How I Would Learn Russian (If I Could Start Over)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 678

  • @pedropontes2230
    @pedropontes2230 3 месяца назад +491

    1. Learn the alphabet
    2. Learn basic words and phrases
    3. Learn the gender
    4. Start learning the conjugations (Only 3 tenses)
    5. Learn the case system
    6. Learn vocabulary in context
    7. Resources: Master Russian, Free Russian Course RT.
    8. Throw yourself into the culture
    9. Practice conversation

    • @alexfoxx3376
      @alexfoxx3376 2 месяца назад +7

      Thank you!

    • @shoaibalam5007
      @shoaibalam5007 2 месяца назад +4

      How much time required...

    • @almightytwee1188
      @almightytwee1188 2 месяца назад

      @@shoaibalam5007over 1000 hours

    • @alemeli
      @alemeli 2 месяца назад +4

      What about cursive ? When to do it ? Thanks

    • @vintagegenious
      @vintagegenious Месяц назад +5

      ​@@alemeli You won't see cursive unless you see native speakers or you travel to the country. Anyway russian cursive is not harder than greek or roman cursive, can be trained fairly quickly (a day)

  • @lewismontgomery7398
    @lewismontgomery7398 Месяц назад +97

    As a polyglot, the best advice I can offer is to not waste time learning case systems. The reason being, is unless you are already at a high level of fluency, you simply won't know when to use what. Instead, indulge in hours of listening, watching videos / tv with subtitles and listen / see how the endings are applied. This way you will start to naturally understand when and how they work. Having learned Finnish which has 15 cases, unlike Russian which only has 6, I have learned from the mistake of trying to understand a case system which you didn't grow up with. Kids don't learn case systems so why would you as an adult? Allow your brain to naturally adapt by repetition and interaction with the language. You will make more progress learning a language by listening and reading than you ever will learning a complex grammar table. The rule to mastering a language, is to acquire it as a child would: listen, watch, read, write and speak. Make mistakes and keep doing so until you don't. Avoid the grammar and in no time, you'll be living and breathing in your chosen language, because grammar is naturally understood and developed by the brain through non-stop input, not from complicated tables in a book :)

    • @valterferreirabr
      @valterferreirabr 20 дней назад +11

      As a Polyglot (6 Languages so far) I totally 100% AGREE! Languages are to be acquired instead of learned! Read, Watch Movies / Podcasts, Practice, REPEAT! Life is Fun!

    • @nasteemusic
      @nasteemusic 6 часов назад +1

      Thanks for your advice, I’m French and I’m finally starting learning Russian. I was pretty sure that by watching videos and listening to podcasts it will be enough to talk with Russian and travel to, and you confirmed it ! Merci ! Спасибо 😁

  • @viktortsealov5903
    @viktortsealov5903 5 месяцев назад +380

    I am a native Russian speaker and must assure you and everybody watching that your Russian, at least in this video, is perfect and astonishing so your advice is worth a lot.

    • @PolyglotCorner
      @PolyglotCorner  5 месяцев назад +26

      @@viktortsealov5903 thanks for the support 😁

    • @2b_frank
      @2b_frank 3 месяца назад +5

      it actually is! i'm impressed because i heard a lot of times on calls and irl just how *all* foreigners struggle with some sounds😅

  • @avenov
    @avenov 5 месяцев назад +984

    I'm a native russian speaker but I was watching this video as if I was gonna learn it from zero w

    • @user-nu4be8qx1p
      @user-nu4be8qx1p 5 месяцев назад +99

      new video : "I become amnesiac to relearn my mother tongue (shocked locals)"

    • @freeeeman2011
      @freeeeman2011 5 месяцев назад +11

      @@user-nu4be8qx1p wow your english tongue is amasing! XD

    • @artemcakes
      @artemcakes 5 месяцев назад +13

      Now as I speak german as well, after reading your comment about to watch like video auf Deutsch. Thanks for the idea (wait, wha?)😅

    • @JanetteAlfaro-r2m
      @JanetteAlfaro-r2m 5 месяцев назад +5

      With languages you should use it or lose it. I really admire you for being a polyglot. Especially learning Russian! I enjoyed hearing your experiences!

    • @rajendrashinde7445
      @rajendrashinde7445 4 месяца назад +5

      I am learning Russian Language... I'm from Mumbai India

  • @LinguaSerbia
    @LinguaSerbia 5 месяцев назад +518

    My advice related to cases: just don't learn it as a table. Learn it from the context, from actually seeing it used in sentences. Learning cases from a table killed my joy in learning any language ever. It felt much harder than any physical work.

    • @laurac1902
      @laurac1902 5 месяцев назад +19

      This was my experience in German as well. Having a lot of input helped me be able to discern what sounded right. I still studied the case system, but there’s absolutely no way I could rely on figuring that out quickly and maintaining a smooth flowing conversation.

    • @wasfuerkeksigkeit
      @wasfuerkeksigkeit 5 месяцев назад +12

      this is excellent advice. if i had learned all the grammar correctly with tables etc... well i would have just given up. i now speak russian with a LOT of mistakes, but i DO speak and read it. i also enjoy it. this would have been impossible with boring grammar drills

    • @JordaNobody
      @JordaNobody 5 месяцев назад +9

      Honestly, I felt the opposite. Russian for free not only has a table but also exercises to help with each case and provides examples on when you would use them. It doesn't explain the cases perfectly to be honest, but to have the table side by side with the exercises helps a lot and then you can remove the table completely when it's a bit more natural.

    • @markmarkyyy5632
      @markmarkyyy5632 5 месяцев назад +2

      I agree.... very young children learn in this way... a word, a phrase, a sentence.....

    • @anglluk
      @anglluk 5 месяцев назад

      это, еще вы пунктуацию не видели, просто ужас и это для человека ,который живет в России -это просто ужас : мне интересно, в других языках кто-то воспринимает в серьезно знаки : ; - и еще ссп спч бессоюзные предложение прямо косвенное цитирования водные конструкции и многое другое

  • @AV-xv3ln
    @AV-xv3ln 2 месяца назад +29

    I’m a native Russian speaker, and I really enjoyed your video! Here’s a piece of advice: remember that kids naturally learn to speak correctly without studying rules, even before they start school. This principle applies to any language in the world. So, don’t be discouraged by the complexity of Russian-just go with the flow.
    It’s similar to how I learned English. For example, when deciding between “many” or “much,” I noticed that nouns ending with an “s” sound usually take “many”: many chairs, many pens, but much beer, much onion in the salad. Sure, there are exceptions, but you’ll pick those up easily, just like most people do.
    The same goes for Russian-you’ll start noticing patterns for why certain phrases or contractions are used the way they are. Good luck, everyone!

