"Tozhe" in Russian means "also" or "too." It is used to indicate that something applies to another subject as well.
The Russian immigrants spoke Russian.
The proper adjective for Russian is "Russian."
The Russian word for "Russian" is русский, pronounced ROOS-ski. If you want to write it in English, you can write it as russky.
In Russian, 'Russian' is pronounced as 'ััััะบะธะน' (ruskiy).
In Russian, "no" is written as "ะฝะตั".
Я тоже по тебе скучаю (ya tozhe po tebe skuchayu).
I wonder if you mean тоже - tozhe with the same sound that [s] makes in pleasure. If that's the case, it means: also, too, as well;
The cast of Ya tozhe khochu - 2012 includes: Oleg Garkusha as Oleg Vyacheslav Ivanov Aleksandr Mosin as Sanya aka Bandit Alisa Shitikova as Alisa
The cast of Agenty KGB tozhe vlyublyayutsya - 1991 includes: Mikhail Bychkov Luz Croxatto Armen Dzhigarkhanyan Christian Garcia Sergey Gazarov Catalina Guerra Igor Kashintsev Natalya Krachkovskaya Leonid Kuravlyov Sergey Nikonenko Lyusyena Ovchinnikova Olga Tolstetskaya Tatiana Yakovleva
The Russian immigrants spoke Russian.
The proper adjective for Russian is "Russian."
The Russian word for "Russian" is русский, pronounced ROOS-ski. If you want to write it in English, you can write it as russky.
In Russian, 'Russian' is pronounced as 'ััััะบะธะน' (ruskiy).
Me, personally; no, I am not Russian.
just Russian formalism - no the
A black Russian is changed to a white Russian with the addition of cream.
That is the correct spelling (capitalized) of the word Russian (Русско in Russian).