Easy Russian

Easy Russian

Read, watch and learn

Similar Posts

Describe your daily routine: useful russian phrases.

One of the most common topics of conversation is to talk about your daily routine. So, let’s learn some useful words, so that you can describe your everyday life in Russian without any problems. Watch this video if you want to know how to pronounce words and phrases used in this lesson. Now let’s get…

Russian Vocabulary for Work: Essential Words Handbook

In today’s globalized world, language skills are increasingly essential for career advancement. This is particularly true for the Russian-speaking job market, where proficiency in work-related terminology can significantly enhance professional prospects. Throughout this comprehensive guide, we will explore fundamental aspects of job-related language, including job applications, interviews, workplace communication, and more. My goal is to…

Russian for Work: Essential Office-Related Vocabulary

Are you looking to improve your Russian language skills for work? Or perhaps you’re just interested in expanding your vocabulary? Either way, learning office-related vocabulary can be extremely useful. In this blog post, I’ve put together a comprehensive list of stationery, furniture, and equipment words that will help you describe your workplace in detail. By…

Kitchen Vocabulary in Russian: Things You Use to Cook and Eat

A kitchen, as you already know, is used for cooking and food preparation. It’s a place where delicious meals are crafted, flavors are combined, and culinary adventures take shape. Within this usually small but vibrant space, you can find a treasure trove of tools and appliances that aid in the creation of culinary masterpieces. In…

Russia & Beyond: Naming Places and People in Russian

Understanding how to talk about countries in Russian opens doors to cultural exchange, communication, and a deeper understanding of the global community. By learning the names of countries, languages, and nationalities, we gain insight into the rich tapestry of cultures across the world. In this article, we will explore the basic terms and patterns used…

Privacy Overview

  • Free Resources
  • 1-800-567-9619
  • Subscribe to the blog Thank you! Please check your inbox for your confirmation email. You must click the link in the email to verify your request.
  • Explore Archive
  • Explore Language & Culture Blogs

Russian Speech Cliches

Good structure is one of the significant pillars of essay writing, and speech cliches are tools to layout your thoughts in the most compelling way. Thus, for your convenience, the expressions are listed according to essay parts: introduction, main body, and conclusion. Beginning with helpful Russian expressions for when you don't know how to start your text:

Russian Essay Phrases for Introduction

Russian essay phrases for main body, russian essay phrases for conclusion, opening words / sentence connectors.

Sentence Connectors

Russian Essay Writing Tips

Do longer eloquent sentences work.

Academic writing, for instance, in English, is all about clarity and brevity. The Russian language also commends the two but favors some more embellishments, even epithets, and metaphors for the diverse scientific topics one can imagine. But what is the limit, and how long is too long? There is no uniform example to give. However, some Russian teachers advise reading the sentence out loud. If you are getting out of breath - time to edit out ruthlessly.

To comma or not to comma?

Typically sentence connectors are separated by commas in the Russian language. But there is a catch: a list of 30+ terms that look like opening words but are, in fact, not. With experience, one develops a gut feeling as to when there is a need for a comma. Before that, use the following test: remove the connector from the sentence. If the meaning does not change, commas are required.

Russian Essay Writing Tips

(source: adme )

Handwriting wire

Unless typing is involved, essays in Russian are written in calligraphy. The example above illustrates why it can become an issue, primarily if you are used to writing in block letters. So checking your essay, imagine yourself in the teachers' shoes and question if they can understand not only the arguments but also your handwriting.

Tautology much?

While tautology is a problem that comes up often in writing no matter the tongue, in Russian essays, it is penalized brutally. That is because the language offers several synonyms like no other. One of the most common examples with the verb to go :

It takes time to get used to such a variety. So for safety sake, think twice of any verb or adjective you are choosing, if there is a synonym, go with it.

Do you feel ready now to take the Russian essay writing world by storm? Share with us some of your favorite phrases or common challenges in the comments. 

Author Image

Olya Amburg

Olya is a globetrotter, a Russian native inspired by people, cultures, and interactions. A love for the Russian language and literature led her to become a journalist. Olya shares her knowledge and passion for language learning, traveling, and communication as a freelance writer. In her spare time, she studies psychology and neuroscience, teaches yoga, and plans international adventures with friends.

Your Signature

Subscribe to our newsletter now!

31 Must-Know Words to Talk About Your Family in Russian

Family is one of the most important things in many of our lives, so it’s only natural that you’ll want to talk about your loved ones from time to time.

And if you’ve decided to study Russian , you might’ve already picked up a few family-related words to lace into conversations . But you might only know the tip of the iceberg!

Learning more Russian family words can infuse your vocabulary with useful vocabulary that you can use in everyday life.

These 31 must-know Russian family words can help you converse about your clan!

Immediate Family 

Extended family, relatives through marriage , tips to master russian family words, and one more thing....

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

Use them with your family.

What better way to practice your family words than interacting with your family? If your family knows a little Russian, that’s great! However, they don’t need to know any Russian for you to practice your new vocabulary with them.

You could just start using the words in Russian as nicknames for your family members! Using them regularly will help reinforce them and soon they’ll feel like second nature.

Practice them in context.

Practicing words in context is one of the best ways to learn (and remember) them. Since family-related words are quite common, you can find them all over authentic Russian content. You can even listen to them in your favorite Russian TV shows and movies .

FluentU takes authentic videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons.

You can try FluentU for free for 2 weeks. Check out the website or download the iOS app or Android app.

P.S. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

FluentU Ad

Try FluentU for FREE!

Make your own flashcards.

Flashcards can be one of the quickest and easiest ways to learn more vocabulary, and family words are especially easy to learn with flashcards. You can make flashcards online, with a flashcard app or out of index cards!

And perhaps best of all, you can use real pictures of your family so that you see their smiling faces as you learn family-related words. Then you can associate the Russian words more directly with their meanings rather than translating in your head.

