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Fake Scientist
United States
Приєднався 30 гру 2022
This is the Fake Scientist's channel.
The European’s Cheat Sheet: Three Laws for Learning Chinese
A quick tour of Three Laws for learning Chinese.
Some not-so-standard tips.
May serve as shortcuts for European native speakers learning Chinese, I guess.
An additional content for question on Quora:
qr.ae/pY1U9t
Some not-so-standard tips.
May serve as shortcuts for European native speakers learning Chinese, I guess.
An additional content for question on Quora:
qr.ae/pY1U9t
Переглядів: 47
Відео
"Mandarin" in ancient China / India / the Med: Evolution of Language Over 2000 Years.
Переглядів 1,6 тис.14 днів тому
The ancient Chinese parts come from historical documents, dictionaries, and references to the accents of various modern Chinese dialects. The ancient Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin are based on Wikipedia articles and insights drawn from the linguistic characteristics of certain European languages. An additional content for question on Quora: qr.ae/pY1Mhp
a blond handsome lad on the Great Wall
Переглядів 84Місяць тому
A blond, handsome young lad touring the Great Wall with President Reagan. Video filmed in 1984. Any clues..... Is this blond, handsome lad President Trump? Or not?
Chinese Yokai, IDENTIFICATION
Переглядів 93Місяць тому
Chinese yokai you might encounter while traveling in some remote mountains in China. An additional content for an answer on Quora: qr.ae/p23twD
Chinese Yokai transforming into humans, a CCTV footage
Переглядів 77Місяць тому
Happened somewhere in China. A yokai was transforming into human form. Maybe for real, maybe a hoax. To me, this feels real. An additional content for an answer on Quora: qr.ae/p23twD
Chinese Calligraphy_ 2000 Years Ago vs 2000 Years Ahead
Переглядів 127Місяць тому
Chinese calligraphy could be life, art, and POST-POSTMODERN ARTISTIC ACTIVITIES additional content for an answer on Quora: qr.ae/p2lxaK
The last Emperor's presence
Переглядів 364Місяць тому
The presence of a true emperor can not be easily erased, even if he had been reduced to a puppet; even if he was facing his boss. additional content for an answer on Quora: qr.ae/p2D02q
Chinese Kids’ Interview 100 year ago
Переглядів 1,2 тис.Місяць тому
An interview with Chinese Kids about 100 Years Ago additional content for an answer on Quora: qr.ae/p2D02q
Vote for America-Vote for all
Переглядів 49Місяць тому
艾米,逵哥 Apologize for the 2 days delayed. Hope you guys are all fine. Be safe. 北令北玉河是河玉 02,070,05,004,12,017,07,001,01,013
Mandarin Chinese disappears, this will be the life.
Переглядів 6932 місяці тому
Mandarin Chinese is indeed very important. additional content for an answer on Quora: www.quora.com/Why-should-we-learn-Mandarin-today/answer/Elchuro
World Peace from a Chinese lady 100 Years Ago
Переглядів 3592 місяці тому
A famous Beijinger's speech in America in the 1930s. In Mandarin and English, about 100 years ago.
Mandarin Chinese spoken 100 years ago
Переглядів 340 тис.2 місяці тому
Mandarin Chinese hasn’t changed that much over the past few hundred years. additional content for an answer on Quora: www.quora.com/How-similar-was-the-way-people-spoke-the-common-language-during-the-early-Qing-Dynasty-to-modern-Mandarin-Chinese/answer/Elchuro?ch=10&oid=1477743822738649&share=0ecd1fd4&srid=3CbFLj&target_type=answer
Chinese characters in a story-(How can I teach kids Chinese characters?)
Переглядів 1003 місяці тому
How can children learn Chinese characters easily? By turning them into stories! Want to keep kids engaged? Use stories to bring characters to life.
Chinese usual greetings 2000 years ago
Переглядів 4383 місяці тому
Quoting from a TV series that highly restored the scenes in the Han dynasty.
