I started learning Russian in January 2006. Why? It's a major world language with speakers in many countries, some of which I would like to visit; I have a number of Russian-speaking colleagues and friends, and because knowing it would be useful when building Russian websites.
My course of choice was Rosetta Stone Russian, a CD-Rom course which teaches you the language entirely through the medium of Russian. You start learning individual words, then combinations of two or three words, and then gradually learn to build phrases and sentences. The exercises help you develop your listening, speaking, reading and writing skills. You can work through them manually, or let the program take you through them.
One disadvantage of this method of study is that you to work your way through many lessons before you learn to say anything useful. On the other hand, you are building up a solid foundation of vocabulary and grammar.
In August 2006 I decided to put Russian on hold, mainly because I was getting frustrated with how little apparent progress I was making. I plan to have another go at Russian, with Rosetta Stone and Oxford Take off in Russian once I've acquired a good knowledge of Czech, which I started learning in September 2006.
Information about written and spoken Russian
Other Russian language learning materials
Arabic, Cantonese, Czech, Esperanto, French, Hungarian, German, Icelandic, Italian, Irish (Gaelic), Japanese, Korean, Latin, Mandarin, Manx (Gaelic), Portuguese, Russian, Scottish Gaelic, Spanish, Taiwanese, Turkish, Welsh
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