Russian and Ukrainian languages - Vocabulary - Русский и украинский языки

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024
  • What is the difference between Russian and Ukrainian? - • Difference between Ukr...
    ru-land.club - Nika from Ru-land.club is here to clear this out:)

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @RealRussianClub
    @RealRussianClub  6 лет назад +71

    ❤Please, support my channel in one of these ways:
    Buy me a coffee - www.buymeacoffee.com/realrussianclub
    RUclips Sponsorship - ruclips.net/channel/UCyJznKYS9kkP7RWWq3YAbFwjoin
    Patreon - patreon.com/realrussianclub
    PayPal - realrussianclub@gmail.com

    • @VERBA_SCHOOL
      @VERBA_SCHOOL 6 лет назад +1

      Очень здорово и наглядно получилось :))

    • @archraskal
      @archraskal 6 лет назад +1

      I have a question for you that you may want to make into a video based on it. it has to do with Leo Tolstoy's novel, "Anna Karenina." It has been made into a movie several times
      in English speaking countries, in particular the U.S. and the UK. Many Russians have disliked these film adaptations, and to paraphrase their reasons, "they fail to capture things that
      are essential to Russian culture." Have you seen these movies, and do you concur with this sentiment, and what does it specifically mean?

    • @WatchmanofMKDN
      @WatchmanofMKDN 5 лет назад +2

      Real Russian Club im a Macedonian from Australia and I understand almost everything 👍
      Some interesting history about the slavic languages;
      Old Church Slavonic is the language that was used to spread the slavic orthodox (pravo slaven) religion throughout Europe.
      Old Church Slavonic is closet to today’s Macedonian language and it was Macedonian missionary’s who went throughout Europe spreading the pravo slaven religion and giving people the slavic alphabet which was created in Macedonia by the brothers kiril and metodi, thats why its called Cyrillic alphabet.
      Even President Putin payed homage and congratulated the Macedonian President and said
      “Macedonia is the cradle of slavic literature” because he knows Russia got its alphabet and religion from Macedonians in the 10th century.
      So the Macedonian language was the greatest influencer on the slavic languages.
      The people of the “pravo slaven” religion were called “pravo slavni”. That’s where the term “SLAV” comes from and today it also includes countries that are not “slavic orthodox” but they speak a slavic language.

    • @Борисстепанов-р1д
      @Борисстепанов-р1д 5 лет назад +1

      Ukrainian is weird.

    • @Борисстепанов-р1д
      @Борисстепанов-р1д 5 лет назад +1

      @@WatchmanofMKDN russian is the closest to old church slavonic.

  • @ProfessorElectronic
    @ProfessorElectronic 2 года назад +421

    Watching this video today make my heart melt. 2 countries share so many similar history and culture but end up going to war.

    • @daryllang4430
      @daryllang4430 2 года назад +27

      Yes I also feel very very sad

    • @yur_iy_
      @yur_iy_ 2 года назад +19

      @@katerynaperynets4698 I agree with you🇺🇦

    • @Naschira
      @Naschira 2 года назад +12

      @@katerynaperynets4698 You seem to know very little about the history of your country. Do you know who Bogdan Khmelnitsky is? Do you know about Bogdan Khmelnitsky's letter to the Russian Tsar dated 1648? Well, at least you know Lermontov.

    • @geddogeddo
      @geddogeddo 2 года назад +8

      Я русский.. Я Украина

    • @en6064
      @en6064 2 года назад +13

      @@Naschira I think that if you knew more about Bohdan Khmelnytsky and the Zaporozhians, you would be aware that when the Muscovite emissaries met with the Kozak representatives, the two parties had to use translators to even understand each other.
      I'm addition, the Kozaks did not expect to be forced to make an oath of loyalty to the Czar. They wanted an equal partnership, and were used to the less centralized form of government in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Czar however was an absolute ruler. Any time the Kozaks stepped out of the line the Czar violently repressed them. So much for brotherhood

  • @ft06jg89
    @ft06jg89 2 года назад +20

    This comment is posted on Feb 28, 2022 during the Russia-Ukrainian war. No one wins the war. All the innocent civilians on both sides suffer. May everyone find peace.

  • @michaelis1819
    @michaelis1819 6 лет назад +365

    Ukrainian language is closer to Slovak than to Russian in many words :) Thanks for the video :)

    • @zeth8300
      @zeth8300 5 лет назад +12

      Both are the same

    • @alekshukhevych2644
      @alekshukhevych2644 5 лет назад +40

      @@zeth8300WHat exactly are u talking about. " both are the same"? They are not the same, far from it..

    • @zeth8300
      @zeth8300 5 лет назад +3

      @@alekshukhevych2644 same ya guys come from proto slavic.

    • @alekshukhevych2644
      @alekshukhevych2644 5 лет назад +24

      @@zeth8300 Dont forget that Proto-slavic was itself a number of different yet close dialects which developed into the slav languages we know today. They are not the same languages. Only a few are mutually intelligable..they share much vocabulary..just like all Latin based languages do among each othee.. but they are different languages...

    • @zeth8300
      @zeth8300 5 лет назад +2

      @@alekshukhevych2644 thats what i an trying to tell you. is similar ok i speak german wen i speak to a dutch person we have similar understanding

  • @alcubierrevj
    @alcubierrevj 2 года назад +25

    This hits differently today.

  • @onie6352
    @onie6352 5 лет назад +207

    Ukrainian is a lot closer to Polish, if not almost everything is the same. Some words are more similar to Russian. As a Pole, I understood 96% Ukrainian and 90% Russian in this video. Nevertheless, great video :).

    • @ladyslavahryhorieva5342
      @ladyslavahryhorieva5342 4 года назад +26

      Im Ukrainian but it isnt easy to understand Polish:) Still, understand some words. For us some words sound really funny and very cute :)

    • @gordonjamesedward1639
      @gordonjamesedward1639 4 года назад

      Whoa! Really!! 😮😮

    • @GorilkaCo
      @GorilkaCo 4 года назад +1

      Pole position mmmm

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 4 года назад +31

      For Czech it's much easier to understand Ukrainian than Russian, but not in all cases. But both languages are eastern slavic so it's not so easy to understand, but Ukrainian is definitely better for me, that's why I hate when Ukrainian workers here speaking Russian to me. If some Ukrainian is reading this - OMG speak Ukrainian when you are in Czechia or Poland, speaking Russian to younger people is nonsense, we don't understand.

    • @AndersGehtsdochauch
      @AndersGehtsdochauch 4 года назад +2

      @@Pidalin I especially liked the example "to do", that sounded like "robiť" vs "dělat" (Slovak vs Czech) 😁

  • @scientist-v2j
    @scientist-v2j 4 года назад +73

    Дом-будинок, красивый- гарний, богатый- заможний, другой-інший,тому що другий то второй російською.Перекладали мабуть з гугл-перекладача.

    • @trolleyboey9494
      @trolleyboey9494 4 года назад

      damn theyre just synonyms

    • @trolleyboey9494
      @trolleyboey9494 4 года назад +6

      @@ЕдувМагадан-т3ы а русский тогда что

    • @ЕдувМагадан-т3ы
      @ЕдувМагадан-т3ы 4 года назад +2

      @@trolleyboey9494 Возьми учебник. Там все написано..

