For example, the noun стол (table) is masculine. Remember! The only ending shared by more than one gender is the letter "ь".
a table is feminine, une table. freedom is feminine, la liberté Canada is masculine, le Canada. and France is feminine, la France.
“Чай” (chai) is masculine and ends in “-й,” so we need to use the ending “-я” to form the genitive.
Most of these are about (I/me) and gender neutral. you is вы (formal) and ты (familiar) He is он She is она While to him is ему and to her is ей There are many cases to learn for each gender and also for me, they, you etc.
Pronouns “я” (ya) and “мы” (my) refer to the speaker and are first-person pronouns. The second person describes a person you're talking to, so “ты” (ty) and “Вы” (Vy) are second-person pronouns. They refer to one or more people.
“Ты” is the regular 2nd person singular form. It is mostly used in informal situations and shows a certain kind of proximity between people. It's correct to use “ты” in the following situations: With friends and family.
Soft stems of masculine nouns are indicated by the letters -й and -ь (soft sign): музей, словарь. Soft stems of feminine nouns are indicated by -я and -ь: песня, дверь.
Мать is masculine, feminine.
(masculine) большой город — big city. (feminine) большая машина — big car. (neuter) большое солнце — big sun.
How can we tell that “машина / car” is feminine or “стол / table” is masculine? Actually, you can identify the gender of almost any noun very easily just by looking at its ending. All you have to do is memorize a few patterns.
For instance, календарь is masculine but ночь (night) is feminine.
Russian is widely believed to be one of the most difficult languages to learn. This is mostly true, if you have no knowledge of other Slavic languages (e.g. Bulgarian or Czech). The grammar rules in Russian are very complex and have numerous exceptions.
Some nouns are neither male nor female; they fall under the neuter gender. For example: table, hair, city, etc. These nouns are inanimate or non living entities and are assigned neither feminine nor a masculine gender.
Neuter gender:
Neuter means neither, which is neither male nor female. For example, table, hair, city, etc.
Neuter nouns refer to things that have no gender (i.e. rock, table, pencil, etc.)
Рубль is a masculine noun. As you can see with the examples above, the numbers in front of “ruble” and “rubles” are written out in their masculine form to match.
площадь {feminine}
Это деревенская площадь Питера Брейгеля. expand_more This is the village square by Pieter Bruegel.
The generic word for "horse" is лошадь. It means that, if we do not know if the horse is a male or a female, we would say лошадь. Конь is used when if we know it is a male horse.
словарь • (slowarʲ) class j2 (plural словараш) dictionary.
Usually, как дела? is quite a formal greeting requiring a formal response.
Translation of "моя крошка" in English. Noun. my baby. my little girl.