Practice Russian with quizzes that focus on everyday vocabulary, core grammar, and reading comprehension. Each quiz helps you recognize common words and patterns, and build confidence with Cyrillic spelling and simple sentence structure.

Master the core uses of Russian cases with practical, sentence-based questions. You’ll train yourself to pick the right case for common meanings like possession, direction, location, and instrument. Choose how many questions to answer and the difficulty level to match your study plan.
Match Cyrillic letters to their sounds and build confidence reading Russian from the ground up. You’ll see a mix of easy recognitions and trickier sound pairs to sharpen accuracy. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then practice at your own pace with no timer.

Master Russian aspect by choosing when a verb means a completed result (perfective) versus an ongoing, repeated, or in-progress action (imperfective). You’ll compare near-identical pairs in real contexts so you can speak and translate more naturally. Mixed difficulty keeps it useful for both review and challenge.
There are 3 quizzes with 286 questions total.
No. Each question is untimed, so you can work carefully and learn from each choice.
Each question has 4 options. Choose the best answer based on meaning, grammar, or spelling.
You’ll practice Cyrillic recognition, common vocabulary, and core grammar patterns used in everyday Russian.
Yes. The set includes a mix of easier fundamentals and more challenging questions, with quiz lengths that vary.
These Russian quizzes help you strengthen vocabulary, key grammar patterns (cases, verb forms, pronouns), and practical comprehension for short phrases and sentences.
You’ll also get steady exposure to Cyrillic, so recognizing letters and common word endings becomes more automatic over time.
Each question has 4 answer options and there’s no timer, so you can focus on accuracy and learning rather than speed.
Quiz length and difficulty vary across the set, letting you start with fundamentals and move toward more detailed grammar and mixed-skill questions.
Russian is an East Slavic language written in Cyrillic, and it’s known for its case system that changes word endings to show meaning in a sentence.
Because stress can shift between word forms, Russian spelling practice is especially useful alongside vocabulary building.