Russian CASES Explained - Russian Language

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  • Опубликовано: 8 авг 2023
  • Russian Language Course for Beginners is open for enrollment right now! Please, join and learn cases with me❤️ Get them in a bundle or separately (30 hours of interactive videos, TPRS audio mini-stories for speaking, online and offline homework, games, community, and much more!)- russian.fromzerotofluency.com...
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Комментарии • 101

  • @RealRussianClub
    @RealRussianClub  Год назад +17

    Russian Language Course for Beginners is open for enrollment right now! Please, join and learn cases with me❤ Get them in a bundle or separately (30 hours of interactive videos, TPRS audio mini-stories for speaking, online and offline homework, games, community, and much more!)- russian.fromzerotofluency.com/bundles/levels-1-and-2

  • @moonasha
    @moonasha Год назад +78

    for those of you new to russian, i would just like to tell you that cases appear far more intimidating than they actually are. They are very easy to memorize. The male endings are numerous, but the female endings are almost all the same a lot of the time. Overall there's less than what, 20, 30 endings to memorize. What is 20 compared to the number of nouns, verbs, adjectives, that you need to understand the language? In my opinion you need 2000+ words to understand russian at a basic level. So those 20 or 30 endings are peanuts compared to memorizing actual words. You'll learn them just by reading, if you keep a table next to you and check it. If you take a week to just memorize them by writing words out over and over in all the cases, it will be even easier. 30 minutes a day, pick random words and adjectives, and write them in every case from memory, using a table when you forget an ending. Easy. Remember, the only way to memorize something like this is to USE it and make mistakes. Mistakes are how you learn a language, and you can't make mistakes if you just sit there not using the language

    • @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x
      @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x 8 месяцев назад +2

      What is male ending and female endings? Its mesculine and feminine not male and female

    • @djwolf4651
      @djwolf4651 4 месяца назад +1

      You have just made me more scared tbh

  • @AnthonyWabo
    @AnthonyWabo 11 месяцев назад +6

    Russian and Bulgarian have a lot of similiraties and it's amazing how Russian has a case system where in Bulgaria there are traces of it.

  • @zoum07
    @zoum07 Год назад +4

    I knew about the cases but I didn’t know we can interchange the words THAT much in a sentence!😮
    Very useful, thank you!

  • @deejay6869
    @deejay6869 Год назад +12

    Hi, Daria. Long time ago when I first started watching your channel to learn Russian, I was the biggest advocate about not having to learn cases in order to speak Russian fluently. Thank you for taking the time to explain how and why cases are important to the Russian language. Now you've got me interested in learning them. I never thought I'd say that sentence before.

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  Год назад +3

      I’m so happy to hear it❤

    • @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x
      @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x 8 месяцев назад +1

      So you were the biggest advocate of not learning cases without even knowing what caes actually are and what function they serve?

  • @critterhighland8427
    @critterhighland8427 Год назад +3

    I’m at work but I will watch later. Love you😀 and Спасиб

  • @didulahasith6629
    @didulahasith6629 Год назад +3

    Previet Ma'am 🤗I'm continueing your lessons and now i'm watching lesson 6 😊 Your learnings are so helpful ma'm 💖 Thank you so much for that 💖💖💖🇷🇺🇱🇰

  • @MariaShenoda-ve6tl
    @MariaShenoda-ve6tl Год назад +8

    I love you I follow you and learn Russian from you

  • @MuhannadHammoud
    @MuhannadHammoud Год назад +7

    As a native arabic speaker i can tell you that russian language is like arabic when it comes to words order, and obviously when we chang the order of the words we make changes in the word itself...
    You are a very good teacher and i love you...❤

    • @esterherschkovich5002
      @esterherschkovich5002 11 месяцев назад

      I understand Hebrew..and as both are Semetic languages..I should be ok😊

  • @Darkdally
    @Darkdally Год назад +2

    Привет! One thing I wanted to say, but I hopped on right at the end of the premiere, and I think it was kind of what you were saying. I started learning Russian through your videos, and I was going fast, and then it got to cases, and it kinda blew my mind. I almost got discouraged, but I was determined to keep going.. I just didn't know how. Some time down the road I just figured "whatever", I'll just learn phrases and the cases will come along as I learn to say things. It did. I haven't focused on it much, but the more I understand, the more it makes sense. Now, a couple of year later, just from being exposed to Russian so much, and now having friends in Russia, I probably could look at those complicated charts and retain some of what's there, because I've seen it, my brain remembers somewhere.. so yeah... just keep going and it'll make sense.
    Thank you so much for your videos that first taught me the basics!

