What If European Countries Were Divided By Language?

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  • Опубліковано 6 січ 2025

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  • @General.Knowledge
    @General.Knowledge  3 роки тому +659

    Do you live in an area that speaks multiple languages?

    • @lordmeow
      @lordmeow 3 роки тому +26

      Yup, and toooons of dialects

    • @larrywave
      @larrywave 3 роки тому +4

      What was weird about uralic ?

    • @Ikarioto
      @Ikarioto 3 роки тому +20

      I live in place where is spoken dialect of Polish called kurpian dialect. Kurpian dialect is a mixture of Polish and Old Prussian

    • @williamgabrielmortianu9873
      @williamgabrielmortianu9873 3 роки тому +8

      I have an brother in law half gagauz half moldovan and he seed gagauz is two words means right mouth becouse this People are Turks christians and prefer to go in other country for not became muslims.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa 3 роки тому +19

      can't wait to see the language map for Papua New Guinea

  • @hudsonylin
    @hudsonylin 3 роки тому +3316

    "Portugal is the perfect nation-state" - a Portuguese dude.

    • @foxxo_exe966
      @foxxo_exe966 3 роки тому +164

      portugal best in the world

    • @JasmanJr
      @JasmanJr 3 роки тому +119

      Portugal caralho!

    • @Duck-wc9de
      @Duck-wc9de 3 роки тому +60

      the best and the first. ahahahaha

    • @urbanwarrior3470
      @urbanwarrior3470 3 роки тому +11

      @@Duck-wc9de Not the first.

    • @Duck-wc9de
      @Duck-wc9de 3 роки тому +62

      @@urbanwarrior3470 not the First country, but the first nation-state. There is a diference

  • @saalok
    @saalok 3 роки тому +3182

    "Super germany"
    Rest of Europe: DON'T GIVE THEM IDEAS AGAIN

    • @Mr.Noob1
      @Mr.Noob1 3 роки тому +121

      North germans would say that the south should become it's own country

    • @thegreedyharvest8796
      @thegreedyharvest8796 3 роки тому +55

      @@Mr.Noob1 true, bavarian and swabian are two different languages

    • @Wolvek
      @Wolvek 3 роки тому +64

      @@thegreedyharvest8796 can we bavarians pls have independence
      And now in bavarian
      Kinna wia biddsche Unabhängigkeit griang?

    • @thegreedyharvest8796
      @thegreedyharvest8796 3 роки тому +42

      @@Wolvek bitte in deutsch :D

    • @piekay7285
      @piekay7285 3 роки тому +61

      Not Super Germany, small super Germany. Sudetenland, Prague, Silesia, Prussia were mostly ethnically German plus the large areas outside of Germany that were ethnically majority German

  • @swagmundfreud666
    @swagmundfreud666 3 роки тому +230

    One you missed is Sardinian. I had a Sardinian exchange student stay with my family for a year and he was adamant that Italian and Sardinian are different languages. He set out to prove this by speaking Sardinian to another exchange student from Italy (specifically Milan) and she says she could understand about 60% of it. Apparently that's less than Swedes and Norwegians can understand from eachother so I'd say it's definitely a language

    • @thetemptedvida8650
      @thetemptedvida8650 3 роки тому +32

      60% is even an optimistic percentage, I can tell

    • @LaBestiaVivente
      @LaBestiaVivente 2 роки тому +38

      im half Sardinian and half south italian, this video got it extremely wrong with italy. first of all Sardinian is officialy recognised by the italian government as a language along with friulian and Ladin in the northeast of italy. Along with this Sardinia is an autonmous region and has full rights regarding the language and contrary to most outsider belief it is still spoken by the majority of the island including youth. Italys languages are divided into 4 subgroups of romance languages (gallo italic in the north, italo dalmatian in the center and south) , rhaeto romance only with ladin and friulian and Sardinian languages for Campidanese and Logudorese Sardinian ALL developed independently from Latin and not Italian which bases itself on the rennesaince florentine dialect of tuscany (tuscan is a grouping of dialects spoken in Tuscany and falls under the italo dalmatian term) made popular by Dante Alighieri and was not spoken by anyone except said city in the Italian peninsula before italian unification in 1861. these languages are all still spoken and referred to as dialects sadly . as last he missed so many sparse languages spoken in Italy such as the arberesh Albanian of the south which came from albanian immigrants escaping during ottoman rule spoken in different villages and towns mainly in the province of Cosenza Calabria but also in other southern regions but in smaller scales, greek also has a small population of speakers (its estimated to be around 80 000) mainly spoken in some towns in the province of Lecce (the heel of italy) , some villages of Reggio Calabria (the tip of the boot) and very few speakers in the Sicilian city of Messina. these are just a two but there are many other language islands inside Italy. if you are more interested or dont believe me look up "languages of italy" basically anywhere as so many outsiders and italians too get this wrong all the time!

    • @shardanas
      @shardanas 2 роки тому +2

      @@LaBestiaVivente As a Sardinian I confirm what you have written. 👍

    • @Spacemongerr
      @Spacemongerr 2 роки тому +7

      How much Swedes understand depends on which Norwegian dialect you are talking about, as they can be quite different. Here is my attempt at writing some of them down using a mix of Norwegian, English and self-made orthography:
      I used я to represent a "French-pronounced" guttural R.
      Æ is pronounced like the A in "back".
      Ø is pronounced like the U in "burn".
      All of the example dialects have very different intonations.
      Æ fatt itsh ka dø prat om, æ e eyn moshom kall. Ævet'itsh.
      Yæy fatter ikke va du prater om, yæy ær en moshom kar. Ye'vetke.
      Ya fattar inte va du pratar om, ya ær en roli kille. Yavet'nte.
      Eg fatte ishe ka du pяate om, eg e en løylege kaя. Egvet'she.
      Eg faddaя ichye å du pяadaя om, e e en moяsom kaя. Eg'vedchye.
      Guess which one is Swedish! (general Stockholm-area dialect) Solution at the bottom!
      In written Norwegian (which noone speaks) it would be written like this:
      Jeg fatter ikke hva du prater om, jeg er en morsom kar. Jeg vet ikke. (Bokmål)
      Eg fatter ikkje kva du pratar om, eg er ein morsom kar. Eg veit ikkje. (Nynorsk)
      Sometimes, though rarely, people write in their own dialects, and it can be almost completely unintelligble for speakers of other dialects.
      Some of the dialects would more often use other words than "fatte" and "prate", and in general have different vocabulary for many things, but I made them the same for easier comparison.
      English: "I don't understand what you are talking about, I am a funny guy. I don't know." Dialects are from these places, top to bottom: Trondheim, Oslo, Sweden, Stavanger, Kristiansand.

    • @theprooblem
      @theprooblem 2 роки тому

      Sorry but this is incorrect. While it's true that Sardinian is its own language, there is no way that a Sardinian cannot fully understand Italian. Your friend was messing with you.

  • @diogorodrigues747
    @diogorodrigues747 3 роки тому +1271

    Italian dialects are, in fact, local languages. The meaning of "dialect" is quite different from the rest of the world.
    You also forgot about Occitan, the language spoken in Southern France and very different from French (a prestige language in Medieval Ages, but nowadays at risk of extinction).

    • @mariasirona1622
      @mariasirona1622 3 роки тому +48

      The finnish dialects are also very different and unique. The country is almost as diverse as Italy.

    • @augustobarbosab.773
      @augustobarbosab.773 3 роки тому +51

      Ironically there seems to be more speakers of Maghrebi Arabic than of Occitan in France.
      Ps.: I wasn't expecting I would see you here. Nice :)

    • @jav1843
      @jav1843 3 роки тому +88

      Such a centralized rule from Paris killed the different languages in France,like Occitan Breton And Catalan all of them almost extinct in France,thats what separatists here in Spain dont understand if Catalonia was part of France the would speak as much catalan as in Rosellon(almost nothing)

    • @carlosmagalhaes7109
      @carlosmagalhaes7109 3 роки тому +8

      Yeah. He forgot about some languages.

    • @cultist4194
      @cultist4194 3 роки тому +29

      I tried learning italian with music from sicily. Big Mistake

  • @nicolascarpa638
    @nicolascarpa638 3 роки тому +478

    There are a lot of oversemplifications, especially in the Southern countries. Setting Galician apart from Portuguese while implying that Sardinian, a language on its own, is a dialect of Italian sounds very arbitrary; not to mention that Alghero (in Sardinia) counts very few Catalan speakers, while Corse has a language that is a proper (in this case) dialect of Italian. I guess the map you’ve found tends to enlighten the territories where a minority/secondary language is officially recognized, which is the case in Spain and Italy while France has always strongly opposed to any recognition.

    • @LaBestiaVivente
      @LaBestiaVivente 2 роки тому +22

      Alghero has around 15 000 Catalan speakers, and he completely ignored every other regional language in Italy whilst Corsican can be considered a dialect or a very close language to Tuscan

    • @leosalonen1564
      @leosalonen1564 2 роки тому +5

      @@LaBestiaVivente This video wouldn't be 10mins long if it went that deep.

    • @LaBestiaVivente
      @LaBestiaVivente 2 роки тому +26

      @@leosalonen1564 then simply don't make a video about something like this if you're not going to put in effort instead of spreading misinformation

    • @leosalonen1564
      @leosalonen1564 2 роки тому +12

      @@LaBestiaVivente it's for surface level understanding for entertainment. I think it is good that it provokes conversation and for those that want to know more will just wikipedia it.

    • @bazingoosegaming9776
      @bazingoosegaming9776 2 роки тому +1

      The Catalan dialect in Sardinia is mentioned tho chief

  • @kulkuljator
    @kulkuljator 2 роки тому +161

    Hungarian language being a part of the Uralic family is one of the strangest things I learned from the history of my language(Estonian)

    • @anonymus9570
      @anonymus9570 2 роки тому +42

      Shoutout from Hungary to our old long-lost brothers! 🇭🇺❤️🇪🇪

    • @kulkuljator
      @kulkuljator 2 роки тому +60

      There are two types of Hungarians, lol

    • @tinasdf5876
      @tinasdf5876 2 роки тому +7

      @@kulkuljator hahaha no inbetween

    • @gaborfarkas3397
      @gaborfarkas3397 2 роки тому +34

      Our languages parted some 3000 years ago, still most of the structure has been preserved. And there are many direct sound shifts which lift basic words from one of the languages to the other. (p to f, k to h, starting s to nothing) An Estonian friend spent some half a year in Hungary, he learnt the language nearly perfectly. The words can be different but the grammar is rather transparent. And, surprisingly, he has no foreign "accent", although his pronounciation differs from standard. Its rather a strong dialect, the sounds seem to be Hungarian from a remote place in the country. Instead of "which country are you from" one would ask "which village"?

    • @kulkuljator
      @kulkuljator 2 роки тому +6

      @@gaborfarkas3397 Oh, wow, thank you for the information! I just knew the fact that they are related, but never looked into similarities. Good to know.

