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I’m an Austrian and I have been learning Hindi for the past year. I understood all except for the Persian sentence and one or two words. I’m impressed how similar all those languages are
I am Gujarati and its not just the language but also culture is similar. Their favorite drink is Dug and here our favorite drink is Chass. Both mean buttermilk
I am an Iraqi and I understood most of the words in this video (khosh) (shetaranj) (dukan) (kharab) (keshmesh) (zaruri) (khared) (dava) . It is really similar to the Iraqi speech. It makes me astonished how much speech may be similar among different peoples and cultures.❤️
I don't know if you know it, there are different "language families" which can explain the many similarities between languages. Farsi (spoken in Iran) and Gujarati (and Hindi ..) all belong to the same Family, the Indo- Iranian Family, which is then also a Part of the bigger Indo-European Family. Check it out: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Iranian_languages en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages Here you can see other language families: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_family
Is Farsi and Parsi are same languages ? Parsi is the language spoken by Zoroastrian community (locally known as "parsi people") in India. I have heard parsi(personally), most words are inter-related with hindi. But when i hear Persian language in TV it appears very different. (May be because i hear in TV, not personally)
I'm a Marathi, Hindi and Gujarati speaker. And I understood all them Possibly because I know hindi. Marathi has more Sanskrit words but lot of Hindi words are now used in Marathi.
Hindi has many works from Persian. People rarely speak pure Hindi and after Mughal rule in India many words from Persian became part of everyday Hindi. Actually during Akbar and even after him Persian was one of the official languages in the Mughal court.
@@malikjibranliaqatawan7076 actually not. It's because the North Indian languages and Persian are part of the Indo-Iranian subgroup of the Indo-European language family. Words like garm(Persian) and garam(Indo-Aryan) are words that are native to each, not adopted. There are thousands of examples. The numbers are an obvious example of this. Yes, the Mughals did introduce Modern Persian vocabulary to the Indian languages but other than that their similarities are from their common origin.
Afshin Vlogs India 🇮🇳 doesn't have culture neither language . Before the British colonize them their official language was Farsi now they changed their language but still many of their words copied from Farsi language.
@@sayeedhusseinsadat3284 i guess that's what the Arabs say about the Persian language. When i lived in Saudi Arabia that was their opinion of Persian. And honestly it was hard to defend because of the copious amount of vocabulary that Persian has adopted from Arabic. I dont think that we can equate language and culture so deeply especially when languages adopt words only. Persian culture is sure not the same as Arabic culture yet there is a large percentage of words adopted from Arabic. But these are just words. The same goes for the Persian words that came into Indian languages. English is a highly Latinized language regarding academic terminology etc compared to other Germanic languages but still remains a Germanic language. The culture of England is by no means synonymous with the the cultures of Latin's modern day descendants. My point is that let's not jump to conclusions about cultural heritage etc because no culture has been intact 100%. That's just an illusion.
Salam. I am Tajik (one of Persian languages) and I could understand 95 % of the words above. The reason is we all were one nation- Ariyan. 3500 yaers ago Ariyan divided into 2: Persians and Indians. Then, these languages also subdivided into several languages like Tajik, Pashtu, Balochi, Kurd and Urdu, Punjabi, Gujarati. So our languages are almost the same!🇹🇯🇮🇷🇦🇫🇵🇰🇮🇳
last week a couple visited my house, the guy is from gujarat and the girl is from Iran they just got married few weeks ago I show them some of your videos and she was surprised even I was when I found this channel ,good job 👍
@sai teja the name Iran is derived from Arya. So how is it that you oppose an Indian marrying an Iranian. Old Persian, Avestan and Sanskrit are like dialects of the same language. Maybe you need to do some soul searching lol.
as a Bengali speaker, I know all the words. I wonder how many of these words have a Sanskritic origin.... I wanna explore the Indo European and Iranian connection.
shamik chakraborty none these are words of middle eastern origin none of these have Sanskrit origin infact Sanskrit dominated languages are found mostly inside india that too because of most people being hindu for example urdu have less then 8% Sanskrit origin words since it was founded and used by muslims only in it's early days now it's used by most of north indians and these days it goes by the name of hindi which is it's corrupted version
some do have sanskritic origin. garam(hot) can be traced to sanskrit gharma(sun) and probably a similar indo-aryan term in avestan. In the end, sanskrit and old-persian and avestan did have a one common indo-iranian ancestor.
Neel घर्म 'gharma' means 'sun' in Sanskrit, that's how 'sun' became 'ghaam' in Nepali and 'kham' in Romani. Gharma and garam are cognates, because Sanskrit and Persian share a common ancestor. 'sun' is associated with 'heat'.
I live in Punjab pakistan I'm Balochi natively Speak siraki Punjabi urdu/Hindi Farsi kashmiri and understand Arabic gujraiti Pashto too Learning Spanish Portuguese French and Italian (Romance language)
@@أحمد-ث4ه4د Quite contrary to popular perception, Persian is actually Indo European language. It's from Indo Iranian branch of the Indo European language family.
@@kumarnavneet8968 As are Kurdish, Pashto, Avestan, Tajik, and Ossetian. The Indo-Iranian branch split off from Proto-Indo-European, then the Indo- and Iranian parts split again. At the time of that split, the Indo- part was represented by Sanskrit/Prakrits. The modern languages of India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh derived from Prakrits, which was the colloquial, spoken version of Sanskrit. In this respect, the Indian subcontinent paralleled the Roman Empire, where classical Latin was used for state and religion, while the people spoke something called Vulgar Latin, which evolved into the Romance languages of today. Today's Romance languages have about the same degree of mutual intelligibility as modern Indo-Iranian languages do, and even more so in writing, because they all use the same alphabet.
down south India it's interesting...Tamil is as old as Sanskrit and has no relation to Sanskrit and another language called Malayalam is mixture of Tamil and Sansrit brought down by Indo-Aryan speakers.
The Farsi community in India is perhaps the connection between Gujarati and Persian. They follow Zoroastrianism. Infact many distinguished personalities in India are from this community.
Many Persians have come to India much before the zoroastrians. Faris is considered to be closer to Sanskrit than to Arabic. Arabic is a semitic language, closer to Hebrew.
I speak Marathi, a language very closely related to both the Gujarati and the Persian language. So I could understand each word. I was really astonished to find this much similarities between Persian and Indian languages. Also, the effort you took to figure out the similar words is really worth appreciating. 🙏🙏🙏
OMG I am Gujarati bt I never knew there were so many similarities between Gujarati nd Persian language.. Amazing video..these kind of video motivates me to learn new language 🙌👍
Hi Bahador, I don't know whether you knew about this fact or not that Farsi was the official language of Delhi Sultanate and after that of Mughal empire. Due to this factor, north Indian languages( Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali etc) have many words that are the Farsi origin. Even some foods and rituals have common ancestors lying in the indo parsi regions.
Persian to Hindi the meaning goes this way the language isn't same instead mixed up during persian mughal or arab invasion.. Barf (persian) - him (Hindi) Khush (Persian) - Prasanna (Hindi) Aaram Persian - Bishram Hindi Satranj Persian - Juwa Hindi Bazaar Persian - Haatt Kharaab - Kismis - Shikar - Aakhet Jaruri - Aawashyak Dawa - Ausadhi Kharid - kraya Nafrat - ghrina Khurak - Khadhya Bimar - Aswasth Kabootar - parinda Darwaja - Dwar Even Persians they don't have typical words due to arab invasion the language is totally mixed up of Arabic loan words and parsee is impure mixed-up hybrid language even their own script is now extict and people of persia present Iran they don't have persian ethnic names instead they have Arabic ethnic names
This was fun to listen to. Back in medical school my flatmate was Persian, and I am Gujarati. The similarities were very clear after about a week of living with another. Thank you for uploading this.
I think my mother tongue Marathi is believed to have 30% words from Persian. However, it's also believed that the roots of all those words again go back to Sanskrit.. An example is shataranj - the Sanskrit word is Chaturang. Though today we call it "Buddhibal" which sounds more Sanskrit based than Shataranj, which sounds more Persian. Another example is Santoor - the original Sanskrit word is Shatatantri (an instrument of 100 strings). But we all believe that this word has come from a middle Eastern influence.
@@sid-pd2nb no, they are cognates. Search it up. They went through different sound changes. They diverged from their common ancestor language proto indo iranian.
Aww..m Gujarati.. N I was thinking to suggest u abt this Gujarati n Farsi challange... N see.. U come up with this video.. M so happy.. Thank u so much 🤗🤗
Actually 'INDO' and 'Aryan' both same ....Indo is the English version of the word 'HINDU' and "Aryan" is a South-Indian originated word...Some peoples give theory that the 'Iranian' also an English version of the word Aryan....
