Express Your Emotions Pt. 3 | Russian Language

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 58

  • @bananafrica6421
    @bananafrica6421 4 года назад +8

    Я так счастлив, потому что нашел твой канал! :)

  • @Asma-ep9bx
    @Asma-ep9bx 7 лет назад +20

    Excellent style of teaching Russian... Спасибо

  • @patrichistefan6189
    @patrichistefan6189 6 лет назад +6

    Спасибо Фёдор!

  • @rovaniemipasta
    @rovaniemipasta 6 лет назад +5

    Your videos are flipping excellent! So well explained and easy to understand! Balshoye Spasiba!!

  • @victoriannecastle
    @victoriannecastle 8 лет назад +12

    This clears it for me. I've been hearing счастлиьой from Easy Languages. Didn't know this is how it's personally said.

    • @Manettvibrante
      @Manettvibrante 7 лет назад

      Victorianne Castle yeh me too! i was like it doesnt quite sound like its written wtf..

  • @ahmedsayhood
    @ahmedsayhood 7 лет назад +3

    you are genius man u helped a lot i tried many videos but u made difference thank u спасибо

  • @CiderDivider
    @CiderDivider 8 лет назад +2

    Thank you for sharing these videos!! You teach very well.

  • @marcelo90z
    @marcelo90z 8 лет назад +35

    Waaaay easier than many language courses. I am trying to learn Russian with a book, but I can't really learn anything from it; for instance, it isnt telling me where some letters are silent, like the "т" in "-ст-". Thank you (Regards from Brazil)

    • @funkycensoredcat9000
      @funkycensoredcat9000 3 года назад

      Olá, amigo!
      Comentário antigo, eu sei; mas, atualmente, você consegue falar russo com proficiência?
      Espero que tenha conseguido continuar com seus estudos.

    • @marcelo90z
      @marcelo90z 3 года назад

      @@funkycensoredcat9000 Infelizmente eu acabei por não continuar estudando russo. Não sei o que aconteceu, mas não mantive o ritmo

    • @Wassuuppbitches
      @Wassuuppbitches 2 года назад

      @@marcelo90z oh man, sorry to hear that..

  • @alogutz
    @alogutz 7 лет назад +2

    Большое спасибо. I've already suscribed to your channel. I find all of these lessons quite helpful. Thank you for your time and effort. What I don't clearly understand yet is the present tense and the infinitive, but I'm going to take a look at all of your lessons. Perhaps I find a better explanation. Learning Russian certainly is challenging and amusing, when you do it through self-teaching.

  • @Hussain350z
    @Hussain350z 7 лет назад +2

    THANK YOU VERY MUCH BRO !!!! KEEP IT UP

  • @hamzaelkerz1448
    @hamzaelkerz1448 7 лет назад +1

    thank you about everything dude💪😊👍

  • @ozdendemir9247
    @ozdendemir9247 6 лет назад

    Best Russian teacher ever! Thanks!

  • @sssssssoup3335
    @sssssssoup3335 6 лет назад +1

    great job

  • @BRYANTERMULOOFFICAL
    @BRYANTERMULOOFFICAL 8 лет назад +1

    is мне хорошо мне грустно for male only? thanks sir fedor..

  • @Кенкенпа
    @Кенкенпа 7 лет назад +3

    Мне очень нравится твои видеа!

  • @ting-anlu7392
    @ting-anlu7392 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks a lot !! Just a bit curious about how to construct negative phrases. For example "I am not happy " or "I do not want /have sth".
    Thanks …!

    • @BeFluentinRussian
      @BeFluentinRussian  7 лет назад +2

      Just simply add "не" before describing your emotion.
      Я НЕ счастлива
      Я не чувствую хорошо

    • @shahamin457
      @shahamin457 4 года назад

      @@BeFluentinRussian if i want to say that im so happy..does it will be Я очень счастлив??это правда??😁😁😁

  • @lucasm4299
    @lucasm4299 7 лет назад +1

    What about ощущать?

  • @higuys5982
    @higuys5982 4 года назад +1

    Dear Teacher,
    can you use Я Счастлив with Мне Счастлив?

  • @phloom4053
    @phloom4053 8 лет назад +5

    Thanks I'm not even a teen yet but I'm nearly fluent in russian

    • @mrwetcloth4571
      @mrwetcloth4571 3 года назад

      How old are you

    • @phloom4053
      @phloom4053 3 года назад

      @@mrwetcloth4571 bro I’m 16 now

    • @mrwetcloth4571
      @mrwetcloth4571 3 года назад

      @@phloom4053 how’s your Russian now ?

    • @phloom4053
      @phloom4053 3 года назад

      @@mrwetcloth4571 it’s alright but forgot some of it because I haven’t had to use it

    • @mrwetcloth4571
      @mrwetcloth4571 3 года назад

      @@phloom4053 I’m an intermediate level and I just started college in England, there is a lot of people who speak Russian around me so I’m lucky but generally you just need to meet new people and ask about languages

  • @JulianJurec
    @JulianJurec 8 лет назад +2

    Hi. I have a question. Could you expand a bit on how would I say "You are hungry" or "We are sad" and stuff like this, because you only focused on Mne and Ya, and I'm wondering if I can use it with other persons as well.

  • @yalcnozturk5846
    @yalcnozturk5846 3 года назад

    I feel sad, I feel bad, I feel... I don't know... Good... My man Fedor doesn't know feeling good...

