I have a large Pinterest board dedicated to charts and all things Russian but had no idea how to learn from them. You and your videos are LIFESAVERS for me. Большое спасибо! ❤
I'm from Palestine, I'm working now in Tashkent and I started learning Russian months a go, I could not learn from free videos or paid ones even from Arabic teachers as all courses are going into details and I was unable to connect all lectures together, for me I should see the start and the end points in general so I could imagine the journey or at least partially understand the topic's logic in the first lecture and then going deep afterwards. I found this video useful although I know all rules, but it helped me to see the big picture, adding to that your teaching style is fun and interesting, thanks for sharing it online.
EXCELLENT VIDEO !!! Я из Аргентины, люблю русский язык и самостоятельно изучаю русский язык, который очень интересный и сложный язык. Мне нравится ваше объяснение. Спасибо !!!
It took me 4 semesters at 6 hours per week including 2 hours of language lab and 4 hours of class . After 288 hours I was ready to start reading Onegin .
Your video is very helpful for beginners like me. As a Korean born and raised in Germany, I can see that many grammatical principles you're introducing work just like in German. Especially one of three genders for every noun and the different verb conjugations for persons singular and plural. The declension of adjectives and nouns in different cases is also the same as German. My question is from the last part of the vid. Which verb do Russian use when NOT SURE if someone went somewhere by foot or by some kind of vehicle? Ходить or ндтн, ездить or ехать ?
thank you for your question. Usually, the choice depends on context and logic. Let's say, we talk to our neighbour, then it makes sense to use ходить (идти). If we know that a person lives in another district or city, we assume he/she went by vehicle.
@prostorussianpodcast Thanks for your answer. So which one would you use if you don't have any idea whatsoever about how someone went to a place, knowing nothing about the actual distance?
Я бы в этом случае спросила: "Куда он направляется?" От слов "направление", "направление движения". Направляться (двигаться в определенном направлении) можно как пешком, так и на любом транспорте 😊 Пример: "Он сейчас напрявляется в офис и скоро прибудет". Слово "прибудет" означает, что он скоро "будет здесь", без разницы, пешком или на транспорте 😊
they are different verbs that have the same form (look) in the infinitive only. "to have" in the present: у меня есть, in the past tense: у меня был(а,и). "to eat" in the past tense: я ел(а), but in the present tense: я ем
Спасибо большое за видео. Молодец)) Я американец и изучаю русский язык 4,5 года. Самостоятельно, дома. Сейчас у меня наверно уровень А1-А2. Вы на iTalki?
I understand why certain things were left out, but you really only tell half the story when you leave out verb aspect, plural case endings and 5/7 letter spelling rules. Hope these are covered in later videos to give a more complete picture. Thx.
verb aspects or declension of adjectives are not for beginners. This video is for beginners and covers the basics needed to start speaking grammatically correct as soon as possible with a minimal vocabulary. But people can learn grammar in any sequence, as long as it helps them achieve their goals.
Hello! I just bought the course and still have not received any guideines to how to access it. I only received the payment receipt. How do I start my course?
I love the detail level, but honestly, if this is for absolute beginners, I wouldn’t go from pronouns to past tense. That’s quite a leap. Also, the font with the normal and cursive lettering can definitely be confusing. There are other fonts that would be better for beginner videos, although I understand the importance of recognizing the mixed style as it’s common in Russian handwriting.
if English is your native language then the word "six" can help you. The sound of ы is veeery close to the sound you have between "S" and "X" when saying "six". Enjoy learning your languages! 🎉
Что делает русский человек, когда находит видео о русском языке? То же, что и я PS "й" - это тоже согласная хд Also, quite a bold task to try and explain movement verbs in one short video given that aspect is one of the hardest in Russian
Master Russian Grammar Basic with the new course! 🤩
Details: prostorussianpodcast.com/basicgrammarcourse
Absolute lifesaver, for the life of me I just wasnt understanding the grammar until I watched this.
