@Zhenewa Indeed. For what does it say? "This channel has no videos". What a pity. I was expecting a Russian course on phonetics there, much better than mine. Imagine my surprise not to see one there...
I lol'd when you said "don't worry if you don't understand the grammatical terms-we'll take things slowly" cause I paused the videoearlier when I saw the 'pronouns, prepositions, verbs' and took notes from google. Then I came back to unpause the vid and heard you say that. haha. well thanks for always being prepared for stupid folk like me :) (only in high school)
Hey man, you made me laugh with your russian accent... I'm a Serbian and russian is easy for me. I still think you did a great job for english speaking people.
You mentioned pronouns at a higher level of learning and thus mastered later by children. Great point. But, are you referring here to 'natural' stages of language acquisition? Or just the 80/20 principle at work? That the ROI is greater. What are the other 'levels' of language? I have wondered how Michel Thomas worked out his way of breaking down a language into components, or whom or what he actually based it on. Seems like you're going at it MT style.
@usenetposts That reminds me. I now have fully incorporated your Gold List Method into my Michel Thomas learning (and teaching) arsenal. Hand 'n glove. MT is great for getting to the heart of the grammar points, but less than ideal for remembering them. Not anymore! I plan to do the same with your Russian course : )
@TheLinguaHacks It seems to me that Goldlist Method is a very good way to take knowledge covered at MT to the next level. I'm becoming more and more in favour of starting completely fresh languages with an audio course like MT method (I personally think his accolytes have done in many cases a better job than the master) or failing an MT method course, Paul Noble or at a pinch Pimsleur (not so good in many ways but better than nothing) If there is both an MT and a Pimsleur, I'd start with MT...
@usenetposts@The Linguahacks continued ...then do the Pimsleur, and then, having a decent grounding in the sound and structures from an aural viewpoint, the best way to introduce reading and writing would be to take a conventional course after that and goldlist the lot. Then if I'm serious about knowing a lot of the language a pocket dictionary to get to 15,000 words (takes a couple of years, really, unless you're a full time student or single) and then progress to Lit sourced Goldlisting.
@sloveniaANDusa Many thanks. I'm glad to say that in my case it is dve žogi, although I am not one to stand in judgement over gentlemen who have ena or tri.
@sloveniaANDusa Hvala, you too. You could always use your existing webcam but you'd need to lose the hall of mirrors effect. Or maybe not. That could be quite funny, to do a serious linguistic film with the full distortion effects going.
I´m traying to learn russian languaje, but This is my first time ever, I don´t have time to go to school, so I am doing by my self. Is this the first lesson if I don´t anything of Russian languaje? Thanks.
Nice singing at the end -- I'd say (to future viewers) begin the video at 17:30 for the actual lesson, unless you have 17 minutes to kill hangin out with Huliganov, and need a review of rudimentary English grammar - and an interesting book recommendation - and a few tidbits about history of Polish or Old Church Slavonic..
Ok, Huliganov. I like this lesson. I'm much more advanced than pronouns but I like to hear your explanation of things. I really want to understand the Russian language and the culture. You clearly really know your stuff! Excellent joke and I liked the song too. I can't quite figure you out but I like your stuff!
Hello) I'm Russian. I'm learning English. If you are English speaking person and learning Russian - we can help each other! my mail: innaru2009@yandex.ru write to me=)
@Innaru2009 privet. i just started to leaarn russian and i don't know how long you've been doing english but..i've ony been doing it for a few days. whats it like learning english? is it hard?
Thank you soo much for going over this ti, mui, etc. stuff I understand it as this is like in Spanish as well, but I never knew it would apply in Russian also...
wow good lesson man! I am from the Netherlands and I think russian is a very cool languague ( <----- fail ) I am doing my best to learn it but it's very hard and on school I have to learn the stupid langueges as German and French because they are close to my country hope oneday they will teach russian keep it up great work!
Hello Mr. Huliganov! I am learning well from your videos. Thank you!! I am moving to Kazakhstan in August so trying to learn as much as possible by then. Question: Are there any Russian language shows you recommend me to watch (looking for lots of dialogue)? I want to get used to hearing Russian by watching 30 minutes of tv every day. Thanks also for the jokes and songs.
Thank you for these videos, It's nice learning grammar from someone telling it in great detail and using examples, rather than reading it from text books, which only makes things more confusing. Again thank you! Спасибо! ^_^
As an aspiring linguist, this was very informative- thank you. Thank you for the time you took to explain everything and your lovely singing at the end. =) I hope to speak Russian fluently one day.
@usenetposts You are welcome, and I will surely enjoy it as I make my way though it. Can I ask a quick question though? In a Russian song called "АнгелОК" .. well, why is that "OK" at the end? I thought "angel" was simply "Ангел". Does the "OK" mean anything or is that actually how you say "angel"? It's just something that has been bugging me, haha.
@BethInuzuka -ok is one of a series of diminuatives. it means "little" or sometimes "silly little", like durak = "idiot" and "durachok" is "silly little idiot". But if they write the suffix in capitals then it's probably a play on words with the English "OK" as in "okay". In the case of song titles and group names in Popular Music the meaning in any language is often something you'd need to ask the people involved. People still speculate on the meaning of some titles and group names in English.
