Western Europe vs Eastern Europe Word Differences!! (Germany, United Kingdom VS Poland, Georgia)

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  • Опубліковано 15 лют 2023
  • Does Western and Eastern Europeans use different words?
    Or do they use simillar words?
    Today we invited 4 pannels came from Germany, United Kingom, Poland and Georgia
    And compare each country's vocabulary!
    Also, please follow our pannels
    Svea / sveawedis
    Ryan / ryebrows.pdf
    Ania / ayliee_k
    Sophia / sophiaa_kv
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 901

  • @henryqu19
    @henryqu19 Рік тому +455

    Pretty good see the return of Ania from Poland and someone from Georgia 🇬🇪 , welcome

    • @no6odys8fe90
      @no6odys8fe90 Рік тому +9

      Georgians are not europeans

    • @qetaneqetanes5644
      @qetaneqetanes5644 Рік тому +61

      @@no6odys8fe90 we are Europeans 😐 🇬🇪 just look at the map. You can find the border between Europe and asia.

    • @arganashvili
      @arganashvili Рік тому +11

      @@no6odys8fe90 Are you sure??😏😏

    • @no6odys8fe90
      @no6odys8fe90 Рік тому

      @@qetaneqetanes5644 nope , the most widely accepted Europe Asia border has Georgia in Asia , therefore they are not europeans but asians don't be mad be proud of it

    • @Adriano70911
      @Adriano70911 Рік тому +21

      ​@@no6odys8fe90 so what? France is European and has more Africans than some African countries

  • @11kimczi
    @11kimczi Рік тому +203

    i think in polish for doppelganger we use "sobowtór"

    • @George_Shonia
      @George_Shonia Рік тому +3

      Doppelganger>ტყუპისცალი>CopyOne 😂

    • @Neexienous
      @Neexienous Рік тому +4

      Yuh that's true.

    • @_amtb_
      @_amtb_ 10 місяців тому +1

      You are right!

  • @hybirr
    @hybirr Рік тому +406

    Extremely happy that there's not only a Polish person, but also Georgian

    • @StudyJQ
      @StudyJQ Рік тому +2

      But Georgia is not in Europe

    • @nirianirar5298
      @nirianirar5298 Рік тому +7

      @@StudyJQ It's not Asia to

    • @StudyJQ
      @StudyJQ Рік тому

      @@nirianirar5298 ok man
      Only Georgian people's pretend to be part of European Union but politically and geographically government know they are the part of Asia.

    • @datazhonzholadze999
      @datazhonzholadze999 Рік тому +1

      I’m Georgian

    • @datazhonzholadze999
      @datazhonzholadze999 Рік тому

      @@StudyJQ yes we are not

  • @lashalursmanashvili162
    @lashalursmanashvili162 Рік тому +71

    Im from georgia i never expected someone from my country to be there in this channes its really surprising she looks and sounds awesome im proud of her.

  • @lix.bbokiee
    @lix.bbokiee Рік тому +37

    Pani z Polski jest bardzo piękna ❤

  • @lovrobarbir1273
    @lovrobarbir1273 Рік тому +22

    That last part when Sophia said they were just under big Russia and it's logically to expect that Georgian language would pick a lot of Russian words... In reality it's quite opposite if I dare to say. It has completely different effect, like smaller nations are trying their hardest to preserve original language while carefully monitoring which words are coming in and even translating and adapting them completely to their respected language.

    • @cicik57
      @cicik57 9 місяців тому +2

      this works in two ways if one language can express something shorter like with one precise word

  • @dreamreas1460
    @dreamreas1460 Рік тому +3

    I found this channel for myself a few days ago and it's really cool! Firstly, you can learn some phrases from the video. Videos have English subtitles and if you don't understand something, you can just watch it. I always like to listen how difference can be words from different countries but sometimes they're similar! Secondly, it's really interesting to know about differences in one language. I watched the video where three ladies from US, UK and Australia tell about differences in language that was the same though! I was excited when had known about it. Honestly, I know about it before but I didn't think what they're more different. Finally, it's amazing channel if you want to know about other countries. There are culture specifics, pronounciation and others aspects of languages here. Where you can find a lot of interesting things and learn more

