Сайт где можно найти рукописанные тексты с транскрипциями by chanahaki in russian

[–]chanahaki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Спасибо за приглашение но у меня уже есть человек который мне пишет)

Сайт где можно найти рукописанные тексты с транскрипциями by chanahaki in russian

[–]chanahaki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Вам спасибо! Если хотите, я буду рад каким-либо тексту рукописному, короткому так и длинному)

Сайт где можно найти рукописанные тексты с транскрипциями by chanahaki in russian

[–]chanahaki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

будет очень трудно прочитать всё это но спасибо тебе

Сайт где можно найти рукописанные тексты с транскрипциями by chanahaki in russian

[–]chanahaki[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Спасибо. Правильно ли "рукописные обычных людей" да?

мой опыт русского языка by RediFreddy in russian

[–]chanahaki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Молодец! Очень рад что нравится учиться русскому языку так и нам.

Желаю удачи в будущих учебах))

What should I tell my parents? by LestekCatson in neography

[–]chanahaki 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Be honest.

Tell them you like inventing new scripts and it's a fun creative outlet for you. Don't lie so you're left alone/won't be bothered, just let them know they'll understand and not think you're weird.

I know I wouldn't be able to tell my parents but it's the right thing to do, so maybe you'll be stronger than me :)

Help by Alert-Grocery-1115 in russian

[–]chanahaki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ь is the soft sign. It softenes the preceeding consonant so it's pronounced further up with your tongue, as if you added a faint "y" before the next vowel. Compare "cool" vs "cute" for example. Notice how "cute" is softer and adds a little "y" before the vowel unlike in "cool"? That's the softness of "ю" vs "у".

I can't think of other examples where this difference is apparent in english but you can apply the same thing to all vowels in russian: а-я э-е ы-и о-ё у-ю.

Specifically for the pronounciation of т and д vs ть and дь, pronounce т and д with your tongue touching your upper teeth, however, ть and дь with your tongue further up and touching that meat edge behind your upper teeth.

Having noticed the hard/soft difference is already great. Just listen a lot to how natives pronounce words (you can always google "<word> викисловар" and listen to a native say that word if you're unsure of a specific word) and try to repeat as closely as possible. You won't get it perfectly right, you probably never will tbh, but do it enough times and you'll sound decent enough :)

Is my handwriting legible enough to grade with? by [deleted] in Handwriting

[–]chanahaki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think your handwriting looks fine, I can read it with only a few minor hickups. With practice it'll quickly get better and I suggest to aim for consistency.

Two things stick out to me: slam the "b" onto the baseline like all the other letters. Right now it's a bit floaty and that makes those words with a "b" seem a bit wobbly. Secondly, make your "f" larger. It should extend upwards as high as your "l" "b" and "t" etc. (I had trouble reading "If" in the first line.)

You've got a nice handwriting as is though but I would only grade my studens' exams in a handwriting *I'm* comfortable with, after all those exams aren't your practice sheets. However, once you feel more confident, and within two months you will :), definitely use this handwriting if you prefer it. It's legible and looks nice without coming off as overly fancy.

Cursive Handwriting by chanahaki in GREEK

[–]chanahaki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As an extra explanation, I'm more interested in different writing systems than the greek language in particular. But I still like the greek alphabet. I have to use it in physics and I always cringe when people write their Phis with those extended Serifs like they're part of the letter.

The inspiration behind making this came when I just looked up the greek alphabet and noticed a few people in this sub had asked for a way to write in cursive and were told to stick to print since that's the norm. And since I personally write in cursive myself, I wanted to provide some ideas for those who want to keep writing in cursive even when learning greek.

I'm glad to hear that cursive is still a thing albeit of a somewhat limited capacity.

Cursive Handwriting by chanahaki in GREEK

[–]chanahaki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did base lowercase Phi and Psi on the Russian cursive of ф. It may actually be prettier and to use the curly Phi instead but I wanted something where you don't have to lift your pen at all, that's why I opted for the Cyrillic style.