We use Sanskrit here in Japan for religious purposes at Buddhist temples. It’s called Bonji (梵字) in Japanese. It’s usually written vertically as well. Very nice video.
Shubham cha shravanayithvam , Sah aadaram mama pranamam Japaniya (nippon) deshayayam. 🇯🇵⛩️🎌🗾☸️ Ahma ekasmin Sri Buddhasya pingamih asthih cha ekasmin Bauddha dharmmeh vishwasayithum kritvam Aham Vaidikha dharmmayayam cha vishwasayithum ,aham kshatriyaha astih Sidhartha rajakumaraha mama poorvikaha bhavanthih cha aham athyadikham abhimanam krithvam Japan janatayayam mama sahorodari sahodarani bhavanthi Aham ekasmin ahimsa margam sweekarayithum cha sasyaharih asthih. Also pali language,the common sanskrit (do pali prayers also in Buddhist temples of Japan . All sanskrit ,pali, etc pride of India and also Every India's siblings (japan are oru friends ,more than friends siblings) Namo ratnah trayayah Namo Arya dharmmaya Namo Arya Satyayaha Namo Budhhaya Namo samskritha bhasayah Namo pali bhashayah Bharath Matha ki jay Jai hind Vande matharam 🇮🇳🕉️☯️☯️☸️☸️👍⚡🔥🙏🐫🛕🐴🐎🐪🐘🛕👣 Follow Buddha's sacred steps Be awakened one (consciousness of surroundings ,respect nature, respect dhamma,Respect our world ,Respect our mother Earth) Buddha means awakened one ,one who is intelligent,buddhi means intelligent in sanskrit.buddhi good consciousness Jayathu Samskritham Jayathu Bharatham Jayathu Arya Vartham Jayathu Sri Budhha Cha Budhha Dharmmam Vijayithum Arya Dharmmam Om Dyohpitayah Namah Om Sidhartha Rajakumaraya namaha
@@binayasahu3326 It is due to influence than rather due to to relationship (For example greeks , Tocharians,persians And sanskrit(Indic ) all originated from Proto indoneuropean but japan was influenced by Buddhism and Subsequently Hinduism from china through India, So japan is a friendly nation, And is fraternity through friendship Rather than by relation ,though japan is a close friend and very good friend of India
Julie, I was delighted with your presentation on Sanskrit. I was amazed at the amount of information that you packed into a mere 10 minutes. Sanskrit has been the delight of my retirement years. I finally had a chance to learn it. It is so worthwhile to learn, because of the literature written in it. It reveals insights into the development not only of Indian languages but also of European languages.
Mate do u know vedic hindu civilization based on sanskrit still alive in India. Out of 1.31 billon indians we 1.1 billion r hindu. Vedas r our holy book. We still today use sanskrit sloks for worshiping our vedic gods... Hinduism is worlds 3rd largest religion in the world. Our civilization is 10,000 years old most oldest
Frank, I find Sanskrit fascinating too but for a different reason. I am learning my mother tongue New Zealand Maori. I am convinced my ancestors must have departed from the Indonesian region during the height of India's influence there due to the number of Sanskrit words that are found in Maori. Few people know this.
@@adammorehouse7664 That's a little different from the prevailing theory about the origin of the Maori language and people. Sound changes tend to be regular and operate for a short period of time. So, if you can work out some of the regular sound changes, then you will have further evidence to substantiate your theory. (I live in New Zealand.)
@@frankboulton2126 , My first foray into this idea was that Polynesians did not have a written language but people in Asia did, so I wondered if they had recorded accounts of the Pacific islands. Then I thought, lets compare Maori with Sanskrit pronouns. I = M. ahau, au S. ahau au. He/she = M ia S. sia. we(dual) M. taua S. tvaum That = M. tena S. tena ... there are many many loan words in Maori that can be attributed to Sanskrit. Its weird I know, but at first I thought wow, Maori must have a Indian connection or origin, but with more research I don't think that is the case now. Maori is part of the Austronesian language family, so familiar words like mata, taringa, ringa, basic body parts are the same from Bali to Tahiti to Aotearoa. There is strong DNA evidence that the Eastern Polynesians took a fast train out of the Sulawesi, Celebes, lowland Philippines area to settle the islands of the eastern Pacific, Hawaii and Aotearoa, and about 1000 years after Central Polynesians settled Samoa, Tonga. So similar origin but different time. If you look at the numbers 1-10 a half or more are the same. So my theory is that when Polynesians left Island South East Asia, India's influence on trade and culture from China, Japan, Korea, to Indochina, Indonesia to Arabia and Egypt was at its height. So basically they left the area speaking the lingua franca of the time, much like you and I in the southern hemisphere are speaking English though we are not Englishmen.
@Devvrat Mishra Dude, everything is theoretical. There's no solid proof to prove any theory. What they do is put out most "probable" theory based on the evidence available to that date. Often they don't correct the theories based on new evidence because of intellectual dishonesty and various other motives. Let time go by and let technology develop even more, everything will fall into place.
My language khasi has sanskrit/hindi words too. Around 310-410 words. The newer dictionaries contain less sanskrit words compared to older dictionaries. Eg:) khalki in khasi means window. Nowadays it's an outdated term because we say 'jingkhangiit' now (jing=noun, Khang=close, ïit=glass)
Sören Sörensen who translated the first edition of the "Bhagavad Gita" into Icelandic from Sanskrit said that the two languages had a lot in common. I met him once, he was probably in his nineties then and thanked him for the translation as I had a copy of it which I had bought from an antique book-store. And this gentleman lived just a few houses across the street from where we lived and we kids used to ring his door bell and run away prank sometimes.
One interesting detail in Swedish, IMHO, is the word 'samband'. How on Earth can a word like that (e.g. with a prefix sam-) be in Swedish so akin to the Sanskrit word saMbandha, both words meaning a relationship/connection of some kind? Dunno if that word appears in Icelandic, but perhaps "at least" in Norwegian and/or Danish.
@@arjuna-fn2pg It is also Icelandic, the word band also means a thin rope or cord. Also samviska (viska: wisdom) conscience and sameiginlegt to be in one accord, same interest. Vita means to know: Veda.
In Modern Indian languages, Bandh is the verb root for tying. Band as a prefix is used when you tie 2 things together, such as Kamarband in Hindi( the Hindi name for waistband)@@INDYOSKARS
@@arjuna-fn2pg Lithuanian language has few of such words: samplaika (accumulation, agregation of something) and sambūris (gathering). The others - ones with -san, which was most likelly morphed from -sam: santykis (relation, ratio), santaika (harmony), sanglauda (cohesion), santaka (confluence), santvarka (system, order, structure), santrumpa (abbreviation), sandrauga (commonwealth, comunity), santrauka (summary, resume). Another related group is with the preffix -są where -ą is now pronounced like long -a, but in old times it was a nasal -a, prononced like -aŋ: sąveika (interaction, cooperation), sąžinė (conscience), sąlyga (condition, term), sąjunga (union, alliance), sąranga (setup, structure), sąvarta (dump), sąmonė (consciousness).
JuLingo, you're amazing! You gave such a beautiful and very helpful explanation on Sanskrit. I hope that one day I'll learn Sanskrit and read the ancient texts especially the Bhagavad Gita. Please continue making new interesting videos on languages! Love from Kosovo❤
@@JuLingo if you really want to study religious texts of all major religion. Then you should choose Hinduism in end after reading scriptures of other religion. Because scriptures in Hinduism are endless.
I did Sanskrit for a while. It sounds amazing, with its longish words, retroflex consonants, and with aspirated vs. non aspirated consonants. The grammar is very complex with a huge amount to memorize. The writing is diffecult because, because when a word starts with multiple consonants, the group is written into a single compound letter. That's more memorization! The last letter of the previous word mixes with the first letter of the following word, according complex rules that must memorized. This is called Sandhi. Sanskrit makes Latin look like a give away! However, Sanskrit sounds totally cool and gives the devoted endless challenge.
English language whose alphabets are random took the knowledge of phonetics and tried hard to advance it with digesting grammatical and basic linguistic concepts from Sanskrit like phoneme ,lexeme ,morpheme etc ua-cam.com/video/K51c_qoB9F4/v-deo.html Also the powerful concept of declension ( ua-cam.com/video/bzRxSVK7qIU/v-deo.html) helps Sanskrit sentences to have same meaning independent of position/order of words in the sentences making it most suitable for AI research
Is there anything this woman doesn’t know about language?! Love this channel and her voice manages to sound educational and kind at the same time. Much love. 💕🐝
In answer to "alive, or dead", I would say that Sanskrit is neither. It is sort of immortal, and in that way it stands as an example of what any language can, and should be. As a creator of a language myself, I see Sanskrit as something to be achieved. It, as well as several others, has been a great source of inspiration. Well done all of you ancient grammarians. I honor you.
Hello, yes, "immortal", that's it! By the way, recently I've strated translating some Western songs into that marvellous language, a conpletely new experience. But look yourself: आजिगांसामी त्वा (Näher, mein Gott, zu dir) आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे । शोकदुःखोत्कटः चण्डं तर्ज्ये ॥ विहाय यातनाम् अस्ति श्रद्धा मम । आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे ॥१॥ अप्यस्मत्पूर्वकः शायमश्ने राक्षसपीडितः न मोक्षं लेभे ॥ अहं च स्वप्नया समाकाङ्क्षाम्यया । आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे ॥२॥ वल्गुदिवौकसः स्वर्गमार्गे संप्रतिगृह्य नः उदाहरन्ते । तिरः सर्वान् कृच्छ्रान् नयन्ति साद्यन्तम् । आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे ॥३॥ रात्र इते ततः द्योतिसूर्ये दीक्षं तुभ्यं पुनः त्वत्तुङ्गाग्रे मिनोमि ते प्रभो विश्वानरां वेदीम् । आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे ॥४॥ ईश बोधागम्य होषि सर्वान् । प्रत्ययकारक तारय मा ॥ उदीक्ष्य त्वा दधे प्रत्युत्तितर्म्यहम् । आजिगांसामि त्वा ईश्वर मे ॥५॥
@@MarianLuca-rz5kk What can I say? It is my attempt at creating a sort of Sanskrit of the West. When I started,it was my hope that it would one day replace English in some areas, but that was a long time ago. It is based very vaguely on a European pattern, but I chose to make it more regular and accurate in its inflections. It uses a reverse syllabic order vowel-consonant. So all words begin with a vowel and end with a consonant. It has its own writing system that acts like a cross between an alphabet and a syllabary. This system also incorporates combining and final forms. Since there are final forms, there are no spaces in between words. The way it sounds has been inspired by Irish, Anglo-Saxon, and Etruscan. That being said, it has taken on a life, and sound of its own. It is called Ohloy'. A sample phrase would be, Onókanat askritt ohlem ifáhintt. From the Lords Prayer, "hallowed be thy name". I hope that answers your question.
