As someone who is studying Russian alone in his room once a week, these videos are indispensable! Thank you so much, these videos are greatly appreciated! Cheers!
@ I have been studying Russian online throughout this outbreak of coronavirus: believe me, I have been working with people who cannot spell in English: Russian is my FIFTH foreign language.
@Klank Member There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
@@nickburton100 There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
@ There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
your lessons are too cool. just in 17 minute i learned 1-199. Keep up the good work. Your explantation are so easy and logical one can never forget it.
Go next: 200 - двести 300 триста 400 четыреста 500 пятьсот 600 шестьсот 700 семьсот 800 восемьсот 900 девятьсот 1000 тысяча 2000 две тысячи 3000 три тысячи ... 7529 - семь тысяч пятьсот двадцать девять
I swear to you, this guy's channel, EVERY VIDEO, is so well done! Even with bad audio, or video editing, the explanation for grammar rules and memorization tricks is amazing! Thanks Fedor! You're epic.
The explanation of why some numbers are what they are, like 90 which is "9 but a 100", is really helpful when remembering these words. Some of them are just not that easy, you make it less difficult. Still, this could be worse in French: 99 is quatre vingt dix neuf, which is literally translated as 4 times 20 and 10 and 9.
Thank you guy. I am Vietnamese and i am studying Russian in Moscow. Your lecture is easy to understand and easy to go into my memory. It is helpful for me. Thank you again!
ppoint432 It's actually not that bad. I've been studying Russian for six weeks and I think I have a general idea. If you're just counting, doing math and the numbers are not attached to a noun, it's like this. If a number describes a noun, like three cats or nine cities, then the number declines like an adjective. Because it really kind of IS an adjective, right? It's describing the quantity of a noun. And you know how English ordinals work--1st, 2nd, 3rd, and all the rest end -th? Russian is similar in that, but with cardinal numbers as well. Don't be scared, it's not that bad! :)
As a person who is learning Russian, but has a very hands-off professor, I seriously appreciate these lessons. I FINALLY understand the number system! Спасибо!
Thankyou so much !!!!! you're a really good teacher. I'm learning Russian and this helps me a lot. Even my Russian friend thinks I'm improving my Russian pronounciation. She also helps me with my Russian. Greets from the Netherlands
All non-stressed "o"s are pronounced like "a" in Russian. Just like the "O" in Росси́я. со́рок is from Old East Slavic сорокъ (sorokŭ, “a bunch of 40 sable pelts”).
@@ultravioletsus - Multi-syllable words have a stress, meaning on of the syllables is pronounced longer, clearer and with more focus than the others. In Russian, if an "o" is part of a stressed syllable, it´ll be pronounced like "o". In an unstressed syllable, it`ll be "a". Example: пого́да (weather). Pronounced pa-go-da. The middle syllable has the stress (´), thus the "o" in it sounds like "o". The first syllable has an "o" too, but it is prounounced "a". Other examples: по́сле (after) - pronounced: posle поколе́ние (generation) - pronounced: pakaleniye когда́ (when) - pronounced: kagda то́лько (only) - pronounced: tolka оте́ц (father) - pronounced: atyets большо́й (big) - pronounced: balshoy до́ма (at home) - pronounced: ? домо́й (home) - pronounced: ? Can you guess the last two?
@@vanessas2454 немного неправильно. О не превращается в А, а то будут люди произносить мАлАко, пАгода и т.д., что неправильно, тогда как произносить мОлОкО не будет являться ошибкой. О смазывается и произносится как среднее между А и О, для этого звука в транскрипции есть отдельный символ.
There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
Fedor, I’m new to the channel and I’m trying to learn the basics, but I can already see that it will be really, really helpful. Thank you very much and God Bless you!
um student who learning Russian language in Russia thx a lot i watch all your lessons. it facilitated my learning the Russian language. thnx million times.
I spend time learning Russian but the language never truly cements in my brain until I watch your videos and your explanations- and suddenly I feel I finally understand! From struggling to remember the numbers in Russian, I now feel confident after your help, Fedor. It actually makes sense now. Thanks so much! 🙏🏼
I'm brazilian and you're helping me a lot. I am very dumb, and I'm studying alone at home, but I can understand everything that you're saying, great job :)
Hello! :) That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
I used to get confused and mixed up with the Russian words for 15, 50, and friday, but your explanations helped me get this and understand the rest of the numbers. Especially about how how 11-19 works.
It feels like writing Russian numbers in the English language that have the same pronounciation as you write it is easy to remember so ill write it here just to save it for some day 1-Adin 2-dva 3-Tree 4-Chitiree 5-piyat 6-shiyast 7-simb 8-vocimb 9-devit 10-decit
Hello! :) That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
Thank you for the lesson! I know little russian from before because I studied it in middle school, but even though I studied the language for 3 years I couldn't learn the numbers above ten but now with your explanation I can finally understand them and remember them better. Thank you
Half the fun of learning Russian is getting a handle on all the special pronunciation and spelling orthography rules. It's slow going for me, but I'm getting there. Thanks for all your inspirational and informative videos, Фёдор!
Hello! That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
caramba! você explica super bem! pensei que seria mais complicado mas eu entendi tudo. só preciso reassistir e treinar minha pronúncia que tudo ficará ok! спасибо!
I’m from Ireland and fluent in Irish and starting learning russian about 3 or 4 weeks ago I’m using grammar books and bullet journals and your channel is amazing appreciate it so much so helpful and super fun!!
лол. говорит привет друзя или hey guys. that said i switch between russian and english a ton when im having a conversation with another bilingual person, to the degree that its 3 words in english and then 3 words in russian and so on
For those who wanna see the latin-ed version of the numbers: 1- Odin 2 - Dva 3 - Tri 4 - Chetyri/Chetyrye 5 - Pyat' 6 - Shest' 7 - Sem' 8 - Vosem' 9 - Devyat' 10 - Desyat' 11 - Odinnadtsat' 12 - Dvenadtsat' 13 - Trinadtsat' 14 - Chetyrnadtsat' 15 - Pyatnadtsat' 16 - Shestnadtsat' 17 - Semnadtsat' 18 - Vosemnadtsat' 19 - Devyatnadtsat' 20 - Dvadtsat' 20 - Dvadtsat' 30 - Tridtsat' 40 - Sorok 50 - Pyat'desyat 60 - Shest'desyat 70 - Sem'desyat 80 - Vosem'desyat 90 - Devyanosto 100 - Sto EDIT:i;ve been learning the russian alphabet for 2 years starting from february 13, 2019 and i now can read russian words but don't understand them so i know what he spelled on the paper and i just read it and know what is it in latin alphabet.
