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  • Russian: Lesson 4

    Alright, we’re moving to pluralization. This will be the bulk of lesson four. The endings to be learned are abundant enough. If you feel overwhelmed, don’t worry! There will be opportunities to practice what you learn in this lesson and have already learned in the previous three lesson. (Once I get those quizzes made!)



    I. Pluralization

    Time to start learning plurals. Forming the plural in English is very straightforward. In most cases it’s going to be either –s or –es that gets added to a noun.

    SingularPlural
    bookbooks
    couchcouches

    Now of course there are irregularities, but that’s the general rule.

    Well, in Russian, it’s more complex. In fact, there are six plurals! We’ll be learning the nominative plural in this lesson only, since we have already learned the nominative singular. You need to know the singular and plural of this case in order to form the additional cases. When you learn the other cases, it will all make sense.

    Masculine Nouns
    Add –ы to a consonant.
    магазин
    [store]
    магазины
    [stores]
    стол
    [table]
    столы
    [tables]
    ананас
    [pineapple]
    ананасы
    [pineapples]
    Feminine Nouns
    Replace –я with –и.
    неделя
    [week]
    недели
    [weeks]
    статья
    [article]
    статьи
    [articles]
    кухня
    [kitchen]
    кухни
    [kitchens]
    Replace –а with –ы.
    страница
    [page]
    страницы
    [pages]
    карта
    [map]
    карты
    [maps]
    цена
    [price]
    цены
    [prices]
    Pay attention to the change in stress in the word цена. If the stress changes in the plural, it will most likely do so in other plurals.
    Neuter Nouns
    Replace –е with –я.
    море
    [sea]
    моря
    [seas]
    поле
    [field]
    поля
    [fields]
    This stress shift phenomenon is very common in neuter nouns ending in –е.
    Replace –о with –а.
    окно
    [window]
    окна
    [windows]
    блюдо
    [dish]
    блюда
    [dishes]
    Pay attention to the change in stress in the word окно. If the stress changes in the plural, it will most likely do so in other plurals.
    The overwhelming majority of nouns ending in –е and –о are of foreign origin [кофе – coffee, капучино – cappuccino, etc.]. And many of them don’t decline – they never change! Isn’t that wonderful news!
    For more info on indeclinable nouns, please click here.
    For more info on the nominative plural, please click here.


    II. The conjunction или

    We’re shifting our focus to the conjunction или, which means or. We already know two key conjunctions in Russian: и and а.

    Это дом или магазин.
    This is a house or a store.

    And you can turn it into a question:

    Это дом или магазин?
    Is this a house or a store?

    Let’s take it a little further. There is a useful construction with или: или…или… This means either…or… Thus, one can say:

    Это или дом, или магазин.
    This is either a house or a store.
    The conjunction или, doesn’t require a comma before it, unless it’s doubled in the construction или…или…

    III. The conjunction но

    I’ve got another conjunction for you. It’s another key one in Russian. It’s но, which means but.

    Это старый, но красивый дом.
    It’s an interesting, but strange house.
    Это дом. Он старый, но красивый.
    This is a house. It’s old, but pretty.
    Unless starting a sentence, но is always preceded by a comma.
    For more info on conjunctions, please click here.

    That concludes lesson four. See you in the next lesson! Spoiler alert: it’s going to differ from the previous four lessons.

    Last Edited: 01/26/2026.
    February 6, 2024
    Beginning Russian, La Langue Russe, La Lengua Rusa, La Lingua Russa, Language Learning, Learn Russian, Russian, Russian Class, Russian Conjunctions, Russian Language, Russian Learning, Russian Lessons, Russian Studies, Study Russian

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