What Beginner to Advanced Russian Looks Like

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ColeLangs

ColeLangs

Күн бұрын

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📘Learning a Language? Check out my book: a.co/d/hoLGHZP
📚RESOURCES
Cases and general grammar:
/ @russiangrammar
Verbs of Motion:
storylearning.com/learn/russi...
Verbal Aspect:
livefluent.com/intro-to-verba...
Great channels for comprehensible input:
/ @russianwithmax
/ @russianprogress
TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Beginner
5:34 Intermediate
9:27 Advanced (only the beginning!)
🟡Socials🟡
🎟Instagram: / cole.langs
💻Discord: / discord
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Russian is a language like no other. I have a love hate relationship with it. Beautiful, yet elusive, and a tough nut to crack. Whether you're learning Russian or just want to see what some slavs have to deal with everyday, I hope you enjoy the absurd beauty of the Russian language :)
#colelangs

Пікірлер: 1 600
@ColeLangs
@ColeLangs 2 ай бұрын
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@LanguageSimp
@LanguageSimp 2 ай бұрын
Ы
@Chaldon-hl6yk
@Chaldon-hl6yk 2 ай бұрын
уй
@legoushque3334
@legoushque3334 Ай бұрын
уй
@oro5421
@oro5421 Ай бұрын
Why does KZfaq’s “translate to Russian” button make this “Да” (yes)?
@va_fix3266
@va_fix3266 Ай бұрын
уй
@Rin-zd9nv
@Rin-zd9nv Ай бұрын
Ы
@OceanSoul1989
@OceanSoul1989 Ай бұрын
Том ударил Бена - это ситуация. Бена ударил Том - это показания свидетеля в суде.
@zianser
@zianser Ай бұрын
Бена Том ударил - это стихи.
@user-bn2kw2gh5c
@user-bn2kw2gh5c Ай бұрын
Ударил Бена Том - это апроксимиляция нормально-сложного события
@whatacoincidance
@whatacoincidance Ай бұрын
Гениально
@piwo_rearm_piwo
@piwo_rearm_piwo Ай бұрын
коммуникативный синтаксис.
@pantera08803
@pantera08803 Ай бұрын
Ударил Том Бена и начал рассказывать про русский язык
@rodion626
@rodion626 Ай бұрын
Foreigners learn cases and verbs to say: я иду домой Also, native speakers: go домой
@PzFalconer
@PzFalconer Ай бұрын
Russians actually use "go" ("го") as an imperative "let's go" though. I can imagine how counter-intuitive this might be for a foreign learner. The same goes for many other recently borrowed words, I think, they are often more specific than in their native language.
@Yaanina
@Yaanina Ай бұрын
@@PzFalconer word “киллер” in Russian)
@iMost067
@iMost067 Ай бұрын
And go домой can only be used as sugestion as "Пошли домой" bet not as "идем до дома" или "иду домой"
@PzFalconer
@PzFalconer Ай бұрын
@@iMost067 yup, exactly. It's quite specific.
@user-hl6tq7cw7e
@user-hl6tq7cw7e Ай бұрын
Жиза)
@timasaphin1393
@timasaphin1393 Ай бұрын
Ни дать, ни взять, какое видео чудное. Ежели кто молвит - кринж, огорчусь несомненно. По чём зря не гутарит, всё с чувством, с толком, с расстановкой. Да с прибаутками, любо-дорого ушам, да очам. Работа лепотная, добрая. Хочу еще, но куда там, держи карман шире. Проверим переводчик ютуба\гугла
@selua8886
@selua8886 29 күн бұрын
с самого начала прокумекала 🤣
@darko6655
@darko6655 28 күн бұрын
Nothing to add nor correct, such a wonderful video. Would definetly get dissappointed if someone will call it a cringe. Whatever he tells is with comprehansion, sense and order. And it's done with knicknacks pleasant to the ears and eyes. Nice and thorought work. I wish for more, but surely won't have it (It's may be not a perfectly correct translation but quite an accurate adaptation I came up with)
@elllawliet2185
@elllawliet2185 28 күн бұрын
@@darko6655почти что идеально :)
@user-vm4zp5pv6g
@user-vm4zp5pv6g 27 күн бұрын
@@darko6655congratulations
@das_mann
@das_mann 27 күн бұрын
Проиграл с подливой. Баете Вы ласково!
@parazitdog2786
@parazitdog2786 Ай бұрын
чем больше таких видео я смотрю, тем лучше понимаю логику английского языка
@user-te5ut5gk6h
@user-te5ut5gk6h Ай бұрын
Пока англоговорящие учат русский язык по гайдам в интернете, русские учат английский по их гайдам на русский язык
@bibus2282
@bibus2282 Ай бұрын
Я учу русский по английским гайдам в интернете
@user-ss4oy9wx4m
@user-ss4oy9wx4m Ай бұрын
да что уж тут, чем больше таких видео я смотрю, тем лучше понимаю логику русского языка...
@Vladimir-dr6bc7tc8x
@Vladimir-dr6bc7tc8x Ай бұрын
I absolutely agree with you!
@kindlingking
@kindlingking Ай бұрын
Если бы не это видео, я бы и не заметил сходства между английскими завершенными временами и нашими совершенными глаголами. Это прям так очевидно, что, пока кто-нибудь не укажет, сам не заметишь.
@TayaTerumi
@TayaTerumi Ай бұрын
I am a native Russian speaker, so I have zero idea why the KZfaq algorithm suggested me this, and even less of an idea why I have watched this. This was fun, though, and really shows the effort put into learning the language. I had no idea motion verbs are so hard for foreigners-for example, the other difficult thing, cases, *is* also difficult for us native speakers (to the point where it's taught in schools), yet motion verbs are extremely natural, to the point that I had no clue they make up a separate group. TIL!
@user-li9eh9kk3i
@user-li9eh9kk3i Ай бұрын
Может вы смотрите видео на других языках или изучаете же другие языки?
@CerberZer0S1gnaL
@CerberZer0S1gnaL Ай бұрын
Same s**t bro.
@Alive_toon
@Alive_toon Ай бұрын
С падежами вообще беда. Особенно у числительных. Их из моих знакомых вообще никто склонять не умеет (я их не поправляю). Я познал этот дзен, но все равно допускаю ошибки
@TennessisET
@TennessisET Ай бұрын
I studied Russian in school, well I'm from KZ, but I'd never heard of "motion verbs" until I encountered western learners' videos. I was surprised it was such a big thing.
@olggader5540
@olggader5540 Ай бұрын
​​@@Alive_toonнас (я из россии) учили склонять их при помощи слов или типо того или ворпросов к падежам или кароче это сложно
@rovalen_hagane
@rovalen_hagane Ай бұрын
Bro forgot to mention punctuation💀
@nkirito
@nkirito 26 күн бұрын
As the guy who speaks Russian, it's a true and it's a real problem for speakers
@Kartaljuzin
@Kartaljuzin 25 күн бұрын
Точно!