  • @viewer1339
    @viewer1339 4 месяца назад +223

    My humble advice:
    1) Start with fundamental grammar (genders, conjugations, cases) but don’t try to nail everything down.
    2) Develop your vocabulary. It will help your understanding a great deal. You will be able to connect the dots to get an idea of what is being spoken, even if you don’t wholly understand it.
    3) Listen a lot, preferably podcasts that are coming with transcript. This will improve not only your listening but vocabulary also.
    4) You need to speak as much as you can but if you have nobody, talk to yourself. Explain your daily routine to yourself in Russian. Pretend you’re in a restaurant and you’re ordering a meal, etc.
    5) If you don’t know where to start, buy a course book. It will provide the basics in an organized way.
    6) Don’t jump from one YT channel to another. There is no perfect resource but some are smarter than the others
    7) It is one step at a time. You have to be very very patient. It is like watching grass grow (at least for me).

    • @kanika742
      @kanika742 4 месяца назад +2

      Thanks a lot❤❤ It helps 🙂

    • @Rainzy42
      @Rainzy42 4 месяца назад

      Can I learn it online?

    • @viewer1339
      @viewer1339 4 месяца назад +6

      @@Rainzy42 I would suggest self study with a course-book and support from online resources:
      - For course-book, try Дорого в Россию (The Road to Russia) or Поехали
      - For online grammar support, о русском по русски (about Russian in Russian) is a good resource. She is a good teacher and explains concepts in an easy way
      - For listening, try Russian with Max. He has videos for all levels.
      - For speaking, read easy texts and then re-tell them (don’t memorize). Talk to yourself. Whatever you are doing at that moment, try to explain it in Russian. Pretend that you are in an everyday situation (let’s say you’re ordering a meal) and try to do that in Russian. If you have privacy, do all these exercises actually speaking, not in your head. That makes a big difference.

    • @EyeDriveATruck
      @EyeDriveATruck 4 месяца назад +1

      What about Duolingo?

    • @gamingzsupraz6553
      @gamingzsupraz6553 4 месяца назад +2

      thx Jesus loves you. Have a good day!

  • @susankeeton1636
    @susankeeton1636 5 месяцев назад +201

    My favorite part of learning about the Russian culture is the Soviet movies. You can find them on RUclips with English subtitles.

    • @adevikthur
      @adevikthur 5 месяцев назад +2

      Can you recommend a few?

    • @susankeeton1636
      @susankeeton1636 5 месяцев назад +53

      @@adevikthur , Irony of Fate, Diamond Arm, Carnival Night, the girls, Operation Y, kidnapping caucasian style, office romance parts 1&2, Ivan Vasilyevich changes his profession. Hope that helps!

    • @adevikthur
      @adevikthur 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@susankeeton1636 Thanks much!

    • @flavoredwallpaper
      @flavoredwallpaper 5 месяцев назад +13

      @@susankeeton1636 Diamond Arm is my mom's favorite Russian movie. I've seen it before with subtitles, as a kid, but hopefully I can watch it again in Russian some day!

    • @bshthrasher
      @bshthrasher 4 месяца назад +8

      A few recommendations from me:
      17 Мгновений Весны - 17 Moments Of Spring (series in 12 episodes, absolutely genius dialogues, very good for learning) - 1973
      Курьер - Courier - 1986
      Самая обаятельная и привлекательная - The most charming and appealing - 1985

  • @frettychervil
    @frettychervil 3 месяца назад +15

    I agree that the Russian alphabet is the beginning. After studying Chinese, it makes you really appreciate learning any language that has an alphabet.

  • @ratrodrigs9583
    @ratrodrigs9583 4 месяца назад +30

    Been learning russian on duolingo for 2 years didnt make much progress, met a friend from russia on a video game called escape from tarkova and every now and then id have him speak russian and id only ask in english if i didnt understand something, learned more that way

    • @fjorddenierbear4832
      @fjorddenierbear4832 12 дней назад

      Similarly, I didn't learn to truly speak Japanese until I had engaged in a lot of conversation.
      I'm doing DuoLingo for Russian lately and learning how to say words like "hedgehog", but the app hasn't yet taught me to count to 10, say "sorry", or much of anything.
      I''m now switching to Pimsleur, and I intend on completing Pimsleur Russian before I may again focus on DuoLingo. Pimsleur has weaknesses, but I think it may be the best way to learn to actually speak, and typically with a good accent right off the bat.

  • @joelfisk
    @joelfisk 4 месяца назад +39

    I'm stuck in the vocabulary phase right now. I have a young baby and am struggling to find time. I absolutely adore the Russian language now though. The movies, television, and music are simply incredible. It's like I stuck my foot in water to test the temperature and the quality just devoured me. Всем удачи!

  • @bazsamester
    @bazsamester 5 месяцев назад +21

    Ive been studying Russian for 2 years now, and I MAXIMALLY agree with everything you said. I’m also surprised RT has a Russian cours, I really didn’t know that one.
    Anyways, keep up the good work, you’ve gained a new subscriber❤

  • @emberho3426
    @emberho3426 2 месяца назад +8

    Respect to this guy. I have found this channel by chance, and I love your approach.

  • @Cryout5200
    @Cryout5200 2 месяца назад +9

    Can you share the playlist with the bangers?

