Please make more and more videos like these sentences. 2 times listening without seeing ans one time with writing. This is the most effective method. I thank you.
I'm finding this listening practice very useful. The fact that I'm not watching a video of someone speaking actually makes it harder to hear what words are being spoken. But that's a good thing because you're helping me get better at it. Not only that, there are a lot of new words that I don't understand so it's also good for my improving my vocabulary. I will do it in small steps and write these down for reference and practise speaking these aloud. :).
Thanks for your feedback! Yes, it´s difficult to understand the audio without seeing the words but this is the whole point of the exercise. There is a similar video on the channel that you may like ruclips.net/video/0FFg214Hu2g/видео.html
@@BoostYourRussian You certainly know how to teach. In my opinion, the best teachers are those that start off with content that doesn't all make sense straight away. I go by the rule, if it's too easy then you don't learn anything. OK. I'll have to watch that video as well. Maybe not tonight but once I've understood enough of this one.
Thanks so much for this exercise. I’m using it as dictation practice (I play the sentence, then write it out, then listen again, review, and then see it written by you and correct it). It’s amazing! Please do more of these :)
Thank you so much for these videos! They are just wonderful. They’ve become my go-to’s every morning to improve vocabulary, grammar, listening and speaking. Thank you so, so very much for dedicating so much of your time to these! It’s greatly appreciated!!
Super exercise! Thank you for creating it - will admit I struggled with lots of it, but I think that is just vocabulary. In the sentences where I knew all the words, it seemed easy. Guess learning a language is a lot about learning a truck full of words! Thanks
That´s true! Unfortunately, in a real conversation there will always be unknown words and you have to learn to guess the key meaning of the phrases even without understanding every single word
You are really nailing it with these excellent and helpful videos! I can easily read in Russian but I need to improve my listening skills and you are helping me.
That was a good exercise! The sentence "В комнате стоял страшный шум" (plus a few more) took me by surprise. I did not know that a sound could "stand" in Russian. :)
@@BoostYourRussianOh i see i misspelled the word. Thanks for a quick reply much appreciated :) Weird that translator doesn't actually warn that веревне is not typed correctly. я не пишу правильно!
Actually, learning the phrases until you understand them and being able to repeat them when you rewind and start over is an even better exercise than just listening.
At 4.25 you make really weird pronounciation, i don't think it has todo with natural speed. You create a new word out of two parts of the original sentence and "писадка" can be heard. Hearing this is very confusing, i know the original words very well, but like this the sentence becomes unclear. I talked to a native Belarusian speaker who mentions this is very unusuall. I hear these weird things more often in your videos. Do you speak some dialect?
It´s hilarious when foreigners try to criticize my pronunciation! I´m a native Russian speaker, born and raised in Russia, so no, I don´t speak a dialect. I just listened to the sentences that you mentioned and it sounds 100% authentic, no "weird pronunciation" detected. It´s normal when in spoken speech the end of one word is attached the beginning of the following word and is called "connected speech" in linguistics. That´s exactly the reason why for most foreigners, it´s difficult to understand spoken speech even if they recognize all words in a sentence individually.
@@BoostYourRussian Yes i can understand the hilariousness, but i don't think its that funny. I think I stick with Alfia and Max, i never heard this "weird stuff" with them😉. I understand the concept of connected speech, this is more reemphasised and interconnected.
@@BoostYourRussian I know that, but wouldn't it better if you'd use something useful? Just think about it: if you listen to something that very probably you won't be using in your life, the attention you can pay to it is very small; if you hear something interesting instead, you naturally pay to it much more attention.
Thanks for the video! It is very helpful. An idea would be to repeat the setences a fourth time after the solution was presented.
Please make more and more videos like these sentences. 2 times listening without seeing ans one time with writing.
This is the most effective method.
I thank you.
It’s really amazing that you share your knowledge. Thank you❤️😀
My pleasure, Jerry 😊
Wonderful practice! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it, Frank!
Excellent, спасибо!
Glad you liked it :)
I'm finding this listening practice very useful. The fact that I'm not watching a video of someone speaking actually makes it harder to hear what words are being spoken. But that's a good thing because you're helping me get better at it. Not only that, there are a lot of new words that I don't understand so it's also good for my improving my vocabulary. I will do it in small steps and write these down for reference and practise speaking these aloud. :).
Thanks for your feedback! Yes, it´s difficult to understand the audio without seeing the words but this is the whole point of the exercise. There is a similar video on the channel that you may like ruclips.net/video/0FFg214Hu2g/видео.html
@@BoostYourRussian You certainly know how to teach. In my opinion, the best teachers are those that start off with content that doesn't all make sense straight away. I go by the rule, if it's too easy then you don't learn anything.
OK. I'll have to watch that video as well. Maybe not tonight but once I've understood enough of this one.
Thanks so much for this exercise. I’m using it as dictation practice (I play the sentence, then write it out, then listen again, review, and then see it written by you and correct it). It’s amazing! Please do more of these :)
Such a great way to use this video! Glad you found it helpful!