@xfcghy
@xfcghy 23 күн бұрын
it is a problem even for native speakers
@TremblingKiwi
@TremblingKiwi 21 күн бұрын
Thats for Christmas
@harm-reduction
@harm-reduction 21 күн бұрын
it is not a problem if you dont use it :P u can say something like: "Sorry i just type fast so i dont have time for this shit" thats what i usually do in chatrooms. Frankly speaking beside few funny cases like "казнить нельзя помиловать" usually even without any kind of punctuation (and even without dots at the end of the sentences) you can still understand 100% of information without any chance of double interpreting it (thanks to all those rules from the video). Punctuation is redundant in most of the cases and may be skipped in russian modern casual talk. When its not redundant well its wise to use that one comma that finally makes any sense but even if you dont people will just assume that you meant the most rational meaning out of two. However it is a grammar so u need all those commas if you want to write official docments and shit like that. As a russian i find it very hard to use articles in english (a/an/the) because my brain cant understand why do i need to use em, they feel very redundant to me. Sometimes a phrase sounds bad without an article so i put em but mostly i forget and skip em, while i see native speakers using em much more often (which is more correct i suppose?) well i think articles can somewhat compare in terms of their redundancy with the russian commas. Btw "to be" verb i dont find redundant at all. Oh and also ordering a sentence in free manner also fucks me up sometimes, but i see people understand me just fine, so its nothing like "Tom punched Ben" its more like strange order of words that i chose. And on the other side i also got some deformation from knowing english too and sometimes line up russian words in the order that feels strange, but if you translate em directly to english one by one - then that word order is perfect for english. As the outcome these funny issues make me sound autistic in both of the languages.
@archniki_
@archniki_ Ай бұрын
Это самый понятный гайд, который я видел по своему лангуаге Теперь я могу послать это своим забугорным френдс
@alexa.droid9267
@alexa.droid9267 15 күн бұрын
Лангуаже! (или это мой хранцузский подводит с произношением?)
@NeoBeelzemon
@NeoBeelzemon 14 күн бұрын
​@@alexa.droid9267хреньцузкий.
@Eman_o
@Eman_o 6 күн бұрын
почему лангуаге звучит как вольтсваген?
@PyromaN93
@PyromaN93 Ай бұрын
One of guilty pleasures for natives - hear how foreigners deal with consonant clusters
@alphabeticallychronological
@alphabeticallychronological Ай бұрын
its horrifying. also writing д
@PyromaN93
@PyromaN93 Ай бұрын
@@alphabeticallychronological oh, just use cursive😏🤣🤣🤣
@archniki_
@archniki_ Ай бұрын
They need try learn how to pronounce ya yo you like a one united word endings
@maratkh9613
@maratkh9613 Ай бұрын
@@alphabeticallychronological oh, yes. i'm 37, i was born and live my whole life in Russia, but to this day i can't write д nicely
@Ma_X64
@Ma_X64 Ай бұрын
​@@alphabeticallychronological Д is actually D literally but it have been transformed with time. You can write D with cursive and it will look kind of strange but ok.
@user-zo7ft8he9j
@user-zo7ft8he9j Ай бұрын
In fact, if you say "Я идти дом" or "Мы работать здесь" , 90% russians understand you because russian is flexable, it is not so hard, just relax and system will guied you, and please did not forget your vodka, have fun :)
@vladm5920
@vladm5920 Ай бұрын
I agree, it’s not thaat hard to learn to express yourself in Russian, but it would be near impossible to blend in with native speakers unless you spend 30-40 years in Russia.
@user-zo7ft8he9j
@user-zo7ft8he9j Ай бұрын
@@vladm5920 after you come into Russia and drink 2 bootles of vodka you will take all of language flexability and become native speaker :)
@neniAAinen
@neniAAinen Ай бұрын
@@vladm5920 depends on talent and effort. I saw Chinese(!) students with 2-3 years of experience speaking fluently to the point where it became indistinguishable. Rare talents, but still.
@65kasara
@65kasara Ай бұрын
​@neniAAinen I have a Chinese friend who knew Russian but could barely speak, now he swears in Russian even when he speaks Chinese, its absolutely hilarious seeing him hit something and going to Russian swearing, proceeded by Chinese, proceeded by more Russian swearing.
@difenol5750
@difenol5750 Ай бұрын
Я бы сказал 100% поняли бы
@tbqhwyf
@tbqhwyf Ай бұрын
I watched this video and got a Kazakhstan citizenship in 3 days, very useful info
@Quackami
@Quackami Ай бұрын
I'm a kazakh and I do not understand the reason of it. It is illegal here to have more than 1 passport, citizenship, it makes all that even more odd. Or I just didnt understand joke.
@Quackami
@Quackami Ай бұрын
@@tbqhwyf it's reminds me the case when Varlamov posted info that he got Turkmenistan citizenship and media believed him
@verificationguy8062
@verificationguy8062 Ай бұрын
You have to know Kazakh for Kazakhstani passport tho lol
@Quackami
@Quackami Ай бұрын
@@verificationguy8062 I know real examples how russians after mobilization got pass without knowledge of kazakh language, requirments for that kind of thing are not so strict.
@user-hx5eq6lt7v
@user-hx5eq6lt7v Ай бұрын
​@@QuackamiЭто шутка на манер языкового симпа (LanguageSimp). Это мужик-полиглот, который часто в роликах, когда говорит вставляет флаги других стран, где этот язык распространен, чисто в качестве шутки. Для русского часто использует казахстанский флаг, так что думаю отсюда шутка пошла
@annisamiranti9942
@annisamiranti9942 Ай бұрын
There's no Ben and Tom is harmed in this video
@henapbc9
@henapbc9 Ай бұрын
No Bens or Toms were harmed in this video
@alexeyageev6966
@alexeyageev6966 22 күн бұрын
@@henapbc9 In making of this video
@henapbc9
@henapbc9 22 күн бұрын
@@alexeyageev6966 while making this video
@Wkmrgn
@Wkmrgn 19 күн бұрын
During the creation of this video
@Yarilo14
@Yarilo14 17 күн бұрын
In process of showcasing theoretical situation using other Language in this video
@WictorWhite
@WictorWhite Ай бұрын
My favourite tricks for my foreign colleagues is inverting letters: R-Я, N-И h-Ч
@nozemi9074
@nozemi9074 Ай бұрын
Ещё советую использовать "з" как маленькую 3 (тройку)
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
I remember the game SIИGULAЯITУ and how ridiculous the title looked for me as a russian.
@BorisCode
@BorisCode Ай бұрын
@@TEPMOBETEP siigulayaity
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
@@BorisCode да, именно так я и читал это название
@AlexNompe
@AlexNompe Ай бұрын
​@@TEPMOBETEPЭэээ, какого чëрта я прочитал это как singularity???
@legoushque3334
@legoushque3334 Ай бұрын
Я даже не представляю насколько сложно учить русский язык человеку, который не является носителем другого славянского языка... Нам самим то сложно его учить, чего уж говорить про носителей языков других групп. Я очень рад что существует интерес к нашему языку и культуре несмотря на все печальные события последних лет
@user-sm1mr6rj4c
@user-sm1mr6rj4c Ай бұрын
В данном видео интерес исходит от культуры которая делала вещи гораздо хуже. Русская и Американская культура прекрасна вне зависимости от того что делают правительства этих стран.
@le_deer
@le_deer Ай бұрын
@@user-sm1mr6rj4cхуже это в гулагах сгноить лучшую часть своего населения )
@user-sm1mr6rj4c
@user-sm1mr6rj4c Ай бұрын
@@le_deer Посмотрите какой процент заключённых гулага русские. Советская власть - уроды я не спорю, но русские виноваты в гулаге не больше чем все остальные народы.
@obvio6630
@obvio6630 Ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I'm trying to learn Russian. After just watching the video, I realized that I'm still a complete beginner.I can't form simple sentences and I realized that several things have the same meaning when translated into English. The problem is that I don't speak fluent English lol My level of English is enough for me not to go hungry, but at some point I won't be able to use Duolingo anymore
@zeunders3787
@zeunders3787 Ай бұрын
Да не то чтобы сложно нам его учить... Если ты всё детство был ленивым, не читал и не разговаривал, то твои слова про сложность могут быть правдивы. Для нормальных людей это не так. Я сам почти не учил правила, но в моих сочинениях и т.п. не было ошибок. Благодаря чему? Я читал школьную литературу, разговаривал с русскими, старался хоть сколько-то грамотно писать и говорить. Влияние классической литературы я замечал уже через неделю чтения. Я не знаю кем надо быть чтобы НОСИТЕЛЮ языка было прям СЛОЖНО учить его же русский язык. Сейчас я не читал классику уже года два, и я сам вижу как падает моя грамотность. Читайте больше.