  • @richardcgs2001
    @richardcgs2001 4 месяца назад +35

    [1] You forgot one very important aspect in learning vocabulary, including when conjugating verbs: don't ignore ударение - memorize over which vowel the accent falls and the associated pronunciation rules. For example, unaccented "o" is pronounced as "a." In some few instances, moreover, a word may be spelt the same but have the accent in an alternate place with semantic effect. So take мука: with accent over the, "a," you have flour; over the "y," you have torture. Another example: There is a big difference if you say я хочу писать depending on whether the accent is placed over "и" or over the "a" in писать. (The latter means "I want to write;" the former, something you only may want to say with your buddies after drinking a lot of beer and you need bladder relief.) With the accent placed incorrectly, you simply may not be understood engendering a look of confusion or you'll be understood as someone speaking Russian poorly. Consider, for example, how to pronounce correctly the very simple words бабушка (grandmother) and отец (father) using Google translate. Can you hear where the accent falls in each? [2] You exaggerate the general difficulty of determining the genders - masculine, feminine, neuter; only two specific issues of complexity come to mind: (1) words ending with мякий знак (soft sign) ь, which may be either masculine or feminine, and (2) the short array of words like мужчина (man), which, by appearances i.e., the typical feminine ending "a" manifests but, nonetheless, is grammatically masculinе so we get "неграмотный мужчина" and not "неграмотная мужчина." In general, masculine and feminine in French is a much bigger headache than determining m/f/n in Russian. [3] Of course, learning the Cyrillic alphabet is a must but do not exaggerate the difficulties of doing so. Compared to Georgian or Armenian orthography, for example, the Cyrillic alphabet is a cake walk with most sounds, except notably for ы, x and щ, easily replicable by native English speakers. I would, however, recommend the learner undertake learning cursive script right after learning print script; cursive has some tricky nuances and should ideally be mastered early on.

    • @lucyfromsiberia
      @lucyfromsiberia 3 месяца назад +1

      Ahahaha! "Я хочу пИсать" That's a phrase you can't even say to your mates. That's what little Russian kids say. That's not what grown-ups say.
      And in general, you've written correctly.

    • @sauloramos9881
      @sauloramos9881 Месяц назад

      You're right, learning the alphabet is actually on the easier side compared with many other things.

  • @jarelllockhart6710
    @jarelllockhart6710 2 месяца назад +3

    I’ve literally just started learning Russian. I started Sunday night and now it’s Wednesday and I’ve learned the alphabet. It’s not hard to remember but some could be a little difficult to pronounce. Now that I can pronounce and read most of it I’m going to implement this.

  • @dannajeon8895
    @dannajeon8895 5 месяцев назад +39

    I'm SO LUCKY to find this because I was thinking about studying Russian and you just popped up recently with this video. Thank you, I'll take all your recommendations.

    • @joelfisk
      @joelfisk 4 месяца назад +1

      Listen to Kino and never look back. It's such a great language and culture.

    • @dilfosaur_
      @dilfosaur_ 4 месяца назад

      Good luck, you can do it! Я в тебя верю!

    • @viva190_
      @viva190_ 3 месяца назад +1

      @@joelfisk i love kinooooo

  • @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl
    @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl 5 месяцев назад +14

    The alphabet was the easiest part for me. I'm currently learning it in braille as well as print and let me tell y'all, the print version is much easier. Anyway, the genders were also pretty simple, and I love how predictable the endings are. The verb endings are also predictable for the most part, I'd say about 95 percent of verbs have the same ending rules. I have been learning Russian as a legally blind person and I'm only now starting to learn the cases. Out of the 6 cases, I would split them into 3 sections, easy, medium, and challenging.

    • @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl
      @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl 5 месяцев назад +4

      Also, my Russian music recommendations are some heavy metal bands. They are Kipelov, Aria, Kino, and Neverlove. All are fantastic bands.

    • @hwlsgrl
      @hwlsgrl 4 месяца назад +1

      same! 3 years after learning the Russian alphabet my Russian skills have worsened since I haven’t spoken it in a while other than at home but barely, but knowing to _read_ Russian is still completely in tact lol 😭

    • @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl
      @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl 4 месяца назад +1

      Lol honestly! Once you learn the alphabet, you never forget it

    • @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl
      @KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl 4 месяца назад +1

      Just as a note, I have 2 videos on my channel pertaining to the Russian alphabet. I'm not trying to mooch off someone else's channel, but I'm just letting y'all know that if you want to see more videos on the Russian alphabet or other unrelated things, I have them

    • @S.Korolev
      @S.Korolev 3 месяца назад

      ​@@KatelynMyszkowski-uo6dl found one, watched it and liked it 😊 How is your progress now?

  • @joaovb5824
    @joaovb5824 19 дней назад +2

    I really strugle to read russian, but the major problem isn't understanding, but actualy read the words, like, letter by letter, I really have to take my time reading in order to get the message, I'm trying to find a way to learn to read faster. Thanks for the advices btw, great video!

  • @tbountybay3080
    @tbountybay3080 5 месяцев назад +10

    I genuinely think this is the best "how to approach mastering russian" advice I have found. I have been studying russian for 1 year and yeah, very useful

  • @guillaumeleblanc4542
    @guillaumeleblanc4542 5 месяцев назад +12

    New subscriber here, that was great advice, learning how to read Russiam was a big step forward for me. I should have been doing this from the start.

  • @Leonardo-jz5jf
    @Leonardo-jz5jf 5 месяцев назад +17

    Many Soviet films are free on RUclips, even movies based on classic Russian literature are on RUclips for free and with English subtitles. For example Dostoevsky’s crime and punishment and brothers karamazov I believe are there

  • @tritaporika
    @tritaporika 4 месяца назад +26

    Im Latvian, and my native language is also Latvian (no sh1t, ik), but i fluently speak russian language without any accent since im 7, rn i speak Russian, Latvian, English and currently learning Polish as hobby and German in school. I think this video is pretty right about that you need to start with alphabet etc, but in my opinion its better to start to watch videos in that language to understand how it sounds, then learn basic sentences, and only then start learning about text, writing, etc. Usually people learn language to talk in it, not for texting and then i would recommend to learn sentences (or try to make some) what you would use very often and then actually use them. Even if you learn 10 words from book in single day, you will still forget them if you dont use them daily, cuz ''why you need to remember if you arent using that information?'', you got the point ;)

    • @EyeDriveATruck
      @EyeDriveATruck 4 месяца назад +1

      Would you ever want to learn Lithuanian?

    • @tritaporika
      @tritaporika 4 месяца назад +1

      @@EyeDriveATruck Idk, maybe. Knowing a lot of languages is fun, but the only problem is that i dont know anybody to learn lithuanian language with (i dont know anybody to use lithuanian. Its always easier having somebody to talk in that language with)
      But Lithuanians are cool, so maybe one day i could start learning it. =D

    • @EyeDriveATruck
      @EyeDriveATruck 4 месяца назад +2

      @@tritaporika come on, it’s right next door to Latvia!