  • @user-md9mt6rz2b
    @user-md9mt6rz2b Рік тому +75

    🇬🇪🇬🇪❤️❤️სოფია ჩვენი საამაყო გოგო✊

    • @Gacha.Sisters
      @Gacha.Sisters Рік тому +3

      გეთქნხმები ❤️🇬🇪🤍

    • @Ktos-uo8kk
      @Ktos-uo8kk Рік тому +7

      Любов від мене для Сакартвело🇺🇦❤️🇬🇪

    • @megishengelia
      @megishengelia Рік тому

      @@Ktos-uo8kk ❤️❤️❤️

    • @Gacha.Sisters
      @Gacha.Sisters Рік тому +3

      @@Ktos-uo8kk 🇬🇪🫶🇺🇦

    • @gokusuperkaioken3222
      @gokusuperkaioken3222 Рік тому

      ვიცი

  • @princessdaya5781
    @princessdaya5781 Рік тому +80

    the georgian girl is soo beautiful😍😍 also i never know how pleasing the georgian language sounds! makes me want to learn it lol

  • @Maleficarum999
    @Maleficarum999 Рік тому +34

    Sofia a word for doppelganger in Georgian is ორეული (Oreuli).

  • @wojciechz2031
    @wojciechz2031 Рік тому +73

    Hej, nożna isn't a verb, it's an adjective... And it isn't only for the word "piłka nożna", because we can say "hamulec nożny" (footbrake) as well and probably something more. Anyway, noga is a leg while foot is litarally stopa. Notabene, if we refer to the "feet" measure we use "stopa/stopy/stóp" word.

    • @edwardpenetrator9407
      @edwardpenetrator9407 Рік тому +6

      mówi się "feet", a nie "foots", ale ogólnie też zauważyłem to o czym mówisz.

    • @wojciechz2031
      @wojciechz2031 Рік тому +5

      @@edwardpenetrator9407 Ajajaj takie faux pas! Oczywiście masz rację

    • @angelikabielecka4339
      @angelikabielecka4339 Рік тому +5

      @@wojciechz2031 Pragnę zauważyć, że Pana zdanie nie jest poprawne stylistycznie i składniowo. Ajaj i co? Jajco, każdy robi błędy. Totalnym brakiem kultury jest je komuś wytykać. Mamy się teraz wzajemnie poprawiać?

    • @xxnario7286
      @xxnario7286 Рік тому +3

      @@angelikabielecka4339 A on ci wytknął jakiś błąd czy mówisz o tym, że poprawił Anię z filmiku?

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 Рік тому +1

      @@angelikabielecka4339Serio? Niepoprawnie? Jakieś szczegóły? Mamy się poprawiać! Bo, ponieważ, :) teraźniejsza znajomość kanonów języka polskiego kuleje, łagodnie mówiąc. Gimbaza nie odmienia. To jacyś barbarzyńcy. Mieszają 1. a 3. osobą. ŻENADA.

  • @Zephyrus88PL
    @Zephyrus88PL Рік тому +36

    Well.
    Doppelganger in polish could be translated to "sobowtór" or "uzurpator".

    • @_Killkor
      @_Killkor Рік тому +8

      Oh yeah. Sobowtór. It's a cool word.
      Not sure about the uzurpator though. Isn't it just "usurper"?

    • @lilachodan4941
      @lilachodan4941 Рік тому

      Exactly

    • @klaudiatokarska8620
      @klaudiatokarska8620 Рік тому +2

      I was going to write "sobowtór" as well.

    • @mysteriousdoge1298
      @mysteriousdoge1298 Рік тому +4

      I don't think the word "uzurpator" has anything to do with doppelganger but "sobowtór" is absolutely correct

  • @maritacherry6871
    @maritacherry6871 Рік тому +58

    1:40 we actually have Georgian version of word CREAM wich is either საცხი/Satskhi or მალამო/Malamo depending what kind of cream we are talking about. Satskhi is more cosmetic cream while malamo's a medical one. But yeah, Georgians using კრემი/kremi word as well.
    WE ALSO HAVE TRANSLATION FOR Doppelganger- ორეული/ Ore-uli
    even i forgot that word even tho its not that uncommon.

  • @Giannis_Sarafis
    @Giannis_Sarafis Рік тому +19

    Hi everybody! Actually in Greece the word for Pharmacy is "Pharmakeo" (Φαρμακείο) and it actually means a place with drugs (pharmaka). Apotheke (Αποθήκη) literally means a place where you store things, a storage or a warehouse, so that's why it is confusing. Greetings to all of you who are from Germany, UK, Poland, Georgia and our neighbors from Albania. Music comes also from a Greek word (μουσική) that sounds like "mu-see-kee". It was the art dedicated to the "Muses", the ancient Greek godesses of fine arts.

