In case anyone wants the words for their notes (notice that there are only 49, did i miss one?) 101. Маленький 102. Прошлый 103. Высокий 104. Молодой 105. Настоящий 106. Следующий 107. Тяжёлый 108. Длинный 109. Простой 110. Короткий 111. Тёмный 112. Красивый 113. Близкий 114. Правый 115. Больной 116. И 117. А 118. Но 119. Не 120. К 121. Из 122. Для 123. Лицо 124. Нога 125. Палец 126. Спина 127. Язык 128. Сердце 129. Уха 130. Нос 131. Зуб 132. Волос 133. Кожа 134. Бок 135. Рот 136. Живот 137. Давать 138. Пойти 139. Работать 140. Любить 141. Значит 142. Ждать 143. Лежать 144. Писать 145. Слушать 146. Только 147. Просто 148. Хорошо 149. Много 150.
Ждать 10:22 lol funny picture also dam before this series came out I saw the post about bringing it back and I started learning vocab again I've learned around 150 words this week lets go
Suggestion-Moving forward Is it possible that after you explain all of the words as the previous videos, but at the end repeat all of the words leaving 5 seconds for us to state the meaning of the word? LOVE this as I'm preparing for TORFL A-1
Sometimes you teach me stuff about my native American English language that I never thought about! In today's example, we can say "close friend" or "close relative" or "close advisor", but we never say "close person". I think the conclusion is that "close" has to refer to a relationship. On the opposite, you can say "distant relative" but you would never say "distant friend" or "distant advisor" because it simply would not make sense.
@@pguser You're right. It's just "different". As a spanish im finding russian """"easy"""", maybe because we have a lot of verbal forms and that makes it easy to understand. Also the spanish structure of sentences can be used in russian and it makes sense. If i only spoke english.....💀💀💀
@crimsonplane7723 As a native Polish and English speaker, I can say that Russian is very easy to learn. However, the challenge will come later when reaching fluency. I don't really know how the Russian language is like tho
Just speak in front of nice Russian people, so that they can correct and motivate you to continue with your studies on the Russian language. Good luck with your goals❣️
@KittyGirlplays Learning a language should bring joy and not stress, just don't worry too much about pronunciation or incorrect endings of words.......well, unless you're going to become a professional translator. Dance as if no one were watching, sing as if no one were listening 😄
Ill write it by parts then. "Ждать" is the base form of the verb when it comes to people, you say я - жду ты - ждёшь он/она/оно - ждёт мы - ждём вы - ждёте они - ждут
But in this case, you are telling someone to do something, then you use the "imperative", wich is "Жди" Then, you can say "Жди там, пожалуйста!". That would be the correct way to say it
Might sound like a dumb question but where I live in the United States, we have a lot of Slavic people and a recent influx of Ukrainian refugees. If I were to just drop a доброе утро or как дела on someone with an accent, would it be considered rude??
Better not to ask unknown person - как дела - as it is only good for already known person. доброе утро is fine, but the best would be just Здравствуйте.
Germany is a country. The language is just German ;) As a native German speaker, who is learning Russian, I‘d say both are similar in difficulty. Russian has many different endings, depending on the gender and time, but the stem is always the same. German on the other hand has „Artikel“ which tell you the gender. German has 4 cases, Russian has 6. Russian only has 3 time forms, German has many more. I’d say German is a bitte harder. But not that much. Both languages have many things in common.
Hay que aprender inglés primero, te abre muchas puertas! Pero si no tenés ganas podés usar los subtítulos automáticos: hacés click en la tuerquita de las opciones del video, vas a subtítulos y primero le hacés click a los subtítulos automáticos en inglés. Te deberían aparecer los subtítulos automáticos en inglés. Después abrís de nuevo las opciones de subtítulos y elegís la opción de traducción automática, se te va a desplegar una lista de idiomas, buscás español, lo seleccionás y listo. La traducción no es perfecta pero funciona bastante bien, y el hecho de que te pongan imágenes para cada palabra en ruso también ayuda a evitar confusiones.
Si quieres aprender ruso, puedo proponerte entrar a mi discord de apuntes, solo estoy yo. Uso discord para ordenar mis notas y apuntes en distintos canales. Sigo mi propio modo, ritmo, y apunto X cosas que probablemente te ayuden infinito. También tengo listas de expresiones, de palabras, y un apartado donde escribo mis dudas y luego estudio y las respondo yo mismo
In case anyone wants the words for their notes (notice that there are only 49, did i miss one?)
101. Маленький
102. Прошлый
103. Высокий
104. Молодой
105. Настоящий
106. Следующий
107. Тяжёлый
108. Длинный
109. Простой
110. Короткий
111. Тёмный
112. Красивый
113. Близкий
114. Правый
115. Больной
116. И
117. А
118. Но
119. Не
120. К
121. Из
122. Для
123. Лицо
124. Нога
125. Палец
126. Спина
127. Язык
128. Сердце
129. Уха
130. Нос
131. Зуб
132. Волос
133. Кожа
134. Бок
135. Рот
136. Живот
137. Давать
138. Пойти
139. Работать
140. Любить
141. Значит
142. Ждать
143. Лежать
144. Писать
145. Слушать
146. Только
147. Просто
148. Хорошо
149. Много
150.
I think you missed давай
Cool video ! Keep going mate we support you
Thanks again Fedor for the help! Спасибо большое мой друг))
Diese 50er Einheiten sind einfach ganz toll! KLASS!