The early Scandinavians have remnants of early Russian blood that mixed with Germanic blood. How so? The proof lies in the very God "Odin." He was hailed as 'the one' while Russian always used that for the number 'one.' Immigration routes help also but that is more of a fun topic XD
Vikings headed by Rus (Russia) established the city of Kiev. They used to cross the European continent down the waterways & when the rivers ended they carried their long boats till they reached other waterways. That's how they reached Constantinople to sell their wares & take back home what they bought.
@@lemur-kaiser3912 you're dumb. Óðinn is a North Germanic rendering of the Proto-Germanic god "Woðan" which comes from the word "furious one" which is related to the German word "Wut" (fury). The initial "w" drops in Scandinavian languages as in worm-orm, word-ord, wolf-ulv etc. So please inform yourself before talking nonsense. I am Russian by the way.
@@alinedeleandro123 There is no point in erroneously trying to equate the Varangians or Vikings to the Rus', for the Normanist theory is just that, a theory, the only reason why its treated as the truth is because of the socio political potency of its content. The Varangians have only played a part in the founding of Russia, and they shouldn't be confused with the Rus', for even the Primary Chronicle treats them as two SEPARATE, unrelated entities. Their impact in Old Russia is negligible at best, for the Varangians who've settled Russia were numbered only in a few hundred, including women and children, and you do realize there is not a single town, fort or temple of theirs (of Norsemen) that had allegedly existed in Russia, with the exception of a single district in Novgorod? If they've left a great impact, or as you say, established the city of Kiev, then why hasn't anything of theirs survived the ages? Neither have they formed the nobility of the Rus', for the native nobility was already present and fully integrated in their native environs, and were, and still are, overwhelmingly of the R1a (East Slavic subclade) variety. It should also be noted that the Rurikids weren't "Varangian", Rurik and his family members were members of the Rus', I repeat, the Primary Chronicle, the chief sources of information on the period known as the "founding of Russia", states that the Varangians and the Rus' weren't one and the same, but SEPARATE people. Also, according to molecular genetics, the Rurikids, those who were direct descents of Rurik, weren't Scandinavian, for they belong and were bearers of these respective haplogroups: the haplogroup I2a1b (the clan of the princes Svyatopolk-Chetvertinskikh, ascending to the Turovopin Rurikovich-Izyaslavichi), haplogroup R1a1 (the princes of Verkhov) and the haplogroup N1c1 ( Rurikovich-Monomashich, who admittedly aren't even Rurikids, but Olafovich, for the father of Vsevolod was Saint Olaf, the king of Norway). Regarding Oleg, Oleg of Novgorod was the prince of the Rus', not the Varangians, the adjective "Varangian" was a purported demonym added to the men of the Rurikid dynasty by 19th century Russian, Swedish and German Normanists. Last but not least, The Primary Chronicle relates that in the year 6415 (907 AD) the Rus prince Oleg (same counts for Svyatoslav) made a peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire and by taking his men to the shrines and swearing by their weapons and by their god Perun, and by Veles, they confirmed the treaty. We find the same form of confirmation of a peace treaty by prince Igor in 945. In 980, when prince Vladimir the Great came to the throne of Kiev, he erected statues of five pagan gods in front of his palace which he soon thereafter discarded after his Christianization in 988. Perun was chief among these, represented with a silver head and a golden moustache. Vladimir's uncle Dobrinja also had a shrine of Perun established in his city of Novgorod. After the Christianization of Kievan Rus, this place became a monastery, which, quite remarkably, continued to bear the name of Perun. Matter of fact, there is not a single sanctuary found in Russia dedicated to any Norse god neither names nor places. Not just that, Claiming that the Rus' was a Nordic civilization is both erroneous and contradictory to the most base of rules of the creation of civilization, especially in the wake of modern archaeology, empiric, post-19th century history, genetic studies and mapping. In 1914, Swedish archaeologist T. J. Arne argued for a mass Viking age Scandinavian colonization of Eastern Europe. Arne's theories remained largely unchallenged until the 1940's, when anti-Normanism, in part a reaction to the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, was proclaimed official Soviet state dogma. Postwar USSR witnessed a golden age for Soviet archaeology, with the state sponsorship of thousands of archaeological excavations. Key to the anti-Normanist position were the excavations at Gnezdovo and Staraya Ladoga, near Smolensk and Novgorod respectively. Normanists considered both to be Scandinavian settlements, but Soviet archaeologists (Artsikhovsky, Avdusin, Ravdonikas) haven proven that there is minimal evidence for Scandinavian residence at these sites. So yes, in light of empirical proof gathered by professional historians and archaeologists, it is safe to adopt an academic disdain towards "conventional wisdom" (and refusal to adhere to it) which has proven to be categorically, or at least largely false, thus why the "general consensus" made by those who ignore material, empirically gathered PROOF for the sake of furthering of their block' agenda and interests (Western Academia, the one that made that "consensus", while categorically ignoring the differ-begging, EMPIRICALLY GATHERED proof mentioned before) is of arbitrary worth to history. Believe it or not, history, largely thanks to archaeology is an ever-growing and precise science, which actively rewrites the parts that have been PROVEN to be wrong, or at least incorrect. Empirical proof trumps "conventional wisdom", its a shame that Normanists don't understand that. And also, the earliest Arab sources, such as Ibn-Khurradadhbih, also explicitly mention Rus to be 'one of the Slavic peoples'. The whole mantra that Rurikids were Scandinavians starts with the Normanist theories in the 18th century, furthered by 'Romanovs' (not the original line of the Romanovs to boot) and Gerhard Friedrich Muller, and was opposed by most sane-minded members of Russian intelligentsia (including Muller’ own assistant), even by the Rurikid descendants themselves (like Vasily Nikitich Tatishchev). And last but not least, there is reason why Normanists always use the terms "believe" and "according", and adhere to "conventional wisdom" and "consensuses", because they're well aware of the fact that their theory is grossly unsubstantiated by material and finite proof (not evidence, a term Normanists always use, since proof is conclusive but evidence isn't, evidence is more of a suggestion.) and was and still is being actively refuted by archaeological excavations, molecular biology and even contemporary proof from that era, (like the treaties I've mentioned). While we're on the issue of the treaties, Oleg was Rurik' immediate successor (since he was immediate, you can't use the "slavicization argument"), so why was he, as an alleged Norseman, swearing to Slavic gods like Perun and Veles instead of the Norse Gods? Matter of fact, why were all Rurikids swearing by Perun and Veles, if they were allegedly of non-Slavic, Norse origin?
