So Katya.. You are a russian and not an American CIA troll messing with my head? That's not what my sister Eli says.. You want to visit Russia 🇷🇺? There is one place where you will fit right in.. Take care. ua-cam.com/video/vgtjgPtGmx0/v-deo.html
0:00 basic sentences 2:44 negative sentences 3:27 question sentences 4:38 where russian came from and what its called 6:50 differences between russian and english sentence structures 13:04 where russian is spoken 15:28 verb conjugation 21:01 how hard is it to learn russian 23:43 palatalization and soft/hard signs 27:36 common 25 russian phrases
REAAL, I am spanish and I can speak english, portuguese and now im learning more languages (including russian, of course, that's why I'm here) and 99% of it I know it thanks to the internet, school just taught me basic english vocabulary and I think that's it.
sometimes I think that if I knew English as well as Russian, I would prefer to speak English, just because it is so much easier. In English, you don't need to think about what gender you are talking about. When you see a dog on the street, you just say "it", not "he" or "she". And despite the fact that I am Russian , I understand how difficult our language is as a tool for communication. Stay strong who are learning russian!
Do native speakers think about gender? For me it's natural (I am Brazillian, speak Portuguese). But I am not Russian, maybe it is different for another languages.
It is really hard for an English-speaking person to pick this language up, I struggle very hard with the word order and how many different ways there is to say a specific action Where as in English just usually seems to have one word and it never changes, for example walking to places, there’s like five different words for “walk “, and the scenario dictates which one you use, very confusing
я из России и естественно знаю русский язык. Мне было интересно узнать о том какие сложности есть в изучении русского языка и поэтому я нашла это видео. В комментариях так много людей, которые учат мой родной язык!! Я желаю вам всем успеха в этом деле, вы обязательно добьетесь своего!
I am Indonesian and I love learning Russian! Both English and Russian are not my mother/daily language, but I already mastering English and I'm on my way to master Russian too 😁😁
@@madenita1693 You need to add a comma between the first "and". Plus, it is already *mastered* English, not "mastering". Basic mistakes like these are quite improbable to achieve in "master" of English. Moreover, can you pronounce some words correctly? I am sure not. If I were to be honest, there is a thing called Dunning-Kruger effect. You should not say something like this lest the real Grammar Police would be laughing at you.
@@FaranAiki thank you for your kindness to correct my mistake 🙏 i am sorry if my language disturb you. In fact English is not my national or daily language so I already proud of what I have in writing/speaking English. I Will improve my self. Thank you
Until now I've allways found grammar frustrating. Guess it gets more enjoyable when you're doing it for fun! Allso, in my experience, it's benfitial to keep a fun and relaxed attitude towards the learning of the language.
probably because you're taking the whole thing at once so the curve looks steep, if you're a beginner like l was this looks crazy, like trying to jump with new legs, you have to take it slow and one point at a time until it sounds familiar and easy, gradually the learning curve will almost flatten, it's all about doing it slow (say 1 case at a time) but daily, basically swim in the language. l mastered spanish this way too and on my way to japanese, cheers
Russian isn’t anymore difficult than English but it’s vastly different so don’t compare the two. If a child can learn to speak it, so can you. I am beginning month 4 with a tutor (1 hour/3 days per week) & I can read, write & speak it on a very, very basic level but, now I know I will improve more quickly BUT it’s going to take some time 3 Rules: 1. Think in Russian & accept all of its nuances without questioning it. For the first couple of months I asked lots of questions but found the answers slowed me down & I thought, a child would never ask because it’s pointless. Look at it this way, if you have a physics class, would you ask the teacher about a Shakespeare sonnet? Of course not because you must THINK in terms of physics in that class & accept it on those terms. Think Russian. 2. Learn to read AND write it. This will vastly improve your speaking. 3. Have realistic goals & bite sized mini goals. Unless you’re one of those very rare individuals who can learn languages quickly, forget about the idea of being a native speaker in 12 months. I have read that to get to a solid, conversational level you need to put in 1,100 - 1,200 hours of study. You can cut down those hours by studying in more practical ways & terms. As you advance past the most challenging part - grammar & cases, which is foundational, then it’s all about vocabulary, just like English. It is a beautiful language & culture & I went from thinking that I must speak it as an accomplishment to becoming completely fascinated by the culture & this complex language & that thought naturally motivates me. Hope this helps.
go to twtich and watch some russian streamers who knows English and ask some questions idk it works for me...you'll be motivated to learn and interact with them
Now I'm very thankful I was raised by a speech pathologist. My mom crammed so much English grammar knowledge in my head as a child. This is sort of like rearranging rules I already knew with additional modifiers and, of course, new words. My brain hurts. Very interesting though.
