I was a languages major in college (French, German, and Italian). This is by far the best introduction to the Russian/Cyrillic alphabet and pronunciation I've ever seen. It uses real-world examples. It shows some lowercase letters and script/cursive as well as uppercase. It shows stylistic variations that are used for effect. It explains the difference between "yeh" and "yaw" and how one is sometimes substituted for the other. It shows examples of how a vowel can be pronounced in different ways, depending on usage. A lot of info packed into 20 minutes, with no wasted time. Well done. Спасибо.
@@terwit1549 дурак? Это зависит от возраста. Ты бабушку или девочку женщиной назовешь? Девушка - это конкретно молодая женщина, дословно - девственница.
I'm a native Russian, but I really like how you've chosen to teach foreigners Russian alphabet by demonstrating real Russian signboards, along with pieces of regular live in Russia. I know that when I first tried to learn English, it was hard for me to grasp foreign culture and, I think, I'd find such pieces of English culture helpful. They are not much, of course, but they still make you feel like you're already there, and it's a nice comforting feeling for someone trying to learn a new language.
The girl, especially for you, was looking for bad landscapes. :) This is enough in any country. Russia, over the past 30 years, has gone through a lot of bad things. And now, in any city in Russia, you can find very unattractive architecture, etc. But there is also a lot of new and good things. The girl did not show this. (Google translator)
@@СтаниславПилипенко-я5с, I'm not sure there is such thing as good or bad landscapes when it comes to conveying the spirit of daily life in any country. Because the point of it is to give people the feeling of what it's like to live there and go places. If you just show the most beautiful places, you will convey wrong picture, it's like when you are a tourist and you only remember tourist attraction spots after leaving, not the narrow streets or the courtyards with kids playing with their sticks. I've seen many Russians trying to showcase Russian attractions and architecture (mostly in Moscow with the latter), but what they showed never felt like Russia to me, because they have omitted the bad pieces of roads where puddles form after rain or the Soviet Union-old buildings with ugly graffity and swearwords painted on them that I grew up seeing every day. Or the people, their tired or gloomy faces when they hurry to work or to other important places, all busy and worried and trying to be punctual and being frustrated with our municipal services etc. The point of this exercise is not to demonstrate how cool we are by picking the most beautiful places of Russia, but to relay the real picture with both the beautiful and the ugly, so that the foreigners could feel the life here even if they haven't been to Russia once. And if someone thinks it's more respectful to Russia to show only good stuff about it, then I disagree strongly, because there can't be any respect without acknowledgement of true state of things.
@@АнатолийАнатолий-п1д In the 1990s, European and US politicians actively supported corruption in the countries of the former USSR (this is a fact). What is corruption (for real), we learned after the collapse of the USSR. In the days of the USSR, it was almost nonexistent (as it turned out). A lot of resources were taken from the former USSR. The people have become very poor. All these resources supported the economies of Europe and the United States (in the first place). It was a real genocide of Europe and the United States against the peoples of the former USSR. This is exactly how it was (I don’t know what your media say there, I experienced it all myself). Wherever Europe comes in, it only gets worse (with a few exceptions). Now Russia has just begun to recover from the shock of the 1990s. And now in Russia it is much safer and more comfortable than in many other countries. Yes, somewhere in the cities of Russia there is the architecture of the 1990s. But this is less and less. The West brought great grief to the countries of the former USSR. I'm from Ukraine. Ukrainian oligarchs are guilty of Ukraine's troubles (in the first place). They, too, were raised by Western politicians. I know what I'm talking about. Since independence, the population of Ukraine has dropped from 52 million to 30-32 million. Even before the Maidans, Ukraine lived better than Russia. Now the comparison is in favor of Russia. In Ukraine, there is now a real junta and fascists. And Europe (oddly enough) does not see this.
@@poke-champ4256 When I saw this comment and saw two replies, I knew one of them would involve “pretty” and I thought the other reply would be like “SIMP”
Oh this is the smartest thing of you to teach the letters on streetsign and such. When I was in greece, I learned the greek alphabet the exact same way.
я поляк и очен люблю буквы Ш, Ч, Я, Е, Ё, Ю потому что у нас в польском тоже такие звуки есть. Но нам нужно писать две буквы для одного звука вместо одной: Sz, Cz, Ja, Je, Jo, Ju. :)
I understand from your videos that public smiling isn’t the cultural norm in your country, but it doesn’t change the fact that you have a beautiful smile 😊 that lights you up when you use it. Your videos are interesting and informative, Thank you for taking the time to do them!
If I'm remembering correctly, Russian had an additional letter that wasn't used heavily so the Bolsheviks dropped it when they seized power in 1917. Is the one in this video that same letter or is it a different letter?
I saw this video for the first time about a year ago and couldn't get the Russian letters out of my head. Then recently I started studying Russian and as soon as I learned the alphabet I watched this video again to review. I think this video makes a great review. I'm enjoying studying Russian and want to continue learning this beautiful language. When I was learning to read my native English as a child I spent so much time walking around with my mother while she was running errands and I read all the signs. I think signs are a great way to learn and review letters and words.
@@nnawnbs учитель is a man and a woman. Учительница is a feminitive. It's a colloquial speech. But if it's an official document, for example, then only учитель is acceptable.
Never been to Russia yet, but have always been fascinated by it. Back when I was in High school, I used to take my class notes in Cyrillic, but phonetically in English. Confused my teachers. And I had a girl I used to write notes to in class, so she learned how to write in it too. :) Keep up the excellent videos.
Kind of like the bottles of Russian Standard vodka on the back bar of one of my favorite watering holes here in Wisconsin - one side of the bottles have the brand name in English, phonetically spelled out in Cyrillic, the other side in straight English.
@@mgk920Brand name in English, spelld out in Cyrillic🤣 It has Russian name in one side, and English name in the other side "РУССКИЙ СТАНДАРТ ВОДКА" -"RUSSIAN STANDARD VODKA"
It's so hard for me to hear the difference between all the letters that "sound the same but softer or harder" 😭 but she did a great job and going around town showing us signs was so fun!
I also cannot hear the difference. I learnt Russian many years ago, in Uzbekistan. It’s a cool language but I couldn’t get the hard/soft difference then, either. I think my tutor got frustrated with me! 😂
Your hometown in Russia looks very much like many hometowns in America. We are not really so much different as we are alike. Thank you for what you do.
It might be nothing just a graphic to attract your attention to the sign and make it stand out or it could be an action graphic with a cloud of dust to make the sign look like it's moving fast. A business that provides a service will sometimes use a sign like this to suggest they have fast service.
Possibly highly stylized version of a bandage wrapped around an arm at the elbow, the dark spots on the white are a bit of blood from an injury leaking through.
Russian has two versions of each consonant sound. When you say the vowel [i] as in "easy" or the semivowel [j] as in "yes", you lift the body of your tongue towards your palate. Besides your normal consonant sounds, Russian has a whole series of palatalized consonants, where you raise the body of your tongue AT THE SAME TIME that you pronounce it. To write these consonants, you follow them by a soft vowel (я е и ю), or, if there’s no vowel sound after them, you use the soft sign (ь).
@@JesusChristSaves2024 it changes the previous consonant tho. Sign [saın] but sin [sın] so it changes the vowel While топь [topĵ] but топ [top] -- the consonant is changed
@@darrenehhhhhhtill8051 when she said the the word with and without, I was like... Um that's the same word, it sounds exactly the same!. Haha or.. xaxaxa ;) I was watching a Russian youtuber the other day, and he said a word with his mouth open, and the front tip of his tongue curled up! My tongue can not do this, ever, so I might be slightly screwed with russian language.
