Ukrainian Body Parts and Medical Vocabulary Reference
Ukrainian body parts (голова, рука, нога, око), symptoms, medical vocabulary (лікар, лікарня, ліки), and pharmacy/clinic phrases.
20 expert-written guides on Ukrainian
This page collects all 20 Evolang articles on the topic of Ukrainian. Whether you are looking for writing templates, practical guides, or expert explanations, every article here focuses on Ukrainian in the context of professional writing and communication. Browse by scrolling through the list below, or use the search box to find a specific article. You can also navigate by date using the sidebar to see when each Ukrainian guide was published.
Related topics on Evolang include grammar, reference, vocabulary, verbs, phrases, culture — each with its own collection of expert-written guides and writing resources.
All articles on Evolang are written by language and writing professionals. Every guide is reviewed for accuracy and practical usefulness before publication. Browse the full archive to explore all topics, or visit the Evolang homepage to discover the most popular writing guides.
Ukrainian body parts (голова, рука, нога, око), symptoms, medical vocabulary (лікар, лікарня, ліки), and pharmacy/clinic phrases.
Ukrainian colors (червоний, синій, жовтий, блакитний), adjective agreement by gender/case/number, national colors, and descriptive vocabulary.
Ukrainian days, months (січень, березень), seasons, telling time, etymology of Slavic month names, and temporal adverbs (сьогодні, завтра).
Ukrainian diminutives (-ок, -ик, -енька, -оньки): котик, сонечко, мамуся. Tenderness, irony, and cultural use in songs, poetry, and daily speech.
Ukrainian adjective declension: hard-stem (-ий) and soft-stem (-ій) patterns, agreement with nouns in gender/number/case, comparative (-ший), superlative (най-).
Complete guide to the 33-letter Ukrainian Cyrillic alphabet with pronunciation, transliteration, and key differences from Russian: і, ї, є, ґ explained.
Ukrainian family vocabulary: мати, батько, брат, сестра, in-laws (свекор, теща), grandparents, godparents (кум, кума), and diminutives.
Top 100 Ukrainian verbs: бути, мати, робити, говорити, йти with aspect pairs and examples. Verbs distinct from Russian (бачити, шукати).
Essential Ukrainian phrases: greetings (Привіт, Добрий день), thanks (Дякую), polite expressions (Будь ласка), introductions, questions, and Slava Ukraini.
Ukrainian weather (холодно, тепло, дощ, сніг), seasons (зима, весна, літо, осінь), Carpathians, steppe, and natural symbols like калина.
Ukrainian cardinal and ordinal numbers 1-1000, number-noun agreement rules, case triggers (nom. pl. for 2-4, gen. pl. for 5+), declension tables, telling time.
Complete guide to Ukrainian pronouns: personal (я, ти, він, вона, ми, ви, вони), possessive (мій, твій, наш), reflexive (себе), demonstratives (цей, той), with all 7 cases.
How Ukrainian pronunciation differs from Russian: г as /ɦ/ not /g/, clear unstressed vowels, distinct и and і, apostrophe function, palatalization rules.
All 7 Ukrainian cases explained: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative, vocative. Full declension tables and key differences from Russian.
Ukrainian verb conjugation: first and second conjugations, perfective/imperfective aspect, past tense gender agreement, synthetic future, imperatives, participles.
Ukrainian motion verbs: йти/ходити (walk), їхати/їздити (drive), unidirectional vs multidirectional, prefixed motion verbs with при-, ви-, пере-, до-.
Ukrainian vs Russian vocabulary: false cognates like неділя/неделя, completely different words (дякую vs спасибо), Polish-influenced Ukrainian words, month names.
Over 100 essential Ukrainian phrases for daily use: greetings, thanks, directions, shopping, emergencies, with transliteration and Russian contrasts.
Ukrainian food vocabulary: borshch, varenyky, holubtsi, salo, with meal names, market phrases, cooking verbs, and holiday foods in Ukrainian Cyrillic.
Ukrainian travel phrases for airports, trains, Kyiv Metro, hotels, Carpathians, Odesa, taxis, and emergencies with transliteration and cultural notes.