I know russian and I grew with my parents that always talk in russian. But we don't live in a country that there are people speaking that language ... and that's why my grammer in russian got really terrible. Hope this vid would help me fix it.
я учился еще в советской школе , пошел в первый класс в 6 лет , уже умея читать . Так как я любил читать и читал много , проблем с орфографией у меня не было , я просто знал как писать правильно. Спасибо моим учителям за то , что от меня не требовали заучивать правил , я писал правильно и без них , проблемы больше с запятыми . Честно говоря я плаваю в понимании обозначений всяких инфинитивов , падежей или суффиксов , советую больше читать , это упрощает знание орфографии. Кстати , последние годы я не читаю, а слушаю аудиокниги и заметил что при письме не сразу как раньше вспоминаю правильное написание , напечатанный текст лучше сохраняется в памяти чем через слух.
At counter 19.05 it would have been a much better idea to use the same verb (Read) as in the first conjugation instead of (teach). for new learners it would give them a much better sense of understanding the exact difference. of first and the second conjugation.
Thank you. I find so many common gramatical points like in Spanish!!! Please, do give us phonological advise with every better in the alphabet, withitchin words and in one verb phrases, etc. And, do you have cent Moods? If so, what and Why are they needed? Thank you very much!!💃🤗
In English there is only one possible conjugation paradigm. In romance languages we tend to have three (or 4...), for instance in Spanish the infinitive may finish in -ar, -er or in -ir, so we have three conjugations. Knowing that ending, I can check the table and know that am-ar* (to love) and com-er* (to eat) will be conjugated: Yo am-o, tù am-*as*, él am-*a*... yo com-o, tù com-*es*, él com-*e*... In Russian you'll also need to check the infinitive (dictionary form) of the verb. If it ends in *a, я*, it follows one table, and if it ends in *и, е* it follows a slightly different table. The main differences are in words that would sound "strange" when you combine too many "ee" sounds in a row, or other things that doesn't sound well.
Teacher, after knowing 100 verbs and vocabulary the second step would be to learn cases? Or you recommend start learning the six cases and then go for the rest of grammar?
This is Awesome.. I strongly recommend this to all people around the world whoever wish to know,to learn,to evaluate Russian language especially for beginners 👍
The saddest thing about today’s culture - the need for instant gratification. Deep learning & reasonable comprehension will never, ever happen instantly so you might as well move on to the next shiny object.
When will my cheeks stop hurting? I have been practicing speaking/ pronouncing Russian words for about two week now, but have to take breaks, to let my cheeks rest, every other day.. My goal was to be semi fluent in Russian in six months, but I am not sure I will be able to meet this goal, with all the rest time.
Heather Smith the pain will go away with practice! Remember you are teacher your mouth a new style of forming words so it won’t be familiar with what to do for a while.
I think that a russian native speaker is good at speaking-listening and an non native speaker (FROM YOUR COUNTRY that's very important) is good at grammar because he also did this language from scrach. He can understand easier what is difficult for you to understand or he can show you similarities between those two languages. But it depends if you want to memorize words just look videos, but if you would like to learn easier grammar, choose a non native speaker and then you can memorize words or you can find a native speaker from the internet.
Russian isn’t anymore difficult than English but it’s vastly different so don’t compare the two. If a child can learn to speak it, so can you. I am beginning month 4 with a tutor (1 hour/3 days per week) & I can read, write & speak it on a very, very basic level but, now I know I will improve more quickly BUT it’s going to take some time 3 Rules: 1. Think in Russian & accept all of its nuances without questioning it. For the first couple of months I asked lots of questions but found the answers slowed me down & I thought, a child would never ask because it’s pointless. Look at it this way, if you have a physics class, would you ask the teacher about a Shakespeare sonnet? Of course not because you must THINK in terms of physics in that class & accept it on those terms. Think Russian. 2. Learn to read AND write it. This will vastly improve your speaking. 3. Have realistic goals & bite sized mini goals. Unless you’re one of those very rare individuals who can learn languages quickly, forget about the idea of being a native speaker in 12 months. I have read that to get to a solid, conversational level you need to put in 1,100 - 1,200 hours of study. You can cut down those hours by studying in more practical ways & terms. As you advance past the most challenging part - grammar & cases, which is foundational, then it’s all about vocabulary, just like English. It is a beautiful language & culture & I went from thinking that I must speak it as an accomplishment to becoming completely fascinated by the culture & this complex language & that thought naturally motivates me. Hope this helps.
