Ты не один такой поверь! Единственное что урок этот какой то быстро изучаемый, следить за английскими словами! Она так обучает как будто бы люди со встроенной дополнительной памятью, то есть еще и фотографической, её уроков ранее обучаемых я не нашёл
Hello Katya. I have to say that your lessons are the best and easiest to understand. Привет Катя. Я должен сказать что ваши уроки лучше всего и проще всего понять. Большое Спасибо!
To learn fluent Russian in one year is an amazing feat. Even Spanish, Portuguese, or French, for an English speaker to learn fluently in one year is amazing. For example, 13000 to 15000 words in the Russian language (does not count different word endings as new words), learning 50 new words per day- and remembering them after 10 months- requires 300 days. All that learning does not include making sentences. Correct sentence structure and the ability to construct novel words are signs of mastery. Most of the teachers here on RU-vid are NOT fluent. They speak very, very well, true. But, they still mispronounce some words and make grammar errors. True mastery requires natural learning- which is mimicking a native speaker and receiving lots of correction from someone who cares. May God bless every good person who wants to learn.
Hi, i,m Syrian and i want to learn Russian, ever since the Russian helped us out in the war against US backed terrorists in Syria i have been very interessted in learning Russians so i can impress the people coming over here ;)
@DaFuq Im from the Police State, but living in Ukraine. I want you to know you have supporters! All my friends and I stand with you and support you in stopping those terrorsists and the u.s. imperialistic terrorists as well!
Dafuq Russia is a place where people live from the heart and soul. If you have no feelings Russia is not the place for you, but i see that you do have feelings and a soul and are doing the right thing. Very soon i will be serving in the Russian army and maybe by some chance i too will be sent to Syria to keep peace against terrorism. Those fuckers need to be exterminated like weeds from a garden. I respect your culture and even Russia has many different ethnic backgrounds mixed in, we do not care where you're from or what god you worship.... we care about your actions. If you are truly living from the heart, have empathy and the right sense of reason, our arms are open in Russia and we welcome you like one of our own brothers. Best wishes to you and wish you success in your studies of Russian!
These are great videos! When writing the words on the screen I find it much easier when the words are in english letters. I am not yet familiar with the Russian letters, so it makes it difficult for me to follow along in the segments that do not use english letters. I started learning the Russian language when I was in school, and have wanted to pick it back up. I am so glad I found your channel! Spasibo!
Прочитал "Слово о полку Игореве" (в оригинале "Слово о плъку Игорєвѣ · Игорѧ сꙑна Свѧ́тъславлѧ · внука Ольгова") на древнерусском. Сейчас читаю "Хождение за три моря". На этом канале очень хорошие уроки. Посмотрев всего лишь несколько из них, я говорю по-русски лучше, чем большинство русских.
for those of us with progressive neural disorders, syndromes, conditions or diseases, 10 years from when we started learning Russian or another language will be a GOOD outcome. Just saying, as your customer. For some of us, speed is no longer the issue. Some of us will be under age 60. Some of us hope to reach 75. And we believe in exercise and diet and sleep ... and BRAIN work ! спасибо. Merci. Danke. ありがと.
Although there are many, many videos on RU-vid for Russian students, this video is certainly one of the best (if not THE BEST), as I'm still looking around. More details in my very lengthy commentary elsewhere here under TOP COMMENTS). Thank you very much.
A Polish or Serbian or Ukrainian person will find Russian easy, so I guess it's easy by their standards. Spanish will be harder for them. To an Italian, on the other hand, Spanish will be easy but Russian awfully difficult.
#2 While I totally agree that it is fun to learn Russian, I really doubt the latter part of your sentence, dear Katja. As a German I also speak French and Hebrew and once learnt a little Arabic while I was still a student. German is considered to be a pretty tough nut to crack - at least if you want to speak it properly. But Russian grammar doesn't seem to be any simpler as far as I can judge after eight months of learning it. I still have a long way to go, but I really like your videos as an addition to my lessons that I take at a private teacher. So far it has been a joyful journey to learn Russian.
