I’m so happy. I’ve tried to understand this topic many times but couldn’t get it until I watched this video, finally it clicked thanks to your easy and understandable explanation. Thank you!
Interestingly in Serbian there are different endings for past tense verbs for plural depending on gender of the plural too, so 6 combinations. Привет из Сербии
The author's advices are valuable; and on my channel "A morsel of Russian=)" you can find interesting and useful stuff to learn Russian and understand our culture better😊: th-cam.com/video/X9MpZJ2fcV0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=8q2Gnv14o9A18Ena
Каждый раз думаю о том, что, будь я иностранцем, не стал бы изучать русский. Как же это чертовски сложно... Хотя у меня вполне хорошие оценки в школе, но я даже не представляю, как бы я это понимал, будь я носителем другого языка. Восхищаюсь людьми, которые решили учить его как иностранный. Вы уже герои по умолчанию. good luck
The problem is that there are so many words with different endings. And even if the ending is similar to another, it may not be the same idea. Take the word "сказать". If you follow that pattern of adding "ю" in place of "ть", it would be "сказаю", right? (I'm pretty sure this isn't a real word), Well, not really, it's actually "скажу", and that's what makes it harder to make a conjugation video, it'd have to be a really lengthy video.
i start learning russian one day a week since september and i will say thank you :) 5:40 almost the same word i can hear for feminine, neutral and plural :(
If I wished to ask a woman either how her father or how her mother is, would I construct the sentence as, > or because the direction of the question is going to a female, thus I conjugate the word "your" to the feminine personal pronoun? I completely understood what you meant when you covered the male format and examples, I just required a bit further insight into this particular avenue of speaking to someone of either the same or opposite sex. Большое пасибо фёдор!!😊
Fedor, I want to say thanks that you teach our beautiful language, but you told only about basics. If say correctly, there are also "skloneniya", they define the ending of the word. Also, there are many exceptions....
Well, except (and maybe others), First Sergeant (старшина). The noun if feminine. However, the person spoken of is masculine. Thus this feminine noun takes everything as masculine (старый старшина, я вижу старого старшину). 😂
He said ending with "a" is feminine, "e" is neutral. But then in the last example, he says, "два" is masculine, and "две" is feminine. All those statements contradict themselves. Could somebody please explain to me please 🫣🙏🙏🙏
"Два and Две" it 's kinda goes to plural. In basic words (nor plural) usually it works well See the noun which ends on consonant, it's very likely masculine. ананас(pineapple), персик(peach), дом(house), робот(robot), шкаф(wardrobe) all of these are masculine. and I write first which came up in my head. голова(head), лодка(boat) , сосиска(sausage) , картина(painting), редиска, такса, подушка, рыба(fish), тетрадка, гора(mountain) , работа(job/work)- all of these are feminine. море(sea), горе, солнце, окно(window), кино(movie), пальто(coat), all of these are neutral (in Russia we call it средний literally means mediocre ) And other words like verbs adjective they usually mimic nouns for adjectives feminine - endings would be -ая, (both vowels underline the feminine ) masculine - endings would be - ый(consonant and kinda scary vowel "ы") neutral - endings would be - ое (both vowels underline neutral , you know that nouns which ens on either of those is close to 100% neutral)
Телефон refers to the actual telephone set, while трубка or труба refers to that part that you actually bring to your ear, as it was in the old times when these two parts were separate and connected with a wire. Nowadays we use any of those depending on a situation and also another slang word for mobile phones - мобила.
@@Frosy_offical yes I know but I mean the way how you spell it I mean the sound they both sound for me like la or is there a subtle difference I don't realize ?
@@Powerful-j2n According to Wiktionary -ла and -ло do have the same pronunciation of /ə/ (schwa) sound. I might be wrong, but I think I say it slightly differently: -ло is indeed a schwa sound, while -ла is more like a /ʌ/ one. I'm from Udmurtia, Ural region of Russia, so, again, it could be a regional thing.