@KolyaUrtz
@KolyaUrtz 2 ай бұрын
my brain broke watching this but im not giving up
@ColeLangs
@ColeLangs 2 ай бұрын
That's the spirit!!
@legendsofthemyths
@legendsofthemyths Ай бұрын
mi espanyol es no bien pero sigue aprender porque es muy facil pero por tiempo se dificil pero se aprende espanyol de que muy bien no sé comó Explica pero lo que voy a hacer vaya aprender espanyol
@unknown-otter
@unknown-otter Ай бұрын
​@@legendsofthemythsI'm bombarding this comment section with comment about people not needing to study grammar If you're learning Spanish (I am too!), go ahead and see videos about comprehensible input on dreaming Spanish. I've sank 300 hours on there since the mid-December and I can attest that it totally works You don't need to learn what's the grammar rule needs to be used here and there, and what word to use in which occasion, you need to *know* subconsciously what to do. And this really can only be achieved with input
@legendsofthemyths
@legendsofthemyths Ай бұрын
@@unknown-otter Okay bro, the youtubers i been watching to grow my spanish is "Easy Spanish" since last year march i been watching them thats when i try to grow my grammar pero es muy dificil para arender espayol, no porque no encuentro un video para mi para mirar, vale, so its been hard for me to learn spanish because my unddrstanding is not good
@unknown-otter
@unknown-otter Ай бұрын
@@legendsofthemyths yeah, that's why Dreaming Spanish is for you! Easy Spanish is good if you somehow manage hide the subtitles they burned in. From experience, when I watch English movies with Russian subtitles, I don't learn anything. I think that would be the same with watching Easy Spanish videos with English subtitles for me
@69rus42
@69rus42 Ай бұрын
If I were not Russian, I cannot imagine WHAT could have motivated me to learn this language. I read a lot in my childhood, it helped me to write correctly in Russian. I think the only real way for an AVERAGE person (not a genius nerd) to learn Russian is to learn some of the simplest things, and then just practice with natives. By the way, those examples from Duolingo, two out of three were correct, it's a program error. And also, "Том ударил Бена." and "Бена ударил Том." have different shades of meaning. In the first case, it is said that Tom did something, in the second case, it was Tom who did it, and not someone else.
@lordodin5755
@lordodin5755 Ай бұрын
I wanna learn it because i like different language groups from my native Dutch but it's hard as shit i fucking suck at it.
@joelfisk
@joelfisk Ай бұрын
I hate myself so I do things that are hard. Я не знаю. 🏃‍➡️
@kor1sh0k53
@kor1sh0k53 27 күн бұрын
​@@joelfiskВот это боевой дух! х) удачи с изучением языка ^^
@teaofdespair
@teaofdespair 26 күн бұрын
Тссс, бедные иностранцы еще не готовы к тому, чтобы узнать об использовании инверсии в предложении:) (это про Бэна и Тома)
@polya_bullet
@polya_bullet 22 күн бұрын
Ударил Бена Том!!!!😂😂​@@teaofdespair
@i_Daniel
@i_Daniel Ай бұрын
Good luck to everyone who's wants to pronounce "Ы"
@raptakula8469
@raptakula8469 Ай бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/n5aorJmoqrvGe58.html
@annasolovyeva1013
@annasolovyeva1013 Ай бұрын
Ыыы
@ciocco_Fug
@ciocco_Fug 29 күн бұрын
Just relax and say "A", Speak as if you have a plan
@artekary5194
@artekary5194 28 күн бұрын
@@ciocco_Fug That would be an imitation but not a real way to pronounce it, you actually have to move your tongue in a specific way to do it
@user-sq8mh8kd1o
@user-sq8mh8kd1o 27 күн бұрын
I often saw that americans says Ы in their lang. Sometimes “i” pronounces same as «Ы». For example, in word “literally” you can hear russian “ы”.
@mayo9738
@mayo9738 Ай бұрын
My favorite letter is the crab looking D=>Д
@oinochoe
@oinochoe Ай бұрын
No, this is a crab one: Ж
@uwu3798
@uwu3798 Ай бұрын
​@@oinochoe nah this is a spider 🕷️
@user-tc9sk4ei9y
@user-tc9sk4ei9y Ай бұрын
What about Ж?
@mayo9738
@mayo9738 Ай бұрын
@@user-tc9sk4ei9y that's the turtle
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
Д is house looking. Ч is funny for foreigners because it looks like a number
@lifeofyama
@lifeofyama 2 ай бұрын
I watched this video and now I am Russian, большое спасибо чувак!
@Ma_X64
@Ma_X64 Ай бұрын
взржнулъ😂
@novichkovv
@novichkovv Ай бұрын
@@Ma_X64 youtube translates your взржнулъ as зарычал)) Is that what you mean?)
@Ma_X64
@Ma_X64 Ай бұрын
​ @novichkovv Definitely not!) It's very short but loud unrestrained burst of laugh. Can't find some one-word definition in English but may be it exists. (And the ъ sign at the end is just for fun -- like giving some "hardness" to the word. But it doesn't mean anything in real.)
@novichkovv
@novichkovv Ай бұрын
@@Ma_X64 I'm a Russian speaker, I got it) You could've guessed by the bracket smiles)
@Ma_X64
@Ma_X64 Ай бұрын
​ @novichkovv I supposed by nickname but question is given so why not answer to it.
@user-qb5zf2wo4m
@user-qb5zf2wo4m 27 күн бұрын
Представьте диалог: - Так, ну смотри. Крашеный (стол) это отглагольное прилагательное - Окей - А крашенный (детьми) это причастие - Стоп, но ты же просто добавила еще одну "н" и получила другую часть речи - Ну, как бы да, но там еще есть зависимое слово, которое превращает это прилагательное в причастие. - Допустим. Получается, "Крашеный стол стоял возле, крашенного детьми, забора."? - Д-да.. но запятые там не нужны. - П-погоди! Но это же причастный оборот, так ведь? Это всё-таки причастие или нет? - Это причастный оборот, верно, но он стоит перед главным словом. - Хорошо, тогда получается, если деепричастный оборот стоит перед главным словом, он тоже не выделяется? - А-а нет. Деепричастный оборот, как и одиночное деепричастие в целом, выделяется запятыми в любом случае. А вот одиночное причастие не выделяется запятыми. - ... - ... - Зачем столько правил? - Ну, чтобы отличать причастия, деепричастия и прилагательные? - И чем же они отличаются? - Вопросами. К деепричастию задаётся вопрос "Что делая?" и т.п., к причастиям - вопрос "Какой?", "Какая?" и т.п., а вот к прилагательным... а стоп- - Погоди, погоди. А как ты понимаешь, какой вопрос задать к слову, если не знаешь его части речи? - А-а ээээ. По признакам, да, по признакам их легко отличить. Глагол - это действие, прилагательное - признак предмета, деепричастие - добавочное действие, а- - О, получается отглагольное прилагательное = глагол + прилагательное - Верно! - Хорошо, а причастие - это что? - Глагол + прилагательное. -...но это же то же самое, что и отглагольное прилагательное... *глубокий вздох* - Так, ну смотри. Крашеный (стол) - это отглагольное прилагательное... (А ведь разговор ещё не дошёл до кратких форм...)
@amnbvcxz8650
@amnbvcxz8650 15 күн бұрын
К причастиям задаётся вопрос «каков?какова?», к прилагательным - «какая/какой/какое?»
@user-rr9gx6pp8q
@user-rr9gx6pp8q 14 күн бұрын
​@@amnbvcxz8650каков?/ какова? - вопросы страдательных причастий и кратких прилагательных.