Most of these words are very recent adoptions from Persian during Mughal rule which is why they sound almost the same. "shatranj" is an Arabic word from the original Sanskrit word "chaturanga" who invented the game and Persian word "chatrang" who probably refined it. Others like "darwaza" have Sanskrit cognates like "dvaar" but North Indian speakers use the Persian word in common speech. A lot of Hindu nationalists want to get rid of the Persian influence from Hindi, but does it really make a big difference if the words are from your mother's sister (Old Iranian) instead of your mother (Sanskrit)?
Fair enough, but I think they're still Persian words, corrupted as they might be. In any case, should be more scared of english ruining hindi right now than persian or arabic.
Im Iranian and have had a DNA test,im 5 percent Gujarati:) i watch this episode differently,wanted to see how is the language and im going to know about it morr :)
DNA tests work in an idiotic way. In India Gujaratis, Sindhis and Punjabis have mixed Persian/Macedonian DNA thats why your criteria falls under Gujarati because many Gujaratis have taken this test in US. It's same like Eastern African places like Kenya have Chinese DNA mixed because Chinese voyagers settled and mingled. But genome scientists came up with a theory that all Chinese were black Africans back in time.
That makes sense allot of Persians mixed in the Mughal empire etc also that state holds the highest percentage of Indian Parsi Persian who are Zoroastrian who settled in India 1000s of years ago
in Arabic we use شطرنج shatranj for chess دكان dukkan for shop or store خراب kharab for ruin or destruction كشمش keshmesh for raspberry (sometimes) ضروري dharuri for necessary or indispensable دواء dawa' for medication or medicament نفرة nefra or نفور nofour for dislike or aversion I really liked your videos.. Bravo
Yassine يــاسيــن I am a Hindi and Telugu speaker. Telugu is not similar to Arabic at all, but Hindi is very similar and this was not brought to my awareness until my Arabic Egyptian friends told me to teach them Hindi. It seems like we both use the word khursi for chair. I thought it was only a Hindi word. Cool!
Keep up the good work, it is fascinating to know how much in common certain languages have with each other, your project also clears up historical connection about certain nations.
@P G dravidians were from south india not north. And north indians and Iranians have very less genetic difference. This girl in the video was not from north but western India(gujrat). But I know a lot people with light skin tone from gujrat.
İm from Azerbaijan and my nationality is Tat .Our language Tati same as a Persian also actually Persian is a root of our language.What a nice video Gujarati language is an part of the Persian language.💖💖💖💖👏👏👏👍👍👍
So far, as a language lover, I would say, the most amazing video on youtube I have seen. This is what I always look for in Indo European languages. Thanks Bahador..
Wow. I could never have thought gujrati and persian were soooo similar. I knew urdu had a lot of persian. All these words mean the same in urdu and they are pronounced exactly like persian as well.
@@sustainableliving6319 Hindi is a fake language created in the 20th century. Its Sanskritized Urdu/Hindustani, while Urdu is a creole formed from the mixing of Arab/Persian and Braj Bhasha!
Both cultures worship the Sun.. but Hindus go beyond the sun and were aware of numerous universes. Zoroastrians came to India in 16th century, landed in Gujarat, and promised the king there that they'll never cause trouble. Rather will contribute to the society. Undoubtedly, they've been doing that since then. They're genuinely peaceful and courageous, positive people.
There is a reason how meanings changed, in a distant past Indians and Persians must have been actively involved in a battle field: Gods for Indians became demons for Persians. The way it happened in the case of Sri Lanka, Ravana is still praised as God over there, but in India he is a demon.
SnehRaj Sinh Jadeja And Jadeja & junejas all have Sindhi Rajput ancestry. Do you know that bro?They have came long ago from Sindh to Gujarat. Even before partition 👍 Now Sindh is a part of Pakistan.
As a native Gujarati speaker, I'm surprised at how much our language has been influenced by Farsi. I wonder if linguistic similarity means we have common genetic ancestry as well. I never realized the extent of Farsi loanwords we use so commonly without even realizing. Keep up the good work guys!
Yes, there is a fairly close genetic ancestry between Persians and most Indians, by most Indians, I mean the Indians who are considered as Indo-Aryan. Indo-Aryan people include most Most Indians who are not south Indian.
@@Sid6927 I actually took an ancestry test and got J2 which may have its roots in the Zagros mountain range in Iran. So yup. You're right! Maybe @BahodorAlast and I could be long lost brothers. ;P
@@sidharth1123 Yes, You (and I) are long lost relatives of @BahodorAlast separated by only a few ten thousand years of migration and settlement. Fun fact we're also considered as Caucasians. As our ancestors used to live in the Caucasus mountains who then migrated into Europe and Asia, meaning that most Indians (Indo-Aryans) are genetically closer to Europeans than south Indians. this fact also applies to languages.( I'm also Gujarati by the way.)
After the fall of of Sassanid capital Ctesiphon(today's Baghdad) in 637 AD many Persians left their homeland and took refuge in Gujarat to save them from conversion to Islam and they got mixed with local people adopted the local culture and language so both language influenced by each other .
خیلی جالبه. من کورد هستم و ۲ ماه است که زبان فارسی را یاد می گیرم. بخاطر آن هنوز بلد نیستم.اما وقتی یاد میگیرم خیلی تعجب میکنم که زبان فارسی و کوردی بسیار شبیه همدیگرند.الآن باز تعجب کردم چون دیدم که کلمه های که از آنها استفاده می کنیم در جغرافیای وسیعی هم به کار می شوند. ببخشید شاید این نوشته را اشتباه نوشتم. موفق باشید بهادرجان.شمارا دوست داریم. Kurdî Warm-Hot=Garm(گرم) Snow=Barf(برف) Calm=Aram(آرام) Good=Xwaş(خوش) Store=Dkan(دکان) Bad=Kharab(خراب) Raisin=Kishkishk/mewiž Buy=Krîn(کرین) Food=Khwarn(خوارن) Fly=Frin-Prîn(پرین/فرین) Piegon=Kavok(کووک) Chess=Satranc(سترنج) Medicine=Davā/Derman Hate=Nafrat(نفرت) Soft=Narm(نرم) He closed the door=Derî āsé kir
Persian to Hindi the meaning goes this way the language isn't same instead mixed up during persian mughal or arab invasion.. Barf (persian) - him (Hindi) Khush (Persian) - Prasanna (Hindi) Aaram Persian - Bishram Hindi Satranj Persian - Juwa Hindi Bazaar Persian - Haatt Kharaab - Kismis - Shikar - Aakhet Jaruri - Aawashyak Dawa - Ausadhi Kharid - kraya Nafrat - ghrina Khurak - Khadhya Bimar - Aswasth Kabootar - parinda Darwaja - Dwar Even Persians they don't have typical words due to arab invasion the language is totally mixed up of Arabic loan words and parsee is impure mixed-up hybrid language even their own script is now extict and people of persia present Iran they don't have persian ethnic names instead they have Arabic ethnic names
@@atheistatheist8116 wtf these are mostly Sanskritised.. we speak modern Hindi in.. and Persian people are speak pure Persian language it's mixture of Turks and arabic.ok.
This one would probably be difficult, but it'd be really cool to do Ossetian vs Persian. Ossetian is related to the language the Scythians spoke, I believe. It'd be neat to see what it has in common, if anything, with other Iranian languages. Might be difficult to find someone that speaks it though.
@@goldenmemes51 Scythians are Iranic peoples from CENTRAL ASIA & the CAUCASUS- not south Asia. Scythians did conquer some parts of India but that doesn't mean Indians are Scythians. Far from it.
I am Gujarati but I never know that Persian is very Similar to Gujarati. I was happy after hear same language from another accent. Really very Nice Video.
Well India has two type of language base. North Indian, west and east almost based on indo-aryan languages but south Indian languages are dravidian languages.
@manjitrupbikram: I and my Assamese friend found many similarities in Assamese and Marathi. @pooja nadagauda: The Aryan/Dravidian divide is a myth nurtured for political interests. Do surf the internet for such resources. We were taught otherwise in school, and that was a part of cultural subversion. Do see Yuri Bezmenov's videos on UA-cam.
@@mugdhanbapat There is a clear linguistic and cultural divide between the north and the south, which is supported by archaeological excavations in Keeladi in Tamil Nadu, which is as old as the Harappan civilization.
@@mugdhanbapat But if you dig deep, the Aryan/Dravidian theory does seem true. From physical features to culture to languages. Similarities between groups of people.
oh you must know Gujarat Gandhiji, Sardar Patel, Morarji Desai Ex-PM and MODIJI is present PM from Gujarat. All Patels have captured Motels, Gas Station business 70% in USA.
Gujarati, Bhojpuri, Bihari, Punjabi, Haryanvi, Marathi, Hindi, Sanskrit in all these languages Bahador means brave. How do I know? I speak all of them.
For 800 years the state language in India was Persian. That's why most Indian languages have a LOT of loan words from Persian. Historically, Iran has had a massive cultural influence on India. In fact, outside of Iran, India has the most number of Persian manuscripts.