Multiverse of Mine Spring Wonder AI @LensGo_AI #lensgoai #MultiverseofMine
Переглядів 949 місяців тому
Multiverse of Mine Spring Wonder @LensGo_AI #lensgoai #MultiverseofMine
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter08) - The Grand Finale
Переглядів 9511 місяців тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter08) - The Grand Finale
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter07) - The Wrap Up Session
Переглядів 80Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter07) - The Wrap Up Session
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter06) - How to Write with Ease
Переглядів 156Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter06) - How to Write with Ease
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter05) - Advanced of Chinese Characters
Переглядів 168Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter05) - Advanced of Chinese Characters
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter04) - Basis of Chinese Characters
Переглядів 229Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter04) - Basis of Chinese Characters
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter03) - The Second Amendment to the Third Law
Переглядів 327Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter03) - The Second Amendment to the Third Law
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter02) - The Three Laws
Переглядів 414Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter02) - The Three Laws
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter01) - Getting Started and Prepared
Переглядів 651Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery (Chapter01) - Getting Started and Prepared
Joyful Chinese Mastery - Unlock Your Gateway to Mandarin Master PREMIERE
Переглядів 514Рік тому
Joyful Chinese Mastery - Unlock Your Gateway to Mandarin Master PREMIERE
How to draw"a tiger with a drone"_AI vs Kid(20)
Переглядів 756Рік тому
How to draw"a tiger with a drone"_AI vs Kid(20)
How to draw"a wild boar with a drone"_AI vs Kid(19)
Переглядів 736Рік тому
How to draw"a wild boar with a drone"_AI vs Kid(19)
How to draw"an ant with a drone"_AI vs Kid(18)
Переглядів 752Рік тому
How to draw"an ant with a drone"_AI vs Kid(18)
How to draw"a tiger and an ant"_AI vs Kid(17)
Переглядів 761Рік тому
How to draw"a tiger and an ant"_AI vs Kid(17)
How to draw"Kungfu Panda meets Tailung"_AI vs Kid(16)
Переглядів 751Рік тому
How to draw"Kungfu Panda meets Tailung"_AI vs Kid(16)
How to draw"a tiger sees a man in zoo"_AI vs Kid(15)
Переглядів 772Рік тому
How to draw"a tiger sees a man in zoo"_AI vs Kid(15)
you cut it off right when she was about to tell us how to accomplush peace on earth, evil...
Well, there always be solutions.... Have faith....
The English is very modern too
They can communicate on paper whatsoever.
You've got the point.
Shit caught me off guard when she started speaking English 💀
Yes, some one pointed out that the way this lady speaks English is very similar to the way the Queen of England speaks English. I guess that after spending a few years in England, it's possible that she might speak English like a native speaker. But speaking English like the Queen of England, that's something I truly can't understand.
Bro's aura: 🥶🥶🥶🥶📈📈📈📈📈
Yeah, and the emperor's aura.
icche here.
But we do eat mice and Rhizomys cuz why not 🥺 It's protein and not producing that much carbon
Are you sure about this? I mean, "mice"... the "mice" in the streets? I know about "rhizomys"-one of my friends from Fujian once told me that rhizomys is indeed a kind of food. But I don’t think "rhizomys" and "mice" are the same thing.😂
@@elchuro Not in the streets, but in farmlands, people do catch mice and preserve them to eat, it's called 腊田鼠 in Mandarin
@@rd4407 Meaning, the diet of the mice determines whether they become part of your diet.LOL
这应该是北京土话。也可能他那个时期已经没有官话需求了。其实古代皇帝应该都说官话,不说土话。
Here’s a great fact about the Chinese language: All Chinese characters have their own unique stories and meanings that have been around for 5000+ years. Which is why it is still possible to transcribe cave drawings written by their ancestors into modern Chinese texts because modern Chinese characters are just those very same cave drawings that went through thousands of years of combination and splits but they still maintained the slightest of similarities to their 5000+ years old counterparts. If that’s not cool, idk what is.
Haven't seen this gentleman since he and some friends went to open up an ancient chest...
