а вот понять ответ в котором есть хоть одно незнакомое слово? А если два? Двум ученикам легче понять друг друга, чем нэтив спикера:)
@mateomp34398 ай бұрын
Damn, I'm a native Spanish speaker and I sometimes realize that that language is also very difficult, because we have a lot of changes in the words for each time and case, and it has accent marks which can change the meaning of the words. And I'm on my way to learn Russian
@ApenaUmCanal8 ай бұрын
I'm a native portuguese speaker and couldn't agree more. Our languages have soooo many changes, but for us is just natural.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
The good thing about Spanish is that there's lots of cognates with English though!
@ВячеславСпирин-ы4й7 ай бұрын
I tried to learn Spanish and found it somewhat similar to Russian in the part where endings and suffixes change.
@ВячеславСпирин-ы4й7 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage There are many words from French in Russian, as well as in English ))
@Man_0087 ай бұрын
Spanish is the easiest language in the world as for the vowels and stress, I just love it, the most logical language system. Vaya, me encanta el castellano de verdad 💪 Y sí, las eRRes en ruso y español son bastante similares, me gusta la R vibrante como en español, italiano o ruso que sea suave o fuerte, esa R latina romana eslava :))
@dimark91737 ай бұрын
I'm from Moscow. I swear your pronunciation of some phrases is perfect and has a clearly moscow accent!😁 At first I thought that you're a native speaker! I think If I weren't Russian I wouldn't have learned this language😁 Good luck :)
@bellathereader13287 ай бұрын
This is a fantastic way of describing Russian grammar. As a beginner, I came to the point you make about taking it easy with the grammar lessons and simply “having fun” listening to pop music, doing simple Russian to English translations, and memorizing useful sentences like “hello, how are you, nice to meet you.” The case system seems overwhelming, so I want to downplay that right now
@Norwegiandolphin7 ай бұрын
Ik ben Noors en ik heb sommige jaar geleden nederlands geleerd (mar niet goed, hehe). Nu ga ik Russisch leren. Je kanaal is perfect voor mij!
@Tamère3537 ай бұрын
Круто. А как в Скандинавии к русским относятся?
@SuperMopga7 ай бұрын
@@Tamère353 Это Голландия, а не Скандинавия. Плохо к вам там относятся.
@Fux24ru6 ай бұрын
Поразительно, я понял смысл вашей фразы, имея только школьный запас немецкого. ))
@Inna.Eroshina8 ай бұрын
Great content!👍 I'm Russian and I've been learning English by myself and this is so hard for me! Each foreign language is difficult to learn and easy to natives! Good luck to us all! And thank you all for learning Russian at this f*cking time ❤✌️
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Спасибо за комментарий Инна. Удачи с изучением иностранного языка)
@Inna.Eroshina8 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage Спасибо большое) очень приятно) и Вам успехов 👍
@marvelenia67028 ай бұрын
Lovely comment! I am 62 and I started learning Russian here on YT with a teacher who does 1 lessen every day. It is very hard to keep up with it but if it will take me longer, so be it. Times are rough yes, but here we are again, proving that we the normal people are filled with respect, love and compassion for each other. Hopefully we will go into a future together that will be lovely for all living beings! Good luck with learning English! I am sure you will succeed!
@Inna.Eroshina8 ай бұрын
@@marvelenia6702 Thank you for this amazing comment! ❤️ I was moved to tears while reading this text! Your words are my thoughts! Blessing to you! ❤️ Благодарю Вас! Ваши слова тронули меня до слёз! Желаю Вам успехов в изучении русского языка и благополучия в жизни!
@alicekrausova27157 ай бұрын
By the way, though in these times Russian at schools is not taught, I see that even in The Czech Republic more and more people are interested in learning Russian ( especially my generation that had obligatory Russian lessons at school!) Lot of us we are trying to brush it. But in small towns it is difficult to find teachers... Privjetik! iz Čechii 🇨🇿❤
@Lily_1X8 ай бұрын
This video has many important information, I don’t know a better way to appreciate your work. Thank you 😊
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Writing a comment is of great help ;)
@foxfluffy7 ай бұрын
Nice explanation about word endings, thanks! Russians use this as a partial replacement of the complex English tense system. There is only 3 tense in Russian so when there is 16 of it - for Russian native this becomes mind-blowing :)
@ob_dowboosh6 ай бұрын
Я бегаю - I run Я бегал - I ran Я буду бегать - I will run Я бегу - I am running Я бежал - I was running Я буду бежать - I will be running Минимум 6 времён.
@Karl666Smith6 ай бұрын
I've stopped caring about tenses since school
@McSymm_Mcsymm5 ай бұрын
@@ob_dowboosh , "бегать" и "бежать" это вроде как разные слова. У них похожий смысл, но "бегать" означает многократное действие, а "бежать" - однократное. Поэтому вы сейчас написали склонение по временам двух глаголов, поэтому получилось шесть.
