Search from various 영어 teachers...
Tiulpan
Which grammatical case is the hardest for studying Russian language?
Nominative case? Genitive case? Dative case? Accusative case? Instrumentative case? Preposition case?
2011년 2월 20일 오전 11:40
답변 · 12
2
Nominative: Singular you know anyway, plural easy to build
Accusative: most times like Nom/Gen so very easy
Dative: its ok but harder then the two above
Instr: Same as Dative but harder for me because it does not exist in German
Prepos: Easy, not many endings
Genitive: i think its the hardest, the singular is not so hard but
Genitive/Plural is very hard for me to build. There are a lot of rules what to do
at what ending.
This is a good site for the rules:
http://www.russianlessons.net/grammar/nouns_genitive.php
You will see, Genitive has the most rules^^
2011년 2월 20일
1
I always find that the instrumental and when to use it are hard to translate from English. The dative can be a bit hard as well - but it's easier for German speakers or speakers of other Slavic languages as it's present there. Due to English's lack of an inherent case system except for mild accusative (He said...to him) which we get from German I think the entire concept makes you 'detach' your thinking from English grammar and just accept Russian declension for what it is.
2011년 2월 20일
Probably the genitive.
2011년 2월 20일
Probably the genitive.
2011년 2월 22일
It's China
2011년 2월 22일
더 보기
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Tiulpan
언어 구사 능력
중국어(북경어), 영어, 독일어, 일본어, 러시아어, 스페인어
학습 언어
중국어(북경어), 독일어, 일본어
좋아할 수도 있는 읽을거리

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
12 좋아요 · 11 댓글

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
13 좋아요 · 11 댓글

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
10 좋아요 · 6 댓글
다른 읽을거리