This is much higher level than absolute beginners.. More suitable for someone who has started learning Russian for a few months at least... In which case its a good lesson.
ive studied russian for almost 2 months and I can understand most of this to the point of being able to answer the question. I think a few months is a bit too much fyi i have been studying 1 hr a day
This is most certainly not for absolute beginners. If I were just starting to learn Russian (i.e., an absolute beginner), this would cause me to doubt myself, and my abilities. I have seen people quit learning languages for this exact reason. RussianPod is a great resource, but this title is not even close to accurate.
" HoW aRe yOur rUsSiAn listening sKilLs" Considering I've been learning Russian for 3 years and just about heard a few phrases, not too good Gabriella, not too good.
6months ago, I couldn't understand a single word... After 6months of tireless efforts, am back here and I finally understood every single time the speaker said the word pizza, that's what I call progress!
I am preparing for my Russian A2 exam and I would say this video fits my requirement perfectly well! It is definitely not for absolute beginners, but for beginners who have some background in learning Russian.
I totally agree. I've been using Lingvist to teach myself Russian, and according to them, I've learned about the 3000 most commonly used word forms (not necessarily words, i.e. most commonly used forms which includes separate forms for verb endings, case endings, etc.) and I also have been doing listening and have the opportuntity to talk to a couple native speakers. And I'm able to understand this just fine, although I am occasionally encountering a few words I don't know. But I agree...it's not "absolute beginner" level. That seems a gross understatement! I can't imagine being able to follow this a few months ago. Russian is a hard language. I recommend Lingvist to get started mastering the basic vocabulary. I have used Duolingo too but I find Lingvist is much more effective because it teaches words and word forms in order of frequency of occurrence in typical use, which makes it more practical.
I've been at an A1 level in comprehension with weaker grammar skills. I have some russian friends who prefer not to speak with me in Russian as a principle (i.e. their English is of a higher level than my Russian) - and some Russian friends who almost exclusively speak Russian and hence prefer that I practice and try to make myself understood. I feel this exercise is adequate at my level to catch the context of everyday conversations that are slightly more advanced than simply personal / weather / calendar related questions (i.e. doctors, orders, +)
Absolute Beginner to me means sub-A1 - this lesson is *way* above that. The speech is too fast, there are no pauses after sentances to allow comprehension to form and settle - anyone who's just started the language (Absolute Beginner) will drown within the first 20 seconds.
Simon Kinsella I think you are misunderstanding how this system is meant to work. It's more like a child learning how to read by being read to. By listening and seeing pictures and the words you learn the language more naturally the way a child learns their native language. I have studied many languages and this is one of the best methods I have found to date.
Finally able to get this with self-study; 1 year + 3 months from when I first learned the alphabets. Today it seems, everything come together for the first time and I no longer rely on subtitles and ventured into questions I've never heard before and got their answers right. Still need a lot of replay in some places. Doable, but not for absolute beginner. )
Miselfis I'm probably super late to reply buuut this is definitely not for absolute beginners. I understand (and kind of speak) Russian since childhood, this video contains lots of words that beginners don't know, so don't worry~
Since I consider myself an almost absolute beginner and was still able to answer correctly most of the questions, it made me feel waaay better at Russian than I actually am... I couldn't speak to save my life though
NOT FOR BEGINNERS. I've been living in Russia for a year, studying 30 minutes a day, and speaking with locals many times a week. I can catch a few words but still have NO IDEA WHATS GOING ON.
I've been living in russia for a month and i study 8 hours in a week but I've understood the whole video. How can you catch just a few words ? I didn't get that point...
i consider this a sink or swim, at first its shocking but then it 'grows' they speak slow enough and without shaving off words...it's quite complete as far as losing all the distraction and making it practical. Just pick up a few words over and over until you can fill in the sentences as we go, and as words are recognizable, the idea is to get the gist, then eventually the rest...
Excellent. But not beginner. I have studied Russian for 3 years, but 3 years ago, this would have been very difficult. This channel is a useful supplement to careful grammar study.
I think this is great - fun, and repeats the same vocabulary so that it sticks. However, I agree with other commenters that it isn't absolute beginner level - I've studied Russian before and have a fairly good grounding in the grammar, numbers, time etc. It's just my vocbulary and comprehension skills that are lacking. There must be easier exercises out there for true beginners.