AnkiApp is a helpful tool you might use to make family vocabulary flashcards. You can include text, sound and images, making it easier to put together flashcards that meet your needs and preferences. A special algorithm tracks how well you know each flashcard to prioritize words you need to study more.

family in russian

Quizlet is another convenient option. This website lets users put together flashcard sets with words and pictures. But you don’t have to use your sets just as flashcards. You can also use the material for different activities, including games. Plus, you can access flashcard sets by other users, and there are dozens of options that focus on Russian family vocabulary.

Need another option? Cram also lets users create their own flashcards with text and images. Not only that, but you can also use countless flashcard sets focused on Russian vocabulary that other users have put together.

When it comes to flashcard apps, sharing is definitely caring!

By now, you’re hopefully feeling confident in your ability to address, describe and chat about some of the most influential people in your life.

Family is important all over the world, and the topic of yours is bound to come up in future Russian conversations.

And by drilling these 31 Russian words into your growing vocabulary, talking about your loved ones will become instantly easier!

If you love learning Russian and want to immerse yourself with authentic materials from Russia, then I should also tell you more about FluentU .

FluentU naturally and gradually eases you into learning the Russian language and culture. You'll learn real Russian as it's spoken by real Russian people!

FluentU has a very broad range of contemporary videos. Just a quick look will give you an idea of the variety of Russian-language content available on FluentU:

learn-russian-with-authentic-russian-videos

FluentU makes these native Russian videos approachable through interactive transcripts. Tap on any word to look it up instantly.

learn-russian-with-subtitled-videos

Access a complete interactive transcript of every video under the Dialogue tab. Easily review words and phrases with audio under Vocab .

learn-conversational-russian-with-dialogue

All definitions have multiple examples, and they're written for Russian learners like you. Tap to add words you'd like to review to a vocab list.

And FluentU has a learn mode which turns every video into a language learning lesson. You can always swipe left or right to see more examples.

practice-russian-with-adaptive-quizzes

The best part? FluentU keeps track of your vocabulary, and gives you extra practice with difficult words. It'll even remind you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. You'll have a 100% personalized experience.

Start using the FluentU website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

More lessons on Russian vocabulary

  • The most important Russian words
  • Hello! and How are you? in Russian
  • Goodbye in Russian
  • Thank you, please, and you're welcome in Russian
  • "I speak Russian" in Russian and other useful phrases
  • Calling for help in Russian
  • My name is ... in Russian
  • Seasons in Russian
  • Congratulations in Russian
  • Talking about health in Russian
  • Meeting your Russian in-laws
  • Talking about family in Russian
  • Talking about the weather
  • Internet vocabulary and phrases
  • Colors in Russian
  • Visiting a pharmacy
  • Directions in Russian
  • New Year's dialogues
  • Happy birthday in Russian, Russian birthday wishes
  • Going to the movies
  • I love you in Russian and other romantic phrases
  • Russian terms of endearment
  • Professions in Russian
  • Hotel dialogues in Russian
  • Visiting a doctor

7 comments on “015 – Making friends in Russian”

i need a job in russian

Hello, I am interested in learning Russian and I am looking for help for Russian people who practice Persian language please help me.

Please visit this website: https://russianpenpal.com/en/learn-russian/

thank you for this site and lesson. i am originally from Kazakhstan so it is nice to have this site

Hello VIO, thank you for your comment. Good luck!

I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE SOME MATERIAL TO TEACH CHILDREN AS SONGS AND SHORT STORIES. THAT WOULD BE VERY NICE .

Hello Pilar,

I’m sorry, but we do not provide any materials but those you see on our pages. Good luck with your search.

Your feedback and questions Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • Slovenščina
  • Science & Tech
  • Russian Kitchen

What kinds of friendship are there in Russia?

my friend essay in russian language

On first glance, Russians seem a bit gloomy, but in fact, they are very friendly. Russians make friends not just for the company and rarely open up to strangers. But with close people, they turn into soulful and devoted companions. Many Russians even keep in touch with some of their classmates, despite decades passing! As a famous saying goes: "It’s better to have 100 friends than 100 rubles." Nevertheless, Russians clearly separate the level of intimacy between people. Read on to see how Russians call their friends – and what the difference is between the statuses.

Error — JavaScript not Loaded

You need to enable JavaScript to use the Memrise web product. We also have iOS and Android apps that we highly recommend.

  • Learn Russian
  • Russian Course

Are You My Friend?

Russian lesson:, lesson overview.

Stars rated 4.8 out of 5

Search for #content you enjoy

my friend essay in russian language

Zoom Call Lifehacks

Let's go to the circus, my grandpa liked to eat, do you speak russian, your ring is on your hand, browse other topics that fit your needs.

logo-01_edited.png

  • Oct 23, 2020

How to introduce yourself and others in Russian (with a quiz)

Updated: Oct 12, 2021

Different ways to introduce yourself and others in Russian

How to introduce yourself and others in Russian - Key Russian phrases

If you have just begun to learn Russian language, you understand that in order to communicate with Russian natives you need to learn how to introduce yourself in Russian . Though, you should also know the ways how to introduce others in Russian language . These are the key topics that you need to learn first of all.

However, you also need to make sure first that you know how to greet in Russian as well as how to say goodbye . Otherwise, your self-introduction will not be as complete as it should be. So, I recommend you to first learn the basic phrases in Russian.

There are different ways to introduce in Russian.

I suggest you to watch the following video in order to learn how to i ntroduce somebody, to make a self-introduction, some questions to get acquainted, useful expressions to get acquainted, expressions to use when you already know a person, expressions to show how happy you are to get acquainted as well as some interesting cultural insights. And don't forget to take a quiz after watching the video (on this page below the summary of a video).

