Hey, I'm not a native speaker of Russian, but I'm studying it at university along with the English language and phonetics, so I could help you with the pronunciation part.
just so you know, there’s no good way for English speakers to approximate the sound of ы. It doesn’t exist in any form in English unless you have some strange accent. Just listen to native speakers pronounce it, like most sounds and words in Russian the key is blending it with the previous and following sounds
Hey, I'm not a native speaker of Russian, but I'm studying it at university along with the English language and phonetics, so I could help you with the pronunciation part.
I offer Russian and seek English. If you need a teacher who'll explain to you some rules verbally, feel free to DM me.
I found the following users who may fit your language exchange criteria:
55555Please feel free to comment on the above posts to get in contact with their authors.
Hermes: a bot for r/Language_Exchange | Documentation
just so you know, there’s no good way for English speakers to approximate the sound of ы. It doesn’t exist in any form in English unless you have some strange accent. Just listen to native speakers pronounce it, like most sounds and words in Russian the key is blending it with the previous and following sounds
[deleted]
That's... A question for the Russian National Exam. The guy is just learning the alphabet. Cut him some slack