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Russian Case Chart With Examples

Russian Case Chart with Examples

The Only Russian Case Chart You’ll Ever Need

Hey, guys! I’ve posted several Russian case charts in the past that I’ve found online, but none of them have been quite perfect. The last few days, I’ve been working on one of my own, with examples of all the different rules (and their exceptions).

It is too large to post a single picture that fits it all, so I broke it down by case. (They look blurry while scrolling, but if you click on them they’re high-def.)

Nominative Case | Именительный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples

Genitive Case | Родительный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples

Dative Case | Дательный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples

Accusative Case | Винительный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples

Instrumental Case | Творительный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples

Prepositional Case | Предложный Падеж

Russian Case Chart With Examples
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More Posts from Things-tokeepinmind

10 months ago

hobbies masterpost!

a really excellent way to reduce anxiety is to pick up a new hobby. find something you’re interested in, learn it, then use it as a healthy and productive way to cope.

learn to play guitar

learn how to make interactive stories with the free program Twine

learn how to make pixel art

learn another language

learn how to build a ship in a bottle

learn how to develop your own film

learn how to embroider

learn how to make chiptunes (8-bit music)

learn how to make origami (the art of paper folding)

learn how to make tumblr themes

learn how to make jewelry 

learn how to make candy

learn how to make terrariums

learn how to make your own perfume

learn how to make your own tea

learn how to build birdhouses

learn how to read tarot cards

learn how to make zines

learn how to code

learn how to whittle (wood carving)

learn how to make candles

learn how to make clay figurines

learn how to knit scarves

learn how to become an amateur astronomer

learn some yoyo tricks

learn how to start a collection

learn how to start body building

learn how to edit wikipedia articles

learn how to decorate iphone cases

learn how to do freelance writing

learn how to make your own cards and

learn how to make your own envelopes

learn how to play the ukulele 

learn how to make gifs

learn how to play chess

learn how to juggle

learn how to guerrilla garden

learn how to chart your family history

learn how to keep chickens

learn how to do yoga

learn how to do magic

learn how to raise and breed butterflies

learn how to play dungeons & dragons

learn how to skateboard

learn how to do parkour

learn how to surf

learn how to arrange flowers

learn how to make stuffed animals

10 months ago

20 books everyone needs to read at least once because people will reference them in front of you your entire life:

“the faerie queene,” by edmund spenser. this poem is both an epic and an allegory, written in (mostly) iambic pentameter. it is divided up into six books (plus a little bit of a seventh) which you should read, if for no other reason than the fact that there’s supposedly an exclusive book club at harvard university for the select few people who have finished all six sections

“romeo and juliet,” and “othello,” both by shakespeare. these plays both involve two lovers who die because of communication issues. and they’re both super important to read because there are so many references to them, both in other pieces of classic lit., and in modern culture

“the picture of dorian gray,” by oscar wilde. if you can’t tell, this is my favorite book ever. if you can get past the purple prose, it’s one of the most ‘dark academia’ books ever. it’s got references to other famous pieces of literature (which i’ll include on the list), lots of gay shit, a dramatic young adult who loves shakespeare, and ofc, murder

“the brothers karamazov,” by fyodor dostoevsky. actually started reading this one to impress a boy; i think that perhaps he and i have different concepts of what is considered impressive, but the book has turned out amazing, so i’m happy. it has lots of wonderful philosophical and theological discussions. the one thing you may not like is that Dostoevsky constantly goes off on little tangents (like Herodotus). it simultaneously fascinates me and makes me want to smack him with a stick

“the prince,” by niccolo machiavelli. this isn’t classic literature so much as it is political science, but honestly, so many people talk about ‘machiavellianism’ without ever having read the original Machiavellian treatise, and it would be so much better to just read the book and then be able to cite machiavelli himself at your next political-philosophy discussion.

“the canterbury tales,” by geoffrey chaucer. these are classics. they’re filled to the brim with medieval language and sexual innuendo, but that’s part of what makes them so wonderful. if that’s not enough of a selling point, ‘the tale of the deathly hallows’ from “harry potter” is super similar to ‘the pardoner’s tale’ from this book.

“the divine comedy,” by dante alighieri. includes a crap ton of great history references and some super sick burns directed towards the corrupt people of dante’s time.