These are the claims of the Normanist theory: 1.That Scandinavians migrated to the Ancient East-Slavic area. (in reality, only in fringe numbers, a few hundred, including women and children) 2.That Kiev’s ruling dynasty was established by Scandinavians. (in reality, The Rus', in every Rus-Byzantine treaty, swore by Perun and Veles, not Thor and Odin) 3.That the name Rus’ is etymologically Old Norse. (in reality, even the Germanic Sagas don't refer to them as a Germanic people, and etymology is easy to abuse, since Indo-European languages are etymologically very alike) 4.That Scandinavian migrants influenced the development of the East-Slavic state. (in reality, the Varangians have only been bodyguards of the Rus', and sometimes, even tutors, but rarely) 5.That Scandinavian migrants created the first East-Slavic state. (in reality, refuted by the work of aforementioned Soviet archaeologists and molecular biology as well, Russian haplogroups and populations don't cluster with Scandinavian haplogroups and populations, neither modern, or from that era) 6.That the Scandinavians succeeded because of their racial superiority. (in reality, Scandinavia was the least developed, least influential and historically irrelevant part of Europe during most of recorded history, and as such, were always lagging behind Slavs as a whole, regardless on historical period) 7.That the past shapes current politics: specifically, that descendants of Scandinavians are natural rulers, whereas Slavs are natural subordinates.( in reality, the theory in question was furthered by the Holstein-Gottorp cadet branch Romanovs, who, due to being grossly unpopular, whether by the masses, or by the Russian nobility, sough alternative ways to solidify their authority, through subversion of history and the manipulation of information. Matter of fact, the Normanist theory is the first historically recorded form of state-sponsored Russian propaganda, where an unpopular leader utilized foreigners, pseudo-history and folk mythology to devise a justification for its absolute power and indisputable authority, thus why the theory was later adopted as state dogma, and academically challenged only in the later stages of the 1800's, when the Russian academy began to grow more independent from the ruling apparatus).
Good work. I had been putting off watching this because I didn’t feel like memorizing so many words at once. But you give us all the tools we need to understand how it all works.
Wow, I've been doing Russian for a while now and this made these numbers so clear. In several languages I study the 'teens' are harder to do. Great explanation.
I don't actually want to LEARN Russian ...but I'd like to know a WHOLE BUNCH about the language..So here is my take! If you want to learn russian numbers go look at ALL the russian number presentations on RUclips BECAUSE every one of these good motivating presenters will add just a teensy bit additional information. Such as the young man in this video added the function and purpose of that little syllable odin NA dsat the NA meaning ON really... so One On Ten=> Eleven...Great! Some new tidbit of info! Thank you!
Hello Fedor :) Thank you very much to take time to share this useful way to remember how to count in russian language !!! I think russian is the most beautiful language spoken in the world and I'm telling you this as italian guy. It would be very helpful if you could slowly repeat how to pronunce numbers without explanation or translation in between one another. Thank you again and greetings from Italy :)
You make learning the language very easy. I Love how you explain on how the words are structured. The co worker I work with is from Russia and he also has been helping me learn. Gonna count to 20 to him and see how well I do :) Thank you very much for your lessons!!
There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God... Best Regards, from Brazil!
Одиннадцать. Единица на десятке... Забавно, я никогда не задумывался над этим. Для меня это было просто название числа, что не имеет какого-то смысла в своей основе. Да не только я, думаю никто из носителей даже и не замечает таких деталей и особенностей, что по неволе открывают для себя иностранцы в попытках выучить язык.
Я когда изучал японские числительные, думал че они такие сложные, тоже дофига исключений в паттернах. Посмотрел это видео и осознал, что у нас то ничем не лучше оказывается, никогда об этом не задумывался)
Thank you, now I am in your wonderful Kindergarten class for Russian numbers. You break it down in a very logical way that I can remember. Thank you sir. Genius!
Number 5 kinda sounds like the word Biatch in English. :) ..........Teacher, in the word for the number 1, it sounds like the letter Д is pronounced like a G in English, while in the number 2, it sounds like a D in English. I'm wondering if that's why the phrase I'm hungry in Russian, я голоден, sounds like ya golajean to me?
Lol....you're right, I'm sorry. I do sweat the small stuff. I also speak Spanish and in that language some words can be pronounced with more of a J sound depending on the speaker. Yo which means I, is sometimes pronounced as Joe. I'm doing more reading in Russian cause I figure I'll learn a lot that way. I see in my book that the word John is spelled, Джон. So I'm getting used to sometimes seeing the letter, Д, associated with an English G or J Sound. I'm glad that for the most part, however, reading Russian is easy since its not complicated to sound out words, once you learn the Russian alphabet.
Because the soft sounds Дь and Ть are automatically forced slightly aspirated (otherwise it is difficult to pronounce them), BUT they never turn into J and into Ch! Never! I met a Hindu here on RUclips, who heard like you and started teaching everyone wrong.
and now I know where "Nadsat" name of Russian-based teen slang language of _A Clockwork Orange_ originated! so coool! "надсат" = teens! thanks, Фёдор!!
Almost all, if not all of "Nadsat" slang is just poorly pronounced Russian. Yarbles, moloko with the emphasis all wrong...LOL. The more Russian I learn, the more I cringe thinking of that movie.
