Ask a Question

(Create a thread)
Go Back   Spanish language learning forums > The Tomísimo Lounge > General Chat
Register Help/FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

¿Alfabeto de Cyrillic?

 

Talk about anything here, just keep it clean.


Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1
Old May 17, 2009, 08:10 AM
bobjenkins's Avatar
bobjenkins bobjenkins is offline
Diamond
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: España próximamente??
Posts: 2,923
Native Language: Inglés
bobjenkins is on a distinguished road
Send a message via Yahoo to bobjenkins
¿Alfabeto de Cyrillic?

Yo quiero empezar aprender Ruso, pero lo usa el alfabeto de Cyrillic. ¿Podéis recomendarme un libro que me ayude aprenderlo? Los libros me ayudaron, y todavia, aprender español, tambien vosotros!! Yo quiero comprar algos libros sobre ruso.

¿Cuálquiera habla ruso aquí? No sé cómo empezar Gracias

Lo siento, reallzo que la tema sea(subjunctivo o no?) en el lugar incorrecto, si peudes moverlo por favor, yo agredeceré
__________________
"There´s always money in the banana stand michael!"
--george bluthe sir

Last edited by bobjenkins; May 17, 2009 at 08:13 AM.
Reply With Quote
   
Get rid of these ads by registering for a free Tomísimo account.
  #2
Old May 17, 2009, 11:48 AM
Rusty's Avatar
Rusty Rusty is offline
Señor Speedy
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 11,403
Native Language: American English
Rusty has a spectacular aura aboutRusty has a spectacular aura about
While I can't recommend a particular book, you'll be able to find good books that teach the Cyrillic alphabet in a number of places. You can also learn a great deal about the alphabet from the internet.

Alphabet, with pronunciation.

Ask me what you will about Russian.
Я немного говорю на русском языке.
Reply With Quote
  #3
Old May 17, 2009, 01:06 PM
bobjenkins's Avatar
bobjenkins bobjenkins is offline
Diamond
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: España próximamente??
Posts: 2,923
Native Language: Inglés
bobjenkins is on a distinguished road
Send a message via Yahoo to bobjenkins
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rusty View Post
While I can't recommend a particular book, you'll be able to find good books that teach the Cyrillic alphabet in a number of places. You can also learn a great deal about the alphabet from the internet.

Alphabet, with pronunciation. great link I have yet to find a site with sounds for the letters this helps, on a side note its strange how the handwritten is quite different from the typed
Ask me what you will about Russian.
Я немного говорю на русском языке.
Rusty gracias. Did you take some classes about Russian or self learner? I am asking because I might try a russian class at my local college there are only 2 classes availible While theres about 60 spanish one , I wonder how the language compares to spanish/english, in terms of pronounciation, grammar, ect

Is the new alphebet easier to get a grip on then in spanish? It is appealing to me simply because its so different I read that all Russian words are spelled like they sound, and also two letters don't come together to make one sound like in english/spanish "sh/ch/ll/ect" Not sure of the word for this, phonetic maybe?

What about grammar, lots of strange rules that are hard to remember?

And what I am wondering about the most is the pronounciation, if you speak it well, and I assume your a native english speaker, how do you think the sounds compare? Is it more focused on the tone than in spanish, like chinese is. I read somewhere that you can speak chinese but emphasize/accent the wrong parts of the words and you can mean something completely different,is russian anything like that?


sorryfor all the questions, im just not sure where to start, with spanish I went and bought some books and few months later I am happy with how its going, I think that is the way to go for me, or take a class to supplement the books. Im gunna bu the idiots guide/complete morons book today (or what ever they call it)



Спасибо
__________________
"There´s always money in the banana stand michael!"
--george bluthe sir

Last edited by bobjenkins; May 17, 2009 at 01:14 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #4
Old May 17, 2009, 06:32 PM
Rusty's Avatar
Rusty Rusty is offline
Señor Speedy
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: USA
Posts: 11,403
Native Language: American English
Rusty has a spectacular aura aboutRusty has a spectacular aura about
Quote:
Originally Posted by bobjenkins View Post
Rusty gracias. Did you take some classes about Russian or self learner? I took two years of Russian in college (a LONG time ago).
I am asking because I might try a russian class at my local college there are only 2 classes availible While theres about 60 spanish one , I wonder how the language compares to spanish/english, in terms of pronounciation, grammar, ect

