yes It is hard to speak english for foreigners, if you want to speak good you should have a lot of practice in russian speaking countries..but anyway you will be understood by native speakers)
The Russian immigrants spoke Russian.
Vy govorIte po rOUsky
Every continent has people that speak Russian, at a large or small scale. However, Europe and Asia are the only continents with countries that have Russian as an official language.
Russian language
извините меня, Вы говорите на русском языке? (Cyrillic-Alphabet, Russian) izvinitye myenya, Vi govoritye na roosskom yazikye?(Latin-Alphabet, Russian) Excuse me, Do you speak Russian? (Latin-Alphabet, English)
повиснуть-It's hard to speak in russian.You should spell it something like this:"povisnut" повиснуть-It's hard to speak in russian.You should spell it something like this:"povisnut"
No. The Russian people primarily speak Russian, and Germans primarily speak German.
The Russian immigrants spoke Russian.
Vy govorIte po rOUsky
St. Petersburg is a Russian city and the people there speak Russian.
Every continent has people that speak Russian, at a large or small scale. However, Europe and Asia are the only continents with countries that have Russian as an official language.
I guess,maybe from her mom because her mother was born in Russia , and of course she can speak Russian so that's why Michelle can speak Russian fluently :D
No. However, all of the languages of the Former Yugoslavia countries speak languages that are related to Russian.
Russian Jews speak Russian as their first language. Yiddish is a rare second language in Russia. Hardly any Russian Jews can speak it (Most Yiddish speakers in the world live in Belarus, Israel, and Argentina).There are no longer any native speakers of Yiddish in Russia.
Apparently not
73.6%
RUSSIAN