5:32 Because of the usual meaning of "while," I think that another (and maybe slightly better) translation for "а" would be "whereas"
Ждать 10:22 lol funny picture
also dam before this series came out I saw the post about bringing it back and I started learning vocab again
I've learned around 150 words this week lets go
Suggestion-Moving forward Is it possible that after you explain all of the words as the previous videos, but at the end repeat all of the words leaving 5 seconds for us to state the meaning of the word? LOVE this as I'm preparing for TORFL A-1
Sometimes you teach me stuff about my native American English language that I never thought about! In today's example, we can say "close friend" or "close relative" or "close advisor", but we never say "close person". I think the conclusion is that "close" has to refer to a relationship. On the opposite, you can say "distant relative" but you would never say "distant friend" or "distant advisor" because it simply would not make sense.
Russians learning English: THIS IS EASY
Foreigners learning Russian: 💀☠
Edit. Byforeigners i mean english speakers
Russian is easy and hard
@@pguser You're right. It's just "different". As a spanish im finding russian """"easy"""", maybe because we have a lot of verbal forms and that makes it easy to understand. Also the spanish structure of sentences can be used in russian and it makes sense.
If i only spoke english.....💀💀💀
@crimsonplane7723 As a native Polish and English speaker, I can say that Russian is very easy to learn. However, the challenge will come later when reaching fluency. I don't really know how the Russian language is like tho
@@crimsonplane7723 The similarities make it easy. The sentence structure always follows the same rules. Many aspects are similar
Any tips for speaking russian? I’m super nervous because I don’t think i know enough
Just speak in front of nice Russian people, so that they can correct and motivate you to continue with your studies on the Russian language. Good luck with your goals❣️
Больше общайтесь с носителями языка и не переживайте по поводу уровня. Уровень подтянется со временем.
When you speak Russian do not worry about endings. Just say words in any order with any endings. If it's somthing which is making you nervious about..
@KittyGirlplays Learning a language should bring joy and not stress, just don't worry too much about pronunciation or incorrect endings of words.......well, unless you're going to become a professional translator. Dance as if no one were watching, sing as if no one were listening 😄
9:27 The term in English would be "one strand of hair"
Спасибо
bro everything make sense to me cuz it's really close to my language ( Arabic)
Ждать там пожалуйста!
Does this mean “please wait there”
Подождите там пожалуйста.
Ждать там - is a little bit rude.
Lol youtube just deleted my reply
Ill write it by parts then.
"Ждать" is the base form of the verb
when it comes to people, you say
я - жду
ты - ждёшь
он/она/оно - ждёт
мы - ждём
вы - ждёте
они - ждут
But in this case, you are telling someone to do something, then you use the "imperative", wich is "Жди"
Then, you can say "Жди там, пожалуйста!". That would be the correct way to say it
Might sound like a dumb question but where I live in the United States, we have a lot of Slavic people and a recent influx of Ukrainian refugees. If I were to just drop a доброе утро or как дела on someone with an accent, would it be considered rude??
I don’t think it would be considered as rude if you have the right tone
Better not to ask unknown person - как дела - as it is only good for already known person. доброе утро is fine, but the best would be just Здравствуйте.
Most people will respond positively. You don't mimic them in English with their bad accent, but on the contrary, greet them in their native language
Or the short version of it здрасте.
It’s a STRAND of hair.
If fingers and toes are the same, how does someone in a medical profession describe where a patient is hurt??
they say палец ноги or палец руки.
Spakorno !
11:20 why did bro pick that photo 😭
💗
In spanish we don't differenciate between toes or fingers either, it's all fingers! You just specify "feet fingers"
Which one is more difficult Russian 👍 or Germany 👎
Germany is a country. The language is just German ;)
As a native German speaker, who is learning Russian, I‘d say both are similar in difficulty. Russian has many different endings, depending on the gender and time, but the stem is always the same. German on the other hand has „Artikel“ which tell you the gender. German has 4 cases, Russian has 6. Russian only has 3 time forms, German has many more. I’d say German is a bitte harder. But not that much. Both languages have many things in common.
I know better. Finish or Chinese ?
Hello👋
Высокий и длинный - это одно и тоже)))))
Но часто говорят длинные волосы а редко высокие
@@zzziyat888 Если русский скажет о ком то что он длинный все поймут о чём он)))
Арашо.
Zelensky маленький!😅
Отлично! Вот ждун!
I don't understend 😢 solo hablo español perdón
Hay que aprender inglés primero, te abre muchas puertas! Pero si no tenés ganas podés usar los subtítulos automáticos: hacés click en la tuerquita de las opciones del video, vas a subtítulos y primero le hacés click a los subtítulos automáticos en inglés. Te deberían aparecer los subtítulos automáticos en inglés. Después abrís de nuevo las opciones de subtítulos y elegís la opción de traducción automática, se te va a desplegar una lista de idiomas, buscás español, lo seleccionás y listo. La traducción no es perfecta pero funciona bastante bien, y el hecho de que te pongan imágenes para cada palabra en ruso también ayuda a evitar confusiones.
Si quieres aprender ruso, puedo proponerte entrar a mi discord de apuntes, solo estoy yo. Uso discord para ordenar mis notas y apuntes en distintos canales.
Sigo mi propio modo, ritmo, y apunto X cosas que probablemente te ayuden infinito. También tengo listas de expresiones, de palabras, y un apartado donde escribo mis dudas y luego estudio y las respondo yo mismo
4:19 me when non binary 💀 *lego break sound effect*