Accusative Case vs Nominative case
Learn to see the difference between “the person or thing doing something” and “the person or thing receiving the action.” This is one of the most important skills for using the Russian accusative case correctly.
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Learn to see the difference between “the person or thing doing something” and “the person or thing receiving the action.” This is one of the most important skills for using the Russian accusative case correctly.
Learn how to use Russian personal pronouns in the accusative case from context.
Practice putting nouns into the accusative case — both animate and inanimate, singular and plural.
Practice writing numbers in words and choosing the correct noun form (nominative singular, genitive singular, or genitive plural) based on the number.
Practice forming natural Russian noun phrases by putting one noun into the genitive case based on meaning (e.g., “weather forecast” → прогноз погоды).
Practice forming the genitive case of Russian nouns in both singular and plural. Pay special attention to whether the noun in brackets is singular or plural.
Practice using the genitive case of Russian personal pronouns with **у** to express possession (“to have”).