A complete Russian language course for beginners is available for enrollment! - russian.fromzerotofluency.com/courses/from-zero-to-fluency Get all 3 levels and save $102 - russian.fromzerotofluency.com/bundles/all-of-from-zero-to-fluency
The greatest part about getting soft and hard sounds right I noticed in your soft and hard "L" video is that the words are using the soft and hard consonants for a reason. So when you use the right one odds are good the word becomes a lot more comfortable to pronounce. The hard "L" before a ы was a great example for me here that made the realisation hit. It is at least for me so much easier to get to the ы from a soft "L" because the right tongue position kind of follows naturally from releasing the soft one, whereas with the hard L you gotta pull it so far back first it feels like you have to swallow your own tongue.
I can manage to say the sounds properly while speaking single words, or concentrating on a word in a sentence. I think the hardest part is remembering to practice this with all the words in sentences, especially while trying to flow along. Someday,...it'll feel natural.
For me (native French), when you start both pronunciations at 4:56, it's like you're adding a second letter (é) to the first. And that helps me a lot because when Russian teachers talked to me about soft or hard, it didn't mean anything to me. But with your examples it will help me a lot.
Daria, i’ve been studying Russian since 3 weeks ago and seeing your russian lesson series really helps me out!! Wanna know, will you continue the series in the future?
Love listening to you teach. My wife is Russian and laughs at my enunciation. But I just go with it. I figure most will understand what I am saying despite my inability to enunciate properly, however, with this lesson - that may be dangerous!! I need to work harder on the hard v soft.
This is really helpful, and also the video on л and ль; but I'm wondering, Are all the soft consonants pronounced with the tongue further back like with the ль in your л & ль video? I had been trying to make ть with the tongue against the teeth. The diagrams are helpful. 🤔
It must be repeated that "hard" or "soft" don't mean much to native speakers of other languages! That's why it seems so difficult to teach -- to native Russian speakers with no training in language. The immediately understandable description is *palatalized vs *"non-palatalized" (or velar in some cases.)
they don’t ALWAYS change meaning:) it’s the same letters, they just sound differently. You don’t call U 5 different letters, right? Even though it sounds completely differently in different works like “but”, “duke”, etc.
Just came across your videos. I watched lesson 1. Yet to finish lesson 2. I may be jumping ahead but nobody seems to want to explain in what context you pronounce the Russian "O" as "O" but sometimes pronounce it "A". e.g. RUSSIA in Cyrillic letters. Can't seem to turn my keyboard to Cyrillic i would write Russia in Cyrillic. Otherwise, interesting videos.
Russian language basics: Please spare me, Ukrainian soldier Why are the Ukrainians in my town two and a half years into a three day war Please teach these phrases
I just annoyed the snot out of my sister & played this full volume. I am deaf in one ear so to me there is still no difference. bl to me sounds like "oi", she said it sounds like "ue-ee".
A complete Russian language course for beginners is available for enrollment! - russian.fromzerotofluency.com/courses/from-zero-to-fluency
Get all 3 levels and save $102 - russian.fromzerotofluency.com/bundles/all-of-from-zero-to-fluency
Даря, как вы?
The greatest part about getting soft and hard sounds right I noticed in your soft and hard "L" video is that the words are using the soft and hard consonants for a reason. So when you use the right one odds are good the word becomes a lot more comfortable to pronounce. The hard "L" before a ы was a great example for me here that made the realisation hit. It is at least for me so much easier to get to the ы from a soft "L" because the right tongue position kind of follows naturally from releasing the soft one, whereas with the hard L you gotta pull it so far back first it feels like you have to swallow your own tongue.
haha omg :D
I can manage to say the sounds properly while speaking single words, or concentrating on a word in a sentence. I think the hardest part is remembering to practice this with all the words in sentences, especially while trying to flow along. Someday,...it'll feel natural.
For me (native French), when you start both pronunciations at 4:56, it's like you're adding a second letter (é) to the first. And that helps me a lot because when Russian teachers talked to me about soft or hard, it didn't mean anything to me. But with your examples it will help me a lot.