@usenetposts Thank you. =) I'm not sure if the person who uploaded the video simply made "OK" capitalized because they decided to or if the title is that. I'll look more into the song now, knowing they chose to add "ok" at the end whether it means "little angel" or a play on words with English (or both). Eheh, don't be surprised if you hear from me again- I'm too fond of languages and may have more questions. (I hope this wouldn't annoy you?)
@astrophysics1997 Thanks for that. I'm glad I have some worthy students and not just people who come to a subject feeling they already know it better than the person presenting, even though they don't have any videos on the matter themselves. If they did, maybe I'd take more account of their opinions.
im not sure whats wrong with all these people, i think this is actually pretty good, and if someone thinks its not, i guess thats their right/opinion or whatever, but damn people, unless you have something better to share, then shut the fu*k up already, he has alot of good, videos, that you actually can learn from, hes not charging for it, so if you dont like it damn well dont watch it, i however think he is doing a good job, thank you for these videos
@hippywonder1 The word I used fits you to a tee and if you say that's down to your upbringing, then fine. So it was your mother who taught you to go on the video of someone who's only trying to help people, try to sabotage the viewership, be damn rude about the work and the appearance despite having done no videos yourself, and then try and look the victim when you get called on it. Nice lady she must be. I shan't blame your dad as it looks like he wasn't around.
@hippywonder1 Silly little bitch. Do your own Russian course if you think people would learn better your way. Don't just come on here with no uploads and start undermining me. Nobody's gonna thank you for that. And you're banned from watching my stuff, by the way, you pathetic little wannabe vandal.
And I ain't gonna look "pleasant" for you. Kiss my ass.
@hippywonder1 i just noticed your comment. you're really rude. I'm not sure why usenetposts doesn't just delete your comment. I actually have found his posts to be very helpful. I'm not sure what your problem is, but please go away, and stay there.
@mariyamtselalu Amen to that! She wanted to come and lash out from nowhere with total spite, and when she got a bit of her own flavour, she wanted to play the victim. She's not allowed to watch any more of my videos.
@starfayasel Thank you for this sarcasm. Go ahead and do your own course, I'm sure it'll be better than this shit of mine. Teach people how to be sarcastic as well as you are so clearly the undisputed master of it.
can u stop blabbering and teach some russian......ur supposed to teach russian and not actually teach us the entire grammar in english.....u speak abt saving time by using pronouns but u urself wasted 10 mins in beginning to start .......i understand u have loads of knowledge but plz....start teaching as soon as the video begins......no hard feelings but i'm a person with very short attention span....it becomes very difficult for me to wait this long......
@Pedrofrombrazil It means "glory of all Russian people". I don't call that good, myself. Glory belongs to Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and not to any people.
Thank you very much for taking the time and effort to create these videos and put them online. I found the RL101 series very useful in preparing for my first brief visit to Kazakhstan - there were enough signs in Russian to practice my reading. Although I could not converse, I read/discovered a few words that were similar in Sanskrit/Hindi/Marathi; e.g., ogon, sakhar! I am now getting more serious about learning the language - hence RL102!
@scarydude101 You have to learn where the stress is in each word, and how it changes through the conjugations too for some words. Stress is not the easy part of Russian.
@usenetposts excellent answer. also, thank you for devoting your time to these lessons. i am learning russian to travel to and possible live in the next couple years with my lady and your methods are working very well for me so far
I don't know what or who Ruddy Pimsleur is but I do know that I am not the first or the last to observe that there is too much English in this lesson. But that is just my humble opinion.
@moujik1905 Ruddy Pimsleur is someone who did language courses with more of the language, less explanation of it. you just get immersed in the language straight away. If you want to learn that way, then just go to a high class bookshop and ask if they have any Ruddy Pimsleur.
@xander0713 Sorry, should I have made these explanations for lesson one entirely in Russian? You go ahead and do your own course that way, if you think it's a good idea.
Ochen bolshoye sposibo, ya sam polowin Russki i Polowin Meshitin Ahiska etot video ochen pomagayet menya! ya prosto ni hachu zabit Russkiy, Hotel sprosit est utbeya vid dlya dektovki? ya uchus v Amerike i hochu zdelat Rossiskiy domashniy zadanya shtob ya derzhal s Rossiyam mozhesh kak nibut pomogat menya? umenya diktovka i pisat na pisminom ni tak ush horosho i esho grammer Sposibo bolshoye vam!! :)
@Qaynana OK, in that case it's OK. There is already a facebook group with these vids, called "Huliganov's Lessons really work", or something, but the more the merrier.
@Qaynana If you're not making money, just helping people, and if you give the link to here and to Huliganov dot tv, then you can do it. Please let me see the place you linked it just because I am a nosy bastard.
Very good, you make me feel like I'm learning from a friend or an intelligent uncle. Most other places I feel like I'm learning from a computer and the personal connection is missing from that. You do a good job and I'm happy that you give us this resource to learn the beautiful language of Russian! спасибо!
