How to Break Out of the Russian A2–B1 Plateau
Most Russian learners hit a wall somewhere between A2 and B1. This stage is often called the Russian plateau, when
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Most Russian learners hit a wall somewhere between A2 and B1. This stage is often called the Russian plateau, when
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Reading Russian is one of the fastest ways to level up, not because you “know more grammar”, but because your
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Walking through a Russian-speaking city as a beginner can feel like everything is written in code. It’s only when you
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TL;DR: You don’t need a big Russian vocabulary to communicate. You need a small set of high-impact words, plus context,
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TL;DR: Russian films feel hard at first because they say less than they mean. To follow them without subtitles, stop
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Most learners get stuck translating everything from English first. It works at the beginning, but later it slows you down,
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Most people use YouTube to dabble in Russian. The smart ones use it to break through to B1. If you
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Russian in real life isn’t neat or textbook-perfect. It’s quick, expressive, and full of attitude. The moment people relax, the
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Clear, professional Russian isn’t about sounding fluent. If you want to use Russian for work, it’s about sounding competent. In
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TL;DR: Perfect grammar won’t make your Russian sound natural. Fillers will. Real Russian uses words like ну, типа, and короче
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