Introduction to Russian Pronunciation, circa 1960
Film explains pronunciation techniques used in Russian language classroom. Features Professor Pierre C. Oustinoff in the classroom. One of the reels is cut and cannot be viewed. Digitized from the original 16mm black and white reel in 2013. From the University Archives Audiovisual Collection, Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William and Mary. UA07. Acc 1982.066.
Swem Library's Special Collections Research Center welcomes additional identifying information about this film.
Пікірлер: 352
Моя жена в Сибири, мне хорошо когда она в Сибири. Это пять.
@hannahweis6718
5 жыл бұрын
это сто раз по 5!!)))))
@user-oe2cc3tc5t
3 жыл бұрын
@@hannahweis6718 а с тёщей это шесть
@Lexie_Greer
13 күн бұрын
Блин, чуваки! Что ж вы так свих жён-то не любите? Может тогда жениться не нужно было? 🤷♂️🤣
@FransceneJK98
7 күн бұрын
Ах вот как??? Ну, до свидания.
@user-lx6yq5hc7w
7 күн бұрын
@@Lexie_Greer все мы сильны задним умом)
What memories this brings ! I took Russian classes at Cranston High East from 1962-1965. Our teacher was Dr. Chester Adam Kiesel PhD. who had graduated from Brown U. and Harvard. He had us reading Captain's Daughter by Pushkin and Hero of Our Times by Lermonotov by the second year. Kiesel later became an internationally famed translator of several works. We learned pronunciation by copying our teacher and did not use diagrams of the mouth or tongue. To get an idea of the quality of those classes, years later in my 60's, I spoke in Russian with a Russian woman who had been in the Bolshoi ballet. She said I spoke with an accent but thought I had been in Russia as a student ! This was 40 years after High School !!
@selfishbirch
8 сағат бұрын
Всего за два года? Ну и ну! У меня ушло типа семи лет, чтобы читать что то для взрослой аудитории на английском, а говорят, грамматика на русском сложнее к пониманию. Было бы интересно узнать про методы вашего профессора больше. Надеюсь, в интернете есть информация по вопросу. Он явно понимал, что делает.
@mergele5
59 минут бұрын
Thanks for sharing
Эти диалоги просто великолепны XD Сразу вспомнила идиотские диалоги на французском, в которых тоже не было никакой логики.
@DianaT-ph6iz
13 күн бұрын
а какие в японских учебниках!
@PieeM
8 күн бұрын
Думаю так на всех языках 😂
@Tolkienphil
Күн бұрын
На немецком так же😂
-Как его фамилия? -Иван Иваныч. :))
@j-ksg1-96Jg
13 күн бұрын
Керәшендер ул)
@MadHerringFish
10 күн бұрын
Он гений
@user-lg7nm2mr9c
7 күн бұрын
ИванОвич, тогда ок.
@wester_wald
4 күн бұрын
@@MadHerringFish Вот новость
@lilyonkwast
2 күн бұрын
Киняев. Фома Киняев 😑👌
«Я не люблю работать, я много думаю». «Доктор, инженер и поэт». Действительно гений! Ох уж эти диалоги из учебников. Спасибо, что не про водку.
@alexsuhoeinsku8876
4 күн бұрын
реально хорошее объяснение фонетики.ну может кроме "щ".где можно такое про английскую фонетику найти?
@MrOvnours
Күн бұрын
Если верить закадровому голосу, диалоги сочиняли сами ученики)
"-ты кем работаешь? - над собой работаю!" ;))
Щ being taught as a combination instead of a single sound is a testament to the time in itself
@shabelskiy_shorts
2 күн бұрын
what do u mean then?
21:45 имеено так обычно переходит диалог в другую фазу 😂 - Здравствуйте Маша - Вера, доброе утро - Как поживаете? - Хорошо, спасибо. У меня друг.
@1iuh
7 күн бұрын
"Если друг оказался вдруг ..."
