TABERQIT LANGUAGE, PEOPLE, & CULTURE
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- Опубліковано 26 чер 2024
- Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
Special Thanks to Tagrawla N yimazighen
www.mediafire.com/file/58km1p...
And this is the official page of a non-governmental, non-profit organization that oversees the preservation and standardization of Taberqit:
taberqit?ig...
Azul! Isem-iw ḏ Andy, Mak tellid?
Hello! My name is Andy. How are you?
Let's talk about the Taberqit language.
The Taberqit language, also known as Cyrenaican Tamazight or Jebalian, is an eastern Amazigh language facing the threat of extinction with only a few hundred speakers left in Cyrenaica. Efforts are being made to preserve this linguistically rich heritage. Taberqit retains certain phonetics from Proto-Berber, which are lost in other Amazigh variants. It shares similarities with other eastern Amazigh dialects such as Awjili and Siwi but is notable for its phonetic complexity.
The traditional clothing of the Berqian people reflects their rich cultural heritage and commitment to preserving their unique identity. Their attire's intricate designs, vibrant colors, and exquisite craftsmanship visually represent the deep-rooted connections between their clothing and culture, showcasing the Berqian community's collective history and Amazigh identity.
The people of Cyrenaica, who speak this dialect, maintain traditional Amazigh customs, including distinctive culinary practices with dishes like Couscous and Shakshouka. Despite a history of foreign invasions and cultural impositions, they have preserved a unique regional identity rooted in Amazigh heritage. Historically, the Amazigh language prevailed until the Arab conquests led to the gradual adoption of Arabic. Cultural practices include traditional Amazigh tattoos and clothing, notably the bernous.
This video is created for educational, language awareness, and language preservation purposes. It aims to provide valuable insights and knowledge to viewers, enhancing their understanding and appreciation of different languages and their unique characteristics. By raising awareness about linguistic diversity, the video seeks to foster a greater respect and recognition for various languages, particularly those that are endangered or underrepresented. Additionally, it contributes to the preservation of languages by documenting and sharing linguistic knowledge, thus ensuring that these languages and their cultural heritage are not lost to future generations.
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ⵜⴰⵏⵎⵉⵔⵜ ⴰⵟⵟⴰⵙ ⴰⵏⴷⵉ!! Thank you so much Andy!!🤍
ⵏⴽⴽ ⴰⴱⵔⵇⵉ ⵙⴳ ⵜⴰⵎⵓⵔⵜ ⵏ ⴱⵔⵇⵜ! ⴰⴷ ⵜⴷⴷⵔ ⵜⴰⴱⵔⵇⵉⵜ ⴷ ⴰⴽⴽ ⵢⵉⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵏ!🖤🤍ⵣ
I'm Berqian from Cyrenaica! Long Live Taberqit and all Imazighen! 🖤🤍ⵣ
what towns is this dialect spoken in? I can't find any information about it online. I didn't know there were still Imazighen in Cyrenaica but it's cool to know!
@@connormurphy683i'm a berber kabyle and never heard about them.
@@connormurphy683Currently, there are no cities or villages where Taberqit is spoken, only about 20 families speak it. Awjila and Siwa are frequently mentioned, but Taberqit is often overlooked by contemporary linguists who typically focus on villages and cities rather than scattered families. I understand their challenge; finding an Amazigh-speaking family among 20,000 non-Amazigh-speaking ones in a city is difficult. However, historians have noted and documented the presence of an Amazigh dialect and its speakers in northern Cyrenaica at least until the forced Arabisation attempts of the last century. I am proud to be one of the few who still speak this unique dialect, and I am committed to preserving, spreading, and raising awareness about it as much as possible!
@@tnymusic. Interesting. Perhaps Gaddafi's rule delayed efforts to study it like with the now extinct Sokna
@@tnymusic.
All my support for our Iberqiyn tawmat.
a Berber brother seɣ Souss (South Morocco)
ANOTHER AMAZIGH LANGUAGE! 🇱🇾
another amazigh dialect, there is only one Tamazight language with many dialects ( tabrqit , taqbaylit tarifit tazyanit tasousiit .....)
It's so similar to tachlhit of morocco . I can understand the text without any deficulty
Beautiful. This makes me interested in that Berber language spoken in Mauritania, Taznagt, as its also fighting for its survival there apperantly.
As a kabyle berber, i'm glad and amazed that we are not the only subgroup that pronounce V ,but this variety match with kabyle very much . 😮 ayuz atmaten negh.
Also you have the same "th" sound instead of "t".
@@Fallacia_Konstantinos we have them both man, but I understood you, yes they use th in the beginning of every female name...
For "beautiful", they say "asmeh" wich is the same word in berberic form used by people of Oued-Souf in Algeria located close from Lybia and Tunisia. Oued-Souf people speak arabic and claim to be from Yemeni descent, but as a berberic daily speaker (Kabylia), i have noticed that they use many berberic words in their dialect especially for plants, animals and locations.