А я говорю на русском, рождения.) Я не очень знаю английский, не смотря на то, что живу в Англии с родителями уже 15 лет. Словарный запас ещё не очень развит, не говорила на английском как на русском. Те кто хотя выучить русский язык, знайте, вам нужно пройти очень много🌹
In English, this may mean an additional action of the subject. For example, going outside, he closed the door. Выйдя на улицу, он закрыл дверь. In other words, when he goes outside he closes the door at the same time.
Will i own basic level by Russian and English i own no practice speech but i want to have good high level how it be while i quick my educate under treatment of mental healing
I can help in learning Russian, as I am a native speaker of this language. The first two classes will be absolutely free. Научу понимать утонченные фразы и слова, если не выупаешь* их, дабы ужн скоро понимать русов*. I speak English well, so there will be no problems.
Im confused about the doubke negatives. "Nothing didn't happen" is VERY different than "Nothing happned". What would I use to tell someone that "in fact nothing did not happen"? Because there are times when that sentence in English is the optimal sentence to use
You're trying to speak English with Russian words, like those Italians in Costa del Sol who speak Italian with Spanish words... Don't try to push structures that doesn't exist into other languages, it only creates frustration and slows the learning. When the ti.e comes, you'll learn how to communicate that meaning. Do you say "Nothing didn't happen" very often? Sounds akward even in English, like part of a Monty Pytons' sketch 😂
Thank you. I'm using Duolingo app to earn but it has almost no grammar. And I also use an app called learn Greek and learn Russian from the came company to supplement my Duolingo but both just focus on word recognition. PS I'm already bilingual in ASL and English but I want to expand particularly because I'm tired of looking at the back of icons from Christian Russian monistaries and not knowing what the heck it says. I know church Slavic and common Russian are different but close enough to start.
я как русскоговорящий могу вам искренне признаться что и для русских церковнославянская письменность и речь понятна хорошо если наполовину , многие слова исчезли из речи или поменяли смысл вплоть до противоположного . Иногда слушая речь других славян вроде болгар , сербов , поляков или украинцев думается что им проще понять церковнославянский чем самим русским )). Русский язык очень сильно изменился со времен Пушкина , не зря Пушкин так почитается в литературе , так как был одним из основателей современного литературного языка , его стихи и проза легко понятна до сих пор в отличии от других его современников
Thank you for this video but I feel that you over simplify some things. e.g. Он doesn't necessarily mean he and you can use it for non human and non living objects as well. ( В этом комнате есть один стол. Он чёрный).
They are summarising the Russian grammar in 35 minutes, not 35 hours. So, of course they will oversimplify to give a bird's eye overview of the language for us beginners. The target isn't to teach you all the suffix for every gender/number/case, but to let us know that the words will change in that way and we'll learn the rules/patterns
Hello Lena! What is perfective and imperfective in Russian language? How can we compare this with English? I hope you'll answer. About your Channel : It's very interesting and I've been a big fan of you since I started watching only a single video.Easy to understand, Well explanation,Very useful 👍 Thanks a lot.. 😍🏆🏅
Perfective mean it is already done so like i have worked. İt began in the past and ended there. But İmperfect is started in the past but is still ongoing in the presence. Perfect means done. İMperfect means not done.
Why do all these related languages place the accusative case way down the list instead of where it logically belongs, namely right after the nominative case when it is often identical to the nominative? To me this makes the inflections easier to remember in many languages including Russian, Latin and German. I blame it on old, crusty grammarians with obtuse reasons that interest no one but themselves. It's time to fix this!
This was a very good overview. Two key points though. 1. It is very fast. You will need to pause a lot a lot to digest it step by step. 2. They fall in the classic trap that almost every foreign language course falls into. They assume Americans know grammar and grammar terms. I found it to be extremely rare that anyone knows grammar terms. This video does not always explain grammar terms as well as uncommon English words. That is a serious error. A misunderstood word in your own language is no different than a foreign word you don’t know. There is NO understanding. Period. So at least SIMPLY define your terms when you use them the first time. Secondly, no one ever learned their language by listing out all the ways you change the ending of words. Fine for reference. So this video covers so many of the key points of Russian. Probably the most valuable source I have found yet. But do keep in mind to 1. Take it in bite size chunks. And 2) look up every single English word you don’t know. Since our educational system is a disaster beyond disasters, I would highly suggest that Russian Pod101 do a very simple explanation of each and every grammatical word used, with very clear examples of each and every one.
Выучив великий и могучий русский, я с некоторой долей пренебрежения пошел на другие европейские языки. И я оказался прав - все они намного проще русского!
