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👽 dimitrigorvachov

Language learners, I need advice.

I've learned enough Russian for people to slightly understand me, but my vocabulary is lacking. So what should I do, should I focus more on grammer or increase my vocabulary for a while?

3 years ago · 👍 marginalia

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8 Replies

👽 hyperlinkyourheart

If you learn vocab you can make up for grammar deficiencies with enthusiasm, but a good grasp of grammar can't help you if you don't know the word for something. · 3 years ago

👽 dimitrigorvachov

@marginalia I wanted to learn Latin for the longest of times. I think Russian is going to help me with that because it introduces things like cases · 3 years ago

👽 marginalia

FWIW, I've found Krashen's theories extremely useful in learning Latin (which is *extremely* resistant to rote learning, e.g. this is just one word: http://latindictionary.wikidot.com/verb:ferre -- good luck memorizing that with flash cards) · 3 years ago

http://latindictionary.wikidot.com/verb:ferre

👽 iam

My expirience with Udmurt (it is an Ugro-Finnic language) was I did not understand nothing without grammar knowledge because of extensive using different cases, suffics and terminates. In opposite, English learner will need absolute minimum of grammar to understand text. Donno nothing about Russian learning strategies though, even I was born there... · 3 years ago

👽 dimitrigorvachov

@samwise that’s what I heard from many other people as well. I guess I will work more on my vocabulary so I have more to work with. I did get some of the cases out of the way those being the genitive and instrumental cases · 3 years ago

👽 samwise

Couple a years ago I asked the same question, I happen to have a friend who is a russian native. According to him, a wide vocabulary is much more useful compared to grammar (at least early on), it is much more useful for having a comprehensive vocab for getting your message through compared to following grammar but struggling to find the right words. Disclaimer: I haven't been studying russian in quite a while and never actually got to test my friends advice in reality. · 3 years ago

👽 isoraqathedh

The usual advice for language learning is generally immersion. Find something in Russian that you want to access, and then read or listen to it. This would help with both your vocabulary and grammar. · 3 years ago

👽 mc

How I do it: read some books and try to find someone that speaks fluently and try to make some conversation. ;) · 3 years ago