@sakesaurus1706
5 күн бұрын
"не говори со мной, у меня уже есть друг"
@dmxumrrk332
2 күн бұрын
Люди просто «гаммы» разучивают и учатся непослушными органами речи артикулировать звуки чужого языка, где всё по-другому. С этой точки зрения и подобраны слова, и натянута хоть какая-то связь между фразами.
"Я не люблю работать, а много думаю"..)))
@gringo6362
13 күн бұрын
Меньше думаешь дольше живёшь
@Myuker
11 күн бұрын
@@gringo6362 антисоветчик - всегда гомофоб!
@razdvautreu
8 күн бұрын
@@gringo6362 Аватарка соответствующая.
@karugs9032
3 күн бұрын
Ты жив ?
"После венчания мы уехали с супругой в свадебное путешествие: я в Турцию, она в Швейцарию. И три года жили там в любви и согласии." (Фильм "Тот самый Мюнхгаузен").
No technology needed. Only intelligence and articulation in practice which creates a confident professor. I recommend this lesson from 1960 for all teachers.
@Astlaus
4 күн бұрын
I totally want to see someone get alveolar trill right just from the description of its articulation.
- Где вы работаете? - Я не работаю. Я много думаю -Ну, до свидания - До свидания! )) -Как жизнь? -Спасибо, хорошо. У меня друг. -Да что вы говорите! ФАМИЛИЯ!!! - Иван Иваныч - Вот те новости ... Это что, допрос? -Как жена? - Она хорошо -Как кот? -Он хорошо -Как запорожец? -Он хорошо. -Вы любите свою жену? -Да, в Сибири. -А запорожец? -Он зеленый До свидания! )) Boo-ga-ga
@Dmitriy61
6 күн бұрын
Надо было тайм-код написать.
Awesome! A good explanation, a good pronunciation and excellent dialogues )) Про жену в Сибири улыбнуло))
@prostoprohozhijnadjadjupoh7869
9 жыл бұрын
Он ездит её любить в Сибирь. А она ездит в Сибирь любть снег.
@tatiana8670
10 ай бұрын
Я тоже посмеялась 😂
Какие красивые лица!!!
Thanks for the full version. Earlier I saw only the weird conversations which went viral...
@roman28rus
6 күн бұрын
Вы понимаете суть разговоров? Суть кринжа?))
@maya.7057
5 күн бұрын
@@roman28rus У нас в учебниках тоже были подобные диалоги. Одна семья Стоговых чего стоила) Если им показать - они точно поняли суть кринжа)
@roman28rus
Күн бұрын
@@maya.7057 согласен, у меня учебник был по англ.морскому языку, трэшачёк тот ещё)))
@maya.7057
Күн бұрын
@@roman28rus По морскому?? Ну, это неплохо) Это все-таки интересно)
Actually, the articulation system representation is just amazing "Ы" for all of you!
@inersdraco
9 күн бұрын
"Уй"
@moorgrass22
7 күн бұрын
😂
@_-eYuLiXiaoLong-_
7 күн бұрын
"ъ" (ер) + "і" (и десятиричное) = "ы" (ери/ еры). "ъ" раньше имел звук схожий с звуком оук "ꙋ", по этому и пишется как "уи"
@ryanolsen294
5 күн бұрын
@@inersdracotranslates to cow, Перевод смешной😂
@user-ik4iz8ml1i
5 күн бұрын
@@ryanolsen294 коровить
One of the Finest Examples of Learning Russian language and pronunciation Ever.
@evad520
2 күн бұрын
Except not a single conversation was correct. :D
I’m a native Russian speaker and I think this whole tongue placement and explanation of vocal chords is where he lost the students. Especially for the letter И which is just pronounced as Ee in English, like in the word eel. There’s no need to make it more complicated when Russian is already hard enough. No wonder students don’t retain anything after the semester is over. The way languages have been taught for decades was just ineffective for the masses.
@user-be2me4qu1l
2 күн бұрын
100 % - Таким способом как в видео выучить язык невозможно.