I love how you have such a comprehensive understanding and use of the English language yet you still have a Russian accent. Really gives off an intelligent character about you.
As a native English speaker, I am having difficulties wrapping my head around constructing Russian sentences without "the" article. In everyday speech we, (at least I do) use it before pretty much all specified nouns.
The on the other side of the coin: Any advice on how to go about explaining the concept of "the" article to a native Russian speaker learning English?
I appreciate the work you put into your videos & the breadth of the accord you have with your viewers. Spasiba bal'shoi.
Great first grammar lesson. Personally I heard all that and it helps me recall and structure it mentally.
After living many years in Ireland, I got used to the english YOU and now back in France, I've been confusing (myself and) people by unvoluntarily switching from Tu to VOUS all the time. I now see the picture of a modern polish man in a medieval costume walking back and forth with a log to smash my skull if I was to do that in Poland! €:D
love the song- could you provide the lyrics please if it's not too much work? That way we could follow you - and by now quite a few of the words are actually known, so we might even get the context
- Ihr Video ist wirklich sehr Hilfreich - sehr Interessant für mich ist der Faktor, das ich mir nicht nur eine Vokabelbox Englisch sondern auch Russich gekauft habe um beide Sprachen zu lernen und deutlich zu verbessern. Daher ist es für mich im doppelten Sinne Intressant Ihrem Kommentar auf englisch zu folgen und dabei Russich zu lernen bzw. zu vestehen. Vielen Dank für die Arbeit.
Thank you so much. I am teaching myself Russian since where I live the classes are too far and way to expensive. This makes more sense now, then just trying to read it from a book of Russian Grammar. I also prefer to have a teacher teach me grammar.
Any videos up for the use of 'ne' and 'net' yet? I still can't figure it out. I'm trying to learn it with nothing but Rosetta Stone, so I can't just ask someone, and the few times I have I haven't gotten a straight answer. Would you say (pronounced) "Cobaka ne bejeet" or "Cobaka net bejeet"? Which one is no and which one is not? Do they have multiple related meanings?
Ne means "not" in most of the usual meanings. I have no idea of what "Cobaka ne bejeet" means, as this is not one of the standard transcription methods. "Net" means either "no" or the expression "there isn't any/ aren't any..." followed by the genitive case. For example, you could say "eto ne ya" (It's not me) and "net menya" (I'm not here).
you use net only in 2 cases: when you want negate the whole sentence and when you want to say that something isn't there, and in all other cases you use ne
@evankowlski I can help you. Since I learn German and German as many nos. Het meaning No as "Do you drink tea?" And the other person says. "No, I do not." or the no that means not allow. "No!" As an expression He is negative = not/no, I am learning also with Rosetta stone.
For example. If I wanted to say no dog on the table in Russian I wouldn't use Net, I would use Ne. Now if someone ask me if I could put the dog on the table, then I would use Net.
@Niops yes that is correct. I learn that recently. Het that you used in this content would be like the German Kein which means no. Not the expression, but an navigator.
The 102 course is only dealing with "eto" as the demonstrative pronoun. These declined versions are the demonstrative adjective, so I will be dealing with them in the 103 course.
What a brilliant individual you are, sir. To what extent I can only guess. I am humbled.
mrtxbrown 1 month ago 2
@mrtxbrown Who, me?
usenetposts 1 month ago
Все круто, но фонетика - рыдаю. Стоило бы хоть чуть чуть постараться.
Zhenewa 1 month ago
@Zhenewa Indeed. For what does it say? "This channel has no videos". What a pity. I was expecting a Russian course on phonetics there, much better than mine. Imagine my surprise not to see one there...
usenetposts 1 month ago
You are a very good teacher. Very good lesson. I like it. Also the joke and the song are a good complement to the lesson. Thank you.
ovni43 1 month ago
I fell asleep
mikemike20202020 3 months ago 2
@mikemike20202020 Excellent! You will learn better if you sleep a bit between chunks of learning.
usenetposts 3 months ago 8
@mikemike20202020 What exactly did you expect? A children's programme about animal names? With lots of songs and pink and yellow?
mina169 3 months ago
@mina169 hah hah! That is EXACTLY what passes for a language class in much of YouTube - you have hit the nail on the head!
usenetposts 3 months ago
I lol'd when you said "don't worry if you don't understand the grammatical terms-we'll take things slowly" cause I paused the videoearlier when I saw the 'pronouns, prepositions, verbs' and took notes from google. Then I came back to unpause the vid and heard you say that. haha. well thanks for always being prepared for stupid folk like me :) (only in high school)
sUnnydUcks123 4 months ago
You just got me interested in russian again! I left it because all the other internet videos are really bad.