    • @ЕдувМагадан-т3ы
      @ЕдувМагадан-т3ы 4 года назад +1

      @@Ch_dArt Почему у Вас?! Было "древнерусское государство". В границах Киевской, Черниговской,Ростовской,Великий НовгородРязанской и т.д.Учи историю шумер..

    • @СергейЛысенко-у4т
      @СергейЛысенко-у4т 4 года назад +5

      @@ЕдувМагадан-т3ы а може это не полонизмы а украинизмы-? страва -мед или геродот так себе лох

  • @DairokutenMaoUwU
    @DairokutenMaoUwU 2 года назад +115

    Top 10 Anime Betrayals

    • @nolandderlugner1351
      @nolandderlugner1351 2 года назад +6

      ? the war been going on since 2014

    • @zaidankreshnandi255
      @zaidankreshnandi255 Год назад

      @@nolandderlugner1351 mhn

    • @homelander4926
      @homelander4926 Год назад +4

      @@nolandderlugner1351 between Russia and Ukraine? Funny, Russia said those were ukranians fighting there;)

  • @joir2000
    @joir2000 6 лет назад +96

    Better don't buy a cat over there, there is a chance you will come home with a whale :P
    Great video btw, спасибо большое!

    • @RussianwithAnastasia
      @RussianwithAnastasia 6 лет назад +4

      😁😁😁

    • @ДмитрийВронский-в3с
      @ДмитрийВронский-в3с 5 лет назад +1

      Actually, a whale is written same in both languages - кит. The pronunciation differs: soft 'ee' in Russian and hard sound in Ukrainian.

    • @vladko2008
      @vladko2008 5 лет назад +1

      кот [rus.] = кiт [ukr.] = cat [eng.]
      кит [rus.] = kит [ukr.] = whale [eng.]

    • @PAPASTRATOS777
      @PAPASTRATOS777 4 года назад +1

      -Are You two girls from England?
      -Wales
      -Are two whales from England???))

  • @boryny
    @boryny 5 лет назад +51

    As a Polish woman I understand both ;) but selectively.. :) Good job guys :)

    • @gordonfreeman1842
      @gordonfreeman1842 4 года назад +1

      Very nice!

    • @КотМатроскин-ц7т
      @КотМатроскин-ц7т 4 года назад

      Пиши по польски "русскими" буквами - тоже поймём.

    • @drampadonak
      @drampadonak 4 года назад +10

      @@КотМатроскин-ц7т какими блять РУССКИМИ ? Это - кириллица называется

    • @svetozar161
      @svetozar161 4 года назад

      kobieta

    • @shigo123
      @shigo123 4 года назад

      @@drampadonak я аж в голос заржал 😂😂

  • @ardysailo
    @ardysailo 2 года назад +111

    I came here just because i wanted to see peace between Russia and Ukraine. So much similarities means that you share the same ancestry. I am from India and it hurts to see constant bickering between India and Pakistan who shared the same ancestry.

    • @michel94818
      @michel94818 2 года назад +22

      I'm south korean and I can feel your emotion because same kind of situation is here between north and south koreans now..

    • @bearofthunder
      @bearofthunder 2 года назад +10

      Yes, it's depressing, but nice to see these women here together representing normal people.

    • @albertopajuelomontes2066
      @albertopajuelomontes2066 2 года назад +7

      this was 4 years ago, now they hate each other

    • @OleksandrSe
      @OleksandrSe 2 года назад +2

      Disgusting, we dont share anythigh with russia. If you knew more about russia you wont say anything like that

    • @godanddevil.5331
      @godanddevil.5331 2 года назад

      PAPER CURRENCY CAN BE MANIPULATED..ASK GOLD AND SILVER FOR OIL TRADE......

  • @greed9327
    @greed9327 6 лет назад +264

    Прикольно смотреть видео такого формата когда знаешь как русский, так и украинский языки))) Привет с Полтавы, Украина)

  • @MacakPodSIjemom
    @MacakPodSIjemom 5 лет назад +57

    Interesting: in Ukrainian другий means second, in Russian другой means another one. In Serbian it means both - други is second or another ( example - други дан - it can mean both "second day" or "another day", you just have to read from context.

  • @3CPO4GPU
    @3CPO4GPU 6 лет назад +83

    👍 Ukrainian difference is more close to slovak language. Спасибо девочки 👭 😉

    • @royal6355
      @royal6355 5 лет назад +8

      *девушки

    • @nikolatesla708
      @nikolatesla708 5 лет назад +1

      @@kraljslovan5003 I love Slavic language and everything Slavic! I'm learning Russian for yrs now. 😊

    • @ivanovolgovich1382
      @ivanovolgovich1382 4 года назад

      @@royal6355 проверял?

    • @royal6355
      @royal6355 4 года назад

      Ivanov Olgovich ага

    • @gleb202
      @gleb202 4 года назад

      @@kraljslovan5003 true

  • @leoshane9118
    @leoshane9118 6 лет назад +203

    It's great to see Russians and Ukrainians getting along well! Love from Sri Lanka! ✌️✌️

    • @leoshane9118
      @leoshane9118 6 лет назад +40

      KingFisheR00011 I think it's not the place to talk about politics here and I respect Darias channel.

    • @KingFisheR00011
      @KingFisheR00011 6 лет назад +3

      @@leoshane9118, I do respect any channel I'd voluntarily subscribed to, but I've been always having a stone on me. That's who I'm. no more, no less. With all due and mutual respect, I guess. Besides, if you ain't taking part into some politics, then politics takes some parts of you anyways, right? 😃

    • @antmiralgeneralaladeen
      @antmiralgeneralaladeen 6 лет назад +22

      KingFisheR00011 I think its sad that you fight with Ukranians. You have so many in common.Its like Germans fighting Austrians. At least don't hate all Ukranians but only the neonazi.
      Respect from Greece to both Russia and Ukraine.

    • @DarmidonT100
      @DarmidonT100 6 лет назад +7

      It's great to see Tamils and Lankins getting along well!

    • @alekshukhevych2644
      @alekshukhevych2644 5 лет назад +1

      @@cosasderu Ukrainian nazi groups formed in the 90's. They are small in number and hold no real power. There are Ukrainian nationalists or NARODOVCI. If u know the true definition of nazism u would be calling them nazis.

  • @marcomerker5573
    @marcomerker5573 6 лет назад +20

    Классное сотрудничество :) спасибо вам :) продолжайте в том же духе :)
    Привет из Германии!

  • @JBM425
    @JBM425 3 года назад +78

    I used to think that Russian and Ukrainian were like the difference between British and American English. Now, I would compare it to the difference between Italian and Spanish: similar alphabet and sounds, some common vocabulary, but distinct languages in their own rights.

    • @SaturnineXTS
      @SaturnineXTS 2 года назад +10

      Spanish and Italian is definitely a more apt comparison. Although Slavic languages in general have diverged comparatively not that long ago, so with some training it's possible to understand all of them if you're fluent in just one. Of course correct active use is another story.
      I suppose thinking the differences between the two languages were negligible at best is a result of Russian state propaganda who wants to deny Ukraine the right to statehood, and therefore presents Ukrainian as a dialect of Russian - which is not correct by any linguistic criterion, nor by the history of the evolution of these two languages.