@ob_dowboosh5 ай бұрын
@@McSymm_Mcsymm по Вашей логике тогда и run/running - это разные слова.
@-brother_bear-6 ай бұрын
Russian is a simple language! Just remember all the endings, suffixes, prefixes, tenses, cases, genders, punctuation spelling, accents, declensions, participles and adverbs, semantic construction of the sentence, pronouns, quantitative changes, phonetic transcriptions and a ton of other small nuances... And you can juggle words as you like)
@albinaparrik5726 ай бұрын
😅😅😅😅
@Kolymchanka.Spornoe6 ай бұрын
Про интонацию забыли)))
@Evgeny13055 ай бұрын
И после этого иностранец начнёт учить китайский.
@dr.satyaa2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@davemackenzie83438 ай бұрын
Спасибо вам Ари. Как обычно, всегда полезно. Отличный совет.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Рад слышать что советы в видео были полезными.
@ТатьянаГ-ж6п8 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage мне понравился ролик, я бы только заменила пару 'смотреть-посмотреть' на 'видеть-увидеть'.
@artur666stantsel7 ай бұрын
@@ТатьянаГ-ж6пв чем смысл? Это разные глаголы, как на английском see и look
@alexberggo7 ай бұрын
Спасибо всем, кто учит русский! Давайте дружить, общаться и учить языки друг друга! Всем мира и добра 🥰
@AJ7000y7 ай бұрын
the most peaceful nation
@sdragoff7 ай бұрын
@@AJ7000y sarcasm?
@AJ7000y7 ай бұрын
@@sdragoff exactly!
@igortchernowitzer9277 ай бұрын
@AJ7000y comparing to North Koreans or cannibal tribes, russians are even more aggressive..
@ЛюбовьМакарьева-р7в7 ай бұрын
Надеюсь, угараешь
@шибкоумнаяоднако8 ай бұрын
Хорошие советы. Половина применима вообще к любому языку, вторая половина применима после (не)большой модификации. Ари, мне так нравится слушать, с какой любовью вы говорите о русском языке!
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Да, эти советы можно и применять к нерусским языкам)
@watchmakerful7 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage Как минимум к большинству славянских (кроме болгарского - там совсем другая грамматика) и, возможно, к балтийским.
@IvanPetrov-b8n7 ай бұрын
О российском язьіке
@denschoff31697 ай бұрын
@@IvanPetrov-b8n порвался
@IvanPetrov-b8n7 ай бұрын
@@denschoff3169 тумбочка
@aymunz7 ай бұрын
Aside from the obviously very useful tips, I like the new video format and the improved audio quality!
@elidepp35536 ай бұрын
Весьма достойное произношение! Акцент слышен, только если внимательно прислушиваться. Молодец! Хорошая работа. Сможешь работать шпионом.
@ГлебЗинчук-ч1б6 ай бұрын
Раскроют минут за пять 😂
@adammichalik13276 ай бұрын
>Сможешь работать шпионом. lmao
@laierr7 ай бұрын
ok, flash test, which is the correct way to say "i will buy": - Я буду купить - Я буду покупить - Я покуплю - Я сделаю покупление - Я совершу акт товарно-денежного обмена с целью получения материальных благ Okay, actually, the point of that exercise is: despite the fact that most of those forms are horribly wrong, Russian speakers would understand you. . . Except for the last one. Don't use that one.
@basedandredpille7 ай бұрын
the last sentence is actually the only one that makes sense in Russian language
@KB-ff9wx7 ай бұрын
@@basedandredpille Correction. It's the only one that complies with the "rules" of the Russian language (is grammatically correct), but is still NOT recommended to be used in a normal conversation. Unless one wants to have their clock cleaned. :-)
@laierr7 ай бұрын
@@basedandredpille First four make perfect sense, but horribly incorrect grammatically. Last one is *correct grammatically*, but barely makes any sense.
@dronnet7 ай бұрын
Ю абсолютли райт 😀 (you absolutely right ) I full understand you, but it will be correct like this: - Я буду покупать meat, beer, car...... - Я куплю meat, beer, car...... - Я сделаю покупку
@AndreyAristov-i8d7 ай бұрын
😂 last option
@vadimmartianov98167 ай бұрын
As a Russian speaker should say - this guy totally right. Do Not Try immediately learn everything and use everything you learned. We understand how crazy our language is, and even if you use just basic forms of words we amased. Yes, it not sounds pretty, but we will understand you (ehm... in most cases). And after you have basic language - try to improve, not before. Also he talk about it only a little, but yes, system - is only way to do it, things like "i will listen native input" does not work here, no way your brain handle 6 cases, 3 conjugation, 3 pov and mix of all of this in one time.
