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[Interesting observation IMO] Instead of spoken language 'hanging' on 'filler words' and 'conjuctions' when people pause to think "well like, uh then..." in Russian do they pause on the case ending or am I imagining things?
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I was listening to a lot of a podcast above my level for practice, Learn Russian with Sasha, and in the latest interview I noticed a speech pattern perhaps unique to Russian:

The * pause to think part of the sentence * wasn't where it often is, it seemed like it was at the end of words, rather than standalone 'filler words' like uh, ah, well then на В и тот, is this true you think? Common for russian? I figured because the case nature requires a lot of thinking and conveys a lot of info, maybe they pause or hang there? (As an elementary level Russian learner but more experienced language learner this crossed my mind.)

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