@tikala1
2 күн бұрын
I can’t say for certain but it’s possible the teacher was trying to teach the students to sound more native-like, rather than having a strong American accent when speaking. Not saying I agree with the method, just giving a possible reason for it.
@Jimserac
Күн бұрын
Agree completely ! Thank goodness our Russian teacher did not use such diagrams. We learned by copying him and he corrected us or improved our speaking over time. I remember I had trouble with "вы" but eventually got it right. I can still remember passages from "Hero of Our Times", it was the first book I read in Russian. But out teacher, Chester Kiesel PhD., also told us poems and carefully explained them to us. I still remember them, decades later. He later became a famed international translator.
Он доктор, он инженер, он поэт? Это же я! Это моя фамилия Иван Иваныч!!! А вообще очень хорошее произношение!
Диалоги просто пиздец смешные))) Не хватает еще водки и медведей для полного антуража.
@igormironov7708
5 жыл бұрын
И балалайки
Al fin encontré un vídeo que realmente enseña, no solo la pronunciación del ruso, sino que también conceptos importantes de fonética articulatoria. Lejos el mejor vídeo de pronunciación del idioma ruso que he visto.
@MrGianeta
5 жыл бұрын
yeah, but it's from the 60's. That's... a long time ago. the pronunciation changed a bit since then. I just thought you should be aware of that. Also, in your case you might want to concentrate on differences between Spanish and Russian, which are not the same as differences between Russian and English. Also, the dialogues are weird (which is ok, since it's the foreign studens who made them up, I guess, but definitely not to be followed). The method itself is very sound. Russian phonetics is very well studied, so you have plenty of materials available if you look for them - both for positions of the tongue and for the so called "intonational constructions" (i.e. types of sentence intoning).
This is the way English was taught in the Soviet Union. organs of speech and stories written 150 years ago.
@user-ku2xr3nh4b
5 жыл бұрын
«The Stogov Family» из учебника Старкова ☺☺☺
@GallinaGarkina
Жыл бұрын
@@user-ku2xr3nh4b Диксона (он англичанин). Чей тогда метод? Мы вернулись туда, откуда пришли.
@spacegangster2588
8 күн бұрын
рассказы, написанные 150 лет назад это изысканное сокровище по сравнению с мусором написанным сегодня, лучше говорить и произносить английский как викторианский англичанин, чем как современная толпа.
@piroDYMSUS
7 күн бұрын
@@spacegangster2588это компрометирует основной смысл учить английский - для общения. 90% людей для которых английский не родной вас понимать не будут или будут с большим трудом.
@FransceneJK98
7 күн бұрын
And this is why the majority of people still don’t speak English. The method is all wrong
Wonderful! That is more or less the way I learned English about 60 years ago in France.
They were a dedicated class. They didn't break for lunch after the noon time bell. Thanks for posting.This answered a lot of my questions.It also brought back some memories of wearing those "cans" and the tinny audio that came through those heavy things.
@gammondog
2 жыл бұрын
@@mackenziewoods8201 No. A bit before my time. I did use those types of headphones in grammar school. Also, I did study Russian in College. There, they had a language lab where you could use cassette recorders and practice speaking. It was humbling to play back a recording and hear my voice for the first time as it sounds to others. Not the same as it sounds to yourself. Many fond memories of my classmates and professor.
@nancycat9242
Жыл бұрын
@@gammondog do you still remember Russian?
@gammondog
Жыл бұрын
@@nancycat9242 only a few hundred words. I can still read the words and hand write Cyrillic script. Oddly, I would have a difficult time hand writing the printed letters by memory. Conjugation of verbs fine but inflections of nouns and adjectives not so. That case system was a real challenge. Still, I cherish my memories of taking those classes. P.S. It’s just as the late Barry Farber said. The Cyrillic alphabet is a “false alarm”. Every student in the class that stayed after the first few classes mastered it in three weeks. Including alphabetical order and hand writing. The Cyrillic keyboard was not covered in those days.
