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To all Russian learners - Russian is a language you have to listen to A LOT to learn it faster. Although I’m a Russian native, I’ve a bunch of experience teaching the language to my international friends. Believe me, nothing will help you learn cases or grammar faster AND easier than listening to music/short stories in Russian on repeat. There’s a bunch of playlists of these on TH-cam, good luck! удачи!
@@kingofthejungle2894 the only thing i would recommend is to listen to a lot about what you love/passionate about, but the deep search is required as it is no easy to find stuff you love in russian when just starting to learn the language especially. but constant listening is a huuuge boost to your russian grammar, to understanding cases especially (based on my experience) speaking of music, there are a couple of bands/music artists i recommend - Монеточка, МЫ, Перемотка, Би-2, Земфира, Flëur, Мумий Тролль, Порнофильмы, Сироткин, Пасош, Буерак, Oxxxymiron, Noize MC, Кино, Дайте танк (!), Три дня дождя, Нервы, Пошлая Молли…the list could be endless lol and yes i’m teaching russian just for fun
Advice from a Russian who, let's say, knows English and tried to learn Hindi, Bengali, Korean, Japanese and Chinese. 1. Your level is nan, zero, you are completely oblivious of the target language. If you don't have a luxury of getting stranded somewhere in the city of the target country, do duolingo for two weeks. Taste the language. 2. If you are fine with it, throw duo away and learn phonetics and alphabet. I mean it. There is one common thing between Russian and your language, presumably English: the sound comes out of a hole in the head, that is it. 3. Start reading very good (interesting, as much as it can be on this level) graded readers that are limited to 100-200 common words. Read aloud. Grasp the idea of proper stressing. Forget about English sounds. There is nothing in common as I said. 4. Make flashcards (anki) out of unknown words and do them in moderation. If it is too painful, leave it. Just read the graded books again and again. But anki is a great supplement. Anki is not a substitute for reading. You must read a lot and read aloud. This way you will learn words and their context. 5. Regarding the cases - forget it. Complexity grows exponentially the more words, genders and tenses you know. It is imposible to learn conciously, but it is easy to acquire without even registering it. It is easy, but it requires time, years, actually. So be merciful and compasionate to yourself. Just read aloud and continuously understand (not translate, understand) what you are reading. Extra advice: The above steps alone may not give you enough stress to fire up your neurons, so I would highly recommend a monolingual Russian companion, or one who barelly speaks your language. His only task should be to listen to how you read aloud and correct, read himself and make you repeat. This is pretty cheap, from 7 to 20 bucks for 60 minutes. I personally forced my Chinese teacher to do just that lol and it works pretty well. Grammar and other fluff can be googled when YOU need it. This path I described is a slow process, but it is, nonetheless, the fastest.
@@S.Korolev Thank you for the advice. I am confused though, you say in your comment, you are a Russian, and in the second comment, that you are learning Russian. Which is it?
i agree about learning slow; dont get into bad habits - coz most people won't correct you - and i found by doing this slowly with duolingo and conversations i watch and hear, and films, I can *CLICK* have an "AHA moment" on how the grammar works. i honestly find, from years of learning chunks of different languages - and having learnt french and german good enough to talk, and spanish & portuguese good enough to read, and often listen - that as they said, getting a good foundation, and letting it slowly integrate is good. we ain't all like Kazuma, and whilst I'd love to buy a copy of his book he released; i think because he FOCUSSES on languages all the time, instead of having a life, it's gonna come quicker. honestly I don't know how he does it; it's mad watching him speaking huge chunks of like 30 -40 languages!! (then say he only speaks 8, humbly)
Спасибо за видео. Я изучаю русский язык 4,5 года самостоятельно. Прошлую неделю у меня был первый разговор с учителем на iTalki. 30 минут только говорили по русскому. Это очень прекрасно. Мне очень рад)))
Приветствую в этом непростом деле ✌ Небольшое замечание для пользы - мы не говорим _"Мне очень рад"_ Правильно будет либо: _"Я очень рад"_ , либо: _"Мне очень радостно"_ Так правильней сочетаются эти слова.