To say Russian is easier than English is not really correct. For English speakers, the declension system is difficult to learn since there is no English equivalent. In other words you can’t rely on English all that much to learn Russian. That being said with hard work it is still worth the effort as Russian is a more exact and beautiful language than English.
There is limited declension in English - "child" singular, "children" plural, "child's" singular possessive, "children's" plural possessive. In English we say "In the garden" whereas in Russian it is «В саду» or you can just say «Саду» and the «В» is understood by the ending of «Саду».
bit.ly/3MR9euK Click here and get the best resources online to master Russian grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
So Katya..
You are a russian and not an American CIA troll messing with my head? That's not what my sister Eli says..
You want to visit Russia 🇷🇺? There is one place where you will fit right in.. Take care. ua-cam.com/video/vgtjgPtGmx0/v-deo.html
She actually said she could hook you up with a job. Enjoy yourself rain deer.. Cya.. ua-cam.com/video/BpD9ZSnHOoQ/v-deo.html
Thank you for your valuable guidance.
0:00 basic sentences
2:44 negative sentences
3:27 question sentences
4:38 where russian came from and what its called
6:50 differences between russian and english sentence structures
13:04 where russian is spoken
15:28 verb conjugation
21:01 how hard is it to learn russian
23:43 palatalization and soft/hard signs
27:36 common 25 russian phrases
спасибо брат
q
@@yernaryergaly7253 im proud of myself for not needing google to translate that for me
@@thecoolguy9364 same
@@thecoolguy9364 SAME
When you learn better in UA-cam than online school
Like really
I am a native Russian speaker and I am learning English. native English speakers write me please we will help each other with practice.
REAAL, I am spanish and I can speak english, portuguese and now im learning more languages (including russian, of course, that's why I'm here) and 99% of it I know it thanks to the internet, school just taught me basic english vocabulary and I think that's it.
sometimes I think that if I knew English as well as Russian, I would prefer to speak English, just because it is so much easier. In English, you don't need to think about what gender you are talking about. When you see a dog on the street, you just say "it", not "he" or "she". And despite the fact that I am Russian , I understand how difficult our language is as a tool for communication. Stay strong who are learning russian!
😂😂😂😂😂 я 🙋 it's too difficult 😣
Do native speakers think about gender? For me it's natural (I am Brazillian, speak Portuguese). But I am not Russian, maybe it is different for another languages.
It is really hard for an English-speaking person to pick this language up, I struggle very hard with the word order and how many different ways there is to say a specific action Where as in English just usually seems to have one word and it never changes, for example walking to places, there’s like five different words for “walk “, and the scenario dictates which one you use, very confusing
@@chrislaverick6413 bro I'm speak hindi and I have learned english and now I'm learning Russian through english 😂
@@adityaironside7611 whoa, good job man lok
я из России и естественно знаю русский язык. Мне было интересно узнать о том какие сложности есть в изучении русского языка и поэтому я нашла это видео.
В комментариях так много людей, которые учат мой родной язык!!
Я желаю вам всем успеха в этом деле, вы обязательно добьетесь своего!
Спасибо
Спасибо, выучил русский язык просто идеально!!
I am Indonesian and I love learning Russian!
Both English and Russian are not my mother/daily language, but I already mastering English and I'm on my way to master Russian too 😁😁
Same here
"... already *mastering* English ...."
Huh, weird, it seems Dunning-Kruger effect is on the way.
@@FaranAiki can you correct my sentence, grammar police? 😁
@@madenita1693
You need to add a comma between the first "and". Plus, it is already *mastered* English, not "mastering". Basic mistakes like these are quite improbable to achieve in "master" of English.
Moreover, can you pronounce some words correctly? I am sure not.
If I were to be honest, there is a thing called Dunning-Kruger effect. You should not say something like this lest the real Grammar Police would be laughing at you.
@@FaranAiki thank you for your kindness to correct my mistake 🙏 i am sorry if my language disturb you. In fact English is not my national or daily language so I already proud of what I have in writing/speaking English. I Will improve my self. Thank you
Until now I've allways found grammar frustrating. Guess it gets more enjoyable when you're doing it for fun! Allso, in my experience, it's benfitial to keep a fun and relaxed attitude towards the learning of the language.
I learned so much in 39 mins from this video, it's shocking 😲
The lady teaching salutations is BRILLIANT!! Funny, cañm, lovely!!!
Абсолютно здорово. За несколько минут я многому научился. Спасибо.
She is a great teacher and is super beautiful and makes the learning fun!
