I'd like to thank you for the effort you have put into making these videos. Don't be put off by all the complainers. Doesn't seem like they have made half the effort you have to share your knowledge. As a CZ beginner, I found your videos very useful. Thanks.
Finally someone who can explain how to pronounce Czech letters using English words. I don't even know how to explain it to English native speakers, there should simply be something familiar they can build upon... you drew this connection. Excelent. Why this is not in every coursebook on the first page? I'd also teach IPA since it's used in dictionaries. Once you understand IPA, you can read these dictionaries and don't need to look up every word in a dictionary that has recordings (which I don't even know if you can find for the Czech language).
thank you so much for your positivity in these videos and in your responses to comments. i'm an english speaker and your videos are helping me to understand the basics of this complicated language!
My grandmother (mother) and that part of my family is from Czech but I am from the US and have heard Czech all my life but was forbidden to speak it. They had fled those "commie bastards" during the cold war. Thats how my elders put it anyway. So, when they got here they did everything they could to be gracious, patriotic "AMERICAN's". I have always been saddened that my family chose to squash our heritage but I can understand why they felt they needed to do it. I have watched quite a few videos trying to learn and finally, Anthony just made things "click"! I am so happy I can at least finally READ Czech and pronounce the words!! In less than 10 minutes he made things clear for me..Thanks, Anthony!!
There is a historical reason for the ú/ů difference (a difference in the script only, not in the pronunciation). As czech evolved over the centuries, there has been a shift from "ó" sound to a diphtong "uo", which was also written as such. So "kůň" (horse) was written as "kuoň". But a century later there was another shift in pronunciation from the "uo" to long "ú". And thus they somehow retained the historic written from in a way, that the now redundant "o" letter became the circle above u.
ps I'm Czech but my hubby is English and often I tried to explain to him the way things are but as I'm not a teacher I found it hard to describe - your videos are truly great, I keep thinking "why have I not thought of this?!" :)
Thank you very much! Finally there's someone who can explain it simply. I'm very thankful for helping me to learn the beautiful language! Поздрави от България! Greetings from Bulgaria!
Thank you for this video; I think this is one of the best alphabet tutorials for English speakers. chinese/canadian here trying to learn some basic czech before I head over to the beautiful country
going to see my family in Prague this summer and this is great thank you. Czech was my first language so it's really easy to follow along, this is a great refreshment.
You're a star!...Thank you so much for these invaluable videos,,they are very much appreciated.I am hoping to come and teach English as a native speaker to the CR next year....your videos are so inspirational.
In Polish i think the letters are RZ and it is pronounced like like the czech Z with an accent over it. THat is what the r with a accent in Czech reminded me of in your previous video. Very nice. I have always liked unusual letters with pronunciation. :)
I'm glad to see someone bothered to make vid like this one :) even that czech is not that popular, there are many ppl who want to learn it and this way of ur teaching is really good :) still, some letters sounds different, but not that much ;) přeji hodně štěstí všem, kdo se česky učí :) a hlavně pevné nervy :D
I'm only the second generation from Czech Republic. My Grandfather changes his last name from Zivicki to Zevecke. I prefer that Czech pronounce over the English pronounce. Sometimes I explain Zivicki to exchange e for I and most of people have not problems speak to me. I tell to them to take their time and virtually their get it every time. My father never spoke Czech in the home. I wish he did. Your videos are very easy for me,. I just need to practice very little. Thanks Vincent
Did he say he was not Czech native somewhere and I missed it? Or can you tell he is not? Someone below typed that they are Czech and that he sounds native.
Hi! I'm from Czech Republic and I love english. I must say that it's quite interesting to watch people learning our kinda :D hard language. But you're great :) Well done ;)
i study in Olomouc now, i really love the czech language. i'm from Malaysia, my mother tongue(malay) really help me to pronounce the alphabet, words, and everything perfectly. because our language and your language, the style of pronunciation is same, seriously, it's same.. really love Olomouc, i love Czech people, and love everything about czech.. i make a right decision to further my study here..
Great video(s). I ve been living near Brno for 7 months and i am struggling with this language - English was hard enough for me to learn, according to my Father! More importantly, i ve noticed that people are quick to point out small mistakes whilst missing that the overall benefit of these videos are huge. Please ignore the idiots, criticising is easy, producing videos that cuts to the very heart of learning a language is not. Please keep up the good work, it is appreciated. Hugh
Letter "ú" doesnt necessary mean, that it is in the beginning of the word. It can be in the middle too if there is a prefix in the front of it :) For example: trojúhelník
Or if it isn't czech word originally like "manikúra" (a manicure) ... letter "ů" used to be written as "uo" in 15. century. For example "kůň" (a horse) = kuoň. In Slovak language it is still there and they write it this was: "kôň".
yeah, you're both right, but would you really bother to explain these kinda special exceptions to someone who just started learning Czech? Wouldn't be really helpfull, would it?