@Ęxtřəmé Hűñteŕ No, I actually do come from a Muslim family but I am not Muslim and I don't follow any religion. However, Zoroastrianism is a part of our Iranian culture, almost every Iranian, regardless of their religion, has Zoroastrian elements embedded into their culture and identity.
These words came with parsi community (zoroastrians) to gujarati. Some words like shatranj (chaturang) are from sanskrit which travelled to persia from north india via silk route.
Lol! The Parsis couldn't preserve their language , yet passed on many words from Persian? All these words came into Gujarati via Mughal Farsi and Urdu.
@@hameed9653 Persian is relatively new language and Sanskrit is older but Avestan an ancestor of old Persian has some similarities with Sanskrit. both are Proto-Indo-European languages.
@@2441139knakmg yes actually i am nepali and can understand bengali like 40-50% .... in short it is said in Nepal that the only closest language similiar to nepali above hindi and sanskrit is bengali so ya
4:50 It would be “Jarori” in Hindi too. But it would be “Zarori” in Urdu, because Urdu uses Persian influence as its core and the letter “Z” exists while Hindi has primary Sanskrit influence and lacks the letter “Z”
Ponga Pandit “Nuqta” is an Arabic word. These changes were made after Persian became the language of court under Mughal rule. The Hindi we hear now is not pure Hindi, in pure Hindi “Z” would not exist.
Ponga Pandit I disagree, there is a “Pure Hindi” if you hear a speech given in the U.N. by an Indian, that’s pure Hindi. That’s the Hindi an Urdu speaking person would have immense trouble understanding, if you showed a Hindi speaking person pure Urdu, they too would have trouble understanding. Hindi didn’t have the letter Z or the glyph for it until the Persian vocabulary was baked into Hindi. After Persian vocab became large in Hindi it naturally gained the Z glyph (Just to clarify: in no way am I saying Modern Hindi is bad or worse than pure Hindi, it sounds beautiful just stating that if it wasn’t for the large Persian vocab, Hindi would never have had the Z glyph)
-/:; -/:; no offense but the word Hindi by itself is a persian word comming from Hindustan meaning the land by the river sindh which our ancestors called the subcontinent. So by default india and hindi are exonyms which indicates that theyre not pure.
Ponga Pandit Why this inquisition(purge) against persian loanwords and culture then? Indopersian culture was probably the pinnacle of indian civilization think of the music sitar, santour and alle the poetry. Btw. we iranians were also heavily influenced by the subcontinent you gave us numbers, maths, geometry and many more and were not ashamed of this nor are we trying to hide anything.
neither urdu nor hindi is pure.they are just mixture of words influenced by sanskrit ,persian,turkish but differ in magnitude of influence of sanskrit and other languages.basic grammar and sentence formation is the same.
Ok, I don't mean to sound like a creepy guy here but the videos with Mahtab are my favorite... I mean she's so pretty and yet sweet and nice at the same time! Soon as I see her in the thumbnails I am just like, hold up!! gotta stop everything in life and click so I can watch and hear her speak.
Haha nice video. When Bro Bahador said "bazaar", it is interesting because we are Indonesians use "Bazaar" or "Bazar" for a temporary market, it is like market that hold for charity and we use "Pasar" for market. But for store it is "Toko", so different haha. Also we use "Kismis" for raisin. In Gujarati "Zarura" and Farsi "Zaruri" for urgent and in Indonesia it is "Darurat". "Garam" means salt here, totally different :) The girls, Richa and Mahtab looked enjoying the game, nice. Good job Bro Bahador. Salam. Hope you always have a good day.
Hh Ii I don't know how common is the "Pasar" word, but yeah interesting. And now I know that "Pasar" is a loanword from Farsi "Bazar" and have the same meaning. Nice.
Ana Sawitri I am not sure, because I read that "Toko" is a loanword from Chinese, maybe Hakka or Hokkien. But it's ok, I mean many loanwords in Bahasa Indonesia are from Dutch also.
In Indonesia people use bazaar for pop up events because the goods sold are not normal garden variety stuff (vases, electronics, beads etc) pasar is more the meat and veg market
Many Indian languages besides Urdu/Hindi have a strong relation with Persian. Gujarathi, Punjabi, Marathi have so many words borrowed from Persian that people who speak the languages won't know that this word came from another language. It's a mystery as to why the words are pronounced differently in Iran and in India. e.g. hot is germ in Iran but garm in India. Also, Persian is an Indo-European language. So other Indo-European languages of India find it easy to accept Persian words. It's truly fascinating to see how words travel. Thanks!
Hot isn’t germ in Persian. That word is pronounced “garm” here in Tehran. Persian is my mother tongue. And I don’t believe Sanskrit is the mother of Iranian languages. Have this link: www.quora.com/Is-Sanskrit-the-mother-of-all-languages-My-friend-says-that-“stan”-is-a-Sanskrit-word-and-the-Pakistan-Uzbekistan-and-others-are-using-a-Sanskrit-word-My-argument-is-that-“stan”-is-a-Persian-word-and-Vedic-Indians-never-called-our-land-Hindustan
A lot of contributions to world culture and language came from the Indian lands. Eg) some influences are seen Persian culture. Also in Europe. Thank you India 🙏🏼
Srsly?Persian went to india after we conquered their land and made their main language Persian we made their royal family and government to learn and use Persian language so basically ppl had to learn the language to live in India that's how they use Persian words
As much as I love India, but the influence mostly went from Persia to India. India was part of Persian Cosmopolis from around 13th to 19th centuries. Persian was the language of governments and elites across all of Indian subcontinent. India did influence Eastern Iranian lands in Central Asia in antiquity to an extent that they basically became continuation of India, but all of that was swept by Islam.
@@nimkati5627 In antiquity exactly. Im my humble opinion, I wouldn’t say its been wiped/swept by islam. The language and structures speak for itself. He should do an Avestan and Sanskrit video.
Great Video !! This is very interesting and very innovative approach. I would request you to make similar videos comparing with South Indian (Dravidian) languages like Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu Konkani etc.. I know that they will have very very much less in common with Persian. But who knows.. when you do actual practical comparison you may discover interesting thing.. (Because i didn't think that Gujarati had so much common)... Again kudos for nice work.
Brother, I have nothing but utmost respect for what you have done on this channel and continue to do, if your able to find speakers of distant language groups that have plenty in common it would be a lot more interesting, the word Baraf for example (the exact way its pronounced in Gujarati) spans across the Cushitic language group in Somali and Oromo. This is just a simple example as I'm sure you know.
awesome!😊 being a Gujarati i can say all Persian words similar to Gujarati words is because of our beloved zarathoshti ( Parsi) people and some what influenced by mughals too.
there is a district in ilam( a city in iran) called "chalimar" and it is believed that its people came from india centuries ago! it is interesting to know that there is a city near new dehli called "shalimar".
My self Aamir from Gujarat,india- I m living in Dubai Hello Bahador brother....I love to watch your vedio bcz it's very nicely and easy way to learn and know similarities between two language It's just like getting language knowledge with fun
hahaha bahador jan this time was really fun, both of them easily understand each other it seems we can go there and just speak persian :-D and everyone understand
A lot of the Gujarati words were actually borrowed into the language from Persian. The two languages are undoubtedly related, being something akin to second cousins, though
This is my personal opinion..But i think Richa does not know Gujarati properly.. Here's y. She is just saying ya ya.. Without knowing wt Bahador is asking. 1:30 He is saying we (Persian) use 'Kha'.n she is saying ya..'Ka'.. No girl.. In Gujarati. it is also 'Kha'.. So..Khush not kosh in Gujarati.. It's kh not k.. We gujartis do use 'Kha' K = ક - neither (kosh કોશ) ❌ nor khosh ખોશ) Kh = ખ - ખુશ ✔ (khush) 2:55 we gujaratis do not use bazaar..It's not Gujarati word actually.. We use Bajaar (બજાર) (It's J not G) (J for Japan) N we do not use Bajaar for shop..We use it for the whole market. 3:05 again the same.. Kharab - ખરાબ ✔ Karab - કરાબ ❌ Richa plz understand wt she is saying..(i guess u replace all the 'Kha' with 'K' ..NO..NO..NO.. We have both the letters in our Alphabet.. 3:28 Raisin..Yes we sometimes use it.. Kishmish.. But it's not the proper Gujarati word. The proper n actual Gujarati word is Daraakh - દરાખ Draaksh - દ્રાક્ષ 5:15 Kharido - ખરીદો ✔ Karido - કરીદો ❌ (Kharido is lyk a command, nt a verb) To buy = kharidvu = ખરીદવું (this is verb) Noun = kharid/kharidi= ખરીદ/ખરીદી 6:04 khoraak - ખોરાક ✔ Khorak - કોરાક ❌ 8:01 Band = બંદ ❌ Bandh = બંધ ✔ Plz don't get offended.. But i thought I should draw ur attention to sme points .. So dat the other people know abt Gujarati. Thank you..🤗 Love form Gujarat India..🤗
I am a native Arabic speaker, I learned English since childhood and a few years ago I learned persian, one day, I segnified that when my family watch indian movies, a lot of words are familiar with my ear. later I searched about this thing and I knew that indian and persian words have the same origin.