Fantastic! I had been picking up some of the letters just by watching your videos, but this was excellent to get a formal lesson from you, Natasha! You are a great teacher! Russian is not as difficult as I thought it would be!
This is an exceptional learning (as opposed to teaching) video which helps one to remember the alphabet. The cultural and linguist cues and associations help reinforce the experience.
I've been studying the Russian language for almost two years so I have the alphabet down pretty good but it's always nice to see a different way to teach it and learn some new words in the process.
May I ask what you use, or used? I've only been in about a week, full, and I'm teaching myself. I use aps, and website, watch lots of youtube/videos, and Music! But I'd love to hear from someone who is way deeper than I am. Thank you in advance. :)
@@sumrose7972 I think the best way is movies with subtitles. Television series actually, because you hear the same voice of same actors for a long time (20-40-100 episodes), while movies de facto too short. And better not to watch historical movies where actors often talk not like nowadays (different structure of phrases, words order, outdated words, different means, Russians understand such language, it is really cool approach which put viewer in historical context, but it is not what you want when studying language). But not sure that it is easy approach for newbies (I’m Polish, Russian is similar with a lot of common words, so for me it was easy).
@@juliap.5375 ah yes, thank you, I am actually always trying to find Russian tv shows, free on youtube with subtitles, but I will say finding something that I actually want to watch is not easy. It's almost all historical pieces, really lame love melodramas, or action/war stuff. I'd like a comedy, and for whatever reason doesn't seem to offer any. I've watched one series, The Housewife Husband?? (Think that's the name) and currently settled on The Dark Side of the Soul, if you have any suggestions I'd love to try and find a comedy or something light. :)
@@sumrose7972 I don’t know about first (even not found), while second show... it filmed by Star Media, they produce cheap movies for housewives over 50s. First of all, you need to forget about youtube, on it possibly to find only videos for which nobody want to pay (like production of Star Media). You need torrents! :) One of the largest in post-USSR is rutracker. Or rutor-info (they often change name, better to open via Tor. I hope you know what is Tor?). Both have almost everything what produced in Russia, USA, some other countries. So, you can watch almost any movie (from Terminator to Game of Thrones) with Russian subtitles or voice, everything is always dubbed (in some countries dub is not popular, while in Russia otherwise, original soundtracks are rare, but always exist bunch of different dubs). Comedies? Complicated question. You know, humor is not universal thing actually and a lot of jokes based on references to some culture aspects which unknown for foreigns. As example I watched American sitcom The Big Bang Theory with my American colleague, and in some non-funny scene he started to laugh. As he explained to me, actually in scene was reference to American movie from 1930s... How to get this? Impossibly. There are tons of comedies, what exactly you want? For teens, adults, secondary genre? As universal comedy I strongly recommend Кухня (“The Kitchen” on Amazon). It is actually whole universe (6 seasons of main show, additionally 3 movies and 4 spin-off), they so popular, that own remakes made several countries, from Portugal to Georgia. As something light I can recommend “Восьмидесятые”, but for it is hard to find subtitles. It is about life of students in late 1980s, light and very funny. And last one “Мажор” (“Silver Spoon” on Netflix), it is detective, in general light, with a lot of humor (remind in something American “Castle”). There are hundreds more of course (sadly it is hard to find subtitles), need to know what exactly you like, but I think “The Kitchen” and rest will be good start (at least enough for one year). And forget about Star Media, search better for shows of СТС and ТНТ, they produce by several funny tv shows per year.
@@juliap.5375 haha yes Star Media, exactly.. I was starting to wonder about Russian tv. And yes totally familiar with TOR, so I'll utilize that. Thank you. Good call. Yeah comedy is subjective, for sure, but I am currently looking at the show The Kitchen on Amazon, and it also appears to be suggesting other shows for me to look into. Yeah it used to be you really could find anything and Everything on TH-cam if you were willing to look, now there's nothing left. I wish someone would come out with a new platform, cause this youtube is making it very difficult for me to like anymore. Thank you very much for your help. I very much appreciate it.
Thank you. Your teaching went much much smoother than the formal way of just introducing letters and repeating them several times. The only thing I had problem with was "sh" honestly I couldn't even hear the difference between the two " sh"
the first one "sh" ( Ш, ш ) sounds like in eng words "SHine" or "SHop". The second isn't "sh".. this is mostly like closer to "shch" ( Щ, щ ). You can get it from rus word "SHCHavel'" that means "sorrel" in eng or thats how calls the russian soup
This person reminds me of my French\German language teacher from high school! She was from Croatia, but also knew Russian and in downtime, she sometimes wrote some words she knew and told about pronunciation and whatnot. She made me interested in learning some languages
I'm gonna have to watch this again and again. Every time you said "foreigners have a hard time ...", I have had that same problem. This is the best Russian pronunciation video I've seen.
I was a sign painter, painted by hand until computers took over. Thank you for the visit to your side of our world. Your home is wonderful and you are an excellent communicator and beautiful host. Thanks for the visit, Daniel
This video is informative and entertaining as well. I would recommend it to anybody interested in learning russian alphabet, because it does not only teach about russian letters and their pronounciation, but it demonstrates their application in a very realistic and authentic way. Furthermore in this video it can be seen, what Russia looks like in the far eastern parts. Although I knew the russian alphabet before, I could find still some usefull information in it. Dawai!
this is excellent...I learned Russian in the 80s in the military for my work...the way to learn Russian is to focus on learning and memorizing and pronouncing as many words as possible...dont worry about anything else.. words you memorize will eventually flow into sentences..
Many cyrillic letters are very similar to Greek letters: Г is like Γ (Gamma) = G, Д is like Δ (Delta) = D, Л is like Λ (Lambda) = L, П is like Π (Pi) = P, Р is like Ρ (Rho) = R, У is like Υ (Ypsilon) = U, Х is like Χ (Chi) = CH, Ф is like Φ (Phi) = F.
I love languages and studying them. Natasha has done a great job here with this video. It is very creative to teach the Russian letters by showing them in her city; one can learn a bit about Russian life as well. She knows a lot, and has a very natural presentation style. I would like to read some of the great Russian poets I like in their own language. This is a good beginning! Thanks, Natasha Robert, Canada
Wow, pharmacie in dutch is apotheker. That sounds much closer to the russian word than i thought it would..if only all the words would be this similar, i could be speaking russian in no time. This was such a fun video! Thanks for this lesson!
@@tytorubio3271 Old Dutch and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) are cousins. Old Dutch "Irlôsin sol an frithe sêla mîna fan thên thia ginâcont mi, wanda under managon he was mit mi" versus Old English "Si ðin nama gehalgod. Tobecume ðin rice. Gewurde ðin willa on eorþan, swa swa on heofonum.'
This video got me interesting in learning the Russian language. Thanks Natasha for making this interesting video, and making your language more accessible to foreigners.
I found your channel a week ago, very interesting content, seeing your life in Russia especially in the Far East region which I don’t know nothing about. I am thinking about learning Russian so this video was super educational. Keep up the good work, greetings from Germany :)
Thank you very much for that fun way to learn. I'm now learning Russian everyday. One day I hope to be able to speak it fluently. Great video keep up the good work!
Natasha: This was a good idea and it is how I learned the alphabet when I was in Moscow. Perhaps you could do another "in town" video about dialogue you would hear going shopping, taking transportation, going to a restaurant and some Russian culture.