We have only 1 case in addition to the latin language. The ablative is replaced by the local and instrumental. Problem is in many irregularities and exceptions.
trying to quick learn the accent for a short film, when it comes to "th" like in "the" would it be "se" and in words like cesar, would it be cezar or cesar ?
That was a super excellent job of explaining the Czech language and the pronunciation for each of the letters and their different sounds. I speak Spanish, so the sounds are very easy for me. I love the fact that Czech words are phonetically spelled. Russian is that way also, which I am also learning. Even German does that to a degree also. And Spanish of course.
I'm english native speaker but also a native speaker of czech thanks to my parents and I'm really glad for that! It's not that common to have parents from different countries.
Good czech lesson! Yes, I'm thinking that it's hard to speak correctly czech language, slovak is almost the same, but a little easier. Anyway, this "course" is very helpful for somebody who wants to speak the basic words.... Greetings from Romania and...SUCCESS!!! HODNE USPECHU!!
Thank yo so much for your helpful comment. I meant that the alphabet (of both English and Czech) is Latin (rather than the alphabet of, say, Russian). Please accept my humble apologies for the confusion this may have caused you.
in english, the letter Y is sometimes considered a vowel too...it applies to words like SLEEPY or RAINY. I remember in grade school we had a song that said Vowells are A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y hahaha....cool vids my friend, i cant wait to watch the rest in your Czech language series :-)
Hi, nice videos. Just one small remark for accurancy sake. Letters "I" and "Y" has the same sounds only in Prague and generally in Bohemia. In other parts of the country (north Moravia mostly) there are two different sounds for them. The "I" sound is quite soft like in "cheek", while the "Y" is hard, maybe like in "weird". The Prague sound is something betweek. Not too soft, not too hard. That's why when someone is spelling something, he is spelling like "soft I" or "hard Y" to avoid confusions.
FluentCzech: I like your lesson - being Czech myself, i'm glad someone actually tries to learn this (hard) language. My language has so many weird rules and exceptions at the same time that even majority of Czech people actually can't spell properly. You should also mention the different pronounciation of "CH" at some point..
Thank you! I recently started to do research into my family that came from the Czech region just before WWI to America. I found out my surname normally had the C with the Caron above it and wasn't sure how to pronounce it.
Some of the sounds are a bit off, also, there is no dash in ď and ť (just "háček") except for computer fonts in which there is a need to save space but it is a nice video! Keep up the good work!:)
+Ramaz Khatiashvili You are absolutely right with Dvořák. Are you from Georgia by the way? I love georgian folk music, Hamlet Gonashvili was great singer. And beautiful Mariam Elieshvili is my platonic love. :-)
Slovakia do not have letter Ř ,its little bit easier and when you will speak slovakia we will understand you.Slovakia is really similar language. Yea ,but i think Czech is easy.
You definitely can. The differences between Czech and Slovak language are soooo small. :) Slovaks understand us and we as Czechs understand them perfectly, we were one country until 1993 :)
Just one,maybe interesting,fact.I am from Northen Moravia and in our dialect,we pronounce i/y and í/ý a bit differently (y is a bit "harder", i "softer"). People from Bohemia (f.e. Prague) usually pronounce both of them same way. There are words that have different meaning with i than with y (like býlí - weed; bílý - /masculine/ white or být - to be; bít - beat /somebody/). So, you can distinguish between them in our dialect, but in other dial., you need whole sentence. Great for lang. exams :)
cool video! Should learn the language - when I read some comments online in Czech I can understand basic meaning, because some words do sound like Russian and alphabet pronunciation is just like in Latvian! You got any ideas where I could learn it online? :)
Great video. I need to see what I say to remember and build confidence. Thank you. I’ve also bought Pimsleurs audio lessons. Wish me luck so when I visit Czech Republic I can meet the people and get the right food 🍺.
I'm Polish and I realised that Czech is similar to Polish, like 'dobrý večer' in polish you pronounce it 'dobry wieczór' it's pretty similar. Kinda like Russian and I think Hungarian or Bulgarian idk... But yeah
Great. It always makes me happy to learn from an expert. Please make a response video explaining things better than I was able to. Your video will, I am sure, help many people.