We use the word (خوش) a lot in the Northern Najdi dialect in Saudi Arabia which means (excellent), and sometimes sarcastically when something doesn't go the way we want it. خوش video.
Because Northern Nejd has strong tie with Baghdad in the old days due learning Hanbali mathahab which originated in there and Baghdad's dialect no doubly influenced your dialect.
@Anu Arjun you must be a miserable person in life. Those words are not indoiranian they are Arabic. As matter of fact most of your own language is borrowed from Arabic. Godbless Afrosiatic language. Now go take ur depression pills. Your people have borrowed the language of my ancestors Al-Ariba, yes the pure Arabs. When I use your indo language then you can reply.
hodan a He’s being very rude just ignore him. But those words are derived from Indo-Iranian languages and since Persian and Arabic share some similarities it seems they’re Arabic but, they’re not. Only Urdu uses Arabic word in the South Asia other languages don’t have any direct or indirect influence of Arabic. Please ignore that idiot. And have a good day ahead :)
Kenyan I am Swahili speaker,some words similar too. Like baraf in Swahili is barafu-ice,duka-shop, zaruri in Swahili we pronounce dharura- urgent/emergency, Dava in Swahili is dawa- medicine.
Been watching a few of these episodes now, and I deduce that the Indo-Iranian languages are incredibly similar. What is not clear from these language tests, however, is how mutually intelligible they are in day-to-day conversation.
Most of the words are similar because Urdu is developed from Persian and Urdu is synonymous with Hindi except few words... however she's not actually speaking Gujrati but hindi words which might be used with Gujrati...
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Please make somali and Arabic
Do Nepali and Persian. Same root Indo-Iranian branch.
Mahtab is my crash, i wish i could marry her. Shooo cuuute. Little strawberry baby
What is mahtabs fb id, or insta, twitter . What is her full name? Please give me
آقا بهادر شما فوق العاده ای. واقعا از زحماتت برای توسعه دوستی بین اقوام ممنونم.
Hii, im a Indian girl with a name Persis(which meant Persian women) so im glad to see an Indian and a Persian women😍😍😍😍
@Mello Grdd So what 's your native language/what state do you live in bro?
@Mello Grdd So what do your parents speak with you?
@Mello Grdd Ahh, thanks man, very interesting.
@Mello Grdd Are you Irani or Parsi? When you say "late Mughal period", do you mean the Shia Safavid era in Iran?
What's a beautyfull name.ur name is very beautiful and in the future I may name my daughter PERSIS
I’m an Austrian and I have been learning Hindi for the past year. I understood all except for the Persian sentence and one or two words. I’m impressed how similar all those languages are
But actually it's Gujrati not Hindi
All of these are words taken from Arabic and Persian due to which Indian languages have an influence.
@@GT-ne1wu from where did you get the info that sanskrit is the mother of all languages brother?
Most of these words are same in Hindi. They didn't go through any words which are exclusive to Gujarati
@@chan625 could you give few examples?
I am Gujarati and its not just the language but also culture is similar. Their favorite drink is Dug and here our favorite drink is Chass. Both mean buttermilk
વાહ ઉદય ભાઈ
@Jagga Daku search it up yourself Sherlock
A gujrati rathod lol
@@dr.shubhamchaudhari8008 yes rajputs are everywhere in North India
@@dr.shubhamchaudhari8008 Rathod and Chauhan are Gujarati Rajput Clans. Rajasthan and Gujarat together was called Gujaratra.
Here's a testimony to our shared cultures! 🇮🇳🇮🇷
Yeah US can't sanction us to seperate our unique culture
Aryan race ❤
Kurdish India ✌️✌️😊😊
@@mehmetcan2060 love u guys😊😍
No it isn't.
I am an Iraqi and I understood most of the words in this video (khosh) (shetaranj) (dukan) (kharab) (keshmesh) (zaruri) (khared) (dava) . It is really similar to the Iraqi speech. It makes me astonished how much speech may be similar among different peoples and cultures.❤️
bro you like this iraqi guy in the profile picture his name is haider
I don't know if you know it, there are different "language families" which can explain the many similarities between languages.
Farsi (spoken in Iran) and Gujarati (and Hindi ..) all belong to the same Family, the Indo- Iranian Family, which is then also a Part of the bigger Indo-European Family.
Check it out: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Iranian_languages
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages
Here you can see other language families: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_family
Hans Meiser
Yes iranian is Aryan
And indo european✌️🏻💪🏻❤️
Mother = mathar
Brother = brathar
Father = pethar
In German:
Mother = Mutter
Brother = Bruder
Father = Vater
Is Farsi and Parsi are same languages ? Parsi is the language spoken by Zoroastrian community (locally known as "parsi people") in India. I have heard parsi(personally), most words are inter-related with hindi. But when i hear Persian language in TV it appears very different. (May be because i hear in TV, not personally)
I'm a Marathi, Hindi and Gujarati speaker. And I understood all them
Possibly because I know hindi.
Marathi has more Sanskrit words but lot of Hindi words are now used in Marathi.
BigBurner I am Gujarati but I lived in Nasik
Marathi is from Prakrit predominantly .... Not Sanskrit .... Rashtrakutas played a greater role in developing Marathi.
Hi bhava
Hindi has many works from Persian. People rarely speak pure Hindi and after Mughal rule in India many words from Persian became part of everyday Hindi. Actually during Akbar and even after him Persian was one of the official languages in the Mughal court.
I love Hindi
Amazing guys, i have many Indian friends in Dubai and when they start to speak, many words is same with Farsi.
Its because of the Muslim rulers who ruled over india as for example Mughls speaks Farsi thats why words sound same
@@malikjibranliaqatawan7076 no its because farsi And Hindustani Are in the same language Family
@@malikjibranliaqatawan7076 actually not. It's because the North Indian languages and Persian are part of the Indo-Iranian subgroup of the Indo-European language family. Words like garm(Persian) and garam(Indo-Aryan) are words that are native to each, not adopted. There are thousands of examples. The numbers are an obvious example of this. Yes, the Mughals did introduce Modern Persian vocabulary to the Indian languages but other than that their similarities are from their common origin.
Afshin Vlogs India 🇮🇳 doesn't have culture neither language . Before the British colonize them their official language was Farsi now they changed their language but still many of their words copied from Farsi language.
@@sayeedhusseinsadat3284 i guess that's what the Arabs say about the Persian language. When i lived in Saudi Arabia that was their opinion of Persian. And honestly it was hard to defend because of the copious amount of vocabulary that Persian has adopted from Arabic. I dont think that we can equate language and culture so deeply especially when languages adopt words only. Persian culture is sure not the same as Arabic culture yet there is a large percentage of words adopted from Arabic. But these are just words. The same goes for the Persian words that came into Indian languages. English is a highly Latinized language regarding academic terminology etc compared to other Germanic languages but still remains a Germanic language. The culture of England is by no means synonymous with the the cultures of Latin's modern day descendants. My point is that let's not jump to conclusions about cultural heritage etc because no culture has been intact 100%. That's just an illusion.
Salam. I am Tajik (one of Persian languages) and I could understand 95 % of the words above.
The reason is we all were one nation- Ariyan.
3500 yaers ago Ariyan divided into 2: Persians and Indians.
Then, these languages also subdivided into several languages like Tajik, Pashtu, Balochi, Kurd and Urdu, Punjabi, Gujarati.
So our languages are almost the same!🇹🇯🇮🇷🇦🇫🇵🇰🇮🇳
I am from India love you Aryan brother
Sanskrit & Tamil are older language than Persian....
last week a couple visited my house, the guy is from gujarat and the girl is from Iran they just got married few weeks ago I show them some of your videos and she was surprised even I was when I found this channel ,good job 👍
Awesome!! :)
Darji Utsav tu gujrat ma rey chhe
@sai teja why ?
sai teja Lmao it’s a long Gujarati tradition to Marry Iranians look up parsi you will have a heart attack
@sai teja the name Iran is derived from Arya. So how is it that you oppose an Indian marrying an Iranian. Old Persian, Avestan and Sanskrit are like dialects of the same language. Maybe you need to do some soul searching lol.
as a Bengali speaker,
I know all the words.
I wonder how many of these words have a Sanskritic origin....
I wanna explore the Indo European and Iranian connection.
shamik chakraborty none these are words of middle eastern origin none of these have Sanskrit origin infact Sanskrit dominated languages are found mostly inside india that too because of most people being hindu for example urdu have less then 8% Sanskrit origin words since it was founded and used by muslims only in it's early days now it's used by most of north indians and these days it goes by the name of hindi which is it's corrupted version
some do have sanskritic origin. garam(hot) can be traced to sanskrit gharma(sun) and probably a similar indo-aryan term in avestan. In the end, sanskrit and old-persian and avestan did have a one common indo-iranian ancestor.
