"In my language, we don't say 'I love you'. We just tag each other in memes and I think that's beautiful."
Interesting facts about the Russian keyboard layout: Ф is where the English letter A is, and A is where the English letter F is. Also, S is a common plural ending in English, and Ы on the same key is the most common plural ending in Russian.
Hey, I thought I would compile a selection of different resources dedicated to learning the Russian language. Feel free to reblog and add your own
Information about the language
Russian Language on Wikipedia
Russian Language on BBC
Russian Language on Encyclopaedia Britannica
Russian Language on Real Russia
Books
I have a masterlist of different Russian language textbooks for all levels, as well as general Russian literature and Russian magazines for reading practice. It contains over 60,000 books and over 4,000 magazines
Children’s Books in Russian
Project Gutenberg Free Russian Books
Courses - Note that not all of these courses are free.
Lingvist (comes with a 2-week free trial, and by far my favourite course)
Duolingo (Joining with this link automatically adds me as a friend)
Busuu
I Kinda Like Languages Russian Course
Learn Russian with RT (The audio files no longer work but there’s a lot of great resources that work)
Live Lingua Russian Tutors (Not a course as such, but a way to get a Tutor. You can get a free hour lesson)
Russian for Everyone
Russian for Free
RussianLessons
Russian Made Easy
Way To Russia
Russky
Lingodeer
Между нами
MasterRussian
Я говорю по-русски/ I speak Russian
Русский как иностранный: B1+. Russian as a foreign language: B1+
Русский как иностранный: B1+. Часть 2. Russian as a foreign language. B1+. Part 2.
Русский как иностранный B2-1 / Russian As a Foreign Language B2-1
Русский язык как иностранный B2-2 / Russian as a Foreign Language B2-2
A1 Elementary Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
A2 Basic Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
B1 I Certified Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
B2 II Certified Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
C1 III Certified Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
C2 IV Certified Russian Course with Pushkin Institute
Beginner Russian Course / Курс России языка для начинающих
Intermediate Russian Course / Курс России языка среднего уровня
Russian Grammar Course / Курс грамматики России языка
Russian Course for Travelers / Курс России языка для путешественников
From Zero to Fluency Youtube Course
Start Speaking Russian Youtube Course
Russian Reading Youtube Course
Learn Russian Alphabet
Russian (Kazakhstan) Peace Corps Course
FSI Russian Course
Learn Russian
Yes Russian
Polymath
Learnalanguage
Ready Russian
Simplang
Russian Learning Reddit
Learn With Oliver
Memrise is a great resource as it has Memrise courses and user-created courses. These are the official Russian courses if you go through them one by one they amount to approximately 54 hours of content. The thing I like about Memrise is they test you on your pronunciation, and they have lots of videos by Russian native speakers. So it really tests you in all your skills.
Russian 1 by Memrise
Russian 2 by Memrise
Russian 3 by Memrise
Russian 4 by Memrise
Russian 5 by Memrise
Russian 6 by Memrise
Russian 7 by Memrise
These are some unofficial Russian Memrise courses you might like too. Although they tend to not have audio and they don’t have pronunciation tests or native speaker videos, they can still be a good resource.
Learn Basic Russian
Top 10,000 words part one
Top 10,000 words part two
Russian Grammar through Exercises
Assimil Russian
New Penguin Russian Course Vocabulary
Vocabulary resources
Anki
Word Reference
Ba Ba Dum
L-Lingo
Russian Swadesh list
English terms derived from Russian
Wikipedia Russian Topics (Click on different topics then click on different words for their English translation and meaning)
Russian Idioms
Russian Proverbs
Russian Similies
20,000-word Frequency dictionary of the modern Russian language (the Russian National Corpus)
Russian spelling alphabet
Russian Frequency lists/1-1000
Russian Frequency lists/1001-2000
Russian Frequency lists/2001-3000
Russian Frequency lists/3001-4000
Russian Frequency lists/4001-5000
Russian Adjectives - Frequency List
Russian Nouns - Frequency List
Russian Verbs - Frequency List
Russian palindromes
Russian Pronouns
Alpha Dictionary
Dubbed Russian Songs (Russian songs with Russian lyrics alongside transliteration and English translation. They also accept requests)
Clozemaster (I’d say this is more for intermediate-advanced, but beginners might make use of this as well)