@@H99-o3z I'm from Czech as well yes it's been 5 months ago but where did you or where are you wanting to go in Czech there are different places to check out
My husband's grandfather is Czech ...so I'm trying to write my husband's name in Czech but after listening I'm writing everything your showing to learn s Lil more
As a Ukrainian I wonder what Czechs know about Ukrainian language. I mean, how do they see the difference between Russian and Ukrainian. Do they know that Ukrainian is close to Czech in terms of breathy voiced h, less palatalisation comparing to Russian and Polish? Can Czech understand what is spoken/sung in Ukrainian? Thanks for your answer!
Dude I am studying czech and it is NOTHING like english. The czech grammar is one of the most difficult I've encountered in my life. Mandarine writing is very hard but the grammar is rather simple and also lets not forget the letter "ř" which is generally hard to pronounce. Tell a foreigner to master a word such as "šiří". Hezky večer to you.
thankyou kind sir.... excellent information.. yes, since i speak french and english of course,,, with the aid of the alphabet.. i can self study czech.... i sense a slight italien accent in the czech language... yes, learning asian languages is impossible, without letters...
I know this language, i live in the Slovakia...its quite the same language, but im still watching your videos, ´cause im interested , how another people understand our language..:D well done
I have two czech friends and it makes me want to learn how to speak czech and learn so it is why I am on this video, it is alot better with visual and audio instead of just writing and reading. Also translation books are helpful but not very good because they use things that aren't commonly used even though people understand what you are saying, they will know instantly you are not czech.
Hahaha, I came here just to find out how the ř is pronounced, watched the whole video with great interest and anticipation of the ř. Then I laughed out loud at the ending :)
I'd like to thank you for the effort you have put into making these videos. Don't be put off by all the complainers. Doesn't seem like they have made half the effort you have to share your knowledge. As a CZ beginner, I found your videos very useful. Thanks.
Finally someone who can explain how to pronounce Czech letters using English words. I don't even know how to explain it to English native speakers, there should simply be something familiar they can build upon... you drew this connection. Excelent. Why this is not in every coursebook on the first page?
I'd also teach IPA since it's used in dictionaries. Once you understand IPA, you can read these dictionaries and don't need to look up every word in a dictionary that has recordings (which I don't even know if you can find for the Czech language).
10 years later and still great videos! struggling to find good resources that don't cost a fortune but this is a great start thank you!
Very helpful in my attempt to master the basics of this wonderful language, I look forward to watching the rest of your videos.
thank you so much for your positivity in these videos and in your responses to comments. i'm an english speaker and your videos are helping me to understand the basics of this complicated language!
When learning a new language, nothing makes your heart drop more than hearing the words "It takes a lifetime or even longer to master"!
My grandmother (mother) and that part of my family is from Czech but I am from the US and have heard Czech all my life but was forbidden to speak it. They had fled those "commie bastards" during the cold war. Thats how my elders put it anyway. So, when they got here they did everything they could to be gracious, patriotic "AMERICAN's". I have always been saddened that my family chose to squash our heritage but I can understand why they felt they needed to do it. I have watched quite a few videos trying to learn and finally, Anthony just made things "click"! I am so happy I can at least finally READ Czech and pronounce the words!! In less than 10 minutes he made things clear for me..Thanks, Anthony!!
There is a historical reason for the ú/ů difference (a difference in the script only, not in the pronunciation). As czech evolved over the centuries, there has been a shift from "ó" sound to a diphtong "uo", which was also written as such. So "kůň" (horse) was written as "kuoň". But a century later there was another shift in pronunciation from the "uo" to long "ú". And thus they somehow retained the historic written from in a way, that the now redundant "o" letter became the circle above u.
ps I'm Czech but my hubby is English and often I tried to explain to him the way things are but as I'm not a teacher I found it hard to describe - your videos are truly great, I keep thinking "why have I not thought of this?!" :)
Thank you very much!
Finally there's someone who can explain it simply. I'm very thankful for helping me to learn the beautiful language!
Поздрави от България!
Greetings from Bulgaria!
Thank you for this video; I think this is one of the best alphabet tutorials for English speakers.
chinese/canadian here trying to learn some basic czech before I head over to the beautiful country
going to see my family in Prague this summer and this is great thank you. Czech was my first language so it's really easy to follow along, this is a great refreshment.