Here is what you are going to learn from this post (click for a quick access):

Introducing someone in Russian;

Self-introduction in Russian;

Some questions to get acquainted in Russian;

Useful expressions to get acquainted in Russian;

Russian expressions to use when you already know a person;

Check yourself: 'How to introduce yourself and others in Russian'.

Free Russian Video Lesson "How to introduce yourself in Russian"

Check yourself: 'How to introduce yourself and others in Russian'

my friend essay in russian language

Hello! My name is Mila and I am a founder of Hack Your Russian language platform . You can find me here:

YouTube , Instagram , Facebook

Patreon - exclusive materials

Udemy , Skillshare

#RussianLanguage #LearnRussian #RussianLanguage #RussianBasicPhrases #BeginnerRussian #EasyRussian #ElementaryRussian

  • Russian video lessons for beginners

Recent Posts

Test your Russian language level - Russian language test

20 Best Books to Learn Russian Language for Beginners

10 Best Russian Books for Intermediate Students

Got questions?

Ask them in the Russian Questions and Answers — a place for students, teachers and native Russian speakers to discuss Russian grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, and other aspects of the Russian language.

Copyright 2001-2024 MasterRussian.com | Privacy Policy | Contact Us

Russian Lessons

  • Russian alphabet
  • Names of letters
  • Russian Q&A new
  • Pronunciation: Cons.
  • Pronunciation: Vowels
  • Noun Gender/Number
  • Cases of Nouns
  • Russian Greetings
  • Personal Pronouns
  • Learning Russian
  •   » All lessons
  •   » Guest lessons

Browse Topics

  • Start learning Russian
  • Dictionaries
  • Russian - basic
  • Russian - adv
  • Pronunciation
  • Russian Video
  • Russian Blog new
  • Test & quizzes
  • Translation
  • Verb Conjugations
  • Russian numbers
  • Russian Tests new
  • Leo Tolstoy
  • Learner's lore
  • Personal blogs
  • Picture Dictionary new
  • Publications
  • Radio & TV
  • Russian culture
  • Schools in Russia
  • Russian Words
  • Russian names
  • Russian Words iPhone

TODAY'S STREET SIGN

Russian Spanish Dictionary

Double click on any word on the page or type a word:

LinguaJunkie.com

A very cranky language blogger dishing out brutal language tips.

How To Introduce Yourself in Russian in 6 Easy Lines (AUDIO)

The first thing any beginner Russian learner needs is an introduction.

As in, who are you? Where are you from?

Why are you learning Russian and why should anyone care? You should be able to say that in Russian.

You will learn how to introduce yourself in Russian easily and learn TONS here.

introduce yourself in russian

Here’s how you introduce yourself in Russian .

We’ll go from lines 1 to 6 and translate it so you can easily have something to say in Russian and start talking ASAP.

A Russian Introduction Script for You.

Now, I combined all the 6 lines above.

Here’s your Russian self introduction script you might want to use. 

Zdrastvuyte, menya zavut Bob . Mne dvadsat pyat let. Ya stoo-dent . Ya izuchayu russkiy potomu shto mne yazik nravitsa . Ya izuchayu russkiy yazik uzhe dva goda .

Just substitute the red parts with your details. This is a simple and easy way to introduce yourself in Russian.

Russian Audio Lesson on Introductions.

Here is that same RussianPod101.com audio lesson again. Also, here is the text from the audio lesson. That way, you can hear some other examples.

  • Kak tebya zavoot?
  • What’s your name? (Literally: How are you called?)
  • Menya Zavoot Olga.
  • My name is Olga.
  • Menya zavoot Katya.
  • My name is Katya.
  • Menya zavoot Ivan.
  • My name is Ivan.
  • Menya zavoot Aleksandr.
  • My name is Alexander.

Below is the most important phrase of the audio lesson. Remember it.

  • Menya zavoot (insert your name here).
  • My name is  (insert your name here).

More Examples of Introductions

This next section is super useful if you’re a bit more advanced.

If you’re just starting out, this may be too much for you, so feel free to skip.

You will learn the many ways to introduce and greet in Russian with “example conversations.” Please feel free to print this so that you can use it later.

my friend essay in russian language

In the example below, two friends, Andrey and Max, greet each other in Russian.

my friend essay in russian language

Below, you will see a guy named Andrey  introduce himself to a lady named   Evgeniya .

my friend essay in russian language

Below is a formal Russian introduction between a businessman that wants to learn English and an English teacher. See if you can spot any Russian phrases.

my friend essay in russian language

In this next example, you will learn a “professional Russian introduction.” In other words, this is formal and is used in a business email.

Ilya Kaminsky on Ukrainian, Russian, and the Language of War

“how can one speak about, write about, war”.

Editor’s note: this 2017 essay is excerpted from Words for War: New Poems from Ukraine .

My family huddled by the doorframe at 4 am, debating whether or not to open the door to the stranger wearing only his pajama pants, who’d been pounding on the door for at least five minutes, waking the whole apartment complex. Seeing the light come on, he began shouting through the door.

“Remember me? I helped you haul your refrigerator from Pridnestrovie. Remember? We talked about Pasternak on the drive. Two hours! Tonight they bombed the hospital. My sister is a nurse there. I stole someone’s truck and drove across the border. I don’t know anyone else. Can I make a phone call?”

So the war stepped its shoeless foot into my childhood two decades ago, under the guise of a half-naked man gulping on the phone, victim of an early post-Soviet “humanitarian aid” campaign.

During a recent visit to Ukraine, my friend the poet Boris Khersonsky and I agreed to meet at a neighborhood café in the morning to talk about Pasternak (as if he is all anyone talks about, in our part of the world). But when I walked up the sidewalk at 9 am, the sidewalk tables were overturned and rubble was strewn into the street from where the building had been bombed.

