I've been learning Russian for a couple weeks now ( I've always been fascinated with the language and culture) and even though I don't have enough money to pay for your amazing Russian language course, your videos are more than helpful. I remember so much more easily, the things that you teach. As well as your cheerful nature making the videos very easy to watch and listen to. Thank you for the great content
Адвокат прочитал юридическую книгу вчера. Алла приготовила вкусный ужин. Руслан и Людмила идут из парка. Гид гуляет по городу с пятьюдесятью туристами. Она дала ключи отцу. Учитель объясняет проблему ученикам.
These videos help me so much. I have been using Duolingo for learning Russian for a year and a half now, but having an actual person explain things to you helps tremendously. Спасибо Фёдор!
Я пью чай. Я смотрю мои кошки. Они смотрят телевизор. Их любимое шоу "Доктор Кто". (Yes, it's my cats who watch TV. My Russian isn't anywhere near good enough yet to explain how hilarious this is. They'll follow the nearest human around meowing "Ooo? Ooo?" until you turn on Doctor Who. Then they meow at the screen, hide from the baddies, pounce on each other when the music swells, etc. It's like having my own pantomime show right in my house... so, they watch TV, and I watch them watch TV.) Re: cases, I have two guidelines for myself right now - try to notice them when I'm reading/listening, and try to use the correct one when I'm writing something (because I have time to think about it/check it). Otherwise, I don't stress out about them. I know I'll get them down with time and exposure. спасибо Федор!
Здрастье. Как у вас дела? Меня зовут Джудит, мне тридцать лет и я живу в Испании. Я люблю смотреть фильмы, слушать музыку, кататься на велосипеде и на роликах, и также, ездить на природу. Это всё. Хорошего дня. Пока ♡ (Всё правильно?)
This is great! The only thing i would change is "а также" instead of "и также". This is not mistake, but russians typically dont use "и" before "также"
Excellent teacher. I have been learning for nearly 10 years and I still can't get a grip on the cases, I hate them. But Fedor's forthright explanations are helping me slowly, and my tennis is getting better as well!
Yeah, I noticed that a lot of people quit learning Russian very early because of cases. By the way, I used the same subject verb object structure & vocabulary of things around me that you recommended. But I practiced forming the accusative case while I was driving, while I was going for a walk, while I was at home or work. Basically I could do this everywhere, & later I would check to see if I was correct. The structure is simply, I see...(something). Я вижу...(что-то). Я вижу книгу, кружку, гору, машину, поезд, грузовик, улицу, дерево, скамейку, солнце, траву, луну, небо, облако и т.д. Also, I could add the nominative case & adjectives by using this structure: Это машина. Я вижу машину. Это красная машина. Я вижу красную машину. Это книга. Я вижу книгу. Это большая книга. Я вижу большую книгу. Just a suggestion as maybe a part 2 or next step to this if you think it could be effective or helpful for beginners.
Some aspects of Russian is intimidating, but one day I realized that the words are the same, but it's like changing the suffix rather than the prefix like in English.
Absolutely amazing advice given in this video! I am a beginner when it comes to Russian (just A1 level), but I am a native Croatian and in Croatian we have cases as well, and I do understand how they work (very similar in both out languages)...but I still find Russian cases "not easy" to learn in a short period of time and I do struggle when it comes to using them correctly in a sentence XD XD
I would love to make a sentence. I write mostly longhand (in cursive) on paper. I have no idea how to type cryllic letters on RU-vid. But, thank you, you are a better teacher than most I have had.
Okay, I used to enjoy typing in the Russian Alphabet, but that was on my large screen computer. I liked typing in Greek too, but ever since I have been using only my phone for internet I can't use these several other alphabets I like using. However, I do write well in Russian. I copy things in Russian using cursive. I think Russian is beautiful. It's overwhelming though because I only know some Russian, but I learned the Alphabet first very well. My Great Grandfather was related to Count Fredericks, last Minister of the Imperial Court of Tsar Nicholas II. (Look it up). Fredericks is spelled differently depending on where they lived. (Look up the Russian book called Fredericks Old Gentleman. In Russian)
The more i learn Russian , i find it similar to Arabic , so this makes it easier to me to learn Russian than english natives , all the grammer of russian including cases are found in Arabic and its called Ierab اعراب
I subscribe because you make learning Russian easy. You’re explanations are awesome. Thank you so much. Btw I’m learning because my girlfriend is Russian lol
I do you a favour a tell you some vital verbs and nouns you ALWAYS need to know: Nouns: >object >thing >noun Verbs: >organise >conjugate He organises the object of the noun Here you can study: conjugation (all times) accusative of object (or noun) and genitive of noun (or object) Simple words that can be manipulated for your benefit as a student
I finally get it instead of здесь ты here is, is a verb тебя Is a subject you and the word is, is a verb that comes after just тебя вот тебя here you are
I was messing with the russian course on duolingo and I have to say I enjoy how simple your guy's phrasing was compared to english which uses alot of unnecessary words but I got thrown off when I saw a couple of sentences in SOV form up until then it was all SVO and nothing else seemed different about the sentence just the order. I know duolingo isn't the best resource but I am curious do Russians sometimes randomly say sentences in SOV form??
I'm a very beginner about Russian language. I've been learning Russian for 2 months so far, following a RU-vid videocourse. I know I need to improve as much as I can the vocabulary as well. My main doubt, at the moment, is exactly about "cases". My question is: "Can I learn Russian and have (simple) conversations with natives, as you said in your video, without knowing and using the different cases?"