Neel घर्म 'gharma' means 'sun' in Sanskrit, that's how 'sun' became 'ghaam' in Nepali and 'kham' in Romani. Gharma and garam are cognates, because Sanskrit and Persian share a common ancestor. 'sun' is associated with 'heat'.
Neel is right
daniyal k samandar is Sanskrit samudra. Don’t bat for Urdu too much. The grammar is from Sanskrit.
I'm Punjabi, it sounds if i start to learning Persian can easily learn it..!!
I'm a hardcore fan of Persian music..
Me too punjabi , where are you from in punjab?
I live in Punjab pakistan
I'm Balochi natively
Speak siraki Punjabi urdu/Hindi Farsi kashmiri and understand Arabic gujraiti Pashto too
Learning Spanish Portuguese French and Italian (Romance language)
Bro I am also I am from Uttarakhand And I speak Pahari and Hindi
@@rajab4187 If you can master Romance and other Indo-Iranian languages, go for a Baltic language
❤❤
I love Indian languages
It's called Indo-europeans languages and Persian is different from Semitic languages like Arabic and Hebrow ...
@@أحمد-ث4ه4د Quite contrary to popular perception, Persian is actually Indo European language. It's from Indo Iranian branch of the Indo European language family.
@@kumarnavneet8968 As are Kurdish, Pashto, Avestan, Tajik, and Ossetian. The Indo-Iranian branch split off from Proto-Indo-European, then the Indo- and Iranian parts split again. At the time of that split, the Indo- part was represented by Sanskrit/Prakrits. The modern languages of India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh derived from Prakrits, which was the colloquial, spoken version of Sanskrit. In this respect, the Indian subcontinent paralleled the Roman Empire, where classical Latin was used for state and religion, while the people spoke something called Vulgar Latin, which evolved into the Romance languages of today. Today's Romance languages have about the same degree of mutual intelligibility as modern Indo-Iranian languages do, and even more so in writing, because they all use the same alphabet.
Adonis Mx Persian is also indo -aryan (Europe) language
down south India it's interesting...Tamil is as old as Sanskrit and has no relation to Sanskrit and another language called Malayalam is mixture of Tamil and Sansrit brought down by Indo-Aryan speakers.
The Farsi community in India is perhaps the connection between Gujarati and Persian. They follow Zoroastrianism. Infact many distinguished personalities in India are from this community.
the connection is Avestan and Sanskrit. very similar languages
Now Parsi community exist in world only in two country India(60 thousand) and Pakistan(2 thousand).
No, because gujarati and Persian are belongs to same family
Parsis migrated to Gujrat during muslim invasion. Before that parsians and Gujratis would do business with each other.
Many Persians have come to India much before the zoroastrians. Faris is considered to be closer to Sanskrit than to Arabic. Arabic is a semitic language, closer to Hebrew.
I speak Marathi, a language very closely related to both the Gujarati and the Persian language. So I could understand each word. I was really astonished to find this much similarities between Persian and Indian languages. Also, the effort you took to figure out the similar words is really worth appreciating. 🙏🙏🙏
Similarity : - both have beautiful girls.✌
OMG I am Gujarati bt I never knew there were so many similarities between Gujarati nd Persian language.. Amazing video..these kind of video motivates me to learn new language 🙌👍
Hi Bahador,
I don't know whether you knew about this fact or not that Farsi was the official language of Delhi Sultanate and after that of Mughal empire. Due to this factor, north Indian languages( Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali etc) have many words that are the Farsi origin. Even some foods and rituals have common ancestors lying in the indo parsi regions.
Persian to Hindi the meaning goes this way the language isn't same instead mixed up during persian mughal or arab invasion..
Barf (persian) - him (Hindi)
Khush (Persian) - Prasanna (Hindi)
Aaram Persian - Bishram Hindi
Satranj Persian - Juwa Hindi
Bazaar Persian - Haatt
Kharaab -
Kismis -
Shikar - Aakhet
Jaruri - Aawashyak
Dawa - Ausadhi
Kharid - kraya
Nafrat - ghrina
Khurak - Khadhya
Bimar - Aswasth
Kabootar - parinda
Darwaja - Dwar
Even Persians they don't have typical words due to arab invasion the language is totally mixed up of Arabic loan words and parsee is impure mixed-up hybrid language even their own script is now extict and people of persia present Iran they don't have persian ethnic names instead they have Arabic ethnic names
Gujarati is my mother tongue
After watching this video
World is so small... only we open our hearts...🇮🇳🇮🇷
This was fun to listen to. Back in medical school my flatmate was Persian, and I am Gujarati. The similarities were very clear after about a week of living with another. Thank you for uploading this.
Many Indo Aryan languages have a deep impact of Persian language...which makes them even more sweet...❤❤
I think my mother tongue Marathi is believed to have 30% words from Persian. However, it's also believed that the roots of all those words again go back to Sanskrit.. An example is shataranj - the Sanskrit word is Chaturang. Though today we call it "Buddhibal" which sounds more Sanskrit based than Shataranj, which sounds more Persian. Another example is Santoor - the original Sanskrit word is Shatatantri (an instrument of 100 strings). But we all believe that this word has come from a middle Eastern influence.
@A P uh no. Avestan is the root of modern Persian. Not Sanskrit
@@marmary5555 and many avestan words derived from ancient sanskrit
@@marmary5555 actually it's old persian which is different from Avestan.
@@sid-pd2nb no, they are cognates. Search it up. They went through different sound changes. They diverged from their common ancestor language proto indo iranian.
Aww..m Gujarati.. N I was thinking to suggest u abt this Gujarati n Farsi challange... N see.. U come up with this video.. M so happy.. Thank u so much 🤗🤗
Well shah is also a persian word
@@hirenahir3604 Oh is it?
@@remishah9485 unke sare raja au ka nam shah se hi to hota hai nader shah aur usse bhi pehle
well both are indo iranian/aryan languages :) nice video Bahador!
Anatolian Turk These words came into Gujarati after centuries of Muslim rule
Actually 'INDO' and 'Aryan' both same ....Indo is the English version of the word 'HINDU' and "Aryan" is a South-Indian originated word...Some peoples give theory that the 'Iranian' also an English version of the word Aryan....
Most of these words are very recent adoptions from Persian during Mughal rule which is why they sound almost the same. "shatranj" is an Arabic word from the original Sanskrit word "chaturanga" who invented the game and Persian word "chatrang" who probably refined it. Others like "darwaza" have Sanskrit cognates like "dvaar" but North Indian speakers use the Persian word in common speech.
A lot of Hindu nationalists want to get rid of the Persian influence from Hindi, but does it really make a big difference if the words are from your mother's sister (Old Iranian) instead of your mother (Sanskrit)?
Fair enough, but I think they're still Persian words, corrupted as they might be. In any case, should be more scared of english ruining hindi right now than persian or arabic.
@@kamalakantamohapatra6416 you are totally clueless
Im Iranian and have had a DNA test,im 5 percent Gujarati:) i watch this episode differently,wanted to see how is the language and im going to know about it morr :)
DNA tests work in an idiotic way. In India Gujaratis, Sindhis and Punjabis have mixed Persian/Macedonian DNA thats why your criteria falls under Gujarati because many Gujaratis have taken this test in US.
It's same like Eastern African places like Kenya have Chinese DNA mixed because Chinese voyagers settled and mingled. But genome scientists came up with a theory that all Chinese were black Africans back in time.
That makes sense allot of Persians mixed in the Mughal empire etc also that state holds the highest percentage of Indian Parsi Persian who are Zoroastrian who settled in India 1000s of years ago
so all of us are sister and brothers.humanity is a nation
Saman Eftekhari no bro . Not everyone is my sister Cz we aren’t into marrying our own sisters like in Islam
Ifty Sarwar I am spreading love that’s why denying every female as my sister .
lol whos talking , probably al quayda?
xD
@@kaps89
👍👍👍
Gamer Boy if you are Indian then what Iranians do is also none of your business
in Arabic we use
شطرنج shatranj for chess
دكان dukkan for shop or store
خراب kharab for ruin or destruction
كشمش keshmesh for raspberry (sometimes)
ضروري dharuri for necessary or indispensable
دواء dawa' for medication or medicament
نفرة nefra or نفور nofour for dislike or aversion
I really liked your videos.. Bravo
Yassine يــاسيــن
and takhriban for approximately
we in egypt use bazaar as antiques store and in some cities eg.: alexandria they call the grocery shop bazaar
Yassine يــاسيــن I am a Hindi and Telugu speaker. Telugu is not similar to Arabic at all, but Hindi is very similar and this was not brought to my awareness until my Arabic Egyptian friends told me to teach them Hindi. It seems like we both use the word khursi for chair. I thought it was only a Hindi word. Cool!
shamik chakraborty Not Turkish, *turkic
you mean you had no words like that before ???
