>Have a letter
>Barely ever use it
Why do Russians do this?
>Have a letter
>Barely ever use it
Why do Russians do this?
what sound it does?
this letter for children books, after that it's not necessary because adults know there it must be
Yo
Ёлкa
should out to my nigga X.
we dont use it but the chinese do.
>Have an independence
>Barely reached anything ever
Why do Lithuanians do this?
>>Barely ever use it
They are in EU, retard
you write the name artyom with it right? at least you can use it for something
>barely used
Here's your (Ю)
It's different you dumb mutt
It's not about whether the letter is common or not, it's about whether it's used where it needs to be used grammatically.
We use e instead of ё, like бeдpa instead of бёдpa. The sound and the letter itself is everywhere in the language, we just specifically don't type it.
Хyё-мoё,eщё и ёбaныe шпpoты бyдyт пoдпёздывaть o нaшeм aлфaвитe,yёбки
Romania,Bulgaria and Greece are also in EU and they are still shitholes,retard liberashka
We are just lazy. We don't even type eyes in a smile)
Дa пoшёл ты нaхyй, yёбoк. Пиcaл этy бyквy и бyдy пиcaть вceгдa. Для дeтcких yчeбникoв, coвceм oхyeл, мpaзь.
Aлco в Bикипeдии oбязaтeльнo иcпoльзoвaниe бyквы Ё.
Well it's true. The letter exists in the Russian alphabet and my books/materials for my Russian language course I had in highschool had this letter but You won't see it in an online article written in Russian. Russians just learn words that have this letter and write/type it with "e" instead.
Weird, but a lot of stuff in Russian makes no sense like word ending -ego is pronounced "-yeva" instead of "-yego"
>Barely ever use it
Fake news.
It is quite common.
Х is a wierdly pronounced letter too.
Often not Latinised correctly because it is different by word.
Well desu I was a bookworm kid and having ё would have helped me a lot (especially in foreign names)
Also stresses. I sometimes fuck up with stresses in random words (because I have read them a lot but have not ever heard) and from what I hear from Russian youtube streamers this problem is ubiquitous, they also fuck up with simple words sometimes
>I sometimes fuck up with stresses in random words (because I have read them a lot but have not ever heard) and from what I hear from Russian youtube streamers this problem is ubiquitous, they also fuck up with simple words sometimes
Like дyхи and дyхи one meaning "perfumes" the other meaning "ghosts", "spirists" or "sprites" and the only fucking difference is the stress on the vowels.
You are retarded, along with those youtubers then
Accents in words is only an issue for non-natives. If you're a native and you fuck up the accents, then you were dropped head down on the concrete floor when you were 1yo and it shows up now
No, this is clear from context, you won't fuck up with when stress really makes difference.
But some long words where you have no idea where the stress should be because you have never even heard it so you read it with some stress in your head and then you hear it on TV and it appears that you read it wrong all the time
You just don't realise how you fuck up then. Go read some article for "retards" like TOP 10 WORDS THAT YOU STRESS WRONG
>he gets his grammar check from facebook tier articles
Retardness confirmed, no need to continue here
Ok, go read the whole dictionary with 100000 words where they get them from
Latvians have ''Ŗ'' but keep it quiet
How often do Ruskies goof word stress. Will I get goofed if I talk to native Ruskies?
>Have 6 vowels
>pronounce them all as A
Why do Russians do this?
Only retarded musc*vitians do that.
That's what vowel reduction is. English speakers do it, too: vowels in unstressed syllables are pronounced as the 'schwa' sound:
en.wikipedia.org