  • @mastermaltese8731
    @mastermaltese8731 3 роки тому +761

    Completely ignored Malta. Maltese is very linguisticaly unique in Europe, considering it is *semitic* see no. 97 in 9:43 but mixed with A LOT of Romance (Italian) Sad Maltese here 🇲🇹

    • @jodygrottino8257
      @jodygrottino8257 3 роки тому +49

      Don't worry neighbor we love your language too. 🇮🇹❤️🇲🇹
      Ħafna mħabba lejn Malta. ☺️

    • @heyitsjaffa
      @heyitsjaffa 3 роки тому +7

      was literally about to say this, very disappointing!

    • @miguelgoncalves7787
      @miguelgoncalves7787 3 роки тому +14

      No one cares about malta

    • @agrael4918
      @agrael4918 3 роки тому +34

      He didnt mention Poland...

    • @schusterlehrling
      @schusterlehrling 3 роки тому +2

      Too tiny to be on both maps.

  • @-_-5683
    @-_-5683 3 роки тому +715

    'A super Germany would exist'
    I feel like I've heard that somewhere before...

    • @Mr_Blah
      @Mr_Blah 3 роки тому +19

      Oh no

    • @angriffslusticherWildoger
      @angriffslusticherWildoger 3 роки тому +48

      Poland: *nervously sweating*

    • @9delta988
      @9delta988 3 роки тому +3

      Ah stereotypes, will you ever die out?

    • @TYsdrawkcaB
      @TYsdrawkcaB 3 роки тому

      @Safwaan no, it would be ww2

    • @lixobounce6588
      @lixobounce6588 3 роки тому +4

      @Safwaan Pre WW1 Germany.... how long to be exact? 45 years before WW1 Germany don't even exist. also if they somehow got revived they won't be able to get their old land because barely any Germans live there anymore, most have escaped to the western part of Germany in WW2

  • @tobytja
    @tobytja 2 роки тому +15

    Why did you completely skip western Slavic languages?

  • @RoccosVideos
    @RoccosVideos 3 роки тому +884

    As many comments have implied the difference between a language and a dialect is not always clear which leads to confusion. Great video.

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki 3 роки тому +21

      From a linguistic point of view: A dialect is a form of language variety, and these range from individual quirks of speaking, to what is called dialect - but whether something is a dialect or its own language ... oftentimes is a purely political decision.
      Many countries want to be known for speaking their own, national, language - and choose to label their variety as its own language, instead of being a dialect of another country's.
      A good example could be Swiss German or Austrian German. These are both extremely similar to the official German spoken in Germany (more specifically to its Southern dialects, especially Austrian German is very closely related to Bavarian - with rural areas often speaking a heavy dialect). But these countries wanted to have their own language, so they just declared "Swiss German" and "Austrian German" as such. A similar thing happened in Belgium, where the northern parts speak dialects of Dutch, yet they call these languages Flemish, after the region of Belgium they are spoken in, with a similar thing happening in regards to the French-speaking southern part.
      At the same time, Romance languages in Europe are all quite similar to each other (with French and Romanian being most distinct), since all evolved from Vulgar Latin (the Latin spoken by the common people) after the empire splintered. Here, the distinction between languages and dialects is especially interesting, since the degree of difference between many of the so-called dialects is often comparable to the differences between say Spanish and Italian.
      Yet, Gallician and Catallan are often named as dialects of Spanish by some, as do all the other languages with a low number of speakers in Spain, France and Italy (especially Italy, with its highly fragmented and quite distinct dialect map). And this is clearly politically motivated, to deny the speakers being culturally distinct enough o proclaim independence - after all, "they just speak a dialect, not their own language!" as some would say.
      Up to rather recently, there were attempts to drive dialects to extinction in some European countries, in favor of making the official dialect the only one. This happened for example in Spain under the Franco regime around WWII and in France before the French revolution, as well as with Celtic languages on the British isles. And it was done to the Sami people in Scandinavia, and most likely in many other places. (And the Europeans exported this practice to their old colonies, sadly, suppressing native languages and cultures).

    • @Kylora2112
      @Kylora2112 3 роки тому +45

      "A language is a dialect with an army and a navy." - Max Weinreich

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki 3 роки тому +1

      @@Kylora2112 good quote

    • @otakuofmine
      @otakuofmine 3 роки тому +4

      @@Kylora2112 which is easily disproven. gaelic for example is a language and has neither. it is more complicated than that.

    • @otakuofmine
      @otakuofmine 3 роки тому +5

      @@sertaki kinda, but linguists themselves are descriptivists and debate it on the evidence their have, weighting each one. of course some cases might be still debated - scots for example, which is arguebly on its way to a language if the trend goes further. other cases are pretty strong to make in either direction. austrian is just pretty much bavarian and swiss german is alemannic dialect of high german. (and like i pointed out elsewhere, low german on the other hand is mostly agreed on to be its own language despite being forgotten or denounced - also one of the cases where they want them to extinct how u described. sadly true. gaelic another case)
      i hate how countries try denounce minor languages or dialects for the standard variety (which i guess u mean with offical dialect, basicly true i agree). or how some take extreme measures in that case (france, england, russian lead countries - ones I am aware of)

  • @sertaki
    @sertaki 3 роки тому +244

    I suggest in the future to devote slightly more time in research. It would have been easy to find out the exact historical reasons for the Uralic languages in Europe, or why Romanian is a Romance language - making it unnecessary to guess and hypothesize.

    • @Dornwild
      @Dornwild 2 роки тому +21

      Thanks for pointing out. There are tons of very simple but still linguistically accurate texts online, even on Wikipedia. Nowadays claiming you don't know something that could be basically solved within 3-4 clicks in the world of data and internet, it is just plain laziness and ignorance. Sorry to be harsh, but don't see any excuses here!

    • @benjeyemanp1742
      @benjeyemanp1742 2 роки тому +4

      Exactly, I saw a map like this before and looked into the Uralic languages - they're so interesting and there's so much to say about them, he's missing out on a lot there. The Caucasian languages, too

    • @themapleleafforever1526
      @themapleleafforever1526 2 роки тому +12

      Regarding Romanian he is right. Romanian is spoken in that part of the world due to the Roman invasion and settlement of Dacia. Although his use of the wordage "I think" does make it sound unnecessarily ambiguous.

    • @MyFiddlePlayer
      @MyFiddlePlayer Рік тому +4

      The one word summary is "migration". Multiple groups did it multiple times. Sometimes they learned the language of their new neighbors, and sometimes they didn't. Sometimes they migrated to conquer, sometimes they migrated to escape conquest, and sometimes they migrated for environmental reasons.

    • @cosmincasuta486
      @cosmincasuta486 9 місяців тому

      @@MyFiddlePlayer And sometimes, some of them, never migrate!

  • @laillabethm
    @laillabethm 3 роки тому +155

    Hungarian and Finnish are related, even if it's not visible :) and they are both Uralic languages. I've learned some Finnish and seen that the logic of their grammar is almost the same as in Hungarian. And yes, Hungarians have come from the Ural region, and arrived to the Carpathian Basin in the 9th century.
    And Hungarian speakers outside of current Hungary is a painpoint for many countries still today. The Hungarian Kingdom included other nationalities who were not treated as equal at the time of the national movements from the 19th century. This led to them wanting to take a "revenge" on Hungary after WWI and the newly formed countries have taken territories where Hungarian speakers lived. (Which led to further problems...)

    • @allanroosimaa1033
      @allanroosimaa1033 3 роки тому +7

      + estonian

    • @TheSpadaLunga
      @TheSpadaLunga 3 роки тому +20

      Well Finnish as close to Hungarian as Italian close to Polish

    • @amjan
      @amjan 3 роки тому +36

      @@TheSpadaLunga Polish and Italian come from different lang families, and are totally different grammarically - Polish is an inflectional language, Italian is an analytical language.
      Finnish and Hungarian are both agglutinative languages and come from the same family.

    • @TheSpadaLunga
      @TheSpadaLunga 3 роки тому +20

      @@amjan no, both Polish and Italian are from Indo-European lang family

    • @amjan
      @amjan 3 роки тому +11

      @@TheSpadaLunga Are you drunk or just stupid? Polish is a Slavic language, Italian is a Romance language. They are very different, which I explained in the comment.
      "Indo-European" is a very remote superior order of classification, you silly.

  • @tillappelhans4985
    @tillappelhans4985 3 роки тому +156

    You have missed a few things. 1. in the south of France there is another minority language called "Occitaine". Also, there is Corse. In Germany there are two more minority languages in the north, one is Danish and the other one is Frisian. I probably missed some as well.

    • @kosinusify
      @kosinusify 3 роки тому +14

      He actually mentioned Frisian

    • @Yental
      @Yental 3 роки тому +8

      theres also plattdeutsch/low german and Saterfrisian in Eastfrisia

    • @Benefartamemia
      @Benefartamemia 3 роки тому +4

      Corse dialiect is an italian dialect

    • @tillappelhans4985
      @tillappelhans4985 3 роки тому

      @@Benefartamemia and in the West of France you can find the Alsace minority language, which is a German dialect.

    • @demonic_myst4503
      @demonic_myst4503 3 роки тому

      Wondered what ocitain was lol in hou4 i normaly release them as a seperate puppet to weaken france

  • @eltedioso
    @eltedioso 3 роки тому +286

    To say that all of Italy speaks dialects of standard Italian is a major oversimplification. They're mostly dialects of the Romance language continuum, but they're not all on the same branch. But great video regardless!

    • @ephraimbrener9143
      @ephraimbrener9143 3 роки тому +26

      Venetian should have been mentioned. Also for France, Occitan

    • @TheAurelianProject
      @TheAurelianProject 3 роки тому +16

      @@ephraimbrener9143
      There’s way more than just Venetian. Way more.

    • @jtinalexandria
      @jtinalexandria 3 роки тому +39

      Then there's Sicilian, which is not intelligible with Italian, Sardinian which is definitely not intelligible, and Neapolitan, which is only partly intelligible to people from the rest of Italy.

    • @2trappy2
      @2trappy2 3 роки тому +9

      So many mistakes in this video

    • @Montechristoss
      @Montechristoss 3 роки тому +8

      Fascinating to see some people still speaking greek ( some form ) in South Italy although they are some villages

  • @HKWahl72
    @HKWahl72 2 роки тому +20

    Norwegian, Danish and Swedish are in many ways the same language. I can give you an example.
    Yesterday I was in a shop and bought some clothes. I spoke norwegian, and the woman who sold me the clothes spoke swedish.
    We have some words that are different, but we have no problems to understand each other.

    • @sputnikcaviar5592
      @sputnikcaviar5592 2 роки тому +4

      Always thought it would be cool for Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden (and maybe Finland!) to become one nation---Viking Land (of course, Greenland being part of Denmark would make it a pretty big place!). Capital city could be in the Faroe Islands! lol

    • @dschledermann
      @dschledermann 2 роки тому +8

      It's very much a question of what defines a language. There's a lot of politics in it also. Had Scandinavia remained united, the three commonly perceived Scandinavian languages would have been considered dialects.

    • @dschledermann
      @dschledermann 2 роки тому +2

      @@sputnikcaviar5592 fun to think about, but the traditional rivalry between Denmark and Sweden, and the desire for Norway, Finland and Iceland to state their own identity doesn't make it likely. But who knows? Some new geopolitical situation might upend the status quo and make it a possibility again.

