I guess those are two words: [malaya] ('little', but dependant on context) and [moya] ('my'). Endings of these words refer to a female.
"I know" in Russian is "я знаю" (pronounced ya znayu).
You can say "я счастлив" which is pronounced as "ya schastliv" in Russian.
"Ya zakonchil obed" in Russian translates to "I finished lunch" in English.
The word "I" in Russian is "Я" It is pronounced "ya"
Well Russia in Russian is: Россия - (Ro-se-ya) Russian (e.g. a Russian person): Pусский - (Roo-ski) Russian Language: Pусский язык - (Roo-ski Ya-zik)
Well Russia in Russian is: Россия - (Ro-se-ya) Russian (e.g. a Russian person): Pусский - (Roo-ski) Russian Language: Pусский язык - (Roo-ski Ya-zik)
You can say "Я пытаюсь" [Ya pyatayus'] in Russian to mean "I am trying."
ya pridurak = "I'm an idiot"
Ya medsestra (if youre a female) or ya medbrat (male form)
Pronounced "Я учу русский (язык)" (Ya uchú rússkiy yazík)Ya - Iuchu - to study/learnrusskiy (yazik) -Russian (language)
"Copy" in Russian is "копия" (pronounced as "ko-pee-ya").
You can say this in three ways, they are: Ya tebea lublu Lublu ya tiba Tebi ya lublu