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Latin vs. Russian

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Michael K.
Senior Member
United States
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Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish, Esperanto

 
 Message 1 of 19
29 May 2012 at 10:56pm | IP Logged 
I've tried some Latin and I'm thinking about trying some Russian. I want to know about the difficulties of both languages.

From my brief dabblings in Latin, I think it's about as difficult a language as I would want to try. The cases can get downright confusing sometimes. The course I'm using for Latin is "Learn Latin" by Peter Jones, and I'm on lesson 17. I was thinking of continuing my Latin studies, but I'm not so sure anymore.

My first question: what are the particular difficulties of learning Russian for native English speakers? I think I heard there were three particular hard parts, but I don't know if that's the case.

For those who have studied Latin and Russian, what are your thoughts? Is one significantly more difficult than the other?

Are there any Russian courses that come highly recommended? I have TYS Russian and I'm thinking about getting the New Penguin Russian Course. I'm borrowing a Penguin course from the 60s from the library.

Are Latin and Russian similarly grammatically, or are there significant differences?

As is evident from this post, I don't know much about either language. Thanks for any help.
1 person has voted this message useful



Kartof
Bilingual Triglot
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United States
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 Message 2 of 19
29 May 2012 at 11:05pm | IP Logged 
Well I haven't studied Latin or Russian but certainly the greatest difficulty that you'll have with your language
background will be Russian vocabulary acquisition. With Spanish and Esperanto, you certainly have a good grasp of
mostly Romance vocabulary which will make learning Latin at least a bit more manageable. You should be aware
that Slavic vocabulary is not very transparent for speakers of other language groups. That may be the most difficult
obstacle for you to overcome in learning Russian which is less of a problem in Latin.
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Josquin
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 Message 3 of 19
29 May 2012 at 11:48pm | IP Logged 
Well, there are some similarties between Latin and Russian, but of course they are absolutely distinct languages. One can roughly say that the complexity of Latin and Russian is on one level, but the most important thing to remember is that Latin is a dead language while Russian is vitally alive. That means that you only have to be able to analyse the complexity of Latin while you must also be able to produce it in Russian.

I guess the three difficulties of Russian you mentioned are pronunciation, cases, and verbal aspects. Russian distinguishes between 'hard' and 'soft' consonants. 'Hard' consonants are the normal ones which exist in English and most of the other European languages, while 'soft' consonants are palatalised. This means that the front part of the tongue is pressed against the roof of the mouth. It sounds a little bit like simultaneously pronouncing a consonant and a 'y'. The distinction between 'soft' and 'hard' consonants is vital, because the difference in pronunciation may be a difference in meaning. Moreover, nouns and adjectives take their endings according to the 'softness' or 'hardness' of the word's stem consonant.

Russian has six cases, while Latin has five (without vocative). There are three genders, just as in Latin, and there are several declination groups. You will have to learn which verbs and which prepositions take which case. There is also a handful of irregular nouns in Russian that are declined somewhat different from the standard declensions.

The strangest grammatical aspect of Russian is verbal aspects. Of each verb there exist two forms: the perfective and the imperfective aspect. You will use the perfective aspect for actions that have been completed or that take place only once, while the imperfective aspect is used for actions that are still in process, have not been completed, or that repeat themselves.

While this is rather difficult for a non-Slav, the good news is that there are only two conjugation groups and three tenses (present, past, and future). But verbs may change their stem consonants in the present tense, which can be rather confusing, and there are several irregular verbs. I believe there is no passive voice in Russian, and the conditional is simply formed by adding the particle бы to the past tense.

The Latin verbal system is much more complex, as there are more tenses, moods, and voices, but there are no verbal aspects in Latin. Moreover, Latin seems to be more logical and less irregular than Russian. And - you don't have to use it actively, as I already said at the beginning.
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Chung
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 Message 4 of 19
29 May 2012 at 11:56pm | IP Logged 
Michael K. wrote:
I've tried some Latin and I'm thinking about trying some Russian. I want to know about the difficulties of both languages.