Did some digging, I don't know if it is correct. I found that "сорок" was a standard unit for trade back in the day during the pelt / fur trade in the slavic region. A сорок was a bundle of 40 hides. It's the same as in english with a dozen being another word for twelve. However "dozen" isn't used much nowadays but "сорок" stuck around.
hi, someone can help me? I'm playing a game that have a stage in russian, and I'm Brazilian, I don't speak russian. Someone can't help me to translate? The stage is an audio so I can't use the google translate. Sorry about my english, I don't speak well.
There is a Russian saying: Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies... Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends... Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies... Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
I learn Russian just because it sounds beautiful. I love the accent. I heard the Russian national anthem during some match and since then I was interested in their language and the country itself. Thank you soo much for helping 😊
No disrespect Brother but I crack up when I hear number 6 as a German speaker because it sounds a lot like Scheiße, the German word for shit. 1..2..3..4..5.. SHIT! is what I keep hearing. Excellent job and good content though!
Как лингвист я анализирую немного иначе. Одиннадцать. Один / над / цать (один над десятью). «Цать» возникло в результате коллапса слова, произнесенного в спешке.
Just found this, your great. I have been studying Russia daily with a hand full of missed days for 287 days on my own, it's really tough but also I'm old
As someone who is studying Russian alone in his room once a week, these videos are indispensable! Thank you so much, these videos are greatly appreciated! Cheers!
Am revising the language to use in Bulgaria: I discovered last time more spoke Russian than English there: so useful.
@ I have been studying Russian online throughout this outbreak of coronavirus: believe me, I have been working with people
who cannot spell in English: Russian is my FIFTH foreign language.
@Klank Member There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
@@nickburton100 There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
@ There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
It's nice that you explain the reason behind the names of the numbers and not just teaching us the numbers. Good lesson, man.
There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
so french mean sexy, italian mean friendly, german mean cold, and russian mean?
@@raissavioletta7267 holy
I really love this video
@@PauloBouteI like this saying, thanks for sharing.
‘I don’t know why, it’s just the way it is’
Best summary of the Russian language ever
your lessons are too cool. just in 17 minute i learned 1-199. Keep up the good work. Your explantation are so easy and logical one can never forget it.
Go next:
200 - двести
300 триста
400 четыреста
500 пятьсот
600 шестьсот
700 семьсот
800 восемьсот
900 девятьсот
1000 тысяча
2000 две тысячи
3000 три тысячи
...
7529 - семь тысяч пятьсот двадцать девять
199- Сто девяносто девять
146+72=218
Сто сорок шесть + семьдесят два = двести восемнадцать
I swear to you, this guy's channel, EVERY VIDEO, is so well done! Even with bad audio, or video editing, the explanation for grammar rules and memorization tricks is amazing!
Thanks Fedor! You're epic.
youtube suddenly recommending me to learn russian language... i see where this is going.
How's learning?
@@thedarkside8380 poor
How's it going?
@@judyavril123 didnt even start
How’s it going now?
The explanation of why some numbers are what they are, like 90 which is "9 but a 100", is really helpful when remembering these words. Some of them are just not that easy, you make it less difficult.
Still, this could be worse in French: 99 is quatre vingt dix neuf, which is literally translated as 4 times 20 and 10 and 9.
Thank you guy. I am Vietnamese and i am studying Russian in Moscow. Your lecture is easy to understand and easy to go into my memory. It is helpful for me. Thank you again!
No problem! Good luck in your studies
If anyone checks to see what my reply is, i hope your having a good day💗
Chào ông, còn tôi đang ở Đức và đang học tiếng nga để tán gái
Удачи!!
I'm from Brazil, and I understand everything *-* thaaanks
Ur a great teacher
Nena Blue Eu sou Brasileiro e também estou estudando russo, se quiser podemos trocar conhecimento.
Jajaja ese vato xd
@Rukkaru 100% escravoceta sem dúvida
@@andred7684 Is that Russian?
@@bellorusso Not at all. It's Portuguese and Spanish, Russian is written with the Cyrillic alphabet.
Numbers are one of the demons in Russian that I have been avoiding to learn. Thanks for making learning them less painful.
ppoint432 It's actually not that bad. I've been studying Russian for six weeks and I think I have a general idea. If you're just counting, doing math and the numbers are not attached to a noun, it's like this. If a number describes a noun, like three cats or nine cities, then the number declines like an adjective. Because it really kind of IS an adjective, right? It's describing the quantity of a noun. And you know how English ordinals work--1st, 2nd, 3rd, and all the rest end -th? Russian is similar in that, but with cardinal numbers as well. Don't be scared, it's not that bad! :)
“Demons” 🤣👍🏼
Так интересно наблюдать, как изучают твой язык)
Особенно когда знаешь английский.
Он в начале сказал привет , возможно он русский
@@ساطع-ل2ح а имя "Фёдор" тебе ни о чём не говорит?😂
Акцент ооооооочееь сильно выдаёт его происхождение, он прям стереотипный какой-то
Марио
As a person who is learning Russian, but has a very hands-off professor, I seriously appreciate these lessons. I FINALLY understand the number system! Спасибо!
Thankyou so much !!!!! you're a really good teacher. I'm learning Russian and this helps me a lot. Even my Russian friend thinks I'm improving my Russian pronounciation. She also helps me with my Russian. Greets from the Netherlands
Hey!
You're very welcome:)
How is your russian now?
How's your russian going?
Sorry for the late reply 😊. I stopped a year ago but I'll pick it up soon as possible
The most logical lesson ever about russian numbers, благодарю
Português = onze
Russo = Одиннадцать
French: onze
German: elf
Spanish: once
Polish: jedenaście
Quechua: Chunka hukniyoq (native peruvian language)
All non-stressed "o"s are pronounced like "a" in Russian. Just like the "O" in Росси́я.
со́рок is from Old East Slavic сорокъ (sorokŭ, “a bunch of 40 sable pelts”).
how do O's get stressed ?
@@ultravioletsus - Multi-syllable words have a stress, meaning on of the syllables is pronounced longer, clearer and with more focus than the others.
In Russian, if an "o" is part of a stressed syllable, it´ll be pronounced like "o". In an unstressed syllable, it`ll be "a".
Example: пого́да (weather). Pronounced pa-go-da. The middle syllable has the stress (´), thus the "o" in it sounds like "o". The first syllable has an "o" too, but it is prounounced "a".