@user-fy5kc7zv9h
@user-fy5kc7zv9h 11 күн бұрын
Не знаю всех этих правил и никогда их не учила. При этом пишу всегда правильно и это длится ещё со школы. Просто интуитивно чувствую. Как такое может быть?
@nikita567
@nikita567 11 күн бұрын
@@user-fy5kc7zv9h У вас во втором предложении ошибка.
@user-fy5kc7zv9h
@user-fy5kc7zv9h 11 күн бұрын
@@nikita567 нет там ошибки
@diegodelsol1309
@diegodelsol1309 Ай бұрын
Well I knew "Ya idoo dahmoy" right away. May be doing a little better than I thought I was. Otleechnah!
@teenator579
@teenator579 Ай бұрын
💀как русский чел, это очень смешно что за idoo😭
@TheAluna26
@TheAluna26 Ай бұрын
Ja idu domoj* if u want to right it in latin
@MrSharkFIN
@MrSharkFIN Ай бұрын
@@TheAluna26 ya idu domoy actually
@TheAluna26
@TheAluna26 Ай бұрын
@@MrSharkFINno y doesnt make the j sound in slavic languages
@TheAluna26
@TheAluna26 Ай бұрын
@@MrSharkFIN ы = y / й = j
@gaojialulover
@gaojialulover Ай бұрын
Speaking is the easiest thing you can do in russian, because writing, and even more so composing in russian, is many times more difficult. It is so difficult that even educated people make mistakes when writing. Also, a person can turn a blind eye to the fact that you made a mistake during a conversation, but for a mistake in writing, they can say bad things, trying to hurt feelings
@user-gu3fc4nm1v
@user-gu3fc4nm1v Ай бұрын
У меня есть чувство, что за этим стоит какая-то личная, довольно печальная история...
@vihtormch7512
@vihtormch7512 Ай бұрын
Don't you ever try to put a comma in a wrong place
@TheFurious74
@TheFurious74 Ай бұрын
Какие, нафиг, feelings! Граммар-наци будут долго тебя пытать, а потом сожрут заживо!
@magnusnepredaval356
@magnusnepredaval356 28 күн бұрын
Сдесь ошыбок столька катеца слиза каг песать таг можна? о мои глоза
@polya_bullet
@polya_bullet 22 күн бұрын
Мы не со зла! Ну, со зла, но это общая коллективная травма родом из детства, когда мы писали диктанты 😂
@stefangorodetsky612
@stefangorodetsky612 Ай бұрын
Вообще можно хоть как переставлять их, но тогда в некоторых случаях будет вайб как у master Yoda. Да и в целом каждая такая фраза с одной и той же ситуацией ощущается чуть по-разному, особенно больше это ощущается в зависимости от контекста и обстоятельств: 1) Том ударил Бена; 2) Бена ударил Том; 3) Ударил Том Бена; 4) Ударил Бена Том; 5) Том Бена ударил; 6) Бена Том ударил.
@sensei4042
@sensei4042 Ай бұрын
wtf i give up
@stefangorodetsky612
@stefangorodetsky612 Ай бұрын
@@sensei4042 yeah, thanks to grammar cases system, haha
@mapron1
@mapron1 Ай бұрын
@@sensei4042 we use SVO order most of the time; 2-6 are grammatically correct but rarely used, at least in day-to-day speech.
@McSymm_Mcsymm
@McSymm_Mcsymm Ай бұрын
Такое разнообразие перестановок используется очень редко. Чаще всего в стихах. Обычно все говорят «Том ударил Бена» и не парятся.
@user-jf5kr4qd2o
@user-jf5kr4qd2o Ай бұрын
@@sensei4042 it's like a stress a letter inside word, but you emphasize a word in a sentence.
@Obukhov_Artem
@Obukhov_Artem Ай бұрын
9:16 Sentence "Борис переходил улицу" doesn't imply intention of returning
@yuliusseraph4973
@yuliusseraph4973 Ай бұрын
Boris goes to places
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
​@@yuliusseraph4973 Boris, get over it already. That is just a street
@allmite
@allmite Ай бұрын
Yeah, it actually means "was crossing"
@DrNiradino
@DrNiradino Ай бұрын
Russia joke: why did the Boris cross the road? To get away from his side and never to return.
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
@@DrNiradino i am russian and i am unfamiliar with that "joke". It is not even a good one. It is not even have anything funny to be called a joke.
@defaultpenguin2598
@defaultpenguin2598 Ай бұрын
When you finally reach the advanced level, go ahead and search up all the synonyms of the f-word, and just keep in mind that it transforms in the same way as any other Russian word.
@lex_darlog_fun
@lex_darlog_fun 18 күн бұрын
Even better, russian has an entire vocabulary of curse words, which have no exact equivalent in english at all. And when you get familiar with them (which is, in fact, quite easy... and russian people help, ALWAYS trying to teach foreigners our curse words as their very first thing to say), you realize russians also turn these words into different parts of speech. Which is completely legal in russian. And then, when you get comfortable with this concept, too - you notice that russian language also allows you to make combined words, attaching a base of curse word to any other word and effectively turning it to a curse word, too... Which, of course, russians do left and right, not even noticing it (I've heard, German also allows you to play this "word constructor", but I'm not sure). Then, when you grasp all of it, you realize that it technically allows you to build entire sentences consisting ONLY from curse words... which, again, is by no means a synthetic example, and russians actually do so. Not all of them, but *SOME* russians do. It even is a running joke that some men of "ground work" (like, builders or plumbers) speak this way by default. If you already knew all of this, congratulations: вы уже превознеслись, постигнув Дзен.
@bondrewd8003
@bondrewd8003 5 күн бұрын
​@@lex_darlog_funправда.
@user-gd6il5zb8l
@user-gd6il5zb8l 3 күн бұрын
​@@lex_darlog_fun, you forgot to mention constructing new words from perfectly innocent non-curse words and somehow every native Russian who hears those words recognizes those as new curses. We (my friends and I) enjoy this game a lot, cursing without curse words and using those non-curse-words-turned-curse-words as a plumber would use the curse words.
@lex_darlog_fun
@lex_darlog_fun 3 күн бұрын
@@user-gd6il5zb8l ummm... actually, I'm not sure what are you talking about. Yes, we do use kinda-curse words which can be used as both a normal and curse word, but they usually are obvious euthemisms for something "inappropriate". Or they are used that way for a LOOOONG time so anyone knowe they have multiple meanings. But I don't think this phenomenon is specific for russian language. Can you provide an example?
@gmdermine
@gmdermine Ай бұрын
1:35 Duolingo don't know that in russian you can change the order of a sentence as you wish, but it can become more poetic "спасибо большое" and "большое спасибо" means the same thing, "кого она знает здесь?" and "кого она здесь знает?" are also
@Kedarandom4ikov
@Kedarandom4ikov 7 күн бұрын
кого она здесь знает? кого она знает здесь? она кого здесь знает? кого знает она здесь? она знает здесь кого? здесь она знает кого? здесь она кого знает? и это ещё не всё
@gmdermine
@gmdermine 3 күн бұрын
@@Kedarandom4ikov именно
@user-wg6cr9fe3p
@user-wg6cr9fe3p Ай бұрын
«Том ударил Бена» and «Бена ударил Том» have slightly different meaning. The first just says “Tom punched Ben” and that’s it, but the second one says that Tom is the one who punched Ben, it is more like an answer to the question “who punched Ben?” But you can still use both of them in any scenario, it is not wrong
@bazarbekovic
@bazarbekovic Ай бұрын
There’s no “the one who” in the second one. No meaning change occurs because if one is true then the second is true. If it was a case that 2 implies 1 and 1 doesn’t imply 2, then there would have been meaning change.