    • @tritaporika
      @tritaporika 4 месяца назад +1

      @@EyeDriveATruck I have a very little free time usually, cuz i also go to music school yk, so i probably will start learning it after polish

    • @EyeDriveATruck
      @EyeDriveATruck 4 месяца назад +1

      @@tritaporika that’s what I like to hear!

  • @carriegracephillips8832
    @carriegracephillips8832 29 дней назад

    Oh my goodness. This is SUCH a gift to your fellow polyglots! Thank you so much! 😊

  • @shayan1996
    @shayan1996 Месяц назад

    I’m Iranian And I learned English with watching movies only… you kinda cheered me up…and I wanted to say thank you for being generous with sharing your experience 🙏

  • @eftsa5323
    @eftsa5323 3 месяца назад +2

    Man this background song is a masterpiece. I had forgotten it for 2 years now

  • @weirdpersonv
    @weirdpersonv 5 месяцев назад +4

    This might be the best video I found about learning Russian yet. I'm at the point where I know basic sentences but I have russian friends that want to help me improve my russian
    You broke everything down on what you need to learn and how to learn it aswell. I'll definitely start using the points from this video to improve my russian thank you :D

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 4 месяца назад +2

    *Спасибо за это видео! Ваш совет имеет большой смысл.*

    • @Andryushka-v1p
      @Andryushka-v1p 2 месяца назад

      Пишу на русском не пользуюсься переводчиком

  • @matildawolfram4687
    @matildawolfram4687 5 месяцев назад +6

    That's a good video! Many thanks to the author of the channel for the recommendations! The problem with many people is that they want to take a "magic pill" or get "secret knowledge" and immediately have skills and abilities. However, the truth of life is that knowledge, skills, and abilities do not come by themselves. You can't learn a foreign language without doing anything, without wasting your time and effort, just like you can't learn to ride a bike lying on a comfy couch, listening to lectures and watching videos about "modern methods of learning" on a bike. To really learn something, you have to really practice every day. You're going to fall down while you're learning, and you're going to get bumps - that's normal! The ups and downs of learning are an integral part of our lives. Motivation from success and depression from failure will always be your study companions. However, every student has problems in his or her studies that he or she lacks the knowledge to solve. It can be: poor memorization of words; no progress in language learning; the student can speak, but does not understand speech by ear; misunderstanding of grammar; incorrect pronunciation, etc. Agree that a problem you don't know how to solve is very demotivating. In order to find the answer to our question we have to spend a lot of time to read videos, articles and books by polyglots. In today's world, we have to solve problems as quickly as possible. I don't have time to study and analyze a huge amount of information. My goal is to master the basic knowledge of a foreign language as quickly as possible and already start earning money effectively in the international arena. I settled on the practical guide by Yuriy Ivantsiv " Polyglot Notes: practical tips for learning foreign language". This book is always in my bag. If I have a problem while learning a language, I quickly find the answer in this book. There are many different techniques and tips for learning a foreign language in Polyglot Notes. I have made my own individual schedule and plan for language learning. Now I know what I am going to study, how I am going to study, when I am going to study and what results I am going to achieve. No problem could stop me! With an effective language learning plan my professional skills are more and more in demand internationally every day. Friends, don't stop there! Everyone has talents that millions of people around the world need! Learn the language and make your ideas and dreams come true! Thanks to the author of the channel for the informative and useful video! Your videos motivate me.

  • @Lian.g.w
    @Lian.g.w 2 месяца назад +4

    ‏‪0:37‬‏ In persia, we pronounce "hachoo" like this to😂

  • @S.Korolev
    @S.Korolev 3 месяца назад +1

    That was a really good video, man. I mean it. High quality, no beating in the bush, great attitude. Love it!
    ❤❤❤
    Case system is really like a difficulty multiplier, only exponential. I, as a native, don't have any idea where one can start learning it and have clear indicators of progress. It has some structure, but it is so chaotic in real life.

  • @YasminAl-Jarrah
    @YasminAl-Jarrah 2 месяца назад +3

    i started learning on Duolingo and they skipped over the genders, thankyou for your tips

    • @WildWestNeko
      @WildWestNeko 15 дней назад +1

      Duo skips over ALL grammar.
      It's great to brute-force learn meaningless sentences and become proficient in translating on the fly. But for anything else, look elsewhere.

  • @hundragant
    @hundragant 5 месяцев назад +8

    I'm so jealous! I'm American but self taught myself Russian in HS.
    My HS had a lot of Russian people (and cute Russian boys) I got so interested.
    I learned how to read Russian in one day after checking out a book at our school library.
    I thought it was going to be super hard and tedious but it just came to me. I got so excited and started writing PRINT Russian on my own from what I saw in books. I met many Russian friends in HS and they would help me translate English words into Russian for me to memorize that I wrote on paper.
    Long time later I took a free course of Russian language at a community college. Tbh, it didn't teach me much of what I already knew. But it was fun to be in a class of Russian dedication.
    I then further in life took a credit course of Russian language at a different state community college. They had me take a placement test since I told them I already had some knowledge of the language. They told me I could go STRONG in first year with everything I knew already or I could have some challenge and enter second year since I already knew most of the basics.
    I chose to go to first year because I thought it would be a good idea to fill in any gaps I may have missed from teaching myself.
    Obviously I did amazing in that class but they did teach me to write in cursive which text books never did for me and cursive is the primary writing type for Russian language.
    Tbh. I typed all of this out to reach this point. I struggled SOO much with the case system. I recognize it and am familiar with the concept of it. But it's SOO hard to apply it to all the vocabulary and how much it changes in every form. This is why I am jealous.
    That you can know so many languages and speak them so flawlessly. But Russian, my fav language is your best and even English does well for you.
    I tapped out with Russian at the case system. It was too much to remember and understand. Idk how you did it.
    I think I would do better to just be thrown in the country of Russia and learn over time through experience rather than learning the reason and know how.

    • @valtty143
      @valtty143 4 месяца назад +1

      hi! i’m Russian native speaker, i’m learning English. What about practicing together? i can help you with Russian, you can help me with English

    • @Leo-bf4lq
      @Leo-bf4lq 4 месяца назад

      you really gave up on learning it after all those years?