Other examples:
по́сле (after) - pronounced: posle
поколе́ние (generation) - pronounced: pakaleniye
когда́ (when) - pronounced: kagda
то́лько (only) - pronounced: tolka
оте́ц (father) - pronounced: atyets
большо́й (big) - pronounced: balshoy
до́ма (at home) - pronounced: ?
домо́й (home) - pronounced: ?
Can you guess the last two?
@@vanessas2454 all words have a stress, one-syllable words have a stress on the only syllable present
@@vanessas2454 немного неправильно. О не превращается в А, а то будут люди произносить мАлАко, пАгода и т.д., что неправильно, тогда как произносить мОлОкО не будет являться ошибкой. О смазывается и произносится как среднее между А и О, для этого звука в транскрипции есть отдельный символ.
@@PyromaN93 Спасибо за вас ответ. Я думаю, что вы правы, но разница между нормальным А и раздетым О минимальна. Я никогда не слышала мOлOкO.
This was awesome! Taking Russian in college and this just made learning numbers so much easier. Thank you
This Fedor Guy is a REAL teacher. Seems like he was born to effectively communicate technique and form perfectly understandable
Thank you Fedor. The best explanation I have ever seen. All I have to do now is to remember them!
There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
did you remember?
The guy can barely speak eng, what Best explanation r u on about
As a beginner I find this extremely helpful...Thank you and greetings from England 🙏🏻🙋🏻♂
Спасибо за видео. Никогда особо не задумывался, как формируются эти слова, но получается довольно интересно)
Я тоже! 😄
Согл.
мне в начальной школе так рассказывали
Fedor, I’m new to the channel and I’m trying to learn the basics, but I can already see that it will be really, really helpful. Thank you very much and God Bless you!
Вообще-то правильно будет:
Ноль
Целковый
Полушка
Четвертушка
Осьмушка
Пудовичок
Медячок
Серебрячок
Золотничок
Девятичок
Десятичок
ламинат 09 ШУЕ ППШ
Шизы на месте
))))
Ну вообще-то: ноль, целковый, чекушка, порнушка, пердушка, засерушка, жучок, мудачок, хуй на воротничок, дурачок. Не благодарите
Хочешь, что бы они с ума сошли? )
um student who learning Russian language in Russia thx a lot i watch all your lessons. it facilitated my learning the Russian language. thnx million times.
As a Vietnamese who self-study at home Russian, this video is a life saver.
Thank you
I spend time learning Russian but the language never truly cements in my brain until I watch your videos and your explanations- and suddenly I feel I finally understand!
From struggling to remember the numbers in Russian, I now feel confident after your help, Fedor. It actually makes sense now.
Thanks so much! 🙏🏼
i like how when he shows the 11-20 his face says “ i know what your thinking, i am almost sorry”
Is anyone else 2024? '
Yes
Да
meee
Yeah 😊
Yes
I'm brazilian and you're helping me a lot. I am very dumb, and I'm studying alone at home, but I can understand everything that you're saying, great job :)
Hello! :) That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
If you learn a foreign language and you succeed, then it seems that you are not "dumb")))
So comprehensible! I am Greek and your logical explanation behind everything in your videos helps me a lot. Thank you!
Very good and well explained. I like to learn little pieces of various languages and it is interesting to see how similar a lot of them are.
Thank you so much for these videos. It's more than having a private tutor, it's like having a friend who takes their time to explain things to you ❤
Thank You Fidor. Made so easy to learn numbers, but I think I really learned how to write that "D" out properly
Gotta learn this for warzone
Удачи. Good Luck.
Most important phrase for every online game in Russian: ХИ (GG) = хорошая игра (khoróshaya igrá/good game)
@@986KuroYuki you look like an anime character
I used to get confused and mixed up with the Russian words for 15, 50, and friday, but your explanations helped me get this and understand the rest of the numbers. Especially about how how 11-19 works.
Thank you! Glad to help)
It feels like writing Russian numbers in the English language that have the same pronounciation as you write it is easy to remember so ill write it here just to save it for some day
1-Adin
2-dva
3-Tree
4-Chitiree
5-piyat
6-shiyast
7-simb
8-vocimb
9-devit
10-decit
Hello! :) That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
I like how you explain the reason behind the naming😇makes it much more easier
You are such a pleasant dude to learn from
Спасибо Федор, listening to correct pronounciation is great
Thank you for the lesson! I know little russian from before because I studied it in middle school, but even though I studied the language for 3 years I couldn't learn the numbers above ten but now with your explanation I can finally understand them and remember them better. Thank you
Helped very much with my studies!
Спасибо!
Great young teacher! Good pedagogy , perfect explanations. Indispensable for a beginner .
Half the fun of learning Russian is getting a handle on all the special pronunciation and spelling orthography rules. It's slow going for me, but I'm getting there. Thanks for all your inspirational and informative videos, Фёдор!
Hello! That's so great that you like the russian language! I also teach russian to foreigners in english and in french! I add different videos on my channel about russian too (and some videos with my hobbies) Maybe if you find something helpful and interesting there I will be happy if you subscribe :)
I am here because i cannot keep up with Russian crochet tutorials. Thank you for the lesson, they all make much more sense now XD
caramba! você explica super bem!
pensei que seria mais complicado mas eu entendi tudo.
só preciso reassistir e treinar minha pronúncia que tudo ficará ok! спасибо!
From Australia - спасибо братишка! Your energy and intelligence is very helpful!
Cheers!
How do you drink if the water falls out of your cup?
*I love how its similar to Polish lol, just not the spelling 😂 Спасибо чувак!*
greetings from bosnia, in bosnian it's actually the same like polish and russian
Slavic languages are very similar
@Mad Max there is no other then slavic
BiH I’m from Belarus and Belarusian language is between to Russian and polish, you ought to hear it
@Mad Max Not the same, but pretty similar. At least in Croatian the numbers are a bit different.
Awesome, dude. The in-depth explanation of 11-20 and then multiples of 10: SUPER helpful.
"We are done for today, yay!" No, not yay! I don't want to be done, I want to have an infinite class with Fedor
I’m from Ireland and fluent in Irish and starting learning russian about 3 or 4 weeks ago I’m using grammar books and bullet journals and your channel is amazing appreciate it so much so helpful and super fun!!