@juliennechannel68226 ай бұрын
Наш язык не "сумасшедший". Да, он непростой, но он наш. И быть простым он не обязан
@vkuran6 ай бұрын
@@juliennechannel6822 "Не простой" - про сложность. "Он наш" - собственность, принадлежность. "Обязан" - ответственность, наделяемая самим собой ли другим в принудительной форме. Вы вобще о чем? ))) Русский язык на самом деле один из самых сложных. Разговорное английское crazy как раз хорошо описывает это как "непредсказуемый, несоответствующий"
@antoshke7 ай бұрын
Perfect pronunciation and brilliant grammar, mate. Keep it up 💪🏼
@ЛеонидПак-о9ф7 ай бұрын
English is good, Russian pronunciation needs a lot of work
@КсенияАранчей7 ай бұрын
It's so interesting to watch videos about your native language. I'm learning English and your channel can give me a great experience, thank you. Subscribed.
@margaritakrivo7 ай бұрын
for me as a native speaker, people studing russian are a kind of heroes)
@XBoxwolf7 ай бұрын
Your advice is good. I speak several languages and I am learning Russian . I give this kind of advice to anyone who tells me they are interested in learning languages.
@pavel_mednykh7 ай бұрын
As a russian native speaker I’m totally agree with you. When I started to learn foreign languages, I tried to imagine how difficult would it be - to learn russian. And at that moment I realized that it is soooo hard. If somebody would ask me why I use exactly this word or why that word has changed in so weird way in my russian speech - I have no clue. I don’t even know how to explain. Tons of complicated rules and a huge bunch of exceptions makes russian language unreasonably difficult.
@ВячеславСпирин-ы4й7 ай бұрын
Зайти, отойти, войти, пойти, уйти, обойти...
@juliabartosh33657 ай бұрын
Выйти, пройти, перейти, ну и ...идти 😅
@Lara_Chayka6 ай бұрын
Что значит "неоправданно"? Русский ни перед кем не должен оправдываться, потому что никому ничего не должен. Он уникален своей синтетичностью и уже поэтому не может не регулироваться "тоннами правил".
@norbath16506 ай бұрын
@@juliabartosh3365 @user-bp8sp6sf9y Русский не уникален в этом смысле. Приставки, обилие суффиксов свойственно всем славянским языкам. Да и в немецком тоже самое (кроме обилия суффиксов). Вообще русский из славянских даже не самый сложный. Словенский, польский и, возможно чешский даже сложнее.
@juliabartosh33653 ай бұрын
@@norbath1650, я бы не сказала, что польский сложнее. Для меня он легче русского в плане структуры, языковой организации) Немецкий логичнее русского, поэтому легче усваивается. Но восприятие у всех разное, поэтому я понимаю, что мне может быть легко, а кому-то нет. И наоборот, конечно же
@Darkdally8 ай бұрын
I watch Russian series every night when I go to bed. Two things I notice: 1. The stresses are everywhere - I commonly hear the word ничего for instance, pronounced with stresses on any of the three syllables. 2. It doesn't matter, because when you listen to Russian enough, every word has its own distinctive sound. Words like что are thrown in everywhere, but you always catch it because of that 'sht' sound at the beginning. None of that helps with learning it per se, but it does - It's just like when I hear English spoken really fast or from different accents - I still understand it because of the basic sounds. Russian has those too. Watching Russian series has helped ease my apprehension of approaching the language a bit, because I have gotten used to people just talking about general stuff in regular conversations. It is one of the best ways to get started, watching something like Seinfeld (9 seasons on Netflix with Russian dubs) I hear these everyday conversations when I go to sleep and, yeah.. the stuff you worry about, especially when you hear how casually it's spoken, kinda goes away.
@Ночь1958 ай бұрын
Вы вводите людей в заблуждение: Слово "ничегО" (ничегО нет, ничегО не скажу)произносится с ударением ТОЛЬКО на последнем слоге. Слово "нЕчего"(нЕчего есть , нЕчего сказать..) произносится с ударением ТОЛЬКО на первом слоге и имеет другое значение,чем ничегО: "нИчегО","нЕчего" - разное написание,произношение и значение. (Moscow, Russia)
@thatMikhail8 ай бұрын
Ничего always has the stress on the last vowel "o" with no exceptions. Что might be ubiquitous because it is less often omitted than English "that" in constructions like "I think that you're right". Nonetheless, don't hesitate to omit it in simple phrases to make them sound nicer. Думаю, Вы правы. Have a good luck!
@Darkdally8 ай бұрын
@@Ночь195 Thank you, I will write that down so I remember. That was very helpful!
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Yes exactly, it's difficult to really say "I learned words X and grammar Y from watching series", but it's just such a great support activity.