Yama, hello from Seattle! Можно сказать что мы соседи 😀 Мне очень нравятся твои ролики, очень интересно смотреть и слушать! Очень хотелось бы хотя бы несколько таких же роликов, советов, например, как про правильное произношение, но уже про Английский язык) Огромное тебе спасибо! P.S.: очень понравился ваш Salmon Chowder Pie на Granville Island
3:39 чаще всего это неверно - носители не ошибаются, а говорят на изменившемся языке. Язык мутирует и это естественно. Конечно, носители могут ошибиться, но только в момент, когда сдают тест на знание формального литературного языка - то есть ошибка происходит в литературном языке, когда говорят на литературном языке, - вне этого, ошибок такого рода, нет. Если люди говорят в повседневной беседе, то они и не говорят на литературном - они говорят на своём, личном языке, а не на формальном. В повседневной жизни люди и не говорят на формальном языке и не сдают тест. Потому что формальный предназначен для формальной сферы - это инструмент, который уместен в определённом месте, а не везде. И говорить, что человек ошибся в момент, когда он и не поменял конкретный инструмент - неверно.
As a Russian native, I can hardly speak Russian with English natives who learn Russian. My brain just switches to English syntax and even if I manage to speak Russian, it sounds broken. That is why I am in awe with the first teacher. She is able to speak Russian Russian with a foreigner. 😂
What do you mean? Is talking Russian to nonnatives bad somehow? What makes it difficult? What would you wish would be different? I am learning Russian and I am curious whether it's challenging to talk to non Russians
@@kingofthejungle2894 While being a native speaker you start to simplify your russian, sometimes even make mistakes (i.e. not using the correct forms of words) to make it clearer to understand to a nonnative speaker. I think that's the point.
@@andrewkobets3919 yeah, that is the point too. I also doubt nonnatives abilities and start to simplify hard. Switching to English syntax does not really help to speak proper Russian either.
So something I think is important for Russian learners like myself is to break down the groups of the language and spend your daily practice going through the list or which ever you feel like needs more work. Grab your notebook and write down all the groups of Russian language. Vocabulary Grammar Reading Speaking Writing (don’t focus too much on it unless it’s your specific goal) Cases Also apart of vocabulary but it might need its own group but for me it’s the use of more advanced words. Don’t just learn one word, learn the synonyms too
@@evgyrk в принципе в этом нет ничего плохого, иначе зачем тогда знать английский язык? Если знать международные языки, то русский туда тоже можно вписать
I am learning Russian and I love it :D But maybe I am not deep enough yet to understand it's a language of suffering 🤣 How have you been learning Russian? And for how many hours a day/week?
@@kingofthejungle2894 I'm joking mostly, the case system and verbs of motion have proven difficult. I started with Luodingo and since I have found a chat partner using Tandem, and we speak twice a week. I found a list of 10k words on Reddit that I use also. I watch tons of Russian movies and television and listen to almost nothing but Russian music (Korol i Shut and Kino are my favorites so far). It's a beautiful language and I've grown to admire the culture. Удачи вам!
@@kingofthejungle2894 Man, I wrote a lengthy response to this but youtube deleted it. I did Duolingo -> Tandem (too soon tbh), and found a language exchange partner. He and I speak 2x a week, mainly about Russian culture and other activities we come up with. I also found a list of 10k Russian words from reddit which I use frequently. I watch a lot of Russian movies and TV, as well as listening to almost exclusively Russian music. I would love to provide recommendations if you're interested. It's a wonderful, but difficult experience. I have a small child which gets in the way, so its somewhat slow going (I'm only ~A2 after 1.5 years). I'm in no rush though.
Dude, I just watched another language learning youtuber and he films in your room, he just puts an American flag on the wall behind him. Check your house.
@@falllkenn what's the difference between привет and здравствуйте? In Duolingo, both means "hola" (hello in Spanish), and i don't know when to use one and when to use the other 😭
@@DoodieDorcas здравствуйте is more formal than привет, привет is using for friends or parents yk, but здравствуйте usually using at work or in cafe, restaurants
@@falllkenn oooh okayy, thank you! But, what about кот and кошка, is one for a fimale cat and the other for male cat? I would like to clarify these two too :)
Suka, как человек, который нативно говорит на русском и изучал английский - проще было освоить английский. И да, когда ты начал учить русский - ЗАБУДЬ правила английского. Ты попал в прекрасный мир. Забудь Английский. Мы можем 1 фразу\эмоцию\желание сказать двадцатью разными способами. Так что, НЕ подлежащее, сказуемое и тд.
@@kingofthejungle2894 конечно, хоть они всё ещё и являются частью славянского рода, у них есть свои необычные виды акцента, которые для них характерны, частично ещё его могут иметь люди, живущие в южных регионах России
Странные профессора. Одна с сильным акцентом, другая с ново -русской интонацией. Кстати, у парня интонации в предложении длсьаьочно правильные - правильнее чем у "профессоров".
You forgot to say that's how you should address drunk guys. You approach them and say "hello pidor" to them so affectionately. After that, they will be best friends.