This is a very needed lesson, yet the some of the phrases you chose are as unlikely as Martians visiting this planet! Example? 'Russian is fun and easy to learn' Are you kidding? Russian is rewarding, but, easy? Also, 'I became fluent in Russian in one year'. Yeah, right - only in a short story by Gogol, perhaps. No, on second thought, not even there! So, yes, this lesson is a great idea, BUT, you need to get better phrases. But, yes, I like your inventiveness in coming up with your own things!
Natasha is Russian (I am Russian and she has lived in Russia many years because she not only has no accent while speaking Russian but she also understands the way emotions in Russian work and how to express them. Its one of those little niches only native speakers carry from living life using the language for so long.) Every language has this.
1st part of video and i am like okay time to find another language to learn 😅 i love russain and i really enjoy it but i find it really really hard to learn.😪
09:26 Of the 200 most common languages in the world, English is rated as the 7th easiest, and Russian as the 7th most difficult! . I went, she went, we went, you went.........simple. All languages have some difficult parts. English its probably all the complicated past tenses. Good news is you dont need to use most of them to speak fluent English. . 28 ways to say 'her' in Russian.......57 ways to say this/that....and make sure you choose the correct one, or sound ridiculous......get ready for the pain beginner students, LOL!
Да по этому видосу и английский можно выучить ). Good lessons but mostly for ladyes. Serious guys you need russian mafia language corse, where you will be educated how to speak, where to speak, where not to smile (usa guys its for you, you smiling a lot).
If you want a particular section: 0:25 = 10 Phrases to Amaze4:30 = 10 Phrases you never want to hear9:00 = basic pronunciation17:43 = how to negate sentences (basic)19:43 = Why learn Russian (basic motivation)31:15 = clothes33:07 = 10 Phrases that make the speaker look the fool36:55 = Hotel words
PLEASE DON'T READ THE FOLLOWING commentary unless you're really VERY PATIENT. Thank you. About NINE minutes through the video, the teacher reminds us, especially native English speakers, WHY English is one of the most difficult languages - if not the most difficult - on the planet...(especially, to learn well enough. No wonder even most native English speakers - yes, even college grads - have problems spelling even ordinary words consistently correctly. Spelling Bee competitions are virtually unheard of for other languages; but English).... If Chinese is considered to be one of the most difficult languages for an English native speaker, just imagine how very, very difficult learning English would be for the Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, and Russians, to name just a few! Not only are the English-language spellings, stresses/accents...without consistent rules, and most letters of the alphabet (especially the majority of vowels) may have half a dozen different sounds (the letter A in act, art, bait, beat, cake, dais, eat, fair, gallant, heavy, etc., etc., etc.; the letter E in east, every, cake [e=silent], mete, etc.). Virtually every English letter can also be silent - a, e, i, o, u = too many to mention; b = bomB, comB, dumB, lamB, etc., etc.; c = indiCt (pr. inDITE = the c is silent, and there are many more) - and practically every letter of the English alphabet. So, the bottom line is that any English speaker who really WANTS TO - and most important of all, has the INTEREST - will FIND THE TIME and will learn not only RUSSIAN, but any other language he or she so desires. By learning the fundamentals of the English grammar and the Russian language very well, one will find it much easier to learn some of the other Eastern European languages, too! I myself grew up amongst a family, friends and relatives, most of whom spoke a different language; so I became fairly well-versed in about half a dozen languages. Thereafter, I studied not only linguistics, but I turned language-learning "a hobby," experimenting dozens and dozens of languages, becoming knowledgeable in over a dozen languages and fluent in 6-8 of them.... Using the English language as the medium, I found BASIC German (note: "basic"), to be the easiest (beyond basic, German becomes less facile); Spanish is difficult in the beginning; however, one can quickly learn tons of vocabulary by means of association; Portuguese is more difficult than Spanish, but Italian is fairly easy for someone who has a good knowledge of Spanish (plus grammar) in that these two languages are very similar. Note that for a