Russian Course, Lesson 5, Part 1: Soft Consonants
Beginner? Start here with Lesson 1: https://rumble.com/v4918rx-the-easiest-russian-course-for-beginners-lesson-1-hi-how-are-you
Chapters of Class / Lesson 2
00:00 – Your Lesson Number Five
00:50 – John and Katya
02:11 – Let's Translate!
06:14 – Soft Consonant VS Hard Consonant
07:18– Why is it Important?
08:50 – Soft Б'
13:23 – Soft П'
16:12 – What will we do next week?
#LearnRussian basics the easy way with the #free Russian course https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLksj2KpxyeeqED8OKTTMdgCT8wA0OykLt
We start with the basics, learn the Cyrillic alphabet, and the many (over a thousand) words that you can immediately read, understand, and use. Until you reach the first level A1, as certified by TORFL, which allows you to:
1. Meet your basic communicative needs in a limited number of everyday life situations.
2. Understand and use basic expressions to meet elementary concrete needs (in shops, post offices, banks, restaurants, libraries, in class, on public transport, at the doctor's, etc.).
3. The ability to introduce yourself and others, ask and answer questions about personal details related to where you live, work, or study; ability to provide information about relatives or friends and the objects you own.
4. Use greeting and farewell formulas, courtesy phrases, wishes, thanks, and apologies.
5. Ask for and communicate the time.
6. Interact with a Russian-speaking interlocutor, as long as they speak slowly, clearly, and are willing to cooperate.
Happy studying!
Yula 😘
Meet Yula, your #RussianLanguage teacher
I'm a professional language teacher and linguist -- I obtained a Ph.D. Doctorate in Linguistics and taught at the University of Rostov. Born and raised in Russia, I also studied in America, England, Italy, and briefly lived in Tenerife, Spain. In England, I obtained the CELTA teaching certification from the University of Cambridge.
In addition to Russian, my mother tongue, I speak English, Italian, and German fluently and am currently studying Spanish.
Why choose a polyglot teacher?
Having learned many languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them easily! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure? ✈️
92
views
Love lost in translation? 🇷🇺 Russians react to 🇮🇹 Italian romantic nicknames - Craziest ones at the end!
I asked Italians what they call their sweethearts, then I flew to Russia and... watch till the end to discover the craziest nicknames! 👉 If you want to learn to read Russian in a FEW HOURS, start here: https://rumble.com/v4918rx-the-easiest-russian-course-for-beginners-lesson-1-hi-how-are-you
00:00 – Intro
00:16 – Italian most common romantic nicknames
00:46 – Russians react to most common Italian nicknames
03:30 – Romantic Italian food nicknames
04:04 – Russians react to food nicknames
06:56 – Other options like "princess"
07:12 – Russians react to "princess"
07:42 – Romantic Italian animal nicknames
08:16 – Russians react to animal nicknames
09:36 – Craziest ones
🙋♀️ Hi! I'm Yula, a professional Russian teacher.
Having learned 5 languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure?
👉 https://www.youtube.com/@RussianYula
I was born and raised in Rostov, Russia, where I obtained my Ph.D (doctorate) in Linguistics and taught languages at the University of Rostov for 3 years. I then studied in America, England, Italy, and I briefly lived in Tenerife, Spain. In England, I obtained the CELTA teaching certification from the University of Cambridge. I speak:
1. Russian (C2, native)
2. English (C2, native-like)
3. Italian (C1, fluent)
4. German (C1, fluent)
5. Spanish (B1, work in progress...)
Believe me when I tell you that I've been in your shoes! :)
🌀 Do you want me to be your Russian teacher? Subscribe to my channel https://www.youtube.com/@RussianYula and board here: https://yula.app
Хорошей учебы! (Good studying! 😉)
Yula
175
views
Russian Course, Lesson 4: Who is it? What is it?
Lesson 1 is here: https://rumble.com/v4918rx-the-easiest-russian-course-for-beginners-lesson-1-hi-how-are-you.html
Hi, I'm your new professional *Russian teacher* and a *polyglot* with a Linguistics Ph.D 👩🏫
Learning the #Russian #language with online #classes has never been easier! Are you an absolute beginner? Find all the free lessons on my channel, and subscribe for the new ones!