    • @r.fantom
      @r.fantom 2 года назад +3

      @@SaturnineXTS By not long ago, I understand you if you're talking about Ukrainian, cause they came to exist in WW1 by separating from Russia and becoming a new country, they didn't want to be Russians anymore, we had same case in Balkans when Croats and Montenegrins didn't want to be Serbs anymore..

    • @SaturnineXTS
      @SaturnineXTS 2 года назад +3

      @@r.fantom I was talking about languages, not countries. The Slavic family has diverged only around a thousand years ago, which is not much for languages. For Russian and Ukrainian it would be several hundred years

    • @r.fantom
      @r.fantom 2 года назад +2

      @@SaturnineXTS Several hundred craps. Ukrainian language didn't exist before Ukraine came to be. And no, not all of them. Serbs spoke old Serbian, also called Church Slavic language, not long time ago we made new Serbian, modern language. Church Slavic was base Slavic language.

    • @anatoliysharov6512
      @anatoliysharov6512 2 года назад +1

      @@r.fantom Sorry but you are definitely wrong. Church Slavic based Old Bulgarian's language. even more - people had two totally different languages in the antic world- spoken and written. Written one studied extremally thin layer of people. And that what Russian very similar on Church Slavic looks suspicious and may indicate on lack of spoken languages from it place which has kept to modern days.
      Look! Latin, pictures of ancient Egyptian, Church Slavonic, Scandinavian runes, Mayan knot writing are ancient written languages. Modern writing appeared relatively recently through the transmission of spoken language sounds.

  • @mrakbbb2216
    @mrakbbb2216 4 года назад +113

    Long Live Russia, and Ukraine...From Serbia!!!

    • @imperatorromanus8620
      @imperatorromanus8620 4 года назад +7

      Thanks, bro! 🇷🇺🇷🇸🇺🇦

    • @waltherwei1896
      @waltherwei1896 4 года назад +2

      @Виталий Орлов а украинским?

    • @1_1__1_1
      @1_1__1_1 3 года назад +5

      @@waltherwei1896 я за него могу пожелать, Украинским братьям тоже МИРА и ПРОЦВЕТАНИЯ!!!

    • @jqa16
      @jqa16 2 года назад +4

      Sad

    • @urbonx
      @urbonx 2 года назад +2

      @@jqa16 no

  • @erio7942
    @erio7942 5 лет назад +64

    Много ошибок в сравнение. В украинском языке.

  • @IanJones942
    @IanJones942 2 года назад +8

    I am thinking of both of you today. Sending love from America.

    • @ryanspeck256
      @ryanspeck256 2 года назад

      don't 'muricans send thoughts and prayers??

  • @gablan1468
    @gablan1468 6 лет назад +56

    It is just crazy how similar Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Russian languages are... PS. Great video, you two are really cute! Привет с Болгарии)

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  6 лет назад +7

      привет)

    • @royal6355
      @royal6355 5 лет назад

      @Sasha Konstantynov Я так думаю.

    • @tsarnicolasii1228
      @tsarnicolasii1228 4 года назад +1

      When it comes to nouns and certain phrases, Russian is closest to Bulgarian because of Church Slavonic

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад +7

      Ukrainian and Russian - not. Bulgarian and Russian - much more similar.

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад

      @@tsarnicolasii1228 , did we have a discussion already? Do you have 2 accounts?

  • @crystalinemoriel8934
    @crystalinemoriel8934 2 года назад +39

    This learning is more important than ever. I’m so grateful for you 💖🙌🏻 keep speaking 💞

  • @VKumar-zy1rb
    @VKumar-zy1rb 2 года назад +11

    Are you guys still friends

  • @ianbo1501
    @ianbo1501 6 лет назад +159

    Тільки багатий! Не бОгатий!

    • @panadolf2691
      @panadolf2691 5 лет назад +11

      богатий це архаїзм, ще на початку ХХ так писали

    • @_FireHeart
      @_FireHeart 5 лет назад +48

      Ian Bo , більш Українське слово - «заможний»,
      а не «багатий».

    • @olegozon9818
      @olegozon9818 5 лет назад +7

      @@_FireHeart, чому, в країнскій мові існує слово "багатій" .

    • @_FireHeart
      @_FireHeart 5 лет назад +9

      Oleg Ozon , що за «багатій» та «країнскій»?
      Для початку навчись граматики,
      або просто пиши своєю мовою. ))

    • @user-olegdmytriv
      @user-olegdmytriv 5 лет назад +6

      @@olegozon9818 багатій наголос на І

  • @olegat
    @olegat 5 лет назад +31

    Ah yes "sheet"; it's important to pronounce that word correctly lol 😂
    Many thanks for the video, super interesting! Sounds like Ukrainian/Russian share a very similar connection to Portuguese/Spanish or Dutch/German :)

    • @PAPASTRATOS777
      @PAPASTRATOS777 4 года назад

      Only prononsation.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 4 года назад +2

      I am glad we have long vowels in Czech, other slavic speakers can have problem with that. :-D

    • @teroxstep
      @teroxstep 3 года назад

      @@Pidalin Russians also have long wovels such as in Maaskvaa or Kaak pishetsa taak i chitaayetsa🤣

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 года назад

      @@teroxstep Yes, but you have floating accent and it's hard to distinguish what is accent and what is really long vowel. In Czech it's different, we have accent always on same place (first sylable) but you can have long vowel even on end of the word.

    • @Мразь-д4э
      @Мразь-д4э Год назад

      @@Pidalin в русском разговорном языке много тянущихся диалектов .Например, Костромской диалект ,Новгородский диалект ,Ивановский диалект.Особенно в деревнях сохранился диалекты тянущихся гласных .Я родом из города Иваново ,когда училась с жителями Вичуги ,Пучежа,Луха,из деревень Костромы, поняла , что все же мы говорим на разных диалектах и даже языках .....В деревнях сохранился русский дореволюционного периода язык .Язык на котором говорил Николай 2 .Например ,меня удивило слово "примылась" -что означает глагол убралась ,убираться ! А девушки из Пучежа вообще говорили плавуче и тянули гласные ,как-будто молитву читали

  • @mitrut11
    @mitrut11 4 года назад +15

    I'm from Bucharest Romania. For the last 2 months, I've been learning russian with Daria from her youtube lessons. She is an amazing teacher, I like her a lot. I belive a russian can understand an ukrainian over a beer in a bar, same as a Romanian from Bucharest can understand a Moldavian from Chisinau 🤣

    • @juandiegovalverde1982
      @juandiegovalverde1982 2 года назад +6

      Romanians and Moldavians speak the same language.

    • @juandiegovalverde1982
      @juandiegovalverde1982 2 года назад +3

      It’s like Spanish of Spain and Spanish of Mexico.

    • @en6064
      @en6064 2 года назад +1

      No Russians have a hard time understanding Ukrainians. The two languages only have a 60-65% lexical similarity.

    • @gigibenea3529
      @gigibenea3529 2 года назад

      You mean a romanian can understand Italian..because moldavian or Transylvanian or Oltenian are the same

    • @godanddevil.5331
      @godanddevil.5331 2 года назад

      PAPER CURRENCY CAN BE MANIPULATED..ASK GOLD AND SILVER FOR OIL TRADE......

