"Privet" Does anyone know what to do with this?

I am German but I find Russian wonderfully beautiful. Does anyone know any good ways to learn Russian or is anyone Russian themselves who can teach me the language?

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KeineAhnung2862
9 months ago

Hi.

I don't think you're going around a language course. Especially completely without previous knowledge, you can try bubbles and so apps to teach you the basic knowledge + Alphabet can learn yourself in the internet on YT or something.

Theoretically you can do as you have written someone looking for you who teaches you Russian and you German. We have many Russian-language people with us just no idea how far it would make sense that you should have contact with someone every day for hours that ea shows a result at all, that is not easy to sit half an hour and then you can speak Russian. In addition, as a mother tongue, you can often not really explain the grammar, you know it might be so rough, but not really explain why you say so and so, because you talk right after feeling without thinking how you say it, just as we speak in German. Therefore, whether it makes sense and a "not pro" really someone can teach the Russian grammar is questionable. That's why I'd give you some basic skills with internet, Russian-language people and then language course, so you won't get around.

Zickiadous
9 months ago

How can you get such good German?

KeineAhnung2862
9 months ago
Reply to  Zickiadous

Because I am German and logically born here and went to school.

KeineAhnung2862
9 months ago

Yes, I don't care. I have learned Russian at home and German in kindergarten and school both in early childhood and without formal teaching, I already know the definition 😉

Zickiadous
9 months ago

The definition of a native language is clearly regulated internationally.

The language you have learned in your early childhood without the need for a study.

For example, I learned German without formal teaching with the 4th year of life.

You then have 2 mother tongues if you learned Russian alongside German without formal lessons in your earliest childhood.

KeineAhnung2862
9 months ago

It depends on when you learned Russian

From the age I ask for your questions, I can certainly say that I have learned Russian long before you have been witnessed.

and whether you have learned it like German 50% of your lifetime.

Didn't it have to be calculated in percentages?

Don't let you trigger from my expertise!

Zickiadous
9 months ago

It depends on when you learned Russian and whether you learned it like German 50% of your lifetime.

KeineAhnung2862
9 months ago

You can theoretically have 2 mother tongues. And actually it doesn't matter how to call it or?

Zickiadous
9 months ago

Then Russian is not your mother tongue.

PaterAlfonso
9 months ago

"Привет" Does anyone know how to start it?

Sura. Says as much as greet you, hello, welcome.

I had the doubtful pleasure of being able to learn Russian as the first and obligatory foreign language in GDR times for 6 years at school and then 2 of 4 years in study. Fortunately, I almost forgot everything again.

hamberlona
9 months ago
hamberlona
9 months ago
Reply to  Jerome391

It's not perfect. Whether it works incorrectly you notice by clicking on the switch between the two languages ​​a few times. The learning effect depends on what words or short texts are fed to it and whether you are not too lazy to write it down and learn it by heart.