Learning Russian is like trying to understand your enchantment spells in Minecraft... Basically everytime i say something in Russian i get afraid that my Cat now has Fire Resistance IV...
No I speak eanglish and russian. English spelling is some cruel joke. Pacific ocean has 3 cs and all have different pronunciations. Enough and though aren't rhymes. The fact that k is silent sometimes. The letters x, c and q aren't even needed. Russian is easy to spell in if you get basic rules. Oh and unpronounced letter e at the end of English words like one, rule, but not in the word tool which is a rhyme with rule... English needs some spelling reform.
Это не немые буквы. Ь делает стоящий впереди согласный мягким (соль - [сол’]),если его нет, то согласный звучит твердо (пол - [пол]), еще они разделяют согласный и гласный, так что такие гласные, как Я, Ю, Е, Ё произносится полностью [ЙА, ЙУ, ЙЭ, ЙО], а впереди стоящий согласный произносится твердо, если стоит Ъ (съёмка - [сйомка]) или мягко, если стоит Ь (пьеса - [п’йэса])
silent letters in WORDS, but in Russian this is letters of the alphabet, they don't have sound at all. If, for instance, "r" or "t" or "h" are silent in a word, you can pronounce them separately from a word, but you can't pronounce "ь" no matter how strong your desire is😂 just because the sound of this letter doesn't exist 😌
Плохое объяснение. Твёрдый знак это пауза внутри слова, чтобы буквы не объединялись. Мягкий знак это тоже пауза, но ещё он смягчает буквы которые смягчаются.
Твердый знак внутри слов означает, нужно ли при произношении менять гласные после Й, чтобы согласные стали твёрдыми Объявление - Обйавленийе Подъезд - Подйэст При отсутствии твёрдого знака внутри слов менять гласную при произношении после Й не нужно Поезд - Пойест Поляна - Полйяна
@@shamil_yusupovне существует такого правила, как и не существует звуков [е] и [я]. Что в слове "подъезд", что в слове "поезд " будут звуки [j'] ([й']) и [э]. Только в одном случае буква е обозначает два звука из-за твёрдого знака, а в другом случае из-за предшествующей гласной.
That's not exactly a good explanation. See, all consonants in Russian can be either hard or soft sounding, depending on the vowel that follows. There's also 2 types of vowels in Russian - ones that consist of one (а, у, и, ы, о, э) and two sounds (я - ja, which is й/j and а combined basically, е - je, ё - jo, ю - ju). When you say a "double" vowel after a consonant, the consonant goes soft sounding, and vowel loses its first part (that й/j thing). Let's try to explain: in мёд (möd, honey) m is followed jo (ё), but you don't say it like m-jod, with j in ё being pronounced. You say soft m followed by o, like m'od. But sometimes, such vowel doesn't make the consonant soft, and you have to mark that in some way. That's exactly the function of ъ (твёрдый знак, hard sign) - to separate the syllables and let you know that you should pronounce hard consonant and double vowel. For example: подъезд (entrance) is pronounced pod-jezd. Soft sign (ь) plays that role a lot too, only indicating that a certain consonant is soft AND you pronounce both sounds of the vowel.
@@lebronjesus172 no ? theres dozens of other language families unrelated to the indo european language family, for example the uralic languages, the sino tibetan languages, the dravidian languages, the turkic languages the list goes on
Bro, we use the Latin Alphabet so it's like the best and the easiest to pronounce and I speak German, technically in Swiss-Austrian Dialect but still German.
Well, your experience is quite similar to mine, I am learning Sanskrit and the rules, grammar and inflections are insane, plus the vocab- fun fact, it has about 90 synonyms for love like the love between a father and daughter, between 2 sister-in laws ( its a property-based language). However, I am very satisfied that the Devanagari script is perfect for Sanskrit to the extent, that we can determine the historical pitch accents between Vedic, classical and modern Sanskrit( Kudos to Maharishi Panini for having standardized it in 1000- 800 BC). So, the language is like a time capsule, I can read 4500 years old Sanskrit literature with ease, however the spoken grammar and nuances is very different.