    • @liambyrne5285
      @liambyrne5285 11 месяцев назад

      So after 2 years what level are you on the European framework of languages, and how many hours has it taken you and where did you get the phrases from

  • @dbagnis
    @dbagnis 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am amazed! The video you shared about this topic was the best I have seen. It is evident that you have a good understanding of the struggles we face while trying to learn "cases". I am from Argentina and live in Buenos Aires. Our country was built by immigrants who came from all over the world. Thus, it does not matter if you do not speak Spanish fluently, we will still understand you. However, I believe that it is different when it comes to Russian. Learning cases has been quite frustrating for me until now. Thank you so much for your help.

  • @anneswag4928
    @anneswag4928 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love this actually. when i first heard of cases it scared me because i learned spanish and they have a million verb tenses, i thought it would be like that 😂

  • @ER3xW4ha7
    @ER3xW4ha7 11 месяцев назад +9

    Struggled with cases for 10 years. Yes, you read that right. Я ОЧЕНЬ тупой хахаха. If you’re a native English speaker, I suggest learning them in this order: Prepositional, Genitive, Accusative, Dative, Instrumental. If your native language is an analytic language, the Prepositional is the easiest case to understand the usefulness and necessity of cases. Genitive next because it’s the most used, then Accusative because it’s a blend of Nominative and Genitive. The last two are a bit tougher to USE, not understand. With comprehensive input, reading, and predictive text on a phone, you’ll quickly use them correctly 70% of the time. Most of all, don’t quit. I started learning ten years ago and am now A1 level finally. If I can do it, anyone can.

    • @pinklady7184
      @pinklady7184 9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you very, very, very much. I'm going to learn cases in order: learning them in this order: Prepositional, Genitive, Accusative, Dative, Instrumental.

    • @I_Fight_Instacart
      @I_Fight_Instacart 2 месяца назад

      Sorry, but if it's taken you ten years to reach A1 level, I'm not sure you're the best person to give advice. 😂

  • @viktorlafontaine6222
    @viktorlafontaine6222 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. You really teach with passion.

  • @jerrylopez5979
    @jerrylopez5979 Год назад +2

    Отлично. Спасибо. This lesson is very helpful. I put the Russian language like solving the Rubik's cube. There are many steps to learn and in order. With practice and dedication to learning something difficult becomes easier to learn or solve. I still remember you saying in one of your early lessons practice practice practice.

  • @daltono5053
    @daltono5053 8 месяцев назад

    That video was very insightful. Definitely needed this so I can start with learning Russian.

  • @garys_shave
    @garys_shave Год назад +2

    Good to see you Daria, from Canada. ~cheers to you and your family.

  • @pixiesmith9912
    @pixiesmith9912 Год назад

    Thanks for this helpful video! 😊😊

  • @riversidema7578
    @riversidema7578 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for such a good explanation!

  • @GoneGongerOver
    @GoneGongerOver 7 месяцев назад

    I don't speak russian but ppl in my family do, but I speak fluent german whereas they make occasional grammatical mistakes. Now I understand what structures they're coming from and why what sounds wrong to my German ear sounds right to them! This is so fascinating

  • @alanbuckingham8788
    @alanbuckingham8788 Год назад

    Really great video. I'd never understood why cases exist until now.

  • @isalutfi
    @isalutfi Год назад

    Hello, am new subscriber. Thank you for sharing this great content

  • @martinvazquez2667
    @martinvazquez2667 Год назад

    Well done!