"Now Go Away And Do Something...." What a long name👍
0:03 0:18 0:35 0:50 1:04 1:19 1:31 1:46 for comparison lol and 0:40 and 1:52
The Chinese part? The only part where there is guidance from both native speakers and linguistics professors.
@@elchuroyep
@@elchurobtw love the videos!
@@BlueRobloxCoil My pleasure. Enjoy it. lol
Is amazing how the world have advanced in just this recent 100 years, imagine he can have the power to kill anyone than compared to now.
Northern Chinese speaks the most accurate standard mandarin dialect
Ouuum🤔... 😅
LOL
I'm not Chinese but clearly recognize the putonghua phonemes to me the modern putonghua is very close to 100 years old one. Today officials speak with a bit more affectation style, kind of for TV/Radio, not so simple. I'll ask my Chinese wife about that too.
Yall need to hear the bumpkin 😂
LOL
Bruh this is diplomatic Chinese
He is indeed a very famous Beijinger. It’s almost an understatement 😂
LOL
I think I was recommended this recording because I watched a few videos by ex CCTV journalist 王志安. The impression I got was that the Chinese are rather boring in topic selection and gossipy.
There are also many interesting or serious ones, but you need to find them yourself. AI's data analysis and recommendations aren't that thoughtful yet.
@elchuro It's been a longstanding theory that the Great Firewall reduces China's soft power influence... It's pretty rare to get recommended Chinese related videos even when I set my IP to Hong Kong... But I get a lot of Japanese recommendations. That wall created a domino effect that UA-cam ignores Chinese stuff. Or maybe the quality of Chinese related stuff is too low in comparison to Chinese numbers... I've long noted that within the wall media. Regardless of the true cause, the effect is the algorithm doesn't favor China.
@@NoCommentForAWhile The algorithms are working in more complex ways, and no one can explain them clearly, not even UA-cam's algorithm engineers. This is because they have now completely entrusted some of the manual data analysis and processing to AI models, and the data sources/analysis patterns of these AI models are still not up to the level of a 3-year-old child, so... The only way to find videos you're interested in is to "type in" and then "search".
Makes me think both my own Mandarin and English are more or less upstate New York accent
I like the northern US accent, very different from the southern ones.
Mandarin Chinese? Whats next Kumquat Mongolians?
I hate how british really treat themselves as superiors the way the guy hust casually demanded the LAST EMPEROR of the QING DYNASTY to speak Mandarin.
1. Unfortunately, the England fellas do indeed consider themselves superiors, as if they were higher class people. While nobody likes such fellas, they manage to carry it off, and they themselves didn’t see anything wrong with it. Simply put, they didn’t feel awkward, so the awkwardness was left to others. 2. Unfortunately, the last emperor had already been expelled from the Forbidden City by the 1930s. You can still see the imperial dignity in him because he truly was an emperor once, an emperor of the oldest and greatest empire on this planet. However, by then, he had lost any power or authority an emperor should have had. Simply put, at that time, he was just a rich man, a super rich man.
如果按现在的角度第二位女士的英文应该比中文好😂
0:20 镜子 is usually refered to mirror so nowadays people would usually say 镜头(lens)前(front)instead of 镜头前
Exactly.
If we back to the past,probably can't understand our own language 😂
For me, you are absolutely right. lol
Seems like I can understand the Greek of the last Roman emperor and the Chinese of the last Chinese emperor. But, dude, how credible is this simulation of the languages? Percentages for... What I mean is, the Puyi footage you posted earlier, it's an authentic recording, so I can roughly understand that people in Beijing spoke similarly to how they do today, about 100 years ago. By the way, I really like the ancient India script you wrote. I don't know what they mean, nor do I know if they are correct, but I've seen the inscriptions on the Ashoka pillar, and these are really fantastic.
