Message from @National Trotskyist
Discord ID: 619199740071903234
omg
i remember you now @National Trotskyist wtf
this is what happens when 2 niggas change their names.
Lol I asked DOg for your new acc like 2 months ago, but when I tried adding it, it displayed as the Deleted Account later.
farsi changes accounts a lot
Sorry, 4 months ago.
Yes, true.
π€
Saw that.
Yes.
Yes you did.
i saw it but didnt understand
Just as planned.
Man baronii iz... ?
Couldn't finish reading the whole thing.
i can read cyrillic but i cant make out jack shit
I should have probably used a proper keyboard to match the pronounciations as otherwise it sounds autistic.
Π―ΠΊΠΈ Π±ΡΠ΄, ΡΠΊΠΈ Π½Π°Π±ΡΠ΄
We had Russian language in our hi-school, good times.
Russian is a cool language.
I hate the soft sign though.
Makes spelling hard
For me its the hard signs xd.
Yeah the consonant clusters are pretty harsh.
The worst thing Bolsheviks forget to get rid of during their script reforms.
Imo is the duality of O letter.
They merged most letters which were pronounced the same like Yat and Ye.
But O can be read as either O or A, depending on the acute accents in the word (which most native speakers don't use).
Like in spasiba, which is written as spasibo.
it is?
Or Maskva, it's written as Moskva.
Which is why its best to use former USSR states media.
Which means thank you and Moscow.
They have beginner knowledge but love Russia a lot.
Like a good amount of Ukrainians simplify it a LOT.
They just assume it's either too easy or too hard to constantly try correct if I had to guess.
@T. Raven Yes. It's confusing. The Russian cyrillic is for most part a phonetic alphabet after their reform, with the exception of their O letter, which sometimes is read as A.
On the end of words, O will always be read as A, as with the spasiba case.
But for the other ones, you need to learn the placement of acute accents.
Or you could just rely off other speaker's lack of knowledge on pronounciations