I still need to work on my ruskey letter bl
MrMeat42 4 months ago
Thank you, you've successfully saved my Russian Grade :)
MyRedemption26 4 months ago
Hey man, you made me laugh with your russian accent... I'm a Serbian and russian is easy for me. I still think you did a great job for english speaking people.
pickonja316 6 months ago
@pickonja316 He speaks clearly and properly, no need for more :)
FrostySharkSpain 1 month ago
Лет ми спик фром май харт, блеять
murzik320 6 months ago
You mentioned pronouns at a higher level of learning and thus mastered later by children. Great point. But, are you referring here to 'natural' stages of language acquisition? Or just the 80/20 principle at work? That the ROI is greater. What are the other 'levels' of language? I have wondered how Michel Thomas worked out his way of breaking down a language into components, or whom or what he actually based it on. Seems like you're going at it MT style.
TheLinguaHacks 7 months ago
@TheLinguaHacks At the time I made this, I hadn't heard of Michel Thomas, but every linguist eventually comes to the same conclusions.
usenetposts 7 months ago
@usenetposts That reminds me. I now have fully incorporated your Gold List Method into my Michel Thomas learning (and teaching) arsenal. Hand 'n glove. MT is great for getting to the heart of the grammar points, but less than ideal for remembering them. Not anymore! I plan to do the same with your Russian course : )
TheLinguaHacks 7 months ago
@TheLinguaHacks It seems to me that Goldlist Method is a very good way to take knowledge covered at MT to the next level. I'm becoming more and more in favour of starting completely fresh languages with an audio course like MT method (I personally think his accolytes have done in many cases a better job than the master) or failing an MT method course, Paul Noble or at a pinch Pimsleur (not so good in many ways but better than nothing) If there is both an MT and a Pimsleur, I'd start with MT...
usenetposts 7 months ago
@usenetposts @The Linguahacks continued ...then do the Pimsleur, and then, having a decent grounding in the sound and structures from an aural viewpoint, the best way to introduce reading and writing would be to take a conventional course after that and goldlist the lot. Then if I'm serious about knowing a lot of the language a pocket dictionary to get to 15,000 words (takes a couple of years, really, unless you're a full time student or single) and then progress to Lit sourced Goldlisting.
usenetposts 7 months ago
yes! XD we are the only one with the dual in our language as this guy said in the vid... want to learn slovene? follow me and write me a message
dual is like this (ball)
-ena žoga /one ball
-dve žogi (dual !!!) /two balls
-tri žoge/three balls
sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
@sloveniaANDusa Many thanks. I'm glad to say that in my case it is dve žogi, although I am not one to stand in judgement over gentlemen who have ena or tri.
usenetposts 7 months ago
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sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
@usenetposts
Well, i wrote the comment just to invite more people to learn 2 or 3 Slavic languages that i know :D
(Because i can't spak Russian (much) i'm watching your videos. Ohh and by the way, they are awesome!)
sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
@sloveniaANDusa Many thanks! Maybe you can do a course in Slovene? I want to start a business in Slovenia.
usenetposts 7 months ago
@usenetposts
Maybe i will make one or more of them, but i have to buy me a camera first.I want to make it the same way you have. :)
Pozdrav iz Slovenije! Lepo se imej. (:
sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
@sloveniaANDusa Hvala, you too. You could always use your existing webcam but you'd need to lose the hall of mirrors effect. Or maybe not. That could be quite funny, to do a serious linguistic film with the full distortion effects going.
usenetposts 7 months ago
@usenetposts
Da, i could try with my webcam but, it has a really bad quality :)
Ahh! I'll think out something... :D
sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
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sloveniaANDusa 7 months ago
If anyone is interested in great lessons from a native speaker, try the channel SpanishHunkyGuy. They really helped me.
Trevie3 7 months ago
@scarydude101 intuition
druid80lvl 8 months ago
@keljo1215 Well spotted. Dashkievitch's "Theme from Sherlock Holmes". A perennial favorite in the Russian speaking world.
usenetposts 8 months ago
I´m traying to learn russian languaje, but This is my first time ever, I don´t have time to go to school, so I am doing by my self. Is this the first lesson if I don´t anything of Russian languaje? Thanks.
marianitzin 9 months ago
@marianitzin No, first go to the General Introduction to Huliganov's Russian Course and from there RL 101 Some Enchanted Evening.
usenetposts 9 months ago
Nice singing at the end -- I'd say (to future viewers) begin the video at 17:30 for the actual lesson, unless you have 17 minutes to kill hangin out with Huliganov, and need a review of rudimentary English grammar - and an interesting book recommendation - and a few tidbits about history of Polish or Old Church Slavonic..
baiNEKO 9 months ago in playlist Russian Language 101 and 102 with Huliganov
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baiNEKO 9 months ago
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baiNEKO 9 months ago
Your accent is awesome.
itskevindiamond 9 months ago
hero
nervous0breakdown 9 months ago
Ok, Huliganov. I like this lesson. I'm much more advanced than pronouns but I like to hear your explanation of things. I really want to understand the Russian language and the culture. You clearly really know your stuff! Excellent joke and I liked the song too. I can't quite figure you out but I like your stuff!
Batyaboo 9 months ago
I love this guy. And the song at the end.
Can you post the lyrics?