@papi_dummy
@papi_dummy Ай бұрын
​@@bazarbekovic the denoted action is the same but the emphasis on subject and object changes
@alexispell4251
@alexispell4251 Ай бұрын
@@bazarbekovic Bro im russian native. and this guy says everything correctly, but both ways are totally okay (but sooner you will use first)
@forgot10sup
@forgot10sup Ай бұрын
Nah to me the 2nd one sounds more like "Ben got punched by tom"
@b4shkir83
@b4shkir83 Ай бұрын
"Том ударил Бена", "ударил Том Бена", "ударил Бена Том", "Том Бена ударил", "Бена Том ударил", "Бена ударил Том" - same meaning
@PotatoBag685
@PotatoBag685 Ай бұрын
1 clue for beginners. Follow the rule Subject + Verb + Object in Russian language. People will still understand you even if you have failed to use correct forms.
@novichkovv
@novichkovv Ай бұрын
yeah, just add a random vowel to the end of the object, and you will have 1/6 chance of making it correctly
@ShmeL_JujjiT
@ShmeL_JujjiT 29 күн бұрын
​@@novichkovvAnd 5/6 of the chances that it will turn into nonsense. For example Я купил хлебу If you say so, you are either a hillbilly or bought something for bread
@juliempankinn
@juliempankinn 28 күн бұрын
​@@ShmeL_JujjiTчушь полная. совершенно нормальная фраза и никто никогда не подумает что ты хлебу что-то покупаешь
@ShmeL_JujjiT
@ShmeL_JujjiT 28 күн бұрын
@@juliempankinn шуточный пример чтобы показать что так лучше не делать
@novichkovv
@novichkovv 28 күн бұрын
@@ShmeL_JujjiT Купить хлебу - is an archaic form, which doesn't belong to any of common 6 cases. But surprise, there are 14 cases 😀 But we are not taught this in school. This is partitive case
@zyzuchkavlog
@zyzuchkavlog 22 күн бұрын
7:05 1- to read 2- to read until the end 3- to read until the end (old-fashioned) 4- to proclaim something 5- to get the idea (sometimes to scan through something)
@slaviansky
@slaviansky 26 күн бұрын
Fun fact: the word "домой" does have a case, just a very obscure and archaic one called Illative. This case specifies direction, but not particularly. The other example of Illative in Russian is "долой" ("down with [something]"). I like to imagine such parts of the language as a legacy code, used actively in the past but fell out of fashion with time
@basila33
@basila33 Күн бұрын
here is another mind-breaking fact. Russian verbs in past term technically are participles in past term and are remnants of old past perfect that was one of four Russian past terms. Thanks to almighty gods we don't have them anymore.
@mihanich
@mihanich Ай бұрын
I don't know if it helps understanding Russian (and by extension Slavic) verbal aspect, but English has at least one pair of verbs that are actually aspects - say and tell. They have both the same meaning but say means a complete and closed action of telling while tell means a continuous action of telling. The difference is that Russian has such pairing for most of its verbs not just "say" and "tell". Also, verbal aspect gives less ambivalence. For example, your teacher tasked you to read an article. If you say you've read the article it leaves space for ambivalence whether you've read a couple of sentences in that article or actually finished it, so you're not compelled to tell the whole truth. By contrast, if the teacher asks you in Russian if you читал or прочитал the article, you'll have to tell whether you read it completely or not.
@Jed02000
@Jed02000 Ай бұрын
In my expirience there is always an alternative that will be closer to original language and helps to understand the difference between different forms, weather it's time in english or aspects in russian, Although my expirience only relates to learning english, i just belive that it can be applied vice versa, makes total sense in my head
@ericius-yy4md
@ericius-yy4md Ай бұрын
"сказать"="to say" "рассказать"="to tell" "говорить"="to speak" something like that
@eplaymaker
@eplaymaker Ай бұрын
Russian is very special languages. It is very rich. It means that russians are capable to express their emotions and hidden agenda using words, not facial expression like in English. That makes Russian language hard to learn, and that is why “russian never smile”
@user-cp1kx8pp1t
@user-cp1kx8pp1t Ай бұрын
About smiling I think it is just because culture. When you walk the streets of Ukraine, you won’t find a person who smiles just like that, because in many cases we gifting smile to somebody, not just passes-by, but at least thous of which we know.
@user-jf5kr4qd2o
@user-jf5kr4qd2o Ай бұрын
Smile is not a part of politeness in our culture. If you see smiling russian you can be sure that he is really glad to see you or you did something funny. Our smile is genuine.
@louiserocks1
@louiserocks1 Ай бұрын
I agree the russian language is better at conveying much deeper meaning and emotion than english. It's mostly because of all the ways which verbs can be changed and modified in 1000+ different ways. And pretty much 100% of the meaning is conveyed with just words, and word order. With English the meaning and emotion is conveyed more by intonation and volume, and hand/body movements and facial expressions. That's why russian mostly sounds like monotone and English very emotional with lots of intonation (I'm saying this as someone who's native language is English but I know russian for 15 years)
@graywolf6441
@graywolf6441 Ай бұрын
@@louiserocks1 I can add to that what almost for ever sentence you want to express there's right order of words, cases, and forms, and this right order is very very narrow. But if you hit in it, you can express all you thoughts in one short sentence and even archeive oppnent admiration with it. But i think this work with every language, and only natives can feel that effect.
@stefmyt5062
@stefmyt5062 Ай бұрын
Been learning the language for 5 years, and I'm super happy I chose this language.
@setoburu
@setoburu Ай бұрын
Hows the progress?
@stefmyt5062
@stefmyt5062 Ай бұрын
@@setoburu The learning curve is definitely steep, but my first language is Greek, which definitely made it easier to learn. I'd say that once you're done with the grammar (takes about a year to really learn) it becomes far more enjoyable.
@bonk24b38
@bonk24b38 Ай бұрын
​@@stefmyt5062I was always wondering why would a foreigner learn Russian. I mean nowdays our culture seems to be very local, it doesn't make it bad though. So why do you learn it? Is it curiosity or you somehow find it practical?
@stefmyt5062
@stefmyt5062 Ай бұрын
@@bonk24b38 I already spoke 4 languages, and wanted to learn a new one. I have a fascination with Russian culture and history, so for me the choice was easy.
@fakesmile3932
@fakesmile3932 Ай бұрын
Псих
@user-vb9sh7wl9q
@user-vb9sh7wl9q Ай бұрын
The narrator of this video - you have almost no accent when speaking Russian! Well done 👍🎉😊
@user-iy9nx6ux5o
@user-iy9nx6ux5o 28 күн бұрын
Всегда возникает чувство неподдельного восхищения, когда разговариваешь с человеком, сумевшим изучить настолько сложный и многогранный язык.
@siclvceatlvx
@siclvceatlvx Ай бұрын
Cool. Thanks for this video and thanks youtube algorithm. I've been learning Russian on and off for about 12 years (I still suck at it) which started with me learning the cyrillic alphabet for a laugh. The cases are an absolute nightmare but I've come to grips with the word order, which is kind of nice. The bit about the prefixes really knocked something loose in my case-addled brain, now I kind of understand the distinction between words like ходить, уходить, выходить etc. Thanks! Will have a look at more of your vids.
@user-cp1kx8pp1t
@user-cp1kx8pp1t Ай бұрын
Удачи в изучении языка
@watermelon3679
@watermelon3679 Ай бұрын
What about verbs of motion reflexive verbs verbs conjugations syllable stress participles all of them are really hard work
@garpia8196
@garpia8196 26 күн бұрын
Man, i can help u with language, can i take ur discord or telegram?