  • @mokelembembe9606
    @mokelembembe9606 2 года назад +24

    Ukraine - war
    Russia - special military operation

    • @Wind2000channel
      @Wind2000channel 2 года назад

      Meanwhile, Russia(some media): this is war in Ukraine (or invasion of Ukraine)

    • @Caxacate
      @Caxacate 2 года назад +5

      🇺🇦Вiйна
      🇷🇺Специальна военная операция

    • @fiddlerontheroof4942
      @fiddlerontheroof4942 2 года назад

      War kiss my foot - nobody declared any war and Ukraine is still sucking Russian gas...

  • @tacolai
    @tacolai 2 года назад +25

    Nika and Daria, two of my favorite channels for learning Russian!
    Thank you for demonstrating to the world how meaningful and wonderful when these two countries of people get together!

    • @gigibenea3529
      @gigibenea3529 2 года назад +1

      You was thinking that in just 2 weeks everything will blow up...this two beautiful countries and people will start to kill each others ...to hate ...and this just because of couples of people..this is so so sad and nonsense...God please bring the peace

    • @tnoobe4892
      @tnoobe4892 Год назад

      fuck it, fuck russia, fuck russian

  • @klimlib
    @klimlib 5 лет назад +25

    OMG as Serb I understood almost 70%

  • @ДмитроМаковецький-б4т

    1:53 на украинском лучше сказать ГАРНИЙ [ГАРНЫЙ]

    • @dedicatedcommunist6544
      @dedicatedcommunist6544 5 лет назад +10

      лучше сказать "вродливий"

    • @alexkruk4683
      @alexkruk4683 5 лет назад +6

      Вродливий - это если говорить о человеке. А если обо всем остальном, то "красивий".

    • @alexkruk4683
      @alexkruk4683 5 лет назад +1

      А гарний точнее хороший.

    • @СергійДмитрович-и1ж
      @СергійДмитрович-и1ж 5 лет назад +6

      Слово "Гарний" является более широким, так как означает не только "Красивый", но и "Хороший".

    • @ВасильДеліжанов
      @ВасильДеліжанов 4 года назад +9

      Краще "файний". А "дом" - "будинок".
      Плохо, что русская не спросила, как по-украински "язьік", "мир", "руководство"... Халь, что украинка не спросила, как по-русски "нехай щастить"...

  • @HackeandoIdiomas
    @HackeandoIdiomas 6 лет назад +17

    I am Russian, but it is interesting for me as well)))

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  6 лет назад +3

      мне тоже было интересно:))

    • @vladislavdudnikov26
      @vladislavdudnikov26 5 лет назад +2

      @Sigkim I am from East Ukraine and I think what they would be speak on russian. This is due to all ukrainian people know russian language (some just little bit speaking, but understand of all).

  • @LauraArniman
    @LauraArniman 2 года назад +8

    As a Pole i can say 90% ukrainian words are same in polish, and russian mby 65% only.I can understand much better ukrainian language.

    • @mostafaf.t3651
      @mostafaf.t3651 2 года назад

      And English?

    • @dv2045
      @dv2045 2 года назад

      Ah, interesting evwn both of your languages sound the cyrilic is a whole different world right?

  • @Suerte619
    @Suerte619 2 года назад +5

    This video just got recommended to me and it’s sad how things are right now. I wish this war ends soon and I hope your friend Mika and her family are okay 🇷🇺🕊

  • @wastaggio
    @wastaggio 6 лет назад +6

    I'm looking forward to hear you actually having some nice conversation with each other in that beautiful language that russian is.

  • @juanfreexperienceofficial6575
    @juanfreexperienceofficial6575 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you espacibo for all these videos, been watching a lot of them and learning a lot

  • @stroggosaw299
    @stroggosaw299 6 лет назад +15

    Pozdrawiam Was dziewczyny dzięki za lekcje.

  • @joeguerrero6284
    @joeguerrero6284 5 лет назад +1

    This is so cool. I actually follow both of your channels, and they're 2 of my favorites for learning Russian. I've only been at this for a couple of months, so obviously I'm far from being conversational. But with the aid of your channels, and others like them on RUclips, a couple of language apps, and copious amounts of Russian Pop & Rap music I'm learning in the most fun way I can. Thanks for sharing.

  • @_FireHeart
    @_FireHeart 5 лет назад +49

    Couple mistakes that I caught.....
    2:04 Rich (ENG) - заможний [zamozhnyi] (UA) - богатый [bagatyi] (RU)
    2:06 Expensive (ENG) - коштовний [koshtovnyi] (UA) - дорогой [dorogoy] (RU)

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад +12

      In Ukrainian you can also say "багатий". But not "богатий" as they said. I don't get Russians trying to explain Ukrainian without Ukrainian native speakers. I hate it.

    • @Koscoder
      @Koscoder 4 года назад +2

      @@Daniel_Poirot )) вот это вот вряд ли, никто из россиян не будет заморачиваться правильным произношением, а у нее оно правильное. скорее всего девушка с восточной Украины типа Харьков или Днепр и тут вполне нормально так говорить. А если в деревню поехать и суржик послушать ))

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад +2

      @@Koscoder , никто из россиян не будет заморачиваться, потому что они убогие? ))) А если поставить среднеинтеллектуального россиянина на коленки? Вы говорите, что у нее правильное произношение, хотя сами говорите на дегенеративном языке, который искусственно построил Даль. Не унижайтесь )

    • @Koscoder
      @Koscoder 4 года назад +2

      @@Daniel_Poirot шо ты несешь, Вася? 1. у нее правильное украинское произношение. 2. россияне не заморачиваются потому что им нет смысла их и так поймут. как понимают англоговорящие этих девушек которые говорят с акцентом. 3. я говорю на том языке на котором хочу. и могу выбрать из нескольких. )

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад +2

      @@Koscoder , Для особо одаренных. Слова "богатий" и "багатий" читаются по-разному. И я писал вообще не про произношение с точки зрения акцента, а про перевод. И тебе советую подучить английский, а то ты неправильно прочитал, что я написал.

  • @gunzsmfl1620
    @gunzsmfl1620 Год назад +6

    So sad there is war between their countries now... hope they stayed friends somehow...

  • @РВКИНХ
    @РВКИНХ 11 месяцев назад +3

    Красивый - Вродливий.
    Добрый - Гарний.
    Хороший - Добрий.