TheLadyOwnsYou 10 months ago
@TheLadyOwnsYou I love you too, at least I do sexually. So the lyrics are up in the description bit above!
usenetposts 9 months ago 5
@usenetposts Спасибо :)
TheLadyOwnsYou 9 months ago
Hello) I'm Russian. I'm learning English. If you are English speaking person and learning Russian - we can help each other! my mail: innaru2009@yandex.ru write to me=)
Innaru2009 10 months ago in playlist Russian Language 101 and 102 with Huliganov
@Innaru2009 I hope this isn't one of those crypto-matrimonials. All the best ones of my viewers are already taken.
usenetposts 10 months ago
@Innaru2009 privet. i just started to leaarn russian and i don't know how long you've been doing english but..i've ony been doing it for a few days. whats it like learning english? is it hard?
Sillilesshells 9 months ago
Thank you soo much for going over this ti, mui, etc. stuff I understand it as this is like in Spanish as well, but I never knew it would apply in Russian also...
JesusGodHolySpirit3 10 months ago
Нгэук оекке ферма почерпаем поаргументированнее
TheMuppets1231 10 months ago
Вы правда препадаватель русского языка или вы делаете урокы ,,, hummm for fun ? Don't know how to say.
Soudavolstviem 11 months ago
Thanks for very good lesson! I am an Indian and i have deep intrest in russia & russian people.
pyasadil 11 months ago
Учитесь,учитесь
tionad12 11 months ago
He need to learn english first
druid80lvl 11 months ago
wow good lesson man! I am from the Netherlands and I think russian is a very cool languague ( <----- fail ) I am doing my best to learn it but it's very hard and on school I have to learn the stupid langueges as German and French because they are close to my country hope oneday they will teach russian keep it up great work!
savouryshiva 11 months ago
@savouryshiva French is cool too.
Soudavolstviem 11 months ago
Hello Mr. Huliganov! I am learning well from your videos. Thank you!! I am moving to Kazakhstan in August so trying to learn as much as possible by then. Question: Are there any Russian language shows you recommend me to watch (looking for lots of dialogue)? I want to get used to hearing Russian by watching 30 minutes of tv every day. Thanks also for the jokes and songs.
chadrusky 11 months ago
@chadrusky I daresay you already tried the Michel Thomas course? TV won't do anything for you, by the way.
usenetposts 11 months ago
this guy is boring to listen
he speaks without any sense
daniel29729020 11 months ago
@daniel29729020 That's exactly what they told me at University, while they handed me my MA.
usenetposts 11 months ago 7
UHHAAAHAHHAAAHAAA
ArchangelVovan 1 year ago
Thank you for these videos, It's nice learning grammar from someone telling it in great detail and using examples, rather than reading it from text books, which only makes things more confusing. Again thank you! Спасибо! ^_^
rikuobessed 1 year ago
I love russian accent!!! awsome!!!
Guyc00l 1 year ago
I was kidding man, i was just teasing you . when do we expect you to do RL103 ? I hope very soon. thank you so much for RL101 and RL102
starfayasel 1 year ago
As an aspiring linguist, this was very informative- thank you. Thank you for the time you took to explain everything and your lovely singing at the end. =) I hope to speak Russian fluently one day.
BethInuzuka 1 year ago
@BethInuzuka Many thanks for that, I hope you enjoy the whole series.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts You are welcome, and I will surely enjoy it as I make my way though it. Can I ask a quick question though? In a Russian song called "АнгелОК" .. well, why is that "OK" at the end? I thought "angel" was simply "Ангел". Does the "OK" mean anything or is that actually how you say "angel"? It's just something that has been bugging me, haha.
BethInuzuka 1 year ago
@BethInuzuka -ok is one of a series of diminuatives. it means "little" or sometimes "silly little", like durak = "idiot" and "durachok" is "silly little idiot". But if they write the suffix in capitals then it's probably a play on words with the English "OK" as in "okay". In the case of song titles and group names in Popular Music the meaning in any language is often something you'd need to ask the people involved. People still speculate on the meaning of some titles and group names in English.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts Thank you. =) I'm not sure if the person who uploaded the video simply made "OK" capitalized because they decided to or if the title is that. I'll look more into the song now, knowing they chose to add "ok" at the end whether it means "little angel" or a play on words with English (or both). Eheh, don't be surprised if you hear from me again- I'm too fond of languages and may have more questions. (I hope this wouldn't annoy you?)