“meditations,” by marcus aurelius. the original metaphysical journal. probably the epitome of ‘light academia’ if i’ve ever read one

“the great gatsby,” by f. scott fitzgerald. jay gatsby is low-key super relatable…and so is nick, the third wheel…and so is daisy, who feels like women are forced by society to be ‘beautiful little fools’

“the iliad” and “the odyssey,” by homer. i will never ever be able to read ‘the iliad’ again without sobbing hysterically. :’((

“frankenstein,” by mary shelley. not only is this a great book in terms of philosophical potential, but there are so many great things to debate about in it. and, it’s written by a woman :)

“oedipus rex,” by sophocles. my favorite book in 9th grade, though god knows why my mother let me read it then

“metamorphoses,” by ovid. a collection of my all-time favorite myths, which every single person needs to read because it explains how the ancient romans believed the world operated, from the way the sun rises, to the reason we hear echoes.

“the aeneid,” by virgil. suggested by @catilinas :) the final addition to the holy iliad/odyssey/aeneid trinity, written hundreds of years after the last part, by a different author, and in latin instead of the original greek. chronologically ocurrs at about the same time as the odyssey, although from the trojan perspective.

“1984” (suggested by @alexickotowaffle) and “animal farm,” both by george orwell. i’m sticking them together because although the plots are completely different, they both remind me of today’s culture in rather unfortunate ways. but they’re very well written, and i do adore orwell’s style :)

“don quixote,” by miguel de cervantes. an absolutely hysterical book; i kept laughing out loud the entire time i was reading it. it satirizes getting wrapped up in the world of books, to which i’m sure we can all relate.

“hamlet,” by william shakespeare. finally crossed this off of my “to read” list and i absolutely loved it. hamratio (is that the ship name for hamlet x horatio?) is wonderful, the whole play is excellent, and i would highly recommend it

10 months ago

Reblog and you might save someone’s life, especially with all our Black Girls going missing #ProtectBlackGirls #SaveLife

10 months ago

MATH RESOURCES

http://math-blog.com/mathematics-books/

http://world.logic.at/

http://www.mathematica-journal.com/

http://www.e-booksdirectory.com/mathematics.php

http://www.math.utah.edu/

http://math.umn.edu/

http://tutorial.math.lamar.edu/

http://math.stackexchange.com/

https://truebeautyofmath.com/

Videos

Khan Academy

PatrickJMT

MathTV

UKMathsTeacher

ProfRobBob

HippoCampus

MIT’s Math OCW

njwildberger’s Insights into Mathematics videos

Math Dr. Bob

Worldwide center of mathematics

IHES’ youtube channel

Hausdorff Research Institue for Mathematics

Math Overflow’s List of Free Online Lectures

The Catsters - Category Theory Videos

Example Problems & Online Notes/References

Example Problems

Interact Math

Paul’s Online Math Notes

Calculus.org

Wolfram Mathworld

CTY Online AP & College Math Resources

J.S. Milne’s Site

History of Math

Harvey Mudd College’s Online Math Tutorials

Real (and some complex) Analysis & Programming

Computer Algebra Systems (* = download required)

SAGE

Maxima*

Octave*

Wolfram Alpha

Geogebra*

Graphing & Visualizing Mathematics (* = download required)

Geogebra*

gnuplot*

Gapminder

Wolfram Demonstrations Project *

Wolframalpha

scipy*

Microsoft Mathematics*

Winplot* ; Awesome for differential equations!

Desmos super HTML5-based graphing calculator.

Symbolab

Scilab

Typesetting (LaTeX)

TeX Users Group

The Comprehensive TeX Archive Network

Art of Problem Solving Tutorial

TexPaste

Xfig

Detextify

WriteLaTeX WYSIWYG

LaTeX Examples

Community Websites

/r/math

/r/puremathematics

Math Stack Exchange

mathoverflow.net

The Art of Problem Solving

Proof Wiki

arxiv.org

Blogs/Articles

http://terrytao.wordpress.com

http://blogs.ams.org/blogonmathblogs/

http://www.ams.org/notices/

https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/

http://gowers.wordpress.com/

Misc

http://terrytao.wordpress.com

http://blogs.ams.org/blogonmathblogs/

http://www.ams.org/notices/

http://www.jmilne.org/math/

http://www.mathjobs.org

academicearth.org

Encyclopedia of Mathematics

Large List of Recommended books, online resources

Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences

MathIM

http://gowers.wordpress.com

https://www.symbolab.com/

http://projecteuclid.org/

http://www.fxsolver.com/browse/?formulas=on&p=-1

http://www.scilab.org/

http://www.sciencebooksonline.info/mathematics.html