I have been studying russian for 1 month and understood 65% i would say this is not absolute beginner , and more A2, my native language is English, but i study 7 hours a day, and sometimes 13 hours on the weekends. I would say absolute beginner would be, Hi, bye, how are you, see you tomorrow, and a couple of popular russian nouns like. Grandma, Kat, dog, guitar, other easy words
I think this video is pretty good for a beginner within their first 6 months. I have been studying Russian for about 4 months (maybe an 1-2 hours day on average) and I kind of know what's is going on in the scenarios and conversations. But do I understand every word (or even 75 percent)? Absolutely not. But this is helpful for learning new words.
Gracias me gusto muchisimo, me encanto, muchas gracias por mostrarnos este nuevo video de ruso, y gracias por querer compartir sus conocimientos de la l3ngua Rusa con nosotros, que esten muy bien, chao.
No meme this time, but just wanted to leave this here. So, right after the soviet union collapsed my family along with basically the entire village migrated from Kazakhstan back to Germany (the village consisted of german immigrants, who came to Russia under the rule of Catherine II. and were later relocated from the Wolga river far into the country by Stalin). My family was part of it and they managed to start over here in Germany. What I now am really grateful for is that apart from being a native German speaker I can mostly understand my family speaking Russian as well, because I grew up with it more or less. Now what I´m trying to do is also learn the active part of Russian such as speaking and writing, since it always was left behind in a mostly german environment outside home. Thanks RussianPod 101 for offering this course for free. And I hope that those who are starting from 0 stay motivated, because apart from the memes it is a beautiful language with beautiful people in it!
Being in my second year of studying Russian, I understood a good part o the dialogues, but I agree with the commentators wuo say that this is not for absolute beginners, but for those who already have elementary notions of Russian
Yo guys, this is actually a really good way of learning, it's fast because that's how THEY TALK, they talk fast in every day conversation, so just practice, if you don't get it the first few times, just listen to it 100 times over, and you'll be able to do it! Don't worry guys
Questi dialoghi sono per abituarsi alla nuova lingua. Non é possibile capire ogni parola, soprattutto non vivendo in Russia, l'importante é capire di cosa di tratta.... e col tempo raggiungeremo il nostro obbiettivo 💪
Beginner level? I don't think so. How large a vocabulary do you need to understand this? Can someone recommend an actual beginners resource for listening?
Ryan, Russian is my mother tongue... The female does have a regional accent, although I can't place her in a specific part of Russia or one of its neighbouring countries))) It's not a big deal though, I'm just a little bit of a purist)))
@@ryanhill906 i'm also russian. They both have a strange stress, boy sometimes make o sounds in place of a like in north accent, but it's not standart russian
I started to learn russian today and I know some bad words from cs:go. Maybe one day I will be beginner :D my listening skill -100% note:I am also learning english :/
I’ve been studying russian an hour every day for 5 weeks with skype calls to Russian speakers. My teachers say I am not at a level to speak yet but I should try listening to more and I should understand. Я не понимаю!! Not one sentence did I understand... I’m close to giving up!
@@yagmur-xu4bo Hey thanks, I would appreciate that! We could help each other along the journey. Send a message to the Harry Long Official Facebook page, we can chat on there if it’s easier. Oh and, Merry Christmas!
This is why even hough I paid good money to use RP 101 I have not been there very often. The only thing I did not pay for was their 1 on 1 lesson teacher stuff. So for paying up front for "2" years, I am completely lost (((( Disappointed in RP 101 By the way I am a pensioner so that money was a lot of dinners
Well, it might not be for absolute beginners, but if you listen it all the way through you will notice that it is a repeating pattern. You will almost all the time find the same people talking to each other (e. g. a man and a woman, a salesman/-woman and a woman etc.) and the vocabulary is not very diverse. As an absolute beginner this is ridiculously complicated, but if you are a little advanced and have learnt how to inflect nouns, adjectives and verbs, it should work out after some time of getting used to it.