  • @anulearntech
    @anulearntech 10 месяцев назад +1

    My native languages (Marathi, Konkani, Hindi) have 6-7 cases and i had no idea about it as i never knew what the concept of case was (it was probably explained in school, i don't remember). Only after i started learning russian and making comparisons with my mother tongue, did I realise I have been using cases all this time involuntarily 🤣🤦. It's more intuitive for me to learn Russian using Hindi as many linguistic concepts that dont exist in English, exist there (like both languages have proper case structure), but theres hardly any content available.

  • @ThorIsBoss
    @ThorIsBoss 3 месяца назад

    Excellent

  • @claudioolate2516
    @claudioolate2516 Год назад +2

    5:35 ~ in russian how do we understand it?
    ~WE DON'T 😂😂
    This is one of the things that make the russian language challenging and interesting

  • @Javy_Valen_Tain
    @Javy_Valen_Tain 11 месяцев назад +2

    To sump up guys, just remember " whatever", great video Daria ;)

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  Год назад +2

      haha it’s my
      motto in life🤣

    • @Javy_Valen_Tain
      @Javy_Valen_Tain 11 месяцев назад

      You are definetely the teacher every student would love to have , Daria! greetings from Peru ;)@@RealRussianClub

  • @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge
    @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge Год назад +1

    Большое спасибо мадам 🌹💐🌹

  • @alekseidmitrievpro
    @alekseidmitrievpro 11 месяцев назад +2

    Using Masha as an example is what puts you, guys, into trouble. Use beer instead. Я люблю пиво. Люблю я пиво. Пиво я люблю. Unlike Masha, пиво is stable, constant, and reliable (also grammatically). Пиво is always there for you and will never leave you.

  • @marwadance
    @marwadance 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful

  • @venkyachari2889
    @venkyachari2889 Год назад

    Hi mam nice video and thank you please post weekly 2 videos.

  • @Sonya_007
    @Sonya_007 Год назад +2

    Word order in Japanese isn't very strict. We have the same concept with Russian cases. :)

  • @ForsakenTVbutreal
    @ForsakenTVbutreal 5 месяцев назад +2

    “Never compare Russian with your native language.” Me (a Bulgarian): 💀

  • @jitendergill9079
    @jitendergill9079 10 месяцев назад

    WOW, I COULD NOT RECOGNIZE YOU LOOK SO DIFFERENT I HAVE JUST STARTED YOUR RUSSIAN LESSON AND I AM ON LESSON 2.

  • @russianmelodrama
    @russianmelodrama Год назад +1

    Cases are probably the hardest to learn in Russian

  • @nunooptimista5002
    @nunooptimista5002 Год назад

    Dobre otra, spasiba

  • @1massboy
    @1massboy Год назад

    I been learn Russian for some years and I still mess up cases al the time especially with adjectives.
    But I just keep chugging along trying to improve over time

  • @3finnian
    @3finnian 11 месяцев назад

    Спасибо Дарья, или, лучшие сказать "Whatever Daria" 😘

  • @dea690
    @dea690 10 месяцев назад

    Romanian has the cases also: Dativ, Genitiv, Nominativ, Acuzativ, and so on.
    It’s easy.

  • @user-ql8os8mz5o
    @user-ql8os8mz5o Год назад

    If nouns have adjectives or participles, they have cases and changeable endings too. I just inform.

  • @Poor92
    @Poor92 10 месяцев назад

    I speak Sanskrit. Learning the Russian cases was easier for me.

  • @ghost_java35
    @ghost_java35 11 месяцев назад

    word order in japanese is not strict at all. stuff can be in any order more or less as long as the case particles are correct.

    • @RealRussianClub
      @RealRussianClub  11 месяцев назад

      I’ve been studying Japanese for a year, and word order is VERY strict compared to Russian😆

  • @Arahansannihilation
    @Arahansannihilation Год назад

    Good lesson. According to one wise Bald and Bankrupt guy - "don't learn Russian grammar" and he speaks understandable Russian everywhere he goes.

  • @whukriede
    @whukriede 11 месяцев назад

    Famine occurs when there's a lack of food, therefore we say feminine. "Tal" is a valley in German (dale), so we say neutral, not "neurtal". I'm certain there are not so many errors in your Russian as there are in the English. Thanks for the effort anyways, I'm listening now!

