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Is there stress on two letters on the word стоят
How do I pronounce the soft sign at the end of a word?Is there a [t͡s] in “с юга”?Soft vowel pronounciation at the end of a wordVariation in pronunciation of “й” in word-ending “ый”Why are there letters which look similar but are pronounced differently between the English alphabet and Russian Cyrillic?How to pronounce the word агнцев (three consonants in row)?Is there a difference between “эго” and “это” or the are the same?Why does the word “четверг” sound as “четвергх”?Where does the sound “йи” / iotated и / [ji] occur in Russian?Pronunciation of some letters
i cannot figure out the pronunciation of this word стоят
is it stOyat, Stoyit, stoYat, i am very confused
i checked this website that annotates words but it shows two different one
http://russiangram.com/
i also went on wikipedia and it showed to forms of the word and i cannot figure out which one is which.
https://ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%8F%D1%82
It is in this type of context:
сколько стоят помидоры
Thank you in advance
произношение
add a comment |
i cannot figure out the pronunciation of this word стоят
is it stOyat, Stoyit, stoYat, i am very confused
i checked this website that annotates words but it shows two different one
http://russiangram.com/
i also went on wikipedia and it showed to forms of the word and i cannot figure out which one is which.
https://ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%8F%D1%82
It is in this type of context:
сколько стоят помидоры
Thank you in advance
произношение
add a comment |
i cannot figure out the pronunciation of this word стоят
is it stOyat, Stoyit, stoYat, i am very confused
i checked this website that annotates words but it shows two different one
http://russiangram.com/
i also went on wikipedia and it showed to forms of the word and i cannot figure out which one is which.
https://ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%8F%D1%82
It is in this type of context:
сколько стоят помидоры
Thank you in advance
произношение
i cannot figure out the pronunciation of this word стоят
is it stOyat, Stoyit, stoYat, i am very confused
i checked this website that annotates words but it shows two different one
http://russiangram.com/
i also went on wikipedia and it showed to forms of the word and i cannot figure out which one is which.
https://ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%8F%D1%82
It is in this type of context:
сколько стоят помидоры
Thank you in advance
произношение
произношение
asked 2 days ago
Almonds812Almonds812
4178
4178
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
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You are confused because those are indeed two completely different verbs.
Стоя́т помидоры
would mean that tomatoes are standing (perhaps boxes of tomatoes are standing in the corner of a grocery store).
Cколько сто́ят помидоры?
means "how much are tomatoes?".
In the first case the verb is "стоя́ть" (to stand), in the second case, the one you're asking about, the verb is "сто́ить" (to cost, to be worth).
"Не стои́т" means doesn't stand, often by default it refers to erectile dysfunction.
"Не сто́ит" means "[it's] not worth it", "don't do it", "no, thanks" ("not worth it" being the literate translation).
"Он/она того не сто́ит" means he/she isn't worth it.
"Он/она уже на ногах не стои́т" means he/she is so drunk, that he/she can't even stand upright.
Since in Russian stress marks are not used except for learning materials the only way to know whether 'to stand' or 'to cost/be worth' is used is from the context. "Сколько стоит... ?" is pretty straight forward as it's clearly a question regarding the price of something ("How much is... ?"). However question starting with "сколько" and followed with "стоит" can in some instances refer to standing. For example "Да сколько вы там уже стоите?!" means "Just how long have you been stuck there for?!", so "и" would be stressed in that case.
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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You are confused because those are indeed two completely different verbs.
Стоя́т помидоры
would mean that tomatoes are standing (perhaps boxes of tomatoes are standing in the corner of a grocery store).
Cколько сто́ят помидоры?
means "how much are tomatoes?".
In the first case the verb is "стоя́ть" (to stand), in the second case, the one you're asking about, the verb is "сто́ить" (to cost, to be worth).
"Не стои́т" means doesn't stand, often by default it refers to erectile dysfunction.
"Не сто́ит" means "[it's] not worth it", "don't do it", "no, thanks" ("not worth it" being the literate translation).
"Он/она того не сто́ит" means he/she isn't worth it.
"Он/она уже на ногах не стои́т" means he/she is so drunk, that he/she can't even stand upright.
Since in Russian stress marks are not used except for learning materials the only way to know whether 'to stand' or 'to cost/be worth' is used is from the context. "Сколько стоит... ?" is pretty straight forward as it's clearly a question regarding the price of something ("How much is... ?"). However question starting with "сколько" and followed with "стоит" can in some instances refer to standing. For example "Да сколько вы там уже стоите?!" means "Just how long have you been stuck there for?!", so "и" would be stressed in that case.