Russian is a beautiful sounding language but man the grammar just kills all my motivation to learn it.
this video has murdered my motivation. i thought i was doing fine until i watched this.
probably because you're taking the whole thing at once so the curve looks steep, if you're a beginner like l was this looks crazy, like trying to jump with new legs, you have to take it slow and one point at a time until it sounds familiar and easy, gradually the learning curve will almost flatten, it's all about doing it slow (say 1 case at a time) but daily, basically swim in the language. l mastered spanish this way too and on my way to japanese, cheers
Russian isn’t anymore difficult than English but it’s vastly different so don’t compare the two. If a child can learn to speak it, so can you.
I am beginning month 4 with a tutor (1 hour/3 days per week) & I can read, write & speak it on a very, very basic level but, now I know I will improve more quickly BUT it’s going to take some time
3 Rules:
1. Think in Russian & accept all of its nuances without questioning it. For the first couple of months I asked lots of questions but found the answers slowed me down & I thought, a child would never ask because it’s pointless.
Look at it this way, if you have a physics class, would you ask the teacher about a Shakespeare sonnet? Of course not because you must THINK in terms of physics in that class & accept it on those terms. Think Russian.
2. Learn to read AND write it. This will vastly improve your speaking.
3. Have realistic goals & bite sized mini goals. Unless you’re one of those very rare individuals who can learn languages quickly, forget about the idea of being a native speaker in 12 months. I have read that to get to a solid, conversational level you need to put in 1,100 - 1,200 hours of study. You can cut down those hours by studying in more practical ways & terms.
As you advance past the most challenging part - grammar & cases, which is foundational, then it’s all about vocabulary, just like English.
It is a beautiful language & culture & I went from thinking that I must speak it as an accomplishment to becoming completely fascinated by the culture & this complex language & that thought naturally motivates me.
Hope this helps.
go to twtich and watch some russian streamers who knows English and ask some questions idk it works for me...you'll be motivated to learn and interact with them
О привет ребятки!
Now I'm very thankful I was raised by a speech pathologist. My mom crammed so much English grammar knowledge in my head as a child. This is sort of like rearranging rules I already knew with additional modifiers and, of course, new words. My brain hurts. Very interesting though.
Very comprehensive and easily understandible. Many thanks Lena. Spaciba.
at least use cyrillic
Plz make a video about conversations so it may help beginners to speak russian in easy manner
Katya you are funny and teacher thank you for explaining the difference between English/Russian grammar. It is very helpful.
thanks for all the efforts this video is very good
This should be the first lesson after learning the alphabet and basic words.
I know russian and I grew with my parents that always talk in russian. But we don't live in a country that there are people speaking that language ... and that's why my grammer in russian got really terrible.
Hope this vid would help me fix it.
Russian is my native language, but I still watch your videos because of Lena =).
ну она красивая 😉
Absolutamente genial. En pocos minutos aprendí un montón. Gracias.
Awesome gyan mam.
Keep it up.
You made russian so simple to learn.
Thank you mam so much.
🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹💥💥💥
Very interesting method to teach Russian , thank you
What a gift this channel is...thank you so much...thank you for all your hard work to help us...looking for pdf cheat sheets now...
Wow this was really helpful, спасибо!
я учился еще в советской школе , пошел в первый класс в 6 лет , уже умея читать . Так как я любил читать и читал много , проблем с орфографией у меня не было , я просто знал как писать правильно. Спасибо моим учителям за то , что от меня не требовали заучивать правил , я писал правильно и без них , проблемы больше с запятыми . Честно говоря я плаваю в понимании обозначений всяких инфинитивов , падежей или суффиксов , советую больше читать , это упрощает знание орфографии. Кстати , последние годы я не читаю, а слушаю аудиокниги и заметил что при письме не сразу как раньше вспоминаю правильное написание , напечатанный текст лучше сохраняется в памяти чем через слух.
At 18:34 you show verb conjugation. In the 1st conjugation, first person singular can end in either -у or -ю. How do .i know which of these to use?
Спасибо большущее друзья!
Thank you so much🍀
This was amazing
excellent video. It answered many questions I have. Great stuff!😁😎🤠
At counter 19.05 it would have been a much better idea to use the same verb (Read) as in the first conjugation instead of (teach). for new learners it would give them a much better sense of understanding the exact difference. of first and the second conjugation.
6:34 Just how can you differenciate between the "и" from the first word and "м" in the Тумане .... (Handwritting)
Very good production
Hi would you also bring the rules and structure of russian tense?
Very good teachers
Thank you. I find so many common gramatical points like in Spanish!!!
Please, do give us phonological advise with every better in the alphabet, withitchin words and in one verb phrases, etc.
And, do you have cent Moods? If so, what and Why are they needed?
