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SuperBrainIL
Приєднався 17 січ 2018
Germanic Languages - Word Comparison | Parts of the body
A comparison between the different Germanic languages.
(For Norwegian, Bokmål is used)
(For Norwegian, Bokmål is used)
Переглядів: 2 236
Відео
Celtic Languages - Numbers
Переглядів 1,4 тис.Рік тому
A comparison between the words for numbers in the Celtic languages (Irish, Scottish-Gaelic, Manx, Breton, Welsh, and Cornish)
Baltic Languages (+Proto-Slavic) | Word Comparison
Переглядів 16 тис.Рік тому
A comparison of vocabulary between the Baltic Languages (Lithuanian, Latvian, and the extinct Old Prussian) as well as Proto-Slavic(because why not).
Afro-Asiatic Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 3,6 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between languages from the Afroasiatic language family! The Afroasiatic family includes five branches (excluding Omotic): - Cushitic (here represented by Oromo and Somali) - Chadic (represented by Hausa) - Semitic (represented by Arabic and Hebrew) - Egyptian (represented by ancient Egyptian) - Berber (represented by central Atlas Tamazight)
Hittite and Luwian | Anatolian Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 7 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between Hittite and Luwian, the two most documented Anatolian languages. The Anatolian languages were the first to split from the Proto-Indo-European language, with Proto-Anatolian sometimes said to be PIE's sister language. The speakers of the Anatolian languages settled (as their name implies) in modern day Turkey
Hebrew Dialects | Word Comparison
Переглядів 1,4 тис.2 роки тому
A word comparison between several historical and modern dialects of Hebrew! Biblical Hebrew (before and after the beged kefet feature) Samaritan Hebrew Mishnaic and Tiberian Hebrew Liturgical Hebrew dialects of the Jewish diaspora Modern Hebrew
Celtic Languages | Animals
Переглядів 2,5 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the words for animals in the modern Celtic Languages: Irish, Scottish-Gaelic, Manx, Welsh, Cornish, and Breton!
West Slavic Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 8 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the living West Slavic languages
Romance Languages | Numbers | 1-10
Переглядів 5 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the words for numerals in the Romance languages.
Turkic Languages | Word comparison
Переглядів 3,7 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the vocabulary of several Turkic languages.
Proto Indo-European Daughter Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 9 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the daughter languages of PIE, in other words, a comparison between the proto-languages of all living IE branches.
Semitic Languages | Word Comparison | 2
Переглядів 17 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between several Semitic languages. Both alive and dead
Slavic Languages | Numbers
Переглядів 4,8 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the words for numbers in the main Slavic languages.
Celtic Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 52 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between the 6 modern Celtic languages: Irish, Scottish-Gaelic, Manx, Breton, Cornish, and Welsh
Languages of the Iberian Peninsula | Word Comparison
Переглядів 17 тис.2 роки тому
A comparison between words of several of the languages of the Iberian peninsula: Spanish, Portuguese ( Galician) , Aragonese, Astur-Leonese, Catalan, Occitan, And Basque
Romance Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 2,2 тис.2 роки тому
Romance Languages | Word Comparison
Germanic Languages | Word Comparison
Переглядів 6 тис.2 роки тому
Germanic Languages | Word Comparison
How Many Continents Are There? objection.lol
Переглядів 2403 роки тому
How Many Continents Are There? objection.lol
No Maltese?😢
There is some problem there is no word illh in arabic.The term for God is ilah,but Allah is also used.Allah means God,and carries same meaning with Alaha,and also elohim,eloah.However,their root word comes from mesopotamian word illh which means God.
2:15 I’m an Amharic speaker and the correct word for Dog is “wusha” ውሻ
Há muitos erros. Não dá pra confiar no vídeo
Dog in Catalan is gos
This was a great video! I don’t know why everybody’s triggered.😂 I didn’t know extremism extended to language gatekeeping as well.