Rather than learning about phonetics (which I already knew), I have learnt a master lesson on how to teach it. Brilliant! Correction: absolute genius! Why modern lessons are so watered down in comparison?
@michaelparisi9275
9 жыл бұрын
kiss ass
@BobGlasby
8 жыл бұрын
+Michael Parisi Because modern Education European and American has been taken over by feminists and politically correct persons.
@kw5839
8 жыл бұрын
+Robert Glasby truer words were never spoken.
@petros_adamopoulos
6 жыл бұрын
This was proper mansplaining all the way :).
@anibalcesarnishizk2205
4 жыл бұрын
@@BobGlasby Long time ago i had read in a Reader's Digest article that American universities demanded the students to learn foreign languages but in the second half of the '60s practically learning foreign languages were banned by the students themselves.The latter wanted folkloric studies or something that went along with the" Spirit of Times".
Как приятно видеть, как студенты занимаются изучением русского языка
@AmneziaAztec
7 күн бұрын
60 лет назад)
@annk.4039
6 күн бұрын
@@AmneziaAztecвсе равно приятно.)
"Все работают - а я не люблю работать. Но я много думаю!" - вся русская интеллигенция в одной фразе.
К счастью у нас есть такие же преподаватели английского - американского, и это счастье заниматься по такой программе :) А у этого преподавателя шикарная дикция присущая всем дикторам того времени, идеальная школа.
@maya.7057
5 күн бұрын
Да, у преподавателя хороший язык. Для тех времен, когда живой язык не слышали просто удивительно.
@EK-tb6ui
3 күн бұрын
ага, особенно если внимательно его фамилию прочитать ))))
@maya.7057
3 күн бұрын
@@EK-tb6ui Устинов. А что здесь необычного?
@Kolemag
3 күн бұрын
@@EK-tb6ui ой и правда )
@genls
5 сағат бұрын
@@maya.7057и английский с акцентом
wonderful lesson. I really enjoyed
У преподавателя хороший английский!
" - Как жена? - Она хорошо. Она в Сибири" ))) 22:24
@TheDarkvindetta
5 жыл бұрын
и ест снег день и ночь
@user-lg7nm2mr9c
8 күн бұрын
Видео из 1960ых, так что норм
@1iuh
7 күн бұрын
"После венчания мы уехали с супругой в свадебное путешествие: я в Турцию, она в Швейцарию. И три года жили там в любви и согласии." (Фильм "Тот самый Мюнхгаузен").
Surprisingly helpful!
Приятно знать, что корявые диалоги не только в наших учебниках по ин. языкам)
@Eg0r86
5 күн бұрын
Это диалоги не из учебников.
@Anubis1993KZ
5 күн бұрын
@@Eg0r86 т.е. это импров или что?
@Eg0r86
5 күн бұрын
@@Anubis1993KZ Да, они сами придумывали диалоги. Это одно из первых занятий.
@marymay3343
5 күн бұрын
The idiocy of Duolingo sentences is unbeatable :)
У них хорошо получается 🙂
superrrrr, spasibo!
доктор, инженер, поэт 🤣 как фамилия? ...Леонардо да Винчи! 😁
@Marguerite-Rouge
2 күн бұрын
Известен как Иван Иваныч для родственников! Вещи скрыты от нас 🙃
This video reminds me of my Speech Professor Renierio Real in the University of Bohol during my college days. Speech subject is not a part of my course curriculum but i decided to study it very well in order for me to improve myself the way I pronounced the English pronounciation, but until now nothing has changed. The problem is just within in me.
"Я не люблю работать... "😂😂😂
This is still so useful!
Щ isn't pronounced like that for at least 100 years. It's not "щч" it's just "щ", which doesn't make it any easier for native English speakers though.
@vuhdeem
5 жыл бұрын
He's teaching Ukrainian Щ. I don't know why. Russian Щ is just English "sh" but held longer and tongue higher.