@stevanjakovljevic83908 ай бұрын
@@Darkdally I am serbia, I dont spek russian but I can undestand what is going on here . нИчегО is nothing , нЕчего is something .It similar to many slavic languages , on serbian is ништа and нешто. We even have word нечега , I remember нечега (something ). All are same base , but in diffrent language its developed differently
@sweet_concordia3 ай бұрын
У меня в рекомендациях выпал ролик с вашего канала. Решила посмотреть и другие и хочу сказать, что у вас прекрасное произношение! Думаю, вы можете быть грамотнее многих моих одноклассников в России)) У вас крутой контент, продолжайте в том же духе!
@lolli45457 ай бұрын
Dont give up, dude! Keep learning
@user-nu4be8qx1p8 ай бұрын
very instructive, thank you profesor 🙏
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Happy to help!
@alko_xo8 ай бұрын
For me as a Russian it (I mean this tutorial) was very good and funny as well. Really nicely done!
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Рад слышать что видео вам понравилось)
@alekto57837 ай бұрын
Вау. Вы звучите как билингвал, которого в детстве учили как русскому, так и английскому языкам, но из-за отсутствия практики немного появился акцент, но звучите очень чисто. Очень. Редко (никогда) не слышала иностранца, говорящего практически как носитель. Честно говорю, никакой лести) Вы оч крутой.
@АлександраМальцева-в4ю7 ай бұрын
You've done a great job and your russian is flawless! Thank you for learning it!
@wosinddieteller21858 ай бұрын
когда знаешь русский , но все ровно смотришь видео 😂
@alexkhodyr8 ай бұрын
Нет предела совершенству
@horzeskull65037 ай бұрын
Интересно же узнать, как они это себе видят.
@MaxusR7 ай бұрын
Ага. И ошибиться в этой же самой фразе. Всё рАвно :)
@algorismalitia1117 ай бұрын
@@MaxusR Фсеровно кринжово ржал с тебя и скучал за тобой! ....нувыпонели)
@rossleone91408 ай бұрын
There is just only so much I can remember in a day. I’m the worst at Russian but I haven’t given up
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
The more I prioritize sleep, the more new things I can learn I've noticed
@rossleone91408 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage I noticed you said that in your memory optimization course. Luckily when I’m in Russia I have plenty of time for sleep. When I’m in USA however, that’s a different story
@AgnieszkaKolodziejczyk-oh2rb7 ай бұрын
@@rossleone9140Привет 😊
@rossleone91407 ай бұрын
@@AgnieszkaKolodziejczyk-oh2rbummmm привет
@AgnieszkaKolodziejczyk-oh2rb7 ай бұрын
@@rossleone9140Hey there! What's up? Sorry to bother you.... I'm just learning Russian and......Never mind:)
@ihinmof7 ай бұрын
I am a russian speaker who also has experience if learning english.When i met a boy who was learning russian i was stunned how he was able to say Я хочу Ты хочешь Он она оно хочет Мы хотим Вы хотите Они хотят. I am still trully amazed hahahah. By the way, some day i was teaching russian to chinese students. Damn, russian is so hard. The word фотографироваться (to take photo) was an indeed loop. It is not obvious but russian is not my mother language. I talk a lot and use my true mother language and i love how it has logic and makes a lot of sence.
@alicekrausova27157 ай бұрын
No language has so much sense and so many MEANS of expressing even feelings as Slavic languages!!! 🤍💙❤️❤️🤍💙🥰🥰🥰
@ihinmof7 ай бұрын
@@alicekrausova2715 я имею ввиду логику и последовательнось языка. Понимаешь, в русском языке необходимо учить каждый случай,каждую форму. В татарском намного больше правил и четче грамматика. Если бы вы учили кого-то русскому, то быстро поняли бы насколько он сложен в плане склонений. Кстати мой друг китаец(другой) после пары месяцев русского языка бросил эту затею. Другие еще пытаются... Самый сложный язык по рейтингу это мандарин китайский. Я считаю что так принято только из-за иероглифов. Они и правда сложные хахаха но русский намного сложнее, не могу представить какого это учить русский.
@Dron0087 ай бұрын
Sometimes I think how hard for students learning Russian is to pronounce even very popular Russian words like "мужчина", "женщина", "здравствуйте". Так, в слове "женщина" присутствует смягчённое "н", если его не смягчать, для иностранца, конечно, простительно, но будет очень заметно.
@ihinmof7 ай бұрын
@@Dron008 произношение сложное в каждом новом языке. С русским еще повезло,в нем почти как пишется так и слышытся.