Такое видео надо было делать намного длиннее. Для англоговорящего это крышесносящая концепция, что каждый объект имеет род, как и человек 😂. Самое главное, этого и не объяснить логически, зачем предметам иметь гендер 🤣.
technically it's allowed to be either masculine or neuter- masculine is the older one (the word used to be "кофий") and is sort of kept as a relic, and some people will insist that it's the only correct form. with the modern word though, many people regularize it to neuter because of its ending -e. I'm not sure which is more common though..
Basically Zachem means "For what purpose", while Pochemu simply means "Why". You can use Zachem only when you ask about the reasoning of mind of living beings, mostly humans, but sometimes animals too. Zachem ti kupil stol'ko yablok? - Why did you buy so many apples? Zachem koshka lizhet kotyat? - Why does the cat lick the kittens? If the object is inanimate, you can only use Pochemu. Pochemu nebo goluboe? - Why is the sky blue? Pochemu sneg takoi holodniy? - Why is the snow so cold? You can use Pochemu instead of Zachem, but not the other way around, because inanimate objects don't have any thoughts or reasoning. Here's a tricky example: Zachem takoi bolshoy dom? - For what purpose is this house so big? We use inanimate object but in fact we ask about a person, not the object. So full version of the sentence would be - Zachem (tebe) takoi bolshoi dom? - where tebe is implied.
Звините учитель Почему Какая красивое море? Море С.р Какое красивое море . Это правильно? Или нет? Я немного говорю по- Английски, а немного говорю по- Русски. Приведите пример на русском языке. Приведите пример слова человек
смотрю видео потому что стало интересно как иностранцы определяют род существительных) ведь мы даже об этом не задумываемся и пользуемся "проверкой" для русских: стол он мой, значит мужской)
5:58 - typo - какОЕ красивое море
I thought it was gonna be like German where you simply have to know every singe word’s gender, with no way of really finding out if it’s a new word
У тебя хорошо получается преподавать русский язык 😎👍
I’m so happy.
I’ve tried to understand this topic many times but couldn’t get it until I watched this video, finally it clicked thanks to your easy and understandable explanation.
Thank you!
Bro you teaching in an interesting manner! Спасибо!
Best Russian language learning YT Channel IMO! Thank you as always, Fedor!
👏👏👏😎
You're a super good teacher
Feodor, you are a gifted teacher.
Interestingly in Serbian there are different endings for past tense verbs for plural depending on gender of the plural too, so 6 combinations. Привет из Сербии
Лаку ноћ из Русије🙂
Кстати, а в Сербии вроде бы преподают детям русский язык в школах, но не углублённо, да?
Привет из Москвы)
@@Skylar.alx8 Не знаю, давно был в школе. Привет из Нови-Сада - у нас здесь теперь много русских 😀
Ngl this comes to a very good time
ngl? what?
@Nagitosfluffyhair TFTC 😊
The author's advices are valuable; and on my channel "A morsel of Russian=)" you can find interesting and useful stuff to learn Russian and understand our culture better😊:
th-cam.com/video/X9MpZJ2fcV0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=8q2Gnv14o9A18Ena
I love this - I needed this video. The Russian nouns and changes relating to gender are killing me!!
Каждый раз думаю о том, что, будь я иностранцем, не стал бы изучать русский. Как же это чертовски сложно... Хотя у меня вполне хорошие оценки в школе, но я даже не представляю, как бы я это понимал, будь я носителем другого языка. Восхищаюсь людьми, которые решили учить его как иностранный. Вы уже герои по умолчанию. good luck
I'm from Arctic and I'm studying Russian 😁❤
You are a clever polar bear 😀
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Excellent lesson! Thank you!
i really need a full conjugation tutorial like for EVERYTHING no exceptions. i dont care if the vid is 3h long plssss
The problem is that there are so many words with different endings. And even if the ending is similar to another, it may not be the same idea. Take the word "сказать". If you follow that pattern of adding "ю" in place of "ть", it would be "сказаю", right? (I'm pretty sure this isn't a real word), Well, not really, it's actually "скажу", and that's what makes it harder to make a conjugation video, it'd have to be a really lengthy video.
@@lowgpu1687your example of "сказать" is not right. This is a perfective form of verb говорить and will have its' own conjugation.