I'll start this from the beginning and perhaps it will sink in a bit more. One day-post Covid 19-I hope to travel to see locations associated with the the great Russian writers (Tsarskoye Selo, Peredelkino, Dostoyevsky Steps, anything Pushkin or Akhmatova-and the list goes on). Thank you, Natasha, for creating this learning tool. Ричард
This is how I slowly learn Russian. I watch several Russians on TH-cam, and noticed the large number of Russian words that can be learned from watching them walk through their towns. Stores have words on them, street signs have words on them, menu's, books, and many other things that you might see in a Russian blogger's videos. You may not become fluent, but you will be able to function on some level if you can read street signs, labels on packages, and signs in shop windows.
Watched you video on the Russian smile...keep that lovely smile going. You are a natural teacher for us old folks trying to learn Russian language and culture.
I knew already russian letters, they were not difficult to me to memorize because I learned old greek alphabet at high school... Very helpful video about pronunciation though, thank you Natasha :)
This video has uncoded my learning needs. Your city is literally made for you to teach the world all this incredibly useful Russian vocabularies in a way I might remember a little better. Спасібо
Did you know that there is a very famous singer in the country I was born in called Nati Natasha. Nati is a very common short nickname for Natalia. I also like how together the name almost sounds like “naughty Natasha” but anyway it is Nati Natasha she is a reggaeton artist. Natasha just like you Наташа. I was born in Puerto Rico now I live in USA.
@@RowynDaily It was interesting listening to English-speaking Russians and Chinese in the 80s and 90s. Most Russians I heard spoke English with a European accent, because most of their exposure to English came from British or continental Europeans who spoke or taught English. On the other hand, most Chinese I heard spoke English with an American accent because of the influx of American teachers to teach English in China after President Nixon relaxed diplomatic relations with the PRC.
@@ДаниилНалбандян-м9у я тут посмотрел иностранку Нурию, она учит Русский. Токо же ощущение посетило. Но у меня другой вопрос, почему мне ютуб подсунул вначале Нурию, теперь Наташу.
When I was young I got a book that taught Russian and studied it a bit just for fun because I was bored one summer. I learned a bit of grammar but nothing I remember. I also memorized the alphabet at the time. I don't remember all of it, but I recall one time a few years ago - which would be the equivalent of 25 or 30 years after I memorized the alphabet - I was playing Geoguessr. I moved around a bit trying to figure out where I was. I saw a sign in cyrillic and was able to figure out the word Kaliningrad. I thought it was very cool that I was able to remember an alphabet that I hadn't really looked at so many years later, and even now whenever I see cyrillic in anything I find it fun to try to work out the sound of the word, even if I don't know what it means.
Hi, I´m from the Czech Republic. We used to learn Russian laguage at school. Actually Советский Союз used to be presented to us as our idol and protector. I can still read Russian words but not without problem - I really have to focus and recall what is what. But when I was about10-12 years old (1987-89) I could read and write easy texts in азбука fluently. But when I hear your pronuncinantion I think our Czech teachers couldn´t speak good Russian. It sounds much better than they taught us. Then there were political changes and everyone started to learn German and English.LOL
@@samiranazari4126 well, I have problems with х and ж and ч as well, but not quite as bad. And my wife tried to explain why о is pronounced as a sometimes. 😆
Thank you. I enjoyed your video a great deal. I have been to Vladivostok, Moscow, St Petersburg and many small Russian towns. It was very enjoyable to tour Spassk with you, as it reminded me of many of the towns I have visited in Russia. I have learned the Russian alphabet, but your explanation was very helpful. Большое спасибо.
When I went to Moscow on Google roads I was happy to see signs I understood, such as "BAHK" so I began to study and learn the Russian alphabet. This video has been very helpful to me. Thank you.
Анапа - хорошее место, с пляжами и прочим. Там тепло. Кстати, достаточно недалеко от Анапы был построен знаменитый мост в Крым - можете и его поглядеть.
Thank you so much, this is the best lesson on the Russian alphabet I've found and I'll be referring to it over and over again I have no doubt. Thumbs up!
По-началу считалось, что обычный ремонт - это из отечественных материалов и по местным ценам. А Евро - соответственно иностранные (европейские) материалы и цены. Думаю так. Это не стиль. Потому, как можно сделать евро-ремонт из евроматериалов в любом стиле ...да хоть в африканском.
I like how every few letters there was an unexplained jump cut, it seemed to add a little bit of humor that made the video that much nicer to watch. I'm not sure if she did it on purpose or not, but I quite liked it, especially because it was a little subtle as well
Thanks Natasha, you are a star! Much appreciated, and such a creative and interesting way to teach. The chemist sign (and one or two others) look like they are reusing an old sign from a previous tenant. Unless it is supposed to be a pestle (пестик - almost sounding the same). You mentioned the Greek connection of some of the letters. I'm not an expert in greek but I have found it helpful for these: Phi = Ф = 'ph' or F Pi = П = 3.14* = P You have a nice town / city, it is easier to remember things when they vary, I will watch it a few more times however, as the hard/soft bl, b symbols are quite subtle for me. I thought the market was funny, because as you explained about the masks, just out of shot (through the gate) was a lady who possibly wasn't wearing one, which I found rather hopeful! Also it's very useful to hear the letters, some sound quite different to the alphabet conversion sheets can imply. Я find the alphabet is a key to unlock quite a few words such as Instrument = Инструмент and System = Система etc. Спасибо, Наташа.
Спасибо for such a comment! I liked you thoughts. Some words in Russian are just cognates of the English words: компьютер - computer, телефон - telephone, интернет - internet. As for the masks, it's so absurd because they make people to wear the mask in a supermarket, but nobody wears it in a bus... In my remote town the virus is not bad, so people don't care about it or they're just tired of it.
Thank you, Natasha. I’ve tried to learn the Russian alphabet and your method is so practical it is very helpful in a way I cannot get from texts. I still cannot pronounce the formal word for “Thank you” - it twists my tongue up several different ways every time I try.
Хорошее произношение) thank you, for video. I, m learn English, my level - beginner or elementary. At the beginning of the video, I understood more or less about are you speak, don't without translating in my head in Russian, which means that there is progress
@Velcro 809 Него шта! И ми ћирилицу за трку имамо :) ! Сада нека професорка изговори Ђ и Ћ ако уме. ЧЕБУРЕЧНАЈА, знао сам одмах да је то БУРЕКЏИНИЦА :) .
@@dustymiller65 Russian and Serbian letters are very similar, but not all are the same. Those are Serbian letters, I just wanted to point out similarities 🤗
"Однако понял, что нельзя ориентироваться на цвет, когда вместо мясной лавки попал в магазин электрических принадлежностей. Свою первую букву «А» он выучил в «Главрыбе» на Моховой, а потом и «Б» - потому что удобнее было подбегать к магазину со стороны слова «рыба». Дальше Шарик начал упражняться в чтении и очень хорошо стал ориентироваться на улицах Москвы" ну это так, а вообще ролик понравился.
my grandfather used to collect stamps in the 1970s and his collection had some rare russian stamps. when i was a kid i used to think they said "NOYTA CCCP" but now i realise they said "POCHTA SSSR" / SOVIET POST. спасибо наташа
Having really no familiarity with Russian it was challenging learning the letters, but you presented it very well. I also really enjoy seeing the different locations, it helps to understand life there, which is fairly different in some ways and of course very much the same in many. I enjoy your videos very much, thank you for making them.
Спасибо за отличное видео! И ам трыинг то врите тхис коммент витх кыррилик леттерс. I hope it was not too bad. Please correct me if I was wrong. п.с.: How do you write the english W in russian? Привет из Дании!