A crowd, including local media, was gathered around Boris as he spoke out against the bombings, against yet another fake humanitarian aid campaign of Putin’s. Some clapped; others shook their heads in disapproval. A few months later, the doors, floors, and windows of Boris’s apartment were blown up.

There are many stories like this. They’re often shared in short, hurried sentences, and then the subject is changed abruptly.

“Truthful war books,” Orwell wrote, “are never acceptable to non-combatants.”

When Americans ask about recent events in Ukraine, I think of these lines from Boris’s poem:

people carry explosives around the city in plastic shopping bags and little suitcases.

Over the last twenty years, Ukraine has been governed by both the Russian-speaking East and the Ukrainian-speaking West. The government periodically uses “the language issue” to incite conflict and violence, an effective distraction from the real problems at hand. The most recent conflict arose in response to the inadequate policies of President Yanukovych, who has since escaped to Russia. Yanukovych was universally acknowledged as the most corrupt president the country has ever known (he’d been charged with rape and assault, among other things, all the way back to Soviet times). However, these days, Ukraine’s new government continues to include oligarchs and professional politicians with shrewd pedigrees and questionable motivations.

When the standoff between the Yanukovych government and crowds of protesters first began in 2013, and the embattled President left the country shortly thereafter, Putin sent his troops into Crimea, a Ukrainian territory, under the pretext of passionately protecting the Russian-speaking population. Soon, the territory was annexed. In a few months, under the pretext of humanitarian aid, more Russian military forces were sent into another Ukrainian territory, Donbas, where a proxy war has began.

All along the protection of Russian language was continually cited as the sole reason for the annexation and hostilities.

Does the Russian language in Ukraine need this protection? In response to Putin’s occupation, many Russian-speaking Ukrainians chose to stand with their Ukrainian- speaking neighbors, rather than against them. When the conflict began to ramp up, I received this e-mail:

I, Boris Khersonsky, work at Odessa National University where I have directed the department of clinical psychology since 1996. All that time I have been teaching in Russian, and no one has ever reprimanded me for “ignoring” the official Ukrainian language of the state. I am more or less proficient in the Ukrainian language, but most of my students prefer lectures in Russian, and so I lecture in that language.

I am a Russian language poet; my books have been published mostly in Moscow and St. Petersburg. My scholarly work has been published there as well.

Never (do you hear me—NEVER!) did anyone go after me for being a Russian poet and for teaching in Russian language in Ukraine. Everywhere I read my poems in RUSSIAN and never did I encounter any complications.

However, tomorrow I will read my lectures in the state language—Ukrainian. This won’t be merely a lecture—it will be a protest action in solidarity with the Ukrainian state. I call for my colleagues to join me in this action.

A Russian-language poet refuses to lecture in Russian as an act of solidarity with occupied Ukraine. As time passed, other such emails began to arrive from poets and friends. My cousin Peter wrote from Odessa:

Our souls are worried, and we are frightened, but the city is safe. Once in a while some idiots rise up and announce that they are for Russia. But we in Odessa never told anyone that we are against Russia. Let Russians do whatever they want in their Moscow and let them love our Odessa as much as they want—but not with this circus of soldiers and tanks!

Another friend, the Russian-speaking poet Anastasia Afanasieva, wrote from the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv about Putin’s “humanitarian aid” campaign to protect her language:

In the past five years, I visited the Ukrainian-speaking Western Ukraine six times. I have never felt discriminated against because I spoke the Russian language. Those are myths. In all the cities of Western Ukraine I have visited, I spoke with everyone in Russian—in stores, in trains, in cafes. I have found new friends. Far from feeling aggression, everyone instead treated me with respect. I beg you, do not listen to the propaganda. Its purpose is to separate us. We are already very different, let’s not become opposite, let’s not create a war on the territory where we all live together. The military invasion which is taking place right now is the catastrophe for us all. Let’s not lose our minds, let’s not be afraid of non-existent threats, when there is a real threat: the Russian army’s invasion.

As I read the letter after letter I couldn’t stop thinking about Boris’s refusal to speak his own language as an act of protest against the military invasion. What does it mean for a poet to refuse to speak his own language?

Is language a place you can leave? Is language a wall you can cross? What is on the other side of that wall?

Every poet refuses the onslaught of language. This refusal manifests itself in silence illuminated by the meanings of poetic lexis—the meanings not of what the word says, but of what it withholds. As Maurice Blanchot wrote, “To write is to be absolutely distrustful of writing, while entrusting oneself to it entirely.”

Ukraine today is a place where statements like this one are put to the test. Another writer, John Berger, says this about the relationship of a person to one’s language: “One can say of language that it is potentially the only human home.” He insisted that it was “the only dwelling place that cannot be hostile to man . . . One can say anything to language. This is why it is a listener, closer to us than any silence or any god.” But what happens when a poet refuses his language as a form of protest?

Or, to put this question in broader terms: what happens to language in wartime? Abstractions very quickly attain physical attributes. This is how the Ukrainian poet Lyudmyla Khersonska sees her own body watching the war around her: Buried in a human neck, a bullet looks like an eye, sewn in . The poet Kateryna Kalytko’s war is also a physical body: War often comes along and lies down between you like a child / afraid to be left alone .

The language of poetry may or may not change us, but it shows the changes within us: the poet Anastasia Afanasieva writes using the first-person plural “we,” showing us how the occupation of a country affects all its citizens, no matter which language they speak:

when a four-wheeler with a mortar passed down the street we didn’t ask who are you whose side are you on we fell down on the floor and lay there.

On another visit to Ukraine, I saw a former neighbor of mine, now crippled by war, holding his hand out on the street. He wasn’t wearing any shoes. As I hurried by, hoping he wouldn’t recognize me, I was suddenly brought up short by his empty hand. As if he were handing me his war.

As I walked away from him, I had an eerie feeling of recognition. How similar his voice, the voices of the Ukrainian poets I’ve been speaking with, to the voices of people in Afghanistan and Iraq, whose houses my own tax money has destroyed.