  • @sethseth9059
    @sethseth9059 Год назад

    If its John Wick then you don't need to case ending for Jack, we know.

  • @bewatermyfriend7355
    @bewatermyfriend7355 8 месяцев назад +1

    The grammar is very similar to Bosnian.

  • @quinceywilliams4450
    @quinceywilliams4450 9 месяцев назад

    Every time people question how people can be as crass as they are today, I have No problem believing. I have seen. And it's World-wide. I have cases.

  • @user-jm3xl7rg5k
    @user-jm3xl7rg5k Год назад +1

    Cases in Russian exists, because they did not die, like in other languages.)))
    Proto-indoeuropean had (supposedly) eight cases, from which survived only six.
    Also, it is general mistake to say English has no cases. Because it has two: possesive and "everything else". ) ))

    • @moonasha
      @moonasha Год назад +1

      english cases also still persist in certain ways, like when you say "give it to me". 'To me' is basically left over dative case version of the I pronoun

    • @user-jm3xl7rg5k
      @user-jm3xl7rg5k Год назад

      @@moonasha yes, still some remains of old case system in pronouns ("I -- me -- mine", etc...)

  • @zakaria5039
    @zakaria5039 Год назад

    So who ate who?😅, I though the crocodile eat the tourist...so krokodil ect tourista, right? I know it's sad 😊. I took russian language long time ago and I love your courses, because I never really understood many details. Thank you 🙏

  • @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge
    @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge Год назад +2

    8:03 Is Джек(Jyeck) или Джэк(Jack)?

    • @user-jm3xl7rg5k
      @user-jm3xl7rg5k 11 месяцев назад

      Традиционная транслитерация: "Джек".

    • @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
      @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar 11 месяцев назад +2

      By pronunciation же=жэ, жи=жы, жа=жя, жу=жю. Same with letters ц, ш, щ, ч. Джек - correctly

    • @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge
      @Yohann_Rechter_De-Farge 11 месяцев назад

      @@oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar спасибо 🌹🌺🌷

  • @reznovvazileski3193
    @reznovvazileski3193 10 месяцев назад

    If I guess the case and get it wrong, will I still be understandable? I don't mind it sounding weird but if I understand correctly from this video if I use any case at all at least the context is understood right? John might be a man but say I call him John-'y' instead of John-'a', everybody should still understand that he is the one getting murdered because that's the cased word?

  • @niravelniflheim1858
    @niravelniflheim1858 11 месяцев назад

    That was interesting! In English the word order isn't super-strict but we change the verb instead of the noun, so like "a crocodile ate a tourist" is equivalent to "a tourist was eaten by a crocodile". 😮
    Hmm. "A tourist a crocodile ate" is also understandable, but then it sounds like the grammar of Yoda from Star Wars... odd, basically 😅
    I like the sound of the Russian system. Thanks for the lesson! 😊

  • @verissimodasilva8925
    @verissimodasilva8925 11 месяцев назад

    Здравствуйте, Даша! Хотел учить в веше сайт но не знаю если есть возможность чтобы оплатить с карта банка виза, потому что живу в Москве!

  • @MooseCracker
    @MooseCracker 11 месяцев назад

    Learning starting from English, German cases are much tougher to follow than Russian.

    • @liambyrne5285
      @liambyrne5285 11 месяцев назад

      Yea rite ,pull through other one

  • @mazyarkhanlar8134
    @mazyarkhanlar8134 Год назад

    Russian is Indo-European language ,
    I see many people from India learn Russian easy ,
    Sometimes European people complain but I am 100 percent sure ,If the person whose native language is Italian ,Spanish ,French will be not difficult .
    Because Indo -European familly group,
    But there is one difference ,
    Russian needs patience and slow process,because it has richer grammar,
    Other Indo -European language like Bulgarian lost “Cases rule “ because they were under “Ottomans “

  • @felixw8004
    @felixw8004 8 месяцев назад

    why does she say accusative of турист is туриста? May grammar table says for masculine nouns the ending does'nt change

    • @widsquird
      @widsquird 8 месяцев назад

      If it's an "animate" noun it's ending will change, meaning it represents a person or animal

    • @Rayenn_19
      @Rayenn_19 4 месяца назад

      Because tourist is animate, and in masculine animate objects, the endings for accusative and genitive are the same. Турист - Туриста - Туриста (N - G - A)
      Whereas in inanimate objects, the endings for accusative and nominative are the same. Стол - Стола - Стол (N - G - A)

  • @icejumperke
    @icejumperke 11 месяцев назад

    When you say “Джон убил джека”, doesn’t that mean that John killED Jack in the past..?