Taberqit speakers are leaving their tongue and becoming arabic speakers, then they will forget their roots and claim to be from arabic descent. Same thing is currently happening in Algeria. I have some members of my family 100% kabyle who don't speak our tongue because they forgot it by living among arabic speakers. Each time arabic tongue meets berberic tongue, arabic remains and berberic disapears. Inferiority complex and assimilation to the majority. So sad.
Man! It's one of the closest dialects to Kabyle, as it shares words that you nearly only find in Kabyle, such as the sun, why ... It also seems very old in the pronunciation of some words. What is strange is that I havn't heard of this dialect before in lybia
Yes, they say "ittij" for sun as us kabylians.
For "sun", my tribe use both "ittij" and "tafukt" (ait Sliman's tribe from Tala Ifacene to Boukhlifa). Fun facts : Zinedine Zidane is also from this tribe. Fun fact 2 : I've met someone in Saudi Arabia who guessed by himself that I was a Slimani thanks to the very specific dialect that we speak in Tala Ifacène. He was also a Slimani but from the part of our tribe who is very close to Bejaia and speak as them; that's why I did not guess that we were cousins while he did.
Yes i'm really amazed and we never heard about this berber subgroup, very weird a tarwa.
Can you please compare three dialects of greenlandic languge🇬🇱🇬🇱🇬🇱🙏
no i wish greenland has become norse
Taberqit was the descendant language of the ancient Libyans; these Libyans were rivals to Ancient Egypt and often played a role in their politics, with some entering higher ranking positions after Egyptian power declined during the Bronze Age collapse. Another empire that used them was the Carthaginians, often as elite infantry against the Roman Republic. One Roman Emperor, Septimius Severus (Severus I), was believed to have been of Libyco-Berber stock, born in Roman Africa, going on to found the Severan dynasty (193-235).
This historical heritage must be conserved, alongside the conservation of Taberqit as a language!
Septimus Severus is generally blackwashed by the western media (BBC) to have a black man emperor of Rome.
As an Algerian I'm outraged, honestly.
Great information,would you tell me what is the difference between berber and lybian an numidian?
@@kamelboufenchouche8289 The term, 'Libyan' refers to the native Amazighs of modern-day Libya, who have a regional culture distinct from other Amazighs; a Berber is just another term for 'Amazigh'. Numidians were another Amazigh-Berber group from the surrounding areas of modern-day northern Algeria and were often used as mercenaries and levees in times of war; these Numidians founded the 'Mauro-Roman' kingdom after the downfall of Western Rome and then submitted themselves as vassals to the Eastern-Roman Empire under Justinian I, falling to the Arabs during the Islamic invasions in the late 600s and gradually becoming Arabised and converting to Islam.
It should also be noted that different sects of the Christian faith popped up in these Amazigh-Berber areas, such as the Adamites who went to services nude, the Gnostic Abelians who saw the God of the Old Testament to be distinct from the God of the New Testament and most vitally of all, the Donatists who opposed the readmission of Christians who caved in during the Great Persecution by the Roman Empire.
An amazi(gh)ng language!
So much similarities with Dahra berber (centre Algeria) also known as Tachelhit
Tachenwit
Please a video for Tacawit (Chawiya) an other Amazigh language
I need a volunteer. :)
Interesting alphabet
An infamous Northern African language.
Are Tabarqa people Izennagen or Izennaten ?
Because i am Kabyle wich i think we're Izennagen, I understood 70% of Taberqit
Could you make Iraqi Arabic and Persian?
The words to see, to think and some other verbs are used in Arabic dialect of Tunisia as well
Yedina language, culture and people, please
Request: Finnish and Mongolian?
Can You Do Oromo
Does this Berber have few similarities to Arabic, according to some people?
As a Kurd, I was always interested in Amazigh people and their family of languages. I hope they gain their independence and freedom someday.❤️
Independence from who?
@@Elias-tl2jzFrom the Arabs who came, as well as the English and Spaniards, they came to America and Australia, and exterminated and oppressed the indigenous peoples.
@@Elias-tl2jzArab states.
@@thedarkside102 what is arab ?🤔🤔🤔🤔
@@Elias-tl2jz
Who have an arabic identity.
ⵜⴰⵏⵎⵎⵉⵔⵜ 😍
IRISH ENGLISH. LANGUAGE. PEOPLE. AND CULTURE
This seems like Awjila. This video should be relabelled, neither scholars, their neighbors, or speakers of this language call it Taberqit.
This is the name adopted by the GRSTB Foundation for this dialect, as it is traditionally called Tajbalit. It is, in fact, an eastern Amazigh language and may resemble Awjila, but it differs from it. Unlike Awjila, Taberqit includes fricatives such as ṯ and ḏ. There are many other differences that distinguish it from Awjila, just as it is distinct from Siwi.
The text is a word-for-word Paradisi's first Awjili text (possibly via my PhD thesis or book) with all the Arabic loanwords taken out and the Annexed state reinstated.
@@PhDniX Awjila doesn't have a distinction between annexed and construct state?
I'ts amazing!!!ⴰⵢⵓⵣ,ⵜⴰⵏⴻⵎⵎⵉⵔⵜ