    • @sputnikcaviar5592
      @sputnikcaviar5592 2 роки тому

      @@dschledermann ...having been to all those places plus the Faeroe Islands...I would say they have more in common than a liberal NYC Biden voter and a conservative Oklahoma Trump voter! lol

    • @dschledermann
      @dschledermann 2 роки тому +4

      @@sputnikcaviar5592 yeah, you are not incorrect in that the people are very similar with regards to politics, but Scandinavia is very different from the US. Currently I doubt Scandinavians would be very keen on the idea of a new union. I think people are satisfied with the current status. But again; who knows? If the debacle with Russia goes south, EU breaks up and NATO is weakened, some sort of unified Scandinavian state, closely aligned with the UK and the Netherlands might actually become a reality.

  • @gre3nishsinx0Rgold4
    @gre3nishsinx0Rgold4 3 роки тому +119

    If the languages in Europe became it's own country. The amount of cluster- fudge and border gore would offend everyone.

    • @dutchafrikaner1204
      @dutchafrikaner1204 2 роки тому +5

      and then, what is a langauge? Is that what now is recognized as language, or do dialects count too? Otherwise, Limburg and Lower Saxony are also forgotten like often Low Saxon and Limburgs are.

    • @crogmmp
      @crogmmp 2 роки тому +2

      Looks aren't the problem. It's simply impossible to control all those inclaves, exclaves, splits and keeping the borders the way they are

    • @apveening
      @apveening 2 роки тому +8

      A language is a dialect with a fleet and an army.

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ 2 роки тому

      Not really, Europe has already cleaned up its linguistic borders due to nationalism and world wars.

  • @volframs9
    @volframs9 4 місяці тому +2

    The south estonian language is called voro. there is also another one but i forgot what it was called
    In latvia there are two languages: latgalian and livonian. latgalian is spoken in the eastern part of latvia where rezekne and daugavpils is (its considered a dialect by the government but the others say its a different language). livonian is a uralic language which only has a few speakers left (and only 1 native speaker born a few years ago).
    Lithuania has samogitian which is considered a dialect of lithuanian (like latgalian)

  • @drd-hm6fc
    @drd-hm6fc 3 роки тому +77

    Actually all those Italian dialects are considered by experts as being their own languages, since they evolved independently from each other and not from standard Italian. Some of them, like Sardinian, are even officially recognised as such, even if in school it is taught that most of them are just dialects. I could understand not including them alla since it would make the map a mess and the vast majority of people who speak a regional language also speak Italian, but at least they could have included Sardinian because of its official status

    • @Hikaeme-od3zq
      @Hikaeme-od3zq 3 роки тому +1

      I think also Neapolitan is recognized as an official language.

    • @alexhalex8
      @alexhalex8 3 роки тому +4

      @@Hikaeme-od3zq It is not, just as all the rest of the Italian regional languages other than Sardinian and Friulian

    • @nyko921
      @nyko921 2 роки тому +1

      @@Hikaeme-od3zq Neapolitan is not considered a language by the italian government but is recognised by Unesco

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ 2 роки тому +1

      He could have divided Italy into Venetia, Gallo-Italia (Lombard, Ligurian, Piedmontese), Italo-Dalmatia (Italian, Neapolitan), Sicily, and Sardinia.

    • @nicolomodica2704
      @nicolomodica2704 2 роки тому

      @@alexhalex8 venetian is recognised as a language

  • @mahatmaniggandhi2898
    @mahatmaniggandhi2898 3 роки тому +35

    the thing is that sometimes there isnt a clear line between dialect and language
    for example most people consider galician the same as portuguese,or bulgarian the same as macedonian or that a lot of germany doesnt actually speak "german"(standard german) they speak regional germanic languages which sometimes is unintelligible to standard german like bavarian or low german, same thing goes for italy.
    however both italy and germany are a dialect continuum the german one even includes netherlands and belgium

    • @sebe2255
      @sebe2255 2 роки тому +4

      That dialect continuum is pretty much dead. But the distinction between dialect and language is completely arbitrary and political

    • @mahatmaniggandhi2898
      @mahatmaniggandhi2898 2 роки тому +1

      @@sebe2255 :(

    • @martijnb5887
      @martijnb5887 2 роки тому

      A language is a dialect with a navy

    • @ferruccioveglio8090
      @ferruccioveglio8090 2 роки тому

      @@martijnb5887 It's the reason because doesn't exist the Swiss language!
      Oh, wait, Hungarian, Serbian, Czech and Slovakian exist...

  • @camuscolorado
    @camuscolorado 2 роки тому +11

    Somebody had that idea of a nation encompassing all speakers of their language around the end of the 1930s. It did not end well.

  • @Occitania26
    @Occitania26 3 роки тому +42

    2:42 Where is Occitan on your map? Occitan is the language of the southern half of France, Catalan in Spain is a twin language of Occitan. Occitan (Catalan) is not French and not Spanish.
    _Ont es l'occitan sus la vòstra mapa ? occitan es la lenga parlada dins lo miegjorn de la França, lo catalan en Espanha es una lenga bessona de l'occitan. L'occitan (lo catalan) es pas brica francés, espanhòl tanpauc._

    • @AcousticSkidmark
      @AcousticSkidmark 3 роки тому +3

      As a catalan + spanish speaker who understands a little french too this language is perfectly understandable

    • @Occitania26
      @Occitania26 3 роки тому +3

      @@AcousticSkidmark Yes, it is

    • @Hugo-cn9no
      @Hugo-cn9no 3 роки тому +2

      En tout cas on emmerde fort l'occitanie et les occitanophones, quelle blague d'ailleurs ce nom de région (je suis d'aveyron lol) et la culture occitane n'a jamais été notre, nous avons été guyennais, puis à un moment sous la domination du comté de foix donc les pseudo-nationalistes occitans mdr

    • @Occitania26
      @Occitania26 3 роки тому +1

      @@Hugo-cn9no ça se discute... Le pseudo-nationalisme occitan est de mon point de vue pas moins crédible que le pseudo-régionalisme guyennais-aveyronnais, l'un étant d'obédience nationaliste romantique (le nationalisme romantique a connu son âge d'or au 19e siècle avec la réunification de l'Italie et l'union de l'Allemagne), l'autre (le régionalisme aveyronnais) étant d'héritage historique médiéval (attachement nostalgique à l'ancien duché de Guyenne et Gascogne).

    • @rachidlamolle77
      @rachidlamolle77 3 роки тому +2

      Ça reste dramatique de voir une si belle langue sombrer dans l'oubli alors qu'elle est un réel pont entre l'italien, l'espagnol et le portugais...

  • @furlan1743
    @furlan1743 3 роки тому +26

    Corse has nothing to do with french, it developed from medieval Italian and it is intelligible to Italian, not to french, which developed in a whole different area (not even in southern France so the closest part of France to Corsica but in northern France). Plus the definition of Italian dialect is different from the traditional one. They are actually languages. They share a lot in common, since they were all highly influenced in vocabulary and phonetic by Italian, but they are actually different languages.

    • @nagichampa9866
      @nagichampa9866 2 роки тому

      While I agree that Corse (Corsican?) is closer to Italian than French and as such should be mentioned, I would argue that French and Italian are mutually intelligible to some extent to anyone that doesn't have a "that's another language so I don't understand" attitude.

  • @arposkraft3616
    @arposkraft3616 2 роки тому +2

    @6:30 oww that ... thats stalins doing...he loved "mixing people and borders" and the coast of besarbia was one of his special projects

  • @Janttura
    @Janttura 2 роки тому +18

    A finn could have a short discussion with a carelian. The biggest way they differ from each other is the way they're written. Words have mostly same meanings and structure of the language is similar. Eesti for finns sounds like they're trying really hard to speak finnish but they're making up new words and new meanings to words. But we're pals, I wish to visit soon again ❤️

  • @mewosh_
    @mewosh_ 3 роки тому +31

    did he just completely avoided/forgot to mention all the western slavic countries or am I having some memory issues?

    • @ontopmeow
      @ontopmeow 2 роки тому +2

      We don't exist.

    • @jakubondrus6064
      @jakubondrus6064 2 роки тому +2

      Yea he did, even though there are parts of Slovakia where people speak neither Slovak nor Hungarian (as their native language, that is)

  • @WerJoy
    @WerJoy 2 роки тому +1

    Bulgaria has glimpse of turkic languages because they were used to be khanate and they territory was spread out from modern Bulgaria through the south east of Ukraine and was ending close to russian ural mountains. Those small groups of turkic speaking people in Bulgaria, Chuvash, Bashkir people in Russia are the only last descendants of that khanate.

  • @LP12BZ
    @LP12BZ 3 роки тому +61

    In Corse is spoken a language that derived from an Italian dialect and has nothing to share with french

    • @General.Knowledge
      @General.Knowledge  3 роки тому +3

      Apparently so! I don't get why it wasn't included in the map

    • @fazznoanimation1031
      @fazznoanimation1031 3 роки тому +7

      @@General.Knowledge corsican/french person who lives in corsica here. To be fair french is the majority language in corsica nowadays, corsican is still present on every signs you'll see and occasionally if you go to a bar/pub in any city/town you'd probably have elders singing corsican songs. Though unfortunately there are more people speaking french than people speaking corsican and it's very rare to hear anyone speaking corsican to another person. Thankfully though there are measures taken to preserve the language like if you go the university you'll have a mandatory club activity to pick from related to corsican, be it talking with corsican speakers or partaking in classes that teach you about corsican history and culture through linguistic ateliers like cinematography and etc

    • @felicepompa1702
      @felicepompa1702 3 роки тому +6

      @@fazznoanimation1031 sadly france is an extremely centralized state. Do you now the history of corsican? Napoleon III enacted the "francisata" or "gallicisation" of corsican aiming at slowly replacing corsican words with french loan words basically killing the language without doing it directly, the only corsican strongholds was the church and italian univeristies like Pisa or Bologna, but then all travel to italy was banned and people had to study at french univeristies instead, after that in all church activities corsican was banned.
      Even today corsican is not a recognized language in france and the island is not even autonomous, some corsicans carry old tuscan or old sardinian last names without even knowing it (and probably butchering the pronounciation of their own surname)

    • @yvanoff5443
      @yvanoff5443 3 роки тому +4

      The map he used is widely inaccurate anyway. Well spotted for Corsican, I also noticed Occitan or Arpitan mysteriously vanished as well

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper 3 роки тому

      @@felicepompa1702 France is a colonial entity that should be abolished.

  • @tonyhawk94
    @tonyhawk94 2 роки тому +16

    French from Alsace here :
    -> Alsace-Lorraine speaks two dialects of "German", Alsatian and Plattdeutsch, these are not Hochdeutsch but southern dialects. However, from my experience, the degree of intercomprehension is variable, though we could communicated with our Schwaben neighbor, it was impossible for my friends from the North of Germany to understand it (we made several experiences hehe).
    -> However, most people especially the younger generation have little to no knowledge of this dialects.
    -> Also in Italy i think French is no longer spoken or only minimaly in Aoste valley.

