Personal Pronouns (Nominative)
Личные местоимения
Personal Pronouns (Nominative) in Russian
Overview
Russian personal pronouns in the nominative case serve as the subject of a sentence, just like "I," "you," "he," "she," "it," "we," and "they" in English. At the A1 level, memorizing these seven pronouns is essential because they determine verb conjugation endings and set the foundation for the entire pronoun system across all six Russian cases.
Russian distinguishes between informal "you" (ты) and formal/plural "you" (вы), similar to French tu/vous or German du/Sie. This distinction is important in everyday communication: using ты with a stranger or an elder can be considered rude, while using вы with a close friend may feel cold or distant.
Unlike English, Russian has three genders for the third person singular: он (he/masculine), она (she/feminine), and оно (it/neuter). The choice depends on the grammatical gender of the noun being referred to, not just biological sex. A table (стол) is "он" because it is grammatically masculine.
How It Works
| Person | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | я (I) | мы (we) |
| 2nd | ты (you, informal) | вы (you, formal or plural) |
| 3rd | он (he/it masc), она (she/it fem), оно (it neuter) | они (they) |
Key Rules
- Verb agreement: The verb ending changes based on the pronoun (я читаю, ты читаешь, он читает).
- Ты vs. Вы: Use ты with friends, family, children, and peers. Use вы with strangers, elders, superiors, and in formal settings. Вы is capitalized (Вы) in written formal address.
- Oно is rare: Most nouns are masculine or feminine. Оно is used with neuter nouns (окно = window, молоко = milk).
- No "it" for weather: Russian uses impersonal constructions without a pronoun for weather and states (Холодно = It's cold).
Examples in Context
| Russian | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Я студент. | I am a student. | No verb "to be" in present tense |
| Ты говоришь по-русски? | Do you speak Russian? | Informal "you" |
| Он работает здесь. | He works here. | 3rd person masculine |
| Она живёт в Москве. | She lives in Moscow. | 3rd person feminine |
| Оно большое. | It is big. | Neuter, used with neuter nouns |
| Мы живём в Москве. | We live in Moscow. | 1st person plural |
| Вы говорите по-английски? | Do you speak English? | Formal or plural "you" |
| Они работают вместе. | They work together. | 3rd person plural, all genders |
| Я и ты — друзья. | You and I are friends. | Combining pronouns |
| Вы готовы? | Are you ready? | Could be formal singular or plural |
Common Mistakes
Using ты when вы is expected
- Wrong: Ты можете помочь? (mixing ты with вы verb form)
- Right: Вы можете помочь? or Ты можешь помочь?
- Why: The pronoun and verb must agree. Social context determines which to use.
Forgetting that grammatical gender determines "he/she/it"
- Wrong: Referring to книга (book, feminine) as он
- Right: Она интересная. (She/It is interesting.)
- Why: Third person pronouns match grammatical gender, not natural gender.
Omitting the pronoun unnecessarily
- Wrong: Assuming Russian always drops pronouns like Spanish or Italian
- Right: Russian uses pronouns more often than pro-drop languages; omit only when the subject is clear from context or emphasis is not needed
- Why: While pronoun omission is possible, it is less common than in Romance languages and can cause ambiguity.
Practice Tips
- Practice introducing yourself and others using all the pronouns: Я ..., Ты ..., Он/Она ..., Мы ..., Вы ..., Они ...
- Pay attention to the ты/вы distinction in Russian media -- notice when characters switch between them, as it signals changes in relationship dynamics.
Related Concepts
- Next steps: First Conjugation Verbs -- learn how verbs change endings based on these pronouns
- Next steps: Second Conjugation Verbs -- the other major conjugation pattern
- Next steps: Question Formation -- how to form questions using these pronouns
- Next steps: У + Genitive (possession) -- expressing "to have" with pronoun forms
- Next steps: Нравиться (to like) -- a key construction using dative pronoun forms
- Next steps: Pronoun Case Forms -- how these pronouns change across all six cases
- Next steps: Indefinite Pronouns -- pronouns for "someone," "something," "anyone"
Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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