When I was preparing for my final French exam at university, I decided that for a few days before the exam I won’t say anything in Russian before I say it to myself in French. Worked great for me!
I live in Sacramento and have been learning Russian for around 3 months. I’m fortunate to live around a lot of slavs but if you’re not. Try finding a local Eastern European market and practice your Russian there. Try to have small convos with the cashiers. It’s good practice for me
I love this guy, every time I have a question he answers then while I am watching him I develop a new question and then I hear right then him explaining it, thank you Fedor👍
@debik22800Trust me, as an American I can say that no American citizen wants to fight with Russia, it's literally our Government and we all have no say, it's corrupt really.
When I try to make a new sentence most of the time I have the words but I confuse the endings all the time, like even in normal basic sentences, I make a sentence but with wrong case for example I was just thinking я ела много вкусную еду, но теперь знаю это не правильно 🥲
One of the little things I always have in the back of my mind is popular slang, idioms, and general speech quirks. English speakers seem to make up new words everyday through memes and such, I wouldn’t be surprised if Russians did the same thing. So even if I became fluent in basic textbook speech, will I even catch up to how “kids these days” talk? 😂 Idk just something I think about.
oooh, you don’t even imagine how russians good at making up new words and the fun fact is that all generations make it we have slang which is used by young people, and it is almost no different from yours, we often use english words as slang but the thing that exists only in slavic languages is free word formation for example my mom says «валюмкаться» instead of «валяться» (to lay on) and «валюмкаться» this is a non-existent word! it’s just a very very cute version for a process of laying on a couch with your loved ones. my mom just created it herself but every russian speaker can understand that it is a much more cute version of «валяться» and it has millions of such examples… especially russians like to make words more cute (or more offensive lol), many cute forms are common words like зайка, зайчик, зайчонок, зайчуля, зайкин, зайчуша (all of this are just forms of word bunny)
It is individual, it depends on your learning ability, diligence and how much time you devote to oral and written speech. And also depends on your basic native language. Russian language is easier for some foreigners to learn, for example, Slavs, because of the similarity of words, and for some it is much more difficult, because their language does not have the sounds that are in Russian, have different phonetics, different word order, grammatics, etc. But in general, to speak Russian fluently, it will take about 3-5 years of continuous study and life in a Russian-speaking environment. The more you use the language in everyday life, the more russian speaking friends you have, the faster you will master it.
That intro tho, can someone please write it down with cyrillics so I can learn how to say it and what it means. The YT CC is not catching that. Privyet something? Hi, I'm Feda something something? :D
Totally nailed it ! Knowing how to declare in downtown Moscow "Медведь в такси !" isn't the slightest bit useful. Your advice is well worth knowing and certainly makes a lot of sense. Wish that I'd seen this sooner.Thanks for sharing this !
@@ЭйвейлАлександрв русском языке можно переставлять слова в произввольном порядке, главное чтобы смысл остался прежним. например: (учите русскому языку иностранцев; иностранцев языку русскому учите; языку русскому иностранцев учите... это можно продолжать вечно) и
When I was preparing for my final French exam at university, I decided that for a few days before the exam I won’t say anything in Russian before I say it to myself in French. Worked great for me!
Up at 4:32 in the morning learning russian😂
😂
2am, I’m learning Russian despite the fact I’m a Russian native
@@ItsSuchACliche wow the first Russian native I’ve seen that barely knows the Russian language..welcome my friend 😂😊
same😭
wtf im looking at this at 4:40am😂
I live in Sacramento and have been learning Russian for around 3 months. I’m fortunate to live around a lot of slavs but if you’re not. Try finding a local Eastern European market and practice your Russian there. Try to have small convos with the cashiers. It’s good practice for me
Thank you, Fedor!
These were good tips to follow.
Спасибо!
Я учу русский язык. Ваши видео мне очень помогают, Спасибо.
I love this guy, every time I have a question he answers then while I am watching him I develop a new question and then I hear right then him explaining it, thank you Fedor👍
Спасибо
Большое спасибо для ваши видео. Они мне помогают много.
Спасибо, Фёдор. Я изучаю русский язык уже 4 года, говорю на уровне В1, но иногда мне всё ещё трудно описать своё банальное окружение. 😅
А переведи что я сказал
@@kiseldr "And translate what I said."
@@kiseldr АХЫХВХАХЫВА ГЕНИЙ
@@Whammytap No and, only translate what I said
@@zllip я не понимаю правила этой игры 😅
Большое спасибо, красивый сэр, за вашу доброту и терпение к ученикам. В эти дни вы помогаете нам всем сохранять веру в то, что хорошо в России.
@debik22800Звучит как сарказм🙄
@debik22800Trust me, as an American I can say that no American citizen wants to fight with Russia, it's literally our Government and we all have no say, it's corrupt really.
Excellent advice! Noted
Either this was a re upload or I watched this in a dream
Thank you!
You have been quiet euphoric lately bro!
You are so right. I know a ton of words but I don't speak Russian sentences with anyone. There is also a fear factor to it.
Just do it. What's ur problem?
Starting at 8:10 is the whole video in 1 sentence.
Спасибо 🙏
i must have traveled in time because i saw this video yesterday.
