Ooh, guess what! Ana signed my yearbook yesterday, and part of what she wrote was in Russian, and I actually knew what most of it meant! Of course, that's just because it was all song lyrics, but... =D
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All your adaptation are belong to me.
DIMA. GET YOUR HAWT FACE OVER TO DETROIT AND DO A CONCERT FOR US.
Ana was at my house today... Everyone: *talking about languages* Ana: *says something in Russian* Me: ...um... ya ne ponimayu? Ana: You pronounced it right! Me: YES!! =DDD
Hehe!
-- Edited by Elanchana at 04:44, 2008-06-06
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All your adaptation are belong to me.
DIMA. GET YOUR HAWT FACE OVER TO DETROIT AND DO A CONCERT FOR US.
I finally found conjugation rules on RL.net, and they're really helpful.
For everyone:
Conj 1: Verbs ending in -at or -t Infinitive: rabotat (to work) Ya rabotayu (I work) Ti rabotayesh (You work - informal) On/Ona/Ono rabotayet (He/she/it works) Mi rabotayem (We work) Vi rabotayetye (You work - formal/plural) Oni rabotayut (They work)
Conj 2: Verbs ending in -it Infinitive: govorit (to speak) Ya govoryu (I speak) Ti govorish (You speak - informal) On/Ona/Ono govorit (He/she/it speaks) Mi govorim (We speak) Vi govorite (You speak - formal/plural) Oni govoryat (They speak)
Well those are the russian words i know!excuse me,but i know very little!
niet (no) da (yes) spacibo (thank you) priviet (hallo) tsarievna (princess) neseryozna (its not serious) ya dyla tebya (i live for you) nikogda (never) angyel (angel)
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WE'VE BEEN FALLING FOR ALL THIS TIME AND NOW I'M LOST IN PARADISE...