Many thanks from America
you are welcome! :)
I have a large Pinterest board dedicated to charts and all things Russian but had no idea how to learn from them. You and your videos are LIFESAVERS for me. Большое спасибо! ❤
спасибо ☺️
I too have Pinterest and I collect pins on Russian grammar, vocabulary, etc. I love Pinterest.
한국에서 러시아여행 하려고 한달전부터 러시아말을 공부중입니다. 아주 많이 도움이 되었습니다. 감사합니다. 너무 편하고 아름다운분이 가르켜주시니 머리에 쏙쏙 들어 오네요.^^
большое спасибо ☺️☺️☺️
I'm from Palestine, I'm working now in Tashkent and I started learning Russian months a go, I could not learn from free videos or paid ones even from Arabic teachers as all courses are going into details and I was unable to connect all lectures together, for me I should see the start and the end points in general so I could imagine the journey or at least partially understand the topic's logic in the first lecture and then going deep afterwards. I found this video useful although I know all rules, but it helped me to see the big picture, adding to that your teaching style is fun and interesting, thanks for sharing it online.
Thank you!
Very helpful. I like your style of teaching. Спасибо.
You are welcome!
EXCELLENT VIDEO !!!
Я из Аргентины, люблю русский язык и самостоятельно изучаю русский язык, который очень интересный и сложный язык.
Мне нравится ваше объяснение. Спасибо !!!
Большое спасибо! А вы прекрасно пишите по-русски! Браво!
I just started learning russian and I find this video to be such a nice introduction to basic grammar without feeling overwhelmed. Большое спасибо 😊
Happy to hear that
Спасибо! Coming from a native English speaker ( with dyslexia), this helped me a lot.
You are welcome :)
You’re a magnificent teacher!
Wow, thank you!
You are the best Russian language teacher I have ever met 💖
Оh, thank you so much. Спасибо 🥹☺️
Thanks for this useful video❤️❤️
пожалуйста :)
Such a great informative video amazing work please keep it up it would be awesome to see more videos on grammar like this ❤
спасибо :)
best video on russian grammar i’ve ever watched!!! love the way you explain things and your visuals 🥹☺️ so helpful thanks a bunch
oh, thank you very much ☺️
Brilliant ❤
Really helpful 🎉
So glad!
wonderful lesson
Glad you liked it
Perfect presentation
thanks
Literally u become my favorite teacher please keep going 🥹❤️
спасибо ☺️☺️ btw I am working on the second part ;)
Thank you
пожалуйста :)
Very, very good, thank you very much.
You are master for education.
You are very welcome!
Thanks so much. You are master🎉
You are welcome
great video, i feel like it's a nice compact basis to start my Russian journey without feeling overwhelmed , thank you so much!! :)
Happy to hear that. I hope you will enjoy learning Russian! :)
Thank you so much
You are welcome. Пожалуйста :)
Thank you
You're welcome
I am from Bangladesh. I want to more videos.
It took me 4 semesters at 6 hours per week including 2 hours of language lab and 4 hours of class . After 288 hours I was ready to start reading Onegin .
Круто!
very good video but the font used for the Cyrillic alphabet is really hard for me to read.
отличный урок (говорю как носитель)) все понятно и правильно❤
спасибо :)
Your video is very helpful for beginners like me. As a Korean born and raised in Germany, I can see that many grammatical principles you're introducing work just like in German. Especially one of three genders for every noun and the different verb conjugations for persons singular and plural. The declension of adjectives and nouns in different cases is also the same as German.
My question is from the last part of the vid.
Which verb do Russian use when NOT SURE if someone went somewhere by foot or by some kind of vehicle?
Ходить or ндтн, ездить or ехать ?
thank you for your question. Usually, the choice depends on context and logic. Let's say, we talk to our neighbour, then it makes sense to use ходить (идти). If we know that a person lives in another district or city, we assume he/she went by vehicle.
@prostorussianpodcast Thanks for your answer.
So which one would you use if you don't have any idea whatsoever about how someone went to a place, knowing nothing about the actual distance?