  • @JohnDoe-iq9bz
    @JohnDoe-iq9bz 4 месяца назад +3

    After hearing his accent whilst speaking Russian I almost thought he was a native speaker. Excellent video👌

    • @dzenacs2011
      @dzenacs2011 3 месяца назад

      He still has accent. Not fluently

    • @user-ri2qd4tg7o
      @user-ri2qd4tg7o 29 дней назад

      Also these videos arent always reality. For all we know, he practiced them sentences 20 times before recording the pronunciation in the video

  • @jaimebenito620
    @jaimebenito620 4 месяца назад +3

    English retains the Saxon genitive (Old English), but instead of being written as an ending, the s is added with an apostrophe. Think of "Johns car" (correct: John's car) as the genitive declension of John.

    • @inbloom-nj1dq
      @inbloom-nj1dq 2 месяца назад

      Also I-me, we-us, he-him, she-her, they-them

  • @bellathereader1328
    @bellathereader1328 5 месяцев назад +13

    Recently began Russian studies and agree with everything you said. Have a reason: mine is to speak to my Russian grandson and to my daughter in law’s family. My main fun so far when learning is Russian pop music and doing translations plus practicing pronunciation by singing along. I started with the Russian shuffle dancers. Currently I’m working on дальше-больше by Dabro. It’s a great song!!

  • @nancy6178
    @nancy6178 3 месяца назад +1

    I agree with some comments that learning cases are best by listening to native speech and memorizing the whole phrase in a context.

  • @AndresJ80
    @AndresJ80 2 месяца назад +2

    Quick PSA cuz no one in the comments are talking about it: the dative and accusative terms in the table at 3:24 are swapped, so try not to learn them incorrectly

  • @leenasipponen8958
    @leenasipponen8958 3 месяца назад +3

    Thanks for your video. I've been learning Russian for about two years, roughly the way you advised in your video. However, I am making extremely slow progress. The most difficult thing for me in the Russian language is the pronunciation. I don't learn words when I can't pronounce them. I know the pronunciation rules, but the Russian с, з, ж, ш, щ, ч, and soft consonants are difficult for me. And so are the aspects of verbs. The cases are not that difficult. Maybe the reason for my slow learning is my age: almost 81.

    • @ranaexoxo
      @ranaexoxo 3 месяца назад

      You got this!!

    • @watermelon3679
      @watermelon3679 Месяц назад

      it has nothing to do with the age I am 25 years old Russian is still a real pain in the neck for me 😁

  • @josephk9992
    @josephk9992 4 месяца назад +4

    Great video, thanks! I looked in comments for your music suggestions, sorry if I missed it but couldnt find them, I would love to hear some music just to get the ear for the language/rock out to some bangers!

    • @bennight5915
      @bennight5915 3 месяца назад

      I am also looking for the music recommendations, I haven't found them, did you happen upon them?

    • @ЕкатеринаГолдинова
      @ЕкатеринаГолдинова 2 месяца назад

      @@bennight5915 What kind of music would you like to listen to? I'm a native speaker and huge Russian music lover, so maybe I can suggest something

    • @bennight5915
      @bennight5915 2 месяца назад

      @@ЕкатеринаГолдинова Anything really, I listen to every kind of music genre, classical, country, pop, rock, rap, whatever you recommend I will definitely give a try. Thank you so much!! I am very much an auditory learner so this will be very helpful!

    • @ЕкатеринаГолдинова
      @ЕкатеринаГолдинова 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@bennight5915 Ok, let me share not the most popular russian speaking bands since the popular one are more or less known. Sorry I can be pretty bad at music genres
      Oldschool rock - Наутилус Помпилиус, Сплин, ДДТ
      Some just rock - Северный флот, Радио Тапок, КОПЕНGAGЕН, Магелланово Облако
      Alternative - LOUNA, Порнофильмы, Nizkiz, Обе-Рек, Noize MC
      fantasy folk - Карелия, Мельница, Земля Легенд
      Indie - Сироткин, Элли на маковом поле, Дарья Виардо
      Rap - Oxxymiron, Каста

    • @bennight5915
      @bennight5915 2 месяца назад

      @@ЕкатеринаГолдинова Oh my gosh you are amazing thank you so much!! I have already started listening to some of the Alt bands you mentioned (as that is my current hype fixation) and they are amazing!! You have been such a big help and I wish you the best. Thank you again so much!!

  • @harrisglrl
    @harrisglrl 3 месяца назад +1

    thank you i will return to this video in the future

  • @davidlarretaa.5077
    @davidlarretaa.5077 Месяц назад

    I want to learn more languages and this video is helping me a lot. With 17 years old I can speak English, Spanish and German in C1 level, in the future I want to speak Russian, japanese and French and I noticed that Russian and German have a lot of similitudes, now it doesnt look that hard, because I can compare it with a language that I already know. Thank you again this video actually help me a lot.

  • @falcone5287
    @falcone5287 2 месяца назад +5

    As a russian I have absolutely no idea why Im watching this :)

    • @od813
      @od813 Месяц назад

      You could become a teacher to teach the language to many ppl lol

  • @houstonsheltonbees814
    @houstonsheltonbees814 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks so much for the Links. Very helpful for me. Subscribed

  • @paulkiss1981
    @paulkiss1981 4 месяца назад +2

    Another native speaker of Russian here. Hats off to those who learn the language. Such a feat, really

    • @rajendrashinde7445
      @rajendrashinde7445 4 месяца назад

      I am learning Russian Language... I'm from Mumbai India

  • @BrettLesPaul
    @BrettLesPaul 4 месяца назад +2

    Russian is my first second language as well starting Feb of 2023. It seems that I went about it the right way. Knocked the alphabet out in a few days. That’s the easy part. I used RUclips resources for a while and then got Babbel. I continued to use RUclips resources to supplement Babbel. But I have been taking it slow and casual because I have no timeline. I don’t have a need for it. I’m simply intrigued by the language and culture. So even though I’m still only at about tourist level proficiency, because I slacked off heavy learning to focus more on more important things, I stay connected to the language by continuing to watch and listen to content that includes Russian language. I will eventually get back to intense study.

    • @joelfisk
      @joelfisk 4 месяца назад +2

      Wow. We appear to be living parallel lives, друг. Good luck with your studies!

    • @ЮлияВолобуева-й9в
      @ЮлияВолобуева-й9в 4 месяца назад +2

      Hi there !
      Wish you luck in learning this really difficult language!
      Btw I’m a Russian native speaker, who speaks English and learn french.
      I think we can help each other by having conversations and practicing
      What do you think? Just reply if interested

    • @adestemitope9730
      @adestemitope9730 29 дней назад

      @@ЮлияВолобуева-й9в. I am in

  • @mimigamesalot
    @mimigamesalot Месяц назад

    I'm currently learning Russian, and I'd love to hear the song recommendations you have!! If you don't mind, I'd also like to check out the discord you were talking about!!