@babythebabyslings
5 жыл бұрын
Chukovskij Щ kak щч proiznosit.
@Unbrutal_Rawr
3 жыл бұрын
The film is from the 1960 when this pronunciation was still standard.
@mihanich
3 жыл бұрын
@@Unbrutal_Rawr This wasn't standard in 60's. You won't hear that pronounciation in 60's.
@Unbrutal_Rawr
3 жыл бұрын
@@mihanich Fine, it wasn't standard anymore, but you absolutely will hear this pronunciation in the 60, especially outside Moscow and from Russian emigrants. You hear it from this man, who was born in 1912 in Moscow, even though this pronunciation was rather characteristic of the St Petersburg standard with *шчука* and *дождя* as opposed to the Moscow standard which had *щ:юка* and *дож:я.* Here's another example: kzread.info/dash/bejne/gmFm2LWNktzZqtY.html It is indeed much easier to learn to distinguish this pronunciation from *ш,* especially because those who have this pronunciation pronounce *ш* softer than in the modern standard.
This is excellent!
готовые шпионы! никто ничего не заподозрит!
I learned Russian (and French and Spanish) by the direct grammar method to university level, and my listening skills never progressed much beyond elementary. Even later, when working in Russia, I was half-stuck in a grammatical, translating mindset.
@real_shevtsov
7 күн бұрын
Same with Spanish and French, dunno why :( P.S. I'm From Russia
@banana53358
6 күн бұрын
russian is really really difficult . I m learning it right now that grammar makes me yank my hair out
@SKASlavon
6 күн бұрын
Да, очень большие различия по структуре и вариативности построения предложений.
@thisismycoolnickname
6 күн бұрын
Stop caring about the grammar. As a beginner, your job is to be able to understand meanings of sentences, that's all.
@elenapovarova4201
6 күн бұрын
@@thisismycoolnicknamebut this is almost impossible without knowing a grammar
Wow! Thank you.
this is a really good guide
21:17 These student conversations in Russian are hilarious 🤣🤣🤣
@dragonfractal6361
4 күн бұрын
When I was taking Russian and had to partner up with classmates for oral exams, we, too, made up hilarious conversations. I remember practicing with a partner and her talking about someone having six cats. The professor walked in, and the very next moment, I exclaimed, “Шесть кошек?!”
That's brilliant!
Keep in mind that the "щ" sound is no longer pronounced like that.
@finkrer
8 жыл бұрын
***** Like this: *щщщ* Seriously though, if I absolutely had to explain it right here, I'd say it is a long sh-sound, but it's actually a different one, so you'd better google it and find the correct pronunciation yourself.
@finkrer
7 жыл бұрын
Well, if you want to call early 20th century Russian classical, alright. But no one speaks like that now, except maybe very old people. Even gopniks pronounce it correctly. I am Russian and I say so.
@finkrer
7 жыл бұрын
Check it anywhere on the Internet, the old pronunciation is [ʂtɕ], the new pronunciation is [ɕː]. I can only assume that these native speakers either didn't exactly understand what you wanted from them, or you yourself got something wrong. I as a native speaker can clearly see the whole picture, and I say that it is the old pronunciation that is not used anymore. The professor has probably left USSR long ago and carries an outdated pronunciation, even for the 60s.
@finkrer
7 жыл бұрын
Robert Glasby Well, they just have a non-standard pronunciation, then, that's all. I've been to Siberia, though, and the accent people have there is no different from mine or the one heard on TV. As I've said, if you want objective information, it's all out there. Just google it.
@finkrer
7 жыл бұрын
Robert Glasby It's not difficult at all. I think you misunderstood me and are asking these people the wrong questions.
Супер, спасибо. Но после дождя на улице обычно свежо.
22:00 iron man beginning
"I think a lot" the person who wrote this dialogue has extensive not-work experience.
5:50 I've never understood the approach of teaching Щ as two sounds to English speakers. This seems ubiquitous in instruction while completely unknown to native speakers.