In the late 20th century, the Jewish poet Paul Celan became a patron saint of writing in the midst of crisis. Composing in the German language, he has broken speech to reflect the experience of a new, violated world. This effect is happening again—this time in Ukraine—before our very eyes.

Here is the case of poet Lyuba Yakimchuk, whose family are refugees from Pervomaisk, the city which is one of the main targets of Putin’s most recent “humanitarian aid” effort. Answering my questions about her background, Lyuba responded:

I was born and raised in the war-torn Luhansk region and my hometown of Pervomaisk is now occupied. In May 2014 I witnessed the beginning of the war . . . In February 2015 my parents and grandmother, having survived dreadful warfare, set out to leave the occupied territory. They left under shelling fire, with a few bags of clothes. A friend of mine, a [Ukrainian] soldier, almost shot my grandma as they fled.

Discussing literature in wartime, Yakimchuk writes: “Literature rivals with the war, perhaps even loses to war in creativity, hence literature is changed by war.” In her poems, one sees how warfare cleaves her words: “don’t talk to me about Luhansk,” she writes, “it’s long since turned into hansk / Lu had been razed to the ground / to the crimson pavement.” The bombed-out city of Pervomaisk “has been split into pervo and maisk ” and the shell of Debaltsevo is now her “ deb , alts , evo .” Through the prism of this fragmented language, the poet sees herself:

I stare into the horizon . . . I have gotten so very old no longer Lyuba just a – ba .

Just as Russian-language poet Khersonsky refuses to speak his language when Russia occupies Ukraine, Yakimchuk, a Ukrainian-language poet, refuses to speak an unfragmented language as the country is fragmented in front of her eyes. As she changes the words, breaking them down and counterpointing the sounds from within the words, the sounds testify to a knowledge they do not possess. No longer lexical yet still legible to us, the wrecked word confronts the reader mutely, both within and beyond language.

Reading this poem of witness, one is reminded that poetry is not merely a description of an event; it is an event.

What exactly is the poetry’s witness? The language of poetry may or may not change us, but it shows the changes within us. Like a seismograph, it registers violent occurrences. Miłosz titled his seminal text The Witness of Poetry “not because we witness it, but because it witnesses us.” Living on the other side of the Iron Curtain, Zbigniew Herbert told us something similar: a poet is like a barometer for the psyche of a nation. It cannot change the weather. But it shows us what the weather is like.

Can examining the case of a lyric poet really show us something that is shared by many—the psyche of a nation? the music of a time?

How is it that a lyric poet’s spine trembles like a barometer’s needle? Perhaps this is because lyric poet is a very private person: in her or his privacy this individual creates a language—evocative enough, strange enough—that enables her or him to speak, privately, to many people at the same time.

Living many hundreds of miles from Ukraine, away from this war, in my comfortable American backyard, what right do I have to write about this war?—and yet I cannot stop writing about it: cannot stop mulling over the words by poets of my country in English, this language they do not speak. Why this obsession? Between sentences is the silence I do not control. Even though it is a different language, the silence between sentences is still the same: it is the space in which I see a family still huddled by the doorframe at 4 am, debating whether or not to open the door to the stranger, wearing only his pajama pants, who is shouting through the doorframe.

__________________________________

Words for War

Excerpted from Words for War: New Poems from Ukraine , edited by Oksana Maksymchuk & Max Rosochinsky and published by Academic Studies Press.

Ilya Kaminsky

Ilya Kaminsky

Previous article, next article.

my friend essay in russian language

  • RSS - Posts

Literary Hub

Created by Grove Atlantic and Electric Literature

Sign Up For Our Newsletters

How to Pitch Lit Hub

Advertisers: Contact Us

Privacy Policy

Support Lit Hub - Become A Member

Do you want to learn Russian?

Check out our other posts on Russian language, culture, and more. And if you’re looking for convenient and affordable live Russian lessons with a real teacher, check out The Language Garage Russian . Our lessons are given online in a virtual classroom, so it doesn’t matter where you live or work. We can come to you. And we have flexible options, with a free trial so that you can decide if there’s a fit. Check us out!

Please Share This Share this content

  • Opens in a new window

You Might Also Like

Read more about the article 音楽 ongaku: Talking About Music in Japanese

音楽 ongaku: Talking About Music in Japanese

Read more about the article ¿Cómo es ella? What’s she like? Describing People in Spanish

¿Cómo es ella? What’s she like? Describing People in Spanish

Read more about the article A Cidade: Around Town in Portuguese

A Cidade: Around Town in Portuguese

Native Russian Tutor for You

  • Survival Russian Phrases: Survive in Russia using just your words
  • Common Russian Phrases and words
  • How to say hello

On this page you will learn  how to say hello my friend in Russian

Hello my friend – Привет, друг мой.

  • Pronunciation
  • In English letters
  • About the word

hello my friend in Russian

Привет, друг мой! [Privet, droog moy]

[baslider name=”How to say hello my friend in Russian”]

Привет, друг мой! [Privet, droog moy] Привет [pri-VET] = Hi – Informal greeting (used with friends, family, etc.) друг [droog] = friend – noun, Masculine, Nominative Case мой [moy] = my – possessive pronoun