✨ Here are the 1000 words you will know in a few hours, right after lesson 3: 🌀 https://yula.app/register?p=702 📚
For those who love details and a traditional study method, my fantastic PDFs are also available with all the rules, exercises, glossary, and dialogues accompanied by audio for listening practice, check out the complete Easy Russian #lessons: 🌀 https://yula.app
Chapters of Class / Lesson 2
00:00 – Your Lesson Number Four
01:00 – John Goes to the University
02:02 – Let's Translate!
04:49 – My Favourite Sound Ы
06:44 – Why do they read "O" like "ah"?
09:19 – Personal Pronouns
12:22 – Negative Particle "не"
13:11 – Vocabulary: Professions and Occupations
14:46 – Quiz!
#LearnRussian basics the easy way with the #free Russian course https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLksj2KpxyeeqED8OKTTMdgCT8wA0OykLt
We start with the basics, learn the Cyrillic alphabet, and the many (over a thousand) words that you can immediately read, understand, and use. Until you reach the first level A1, as certified by TORFL, which allows you to:
1. Meet your basic communicative needs in a limited number of everyday life situations.
2. Understand and use basic expressions to meet elementary concrete needs (in shops, post offices, banks, restaurants, libraries, in class, on public transport, at the doctor's, etc.).
3. The ability to introduce yourself and others, ask and answer questions about personal details related to where you live, work, or study; ability to provide information about relatives or friends and the objects you own.
4. Use greeting and farewell formulas, courtesy phrases, wishes, thanks, and apologies.
5. Ask for and communicate the time.
6. Interact with a Russian-speaking interlocutor, as long as they speak slowly, clearly, and are willing to cooperate.
Happy studying!
Yula 😘
Meet Yula, your #RussianLanguage teacher
I'm a professional language teacher and linguist -- I obtained a Ph.D. Doctorate in Linguistics and taught at the University of Rostov. Born and raised in Russia, I also studied in America, England, Italy, and briefly lived in Tenerife, Spain. In England, I obtained the CELTA teaching certification from the University of Cambridge.
In addition to Russian, my mother tongue, I speak English, Italian, and German fluently and am currently studying Spanish.
Why choose a polyglot teacher?
Having learned many languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them easily! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure? ✈️
195
views
Russian Course, Lesson 3: You can now read Russian!
How to read Russian? After this Lesson, you'll be able to do it! The first Lesson is here: https://rumble.com/v4918rx-the-easiest-russian-course-for-beginners-lesson-1-hi-how-are-you 👉 Why choose a *polyglot* teacher?
🙋♀️ Hi! I'm Yula, a professional Russian teacher.
Having learned 5 languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure?
✨ Here are the 1000 words you will know in a few hours, right after this lesson: 🌀 https://yula.app/register?p=702 📚
For those who love details and a traditional study method, my fantastic PDFs are also available with all the rules, exercises, glossary, and dialogues accompanied by audio for listening practice, check out the complete Easy Russian #lessons: 🌀 https://yula.app
Chapters of Class / Lesson 3
00:00 – Your Third Russian Lesson
00:43 – How to Talk about a Family Photo
01:19 – Let's translate
02:35 – "My" and "Your" in Russian
04:18 – Russian Alphabet and Sounds Part 3
08:28 – Russian Letters Щ and Щ
09:57 – Russian Letters Ю and Я
11:08 – Syllables
14:48 – Your First Russian Words
122
views
4
comments
Russian Course, Lesson 2: Hello, how are you? (Formal greetings)
This is the easiest #Russian #course around (without false promises).
👉 Why choose a *polyglot* teacher?
🙋♀️ Hi! I'm Yula, a professional Russian teacher.
Having learned 5 languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure?