  • @WildWestNeko
    @WildWestNeko 15 дней назад

    I have been trying to learn Russian since the 90s, and instead accidentally absorbed English. So here I am in the present, still trying to learn this sucker.
    If only I could find someone to converse with........

  • @hanislip
    @hanislip 20 часов назад

    So russian similar to portuguese

  • @alexandregb566
    @alexandregb566 2 месяца назад +5

    ... with Russian, this is the CASE!!! I freak out every time I hear the word CASE!!! since I started to leaned Russian. Coincidence? I don't think so!

    • @WildWestNeko
      @WildWestNeko 15 дней назад

      Yes, screw case declensions. None of the languages I speak uses declensions... not even Alemannisch.
      A lack of vocabulary and declensions is what always trips me in Russian, and I have no direct translation to work with.

  • @Mr_Cheese_YT
    @Mr_Cheese_YT 4 месяца назад +9

    I’m learning it from now ima edit that comment on every important step
    25/07/2024 - Learning the alphabet

  • @coolbrotherf127
    @coolbrotherf127 3 месяца назад

    One thing that makes languages so much more fun to learn is if you really enjoy the people and culture of that language. Trying to learn a language just to say you know another language usually leads people to quit once it gets hard after the early beginner phase.

  • @katgifi8616
    @katgifi8616 4 месяца назад +22

    Starting russian today, July 27 Saturday, will be updating everytime I make progress

  • @Patobombado_
    @Patobombado_ 2 месяца назад

    After learning chinese for almost one year, any alphabets in languages are already a win.

  • @felixschilder3189
    @felixschilder3189 2 месяца назад +3

    Can you share the link to the Discord server and do you have a spotify playlist with Russian songs?🙃

    • @КристинаШульгинна
      @КристинаШульгинна Месяц назад

      hii, do you study Russian language? I study English and learn him 2 month. Maybe you want to be my friend? I can help you Russian, and you can help me English.
      Sorry, for my mistakes

  • @Artishtar
    @Artishtar 5 месяцев назад +9

    Your russian accent is amazing..

    • @PolyglotCorner
      @PolyglotCorner  5 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks 😁 I’ve studied it for a long time

    • @malcowicz
      @malcowicz 5 месяцев назад +1

      Он прав. Аян действительно очень крут. Для меня маркёром высокого уровня являются причастные и деепричастные обороты. Далеко не все русские их знают))

    • @troll707
      @troll707 5 месяцев назад

      @@PolyglotCornerMake a video about sounding like a Russian native if you haven’t already

  • @victoriasfire
    @victoriasfire Месяц назад

    Thanks for the tips!

  • @dark1021
    @dark1021 5 месяцев назад +16

    Good tips. I actually learned how to read and write/speak it before I actually understood it. That worked best for me. You could put something in front of me and I'd read/speak it like a native. I'd have no clue what I was saying or reading but I could read/speak it. After I knew all the quirks with the language, genders, grammar, pronunciations etc that's when I started to focus on understanding it. Completely weird but I did it lol.

    • @bshthrasher
      @bshthrasher 4 месяца назад +1

      Picking the easiest route is a great way to learn a language. Once you learn the easy stuff, the hard stuff becomes easier as well :)

    • @eyem4freedom
      @eyem4freedom 4 месяца назад +1

      Kind of what I'm doing. I can read and speak most any word. Trying to learn rules is mind numbing. I'm 2 years on and I still don't know most rules. I figure I'll get there eventually. I'm learning on my own with mostly duolingo

    • @kanika742
      @kanika742 4 месяца назад

      ​@@eyem4freedom hey I am also learning with Duolingo plus the RUclips.
      😊
      And I also can read but can't understand 😅 It's been only a week but I found this method is more faster than going step by step.

  • @enricoandtherussianlanguage
    @enricoandtherussianlanguage 4 месяца назад

    Wow! Great suggestions indeed! Thanks!🙏🏻

  • @MiaGargalak
    @MiaGargalak 3 месяца назад +1

    Love your tips. Following them through. Would love to know what your favorite songs, artists, movies, podcasts etc in Russian are. Thanks, Mia.

  • @carleen.thompson
    @carleen.thompson 6 месяцев назад +7

    i’m impressed by this!! you broke concepts down well & made things seem approachable!

  • @jerryphilips9346
    @jerryphilips9346 2 месяца назад

    Thankyou for giving us a blueprint.

  • @PurpleChalk-mv1ws
    @PurpleChalk-mv1ws Месяц назад +1

    I am an English native speaker and I started listening to some Russian songs and they sound a lot like American songs with Russian lyrics

  • @Alaindelon3440
    @Alaindelon3440 5 месяцев назад +8

    Great video, thanks! I found the RT resource quickly, but just letting you know that they're not in the video description as you mentioned :)

    • @PolyglotCorner
      @PolyglotCorner  5 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks for pointing that out! I’ll update that now!

    • @acmendes2086
      @acmendes2086 5 месяцев назад +1

      i cant find it

    • @PolyglotCorner
      @PolyglotCorner  5 месяцев назад +1

      Check now 😁

    • @acmendes2086
      @acmendes2086 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@PolyglotCorner I see the link now, thank you! Btw does it work only for some countries?

    • @acelys-x
      @acelys-x 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@acmendes2086Some countries can't access it. A solution is to use a VPN

  • @JustSomeDude19
    @JustSomeDude19 5 месяцев назад +6

    Great Video, you explained everything very well and is very helpful to me. I am currently just 2 days into learning it, and you pointed out some important things I didn't know before. Thank you.

