If you know the alphabet, this course is the best course to continue studying Ukrainian.You'll learn food vocabulary with useful grammar:1. Nouns (gender and quantitative forms, Nominative and Accusative case for inanimate nouns) 2. Adjectives (gender and quantitative forms, Nominative and Accusative case for inanimate words)3. Pronouns (personal and possessive)4. Verbs (Present Tense, 1st Conjugation Type)
This course has English subtitles (open captions). I speak Ukrainian so you can get used to hear it, but everything I say is translated in subtitles for you.
If you have learned the alphabet this is the right course to continue learning Ukrainian language. The most difficult aspect of learning Ukrainian are the cases. There are 7 cases. In this course, we’ll study Nominative and Accusative Cases for inanimate nouns. We’ll learn how to determine the gender of nouns and adjectives and how to make them plural. Also, we’ll study possessive and personal pronouns in Nominative Case. Speaking about the verbs, we’ll learn to conjugate them in Present Tense, we’ll learn the first conjugation type in Present. In total, there are 2 conjugation types in Present Tense. And there is one Present Tense in Ukrainian, not 4, like you have in English :)
In this lesson we practice phrases like:
- Is it water?
- Yes, it is./ No, it is not.
- What is it?
- It is coffee.
We learn words like:
coffee - кава,
tea - чай,
juice - сік,
water - вода,
beer - пиво,
wine - вино,
gorilka - горілка,
whisky - віскі,
rom - ром
In this lesson we learn how to ask "Who is it?"
and these words:
a man - чоловік
a woman - жінка
a boy - хлопець
a girl - дівчина
a little boy - хлопчик
a little girl - дівчинка
Here I
sum up what we have learned in the first two classes - Nominative Case and its question words: що (what), хто (who).
explain the new information - conjugation of the verb TO DRINK (пити) in Present Tense and Accusative Case for inanimate nouns. To decline words in Accusative Case, we change the ending of a noun 'А' for 'У' and 'Я' for 'Ю')
explain why some letters are highlighted — it is because those letters are stressed. There is no rule of stressing the words in Ukrainian language, thus you should always look it up.
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