I think a video on vocabulary in the kitchen would be a great refresher. Maybe some cooking terminology for this instance to grill, to sear, put in the oven, chop or dice onions, add some new vegetables words like asparagus or artichokes. I think the video would be useful if one wanted to help a Baba in the kitchen.
My grandparents are Ukrainian and I always called them “baba and gido” idk if that’s a certain dialect or something, that’s just what I’ve always known
Yes, probably your grandparents come from the west of ukraine. My dad's parents are from the West and I call them babtsia and dido as well. That's just regional differences. In my videos I'm trying to stick to the standart Ukrainian that everyone will understand :)
I continue to love love love your videos. I always learn something. You are greatly appreciated. молодець, як завжди! ( I hope that last statement was correct. I am trying to spice up my use of terms. Much respect to you and to your work.
We can say Родина мого друга велика but the meaning will be "my friend's family is big". To say that someone has it we can use the verb мати - to have. Or there is another way: у + genitive case noun + є: у мого друга є велика родина. Very often in the present tense we omit є: у мого друга велика родина
Hey teacher. Post a class about words with "G" in Ukranian, it's so hard to see, different of Russian. The original Russian "G" turns a "H" in Ukrainian,
Russian "g" is not original and Ukrainian "h" does not turn into it. In Russian alphabet there is no letter responsible for the sound [h], only [g]. In Ukrainian we have both [g] and [h] and that is super cool.
I think a video on vocabulary in the kitchen would be a great refresher. Maybe some cooking terminology for this instance to grill, to sear, put in the oven, chop or dice onions, add some new vegetables words like asparagus or artichokes. I think the video would be useful if one wanted to help a Baba in the kitchen.
Thanks for the lesson teacher!
Thank you for watching!
Дякую за розширення наших словникових записів! Твоі матеріали багатосторонні!
Дякую, що дивитесь! 💙💛
My grandparents are Ukrainian and I always called them “baba and gido” idk if that’s a certain dialect or something, that’s just what I’ve always known
Yes, probably your grandparents come from the west of ukraine. My dad's parents are from the West and I call them babtsia and dido as well. That's just regional differences. In my videos I'm trying to stick to the standart Ukrainian that everyone will understand :)
Another well done video
Thank you very much! 💙💛
I like your vidieos . Its very helpful for me and also for the people who needs to learn Ukrainian.
I'm glad it is! Thank you for watching!
I continue to love love love your videos. I always learn something. You are greatly appreciated. молодець, як завжди! ( I hope that last statement was correct. I am trying to spice up my use of terms. Much respect to you and to your work.
I really appreciate your feedback! It's comments like these that make me keep working on this channel :) (And yes, the statement was 100% correct!)
My husband's Ukrainian great grandparents settled in Canada and went by Baba and Geda
That's interesting! I wonder what part of Ukraine they came from!
Кiт - сiм’я 😸
He so is ❤😻
Кіт злиняв і змінив забарвлення - був білий, став сірий 😾😊
хахах, то різні коти))
@@LetsLearnUkrainian 🐱🐱
Why do we use a "у" in this sentence? у мого друга велика сім'я. у translates to in. Why can't we say? ---> "мого друга велика родина"
We can say Родина мого друга велика but the meaning will be "my friend's family is big". To say that someone has it we can use the verb мати - to have. Or there is another way: у + genitive case noun + є: у мого друга є велика родина. Very often in the present tense we omit є: у мого друга велика родина
I need someone to practice my Україна
Hey teacher. Post a class about words with "G" in Ukranian, it's so hard to see, different of Russian. The original Russian "G" turns a "H" in Ukrainian,
Russian "g" is not original and Ukrainian "h" does not turn into it. In Russian alphabet there is no letter responsible for the sound [h], only [g]. In Ukrainian we have both [g] and [h] and that is super cool.
@@LetsLearnUkrainian I see. But it's so hard to find out an Ukrainian word with "g" sound.
Приємно, але насправді дуже важко вчитися..
Так, вивчати нову мову і правда часом дуже важко 😣