Fun fact: hard sign was used A LOT in Russian Empire Example: Modern Russian: Привет, хочу задать странный вопрос тебе. (Hello, i want to ask you a weird/strange question) Pre-Revolutionary Russian: Привѣтъ, хочу задать странный вопросъ, тебѣ
Oh boy, i had a struggle while learning how to read old church slavic, because that language had the same letters.... it took me months to remember whitch is whitch 😅😅
@@Vkusnayasabaka Sorry but what does english grammar has to do with learning how to read old version of my own language? :) And i am not using english that often so..but thank for pointing that out. Have a nice day :)
It actually makes the words sound soft for example: The word "брать(to take)" sounds like [bryætç] but if it didn't had the ь it would sound like [brat] Also its named myaxkaya znak
both makes sense, unless you're talking about the language itself. if i were to teach someone english, id refer to the latin alphabet as the english alphabet. however, if i were (for example) telling someone they cant have a username has characters other than the latin alphabet, it would be correct.)
He meand russian variant of Cyrillic alphabet. Because not all of Cyrillic languages contain Ь & Ъ ... or they can contain these letters, but use them by other ways
The hard sign can also mutually seperate the two letters on either side. Ав that would sound like av Whereas аъв would sound like A V. You take almost like a comma when you say it
Про мягкий знак все верно, он может выполнять функцию как смягчения, так и разделения. Твердый знак в современном русском языке не делает звук тверже, он лишь разделяет (и то он может быть только после приставки на согласный и перед корнем на е/я/ю/ё
Мягкий знак выполняет две функции: смягчение и разделение в корне слова, твердый знак выполняет функцию разделения между приставкой и корнем слова. Живи теперь с этим.
Well, I'm Russian and I'm studying at a philological institute, so... I am learning Old Church Slavonic. And Proto-Slavic too. Previously, these letters sounded. They had a very short closed sound. And then there was a process called the "fall of reduced vowels". In some words, these letters disappeared, in others they turned into other vowels. And where they remained, their functions changed.
Incorrect. Soft sign indeed makes the consonant before it sound softer, like it has a very short [i] sound after it. But hard sign is put between consonants and vowels when vowels like е, ë, ю, я (ye, yo, yu, ya) should start with that [y] sound after a consonant. Because without hard sign they don't have that [y] sound after consonants. For example: дю would sound like [d(i)u] (i is very short, like it's a part of d sound) and дъю would sound like [dyu] with a little pause between d and y, so it doesn't merge with d at all.
Изучаю русский язык по видео на английском. Это какой-то новый уровень просвещения😂
Ооо, это ты ещё не видел
Да нет, наверное
да ладно, апостроф в английском тоже не читается. А в иврите и арабском, вообще гласных нет.
😂
Попробуй изучить русский на английском
Оълрп олыовлоплсо шаовту
Это они еще не видели мем с ъуъ)
ахахахааха реально, такое пока что рано показывать
А что он означает?
@@MP-ej1vhНедовольное кряхтение кота 😂
Согл
Оно же как-то произносится? 😂
I’m learning Russian and I gotta admit this language is WILD
It's easy
Se
@@Lemonasz idk if it is I can't speak it only a little bit bc music
@@Lemonasz really? Maybe for u
@@Lemonasz Да
Yes, our language is complex! You also have to understand “Are you going for a walk? - YES NO, probably”
The thing is, the correct way to translate this would be "well no, probably")) Nothing hard to understand that)
The word "да" has several meanings, in this phrase it doesn't mean "yes", it means more like "well,..."
Значит у него много значений
@@user-mu3pr7vu8z прям с языка снял. а то заипали эти умники со своим "да нет наверное"
Да
Learning Russian is like trying to understand your enchantment spells in Minecraft...
Basically everytime i say something in Russian i get afraid that my Cat now has Fire Resistance IV...