Vikida Children’s Encyclopedia (Entirely in Russian)
Russian for Children by Pushkin Institute (Entirely in Russian) This actually contains resources for 5+ to 18+ so it covers a broad range of levels
Slow Russian Podcast
Slow Russian Youtube
Beginning Russian through Film
Amazing Russian Youtube
Bab.La English - Russian Dictionary
Grammar
Grammar Exercises Youtube Playlist
MasterRussian
Online Interactive Grammar
Learn Russian Grammar Tables
Russian Grammar Youtube
Russificate
Conjugation Tool
Russian Grammar
Russian News Sites
Russia Today (In Russian) / Russia Today (in English) (They also have a whole database of documentaries/shows/films that are in English or Russian. Just click on a show here and it’ll give you the option to watch in English or Russian)
The Moscow Times (In Russian) / The Moscow Times (In English) (They have free English PDFs of past print publications too)
Tass Russian News Agency (In Russian) / Tass Russian News Agency (In English)
Moskovskij Komsomolets (Московский комсомолец) (only available in Russian)
Komsomolskaya Pravda (Комсомо́льская пра́вда) (only available in Russian)
Izvestia (ɪzˈvʲestʲɪjə) (Only available in Russian)
Rossiyskaya Gazeta (Российская газета) (Only available in Russian)
Kommersant (Коммерса́нтъ) (Only available in Russian)(There is also a UK news website entirely in Russian)
Trud (Tpyд) (Only available in Russian)
Moskovskiye Novosti (Московские новости) (Only available in Russian)
Nezavisimaya Gazeta (Независимая газета) (Only available in Russian)
Novye Izvestia (Новые Известия) (Only available in Russian)
Vedomosti (Ведомости) (Only available in Russian)
Pravda Правда (Only available in Russian)
Delovoy Peterburg Деловой Петербург (Only available in Russian)
RBC daily (Only available in Russian)
Sport Express (Спорт-Экспресс) (Only available in Russian)
Sovetsky Sport (Советский спорт) (Only available in Russian)
Russia Beyond The Headlines (In Russian) / Russia Beyond The Headlines (In English)
Krasnaya Zvezda (Кра́сная звезда́) (Only available in Russian)
Moskovskaya Pravda (Московская правда) (Only available in Russian)
Argumenty i Fakty (Аргументы и факты) (Only available in Russian)
Sovetsky Sakhalin (Советский Сахалин) (Only available in Russian)
Tyumenskaya Oblast Segodnya (Only available in Russian)
Vecherniy Murmansk (Вечерний Мурманск) (Only available in Russian)
Vecherniy Novosibirsk (Вечерний Новосибирск) (Only available in Russian)
Vecherniy Stavropol (Вечерний Ставрополь) (Only available in Russian)
Novaya Gazeta (Новая газета) (Only available in Russian)
Novgorod (Новгород) (Only available in Russian)
Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti (Санкт-Петербургские ведомости) (Only available in Russian)
Literaturnaya Gazeta (Литературная газета) (Only available in Russian)
Parlamentskaia Gazeta (Парламентская газета) (Оnly available in Russian)
Meduza (In Russian) / Meduza (In English)
Please note that sites listed do not equal an endorsement. I don’t know the political background or views of each of these publications. I’m merely compiling a variety I saw through various Russian news lists and search engine results. Content warnings may apply and not all content may be suitable for minors
Listening practice (Note, I may make another masterlist compiling various Russian podcasts and Youtube channels so I’m leaving them out of this section)
LibriVox
Listeningpractice.org
Slavic Languages and Cultures Department, University of Groningen Listen to the Slavic languages
Audio Lingua
Learn Russian with Peppa Pig
Forvo
StarMediaEN (Russian shows, documentaries etc with English subtitles)
Russian Films With English Subtitles Youtube Playlist
Alosha (Алёша Попович и Тугарин Змей) Children’s Film
Dobrynya and the Dragon (Добрыня Никитич и Змей Горыныч) Children’s Film
Ilya Muromets and Sparrow the Robber (Илья Муромец и Соловей Разбойник) Children’s film
How Not to Rescue a Princess (Три Богатыря и Шамаханская Царица) Children’s Film
Russian Animation (Mixture of dubbed content and subtitled content)
Киноконцерн “Мосфильм” (Moscow Film, only some of these are subtitled)
фильмы о Холмсе и Ватсоне (Movies about Sherlock Holmes with Russian audio and English subtitles)
Okay, so this list has gotten long enough lol. If you have any resources you feel should be added feel free to reblog and add them or message me and I’ll edit it in. If you have any requests for resource compilations that you want me to do (e.g. compiling Russian podcasts, general Russian websites, Russian YouTubers etc) please let me know.