Let me know if you are interested in practice of spoken Russian. It's for free, I only want you for some help with English in return. Feel free to ask any question!
slavic country person will learn russian, 20 times faster, then people from other countries, for example: - Bulgarian studying Russian for 1 month = a person from France studying Russian for 2 years
Espero que mi comentario ayude a gente hispanohablante, el video esta muy bien hecho pero definitvamente no es para principiantes. Este nivel esta para personas que ya tienen conocimiento de ruso tipo B1 en adelante. Para aquellos que recién están empezando les recomiendo que lo usen para escuchar pronunciación y como se forman las oraciones. Si intentan escuchar y tratar de entender todo pueden llegar a frustrarse. Saludos
I thought instead of человеки they use люди in the plural... Interestingly you can and should do the same in German. In the singular human is Mensch, in the plural it's Menschen, but there exists a second form, a plurale tantum that sounds very similar to the Russian equivalent and is likely related to it etymologically: Leute. Usually the correct plural of Mensch would be Leute, and the plural Menschen is reserved for referring to the species. But in the last decades people more and more resort to Menschen even though they mean Leute.
Okay, this is definitely not for absolute beginners, but not too hard either, because I'm A1 level, and i could understand some words and this way i got some right, and others i had no idea at all. So yeah, probably A2 level.
I understand what's going on in this podcast in almost in 95 percent, but I am learning this language for one year (more or less frequently) and my mother tongue is polish, with is a little bit similar to russian, but i totally agree that this is not for absolute beginners ;/ This is almost B1 level in my opinion
Well, first of all, I have went through the first dialogue and I can hear that the speakers are clearly not native, they all have an accent. Their pronunciation is good, but the accent is still there. And another thing that needs to be said is that their speech is rather unnatural and most of the sentences they say are not build “the Russian way”. And yes, I am a native Russian speaker and a Russian teacher.
this system is not helpful to learn someone beginner of russian.. 1- conversation is very fast 2- we do not understand what they are talking...probably this class is good for 2-3 level russian learners,,
Hello Isik Pamir, Thank you for your feedback! I'm sorry that you had trouble with these lessons. I have a couple suggestions that may help you with this material. For your first issue, did you know that you can slow down playback on RUclips? It's super handy especially when studying a language. To try it, just click the settings icon on the lower right of the video, click "Speed" and select .25, .5 or .75 speed. For your second issue, try not to be discouraged if you have difficulty understanding the dialog on your first play-through. Just try to grasp as much as you can, then wait for the dialog to repeat with subtitles to get the full meaning. I'm sure that with adjusting the playback speed, revisiting these lessons and a little bit of patience, these lessons will feel easy to you in no time! For more features and lessons, we'd love it if you joined us over at RussianPod101.com! A free account will give you limited time access to the full features of the site, and even if you decide not to signup for a paid account after the trial expires, your free account will give you some access and perks that you wouldn't get otherwise. Thanks for studying with us! Team RussianPod101.com
bit.ly/3NbK7mu Click here and get the best resources online to master Russian grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
I'm italian and I perfectly understood "pizza".
David RF
I also understood "machina" -- car
I'm not italian and understood "pizza" too.
ueuheuhehuehuehueueuuhe goood man
Я ничего не понимал
HAHAH
This is much higher level than absolute beginners.. More suitable for someone who has started learning Russian for a few months at least... In which case its a good lesson.
A few months? Maybe for 8 hours a day.
ive studied russian for almost 2 months and I can understand most of this to the point of being able to answer the question. I think a few months is a bit too much
fyi i have been studying 1 hr a day
@@kyroh-bf2tf you're a super fast learner then, been learning everyday for like over half a year and I can't understand crap 😭
Я учу русский 14 лет
This is most certainly not for absolute beginners. If I were just starting to learn Russian (i.e., an absolute beginner), this would cause me to doubt myself, and my abilities. I have seen people quit learning languages for this exact reason. RussianPod is a great resource, but this title is not even close to accurate.
For absolute beginners of intermediate level :)))
Yes 😓
😂 da
" HoW aRe yOur rUsSiAn listening sKilLs"
Considering I've been learning Russian for 3 years and just about heard a few phrases, not too good Gabriella, not too good.
Не очень хорошо. Я тоже нет.
LOL
how is it now?
Well it seems like you haven’t been learning for 3 years then. Maybe you’ve wanted to learn for 3 years. Seems like you haven’t taken initiative
6months ago, I couldn't understand a single word... After 6months of tireless efforts, am back here and I finally understood every single time the speaker said the word pizza, that's what I call progress!