    • @nein236
      @nein236 18 днів тому

      Hochdeutsch is a term that refers to southern dialects.

  • @gordonpi8674
    @gordonpi8674 2 роки тому +1

    Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Montenegrin are ONE polycentric language called Serbocroatian, same as are English and Spanish.

  • @jordilt3449
    @jordilt3449 3 роки тому +38

    Catalan and basque are also spoken in french territory.
    In France are also spoken occitan (forgotten in the video) and corsican, in the island of Corsica (along with the mentioned in the video).
    In Italy (where, as you say, catalan is also still spoken in a corner of sardinia) are also spoken Sicilian, Sardinian, Napolitan and venetian, at least. In italy they call them "dialects". yes, they are "dialects" from the latin, as it is "italian" (in fact is tuscan, from the toscania region) itself.
    In spain, along with basque, galaico-portuguese (galego and portuguese are the same language) and catalan are also spoken aragonese, asturianu and occitan (in a catalan valley, the only place where occitan has official recognition (by catalan authorities) ).
    about "what makes sense" 10:47 i would say that what makes sense is to left to people to chose what makes sense: is called democracy and human rights. Most of current borders come from wars, written by blood, and after that most, if not all the states tried to destroy the languages of the minorities left within each state. So if i should chose between a border written in blood and pursuing cultural genocide or democracy, i chose the second. whatever you think that makes sense or not.

    • @anthob2129
      @anthob2129 2 роки тому

      Yes italy has many dialect, my family speaks Bergamasco, a local dialect of Lombardy

    • @lechatrelou6393
      @lechatrelou6393 2 роки тому +3

      Yes, like the map shows, Catalan and Basque are spoken in French.

  • @yann1ck666
    @yann1ck666 3 роки тому +32

    Just a small remark. Wallonia isn't a province of Belgium. It is however one of the three regions. It is itself split up in 5 provinces

  • @lenartkafol7569
    @lenartkafol7569 3 роки тому +74

    It is so sad that Slovenian language wasn't even mentioned, while you also wrote Slovakia instead of Slovenia in a video about country name origins. You shouldn't neglect one country while thoroughly covering the others. Otherwise great videos.

    • @randomestchannel
      @randomestchannel 2 роки тому

      bro get mad yo country just a femboyland lmao

    • @django_KS19
      @django_KS19 Рік тому

      Lmao Iceland was also ignored, hate when this happens

    • @MajklAstarin
      @MajklAstarin 5 місяців тому

      @@django_KS19 Lol Iceland was not ignored. He mentioned it at 3:49. Czech, Polish, Slovak and Slovenian were not mentioned at all. Or I did not catch it.

  • @paulaedwardsxii
    @paulaedwardsxii 3 роки тому +15

    6:31
    I'll give you some explanation (whoever is Moldovan too correct me if I'm wrong)
    So, most of Moldova speaks Romanian/Moldovan(which is the same except small differences and Russian slangs) but in the autonomous region of Gagauzia it's spoken Gagauz, a turkic language, and then to the east there's a small stripe that is Transnistria/Pridnestrovie, an unrecognised country which already declared independence, there it's spoken Moldovan too in some places, to the north Ukrainian and to the south of it (closer to the capital) it's spoken Russian, which is their official language

    • @Marmara73
      @Marmara73 3 роки тому +4

      Gagavuz is Turkish. It is almost the same as the Turkish in Turkey. Gagavuz Turks are Christian Turkic tribe

    • @paulaedwardsxii
      @paulaedwardsxii 3 роки тому +1

      @@Marmara73 okay, thanks for the info

    • @callmereiki
      @callmereiki 3 роки тому +2

      I know personally someone who is from gagauz zone. He speaks a Russian dialect and I feel like most gagauz people refuse speaking Romanian. Also they are orthodox Turks so yeah.. weird mix

    • @vjflow749
      @vjflow749 3 роки тому +6

      Gagauz people do not speak gagauz language. Instead, they speak russian. They are pro russians. When Romanian president offered scholarships to Gagauz students to come to Romania to learn Gagauz language, in the local schools in Dobrogea region which has a Turkish minority, the Gagauz refused.
      Another thing, when Transnistria declared independence from Moldova, Gagauzia also declared independence and they had the intention to unite with Russia. After negociations with the Moldovan government the Gagauz received autonomy for their region inside R. Of Moldova

    • @paulaedwardsxii
      @paulaedwardsxii 3 роки тому +1

      @@vjflow749 that’s interesting... I never knew that, my relative was raised by Gagauz people, but nobody was really informed about this to tell me, Thanks

  • @danielefabbro822
    @danielefabbro822 2 роки тому +9

    Friuli once was an independent nation, and also one of the first democracy of Europe. Born in 1077, the Patriarchate of Aquileia had one of the first forms of parliamentary government where aristocracy, church and volgus (common people/citizens) was equally represented.
    It lasted until Venetians came to conquer and occupy our land.

  • @cg623d
    @cg623d 2 роки тому +5

    Standard French is the Paris Region language. Northern France has its own languages like Picard (even though Dutch Flemish is mentioned)

  • @thesoundoftoulouse
    @thesoundoftoulouse 3 роки тому +51

    Where is the Occitan language? estimates range from 100,000 to 800,000 speakers in total today, that's a lot! ranked 46th language by the Calvet barometer measuring the weight of the world's languages in 2012.
    I see that you put Catalan in Spain, yet Catalan was considered only a dialect of Occitan until the end of the 19th century. Moreover, in Catalonia, Occitan is a co-official language with Catalan and Spanish.

    • @torrawel
      @torrawel 3 роки тому

      The first map is pretty bad. The second one a lot better :)

    • @novedad4468
      @novedad4468 3 роки тому +7

      Occitan is cooficial in Catalonia due to the language beeing native to the people of the Vall d'Aran, not because Catalan is considered to be Occitan. Yes, they are more relates to each other than they are to Spanish and French, but they are still distinct. You wouldn't say Frisian and English are the same would you?
      Still, its sad to think that the only place where Occitan language is protectes is in Spain, when 98% of it is spoken in France...

    • @thesoundoftoulouse
      @thesoundoftoulouse 3 роки тому +1

      @@novedad4468 Ok ;)

  • @truthseeker1278
    @truthseeker1278 7 місяців тому

    7:54 For those interested:
    That map is available in much better quality in 2 similar versions on the website with the capital "R".

  • @КонстантинГеоргиев-и9ф

    5:46 dude, there are no Macedonian speakers in Bulgaria. People around Blagoevgrad speak a dialect of Bulgarian only slightly closer to standard Macedonian than standard Bulgarian is.

    • @honeyheart8215
      @honeyheart8215 3 роки тому

      Картата не е правилна хаха.

    • @Sgajwkjdjsja
      @Sgajwkjdjsja 2 роки тому

      the macedonians who have delcared themselves as such in bulgaria speak macedonian

  • @SantiAb009
    @SantiAb009 2 роки тому +6

    I'm from Portugal and I've been following your channel for some time, I even understand English but I would be happy if you put subtitles in Portuguese and in other languages ​​so that other people who don't speak English natively can enjoy your content

  • @DanTheCaptain
    @DanTheCaptain Рік тому +7

    Hungarian here and yes there are still sizeable Hungarian populations in neighbouring countries. Most of these are located in Romania however, the next most are located in Slovakia and Serbia. I have met many Slovakian Hungarians and have a lot of friends from Transylvania! There’s approx. 1.5 million Hungarian still left in Transylvania today.

  • @bokoe7469
    @bokoe7469 2 роки тому +10

    The Dutch government recognises two more languages: Low Saxon, spoken in the north and east of the country, and Limburgish, spoken in the southeast. Both languages are spoken in parts of Germany as well.

    • @stefan19801209
      @stefan19801209 2 роки тому +2

      Limburgish is also spoken in the province of Limburg in Belgium. Vie kalle ooch Plat in Limburg. ;-)

    • @иосифгерман-п8о
      @иосифгерман-п8о 2 роки тому +1

      Nedersachsiech &Limburgs are dialects Not separate Languages

    • @bokoe7469
      @bokoe7469 2 роки тому +1

      @@иосифгерман-п8о most linguists and the Dutch government recognise them as separate languages

  • @L.A.ismyname
    @L.A.ismyname 3 роки тому +11

    I caught some mistakes about languages in the Netherlands.
    1. The map showed about the Frisian language isn't accurate (in modern sense). In West-Friesland, Groningen, Ostfriesland, Wilhelmshaven and Bremerhaven, Frisian has been extinct. West-Fries is an Hollandic language, Gronings, Ostfries Low German and the other dialects in the Weser-Ems region are Low Saxon. Don't get me wrong they used to be Frisian and they still have a Frisian substrate but they aren't Frisian!
    2. You should definitely have included Low Saxon/Low German as a separate language, it is spoken in a huge area, yes there isn't a standard version but is Friulian? Catalan?

    • @hightidemidafternoon
      @hightidemidafternoon 2 роки тому

      Agreed! I am from Schleswig-Holstein's east and do consider low german my mother tongue.

  • @dutchman7623
    @dutchman7623 2 роки тому +2

    A sigh of relief at the end, Ireland doesn't belong to the US because of it's language.
    Can just remain Ireland as it is and be happy.

  • @solidarnosc14
    @solidarnosc14 Рік тому +3

    A little correction for poland on this map:
    Polish is also spoken in some parts of western Belarus and western Ukraine, although not official

    • @dmytrokhomenko2926
      @dmytrokhomenko2926 Рік тому +1

      Polish is almost not spoken in Ukraine. There's only 5-6 small villages.

    • @anothervinnie7413
      @anothervinnie7413 Рік тому

      Used to be… my great father was born in Poland in a place which is in Ukraine today. But I assume nobody there can speak Polish anymore…

    • @solidarnosc14
      @solidarnosc14 Рік тому

      Well, what you are assuming is wrong. I have MANY friends from western belarus and western Ukraine, ALL of them speak Polish, and their parents, and their grandparents, and their friends... sometimes even signs on the streets are written in Polish@@anothervinnie7413

  • @alistairt7544
    @alistairt7544 3 роки тому +8

    I feel like many of these borders' extent are so arbitrary, or perhaps just simply historical, because today some of these languages have very little population of speakers(percentage wise). Like Breton for example, only has around 200,000 speakers, which is less than 5% of the total population of modern-day Brittany. It's even lower when it comes to French Flemish speakers up north, with less than 100k. Perhaps, Alsatian and Occitan have significant numbers of speakers, to maybe be shown in the map.
    I bring this up because I just watched the South American video of this topic and Quechuan languages didn't have separate borders like how Breton have their own borders here. There are millions of Quechuan speakers and are far more significant in number of speakers compared to Breton, Alsatian, and French Flemish speakers, and yet, they were just merged/absorbed within the borders of Spanish.

  • @janezazman6861
    @janezazman6861 3 роки тому +2

    What about Slovenian? Beside in Slovenia it is spoken in eastern Italy (it's on the Italy map in the video at 5:05 and you haven't mentioned it), in southern Austria and in the southwest of Hungary.