I just had a huge disconnect when you said “Привет guys”
Привет гайс
😂
лол. говорит привет друзя или hey guys. that said i switch between russian and english a ton when im having a conversation with another bilingual person, to the degree that its 3 words in english and then 3 words in russian and so on
For those who wanna see the latin-ed version of the numbers:
1- Odin
2 - Dva
3 - Tri
4 - Chetyri/Chetyrye
5 - Pyat'
6 - Shest'
7 - Sem'
8 - Vosem'
9 - Devyat'
10 - Desyat'
11 - Odinnadtsat'
12 - Dvenadtsat'
13 - Trinadtsat'
14 - Chetyrnadtsat'
15 - Pyatnadtsat'
16 - Shestnadtsat'
17 - Semnadtsat'
18 - Vosemnadtsat'
19 - Devyatnadtsat'
20 - Dvadtsat'
20 - Dvadtsat'
30 - Tridtsat'
40 - Sorok
50 - Pyat'desyat
60 - Shest'desyat
70 - Sem'desyat
80 - Vosem'desyat
90 - Devyanosto
100 - Sto
EDIT:i;ve been learning the russian alphabet for 2 years starting from february 13, 2019 and i now can read russian words but don't understand them so i know what he spelled on the paper and i just read it and know what is it in latin alphabet.
Seeing it like this helps much more.
@@commencents1042 thank you
ODIN is the chief Viking god...
The early Scandinavians have remnants of early Russian blood that mixed with Germanic blood. How so? The proof lies in the very God "Odin." He was hailed as 'the one' while Russian always used that for the number 'one.'
Immigration routes help also but that is more of a fun topic XD
Vikings headed by Rus (Russia) established the city of Kiev. They used to cross the European continent down the waterways & when the rivers ended they carried their long boats till they reached other waterways. That's how they reached Constantinople to sell their wares & take back home what they bought.
@@lemur-kaiser3912 you're dumb. Óðinn is a North Germanic rendering of the Proto-Germanic god "Woðan" which comes from the word "furious one" which is related to the German word "Wut" (fury). The initial "w" drops in Scandinavian languages as in worm-orm, word-ord, wolf-ulv etc. So please inform yourself before talking nonsense. I am Russian by the way.
@@alinedeleandro123 There is no point in erroneously trying to equate the Varangians or Vikings to the Rus', for the Normanist theory is just that, a theory, the only reason why its treated as the truth is because of the socio political potency of its content. The Varangians have only played a part in the founding of Russia, and they shouldn't be confused with the Rus', for even the Primary Chronicle treats them as two SEPARATE, unrelated entities. Their impact in Old Russia is negligible at best, for the Varangians who've settled Russia were numbered only in a few hundred, including women and children, and you do realize there is not a single town, fort or temple of theirs (of Norsemen) that had allegedly existed in Russia, with the exception of a single district in Novgorod? If they've left a great impact, or as you say, established the city of Kiev, then why hasn't anything of theirs survived the ages? Neither have they formed the nobility of the Rus', for the native nobility was already present and fully integrated in their native environs, and were, and still are, overwhelmingly of the R1a (East Slavic subclade) variety. It should also be noted that the Rurikids weren't "Varangian", Rurik and his family members were members of the Rus', I repeat, the Primary Chronicle, the chief sources of information on the period known as the "founding of Russia", states that the Varangians and the Rus' weren't one and the same, but SEPARATE people. Also, according to molecular genetics, the Rurikids, those who were direct descents of Rurik, weren't Scandinavian, for they belong and were bearers of these respective haplogroups: the haplogroup I2a1b (the clan of the princes Svyatopolk-Chetvertinskikh, ascending to the Turovopin Rurikovich-Izyaslavichi), haplogroup R1a1 (the princes of Verkhov) and the haplogroup N1c1 ( Rurikovich-Monomashich, who admittedly aren't even Rurikids, but Olafovich, for the father of Vsevolod was Saint Olaf, the king of Norway).
Regarding Oleg, Oleg of Novgorod was the prince of the Rus', not the Varangians, the adjective "Varangian" was a purported demonym added to the men of the Rurikid dynasty by 19th century Russian, Swedish and German Normanists. Last but not least, The Primary Chronicle relates that in the year 6415 (907 AD) the Rus prince Oleg (same counts for Svyatoslav) made a peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire and by taking his men to the shrines and swearing by their weapons and by their god Perun, and by Veles, they confirmed the treaty. We find the same form of confirmation of a peace treaty by prince Igor in 945. In 980, when prince Vladimir the Great came to the throne of Kiev, he erected statues of five pagan gods in front of his palace which he soon thereafter discarded after his Christianization in 988. Perun was chief among these, represented with a silver head and a golden moustache. Vladimir's uncle Dobrinja also had a shrine of Perun established in his city of Novgorod. After the Christianization of Kievan Rus, this place became a monastery, which, quite remarkably, continued to bear the name of Perun. Matter of fact, there is not a single sanctuary found in Russia dedicated to any Norse god neither names nor places. Not just that, Claiming that the Rus' was a Nordic civilization is both erroneous and contradictory to the most base of rules of the creation of civilization, especially in the wake of modern archaeology, empiric, post-19th century history, genetic studies and mapping. In 1914, Swedish archaeologist T. J. Arne argued for a mass Viking age Scandinavian colonization of Eastern Europe. Arne's theories remained largely unchallenged until the 1940's, when anti-Normanism, in part a reaction to the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, was proclaimed official Soviet state dogma. Postwar USSR witnessed a golden age for Soviet archaeology, with the state sponsorship of thousands of archaeological excavations. Key to the anti-Normanist position were the excavations at Gnezdovo and Staraya Ladoga, near Smolensk and Novgorod respectively. Normanists considered both to be Scandinavian settlements, but Soviet archaeologists (Artsikhovsky, Avdusin, Ravdonikas) haven proven that there is minimal evidence for Scandinavian residence at these sites. So yes, in light of empirical proof gathered by professional historians and archaeologists, it is safe to adopt an academic disdain towards "conventional wisdom" (and refusal to adhere to it) which has proven to be categorically, or at least largely false, thus why the "general consensus" made by those who ignore material, empirically gathered PROOF for the sake of furthering of their block' agenda and interests (Western Academia, the one that made that "consensus", while categorically ignoring the differ-begging, EMPIRICALLY GATHERED proof mentioned before) is of arbitrary worth to history. Believe it or not, history, largely thanks to archaeology is an ever-growing and precise science, which actively rewrites the parts that have been PROVEN to be wrong, or at least incorrect. Empirical proof trumps "conventional wisdom", its a shame that Normanists don't understand that. And also, the earliest Arab sources, such as Ibn-Khurradadhbih, also explicitly mention Rus to be 'one of the Slavic peoples'. The whole mantra that Rurikids were Scandinavians starts with the Normanist theories in the 18th century, furthered by 'Romanovs' (not the original line of the Romanovs to boot) and Gerhard Friedrich Muller, and was opposed by most sane-minded members of Russian intelligentsia (including Muller’ own assistant), even by the Rurikid descendants themselves (like Vasily Nikitich Tatishchev).