If you just want to replace English letters with their Cyrillic equivalent, your sentence is correct. But there is another way. You can write it with the English pronunciation but in Russian letters, then it will be Ай эм траинг ту райт зыс камент виз сириллик леттерс. Anyway, good job! And we write W in two ways: it can be just В (v) or as У + vowel that follows it. For example, Emma Watson in Russian is Эмма Уотсон. But the same surname for the caracter of Dr. John H. Watson in Russian is Доктор Ватсон. In some words it's officilly В. For example, Wisconsin in Russian is Висконсин, not Уисконсин. But I think using У and a vowel is more correct. Because for Russian В English has V.
I wanted to learn Russian letters on the streets with Nataly, but then I realized I already know all the Russian letters ;D ''Наталиииии, утоли мои печали''
I hear Natasha saying: "foreigners often confuse these two letters "shé" and "shé" but you have to learn how to tell them apart"... ehr... rewind 5 seconds... "shé" and "shé" what?! rewind again...."shé" and "shé"...and again... "shé" and "shé".... and yet again... "shé" and "shé"... oooookayyyy... I'll trust you on this one :))
@@markmilan8365 If in the learner's native language there are no "soft" and "hard" sounds concepts, it is really hard to explain. Wikipedia: "In phonetics, palatalization or palatization refers to a way of pronouncing a consonant in which part of the tongue is moved close to the hard palate. Consonants pronounced this way are said to be palatalized and are transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet by affixing the letter ⟨ʲ⟩ to the base consonant. Palatalization cannot minimally distinguish words in most dialects of English, but it may do so in languages such as Russian, Mandarin and Irish."
@@1234567qwerification Thank you for your comment. Of course my explanation was not a professional one (like instead yours) but it works as an help for those that find very difficult to understand how to distinguish between them and do not speak Russian. Usually I understand which letter is used depending on the context and in case of mistakes I can still verify in internet.
Now know more about the Russian language than I ever had before, thank you. I don't think I'll ever learn to speak it, but reading it is something I've always been interested in.
She says that she doent know what she wants to do as a profession , Its obvious shes going to be a master teacher ... and one of the best ones , i though ill never learn something new , but with her im learning alot...
I can slowly read and sound out Russian writing but won't know what it means. If I see a word a lot, I look up it's definition. I'd say this is the most realistic way of learning a new language 😂
It is my experience as well. Sometimes I feel like I'm studying the actual Rosetta stone from Egypt. If we leave this earth we will find that they speak Russian on Mars. 😁
@@gabbyhyman1246 I hope Elon musk finds a rock on Mars with the word "blyat" carved into it with primitive stone tools, just so we can all lose our minds over it
What’s your favorite Russian letter?
Φ , its the same in greek :)
Д, it is the first I learned!!
Жжжж 🐞 and Рррр 🐯
How do you say Beautiful in Russian?
Ы, потому что всем поим друзьям приходится объяснять, что это звук, который произносишь, когда тебя ударили в живот
Best basic Russian language lesson I've ever had.
I was a languages major in college (French, German, and Italian). This is by far the best introduction to the Russian/Cyrillic alphabet and pronunciation I've ever seen. It uses real-world examples. It shows some lowercase letters and script/cursive as well as uppercase. It shows stylistic variations that are used for effect. It explains the difference between "yeh" and "yaw" and how one is sometimes substituted for the other. It shows examples of how a vowel can be pronounced in different ways, depending on usage. A lot of info packed into 20 minutes, with no wasted time. Well done. Спасибо.
My favourite Russian letter is "Ж". It just looks so cool.
"Ж" looks like a bug. The bug in Russian is "Жук"
@@terwit1549 Like Женщина. Because Russian women are beautiful.
Russians generally say - "Девушка". It does not depend on age. "Женщина" is something official
@@terwit1549 дурак? Это зависит от возраста. Ты бабушку или девочку женщиной назовешь? Девушка - это конкретно молодая женщина, дословно - девственница.
@@ARTOMYS ПНХ
Зачем я, носитель русского языка, 20 минут смотрел про русский алфавит на английском языке? o_O
захотел почувствовать себя иностранцем
Просто девочка красивая
Аналогично, зачем я это смотрел не отрываясь)))
Я тоже)Девушка красивая просто)
@@mikewishnevski6665 И голос приятный
I'm a native Russian, but I really like how you've chosen to teach foreigners Russian alphabet by demonstrating real Russian signboards, along with pieces of regular live in Russia. I know that when I first tried to learn English, it was hard for me to grasp foreign culture and, I think, I'd find such pieces of English culture helpful. They are not much, of course, but they still make you feel like you're already there, and it's a nice comforting feeling for someone trying to learn a new language.
Your English is almost flawless. If you ever want to trick native speakers, just get rid of 90% of your punctuation and no one would ever know.
@@christinafacts444, thanks, I'll do that :3
The girl, especially for you, was looking for bad landscapes. :) This is enough in any country. Russia, over the past 30 years, has gone through a lot of bad things. And now, in any city in Russia, you can find very unattractive architecture, etc. But there is also a lot of new and good things. The girl did not show this. (Google translator)
@@СтаниславПилипенко-я5с, I'm not sure there is such thing as good or bad landscapes when it comes to conveying the spirit of daily life in any country. Because the point of it is to give people the feeling of what it's like to live there and go places. If you just show the most beautiful places, you will convey wrong picture, it's like when you are a tourist and you only remember tourist attraction spots after leaving, not the narrow streets or the courtyards with kids playing with their sticks. I've seen many Russians trying to showcase Russian attractions and architecture (mostly in Moscow with the latter), but what they showed never felt like Russia to me, because they have omitted the bad pieces of roads where puddles form after rain or the Soviet Union-old buildings with ugly graffity and swearwords painted on them that I grew up seeing every day. Or the people, their tired or gloomy faces when they hurry to work or to other important places, all busy and worried and trying to be punctual and being frustrated with our municipal services etc.
The point of this exercise is not to demonstrate how cool we are by picking the most beautiful places of Russia, but to relay the real picture with both the beautiful and the ugly, so that the foreigners could feel the life here even if they haven't been to Russia once. And if someone thinks it's more respectful to Russia to show only good stuff about it, then I disagree strongly, because there can't be any respect without acknowledgement of true state of things.
@@АнатолийАнатолий-п1д In the 1990s, European and US politicians actively supported corruption in the countries of the former USSR (this is a fact). What is corruption (for real), we learned after the collapse of the USSR. In the days of the USSR, it was almost nonexistent (as it turned out). A lot of resources were taken from the former USSR. The people have become very poor. All these resources supported the economies of Europe and the United States (in the first place). It was a real genocide of Europe and the United States against the peoples of the former USSR. This is exactly how it was (I don’t know what your media say there, I experienced it all myself). Wherever Europe comes in, it only gets worse (with a few exceptions). Now Russia has just begun to recover from the shock of the 1990s. And now in Russia it is much safer and more comfortable than in many other countries. Yes, somewhere in the cities of Russia there is the architecture of the 1990s. But this is less and less. The West brought great grief to the countries of the former USSR. I'm from Ukraine. Ukrainian oligarchs are guilty of Ukraine's troubles (in the first place). They, too, were raised by Western politicians. I know what I'm talking about. Since independence, the population of Ukraine has dropped from 52 million to 30-32 million. Even before the Maidans, Ukraine lived better than Russia. Now the comparison is in favor of Russia. In Ukraine, there is now a real junta and fascists. And Europe (oddly enough) does not see this.
As an educator, she is a natural. Teaching comes so easy, and she does such a good job. 😃
Couldn’t agree more
I agree Mark. Natasha is a natural teacher. I wish my son could meet someone like Natasha. Her parents must be proud.