  • @Rundik
    @Rundik 4 месяца назад +13

    The russian alphabet isn't hard at all. Have you seen chinese or arabic? Arabic literally requires you to learn how to read every word because it doesn't have vowels

    • @afrosrb7828
      @afrosrb7828 Месяц назад +2

      I would argue against. I've learned the letters in 10 days. Just take 2 letters a day and you'll learn it in 2 weeks. It's actually easy, because it's just letters, so folks who don't use signs like the Chinese etc., don't have a problem really.
      Regarding the vowels, there are actually THREE which function as a prolongation letter (hurūf al-madd), which are summed in the word واي, the و (u) the ا (a) and the ي (i). Reading the Qur'ān or books with harakāt (vowels: fathah, dammah, kasrah) is what you learn at the beginning, later after you learned the words, you know which vowels are used, but knowing nahwu (grammar) and sarf (morphology) is also required for the right usage. It comes with time. Even today many Arabs don't know which vowels are being used in certain words when reading classical islamic literature. Also the same word can be pronounced with different vowels, depending on the tribes that spoke it like that, for example YAHSABU or YAHSIBU (he thinks)

  • @birddispenser
    @birddispenser 4 месяца назад +1

    Hearing the bit about the alphabet, I guess it is all about perspective. The first foreign language I started learning was Japanese (I am still not very good, I need more vocab) and, well, you know how it has at least 2k Chinese characters that you need to at least understand to be able to get anywhere with it. So, when I decided to dabble in Russian, the alphabet felt so easy by comparison. Studying Japanese has been very frustrating at times, and I have only recently gone back to it after getting particularly frustrated, I recommend that you try another language you have not previously studied before. While Russian is obviously much easier (by comparison) I have not spent nearly as much time with it, and it really put into perspective how much progress I had made with my Japanese, and ultimately how much I would beat myself up for small and understandable mistakes.
    So, long story short, if you are like me and you ever get frustrated while learning your target language try learning another completely new language (new to you, of course) and you will quickly appreciate all the progress you made in your target language.

  • @Part.No.1xbil.Prod.Tp.MXMVIII
    @Part.No.1xbil.Prod.Tp.MXMVIII 2 месяца назад

    What launched me into wanting to learn was listening to the band KINO. I started getting into new wave and 70s punk and then I found their song packha sigaret which really hit home for me as a youth on and off the street. Post-soviet alternative music slaps. Also shoutout to moscow death brigade.

  • @WhitEagle7
    @WhitEagle7 4 месяца назад +1

    As a native Russian speaker I am so happy I don't have to start it from scratch.

  • @Fatadevis
    @Fatadevis 5 месяцев назад +34

    I'm from the Republic of Moldova, and about 80% of the people here speak russian more than romanian (the native language), and in my school I had to learn it starting with 5th grade. It's been 4 years since I've been learning russian in school and I understand just a bit more than i can say, buy i can say that russian its really complex, especially the grammar part, which is simillar to romanian, but there are a shit ton of exceptions in every rule and so many things that just seem unecessary))

    • @HubbaDubba05
      @HubbaDubba05 5 месяцев назад

      Prepare to be "special military operationed" by the Great Russian Federation cause your country has more people speaking russian than the native language

    • @FaraStiriRO
      @FaraStiriRO 5 месяцев назад +1

      Pe bune 80% din moldoveni vb mai bine rusa decat romana? Eu stiam ca moldovenii doar vb rusa asa ca pe o limba a doua, cum vorbim noi engleza sau ceva. Wow.

    • @Fatadevis
      @Fatadevis 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@FaraStiriRO așa e, e oribil sa vezi in câte spații publice, restaurante, parcuri, cafenele nu se vorbește romana. E un sentiment așa dezamăgitor când mergi la magazin și casiera începe să-ți vorbeasca în rusa, neștiind o boabă de romana. Poate fi explicat asta și prin faptul ca Moldova e o țară post sovietica și comunistă, si ca încă exista o mulțime de oameni (în principiu bătrâni), care susțin vorbirea limbii ruse, comunismul, având o mentalitate foarte inapoiata

    • @FaraStiriRO
      @FaraStiriRO 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@Fatadevis Uff, da, din pacate asta e realitatea. Cine stie, in viitor poate in sfarsit Romania si Moldova se vor uni, pentru ca suntem aceeasi tara, aceeasi limba, aceeasi istorie, aceiasi oameni really.

    • @MishkoWtF
      @MishkoWtF 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@Fatadevis😂 да просто эти старики знают один из мировых языков и им просто нет необходимости учить что-то ещё особенно если учесть что они закончили школы много лет назад. Они просто решили не копать себе местечковую землянку, а являются сотворцами огромной части мировой культуры.
      Особенно кекнул с того что коммунистический менталитет - отсталый;) там долбанный маркс и Ленин в бестселлерах продаж, что в России, что в странах «развитого капитализма», а тут про отсталый менталитет басни рассказываешь;)

  • @Datho_turco_seyma
    @Datho_turco_seyma 2 месяца назад

    Thank you it helped a lot on having a strategy .Greetings from Türkiye

  • @taiga1295
    @taiga1295 6 дней назад

    Honestly I think Russian is pretty popular and many people learn it. It's probably easy to get the basics. I don't speak Russian but I can understand the gist of it when people speak it.

  • @austinbyte
    @austinbyte 5 месяцев назад +2

    Gut klingt! Vielen Dank!

  • @AriVampirz
    @AriVampirz 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm starting to learn Russian today. Please remind me to study

  • @kimberlymartinez-zr1vn
    @kimberlymartinez-zr1vn 5 месяцев назад +1

    Very good work brother! Keep making America proud 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @MJ-mu3kb
    @MJ-mu3kb 4 месяца назад +1

    its funny you mention music, my whole reason for trying to learn russian rn is because I got really into russian post punk.

    • @lemonstudios8617
      @lemonstudios8617 4 месяца назад

      SAMEEE Do you have any recommendations or favourites?

    • @MJ-mu3kb
      @MJ-mu3kb 4 месяца назад

      @@lemonstudios8617 Kino, Chernikovkaya Hata, ATOW, Творожное озеро, Dismay, and Electrobirds. those are only a few of the many ive discovered and fallen in love with..

  • @jurekprzychodzen6454
    @jurekprzychodzen6454 5 месяцев назад +1

    Practical tips, thank you. Btw, Russian language uses Greek alphabet, and linguistics-wise, English is not a Western European, but a Germanic language.