  • @n0namesowhatblerp362
    @n0namesowhatblerp362 2 роки тому +14

    There is a village in Ukraine where people used to speak swedish in, But i think all those people are gone now. "Gammalsvenskby" in Ukraine. As a swede, I found that hella interesting.

    • @torzsmokus
      @torzsmokus 2 роки тому

      I wonder if it is related to the Viking / Varegian origins of the Rus'

    • @n0namesowhatblerp362
      @n0namesowhatblerp362 2 роки тому +3

      @@torzsmokus No, it has nothing to do with that. The people of Gammalsvenskby where forcefully moved there by Russia from Estonia, in the 15th century, back then Estonia, or this part of Estonia at least belonged to Sweden. Fun fact: The land where saint petersburg is today also used to belong to sweden. No, you cant say finland, as finland had never been a soverign state until their independance from Russia. The boo hoo - iness from the finnish side towards the swedes tends to omit that all villagers and farmers in what was sweden back then, where forceully christianized. It was not especially done just for the finns..and for that matter then the swedes should be just as angry with the germans. - A finnish-swede, who likes history.

    • @dmytrokhomenko2926
      @dmytrokhomenko2926 Рік тому

      That's Zmiivka in Kherson region. It was occupied for 8 months and what I know it's damaged but not destroyed completely, I think +- third part of the community stayed (just like in other villages which in war zone).

  • @rafox66
    @rafox66 2 роки тому +3

    The Netherlands has an officially recognised minor language called Nedersaksisch (Low Saxon, also known as Low German) that stretches all the way into Russia's Kaliningrad. It has different dialects so it would be limited but older people that still speak the language could have a conversation with each other throughout that area.

  • @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit
    @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit Місяць тому

    8:11 that is, because Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian are indeed part of the same language family. Uralic. It also includes some other stuff like Sami or Karelian. It's called Uralic, because the family originated in the Ural Mountains (the way it ended up where it is now is due to migration).

  • @abdulrahmanabdulaziz8742
    @abdulrahmanabdulaziz8742 3 роки тому +6

    Next is Asia please.
    Excellent video as always 👍

  • @thisis2awesome
    @thisis2awesome 2 роки тому +9

    Two countries that could merge in the future are Moldova and Romania, not only because of the common language but culture as well. They have been one country in the past so its not entirely possible.

    • @dilgeatakan9366
      @dilgeatakan9366 Рік тому +2

      And I blame Russia for the division.

    • @CVery45
      @CVery45 11 місяців тому

      @@dilgeatakan9366 No one in Europe cares about the opinion of the Turks

  • @eastfrisian_88
    @eastfrisian_88 3 роки тому +6

    In Germany, there is still Low German in the north, but there the dialects differ greatly by region. In East Frisia where I grew up we have more loan words from Dutch, in some churches the service was even held in Dutch until the First World War. Low German in East Frisia is also closely related to the "Gronings" dialect in the Netherlands and people understand each other very well, while standard Dutch is again different. The verb for "to speak" in our Low German is "proten" (from Dutch: praten) and otherwise "schnacken" is almost always used. Now I live in Friesland (not to be confused with Dutch Friesland) and there is a "boarder" between villages between "proten" and "schnacken", because some villages had stronger connections to East Frisia due to natural barriers (moor, North Sea coastline). I am 33 and unfortunately only a few people my age still speak relatively fluent Low German, which I find a great pity.
    I work in customer service for Germany and Austria in quality assurance and there are also some dialect forms in Austria that are quite difficult for me to understand, as well as Swiss German or Luxembourgish. My mother has lived at the other end of Germany in southeastern Bavaria for 10 years and when I visit her, I always have to pay very close attention to what is being said with long-established dialect speakers and still only understand about 60-70% and the rest I have to guess or infer from the context.

    • @MarsOhr
      @MarsOhr Рік тому +1

      Was treibt denn eine Ostfriesin nach Bayern?

    • @fjkfkfkf
      @fjkfkfkf Рік тому +1

      yeah okay but as a swiss german we speak perfect low standard german and can switch up between the accent. we also have to speak standard german in formal occasions

    • @MarsOhr
      @MarsOhr Рік тому +1

      @@fjkfkfkf Ich glaube, da haben Sie etwas mißverstanden. Die Deutsch-Schweizer vesrtehen, geschweige sprechen, doch kein Plattdeutsch.

  • @benlewis5312
    @benlewis5312 3 роки тому +12

    The nation most likely to split up based on language is obviously Spain. The nations most likely to combine via language are probably Germany and Austria but that's harder to say for certain

    • @ces5263
      @ces5263 3 роки тому +1

      Nope, the mayority of spaniards speaks spanish, even in the territories with a cooficial language spanish is by far more used.

    • @oier2995
      @oier2995 3 роки тому

      @@ces5263 no sabes leer

  • @michaeltaddicken3400
    @michaeltaddicken3400 3 роки тому +53

    This is really a minefield. If you want to do this subject justice, you need at least 20 hours more time to go much deeper. 😉 Nation-state language are somewhat arbitrary. Do you know that you can walk from e.g. Porto in Portugal to Messina in Italy and each village could communicate well with its neighbours. Where does a language start, where does it end? That's really tricky. The same goes for Dutch and German; Danish, Swedish and Norwegian; Macedonian and Bulgarian. Bielorussian and Ukrainian. Karelean has lots of Russian words in it, but remains a Finnish dialect? And history is a huge !!!! factor everywhere. For example many Germans can understand Dutch better than Bavarian for example. 😆 Just saying. ....

  • @vladagherman3255
    @vladagherman3255 2 роки тому +4

    Hey, a Moldovan here! Basically, this map regarding Moldova is very wrong. While it's true that the southern territories have a kind of their own language, there is still some inaccuracy. Let me explain.
    So, first of all, almost all the territory of Moldova must be a mix of the 2 languages - them being romanian and russian, and not just small particles of russian here and there. Because the majority of our population knows and speaks both languages, at least on the basic level and uses them in daily life.
    Also for those who ask: Why romanian and not moldavian language? If short, romanian is an umbrella term for 3 dialects: moldavian, wallachian and transylvanian. Each from its own part (while Wallachia and Moldova were kingdoms back then, Transylvania was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire), that united in one country under the name of Romania (but we parted ways at some point). Thus there's no wrong answer between romanian and moldavian, cause it's basically the same language.
    Second, that mixture of languages that you see in the south, is not situated in Moldova. That is our former territory, that's why there are particles of romanian language in there. However now it is under Ukraine, if you pay attention you will see the borderline between Republic of Moldova and that mix of green.
    But it's true, indeed, that russian language plays a much bigger role in the East and South of the country... Let's say - because of the cultural and political preferences of the population there; that is Transnistria and Gagauz (it's a lot to write in order to explain this, so i'll gladly try my best to do that only if someone's interested).
    Lastly, about the Gagauz. The gagauz people also speak 2 languages, mostly russian and gagauz, from what i know (and some even 3 if we include those who know romanian). I'm not gagauz and i don't really know their history, so i'll use the open info from the internet (Thanks, Wikipedia!). So, the ancestors of the gagauz people today, immigrated from the current-day Bulgarian Black Sea coast, north of Varna, to Russian Empire and settled in the region that is now the current-day Republic of Moldova.
    My take is that, at that time the balkanic territories (including Bulgaria) and its languages were majorly influenced by the Ottoman Empire while under its rule, and when gagauz came to Russian Empire it was yet again influenced. Well, as any language that is in great proximity to other languages and territories over decades.
    I don't know if i'm right or wrong, but it makes sense to me, as it is stated in wiki that though gagauz is a distinct language from Balkan Gagauz Turkish, it is a language derived from it. It is also stated, and you can see that by the color code on that map too, that gagauz is a language with turkic roots, alongside Azerbaijani, Turkmen, and Turkish. And besides Moldova it is also spoken in some regions of the Ukraine, Russia (that were influenced by turkic population) and Turkey itself.
    Plus, fun fact: despite gagauz being a pretty old language, as an official and written language it is surprisingly young (1957).
    So yeah, something like this! I hope the information i brought helped clarifying things and it wasn't boring. I also hope that i explained well, because english is not my first (nor second xD ) language, thus there may be mistakes. Enjoy your time of the day (whatever it is)!

    • @Ιωάννης-π2ο
      @Ιωάννης-π2ο 2 роки тому +2

      Thank you for making us understand the current situation about the language dispute (Romanian-Russian) in our beautiful Moldova. I just have an objection. As an gagauzian itself. We believe we are Greeks and not türks neather Bulgarians or aromanians. We believe that we are tribes from pondos and Constantinople/Instabul territories who left Greece to escape from the slaughtering of the Turks. We believe in Hellenism and we embrace it, we learn Greek language in school and actually we have a big community of Pontians here. Now, I know many things had changed after two centuries... But that's what we are or what at least believe we are 🇬🇷 - 🇹🇷 ♥ 🇷🇴
      Ps. My grandmother used to speak Greek while my father knew some Greek as well. But from my mother's side all my family used to talk Turkish or Romanian 🤔 I've got no idea what's happening

    • @vladagherman3255
      @vladagherman3255 2 роки тому +1

      @@Ιωάννης-π2ο Well Greece is still balkanic region so i think my theory still works. Sorry if i mistook something. Thanks for adding veritable info! Friends! 🤗

  • @gold-818
    @gold-818 3 роки тому +15

    The language group issue provides its own set of problems. For example English speakers can't understand Germans but Spanish speakers can understand Portuguese if they speak slowly. I would say just because there is a root language group doesn't mean structurally the languages are compatible to each other. Then add culture on top of that and culturally Romanians are similar to Slavs not Latins. Same could be said with swedish people having a culture closer to Russia than Germany.

    • @pecadodeorgullo5963
      @pecadodeorgullo5963 3 роки тому +7

      That's due to English being a mix of different languages with germanic being the most prevalent with Latin in close second place.

    • @spyarg
      @spyarg 3 роки тому +5

      I think the revetse is true. Portuguese can understand Spanidh more easily than Spaniards can understand Portuguese

    • @juanfran579
      @juanfran579 3 роки тому +2

      @@pecadodeorgullo5963 A very good English teacher in UA-cam called Gideon recently pointed out that the latin-rooted percentage of present day English is higher than the Germanic-rooted. I don't remember the percentage.

    • @paintingdreams290
      @paintingdreams290 2 роки тому

      @@juanfran579 true i mean English literally took words like death from the Normans and stuff and it is a mixed bag with some words having greek (root words), latin (root words), french and italian

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ 2 роки тому

      @@paintingdreams290 Death is of Germanic origin though whereas Normans were speaking Old French.
      Actual words brought by the Normans are: people (in Modern French peuple), favorite (favori), age (âge), flower (fleur), beef (bœuf), mutton (mouton), veal (veau), pork (porc), salmon (saumon), real (réel), colour (couleur), servant (servant), error (erreur), butcher (boucher), button (bouton), crime (crime), dungeon (donjon), eagle (aigle), defeat (défaite), enemy (ennemi), fashion (façon), fraud (fraude), joy (joie), judge (juge), leasure (loisir), launch (lancer), manor (manoir), marriage (mariage), liberty (liberté), noun (nom), noble (noble), pleasure (plaisir), odour (odor), occupy (occuper), pocket (pochette), reason (raison), river (rivière), salary (salaire), royal (royal), sir (sire), madam (madame), pigeon (pigeon), cry (crier), escape (échapper), port (port), autumn (automne), strange (étrange), manner (manière), desire (désirer), savage (sauvage) etc.