@@theeternal6890 sanskrit is ebraic dialect oldest from aramaic hebrew cananites hitites aryans writen in cuneyform spoooken orals in lingua franka of scitians shamanist,writen in vedas by brahmans budist pryest of ashoka wich come from sumer
just for fun try if you are indian open english to russian translator and type any indian word or name and hear its pronounciation in russian you will be amazed that every word has proper pronunciation as it should be in sanskrit try krishna raam or any other name you will be amazed first time i tried i understood that russian is very very silmilar to samskrit
@@JuLingo Sorry Madam u r wrong about the timeline.... Mahabharata took place 7thousands years ago (5100bc),,, Maharishi Sushruta, Panani and Patanjali all existed before Veda Vyasa (Maharishi contemporary to Krishna)..... If the text is 3500years old then it doesn't mean Sanskriti is only limited to 1500bc.... Even Adi Shankaracharya is 2500years old born in 509bc but Britishers and Max Muller changed his timeline to 788ad only to hide his contributions to Bharat ....and came up here with bogus Aryan Invasion and migration theory and tried to limit our whole history in 3000years even they fixed the Mahabharata timeline in 10 to 6th century BC..... Now archaeological evidences like Dwarka, MohanJodaro, Dholavira, lopattal, Saraswati river civilization, Ram Setu confirms our existence were 50000+ years old.... No place for Aryan theory which were made up 200 ago by Europeans ...
@@JuLingo Mahabharata 7thousand years ago, Ramayana 14thousands+ years ago....n Rigveda written by Rishis 21thousands + years ago .... We can say with confidence that our civilization 30000+years old according to evidences.... Watch Nilesh Oak's findings
@@JuLingo actually...her native tongue is Latvian. Latvian is oddly similar to protoIndoeuropean and to Sanskrit. So she may have an advantage over English speakers in pronouncing Sanskrit.
@@JuLingo Aryan Invasion Theory was created to Subvert Indian Culture by British Invaders. It's BS. But Sanskrit is the oldest language on earth Even 10,000 years ago, in India we were a civilized nation when Europeans were eating raw meat in their caves. Intelligence Officer Yuri Bezmenov Confirms that.
@@andrewhammel5714 maybe, but not that similar. We Indians are mostly unique and isolated culture, compare the phonology of Sanskrit and Latvian, many phonemes don't occur in both. Sanskrit has aspirated, deaspirated, retroflex which don't occur in Latvian. Sorry, Latvian is similar to European language and culture.
Thanks! As a former Sanskrit student, I just have two remarks : there are EIGHT cases in Sanskrit which are the very eight cases of Proto-Indo-European (you merely forgot the Vocative case) ; the word for "descent" is अवतार (avatāra), from the root ava-TĀR-/TṜ-. Otherwise it's good!
@@arjuna-fn2pg Hello, I don't know how it is classified by various Indian scholars, but as far as Western Grammarians studying Indo-European Linguistics are concerned, "Vocative" is a grammatical case (found also in Greek, Latin, etc.), with distinctive marks that make it not the nominative case. But once again, it's probably a matter of how you theorize the thing.
Sanskrit is something else. It is like a canvas for a painter. A word can have lots of meaning. In the Philippine dialects, lots of words are borrowed by astronesian speakers and becomes a part of everyday use. I cant speak sanskrit but the words spoken are like what was explained in this video. Ex Sanskrit : Kr = Karana (indicate actions), Tagalog : Tara na (lets go), Tara (come) Sankrit : Phanim (snake, hooded), Tagalog: Payong ( umbrella) something above the head as a hood. (Also like a cobra wings.) Sankrit : Swami (husband), Tagalog : Asawa (spouse) gender neutral. Sanskrit : sakshi, Tagalog : saksi (witness) Sanskrit : asha, Tagalog : asa (hope), nasa ( desire) Sanskrit : Karma , Tagalog Karma (something you do will come back to you ) Sanskrit : Kama (love or desire / pleasure) Tagalog : Kama (bed), Mahal (love), kamasutra (bed lessons) or (lessons in bed). Sanskrit : Mukh, Tagalog : mukha ( face) Sanskrit : Rajah , Tagalog : Hari, Raha or Raja (spanish j = ha) means king salapi = money asal = behaviour / character bahaghari = rainbow Diwa = spirit bathala = great lord katha = fiction or tale likha = art (creativity) simba = to pray (chant) kulam/kolam = voodoo (sorcery) guru / guro (everybody knows this one) I think Sanskrit is not dead (most of the root words).
As long as there are people speaking this language and calling it their mother tongue, perhaps this language should be considered alive 🕉 Great video, Julie! Keep up the good work🙏
Thank you so much for this intriguing and respectful overview of Sanskrit. As a Bengali speaker, this is much appreciated and is giving me a nudge to learn more. Your explanations and organization of all your videos are excellent!
@Kazuma Kiryu There is no Tamil influence on Odia per se, more like some Dravidian influences from Telugu and Kui languages such as words like Nanna and all. Telugu is from a different Dravidian branch than Tamil.
I sing in Sanskrit for 1 hour every morning. 1, Hanuman chalisa,2 om namo hah 3 Chidananda 4 nitya praathna. Being performing for 1 hear and I swear it’s the best medicine ever! It produces stores energy in your system and you can uses it throughout the day so you don’t get tired easily
That was jolly interesting. I was randomly looking for an overview of Sanskrit and that was exactly what I got. You covered a huge topic concisely and informatively. Thank you.
Wow, great video, and so nice to see you had an image of Mattur village showing vedic students receiving their lessons on the river bank from the great Aswattha Narayana Avadhani, before he took Sannyasa. You also have a nice clip of Gaiasanskrit singing sanskrit stotras in her wonderful style. Thank you!
Miss Julie, not only the knowledge you gather is so vast yet briefly placed in the video but the way you present them makes it more interesting. Thank you for what you are doing.
Sanskrit is a language that has been partly developed naturally, partly revealed and partly discovered. And it is one of the few languages to have all these three faces. Sanskrit has a history of more than 4000 years, perhaps even extending upto 5500 years or more. It has several stages, right from the ancient pre-Vedic stage, Early Rigvedic stage, Later Rigvedic stage, Middle Vedic Sanskrit, Mantric Sanskrit, Brahmana prose type Vedic Sanskrit, Late Vedic Sanskrit, Standardized Sanskrit, Modern Sanskrit. Still, the language remains the same basically, with only way of expression and preferred vocabulary changing over time. Now, coming to the answer : Stage 1 : Development naturally The Vedic language, before the advent of Vedas, was a common spoken language, which was developed naturally from human sounds and proto languages. Much of the Sanskrit roots still belong to this category. The grammar and phonology had developed well enough at this stage itself, and the amazing language was created. Stage 2 : Development by revelations You could call the change in Sanskrit language expressions by the time of arrival of Vedas, to be belonging to this stage. Sanskrit language turned to be highly poetic, its literary ability increased a thousand fold, its vocabulary was refined and its ingenious capacity to create vocabulary increased. All this happened because of the development of the spoken language as a full fledged master literary language in Vedas. You could call Vedas as “revelations to the poets”. The Vedic language is a literary miracle. Its use of words, use of expressions and everything is rooted on the mystic poetic perspective that is rightly called a divine revelation or inspiration to the poets. For example, consider sun. The Vedic poets saw the sun in the horse, and horse in the sun. The sun was associated with rise from sea, born from time (Yama), who is first grasped by Gandharva (the singer devotee) and mounted by Indra. (Check my posts on concepts of God, its Indra, the sum of all concepts of God, who “mounts the Sun” ) In Rigveda 1.163, we find a stating of relation of this to the horse, who also rises from sea or land (through trade), first grasped by Gandharva (the Afghan), mounted by Indra (the king). This relation of horse with waters and sun is also reflected in the basic language : when yaha means water, yahva means a horse. Sun’s rays are called rashmi which itself is the name for horse’s reins. The Ashvamedha is thus a simple poetic narration of that brilliant dazzling horse of the sky which rounds the sky in an year, conquering all skies with its luminescence. The political seeker grasps the reins of horse, the spiritual seeker grasps the reins of spiritual sun, the living beings grasp the rays of the physical sun. Likewise, in every Sanskrit vocabulary, one can see the influence of Vedic poetry. Thus, it won’t be incorrect to state that Vedic poetry developed the Sanskrit vocabulary and sense of poetry. Nevertheless, it has given us so many profound words like brahman, deva, asura, yajna, go etc. which are books in themselves. 3. Development by discovery Sanskrit, like any other literary language, was deformed in popular speech. To conserve the language, the grammarians had to discover the roots of the language and words, re-state the rules of grammar, and create splendid works in etymology. And this required a discovery, an insight into the profound language gifted by the Vedas. Yaska compiled the nirukta for the Vedic words, Panini standardized the language across various dialects by discovering and redefining the rules of grammar. Sanskrit also developed technically, spiritually and philosophically with the discoveries of different technologies, spiritual traditions, philosophical branches. Now we have a Sanskrit that is a language stable naturally, through revelations of Vedic poetry and through constant discoveries in physical and spiritual worlds. It is a complete language in itself. Modern Sanskrit, apart from development through new literary phases, finds its main growth through technical vocabulary.
Your videos are always well researched. Well presented. I speak Konkani, spoken by just about two million speakers worldwide and which has its roots in Sanskrit, just like a majority of the Indian languages of North and central India.
I think that Sanskrit is the most beautiful language that exists, did exist and will exist forever ♾ and to me Sanskrit is an ocean that has no end💎❤️. Thank you so much for making this amazing video. Keep making amazing videos like this😉. Greetings from Kosovo 🇽🇰
Your first sentence is subjective, meaning, it is based on your 'emotions' and 'feelings'. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, or in the case of language...ear of the beholder. Sanskrit is ok but it's consonant clusters make it rough sounding like Polish or Salish. French is quite beautiful speech wise, of which tho, that too is subjective.