@alicekrausova27157 ай бұрын
@@Dron008 You are very right. I'm Czech and we had Russian at school but, unfortunately, nobody taght us proper fonetics. I've been trying to repeat Russian now but I' m aware how different the fonetics are ( And vice versa, the Russians mostly can't get rid od their strong accent when speaking other languages.) For us, Slaves, the grammar is not that difficult but the fonetics!!! 🙈🙈🙈 Never thought about " soft" N in " ženščina"!!! But which,N is in " zdravstvujte"? 😃 Privjet iz Čechii... ( P.s. Dymaju čto dlja innostrancev slavjanskaja grammatika slyškom složnaja, jak naša duša 😃🤍💙❤️!)
@glassperlenspiel7 ай бұрын
With O that becomes A is very simple: if O is not stressed than it will be prononced as A. Nice video and explanations! Keep on!
@PeterZaitcev6 ай бұрын
I am shocked how good your pronunciation is. You successfully and correctly said all sounds, even the hardest! Well done, sir!
@alexmares29848 ай бұрын
I have learned Russian language at school. Eleven years later I learned polish language, than Suisse German, a little bit Italian and now Scottish Gaelic. Each foreign language is difficult to learn. What's the problem? I want it!
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
That's a fun uncommon mix of languages!
@khot_direnni6 ай бұрын
It’s also funny that when you speak Russian with mistakes, it is not perceived by the native speaker as something discordant, there is a certain charm in this and the person is basically surprised that you decided to learn Russian in the first place. To be honest, I don’t understand why foreigners generally decide to study Russian. I would be glad if you share what prompted you to study Russian. I am now working on a new method of learning Russian for foreigners, so that it is simple and understandable for them, and understanding the motivation for learning Russian by foreigners will greatly help me in my work.
@MrRoscoАй бұрын
As an American we only really learn languages like Russian for fun because you could speak to someone on the internet that's Russian and also it's rare for someone to speak Russian in the US so it's impressive if you do
@florecista18 ай бұрын
Excellent video! I learned a lot.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
That's great!
@elina14216 ай бұрын
those tips are actually helpful not just for learning russian but for other languages too. thank you!!!
@ШахзодаСапарбаева-э8ь8 ай бұрын
После просмотра я захотела изучить русский, но проблема в том что я его уже знаю на уровне advanced 😂😂
@coyotewld8 ай бұрын
Пунктуацию можешь подтянуть 😂
@Valeriya-tn1th8 ай бұрын
Скорее proficiency 😅
@ЕлизаветкаБогданова8 ай бұрын
Лев Толстой:"Русский язык- сокровище. Смысловая глубина образов не имеет дна. Постичь его, полностью, во всей силе, мере, красоте, не может даже исконно русский человек, что тут говорить о басурманах"?
@Hubert_G7 ай бұрын
Then go learn polish
@nexusi68677 ай бұрын
@@ЕлизаветкаБогданова Ты это сам придумал, "басурман"? Вообще никак не гуглится цитата.
@peabody30007 ай бұрын
people think the cyrillic is going to be the hard part, but it's cake compared to about a million other things that make the language a monster
@x86ed8 ай бұрын
I’m addition to lessons, I’ve been listening to Russian Peppa pig lol.
@3dgoes2d8 ай бұрын
instead of watching peppa pig translated to russian, you can watch russian cartoon for kids Смешарики, it is actually amazing and still beloved by both kids and adults
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Hahahaha I personally hate the high pitched voices and prefer real voices. BUT the most important thing is that you like watching it.
@Kinotaurus8 ай бұрын
what is oink-oink in Russian? :)
@snadianna8 ай бұрын
@@Kinotaurus хрю-хрю :)
@ЕлизаветкаБогданова8 ай бұрын
@@Kinotaurus chroo-chroo😅
@КодоловаЛюдмила7 ай бұрын
На данный момент я участвую в программе общения с Американцами, которые учат русский язык в школах. То есть я помогаю им с языком, просто общаясь с ними. Мне Ваше видео помогло задуматься о нюансах речи, которые я не могла почувствовать, потому что очень привыкла к ним. Мне легче понять, что вводит в ступор моих ребят. Спасибо большое! Скинула своим ребятам, очень надеюсь, что им это видео поможет преодолеть первые ступени изучения русского
@elviraaksenova32387 ай бұрын
Brilliant notes about the Russian language. I have been teaching Russian for 12 years and my students are always struggled with the cases and stress in words. У тебя прекрасное произношение! Так держать :)
@user184288 ай бұрын
Does English make sense when it comes to pronunciation? If you look close, it has almost no rules and every word should be memorized. You just got used to the language and do not see the dark parts. So Russian stresses also should be learned through getting used to it by practicing mostly listening.
@ДмитрийШайтура8 ай бұрын
да, привычка приходит с практикой прослушивания и разговора. Слушаете и постепенно запоминаете где какие ударения. Но, нужно время для этого.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Oh yes English is even worse I think. Bit difficult to say because I've been exposed to it since childhood as we don't dub most of the English movies/series on tv.
@margo70598 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage Английская письменность - это по сути иероглифы. Только не в китайском варианте, а в японском.