BethInuzuka 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
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caglargokce 1 year ago
Stop bitching at him. He's covering the lesson he is going to teach. I happen to respect Viktor's lessons.
astrophysics1997 1 year ago
@astrophysics1997 Thanks for that. I'm glad I have some worthy students and not just people who come to a subject feeling they already know it better than the person presenting, even though they don't have any videos on the matter themselves. If they did, maybe I'd take more account of their opinions.
usenetposts 1 year ago 4
im not sure whats wrong with all these people, i think this is actually pretty good, and if someone thinks its not, i guess thats their right/opinion or whatever, but damn people, unless you have something better to share, then shut the fu*k up already, he has alot of good, videos, that you actually can learn from, hes not charging for it, so if you dont like it damn well dont watch it, i however think he is doing a good job, thank you for these videos
Andreibehrcor 1 year ago
What wonderful colourful language you use. Really shows a person's upbringing.
hippywonder1 1 year ago
@hippywonder1 The word I used fits you to a tee and if you say that's down to your upbringing, then fine. So it was your mother who taught you to go on the video of someone who's only trying to help people, try to sabotage the viewership, be damn rude about the work and the appearance despite having done no videos yourself, and then try and look the victim when you get called on it. Nice lady she must be. I shan't blame your dad as it looks like he wasn't around.
usenetposts 1 year ago
People please use any other sites if you really want to learn Russian .It is not
Russian and he is not a teacher (I do not mention his unpleasant look and manners)
Lena
hippywonder1 1 year ago
@hippywonder1 Silly little bitch. Do your own Russian course if you think people would learn better your way. Don't just come on here with no uploads and start undermining me. Nobody's gonna thank you for that. And you're banned from watching my stuff, by the way, you pathetic little wannabe vandal.
And I ain't gonna look "pleasant" for you. Kiss my ass.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts
What wonderful colourful language you use. Really shows a person's upbringing.
hippywonder1 1 year ago
@hippywonder1 i just noticed your comment. you're really rude. I'm not sure why usenetposts doesn't just delete your comment. I actually have found his posts to be very helpful. I'm not sure what your problem is, but please go away, and stay there.
mariyamtselalu 1 year ago 2
@mariyamtselalu Amen to that! She wanted to come and lash out from nowhere with total spite, and when she got a bit of her own flavour, she wanted to play the victim. She's not allowed to watch any more of my videos.
usenetposts 1 year ago
Thank you for this English lesson !!!!
starfayasel 1 year ago
@starfayasel Thank you for this sarcasm. Go ahead and do your own course, I'm sure it'll be better than this shit of mine. Teach people how to be sarcastic as well as you are so clearly the undisputed master of it.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@tailsmilesprower24 It ain't heavy, it's my brazzer.
usenetposts 1 year ago
can u stop blabbering and teach some russian......ur supposed to teach russian and not actually teach us the entire grammar in english.....u speak abt saving time by using pronouns but u urself wasted 10 mins in beginning to start .......i understand u have loads of knowledge but plz....start teaching as soon as the video begins......no hard feelings but i'm a person with very short attention span....it becomes very difficult for me to wait this long......
MrJetrocker 1 year ago
@MrJetrocker Just do me and everyone else a favour and take your very short attention span somewhere else, you ungrateful, arrogant little twat.
usenetposts 1 year ago 14
@usenetposts LOLOLOL!!!! YESSSSSSS!
mariyamtselalu 1 year ago
less talk more teach
AreaQNH870 1 year ago
@AreaQNH870 There's always Pimsleur, if you don't want to know any background.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts Yes I have been using Pimsleur, Rosetta Stone, and of course your series.
AreaQNH870 1 year ago
By the way, could someone translate this quote a person wrote to me? "Слава всех русских людей" Is this bad or good? Thx!
Pedrofrombrazil 1 year ago
@Pedrofrombrazil It means "glory of all Russian people". I don't call that good, myself. Glory belongs to Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and not to any people.
usenetposts 1 year ago
Thank you very much for taking the time and effort to create these videos and put them online. I found the RL101 series very useful in preparing for my first brief visit to Kazakhstan - there were enough signs in Russian to practice my reading. Although I could not converse, I read/discovered a few words that were similar in Sanskrit/Hindi/Marathi; e.g., ogon, sakhar! I am now getting more serious about learning the language - hence RL102!
amolut 1 year ago
@amolut Look at the similarities you can see just counting to ten.
usenetposts 1 year ago
The RussianLessons Group does not exist!
I followed the URL got a blank page.
firysnow 1 year ago
@firysnow Which one, the group in here r the google one? There's also a facebook one, apparently...
usenetposts 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Need to marry you **busizz4me.info**
AthenaLailaify 1 year ago
@scarydude101 You have to learn where the stress is in each word, and how it changes through the conjugations too for some words. Stress is not the easy part of Russian.
usenetposts 1 year ago
and also, is huliganov your real name?
rdphippo 1 year ago
@rdphippo In the land where hippo is your real name, huliganov is mine.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts excellent answer. also, thank you for devoting your time to these lessons. i am learning russian to travel to and possible live in the next couple years with my lady and your methods are working very well for me so far
rdphippo 1 year ago
@rdphippo happy to hear that.
usenetposts 1 year ago
LOVE the song!!!
rdphippo 1 year ago
I don't know what or who Ruddy Pimsleur is but I do know that I am not the first or the last to observe that there is too much English in this lesson. But that is just my humble opinion.
moujik1905 1 year ago
@moujik1905 Ruddy Pimsleur is someone who did language courses with more of the language, less explanation of it. you just get immersed in the language straight away. If you want to learn that way, then just go to a high class bookshop and ask if they have any Ruddy Pimsleur.
usenetposts 1 year ago
too much English my friend! gavariu pa ruski pajalusta
moujik1905 1 year ago
@moujik1905 What do you think this is, ruddy Pimsleur or something?
usenetposts 1 year ago
THANK YOU FOR THE LESSONS, I'M TRYING TO LEARN RUSSIAN AND THIS HELPS A LOT.
marisoledadmr 1 year ago
Thankyou, I needed a brush on my English skills anyway.
