I would bet it's /g/. That Russian thing is unique to East Slavic (R, U, BR). West Slavic keeps the /g/ e.g. polskiego /pol'sk'ego/. So does Serbian, another South Slavic language.
Type: Posts; User: chaika; Keyword(s):
I would bet it's /g/. That Russian thing is unique to East Slavic (R, U, BR). West Slavic keeps the /g/ e.g. polskiego /pol'sk'ego/. So does Serbian, another South Slavic language.
Russian Lessons | Russian Tests and Quizzes | Russian Vocabulary |