  • @ccb150
    @ccb150 Год назад

    i understand when trying to make something a little clear especially for interests in story books and being effective in writing and considering its rules, but how come something negative has to happen in order for it to be a story? Its like a horror mexican story.

  • @mitchyoung93
    @mitchyoung93 11 месяцев назад

    German manages to have cases, articles, and super strict word order.

  • @EHonda-ds6ve
    @EHonda-ds6ve Год назад

    As a german native speaker. It is in german more flexible than in English. German was a bad example.

  • @ed-ew6cn
    @ed-ew6cn Год назад

    за слово "книги" ютуб не банит?

    • @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
      @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ютуб вообще за слова не банит

  • @OFFSITE88
    @OFFSITE88 11 месяцев назад +1

    How do Russian children learn this?

    • @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
      @oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaar 11 месяцев назад +2

      В детстве

    • @SvetlanaMakarenkova
      @SvetlanaMakarenkova 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@oskaaaaaaaaaaaaaarа потом забываем🤭

    • @Rayenn_19
      @Rayenn_19 4 месяца назад +2

      Children don't learn a language the way adults learn.
      Most of the time, children learn their first language by imitating others and by doing a lot of practice. They don't really understand what's the technicality behind grammars. They just use the way others use it

  • @lucifer_morning_star462
    @lucifer_morning_star462 Год назад +2

    Please Mam teach my fellow russians HINDI too Love from INDIA, We will be Friends forever and Felt really sad today as Ukraine attacked on Moscow,My condolences are with you people.

  • @user-mb6xm8ed8s
    @user-mb6xm8ed8s 5 месяцев назад +1

    ❤😊🎉❤🫶 Russia and Bharat good friend friend ilu❤🩷🩵🫶

    • @Rayenn_19
      @Rayenn_19 4 месяца назад +1

      What is Bharat?

  • @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x
    @READ_MY_channel.DESCRIPTION_x 8 месяцев назад

    In india we have tourists from cuba who steal our crocodiles and eat them. Its true

  • @hasankeser
    @hasankeser Год назад

    It is not unique to Russian. Just think about German. It also has similarly complex cases...

  • @luckyfriday5366
    @luckyfriday5366 Год назад

    Practice enough and you do not have to "learn" cases; it will become second nature...I know, some rather old fashioned methods of teaching languages used to throw grammatics tables at you - not any more, luckily.

  • @User48729
    @User48729 Год назад

    Дарья, а кто вообще придумал падежи? он осложнял нам задачу 🤕 наверное он не любил иностранцев 😄😄😄😄😄

    • @I_Fight_Instacart
      @I_Fight_Instacart 2 месяца назад

      He probably listened to *FOREIGNER* 🎸🤟🎶

  • @fedbkadosidevskiy
    @fedbkadosidevskiy 10 месяцев назад

    хахахах я тут русская

  • @yoannlemeko7735
    @yoannlemeko7735 4 месяца назад

    I think it"s sad how learners nowadays are lazy ... they want to learn a language but don't want the efforts. Lazy lazy and pathetic. I'm french and learning japanese too and it's hard. I read that some learners want to get rid of kanjis and write only in hiragana because it's easier. Learning a language is a long path and I can't stand this new generation of people who want to "learn" a language in 2 months. So no ... I would not say "whatever"

  • @johnvelas70
    @johnvelas70 Год назад

    I just got done explaining for the gajillionth time why I only ask women technical questions.
    Serves me right. The Jarhead has the following flaws: 1.) has an IQ of soup 2.) is a Jarhead 3.) is not a woman
    I hope I'm not insulting soup.