Same at english lessons in Russian school, funny dialogues about nothing. But let me tell all american people who learning russian - you are brave and awesome!!!!
@shubham_dalvi
3 жыл бұрын
Tell me the difference between ы and и
@user-mo7vp1fx7o
3 жыл бұрын
@@shubham_dalvi dont know dude how to explain, same difference like between v and w
@shubham_dalvi
3 жыл бұрын
@@user-mo7vp1fx7o is it correct if one writes your name Мартинов instead of Мартынов?
@user-mo7vp1fx7o
3 жыл бұрын
@@shubham_dalvi not quite realy, И - pronounced more softly than Ы
@shubham_dalvi
3 жыл бұрын
@@user-mo7vp1fx7oTrying to learn Russian pronounciation and grammar got me like 🥵 🤯
They're doing well as far as I can judge by the video
Какие красивые и умные американцы тех лет. Какие красивые девушки !!!(прежде всего красивы внутри в душе.) Какие прилежные и чистые студенты -парни и дувушки. Просто загляденье.
@maya.7057
5 күн бұрын
Тогда это было целое дело - снимать показательные уроки. Это не на телефон из-под парты. Они не могли быть не прилежными на таких съемках) Там сзади сидела большая съемочная группа. Преподавателю респект. Это очень нервное дело - официальные съемки.
13:18 no,it CAN be preceded! especially in ukrainian accent of russian language, but also in normal russian it is easier to say "Yi" when consonant followed by so-called "soft sign" between this consonant and "i". yes, i'm russian and studied linguistics at the university and live not so far from the russian-ukrainian border
- Пошли. Всэ вмэстэ. - Почиму ти свэгда к грузим придьераешьча? Патаму што мы такия прастыя луди… И за этова мы такая лохайа дабыча. - Што будет с нашей страной?! Прьямо как в старые времена! Мы ж ни в чем… не виноваты! - Какие ваши доказательства?! - Кокаинум!
21:59 - Он доктор? - Доктор, инженер, поэт, гений, миллиардер, плейбой, филантроп.
If this is Russian 101, I can say for certain that foreign language teaching in American universities has gone downhill. This sounds like a graduate seminar on phonetics.
People can laugh, but Mr. Ustinov’s English is better than any native speaker Russian teacher that I’ve ever heard. I always find it odd that someone thinks they can teach a language to English speakers when they haven’t even figured out the differences between the two.
какая прелесть!
Well, pronunciation is close to Russian, but intonation is “to exited”, (more American) for Russian people, so we speak without emotions usually
молодцы:)))
"В церкви на вопрос священника, хотим ли мы стать мужем и женой, мы дружно ответили: «Нет!» - и нас тут же обвенчали. После венчания мы уехали с супругой в свадебное путешествие: я в Турцию, она в Швейцарию. И три года жили там в любви и согласии." (Фильм "Тот самый Мюнхгаузен").
Диалоги просто 😂🔥🔥🔥
Какой классный демонстрационный макет
похвально!
Imagine student sit still the same way these days, even older ones
Does anybody know the song played at 20:43 ?
@stopnevich
5 жыл бұрын
Пётр Лещенко "Чубчик"
@markszabo928
5 жыл бұрын
Николай Стопневич Thank you
5:53 a very uncommon way to pronounce "щ" nowadays (as two sounds sch-ch instead of one long soft sch). Something old-fashioned, maybe the old-muscovite pronunciation from the 1950s or something else.
I'm a native speaker of Russian. Watching this for some reason😂
This is very interesting, I had only heard stories about how Russian pronunciation used to be taught. My understanding is that back in these Cold War days if you were studying Russian you either wanted to work for an intelligence agency or you were a suspect Communist. It would be interesting to learn if these students continued studying Russian/what they might have done with it.
Это весьма весело.Интересно как Американцы воспринимают русских,когда они учат английский язык...Тоже наверно смешно для них.