I’ll share the feedback from a linguistics professor regarding this video. The Chinese part, he praised the use of characters, especially the one from the Qin Dynasty, which was copied from archaeological discoveries. This is a great touch and mostly aligns with historical truth. However, the pronunciation isn’t that smooth, especially when some pronunciations imitate the rhythmic features found in historical texts, neglecting the natural intonation and rhythm of spoken language. He suggested borrowing some conversational features from modern dialects. The Indian Sanskrit part, he has only been exposed to some relevant research and has conversed with linguistics professors in China about Sanskrit issues. The Sanskrit simulation in the video resembles what he’s heard from Buddhist monks using Sanskrit for prayers. Since he doesn’t understand Sanskrit himself, he liked the Sanskrit simulation based on what he’s heard from Buddhist prayers but doesn’t know if it’s accurate. The Greek and Latin parts, he didn’t find them good, they just didn’t sound right to him, so he didn’t offer any evaluation. However, my American friend received feedback from his English teacher in the US, saying the writing part was good because it noted that ancient Greek and Latin didn’t have lowercase letters. For the pronunciation, he suggested finding Italians, Greeks, or people from the Eastern European region along the Black Sea to record it, as the current recording is not that good. So, I’m not sure how credible these simulations are. Initially, I thought the Sanskrit simulation was quite successful because that professor praised it. However, a brother from India said the Sanskrit part is completely incorrect. Now, I’m a bit confused and need to spend some time researching it again. Or if the pronunciation could be improved, I might redo it.
@elchuro That ancient India script, where you get it? Is it from the Ashoka pillar?
@@BelldassHoffman Sort of.... Actually, the process is a little bit complex. 1.I consulted a professor about how Sanskrit was written in ancient India. The answer I got was that ancient Sanskrit didn't have its own script and was possibly written using Brahmi script, later using a script similar to modern Indian scripts. The professor didn't know much about Sanskrit, so I didn't get a definitive answer. 2. Just googled and found answers that more or less confirmed what the professor had said. 3. It was all about Google, lots of Googling where I found the Brahmi script on Ashoka's pillar as a real artifact and copied those characters from it.
@@elchuro That was a big deal. Bravos
Definiterly seen this video many times in the past and I can confirm he sounds almost exactly as us, I was originally from Beijing.
That's exactly what my friends told me. Yes, friends from Beijing.
Why did you skip Yuan dynasty?
The timeline is not a dynasty timeline, I choose these emperors not based on Chinese, Indian, or Roman dynasties, but according to an interval of approximately 200-300 years between each emperor.The Yuan Dynasty lasted for too short a time. You can also see that the Shang and Zhou Dynasties are not included. Starting with the early Qin Dynasty because that period was prominent in China, India, and the Mediterranean. The absence of the Qing Dynasty is because by that time, India was under British rule, and the Mediterranean had already taken on a near-modern European form, Roma's gone.
like how the clothes in chinese one were accurate by time
Based on some historical literature and the guidance of a professor, it is not entirely accurate because the precision of AIGC is insufficient.
@elchuro still more accurate than what we see in cdramas
@@beujwarlord Maybe the TV drama producers simply don't like Chinese culture. I recommend a Chinese TV series, "三国演义". First broadcast in China in 1994. The costumes and props, including many of the decorative details, are recreated based on archaeological artifacts. It’s really, really well done. Many of my friends told me that it didn’t feel like acting, it felt like a real Han Dynasty.Except one thing, the spoken accents are in modern Mandarin. Still, the language used is quite true to the vocabulary and expressions of the Han dynasty.
@@elchuro yes it feels pretty real compared to 2010 version
@@beujwarlord Yeah.
I've gotta say that every single iteration of the Sanskrit is wrong, unfortunately. So many wrong consonants were used, and the aspirants were missing. The Vedic Sanskrit versions (the first few) also had pitch accents similar to the Greek Tonos or the Japanese pitch accents, were also missing here. Just feels like cheap AI work
That bad? Any perfect pronunciation guides to help? Voices were sampled from 2 Chinese guys and 2 American guys. And followed this for ancient Sanskrit pronunciation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskrit In the 2nd one (1-30AD), the word "god" is the ancient Greek word “ΘΕΟΣ”, meant to fit the "Greece-India" dynasty.