Choose your native tutor at ARusPro

Anastasia Russian Tutor

Russian word for astronaut

Russian word for astronaut

How to say Happy Valentine’s Day in Russian

Happy Valentine's Day in Russian

How to say have a good night in Russian

have a good night in Russian

How to say yes and no in Russian

yes and no in Russian

How to say hello in Russian in English

hello in Russian in English

How to say I love you too in Russian

I love you too in Russian

Studying Russian has gotten trendy now. Maybe you have by this time taken the plunge into learning Russian when you heard Russian words said in a song, in a movie, or written in a book (in a marginal note). Perhaps you longed for picking up a few cool trendy Russian phrases. You checked Google and YouTube seeking for a Russian pronunciation guidebook to learn basic Russian pronunciation and orthography. Or maybe you felt like learning how to write and speak Russian and you were curious how to write Cyrillic in English letters. On this Internet page you can discover frequent expressions in English translated to Russian. Plus, you can listen to Russian language audio in MP3 files and learn most popular Russian expressions. However, language acquisition is not restricted to learning the pronunciation of Russian words. You need to get a speaking image of the word into your head, and you can do it on this site by looking at general Russian vocabulary with images. And much more! You can not only listen to online recordings of Russian words and common phrases, but look at how those words are said by watching a video and learning the translation of the word! Ultimately, to make the images of the words sink into your head, this Internet page has a pronunciation instructions in English letters. So, as you can see, we use a wide complex of learning tools to help you succeed in learning Russian through English. At the moment you can discover many free resources for studying Russian: podcasts, Internet pages, YouTube channels and websites like this one which will help you pick up grammar, speaking, orthography, handy Russian expressions, pronunciation, Russian Cyrillic letters. However, all these webresources provide you with non-structured language data, and this may complicate things for you. To remove perplexity and get structured knowledge as well as to save your time, you need a Russian teacher because that’s their duty to structure the material and provide you with what you need the most. An instructor is aware of your strengths and weaknesses, your individual pronunciation and knows how to reach your language goals. The only thing you need to do is to count on your instructor and revel in your high-level Russian language 6 months later.

Now you know  how to say hello my friend in Russian.

Sort By Likes Views Title Likes Date Filter - All About Russian Language Russian Learning Tips For Free | How to Learn the Russian Language All how to say-s All Russian video lessons

Difficult Russian

Russian Lessons on Skype Vs. Language Exchange

how-to-say-russian-common-words-and-phrases

How To Say Russian Common Words and Phrases

Lessons from native Russian teacher Anastasia...

Learn Russian Online

Strategies for Memorizing Russian Vocabulary

Strategies for Memorizing Russian Vocabulary

Russian Alphabet

How To Learn Russian Alphabet: The Ultimate Guide to ABC

russiantutora.com video testimonials

video-testimonials

my friend essay in russian language

Bennie Hawra

Can I speak with my essay writer directly?

my friend essay in russian language

Finished Papers

my friend essay in russian language

Laura V. Svendsen

Customer Reviews

my friend essay in russian language

  • History Category
  • Psychology Category
  • Informative Category
  • Analysis Category
  • Business Category
  • Economics Category
  • Health Category
  • Literature Category
  • Review Category
  • Sociology Category
  • Technology Category

Write My Essay Service Helps You Succeed!

Being a legit essay service requires giving customers a personalized approach and quality assistance. We take pride in our flexible pricing system which allows you to get a personalized piece for cheap and in time for your deadlines. Moreover, we adhere to your specific requirements and craft your work from scratch. No plagiarized content ever exits our professional writing service as we care. about our reputation. Want to receive good grades hassle-free and still have free time? Just shoot us a "help me with essay" request and we'll get straight to work.

Onlymyenglish.com

Onlymyenglish.com

Learn English

My Best Friend Essay in English (100, 200, 300, 500 Words)

A best friend is a special and unforgettable person in our lives and will stay longer than other common friends. We share most of the things, conversations, and important talks and support them anytime in our lives.

In this topic, we are discussing the best friend and the memories that we all spent with our friends and best friends. 

We have covered an essay pattern in various paragraphs of around 100 words, 200 words, 300 words, and 500 words, respectively, that helps many of the children or students of class 2 to 12th to understand the short and descriptive essay pattern of the best friend.

Table of Contents

My Best Friend Essay 100 Words

I always thank God that he sent Rahul into my life as my best friend, and I also wish that everyone has a friend like Rahul. Rahul and I met on the first day of school after the summer vacation when we were studying in the 5th standard.

I also remember an incident when our class teacher asked him about his previous school and the place from where he came. He is a good speaker, and he gave an interesting answer to everyone in his introduction in class. 

He is good at studies and also a good athlete. He loves running and singing too, and his handwriting is also very neat and clean. I feel happy to become his friend, and he also loves my company, and we spend most of our time together.

My Best Friend Essay 200 Words

I have had a lot of friends since childhood, but Raghav is one of the kindest and most trustworthy friends for me. I must say that Rohan has been my best friend since childhood. He is a very good person and a true friend because he has a good manner that he never lies to anyone, and hates people who lie to him. He is a kind boy and also a sincere student. We both live in the same building, and our apartments are also in front of each other. 

My parents also met my friend in the school at the parents-teachers meeting, and they also like Raghav and his sincerity. We both have been in the same class from the 3rd standard until now. We are in the 10th standard now, and we both help each other in the preparation for Board exams, which will be held in the month of March. 

He always invites me to his house to play video games with him. Every Sunday, we both enjoy playing video games with popcorn and juice together. Sometimes, our school teachers also wonder about our true friendship and the strong bond between us. He has a set of badminton rackets and a shuttle, and we also play together in the evening near our building. We both love each other’s company.

My Best Friend Essay 300 Words

Everyone has at least a single friend who is more than just a friend to them. Getting a friend is common, but getting a true friend is very rare and a bit special. It is like a big achievement for people to get a trustworthy and lifelong best friend. I also had a best friend in my life too since childhood. His name is Ganaraj, and his mother is Telugu. We are neighbors too and also classmates. We always sit together in school and also spend most of the time together. 

He is a very talented person and always supports me in my studies. We both like mathematics, and also we love to solve maths numerical problems. I like to play games, and we both always play games together and participate in the sports that are held in school. Our favorite sport is Cricket, and we both are good all-rounders on our school cricket team. Our class teacher always suggests and supports us to play cricket even better and also helps in education to achieve success in life.