Is the new alphebet easier to get a grip on then in spanish? It is appealing to me simply because its so different I read that all Russian words are spelled like they sound, and also two letters don't come together to make one sound like in english/spanish "sh/ch/ll/ect" Not sure of the word for this, phonetic maybe? The different alphabet intrigued me, as well. After learning Spanish, I wanted to learn other languages. Russian was my first pick. The alphabet is certainly harder to learn than the Spanish alphabet, because in Spanish they use most of Roman letters we use. The Cyrillic alphabet was devised by a Greek, so some of its letters resemble Greek. And, just like Greek, the type-written uppercase letters don't look like the lowercase letters. The cursive form is even more radical in the lowercase arena.

What about grammar, lots of strange rules that are hard to remember?
The most difficult part about the grammar is the noun cases. There are six cases. In other words, the word book has six different endings, depending on how it is used in the sentence. The endings must be used correctly in order to be understood.
Russian has no articles (the, a(n)), which takes a little getting used to.
There are six different verb endings, just like in Spanish, but not for exactly the same persons. There are only three tenses (present, past, future). There are three moods (indicative, imperative and conditional). The aspects (imperfective and perfective) are probably the hardest thing to get around. It means there are two verb forms to choose from in the past and future tenses, and sometimes they look nothing like each other.

And what I am wondering about the most is the pronounciation, if you speak it well, and I assume your a native english speaker, how do you think the sounds compare? Is it more focused on the tone than in spanish, like chinese is. I read somewhere that you can speak chinese but emphasize/accent the wrong parts of the words and you can mean something completely different,is russian anything like that? Russian pronunciation will be easier for you than for a native Spanish speaker because there are A LOT of contiguous consonants. The accent, or stress, in a word is about the only difference you'll note, as far as tone. In Russian, the tone drops on the accented syllable. Most of the vowels change in pronunciation based on whether they are stressed or not. This practice is much like English, where we tend to hurry over the unstressed vowels in words like polite. The Russian o is pronounced like the Spanish o when it is stressed, but like the English schaw sound (like the o in polite) when it is not stressed.

sorryfor all the questions, im just not sure where to start, with spanish I went and bought some books and few months later I am happy with how its going, I think that is the way to go for me, or take a class to supplement the books. Im gunna bu the idiots guide/complete morons book today (or what ever they call it)

Спасибо
You're welcome. (I don't know why you underscored the и. There are no accents in Russian. That is the correct syllable to stress, by the way. And, as I mentioned earlier, that is the syllable which will receive the drop in tone.)

For both your Spanish and your Russian studies, I recommend listening and speaking (not just reading). You must hear correct pronunciations in order to speak the language. Make sure your Russian college class is taught by someone who SPEAKS the language. My first-year Russian teacher had a terrible time with pronunciation.
Reply With Quote
  #5
Old May 17, 2009, 06:40 PM
bobjenkins's Avatar
bobjenkins bobjenkins is offline
Diamond
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: España próximamente??
Posts: 2,923
Native Language: Inglés
bobjenkins is on a distinguished road
Send a message via Yahoo to bobjenkins
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rusty View Post
You're welcome. (I don't know why you underscored the и. There are no accents in Russian. That is the correct syllable to stress, by the way. And, as I mentioned earlier, that is the syllable which will receive the drop in tone.)

For both your Spanish and your Russian studies, I recommend listening and speaking (not just reading). You must hear correct pronunciations in order to speak the language. Make sure your Russian college class is taught by someone who SPEAKS the language. My first-year Russian teacher had a terrible time with pronunciation.
Wow thanks, Yeah Ill have to check out the teachers at my college and make sure they actually speak fluently in russian I find it quite a bit harder to get my hands on russian language television programs, news, ect. But hopefully ill manage

thanks
__________________
"There´s always money in the banana stand michael!"
--george bluthe sir
Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
cyrillic, russian

 

Link to this thread
URL: 
HTML Link: 
BB Code: 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Site Rules


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:36 AM.

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.

X