My tutor walked through the logic of that phrase with me. She basically said the да is like a response to the question like “ok,” but the no of нет is really more of your answer, but the наверное is there to show that no isn’t firmly your answer and that you may change your mind, but you’re leaning towards no.
Personalized 1-on-1 language lessons with native teachers on italki🎉 Buy $10 get $5 for free for your first lesson using my code YAMA5.
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Ok
simp
for people who dont have time to watch the full video, the fastest way to learn russian is
fr
Frrrr
misinformtation
Is there is no fast way to learn anything fast.
IS WHAAAT!?
I started learning Russian today guys wish me luck.
your 1h in... r u fluent?
@@студент-0 Удачи !!!
Good luck buddy :3
I'm from Russia ;)
Oh, you chose the way of suffering
Quiet, don't scare them 😇 (I'm kidding)
To all Russian learners - Russian is a language you have to listen to A LOT to learn it faster.
Although I’m a Russian native, I’ve a bunch of experience teaching the language to my international friends. Believe me, nothing will help you learn cases or grammar faster AND easier than listening to music/short stories in Russian on repeat. There’s a bunch of playlists of these on TH-cam, good luck! удачи!
Do you have any specific recommendations? And are you teaching Russian just for fun?
@@kingofthejungle2894 the only thing i would recommend is to listen to a lot about what you love/passionate about, but the deep search is required as it is no easy to find stuff you love in russian when just starting to learn the language especially. but constant listening is a huuuge boost to your russian grammar, to understanding cases especially (based on my experience)
speaking of music, there are a couple of bands/music artists i recommend - Монеточка, МЫ, Перемотка, Би-2, Земфира, Flëur, Мумий Тролль, Порнофильмы, Сироткин, Пасош, Буерак, Oxxxymiron, Noize MC, Кино, Дайте танк (!), Три дня дождя, Нервы, Пошлая Молли…the list could be endless lol
and yes i’m teaching russian just for fun
Advice from a Russian who, let's say, knows English and tried to learn Hindi, Bengali, Korean, Japanese and Chinese.
1. Your level is nan, zero, you are completely oblivious of the target language. If you don't have a luxury of getting stranded somewhere in the city of the target country, do duolingo for two weeks. Taste the language.
2. If you are fine with it, throw duo away and learn phonetics and alphabet. I mean it. There is one common thing between Russian and your language, presumably English: the sound comes out of a hole in the head, that is it.
3. Start reading very good (interesting, as much as it can be on this level) graded readers that are limited to 100-200 common words. Read aloud. Grasp the idea of proper stressing. Forget about English sounds. There is nothing in common as I said.
4. Make flashcards (anki) out of unknown words and do them in moderation. If it is too painful, leave it. Just read the graded books again and again. But anki is a great supplement. Anki is not a substitute for reading. You must read a lot and read aloud. This way you will learn words and their context.
5. Regarding the cases - forget it. Complexity grows exponentially the more words, genders and tenses you know. It is imposible to learn conciously, but it is easy to acquire without even registering it. It is easy, but it requires time, years, actually. So be merciful and compasionate to yourself. Just read aloud and continuously understand (not translate, understand) what you are reading.
Extra advice:
The above steps alone may not give you enough stress to fire up your neurons, so I would highly recommend a monolingual Russian companion, or one who barelly speaks your language. His only task should be to listen to how you read aloud and correct, read himself and make you repeat. This is pretty cheap, from 7 to 20 bucks for 60 minutes. I personally forced my Chinese teacher to do just that lol and it works pretty well.
Grammar and other fluff can be googled when YOU need it.
This path I described is a slow process, but it is, nonetheless, the fastest.
P.S.
If I recall correctly, I learned Russian cuz I liked to read about animals, watch cartoons and play with friends 😂
@@S.Korolev Thank you for the advice. I am confused though, you say in your comment, you are a Russian, and in the second comment, that you are learning Russian. Which is it?
@@S.Korolev And why did you write, concerning cases "forget it?"
awesome advice
i’m a native bengali i speak english well but have been trying to learn Russian. this kinda helped so thank you
i agree about learning slow; dont get into bad habits - coz most people won't correct you - and i found by doing this slowly with duolingo and conversations i watch and hear, and films, I can *CLICK* have an "AHA moment" on how the grammar works.
i honestly find, from years of learning chunks of different languages - and having learnt french and german good enough to talk, and spanish & portuguese good enough to read, and often listen - that as they said, getting a good foundation, and letting it slowly integrate is good.
we ain't all like Kazuma, and whilst I'd love to buy a copy of his book he released; i think because he FOCUSSES on languages all the time, instead of having a life, it's gonna come quicker.
honestly I don't know how he does it; it's mad watching him speaking huge chunks of like 30 -40 languages!! (then say he only speaks 8, humbly)
“Cyka = you” moment 😭 🙏
ага, ща научит своих )) потом будут у нас огребать )
Спасибо за видео. Я изучаю русский язык 4,5 года самостоятельно. Прошлую неделю у меня был первый разговор с учителем на iTalki. 30 минут только говорили по русскому. Это очень прекрасно. Мне очень рад)))
ты молодец друг
Wow, 30 minutes in Russian, that's impressive! Why did you decide to learn Russian?