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
add a comment |
You are confused because those are indeed two completely different verbs.
Стоя́т помидоры
would mean that tomatoes are standing (perhaps boxes of tomatoes are standing in the corner of a grocery store).
Cколько сто́ят помидоры?
means "how much are tomatoes?".
In the first case the verb is "стоя́ть" (to stand), in the second case, the one you're asking about, the verb is "сто́ить" (to cost, to be worth).
"Не стои́т" means doesn't stand, often by default it refers to erectile dysfunction.
"Не сто́ит" means "[it's] not worth it", "don't do it", "no, thanks" ("not worth it" being the literate translation).
"Он/она того не сто́ит" means he/she isn't worth it.
"Он/она уже на ногах не стои́т" means he/she is so drunk, that he/she can't even stand upright.
Since in Russian stress marks are not used except for learning materials the only way to know whether 'to stand' or 'to cost/be worth' is used is from the context. "Сколько стоит... ?" is pretty straight forward as it's clearly a question regarding the price of something ("How much is... ?"). However question starting with "сколько" and followed with "стоит" can in some instances refer to standing. For example "Да сколько вы там уже стоите?!" means "Just how long have you been stuck there for?!", so "и" would be stressed in that case.
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
add a comment |
You are confused because those are indeed two completely different verbs.
Стоя́т помидоры
would mean that tomatoes are standing (perhaps boxes of tomatoes are standing in the corner of a grocery store).
Cколько сто́ят помидоры?
means "how much are tomatoes?".
In the first case the verb is "стоя́ть" (to stand), in the second case, the one you're asking about, the verb is "сто́ить" (to cost, to be worth).
"Не стои́т" means doesn't stand, often by default it refers to erectile dysfunction.
"Не сто́ит" means "[it's] not worth it", "don't do it", "no, thanks" ("not worth it" being the literate translation).
"Он/она того не сто́ит" means he/she isn't worth it.
"Он/она уже на ногах не стои́т" means he/she is so drunk, that he/she can't even stand upright.
Since in Russian stress marks are not used except for learning materials the only way to know whether 'to stand' or 'to cost/be worth' is used is from the context. "Сколько стоит... ?" is pretty straight forward as it's clearly a question regarding the price of something ("How much is... ?"). However question starting with "сколько" and followed with "стоит" can in some instances refer to standing. For example "Да сколько вы там уже стоите?!" means "Just how long have you been stuck there for?!", so "и" would be stressed in that case.
You are confused because those are indeed two completely different verbs.
Стоя́т помидоры
would mean that tomatoes are standing (perhaps boxes of tomatoes are standing in the corner of a grocery store).
Cколько сто́ят помидоры?
means "how much are tomatoes?".
In the first case the verb is "стоя́ть" (to stand), in the second case, the one you're asking about, the verb is "сто́ить" (to cost, to be worth).
"Не стои́т" means doesn't stand, often by default it refers to erectile dysfunction.
"Не сто́ит" means "[it's] not worth it", "don't do it", "no, thanks" ("not worth it" being the literate translation).
"Он/она того не сто́ит" means he/she isn't worth it.
"Он/она уже на ногах не стои́т" means he/she is so drunk, that he/she can't even stand upright.
Since in Russian stress marks are not used except for learning materials the only way to know whether 'to stand' or 'to cost/be worth' is used is from the context. "Сколько стоит... ?" is pretty straight forward as it's clearly a question regarding the price of something ("How much is... ?"). However question starting with "сколько" and followed with "стоит" can in some instances refer to standing. For example "Да сколько вы там уже стоите?!" means "Just how long have you been stuck there for?!", so "и" would be stressed in that case.
edited 2 days ago
Roman Odaisky
1,550311
1,550311
answered 2 days ago
AR.AR.
93616
93616
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
add a comment |
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
Ok in СТОят which the я sound like an i or (y)i
– Almonds812
2 days ago
1
1
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
I'd say don't worry so much about unstressed vowels in Russian. They are rarely clear and you'd get better result by obsessing less about them. You need to say the word quickly and stress the right syllable? the rest vowels are sort of 'lazy', they just fall in place. The stressed vowels must be pronounced as is, the rest can be pronounced differently depending on many reasons up to a personal mannerisms. I'd say that I pronounce "я" in "стоят" somewhere between йя, йe, йи. Depending on a speaker "СТОят" and "СТОит" (plural vs single) can sound slightly different or almost identical.
– AR.
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
Thank you, thats all i needed to know 😊
– Almonds812
2 days ago
add a comment |
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