  • @amarsalem5671
    @amarsalem5671 4 года назад +4

    wow, my two favorite RUclips teachers are together making an interesting lesson

  • @slavakaza
    @slavakaza 5 лет назад +7

    Great video, girls! :)
    But you should have went more structured into detail (more scientificly) with the differences.
    Like:
    -There are words that changed their meaning slightly over the time, but basically meaning the same or similar in both languages: великий, лист, красный, малювати
    - Meanings that found a new word in Russian, however the initial word in Ukranian is perfectly understood by Russian speakers, because very similar meanings have the same word in Russian:
    ребёнок - дитина - дети
    человек - людина - люди
    - Ukranian words which are testimonials of the slavic language continuum and which were taken out of this continuum and today manifested as well in the Polish language (or Czech/Slovak languages), while in Russian still using another word - like працювати, роботи, дякую
    - Ukrainian words coming from the German language (from those times when German was the official language in slavic dominated areas), while in Russian the old slavic word is used:
    смачный, which comes from Smak (today found in german Geschmack or Skandinavian smak)
    цукор, which comes from Zucker (which technically also tracks back to the same roots as сахар - in the greek language coming from arab / persian)
    краватка which comes from Krawatte (itself comming from hrvat/croatian)
    or other categories I forgot now.
    If considering those aspects Russian and Ukranian are a lot closer than it might appear in the begining :)

  • @_bbie
    @_bbie 6 лет назад +7

    Wow, my two favorite teachers collaborating! Супер!! 👍👍👍

  • @katarinastankovic8628
    @katarinastankovic8628 5 лет назад +6

    I'm studying both languages and this is really useful for begginers!

    • @sashoksashok8108
      @sashoksashok8108 5 лет назад +3

      You have Serbian surname. For Serbians to learn Russian or Ukrainian is very easy

  • @danhubanks554
    @danhubanks554 4 года назад +1

    I really like learning from both of you. I really also enjoy your separate videos also. So glad to have found you both.

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 2 года назад +7

    *Thank you for this informative video! I worked in the Czech Republic for nearly two years, and from this video I can see/hear that Ukrainian words and vocabulary seem much closer to Czech (and I assume to the other Western Slavic languages). For instance, Russian has no "h" sound, as Czech and Ukrainian do, and instead uses a "g" sound. Also, in the matter of vocabulary, the Czech word for "red" is "červený," which is much closer to the Ukrainian "червоний" than the Russian "красный," etc. Я Вас благодарю!*

    • @Белла-я4р
      @Белла-я4р 2 года назад

      In Russian language they have sound "h"

    • @519djw6
      @519djw6 2 года назад

      @@Белла-я4р Please give me an example of a Russian word that has the "h" sound. I have never encountered any word in Russian that has this sound. Instead, "h" is transliterated as Г (G).

    • @Белла-я4р
      @Белла-я4р 2 года назад

      @@519djw6 Хлеб, хлопок, хорошо, хотеть, характеристика, хулиган, and it isn't end

    • @519djw6
      @519djw6 2 года назад +1

      @@Белла-я4р The Russian letter X is *not* an "H" sound. Rather, it is a guttural CH, such as is found in the German words "Buch" or "lachen." I know that you are the native-speaker of Russian--but they do not sound at all like an H to Anglophones.

    • @Белла-я4р
      @Белла-я4р 2 года назад +1

      @@519djw6 Okay 🙂 I didn't know that, sorry. I'm not Russian, I'm Ukrainian 💙💛 I speak only Ukrainian, I just watched a lot of videos and films in Russian, so I know it quite well)

  • @357QueenBee
    @357QueenBee 6 лет назад +9

    A tie in Spanish is Corbata. If we use cirilic letters it would sound like корбата with the o sounding like an o not an a. Languages are so interesting.
    By the way I follow both of you. ☺

    • @allesindwillkommen
      @allesindwillkommen 6 лет назад +3

      If you think that's interesting, you should know that the word "cravate" comes from the name of the Slavic people Croats whose soldiers traditionally wore neckties.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cravat_Regiment

    • @costistuparu1006
      @costistuparu1006 6 лет назад +2

      In Romanian is Cravată. :>

    • @sael52
      @sael52 5 лет назад +3

      tie in persian (Iran) i keravat.

    • @idopshik
      @idopshik 5 лет назад

      Obviously from German - die Krawatte.

    • @AndersGehtsdochauch
      @AndersGehtsdochauch 4 года назад

      @@idopshik No, from "der Kroate"/"Croat" originally. That's where all of these words come from.

  • @ryanspeck256
    @ryanspeck256 2 года назад +3

    Very interesting to sort these comments by newest and compare those from before the invasion versus those after the invasion. Seriously, try it yourself on other videos like these.

  • @KuSi7800
    @KuSi7800 Год назад +4

    MAKE LOVE, NOT WAR🙌
    🇺🇦🇷🇺🇺🇦🇷🇺🇺🇦🇷🇺🇺🇦

  • @yeduavi
    @yeduavi 6 лет назад +8

    Hi Daria!
    You and Nika are simply amazing.
    I will continue with my Russian Study..
    До свидания!

  • @chrisfarley6662
    @chrisfarley6662 6 лет назад +2

    That was very insightful! Thank you very much.

  • @Timurlane100
    @Timurlane100 6 лет назад +3

    Brilliantly done. That Г sound in Ukrainian is tricky. Somewhere I read that Ukrainian was closer to Polish and had only around a 40% similarity with Russian while having a 60% similarity to Polish. Such numerical scores are probably specious, but it successfully conveys the idea that Russian and Ukrainian are not identical. I got a little hopeful that I was catching on when I was able to identify the movie Он - дракон as using Ukrainian and not Russian as it was listed on IMDB. I heard 'так' instead of 'да'. Multitudinous thanks to you and Nika. It's slow going, but my skills with the language are improving thanks to your guidance.

    • @АлексейКириллов-и3ч
      @АлексейКириллов-и3ч 6 лет назад

      Of course there are many Polish words, because western Ukraine was Polish and Austro-Hungarian territory)) The flag of Ukraine is the flag of Lower Austria

    • @ijnfrt
      @ijnfrt 6 лет назад +1

      Алексей Карпов that fact that western Ukraine was under Poland has nothing to do with that, it's true that in the regions close to polish border have more similarities with Polish (duh, no surprise there), but eastern verities of Ukrainian still bare more resemblance with Polish, and especially Belorussian

    • @jolevangelista
      @jolevangelista 5 лет назад

      Both languages are Eastern Slavic and close to each other. Both mutually intelligible. However, Polish is closer to Ukrainian compared to Russian. Especially in terms of vocabulary.

    • @maxymgunderych313
      @maxymgunderych313 Год назад

      @@АлексейКириллов-и3ч ага, при тому що прапор рос імперії, це вкрадений прапор з австрійської імперії😂 і герб також))

  • @krakataukrakatau9137
    @krakataukrakatau9137 6 лет назад +11

    First of all, гвинтокрил isn't helicopter in Ukrainian, it's gyrodyne. Helicopter in Ukrainian is вертоліт or гелікоптер. These two words are similar, but not the same. Video is nice, but saying that Ukrainian is VERY different from Russian isn't true. English is very different from Russian. Ukrainian is similar to Russian, both languages belong to east Slavic language branch, but they aren't the same language.

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  6 лет назад +7

      they are different enough for many Russians not being able to understand Ukrainian :)

    • @krakataukrakatau9137
      @krakataukrakatau9137 6 лет назад +1

      Yes, that's called mutually unintelligible languages. But still that doesn't mean that these two languages are very different.

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  6 лет назад +2

      omg ok ok :D

    • @alekshukhevych2644
      @alekshukhevych2644 5 лет назад +3

      Among the slavic languages, they are one of the most different from one another. Most Russians dont understand Ukrainian.

    • @agathisthegreat
      @agathisthegreat 5 лет назад

      ​@@alekshukhevych2644 uh well. Russian and Ukrainian are definitely not the farthest from each other. Russian is a bit apart from the rest of Slavic languages, that's more true.