@PyromaN938 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguageFrench and English is the biggest weirdos in the whole Indo-European family at this point, I think. Just notoriously messed pronounciation rules.
@openm1ndead7 ай бұрын
I'm impressed. The way you speak, your pronunciation is almost identical to the 'real' Russian. Bravo and keep going!
@graywhite15297 ай бұрын
the downsize of cases in russian is that it is a real pain in the azz for translators to properly caption Yoda, no matter how you turn it, it still sounds normal 😆
@cufflink447 ай бұрын
That's a great observation!
@zenelektrik6 ай бұрын
As a russian, I admit, that speaker speaks russian almost perfectly. Listen to him )
@Alex-mw4tt7 ай бұрын
Your Russian is great! It’s amazing to see such an interest and attention to this language, especially these days. PS: actually we pronounce “млако”, the “а” between “м” and “л” is almost not vocal. :)
@snakelll15 ай бұрын
это где так говорят, поделись
@karpai54278 ай бұрын
То что всем абсолютно наплевать на букву "Ё", полагаю, не делает изучение языка легче.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Нет, это действительно не помогает)
@zloychechen51508 ай бұрын
это Е умляют
@sdfasdfre7 ай бұрын
@@LearntheRussianLanguage Попался шпион! In this case "Нет" at the beginning means that you disagree with the other person. "Да, это действительно не помогает" would be better.
@watchmakerful7 ай бұрын
А ведь хотели же сделать её обязательной, как сделали в своё время букву "Й".
@ЕкатеринаРязанова-з3л7 ай бұрын
@@watchmakerfulдаже, если и сделают, то я продолжу писать "е" вместо "ё" 😊
@celestialwizard92908 ай бұрын
Привет Ари..I just started learning russian and I've stumbled upon the hard and soft consonants, cases and the verb conjugations. The thing is that I can't seem to pronounce the words correctly especially with щ and ш and the soft and hard consonants. Does it make a lot of difference since I am a beginner? Because I want to learn as much vocabulary as possible. I think it will waste my time trying to focus on correct pronunciation now. But wouldn't it be hard to correct myself later? I want your opinion on this
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
You're right. It doesn't make a lot of difference to focus on pronunciation now. Sure, don't ignore pronunciation 100%. But I've found that pronunciation tends to get better automatically IF you listen to a lot of spoken Russian (watch series, talk to natives, listen to music, etc). Focus on: - vocabulary - grammar - listening - speaking And then once you reach a decent conversational level, start focusing on the more difficult letters. Record yourself, show it to a native speaker and he can usually tell where to focus most (or send it to me if you're in one of my courses).
@2406veronica8 ай бұрын
As a Russian, I can only agree that this difference is not so important. Learn the vocabulary first thing. When you know the words, it helps you to understand, to guess, at least, and to express yourself. Maybe, it will be grammatically incorrect...
@pietdev.46488 ай бұрын
sure thing, handle the vocabulary and grammar first. When you feel confident, grab a book on theoretical phonetics. I am not kidding. Pronunciation can't be learnt by imitation alone. You need to know how the speech apparatus functions
@zloychechen51508 ай бұрын
Don't worry about soft/hard too much. You can just tell everyone you're from Belarus)).
@snadianna8 ай бұрын
don't stress about grammar too much if you just started. imo, vocabulary comes first. verbs are difficult to master. start with nouns first. that's how they teach language at school and noun grammar much easier to learn once you understand the pattern. to know correct pronunciation it's better to hear it first and all the time, so, you could watch some kids cartoons that teach that to little kids or watch youtube or twich, or films in russian (if your level allows it), but keep in mind, some people could pronounce some words wrong, even native speakers. it's not a big mistake though, because not all of native speakers are linguists, so take it easy. 😉 I'm writing all this as russian native speaker. P.S. I use google all the time to correct my writing (this message included). English is too difficult in that case. I learned English by myself and make mistakes all the time, because what you hear doesn't = what you write. Even if I know pronunciation, I can't be sure I can write it correctly. At least, russian doesn't have "silent letter" problem in most cases ("ь" and "ъ" doesn't count, because they're silent by default). word "здравствуйте" is just one of the few exeptions (the only one?) we all need just to memorise (native speakers included).
@bezemdriederde8 ай бұрын
Ik luister veel naar russische muziek, dat zorgt ervoor dat kennis niet verwaterd en ik mn vocabulair kan uitbreiden. Ik heb alleen moeite met het vinden van rusissche series, hoe doe jij dat? Luister jij naar engelse series die gedubbed zijn in het russisch met engels ondertitels erbij? tips zijn welkom!