✨ Here are the 1000 words you will know in a few hours, right after lesson 3: 🌀 https://yula.app/register?p=702 📚
For those who love details and a traditional study method, my fantastic PDFs are also available with all the rules, exercises, glossary, and dialogues accompanied by audio for listening practice, check out the complete Easy Russian #lessons: 🌀 https://yula.app
Chapters of Class / Lesson 2
00:00 – Your Second Russian Lesson
00:50 – Formal Dialogue
01:15 – Let's translate
04:20 – Russian Letters and Sounds
05:20 – Russian K and П Sounds
05:58 – Russian Р Sound
03:21 – 11 more Letters of the Alphabet
08:32 – Syllables
10:58 – Your First Russian Words
We start with the basics, learn the Cyrillic alphabet, and the many (over a thousand) words that you can immediately read, understand, and use. Until you reach the first level A1, as certified by TORFL, which allows you to:
1. Meet your basic communicative needs in a limited number of everyday life situations.
2. Understand and use basic expressions to meet elementary concrete needs (in shops, post offices, banks, restaurants, libraries, in class, on public transport, at the doctor's, etc.).
3. The ability to introduce yourself and others, ask and answer questions about personal details related to where you live, work, or study; ability to provide information about relatives or friends and the objects you own.
4. Use greeting and farewell formulas, courtesy phrases, wishes, thanks, and apologies.
5. Ask for and communicate the time.
6. Interact with a Russian-speaking interlocutor, as long as they speak slowly, clearly, and are willing to cooperate.
Happy studying!
Yula 😘
125
views
Russian Course, Lesson 1: Hi, the Russian Alphabet is easier than you think!
Want to Learn the Russian language as a beginner? This is the Easiest Russian Course around. 👉 Why choose a *polyglot* teacher?
🙋♀️ Hi! I'm Yula, a professional Russian teacher.
Having learned 5 languages, I'm familiar with the challenges and know how to help you overcome them! In this course, I will guide you, hand in hand, as you discover my native Russian language. Are you ready for the adventure?
🌀 Here are the 1000 words you will know in a few hours, right after lesson 3: https://yula.app/register?p=702
📚 For those who love details and a traditional study method, my fantastic PDFs are also available with all the rules, exercises, glossary, and dialogues accompanied by audio for listening practice, check out the complete Easy Russian #lessons: https://yula.app
Chapters of Class / Lesson 1
00:00 – Your First Russian Lesson
01:06 – Your First Russian Dialogue
02:18 – Let's translate!
04:11 – First 11 Russian Letters
09:49 – Let's read some syllables
13:47 – Let's read some words
What's next?
I'm going to publish new lessons every week, subscribe to my channel to get them :)
We start with the basics, learn the Cyrillic alphabet, and the many (over a thousand) words that you can immediately read, understand, and use. Until you reach the first level A1, as certified by TORFL, which allows you to:
1. Meet your basic communicative needs in a limited number of everyday life situations.
2. Understand and use basic expressions to meet elementary concrete needs (in shops, post offices, banks, restaurants, libraries, in class, on public transport, at the doctor's, etc.).
3. The ability to introduce yourself and others, ask and answer questions about personal details related to where you live, work, or study; ability to provide information about relatives or friends and the objects you own.
4. Use greeting and farewell formulas, courtesy phrases, wishes, thanks, and apologies.
5. Ask for and communicate the time.
6. Interact with a Russian-speaking interlocutor, as long as they speak slowly, clearly, and are willing to cooperate.
🙋♀️ Hi, I was born and raised in Rostov, Russia, where I obtained my Ph.D (doctorate) in Linguistics and taught languages at the University of Rostov for 3 years. I then studied in America, England, Italy, and I briefly lived in Tenerife, Spain. In England, I obtained the CELTA teaching certification from the University of Cambridge. I speak:
1. Russian (C2, native)
2. English (C2, native-like)
3. Italian (C1, fluent)
4. German (C1, fluent)
5. Spanish (B1, work in progress...)
Believe me when I tell you that I've been in your shoes! :)
🌀 Do you want me to be your Russian teacher? Subscribe to my channel and board here: https://yula.app
Хорошей учебы! (Good studying! 😉)
Yula
323
views