1:02 - Reading Exercise 7:06 - Ж, Ш, Ц - the consonants that are always hard 7:53 - Ч, Щ - the consonants that are always soft 8:33 - Syllables with several consonants in a row ___ Transcript to the video: www.linkedin.com/pulse/exercise-learn-how-read-russian-comprehensive-olga-misuraghina/?published=t 👆 This video is a part of a guided plan for learning Russian: ru-vid.com/group/PLpgpVaWoAiTEF8aNQvPnFCLBrtIeF3tqa
I've been watching this video every single day as part of a new habit and I can't put into words how effective this exercise is if you do it regularly! If you find yourself having a hard time reading Russian words, I assure you, if you do this exercise every day, you'll get the hang of it in no time! Videos like this that evoke real progress! Thank you so much for your time and dedication to boil down the concepts and tips that really do the difference! Keep up the amazing job you are doing.
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Thank you ! For a decade I have not understood words having a hard or soft consontant as the final letter. Your lecture made it clear. THANK YOU ! Why could other teachers not have explained it as clearly as you...?
Im enjoying this you make this complicated language easy and smooth. Im an a Kenyan from a tribe that belongs to the Bantu clan speaker's we have no historical exposure to slavanik language but come rain or sunshine. I must learn Russian
This particular video has been extremely helpful in understanding hard vs soft consonants! I come back to it often. You really understand how important it is for beginners to see the instructors mouth clearly while learning the phonetics and the value of repetition. Thanks very much.
I would like to see you do a RU-vid video concerning how to write RU in the pre-Revolutionary script, using all the characters which were purged by the Bolsheviks between 1918 and 1926. Also, I would like to see you do a video on how to speak RU without the vowel reductions which happened about two hundred years ago (e.g. the reduction of "O" to "Ah" in unstressed sullables.) It seems that Lower Volga RU preserves the older form of speech, and I want to emulate that. Please, more RU-vids ! ☺
The only thing I struggle with is the ы and и. Even with all the Consonants heard. I still can't hear the difference. Edit: now I get it. Ы is pronounced as 'iei'-isch and и as 'ee' like in fleet?
Thank you for a great set of videos! I recently started learning Russian (with the help of a few textbooks, RU-vid and a few friends who are native speakers). My native language is Norwegian, and I also speak English fluently after having lived in the US for several years. The hardest letter for me to pronounce is Х. I tend to make it too «throaty» or hard like in Spanish or Arabic. I can´t seem to find the middle ground. Do you have any tips on how I can get it right? I have been listening again and again at 3:12, but I still can´t pronounce the letter or the syllables.
Im enjoying this you make this complicated language easy and smooth. Im an a Kenyan from a tribe that belongs to the Bantu clan speaker's we have no historical exposure to slavanik language but come rain or sunshine. I must learn Russian
you actually have pronounced "Й" when you said "БЮ" and you know that's wrong, in your previous videos you had mentioned that whenever a consonant is followed by a vowel right next to it the "Й" sound disappears!
To hear the difference between Й and no Й in syllables like БЮ - БЬЮ and such, go here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-76Zqi9to-yc.html