  • @hodorss
    @hodorss 2 месяца назад +1

    Я Русский но понимаю что если бы учил свой язык с нуля то у меня хер что получилось, ребята которые учат языки вы гении

  • @ruthbaker2667
    @ruthbaker2667 4 месяца назад

    Great advise....thankyou....also started my Russian journey 24/724😅

  • @christianefiorito3204
    @christianefiorito3204 Месяц назад

    German and Latin have m, w, n Spanish and Italian teo genders. I feel happy I had Latin at school that helps . German has 4 cases but uses a prefic. Latin has six cases and uses the ending depending on the case. If you have kids, let them learn Latin. It helps so much with the structure of language

  • @gethigh961
    @gethigh961 Месяц назад

    I would say learning the alphabet is 90% of learning pronounciation. As I learned german as my native language and after in this order, french, english and italian which all share the (mostly) same latin alphabet but very different pronounciation made learning and especially speaking russian really easy when you have a connection between certain letters я, ц, ш, щ, х etc. with pronounciations from the other languages. As an example я is said exactly the same as you would read ja in german, ш is „sch“ and so on. The biggest challange for most people I guess is rolling the r in all slavic languages but I had to learn this for italian aswell.

  • @perryvanderheide4373
    @perryvanderheide4373 Месяц назад

    Thanks a lot! 😁

  • @adamlasry5225
    @adamlasry5225 День назад

    Thanks a lot.

  • @АлексейЮрченко-т5л
    @АлексейЮрченко-т5л 2 месяца назад +2

    Хорошая мотивация для носителя русского продолжать учить английский 😁

  • @TheDeGeO
    @TheDeGeO 4 месяца назад +3

    Any russian music recomendatios? Possibly rock, metal or punk?

    • @PolyglotCorner
      @PolyglotCorner  4 месяца назад +4

      Yeah! Check out Кино, Три Дня Дождя, and Какая Разница, those are some of the alt/rock/punk bands that I like!

    • @Maria_Nizhny_Novgorod
      @Maria_Nizhny_Novgorod 4 месяца назад

      Radio Tapok

    • @cosmonught
      @cosmonught 3 месяца назад

      @@PolyglotCorner molchat doma, is one one my favorites

    • @dimavologdin5170
      @dimavologdin5170 3 месяца назад

      Search “Russian post-punk” on RUclips. It is calm, romantic and vigorous music.

  • @jamovfx
    @jamovfx Месяц назад +1

    It’s funny because I got into Russian from listening to Russian music, put me on to some bops bro

  • @jasonwojcik
    @jasonwojcik 5 месяцев назад +1

    Обожаю рок-группу Ви-2 и сериал "Кухня"!
    Спасибо за видео!

    • @sangamescity
      @sangamescity 5 месяцев назад +1

      да, только группа называется не "Ви-2", а "Би-2"

  • @DizzyCatX
    @DizzyCatX 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much!

  • @kno6ndg7
    @kno6ndg7 29 дней назад

    Ничего себе вы шпарите. Ваш русский лучше, чем мой английский, особенно, если сравнить их сложность.

  • @meganleaford
    @meganleaford 4 месяца назад

    Can anyone give any tips on how to effectively study the alphabet? Any exercises or memorizing techniques?

  • @epouxdemoname4444
    @epouxdemoname4444 Месяц назад

    Thank you very much 😊 I'm actually learning the genders and trying to talk, without proper conjugation 😅 Е моё.
    I feel that some points must be done at the same time.
    Can you share the link for Discord 🙏🏾

  • @Bruh-cg2fk
    @Bruh-cg2fk 5 месяцев назад +3

    thank you so much

  • @conundrum2u
    @conundrum2u 4 месяца назад

    Individual learning styles would mean that others would rearrange your list, but they're all crucial. For me, I tried to learn simple phrases but got frustrated with not understanding context. I was missing a lot of vocabulary. I readjusted to focusing more on vocab first (like baldandbankrupt suggested) and my comprehension went way up from there. I would recommend associating pictures with words (like flash card apps or whatever) to decouple your brain's natural association with your native language. I'm still learning the case system, but having context allows me to absorb the language, listening or visualizing, much better by simply knowing what's being talked about and figuring out the case system from there. Even if I don't understand cases perfectly, I know what a lot of the root words are and can work it out just knowing what's being talked about. I also prioritized listening and even though I didn't understand everything I was hearing, I was able to parse what was being said much easier and would look up words that I was able to discern much easier.

  • @UnrealSPh
    @UnrealSPh 5 месяцев назад +5

    Exceptions are your Best friends in you russian learning journey 😅 I would say that usually Exceptions have some rules in russian grammar rather than rules have some Exceptions

    • @watermelon3679
      @watermelon3679 Месяц назад

      😅😅 yes I got accustomed to exceptions

  • @m.i.n3447
    @m.i.n3447 5 месяцев назад +3

    Please share a list of songs and artists

    • @abdodeeb0
      @abdodeeb0 5 месяцев назад +1

      .

    • @joelfisk
      @joelfisk 4 месяца назад

      Kino, Korol I Shut, Molchat Doma, Otava Yo, Mikael Krug, DDT, Ulitsa Vostok, Nautilus Pompilius...
      There are so many great Russian bands and musical artists.

  • @johnnydub237
    @johnnydub237 Месяц назад

    I would love to hear some of your favourite Russian music artists please! I have loved Russian rap music for many years and my favourites are Obladaet, Kizaru, Pharaoh, Face, Хаски, T-Fest and the pop-singer Olga Seryabkina. I would really love to learn the language but it seems incredibly overwhelming and complicated. I spent 2 months learning Spanish in Mexico several years ago and I felt like an absolute todler with how I was progressing, it was terrible.

  • @Ismael27695
    @Ismael27695 2 месяца назад +1

    Do you recommend Counter Strike for Russian Practice?

  • @ddgame7625
    @ddgame7625 4 месяца назад +1

    I am a russian native, so if any english natives wanna train it, we can talk)

    • @claresage
      @claresage Месяц назад +1

      English native learning Russian спасибо

    • @adestemitope9730
      @adestemitope9730 29 дней назад

      English native learning Russia

  • @Wolf_GamingzYT
    @Wolf_GamingzYT 3 дня назад

    I also speak Russian but I don’t really know how to write correctly so I mostly use google translate, BUT I know when if the sentence makes sense or not

  • @tinkerer67
    @tinkerer67 Месяц назад +1

    Just went to check the RT site and it doesn't work at all. The whole website seems broken.

    • @1N73RC3P7OR
      @1N73RC3P7OR Месяц назад

      Your internet provider is probably blocking it. Use a VPN

    • @tinkerer67
      @tinkerer67 Месяц назад

      @@1N73RC3P7OR I can access the website, but many things like audio clips are not working.