Keep up the good work, it is fascinating to know how much in common certain languages have with each other, your project also clears up historical connection about certain nations.
both of the girls look same but one is more lighter skinned
@P G dravidians were from south india not north. And north indians and Iranians have very less genetic difference. This girl in the video was not from north but western India(gujrat). But I know a lot people with light skin tone from gujrat.
I am from surat, and we have highest parsi community in india, which are basically persian
UFO unma aor inma bohat fark ha
@@rajavarma3894 kya fark hain
@@mcpeguru4060 Vah log aab Muslim hai aor communal baan chuka hai
No bro, Highest is in Mumbai...next Surat
Persians are indians. They all originated from our Civilization. All these languages came from Sanskrit.
İm from Azerbaijan and my nationality is Tat .Our language Tati same as a Persian also actually Persian is a root of our language.What a nice video Gujarati language is an part of the Persian language.💖💖💖💖👏👏👏👍👍👍
No gujarati(sanskrut)
So far, as a language lover, I would say, the most amazing video on youtube I have seen. This is what I always look for in Indo European languages. Thanks Bahador..
Wow. I could never have thought gujrati and persian were soooo similar. I knew urdu had a lot of persian. All these words mean the same in urdu and they are pronounced exactly like persian as well.
Yep, kind of cool, right? Peace.
Yeah, the mughal influence on hindi and creation of urdu and also affecting other regional languages nearby
@@sustainableliving6319 Hindi is a fake language created in the 20th century. Its Sanskritized Urdu/Hindustani, while Urdu is a creole formed from the mixing of Arab/Persian and Braj Bhasha!
Persian Avesta/Zoroastrianism and the Vedic religion are linked!
Shura and Ashura - Inverse meaning in both religions
Both cultures worship the Sun.. but Hindus go beyond the sun and were aware of numerous universes.
Zoroastrians came to India in 16th century, landed in Gujarat, and promised the king there that they'll never cause trouble. Rather will contribute to the society. Undoubtedly, they've been doing that since then. They're genuinely peaceful and courageous, positive people.
No inverse meaning.
In RIGVEDA, both deva and Asura means god not demons.
There is a reason how meanings changed, in a distant past Indians and Persians must have been actively involved in a battle field: Gods for Indians became demons for Persians. The way it happened in the case of Sri Lanka, Ravana is still praised as God over there, but in India he is a demon.
sad part is that this gujju girl comparing words with Hindi not Gujarati😂😂😂😂
Bhai hindi or gujrati dono language similar hi he usme thoda hi difference he
Sad thing about you is you are not showing your own name and you are writing Donald Trump
SnehRaj Sinh Jadeja
And Jadeja & junejas all have Sindhi Rajput ancestry. Do you know that bro?They have came long ago from Sindh to Gujarat. Even before partition 👍
Now Sindh is a part of Pakistan.
Mugal samrajya many words leave in India.. That's why similar
😂😂😂😅😅🤣
As a native Gujarati speaker, I'm surprised at how much our language has been influenced by Farsi. I wonder if linguistic similarity means we have common genetic ancestry as well. I never realized the extent of Farsi loanwords we use so commonly without even realizing. Keep up the good work guys!
Yes, there is a fairly close genetic ancestry between Persians and most Indians, by most Indians, I mean the Indians who are considered as Indo-Aryan. Indo-Aryan people include most Most Indians who are not south Indian.
@@Sid6927 I actually took an ancestry test and got J2 which may have its roots in the Zagros mountain range in Iran. So yup. You're right! Maybe @BahodorAlast and I could be long lost brothers. ;P
@@sidharth1123 Yes, You (and I) are long lost relatives of @BahodorAlast separated by only a few ten thousand years of migration and settlement. Fun fact we're also considered as Caucasians. As our ancestors used to live in the Caucasus mountains who then migrated into Europe and Asia, meaning that most Indians (Indo-Aryans) are genetically closer to Europeans than south Indians. this fact also applies to languages.( I'm also Gujarati by the way.)
After the fall of of Sassanid capital Ctesiphon(today's Baghdad) in 637 AD many Persians left their homeland and took refuge in Gujarat to save them from conversion to Islam and they got mixed with local people adopted the local culture and language so both language influenced by each other .
@@sidharth1123 May be you have an ancestor who took refuge to Gujarat after the fall of last Persian empire(Sassanid empire).
خیلی جالبه.
من کورد هستم و ۲ ماه است که زبان فارسی را یاد می گیرم. بخاطر آن هنوز بلد نیستم.اما وقتی یاد میگیرم خیلی تعجب میکنم که زبان فارسی و کوردی بسیار شبیه همدیگرند.الآن باز تعجب کردم چون دیدم که کلمه های که از آنها استفاده می کنیم در جغرافیای وسیعی هم به کار می شوند. ببخشید شاید این نوشته را اشتباه نوشتم. موفق باشید بهادرجان.شمارا دوست داریم.
Kurdî
Warm-Hot=Garm(گرم)
Snow=Barf(برف)
Calm=Aram(آرام)
Good=Xwaş(خوش)
Store=Dkan(دکان)
Bad=Kharab(خراب)
Raisin=Kishkishk/mewiž
Buy=Krîn(کرین)
Food=Khwarn(خوارن)
Fly=Frin-Prîn(پرین/فرین)
Piegon=Kavok(کووک)
Chess=Satranc(سترنج)
Medicine=Davā/Derman
Hate=Nafrat(نفرت)
Soft=Narm(نرم)
He closed the door=Derî āsé kir
سپاسگزارم. خیلی هم قشنگ نوشتین
Kurdish and Persian come from the same root. Both are Iranian languages.
بژی کوردستان.
فارسی و کوردی از یک ریشه هستند و خیلی شبیه همدیگر اند.
S Sin سپاس برات
متاسفانه هنز خوب نیست. عزیز برادر شما بلوچ بودید نه؟
Mahdi Gh تو هر بزی❤️
Two beautiful ladies, two beautiful languages / culture's
Very interesting! We have kishmish in Russian too as a variety of grapes (raisins) too😁
Persian to Hindi the meaning goes this way the language isn't same instead mixed up during persian mughal or arab invasion..
Barf (persian) - him (Hindi)
Khush (Persian) - Prasanna (Hindi)
Aaram Persian - Bishram Hindi
Satranj Persian - Juwa Hindi
Bazaar Persian - Haatt
Kharaab -
Kismis -
Shikar - Aakhet
Jaruri - Aawashyak
Dawa - Ausadhi
Kharid - kraya
Nafrat - ghrina
Khurak - Khadhya
Bimar - Aswasth
Kabootar - parinda
Darwaja - Dwar
Even Persians they don't have typical words due to arab invasion the language is totally mixed up of Arabic loan words and parsee is impure mixed-up hybrid language even their own script is now extict and people of persia present Iran they don't have persian ethnic names instead they have Arabic ethnic names
@@atheistatheist8116 wtf these are mostly Sanskritised.. we speak modern Hindi in.. and Persian people are speak pure Persian language it's mixture of Turks and arabic.ok.
@@spiranova5780 There's no Hindi nowadays turned Urdu..
If English, Persian, Arabic are mixed you call it modern Hindi.
@@atheistatheist8116 You are spot on. Hindi is like nowadays, 60% Urdu, 20% Hindi, 10% Arabic and 10% English combined together.
Awesome brother.... I am Gujarati and i found persian is so similar to my language....
This one would probably be difficult, but it'd be really cool to do Ossetian vs Persian. Ossetian is related to the language the Scythians spoke, I believe. It'd be neat to see what it has in common, if anything, with other Iranian languages. Might be difficult to find someone that speaks it though.
Yes, it is difficult to find a fluent speaker but we'll definitely do our best!
@@BahadorAlast the hard part is finding someone who knows Ossetian but not Georgian/Russian; Ossetia is in both those countries.
i agree, im a punjabi jatt and sikh jatts are purest form descedents of Saka scythian invaders to punjab region 2000years ago!
@@goldenmemes51
Lmao no your not. You people are Indians and look Indian
@@goldenmemes51 Scythians are Iranic peoples from CENTRAL ASIA & the CAUCASUS- not south Asia. Scythians did conquer some parts of India but that doesn't mean Indians are Scythians. Far from it.
I am Gujarati but I never know that Persian is very Similar to Gujarati. I was happy after hear same language from another accent.
Really very Nice Video.
Most of the indo-european languages are similar.
I think it's more fun when there are more participants...just suggesting!
Your videos are always interesting! Keep it up!
Hi Mahtab! 😊
Well India has two type of language base. North Indian, west and east almost based on indo-aryan languages but south Indian languages are dravidian languages.
In the North East most of the languages are Sino-Tibetan as well
@@SantomPh Don't forget Tai, Mon khmer and Assamese and Bengali.