  • @TheLemminkainen
    @TheLemminkainen 2 года назад +7

    Ukrainian has lot more western influence
    Cool video

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 2 года назад

      I thought Russian had more Western influence because of French, German, Dutch, and so on? I may be wrong, though.

    • @itsgiag
      @itsgiag 2 года назад +1

      @@Musicienne-DAB1995 The Western influence primarily happened because of Russian royalty (mostly French) and Russian writers who knew more than one language (French, Spanish, English, Ukrainian, Hebrew, etc.). The common people only knew Russian and those in villages probably knew only their mother tongue and some Russian.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 2 года назад

      @@itsgiag Thanks. Did any common people also know Old Church Slavonic?

    • @itsgiag
      @itsgiag 2 года назад +1

      @@Musicienne-DAB1995 I'm guessing that some could have and some couldn't, but most likely is that priests were the ones that knew Old Church Slavonic -perhaps royalty and famous people did, too-.

  • @jyotishj7582
    @jyotishj7582 6 лет назад +2

    Hi Prasad from India. Just subscribed to your channel.Love from India to Russia

  • @martinwimmer1223
    @martinwimmer1223 4 года назад +3

    I'm afraid I have to learn both languages. You have inspired me very much. Thank you very much. But the most important thing: I want peace between Russia and Ukraine. I love you both!

    • @Александр-ф9ъ2л
      @Александр-ф9ъ2л Год назад

      Мир в любом случае настанет рано или поздно, но дружбы теперь никогда не будет из-за плешивой мрази, захватившей власть в моей стране...

  • @kapaki97
    @kapaki97 2 года назад +1

    I really enjoyed watching the video, it's so fun!

  • @lolazelet
    @lolazelet 6 лет назад +8

    дуже добрий урок!)

  • @Top10878
    @Top10878 4 года назад +2

    It is really interesting in Bulgarian language we have similar words from both languages. Well done, good job.

    • @andrzejdobrowolski9523
      @andrzejdobrowolski9523 4 года назад +1

      Bulgarian is also a Slavic language.
      You probably will also understand such Polish words like Żona (Zhona), Mąż (Mouzh), Dom, znam, serce (sertse), Żywot (Zhyvot), Głowa (Gwova)

  • @inksoldier5544
    @inksoldier5544 5 лет назад +37

    Разница ощущается в построении предложений и в целом в речи.
    просто по словам все славянские языки похожи.

    • @moskalineludi
      @moskalineludi 4 года назад +1

      звісно, тільки тюрський відрізняється

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot 4 года назад +4

      Русский как раз отличается больше всех от остальных. Наиболее близкий к нему - болгарский.

    • @umoxtorumoxtor6940
      @umoxtorumoxtor6940 4 года назад +8

      Разве что по лексике. По строю языка ближайший к русскому - белорусский. А болгарский синтаксис - это что-то с чем-то, ни в одном другом славянском языке такого нет.

    • @smallbugsy
      @smallbugsy 4 года назад

      Как раз предложения строятся одинаково

    • @smallbugsy
      @smallbugsy 4 года назад +5

      @@Daniel_Poirot не так. Я скорее пойму поляка,когда он медленно говорит,чем болгарина

  • @panedilegna2891
    @panedilegna2891 5 лет назад +1

    Дякую! This is a very useful video to show the differences between the two languages. I know a lot of people who say they are very similar but having studied both I never really saw what they were talking about.

    • @SovietClassic
      @SovietClassic 5 лет назад +2

      I am Russian, live in Russia and can understand about 80-90% of Ukrainian without learning it.. Russian and Ukrainian are very close languages.

    • @panedilegna2891
      @panedilegna2891 5 лет назад

      @@SovietClassic I obviously see that there are similarities but from a learner's perspective it might be more difficult to see them at first.

    • @jolevangelista
      @jolevangelista 5 лет назад

      Similar is not the same, right?

    • @sliotakerzo5551
      @sliotakerzo5551 5 лет назад

      @@SovietClassic how much time had you watched Ukrainian TV before? Also, I have read the informal information about German who began understood basic Dutch after a month of constant exposure to it and without studying it (except for specialized technical concepts). And it became to exist even with differences with grammar and word order in these two languages. Also, Russian may translate the Ukrainian with false friends. For example, a Russian user translated Ukrainian word "dovelosia" (had to) as the Russian word "dovelos" (had a chance, manage).

    • @SovietClassic
      @SovietClassic 5 лет назад

      Ігор Клим, I have learned English for many years and know it worse than Ukrainian which I have never studied. Some words are false friends but most words are understandable without learning them

  • @alexeyalex2135
    @alexeyalex2135 4 года назад +5

    За долгое время такое адекватное русско-украинское видео) Спасибо обеим за позитив)

  • @CassiusOvO
    @CassiusOvO 6 лет назад +35

    Their beauty is the reason i'm learning

    • @nickde6339
      @nickde6339 6 лет назад

      hahaahha

    • @lookchahshway5182
      @lookchahshway5182 6 лет назад +1

      Good eye candy, but too much will give you intellectual tooth decay, so balance it out and study some Arabic, Saudi dialect, the women wear tents over there, with two holes for their eyes

    • @JohnDoe-ee6qs
      @JohnDoe-ee6qs 6 лет назад

      Lance Salter French letters?

    • @KROMER-CORTEX
      @KROMER-CORTEX 6 лет назад

      You're dumb

    • @ghexhsdhujvcfbsdhucvrej5452
      @ghexhsdhujvcfbsdhucvrej5452 5 лет назад

      shes 15

  • @U.D-m5l
    @U.D-m5l 5 лет назад +19

    Russian sounds more beautiful and natural to me

    • @ricardopontes7177
      @ricardopontes7177 5 лет назад +6

      I find Ukrainian much more plesant to listen, although Russian is more useful.

    • @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH
      @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH 5 лет назад +3

      @@ricardopontes7177 If you know Russian and Polish, then you know Ukrainian, because the latter was artificially formed.

    • @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH
      @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH 5 лет назад

      @@ricardopontes7177 If you know Russian and Polish, then you know Ukrainian, because the latter was artificially formed.

    • @von_Lemberg
      @von_Lemberg 5 лет назад +2

      @@HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH Вы совсем больной писать об искусственном языке?:)

    • @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH
      @HECKAKYH-ADEKBATEH 5 лет назад +1

      @@von_Lemberg два видео: 1)"Андрей Ваджра о происхождении украинцев" 2) "Станислав Дробышевский. О национализме с научной точки зрения."
      Украинство - искусственный проект, ментальный конструкт заложенный Польско-Литовской республикой, по уничтожению русской культуры и государственности. Отдаленно напоминает проект американских либерцев (american liberian), с теми же целями (уничтожать своих же братьев по крови, услуживая и подчиняясь господину на ментальном уровне). Поэтому он неспособен создать свое государство, не способен к независимости и поощряет стукачество в жесточайших формах, по схожим принципам почему вирус неспособен создать более сложный организм.
      Язык основан на польском, с большим количеством немецкий вставок (отсыл к Австро-Венгрии).