💀
I am preparing for my Russian A2 exam and I would say this video fits my requirement perfectly well! It is definitely not for absolute beginners, but for beginners who have some background in learning Russian.
你真棒
I am from Russia. My mom says that I don't listen well enough, so I'm here for the practice.
This is not absolute beginner level. Not even close.
Gregory Hoaja ты прав
it's not that difficult either. must be kind of Level A2
betoperdido I think, it is level A1.
I totally agree.
I've been using Lingvist to teach myself Russian, and according to them, I've learned about the 3000 most commonly used word forms (not necessarily words, i.e. most commonly used forms which includes separate forms for verb endings, case endings, etc.) and I also have been doing listening and have the opportuntity to talk to a couple native speakers.
And I'm able to understand this just fine, although I am occasionally encountering a few words I don't know. But I agree...it's not "absolute beginner" level. That seems a gross understatement!
I can't imagine being able to follow this a few months ago.
Russian is a hard language. I recommend Lingvist to get started mastering the basic vocabulary. I have used Duolingo too but I find Lingvist is much more effective because it teaches words and word forms in order of frequency of occurrence in typical use, which makes it more practical.
I've been at an A1 level in comprehension with weaker grammar skills. I have some russian friends who prefer not to speak with me in Russian as a principle (i.e. their English is of a higher level than my Russian) - and some Russian friends who almost exclusively speak Russian and hence prefer that I practice and try to make myself understood.
I feel this exercise is adequate at my level to catch the context of everyday conversations that are slightly more advanced than simply personal / weather / calendar related questions (i.e. doctors, orders, +)
Absolute Beginner to me means sub-A1 - this lesson is *way* above that. The speech is too fast, there are no pauses after sentances to allow comprehension to form and settle - anyone who's just started the language (Absolute Beginner) will drown within the first 20 seconds.
Simon Kinsella I think you are misunderstanding how this system is meant to work. It's more like a child learning how to read by being read to. By listening and seeing pictures and the words you learn the language more naturally the way a child learns their native language. I have studied many languages and this is one of the best methods I have found to date.
Finally able to get this with self-study; 1 year + 3 months from when I first learned the alphabets. Today it seems, everything come together for the first time and I no longer rely on subtitles and ventured into questions I've never heard before and got their answers right. Still need a lot of replay in some places. Doable, but not for absolute beginner. )
can you guide me from where to start
If this is for absolute beginners, then I'm way worse at Russian than I thought I was!
Miselfis I'm probably super late to reply buuut this is definitely not for absolute beginners. I understand (and kind of speak) Russian since childhood, this video contains lots of words that beginners don't know, so don't worry~
Are you still learning russian language?
Since I consider myself an almost absolute beginner and was still able to answer correctly most of the questions, it made me feel waaay better at Russian than I actually am... I couldn't speak to save my life though
Same
Definitely not absolute beginner but enough context clues that maybe an A2 level learner would do ok?
Two years ago, I barely understood a word. Now I understand every word. That's what I call progress! 😅
How did tou learn russian? Which Books? on your own? Courses? Full immersion?
you are funny
NOT FOR BEGINNERS. I've been living in Russia for a year, studying 30 minutes a day, and speaking with locals many times a week. I can catch a few words but still have NO IDEA WHATS GOING ON.
Meet the woman of your dreams. That sucks i started 2 months ago and can understand half of this
this is my 2nd week that i'm finally able to read the alphabet :)
@@UriBlack whats your mother tongue? Also, what books do you use?
I've been living in russia for a month and i study 8 hours in a week but I've understood the whole video. How can you catch just a few words ? I didn't get that point...
@@gokce3638 how is life in russia? :)
i consider this a sink or swim, at first its shocking but then it 'grows' they speak slow enough and without shaving off words...it's quite complete as far as losing all the distraction and making it practical. Just pick up a few words over and over until you can fill in the sentences as we go, and as words are recognizable, the idea is to get the gist, then eventually the rest...
I've been studying for four months. Although i couldn't understand everything, i could still answer the questions correctly. This is fun.