@manjitrupbikram: I and my Assamese friend found many similarities in Assamese and Marathi.
@pooja nadagauda: The Aryan/Dravidian divide is a myth nurtured for political interests. Do surf the internet for such resources. We were taught otherwise in school, and that was a part of cultural subversion. Do see Yuri Bezmenov's videos on UA-cam.
@@mugdhanbapat
There is a clear linguistic and cultural divide between the north and the south, which is supported by archaeological excavations in Keeladi in Tamil Nadu, which is as old as the Harappan civilization.
@@mugdhanbapat But if you dig deep, the Aryan/Dravidian theory does seem true. From physical features to culture to languages. Similarities between groups of people.
Wow we learn so much things from your channel ! I didn't even know about gujarati language ♡
oh you must know Gujarat Gandhiji, Sardar Patel, Morarji Desai Ex-PM and MODIJI is present PM from Gujarat. All Patels have captured Motels, Gas Station business 70% in USA.
Video manne gamyo. Saras 👌
Too good keep posting such videos
I get so happy whenever u post a new video 😁
Especially if it's Arabic though hehe ;)
Bahador ur name means BRAVE in urdu😊
Gujarati, Bhojpuri, Bihari, Punjabi, Haryanvi, Marathi, Hindi, Sanskrit in all these languages Bahador means brave.
How do I know? I speak all of them.
@@indiancodm2470 and Nepali khas
@@indiancodm2470 in Sanskrit too???
@@indiancodm2470 not in Sanskrit. Not at all. Bahadoor has got Mongolian origin.
@Nibil Thomas trust a mallu to own them all
For 800 years the state language in India was Persian. That's why most Indian languages have a LOT of loan words from Persian. Historically, Iran has had a massive cultural influence on India. In fact, outside of Iran, India has the most number of Persian manuscripts.
Not to mention, today there are more Persian Zoroastrian temples in India than Iran.
@@BahadorAlast please ignore some mental Patients who spread hate. :)
@Ęxtřəmé Hűñteŕ No, I actually do come from a Muslim family but I am not Muslim and I don't follow any religion. However, Zoroastrianism is a part of our Iranian culture, almost every Iranian, regardless of their religion, has Zoroastrian elements embedded into their culture and identity.
@@MsArjun1111 Thank you but that's fine. I don't think he was trying to spread hate.
@@BahadorAlast Alright buddy, have you had the chance of meeting some zorastrian Canadians ?
We had discussed this once, long ago on Instagram
It's really good to know that there are similarities between Gujarati and Persian language appreciate your video thank you
There should be a seat for bahador also. 😞 just a suggestion
Salman Basharat I agree
haha thank you, but I enjoy standing, maybe I'll sit in some future videos.
Bahador Alast maybe you enjoy but I feel tired when I see you standing for 30 minutes or more.😊
Bahador Alast is very hospitable thats why he dnt gt a seat infront of guests
He sits in a lot of the more recent videos.
These words came with parsi community (zoroastrians) to gujarati. Some words like shatranj (chaturang) are from sanskrit which travelled to persia from north india via silk route.
Lol! The Parsis couldn't preserve their language , yet passed on many words from Persian?
All these words came into Gujarati via Mughal Farsi and Urdu.
@@hameed9653 Persian is relatively new language and Sanskrit is older but Avestan an ancestor of old Persian has some similarities with Sanskrit. both are Proto-Indo-European languages.
do nepali and hindi.
I'm Bengali by race. But I can understand Nepalese like 50%
@@2441139knakmg yes actually i am nepali and can understand bengali like 40-50% .... in short it is said in Nepal that the only closest language similiar to nepali above hindi and sanskrit is bengali so ya
@@theuchhista2608 are you sure that the closet language to Nepali is Bengali
What is more amazing is that these both girls sound like they were born/raised in the US but know their ethnic languages very well.
they all live in Canada. Mehtab and Bahador actually come from Iran itself so naturally they speak Farsi well.
4:50
It would be “Jarori” in Hindi too. But it would be “Zarori” in Urdu, because Urdu uses Persian influence as its core and the letter “Z” exists while Hindi has primary Sanskrit influence and lacks the letter “Z”
Ponga Pandit
“Nuqta” is an Arabic word. These changes were made after Persian became the language of court under Mughal rule. The Hindi we hear now is not pure Hindi, in pure Hindi “Z” would not exist.
Ponga Pandit
I disagree, there is a “Pure Hindi” if you hear a speech given in the U.N. by an Indian, that’s pure Hindi. That’s the Hindi an Urdu speaking person would have immense trouble understanding, if you showed a Hindi speaking person pure Urdu, they too would have trouble understanding. Hindi didn’t have the letter Z or the glyph for it until the Persian vocabulary was baked into Hindi. After Persian vocab became large in Hindi it naturally gained the Z glyph
(Just to clarify: in no way am I saying Modern Hindi is bad or worse than pure Hindi, it sounds beautiful just stating that if it wasn’t for the large Persian vocab, Hindi would never have had the Z glyph)
-/:; -/:; no offense but the word Hindi by itself is a persian word comming from Hindustan meaning the land by the river sindh which our ancestors called the subcontinent. So by default india and hindi are exonyms which indicates that theyre not pure.
Ponga Pandit Why this inquisition(purge) against persian loanwords and culture then? Indopersian culture was probably the pinnacle of indian civilization think of the music sitar, santour and alle the poetry. Btw. we iranians were also heavily influenced by the subcontinent you gave us numbers, maths, geometry and many more and were not ashamed of this nor are we trying to hide anything.
neither urdu nor hindi is pure.they are just mixture of words influenced by sanskrit ,persian,turkish but differ in magnitude of influence of sanskrit and other languages.basic grammar and sentence formation is the same.
Ok, I don't mean to sound like a creepy guy here but the videos with Mahtab are my favorite... I mean she's so pretty and yet sweet and nice at the same time! Soon as I see her in the thumbnails I am just like, hold up!! gotta stop everything in life and click so I can watch and hear her speak.
Mani Pirooz thank you!
She's also my favourite! She's very beautiful and very friendly! :)
@@mahtabpezhman228 ❤❤
She is absolutely beautiful and I love the way she speaks.❤️
Firman is a lucky guy😆
Haha nice video.
When Bro Bahador said "bazaar", it is interesting because we are Indonesians use "Bazaar" or "Bazar" for a temporary market, it is like market that hold for charity and we use "Pasar" for market. But for store it is "Toko", so different haha.
Also we use "Kismis" for raisin.
In Gujarati "Zarura" and Farsi "Zaruri" for urgent and in Indonesia it is "Darurat".
"Garam" means salt here, totally different :)
The girls, Richa and Mahtab looked enjoying the game, nice. Good job Bro Bahador. Salam. Hope you always have a good day.
Ladara Dara Toko was taken from dutch language
Hh Ii
I don't know how common is the "Pasar" word, but yeah interesting. And now I know that "Pasar" is a loanword from Farsi "Bazar" and have the same meaning.
Nice.
Ana Sawitri
I am not sure, because I read that "Toko" is a loanword from Chinese, maybe Hakka or Hokkien.
But it's ok, I mean many loanwords in Bahasa Indonesia are from Dutch also.
Bazaar is a Persian word that many languages use as well.
In Indonesia people use bazaar for pop up events because the goods sold are not normal garden variety stuff (vases, electronics, beads etc) pasar is more the meat and veg market
Halet Che Tore
Halat ache toh Hain (हालात अच्छे तो है)
Hit like if you see the similarity
Kheyli mamnun!!!!! Finally a video I could enjoy!!!
Glad to hear, I hope you enjoy future videos as well.
Many Indian languages besides Urdu/Hindi have a strong relation with Persian. Gujarathi, Punjabi, Marathi have so many words borrowed from Persian that people who speak the languages won't know that this word came from another language. It's a mystery as to why the words are pronounced differently in Iran and in India. e.g. hot is germ in Iran but garm in India. Also, Persian is an Indo-European language. So other Indo-European languages of India find it easy to accept Persian words. It's truly fascinating to see how words travel. Thanks!
Hot isn’t germ in Persian. That word is pronounced “garm” here in Tehran. Persian is my mother tongue. And I don’t believe Sanskrit is the mother of Iranian languages. Have this link: www.quora.com/Is-Sanskrit-the-mother-of-all-languages-My-friend-says-that-“stan”-is-a-Sanskrit-word-and-the-Pakistan-Uzbekistan-and-others-are-using-a-Sanskrit-word-My-argument-is-that-“stan”-is-a-Persian-word-and-Vedic-Indians-never-called-our-land-Hindustan
I did think for a while in past that Gujarati people have some Persian roots and then I saw this video!! Awesome!! 👍🏻
A lot of contributions to world culture and language came from the Indian lands. Eg) some influences are seen Persian culture. Also in Europe. Thank you India 🙏🏼
Srsly?Persian went to india after we conquered their land and made their main language Persian we made their royal family and government to learn and use Persian language so basically ppl had to learn the language to live in India that's how they use Persian words
@@fearsomealex8816 Avestan is of Sanskrit.