  • @buhbwoylimpo7287
    @buhbwoylimpo7287 Год назад +5

    I'm wondering they are still friends right now

  • @PortugueseGirl27
    @PortugueseGirl27 2 года назад +15

    I would say that Ukranian and Russian are as similar and different as Portuguese and Spanish maybe or like Danish and Norwegian .

  • @olversevilla5139
    @olversevilla5139 2 года назад +2

    I really enjoyed the class and even related the words to other languages such as "краватка" similar to "gravata" in portuguese and " cravatta" in italian, even similar to spanish "corbata".

    • @lennardschneider6847
      @lennardschneider6847 Год назад

      Some Ukranian words also seem more related to German, we call a neck tie "Krawatte" ;-) And some other words seem to have Latin roots or sound like some Italian words (the words for eyes and glasses; hm, might be because Latin was the language of science for a long time).
      Ukranian seems to aspirate consonants more than Russian, at least the sh / tsh -sounds. Germans aspirate a lot on all consonants, especially on hard ones like t, k, p. That would be the main difference between German and Dutch which are also "sister languages" - the Dutchies do not aspirate, like never ever ;-D
      Very interesting, all this language stuff =)

  • @ahmedalgerian263
    @ahmedalgerian263 6 лет назад +40

    Love both 🇷🇺🇺🇦 because it it's History about Kievan Russ

    • @romanromanowski3623
      @romanromanowski3623 5 лет назад +3

      Hah yeah and Swedes with Norwegians are part of Kiean Rus too 🇺🇦🇷🇺🇸🇪🇳🇴even colour of flags are same 😄 🇸🇪🇺🇦🇳🇴🇷🇺

    • @СлаваУкраїні-й7в
      @СлаваУкраїні-й7в 5 лет назад +15

      No. Russia is colonies of Kievan Rus'. Russians isn't slavs.
      Ukraine is Kyivan Rus'

    • @romanromanowski3623
      @romanromanowski3623 5 лет назад +1

      @@СлаваУкраїні-й7в aren't* not isn't

    • @СлаваУкраїні-й7в
      @СлаваУкраїні-й7в 5 лет назад +2

      @@romanromanowski3623 thanks. I do not know English well

    • @romanromanowski3623
      @romanromanowski3623 5 лет назад

      @@СлаваУкраїні-й7в Мои поздравления, но вы бы лучше получили английську чи испаньску мову, бо они понадобиться могут везде за пределами бывшего совка...

  • @amigrow3019
    @amigrow3019 4 года назад

    Nice..😁😁 Daria When I was watching your video my attention went to another place. Do you know what it is ....?In the red quetex on your nails...bueatiful

  • @ladyslavahryhorieva5342
    @ladyslavahryhorieva5342 4 года назад +3

    Ukrainian language sounds just magnificent. Not even comparable

  • @uamurphy
    @uamurphy 4 года назад +2

    Ukrainian is very rich for synonym
    s, but it doesn't mean that these words are mistakes! It's just one of the ways to say it. You can check it out on any Ukrainian vocabulary.
    Word "дороги́й" has synonyms like "кошто́вний", "ці́нний".
    The only mistake in this video is the word "богатий" which is actually "багатий", or "заможний".

    • @lydiamedvedeva2252
      @lydiamedvedeva2252 3 года назад

      1) Статья 2013 г "Інноваційні процеси комерціалізації науково-дослідної діяльності підприємств": "яка виробляє дуже дорогий товар"
      2) Статья 2018 г "Політична система Великої Британії": "У Великобританії існує богатий історичний досвід пошуку ефективних..."

  • @saraluvcats6891
    @saraluvcats6891 6 лет назад +6

    Seems like Russian "г" is pronounced (h) not (g) in Ukrainian;
    Thank you for this video girls. Now I will go watching the other one on Nika's channel 😆

    • @kargi-chineli
      @kargi-chineli 6 лет назад +1

      ah well that sometimes also happens in Russian too though, like мягкий or лёгкий.

    • @krakataukrakatau9137
      @krakataukrakatau9137 6 лет назад

      In Ukrainian language that's common, but also some Russian speakers in Ukraine and south Russia pronounce г like х. Knowing that Russian isn't really diversified language, this pronunciation difference is nice though :)

    • @georgiyburlachenko5750
      @georgiyburlachenko5750 6 лет назад

      Actually in Ukrainian language it's a different letter. There's "ґ" that sounds like Russian "г" and "г" that sounds softer.

    • @sael52
      @sael52 5 лет назад

      @@georgiyburlachenko5750 give an example please!

    • @sael52
      @sael52 5 лет назад

      @@sandro5019 ok its sounds like french "R"

  • @tom-ff9yg
    @tom-ff9yg 2 года назад +1

    very cool, it's like portuguese and spanish, it's very similar but it can confuse because there's a lot of different things and meanings...
    thanks from brazil !!

  • @zagrepcanin82
    @zagrepcanin82 2 года назад +3

    Me as Croatian well 99% of words I understand both from russian and ukrainian languages

  • @andysandys.6825
    @andysandys.6825 2 года назад +2

    Like Indonesia & Malaysia language as Melayu language group, many similarity & difference also.....Greeting from Jakarta

  • @timothykarlsson3126
    @timothykarlsson3126 2 года назад +3

    Both languages are beautiful, though I speak neither

  • @constitutionscott5416
    @constitutionscott5416 3 года назад

    I didn't realize how different the two languages are. Great video! Спaсибо/ Дякую.

  • @chrisjunior6089
    @chrisjunior6089 6 лет назад +3

    "thank you both so much" for lesson and video.

  • @N330AA
    @N330AA 2 года назад +13

    The video is so sad now :(

    • @andrewshed
      @andrewshed 2 года назад +3

      I am a Russian speaking Ukrainian American. I'm trying to learn Ukrainian. It is sad but Russians and Ukrainians still get along- Putin is just a POS.

  • @marcelbruinsma
    @marcelbruinsma 6 лет назад +18

    Though Russian is harder to learn, because the grammar is more difficult, to me Russian sounds more pleasing to the ear.
    But this is something that's quite personal so other people might think the opposite.
    Thanks for this video with great examples.

    • @archangel4316
      @archangel4316 6 лет назад +4

      To me, Russian has always been one of the most beautiful languages around, same with German most of the Eastern European languages.

    • @alekshukhevych2644
      @alekshukhevych2644 5 лет назад +8

      Russian has its own beauty, but Ukrainian has been ranked as the 3rd most melodyc language in the word after Italian and French. We also heard only seperate words here, not sentences.

    • @margaretackerman6343
      @margaretackerman6343 5 лет назад +4

      Ukrainian language is recognized as one of the most beautiful languages ​​in the world. In 1934 in Paris, a beauty contest of languages ​​was held. Ukrainian language ranked third, second only to French. lisimnik.ru/2015/06/rejting-samyx-krasivyx-yazykov-mira

    • @margaretackerman6343
      @margaretackerman6343 5 лет назад

      @Oleksandr Konstantynov ха-ха.

    • @TheOleg_gg
      @TheOleg_gg 5 лет назад +8

      @@alekshukhevych2644 "Ukrainian is the 3rd most melodyc language in the world" only in the Ukrainian propaganda. All the links to this "language-contest in old Europe" lead to UA and UA-Canadian web-sources. And nobody cares to show the primary source (newspaper, historic record or smth. ) Because this is just a patriotic fairy tale.