He is very valuable to me, and I always value his friendship as I value my parents. He is like my family, as a brother from another mother. Whenever I need his help and support, my best friend is there for me to hold me. We both live in the precious moment and create memories that will stay with me forever. Our friendship is a kind of beautiful relationship, and I hope any kind will never break these mistakes. Every Sunday, we go together to a playground near our locality, and we spend most of our time there. My parents also like Ganaraj to be my friend. Everyone is happy with our friendship and has a strong bond that never goes down in any situation.

My Best Friend Essay 500 Words

My best friend’s name is Siddhart Jadhav. We have been friends since class 7th A in Alfred Nobel High School. We both studied in the same school in childhood but not in the same class as our sections are different. Later that time, all the students from all the sections are sorted according to the previous academics’ percentages and grades and separated into four different sections. Due to this separation, I met Siddhart in the 7th A, and we became friends at that time. Later, time goes by, and our friendship bond becomes stronger, and we become best friends with each other and spend most of our time together in school, tuition, and extra classes. We also sit on the same bench in the classroom. 

Our likes and dislikes are also common, and we also love to dance and sing. In every annual gathering and other function that is held in our school, we both participate and give our best performances. We never wanted to win the competitions, our intention was to enjoy the gathering. Some of our school teachers don’t like our togetherness and friendship, but some of them loved and always blessed our strong bonded friendship to stay longer and longer. Siddharth and I always talked in the running classroom, and most of the time, our teacher also punished both of us by standing outside the classroom. We always tried to irritate the lecturer in the chemistry lectures by asking tons of doubts and questions. We eat tiffin boxes sitting on the last benches.

Apart from this naughtiness, Siddharth is very punctual, and he is never late for coming to school and attending classes. He always completes his homework at a given time and being with him, I also start studying very well and completing my homework on time. He keeps his books and copies very clean. His writing is very nice and encourages me to write cleanly and clearly for better understanding. My parents also compliment my friend that being with him, I also become responsible and a good student.

Siddharth and I are both excellent football players and athletes. When we both start playing the football game, the opponent team never wins. Our sports teacher always motivates us and tells us that we will become good football players one day. My parents also know Siddharth very much, and they like his pleasant behavior. Feel free when Siddharth and I stay together, whether for playing games, video games, study, or for going out to have fun with other classmates. Siddharth is my best friend, my first friend. He is the one who offers me help in my studies when I need it, supports me and always shows love to me, defends me, and stands by my side in any situation no matter what. 

In academics, my best friend, Siddharth, is chosen to be awarded the best student of the year in the 10th class. He is one of the brilliant students of our school and also won many of the competitions that were held in school. He is like a well-wisher, and I always enjoyed his company. He, too, feels secure and relieved by spending time with me as well. He is like a problem-solving friend to me. I never wanted to lose him in my life.

  • Global Warming Essay
  • Mahatma Gandhi Essay
  • Essay on Holi
  • Independence Day Essay
  • My Family Essay
  • My School Essay

You might also like

10-lines-on-my-mother essay english

10 Lines on My Mother Essay in English

My aim in life essay in english, my father essay in english for students, women empowerment essay in english (100, 200, 300, 500 words), republic day essay in english, my country india essay for students and children in english.

IMAGES

  1. How To Say "Friend" in Russian: Friendship Vocabulary

    my friend essay in russian language

  2. How to say "friend" in Russian: friendship vocabulary ~ Easy Russian Blog

    my friend essay in russian language

  3. Russian Vocabulary

    my friend essay in russian language

  4. How to Say My friends in Russian

    my friend essay in russian language

  5. How to Say My friend in Russian

    my friend essay in russian language

  6. کلمات و عبارت‌های کاربردی زبان روسی برای گردشگران

    my friend essay in russian language

VIDEO

  1. My Best Friend Essay in English || Essay on my best friend || my best friend essay

  2. My best friend in english

  3. Essay on my best friend

  4. my friend essay

  5. My Best Friend Essay In English

  6. #24 How to talk about your Family in RUSSIAN

COMMENTS

  1. Russian dialogue: My best friend

    What does he look like? Он высо́кий. У него́ све́тлые во́лосы и голубы́е глаза́. Я счита́ю, что он о́чень симпати́чный. He is tall. He has fair hair and blue eyes. I think that he is very handsome. Почему́ он тебе́ нра́вится? Why do you like him?

  2. Phrasebook Topic 16 About My Friends

    2. Make up your own story. Tell about a friend of yours (could be your друг/подр у га, знак о мый/знак о мая, при я тель/при я тельница, etc.): what his/her name is, where he/she lives now, what he/she does, where he/she works or studies, what he/she is studying, what languages he/she speaks. 3.

  3. Давай Дружить!

    Давай Дружить! - Let's Be Friends! Posted by Nadya on Aug 24, 2020 in Culture, Russian life, Vocabulary. Friends play extremely important roles in our lives. Friendship in Russia means a lot and is appreciated. To be honored to be called a true friend, you need to do certain things. A close friend is almost a family member.

  4. How To Say "Friend" in Russian: Friendship Vocabulary

    There are some ways to say "friend" in Russian language. The most common word for it is друг [drook]. The word "друг" is a masculine form, and the feminine form is подруга [padr oo ga]. Note the last word ends in "a". It usually shows that a noun is feminine. Examples:

  5. Друзья-товарищи: Degrees of Friendship in Russian

    The notion of a friend (друг) is more restrictive in Russian than the corresponding notion in English. For instance, you would not introduce a person you just met a few days ago to a third person as your друг. It does not mean you are keeping your distance or dislike the person. It's just that friendship (др у жба) in Russian ...