You're a star!...Thank you so much for these invaluable videos,,they are very much appreciated.I am hoping to come and teach English as a native speaker to the CR next year....your videos are so inspirational.
I find this much more helpful than many other language videos. Thank you for this
In Polish i think the letters are RZ and it is pronounced like like the czech Z with an accent over it. THat is what the r with a accent in Czech reminded me of in your previous video. Very nice. I have always liked unusual letters with pronunciation. :)
I'm glad to see someone bothered to make vid like this one :) even that czech is not that popular, there are many ppl who want to learn it and this way of ur teaching is really good :) still, some letters sounds different, but not that much ;) přeji hodně štěstí všem, kdo se česky učí :) a hlavně pevné nervy :D
I'm only the second generation from Czech Republic. My Grandfather changes his last name from Zivicki to Zevecke. I prefer that Czech pronounce over the English pronounce. Sometimes I explain Zivicki to exchange e for I and most of people have not problems speak to me. I tell to them to take their time and virtually their get it every time. My father never spoke Czech in the home. I wish he did. Your videos are very easy for me,. I just need to practice very little. Thanks Vincent
Excellent lesson - you've done a brilliant job explaining how to pronounce the alphabet. Thanks!
I am learning Czech language , because of the girl i love , She is from Czech
That must be very hard for you
cool greatings from czech rep.
Amin Assic i love a guy from Czech hes my best friend:) thats why im learning
Same here, but I guess one sided love fuck!
Im learning now as my bf from there
Did he say he was not Czech native somewhere and I missed it? Or can you tell he is not? Someone below typed that they are Czech and that he sounds native.
Hi! I'm from Czech Republic and I love english. I must say that it's quite interesting to watch people learning our kinda :D hard language. But you're great :) Well done ;)
You have no idea how helpful it is
i study in Olomouc now, i really love the czech language.
i'm from Malaysia, my mother tongue(malay) really help me to pronounce the alphabet, words, and everything perfectly. because our language and your language, the style of pronunciation is same, seriously, it's same..
really love Olomouc, i love Czech people, and love everything about czech..
i make a right decision to further my study here..
You seem like a genuinely nice person! Thank you for the great alphabet breakdown!
Great video(s). I ve been living near Brno for 7 months and i am struggling with this language - English was hard enough for me to learn, according to my Father! More importantly, i ve noticed that people are quick to point out small mistakes whilst missing that the overall benefit of these videos are huge. Please ignore the idiots, criticising is easy, producing videos that cuts to the very heart of learning a language is not. Please keep up the good work, it is appreciated.
Hugh
chlape jseš skvělej že tohle děláš pro nás všechny náš jazyk i naší zemi . díky
Letter "ú" doesnt necessary mean, that it is in the beginning of the word. It can be in the middle too if there is a prefix in the front of it :) For example: trojúhelník
Or if it isn't czech word originally like "manikúra" (a manicure) ... letter "ů" used to be written as "uo" in 15. century. For example "kůň" (a horse) = kuoň. In Slovak language it is still there and they write it this was: "kôň".
yeah, you're both right, but would you really bother to explain these kinda special exceptions to someone who just started learning Czech? Wouldn't be really helpfull, would it?
We have only 1 case in addition to the latin language. The ablative is replaced by the local and instrumental. Problem is in many irregularities and exceptions.
trying to quick learn the accent for a short film, when it comes to "th" like in "the" would it be "se"
and in words like cesar, would it be cezar or cesar ?
That was a super excellent job of explaining the Czech language and the pronunciation for each of the letters and their different sounds. I speak Spanish, so the sounds are very easy for me. I love the fact that Czech words are phonetically spelled. Russian is that way also, which I am also learning. Even German does that to a degree also. And Spanish of course.
@TheAnthonyconti Unfortunately, I don't think there is one. At least, not one I have ever heard of.
I/y determined by letters next to them ? Yeah i wish that, there is like 10 different rules how to write i/y right.
Can you link the ř video in the description? I'll find it, but that would navigation easier. Thank you.
What is hard for me is to roll my tongue for example in Zviře.
I'm english native speaker but also a native speaker of czech thanks to my parents and I'm really glad for that! It's not that common to have parents from different countries.
+Behnroid Yeah XD. I am partly Czech, partly Amarecan and partly German XD
+Matěj Vlček *American
Im half Czech and half Irish
Good for you!
Follow us to increase a new language inside češtína
Thank you for making these videos. My grandparents were czechoslovakian, and I would like to learn the language, because it is a part of my heritage!