A few English words of Semitic origin... (Arabic) Ard (English) Earth (Hebrew) Gamel (English) Camel Assyrian) Ayna (English) Eye
The video shows that ,This dude have no any information about Ethiopian history 😂 he even didn't know amharic use Ge'ez alphabet. "Don't make videos before searching for it"
What are you talking about?! He did use Ge’ez alphabet to write Amharic.
@katlamb4606 if he did, so why he use Ethiopia and amhara in different languages section. I mean both are use the same ge'ez alphabet, and no difference in meaning as well, as Ethiopian there is no difference between Ethiopia and amharic in meaning and alphabet, but he did in the video ( it is clickbait)
@@EdisonvsTesla Ge'ez is also the name of a language.
I don't like pseudo-Lithuanian style of proto-Balto-Slavic stems proposed. It's obvious that duktė < dwktia, and then dwktia > dwkća ~ dwkć(ĭ) > {Serbian/Slovenian kći; Ukrainian dočká; Russian dočĭ). The same: naktis < naktia (Avestan naxtia) > nokća~nokć(ĭ) > Russian nočĭ. Mĭesĭenc < mĭosĭontĭo (Vedic masa): menesi(s) is typical Baltic shift: meSEN(t)i(s) > meNESis. Swlwnĭćo < sw(o)lw(o)ntĭo (Vedic-alike: Svarvant(ya)): saulė is the same shift: swal(nt)ia > saulia. Etc.
J'habite le Nord de la France (chti) & je ne donc pas du tout normand & ne parle pas du tout normand comme vous m'indiquez dans votre vidéo.😂 N'importe quoi 😂😂
English word God is : Hebrew: Eloah (common noun)- a god, Elohim (plural Noun used as proper noun) means God . Aramaic: Elah (Common noun) - a god Alaha (proper Noun) - God Arabic : ilah (Common noun) - a god Allah (proper name) - "God" لا إله إلا الله la ilaha ill Allah "There's no god but God"
EYE EARTH
للغات تشبه اللغة العربية بنسبة 88٪
Map is wrong, words are wrong, data is wrong. The whole video is a big piece of mistake.
The differences between german dialects are bigger than between these "languages"
Dud, portuguese and standard spanish are quite different, specially pronunciation wise. Portuguese, galician and leonese have a strong celtic influence. Occitan is also quite different, and basque is a totally different thing
They are languages, not "languages"
@@slaveofrhllor it's not a language if you can understand more than 50% of it knowing another language
Este video está fatal
No solo os habéis inventado palabras sino que también os habéis inventado idiomas que no existen.
¿Idiomas que no existen? Anda y edúcate un poquito antes de decir chorradas
In Scottish gaelic Capall is a mare or smaller horse. Madadh was dog in argyll aran dialect that recently died out, similar to how its probounce in connacht. Iseag is like birdy or chick so that similar to manx too.
Hebrew has phonological beauty, and is phonetically concise.
I don't know if Hebrew is still spoken the way it was in the past. For ex., the sound "R" that sounds like the French or Gerrman "R".
@@MoroccoOujdaCity It's was spoken in different accents and sounds even in the "past" in the land of Israel itself - Shiboleth vs Siboleth. Read the Bible. A hard french-like R may have been pronounced in more ancient times in Hebrew. Some scholars say it was, but its impossible to determine. Today Hebrew is spoken in Sephardic-Jerusalemian accent of the Jews who became the dominant community in Jerusalem from the 16th century. The trilling R was spoken in old Radio and TV and was considered the "Correct" way of speaking. But when Hebrew became colloquial very fast, the Trilling R fell in favor for a hard Ashkenazi R. Also consonants like the soft Sephardic KH fell, the Ashkenazi S (or TH) fell, and new ones like J and ZH sounds from Arabic and English were naturally introduced. Personally I think Ashkenazi Accent is more melodic and keeps Hebrew elements the middle eastern Sephardic does not. Sephardic is very clear cut but monotone.
