Go to Chapter [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8], [9], [10].
Video. Link to the video for Golosa (currently only Chpts.1-5 of Book 1 Third Edition).
Sound. Link to the audio recordings for Golosa: Book Two.
Golosa. Textbook links to useful web sources for this chapter.
An Interactive Online Russian Reference Grammar. From Robert Beard, Bucknell University. [Russian fonts required]
Russian Cyrillic Alphabet. Compared to the Greek alphbet.
© 1966 Robert Beard.
An Introduction to Russian. Copyright (c) 2000 by J. David Eisenberg.
A nice site that takes you through the alphabet via a few words and
phrases. Includes sound files. [Follow the pages through]
Russian Alphabet. With sound (from the Funet website).
The Cyrillic Alphabet. The alphabet written and spoken.
(Reader: Natasha Bulashova.)
The Russian Alphabet. Another version of the alphabet (from Middlebury).
This includes rules of pronunciation, etc. [Click the next page arrow at the
bottom of each page to follow the lecture through to the end.]
Learning Cursive. Page from T. Beyer's site (at Middlebury College).
Russian Manual Language. Sign language. Learn how to sign the Russian alphabet.
The Cyrillic Alphabet. From Bucknell's page. Russian word
list given (with English "clues") to help you read Russian. [You may need Russian fonts for this one.]
Signs. A number of signs to read from Professor Beyer (Middlebury College).
Russian notepad. From Professor Beyer (Middlebury College).
Animal Talk. From Fresh Guide to St. Petersburg.
Friends and Partners
- Go to the language page and you can learn the
Cyrillic alphabet, practice Russian
greetings and
farewells or learn about language
study programs. Also check out their link to Cyrillic Text.
Back to Intermediate Russian home page.
Back to the Russian at St. Lawrence Page.
last update: 8/21/03
Russian For Travelers
- Learn a little Russian (basic words, numbers, shopping/dining,
travel, directions, places, time and dates. Links take you
to dictionaries, and there is also a link to help you learn the
Cyrillic alphabet. (You can see cyrillic on your screen
without having to install special fonts.)