HomuncuIus 1 year ago
seems more like an English lesson.....
xander0713 1 year ago
@xander0713 Sorry, should I have made these explanations for lesson one entirely in Russian? You go ahead and do your own course that way, if you think it's a good idea.
usenetposts 1 year ago 2
Ochen bolshoye sposibo, ya sam polowin Russki i Polowin Meshitin Ahiska etot video ochen pomagayet menya! ya prosto ni hachu zabit Russkiy, Hotel sprosit est utbeya vid dlya dektovki? ya uchus v Amerike i hochu zdelat Rossiskiy domashniy zadanya shtob ya derzhal s Rossiyam mozhesh kak nibut pomogat menya? umenya diktovka i pisat na pisminom ni tak ush horosho i esho grammer Sposibo bolshoye vam!! :)
DozhdTUT 1 year ago
THIS GUY IS SAD BUT ITS NICE TO SEE SOMEONE TAKE PART IN THIS
01MSlaghuis 1 year ago
@01MSlaghuis I hope you cheer up soon.
usenetposts 1 year ago
just joing me Rena Azimova on facebook or check my page hindi, russian, english learn and study, on facebook
it is for free:) i want to exchange with people language knowledge n wish to learn hindi this way!
Qaynana 1 year ago
@Qaynana OK, in that case it's OK. There is already a facebook group with these vids, called "Huliganov's Lessons really work", or something, but the more the merrier.
usenetposts 1 year ago
Please, can i use your videos in my page on facebook, Hindi, Russian, English-study and teach??? please:)
Qaynana 1 year ago
@Qaynana If you're not making money, just helping people, and if you give the link to here and to Huliganov dot tv, then you can do it. Please let me see the place you linked it just because I am a nosy bastard.
usenetposts 1 year ago
loved the joke :)
meliriri 1 year ago
Very good, you make me feel like I'm learning from a friend or an intelligent uncle. Most other places I feel like I'm learning from a computer and the personal connection is missing from that. You do a good job and I'm happy that you give us this resource to learn the beautiful language of Russian! спасибо!
derDenker1992 1 year ago
sometimes i feel that he teaches english not russian
starfayasel 1 year ago
Boring
starfayasel 1 year ago
@starfayasel I agree. Someone with no uploads at all, like yourself, is a MUCH better entertainer than I am!
usenetposts 1 year ago 10
usenetposts ваша внешность просто копия российского политика А. Митрофанова
Russianitro 1 year ago
@Russianitro That's what they all tell me.
usenetposts 1 year ago
thank you for this lesson
I have always to learn russian for free~
sergeikuo 1 year ago
Ты - for familiar people (buddies, friends, the family)
Вы - for unknown persons (who you don't know) and to people which older than you (it's showing respect)
Never talk "Ты" to unknown persons
mochiKozlov 1 year ago
yeah you know more than most people
mw227 1 year ago
totally agree with the commernt below. these are the best russian lessons accompanied with accurate audio I've found on the net yet.
snickerchick11 1 year ago 2
Very beautiful song at the end - Very informative lesson about Pyccknn
Rifou812 1 year ago
I love how you have such a comprehensive understanding and use of the English language yet you still have a Russian accent. Really gives off an intelligent character about you.
theshitaIker 1 year ago
@theshitaIker That's very kind of you.
usenetposts 1 year ago
@usenetposts especially coming from 'theshitalker' lol.
no really though, great video.
xaugstbrnsredx 1 year ago
Thank you very much for posting these lessons.
TheKyla1981 1 year ago
@TheKyla1981 many thanks for watching them.
usenetposts 1 year ago
haha ha I want to get your accent.
slobor3 1 year ago
Very good explanation! Thanks, will follow you, hope to improve very fast and can communicate with my future parents-in-law. :)
grassland007 1 year ago
As a native English speaker, I am having difficulties wrapping my head around constructing Russian sentences without "the" article. In everyday speech we, (at least I do) use it before pretty much all specified nouns.
The on the other side of the coin: Any advice on how to go about explaining the concept of "the" article to a native Russian speaker learning English?
I appreciate the work you put into your videos & the breadth of the accord you have with your viewers. Spasiba bal'shoi.
- T3
ToonTownTerrorist 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Guys, I can teach you some Russian or Arabic.
Write me a message, if you are interested.
RusLanguage 1 year ago
I really like how clearly Huliganov explains his lessons. Very helpful for my studies on Russian Grammar :)
julia3465 1 year ago
Great first grammar lesson. Personally I heard all that and it helps me recall and structure it mentally.