@@MoroccoOujdaCity The r sound in modern Hebrew is heavily influenced by the way people used to speak in the Levant 130 years ago. When Eliezer Ben-Yehuda started promoting Hebrew as a language of everyday conversation, and thus resurrecting the language as a natively spoken language, he did so based on the Algerian Sephardic Jewish dialect of Hebrew. This Sephardic dialect pronounced the letter r as a rolling r, just like standard Arabic. The immigrating Ashkenazi Jews also spoke with a rolling r, because the Yiddish language also rolled their r like Arabic. But the Levantine Arabs did not commonly use a rolling r 130 years ago. When Hebrew became an everyday language the pronunciation changed into being like the pronunciation of the surrounding population. The reason Levantine Arabs used to speak differently is due to their ancestors speaking Aramaic before they adopted Arabic, thus they used to speak Arabic with an Aramaic accent. This changed when education and media became widespread and they became influenced by standard Arabic and the other larger dialects of Arabic that borders the Levant. Under this fairly recent influence the Levantine Arabs have stopped using much of their old Aramaic influenced dialect. But modern Hebrew retains some of these Aramaic features, like the way the letter r was pronounced.
Modern Hebrew is different from Ancient Hebrew
@@ZechariahSingerwhat complete and utter bs. Levantine Arabic rolls the “r” just like every other Arabic dialect
peh'wr peh'wrlye mwe gh'essor.
"Rule" in spanish is "regla" "Rule" in german is "regel" Interesting how syriac, and hebrew for "Leg" had the same evolutive divergence. Is hebrew's restorage by any chance mostly influenced by yiddish?
Not really, maybe some Words but they are Just a plus, Hebrew is really ancient, It only had more Words added, not replaced or removed
Cualquiera que haya viajado ppr España sabe que este mapa es el sueño húmedo de los nacionalistas de todo lugar. El castellano o español es la lengua nativa más hablada en todas las regiones excepto en Galicia. Y desde luego hay idiomas que están extintos desde hace mucho tiempo en la mayoría de las zonas que están rotuladas con su color. Por poner un ejemplo que conozco bien: no hay ni un solo hablante nativo de astur-leonés en las privincias de León, Zamora y Salamanca. Soy de esas tierras y jamás lo escuché. Cuando se hacen actos de reivindicación leonesista se lee un texto penosamente escrito en llionés y el resto del acto discurre en castellano. No es sólo que nadie lo habla en estas tres provincias de modo nativo, es que nadie tiene fluidez con él. Es mera reivindicación política. En otras regiones me atrevo menos a pronunciarme porque mi experiencia es menos exhaustiva. Es una lástima que haya gente que se avergüenza de la lengua que han heredado de sus padres y abuelos: añoran un pasado que desapareció en ocasiones hace siglos. Y si tenemos en cuenta que la lengua que rechazan, que es la suya, es también una de las lenguas más habladas en todo el mundo sólo podemos sacar una conclusión: son más tontos que el que asó la manteca.
Me parece que el que aquí tiene sueños húmedos eres tú. Sueños húmedos de supremacismo lingüístico, claro...
Hausa is like a brother for coptic language in many aspects, Intonation, roots, order of words, consonants or impulsive accent.
The backside of the 'neck' is 'nek' in Dutch - as shown - and 'Nacken' in German - not shown.
1:36 fun fact we say Mayya too, in the egyptian arabic dialect.
0:23 somali has laab (plr. laabab) which means heart or breast 1:03 somali has dhiin which means bloody wound or the color red 1:42 somali has mood/moot which means death 2:21 somali has leef meaning lick (possible sound shift or s -> f ?) 3:45 somali has maanyo meaning sea and mayay meaning rain
3:41 Fun fact: In Arabic the verb "watered" (like watering a plant) is "rawa" similar to the Hausa noun "ruwa"
Really Hausa themselves are puzzling. If you know their language you will have a feeling of understanding pharaohs names meaning. Their pre-islamic and colonial identity is really a tabou.
@@Albaror What the hell are you talking about? Nothing is tabou here! What colonisation are you even talking about? Hausa's were Muslims more than a millennium now and they choose it. Hausa are still speaking Hausa and it is a lingua franca among Muslims Nigerians and Niger. Super for them!