She is cute. I could listen to her for hours
Totally agree
You’re an incompetent educator.
Love this lady very much. She is very proud of her town and country and wow she's so smart..
and pretty
@@herzart212 when i saw this comment just has one reply i knew it was about her looks. which is the only reason im here so...
@@poke-champ4256 When I saw this comment and saw two replies, I knew one of them would involve “pretty” and I thought the other reply would be like “SIMP”
simp
@@herzart212 Her pretty face is half the reason I come here.
She (or whoever actually runs this channel) Is good at marketing these vids.
Oh this is the smartest thing of you to teach the letters on streetsign and such. When I was in greece, I learned the greek alphabet the exact same way.
I love Russian old song's, always been wanted to learn Russian for a long time, Темная ночь song is one of my favorite. Love from Vietnam!!
I liked the method adopted in teaching Russian letters.I would definitely another lesson.
люблю Вьетнам:)
я поляк и очен люблю буквы Ш, Ч, Я, Е, Ё, Ю потому что у нас в польском тоже такие звуки есть. Но нам нужно писать две буквы для одного звука вместо одной: Sz, Cz, Ja, Je, Jo, Ju. :)
Thats because cyrillic alphabet was made exactly for slavic languages, while poles where to much affected by german influence
@@alexeig127 I know that, but polish is mainly influenced by latin, french and greek, not only german. :)
ŠĐČĆŽ
Вы тратите больше чернил, когда пишете :)
А мне нравится польское написание.👍
I understand from your videos that public smiling isn’t the cultural norm in your country, but it doesn’t change the fact that you have a beautiful smile 😊 that lights you up when you use it. Your videos are interesting and informative, Thank you for taking the time to do them!
The 'monument to the endangered letter.' That got me🤗🤔🤨🙃🙄😎
Poor letter with the two dots on top, nobody ever remembers to put those on. Ëë
@@dustymiller65 Letters with Diacritics UNITE!!!
If I'm remembering correctly, Russian had an additional letter that wasn't used heavily so the Bolsheviks dropped it when they seized power in 1917. Is the one in this video that same letter or is it a different letter?
In Belarusian the dots MUST be written. If you don't, it's a spelling error.
That letter isn't even on the Russian keyboard in the Google translation page.
I don't know anything about the Russian language but if I ever started to learn Russian, you'd be my teacher of choice. Best wishes from Finland!
just don´t Simo Häyhä her please...
@@Ulexcool well boy, before it would ever come to that, they would Arthur Harris us 100 %
I saw this video for the first time about a year ago and couldn't get the Russian letters out of my head. Then recently I started studying Russian and as soon as I learned the alphabet I watched this video again to review. I think this video makes a great review. I'm enjoying studying Russian and want to continue learning this beautiful language.
When I was learning to read my native English as a child I spent so much time walking around with my mother while she was running errands and I read all the signs. I think signs are a great way to learn and review letters and words.
It's 2 am and I have no idea why I am watching this, because basically I am Russian. The author, you are amazing!!
Natasha, you are a great teacher! Congratulations! Thanks for this video.
Hi from Brazil, Natasha.
You are a wonderful “professora” ( teacher in portuguese ).
@@JackSmith-ou1dg учительница*
учитель is male teacher
@@nnawnbs училка)))
@@nnawnbs учитель is a man and a woman. Учительница is a feminitive. It's a colloquial speech. But if it's an official document, for example, then only учитель is acceptable.
Profesora is professor in Spanish as well!
@@ldgaming4213 professor is профессор in Russian
Never been to Russia yet, but have always been fascinated by it. Back when I was in High school, I used to take my class notes in Cyrillic, but phonetically in English. Confused my teachers. And I had a girl I used to write notes to in class, so she learned how to write in it too. :)
Keep up the excellent videos.
Kind of like the bottles of Russian Standard vodka on the back bar of one of my favorite watering holes here in Wisconsin - one side of the bottles have the brand name in English, phonetically spelled out in Cyrillic, the other side in straight English.
i do that toooo hahhah everybody always looks at me weird but its so much more fun
@@mgk920Brand name in English, spelld out in Cyrillic🤣 It has Russian name in one side, and English name in the other side "РУССКИЙ СТАНДАРТ ВОДКА" -"RUSSIAN STANDARD VODKA"
First lesson I have ever had in Russian, very interesting especially when shown on signage. You are a lovely teacher - thanks.
It's so hard for me to hear the difference between all the letters that "sound the same but softer or harder" 😭 but she did a great job and going around town showing us signs was so fun!
I also cannot hear the difference. I learnt Russian many years ago, in Uzbekistan. It’s a cool language but I couldn’t get the hard/soft difference then, either. I think my tutor got frustrated with me! 😂
I just love the way you dress. So simple and tasteful. You're absolutely beautiful! Whatever you do: never change!
Thank you very much for this very interesting video. You are a great ambassador for Russia.
I love cheburech! We have Cheburechnaya restaurant in NY too!
Is there cat's, dog's and bum's meat in your chebureks too?
Your hometown in Russia looks very much like many hometowns in America. We are not really so much different as we are alike. Thank you for what you do.
Probably the best basic Russian alphabet lesson I've ever seen. Brilliant to tie it in with signs on the street!
So what you think is located above the pharmacy? We have such suggestions so far: a bed
, a pestle, sea wave, and avalanche.
It’s smth liquid
A pestle no doubt.
It might be a piece of cotton on skin
It might be nothing just a graphic to attract your attention to the sign and make it stand out or it could be an action graphic with a cloud of dust to make the sign look like it's moving fast. A business that provides a service will sometimes use a sign like this to suggest they have fast service.
Possibly highly stylized version of a bandage wrapped around an arm at the elbow, the dark spots on the white are a bit of blood from an injury leaking through.
the hard sign and soft sign still stays a mystery for me ^^
Russian has two versions of each consonant sound. When you say the vowel [i] as in "easy" or the semivowel [j] as in "yes", you lift the body of your tongue towards your palate. Besides your normal consonant sounds, Russian has a whole series of palatalized consonants, where you raise the body of your tongue AT THE SAME TIME that you pronounce it.
To write these consonants, you follow them by a soft vowel (я е и ю), or, if there’s no vowel sound after them, you use the soft sign (ь).
It's basically a silent letter. It's like how the letter "g" produces the pronunciation of the word "sign".
@@JesusChristSaves2024 it changes the previous consonant tho.
Sign [saın] but sin [sın] so it changes the vowel
While топь [topĵ] but топ [top] -- the consonant is changed
@@fernandolamadrid9889 why tho
@@darrenehhhhhhtill8051 when she said the the word with and without, I was like... Um that's the same word, it sounds exactly the same!. Haha or.. xaxaxa ;)
I was watching a Russian youtuber the other day, and he said a word with his mouth open, and the front tip of his tongue curled up! My tongue can not do this, ever, so I might be slightly screwed with russian language.
Thank you so much. I have always been fascinated by Cyrillic letters, they have an artistic look to them for a non speaker.
are you planning to start learning Russian one day?
Fantastic! I had been picking up some of the letters just by watching your videos, but this was excellent to get a formal lesson from you, Natasha! You are a great teacher! Russian is not as difficult as I thought it would be!
This is an exceptional learning (as opposed to teaching) video which helps one to remember the alphabet. The cultural and linguist cues and associations help reinforce the experience.
I've been studying the Russian language for almost two years so I have the alphabet down pretty good but it's always nice to see a different way to teach it and learn some new words in the process.