@panpanplusplus
@panpanplusplus Ай бұрын
Будешь чай? Да нет наверное ... Есть что есть? Нет. Есть что пить ... контрвзбзднуть - слово с 9 подряд идущими согласными
@amnbvcxz8650
@amnbvcxz8650 15 күн бұрын
Не слышала никогда контрвзбзднуть. Сленг какой-то
@verletzt546
@verletzt546 2 ай бұрын
бля я люблю рашн ленгвич боже спасибо что я говорю на нем с рождения потому что учить все это это полный пиздец (крутое видео кста, странно что так мало лайков!!! монтаж и подача топ, даже жаль шо я уже русская (хотя даже меня некоторые вещи удивляют, рашн ленгвич из крейзи мэн))
@Pavel-qt1cw
@Pavel-qt1cw 2 ай бұрын
А я хейт рашэн лангвич так как нет ризн его учить. Экономикс в жопе, фридом слова нонегзистент. Зато ви хев Достоевский и Толстой)
@tramvajtramvajevic9247
@tramvajtramvajevic9247 Ай бұрын
Точно русская, та чи не вкраїнка?
@Drggg46
@Drggg46 Ай бұрын
Реально, иногда радуюсь что мне не нужно учить русский, потому что я его лет с 7 по телевизору слышал. Английский намнооого проще
@dan-3268
@dan-3268 Ай бұрын
Ай фил ю май доооог
@Pavel-qt1cw
@Pavel-qt1cw Ай бұрын
доушите коно коменто о миэтеиру но ка? чотто джамакусай не
@mannheim-manheimproductions
@mannheim-manheimproductions 2 ай бұрын
damn dude, sweet editing. cant imagine how long this took!
@dan-3268
@dan-3268 Ай бұрын
If you are learning Russian, try not to learn it with your head. It will boil and explode, because of all the exceptions. You will probably never sound like a native speaker, maybe within a limited topic yes. Cause honestly even in this video the guy says that читал is imperfect, like we emphasise the process rather than the completion. I get it. But funnily enough, if I want to say "I've read this book", which is clearly about completion, I would still say "я ЧИТАЛ эту книгу", and not "я прочитал эту книгу". It's so complicated. I worry about people trying to learn Russian. The only way is to just enjoy and have fun.
@Chasodey
@Chasodey Ай бұрын
Well, if you say casually in your discussion with people that “Я ЧИТАЛ книгу» you won’t give your listeners a full confidence if you finished the book. You may read it from back to back or you could just glaze over some pages. It’s imperfect because you don’t give a confidence, just an implication.
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
​@@Chasodey yep, that's what i wanted to reply with, but you spare my time with your effort. Thank you, good sir!
@xaartofering7494
@xaartofering7494 Ай бұрын
yes, there is some uncertainty here, but in fact most often we say "я читал" meaning "я прочитал" you can also say "я дочитываю", which means I've almost completely finished reading
@TEPMOBETEP
@TEPMOBETEP Ай бұрын
@@xaartofering7494 to say "я читал" it us usially meant in the sense "i am familiar with it" and not in specificly asserting completion of reading "i completed reading that book". It is special use case, and not the rule. You supposed to say "я прочитал", but is just more humble to say "i am familiar with it" than "i've read it".
@dan-3268
@dan-3268 Ай бұрын
@@Chasodey well. I don't really know what you mean. I mean I show you a book and say "hey check out what I have" and a native speaker will probably never say "ааа я прочитал эту книгу", they will say "ааа я читал эту книгу. Она классная".
@vovan-1130
@vovan-1130 Ай бұрын
спасибо ютуб что показал это видео в 10 часов ночи, теперь я немного понимаю английский
@alexbearcub
@alexbearcub Ай бұрын
I dunno why I started watching the beginner's Russian guide, being literally a native Russian speaker, but I gotta admit you explained everything great. Especially, I laughed a lot at the part about Russians making mistakes themselves, because it's a really common case among us. In my high school years I got the highest number of points at the State Exam in Russian in my school, living in Russia for only three years at the moment. Even now my boss at the office sometimes asks me how to write one or another sentence in official documentation correctly. So, it's really true: sometimes Russian is too hard even for us 😅
@EgorYouTube
@EgorYouTube Ай бұрын
Херасе , егэ на сотку написал ? Да ты монстр
@Chamieiniibet
@Chamieiniibet Ай бұрын
That's a common thing, I was working with a British team writing down the requirements we were compiling together, all in English (and I was just a Russian living in Russia) and at one moment I was like "wait a second, I'm trying to remember what form of the word that should be" and they were like "wow, we missed there should be another word here... And it seems like we don't know which one, and you do"
@andyshtroymish4997
@andyshtroymish4997 Ай бұрын
​@@Chamieiniibetbooks don't live, people do and therefore change over time. There is no absolute schoolbook in any subject, every single one loses some relevance before it's in your hand😢
@amnbvcxz8650
@amnbvcxz8650 15 күн бұрын
I had got maximum minus one points in state exam in Russian 9 years ago. It was the only subject i never learned or prepared for. it had always been intuitive and natural, as i read a lot as a kid and thus it became my natural strength. whereas all other pupils actually had to study it to remember the rules, grammar and punctuation. It’s kind of ironic but my best natural skill is useless now as I had moved.
@Mortablunt
@Mortablunt 5 күн бұрын
You weren’t kidding about Russian being too hard for natives sometimes. As a foreigner I noticed Russians, will do absolutely anything to get out of using a verb of motion if they don’t explicitly have to. You could still get around just fine even with a former brain damage that specifically only wiped out your verbs emotions. All you would have to do is point and say “davai” + “word”, and only if something couldn’t be inferred from your pointing or context, you would need to use the prepositions “v/na/c/ot/k/iz”. You still wouldn’t need them if you could just use your means plus case “peshkom/mashinoi/poezdom/korablem.”
@user-mo2ro9ku9j
@user-mo2ro9ku9j 16 күн бұрын
чайник долго остывает = чайник долго не остывает
@Igor_Chausov
@Igor_Chausov Ай бұрын
When I have learned English I thought that it is poor because when you check words in dictionary almost all of its have more than one meaning. But now I understood it's not English poor it's Slavic languages too complex.
@user-jf5kr4qd2o
@user-jf5kr4qd2o Ай бұрын
Не знаю, я охренел от количества фразовых глаголов, которые совершенно не логичны, и которые невозможно выучить в разумные сроки. Плюс куча слэнга, идиом и просто устоявшихся выражений на все случаи жизни.
@andyshtroymish4997
@andyshtroymish4997 Ай бұрын
​@@user-jf5kr4qd2oit's a beginner's misleading. Easy to learn, hard to master. But yes, oh boy yeah it is waaay less stressful to learn English being native Russian than vice versa!
@BandaSheptuna
@BandaSheptuna Ай бұрын
@@andyshtroymish4997 💀💀💀
@snopy1741
@snopy1741 Ай бұрын
This is so insightful to watch as a Russian native speaker after studying the language in academia. Always wondered what it would feel like to approach it from the outside, and the perception of some things really did surprise me! For instance, we go over the concept of perfective and imperfective verbs in elementary school, and from then on we're told "читать" and "прочитать" are practically two forms of the same verb.
@RivaDanny
@RivaDanny Ай бұрын
Интонации, вот от чего можно сойти с ума. Дополнительные смыслы, которые появляются при перестановке слов. «Что Вася делал? - Вася переходил улицу». (Нормальный вопрос, нормальный ответ). «Как Вася попал под машину? - Вася улицу переходил». (+ несовпадение вопросительного слова и ответа). «Почему Вася опоздал? - Улицу Вася переходил».( либо сарказм: Вася не слишком умен и переход улицы занял много времени; либо известная проблема с улицей). И таких вариантов бесчисленное множество.