WOW! You really figured it out! I'm Czech and I have to admit that Czech is a very difficult language indeed. Therefore, I admire you! :)
which font we can use to write in czech republic language?
Good czech lesson! Yes, I'm thinking that it's hard to speak correctly czech language, slovak is almost the same, but a little easier. Anyway, this "course" is very helpful for somebody who wants to speak the basic words.... Greetings from Romania and...SUCCESS!!! HODNE USPECHU!!
Thank yo so much for your helpful comment. I meant that the alphabet (of both English and Czech) is Latin (rather than the alphabet of, say, Russian). Please accept my humble apologies for the confusion this may have caused you.
Can you help me how to learn Czech language
Just beginning to learn and this is incredibly helpful.
Good morning 🌞 Hello dear friend, How can I learn Czech language easily?
You are very gifted teacher. Jen tak dál keep doing it .
Thanks! Your video is the first that teaches me how to say the “d’” because it’s so hard for me.
in english, the letter Y is sometimes considered a vowel too...it applies to words like SLEEPY or RAINY. I remember in grade school we had a song that said Vowells are A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y hahaha....cool vids my friend, i cant wait to watch the rest in your Czech language series :-)
Thanks so much for the clear explanations! This is exactly what I needed.
Hi, nice videos. Just one small remark for accurancy sake. Letters "I" and "Y" has the same sounds only in Prague and generally in Bohemia. In other parts of the country (north Moravia mostly) there are two different sounds for them. The "I" sound is quite soft like in "cheek", while the "Y" is hard, maybe like in "weird". The Prague sound is something betweek. Not too soft, not too hard. That's why when someone is spelling something, he is spelling like "soft I" or "hard Y" to avoid confusions.
@Michiesu11 Můžeš použít melodii vaší písničky na abecedu, ale použít české hlásky, ne?
Must say that there is Ŗ in Latvian too, but it's no longer used and only mentioned in school books.
Hello, I just appeared to congratulate you on your pronuncation! You are very good at it!
FluentCzech: I like your lesson - being Czech myself, i'm glad someone actually tries to learn this (hard) language. My language has so many weird rules and exceptions at the same time that even majority of Czech people actually can't spell properly. You should also mention the different pronounciation of "CH" at some point..
@fearlesssockpuppet I'm sure he's referencing the fact that English uses a latin alphabet, which Germanic languages abolished their rune system for.
Thank you! I recently started to do research into my family that came from the Czech region just before WWI to America. I found out my surname normally had the C with the Caron above it and wasn't sure how to pronounce it.
Some of the sounds are a bit off, also, there is no dash in ď and ť (just "háček") except for computer fonts in which there is a need to save space but it is a nice video! Keep up the good work!:)
super video , blahopreji , jen tak dale , doufam ze brzo budete mit vic a vic divaku ;)
I think that r is difficult for me to pronounce...
Thank you, sir. Always wondered about the last one. I think that;s the case with Dvorak, isn't it?
+Ramaz Khatiashvili You are absolutely right with Dvořák. Are you from Georgia by the way? I love georgian folk music, Hamlet Gonashvili was great singer. And beautiful Mariam Elieshvili is my platonic love. :-)
Wow! Hamlet is my hero. Everyone´s hero in fact. :-)
can I use this tutorial for Slovak language as well ?
Slovakia do not have letter Ř ,its little bit easier and when you will speak slovakia we will understand you.Slovakia is really similar language.
Yea ,but i think Czech is easy.
Thanks for all of your help. I am studying there soon and need all the help I need! :)
Hi im from the Czech republic and i can help you with our language if you are interested :)
Lukáš Kadlec Does this offer still stand (for me) :D ?
powerofpizzazz Im from cze too. I can help u if u want
You definitely can. The differences between Czech and Slovak language are soooo small. :) Slovaks understand us and we as Czechs understand them perfectly, we were one country until 1993 :)
Exceedingly Laudable, Anthony.
Just one,maybe interesting,fact.I am from Northen Moravia and in our dialect,we pronounce i/y and í/ý a bit differently (y is a bit "harder", i "softer"). People from Bohemia (f.e. Prague) usually pronounce both of them same way. There are words that have different meaning with i than with y (like býlí - weed; bílý - /masculine/ white or být - to be; bít - beat /somebody/). So, you can distinguish between them in our dialect, but in other dial., you need whole sentence. Great for lang. exams :)
cool video! Should learn the language - when I read some comments online in Czech I can understand basic meaning, because some words do sound like Russian and alphabet pronunciation is just like in Latvian! You got any ideas where I could learn it online? :)
Our language is difficult, but Czech in your submission appears to be even harder.