Контент топчик:)) Всегда поражался твоему умению круто объяснять грамматику и все эти сложные вещи:)
боже как у тебя дела)) сто лет не говорили
@@RealRussianClub надо тебя в подкаст пригласить) кстати, приглашаю)) на этой неделе можно
@@RussianWithMax я всегда за)
Great content. Very useful. Thank you for putting this together and sharing with us. ❤
thank you!
Thank you very much teacher Daria for this interesting lesson about hard and soft letters in RUSSIAN language! ( быть и бить) и.т.д.
Daria, i’ve been studying Russian since 3 weeks ago and seeing your russian lesson series really helps me out!! Wanna know, will you continue the series in the future?
Excellent short lesson thank you
Love listening to you teach. My wife is Russian and laughs at my enunciation. But I just go with it. I figure most will understand what I am saying despite my inability to enunciate properly, however, with this lesson - that may be dangerous!! I need to work harder on the hard v soft.
it's great that you have someone to practice with :)
Главное чтобы жена понимала 😉 поугараете вместе 😂
Welcome back 🎉
thank you but I've been here this entire time haha :D
Because you are great 😁💪
Are you in Russia now
I want to know if the universities are open to preparatory year registration
Please tell me that 🙏 ok
in st St. Petersburg
Спасибо огромное, Дарья!))
My personal favorite: брат and брать.
👍🏻👍🏻
Большое спасибо мадам 🌹🌷🌺
Very helpful thanks ❤
Спасибо Даурия!!
Keep up the good work
Thanks, will do!
Very Interesting 💚
Thanks, I think I understand ы now and in theory soft ь means trying to start an ы but without saying the i
Excellent explanation
Great thanks
Love you
finalmente vi a diferença de "ест" e "есть"
i understand but for my italian is a certain way more easy.
i feel the difference but pronounciation is difficult
grazie spasibo daria
This is really helpful, and also the video on л and ль; but I'm wondering, Are all the soft consonants pronounced with the tongue further back like with the ль in your л & ль video? I had been trying to make ть with the tongue against the teeth. The diagrams are helpful. 🤔
It must be repeated that "hard" or "soft" don't mean much to native speakers of other languages! That's why it seems so difficult to teach -- to native Russian speakers with no training in language.
The immediately understandable description is *palatalized vs *"non-palatalized" (or velar in some cases.)
Даря, Послушайти меня🙏🏿
❤
Question: if they can change the meaning, why not consider hard and soft versions as separate letters?
they don’t ALWAYS change meaning:) it’s the same letters, they just sound differently. You don’t call U 5 different letters, right? Even though it sounds completely differently in different works like “but”, “duke”, etc.
Thanks, Daria. I'm trying to remember from the linguistics I studied years ago whether they are phonemes or allophones. Can you help?
I am of course referring to the sounds, not to the written letters.
Just came across your videos. I watched lesson 1. Yet to finish lesson 2. I may be jumping ahead but nobody seems to want to explain in what context you pronounce the Russian "O" as "O" but sometimes pronounce it "A". e.g. RUSSIA in Cyrillic letters. Can't seem to turn my keyboard to Cyrillic i would write Russia in Cyrillic. Otherwise, interesting videos.
how do i say. "you please me" in russian? ты мне нравишься It doesn't seem right... it gives the sense of "I like you". Help me ' -'
in Russian I like you is ты мне нравишься, it’s like “you are liked by me”
“you please me” I don’t even know how to say in Russian😅 I’d still use “мне нравится” expression
@@RealRussianClub I see. Thanks for the correction :3. Much better if someone explained it instead of Google Translate, it helped a lot.
Are you in Russia now
I want to know if the universities are open to preparatory year registration
Please tell me that 🙏 ok
IN ST PETERSBURG
no, I moved in 2018:) but as far as I know universities work as normal
Ok
No problem 😊
Paka2🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩
🇮🇳 🇷🇺
Russian language basics:
Please spare me, Ukrainian soldier
Why are the Ukrainians in my town two and a half years into a three day war
Please teach these phrases
I just annoyed the snot out of my sister & played this full volume.
I am deaf in one ear so to me there is still no difference.
bl to me sounds like "oi", she said it sounds like "ue-ee".
Hay what you'r ig I'd
realrussianclub
👍👍👍