there are articles in russian?
NO! ‘a’ and ‘the’ don’t exist
what is to be in russian (present tense)
trick question! there’s no to be verb in the present tense russian
what is the nominative case
what is the accusative case
what is the genitive case
example of genitive case
example of nominative case
example of accusative case
How to turn an adjective into an adverb
Example of turning adj. into and adverb (good —> well)
Хороший (in masc. form)
Хорошо (as an adverb)
What type of ending is -ность
Feminine ending
Your possessive (sing./ familiar)
Masc. = Твой
Fem. = твоя
Neuter = твоё
Your (pl./ formal)
Masc. = ваш
Fem. = ваша
Neuter = ваше
My
Masc. = мой
Fem. = моя
Neuter = моё
Our
Masc. = наш
Fem. = наша
Neuter = наше
His
Его (pronounced yevo)
Her
её (pronounced yeyo)
Their
Их ( is the same for masc. fem. And neuter)
The genitive case endings (masculine and neuter nouns)
Genitive case endings (fem. nouns)
Uses of the genitive case
Prepositions which the genitive case is used after
after — после
w/o — без
until — до
opposite— напротив
around/ near —около
by/ near — у
from — от
from/ out of — из/ с
rules for the accusative case (masculine nouns)
Masc. nouns
- If noun inanimate, there’s no change.
- If noun is animate and ends in a consonant, add “а”.
- If noun is animate, replace “й”, with “я”.
- If noun is animate, replace “ь”, with “я”
dative case rules (masc. and neuter nouns)
-Masculine nouns (ending in consonant):
add -y
- Neuter nouns ending in o:
Replace -o with a -y
- masculine nouns ending in soft signs:
-ь -й are replaced w/ -ю
Neuter nouns ending in -e
replace -e w/ -ю
Neuter nouns ending in -мя
Replace-мя w/ -ени