Portuguese (or Brazilian), it's easier to learn Spanish than vice versa; Persian and Arabic use the same script (and Urdu, too, among others), but for an English speaker, Persian and Urdu are much easier to learn than Arabic. What makes Russian discouraging is the Cyrillic script. However, once the letters of the alphabet are mastered, then Russian becomes much easier than most of the above-mentioned languages, as well as Hungarian and Finnish (these two are far more difficult to learn than, say, Romanian. In fact, I would consider Romanian the easiest - though nothing in life is really very easy to learn! - Eastern European language to learn (that's for a native English speaker). Of course, I'm providing just a minute amount of the info I've accrued over many, many years - but, in order not to leave out Eastern Asian languages...please note that I found Japanese to be much easier than Korean and Chinese, for example, the lingua franca of India, Hindi (AKA Hindustani), is quite similar to Urdu (spoken in Pakistan), but the Urdu script is Arabic.... So, due to time constraints and how very busy people are, especially in these days of the Internet, I'm closing my commentary here; otherwise, I'm afraid, I'd be going on for another thousand pages to express my views on languages and language learning.... Thank you very much if you bothered to read my two cents! Thanks, again.
Greg K. disagree, it wouldn't become worldwide if it wasn't degenerated throughout the French oppression of Britain. nearly all grammar disappeared back then. English language formerly had full grammar similar to German. look, I'm learning Russian from English channel, even if I'm Slavic and English is my third language, just because English is so easy.
yeah and i don't really believe you can speak Mandarin or Hungarian. it's ofc easy for a french guy to get Spanish right, but Romanic languages are the easiest for everyone as almost all technical terms come from latin
I understand what you are trying to say, but I disagree. English basically doesn't have any grammatical concept to make it really hard. The only annoyance is the vast ammount of irregularities in pronounciation, but that's the only thing that can be considered hard. But once you know a word, how it is pronounced and written you can immediately use it, because in all but very few cases you can just put it in a sentence as it is, and in case of verbs apply the simple and few rules of conjugation . This isn't remotely the case for many other languages. Thoughts like: Well this word ends with "xyz" so how does it end if I want to use it in a conditional sentence, 3rd person plural etc - you just don't need to think about that. And there are many many more examples. I'd argue that it is by far the easiest of all Indo European languages.
katya, u have a potential of being a good teacher. but you mostly tend to focus on your russian language rather than L2 students. i mean that you d better to choose the simpler sentences and break the sentence first and teach step by step.
Hello Katyshka, my name is Kathryn. I am learning Russian myself. I plan to move to Russia in March. I was wondering if you could help me with making a video that would help me and many other people understand how your Ruble money works. There isn't really any good videos of how your Rubles work. I understand you have 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, 1,000 and 5,000 for types of Russian Ruble Banknotes. Your Russian Ruble coins are 1, 2, 5, and 10 for types of coins. I am confused though since RU-vid guy that has a RU-vid channel called (Real Russia) didn't give any examples with each banknote and coin. Since coins make money uneven it be nice to have an example of Rubles coins item at a grocery store or clothing store. For example if flour cost 10 banknote Rubles and 5 Ruble coins. So flour would cost $10.25 right is this how your Ruble coins work?? Plus maybe a comparison of the 10 ruble. How many 10 ruble coins will it take to get to the same amount of money as 5 banknote? How many 5 Ruble coins would it take to have the same amount at 5 banknotes.
Katya, you're so cute! I just started learning but from my experience the only way to really learn is to fully emerge yourself in the language. I don't have that opportunity...do I try to find a girlfriend that speaks Russian fluently?😂 What's the best way for an English speaker to really learn?
There are no such similarities between western Slavic languages and eastern Slavic languages as between western Slavic languages and south Slavic (Serbian) and between eastern Slavic languages and Serbian. So Russian couldn't be called the king of all Slavic languages. 23:30