Me in a restaurant
Waiter: here's your glass Me: oh, thank you Waiter: *puts the glass down* Me: thank you Waiter: *fills the glass with water* Me: thank you Waiter: I'll bring your order soon Me: thank you
I’m honestly so glad that you love the Improvisation posts. I’m even more glad I have a lot of content to translate for you :) Hope you enjoy this bit!
*Alexander Nezlobin is a famous Russian comedian. **Sasha is short for Alexander. Don’t ask, I don’t get it either. There are a lot of instances where the short version of a Russian name sounds completely different from the name itself.
About the Russian invasion - how is everyone feeling there? What can we do to help?
Thank you so much for asking!
A little bit of history: it's actually been 8 years since russia first invaded our country. But for the last years it was getting more and more quiet. And now BOOM again
Many people evacuated from the destroyed by war cities in 2014 and some still live there even though they support Ukraine. It's hard to leave your home. So it's emotionally different for everyone. There was a joke that people from Kyiv worry more than people from Eastern Ukraine. Because they have experienced a similar thing in 2014 and now they're more prepared than ever before.
Personally, I'm panicking from time to time, because, yup, it's stressful. Most people don't really speak about the war and evacuation because it's scary. But I feel like everyone's trying to be prepared for the evacuation or fighting. Every night does feel like a last one, after all.
Since the beginning of the war, our people have been giving money to military charity. One of the most famous military charities is "Return alive" (Povernysya zhivim). Many Ukrainians donate here every month. Here is a link for Facebook page of the charity, let me know if it translates to English or if i should make a post with translation:
There is also a charity that helps military. Yana Zinkevych, a Ukrainian politician and a commander of the Hospitallers Medical Battalion, leads this charity. In 2015 she was paralyzed during a mission and since then she has been using a wheelchair. She has personally saved more than 200 soldiers and she's awesome.
https://www.facebook.com/100020149602229/posts/914756185872693/
In her post here she makes a list of needed ammunition and the needed money.
I tried to write about the charities that Ukrainians trust in. They are famous, they have been trusted by people all these years, so as far as I am concerned, they can be trusted.
Here is a post by @everlasting-burnout who provided more links. They seem trustworthy.
Thank you so much for reading and I encourage to reblog. Just to remind you, I'm trying to tell about Ukrainian situation as objectively and as truthfully as I can
Hey guys! This is all about productive stuff you can do on Sunday to make the most out of it and have an amazing week! 🥑
Implementing some of these things in your Sunday routine, will help you not to spend your Mondays trying to get your life together.
PS click on the pictures for better quality 🥑
hi everyone!
my name is yeliza, i’m ukrainian, living in kyiv. funny story but currently we have a 150k+ army of russians all over the ukrainian borders, as well as an ongoing shelling from uncontrolled territories that has been averaging more than 1000 strikes daily. more fun facts - we are currently in a state of emergency, and it’s of high probability that russians will start a major invasion pretty damn soon. kyiv will be one of the first to be hit :)
i wanted to use this as an opportunity to spread the information about the whole situation, but also ask you to help me disperse it further: you can get the main points about the russo-ukrainian war and current escalation here. also PLEASE CONSIDER DONATING TO OUR ARMY - the link is here. any amount would be helpful - even some of your pocket money. we are in the dire need for the global support, truly.
much love and appreciation for your help!
if you have any question regarding the situation, i’ll be glad to answer as long as i’ll be able to! stay safe!
UPD. The National Bank of Ukraine has also opened a donation account for Ukrainian army, the number of the special account: UA843000010000000047330992708 . Proof here. PLEASE DONATE
I’m sorry, but THIS. This is what great translation is. Simple, yet genius. Shield — щит (pronounced as ‘sheet’; masc., sing.) So yeah, in the Russian version of Free Guy, Chris Evans said both ‘what the shield’ and ‘what the shit’. The translators could have just put ‘Что за чёрт?’ in there (which is a standard way of translating ‘What the hell/shit/etc?’ in Russian), but they used this beautiful combination of circumstances to their advantage. As someone who’s majoring in translation, I just can’t get over how good this bit is. This joke got a lot of laughs in the movie theater I went to.
— Why do you always put parentheses in messages? — I feel more comfortable with them)) — What do you mean? — Parentheses look like they are hugging words and they become kinder))
I was just serfing the net and came across this video. I really love old educational videos for Russian learners, so I thought I’d share it. (I don’t know why I find the last conversation so funny, but it is)
actually, we don't call it russian, we simply call it cheeki-breeki
106 posts