@bogienyka8 ай бұрын
почему бы и нет, озвучка ведь русская
@alekseykrivoshein82418 ай бұрын
Я думаю, что существует достаточно российских интернет ресурсов, где есть фильмы и сериалы на русском. Это для нас в России есть трудности в оплате иностранных ресурсов, потому что наши карты не принимают сейчас.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Ik vind gewoon Russische series met Engelse subs. Maar op Netflix kan je ook wel wat Engelse series vinden met Russische dub. Russische series zijn wel gemiddeld gezien wat minder dan Engelse maar wel relevanter qua taal/cultuur.
@user-ug64e3st87op7 ай бұрын
Don't stop. 😁👍 Успехов в изучении русского❤
@АнастасияКотлярова-й8з7 ай бұрын
Your pronunciation is so awesome! You did a really good job
@robetheridge69998 ай бұрын
It is funny that you say people will understand you if you make a mistake. I was asking a girl if she was ready to go, but I inadvertently used the masculine form of 'ready' because I had been working with and talking with guys all day. She looked at me as if I was an Alien speaking a language from another galaxy. She stared at me for a few seconds, then looked for help from my buddy who asked exactly what I asked but with the feminine word. She immediately answered him in the affirmative. Even he laughed at how lost she looked.
@AKEri68328 ай бұрын
It's so weird. I never address women in a feminine form. And yes, I am a native Russian speaker
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Hahaha, I think that's more her problem than yours.
@alexandertvaladze82268 ай бұрын
Are you sure the girl was Russian?)
@AKEri68328 ай бұрын
@@alexandertvaladze8226 In general, most of the girls I know usually address themselves in male form
@АлексейМихалёв-н7д8 ай бұрын
As I see you use "готов" instead "готова". It's an adjective and it have gender forms. But as you know the verbs (except past tense forms) don't have gender different forms. You can say "ты пойдёшь со мной?" instead "ты готова пойти/идти со мной?" Btw "Ты готова пойти/идти со мной?" is a kinda weird sentence and kinda scary bc it prepose that the girl have (unless you really ask if she is ready/good prepared for) to make a difficult decision/choice.
@R.a.p.h.a.e.l.a8 ай бұрын
Re the cases. Can somebody explain why Russian nouns are taught one case at a time rather than teaching all the endings of a given declension at once? I speak an inflected language on a daily basis, plus I have extensive training in Latin (the only language before Russian that I acquired by formal study rather than getting more or less by osmosis), so cases as such don't faze me at all. But Latin textbooks present you with the entire declension of a given noun, all cases singular and plural, at the same time. I'm used to this and I found it incredibly disorientating that Russian pedagogy takes the approach of doing one case at a time. It's actually been the single most difficult thing about Russian cases for me and it really knocks me off my stride.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
No clue actually. Maybe because most people do not have experience with Latin/case languages, so presenting all at the same time overwhelmes students. But that's just my experience.
@merMLAB8 ай бұрын
I suppose this is because in the Russian language, the formation of cases obeys a fairly strict rule with almost completely absent exceptions. That's why it's enough to learn a word only in the nominative case, and then use the case formation rule to incline it by case.
@R.a.p.h.a.e.l.a8 ай бұрын
@@merMLAB That's an interesting theory, but Latin has very strict rules as well. The difference being that in Latin you have to know the genitive as well as the nominative in order to decline a noun correctly. I'm wondering whether the one-case-at-a-time approach is just a newfangled way of doing things differently. I have actually seen an elementary Latin textbook that takes that approach and I thought it was weird there too!
@zloychechen51508 ай бұрын
Being a native russian, and from watching this kind of videos, i've come to realize that teaching russian to foreigners is completely different from what we had in school. I'm pretty sure we did all cases at once, if there even was such a thing. In our case it had more to do with analysis of WHY things are how they are, rather than HOW they are (because we already knew that, for the most part). For foreigners it may be the other way round, or both at once, with the emphasis on the latter, coupled with the fact that they have to memorize a shit load of things.
@nikospapageorgiou23458 ай бұрын
I speak a cased language too (Greek),and I studied Latin by the LLPSI book, which introduces cases one by one too. The book is written in a method that starts you from 0 (e.g. Rome is in Italy) and takes you chapter by chapter to more and more advanced sentences - each chapter deals with a grammatical aspect of the language. In that method, cases are introduced one by one, as they treated as some aspect of the language each, and some are more basic than others (Nominative -> accusative -> genitive -> dative -> ablative). I do not know what methodology the Russian textbooks use, but it may be motivated by similar ideas (Learn to say basic things first, we ll figure out more advanced stuff later). Of course this methodology targets people that can contain their enthusiasm and just be happy following the book.