PFFT-
😂😂😂👍🏼
Хвэаэаээаэажаэвэа проорала жёстко 😂😂😂😂
No I speak eanglish and russian. English spelling is some cruel joke. Pacific ocean has 3 cs and all have different pronunciations. Enough and though aren't rhymes. The fact that k is silent sometimes. The letters x, c and q aren't even needed. Russian is easy to spell in if you get basic rules. Oh and unpronounced letter e at the end of English words like one, rule, but not in the word tool which is a rhyme with rule... English needs some spelling reform.
😂😂😂😂
Every language has silent letters in words. This is not a weird thing. It's the most common thing
++
Это не немые буквы. Ь делает стоящий впереди согласный мягким (соль - [сол’]),если его нет, то согласный звучит твердо (пол - [пол]), еще они разделяют согласный и гласный, так что такие гласные, как Я, Ю, Е, Ё произносится полностью [ЙА, ЙУ, ЙЭ, ЙО], а впереди стоящий согласный произносится твердо, если стоит Ъ (съёмка - [сйомка]) или мягко, если стоит Ь (пьеса - [п’йэса])
silent letters in WORDS, but in Russian this is letters of the alphabet, they don't have sound at all. If, for instance, "r" or "t" or "h" are silent in a word, you can pronounce them separately from a word, but you can't pronounce "ь" no matter how strong your desire is😂
just because the sound of this letter doesn't exist 😌
Плохое объяснение.
Твёрдый знак это пауза внутри слова, чтобы буквы не объединялись.
Мягкий знак это тоже пауза, но ещё он смягчает буквы которые смягчаются.
Передам своим дверям, моли в шкафу и соли в салате
какая еще пауза? нет там никакой функции "паузы".
Твердый знак внутри слов означает, нужно ли при произношении менять гласные после Й, чтобы согласные стали твёрдыми
Объявление - Обйавленийе
Подъезд - Подйэст
При отсутствии твёрдого знака внутри слов менять гласную при произношении после Й не нужно
Поезд - Пойест
Поляна - Полйяна
@@shamil_yusupovне существует такого правила, как и не существует звуков [е] и [я]. Что в слове "подъезд", что в слове "поезд " будут звуки [j'] ([й']) и [э]. Только в одном случае буква е обозначает два звука из-за твёрдого знака, а в другом случае из-за предшествующей гласной.
@@shamil_yusupov полйана - полъяна - неверно. Поляна - в этом случае мягко звучит л и всё
That's not exactly a good explanation. See, all consonants in Russian can be either hard or soft sounding, depending on the vowel that follows. There's also 2 types of vowels in Russian - ones that consist of one (а, у, и, ы, о, э) and two sounds (я - ja, which is й/j and а combined basically, е - je, ё - jo, ю - ju). When you say a "double" vowel after a consonant, the consonant goes soft sounding, and vowel loses its first part (that й/j thing). Let's try to explain: in мёд (möd, honey) m is followed jo (ё), but you don't say it like m-jod, with j in ё being pronounced. You say soft m followed by o, like m'od.
But sometimes, such vowel doesn't make the consonant soft, and you have to mark that in some way. That's exactly the function of ъ (твёрдый знак, hard sign) - to separate the syllables and let you know that you should pronounce hard consonant and double vowel. For example: подъезд (entrance) is pronounced pod-jezd.
Soft sign (ь) plays that role a lot too, only indicating that a certain consonant is soft AND you pronounce both sounds of the vowel.
I am Russian speaking, I read your comment and never noticed this before😳
You did really good job✨
Где э потерялся?)
Я думаю, что люди, которые говорят по-русски, довольно круты!
факт
Да
Да
А ты кто тогда
Владение языком еще ничего не значит. Крутость проявляется в том, чего человек добился сам, а не в том, что он выучил неосознанно.
I gotta admit
Russian sounds suspiciously similar to Sanskrit
theyre both indo-european Languages, descending from proto-indo-european
«Why is Russian similar to Sanskrit?
Russian is the only European language that shares a grammatical basis with Sanskrit.» information from Google
@@OkOk-yv1fxBro every language is “Indo European” 💀
@@lebronjesus172 no ? theres dozens of other language families unrelated to the indo european language family, for example the uralic languages, the sino tibetan languages, the dravidian languages, the turkic languages the list goes on
It's almost as if...