And last but not least, there is reason why Normanists always use the terms "believe" and "according", and adhere to "conventional wisdom" and "consensuses", because they're well aware of the fact that their theory is grossly unsubstantiated by material and finite proof (not evidence, a term Normanists always use, since proof is conclusive but evidence isn't, evidence is more of a suggestion.) and was and still is being actively refuted by archaeological excavations, molecular biology and even contemporary proof from that era, (like the treaties I've mentioned). While we're on the issue of the treaties, Oleg was Rurik' immediate successor (since he was immediate, you can't use the "slavicization argument"), so why was he, as an alleged Norseman, swearing to Slavic gods like Perun and Veles instead of the Norse Gods? Matter of fact, why were all Rurikids swearing by Perun and Veles, if they were allegedly of non-Slavic, Norse origin?
These are the claims of the Normanist theory:
1.That Scandinavians migrated to the Ancient East-Slavic area. (in reality, only in fringe numbers, a few hundred, including women and children)
2.That Kiev’s ruling dynasty was established by Scandinavians. (in reality, The Rus', in every Rus-Byzantine treaty, swore by Perun and Veles, not Thor and Odin)
3.That the name Rus’ is etymologically Old Norse.
(in reality, even the Germanic Sagas don't refer to them as a Germanic people, and etymology is easy to abuse, since Indo-European languages are etymologically very alike)
4.That Scandinavian migrants influenced the development of the East-Slavic state.
(in reality, the Varangians have only been bodyguards of the Rus', and sometimes, even tutors, but rarely)
5.That Scandinavian migrants created the first East-Slavic state.
(in reality, refuted by the work of aforementioned Soviet archaeologists and molecular biology as well, Russian haplogroups and populations don't cluster with Scandinavian haplogroups and populations, neither modern, or from that era)
6.That the Scandinavians succeeded because of their racial superiority.
(in reality, Scandinavia was the least developed, least influential and historically irrelevant part of Europe during most of recorded history, and as such, were always lagging behind Slavs as a whole, regardless on historical period)
7.That the past shapes current politics: specifically, that descendants of Scandinavians are natural rulers, whereas Slavs are natural subordinates.( in reality, the theory in question was furthered by the Holstein-Gottorp cadet branch Romanovs, who, due to being grossly unpopular, whether by the masses, or by the Russian nobility, sough alternative ways to solidify their authority, through subversion of history and the manipulation of information. Matter of fact, the Normanist theory is the first historically recorded form of state-sponsored Russian propaganda, where an unpopular leader utilized foreigners, pseudo-history and folk mythology to devise a justification for its absolute power and indisputable authority, thus why the theory was later adopted as state dogma, and academically challenged only in the later stages of the 1800's, when the Russian academy began to grow more independent from the ruling apparatus).
The explanation about the numbers 11-19 was amazing. Thanks a bunch!
The closeness to Polish
Good work. I had been putting off watching this because I didn’t feel like memorizing so many words at once. But you give us all the tools we need to understand how it all works.
u basiclly killed it )) thanks alot for this amazing lesson and keeeep going mate ))
Wow, I've been doing Russian for a while now and this made these numbers so clear. In several languages I study the 'teens' are harder to do. Great explanation.
You are a great teacher! Thanks for the detailed explanation. Very easy to understand :)
Such a kind guy! Best wishes!
Showed it to my math teacher during my class
Now its our class
I don't actually want to LEARN Russian ...but I'd like to know a WHOLE BUNCH about the language..So here is my take! If you want to learn russian numbers go look at ALL the russian number presentations on RUclips BECAUSE every one of these good motivating presenters will add just a teensy bit additional information. Such as the young man in this video added the function and purpose of that little syllable odin NA dsat the NA meaning ON really... so One On Ten=> Eleven...Great! Some new tidbit of info! Thank you!
Keep up the good work, please! Your explanations are really helpful!!
Hello Fedor :) Thank you very much to take time to share this useful way to remember how to count in russian language !!! I think russian is the most beautiful language spoken in the world and I'm telling you this as italian guy.
It would be very helpful if you could slowly repeat how to pronunce numbers without explanation or translation in between one another.
Thank you again and greetings from Italy :)
In Serbia 1-10 is very similar to Russian.
Yes
This was an excellent explanation. I have seen a lot of presentations on the numbers but this was great! Срасибо!
Спасибо! That helped a lot.
You make learning the language very easy. I Love how you explain on how the words are structured. The co worker I work with is from Russia and he also has been helping me learn. Gonna count to 20 to him and see how well I do :) Thank you very much for your lessons!!
There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
Best Regards, from Brazil!
Wow awesome
@@xochiltmunguia3070 I´m glad you like it! Stay Safe!
Lol
Lol
Одиннадцать. Единица на десятке... Забавно, я никогда не задумывался над этим. Для меня это было просто название числа, что не имеет какого-то смысла в своей основе. Да не только я, думаю никто из носителей даже и не замечает таких деталей и особенностей, что по неволе открывают для себя иностранцы в попытках выучить язык.
I almost spoke 20 as Десяатнадцать at first)))
When I be child I speak "desyatnadcat'" too))
I'm russian)00)
I love you.
Десятнадцать. Почему я ору?