Excellent summary! Your knowledge of languages and ability to highlight the most pertinent aspects of their history, structure and current context so briefly is very impressive!
I once read that Sankrit has over 60 terms for love, like a separate word for love between mother and daughter, or the nonsexual love between friends, etc. Haha, guess when I wrote this comment. ;)
This was a great video that I found to be very informative. You missed the vocative case when listing the noun cases, but other than that, it was very nicely researched and very thoroughly presented. I've watched a few of your other videos too, and they're all very well-made as well. You have a new subscriber. :-)
A very nicely done viseo, Julie, thank you. My own Sanskrt teachers come from the Sanskrt village of Mattur, and I have visited it - a very lovely place near Shimoga in Karnataka. If you can visit, I recommend it
I acted in a Drama in Sanskrit when I was in my School ..I was a dumb student in the Drama ..I fondly recall my memory after watching this episode! thank you .
I absolutely love this video. Thank you much for it! I’ve been singing Sanskrit in prayer circles for years and desire to learn more about the language that is what lead me here. Inspiring me to dive deeper into the dialect
As she mentions hardly 0.2% people in India speak Sanskrit. Many times in India we recite Sanskrit shlokas (poetic verses) without truly understanding the meaning. At least 50% of words in Indian spoken languages comes from Sanskrit either direct or mutated form. Some students learn Sanskrit in high school for 3 years but fail to continue or practice it. It is not so common for people to have fair amount of understanding of this language. Once I felt ashamed while travelling in Germany, when a fellow German guy spoke to me in Sanskrit and I could neither understand nor reply.
Sad thing is this that while Sanskrit is getting so much support from the Indian government multiple other endangered languages exist in India that do not... Sanskrit doesn't even need support it is already a religious language which will not allow it to die so it doesn't need so much help...
I am enjoying your videos. I'm so impressed the level of detail and comprehension. Keep up the amazing work. And could you please do a video on Hebrew?
Wow. As a knower of Sanskrit and it’s few descendant languages, you did a superb job in a short video. You are simply amazing in your presentation skills. Subscribed.
What an amazing presentation on Sanskrit language, which obviously is a foreign one to you ! As an Indian myself I have got enlightened about our own language by a foreigner ! I had one year of Sanskrit as an additional language in high school , and unfortunately most of us hated it. May be because we found it to be too difficult. I wish we had better teachers who could explain various facets of this language. Julie, you are amazing and keep up the great work.
Great video, Julie! I really enjoyed it. However, I am certain that Sanskrit has eight cases, and not seven. The eight cases are: nominative, accusative, instrumental, dative, ablative, genitive, locative, vocative.
Yes Mr.Robert W., the last one Vocative is Called Sambhodana mwhich means calling,appealing or addressing ! for examople :-Hey Robert vada( d soft as in French) = Oh Robert speak!
This is so fascinating! I didn’t know any of this, only that Sanskrit was an ancient root language. But I learnt so much from you. Thank you so much. Sanskrit now I see how it is so interesting
I love how incredibly knowledgeable you are. Your knowledge and beauty are intertwined and at a very high level. I’m very impressed, you are amazing. I am a fan.
An interesting point about living languages needing to evolve. The reference to affixes made me wonder whether this was part of Zamenhof's inspiration for Esperanto?
Hi Julie! I read at some point, that -- while the formal grammar is much fixed -- the use of the grammar shifted from synthetic to analytic. So, one could consider it a language alive with a strong skeleton...
I can’t explain to you how much your UA-cam page means! Thank you so much for your research and anyone that helped you! I have learned copious, on your page alone. ❤🔥
2:19 I would just love to know the name of the song in the background! I hear the woman pouring her heart and soul into the music with her vocals; I don’t even need a translation to hear the cry of her spirit, great stuff! Shazam won’t tell me the name of the song. Pls help!!
I am a Bengali-speaking person from Bangladesh. Learning a language is my hobby. I love learning new languages. I am a multilingual Man. I can read, write, speak and understand Bangla, Hindi, Urdu, Malayalam, English, and Arabic. Now I have started to learn the Manipuri language. From Your videos, I got some basic knowledge about the language. Your explanations are very clear and helped me to learn a lot. Thanks for your nice videos.
Good video! My brother studied languages at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center in California. The pace of study was intense. Students had to master the language course in 36-64 weeks. Psychologically it was very difficult, but fortunately he was helped by Yuriy Ivantsiv's book "Polyglot Notes. Practical tips for learning foreign languages”. The book " Polyglot Notes" became a desk book for my brother, because it has answers to all the problems that any student of a foreign language has to face. Thanks to the author of the channel for this interesting video! Good luck to everyone who studies a foreign language and wants to realize their full potential!
Every Srilankan Buddhist Monk must learn Sanskrit language ,Sanskrit is one of major language in there schools. Your pronounce is very good. Major south asian languages like Hindi, Tamil, Sinhalese are borrow Sanskrit word
Not really, Slavic languages don't have Sandhi or some agglutinative rules, like Sanskrit. Plus, they are phonologically smaller than Sanskrit( that is, they have a smaller set of phonemes).
Even if it is so, everything else is very similar, they obviously belong to the same language family and they are the most similar languages, both grammar and vocabularywise.
They all belonged to the Proto Indo-European language family. They have a common ancestor which is now lost in time or rather evolved into all the European, Indian and Iranian languages around today or extinct already.
Namaskaram Julie ma'am, your point about Sanskrit language were too much clear and the pronounciation as well. Love from India 🇮🇳 And Now I am also learning Sanskrit.
Love the video, Julie! I came here after I saw you killing it at Ecolinguist channel 👍🏽 I hope you won't let these ultranationalists of a certain country bring you down because they don't agree with what you say I this video. TBH it's quite entertaining how they feel like they know better about a certain language than linguists, geneticists, archaeologists, and anthropologists from all around the world 😁 Greetings from Indonesia! 🇮🇩
By ultranationalist do you mean Indonesia? Btw Sanskrit is an Indian language and we are proud of it..its a language of Indo-European family. Keep learning Arabic boy it will come in handy
I'm living in tamilnadu.... And yes... Tamil and Sanskrit is the very most old languages in the world... Now u can google it and check "kizadi archeological research in Tamilnadu".... It is the new discovery in tamilnadu of india
@@krishnajaggarao4262 yep but Sanskrit loaned a lot of ancient Tamil words before medieval or modern Tamil loaned words from Sanskrit . Pls don't just say this one point everywhere.🙃
I'm studying sanskrit to chant mantra in my yoga classes and personal practice. My teacher Sharada taught that there are no swear words in sanskrit, it is a very pure language.
Beautiful. I know many of the Sanskrit words you had used in the presentation because my language Bangla has originated from Sanskrit. Thanks for your lovely presentation. You are a language expert!
My language khasi has sanskrit/hindi words too. Around 310-410 words. The newer dictionaries contain less sanskrit words compared to older dictionaries. Eg:) khalki in khasi means window. Nowadays it's an outdated term because we say 'jingkhangiit' now (jing=noun, Khang=close, ïit=glass)
@Black Dragon Tamil has never faded, of course. It is still spoken. Whereas Sanskrit has faded mostly in speech, but it's influence is everywhere in eastern Hemisphere.
They are not making fun of sanskrit, they are making fun of people sharing stupid facts on whatsApp like NASA hai said that sanskrit is best language for computer programming and more such bullshit facts..
@Black Dragon Tamil is also not native to India, it was not even spoken some 7000yrs ago in India. Dravidians came from Africa 7000yrs ago to India, Indo-Europeans had been in Central Asia before Dravidians and just came to India later than Dravidians, 4500 to 5000yrs ago. The actual Indian languages are the Onge and Jarawa languages of Andaman, Dravidians slayed all the pre-existing populations of India even before Indo-Europeans, which is why there is very few of such languages. Sanskrit didn't kill Dravidian languages completely, just some loanwords here and there. Does Vietnamese shed about 70-80% of its sinitic loanwords, because of being an Austroasiatic language? Does Sanskrit shed the 300-500 words of Dravidian and Austroasiatic origin that it has? No. Only Tamils do, because Adam and Eve spoke Tamil and Tamil is an Aramaic dialect, according to you Pandis. Every Indian is proud of Dravidian as well as Sanskrit language. If Aryans are still foreign to this land even after 5000yrs, then first send Dravidians or only Tamils back to Africa, you all look like Africans only and are mostly crypto-christians, so can easily mix. Then, speak about throwing all Aryans out of India into Central Asia and Tajikistan. Change begins from your home.
@@infinite5795 the most early indians gatherer hunters didn't bring civilisation while the tamil is the language of india's first civilisation-indus valley and even it was spoken in north india. Aryans appropriated the civilisation of tamils and imposed sanskrit. All temples were constructed by sudras who were descendents of indus valley civilisation. Even sanskrit has lots of dravidian influence while modern standard tamil has none. Tamil can exist without sanskrit while sanskrit can't exist without tamil.
Brilliant presentation. Thank you. आत्मषट्कम् ॥ निर्वाण षटकम्॥ मनो बुद्ध्यहंकारचित्तानि नाहम् न च श्रोत्र जिह्वे न च घ्राण नेत्रे न च व्योम भूमिर् न तेजॊ न वायु: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥ न च प्राण संज्ञो न वै पञ्चवायु: न वा सप्तधातुर् न वा पञ्चकोश: न वाक्पाणिपादौ न चोपस्थपायू चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥ न मे द्वेष रागौ न मे लोभ मोहौ मदो नैव मे नैव मात्सर्य भाव: न धर्मो न चार्थो न कामो ना मोक्ष: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥ न पुण्यं न पापं न सौख्यं न दु:खम् न मन्त्रो न तीर्थं न वेदा: न यज्ञा: अहं भोजनं नैव भोज्यं न भोक्ता चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥ न मृत्युर् न शंका न मे जातिभेद: पिता नैव मे नैव माता न जन्म न बन्धुर् न मित्रं गुरुर्नैव शिष्य: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥ अहं निर्विकल्पॊ निराकार रूपॊ विभुत्वाच्च सर्वत्र सर्वेन्द्रियाणाम् न चासंगतं नैव मुक्तिर् न मेय: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
I have learned somewhere that even Greek and Latin has many similarities with Samskritam. I have studied Samskritam in my school days, now using only in my prayer recitations. But will re-start learning more deeply. Thank you for your well researched content and showing Gaiea clip along-with. She sings so well in Samskrit. Love from Bharat
That would be the indo european connection, they both descend from a common ancestor. The most straightfoward example are family words: irish máthair, fháthair, and bráthair compared to sanskrit mātr, pitr, bhratr. Latin mater pater frater, english mother father brother. Sound changes lead to these being different in different indo european languages that have undergone separate evolution
@@infinite5795 Yes you're right, there was actually an Italo-Celtic branch that makes celtic and italic languages a little more closesly related that other indo european branches. Kind of like the balto slavic branch
Please Check Robert Caldwell's comparative grammar of dravidian languages.Two Culture's in India. Tamil ( Mother of Dravidian Languages) and Aryan (Sanskrit). Tamil is the Oldest Language Not Sanskrit.