Thank you very much!!💃🤗
In 3:20 you pronounced Γ as v, but Γ should be g. Is not that right?
Guuh it is
It is same as
ग or গ
Can you kindly explain as to when the 2nd conjugation is used in Russian?
It depends from only the verb which you use =)
P. S. Lagta hai, aap bhaarat se hain😉 main hindi bhi sikhta huu
In English there is only one possible conjugation paradigm. In romance languages we tend to have three (or 4...), for instance in Spanish the infinitive may finish in -ar, -er or in -ir, so we have three conjugations. Knowing that ending, I can check the table and know that am-ar* (to love) and com-er* (to eat) will be conjugated:
Yo am-o, tù am-*as*, él am-*a*...
yo com-o, tù com-*es*, él com-*e*...
In Russian you'll also need to check the infinitive (dictionary form) of the verb. If it ends in *a, я*, it follows one table, and if it ends in *и, е* it follows a slightly different table. The main differences are in words that would sound "strange" when you combine too many "ee" sounds in a row, or other things that doesn't sound well.
Teacher, after knowing 100 verbs and vocabulary the second step would be to learn cases? Or you recommend start learning the six cases and then go for the rest of grammar?
Good video! Thanks! (There is a lot of background noise though)
I'm also learning Russian...
Love you Russia
Very, very valuble. So easier to me as I am Croatian speaker too
Though in my opinion It's so simple IF Teacher keep it a little kalm when speaking and showing scenes☺️🙏🏻
Katya would be a reason to learn Russian. Unfortunately I already have enough to do with English and French.
Всё понятно и всё по делу 👌
It's not hard to us Serbs, because it's similar.😊Большое спасибо!
11:48 what is diferent between lubil and lubit and when to use lubil and lubit????
любит - [lubit] - he loves (Present)
любил - [lubil] - he loved (Past)
This is Awesome.. I strongly recommend this to all people around the world whoever wish to know,to learn,to evaluate Russian language especially for beginners 👍
idk why I was so happy when I saw my country, Georgia here - 15:14
@6:30 why does Д become uppercase D and lowercase g in cursive, along with И becoming U and Т becoming an M? 😅
This is perfect!! Thank you!
Fabulous... Great... Perfect... Gracias.. Obrigado.. Thanks..
can anybody explain why an "O" sometimes turns into an "A" in the pronouncing? it confuses me and i cant find information for it. thx in advance.
ua-cam.com/video/CE_4-ZEZAbE/v-deo.html
Because of th vowel reduction. English does it too.
when it's not a stressed syllable like in words "плохой" or "хороший", the first O sounds like A..it happens naturaly just like in English
This is 35 minutes, not 40 minutes
*Triggered*
the video is 35 minutes. now it's your turn to repeat everything, it should take you no longer than 40 minutes.
and so much shit unrelated to grammar
The saddest thing about today’s culture - the need for instant gratification.
Deep learning & reasonable comprehension will never, ever happen instantly so you might as well move on to the next shiny object.
Menya Savut 35 минут ХАХАХАХХ я его знаю с рождения))))0)))))0)
@@SeXYDaSh и что
Amazing
The verb conjunction seems more hard to me
At counter 11.35 you have failed to make a proper distinction between the word LIKE and Love.
This really helped but it is just that my tounge always goes crazy trying to pronounce one of these russian words
Do You speak Russian that fast in the paid version as well ??
I like you she says “Катя”
Thank you for this vedio
what you mean with russian have no many exceptions? All that this language has is exceptions
ahahaha. there are too many patterns to remember, so it is easier to memorise every word form.
When will my cheeks stop hurting? I have been practicing speaking/ pronouncing Russian words for about two week now, but have to take breaks, to let my cheeks rest, every other day.. My goal was to be semi fluent in Russian in six months, but I am not sure I will be able to meet this goal, with all the rest time.
Heather Smith the pain will go away with practice! Remember you are teacher your mouth a new style of forming words so it won’t be familiar with what to do for a while.
Yea it's not cool stepping on somebody's food in the train 34:15. Just kidding, thank's for the lessons!
i think it is foot, not food
@@mikayileliyev4905 Ahh, I think you are right! Silly me
I have signed Russian pod 101 but I am not receiveing anything on my email
How can I memorize thousands of words with no Russian speaker in my country??
I have to be a computer now , OMG
I think that a russian native speaker is good at speaking-listening and an non native speaker (FROM YOUR COUNTRY that's very important) is good at grammar because he also did this language from scrach. He can understand easier what is difficult for you to understand or he can show you similarities between those two languages. But it depends if you want to memorize words just look videos, but if you would like to learn easier grammar, choose a non native speaker and then you can memorize words or you can find a native speaker from the internet.
