"It’s like a puzzle with missing pieces, Mom. Why does pribyt (to arrive) have an 'i', but prebyt (to stay) have an 'e'?"
Dima looked at the page. He started to see the logic. He began to write, his pen flying across the paper. He found the nouns, the adjectives, and the tricky verbs. The more he wrote, the more the "enemy" textbook felt like a guide. domashnie zadaniia za 6 klass po russkomu ladyzhenskaia
"Pre- or Pri-? That is the question," Dima whispered, mimicking a dramatic actor. "It’s like a puzzle with missing pieces, Mom
Once, in a small town where the winter wind loved to howl through the chimney pipes, lived a sixth-grader named Dima. Dima was a bright boy, but he had one sworn enemy: his Russian language textbook, authored by Baranov, Ladyzhenskaya, and Trostentsova. He began to write, his pen flying across the paper