  • @asiersanz8941
    @asiersanz8941 3 роки тому +7

    A basque speaker here, a language isolate. It is weird to see that you have forgotten the occitan language in France and in parts of Italy. A language that has even a literature nobel prize (Mistral).

  • @michabrzyski8586
    @michabrzyski8586 2 роки тому +14

    in Poland there are 3 languages : Polish, kashubian and silesian

    • @cutediz
      @cutediz 2 роки тому +2

      Silesian usage is very limited. As someone who lives in Upper Silesia I very, very rarely hear it. I believe most of people there can't speak it. Those who can probably use it only in some closed circles like family at home etc.

    • @PhoeniX-jc2vq
      @PhoeniX-jc2vq 2 роки тому +2

      Silesian and Kashubian are not used by many people, both have less than 200-300 thousand speakers. Besides, Silesian and often Kashubian are seen as dialects of the Polish language. This is a complicated matter for linguists.

    • @krowkerspl7069
      @krowkerspl7069 2 роки тому +1

      śląski to nie język

    • @Ultima-Signa
      @Ultima-Signa 5 місяців тому +1

      You guys arguing that Silesian and kashubian are ˋonlyˋ being spoken by 200-300 people respectively and therefore shouldn’t be included on the map is kinda funny considering that Sorbian is only spoken by 30-60 thousand people (and that only thanks to massive state assistance to revive the language), yet he cut out two big parts out of Germany because of the Sorbian minority 😂

  • @mygetawayart
    @mygetawayart 3 роки тому +6

    the thing with Italy is that Friulan, Sardinian, Tirolese, Slovenian, Croatian, Ladin, Albanese, Occitan, Griko and Provençal are considered by the government as separate protected languages. All other languages (not dialects, as they developed before Italian, directly from Latin) don't have the same recognized protected status as those.
    Also most local languages come in hundreds of different variations, with a non-absolute level of intelligibility from one another, so if we were to count all of Italy's languages, it would take a lifetime, so for some it's easier to just group all of Italy under "Italian" and call local languages as "dialects" while neither classification is correct.

  • @bigozimak
    @bigozimak Рік тому +12

    In a sea of Germanic, Slavic and Latin languages, you have the unique Hungarian language, right in the middle. Respect to Hungary for somehow keeping their language.

  • @marcoponzio1644
    @marcoponzio1644 2 роки тому +5

    5:22 Ladin is a minority language descended from Latin but with a lot a German influence, and Friulian is just really different from Italian (to me because they included it, they should've also added Sardinian and maybe Neapolitan?)

  • @McGliga
    @McGliga 3 роки тому +24

    6:00 Unsure about other countries, but specifically when it comes to Serbia, the northern most province of Vojvodina has historically been populated by Hungarians, only relatively recently (1600s, after the Austro-Turkish wars) did a major demographic shift happen, where in Vojvodina, Slavonia and Baranya were populated by Serbs escaping Ottoman reprisals for our role during the wars. If im not mistaken Serbs became the majority in those areas during 1700s though, however dont hold me on that one, as im unsure. Greetings from Serbia, great video

    • @tomislavmatic4458
      @tomislavmatic4458 3 роки тому +1

      As for Slavonia and Baranja, they were never the majority, as they populated only the parts bordering Ottoman Empire...

    • @redflower2827
      @redflower2827 3 роки тому +4

      Not true, Serbs were always majority there but there were also movement from Serbs from other parts of Serbia in 1600s due Ottoman invasion. Slavs were present on territory of Pannonian basin before Hungarian arrival on that territory (they came im 9th centry in Pannonia). When Hungarians came in 9th century they split the Slavic communities in the region in two, leading to the division of the West Slavs and the South Slavs.

    • @bojanstare8667
      @bojanstare8667 3 роки тому +3

      @Dénes Main tribes in Pannonia were Slavic even after arrival of Hungarians. Genetically were Avars and Hungarians just minority of elite and wariors in Pannonia. Mainly women were and they still are of Slavic origin. They have taken over Magyar language. About Serbs and Croatians is theory of arrival from Caucasian area (and specially for Croatians from Iran).

    • @yincognito
      @yincognito 3 роки тому +1

      @Dénes The moment you claim that Middle Age demographics are "very accurate" and "a fact", you lost all credibility. Middle Age demographics in all regions of the world are highly unreliable, counted only the nobility and not the vast majority made of common people aka peasants, and are only based on estimates, not facts - something made very clear by the Wiki page on Medieval Demography. If that isn't enough, demographics (which deals with _ethnicity_ of people) is only loosely connected to linguistics (which deals with the _languages_ spoken by people), especially in a multicultural, multiethnic and multilanguage area like the former Hungarian Kingdom, where a person speaking Hungarian (in order to have a chance in the kingdom) wouldn't necessarily mean that the person was an ethnic hungarian.
      You talk about the mongol and ottoman massacres and how the Romanians (and probably other groups in Hungary, i.e. Slovaks, Serbs, Croatians, etc.) were a minority subject to assimilation. If that's so, how come your own Gesta Hungarorum chronicle mentioned Vlachs inhabiting and fighting against the Magyar / Hungarian invaders in the 9th century? How come the two most famous kings and defenders of Hungary, aka John Hunyadi and his son Matthias Corvinus were partially of Vlach (i.e. the name of Romanians in Middle Ages) origin, and both born in the Vlach populated Transylvania? How come just after the Mongol invasion - which you claim it devastated the Hungarian Kingdom and left it sparsely inhabited - sizable groups of Vlachs from the Hungarian ruled - but Vlach populated - Transylvania founded the nearby principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia, who would later form the basis of what is now Romania, along with - surprise surprise - Transylvania? How come the 1st document written in Romanian language in 1521 (Neascu of Campulung letter, written in the Old Slavonic script at the time) warned Transylvanian counterparts (i.e. the mayor of Brasov) of Turkish advance towards Hungary, indicating friendly relations and common cause against the invaders? How come after the Ottoman conquest of central Hungary at Mohacs in 1526 - which you again claim that it left Hungary depopulated - nobody assimilated the few Hungarians left in central Hungary (which was the only part of Hungary actually being conquered by the Ottomans, since Transylvania was just under Ottoman suzerainity)?
      The problem is that you mix things that actually happened, i.e. the fact that population was left devastated after both the Mongol and the Ottoman invasions, with claims that simply don't match with a devastated and depopulated region. If Hungary was devastated and depopulated after these events, so would be the Romanian "minority" there (which was never a minority, just like the Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Slovaks and others weren't in their own countries, but that's another story), thus not being able to produce kings for the Hungarian throne (and the most effective kings to date, besides Stephen I of Hungary, of course), not being able to found new principalities in Wallachia and Moldavia, not being able to receive letters in the Romanian language that they would easily understand, and well, the last but not the least, not being able to work the land for the Hungarian nobility. My friendly advice to you is to make sure that what you claim makes sense in the future. Denying other people's rights and trying to distort their history is exactly why Trianon happened to Hungary (besides bloody politics, of course) - try to learn from your neighbours who treat their Hungarian speaking citizens honestly, with respect and consideration, if they deserve it (even in Communism, ffs).

    • @yincognito
      @yincognito 3 роки тому +1

      @Dénes You know what's hilarious, now that you mentioned? :D You claiming others exhibit gypsy behavior and making a connection with their origins, when the Hungarians, themselves a people coming from the borders of Asia, conquered - which by definition means stealing the land from other people, including Vlachs, by force - every place they live in since the 9th century (or 5th century if you count the Huns). If that's not gypsy behavior, I don't know what is, really - just saying...
      Personally, I don't know of Romanians stealing stuff from Hungary in WW1 (for sure know about how Russians did it every time in Romania), but then I'm sure you never heard of similar "bad deeds" by Hungarians in WW1 and WW2, so I believe it would be best for both to just apologize to each other nation's wrongdoings (if required) and move on. Fact is, like you already mentioned (and unlike Hungarians), Romanians never took the lands where Hungarians consistently lived as a majority (or any other land that wasn't theirs, except maybe a small part of Bulgaria, which they gave it back after a few years), i.e. Pannonia, even when they could have. If they did claim to have the border up until Tisza river in WW1 (and acted accordingly on wartime), that was just a negotiation tactic to make sure they get the lands where they were always a majority, i.e. Transylvania, and don't come up empty handed in a world where alliances and the given word were just temporary - I'm sure that deep down you are aware of that, experiencing Trianon and all. Someone selling you something will always ask for a higher price to make sure he gets the price he actually wants, that's how these things work, unfortunately. Otherwise, even in communism, the Romanian Hungarians could live just like anybody else, without being oppressed (the period they had autonomy is proof of that, like you mentioned) and certainly not at the level ethnic Romanians were during the 10 centuries of Hungarian rule (the latter couldn't use their language in public, couldn't have rights like everyone else, couldn't own land, basically being in servitude to the Hungarians their whole life). What little trouble you had a couple of years because of wars or communism is NOTHING at all compared to what Romanians endured for 1000 years, being pariah on their own soil. And after the fall of communism, Hungarians in Romania have rights that other minorities in other states would only dream of (e.g. partial education in maternal language, continuous representation in the Romanian Parliament, bilingual signs and place names for places having as little as 20% of their population of Hungarian origin). Pfff...
      Your point about languages is invalid, for one simple reason: I wasn't talking about trade, or career opportunities. I was talking about understanding with their neighbours, with their landlord, and so on - something that was required under the threat of force, especially in the Middle Ages, unless you expect Huungarian nobility to learn Romanian so they could take 3/4 of the Romanian peasant's crop, LOL. Learning the language of the country you live in is a necessity in every time and era, but that doesn't mean you're an ethnic of that country. Every person of a different ethnicity than the country he lives in can attest to that. My own grandparents (Romanians from Transylvania, by the way) had to learn Hungarian for the same reason and circumstances, they even had Hungarian neighbours. Even I know a few words in the language, and I'm only half from Transylvania.
      Regarding the middle section, I guess I misunderstood what you initially wrote (didn't take the Hungarians from Transylvania moving back in central Hungary variant into account). The way you put it now makes sense indeed, but so does the continuity variant, if you're being fair, especially considering that Vlachs already existed in the region at the time of Magyar tribes arrival, they founded two other principalities coming from Transylvania afterwards, and so on. In a way, these contradicting claims look similar with the Jews in Palestina question. Everybody knows Jews have been there for millenia, Jesus himself was a Jew born there (just like Vlachs or their ancestors), but due to historical circumstances that didn't depend on them, the topic is still blurry to this day, especially for the side arguing otherwise. From a logical point of view it makes more sense for people to mostly stay in the region they initially come from than moving around hundreds and thousands of kms in such great numbers, just to repopulate areas for which, and history has proven, the Hugarians already had solutions for (simple example: Saxons or other populaces used for this purpose). Not to mention that it made no sense for Vlachs, who already lived in the 2 neighbouring established principalities that were not under direct Ottoman threat at that time to migrate in such huge numbers in a country that fared more poorly than their own regions then, due to the Ottoman invasion effects. Even then, why migrate just to Transylvania and not central Hungary, if only the latter was in need of a repopulation? See, the truth is easy to see if you follow logic.
      I was not talking about John Hunyadi's familty being gifted a castle in the Hunyadi area of Transylvania, I was talking about his father being a Vlach (confirmed by historical sources), so both him and his son Matthias Corvinus had partial Vlach / Romanian ancestry. This has everything to do with ethnicity as far as I remember, but if you want further proof of such things, check how many statues of him, street names, and how revered he and his son is in Romania (his family even helped Moldavia's Stephen the Great to repel the Ottomans, so it wasn't like it wasn't reciprocal). By the way, coming full circle with how honestly Hungarians are treated in Romania, ever heard of Gyorgy Dosza? Leader of a peasant rebellion in Hungary, tortured to death for that by Hungarian (not Romanian, by the way) authorities at the time for his role in the revolt, today he has a similar number of statues, monuments, street names and being looked like a hero in Romania ... and he was a Szekely, i.e. Hungarian speaking man from south east Transylvania - not Vlach, not Romanian! Can you find me a SINGLE similarly respected figure of a Romanian in Hungary, like there are dozens of - partially or not - ethnic Hungarians in Romania? Oh wait - see, that was what I was talking about ...
      P.S. Speaking like a teacher (even if just a wannabe one, LMAO) is certainly better than using "ppl" or "sry" and asking to "let me tell you something" like a know-it-all, like you did in your original post. I honestly thought whether you were just a 12 y.o. kid and whether I should bother replying, after seeing that. Fortunately your 2nd post is better in that regard, I don't have the feeling I was talking to an illiterate child like after reading your first reply. Credit to you for changing the tune to a more mature one (bar the pointless attempts to offend when mentioning the gypsy attitude, that is). :D