Best part of the video is 2:25 where you show the World map and it shows people moving out of India were Aryans not the west theory that Aryan stabilised India😂
Nice video.. I love how Sanskrit script (say that 5 times) places a horizontal bar above each letter. That way they attach to other well, and the whole thing conveys a natural physicality. Almost like the movement of monkeys swinging below a bar. Or ribbons dangling
You can't apply same rule for Sanskrit as other languages. You can't say Sanskrit is not alive just because it doesn't changed over time. On the contrary the reason why Panini standardized Sanskrit is because he doesn't want it to be changed by the people.
I have been watching your videos. So young, yet so bright and knowledgable about so many lanuages. I can only speak one language. And the videos are not even from her mother tongue judging from her accent. Truly impressed.
Just one note: in fact, Sanskrit has EIGHT cases; I hold that Vocative *is* a grammatical case. And - well, it is india's Latin; although, if it has native speakers, then it *is,* essentially, more alive, than Latin is nowadays.
@@birjeshvishwkran179 There's no such thing as a "mother of all languages", this implies that the approx 7000 languages of the world all descend from a common ancestral language. But that is simply impossible, there's a reason why there are multiple language families, these languages are simply too different from each other linguistically to have a common ancestor, and one needs to explain how a single language would have proliferated so much in a time period when metal was not even discovered. How are the New World Languages related to any Indo-European language?
In this sanskrit video, the origin of words is from Tamil and just modified in sanskrit. Tamil language is mush older. Did you done any reasurch in tamil, if so please provide the link.
We use Sanskrit here in Japan for religious purposes at Buddhist temples. It’s called Bonji (梵字) in Japanese. It’s usually written vertically as well.
Very nice video.
it's not only in japan bro. it's all over the world. Sanskrit is called the language of gods that's why we sing hymns in Sanskrit.
Shubham cha shravanayithvam ,
Sah aadaram mama pranamam
Japaniya (nippon) deshayayam.
🇯🇵⛩️🎌🗾☸️
Ahma ekasmin Sri Buddhasya pingamih asthih cha ekasmin Bauddha dharmmeh vishwasayithum kritvam
Aham Vaidikha dharmmayayam cha vishwasayithum ,aham kshatriyaha astih
Sidhartha rajakumaraha mama poorvikaha bhavanthih cha aham athyadikham abhimanam krithvam
Japan janatayayam mama sahorodari sahodarani bhavanthi
Aham ekasmin ahimsa margam sweekarayithum cha sasyaharih asthih.
Also pali language,the common sanskrit (do pali prayers also in Buddhist temples of Japan .
All sanskrit ,pali, etc pride of India and also Every India's siblings (japan are oru friends ,more than friends siblings)
Namo ratnah trayayah
Namo Arya dharmmaya
Namo Arya Satyayaha
Namo Budhhaya
Namo samskritha bhasayah
Namo pali bhashayah
Bharath Matha ki jay
Jai hind
Vande matharam
🇮🇳🕉️☯️☯️☸️☸️👍⚡🔥🙏🐫🛕🐴🐎🐪🐘🛕👣
Follow Buddha's sacred steps
Be awakened one (consciousness of surroundings ,respect nature, respect dhamma,Respect our world ,Respect our mother Earth)
Buddha means awakened one ,one who is intelligent,buddhi means intelligent in sanskrit.buddhi good consciousness
Jayathu Samskritham
Jayathu Bharatham
Jayathu Arya Vartham
Jayathu Sri Budhha
Cha Budhha Dharmmam
Vijayithum Arya Dharmmam
Om Dyohpitayah Namah
Om Sidhartha Rajakumaraya namaha
Japanese culture has great linkages with with Indian culture and Indian ways of worship .
@Flight Simming correct.
@@binayasahu3326 It is due to influence than rather due to to relationship (For example greeks , Tocharians,persians
And sanskrit(Indic ) all originated from Proto indoneuropean but japan was influenced by Buddhism and Subsequently Hinduism from china through India,
So japan is a friendly nation,
And is fraternity through friendship
Rather than by relation ,though japan is a close friend and very good friend of India
Julie, I was delighted with your presentation on Sanskrit. I was amazed at the amount of information that you packed into a mere 10 minutes. Sanskrit has been the delight of my retirement years. I finally had a chance to learn it. It is so worthwhile to learn, because of the literature written in it. It reveals insights into the development not only of Indian languages but also of European languages.
@Kazuma Kiryu Yes, I am studying Sanskrit. It is delightful to listen to Gaiea and she greatly helps me to learn Sanskrit.
Mate do u know vedic hindu civilization based on sanskrit still alive in India. Out of 1.31 billon indians we 1.1 billion r hindu. Vedas r our holy book. We still today use sanskrit sloks for worshiping our vedic gods... Hinduism is worlds 3rd largest religion in the world. Our civilization is 10,000 years old most oldest
Frank, I find Sanskrit fascinating too but for a different reason. I am learning my mother tongue New Zealand Maori. I am convinced my ancestors must have departed from the Indonesian region during the height of India's influence there due to the number of Sanskrit words that are found in Maori. Few people know this.
@@adammorehouse7664 That's a little different from the prevailing theory about the origin of the Maori language and people. Sound changes tend to be regular and operate for a short period of time. So, if you can work out some of the regular sound changes, then you will have further evidence to substantiate your theory. (I live in New Zealand.)
@@frankboulton2126 , My first foray into this idea was that Polynesians did not have a written language but people in Asia did, so I wondered if they had recorded accounts of the Pacific islands. Then I thought, lets compare Maori with Sanskrit pronouns. I = M. ahau, au S. ahau au. He/she = M ia S. sia. we(dual) M. taua S. tvaum That = M. tena S. tena ... there are many many loan words in Maori that can be attributed to Sanskrit. Its weird I know, but at first I thought wow, Maori must have a Indian connection or origin, but with more research I don't think that is the case now. Maori is part of the Austronesian language family, so familiar words like mata, taringa, ringa, basic body parts are the same from Bali to Tahiti to Aotearoa. There is strong DNA evidence that the Eastern Polynesians took a fast train out of the Sulawesi, Celebes, lowland Philippines area to settle the islands of the eastern Pacific, Hawaii and Aotearoa, and about 1000 years after Central Polynesians settled Samoa, Tonga. So similar origin but different time. If you look at the numbers 1-10 a half or more are the same. So my theory is that when Polynesians left Island South East Asia, India's influence on trade and culture from China, Japan, Korea, to Indochina, Indonesia to Arabia and Egypt was at its height. So basically they left the area speaking the lingua franca of the time, much like you and I in the southern hemisphere are speaking English though we are not Englishmen.
As a reader and reciter of the Vedic texts- your pronunciation is wonderful! Namaskaram 🙏🏽
Wow thank you!
Piękna dziewiczyna!
@@JuLingo Yeah I was surprised too. Very nice.
Much appreciated, thankyou. I agree
@Devvrat Mishra
Dude, everything is theoretical. There's no solid proof to prove any theory. What they do is put out most "probable" theory based on the evidence available to that date.
Often they don't correct the theories based on new evidence because of intellectual dishonesty and various other motives.
Let time go by and let technology develop even more, everything will fall into place.
Sanskrit influenced a lot of languages in southeast asia including my country Cambodia. Event the word “Cambodia” itself derived from sanskit.
You are correct brother ❤️ love from india
Kambujadeśha i belive?
कांबोज
Love from India
My language khasi has sanskrit/hindi words too. Around 310-410 words. The newer dictionaries contain less sanskrit words compared to older dictionaries.
Eg:) khalki in khasi means window. Nowadays it's an outdated term because we say 'jingkhangiit' now (jing=noun, Khang=close, ïit=glass)
Sören Sörensen who translated the first edition of the "Bhagavad Gita" into Icelandic
from Sanskrit said that the two languages had a lot in common.
I met him once, he was probably in his nineties then and thanked him for the translation
as I had a copy of it which I had bought from an antique book-store.
And this gentleman lived just a few houses across the street from where we lived
and we kids used to ring his door bell and run away prank sometimes.
One interesting detail in Swedish, IMHO, is the word 'samband'. How on Earth can a word like that (e.g. with a prefix sam-) be in Swedish so akin to the Sanskrit word saMbandha, both words meaning a relationship/connection of some kind? Dunno if that word appears in Icelandic, but perhaps "at least" in Norwegian and/or Danish.
@@arjuna-fn2pg It is also Icelandic, the word band also means a thin rope or cord.
Also samviska (viska: wisdom) conscience
and sameiginlegt to be in one accord, same interest. Vita means to know: Veda.
In Modern Indian languages, Bandh is the verb root for tying. Band as a prefix is used when you tie 2 things together, such as Kamarband in Hindi( the Hindi name for waistband)@@INDYOSKARS
@@arjuna-fn2pg Lithuanian language has few of such words:
samplaika (accumulation, agregation of something) and sambūris (gathering).
The others - ones with -san, which was most likelly morphed from -sam:
santykis (relation, ratio), santaika (harmony), sanglauda (cohesion), santaka (confluence), santvarka (system, order, structure), santrumpa (abbreviation), sandrauga (commonwealth, comunity), santrauka (summary, resume).