  • @Samvicorp
    @Samvicorp Год назад

    Much Love from Rwanda Africa. Your languages are beautiful. Please teach us basic conversational in both

  • @BrdmanRBS
    @BrdmanRBS 2 года назад +6

    Great Video! I have an interesting story. I've been interested in Russian language since I was about 14. When I was about 24 or so, I found a Belarusian poem on an obscure Belarusian website. I carefully wrote it down and brought it to a choir assistant who was from Russia. He took one look and it and told me he had little idea how to translate it. But then a few years later there was this Girl in a theatre class I was taking who was from Ukraine. She WAS able to (kind of) get the gist of what the poem was about! It was really interesting to see her mental work as she was translating it. It was almost like she had to go into a special secluded place in her mind and switch mental gears, drudging up all the old Ukrainian language thought process that (seemingly) had laid dormant all those years. (the guy in our class thought I was just hitting on her and couldn't really read Cyrillic! Ha-Ha) But it was a really interesting experience about language. "No! she told me. This Belarusian is closer to the Ukrainian. A Russian wouldn't Understand this very well at all"

  • @orglancs
    @orglancs 4 года назад

    I wanted to comment on your other video, but comments are disabled there. That 'extra' case in Ukrainian has a name in English. It's the vocative case. You come across it, if you learn Latin, too. It survives here and there in modern Russian, doesn't it? Isn't Боже as in Боже мой! the same case? Thanks for these two very interesting lessons. As well as learning to speak a language, it is very interesting to learn about it/them. But then I am definitely a language nerd and find anything to do with languages interesting.

  • @sontodosnarcos
    @sontodosnarcos 2 года назад +5

    As a Spanish speaker my ear is certainly not trained, so that I couldn't ever tell one from another. Anyway, Russia and Ukraine are not enemies, and the Russian army has to stop the invasion now! They are killing their friends!

  • @hinchlnt
    @hinchlnt Год назад +1

    This was a bewildering lesson back in the 2010s. It continued to be intimidating even by 2021. But having begun my Ukrainian studies in 2023, I have come across many pairs of words, where I am familiar with each pair, both the Russian word and the Ukrainian equivalent. But I have a long, long way to go before my Ukrainian knowledge will reach my Russian knowledge. Perhaps in two years, maybe more likely in four.

  • @piotrkowalski7050
    @piotrkowalski7050 5 лет назад +9

    and that is how Ukrainian is more similar to Polish. Anyway our languages are similar and it is great. Bracia slowianie. Pozdrawiam, Pozdravliaju, priviet , paka, vsjevo horoshevo, all the best, wszystkiego najlepszego:))))

    • @jarosawbaliun5897
      @jarosawbaliun5897 5 лет назад +1

      vocabulary is close to west slavic but grammar is close to belarusian and russian

  • @davnyman
    @davnyman 6 лет назад +39

    Спасибо вам за прекрасную работу, мне очень понравилось видео. Два из красивейших языков в одном видео - это здорово! 🇺🇦🇷🇺

  • @НастяПлахотня
    @НастяПлахотня 4 года назад +3

    "Красивий" в повсякденному вжитку рідше використовується. Я радше скажу "гарний"

  • @daviyurdan9551
    @daviyurdan9551 5 лет назад +7

    Я бразилець, говорю португальські і люблю українській мова
    Прекрасна відео

    • @ВаняПопов-ф5ц
      @ВаняПопов-ф5ц 5 лет назад

      Ти що
      Как же великий русский язык???)))

    • @daviyurdan9551
      @daviyurdan9551 5 лет назад +2

      @@ВаняПопов-ф5ц i love Ukraine, ukrainian language
      I'm not a sovietic pro-putin, дякую
      Или тоже... Я говорю по русский тоже (не хорошо как украинский, или знаю)

    • @misterwise1742
      @misterwise1742 5 лет назад

      Respect from Ukraine bro:)

  • @RussianwithAnastasia
    @RussianwithAnastasia 6 лет назад +20

    Красавицы! Молодцы! 💜 Когда я уже увижусь с Никой? 😀

    • @VERBA_SCHOOL
      @VERBA_SCHOOL 6 лет назад +3

      Нужно это срочно исправлять! У меня до сих пор лежит сценарий для нашего видео :))

    • @joeguerrero6284
      @joeguerrero6284 5 лет назад

      I follow your channel as well.

    • @ashoknayaki7776
      @ashoknayaki7776 2 года назад

      Russian Bible app
      English bible App

    • @ashoknayaki7776
      @ashoknayaki7776 2 года назад

      Audio bible install

  • @DashART
    @DashART 2 года назад

    i have a question about your name? I've heard that some people call the name "Daria", Dasha. why is that? is it the same as Thomas - Tom or Robert - Rob/Bob?

    • @mitiarazu6806
      @mitiarazu6806 2 года назад +3

      In Russia and Ukraine, a person has a name, for example, Alexander. We use it in official documents. However, when we talk with friends, it's considered to be weird to use it so we use short forms like Sasha. More than that, there are also a lot of different forms that you can use like Shura, Sanyok. like.. My name is Dmitry but my friends say Dima, Mitya, Dimon and blah-blah. So all these forms are the same name. So the name Daria is an official name, and Dasha is like a way you could call a friend.

  • @mehiloveeach.phomche7204
    @mehiloveeach.phomche7204 4 года назад +3

    А как же русские синонимы типа ребенок-дитя,глаза-очи.Я думаю в украинском тоже есть синонимы схожие с русскими словами.

  • @saaksaak8042
    @saaksaak8042 5 лет назад +1

    You guys are great. Gives a good impression of Ukraine and Russia

  • @daisym6968
    @daisym6968 Год назад +2

    There are also similarities between Russian and Bulgarian, but Bulgarian grammar is easier

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  Год назад

      we basically learned the alphabet from Bulgaria :D

  • @leoandrew8530
    @leoandrew8530 5 лет назад +3

    Я изучаю эти два языка и они мне нравится. Я вчу ці два язика і люблю їх. 🇷🇺🇺🇦

    • @sael52
      @sael52 5 лет назад

      правильно будет - Я изучаю эти два языка и они мне НРАВЯТСЯ.

    • @andriystehnovych810
      @andriystehnovych810 4 года назад +1

      українською правильно буде не ЯЗЫКА а МОВИ. Я вчу (вивчаю) ці дві МОВИ і люблю їх. Бажаю вам успіху у вивченні!

  • @amarsalem5671
    @amarsalem5671 5 лет назад

    Spaciba, well done,
    Nika are Ukranian ?

  • @арефнар
    @арефнар 6 лет назад +3

    SEREBRO vs VIAGRA
    i associate this video with this contrast!

  • @RicardoIvanov
    @RicardoIvanov 6 лет назад +1

    Does Nika teach Ukraine language in another channel?

  • @ЕЛКОРДОБЭСТОРЕРО
    @ЕЛКОРДОБЭСТОРЕРО 2 года назад +6

    Keep this friendship. Please. We need peace.

  • @alexandergrabar7333
    @alexandergrabar7333 Год назад +2

    Всё зависит от того, что желать увидеть, различия или похожести..