@elchuro If you want voice samples for ancient Indian languages, just have a contact with me. The rendition is really not good for Indian languages in ur video. Are u in Telegram.
@@rtam7097 Thank you for taking the lead :)
@@elchuro Yeah unfortunately it is mate. There is a good video highlighting the old Vedic tones. VEDIC SANSKRIT & RUSSIAN. Check this out. I personally know the modern Krishna YajurVeda renditions but this video shows Vedic Sanskrit when it was still spoken on the plains of Eurasia
@@rtam7097 That would be a huge help. Much obliged. I don't have any social app. I'm a rookie on all these online things. At work, by email and phone call. At home, I'm not a freeman, got kids. Is email okay?
I like the comparative timeline There should be more videos like this on this channel or other channels
Thanks a lot. And, at your service, as always
sounds like cantonese fr
For the ancient Chinese part, He‘s a native Hakka speaker. lol
The chinese like american tryng to talk chinese
The Greek and Latin sound horrible. Its like they are spoken by someone with SUPER HEAVY American accent.
That's with all of the languages 😅 it's like an ai American dude saying everything 😂
They've tried their best to hide their mother tongue. LOL
@@UnusualDeath It seems the influence of one's mother tongue can’t be hidden. Fake another language is just too hard. But I need to clarify one thing: that ancient Chinese was indeed spoken by Chinese people😂
beijinger lowkey sounds like a slur
Clearly this dude wrote "famous Beijinger" to bait comments and views. I hate how everyone is doing sht like this nowdays. UA-cam will soon be unusable.
he did not roll his tongue on any pronunciation that would've had it today. he either isn't a native beijinger or they didnt have that lingual feature back then (which btw is a very distasteful way of speaking mandarin)
Considering him a well educated man makes sense. lol
Puyi didn't even grow up in Beijing, his formulative years were in Tianjin and Changchun lol
He was born in Beijing in February 1906, but lived outside the Forbidden City until November 1908, when he was almost 3 years old. In November 1908, he was made emperor and taken into the Forbidden City, where he lived from 1908 to 1924. Still, in Beijing. He was already a 16 yrs old lad then.
Fake. Ai...
Such high-precision details? Not AI, not by now.
溥仪?
Yeah.
我見到寫溥儀嘅評論有好多讚,俾我寫段先 溥儀溥儀
Here it is. The 讚. lol
that is not a Beijinger that is Puyi, the last emperor of China.
The emperor and the Beijinger. lol
HOW DOES THE CHINESE WOMAN SPEAK ENGLISH SO WELL SHE LITERALLY SOUNDED LIKE SHE WAS BRITISH
Her teacher was from England.
这跟近代的京腔儿还是有很大的差距
maybe its because puyi speaks more formally?
Yeah, he was a well educated man.
Is that my man Puyi? Wtf ain’t no way I haven’t seen him in a minute
Alright, so when’s the last time you and him had a little reunion? lol
@elchuro Ooh I don’t know it was so long ago I think the last time was at Zaitians funeral.
@cartilyy Wow, heavens above! Then, Mr. Methuselah, may I ask two questions? 1. Puyi was only three years old back then. How did you achieve such temporal-spatial precision to accurately recognize and confirm someone’s appearance across two time points separated by over a century? Was it a demonstration of quantum entanglement? Or perhaps an advanced neural network-based AI reconstruction? 2. May I inquire about your current chronological age? Somewhere in the range of 150-200 years, as estimated by carbon dating?
@@elchuroPeople like me were the reason Puyi abdicated. Yuan Shikai's kidneys were already close to failure around 1912... My kidneys already failed in my 20s 🤬😡... So yes there was something in common
@@NoCommentForAWhile Man, this is making me think, how many wives did you manage to get? LOL
Pretty much sounds the same as today except in most places, 的 sounds a little like a short "duh" instead of the short "dee" like he says it...although in some regions it is still said like that.
Yes.
Famous is such an understatement
“the most” famous, then. lol
English, on the other hand, was spoken with a better manner. Kind of a mix of British and American accents!
Wait wtf, isnt that Puyi?
Good eye.