Excellent. But not beginner. I have studied Russian for 3 years, but 3 years ago, this would have been very difficult. This channel is a useful supplement to careful grammar study.
It's interesting to watch how others learn Russian when you are Russian
I think this is great - fun, and repeats the same vocabulary so that it sticks. However, I agree with other commenters that it isn't absolute beginner level - I've studied Russian before and have a fairly good grounding in the grammar, numbers, time etc. It's just my vocbulary and comprehension skills that are lacking. There must be easier exercises out there for true beginners.
I have been studying russian for 1 month and understood 65% i would say this is not absolute beginner , and more A2, my native language is English, but i study 7 hours a day, and sometimes 13 hours on the weekends. I would say absolute beginner would be, Hi, bye, how are you, see you tomorrow, and a couple of popular russian nouns like. Grandma, Kat, dog, guitar, other easy words
Russianpod, you and me understand "absolute beginner" very differently.
I think this video is pretty good for a beginner within their first 6 months. I have been studying Russian for about 4 months (maybe an 1-2 hours day on average) and I kind of know what's is going on in the scenarios and conversations. But do I understand every word (or even 75 percent)? Absolutely not. But this is helpful for learning new words.
Большое спасибо. Ваше видео мне нравится. Да , точно.
What does точно mean in this sentence
it means "for sure" i think
Gracias me gusto muchisimo, me encanto, muchas gracias por mostrarnos este nuevo video de ruso, y gracias por querer compartir sus conocimientos de la l3ngua Rusa con nosotros, que esten muy bien, chao.
No meme this time, but just wanted to leave this here.
So, right after the soviet union collapsed my family along with basically the entire village migrated from Kazakhstan back to Germany (the village consisted of german immigrants, who came to Russia under the rule of Catherine II. and were later relocated from the Wolga river far into the country by Stalin).
My family was part of it and they managed to start over here in Germany. What I now am really grateful for is that apart from being a native German speaker I can mostly understand my family speaking Russian as well, because I grew up with it more or less.
Now what I´m trying to do is also learn the active part of Russian such as speaking and writing, since it always was left behind in a mostly german environment outside home.
Thanks RussianPod 101 for offering this course for free. And I hope that those who are starting from 0 stay motivated, because apart from the memes it is a beautiful language with beautiful people in it!
Being in my second year of studying Russian, I understood a good part o the dialogues, but I agree with the commentators wuo say that this is not for absolute beginners, but for those who already have elementary notions of Russian
I feel so much better now I've read the comments! hahaha no way is this absolute beginner level
You could include the spelling of the numbers in the conversations
Я бразилец и изучаю русский язык. Я рад, читобы я понимал все. Спасибо.
More videos like this please!:)
For absolute beginners? Way beyond me!
Yo guys, this is actually a really good way of learning, it's fast because that's how THEY TALK, they talk fast in every day conversation, so just practice, if you don't get it the first few times, just listen to it 100 times over, and you'll be able to do it! Don't worry guys
Так приколько было😁хоть русский мой родной язык,но было очень интересно👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
M Horn парада
Хахаха
Потом, почему вы посмотрит видео?
@@ZackFairSOLDIER1stCl wow ты перевел this word удачи for you лol
Its very nice video for veginner, большой спасибо
If you cross out 'absolute' then the title will be accurate.
hi I have subscribed for the basic but how do I activate it I have sign in but I still can't use the full version why?
Gracias por este video de ruso, muchas gracias,que esten bién, chao.
Way too hard for absolute beginner, you should re-grade the level!
Questi dialoghi sono per abituarsi alla nuova lingua. Non é possibile capire ogni parola, soprattutto non vivendo in Russia, l'importante é capire di cosa di tratta.... e col tempo raggiungeremo il nostro obbiettivo 💪
great for intermediate learners - b1 - b2
Beginner level? I don't think so. How large a vocabulary do you need to understand this? Can someone recommend an actual beginners resource for listening?
Both Russian speakers (especially the female one) have a strange accent, that doesn't sound to me like standard Russian pronunciation.
Right, I have Russian friends and have learned some of the language. This is now how people talk in ordinary speech.