Я учусь русский язык два месяца. Я очень люблю твой канал. Спасибо большое. Я из Бразилии и изучаю русский язык потому что я люблю русский культура. Я не знаю грамматика и поэтому это неправильно, Но я хочу попробовать (или питаться?). Спасибо
I think this is a good... homework type video. But for a beginner I wonder if it might be too overwhelming. Но мне нравится твои видео. Очень молодец. Твои видео помогает мне.
the cases also seem to be slightly different from for example german. "i have a dog" and "i see a dog" both are accusative there, so i would expect я вижу собаку to also apply for у меня есть собаку but for some reason here it's собака. is that because the literal translation would be more like "by me there is a dog" and not "i have a dog"?
У меня русский - родной язык но я зачем то все равно смотри ваши видео. Просто потому что очень приятно слушать. Даже вопрос родился. Какой у вас родной язык?
Russian is similar to Arabic when creating sentences. In Arabic (And Russian) we have two type of sentences: - Verb Sentence = Subject + Verb (+ Object) - Name Sentence = Starting + Knowledge [We call it in Arabic like this] Verb Sentence examples: Я понимал (Verb Sentence in the past) Name Sentence examples: Я Муаз. Ты Маджид.
I still remember my teacher told me. Изучай глаголы и запомнить структуру после глаголов потом пользовать их. I think it’s the same meaning in your video.
Почему именно я изучаю русском языке? Я тоже не знаю 🤔 Но в этот момент, изучать русский язык мой любимый хобби. Please correct me if I made any mistake, wich I probably did 🤡. I’ve been studying russian by myself (no courses or teachers) for two months now. Привет всем из Бразилии! 🇧🇷🇧🇷
Почему я изучаю именно русский язык? Я тоже не знаю. Но в этот момент изучать русский язык - это моё любимое хобби. Pretty good level for two months though.
Мой ревой Сталин. Is this right? I’m confused. Is нравится a verb or a noun. What the the noun or verb form of нравится? Also, where do I place the words that aren’t subjects verbs or nouns like даже, это, or тоже into sentences? Also(#2), where does того mean, when I try to put it in google translate it just says Togo, but I see a lot of that word.
Cases system is the only difficult part in russian language, the best way to get them is to practice and get premade idioms. Maybe see a second time your favorite serie with russian subtitle can also help you to assimilate them. Don't be afraid by any tables showing you the cases system, it's ok if you make mistakes, it's not your native language, you will get the correction and progress into learning.
You should just first learn Russian without learning the cases. Of course you will sound incorrect but concentrate on learning vocabulary. Then when you widen your Russian vocabulary and practice a lot, listen a lot. When you will be exposed to Russian, at least you will understand the meaning and then gradually learn the endings so that you'll learn the cases more or less naturally as you will encounter them very often.
Not a sentence but if you would say "well I Don't know" would you use что ж or ну. Would it be ну я не знаю or что ж я не знаю. I'm kind of confused. спасибо!
First one is better. НУ is informal word that you hear in every day life. Что ж is something you will more often find in literature. P. S. and off-topic "Ну что ж" is also a valid construction 😂 example: Ну что ж, давайте начнём! Alright, let us begin!
I think, that "что ж" must be used in sentence with summary. Examples. Что ж, я долго думал и решил. Что ж, если нет ничего лучше, возьмём это. Что ж, друзья, я рад видеть вас! Что ж, не знаю как остальные, а я пойду! Что ж, Катерина, ты едешь или нет?
Here’s my crack at some sentences, time to test my beginners skills :p я вождение машина. Я хочу́ спать. Я буду пить соевое молоко и шоколад. No idea if those sentences are correct or even using the right words but hopefully they make sense :p
2nd and 3rd is great (I use 2nd every morning/evening in my daily life) but there's some problems with 1st one correct way: Я вожУ машинУ Вождение (noun) - водить (verb, infinitive) - вожу (conjugation of "водить" for I) машинУ (У ending because of accusative case)
The word "какой" is commonly used in interrogative sentences. It denotes the property of an object, for example, color, taste, material, etc. For example: "какой это стол? - деревянный" (what kind of table is this? - Wooden), "какой это фильм? - интересный" (what kind of film is this? - Interesting), "какой был день? - жаркий" (what was the day like? - Hot), etc."
Правильно будет "пиво" Люблю больше (кого?/что?) - Винительный падеж. В Винительном падеже слова в среднем роде имеют такое же окончание как в Именительном. Например: восхвалять (кого/что?) божество.
Not an expert here, but cases exist in many languages. Nouns in Russian have cases with their specific endings that tell you whether the noun is the subject, direct object, the indirect object, the means by which something was done, or where you are in relation to something. For example, Книга хорошая = The book is good. Книга is the subject and has the feminine singular ending for the nominative case. But Я покупаю книгу = I am buying a book. Книгу is the direct object so it has the feminine singular ending for the accusative case. I defer to real Russian speakers for any corrections.
@@edgleason8918 Thanks! you summed it up great, I bought the book "new penguin russian course for beginners" since I posted my previous comment, which has helped me tremendously, so many endings though, cases are a nightmare xD
You are a pretty pleasant dude. Thank you teacher, for your access that works very well to me. You glitter with insane lvl of positivity which helps a lot, and makes everything easy... Greetings from Serbia, Holy Russia! Glory to God, Glory to the Holy Trinity, Amen. Поздрав из Србије Русима