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Russian grammar employs an Indo-European inflexional structure, with considerable adaptation. Russian has a highly inflectional morphology , particularly in nominals (nouns, pronouns, adjectives and numerals).
In Russian grammar, the system of declension is elaborate and complex. Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, demonstratives, most numerals and other particles are declined for two grammatical numbers (singular and plural) and six grammatical cases (see below); some of these parts of speech in the singular are also declined by three grammatical genders (masculine, feminine and neuter).
Russian is written with a modern variant of the Cyrillic script.Russian spelling typically avoids arbitrary digraphs.Except for the use of hard and soft signs, which have no phonetic value in isolation but can follow a consonant letter, no phoneme is ever represented with more than one letter.
The Rules of Russian Orthography and Punctuation (Russian: Правила русской орфографии и пунктуации, tr.: Pravila russkoj orfografii i punktuacii) of 1956 is the current reference to regulate the modern Russian language. [1]
Russian vowel chart by Jones & Trofimov (1923:55). The symbol i̝ stands for a positional variant of /i/ raised in comparison with the usual allophone of /i/, not a raised cardinal which would result in a consonant. Russian stressed vowel chart according to their formants and surrounding consonants, from Timberlake (2004:31, 38). C is hard (non ...
Russian has preserved an Indo-European synthetic-inflectional structure, although considerable leveling has occurred. Russian grammar encompasses: a highly fusional morphology; a syntax that, for the literary language, is the conscious fusion of three elements: [116] a polished vernacular foundation; [clarification needed] a Church Slavonic ...
a corpus of Russian poetry, where the rhyming words and poetic prosody (including meter, stanzas etc.) is additionally tagged; a corpus of Russian dialects with specific dialect grammar tagging; a multimedia corpus with searchable tagged fragments of Russian-language movies; a corpus showing the history of Russian stress
Pages in category "Russian grammar" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...