@lol32scbw
@lol32scbw 17 күн бұрын
От этого надо кайфовать, а не с ума сходить.
@simply_syrnik
@simply_syrnik Ай бұрын
This is soo great!! I used to chat to a guy in discord who wanted to learn russian. We met in a game and he tried his best for 2 months but at some point he quit cause it was too hard. I just wish i could get these interactions again helping someone learning our crazy language 😭
@notyourfox
@notyourfox 20 күн бұрын
4:10 Easy: идти - to go; ходить - to walk Medium: ехать - to drive ; ездить - to drive (in general) Hard: везти - to carry (by vehicle) ; возить - to carry (by vehicle) (in general) нести - to carry (by foot) ; носить - to carry (by foot) (in general)
@yakovkarnygin6625
@yakovkarnygin6625 18 күн бұрын
and that’s totally wrong. the only difference between “идти” and “ходить” like any other pair of motion words is that the former corresponds to Present continuous while the latter corresponds to Present simple. a common mistake for Russian people is to say that we don’t differentiate these two tenses. well, in those cases we do.
@RUSurauror
@RUSurauror Ай бұрын
omgggg that’s so well explained. bravo!
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 2 күн бұрын
WOW clear and short explanation. You're a god.
@Victor91rus
@Victor91rus Ай бұрын
То, какая последовательность будет использоваться, хоть и не влияет на смысл, но придает окрас речи в зависимости от контекста: Ударил Бен Тома - отличное начало истории Тома Бен ударил - начало жалобы на Бена в детском саду Ударил Тома Бен - нашли улики против виновного Бен Тома ударил - оглашение противоправных действий Бена в отношении Тома.
@uspenskiy
@uspenskiy Ай бұрын
Wow, You can speak sound Ы. Молодец. The author has good academic knowledge, advanced phonetics and a keen sense of humor.
@aleksejsm.1677
@aleksejsm.1677 25 күн бұрын
Russian is my native lamguage and seeing this video it freaks me out that i actually learned it all by heart. Ive got opposite thing with english, lol. So many things are so static in english, while in russian you can flex and shape words as you wish and still deliver the point of the message.
@thekaterinaaa
@thekaterinaaa Ай бұрын
I love it that you were supportive as much as intimidating ahaha
@Voronza
@Voronza Ай бұрын
Great! Nice video! I never thought of a complexity of my native language this way! All those exceptions... They just stick to you year by year unnoticably.
@y____-----___----__---_--
@y____-----___----__---_-- Ай бұрын
2:45 Actually, determinant lies not within gender, but rather in declension of noun (склонение сущ.). Mastering this aspect promises easier learning journey for you
@aglxru
@aglxru 29 күн бұрын
8:50 there are also perfective variations for indefinite forms: поездить, походить, побегать, полетать.
@ruknot4648
@ruknot4648 Ай бұрын
As a russian native speaker and someone who did a couple classes of philology. I can assure you, I only learned 1% of all exceptions and someone will correct me at least once a week.
@Gueroizquierda
@Gueroizquierda Ай бұрын
I was just wondering where you've been. Glad to hear you're learning Russian, I recently started on it
@w.d.gaster1142
@w.d.gaster1142 28 күн бұрын
That was the cleanest губка боб квадратные штаны ive ever heard an englishman say
@themonster3159
@themonster3159 24 күн бұрын
I've watched this video to improve in English lol
@Zorro33313
@Zorro33313 9 күн бұрын
Ben is the one who's being affected so it affects the spelling of Ben to make it Bena. It's an affected form of the word. The "casing" is encoding different categories of ways to affect smth into the the word meaning it itself. If smth is affected, transformed etc - the word encoding it is transformed as well in a special way depending on what happened to the object. Knowing what is doing smth to what - is the consequence of such programming. It's a hieroglyphical logic, by the way. Russian is a beast of a language. Like some fckin avatar from the last airbender or smth.
@neettaa
@neettaa 20 күн бұрын
«Я читал книгу» также используется не только когда мы хотим сказать, что где-то в прошлом сидели за книгой (тратили время на чтение), но также когда мы хотим что-то из этой книги рассказать. Например: «Я читал книгу, и в ней было сказано…». Другими совами, «читал книгу» - это так же может быть признаком того, что ты ее уже прочитал😁
@marins_oxo
@marins_oxo Ай бұрын
It's so cool to see people being so dedicated about learning a language just in general, but even more so when it's the language you know as your first one. Удачи вам всем, ребята:)
@moonshine732
@moonshine732 Ай бұрын
Это всё конечно хорошо, но где видео про пчелиную войну булджать?
@user-zi8jy9cn5y
@user-zi8jy9cn5y Ай бұрын
I don't know why youtube recommend me a video about learning my first language (probably cause I've watched a lot about learning english, so languages in general) but I loved it! I mean the way you explain (which also means that you understand) all the shades of russian language is wonderful (I don't know your first language though but still) can't understand how it feels from non russian speaker position, but it was pretty accurate! keep going, man 👍🏻 as a big admirer of russian language i'm grateful for this video
@KAMA_THE_ONE
@KAMA_THE_ONE 5 күн бұрын
As a native speaker it always amazed me how I could navigate through all the minute details of this language and make so many mistakes in a rather less complicated English. And yet I always noticed that no matter the level of English I achieved there was always an element of expression that was missing in it but present in Russian, in both speaking and literature it always seemed like English sort of left out a whole level of details and meaning.
@reyriz2223
@reyriz2223 Ай бұрын
I noticed at 9:16 that you used е instead of ё 3 out of 4 times. While it is a common practice in Russia, if you use ё you better use it everywhere needed to avoid confusion, especially in a teaching material. All in all a great video, thank you for making it!
@vihtormch7512
@vihtormch7512 Ай бұрын
Ë is pretty deprecated
@reyriz2223
@reyriz2223 Ай бұрын
@@vihtormch7512 Deprecated isn't the word for that, but yes, Ё is almost never used by most people
@paprikar
@paprikar 25 күн бұрын
​@@reyriz2223while typing, obviously
@user-rr9gx6pp8q
@user-rr9gx6pp8q 14 күн бұрын
​@@reyriz2223и это печально. Отсюда многие ошибки: новорОжденный" вместо правильного "новорождённый", "свеклА" вместо правильного "свёкла" и т.д.
@dainrain5954
@dainrain5954 Ай бұрын
Приятно знать, что кто-то в этом мире учит твой родной язык. Вообще, удачи вам, ребята, кто учит русский и может прочитать этот коментарий. Изучение русского будет тем ещё испытанием, на полное изучение гамматики мы тратим по девять лет в школе и это при то том условии что мы живём в русскоязычной среде. For those, who trying to understend what I write before, but wanna sometime do it: you're amasing, ceep doing what you are doing now and some day you will have no problem with russian. PS: It allways was so intresting to understend how different learning english from learning russian is, but it seems that we are struggeling with pretty same things, hah. I still have big probmlems with grammar in english, and times if you intrested.
@LeftHand200
@LeftHand200 20 күн бұрын
Не знаю, зачем это посмотрел, но подача очень весёлая) Всем успехов в изучении русского!
@hmZooomb
@hmZooomb Ай бұрын
У тебя классная подача материала, мне даже захотелось выучить русский
@Kolay-yt3kx
@Kolay-yt3kx Ай бұрын
4:51 actually it is a noun. But maybe it is easier to understand like this.
@prosp23
@prosp23 Ай бұрын
Hi! I can’t even imagine why the KZfaq algorithm recommended this video to me, but I will be incredibly glad to be your interlocutor as a native Russian speaker. :)
@bravemoon2124
@bravemoon2124 5 күн бұрын
Guys, I’ve never realized those prefixes can be such a challenge, just like you don’t realize how much I struggle with your phrasal verbs 😵‍💫
@LinaNaliEvE
@LinaNaliEvE 29 күн бұрын
Ты молодец ! Продолжай в том же духе ❤
@copypastor
@copypastor Ай бұрын
3:18 отличная вставка бро. его стиль узнается сразу, хоть я и читал это 20 лет назад.