Find yourself a Russian speaking friend.
Russian isn’t anymore difficult than English but it’s vastly different so don’t compare the two. If a child can learn to speak it, so can you.
I am beginning month 4 with a tutor (1 hour/3 days per week) & I can read, write & speak it on a very, very basic level but, now I know I will improve more quickly BUT it’s going to take some time
3 Rules:
1. Think in Russian & accept all of its nuances without questioning it. For the first couple of months I asked lots of questions but found the answers slowed me down & I thought, a child would never ask because it’s pointless.
Look at it this way, if you have a physics class, would you ask the teacher about a Shakespeare sonnet? Of course not because you must THINK in terms of physics in that class & accept it on those terms. Think Russian.
2. Learn to read AND write it. This will vastly improve your speaking.
3. Have realistic goals & bite sized mini goals. Unless you’re one of those very rare individuals who can learn languages quickly, forget about the idea of being a native speaker in 12 months. I have read that to get to a solid, conversational level you need to put in 1,100 - 1,200 hours of study. You can cut down those hours by studying in more practical ways & terms.
As you advance past the most challenging part - grammar & cases, which is foundational, then it’s all about vocabulary, just like English.
It is a beautiful language & culture & I went from thinking that I must speak it as an accomplishment to becoming completely fascinated by the culture & this complex language & that thought naturally motivates me.
Hope this helps.
I can help you. I am almost a native Russian speaker. I would like to learn English. We can help each other.
Watch russian news
Thank you for your video. Russian Alphabet comes from the Bulgarian one as I know. Correct me if I am wrong, please.
It comes from old slavonic
How about Russian' prefixes and suffixes ?
А я говорю на русском, рождения.) Я не очень знаю английский, не смотря на то, что живу в Англии с родителями уже 15 лет. Словарный запас ещё не очень развит, не говорила на английском как на русском. Те кто хотя выучить русский язык, знайте, вам нужно пройти очень много🌹
Help me with english =)
thanks
How can i say “stop, please don’t shoot” 😂
😱 очень хорошо
Пиздец просто интересно как люди учат наш родной язык :D
@@meandyou4198 Раз* смотрю*
никак это не возможно так как говоря честно и открыто мы русские знаем его не так уж хорошо
@@awaloki-p2s тоже верно
А также *зачем*? :)
Интересно, почему вы сделали так трудно язык
Please can you explain Деепричастие I need to learn it but I didn't see any video about it
It means participle in русский
In English, this may mean an additional action of the subject. For example, going outside, he closed the door. Выйдя на улицу, он закрыл дверь. In other words, when he goes outside he closes the door at the same time.
Will i own basic level by Russian and English i own no practice speech but i want to have good high level how it be while i quick my educate under treatment of mental healing
I can help in learning Russian, as I am a native speaker of this language. The first two classes will be absolutely free. Научу понимать утонченные фразы и слова, если не выупаешь* их, дабы ужн скоро понимать русов*. I speak English well, so there will be no problems.
Спасибо большая
Большое =)
Im confused about the doubke negatives. "Nothing didn't happen" is VERY different than "Nothing happned". What would I use to tell someone that "in fact nothing did not happen"? Because there are times when that sentence in English is the optimal sentence to use
You're trying to speak English with Russian words, like those Italians in Costa del Sol who speak Italian with Spanish words...
Don't try to push structures that doesn't exist into other languages, it only creates frustration and slows the learning.
When the ti.e comes, you'll learn how to communicate that meaning. Do you say "Nothing didn't happen" very often? Sounds akward even in English, like part of a Monty Pytons' sketch 😂
Thank you. I'm using Duolingo app to earn but it has almost no grammar. And I also use an app called learn Greek and learn Russian from the came company to supplement my Duolingo but both just focus on word recognition. PS I'm already bilingual in ASL and English but I want to expand particularly because I'm tired of looking at the back of icons from Christian Russian monistaries and not knowing what the heck it says. I know church Slavic and common Russian are different but close enough to start.
я как русскоговорящий могу вам искренне признаться что и для русских церковнославянская письменность и речь понятна хорошо если наполовину , многие слова исчезли из речи или поменяли смысл вплоть до противоположного . Иногда слушая речь других славян вроде болгар , сербов , поляков или украинцев думается что им проще понять церковнославянский чем самим русским )). Русский язык очень сильно изменился со времен Пушкина , не зря Пушкин так почитается в литературе , так как был одним из основателей современного литературного языка , его стихи и проза легко понятна до сих пор в отличии от других его современников
my grammar is not fixed at all. but i'll give u thumbs up for the effort
Thank you for this video but I feel that you over simplify some things. e.g. Он doesn't necessarily mean he and you can use it for non human and non living objects as well. ( В этом комнате есть один стол. Он чёрный).
ashkan roshanzadeh so он and она can also be used like an English “it?”