  • @pegagonza3784
    @pegagonza3784 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for your videos. Question, can we use мне хорошо when they ask how are you?

    • @BeFluentinRussian
      @BeFluentinRussian  5 лет назад +8

      yes, when talking about how you're feeling. But if you're talking about your overall life, then we say "Я хорошо"

  • @chandlermccook9246
    @chandlermccook9246 8 лет назад +4

    I have a question. I use duolingo for russian, and it's kind of erratic (for example I learned пюре before что) and I was wondering what website or program would be a better choice.

    • @chandlermccook9246
      @chandlermccook9246 8 лет назад +2

      +Be Fluent thank you

    • @tylerhollis9108
      @tylerhollis9108 4 года назад +2

      @@chandlermccook9246 I personally use hellotalk to speak with native speakers and it helps you learn easier

    • @NEnigma777
      @NEnigma777 Год назад

      I would take a formal Russian class. I tried all those apps and they sucked. I needed a real class with a real professor that would make us speak Russian and correct us.

  • @LadySuit006
    @LadySuit006 5 лет назад +1

    Why do some emotions/feelings use the dative case and some don't? For example: "I'm angry" (literally, "I got angry") is "Я зола," but "I am sad" is "мне грустно" (to me it is sad)? I understand how to construct both constructions, but I don't understand how to tell which emotion should be constructed which way...or is it just something to be memorized?

    • @BeFluentinRussian
      @BeFluentinRussian  5 лет назад +3

      This is one of the questions that I don't have a logical answer to, but it seems like whenever your surroundings make you feel a certain way, we use "мне", and when the emotion comes from you, we say "я".

    • @LadySuit006
      @LadySuit006 5 лет назад

      ​@@BeFluentinRussian Thanks for the quick response! I thought it might be something along those lines (as in, being mindful of who/what is the subject and who is the object), but I confess I'm still a bit confused by that because is seems to me that something in my surroundings could make me feel angry.
      That being said, it is useful to know that there isn't some grammar rule that I'm missing that explains this. Perhaps knowing which emotions use which grammar construction is just something I need to memorize, so your answer is still quite helpful (to me). ;)
      P.S. I'm really appreciating your channel. Keep it up.

  • @artiomlukin3187
    @artiomlukin3187 3 года назад

    Make a video where you play something bro!

  • @_Chakotay
    @_Chakotay 3 года назад

    👍👍

  • @badisbadis8336
    @badisbadis8336 5 лет назад

    Я люблю федор

  • @user-ve9cs7ee6x
    @user-ve9cs7ee6x 7 лет назад +1

    Мне совсем грустно

  • @TheNixspace
    @TheNixspace 7 лет назад

    What about " я счасливый "
    What does it mean, федор????

    • @BeFluentinRussian
      @BeFluentinRussian  7 лет назад +8

      I means "I am happy":) Счастлив is simply a short adjective.
      Interesting fact though. Счастлив would refer to current situation, "I feel happy at this very moment".
      Счастливый would be like an overall description of me. "I am a happy person"

    • @shahamin457
      @shahamin457 4 года назад

      @@BeFluentinRussian i got it.спасибо Федор

  • @donpalmerino3708
    @donpalmerino3708 5 лет назад

    Hi Fedor:
    I just found your youtube videos the other day. Thanks for everyday examples.
    For Chris Gomez below (and others), there is a website you might find interesting and useful: www.typeit.org. I don't know if it works on I-pad, but on a computer it gives the ability to type in 20 or so languages, with all the accent marks. The Cyrillic keyboard is organized according to the English letter format so we don't have to learn the Russian order. I then use the copy function and paste it to a word processing program.
    Федор: Вам можно объяснить разницу между выражениями или словами что-то, что-нибуть. кое-что, и т.д.
    Я прочитал, что в Новосибирске есть интересный зоопарк. Здесь в США я слушаю и читаю только о Москве и Санкт-Петербурге.

  • @Edo9River
    @Edo9River 8 лет назад

    So there is a little question in my mind, "bad" isn't used in the same way it is in English; However "sad" is just one aspect of the English "bad". As you say there is a feeling of guilt, or regret inside the English speaker, but they won't use those two words ususally, just bad. And consequently, the word "sad" seems one dimensional for the American. There are other feelings, "annoyed", "disappointed", upset but not "angry", "impatient", "frustrated", "lost", "confused", "defeated", "cheated" , "betrayed", "embarrassed", "caught (with my pants down)"; "Tired", "exhausted" and these have physical or psychological meanings......Regarding some expressions of happiness: "fantastic" "like I'm floating on air (because a beautiful girl smiled at me)" "invincible" (because I won, beat the system, etc)...then there are expressions describing someone else "arrogant", "superior", "conceited", "ignorant", "clumsy", "foolish" "satisfied", "stressed out",。

  • @keltar2007
    @keltar2007 7 лет назад

    Molodyetz

  • @pilou5783
    @pilou5783 4 года назад +2

    Мне грустно ..... Why do you shy away from using the right grammatical terms. It will prove a handicap for any student wanting to know more of the complex Russian grammar.
    In fact мне is NOT a subject, but a Dative. And грустно being an ADVERB of course is NEUTER and therefore doesn’t have masc or fem. gender.
    A tip in passing: always integrate the verb you explain into a short sentence, which makes it easier to remember.
    (Мне) грусгно Без тебя = It’s sad without you/ I feel sad without you/ Life is sad without you.
    Good luck and carry on.