@Kosadame
@Kosadame Ай бұрын
Кстати да, спасибо, что указал на это)
@SmileBe4Death
@SmileBe4Death Ай бұрын
Блин, по-моему, произведения Достоевского - сущий ад для иностранных читателей. Его половина носителей-то не поймет, не говоря о тех, кому русский приходится неродным. Когда я говорю не поймут, я имею в виду не суть произведения или сложный анализ, а буквальное значение некоторых предложений. «В углу стоял круглый стол овальной формы»
@gekkkonya
@gekkkonya Ай бұрын
​​@@SmileBe4Death такие непонятки в текстах достоевского возникают из-за того, что некоторые его произведения записывали/печатали под диктовку. ну и как-то так получалось, что доходили до печати они именно в таком виде
@mederrayimbekov7595
@mederrayimbekov7595 Ай бұрын
Как кыргыз который имееть русский язык на арсенале могу перед китайцами , корейцами , японцами , да и перед людей могу чисто флексить 😂😂 выгляжу как азиат котоый ВЫУЧИЛ русский язык (да , сложно было учить и говлрить на русском языке ) соуууу
@sluchayno6644
@sluchayno6644 29 күн бұрын
Не будь я нейтивом, навряд ли когда-нибудь бы решилась учить этот язык боже. Удачи всем изучающим!
@T0m1s
@T0m1s Ай бұрын
This was actually a really good video. Great job.
@NeiroYT
@NeiroYT Ай бұрын
We sometimes mess up those cases (cause' you can be sleepy or in a hurry...). if it's hard case enough, people don't care, else it may sound funny and they will correct you. Also choosing right verbs is not a big deal, but choosing prefix is: ехать and ездить aren't as different as проехать and приехать.
@mid0nly71
@mid0nly71 Ай бұрын
Thanks for your video, It helps Russian speakers(such as me) to deeper understand the difference between English and Russian ❤
@dragoncat4213
@dragoncat4213 Ай бұрын
Очень интересно видеть, как вы понимаете наш язык. Спасибо за видео
@palecandy
@palecandy 28 күн бұрын
getting to the verbal aspect part of the video, words cannot describe how happy i am that my native language is at least a bit similar to russian, because i didn't have to struggle to understand it LOL
@nosense306
@nosense306 Ай бұрын
Great. You are learning Russian, and I learning English. Nice!
@joelfisk
@joelfisk Ай бұрын
Удачи вам. Я учус по русский язык. 🤝
@daptydeduck3998
@daptydeduck3998 Ай бұрын
LinQ is amazing, so much content
@user-qg5ey3bl7v
@user-qg5ey3bl7v Ай бұрын
If you ever feel like learning russian is too hard, remember that it is hard and that's fine if you make some mistakes. It takes 11 years for us to learn the language and yet we still sometimes wrong. Just keep it up
@FentFanta
@FentFanta 7 сағат бұрын
Level 999: Ending up on an FPV drone montage
@arnjolf33
@arnjolf33 Ай бұрын
Мужики, удачи вам!)
@whoflore
@whoflore 2 ай бұрын
3:24 we actually dont... but only sometimes in numbers. like people for some reason say for example "девятиста" when the right variant is "девятисот"/"девятистам". as a russian, imo the hardest part of our language is punctuation.
@user-pw2qo4zf2m
@user-pw2qo4zf2m Ай бұрын
As a russian native speaker I often make mistakes with the cases, but most of the time it happens when I want to express something really quick and there's not much time to think about all the grammar rules. In my experience, other Russian natives just don't care about it.
@whoflore
@whoflore Ай бұрын
@@user-pw2qo4zf2m я почти ни разу не слышал, чтобы кто-то так ошибался
@reducedsmell5356
@reducedsmell5356 Ай бұрын
Невозможно делать ошибки в падежах будучи носителем. Говорить не в соответствии с литературной нормой не значит говорить ошибочно. Вот пример Я остался без девятиста яблок (просто вариант не соответствующий лит. норме, однако вполне себе употребимый) Или «Я остался без девятистами яблок» (вот это уже конкретно неправильно употребленный падеж. Ни один носитель так в жизни не скажет) Так что носитель не может говорить на языке «не правильно» по определению. Может говорить по чьему-то субъективному мнению некрасиво, но не неправильно
@whoflore
@whoflore Ай бұрын
@@reducedsmell5356 дожили
@reducedsmell5356
@reducedsmell5356 Ай бұрын
@@whoflore до чего дожили?
@kir4k75
@kir4k75 21 күн бұрын
Классный урок! Всего 10 минут и говорю как на родном!
@sko_psy
@sko_psy Ай бұрын
Чётко 👍🏼
@alexispell4251
@alexispell4251 Ай бұрын
гласить != to read. гласить - скорее сказать (оглашать, глаголить). гласить = to say/ pronounce/ announce :) Спасибо за видео! Приятно было посмотреть его целиком:)
@McSymm_Mcsymm
@McSymm_Mcsymm Ай бұрын
Вовсе нет. «Записка гласит» - как раз переводится как Note reads.
@izaimedushat
@izaimedushat Ай бұрын
Sounds like Russian is really hard… Fortunately it’s my mothertongue :)
@compact-disc
@compact-disc Ай бұрын
bro's gloating ( ̄  ̄|||)
@obvio6630
@obvio6630 Ай бұрын
Do you speak English fluently? I'm Brazilian and I study Russian translated into English. The problem is that my English is limited and at some point it will be more sufficient
@izaimedushat
@izaimedushat Ай бұрын
@@obvio6630 I’m not sure what the fluency actually is, but I can explain my thoughts pretty well :) Why are you learning Russian?
@Chasodey
@Chasodey Ай бұрын
@@izaimedushatfluency означает плавность, в данном случае плавность мысли, языка, того насколько беспроблемно ты говоришь
@McSymm_Mcsymm
@McSymm_Mcsymm Ай бұрын
@@Chasodey, по-русски не говорят «беспроблемно говоришь», по-русски надо сказать «свободно говоришь».
@penfelyn
@penfelyn Ай бұрын
also, as Russian has no articles, the word order is used instead, usually putting the least definite last and the mentioned close to the beginning: в моей комнате стоит стол. на столе лежит книга. in my room there is a desk. there is a book on the desk книга лежит на столе. стол стоит в моей комнате. the book is on the desk. the desk is in my room.
@NeoBeelzemon
@NeoBeelzemon 14 күн бұрын
Well, about imperfected and perfected: usually we ask the question: what to do. And if there are prefix "S" in "delat'" - it's perfected.
@i_Daniel
@i_Daniel Ай бұрын
Translate tbis guys: ъыь
@Pas121
@Pas121 Ай бұрын
эюя
@artulyanoff
@artulyanoff 29 күн бұрын
You mean "ъыъ"?
@i_Daniel
@i_Daniel 29 күн бұрын
@@artulyanoff yeah, ъыь
@milkyway604
@milkyway604 25 күн бұрын
i can sing it
@artur9782
@artur9782 23 күн бұрын
It’s becomes и
@user-mx1gn3bs8c
@user-mx1gn3bs8c 2 ай бұрын
Добро пожаловать
@sastasica
@sastasica 27 күн бұрын
Russian is my native language, yt recommended, I watched. Now I want to unlearn Russian and start again, this is so fun!
@sosiskakiany1785
@sosiskakiany1785 23 күн бұрын
Отличное видео, автор молодец, хорошее понимание правил, лучше чем у большого количества моих соотечественников.
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