There were some glitches in the video and i guess he re-uploaded it. I also watched just like you 😁😁
Спосиба от души 👍👍👍
I just get hung up on the Tenses, and Perfective and Imperfective, pepositional case OMG! (Beating my head against the desk) 😁
spasiba brat, eto mne zhosko pomoglo ;)
А как оно переводит?!
@@OScorp.vThank you (spasibo) brother (bro)(brat)! This(eto) really (zhestko) helped (pomoglo) me (mne). Спасибо брат, это мне жёстко помогло!
Жёстко помогло😅
Это как?)
Is this a re-upload? I swear, I watched the exact same video (yesterday) but I'm certain it wasn't within the last hour or so.
When I try to make a new sentence most of the time I have the words but I confuse the endings all the time, like even in normal basic sentences, I make a sentence but with wrong case for example I was just thinking я ела много вкусную еду, но теперь знаю это не правильно 🥲
This is the first video I that see and don't repeat the same things that like other 60 video says
One of the little things I always have in the back of my mind is popular slang, idioms, and general speech quirks. English speakers seem to make up new words everyday through memes and such, I wouldn’t be surprised if Russians did the same thing. So even if I became fluent in basic textbook speech, will I even catch up to how “kids these days” talk? 😂 Idk just something I think about.
Я low hp дайте пожалуйста hill ку
oooh, you don’t even imagine how russians good at making up new words and the fun fact is that all generations make it
we have slang which is used by young people, and it is almost no different from yours, we often use english words as slang
but the thing that exists only in slavic languages is free word formation
for example my mom says «валюмкаться» instead of «валяться» (to lay on)
and «валюмкаться» this is a non-existent word! it’s just a very very cute version for a process of laying on a couch with your loved ones. my mom just created it herself but every russian speaker can understand that it is a much more cute version of «валяться»
and it has millions of such examples… especially russians like to make words more cute (or more offensive lol), many cute forms are common words like зайка, зайчик, зайчонок, зайчуля, зайкин, зайчуша (all of this are just forms of word bunny)
@@OScorp.v *heal ку
I wonder if there is a free printable list of Russian Cognates. That would help out with a percentage of vocabulary. Do you know of a resource?
ask chatgpt to make you one. I asked it for a list of the 100 most common words and it gave me a great list.
Can you tell me how much time would it take to be fluent in Russian
5 лет если только на нём
@@OScorp.v Tha--thank you
It is individual, it depends on your learning ability, diligence and how much time you devote to oral and written speech. And also depends on your basic native language. Russian language is easier for some foreigners to learn, for example, Slavs, because of the similarity of words, and for some it is much more difficult, because their language does not have the sounds that are in Russian, have different phonetics, different word order, grammatics, etc. But in general, to speak Russian fluently, it will take about 3-5 years of continuous study and life in a Russian-speaking environment. The more you use the language in everyday life, the more russian speaking friends you have, the faster you will master it.
We can practice you beautiful
That intro tho, can someone please write it down with cyrillics so I can learn how to say it and what it means. The YT CC is not catching that. Privyet something? Hi, I'm Feda something something? :D
He talks: привет, друзья, как дела? Меня зовут Федор
@@MishkoWtF спасибо!
Totally nailed it ! Knowing how to declare in downtown Moscow "Медведь в такси !" isn't the slightest bit useful. Your advice is well worth knowing and certainly makes a lot of sense. Wish that I'd seen this sooner.Thanks for sharing this !
Красивый сэр, а у вас случайно нет канала, где вы учите русских сэров английскому?
Ахаха, да, было бы неплохо
А кроме английского ты говоришь ещё на каком-то языке?) Я вот изучаю 3-й и 4-й языки и интересно, насколько далеко я смогу продвинуться.
Смотрю человека, который учит русскому языку и учу при этом английский
Да, также)
Один вопрос ты где живёшь ???
в россии
В Новосибирск
США
Всем привет. Я русский. Спасибо что учите иностранцев русскому языку
это нормально?
@@ЭйвейлАлександрда, такой порядок слов тоже допустим в этом случае
@@ЭйвейлАлександрв русском языке можно переставлять слова в произввольном порядке, главное чтобы смысл остался прежним. например:
(учите русскому языку иностранцев; иностранцев языку русскому учите; языку русскому иностранцев учите... это можно продолжать вечно) и
@@ЭйвейлАлександрЗдесь важно ещё правильно ударение поставить, чтобы смысл сохранялся: "Спасибо, что у́чите..."
ты кто по национальности?
Он руcский
федОр,а ты русский или прекрасно знаешь русский язык?
Я думаю он нэтив инглиш, но сын эмигрантов, вероятно мать русская.
@@MishkoWtFНе, он родился и вырос в России, снимал видео с родного дома. Просто переехал.
Я не понимаю, ты носитель английского который выучил идеально русский или наоборот?
наоборот
Вагнер оркестр играет! 😂
Нсаклоько быртсо ыт мжешь портичать всеь этто ткест?
насколько быстро ты можешь прочитать все этот текст, право?🤔🤔🤔🤔
Сходу)
Есл смг прчтть этт ткст, от ыт длжн мен рти хндрд бкс😅
ФЕдоор.
FeDOOR