Another related group is with the preffix -są where -ą is now pronounced like long -a, but in old times it was a nasal -a, prononced like -aŋ:
sąveika (interaction, cooperation), sąžinė (conscience), sąlyga (condition, term), sąjunga (union, alliance), sąranga (setup, structure), sąvarta (dump), sąmonė (consciousness).
becasue we indians used to travel from india tk europe to spresd our indian culture
This is definitely one of my favourite linguistic channel, keep up the good work!!!
thank you for your support!!! 🙏🏻
JuLingo, you're amazing! You gave such a beautiful and very helpful explanation on Sanskrit. I hope that one day I'll learn Sanskrit and read the ancient texts especially the Bhagavad Gita.
Please continue making new interesting videos on languages! Love from Kosovo❤
Thank you so much! Yes, I'm planning to read Bhagavad Gita too, as well as religious texts of all major religions ☺️
@@JuLingofirst mind it gita is not a religious book.
@@JuLingo if you really want to study religious texts of all major religion. Then you should choose Hinduism in end after reading scriptures of other religion. Because scriptures in Hinduism are endless.
I am Indian but cant learn sanskrit as there are no sanskrit speakers alive here. Its shame to me
@@birjeshvishwkran179 who told u?? Just visit Himachal Pradesh.. and there are many places in India where Sanskrit is still spoken..
I did Sanskrit for a while. It sounds amazing, with its longish words, retroflex consonants, and with aspirated vs. non aspirated consonants. The grammar is very complex with a huge amount to memorize.
The writing is diffecult because, because when a word starts with multiple consonants, the group is written into a single compound letter. That's more memorization!
The last letter of the previous word mixes with the first letter of the following word, according complex rules that must memorized. This is called Sandhi.
Sanskrit makes Latin look like a give away! However, Sanskrit sounds totally cool and gives the devoted endless challenge.
ua-cam.com/video/7g5umoYakk4/v-deo.html
Prof. Dr. Kanta Bhattarai explains Jayatu Hinduta in Sanskrit Sloka (श्लोक) (Poetic form).
Retroflex consonants are copied from tamizh language
@@Aman-qr6wi even, Eastern Iranian languages like Pashto had retroflexes, so it could be an internal development.
English language whose alphabets are random took the knowledge of phonetics and tried hard to advance it with digesting grammatical and basic linguistic concepts from Sanskrit like phoneme ,lexeme ,morpheme etc
ua-cam.com/video/K51c_qoB9F4/v-deo.html
Also the powerful concept of declension ( ua-cam.com/video/bzRxSVK7qIU/v-deo.html) helps Sanskrit sentences to have same meaning independent of position/order of words in the sentences making it most suitable for AI research
Is there anything this woman doesn’t know about language?! Love this channel and her voice manages to sound educational and kind at the same time. Much love. 💕🐝
She doesn't know native speakers of the language.
@@seid3366 😂😂
In answer to "alive, or dead", I would say that Sanskrit is neither. It is sort of immortal, and in that way it stands as an example of what any language can, and should be.
As a creator of a language myself, I see Sanskrit as something to be achieved.
It, as well as several others, has been a great source of inspiration.
Well done all of you ancient grammarians.
I honor you.
Hello,
yes, "immortal", that's it!
By the way, recently I've strated translating some Western songs into that marvellous language, a conpletely new experience. But look yourself:
आजिगांसामी त्वा (Näher, mein Gott, zu dir)
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ।
शोकदुःखोत्कटः
चण्डं तर्ज्ये ॥
विहाय यातनाम्
अस्ति श्रद्धा मम ।
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ॥१॥
अप्यस्मत्पूर्वकः
शायमश्ने
राक्षसपीडितः
न मोक्षं लेभे ॥
अहं च स्वप्नया
समाकाङ्क्षाम्यया ।
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ॥२॥
वल्गुदिवौकसः
स्वर्गमार्गे
संप्रतिगृह्य नः
उदाहरन्ते ।
तिरः सर्वान् कृच्छ्रान्
नयन्ति साद्यन्तम् ।
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ॥३॥
रात्र इते ततः
द्योतिसूर्ये
दीक्षं तुभ्यं पुनः
त्वत्तुङ्गाग्रे
मिनोमि ते प्रभो
विश्वानरां वेदीम् ।
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ॥४॥
ईश बोधागम्य
होषि सर्वान् ।
प्रत्ययकारक
तारय मा ॥
उदीक्ष्य त्वा दधे
प्रत्युत्तितर्म्यहम् ।
आजिगांसामि त्वा
ईश्वर मे ॥५॥
गोपय मरीचि (Segne du, Maria)
गोपय मरीचि
ईश्वरस्याम्बे
बालं तव निःस्वम्
पृथिवीतले ।
आशिषं मे देहि
कर्मभूमये
आशयाय मे च
त्वं दिवे दिवे ॥१॥
गोपय मरीचि
मत्कुटुम्बकम् ।
ज्योतिष्मति मातः
पालय सर्वान् ।
मातृकहस्तेन
आशिषं भजेः
त्वं सर्वस्मै हृदे
विश्वकौकसे ॥२॥
गोपय मरीचि
मृत्युकालं नः ।
सान्त्वदशब्दांश्च
आरपसि नः ।
त्वमक्षीरस्माकम्
संनिमीलय
येन त्वत्सिसर्ति
स्वर्गनन्दनम् ॥३॥
गोपय मरीच्य-
खण्डभारतम्
स्वप्रदेशभाषा-
नृकुलवर्णान् ।
जागरारण्यानौ ।
पाहि कर्षणम् ।
जागृहि स्वस्मृतौ ।
देहि मङ्गलम् ॥४॥
रात्र्यासीत् (Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht)
रात्र्यासीत्
शान्तिरासीत् ।
सुप्यते
निर्भरम्
किं तु वर्जं महापवित्रौ ।
सौम्य बालान्तर्गोणखरौ
द्राह्यरेणुशमे
द्राह्यरेणुशमे ॥१॥
रात्र्यासीत्
शान्तिरासीत् ।
पशुपाः
शृण्वते
स्वर्गदूतैरुदग्रस्तुतीः ।
अन्नद्रङ्गोऽस्ति मोक्षपुरी ।
ईश्वरोऽवातार्षीत्
ईश्वरोऽवातार्षीत् ॥२॥
रात्र्यासीत्
शान्तिरासीत् ।
ईशस्य
पुत्रक
सुप्रसन्नं न्यागाममस्मान्
प्रदिदाससी लोकहितम्
त्रातर्जन्मनि ते
त्रातर्जन्मनि ते ॥३॥
श्मशानगोचरी (Die Rasenbank am Elterngrab)
दौर्जीवित्या कन्यास्मि द्रौपदी ।
कुपक्कणे वसामि ।
नना ततश्च बत स्वर्गतौ ।
कियच्चिरं सह्यामि ॥
रहः किंचित्किं तु ज्ञात्वा
तत्रातिनिःश्वस्तुं गत्वा
निदं शृणोम्यहं दिवे दिवे ।
असौ मुग्धा श्मशानगोचरी ॥१॥
डोम्बा विप्रश्निका पुराब्रवीत् ।
निराशिनी त्वं कृत्स्नम् ।
परं त्ववोचदु पुरोहितः ।
किं वेत्सि नामुमृषिम् ।
यथा शक्त्रायतिः क्षिप्रे
सौभाग्यं परिववृते
तथा त्वमेव मम तारुणि
श्लाघिष्यसे श्मशानगोजरि ॥२॥
धृषद्विन्येधि भोस्तन्व्यावयोः ।
द्यभक्तं तव भाग्यम् ।
दैवं निहत्य कुरु पौरुषम् ।
इत्यम्बितातवाक्यम् ।
उल्लेखने नित्यी कृता
पूर्णायुः संस्थिते भूयाः ।
कुटुम्बकसमाकृता कनी
शेतेऽत्र सा श्मशानगोचरी ॥३॥
@@josefhell4643
What beautiful work.
I know how difficult translation can be.
I will not pretend to get it all.
That being said,
Well done.
@@davidvaughn367
Hello. What language did you create? How is it like?
@@MarianLuca-rz5kk
What can I say?
It is my attempt at creating a sort of Sanskrit of the West.
When I started,it was my hope that it would one day replace English in some areas, but that was a long time ago.
It is based very vaguely on a European pattern, but I chose to make it more regular and accurate in its inflections.
It uses a reverse syllabic order vowel-consonant. So all words begin with a vowel and end with a consonant.
It has its own writing system that acts like a cross between an alphabet and a syllabary.
This system also incorporates combining and final forms.
Since there are final forms, there are no spaces in between words.
The way it sounds has been inspired by Irish, Anglo-Saxon, and Etruscan.
That being said, it has taken on a life, and sound of its own.
It is called Ohloy'.
A sample phrase would be,
Onókanat askritt ohlem ifáhintt.
From the Lords Prayer, "hallowed be thy name".
I hope that answers your question.
@@davidvaughn367
Thank you for explaining your interesting language system. I wish you success further on.
During the ancient times in Asia, Sanskrit was referred to “languages of the gods” many people around Asia came to India and learnt the language.
even now we call its script as Devanagari.
@@theeternal6890 sanskrit is ebraic dialect oldest from aramaic hebrew cananites hitites aryans writen in cuneyform spoooken orals in lingua franka of scitians shamanist,writen in vedas by brahmans budist pryest of ashoka wich come from sumer
From where did so claimed god's fooling you're own self
Oh, Did God spoke to you in Sanskrit? 🙄
Did he or she told that they speak Sanskrit?
just for fun try if you are indian
open english to russian translator
and type any indian word or name and hear its pronounciation in russian you will be amazed that every word has proper pronunciation as it should be in sanskrit
try krishna raam or any other name you will be amazed
first time i tried i understood that russian is very very silmilar to samskrit
wonderful. I absolutely love the variety of languages on yo channel.
happy to hear that! ☺️
@@JuLingo Sorry Madam u r wrong about the timeline.... Mahabharata took place 7thousands years ago (5100bc),,, Maharishi Sushruta, Panani and Patanjali all existed before Veda Vyasa (Maharishi contemporary to Krishna).....
If the text is 3500years old then it doesn't mean Sanskriti is only limited to 1500bc....
Even Adi Shankaracharya is 2500years old born in 509bc but Britishers and Max Muller changed his timeline to 788ad only to hide his contributions to Bharat ....and came up here with bogus Aryan Invasion and migration theory and tried to limit our whole history in 3000years even they fixed the Mahabharata timeline in 10 to 6th century BC.....