They're related
:O
ъ не делает никакие звуки тверже, он играет разделительную роль
Русские согласные (большинство) имеют 2 звука - мягкий и твердый, и в зависимости от их положения в слове произносятся по-разному
they technically have a pronounciation
Ъ (dyortyznak)
Ь (myegkiyznak)
they do but that’s definitely not how they are pronounced
Technically they are:
Ъ - твёрдый знак
Ь - мягкий знак
You writing Russian like that feels so cursed. 😭
Ь myahkiy znak
Ъ tvyordiy znak (used very rarely)
That looks and sounds like magyar 😂😂😂💀
Ain't no way bro out here looking like Ronaldo
вообще их можно произнести, просто нужно постараться)
I’m Italian and In Italy we have a really similar thing: H
If you read chi the c sounds hard and if you read ci the c sounds soft. The H is also mute
В этом нет ничего сложного!
@@pippopluto5277 I’m not saying it’s hard, just similar lol
Bro, we use the Latin Alphabet so it's like the best and the easiest to pronounce and I speak German, technically in Swiss-Austrian Dialect but still German.
I never compared that "h" to "ъ", but I like it! Thanks for the idea.
(I know a little Russian and a tiny bit of Italian)
No that's actually not true. The H would make the *K* sound
Well, your experience is quite similar to mine, I am learning Sanskrit and the rules, grammar and inflections are insane, plus the vocab- fun fact, it has about 90 synonyms for love like the love between a father and daughter, between 2 sister-in laws ( its a property-based language).
However, I am very satisfied that the Devanagari script is perfect for Sanskrit to the extent, that we can determine the historical pitch accents between Vedic, classical and modern Sanskrit( Kudos to Maharishi Panini for having standardized it in 1000- 800 BC). So, the language is like a time capsule, I can read 4500 years old Sanskrit literature with ease, however the spoken grammar and nuances is very different.
bro, please teach me Sanskrit. i am really into it. I really want to learn it
Tungbung
Russian is a beautiful language. ❤️🇷🇺
Thank you, i'm learning Russian and this helped sm 😭❤
Lucky you, I’m a native Russian speaker, but I want to learn English, he is difficult for me 😢 I hope, you cope.
@@AwesaniM что "cope" значит
@@ririr_справляться
@@AwesaniM спасибо!)
@@AwesaniM its ok i dont even know russuiann
Yay a new bit to my 2 braincells!
Fun fact: hard sign was used A LOT in Russian Empire
Example:
Modern Russian: Привет, хочу задать странный вопрос тебе. (Hello, i want to ask you a weird/strange question)
Pre-Revolutionary Russian: Привѣтъ, хочу задать странный вопросъ, тебѣ
dude it also includes yat also й didn’t use before 1918
It's now only used in Bulgaria ъ
I’m Mexican and we have H ače and it also has no sound
I just learnt the russian alphabet! Привет!
Привет!
Ну крч чел ну типо это кароч ну ты чушпан ёпт.
Пока
@@Loonamool уже уходишь?)
@@juliennechannel6822 возможно
Oh boy, i had a struggle while learning how to read old church slavic, because that language had the same letters.... it took me months to remember whitch is whitch 😅😅
Нихуя не понял , но очень интересно
Burn them at the stake
You should practice your English grammar before learning another language
@@Vkusnayasabaka Sorry but what does english grammar has to do with learning how to read old version of my own language? :) And i am not using english that often so..but thank for pointing that out. Have a nice day :)
ахахахаха "you should practice your english" АХАХААХ
I am a native Russian speaker and I am looking for a native English speaker to help each other in learning
It actually makes the words sound soft for example:
The word "брать(to take)" sounds like [bryætç] but if it didn't had the ь it would sound like [brat]
Also its named myaxkaya znak
Thanks ❤
@@syifaamuhammad2799 ❤️
So basically, a russian alternitave for caps lock?