From my brief dabblings in Latin, I think it's about as difficult a language as I would want to try. The cases can get downright confusing sometimes. The course I'm using for Latin is "Learn Latin" by Peter Jones, and I'm on lesson 17. I was thinking of continuing my Latin studies, but I'm not so sure anymore.

My first question: what are the particular difficulties of learning Russian for native English speakers? I think I heard there were three particular hard parts, but I don't know if that's the case.

For those who have studied Latin and Russian, what are your thoughts? Is one significantly more difficult than the other?

Are there any Russian courses that come highly recommended? I have TYS Russian and I'm thinking about getting the New Penguin Russian Course. I'm borrowing a Penguin course from the 60s from the library.

Are Latin and Russian similarly grammatically, or are there significant differences?

As is evident from this post, I don't know much about either language. Thanks for any help.


1) On difficulties in Russian for speakers of English, check out this thread, and in particular, TixhiiDon's succint list in the thread. For some detail and demonstration why an English-speaking learner should work on proper pronunciation in Russian from the very beginning, no matter how complicated it is to outsiders, see this study done by the University of Victoria (Canada) on how students fared with learning Russian pronunciation. The conclusion begins thusly:

“Phonetic Perception and Pronunciation Difficulties of Russian Language (From a Canadian Perspective)” (from “The Arbitus Review, Vol. 2, No. 1 (2011)) wrote:
It has been previously discovered that learners of Russian have difficulties with the unfamiliar phonetic rules of the language including the stress of words, vowel reduction, consonant devoicing, voicing assimilation, unfamiliar consonant sounds, and intonation. This study found that participants had difficulty with all the above issues when they started learning Russian, and it is only when these pronunciation problems are pointed out and worked on specifically that participants will improve and no longer make mistakes. Previously undiscovered, the largest problem area for students of Russian at the University of Victoria is word stress.


2) For courses, there are plenty of choices. I'm sure that others will chime in with their favourite courses or suggestions. I haven't studied Russian properly but have accumulated a few courses for browsing or if I will ever feel like taking it up after having become bored with my "hit-list" or current target languages (not bloody likely ;-))

3) There is an excellent article by Chauncey Finch called "Latin and Russian as a Teaching Combination". It's available on JSTOR and if you have access to the database via a library (be it public or at a university) you'll get the entire article. As the title suggests it deals with the question from the teacher's point of view rather than the student's but one should be able to get an idea of what you would be up against.

Here're some excerpts that I found useful to create a kind of extended abstract.

Finch, Chauncey E. “Latin and Russian as a Teaching Combination” (“The Classical Journal”, Vol. 43, No. 1, Oct. 1947, pp. 23-6) wrote:
[...]The Latin teacher’s experience in dealing with a highly inflected language gives him a distinct advantage, since Russian, too employs an elaborate system of inflections very reminiscent of the Latin system in many respects. As there is no fixed word order in Russian, the word endings play just as important a role in determining meaning as in Latin, and a thorough understanding of their significance is just as essential for the correct interpretation of texts as is the case with Latin. Therefore, the Latin teacher who undertakes to teach the complexities of Russian grammar is not on wholly unfamiliar ground.

The problems associated with teaching the Russian noun are pretty much the same as those involved in teaching the Latin noun. The Russian grammars list three main declensions: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Several modified types of each of these exist, however, so that, in reality, the number is much greater than three. Furthermore, the endings of individual declensions are not as well fixed as in Latin, but vary considerably in several instances, depending on the nature of the final sound of the noun stem, and in the case of masculine nouns, depending on whether the object designated is animate or inanimate. […] As a general thing, Russian case endings bear little resemblance to the corresponding Latin endings, but there are some exceptions. […] The rule that nominatives and accusatives are alike in neuter nouns holds for Russian as well as for the classical languages. Furthermore, in Russian, as in Latin and Greek, the nominative-accusative neuter plural ending is the vowel a. […] The tense arrangement in Russian differs considerably from the Latin system. But the personal endings, on the other hand, bear a remarkable resemblance to Latin endings, as is seen in the conjugation znat’, “to know,”...