  6. Useful Russian Essay Phrases to Help Improve Your Writing

    Russian Speech Cliches. Good structure is one of the significant pillars of essay writing, and speech cliches are tools to layout your thoughts in the most compelling way. Thus, for your convenience, the expressions are listed according to essay parts: introduction, main body, and conclusion. Beginning with helpful Russian expressions for when ...

  7. How to Say Friend in Russian: Pronunciation and Examples

    Pronunciation: preeYAtyl'/preeYAtylnitsa. Translation: a mate, a pal (male/female) Meaning: a chum, a mate, an acquaintance, a pal. Used to refer to casual friends or mates, the word приятель and its female form приятельница are suitable for any social setting. Example: - Мы приятели. (my preeYAtyli) - We are pals.

  8. How to introduce yourself in Russian

    Sharing Personal Details. Exercise: An Essay about Myself in Russian. Conclusion. 1. How to Start. Start the introduction by saying "Hello" in Russian. In an informal situation, use Привет ( Privet) meaning "Hi.". In a more formal situation, use Здравствуйте ( Zdravstvuyte) meaning "Hello.". You can learn other ...

  9. 31 Must-Know Words to Talk About Your Family in Russian

    Золовка , Свояченица , Невестка - Sister-in-law. In Russian, there are several different words for sister-in-law depending on how she is related. Золовка is the husband's sister, свояченица is the wife's sister and невестка is the brother's wife. Завтра приезжает моя ...

  10. How to make friends in Russian

    Let me introduce you. If you want your friend to indroduce you to somebody else, say: Познако́мь нас. Introduce me (us). When you are presenting somebody else, use the following constructions: Э́то моя́ сестра́, Наталья. This is my sister, Natalia. Позво́льте предста́вить, э́то мой ...

  11. What kinds of friendship are there in Russia?

    4. Droog (Close friend) Though the word "друг", жен. "подруга" (" droog", fem. " podrooga") is usually translated as " friend", in Russian, this word actually means a close ...

  12. Are You My Friend? in Russian

    Learn useful and authentic Russian words and phrases for Are You My Friend?. With Memrise, you'll watch and learn from real native speakers.

  13. How to introduce yourself and others in Russian (with a quiz)

    Self-introduction in Russian. 3. Позвольте представиться (pazvól'te pritstávitsa) - Let me introduce myself. ПОЗВОЛЬТЕ ПРЕДСТАВИТЬСЯ is a very formal and official way to introduce yourself. You can use a word РАЗРЕШИТЕ (razrishite) = "allow me" instead of ПОЗВОЛЬТЕ (pazvól'te ...

  14. "Best friend" in Russian

    6. I've seen both "лу́чший друг" and "вéрный товáрищ" used online to mean "best friend" and I was wondering which is more commonly used. Is the latter only used in specific contexts? In my opinion in the everyday communication "лу́чший друг" is much more common. The other option, I suppose, is used to some ...

  15. Learn How to Talk About Your Family in Russian

    1- Mother. This is how to say "mother" in Russian: мама ( mama ). In English, it can be translated as "mom.". This is the word kids learn to use when they're little. There's also a more formal word for "mother" in Russian language: мать ( mat' ). It's used in formal writing or formal speeches. Interesting fact.

  16. How to say friend in Russian

    Alexander is my schoolmate. Собáка - мой вéрный товáрищ. My dog is my best friend. literal My dog is my loyal comrade. Вáня был отли́чным товáрищем. Vania was a perfect friend. Я отдáл конспéкты одному́ товáрищу. I gave my notes to a friend of mine.

  17. How To Introduce Yourself in Russian in 6 Easy Lines (AUDIO)

    If you want to say your age in Russian, this is it. 4. Я - (occupation) Meaning: I am (occupation). Pronunciation: Ya - (occupation) Example: Я - студент. Ya stoo-dent. I am a student. Yes, you just say "ya" right before your occupation - whether you're a student or a lawyer.

  18. Ilya Kaminsky on Ukrainian, Russian, and the Language of War

    Via Academic Studies Press. By Ilya Kaminsky. February 28, 2022. Editor's note: this 2017 essay is excerpted from Words for War: New Poems from Ukraine. 1. My family huddled by the doorframe at 4 am, debating whether or not to open the door to the stranger wearing only his pajama pants, who'd been pounding on the door for at least five ...

  19. Моя семья: My Family in Russian

    Do you want to learn Russian? Check out our other posts on Russian language, culture, and more. And if you're looking for convenient and affordable live Russian lessons with a real teacher, check out The Language Garage Russian. Our lessons are given online in a virtual classroom, so it doesn't matter where you live or work. We can come to you.

  20. How to say hello my friend in Russian

    Plus, you can listen to Russian language audio in MP3 files and learn most popular Russian expressions. However, language acquisition is not restricted to learning the pronunciation of Russian words. You need to get a speaking image of the word into your head, and you can do it on this site by looking at general Russian vocabulary with images.

  21. My Friend Essay In Russian Language

    My Friend Essay In Russian Language - 2269 Chestnut Street, #477 San Francisco CA 94123. Communications and Media. 20 Customer reviews. Coursework. 626 ... My Friend Essay In Russian Language, Essay Of Healthy Foods, Essay On The Topic Education Should Be Free, Net 2 0 Resume, Argumentation Analysieren Beispiel Essay, Research Proposal Editing ...

  22. My Friend Essay In Russian Language

    The shortest time frame in which our writers can complete your order is 6 hours. Length and the complexity of your "write my essay" order are determining factors. If you have a lengthy task, place your order in advance + you get a discount! Hire a Writer. Level: Master's, University, College, PHD, High School, Undergraduate.

  23. My Best Friend Essay in English (100, 200, 300, 500 Words)

    My Best Friend Essay in English (100, 200, 300, 500 Words) April 3, 2022. A best friend is a special and unforgettable person in our lives and will stay longer than other common friends. We share most of the things, conversations, and important talks and support them anytime in our lives. In this topic, we are discussing the best friend and the ...