Not really
It has the little 3
з
And little Т
т
And little b
ь
@@paket6000 and a little B
в
but it’s actually not B it’s pronounced like a v-
Ьь Ъъ
Ѣѣ Іі Ѵѵ Ѳѳ
Круто, я русский и понял урок русского от американца
Calling Cyrillic alphabet the “Russian” alphabet is like calling Latin alphabet the English alphabet
Ну это логично
both makes sense, unless you're talking about the language itself. if i were to teach someone english, id refer to the latin alphabet as the english alphabet. however, if i were (for example) telling someone they cant have a username has characters other than the latin alphabet, it would be correct.)
I'm Bulgarian and we invented Kirilica (Cyrillic Alphabet), and I know people who would murder you if you said it's the Russian alphabet 😂
He meand russian variant of Cyrillic alphabet. Because not all of Cyrillic languages contain Ь & Ъ ... or they can contain these letters, but use them by other ways
@@quokka_ytnice joke. Cyrillic was invented by greeks
Hard sign in Russian alphabet is used to separate letters, not to make letter hard
Russian Alphabet lore be like:
You also heard of harrymations ralr lore?
@@Stickboy321Go
Yes, it’s a great lore honestly 😎
@@Clock_Man_2763 Fr, It’s the best inspired lore yet in fact I like it more than the original alphabet lore.
The Russian says - “here is two letters” 😂😂
Я когда вижу их отдельно от слова читаю "уэе" и "ауэ"
I always called them ‘Dvoz’ and ‘Yakk’
I call them Yer and Er
@@Lean11437 bro is from XII☠️
In my language the hard sign sound like u in like truck and the soft sign just make the always following "o" soft , so like yo
bro really put on Adidas😂
Thanks for clarifying those two letters 👍
И българския език😢
And these are THE HARDEST LETERS IN HISTORY I'm still don't get them
Ъъъъъъ
Oh yes
Palatalization has left the chat
Это да, раньше они назывались «Ер» [ъ] и «Ерь» [ь]😁
This is thanks to us bulgarian, because we created the cyrillic alphabet. No need to thank us ;)
@enisskenderov151 оооо здр
No you didn't 😂
@@hansohasashi5093 It was invented in Bulgaria and the people who made it were students from Bulgaria so it's Bugarian
@@ItzSoIis Kirill and Mefodiy were Macedonian
@@hansohasashi5093 Their were others among that bunch and it was all in Bulgaria
I need my mum to teach me this
Man became a gopnik in seconds
Гопник🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@user-zq9mi3wp5z да, 😂😂
Эдик по сути говорит😊
Спасибо. Как раз русский учить начал. А то в школе двойки.
The hard sign can also mutually seperate the two letters on either side. Ав that would sound like av
Whereas аъв would sound like A V. You take almost like a comma when you say it
Zdrastvuite. Bol’shoe spasibo. Cheers from our channel🦜🦜🦜Australian Parakeets Stars ✨
Хорошо, что русский - мой родной😅
если вы играете в какие-либо видеоигры, если да, то во что вы в основном играете?
b
Dobrivien
@@niels2753 Đ
In Bulgaria we have the second letter which is Ъ ъ we call it a A. Like България, we call it Balgariya. While in Russia you say it B’lgariya
FINALLY SOMEONE FROM MY COUNTRY TOO!
@@magihriздравей
Здравей
@@magihri lol
Здравей брате
Про мягкий знак все верно, он может выполнять функцию как смягчения, так и разделения. Твердый знак в современном русском языке не делает звук тверже, он лишь разделяет (и то он может быть только после приставки на согласный и перед корнем на е/я/ю/ё
Такой молодой, а уже фул виниры😂
Я думаю, что алфавит родины прекрасен
The russian alphabet alphabet also looks like if a drunk person tried to write the Latin alphabet (No Offense)
Edit: ayo top comment
definitely! XD
Гениально оскорблять язык, а потом говорить "без обид". Ты же в курсе, что это манипуляция?