@@user-le5rs5vv6i oh really? may you explain to me, I honestly need help with conjugations
Спасибо!! Great explanation.
Very helpful, Fedor! Thank you!
As a Brazilian Portuguese native speaker, i'm very similar with that. It works almost the same way in Portuguese
Question words are also affected by gender, but otherwise a great lesson!
Thank you. I learning english and these videos helping me
Пожелаем удачи иностранцам в склонении прилагательных разных родов по падежам 😂
Why you said that 😢
@@La_Chismosasita Please do not worry, if you are serios about learning Russian, everything will be good.
I've been trying to work this out through when it pops up in Duo...
It is mostly all clear now throug this concise explanation...
Isn’t „одно“ and „две“ for neuter missing?
yep, it's "одно" and "два". for example одно облако, два облака
Thank you. Love the test to measure my learning🙂
For neutral ‘одно’, looks like you missed that. Одно море, but два моря.
Отличное видео!!! Спасибо большое!😊
Thank you so much!!!!!
Thank you a lot, I was asking myself this question 😸
You predicted what I've been trying to learn and couldn't understand at just the right time.
Now I know you said you're not a spy but..
i start learning russian one day a week since september and i will say thank you :)
5:40 almost the same word i can hear for feminine, neutral and plural :(
Thank you
Thank you!
Спасибо!
Pronouns also affected "мой нос. мое ухо." Also tactical numbers.
Please write the pronunciation.example kakaya krasivaya...it is very very useful...
Не понял почему про средний род с числительными не рассказал. "одно"
If I wished to ask a woman either how her father or how her mother is, would I construct the sentence as, > or because the direction of the question is going to a female, thus I conjugate the word "your" to the feminine personal pronoun? I completely understood what you meant when you covered the male format and examples, I just required a bit further insight into this particular avenue of speaking to someone of either the same or opposite sex. Большое пасибо фёдор!!😊
How do you use "ету", or rather when to use it 😢😢😢😢
Make videos by levels A1,A2 etc, because I understand a lot of things from you and I want to learn from zero to hero
Приезжайте к нам, быстро выучите русский язык 😅
@@angelofmercy0 I want 😓😢
Now I’m studying online I want to improve it faster I don’t know how but I have to do it
@@medad1877 Всё будет хорошо, не переживайте))
@@angelofmercy0 in fact, I'm afraid to disappointed in last
@@medad1877не переживайте, всё получится ❤️
Федор, ты лучший
Dare I say you are a genius? Yes, I do dare.
I love your videos!
какое красивое море
I was going to write the same comment, a little typing mistake
Perfect job
Thanks teacher i really love russia❤
Aww so there is no way I can tell which gender words are that end with ь😢
dictionary))
Спасибо Фёдор, that was very clear and easy to understand 😃
Fedor, I want to say thanks that you teach our beautiful language, but you told only about basics. If say correctly, there are also "skloneniya", they define the ending of the word. Also, there are many exceptions....
не пугай людей
English speakers can just claim the noun is trans if they mess it up...
Safe to say this guy loves walls
Я 🇷🇺, смотрю видео про 🇷🇺 язык на 🇺🇲.... Автор видео сломал мою логику)))
Well, except (and maybe others), First Sergeant (старшина). The noun if feminine. However, the person spoken of is masculine. Thus this feminine noun takes everything as masculine (старый старшина, я вижу старого старшину). 😂
У меня проблема с этим языком, но я очень стараюсь быть лучше
все получится, если прилагать усилия (•‿•)
He said ending with "a" is feminine, "e" is neutral. But then in the last example, he says, "два" is masculine, and "две" is feminine. All those statements contradict themselves. Could somebody please explain to me please 🫣🙏🙏🙏
"Два and Две" it 's kinda goes to plural. In basic words (nor plural) usually it works well
See the noun which ends on consonant, it's very likely masculine.
ананас(pineapple), персик(peach), дом(house), робот(robot), шкаф(wardrobe) all of these are masculine. and I write first which came up in my head.
голова(head), лодка(boat) , сосиска(sausage) , картина(painting), редиска, такса, подушка, рыба(fish), тетрадка, гора(mountain) , работа(job/work)- all of these are feminine.