  • @lucs1491
    @lucs1491 3 роки тому +31

    As a people living in Alsace (the region of France shown as german speaking) i can say that even if a significant part of the population that might be under 50% i think speak german it is a second language that they learned at school and in an overwhelming majority it ins’t the language that people use in their everyday life (i dont speak German for example) but we have a regional language like the breton that is a mixte of french and german (like catalan is a mixte of french and spanish in a certain way) and this language is spoke fluently by at least as many people as german in Alsace and unlike german even if we speak french most of the time we use some world of these language when we talk ( a similar case to breton) but no problem its a really good vidéo i enjoyed it i just wanted to give my knowledge of the subject considering im directly concerned

    • @jewi71
      @jewi71 2 роки тому +1

      I agree. I live on the other side of the Rhine in Baden. And I also think, that most people in Alsace speak French nowadays.

    • @vivientakacs5599
      @vivientakacs5599 2 роки тому +2

      As someone who lives like 15km away from France, maybe it's the same in France as it is here in Germany. Here, because we live so close to France (and maybe Saarland belonging to France then Germany then France and Germany again lol) we also have to learn French in school but people don't usually speak French. And there are some French people living at the border but also Germans living in France (I've had multiple classmates like that lol)

    • @marcstein2510
      @marcstein2510 2 роки тому

      Literally no one in alsace speaks german. The french completely purposely exterminated everything german in alsace.

    • @may51973
      @may51973 Рік тому +1

      I live in Luxembourg. I only recall meeting one French from Alsace-Lorraine with a very good level of German. Besides the only language used as native language is French

    • @fjkfkfkf
      @fjkfkfkf Рік тому

      I absolutely hated learning french in school@@vivientakacs5599

  • @nonusolarozationeatoumatic6239

    Mappers still pretend for Italian languages to be just "Italian"
    What you called dialects are completely distinct languages one another and are not intelligible, it's more the difference between Sicilian and Italian than Catalan and Castillan

  • @estandark8577
    @estandark8577 2 роки тому +12

    As a Hungarian I would like to thank you for dedicating much for hungarian language. So yes those who live in surrounding countries are hungarians, they live there since 896 (the Hungarian nomads arrived from Ural territory). In 1920 two thirds of our territory was tken away, however c.c 50% of the population on those territories werent hugarians, but romanians, slovakians etc. All in all 5 million hungarians were torn away from the motherland, and since then (1920) their population is smaller every year.

    • @oddmented
      @oddmented 2 роки тому +3

      maybe because those weren't their lands, historically and culturally - which explains why they went back to normal quickly post-occupation, as shown in the current map.

    • @estandark8577
      @estandark8577 2 роки тому +1

      @@oddmented Considering that hungarians came from Ural we can seay even the current size is not legit.

    • @ThisAlias
      @ThisAlias 2 роки тому

      If it's that serious can't the Hungarian government take it to the eu court or something like that since both of these countries are in the EU.
      Sincerely, a Turk who's ancestors started to migrate into Anatolia in the year ~1000 from central Asia.

    • @estandark8577
      @estandark8577 2 роки тому

      @@ThisAlias I f we could than every country has territory disputes with their neighbours to some extent, so giving back territories would be a never ending chain reaction.

    • @benyovszkyistvan408
      @benyovszkyistvan408 2 роки тому +2

      During the 19th century, 7,000-8,000-year-old archaeological finds were found in Hungary (Archaeological finds with ancient Hungarian runic writing...), drawing attention to the ancient past. Not to mention the antiquity of the Hungarian language!
      The question is legitimate. Why did the Kingdom of Hungary have to be liquidated? Maybe many people didn't like the ancient past in Europe...?
      Unfortunately, nothing was written about this question...

  • @thomascroonen1325
    @thomascroonen1325 3 роки тому +5

    Small correction: you said that French is also spoken in the Belgian province Wallonia. Wallonia is not a province but a region that itself consists of 5 provinces. :-)

  • @gabrielckazacu6189
    @gabrielckazacu6189 2 роки тому +1

    Gagauz people are a minority in Moldova. They have their own autonomous region, supporting Putin's Russia and also they are the only orthodox turkic people

  • @samuele7098
    @samuele7098 3 роки тому +8

    I respect your work and I know that this is an impossible task: what differenciates a language from a dialect is not always clear and depending on how you interpret it it can change everything! Also I don't understand how big a language has to be to be counted (how is corsican not on the map for example?)
    My region for example can be seen as divided between italian and german if you oversimplify, but if you want to go too much into detail (to the point that the map is unintelligible and that it is controversial whether a couple of choices are actually languages) you have venetian, lombard, german, cimbrian, ladin, mocheno, nones ladin, trentin and italian

  • @LanguedocProvenceGascogneMIDI
    @LanguedocProvenceGascogneMIDI 2 роки тому +4

    Where is occitan?

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl 7 місяців тому

    10:10 What about languages written in runes?

  • @jacklovejoy5290
    @jacklovejoy5290 3 роки тому +11

    The French map is incorrect as it ignores the Occitan language spoken in southern France and Norman in northern France. Sicilian and Sardinian are different enough from Italian to be its own language

    • @augth
      @augth 3 роки тому +2

      Norman is not a language but a dialect of French (langues d’oïl). Also all regional languages are basically dead or going to die.

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 3 роки тому +2

      @@augth Which is entirely the fault of successive French governments over the last two centuries forcing (Parisian) French on school children and punishing them if they spoke Occitan, Breton, etc.. These languages won't have died, they will have been murdered.

    • @mkgvlc4
      @mkgvlc4 2 роки тому +1

      Why do people only remember Occitan when Corsican is much more alive, and corsica has only been a French colony for 200 years. They must resist French centralismo and preserve their beatiful language

  • @ΔημήτρηςΛαζαρίδης-κ5θ

    Skopje should have the Bulgarian language

  • @dmitrygubanov846
    @dmitrygubanov846 3 роки тому +1

    Almost nobody speaks Belorussian in Belorussia. Maybe some fewer islands in the countryside, but not as about half of the country.

    • @pojuellavid
      @pojuellavid 3 роки тому +1

      Автору виднее ))))))))))))))
      а еще откопал ГОВОРЯЩИХ по-мордовски (на эрьзя и мокша) и особенно на калмыцком, осетинском, ханты и манси )))))))))))))))))

  • @Quite937
    @Quite937 Рік тому +7

    Macedonian ppl speak bulgarian dialect. There is no macedonian language, only bulgarian dialect spoken in region of macedonia. Sad but true. Gagauz ppl are turkic ppl converted peacefully to christianity and they speak gagauz language (or may be dialect form ) very similar to old turkish language. Same as Besarabia region and the bulgarians there- they moved from bulgarian lands 200 years ago and they still speak bulgarian language, but kind of old bulgarian.

    • @TheoCorf
      @TheoCorf Місяць тому

      Σωστά, Οι Σκοπιανοί μιλούν Βουλγαρικά, αλλά αυτοί νομίζουν ότι είναι ξεχωριστό "μακεδονικο" έθνος και μάλιστα απόγονοι του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου!!!

  • @danielmistret
    @danielmistret 3 роки тому +10

    6:26 Moldova mostly speaks Romanian, as we are also Romanians, even though many Moldovans would tell you about a “Moldavian Language” but That’s all Russian propaganda. The Gagauz is a turkish language that has remained here in southern moldova from when Greater Moldova was under the ottoman empire. The part of ukraine, south of Moldova used to be part of Moldova but the USSR gave it to ukraine, slowly taking that territory away from moldova or romania so that’s why there’s a mess of languages there. In rest, everyone here speaks Romanian or Russian. :)

  • @paddyseamair6336
    @paddyseamair6336 2 роки тому +1

    I am an Alsatian and I speak Alsatian which is a part of the German language(Alemanic) your front page map is wrong,same thing for northern Lorraine.We speak French as well, same thing for Luxembourg which language is German(middle German Mosel Frankish)

  • @claudiuspetrusgallus2427
    @claudiuspetrusgallus2427 3 роки тому +12

    Vous avez oublié l’Occitan dans toute la moitié sud de la France , ainsi que l’Arpitan , le Corse , le Sarde, le Cornique dans le sud de L’Angleterre .

    • @Benjamin-dy7uz
      @Benjamin-dy7uz 2 роки тому

      La vidéo est bourrée d'approximations mais l'occitan n'est plus parlé par personne, arrêtons la blague.

  • @stephanemarty6495
    @stephanemarty6495 3 роки тому +4

    You dont make serious reshearch about regional french langagues ? french, occitan, basque, flamand, corse, breton, catalan, alsacien, franco provencal.... more than 3 off : poor video

  • @jakubwasikowski4587
    @jakubwasikowski4587 2 роки тому +3

    In Poland we've got also Kashubian language which is a little bit different than the standard Polish and it also has some additional letters in the alphabet:
    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kashubian_language

  • @drozhcom
    @drozhcom Рік тому +2

    The map is innaccurate. I am Ukrainian and in Ukraine people speak Russian all the way up to central Ukraine. Russian is even more spoken than Ukrainian (although Ukraine's 2001 "census" says otherwise)

    • @SiarheiSiamashka
      @SiarheiSiamashka Рік тому

      If the citizenship actually depended on the preferred spoken language, then a lot of these people in Ukraine would simply make a choice to refuse to speak Russian.