@@hannahbb2557 Correct. In Russian we use он/она for animals and objects.
В этОЙ комнате (комната - женский род)
They are summarising the Russian grammar in 35 minutes, not 35 hours. So, of course they will oversimplify to give a bird's eye overview of the language for us beginners.
The target isn't to teach you all the suffix for every gender/number/case, but to let us know that the words will change in that way and we'll learn the rules/patterns
Why do words ending in 'го' sound like 'во'
Я Русский но сам не понимаю почему так слышится
The English description on the screen blocks russian words . Audio is enough
Do you have passive voice like English?
Thank you for your video. Russian Alphabet comes from Thailand one as I know. Correct me if I am wrong, please.
Yes, you are wrong
You're wrong
Hello Lena! What is perfective and imperfective in Russian language? How can we compare this with English? I hope you'll answer.
About your Channel : It's very interesting and I've been a big fan of you since I started watching only a single video.Easy to understand, Well explanation,Very useful 👍
Thanks a lot.. 😍🏆🏅
Perfective mean it is already done so like i have worked. İt began in the past and ended there. But İmperfect is started in the past but is still ongoing in the presence.
Perfect means done. İMperfect means not done.
I hate grammar in all languages but THIS
THIS MAKES ME WANNA BANG MY HEAD AGAINST THE WALL
Clutch those straws!
Why do all these related languages place the accusative case way down the list instead of where it logically belongs, namely right after the nominative case when it is often identical to the nominative? To me this makes the inflections easier to remember in many languages including Russian, Latin and German. I blame it on old, crusty grammarians with obtuse reasons that interest no one but themselves. It's time to fix this!
im alex,like learn russian,thank you mam...
Aren't = Are not. Но спасибо большой, очень хорошо.
This was a very good overview. Two key points though. 1. It is very fast. You will need to pause a lot a lot to digest it step by step. 2. They fall in the classic trap that almost every foreign language course falls into. They assume Americans know grammar and grammar terms. I found it to be extremely rare that anyone knows grammar terms. This video does not always explain grammar terms as well as uncommon English words. That is a serious error. A misunderstood word in your own language is no different than a foreign word you don’t know. There is NO understanding. Period. So at least SIMPLY define your terms when you use them the first time. Secondly, no one ever learned their language by listing out all the ways you change the ending of words. Fine for reference.
So this video covers so many of the key points of Russian. Probably the most valuable source I have found yet. But do keep in mind to 1. Take it in bite size chunks. And 2) look up every single English word you don’t know. Since our educational system is a disaster beyond disasters, I would highly suggest that Russian Pod101 do a very simple explanation of each and every grammatical word used, with very clear examples of each and every one.
So how come there are two “you read” with different endings? When do you use one snd not the other?
Выучив великий и могучий русский, я с некоторой долей пренебрежения пошел на другие европейские языки. И я оказался прав - все они намного проще русского!
Нет русский язык очень даже прост. Я выучил русский смотря мульти по русскому. И грамматика очень простая. По мне английский сложнее.
Isn’t it koshki em myshey ? Correct me if I am wrong
why do I hear the "Г" sound like a "V" when it's supposed to sound like a hard "G"??? Or have you made a typo???
not always, in such words as "его, сегодня, хорошего, доброго" it sounds like "V", in most other cases it will sound like a hard "G"
Hardest grammar on Earth: Yeah 40 minutes should be enough.
its hard to you.
Not that hard
Would like to learn Tamil and Bengali grammer ?
@@slavoisheir4129 Other languages being harder, does not mean Russian is easy. Even Polish, is a more complicated language than Russian.
To say Russian is easier than English is not really correct. For English speakers, the declension system is difficult to learn since there is no English equivalent. In other words you can’t rely on English all that much to learn Russian.
That being said with hard work it is still worth the effort as Russian is a more exact and beautiful language than English.
There is limited declension in English - "child" singular, "children" plural, "child's" singular possessive, "children's" plural possessive. In English we say "In the garden" whereas in Russian it is «В саду» or you can just say «Саду» and the «В» is understood by the ending of «Саду».
Thank you for the tip.
@Logan Donnelly As is clearly shown by ua-cam.com/video/0lczHvB3Y9s/v-deo.html
Hello, i am native Russian speaker i study English we can help each other, just write to me.
Dude, it really is