@Mike-fm2cp7 ай бұрын
Amazing ❤
@LS-dp2gs7 ай бұрын
Like I always say, if I did not speak Russian already, I would not even start learning it. Props to you, you speak Russian so well. Your pronunciation is awesome.👍
@tlittle016 ай бұрын
In russian we learn different order: Именительный (Nominative case). Родительный (Genitive case). Дательный (Dative case). Винительный (Accusative case). Творительный (Instrumental). Предложный (Prepositional)
@MaverickGRey6 ай бұрын
Эт вы ещё забыли "звательный падеж" 😊 ru.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%97%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%82%D0%B5%D0%BB%D1%8C%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B9_%D0%BF%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%B6
@tlittle016 ай бұрын
@@MaverickGRey в современном русском языке нет звательного падежа. А если вы считаете, что в русском языке падежей много и это сложно - поинтересуйтесь их количество в языка финно-угорской группы
@MaverickGRey6 ай бұрын
@@tlittle01 ну да, ну да kzbin.info/www/bejne/m6GvmZqrjKudlac
@Serevg8 ай бұрын
Отличные советы для любого языка, не только русского.
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Согласен!
@vinllga8 ай бұрын
Wow thank you, blond handsome prince, for such great promotion of Russian
@LearntheRussianLanguage8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@cor197 ай бұрын
Смасибо за это видео! Вы поддержали во мне надежду, что я когда-нибудь всё-таки смогу освоить английский.
@toly41007 ай бұрын
You speak naturally and very well! Молодец.
@Elariel135 ай бұрын
Your pronociation is very good! I was suffering so much learning french, but it appears that my own native language is very hard to learn for foreigners... Go further with it!
@sunnyday99934 ай бұрын
Omg , I can imagine how difficult for you to memorize it . I was enjoying listening you . 👍👍👍
@bamfbamf86926 ай бұрын
“Thanks Russian for молоко» Oh yeah! Thanks English for pronouncing: thought, though, tough, cough, dough, drought. What will you say now? =)
@oksaf48937 ай бұрын
Как носителю языка, было очень интересно посмотреть это видео) спасибо большое))
@elenah85826 ай бұрын
A Russian speaker here, who absolutely loved your explanations of how to learn Russian :) Truly a great video! Will be making my English speaking children, who are learning Russian, subscribe to your channel!
@natashak.94307 ай бұрын
Падежи - это, пожалуй, самое глобально сложное для изучения... А ещё суффиксы и приставки, меняющие одно слово до неузнаваемости и противоположности смысла. А, ну и порядок слов - любой, а от этого меняется, подчас, весь смысл сказанного. P.s. Видео классное и информативное в этом смысле - спасибо.
@c0mboАй бұрын
Should be funny for you to see a video aimed at people learning russian, but instead 99% of comments be like "я русский из России и говорю по-русски..."
@LearntheRussianLanguageАй бұрын
Yeah life doesn't always go the way you expect it to
@RuslanZinovyev5 ай бұрын
You have perfect pronunciation, I am impressed, good job! I wish I had that level of pronunciation in English =)
@StanisławShow7 ай бұрын
Вы проделали большую работу👍🏼👏 аплодисменты
@CinemaRockPizza5 ай бұрын
I am Russian but watching these kinds of videos surprisingly helps me to understand the ways of approaching studies of other languages (conventionally less complicated then my native one). Audio learning is a big moment if not the most important of all. So thank you for reminding me that!
@Ilolm7 ай бұрын
Замечательное произношение! Желаю успехов в изучении!
@K.for.k7 ай бұрын
У Вас действительно хорошо получается объяснять разные маленькие нюансы!
@danylosokolov20856 ай бұрын
I am a Russian speaker, it is my native language, I have been learning English slowly throughout my life. Your Russian is very good, you are a great fellow
@nikitafrompiter6 ай бұрын
Когда я слышу что русский сложный, невольно вспоминаю как читается "C" в этих английских словах: ocean, cat, cinema.
@Dmitry-Petrov5 ай бұрын
Congratulations for your prononciation! I would be glad to have the same in English. Russian is really a difficult language, I realized it when I started to teach it. Снимаю шляпу и так держать!
@MegaEKLMN6 ай бұрын
давно не видел твоих видео, куда пропадал? продолжай, это способствует взаимопониманию между народами
@vitalyproxtor32297 ай бұрын
I am a Russian native speaker and I hardly know the rules of my language! I just read and read books and therefore I just know exactly how to spell each word and what forms it has, it automatically arises in the brain. But I remember that in the 1st grades we started learning Russian with the correct placement of accents, we even had such exercises where you need to place the accents yourself, we also read texts with already placed accents as the author showed!
@AgnieszkaKolodziejczyk-oh2rb7 ай бұрын
Привет 😊
@ЕкатеринаРязанова-з3л7 ай бұрын
Нет, ударения уже были после разбивания целого слова на слоги. Но, да, изучение ударения - одна из первых вещей при изучении (для носителя)
@Qelta6 ай бұрын
You did awesome job man, your pronunciation is very good and even charming. Good luck and hi from Moscow!