Now archaeological evidences like Dwarka, MohanJodaro, Dholavira, lopattal, Saraswati river civilization, Ram Setu confirms our existence were 50000+ years old....
No place for Aryan theory which were made up 200 ago by Europeans ...
@@JuLingo Mahabharata 7thousand years ago,
Ramayana 14thousands+ years ago....n Rigveda written by Rishis 21thousands + years ago .... We can say with confidence that our civilization 30000+years old according to evidences....
Watch Nilesh Oak's findings
I like your Sanskrit pronunciations, you did some good research for the video!
Glad you liked it!
@@JuLingo actually...her native tongue is Latvian. Latvian is oddly similar to protoIndoeuropean and to Sanskrit. So she may have an advantage over English speakers in pronouncing Sanskrit.
@@JuLingo Aryan Invasion Theory was created to Subvert Indian Culture by British Invaders.
It's BS.
But Sanskrit is the oldest language on earth
Even 10,000 years ago, in India we were a civilized nation when Europeans were eating raw meat in their caves.
Intelligence Officer Yuri Bezmenov Confirms that.
@@andrewhammel5714 maybe, but not that similar. We Indians are mostly unique and isolated culture, compare the phonology of Sanskrit and Latvian, many phonemes don't occur in both. Sanskrit has aspirated, deaspirated, retroflex which don't occur in Latvian. Sorry, Latvian is similar to European language and culture.
@@JuLingo read some history of Porto indo European language
Thanks! As a former Sanskrit student, I just have two remarks : there are EIGHT cases in Sanskrit which are the very eight cases of Proto-Indo-European (you merely forgot the Vocative case) ; the word for "descent" is अवतार (avatāra), from the root ava-TĀR-/TṜ-. Otherwise it's good!
The root is तॄ "tṝ" = to cross, cognate of Latin "trans". अव "ava" is a prefix meaning "down", cognate of the English "off".
@@alfonsmelenhorst9672 Yes it is, this was implied in my formulation above, the proper root being in BIG LETTERS and the preverb in small ones.
I have learnt there are seven cases in Sanskrit, vocative being a variation, or stuff, of nominative (prathamaa vibhakti).
@@arjuna-fn2pg Hello, I don't know how it is classified by various Indian scholars, but as far as Western Grammarians studying Indo-European Linguistics are concerned, "Vocative" is a grammatical case (found also in Greek, Latin, etc.), with distinctive marks that make it not the nominative case. But once again, it's probably a matter of how you theorize the thing.
sanskrit originated from shiv sutra and it has not an aryan langauge
Sanskrit is something else. It is like a canvas for a painter. A word can have lots of meaning. In the Philippine dialects, lots of words are borrowed by astronesian speakers and becomes a part of everyday use. I cant speak sanskrit but the words spoken are like what was explained in this video.
Ex Sanskrit : Kr = Karana (indicate actions), Tagalog : Tara na (lets go), Tara (come)
Sankrit : Phanim (snake, hooded), Tagalog: Payong ( umbrella) something above the head as a hood. (Also like a cobra wings.)
Sankrit : Swami (husband), Tagalog : Asawa (spouse) gender neutral.
Sanskrit : sakshi, Tagalog : saksi (witness)
Sanskrit : asha, Tagalog : asa (hope), nasa ( desire)
Sanskrit : Karma , Tagalog Karma (something you do will come back to you )
Sanskrit : Kama (love or desire / pleasure) Tagalog : Kama (bed), Mahal (love), kamasutra (bed lessons) or (lessons in bed).
Sanskrit : Mukh, Tagalog : mukha ( face)
Sanskrit : Rajah , Tagalog : Hari, Raha or Raja (spanish j = ha) means king
salapi = money
asal = behaviour / character
bahaghari = rainbow
Diwa = spirit
bathala = great lord
katha = fiction or tale
likha = art (creativity)
simba = to pray (chant)
kulam/kolam = voodoo (sorcery)
guru / guro (everybody knows this one)
I think Sanskrit is not dead (most of the root words).
I think kama comes from Spanish cama = bed
@@g.g.1663Kama actually means desire in Sanskrit.
Kama can be anything, even you desire to look into phone or eat something is Kama
Most of these^^^ words are Tamil (Sanskrit stole/borrowed it)
@@Thirukkai-Vaal shut up adivasi
As long as there are people speaking this language and calling it their mother tongue, perhaps this language should be considered alive 🕉 Great video, Julie! Keep up the good work🙏
And we study 3 year sanskirt in our school i guess every indian does.
@Just a Random Guy exploring Sanatan Dharm i know but I am gonna take civil or architectural engineering but I study ancient indian knowledge
да, санскрит и русский очень похожи
@@dev_peace_soul waste of time with dead language
@@yeswanthis.c3426 no thx Mr pathetic Tamil 🤡
It's the mother of all languages and it is the main part of our culture 🤗
Thank you so much for this intriguing and respectful overview of Sanskrit. As a Bengali speaker, this is much appreciated and is giving me a nudge to learn more. Your explanations and organization of all your videos are excellent!
Fellow Bengali detected
Its interesting that the word "Mukha" that we use as tagalog word came from sanskrit.
there are many other words in Tagalog which comes from Sanskrit
Murunga - Murungai ( drums stick) came from Tamil. because tamil king invaded visaya
@Kazuma Kiryu are u from philipines?
Actually, the word mukha is a loanword from proto-dravidian into sanskrit.
@Kazuma Kiryu There is no Tamil influence on Odia per se, more like some Dravidian influences from Telugu and Kui languages such as words like Nanna and all. Telugu is from a different Dravidian branch than Tamil.
I sing in Sanskrit for 1 hour every morning. 1, Hanuman chalisa,2 om namo hah 3 Chidananda 4 nitya praathna. Being performing for 1 hear and I swear it’s the best medicine ever! It produces stores energy in your system and you can uses it throughout the day so you don’t get tired easily
Please.. can you write these mantras in saanskrit ?
Hanuman Chalisa is in Awadhi/Hindustani not Sanskrit.
Hanuman Chalisa is in "Audh "(Awadhi) language..which is rather a dialect more than a language...but it is very much influenced by sanskrit tho.
Bet you live in poverty 😂
@@Thirukkai-Vaalbet you are an African descendant.
That was jolly interesting. I was randomly looking for an overview of Sanskrit and that was exactly what I got. You covered a huge topic concisely and informatively. Thank you.
Wow, great video, and so nice to see you had an image of Mattur village showing vedic students receiving their lessons on the river bank from the great Aswattha Narayana Avadhani, before he took Sannyasa. You also have a nice clip of Gaiasanskrit singing sanskrit stotras in her wonderful style. Thank you!
There's something about her eyes. Probably one of the most beatiful ones I've seen.
I agree completely!
Do you know that your name came from sanskrit?
1500 words are similar between sanskrit language and Lithuanian language...
Wow I didn't know this fact, thanks for sharing
@@akihitonarihisago4276 Lithuanian is most close to Sanskrit in Europe and even Russian is very similar
Amazing ,what is the link between them?
Is that because they came from a common source?
@@johnstanton8499 It is because both languages are proto indo european language.....
Miss Julie, not only the knowledge you gather is so vast yet briefly placed in the video but the way you present them makes it more interesting. Thank you for what you are doing.
Sanskrit is a language that has been partly developed naturally, partly revealed and partly discovered. And it is one of the few languages to have all these three faces.
Sanskrit has a history of more than 4000 years, perhaps even extending upto 5500 years or more. It has several stages, right from the ancient pre-Vedic stage, Early Rigvedic stage, Later Rigvedic stage, Middle Vedic Sanskrit, Mantric Sanskrit, Brahmana prose type Vedic Sanskrit, Late Vedic Sanskrit, Standardized Sanskrit, Modern Sanskrit.
Still, the language remains the same basically, with only way of expression and preferred vocabulary changing over time. Now, coming to the answer :
Stage 1 : Development naturally
The Vedic language, before the advent of Vedas, was a common spoken language, which was developed naturally from human sounds and proto languages. Much of the Sanskrit roots still belong to this category. The grammar and phonology had developed well enough at this stage itself, and the amazing language was created.
Stage 2 : Development by revelations
You could call the change in Sanskrit language expressions by the time of arrival of Vedas, to be belonging to this stage. Sanskrit language turned to be highly poetic, its literary ability increased a thousand fold, its vocabulary was refined and its ingenious capacity to create vocabulary increased.
All this happened because of the development of the spoken language as a full fledged master literary language in Vedas. You could call Vedas as “revelations to the poets”. The Vedic language is a literary miracle. Its use of words, use of expressions and everything is rooted on the mystic poetic perspective that is rightly called a divine revelation or inspiration to the poets.
For example, consider sun. The Vedic poets saw the sun in the horse, and horse in the sun. The sun was associated with rise from sea, born from time (Yama), who is first grasped by Gandharva (the singer devotee) and mounted by Indra. (Check my posts on concepts of God, its Indra, the sum of all concepts of God, who “mounts the Sun” ) In Rigveda 1.163, we find a stating of relation of this to the horse, who also rises from sea or land (through trade), first grasped by Gandharva (the Afghan), mounted by Indra (the king). This relation of horse with waters and sun is also reflected in the basic language : when yaha means water, yahva means a horse. Sun’s rays are called rashmi which itself is the name for horse’s reins. The Ashvamedha is thus a simple poetic narration of that brilliant dazzling horse of the sky which rounds the sky in an year, conquering all skies with its luminescence.
The political seeker grasps the reins of horse, the spiritual seeker grasps the reins of spiritual sun, the living beings grasp the rays of the physical sun.
Likewise, in every Sanskrit vocabulary, one can see the influence of Vedic poetry. Thus, it won’t be incorrect to state that Vedic poetry developed the Sanskrit vocabulary and sense of poetry. Nevertheless, it has given us so many profound words like brahman, deva, asura, yajna, go etc. which are books in themselves.
3. Development by discovery
Sanskrit, like any other literary language, was deformed in popular speech. To conserve the language, the grammarians had to discover the roots of the language and words, re-state the rules of grammar, and create splendid works in etymology. And this required a discovery, an insight into the profound language gifted by the Vedas. Yaska compiled the nirukta for the Vedic words, Panini standardized the language across various dialects by discovering and redefining the rules of grammar.
