Product Details
Random Russian A2 (Book 2) is a valuable resource for elementary learners aiming to improve their fluency and expand their vocabulary in Russian. This book offers a random selection of level-appropriate sentences that make language practice both enjoyable and effective. The sentences start short and gradually become longer, providing a natural progression in difficulty. It contains 250 sentences, each numbered for easy reference.
About the Book
Each sentence is written in Russian with stress marks (accent marks) to guide accurate pronunciation and is followed by an English translation for clear understanding. The inclusion of accent marks helps learners internalize proper stress patterns and natural speech rhythm.
Audio Integration
Every sentence includes a track number and timestamp corresponding to the accompanying audio recordings. Listening to native pronunciation while reading helps reinforce your understanding, pronunciation, and listening comprehension skills.
How to Use This Book
Although the sentences are randomly selected and do not aim to cover all A2-level vocabulary, the intentional repetition of structures and expressions reinforces grammar and fluency. To make the most of your practice, personalize each example by changing the subjects, objects, or context. Try forming negatives, questions, or variations that apply to your daily life.
Random Russian is not just a reading resource—it’s a hands-on practice tool for active learning. By experimenting, repeating, and adapting the material, you’ll steadily develop stronger fluency, confidence, and vocabulary in Russian.
Audio Stream
Stream on YouTube
Audio Download
MP3 Files
Download the full accompanying audio for this product as MP3 files—completely free! The files are provided in a compressed ZIP folder for easy access. Simply download, extract the files, and start listening. No purchase of the PDF eBook is required!
Customer Reviews
I really want to see more of these! Fantastic workout going through the sentences with audio. How about in Turkish and Bulgarian as well? thanks Lingualism!