Наилучший язык. Богатейший! Самый приятный и максимально точно передающий ситуацию
Поэтому в нем так много заимствованных слов 😅
@@msc_Noname действительно, обхохочешься.
Yea ikr I speak Russian and like WHYYYY!? WHY THE POINTLESS LETTERSSSSS!?!?!?
*“Who else randomly started watching shorts and now it’s just a everyday thing?” 😎*
Oh look another account buyer
Bot
Me
Yo mama is so fat
When she passed the tv,I missed all the episodes of the simpsons
노 룻신 한국어!!!!!
Eh, im Bulgarian. During soviet times we had to learn Russian and bam 💥 😂
Всеъ правильноъ!
Mr Higgins of Russian Language !
Actually, Ь and Ъ were the short vowels in the past
I am Mongolian and Mongolian alphabet are almost identical to Russian's alphabet
maybe its because they are both cyrilic?
It's really simple and give you more proper to read properly.
Them used to be reduced vowels back in time but it was not until 9th century when they "fell"
Reverse Alphabets 😭😭😭
The middle finger 🖕 is so universal 😂 no matter what your language, hahaha
"е" in the end of words: ьъ
It is NOT weird. Its logical
In turkish, that is a Letter "ğ". It makes the Word more soft
don't forget lil' yus Ѩ
Tip: 1st letter sounds like nashskesnap 2nd letter sound like dlorbeeznut
Я имею в виду, это не так уж и сложно, лол😂🤣
показательный пример - Соль и Объект
I am Mongolian and we have the same alphabet as the Russians
not exactly the same, you have 2 more letters😊
The dutch alphabeth: we have e and é. And you just pronounce them the same way XD.
In uzbek alphabet we have у and y’ and a and a’ and o and o’
А представьте какой был язык во времена Толстого, когда ъ был буквально везде 😂
Мягкий знак выполняет две функции: смягчение и разделение в корне слова, твердый знак выполняет функцию разделения между приставкой и корнем слова. Живи теперь с этим.
This is the Swedish alphabet
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZÅÄÖ
Why do russians sometimes sound french?
Edit: it's the? Mark
That weird soft sign + I noise just sounds weird. Sounds like OUIOUI
Well, I'm Russian and I'm studying at a philological institute, so... I am learning Old Church Slavonic. And Proto-Slavic too. Previously, these letters sounded. They had a very short closed sound. And then there was a process called the "fall of reduced vowels". In some words, these letters disappeared, in others they turned into other vowels. And where they remained, their functions changed.
Incorrect. Soft sign indeed makes the consonant before it sound softer, like it has a very short [i] sound after it. But hard sign is put between consonants and vowels when vowels like е, ë, ю, я (ye, yo, yu, ya) should start with that [y] sound after a consonant. Because without hard sign they don't have that [y] sound after consonants.
For example: дю would sound like [d(i)u] (i is very short, like it's a part of d sound) and дъю would sound like [dyu] with a little pause between d and y, so it doesn't merge with d at all.
I just realized he put on his jacket lol
Not necessarily. They also sometimes turn letters after them into dyphthongs.
Russian alphabet™
1 left) Miyadisnak.
1 right) tierdisnak.
Yeah. I take Russian classes and it's been now a few months. It's nothing new for me but probably for other people
I think the heart one is w
I'm proud of Russian language ❤
Расскажем ему о букве Ё?
Thanks , it helped me a lot because I was wondering for a long time about these two letters :)
Совершенно верно!!!
in my school we learn russia because I am georgian
Когда я их вижу отдельно, в моей голове они звучат как йей и йюй
It makes it sound HARD
In german we have ß which literally means ss.
However, bye in german is tchüss.
When it shoud be tchüß!
Its really confusing ngl
Tvjordyznak/hard sign and myakeeznak/soft sign are modifier letters basically.
I'm learning Russian right now. And my mother language is Arabic so I'm totally fine with the alphabet and when everyone says it's hard i feel smart😂
Bosnian alphabet be like : Dali sam ja zezancija za tebe am I a joke to you in bosnian