After living many years in Ireland, I got used to the english YOU and now back in France, I've been confusing (myself and) people by unvoluntarily switching from Tu to VOUS all the time. I now see the picture of a modern polish man in a medieval costume walking back and forth with a log to smash my skull if I was to do that in Poland! €:D
OLudOvideos 1 year ago
thanks man you're really helpful
revenez 1 year ago
I really like this guy - very entertaining!!!!
briank4251 1 year ago 6
Dear Huliganov,
love the song- could you provide the lyrics please if it's not too much work? That way we could follow you - and by now quite a few of the words are actually known, so we might even get the context
meandtherevolution 1 year ago
I'll be adding in details like that when I do the wordpress version of these, coming soon.
usenetposts 1 year ago
love this russian language learning. It's all good 'cept for the grammar. That is impossi-bluh!
MultiMarkle 1 year ago
- Ihr Video ist wirklich sehr Hilfreich - sehr Interessant für mich ist der Faktor, das ich mir nicht nur eine Vokabelbox Englisch sondern auch Russich gekauft habe um beide Sprachen zu lernen und deutlich zu verbessern. Daher ist es für mich im doppelten Sinne Intressant Ihrem Kommentar auf englisch zu folgen und dabei Russich zu lernen bzw. zu vestehen. Vielen Dank für die Arbeit.
XxxMephistoxxxx 2 years ago
these lessons are very useful, thank you for uploading them ^_^
enough to break your head XD
that made me laugh so much!!
DarkWitchArizona 2 years ago
Kto, ja? Love it...
TheBigCollapse 2 years ago
Thank you so much. This is very helpful.
DormirinDementia 2 years ago
content: 5of 5
editing: fail
truegwbfan 2 years ago
Fail? I'll have to study your uploads. no doubt learning from the master I'll pass next time. ;-)
usenetposts 2 years ago
too funny, i am currently learning russian and am using your videos along with other sources.
and my videos are top notch, untouchable, only a true master can understand this, capishe.
truegwbfan 2 years ago
@usenetposts slaaammmm.
dfguitarman01 1 year ago
@dfguitarman01 Thanks for subbing.
usenetposts 1 year ago
this guy is awsome
SMatr1x 2 years ago
This is briliant i didnt know anything before this.
haha and the bit about polish where you say its enough to brake your head.
ryann102 2 years ago
Thank you so much. I am teaching myself Russian since where I live the classes are too far and way to expensive. This makes more sense now, then just trying to read it from a book of Russian Grammar. I also prefer to have a teacher teach me grammar.
LittleImpaler 2 years ago
привет всем желающим выучить русский язык ^_^ *машет лапкой* xD
earnkun 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Well, God didn't curse the Tower of Babel for nothing.
1236612 2 years ago
Comment removed
1236612 2 years ago
Any videos up for the use of 'ne' and 'net' yet? I still can't figure it out. I'm trying to learn it with nothing but Rosetta Stone, so I can't just ask someone, and the few times I have I haven't gotten a straight answer. Would you say (pronounced) "Cobaka ne bejeet" or "Cobaka net bejeet"? Which one is no and which one is not? Do they have multiple related meanings?
evankowalski 2 years ago
Ne means "not" in most of the usual meanings. I have no idea of what "Cobaka ne bejeet" means, as this is not one of the standard transcription methods. "Net" means either "no" or the expression "there isn't any/ aren't any..." followed by the genitive case. For example, you could say "eto ne ya" (It's not me) and "net menya" (I'm not here).
usenetposts 2 years ago
I think he is trying to say "dog not running".собака ие бежит. Only he is using English letters to pronounce and to spell out the word.
ziggytedly 2 years ago
"Sobaka ne bejeet"
"bejeet" - the VERB, subsequently "NE"
Sybercat13 2 years ago
The usual transliteration for English speakers is then "sobaka ne bezhit".
usenetposts 2 years ago
you use net only in 2 cases: when you want negate the whole sentence and when you want to say that something isn't there, and in all other cases you use ne
ljubicastimarker 2 years ago
@evankowlski I can help you. Since I learn German and German as many nos. Het meaning No as "Do you drink tea?" And the other person says. "No, I do not." or the no that means not allow. "No!" As an expression He is negative = not/no, I am learning also with Rosetta stone.
For example. If I wanted to say no dog on the table in Russian I wouldn't use Net, I would use Ne. Now if someone ask me if I could put the dog on the table, then I would use Net.
LittleImpaler 2 years ago
@LittleImpaler На столе нет собаки. Нет is more to show absence whereas не is a negator. It negates whatever verb is next. Собака не сидит на столе.
Niops 2 years ago
@Niops yes that is correct. I learn that recently. Het that you used in this content would be like the German Kein which means no. Not the expression, but an navigator.
LittleImpaler 2 years ago
Can someone explain to me what all the word conjugations for "this" are? i see diferent forms of it like
это
эти
этим
What are the other conjugations and when are they used in sentence?
Dyotei 2 years ago
The 102 course is only dealing with "eto" as the demonstrative pronoun. These declined versions are the demonstrative adjective, so I will be dealing with them in the 103 course.
usenetposts 2 years ago
этот предмет
эту вещь
эта вещь
Sybercat13 2 years ago