But I have to say, your Czech accent is very good :)
Great video. I need to see what I say to remember and build confidence. Thank you. I’ve also bought Pimsleurs audio lessons. Wish me luck so when I visit Czech Republic I can meet the people and get the right food 🍺.
Czech alphabet is very rich, but there is no letter w and letter g is not a Czech letter as well appearing only in a few foreign words.
I'm Polish and I realised that Czech is similar to Polish, like 'dobrý večer' in polish you pronounce it 'dobry wieczór' it's pretty similar. Kinda like Russian and I think Hungarian or Bulgarian idk... But yeah
Great. It always makes me happy to learn from an expert. Please make a response video explaining things better than I was able to. Your video will, I am sure, help many people.
Your lesson is very good
Very good effort ! Greetings from Czech republic ! :)
It is sooo interesting to watch videos, where you learn czech - my native language. :D
But I think you made good job with this. :))
Hakeshi Wakuro hi
This is called 'čárka' :D you're great teacher i'm Czech and i'm watching you :D
Excuse me my friend, I'm going to traveling to Czech so I need some one like you, can you help me please? I have some questions
Przysmak Carski actually škoda means detriment in czech language 😂
@@H99-o3z I'm from Czech as well yes it's been 5 months ago but where did you or where are you wanting to go in Czech there are different places to check out
H 99 I don't understand why people say they are going to Czech. They are going to the Czech Republic, or CZ or Czechia. Czech are the people.
My husband's grandfather is Czech ...so I'm trying to write my husband's name in Czech but after listening I'm writing everything your showing to learn s Lil more
Hi there :) You are very good czech teacher in english speaking countries, good job, and continue :) (BTW: I am czech :) )
As a Ukrainian I wonder what Czechs know about Ukrainian language. I mean, how do they see the difference between Russian and Ukrainian. Do they know that Ukrainian is close to Czech in terms of breathy voiced h, less palatalisation comparing to Russian and Polish? Can Czech understand what is spoken/sung in Ukrainian?
Thanks for your answer!
Did you make the video for r? :)
Thanks, I have a Czech friend and now I can understand him better
it's not ''EŘ'' its what you hear at the end ...just ''Ř''
Dude I am studying czech and it is NOTHING like english. The czech grammar is one of the most difficult I've encountered in my life.
Mandarine writing is very hard but the grammar is rather simple and also lets not forget the letter "ř" which is generally hard to pronounce.
Tell a foreigner to master a word such as "šiří".
Hezky večer to you.
thankyou kind sir.... excellent information.. yes, since i speak french and english of course,,, with the aid of the alphabet.. i can self study czech.... i sense a slight italien accent in the czech language... yes, learning asian languages is impossible, without letters...
You are missing letter "CH" in your alphabet, which is an actual letter.
6:45
Well as he presenting letters on english alphabet, he's not missing ch.
he isn't
You watching the same video we are?
I am told that d' is also pronounced like the du in duel.
Lot of letters can also be found in Hindi language!
This is great. Thanks for posting it!
thanks, i like your course!
u are a good teacher
velmi vás obdivuju protože máte dobrou výslovnost třeba takový vietnamci třeří tu hojně žijí do teď neuměj čistě česky :)
I know this language, i live in the Slovakia...its quite the same language, but im still watching your videos, ´cause im interested , how another people understand our language..:D well done
Very helpful. Thanks for doing the video.
Anthony are you English?
Ahoj, ty jsi Američan a učíš se Česky?
Thank you, very helpfull for an absolute beginner!
Thank you! This was a great video and very informative!
:D máme nejtěžsí gramatiku na světě jo ? jsem strašně rád že jsem čech :D Hezký večer to you too :D !
I have two czech friends and it makes me want to learn how to speak czech and learn so it is why I am on this video, it is alot better with visual and audio instead of just writing and reading. Also translation books are helpful but not very good because they use things that aren't commonly used even though people understand what you are saying, they will know instantly you are not czech.
CH isn't alright
You are great teacher. I need somebody like you to learn Swedish :D
This is quite helpful! Thanks for your lessons:)
Hahaha, I came here just to find out how the ř is pronounced, watched the whole video with great interest and anticipation of the ř. Then I laughed out loud at the ending :)
I find the hardest part of Slavic languages is actually knowing where the keys of them are on a keyboard. (Sorry for bad English, I'm Ukrainian)