Ryan, Russian is my mother tongue... The female does have a regional accent, although I can't place her in a specific part of Russia or one of its neighbouring countries))) It's not a big deal though, I'm just a little bit of a purist)))
@@ryanhill906 i'm also russian. They both have a strange stress, boy sometimes make o sounds in place of a like in north accent, but it's not standart russian
I don’t know about you guys, But other than a few verbs and hard-to-pronounce words I can’t recognize, I think I can understand this just fine
1. 1:09
2. 2:15
3. 3:19
4.
Я хорошо понимаю! 💪
Can you please upload rest of russian alphabets? I would be so thankfull!!
I'm from Russia. I learning English. I will be happy to help you with studying Russian. My skype: Gibadullinas; e-mail: gibadullinas@gmail.com
I'm interested!
Write me you e-mail or skype
Азат Гибадуллин I am interested in the Russian lessions
I started to learn russian today and I know some bad words from cs:go. Maybe one day I will be beginner :D my listening skill -100% note:I am also learning english :/
I’ve been studying russian an hour every day for 5 weeks with skype calls to Russian speakers. My teachers say I am not at a level to speak yet but I should try listening to more and I should understand. Я не понимаю!! Not one sentence did I understand... I’m close to giving up!
can you practice with me, i want to learn russian
@@yagmur-xu4bo Hey thanks, I would appreciate that! We could help each other along the journey. Send a message to the Harry Long Official Facebook page, we can chat on there if it’s easier. Oh and, Merry Christmas!
@@harrylongofficial6248 thank you so much. i send message. can you introduce yourself
This is why even hough I paid good money to use RP 101 I have not been there very often. The only thing I did not pay for was their 1 on 1 lesson teacher stuff. So for paying up front for "2" years, I am completely lost (((( Disappointed in RP 101 By the way I am a pensioner so that money was a lot of dinners
-_- completely lost from the first minute
Thank you for the good content!
Thanks 🙏
With subtitles very helpful
I am a Polish guy and i know Russian only from CSGO and I understood everything, Kinda funny
Really useful :) Tahnk you so much
I've learn Russian for a few months, and this is a pretty easy listening, I'm glad to see that my russian is not bad at all!
This is perfect!!!
Really really perfect you are..
Well, it might not be for absolute beginners, but if you listen it all the way through you will notice that it is a repeating pattern. You will almost all the time find the same people talking to each other (e. g. a man and a woman, a salesman/-woman and a woman etc.) and the vocabulary is not very diverse. As an absolute beginner this is ridiculously complicated, but if you are a little advanced and have learnt how to inflect nouns, adjectives and verbs, it should work out after some time of getting used to it.
Russian speaker, speaks fluent russian, russianpod : put you at beginner level
with 3 year study Russian. I think it is fine. about B1 I blelieve.
Сегодня была очень хороший день
Let me know if you are interested in practice of spoken Russian. It's for free, I only want you for some help with English in return. Feel free to ask any question!
Евгений Зон hiii! Can i help?
Hi, sure you can! Is it your FB account with sheep on avatar?
Евгений Зон no, thats probably not mine :D do you have snapchat?
No I'dont' I have skype, telegram and a lot of other messengers
Евгений Зон whatsapp? If you dont have that give me your skype :)
Who tf thought this was for “absolute beginners”!?
All correct, I want to practice Russian plz, I can help with English , French and Arabic in return
thanks
I'm from Russia. I learning English. I will be happy to help you with studying Russian. My skype: Gibadullinas; e-mail: gibadullinas@gmail.com
will u help me too ? If I add u on skype?
Спасибо за уроки! Админка я узбечка я очень хочу изучать по русски вы можете помогать
3:04 Preditedopteptitepci
slavic country person will learn russian, 20 times faster, then people from other countries, for example:
-
Bulgarian studying Russian for 1 month = a person from France studying Russian for 2 years
Я понимать русский, спасибо!
fank you . you are very good.
Спасибо гавриела
Go on!
Espero que mi comentario ayude a gente hispanohablante, el video esta muy bien hecho pero definitvamente no es para principiantes. Este nivel esta para personas que ya tienen conocimiento de ruso tipo B1 en adelante. Para aquellos que recién están empezando les recomiendo que lo usen para escuchar pronunciación y como se forman las oraciones. Si intentan escuchar y tratar de entender todo pueden llegar a frustrarse. Saludos
Wow! This was very helpful! Thank you!
