Yes you can u dumb loser
if you installed English as the default language, and others language as secondaries (ex: Spanish or russian) during the installation? you can change the language, but if you didn't installed secondaries language you will to able to change. for ex, i have english as default language, if i want to change to spanish, just go to: C\program files\Solidworks\lang there rename the folder "English" with Spanish, and the folder "Spanish" rename with "English"
well i know that some of the words they are saying mean. some of the self explanatory ones are "grenada!" which means grenade in Russian. others are what the other factions say just in russian. like Tango down or We have the bomb.
Mw2 doesn't have kill confirmed.
You can Prestige in MW2 precisely 10 times.
Well if you mean why do they say no Russian is because if they say any Russian the Russian government will know their yerrorists instead of the Americans
To change from Russian to English for hawk 2, go to the account settings and click the general sections button. there will be a language area where you can switch to the language you want.
Russian special forces team, their sas or delta squad
In the Russian terrorist level in campain
Yes you can u dumb loser
i have the same problem but its russian and i want it in english
M. A. O'Brien has written: 'New English-Russian and Russian-English dictionary (new orthography)' 'New English-Russian and Russian-English dictionary'
To change language from Russian to English in Assassins Creed 2 go to the attributes section. From this section pick the language section. There will be a list of languages displayed. Select English from this list.
English is said as "английский" in Russian.
during the 100 Years War, English rulers turned to the Parliament
You are undercover as a Russian, and you must kill civilians in an airport to earn Makarov's trust.
Using adjectives in English tends to be simpler. English employs just one form of the adjective, whereas the adjective in Russian could change based on its use in the sentence or the other words around it. In addition, Russian classifies its adjectives into three categories: normal, short, and comparative. English does not divide adjectives this way.