  • @DramaQueenMalena
    @DramaQueenMalena 3 роки тому +10

    My family is from Italy, near Venice. My parents spoke the dialect of the region together and Italian to me. I understand almost every Italian dialect. Unless very old people are speaking very fast. The Southern dialects of course are more difficult but after 2 weeks constantly hearing them it's ok.
    My aunt married a Furlan - a man speaking Friaul. I do not understand him and I often spend time in Friuli. Just saying.
    As I grew up in Switzerland, the German speaking part, my main language is German and I understand every dialect.
    In both languages of course there are single words in some dialects that I do not know. But I can follow a conversation or understand a radio programm.

    • @edgzta
      @edgzta 3 роки тому

      Do you speak the Swiss dialect and also standard German?

    • @DramaQueenMalena
      @DramaQueenMalena 3 роки тому +1

      @Eduardo Goyzueta We all do. We speak our dialect in all situations, even Swiss professors at universities speak dialect together. In other countries speaking dialect is mostly perceived as "uneducated". Here it's normal.
      But at school we are taught to read and write in Standard German. So we write letters, emails and documents and we read books and newspapers in Standard German.
      It depends on the part you live but my dialect is about as different from German as is Spanish from Italian. But we are used to it. Children have to learn another language and reading/writing simultaneously.

    • @ValeriusMagni
      @ValeriusMagni 2 роки тому +1

      How can you understand the different languages of Italy and we italian can't?

    • @DramaQueenMalena
      @DramaQueenMalena 2 роки тому +1

      @@ValeriusMagni Ah, I grew up in the Italian community in Switzerland. My parents are from the North, we have family nel Veneto e nel Piemonte but the majority of Italians here are from the South. Calabria, Sicilia e Campania. They all came in the 1960ies, so they all speak dialect. We had to learn to understand it.

    • @ValeriusMagni
      @ValeriusMagni 2 роки тому

      @@DramaQueenMalena ah ok

  • @МаксимСмирнов-ш8ц
    @МаксимСмирнов-ш8ц 3 роки тому +3

    I do live in a country with approximately 277 languages and dialects (or even more). Still, they are used mostly by ethnic minorities. What is peculiar for me is that the authors of the maps haven't highlighted the Manx language of The Isle of Man (even though Irish and Scottish Gaelic were shown). And the thing about the Gagauz people is that it is an ethnic group of Turkic origin who came from the Balkans and settled in modern day Moldavia and some other countries

    • @ShirotheWiseWolf
      @ShirotheWiseWolf 3 роки тому +1

      I may be incorrect, but i believe Manx is officially a dead language, no one actively uses it as language for conversations or writing outside of academia, so It wouldn't really count as a language that would influence a region anymore. I could be wrong, but I think that is the case. There's probably some kind of revitalization projects for it, but not that i'm aware of.

    • @ShirotheWiseWolf
      @ShirotheWiseWolf 3 роки тому +1

      I had a quick look now after curiosity got the better of me and it seems it did go extinct but has subsequently been brought back as i presumed it might have, interesting, so ideally you are correct and it should have been shown~

    • @jakubondrus6064
      @jakubondrus6064 2 роки тому

      @@ShirotheWiseWolf Manx went extinct in the 1970's and while the revival process is ongoing, currently only ca. 50 people speak it as their first language. No point in showing it on the map

  • @helgaioannidis9365
    @helgaioannidis9365 Рік тому +1

    There's a mistake about Greece. The area, where you showed that people speak Turkish in fact is home to a Turkish speaking minority of about 100.000 people. But the majority of the population in West Thrace are ethnically Greek. So from that point of view Berlin should also have been shown as part of Turkiye and Paris should be Arab, if we just randomly take any language spoken by a small part of the population.
    Also if Norwegian, Danish and Swedish are considered separate languages, you made a mistake about Germany. It should be split between Low German, Allemanic and Bavarian.

  • @mewosh_
    @mewosh_ 3 роки тому +15

    just wanted to say that in Poland pretty much everybody speek Polish, except for a minorities speaking Silesian in the region of Silesia and Kashubian in the north

    • @filipkopec525
      @filipkopec525 3 роки тому +8

      And there is a Polish speaking part of Belarus and Lithuania

    • @jakubondrus6064
      @jakubondrus6064 2 роки тому

      @@filipkopec525 there are even Polish speakers in Latvia, although I guess they don't form a majority in any large region

  • @tamasdupcsak2989
    @tamasdupcsak2989 3 роки тому +12

    As a Hungarian, I think the Uralic Union with Finland, Estonia and Hungary would be based, but cursed.
    5:06 Also speaking of dialects, I'm from a region of Hungary, where 3 different dialects have a tripoint, so I kinda speak 3-ish dialects of Hungarian

    • @samuraidom6542
      @samuraidom6542 3 роки тому +8

      Van egy Finn ismerősöm, semmi hasonló nincs a kettő nyelvben, lehet hogy ugyan abba a családba tartozunk de a Finnek és a Magyarok már kb. 3000 éve nem voltak egy nép. A Finnek legközelebb az Észtekhez lennének, de közöttük is van kb egy 1000-1500 év.

    • @andrasszollosy4418
      @andrasszollosy4418 3 роки тому +8

      @@samuraidom6542 az nem igaz, hogy semmi hasonlóság nincs... attól még, hogy egy ideje külön fejlődnek ezek a nyelvek, lehet találni a közös múltunkra utaló hasonlóságokat

  • @frantisekiv5512
    @frantisekiv5512 2 роки тому +1

    6:04 - data from 1910 is very doubtful. The inhabitants were economically and politically pressured to declare Hungarian nationality. Deliberate distortion of statistics was common. These processes contributed to the division of Uhorsko ( old Hungary - multinational Hungary).

  • @danaelgabal4394
    @danaelgabal4394 2 роки тому +2

    You spoke abo minor languages les then 15000 people and you didnt even mention Czech, Slovak and Polish?! That are not a part of any of mentioned languages. Seriosly?

  • @AnarkiarenErregina
    @AnarkiarenErregina Рік тому +2

    They left out Occitan.😢

  • @Sabinero99
    @Sabinero99 Рік тому +1

    The case of France is very similar to the Spain's or Italy's. As far as I know, in France there, a part of French, the following languages: Occitan, Corse, Breton, Catalan, Provenzal, and some others.

  • @vertusmatjaz
    @vertusmatjaz 3 роки тому +9

    Croatia, Serbia, and Bosnia speak the same language. Differences are so minor. There are greater differences in Slovenia, German, Italian, than is the difference between those three languages.

  • @wachtwoorden2
    @wachtwoorden2 3 роки тому +4

    I have a question for Germans, is sorbian still very present? I know the local dialects in Belgium, where I live, are slowly transforming into one and the same with only slight differences in pronounciation? Are sorbs able to keep their identity/language easily?

    • @TheEvilCooler
      @TheEvilCooler 3 роки тому +1

      One of two branches of Sorbian went extinct few years ago. Second and bigger one still survive but it's only spoken in local villages

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna 3 роки тому

      In the South of Brandenburg state, street and town signs are often bilingual in German and Lower Sorbian. But I have never heard them spoken in public. I know there are some villages, where Lower Sorbian is spoken by some people.
      Not a very promising future for Lower Sorbian, I would say...

    • @jkobstube4314
      @jkobstube4314 2 роки тому

      It is, but just barely. I know a guy who speaks it fluently, but it's slowly going extinct.

  • @lexdelija213
    @lexdelija213 2 роки тому +1

    The Romanian language and nation were invented in the 17th and 18th century with a goal to physically divided South slavs from East slavs. Even today there are many slavic words in the Romanian language as well as names of toponyms, clearly proving that most of Romanians today are in fact slavs.

  • @ff_crafter
    @ff_crafter 3 роки тому +14

    Why include Romansh with 40-60k speakers but not occitan that has estimated 600k speakers?

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 3 роки тому +15

      Because the Swiss protect and encourage Romansh while the French don't like regional languages like Occitan, Breton and Basque, so they don't get much support or government help and are rapidly declining.

    • @shadowspriest5
      @shadowspriest5 3 роки тому +1

      Basque... French? Wtf

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dave_Sisson Occitans are the American Indians of France 😢 when will this cultural ğenoçide end

  • @bengu3987
    @bengu3987 3 роки тому +18

    7:12 protectorate?? We’re not a protectorate we’re an illegally occupied territory- also we speak Cypriot Turkish, which is sometimes unintelligible to Turks

    • @Montechristoss
      @Montechristoss 3 роки тому +14

      Well only Turkey recognise northern Cyprus

    • @dreameater6240
      @dreameater6240 3 роки тому +3

      "Cyprioy Turkish" is just an accent, we can easily understand each other.

    • @bengu3987
      @bengu3987 3 роки тому +4

      @@dreameater6240 you can easily understand the way we talk to Turks, you’d have a very hard time trying to understand actual Cypriot Turkish

    • @dreameater6240
      @dreameater6240 3 роки тому +1

      @@bengu3987 Lmao whatever greek cypriots have a strange greek accent too, its normal to have some diffrences in spoken language when you have been seperated by the mainland and have a slightly diffrent history.

    • @varolussalsanclar1163
      @varolussalsanclar1163 3 роки тому +1

      @@dreameater6240 Mamır edersiniz

  • @erd9637
    @erd9637 2 роки тому +1

    Hello. “Gagauz” language in Moldavia and a bit in Ukraine, Odessa from group of Urdolangueges or one of Turk languages.

  • @LanteanLegacy
    @LanteanLegacy 3 роки тому +4

    Why is there gagauz and its not counted to Bulgarian? Also Bulgarian Is spread wider In Ukraine and Moldova I can't see the bulgarian around northern Greece, Edirne, Turkey, East Serbia and Banat Romania?

    • @razvanalbu2104
      @razvanalbu2104 3 роки тому +1

      because in Banat region it is totally insignificant compared to the others

  • @kristijan12
    @kristijan12 3 роки тому +4

    Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia, and Montenegro do not have different languages that are similar. They share the same language that has minor differences. If you can understand someone with at least 85 to 95% of the words being the same that is the same language in it's core.

  • @SethSeht
    @SethSeht 2 роки тому +1

    Honestly, almost nobody speaks Breton. if you consider Ireland to be more English than Gaelic and Corsica to be more French than Corsican, then Brittany is absolutely French.

  • @matthewlui1004
    @matthewlui1004 2 роки тому +4

    I love how people like to remind each other how different and unique we all are. It's not like we want unity and peace or anything.

    • @isabellacatolica5594
      @isabellacatolica5594 2 роки тому +2

      Try to unite Basque and Spanish, two languages that have literally the same differences as English and Cherokee for example
      (That would be a mess)

    • @GivemeTHEfoodNOW
      @GivemeTHEfoodNOW 2 роки тому +1

      But unity and uniformity are two different things