I thought instead of человеки they use люди in the plural... Interestingly you can and should do the same in German. In the singular human is Mensch, in the plural it's Menschen, but there exists a second form, a plurale tantum that sounds very similar to the Russian equivalent and is likely related to it etymologically: Leute. Usually the correct plural of Mensch would be Leute, and the plural Menschen is reserved for referring to the species. But in the last decades people more and more resort to Menschen even though they mean Leute.
Okay, this is definitely not for absolute beginners, but not too hard either, because I'm A1 level, and i could understand some words and this way i got some right, and others i had no idea at all. So yeah, probably A2 level.
That's A2-B1 level for sure
1:08
"Которую книгу" мы так не говорим "Какую книгу". Капец слух режет. Почему носители это не озвучили? Дальше не слушал.
+
Wish it had direct translations, otherwise good lesson
I understand what's going on in this podcast in almost in 95 percent, but I am learning this language for one year (more or less frequently) and my mother tongue is polish, with is a little bit similar to russian, but i totally agree that this is not for absolute beginners ;/ This is almost B1 level in my opinion
Так смешно смотреть , как другие пытаются учить твой родной язык!😂😂😂😈🇷🇺😆
Yes, so funny that I’m crying 😭 lol
Hello from Russia.)
"Как на счёт гамбургера?" - "насчёт" тут нужно писать в одно слово. Граматеи, не коверкайте русский язык, если в школе уроки прогуливали.
"ГрамОтей" пишется через "О". :-)
Вот этот вариант мне нравится
Anyone want to trade Russian help for English help??
How can I contact you?
The response to my comment was blank...I can't read what it says....
I haven't understood
Sorry. My computer didn't show your response. But now I can see it. I emailed you
Nika I'm up for it. Need help in Russian and can teach you English in return.
I played this video 0.75 slower and it's MUCHHHH BETTER
Me too! I find it a very useful tool
I've studied Russian for two months and I got most of them right. It's certainly not for absolute beginners, but definitely sub-A2.
How is this for absolute beginners?!?
I keep hearing a word that sounds like "mushina." Stay is that word?
That's written in Russian as "мужчина" and it means "man"
Супер
Well, first of all, I have went through the first dialogue and I can hear that the speakers are clearly not native, they all have an accent. Their pronunciation is good, but the accent is still there. And another thing that needs to be said is that their speech is rather unnatural and most of the sentences they say are not build “the Russian way”.
And yes, I am a native Russian speaker and a Russian teacher.
this system is not helpful to learn someone beginner of russian.. 1- conversation is very fast 2- we do not understand what they are talking...probably this class is good for 2-3 level russian learners,,
Hello Isik Pamir,
Thank you for your feedback! I'm sorry that you had trouble with these lessons. I have a couple suggestions that may help you with this material.
For your first issue, did you know that you can slow down playback on RUclips? It's super handy especially when studying a language. To try it, just click the settings icon on the lower right of the video, click "Speed" and select .25, .5 or .75 speed.
For your second issue, try not to be discouraged if you have difficulty understanding the dialog on your first play-through. Just try to grasp as much as you can, then wait for the dialog to repeat with subtitles to get the full meaning.
I'm sure that with adjusting the playback speed, revisiting these lessons and a little bit of patience, these lessons will feel easy to you in no time!
For more features and lessons, we'd love it if you joined us over at RussianPod101.com! A free account will give you limited time access to the full features of the site, and even if you decide not to signup for a paid account after the trial expires, your free account will give you some access and perks that you wouldn't get otherwise.
Thanks for studying with us!
Team RussianPod101.com
This is not for absolute beginners. Any teacher can tell this very easily.
@@russianpod101 how about changing the fucking level? You messed up
Ok.... so i followed with about 50% of the words. which is not bad. I'm not a total beginner though. I've got about a 500 word vocabulary.
Я был с удовольствием
но мы не так говорим...
this is definitely more than a year of learning. not absolute beginner at all
Tell me again how on earth this is for ABSOLUTE beginners?!?!
can you practice with me, i want to learn english and russian
I'm from Russia😂😂😂
+
Kill me..😂😂😂.. after one month of Russian learning I came here.. but again demotivated… lol
Not 😢absolute beginner