May I ask what you use, or used? I've only been in about a week, full, and I'm teaching myself. I use aps, and website, watch lots of youtube/videos, and Music! But I'd love to hear from someone who is way deeper than I am. Thank you in advance. :)
@@sumrose7972 I think the best way is movies with subtitles. Television series actually, because you hear the same voice of same actors for a long time (20-40-100 episodes), while movies de facto too short. And better not to watch historical movies where actors often talk not like nowadays (different structure of phrases, words order, outdated words, different means, Russians understand such language, it is really cool approach which put viewer in historical context, but it is not what you want when studying language). But not sure that it is easy approach for newbies (I’m Polish, Russian is similar with a lot of common words, so for me it was easy).
@@juliap.5375 ah yes, thank you, I am actually always trying to find Russian tv shows, free on youtube with subtitles, but I will say finding something that I actually want to watch is not easy. It's almost all historical pieces, really lame love melodramas, or action/war stuff. I'd like a comedy, and for whatever reason doesn't seem to offer any. I've watched one series, The Housewife Husband?? (Think that's the name) and currently settled on The Dark Side of the Soul, if you have any suggestions I'd love to try and find a comedy or something light. :)
@@sumrose7972 I don’t know about first (even not found), while second show... it filmed by Star Media, they produce cheap movies for housewives over 50s.
First of all, you need to forget about youtube, on it possibly to find only videos for which nobody want to pay (like production of Star Media). You need torrents! :) One of the largest in post-USSR is rutracker. Or rutor-info (they often change name, better to open via Tor. I hope you know what is Tor?). Both have almost everything what produced in Russia, USA, some other countries. So, you can watch almost any movie (from Terminator to Game of Thrones) with Russian subtitles or voice, everything is always dubbed (in some countries dub is not popular, while in Russia otherwise, original soundtracks are rare, but always exist bunch of different dubs).
Comedies? Complicated question. You know, humor is not universal thing actually and a lot of jokes based on references to some culture aspects which unknown for foreigns. As example I watched American sitcom The Big Bang Theory with my American colleague, and in some non-funny scene he started to laugh. As he explained to me, actually in scene was reference to American movie from 1930s... How to get this? Impossibly.
There are tons of comedies, what exactly you want? For teens, adults, secondary genre? As universal comedy I strongly recommend Кухня (“The Kitchen” on Amazon). It is actually whole universe (6 seasons of main show, additionally 3 movies and 4 spin-off), they so popular, that own remakes made several countries, from Portugal to Georgia.
As something light I can recommend “Восьмидесятые”, but for it is hard to find subtitles. It is about life of students in late 1980s, light and very funny.
And last one “Мажор” (“Silver Spoon” on Netflix), it is detective, in general light, with a lot of humor (remind in something American “Castle”).
There are hundreds more of course (sadly it is hard to find subtitles), need to know what exactly you like, but I think “The Kitchen” and rest will be good start (at least enough for one year). And forget about Star Media, search better for shows of СТС and ТНТ, they produce by several funny tv shows per year.
@@juliap.5375 haha yes Star Media, exactly.. I was starting to wonder about Russian tv. And yes totally familiar with TOR, so I'll utilize that. Thank you. Good call.
Yeah comedy is subjective, for sure, but I am currently looking at the show The Kitchen on Amazon, and it also appears to be suggesting other shows for me to look into. Yeah it used to be you really could find anything and Everything on TH-cam if you were willing to look, now there's nothing left. I wish someone would come out with a new platform, cause this youtube is making it very difficult for me to like anymore. Thank you very much for your help. I very much appreciate it.
My best russian lesson ever. I am totally puzzled with the subtleness of the hard and soft signs, so difficult to grasp.
That and the sh and shsh sound of ш щ ?? This gets me as well
@@sumrose7972 don't worry guys, Russians will understand you either way, you will get it after awhile
теперь я выучил английский .
а я наконец-то алфавит :)
я тоже!) Я теперь знаю "рашен наташа" )))
@@ЛешаБорисевич-ч1ъ + хд
did you watch it backwards by mistake?
❤❤❤
Thank you. Your teaching went much much smoother than the formal way of just introducing letters and repeating them several times. The only thing I had problem with was "sh" honestly I couldn't even hear the difference between the two " sh"
the first one "sh" ( Ш, ш ) sounds like in eng words "SHine" or "SHop". The second isn't "sh".. this is mostly like closer to "shch" ( Щ, щ ). You can get it from rus word "SHCHavel'" that means "sorrel" in eng or thats how calls the russian soup
This person reminds me of my French\German language teacher from high school! She was from Croatia, but also knew Russian and in downtime, she sometimes wrote some words she knew and told about pronunciation and whatnot. She made me interested in learning some languages
I'm gonna have to watch this again and again. Every time you said "foreigners have a hard time ...", I have had that same problem. This is the best Russian pronunciation video I've seen.
I was a sign painter, painted by hand until computers took over. Thank you for the visit to your side of our world. Your home is wonderful and you are an excellent communicator and beautiful host. Thanks for the visit, Daniel
This video is informative and entertaining as well. I would recommend it to anybody interested in learning russian alphabet, because it does not only teach about russian letters and their pronounciation, but it demonstrates their application in a very realistic and authentic way. Furthermore in this video it can be seen, what Russia looks like in the far eastern parts. Although I knew the russian alphabet before, I could find still some usefull information in it. Dawai!
this is excellent...I learned Russian in the 80s in the military for my work...the way to learn Russian is to focus on learning and memorizing and pronouncing as many words as possible...dont worry about anything else.. words you memorize will eventually flow into sentences..
Just started learning russian. This helped a lot, especially the explaination how words are pronounced differently without certain letters.
Excellent teaching skills on display here!
Loved the lesson using actual steet signs wish there were more lessons like this.
Many cyrillic letters are very similar to Greek letters:
Г is like Γ (Gamma) = G,
Д is like Δ (Delta) = D,
Л is like Λ (Lambda) = L,
П is like Π (Pi) = P,
Р is like Ρ (Rho) = R,
У is like Υ (Ypsilon) = U,
Х is like Χ (Chi) = CH,
Ф is like Φ (Phi) = F.
wow thank you, this is useful!
Youre a very good teacher. I appreciate the effort you put into this video. You are great! Cheers from Georgia USA.
I love languages and studying them. Natasha has done a great job here with this video. It is very creative to teach the Russian letters by showing them in her city; one can learn a bit about Russian life as well. She knows a lot, and has a very natural presentation style. I would like to read some of the great Russian poets I like in their own language. This is a good beginning! Thanks, Natasha Robert, Canada
I loved your idea of using your city to talk about the alphabet. Very creative idea. Спасибо большое.
Wow, pharmacie in dutch is apotheker. That sounds much closer to the russian word than i thought it would..if only all the words would be this similar, i could be speaking russian in no time.
This was such a fun video! Thanks for this lesson!
Both words coming from apothecary.
@@gleggett3817 oh yes apothecary!
(they arent derived from english if thats what you are saying.
It comes from latin/greek language )
@@tytorubio3271 from the Latin apothecarius "shopkeeper" into old French. Pharmacy is also from Latin/French with Greek underpinnings.
The Dutch language is older than English, even some of the English words have their origin from Dutch.
I dont know about Russian
@@tytorubio3271 Old Dutch and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) are cousins. Old Dutch "Irlôsin sol an frithe sêla mîna fan thên thia ginâcont mi, wanda under managon he was mit mi" versus Old English "Si ðin nama gehalgod. Tobecume ðin rice. Gewurde ðin willa on eorþan,
swa swa on heofonum.'
Thanks for the tour of your town. The way you discussed it, I always thought it was smaller and more rural.
