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This is a really good video! My sister challenged me to be able to hold a conversation in russian in just 1 month LOL so, I'm grateful for your breakdown of the alphabet!
It helps me a lot that I know the Greek alphabet in order to understand Cyrillic Russian characters, for example, the D is like Delta, F as Phi, G is gamma, L as lambda
Wow great strategy 👏 Starting naturally for beginners is good and helpful which focus learning naturally. I hope all videos r like this. This would be my favorite channel and this is my first video .
thank you brother for learning this russian alfabet easy, please post some video like this every day for others learning about russian language, thank youuu❤❤🎉🎉
I’m familiar with Greek letters thanks to all the science classes I’ve taken, so I recognize п from the letter pi, г from the letter gamma, and ф from phi. The Cyrillic alphabet and the Latin alphabet are both descendants of the Greek alphabet, but they each adapted the Greek letters in different ways.
You make these alphabet lessons so easy, the sounds, and if we repeat them regularly, can know all of them. Other videos break them down into 4 parts, but your presentation is very easy. Ty.
You crack me up, Федор 😆! Мне нравится how you included your mom and the man on the street. It was lovely to вижу ваши город. 💚🐾 (* lovely видеть вашу город * correction)
@@algion24 you're right. "Dad on the street"! 😆 I had to watch it twice (which I probably do with all of them 💚), but in this instance I already know my Cyrillic alphabet and just needed to laugh ещё раз.
Its been a few days since I started to learn russian and my advice would for a learning and comprehending words quickly would be to not just write them down but to also watch videos from multiple channels to ensure that everyone is on the same page (also do some research). Thanks for the knowledge man, keep it up!
Fedor, thank you! This is the most practical and useful explanation of the Russian alphabet for native English speakers that I have ever come across. Very grateful….I’ve been playing around with trying to learn Russian for so long but just don’t apply myself. Maybe your intensive course starting in July would be a start.
Although I already knew the russian letters but I still learned because he's super didactic and motivated and it made my learning almost intuitive. Good job! The father cameo was pretty cool too!
Just found this channel and subscribed. Thanks to Fedor. I've wanted to learn Russian for awhile now and also about the Russian people of today, in history and their culture and history. Why because my government spent the last half of the 20th century instilling fear and mistrust between the people of America and Russia. I am interested in the people and not the government, politicians or military of either country.
Great lesson, everything is quite clear. Allow me to add a few points: 1. When learning the alphabet, it's better to go in order. Learn the letters as they appear in sequence. There's a somewhat unusual method for learning the letter and sound "Ы," but my experience shows that it works. Take a pencil in your teeth and pronounce the sound "И." This will help. 2. It's easier to understand the soft sign in the context of examples. In Russian, there's the word "Тень" (shadow). In English, it sounds like " ten' " If you remove the soft sign, the last consonant "н" will be pronounced as a hard sound. The same applies to words like "лень" (len') (laziness), "сельдь" ( s'el'd' ) (herring), and others. With the hard sign, it's also quite simple. It indeed serves to make the sound before it hard. For a simpler understanding, you can consider it as the sound "й." It's not entirely correct, but it will help you avoid mistakes in pronunciation. 3. "Р" - you can draw an analogy with the Spanish "Р" sound. Also, remember the stereotypical parody of a Russian accent.
I've been trying to learn the Russian alphabet on duolingo for three months now and I haven't gotten anywhere but now thanks to this video I can finally get somewhere
Ts is my favourite sound! It’s a major player in my own conlang, though that was from before I was learning Russian. I would compare it to the ‘ts’ in ‘tsetse’. Tsetse is also my favourite word. Ts.