@linux6036
Жыл бұрын
Такая же реакция конечно
спасибо, поржал )
Надо же, какими прилежными были американцы когда-то..
@Kurt1991jorsen
6 күн бұрын
Обратите внимание на цвет кожи
@annk.4039
6 күн бұрын
@@Kurt1991jorsenа вы батенька шутник.
@ganglery
5 күн бұрын
Ну изучать русский язык, наверное, не всех подряд с улицы набирали. Это какие-то особо мотивированные американцы. Наверное и сейчас такие есть
2:21 I could never think a thing at the back of my mouth is moving during me pronouncing «и»))
So, so many words to ask how "are you doing?" When she could have used dva.
amazing :D this is most brillant lesson :D
Я иногда работаю. Ой,я несчастная, я живу в Сибири.-)
@vadunded
5 жыл бұрын
У вас там снег день и ночь:))
I’m a native Russian speaker and I feel like I forgot how to speak after watching this tongue placement thing 😂 So I’m not sure if this is an effective language teaching strategy
Прикольно :)
а как же ПИВО ВАДИКА ?
5:38 this consonant rather sounds like very palatalized Sh, but not Shch, it sounds shch in ukrainian and belorusian (velarized). but yes, it is transliterated from russian this way because of history of russian language, in the past it sounded like in ukrainian and belorusian and sometimes can slightly sound this way in petersburg dialect, but not in moscow dialect. yes i'm russian and studied linguistics at the university
У нас любой безработный любит много думать лишь бы не работать)
This is a most Moscow type of Pronounciation, through big and long A.
- я говорю по-русски, по арабский, по итальянский и по испанский. Спасибо 21 век. 2022 год
Прямо диалоги в Обливионе
21:16 вот это правильно!
Деавшка у которого муж инженер и поэт хорошо разноваривает почти без акцента.
Подготовка Цру
If I did not speak Russian already, I would not even start to learn it. Wayyyy too complicated😳
С какой целю они учили русский язык?
@bukleuh
14 күн бұрын
С целью десантирования на Урале. Русский им нужен, чтобы местные не догадались, что они американцы.
@user-uz3zw3fw5r
8 күн бұрын
Чтобы тебя повеселить.)
I love how the students don't get any chance whatsoever to participate. Maybe trying to make the sound for yourself would help you remember how they're produced.
@maxritz7142
8 жыл бұрын
+Ryan Ward If you think this is actually what the classes looked like, then you are understandably mistaken. Most films like this were more staged than on of Kanye's music videos. They were probably very similar to our classes today, where no one really gave a fuck about looking perfect like this.
@BobGlasby
8 жыл бұрын
+Max Ritz So, what you mean is that American education is reprobate. Why do not American children want to learn? What's wrong with your society? No wonder the Americans are warmongers feeding lies about Russia
@MachoMaster
7 жыл бұрын
Well, that escalated quickly...
@maxritz7142
7 жыл бұрын
+MachoMaster I had forgotten about this, but yeah, it really did, didn't it? Anyways, Robert Glasby that's no what I meant at all. I meant that they would have been taking a more active role in the classroom than is shown in this footage. This isn't some high school, this is the College of William and Mary, one of our oldest and most prestigious universities. As for Americans feeding lies about Russia, how do you figure? I was taught from an early age to respect my Russian counterparts. Your nation has accomplished very much with very little.
@poconets
3 жыл бұрын
@@maxritz7142 dude they're not perfect at all😂
no one has used their tongue better than russians - i mean just look at it - every sound takes full mouth - nothing left for breathing in and out -
Учитель-то явно по-русски шарит, акцент у него пипец просто!
@ilzefalb
17 күн бұрын
Устинов же.)
@gringo6362
13 күн бұрын
Да ладно?
Жена в Сибири- это действительно хорошо!
The narrator has a familiar voice.
Where will you put indefinite article 'бля' in this phrase😂?
20:28 she internally cringed about hearing her own voice ahahah classic
И никто не пошутил про диалоги нпс в Обливионе?