This video got me interesting in learning the Russian language. Thanks Natasha for making this interesting video, and making your language more accessible to foreigners.
I found your channel a week ago, very interesting content, seeing your life in Russia especially in the Far East region which I don’t know nothing about. I am thinking about learning Russian so this video was super educational. Keep up the good work, greetings from Germany :)
Thank you very much for that fun way to learn. I'm now learning Russian everyday. One day I hope to be able to speak it fluently. Great video keep up the good work!
I agree with others you would be a good teacher. You'd get my undivided attention. :)
Thanks!
I might have to watch that one a few more times. If little kids can learn this, so can I. Eventually.
Natasha: This was a good idea and it is how I learned the alphabet when I was in Moscow. Perhaps you could do another "in town" video about dialogue you would hear going shopping, taking transportation, going to a restaurant and some Russian culture.
How much is it? "v kakuyu cenu mne obojdyotsya eta hernya?" My name is Sasha, I answered you for Natasha
I'll start this from the beginning and perhaps it will sink in a bit more. One day-post Covid 19-I hope to travel to see locations associated with the the great Russian writers (Tsarskoye Selo, Peredelkino, Dostoyevsky Steps, anything Pushkin or Akhmatova-and the list goes on). Thank you, Natasha, for creating this learning tool. Ричард
This is how I slowly learn Russian. I watch several Russians on TH-cam, and noticed the large number of Russian words that can be learned from watching them walk through their towns. Stores have words on them, street signs have words on them, menu's, books, and many other things that you might see in a Russian blogger's videos. You may not become fluent, but you will be able to function on some level if you can read street signs, labels on packages, and signs in shop windows.
Watched you video on the Russian smile...keep that lovely smile going. You are a natural teacher for us old folks trying to learn Russian language and culture.
I knew already russian letters, they were not difficult to me to memorize because I learned old greek alphabet at high school... Very helpful video about pronunciation though, thank you Natasha :)
Great way to learn. Looks like a fun atmosphere in the town.
Так мило, уехав из спасска в 2010 году, внезапно осознать, что начало снимается в том дворе, в котором жил 12 лет=)
ааааааааааа, ору 🤣
Thanks for sharing. I hope some of the young folks around the world see this!
This video has uncoded my learning needs. Your city is literally made for you to teach the world all this incredibly useful Russian vocabularies in a way I might remember a little better. Спасібо
Did you know that there is a very famous singer in the country I was born in called Nati Natasha. Nati is a very common short nickname for Natalia. I also like how together the name almost sounds like “naughty Natasha” but anyway it is Nati Natasha she is a reggaeton artist. Natasha just like you Наташа.
I was born in Puerto Rico now I live in USA.
If i could travel for Rusia, i would love you to be my guide. Its so amazing how you explain all
I’m impressed by her English without Russian accent
nah she has a Russian accent but it's way subtler than most Russians
Because she went study in America.
@@RowynDaily It was interesting listening to English-speaking Russians and Chinese in the 80s and 90s. Most Russians I heard spoke English with a European accent, because most of their exposure to English came from British or continental Europeans who spoke or taught English. On the other hand, most Chinese I heard spoke English with an American accent because of the influx of American teachers to teach English in China after President Nixon relaxed diplomatic relations with the PRC.
im guessing English is not your mother tonged she clearly has a Russian English accent when she speaks english
Кому тоже в рекомендациях попалось
Мне
я в последнее время видео по английскому смотрю. И вдруг это, но все равно посмотрел)))
Похоже пора заново Русский учить
@@ДаниилНалбандян-м9у я тут посмотрел иностранку Нурию, она учит Русский. Токо же ощущение посетило.
Но у меня другой вопрос, почему мне ютуб подсунул вначале Нурию, теперь Наташу.
I've been trying to learn Russian - you've been a big help with your videos. Thanks!
When I was young I got a book that taught Russian and studied it a bit just for fun because I was bored one summer. I learned a bit of grammar but nothing I remember. I also memorized the alphabet at the time. I don't remember all of it, but I recall one time a few years ago - which would be the equivalent of 25 or 30 years after I memorized the alphabet - I was playing Geoguessr. I moved around a bit trying to figure out where I was. I saw a sign in cyrillic and was able to figure out the word Kaliningrad. I thought it was very cool that I was able to remember an alphabet that I hadn't really looked at so many years later, and even now whenever I see cyrillic in anything I find it fun to try to work out the sound of the word, even if I don't know what it means.
Ого, заморочилась) Гуд джоб!
Hi, I´m from the Czech Republic. We used to learn Russian laguage at school. Actually Советский Союз used to be presented to us as our idol and protector. I can still read Russian words but not without problem - I really have to focus and recall what is what. But when I was about10-12 years old (1987-89) I could read and write easy texts in азбука fluently. But when I hear your pronuncinantion I think our Czech teachers couldn´t speak good Russian. It sounds much better than they taught us. Then there were political changes and everyone started to learn German and English.LOL
Im from Slovakia, around the same age. When you can read azbuka, its quite easy understand lot of words, isnt it?
@@marlboro9tibike It is! :-¨) Ano, v mnoha směrech je to podobný jazyk
I really can't hear the difference between ш and щ, and hard or soft sound (ь ъ) pretty much flies right past me as well.
I think it will come with time and practice, don’t worry, Russian speakers will still understand you without any problem
@@samiranazari4126 well, I have problems with х and ж and ч as well, but not quite as bad. And my wife tried to explain why о is pronounced as a sometimes. 😆
Ш is like SH in "shop", щ is like a CH in "Michigan" or "Chicago".
Just try to smile while pronouncing 'ш' and you will get щ instead.
@@СергейКовалев-т1д6м, носители и там и там “sh” произносят одинаково. У них это больше как «щ» в обоих случаях. Вбей на forvo.com
Thank you. I enjoyed your video a great deal. I have been to Vladivostok, Moscow, St Petersburg and many small Russian towns. It was very enjoyable to tour Spassk with you, as it reminded me of many of the towns I have visited in Russia. I have learned the Russian alphabet, but your explanation was very helpful. Большое спасибо.
Putting the IPA in there made all the difference to my ability to follow along and understand what sounds you're making. Thank you for doing that!
When I went to Moscow on Google roads I was happy to see signs I understood, such as "BAHK" so I began to study and learn the Russian alphabet. This video has been very helpful to me. Thank you.
But still "БАНК". "В" in Russian means V
We are moving to ANAPA Russia next year and we have to learn Russian Language. We speak Croatian as well and it is close to Russian.
Анапа - хорошее место, с пляжами и прочим. Там тепло. Кстати, достаточно недалеко от Анапы был построен знаменитый мост в Крым - можете и его поглядеть.
Это самая лучшая пропаганда Русской культуры, спасибо тебе!
I have lived in the USA for 70 years, and this young girl speaks English more articulately than most of the people I've ever met here.
Thank you so much, this is the best lesson on the Russian alphabet I've found and I'll be referring to it over and over again I have no doubt. Thumbs up!
3:41 только у нас могут придумать такое название ЕВРО окно, евро-ремонт и т.д... Евро окно на Дальнем Востоке)
у нас на базаре продаётся даже еврошвабра...
@@ХЕЙТЕРЫ-ы2б а-ха-ха
так ниче удивительного я думаю имеется ввиду евротехнология, типа окна эти пришли из европы
По-началу считалось, что обычный ремонт - это из отечественных материалов и по местным ценам. А Евро - соответственно иностранные (европейские) материалы и цены. Думаю так. Это не стиль. Потому, как можно сделать евро-ремонт из евроматериалов в любом стиле ...да хоть в африканском.