Десяатнадцатьнадцать would be 30
kitsune 😆😆
Thank you I'm Indian 🇮🇳. And the Russian numbers are influence by the sanskrit language (mother of all languages) try searching for sanskrit no.
Maybe
Ну, теперь я знаю цифры. Чтож, теперь можно и егэ по матеше сдавать
It's similar to sanskrit।
1-pratham
2- dwi or dwitiya
3- tri
4-chatwari
5- panch
6-shasthi
7- sapt
8-asth or astham
9- nav
10-dasham
Why is RUclips recommending this video in 2022?
RUclips you are sick!
Screw your Algorithm!
the russphobia in this comment is strong.
@@moss1w uhm
Cause you're watching too much videos on current war. I see nothing wrong in this video. Only you're being a dumb westerner (if I'm not wrong)
Your videos are super helpful! I study Russian and found that they didn't really taught me enough, your videos always fill the gaps!
А я тут подумал, а цифры сложные
Я когда изучал японские числительные, думал че они такие сложные, тоже дофига исключений в паттернах. Посмотрел это видео и осознал, что у нас то ничем не лучше оказывается, никогда об этом не задумывался)
мне кажется, что русский язык вери изи, ХАХ)
It's nice that you explained the reason behind those numbers not just the numbers. This vedio is very helpful. Thanks a lot.
This more than just helpful, but tremendous! I made some notes for these
Thank you, now I am in your wonderful Kindergarten class for Russian numbers. You break it down in a very logical way that I can remember. Thank you sir. Genius!
Number 5 kinda sounds like the word Biatch in English. :) ..........Teacher, in the word for the number 1, it sounds like the letter Д is pronounced like a G in English, while in the number 2, it sounds like a D in English. I'm wondering if that's why the phrase I'm hungry in Russian, я голоден, sounds like ya golajean to me?
Lol....you're right, I'm sorry. I do sweat the small stuff. I also speak Spanish and in that language some words can be pronounced with more of a J sound depending on the speaker. Yo which means I, is sometimes pronounced as Joe. I'm doing more reading in Russian cause I figure I'll learn a lot that way. I see in my book that the word John is spelled, Джон. So I'm getting used to sometimes seeing the letter, Д, associated with an English G or J Sound. I'm glad that for the most part, however, reading Russian is easy since its not complicated to sound out words, once you learn the Russian alphabet.
It's called palatalization. It's everywhere in Russian. Look it up.
Because the soft sounds Дь and Ть are automatically forced slightly aspirated (otherwise it is difficult to pronounce them), BUT they never turn into J and into Ch! Never!
I met a Hindu here on RUclips, who heard like you and started teaching everyone wrong.
You are the best teacher I have ever hear❤️
3:51
1 Один / 2 Два / 3 Три / 4 Четыре / 5 Пять / 6 Шесть / 7 Семь / 8 Восем / 9 Девять / 10 Десять . Отлично !! Я знаю , спасибо большое 💙💙💙
Блин , у него хорошее произношение ))))
a friendly approach - learning made easy indeed - the number 40 was an unit in older times for russian traders, I heard
and now I know where "Nadsat" name of Russian-based teen slang language of _A Clockwork Orange_ originated! so coool! "надсат" = teens! thanks, Фёдор!!
J.R. Caldoon Anthony Burgess also derived ‘horrorshow’ as a term meaning good, from хорошо.
Almost all, if not all of "Nadsat" slang is just poorly pronounced Russian. Yarbles, moloko with the emphasis all wrong...LOL. The more Russian I learn, the more I cringe thinking of that movie.
@@Whammytap yes I agree. Horrorshow Muhlako bar with the JROOGS. It became very comical for me when I saw it
Fedor is wonderful and comfortable to learn with! I could take thw entire course of Russian with you dear Fedor!!!
Please do! Sign up will open soon!
I'm brazilian. Portuguese speaker learning russian with a russian speaking in english hahaha
Eu também hahahah
I'm not a local speaker of English but I'm always jealous of English speakers to have such good language learning materials.
He said we try to simplify sounds 😂😂😂😂(no offense)
I am an Indian person and still I find Russian difficult remember..
All languages have
1) rules that makes stuff systematic
2) exceptions that makes stuff chaotic
If you had studied Sanskrit then you wouldn't had found it difficult
Did some digging, I don't know if it is correct. I found that "сорок" was a standard unit for trade back in the day during the pelt / fur trade in the slavic region. A сорок was a bundle of 40 hides. It's the same as in english with a dozen being another word for twelve. However "dozen" isn't used much nowadays but "сорок" stuck around.
hi, someone can help me? I'm playing a game that have a stage in russian, and I'm Brazilian, I don't speak russian. Someone can't help me to translate? The stage is an audio so I can't use the google translate. Sorry about my english, I don't speak well.
я здесь 😀
Good explanation Fedor. You are a good teacher. Your sessions are brief. 15 min sessions are ideal time to keep the concentration.
Thank you for your lessons!!! I am Thai! Я люблю русский язык
for your lessons*
Asbest Thanks.
@@kumpolwannalakprayoonratta5087 You Are Welcome! Literally, speaking...too! So, let´s hope that after the Pandemic you may travel to Brazil!...
There is a Russian saying:
Every man should learn French to talk to the ladies...
Every man should learn Itatian to talk to his friends...
Every man should learn German to talk to his enemies...
Every man should learn Russian to talk to God...
I learn Russian just because it sounds beautiful. I love the accent. I heard the Russian national anthem during some match and since then I was interested in their language and the country itself. Thank you soo much for helping 😊
good luck to you! it is very interesting!
@@learnrussianwithtanyavetto8571 thank you
@@NZC_Meow see please videos in my channel ))))
No disrespect Brother but I crack up when I hear number 6 as a German speaker because it sounds a lot like Scheiße, the German word for shit. 1..2..3..4..5.. SHIT! is what I keep hearing. Excellent job and good content though!
Как лингвист я анализирую немного иначе.
Одиннадцать.
Один / над / цать (один над десятью).
«Цать» возникло в результате коллапса слова, произнесенного в спешке.
youtube please explain why I get this recommended now out of all times... ;-;
heh perhaps you're gonna speak russian soon
Just found this, your great. I have been studying Russia daily with a hand full of missed days for 287 days on my own, it's really tough but also I'm old