@@광동아재廣東大叔 I might use completely different verbs. But again, everything depends on the context
Я бы в этом случае спросила: "Куда он направляется?" От слов "направление", "направление движения". Направляться (двигаться в определенном направлении) можно как пешком, так и на любом транспорте 😊 Пример: "Он сейчас напрявляется в офис и скоро прибудет". Слово "прибудет" означает, что он скоро "будет здесь", без разницы, пешком или на транспорте 😊
вчера я делал много, я завтракал, работал, обедал, ужинал и читал
вау, отлично! 👏🏻
💐
8:44 "To eat" and "To have" in Russian. Do both have the same form of есть?
I'm confused on that.
they are different verbs that have the same form (look) in the infinitive only.
"to have" in the present: у меня есть, in the past tense: у меня был(а,и).
"to eat" in the past tense: я ел(а), but in the present tense: я ем
Спасибо большое за видео. Молодец)) Я американец и изучаю русский язык 4,5 года. Самостоятельно, дома. Сейчас у меня наверно уровень А1-А2. Вы на iTalki?
вы тоже молодец :) да, я есть там
@@prostorussianpodcastхорошо. Я буду там тебя искать)
I understand why certain things were left out, but you really only tell half the story when you leave out verb aspect, plural case endings and 5/7 letter spelling rules. Hope these are covered in later videos to give a more complete picture. Thx.
verb aspects or declension of adjectives are not for beginners. This video is for beginners and covers the basics needed to start speaking grammatically correct as soon as possible with a minimal vocabulary. But people can learn grammar in any sequence, as long as it helps them achieve their goals.
Очень хорошее видео для обучения. Он также доступен на немецко-русском языке? Я из германийю
если у вас есть auto-generated captions, то субтитры могут быть на немецком
¿Existe esta presentación en Español en lugar de Inglés, cómo acceder a ella?.
Hello! I just bought the course and still have not received any guideines to how to access it. I only received the payment receipt. How do I start my course?
Hi! Thank you for choosing my course! I re-sent the confirmation letter from the platform (edvibe). Please, check the mailbox. Спасибо 😊
@@prostorussianpodcast Thank you! Received it and completed the course in just a day. I wish it had more units for this price. Good luck!
@@baltakhairol659 thank you for the feedback!
I love the detail level, but honestly, if this is for absolute beginners, I wouldn’t go from pronouns to past tense. That’s quite a leap. Also, the font with the normal and cursive lettering can definitely be confusing. There are other fonts that would be better for beginner videos, although I understand the importance of recognizing the mixed style as it’s common in Russian handwriting.
हां जी
Thank you
I am a 17 year old girl who just started learning Russian and two other languages.
Но можете ли вы сказать мне, как произносится bl в слове?
if English is your native language then the word "six" can help you. The sound of ы is veeery close to the sound you have between "S" and "X" when saying "six".
Enjoy learning your languages! 🎉
@@prostorussianpodcast Oh well thank you .
Actually my language is Arabic but we learn English in school .
Что делает русский человек, когда находит видео о русском языке? То же, что и я
PS
"й" - это тоже согласная хд
Also, quite a bold task to try and explain movement verbs in one short video given that aspect is one of the hardest in Russian
Шок-контент! В восприятии иностранцев "й" - это гласная 😱😏😏
Estou com um pouco de dificuldade em entender o russo falado. 😢
Pouco vocabulário talvez???
Sim, talvez. Também é importante ouvir podcasts e ver vídeos regularmente. Também pode ajudar escrever transcrições do áudio que está a ouvir
Bruno, I have saved playlists on TH-cam dedicated to old Soviet cartoons. They are so cute and they help me with my listening skills)
Наверняка основная часть зрителей это русские учащие русский на английском;) так как в школе нас русскому учили плохо
интересная теория))
Davis Anthony Davis Thomas Perez Steven
I think you might have meant Neutral.
Neuter is something Completely different. 😂
neuter gender refers to nouns that are neither male nor female 😉
Я ты/вы
Я же нетив. Почему я залип?
🤷♀️🤷♀️🤷♀️
No, si yo de rejen hiji putin no voy
Robando càmara...habla solamente en ruso...