"As you can see this store is closed, I don't know why, and... uhm... let's move onto the next letter!" - 😂😂😂
This seems to sum up several aspects of my life!
So, god. damn. relatable.
I like how every few letters there was an unexplained jump cut, it seemed to add a little bit of humor that made the video that much nicer to watch. I'm not sure if she did it on purpose or not, but I quite liked it, especially because it was a little subtle as well
@@JackSmith-ou1dg do you know we aren’t communists anymore hai
Thanks Natasha, you are a star!
Much appreciated, and such a creative and interesting way to teach.
The chemist sign (and one or two others) look like they are reusing an old sign from a previous tenant. Unless it is supposed to be a pestle (пестик - almost sounding the same).
You mentioned the Greek connection of some of the letters. I'm not an expert in greek but I have found it helpful for these:
Phi = Ф = 'ph' or F
Pi = П = 3.14* = P
You have a nice town / city, it is easier to remember things when they vary, I will watch it a few more times however, as the hard/soft bl, b symbols are quite subtle for me.
I thought the market was funny, because as you explained about the masks, just out of shot (through the gate) was a lady who possibly wasn't wearing one, which I found rather hopeful!
Also it's very useful to hear the letters, some sound quite different to the alphabet conversion sheets can imply.
Я find the alphabet is a key to unlock quite a few words such as Instrument = Инструмент and System = Система etc.
Спасибо, Наташа.
Спасибо for such a comment! I liked you thoughts. Some words in Russian are just cognates of the English words: компьютер - computer, телефон - telephone, интернет - internet.
As for the masks, it's so absurd because they make people to wear the mask in a supermarket, but nobody wears it in a bus... In my remote town the virus is not bad, so people don't care about it or they're just tired of it.
Thank you, Natasha. I’ve tried to learn the Russian alphabet and your method is so practical it is very helpful in a way I cannot get from texts. I still cannot pronounce the formal word for “Thank you” - it twists my tongue up several different ways every time I try.
Хорошее произношение) thank you, for video. I, m learn English, my level - beginner or elementary. At the beginning of the video, I understood more or less about are you speak, don't without translating in my head in Russian, which means that there is progress
You make it easy for me to learn Russian 💯🤟🏽
А,Б,В,Г,Д,Ђ,Е,Ж,З,И,Ј,К,Л,Љ,М,Н,Њ,О,П,Р,С,Т,Ћ,У,Ф,Х,Ц,Ч,Џ,Ш.
Привет из Сербии 🤗
Поздрав из Србије 🤗
Greetings from Serbia 🤗
@Velcro 809 Него шта! И ми ћирилицу за трку имамо :) ! Сада нека професорка изговори Ђ и Ћ ако уме. ЧЕБУРЕЧНАЈА, знао сам одмах да је то БУРЕКЏИНИЦА :) .
I think you're missing some Russian letters, no? And the order is not correct; now that's really confusing.
@@dustymiller65 Russian and Serbian letters are very similar, but not all are the same. Those are Serbian letters, I just wanted to point out similarities 🤗
Ive heard that Serbian uses Cyrillic and Latin
@@annabelholland yes and they have both variants of almost all streetsigns. Wonderful guys:) I really love Serbia
"Однако понял, что нельзя ориентироваться на цвет, когда вместо мясной лавки попал в магазин электрических принадлежностей. Свою первую букву «А» он выучил в «Главрыбе» на Моховой, а потом и «Б» - потому что удобнее было подбегать к магазину со стороны слова «рыба». Дальше Шарик начал упражняться в чтении и очень хорошо стал ориентироваться на улицах Москвы"
ну это так, а вообще ролик понравился.
my grandfather used to collect stamps in the 1970s and his collection had some rare russian stamps. when i was a kid i used to think they said "NOYTA CCCP" but now i realise they said "POCHTA SSSR" / SOVIET POST. спасибо наташа
Having really no familiarity with Russian it was challenging learning the letters, but you presented it very well. I also really enjoy seeing the different locations, it helps to understand life there, which is fairly different in some ways and of course very much the same in many. I enjoy your videos very much, thank you for making them.
This is pretty interesting. You speak good english with a nice russian accent.
It's really helpful to have been to Greece several times to understand Cyrillic. Obviously it's derived, similar to Latin hence the similarities.
Hello
it comes from Bulgaria...not Greece!
If I remember how to spell and pronounce this one word tomorrow, I'll consider this video a success. My father was a betepah of WWII.
Betepah would be closer. Be proud of your dad :-)
What a great way of teaching us the basics of your language! Thanks!
1:50: I think it's supposed to be a mortar-and-pestle, which is a common symbol for "Apothecary"
Спасибо за отличное видео! И ам трыинг то врите тхис коммент витх кыррилик леттерс. I hope it was not too bad. Please correct me if I was wrong. п.с.: How do you write the english W in russian? Привет из Дании!
If you just want to replace English letters with their Cyrillic equivalent, your sentence is correct. But there is another way. You can write it with the English pronunciation but in Russian letters, then it will be Ай эм траинг ту райт зыс камент виз сириллик леттерс. Anyway, good job! And we write W in two ways: it can be just В (v) or as У + vowel that follows it. For example, Emma Watson in Russian is Эмма Уотсон. But the same surname for the caracter of Dr. John H. Watson in Russian is Доктор Ватсон. In some words it's officilly В. For example, Wisconsin in Russian is Висконсин, not Уисконсин. But I think using У and a vowel is more correct. Because for Russian В English has V.
I wanted to learn Russian letters on the streets with Nataly, but then I realized I already know all the Russian letters ;D
''Наталиииии, утоли мои печали''
I hear Natasha saying: "foreigners often confuse these two letters "shé" and "shé" but you have to learn how to tell them apart"... ehr... rewind 5 seconds... "shé" and "shé" what?! rewind again...."shé" and "shé"...and again... "shé" and "shé".... and yet again... "shé" and "shé"... oooookayyyy... I'll trust you on this one :))
LMAO I thought the same thing, I can´t understand the difference in sound.
***She*** is a teacher (Щ) it is soft - in ***Short*** (Ш) it is hard. You cannot confuse the two.
@@markmilan8365 If in the learner's native language there are no "soft" and "hard" sounds concepts, it is really hard to explain.
Wikipedia: "In phonetics, palatalization or palatization refers to a way of pronouncing a consonant in which part of the tongue is moved close to the hard palate. Consonants pronounced this way are said to be palatalized and are transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet by affixing the letter ⟨ʲ⟩ to the base consonant. Palatalization cannot minimally distinguish words in most dialects of English, but it may do so in languages such as Russian, Mandarin and Irish."
@@1234567qwerification Thank you for your comment. Of course my explanation was not a professional one (like instead yours) but it works as an help for those that find very difficult to understand how to distinguish between them and do not speak Russian. Usually I understand which letter is used depending on the context and in case of mistakes I can still verify in internet.
Now know more about the Russian language than I ever had before, thank you.
I don't think I'll ever learn to speak it, but reading it is something I've always been interested in.
She says that she doent know what she wants to do as a profession , Its obvious shes going to be a master teacher ... and one of the best ones , i though ill never learn something new , but with her im learning alot...
I can slowly read and sound out Russian writing but won't know what it means. If I see a word a lot, I look up it's definition. I'd say this is the most realistic way of learning a new language 😂
It is my experience as well. Sometimes I feel like I'm studying the actual Rosetta stone from Egypt. If we leave this earth we will find that they speak Russian on Mars. 😁
@@gabbyhyman1246 I hope Elon musk finds a rock on Mars with the word "blyat" carved into it with primitive stone tools, just so we can all lose our minds over it