Historical Evolution
Russian evolved from Old East Slavic, with Church Slavonic long influencing liturgy and high style. Peter the Great's reforms and Pushkin's vernacular canon modernized literary Russian in the 18th–19th centuries. Soviet policy spread standard Russian across Eurasia; post-Soviet states maintain bilingual ecologies with varying degrees of shift.
Phonology
Russian contrasts palatalized (soft) and non-palatalized consonants; vowel reduction in unstressed syllables is systematic (/o/ and /a/ → [ə]). Consonant clusters are common word-initially. Fixed stress patterns vary lexically and affect vowel quality.
Syntax
Russian is SVO with relatively free word order driven by information structure. Six-case nominal declension (seven in some paradigms), three genders, and agreement within noun phrases remain robust. Verbal aspect (perfective/imperfective) is obligatory; motion verbs use specialized unprefixed/prefixed pairs.
Attributes
| Total Speakers | 255 M |
|---|---|
| L1 Native Speakers | 150 M |
| Number of Countries | 4 countries |
| Language Vitality Index | 9 scale |
| Web Domain Share (%) | 5.1 % |
| Language Family | Indo-European / Balto-Slavic / Slavic / East Slavic |
| Standard Script | Cyrillic (Russian alphabet) |
| Grammatical Typology | SVO (flexible), Fusional |
| UNESCO Risk Category | Safe |