@@fearsomealex8816 If you dig deeper you will find there is an ancient connection. Sanskrit -> Avestan -> Persian
As much as I love India, but the influence mostly went from Persia to India. India was part of Persian Cosmopolis from around 13th to 19th centuries. Persian was the language of governments and elites across all of Indian subcontinent.
India did influence Eastern Iranian lands in Central Asia in antiquity to an extent that they basically became continuation of India, but all of that was swept by Islam.
@@nimkati5627 In antiquity exactly.
Im my humble opinion, I wouldn’t say its been wiped/swept by islam. The language and structures speak for itself.
He should do an Avestan and Sanskrit video.
Each video has something unique everytime a new one comes out.
Great Video !! This is very interesting and very innovative approach. I would request you to make similar videos comparing with South Indian (Dravidian) languages like Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu Konkani etc.. I know that they will have very very much less in common with Persian. But who knows.. when you do actual practical comparison you may discover interesting thing.. (Because i didn't think that Gujarati had so much common)... Again kudos for nice work.
shreesha KS dear friend, Konkani is an indo Aryan language ,not a Dravidian one.
Vijay Pawar you are right. Not a Dravidain. But south Indian (geographically)
Brother, I have nothing but utmost respect for what you have done on this channel and continue to do, if your able to find speakers of distant language groups that have plenty in common it would be a lot more interesting, the word Baraf for example (the exact way its pronounced in Gujarati) spans across the Cushitic language group in Somali and Oromo. This is just a simple example as I'm sure you know.
In hindi (darvaze)many door
(Darvaza) one door
In gujarati (darvajo)one door
(Darvaza)many door
Urdu is very similar to Gujrati and Persian, i've understand almost all the words 😊 Nice video 👌🏼
In Hindi:
Door - Pat - पट
Spoilt - Vyarth - व्यर्थ
Sick - Rugn - रुग्ण
Store - vipani - विपणि
Sanskritized words in Hindi are these. You say aapanam for shop in sanskrit, vyartham for waste like that.
awesome!😊 being a Gujarati i can say all Persian words similar to Gujarati words is because of our beloved zarathoshti ( Parsi) people and some what influenced by mughals too.
Hindi speakers also say "Jaroori". They sometimes say "Jeero" instead of "Zero".
there is a district in ilam( a city in iran) called "chalimar" and it is believed that its people came from india centuries ago! it is interesting to know that there is a city near new dehli called "shalimar".
My self Aamir from Gujarat,india- I m living in Dubai Hello Bahador brother....I love to watch your vedio bcz it's very nicely and easy way to learn and know similarities between two language
It's just like getting language knowledge with fun
I love this channel from Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦🇸🇦🇸🇦
Thank you!! :)
Now, I believe I can easily survive in Iran & Indonesia apart from Middle-east.
Indonesia? I wouldn't bet on it.
Do Arabic & Hindi or something related to India
Another nice one dude. Sometimes I wish if I could feature in your videos but I live in the US not Canada :D
Thank you! Well, if you ever do visit Toronto, you are more than welcome to join us for a video!
Haha, thanks for your reply.
hahaha bahador jan this time was really fun, both of them easily understand each other
it seems we can go there and just speak persian :-D and everyone understand
Wow. Informative
Bahador u r a absolute legend for making this man hats off bro
❤❤
Make a Swahili - Arabic Similarity One
A lot of the Gujarati words were actually borrowed into the language from Persian. The two languages are undoubtedly related, being something akin to second cousins, though
I am gujarati. And I am surprised with theses simalirities. In Gujarat there are parsis and they are all great people.
I was waiting for this comparison
I'm so happy that I found this video as I am Gujarati and my hometown is Sanjan which is the big link between India and Persian community.
Btw parsi only speak gujarati even among themselves they speak gujarati
@@celebratesuccess6309 I know. I come from a place where Parsis got asylum when they came to India. My hometown is Parsi town.
This is my personal opinion..But i think Richa does not know Gujarati properly..
Here's y.
She is just saying ya ya.. Without knowing wt Bahador is asking.
1:30 He is saying we (Persian) use 'Kha'.n she is saying ya..'Ka'..
No girl..
In Gujarati. it is also 'Kha'..
So..Khush not kosh in Gujarati..
It's kh not k..
We gujartis do use 'Kha'
K = ક - neither (kosh કોશ) ❌ nor khosh ખોશ)
Kh = ખ - ખુશ ✔ (khush)
2:55 we gujaratis do not use bazaar..It's not Gujarati word actually..
We use Bajaar (બજાર) (It's J not G) (J for Japan)
N we do not use Bajaar for shop..We use it for the whole market.
3:05 again the same..
Kharab - ખરાબ ✔
Karab - કરાબ ❌
Richa plz understand wt she is saying..(i guess u replace all the 'Kha' with 'K' ..NO..NO..NO..
We have both the letters in our Alphabet..
3:28 Raisin..Yes we sometimes use it.. Kishmish..
But it's not the proper Gujarati word.
The proper n actual Gujarati word is
Daraakh - દરાખ
Draaksh - દ્રાક્ષ
5:15
Kharido - ખરીદો ✔
Karido - કરીદો ❌
(Kharido is lyk a command, nt a verb)
To buy = kharidvu = ખરીદવું (this is verb)
Noun = kharid/kharidi= ખરીદ/ખરીદી
6:04
khoraak - ખોરાક ✔
Khorak - કોરાક ❌
8:01
Band = બંદ ❌
Bandh = બંધ ✔
Plz don't get offended..
But i thought I should draw ur attention to sme points ..
So dat the other people know abt Gujarati.
Thank you..🤗
Love form Gujarat
India..🤗
I am a native Arabic speaker, I learned English since childhood and a few years ago I learned persian, one day, I segnified that when my family watch indian movies, a lot of words are familiar with my ear. later I searched about this thing and I knew that indian and persian words have the same origin.
Very good video , i never knew we have many common words with persions
Surprising! Very similar...
I like mahtab very much haha. I just watch videos that mahtab is in
When you skips history classes in school and learn on UA-cam 🤷🏽♀️
History classes don't teach you this.
I'm Gujarati and Muslim who knows allso Persian but I am shock to know it has relationship with Gujarati
Gujju Bhai kem cho
@@tarunrazdan8933 moz ma
Happy every time
Tme maza ma
@@maxo2525 good good har koi khush rahey love gujrat from Jammu
@@maxo2525 kayu gaam tamaru
@@maxo2525 Pakistani you tube channel par Sameer khokhar chhe. Enu Kai relationship to nathi ne tamare. Sameer mast Manas chhe
Good! I'm gujju... Good comparison... Have seen another video of yours comparing hindi and bahasa Indonesia
We use the word (خوش) a lot in the Northern Najdi dialect in Saudi Arabia which means (excellent), and sometimes sarcastically when something doesn't go the way we want it. خوش video.
Because Northern Nejd has strong tie with Baghdad in the old days due learning Hanbali mathahab which originated in there and Baghdad's dialect no doubly influenced your dialect.
Love the video!!
OMG I am Somali and half of these words are also in my language (kharaab, baraf, dukaan, daawo, ).
@Anu Arjun you must be a miserable person in life. Those words are not indoiranian they are Arabic. As matter of fact most of your own language is borrowed from Arabic. Godbless Afrosiatic language. Now go take ur depression pills. Your people have borrowed the language of my ancestors Al-Ariba, yes the pure Arabs. When I use your indo language then you can reply.
hodan a He’s being very rude just ignore him. But those words are derived from Indo-Iranian languages and since Persian and Arabic share some similarities it seems they’re Arabic but, they’re not. Only Urdu uses Arabic word in the South Asia other languages don’t have any direct or indirect influence of Arabic.
Please ignore that idiot. And have a good day ahead :)
I enjoy watching this video, thanks 💞
Mahtab is really gorgeous and beautiful! That smile is just unbelievable 💖💖💖💖💖
Kenyan I am Swahili speaker,some words similar too. Like baraf in Swahili is barafu-ice,duka-shop, zaruri in Swahili we pronounce dharura- urgent/emergency, Dava in Swahili is dawa- medicine.
Ohh, so that's why the Khorak supermarket at Yonge and Cummer is called that.
haha yes, exactly!
Been watching a few of these episodes now, and I deduce that the Indo-Iranian languages are incredibly similar. What is not clear from these language tests, however, is how mutually intelligible they are in day-to-day conversation.
Most of the words are similar because Urdu is developed from Persian and Urdu is synonymous with Hindi except few words... however she's not actually speaking Gujrati but hindi words which might be used with Gujrati...
I appreciate the Indian girl didn't speak English with a Hindi accent.
Bruh do you think pakistani have different accent? Also her was cringe