🌐 Russian · Русский

Learn English from Russian the way people actually speak it

Russian speakers learn English for international business, academic publishing, tech careers, and travel. As Russia's tech sector grows, English has become the language of most programming documentation, international startups, and global conferences.

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Real Examples

Russian to English, word for word

These are real sentences that Russian speakers use every day. Each one comes with a translation and a grammar note to help you understand the difference.

beginner

Я хочу быстро выучить английский.

I want to learn English quickly.

💡 Russian and English both use SVO in basic sentences. Russian often places adverbs before the verb — 'quickly' comes before 'learn' in Russian but can come at the end in English.

intermediate

Я изучаю английский уже три года.

I have been studying English for three years.

💡 Russian uses the present imperfective aspect with a time expression. English uses the present perfect continuous — a tense that Russian has no direct equivalent for.

beginner

Не могли бы вы говорить помедленнее?

Could you speak more slowly?

💡 Russian polite requests use the conditional mood. English uses 'could you' — similar in politeness level but constructed very differently.

advanced

Если бы я больше учился, я бы сдал экзамен.

If I had studied more, I would have passed the exam.

💡 Russian uses the subjunctive particle 'by' with past tense for hypothetical situations. English uses the past perfect in the if-clause and would have in the result clause.

beginner

Английский — очень важный язык.

English is a very important language.

💡 Russian omits 'is' in the present tense — a dash is used in written form. English always requires the verb 'to be'. Russian speakers frequently drop 'is' when writing English.

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Watch Out

Mistakes most Russian speakers make

These are the patterns that trip up Russian speakers most often. Knowing them ahead of time will save you a lot of frustration.

Dropping articles: 'I need book' instead of 'I need a book'
Omitting 'to be': 'She teacher' instead of 'She is a teacher'
Wrong prepositions due to Russian case system: 'I think on this' instead of 'I think about this'
Literal translation of idioms: 'Not my business' to mean 'None of my concern'

Grammar

How Russian and English differ

Understanding where the two languages pull in different directions makes it much easier to stop translating in your head and start thinking directly in English.

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Word Order

Russian word order is flexible because grammatical cases show the role of each word. English has strict SVO order because word position determines meaning. 'I love Maria' and 'Maria love I' mean the same in Russian but are very different in English.

📌

Articles

Russian has no articles at all. Definiteness is expressed through context, word order, and intonation. English articles 'a', 'an', and 'the' must be learned from scratch with no Russian equivalent to map onto.

Verbs

Russian has two aspects for every verb — perfective (completed action) and imperfective (ongoing or repeated action). English has nothing equivalent. Russian speakers must instead learn to use English tenses to express this distinction.

FAQ

Questions people ask us

Here are the things Russian learners ask most when they start their English journey.

How long does it take a Russian speaker to learn English?

Russian speakers typically need around 1100 hours to reach English fluency. The Cyrillic alphabet and different grammar structures add to the learning time, but Russian and English do share some vocabulary through French and Latin borrowings.

What is the hardest part of English for Russian speakers?

Articles are the hardest challenge because Russian has no equivalent concept. Prepositions are also very difficult — Russian uses grammatical cases where English uses prepositions, and they do not map to each other cleanly.

Do Russian speakers find English pronunciation hard?

Some sounds are challenging — the English 'th' sound does not exist in Russian, and English word stress patterns feel unpredictable. However, Russian speakers generally find reading English phonetically manageable once the alphabet is learned.

What is the best English learning app for Russian speakers?

Rozy explains English grammar in Russian, specifically covers articles and prepositions which are the biggest pain points for Russian speakers, and builds conversational fluency through daily practice.

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