море(sea), горе, солнце, окно(window), кино(movie), пальто(coat), all of these are neutral (in Russia we call it средний literally means mediocre )
And other words like verbs adjective they usually mimic nouns
for adjectives feminine - endings would be -ая, (both vowels underline the feminine )
masculine - endings would be - ый(consonant and kinda scary vowel "ы")
neutral - endings would be - ое (both vowels underline neutral , you know that nouns which ens on either of those is close to 100% neutral)
@@moroneverfold спасибо большое друг🙏
@@dnskstnk спасибо большое 🙏
Question,whats the difference between телефон и трубка?спасибо 😊
Трубка is a slang for a "phone", while телефон is a dictionary term for a "phone".
Телефон refers to the actual telephone set, while трубка or труба refers to that part that you actually bring to your ear, as it was in the old times when these two parts were separate and connected with a wire. Nowadays we use any of those depending on a situation and also another slang word for mobile phones - мобила.
Is there a difference between the pronunciation of the endings - ла and - ло for past tense ?
Разница существует -ла это женский род, а -ло это средний род (относится к неживым объектам)
@@Frosy_offical yes I know but I mean the way how you spell it I mean the sound they both sound for me like la or is there a subtle difference I don't realize ?
@@Powerful-j2nIn the sense, do you only hear -ла? I recommend watching the video with words ending on -ла -ло (best with subtitles)
@@Powerful-j2n According to Wiktionary -ла and -ло do have the same pronunciation of /ə/ (schwa) sound. I might be wrong, but I think I say it slightly differently: -ло is indeed a schwa sound, while -ла is more like a /ʌ/ one. I'm from Udmurtia, Ural region of Russia, so, again, it could be a regional thing.
Такое видео надо было делать намного длиннее. Для англоговорящего это крышесносящая концепция, что каждый объект имеет род, как и человек 😂. Самое главное, этого и не объяснить логически, зачем предметам иметь гендер 🤣.
What about кофе is masculine
technically it's allowed to be either masculine or neuter- masculine is the older one (the word used to be "кофий") and is sort of kept as a relic, and some people will insist that it's the only correct form. with the modern word though, many people regularize it to neuter because of its ending -e. I'm not sure which is more common though..
When to use pachemu at sachem?
Basically Zachem means "For what purpose", while Pochemu simply means "Why".
You can use Zachem only when you ask about the reasoning of mind of living beings, mostly humans, but sometimes animals too.
Zachem ti kupil stol'ko yablok? - Why did you buy so many apples?
Zachem koshka lizhet kotyat? - Why does the cat lick the kittens?
If the object is inanimate, you can only use Pochemu.
Pochemu nebo goluboe? - Why is the sky blue?
Pochemu sneg takoi holodniy? - Why is the snow so cold?
You can use Pochemu instead of Zachem, but not the other way around, because inanimate objects don't have any thoughts or reasoning.
Here's a tricky example:
Zachem takoi bolshoy dom? - For what purpose is this house so big?
We use inanimate object but in fact we ask about a person, not the object.
So full version of the sentence would be - Zachem (tebe) takoi bolshoi dom? - where tebe is implied.
@@bshthrasher thank you for answering my query...
then why is "время" neuter even though it ends with я ?
Exception
@@daramogusa which exception ?
@@mcvsec A word that is an exception to the rule
@@daramogusa Thanks for elaborating.
Звините учитель
Почему
Какая красивое море?
Море
С.р
Какое красивое море .
Это правильно? Или нет? Я немного говорю по- Английски, а немного говорю по- Русски.
Приведите пример на русском языке.
Приведите пример слова человек
смотрю видео потому что стало интересно как иностранцы определяют род существительных) ведь мы даже об этом не задумываемся и пользуемся "проверкой" для русских: стол он мой, значит мужской)
isn't мышь plural though?
No.. plural would be мыши
Just remember that any word ending Ь is not plural
No I don’t. But I see where your head is at.
🤯 this is what I was confused about but now I get it 🫡
Большое спасибо!