oh got what you mean.
you mean Евгении Володиной...
how to explain....if in english you use only one form of a noun and sometimes add prepositions to change the form, we have 6 cases: subjective, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative and locative cases. We change forms of the words according to which case we need.
for example (6 cases for the words Eugenia Volodina )
Евгения Володина (Eugenia Volodina)
Евгении Володиной (Eugenii Volodinoj)*
Евгении Володиной (Eugenii Volodinoj)** (sometimes 2 forms may look the same)
Евгению Володину (Eygeniu Volodinu)
Евгенией Володиной (Eugeniej Volodinoj)
Евгении Володиной (Evgenii Volodinoj)***
*in English you often use pr. "of" + noun to make this case and we only change the form of a noun
** in English often you often add pr. "to" +noun
*** same rule, pr. "about" +noun
I am not sure if it's clear
Wow! That's pretty amazing.
Seriously though, I'm part Russian myself and since I've become obsessed with Eugenia I've sort of become obsessed with Russian culture and the language. I love the way it sounds. I think it's so beautiful. I speak Polish but have always wanted to learn Russian.
Both languages are similar (not a lot) but it's because they stem from the slavic branch. I'd like to learn Russian but I don't know if I could do it!
My love for Russia is all because of Eugenia!