Приветствую в этом непростом деле ✌
Небольшое замечание для пользы -
мы не говорим _"Мне очень рад"_
Правильно будет либо: _"Я очень рад"_ , либо: _"Мне очень радостно"_
Так правильней сочетаются эти слова.
@@flammm1483 когда последний раз ты говорил "Мне очень радостно"?))
@@ВладЦветков-я2д вот прям сейчас
Yama, hello from Seattle! Можно сказать что мы соседи 😀
Мне очень нравятся твои ролики, очень интересно смотреть и слушать!
Очень хотелось бы хотя бы несколько таких же роликов, советов, например, как про правильное произношение, но уже про Английский язык)
Огромное тебе спасибо!
P.S.: очень понравился ваш Salmon Chowder Pie на Granville Island
3:39 чаще всего это неверно - носители не ошибаются, а говорят на изменившемся языке. Язык мутирует и это естественно.
Конечно, носители могут ошибиться, но только в момент, когда сдают тест на знание формального литературного языка - то есть ошибка происходит в литературном языке, когда говорят на литературном языке, - вне этого, ошибок такого рода, нет.
Если люди говорят в повседневной беседе, то они и не говорят на литературном - они говорят на своём, личном языке, а не на формальном.
В повседневной жизни люди и не говорят на формальном языке и не сдают тест. Потому что формальный предназначен для формальной сферы - это инструмент, который уместен в определённом месте, а не везде. И говорить, что человек ошибся в момент, когда он и не поменял конкретный инструмент - неверно.
Duolingo is a healthy habit in the way that fentanyl is.
😂
As a Russian native, I can hardly speak Russian with English natives who learn Russian. My brain just switches to English syntax and even if I manage to speak Russian, it sounds broken.
That is why I am in awe with the first teacher. She is able to speak Russian Russian with a foreigner. 😂
What do you mean? Is talking Russian to nonnatives bad somehow? What makes it difficult? What would you wish would be different? I am learning Russian and I am curious whether it's challenging to talk to non Russians
@@kingofthejungle2894 While being a native speaker you start to simplify your russian, sometimes even make mistakes (i.e. not using the correct forms of words) to make it clearer to understand to a nonnative speaker. I think that's the point.
@@andrewkobets3919 Thanks for the information!
@@andrewkobets3919 yeah, that is the point too. I also doubt nonnatives abilities and start to simplify hard. Switching to English syntax does not really help to speak proper Russian either.
So something I think is important for Russian learners like myself is to break down the groups of the language and spend your daily practice going through the list or which ever you feel like needs more work. Grab your notebook and write down all the groups of Russian language.
Vocabulary
Grammar
Reading
Speaking
Writing (don’t focus too much on it unless it’s your specific goal)
Cases
Also apart of vocabulary but it might need its own group but for me it’s the use of more advanced words. Don’t just learn one word, learn the synonyms too
Снимайте больше контента❤
Thanks I want
to learn Russian even I'm Filipino
Для меня самый простой способ изучать русский - слушать и видеть видео или подкасты.
Я подписался из-за музыки Зелды 💪🏻
(Твой контет очень хороший)
Ахахаха чела реально ЯМА зовут, я как узнал, так УПАЛ!!
ОХ, I like undertale sound effect
Bro is so handsome 😔
Спасибо
Duolingo said Cat is koshka where your old videos said kot which 1 is correct ;-;
Koshka is female cat. Kot is male cat
Кошка - женский род (но это слово нейтральное и может применяться в общем, ко всем кошкам), кот - мужской род.
Ты не сможешь выучить русский за 30 дней.
Максимум основные слова , и тп.
Но свободно говорить? No way
Главное основные типа сука,блять, ебать, пизда выучить и уже большинство всего понимать начнешь
How old are you, son? 16? 17? Will you give us advice about the language?
Как человек для которого русский это родной язык, я искренне не понимаю зачем учить этот язык
комплекс неполноценности.