Sanskrit also developed technically, spiritually and philosophically with the discoveries of different technologies, spiritual traditions, philosophical branches.
Now we have a Sanskrit that is a language stable naturally, through revelations of Vedic poetry and through constant discoveries in physical and spiritual worlds. It is a complete language in itself. Modern Sanskrit, apart from development through new literary phases, finds its main growth through technical vocabulary.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Your videos are always well researched. Well presented. I speak Konkani, spoken by just about two million speakers worldwide and which has its roots in Sanskrit, just like a majority of the Indian languages of North and central India.
Female version of Langfocus
With better background music and she's better to look at. ;)
@@gabor6259 Paul is crying in the corner
if you look closely she is taking about the sanskrit language.
Exactly 😂
@@gabor6259 no puppy man, it says it all
I think that Sanskrit is the most beautiful language that exists, did exist and will exist forever ♾ and to me Sanskrit is an ocean that has no end💎❤️. Thank you so much for making this amazing video. Keep making amazing videos like this😉. Greetings from Kosovo 🇽🇰
Until you understand Tamil ancestry.
@Just a Random Guy exploring Sanatan Dharm Wtf. Why Hindi ? Are you Hindi ?
@Just a Random Guy exploring Sanatan Dharm Wow you seem to be a keyboad warrior.
true ❤️❤️
Your first sentence is subjective, meaning, it is based on your 'emotions' and 'feelings'. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, or in the case of language...ear of the beholder. Sanskrit is ok but it's consonant clusters make it rough sounding like Polish or Salish. French is quite beautiful speech wise, of which tho, that too is subjective.
I’m so charmed by your presentation and your pretty accent I’d have to watch the video again to come up with a question.
Excellent summary! Your knowledge of languages and ability to highlight the most pertinent aspects of their history, structure and current context so briefly is very impressive!
I once read that Sankrit has over 60 terms for love, like a separate word for love between mother and daughter, or the nonsexual love between friends, etc. Haha, guess when I wrote this comment. ;)
Valentine's Day?
@@AlexanderDumb 250 points.
@@KootFloris That's a little too many. Can I give some points back?
@@AlexanderDumb You are free to donate all you like!
Yeah . Not only for love . It has multiple term for most of the words .
Really grateful for taking a lot of work to create this video. Brilliant! Great job Julie!
Thanks so much!
This was a great video that I found to be very informative. You missed the vocative case when listing the noun cases, but other than that, it was very nicely researched and very thoroughly presented. I've watched a few of your other videos too, and they're all very well-made as well. You have a new subscriber. :-)
Thank you so much! So happy you enjoy my work ☺️
Köszönjük!
A very nicely done viseo, Julie, thank you. My own Sanskrt teachers come from the Sanskrt village of Mattur, and I have visited it - a very lovely place near Shimoga in Karnataka. If you can visit, I recommend it
Hats off to the research and pronounciation 😳
Thank you :)
I acted in a Drama in Sanskrit when I was in my School ..I was a dumb student in the Drama ..I fondly recall my memory after watching this episode! thank you .
Right
In just 10 Minutes, you have showed a detailed Analysis about Sanskrit :))
I absolutely love this video. Thank you much for it!
I’ve been singing Sanskrit in prayer circles for years and desire to learn more about the language that is what lead me here. Inspiring me to dive deeper into the dialect
I could watch your videos all day long! I hope you make more and more of those!!!!
Thank you. Your short video has explained Sanskrit more clearly to me than my Indian friends have been able to do!
As she mentions hardly 0.2% people in India speak Sanskrit. Many times in India we recite Sanskrit shlokas (poetic verses) without truly understanding the meaning. At least 50% of words in Indian spoken languages comes from Sanskrit either direct or mutated form. Some students learn Sanskrit in high school for 3 years but fail to continue or practice it. It is not so common for people to have fair amount of understanding of this language. Once I felt ashamed while travelling in Germany, when a fellow German guy spoke to me in Sanskrit and I could neither understand nor reply.
Sanskrit is neither dead nor extinct language. Its an endangered language.
Sad thing is this that while Sanskrit is getting so much support from the Indian government multiple other endangered languages exist in India that do not... Sanskrit doesn't even need support it is already a religious language which will not allow it to die so it doesn't need so much help...
@@thephantomofyoutube7346 I have answer for your reply, but don't how say it. Never Mind.
@@divyanshtripathi2421 ohk
Don't worry, nothing to lose, it was never a language never will it be ever.
@@grid9124 Then what is it?
I am enjoying your videos. I'm so impressed the level of detail and comprehension. Keep up the amazing work. And could you please do a video on Hebrew?
Thank you for your support! Hebrew is super interesting, I will do a video on it for sure ☺️ are you a native speaker?
Hebrew is Serbian language, Jesus and Moses is Serbian, not Jewish
@@ivanakurc😂😂😂😂
@@mirnacudiczgela1963 sisaj kyrac mom keru
@@mirnacudiczgela1963 sisaj kyrac mom keru
Wow, really enjoyed and appreciated this talk, Thank you, Namas Julie.
Wow. As a knower of Sanskrit and it’s few descendant languages, you did a superb job in a short video. You are simply amazing in your presentation skills. Subscribed.
Wow Great Video..! I'm from India..now Studying Degree in Sanksrit Grammar..♥️
Great 👍
प्रकृष्ट! आम् संस्कृतं मधूरमं।।
What an amazing presentation on Sanskrit language, which obviously is a foreign one to you ! As an Indian myself I have got enlightened about our own language by a foreigner ! I had one year of Sanskrit as an additional language in high school , and unfortunately most of us hated it. May be because we found it to be too difficult. I wish we had better teachers who could explain various facets of this language. Julie, you are amazing and keep up the great work.
Great video, Julie! I really enjoyed it. However, I am certain that Sanskrit has eight cases, and not seven. The eight cases are: nominative, accusative, instrumental, dative, ablative, genitive, locative, vocative.
Yes Mr.Robert W., the last one Vocative is Called Sambhodana mwhich means calling,appealing or addressing ! for examople :-Hey Robert vada( d soft as in French) = Oh Robert speak!
@@subbanarasuarunachalam3451 isn't it should be "Hey Robertah,"?
This is so fascinating! I didn’t know any of this, only that Sanskrit was an ancient root language. But I learnt so much from you. Thank you so much. Sanskrit now I see how it is so interesting
I love how incredibly knowledgeable you are. Your knowledge and beauty are intertwined and at a very high level. I’m very impressed, you are amazing. I am a fan.
An interesting point about living languages needing to evolve. The reference to affixes made me wonder whether this was part of Zamenhof's inspiration for Esperanto?
Hi Julie! I read at some point, that -- while the formal grammar is much fixed -- the use of the grammar shifted from synthetic to analytic. So, one could consider it a language alive with a strong skeleton...
Thanks Julie you described Sanskrit in very easy way. Thanks a lot.
I can’t explain to you how much your UA-cam page means! Thank you so much for your research and anyone that helped you! I have learned copious, on your page alone. ❤🔥
2:19 I would just love to know the name of the song in the background! I hear the woman pouring her heart and soul into the music with her vocals; I don’t even need a translation to hear the cry of her spirit, great stuff! Shazam won’t tell me the name of the song. Pls help!!
I am a Bengali-speaking person from Bangladesh. Learning a language is my hobby. I love learning new languages. I am a multilingual Man. I can read, write, speak and understand Bangla, Hindi, Urdu, Malayalam, English, and Arabic. Now I have started to learn the Manipuri language. From Your videos, I got some basic knowledge about the language. Your explanations are very clear and helped me to learn a lot. Thanks for your nice videos.
Good video! My brother studied languages at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center in California. The pace of study was intense. Students had to master the language course in 36-64 weeks. Psychologically it was very difficult, but fortunately he was helped by Yuriy Ivantsiv's book "Polyglot Notes. Practical tips for learning foreign languages”. The book " Polyglot Notes" became a desk book for my brother, because it has answers to all the problems that any student of a foreign language has to face. Thanks to the author of the channel for this interesting video! Good luck to everyone who studies a foreign language and wants to realize their full potential!
Every Srilankan Buddhist Monk must learn Sanskrit language ,Sanskrit is one of major language in there schools. Your pronounce is very good. Major south asian languages like Hindi, Tamil, Sinhalese are borrow Sanskrit word
Wow. What a beautiful video. Nicely explained. Throughly enjoyed.
विद्या ददाति विनयं विनयात् याति पात्रताम्।
पात्रत्वाद्धनमाप्नोति धनाद्धर्मं ततः सुखम्॥
Very interesting and well presented, thank you
Sanskrit, when it comes to European languages, is most similar to Slavic languages, especially Serbian, both grammar and vocabulary.
I would think Lithuanian.
Yes correct ...Serbian is much more closer
Not really, Slavic languages don't have Sandhi or some agglutinative rules, like Sanskrit. Plus, they are phonologically smaller than Sanskrit( that is, they have a smaller set of phonemes).
Even if it is so, everything else is very similar, they obviously belong to the same language family and they are the most similar languages, both grammar and vocabularywise.
They all belonged to the Proto Indo-European language family. They have a common ancestor which is now lost in time or rather evolved into all the European, Indian and Iranian languages around today or extinct already.
Namaskaram
Julie ma'am,
your point about Sanskrit language were too much clear and the pronounciation as well.
Love from India 🇮🇳
And Now I am also learning Sanskrit.
Love the video, Julie! I came here after I saw you killing it at Ecolinguist channel 👍🏽
I hope you won't let these ultranationalists of a certain country bring you down because they don't agree with what you say I this video. TBH it's quite entertaining how they feel like they know better about a certain language than linguists, geneticists, archaeologists, and anthropologists from all around the world 😁 Greetings from Indonesia! 🇮🇩
Thank you! ☺️ Haha yeah true 😁
Wdym by that?
By ultranationalist do you mean Indonesia? Btw Sanskrit is an Indian language and we are proud of it..its a language of Indo-European family.
Keep learning Arabic boy it will come in handy
I love watching your videos, very informative and educational. Thank you. ❤❤❤
Very nice ma'am. Nice narration and pronunciation. Keep going great..