You use Campidanese Sardinian as an example but it's the furthest example of Sardinian in its original form. Core Sardinian, for instance, use battor for four and not cuatru, chimbe for five and not cincu etc
Since You include synonyms in the video, "dukra" for daughter is used much more commonly than "duktė". Then again, i have never ever heard or read anyone using "motė" form,- Mama / motina / močia, heck I would even take German "mutė"
indoeuropean languages
Gutes Video mein Bruder. Ich sage,dass Deutsch wie Englisch ist,doch meine Freunde sagen mir,dass nein. Gut gemacht!!!! Bis später!
Here are the words in my dialect of Gascon : Só = Sun Lua = Moon Dia = Day Nèt = Night Leon = Lion Ors = Bear Can = Dog Gat = Cat Casteth = Castle Re or Rei = King Aiga = water Huec = fire
Arabic is the most closest to Proto-Semitic
Aromanian(correct ones) Unã Doauã Trei Patru Tsintsi Shasi Shapti Optu Noauã Dzatsi
Lightning Obama!:)
The color of the map of Extremadura is blue, extremian is revived in all departament/province there. Isn't rose as you putted.
Há erros: em português não é "niote", mas sim "noite"; não é "usso", mas sim "urso".
Chandman Culture and Slabe Grave Culture > Xiongnu Xiongnu 300v.Chr - 50n.Chr> 552n.Chr Türk > Oguz yabgu> Seljuk dynasty> Ataman Dynasty> 1923 Turkey
t*rk
I hope that Turks realise that this is not their history. They have no ancient history in the middle east/anatolia, they aren't native to this land.
Nice 📷📸❤🎉
Nice video 👍📸❤🎉
This video is wrong, you messed up so many of the numbers between Irish, Cornish and Breton
Amazing video! Shukran, toda and ameseginalehu
Kaupf as english word cup came from Latin
'Ilan' is also a tree in Hebrew
Ilan means “how many” in Filipino language
Technically by this map the Romanian language has the biggest land area. Because the rest of the countries have many dialects and languages.
It would be great if we had classical syriac and Akkadian revived in modern times, just like Israel did.
In Arabic there are two words represent the word TOOTH ضرس | سن DHHRS / SEN , The Amharic word T'IRISI is similar to the Arabic DHIRS ( same root )
Exactly! I just stopped the video to comment this.
Great!
Proto Balto Slavic idea was made probably to justify some occupied territories! For instance Poland occupied Prussia and all sources avoid talking about but both countries were originated in almost the same time while Prussia became Protestant country and Poland is always Catholic which creates forever tension. The same idea was used to justify when Russia wanted always to devour Ukraine using reform in 1928 to make language almost similar!
Nope, it's just based on the linguistic evidence. Among the Indo-European languages, there are certain traits that tie the Slavic and Baltic branches closer to each other than any of the other branches. It's therefore probable they shared a common ancestor a bit more recently than the split of Indo-European as a whole.
So let me get this straight: Balto-slavic means that like Russian and Lithuanian share a commom ancestor? As lithuanian or russian speaker do you sense any similarities at all depending on the word?
Yes balto-slavic was one of the first cultures that came in with the spread of proto indo europeans, later they divided into proto baltic and proto slavic. The balts which spread to the areas around east prussia, lithuania and belarus were quite the closest thing to the original proto indo europeans. The balts that stayed in the modern day Ukrayne were later mixed with the Scythians a proto iranian people that separated from the proto indo europeans before going to the south east, they (Scythians) later returned north west and mixed with the balts that stayed in the Ukraynian basin and became the slavs, when they did that some balts went to the north to settle the areas I spoke of previously, some others went to the west as the proto celts and proto germanics.
PIE is a Sprachbund that modern linguists are convinced were a single cohesive language despite plenty of words & aspects of the respective languages that poke holes in the hypothesis (from Germanic substrate vocabulary/phonology to retroflexes in Indian languages). Balto-Slavic is one branch associated with Bronze Age cultures, the others being Italo-Celtic, Germanic, Hellenic, Illyrian, Anatolian, & Indo-Iranian (among several others like Armenian which are in special grey areas)