Странный вопрос
Тогда какой смысл учить любой другой язык?
пхахахаха, ну тогда все должны знать русский язык 😡
@@evgyrk в принципе в этом нет ничего плохого, иначе зачем тогда знать английский язык? Если знать международные языки, то русский туда тоже можно вписать
+
I've been learning for a year and a half.
Abandon hope all ye who enter this place.
I am learning Russian and I love it :D But maybe I am not deep enough yet to understand it's a language of suffering 🤣
How have you been learning Russian? And for how many hours a day/week?
@@kingofthejungle2894 I'm joking mostly, the case system and verbs of motion have proven difficult. I started with Luodingo and since I have found a chat partner using Tandem, and we speak twice a week. I found a list of 10k words on Reddit that I use also. I watch tons of Russian movies and television and listen to almost nothing but Russian music (Korol i Shut and Kino are my favorites so far). It's a beautiful language and I've grown to admire the culture. Удачи вам!
@@kingofthejungle2894 Man, I wrote a lengthy response to this but youtube deleted it.
I did Duolingo -> Tandem (too soon tbh), and found a language exchange partner. He and I speak 2x a week, mainly about Russian culture and other activities we come up with. I also found a list of 10k Russian words from reddit which I use frequently. I watch a lot of Russian movies and TV, as well as listening to almost exclusively Russian music. I would love to provide recommendations if you're interested. It's a wonderful, but difficult experience. I have a small child which gets in the way, so its somewhat slow going (I'm only ~A2 after 1.5 years). I'm in no rush though.
Я не могу учить русский язык без русских субтитров
الاستماع هي افضل واسرع طريقة لتعلم اللغة
طيب اكتبيها بالانجليزي 😅
المقطع بالانجليزي
i listen to russian doomer music and play cs2. I think I am getting the hang of it! idi nakhuy!
Dude, I just watched another language learning youtuber and he films in your room, he just puts an American flag on the wall behind him.
Check your house.
If you want to learn Russian I can help you guys 🙂
HELP ME
@@DoodieDorcas okay
@@falllkenn what's the difference between привет and здравствуйте? In Duolingo, both means "hola" (hello in Spanish), and i don't know when to use one and when to use the other 😭
@@DoodieDorcas здравствуйте is more formal than привет, привет is using for friends or parents yk, but здравствуйте usually using at work or in cafe, restaurants
@@falllkenn oooh okayy, thank you! But, what about кот and кошка, is one for a fimale cat and the other for male cat? I would like to clarify these two too :)
Why does your guests speak Russian with accent?🤔
Suka, как человек, который нативно говорит на русском и изучал английский - проще было освоить английский. И да, когда ты начал учить русский - ЗАБУДЬ правила английского. Ты попал в прекрасный мир. Забудь Английский. Мы можем 1 фразу\эмоцию\желание сказать двадцатью разными способами. Так что, НЕ подлежащее, сказуемое и тд.
Хмм
Yama is ukrainian
Не особо слышно украинский акцент, если честно
@@jocelynjoestar13801 Do Ukrainians have accents?
@@kingofthejungle2894 конечно, хоть они всё ещё и являются частью славянского рода, у них есть свои необычные виды акцента, которые для них характерны, частично ещё его могут иметь люди, живущие в южных регионах России
@@jocelynjoestar13801 где нормально говорят по-русски?
@@kingofthejungle2894 ты не поверишь. В России
Kursk
Странные профессора. Одна с сильным акцентом, другая с ново -русской интонацией. Кстати, у парня интонации в предложении длсьаьочно правильные - правильнее чем у "профессоров".
btw guys pidor means homie
Ахахахахахаххах
True, this is our kind of "friendly" greeting >:)
You forgot to say that's how you should address drunk guys. You approach them and say "hello pidor" to them so affectionately. After that, they will be best friends.
@@uerjduerjd7965 that’s absolutely right. Basically you can use pidor to call everyone, but personally I say this to my homie
Nash slonyara.🐘🦣🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺
Seichas nauchim americosov kul'turno obshatsya.
It's dangers.
You know russian If you can translate this phrase "Да нет наверное"
"So, maybe no / And, more likely - no"
My tutor walked through the logic of that phrase with me. She basically said the да is like a response to the question like “ok,” but the no of нет is really more of your answer, but the наверное is there to show that no isn’t firmly your answer and that you may change your mind, but you’re leaning towards no.
@@solidslicc707 Wow :0 Very good explanation :∆
"Probably not" or
"Oh, probably not" or
"Yeah, probably not"
In Australia, we also have "yeah nah" which is similar, but not quite the same 😁