I'm living in tamilnadu.... And yes... Tamil and Sanskrit is the very most old languages in the world... Now u can google it and check "kizadi archeological research in Tamilnadu".... It is the new discovery in tamilnadu of india
Tamil word was Sanskrit word😊
@@krishnajaggarao4262 yep but Sanskrit loaned a lot of ancient Tamil words before medieval or modern Tamil loaned words from Sanskrit . Pls don't just say this one point everywhere.🙃
@@krishnajaggarao4262 there is no 'zha' sound in Sanskrit . Then how Tamizh was a Sanskrit word.. Don't talk like fool..
@@krishnajaggarao4262 Sanskrit never been born before...Birthless language now going to die...
insecured tamils lol plz check out sarswati river excavtion sanskrit easily predates ur entire existence
I'm studying sanskrit to chant mantra in my yoga classes and personal practice. My teacher Sharada taught that there are no swear words in sanskrit, it is a very pure language.
Beautiful. I know many of the Sanskrit words you had used in the presentation because my language Bangla has originated from Sanskrit. Thanks for your lovely presentation. You are a language expert!
Yep, নমস্কার^^
Thank you for the information, Julie!
Greeting from Brazil.
Thank you very much. I'm a student of Sanskrit language and read the Vedas in simple sanskrit translation. Thank you.
My language khasi has sanskrit/hindi words too. Around 310-410 words. The newer dictionaries contain less sanskrit words compared to older dictionaries.
Eg:) khalki in khasi means window. Nowadays it's an outdated term because we say 'jingkhangiit' now (jing=noun, Khang=close, ïit=glass)
Amazing video!
so happy you enjoyed it ☺️
You showing interest in Sanskrit
In our country some fools criticizing this language.
You really great
@Black Dragon Tamil has never faded, of course. It is still spoken.
Whereas Sanskrit has faded mostly in speech, but it's influence is everywhere in eastern Hemisphere.
They are not making fun of sanskrit, they are making fun of people sharing stupid facts on whatsApp like NASA hai said that sanskrit is best language for computer programming and more such bullshit facts..
This woman saying Aryan invasion as true and europians only brought sanskrit to india. You too supporting it 🤦🤦🤦
@Black Dragon Tamil is also not native to India, it was not even spoken some 7000yrs ago in India. Dravidians came from Africa 7000yrs ago to India, Indo-Europeans had been in Central Asia before Dravidians and just came to India later than Dravidians, 4500 to 5000yrs ago. The actual Indian languages are the Onge and Jarawa languages of Andaman, Dravidians slayed all the pre-existing populations of India even before Indo-Europeans, which is why there is very few of such languages. Sanskrit didn't kill Dravidian languages completely, just some loanwords here and there. Does Vietnamese shed about 70-80% of its sinitic loanwords, because of being an Austroasiatic language? Does Sanskrit shed the 300-500 words of Dravidian and Austroasiatic origin that it has? No. Only Tamils do, because Adam and Eve spoke Tamil and Tamil is an Aramaic dialect, according to you Pandis. Every Indian is proud of Dravidian as well as Sanskrit language.
If Aryans are still foreign to this land even after 5000yrs, then first send Dravidians or only Tamils back to Africa, you all look like Africans only and are mostly crypto-christians, so can easily mix. Then, speak about throwing all Aryans out of India into Central Asia and Tajikistan. Change begins from your home.
@@infinite5795 the most early indians gatherer hunters didn't bring civilisation while the tamil is the language of india's first civilisation-indus valley and even it was spoken in north india. Aryans appropriated the civilisation of tamils and imposed sanskrit. All temples were constructed by sudras who were descendents of indus valley civilisation. Even sanskrit has lots of dravidian influence while modern standard tamil has none. Tamil can exist without sanskrit while sanskrit can't exist without tamil.
Brilliant presentation. Thank you.
आत्मषट्कम्
॥ निर्वाण षटकम्॥
मनो बुद्ध्यहंकारचित्तानि नाहम् न च श्रोत्र जिह्वे न च घ्राण नेत्रे
न च व्योम भूमिर् न तेजॊ न वायु: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
न च प्राण संज्ञो न वै पञ्चवायु: न वा सप्तधातुर् न वा पञ्चकोश:
न वाक्पाणिपादौ न चोपस्थपायू चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
न मे द्वेष रागौ न मे लोभ मोहौ मदो नैव मे नैव मात्सर्य भाव:
न धर्मो न चार्थो न कामो ना मोक्ष: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
न पुण्यं न पापं न सौख्यं न दु:खम् न मन्त्रो न तीर्थं न वेदा: न यज्ञा:
अहं भोजनं नैव भोज्यं न भोक्ता चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
न मृत्युर् न शंका न मे जातिभेद: पिता नैव मे नैव माता न जन्म
न बन्धुर् न मित्रं गुरुर्नैव शिष्य: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
अहं निर्विकल्पॊ निराकार रूपॊ विभुत्वाच्च सर्वत्र सर्वेन्द्रियाणाम्
न चासंगतं नैव मुक्तिर् न मेय: चिदानन्द रूप: शिवोऽहम् शिवॊऽहम् ॥
I have learned somewhere that even Greek and Latin has many similarities with Samskritam.
I have studied Samskritam in my school days, now using only in my prayer recitations. But will re-start learning more deeply.
Thank you for your well researched content and showing Gaiea clip along-with. She sings so well in Samskrit.
Love from Bharat
It's also very similar to the Russian language, as I am learning more and more about the latter. :)
@@Jithinzzz.x no
@@Jithinzzz.x Sanskrit is oldest
@@Jithinzzz.x it's oldest and mother of languages . theoretical Sanskrit has infinite words . Sanskrit helped many languages in terms of vocabulary
@@Jithinzzz.x what's the proof that Prakrit is oldest ?
@@Jithinzzz.x no those languages took words from Sanskrit
I have studied sanskrit in my tenth grade it is very difficult language they asks to write sloaks in exam
I remember reading there was some sort of connection between the Irish language and Sanskrit. Have you any info on that? Great vids btw. x
That would be the indo european connection, they both descend from a common ancestor. The most straightfoward example are family words: irish máthair, fháthair, and bráthair compared to sanskrit mātr, pitr, bhratr. Latin mater pater frater, english mother father brother. Sound changes lead to these being different in different indo european languages that have undergone separate evolution
@@BreninCyhyr Irish is more similar to Latin than Sanskrit, linguistically sneaking.
@@infinite5795 Yes you're right, there was actually an Italo-Celtic branch that makes celtic and italic languages a little more closesly related that other indo european branches. Kind of like the balto slavic branch
Excellent presentation Julie. I am amazed by your perfect pronunciation. Keep up the good work!!
Great video! Very interesting history. 10:02 great cut of the eyes
Please Check Robert Caldwell's comparative grammar of dravidian languages.Two Culture's in India.
Tamil ( Mother of Dravidian Languages) and Aryan (Sanskrit). Tamil is the Oldest Language Not Sanskrit.
a jealous Tamil lol , sanskrit is oldest indian lang not tamil
@@lll2282Tamil and Sanskrit both are oldest.
I read sanskrit stotra daily, words ignite from inner core and that is beauty of reading and listening sanskrit
Sanskrit is so difficult. I need a good teacher to learn it.I m Indian and Sanskrit teachers in my school don't know Sanskrit properly.
hech vaande ahet Bharatiyanche
@@hellguardian11 Ha
I can teach you
Bcoz it is dead😋
@@yeswanthis.c3426 we'll bring it back. Btw, your name itself is in sanskrit.
Very interesting language design - I like the no exception and the very structured approach - Thank you for all your videos on languages!
Hi Julie, just found you. I'm looking forward to this because I'm really bad at langauges. GO Girl ;)
I wonder if she feels insulted by so many references to her beauty rather than comments about the content.
As always, a fantastic video. You are very competent. Congratulations for your excellent work!!! You are one of a kind. Thank you and God bless you!!
Thank you so much for your support! 🙏🏻
Best part of the video is 2:25 where you show the World map and it shows people moving out of India were Aryans not the west theory that Aryan stabilised India😂
Nice video.. I love how Sanskrit script (say that 5 times) places a horizontal bar above each letter. That way they attach to other well, and the whole thing conveys a natural physicality. Almost like the movement of monkeys swinging below a bar. Or ribbons dangling
Great intro to Sanskrit!
I’ve been wanting to learn Sanskrit my whole life.
I’m going to begin now.
what is your native language? Where are you from ? Also - pls do a video about Greek language :) ty
From Latvia ☺️ and yes, will do for sure 😁
Finally, a new video❤️ Love you so much! Your channel is AWESOME!
thank you! ☺️ I know, I take time with those videos, but my goal is to make more and more regularly. your support is helping a lot 🙏🏻
You can't apply same rule for Sanskrit as other languages. You can't say Sanskrit is not alive just because it doesn't changed over time. On the contrary the reason why Panini standardized Sanskrit is because he doesn't want it to be changed by the people.
But the very nature of languages is that they are mutable, just as theories need to allow falsifiability, otherwise it's dogma, not a theory.
Beautiful & informative, many thanks!
I have been watching your videos. So young, yet so bright and knowledgable about so many lanuages. I can only speak one language. And the videos are not even from her mother tongue judging from her accent. Truly impressed.
Just one note: in fact, Sanskrit has EIGHT cases; I hold that Vocative *is* a grammatical case.
And - well, it is india's Latin; although, if it has native speakers, then it *is,* essentially, more alive, than Latin is nowadays.
Its not latin . Its mother of all languages
Latin is the Sanskrit of the West. The mother of all the languages.
@@birjeshvishwkran179 There's no such thing as a "mother of all languages", this implies that the approx 7000 languages of the world all descend from a common ancestral language. But that is simply impossible, there's a reason why there are multiple language families, these languages are simply too different from each other linguistically to have a common ancestor, and one needs to explain how a single language would have proliferated so much in a time period when metal was not even discovered.
How are the New World Languages related to any Indo-European language?
To me, that was an important knowledge gap. THX. (Cool eyes you have, and what is behind them)
Thank you so much!
In this sanskrit video, the origin of words is from Tamil and just modified in sanskrit.
Tamil language is mush older.
Did you done any reasurch in tamil, if so please provide the link.
Sanskrit and tamil most older language in india not europ dhay crazy fool avery one
Very good and acceptable exposition. Thank you. Namaskaram from Bharat!
Accidently click on your video. thank you very much for the effort of making such a beautiful but non popular videos.