Thank you so much for these videos! They are just wonderful. They’ve become my go-to’s every morning to improve vocabulary, grammar, listening and speaking. Thank you so, so very much for dedicating so much of your time to these! It’s greatly appreciated!!
You are so welcome! :)
Just love this video and I wish ur happy life .
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed the video!
Super exercise! Thank you for creating it - will admit I struggled with lots of it, but I think that is just vocabulary. In the sentences where I knew all the words, it seemed easy. Guess learning a language is a lot about learning a truck full of words! Thanks
That´s true! Unfortunately, in a real conversation there will always be unknown words and you have to learn to guess the key meaning of the phrases even without understanding every single word
Muy buen trabajo, Kristina. Priviet iz Argentina 🇦🇷🇷🇺
You are really nailing it with these excellent and helpful videos! I can easily read in Russian but I need to improve my listening skills and you are helping me.
Happy to help, Alfonso!
Awesome video! Thank you!!
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
This way of teaching is so good for differentiating the nuances of sound. Thank-you.
Happy to help!
Très utile, merci!!очень полезно, спасибо!
glad it helped!
you are unbelievable, you deserve all nice words. Thanks.
Wow, thank you for your kind words! :)
Watching from Gym no free hand to give you thumbs up!
Your teaching is awesome 💌
Yay! Thank you!
Very useful exercise!!!! Thank you!!!
You're welcome!
Great. Thanks
Thanks for watching!
Very good way to learn !
Thank you very much Kristina, to give us of your time and such great lessons...
Best greetings from France !
My pleasure!
That was a good exercise! The sentence "В комнате стоял страшный шум" (plus a few more) took me by surprise. I did not know that a sound could "stand" in Russian. :)
haha that sentence is grammatically easy but you do need to know a fixed expression "шум стоит" to understand it!
Very good. Excellent !!. I´m gonna watch all of your videos several times. Thank you for your time to teach us.
Thanks for your feedback, happy to help!
Это отличное и полезное видео. Спасибо!
Рада помочь!
Отличное упражнение. Интересно слушать фразы вне контекста. Мы вынуждены сосредоточиться на звуках.
Рада, что вам понравилось!
Молодец....🙏🙏🙏спасиво
Рада помочь!
@@BoostYourRussian Спасибо
Спасибо большой, Кристина. Мне гораздо пригодится.
Рада помочь!
Kristine,
why do you write : та'кое мо’жет случи’ться то’лько Одна’жды
but pronounce: тако’е мо’жет случи’ться то’лько Одна’жды
Min 11:02 ? A mistake?
yes, it´s a typo
how does: фёдор всю жизнь прожил в веревне mean in the countryside as the last word means rope according to translation very confusing sentence. 3:36
в Деревне, в не в Веревне. The word "веревня" doesn´t exist. Translator thought that you meant "веревка" (rope)
@@BoostYourRussianOh i see i misspelled the word. Thanks for a quick reply much appreciated :) Weird that translator doesn't actually warn that веревне is not typed correctly.
я не пишу правильно!
Actually, learning the phrases until you understand them and being able to repeat them when you rewind and start over is an even better exercise than just listening.
Agree! There are many ways to study with this video, not just listening to the phrases
♥️🌹♥️🌹♥️🌹
Спасибо..
Можно апеснит мне что значит "тем более"?
especially, let alone, moreover, even more so... зависит от котекста
👏👏👏
♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥
At 4.25 you make really weird pronounciation, i don't think it has todo with natural speed. You create a new word out of two parts of the original sentence and "писадка" can be heard. Hearing this is very confusing, i know the original words very well, but like this the sentence becomes unclear. I talked to a native Belarusian speaker who mentions this is very unusuall. I hear these weird things more often in your videos. Do you speak some dialect?
It´s hilarious when foreigners try to criticize my pronunciation! I´m a native Russian speaker, born and raised in Russia, so no, I don´t speak a dialect. I just listened to the sentences that you mentioned and it sounds 100% authentic, no "weird pronunciation" detected. It´s normal when in spoken speech the end of one word is attached the beginning of the following word and is called "connected speech" in linguistics. That´s exactly the reason why for most foreigners, it´s difficult to understand spoken speech even if they recognize all words in a sentence individually.
@@BoostYourRussian Yes i can understand the hilariousness, but i don't think its that funny. I think I stick with Alfia and Max, i never heard this "weird stuff" with them😉. I understand the concept of connected speech, this is more reemphasised and interconnected.
Glad you found the channel that you like!
Rudy, are you sure ? Are you a philologist in Russian language ? Haven't you heard of word elision ?
The host is really cute.
The idea is good but the sentences you use seem to me quite uncommon and of small utility for someone who is learning Russian
The goal of this lesson isn´t to teach you "useful" Russian phrases. It´s a listening test
@@BoostYourRussian I know that, but wouldn't it better if you'd use something useful? Just think about it: if you listen to something that very probably you won't be using in your life, the attention you can pay to it is very small; if you hear something interesting instead, you naturally pay to it much more attention.