[…] It is not my desire to give the impression by what has been said that Russian is little more than a dialect of Latin, for such is certainly not the case. […] But, even so, the resemblances to Latin are numerous enough to make Latin and Russian a logical teaching combination.


I don't intend to quote the entire text for fear of copyright infringement but I think that this improvised abstract should give a decent idea of how knowing Latin will help someone grasp some concepts in Russian more readily than someone not knowing the former.
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Michael K.
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5720 days ago

568 posts - 886 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish, Esperanto

 
 Message 5 of 19
30 May 2012 at 1:26am | IP Logged 
Thank you very much, Kartof, Chung, and Josquin. I'm glad I asked :)

A question about perfective vs. imperfective aspect: is this like the difference between imperfect and preterite in Spanish? They're both past tenses, of course, but imperfect suggests it was ongoing while preterite suggests it was completed once (or something like that). I had a lot of trouble trying to tell the difference between those two.

OT, but how strange would you sound in Spanish if you used the imperfect instead of the preterite, or vice versa?
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Chung
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 Message 6 of 19
30 May 2012 at 1:35am | IP Logged 
Michael K. wrote:
Thank you very much, Kartof, Chung, and Josquin. I'm glad I asked :)


No problem.

Michael K. wrote:
A question about perfective vs. imperfective aspect: is this like the difference between imperfect and preterite in Spanish? They're both past tenses, of course, but imperfect suggests it was ongoing while preterite suggests it was completed once (or something like that). I had a lot of trouble trying to tell the difference between those two.


That's the idea but see this thread for more discussion.

English does mark aspect too, it's just that we have other means. (Cf. "I ate (up) a pie" versus "I was eating a pie." or "I had eaten a pie before you came home." versus "I had been eating a pie before you came home.")
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Michael K.
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5720 days ago

568 posts - 886 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish, Esperanto

 
 Message 7 of 19
30 May 2012 at 1:47am | IP Logged 
Thanks again, Chung. I'm sure your links will come in handy if I decide to pursue Russian seriously.

The Princeton course mentioned in one of your links sounds good, I'll check it out.
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tanya b
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 Message 8 of 19
30 May 2012 at 2:16am | IP Logged 
First, if you want a recommendation on an excellent Russian course for English learners, there is Living Language Ultimate Russian. I completed the course in less than 1 year, entirely through self-study, and am now fully fluent, and am sometimes mistaken for a native speaker (by Russians, that is).

I also used the Living Language Russian-English Dictionary and Phrasebook, Living Language Russian Grammar and Vocabulary, and Katzner's English-Russian Russian-English Dictionary.

With regard to perfective and imperfective verbs, the concept for most verbs is relatively simple.

Generally, perfective verbs are in the past and future tense.

Yesterday I BOUGHT a pair of shoes.
Tomorrow I WILL BUY a pair of shoes.

Generally, imperfective verbs are in the present tense.

Every day I BUY a pair of shoes.

Russian has specific verbs to indicate a one-time action or a repetitive action and there are very clear rules on when they should be used. The rules themselves are not inordinately complicated.

However, the rules become much more tricky when they apply to verbs of motion, which justify a separate Russian textbook on their own.

Verbs of motion are often irregular, and there is some disagreement among Russian native speakers on whether the perfective or imperfective should be used. I generally use the imperfective verb to describe a one-time action because an imperfective verb implies arriving AND returning.

Yesterday I WENT to the park.

The sentence implies that I returned home afterward, indicating a completed multi-directional action, justifying the imperfective.

If I lived in the park, then I would use the perfective, because going to the park in that case is a uni-directional action.

I hope in my clumsy way I have explained this satisfactorily.

In Russian, there are 5 major obstacles to fluency.

1) Pronounciation
2) Cases
3) Gender
4) Verb Aspect
5) Verb Conjugation

Other than that, it's a breeze.


Edited by tanya b on 30 May 2012 at 2:22am



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