    • @alexuni9217
      @alexuni9217 Рік тому +1

      100% correct but for some reason, recently, I've seen more than one pharmacies be called Apotheke or something of the sort. New trend perhaps. In Chania, at least, don't know about other cities/towns.

    • @tomekville7
      @tomekville7 7 місяців тому

      I guess polish word Apteka originated fromn Greese --Apotheke (Αποθήκη)

    • @lollylula6399
      @lollylula6399 3 місяці тому

      Really interesting, thanks for sharing.

  • @dubmait
    @dubmait Рік тому +30

    I have to correct the english guy.
    There are 2 branches of celtic languages.
    Brythonic which includes breton, welsh, and cornish
    Gaelic which includes, Irish gaelic, scots gaelic and manx
    So welsh is not gaelic. There are some interesting similaries between irish gaelic and welsh , but they are part of different celtic branches.

  • @--julian_
    @--julian_ Рік тому +39

    the georgian girl was so cool

  • @fabiannicoles
    @fabiannicoles Рік тому +16

    In Indonesia 🇮🇩 we say :
    1. Police : Polisi 👮🏻
    2. Twins : Kembar 👯‍♂️
    3. Family : Keluarga 👨‍👩‍👦
    4. Cream : Cream
    5. Theatre : Teater 🎭
    6. Movie : Bioskop 📽️
    7. Football : Sepak Bola ⚽ (Sepak is Kicking and Bola is Ball)
    8. Leg : Kaki 🦵🏻
    9. House : Rumah 🏡
    10. Music : Musik 🎶
    11. Pharmacy : Apotek ⚕

    • @queensvictoria
      @queensvictoria Рік тому +2

      In Malaysia 🇲🇾 we Say:
      1. Police : Polis 👮🏻
      2. Twins : Kembar 👯‍♂️
      3. Family : Keluarga 👨‍👩‍👦
      4. Cream : Krim
      5. Theatre : Teater 🎭
      6. Movie : Wayang 🎬
      7. Football : Bola Sepak ⚽
      8. Leg : Kaki 🦵🏻
      9. House : Rumah 🏡
      10. Music : Muzik 🎶
      11. Pharmacy : Farmasi ⚕

  • @angyML
    @angyML Рік тому +18

    I guess I'm not the first person who says this, but the Georgian word for theatre is quite similar to Catalan in terms of pronunciation.

    • @t.mtinimari3988
      @t.mtinimari3988 Рік тому

      What does it mean exactly??Can you explain ✨😚??

  • @aggiecat
    @aggiecat Рік тому +47

    The Polish language has the most similarities with the Slovak and Czech languages. We can communicate with people from these countries speaking their own language 🤗 As for the comments about Russian, I can't really understand this language at all and they are not similar to Polish, even when it comes to the accent. We have a lot of similar voiced letters, but different words are formed from them in Polish and Russian 🙃
    BTW! Ania I'm so proud of you! 👏 Lubię jak ktoś angażuje się w wyjaśnienie naszych czasem specyficznych określeń i zrobiłaś to idealnie i jeszcze wyłapywałaś dodatkowe różnice! Good job! Tak trzymaj! 💪

    • @VADOFUSION
      @VADOFUSION Рік тому +3

      Got it. What language is your favorite among those countries??

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Рік тому +4

      I understand some words in Polish only thank to English, because Polish has many latin origin words which are mostly similar in English, but obviously, it doesn't work vice versa, Poles understand Czech not well, which makes sense when we have our original words for many everyday things, we mostly don't use some latin origin words lik in Polish.

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Рік тому +4

      @@VADOFUSION each has pluses and minuses. Hard to say 🙉
      I like English because I know it. As for German, I live in the Polish "Silesia" region and there are many mixed Polish-German-Czech words in our dialect. I'm also a bit familiar with German, but learning it is a nightmare 😜 while Georgian is interesting for me. Only now it turned out for me how many similarities there are between Polish and Georgian. However, I must admit that our nations like each other, they were under Russian influence, hence these similarities may appear in our languages🤗

    • @VADOFUSION
      @VADOFUSION Рік тому +3

      @@aggiecat Yeah Russia is power it’s that first come to my mind when i thinking about it. But im no big fun speaking Russian i like English to be honest and spanish as well, but i’m still proceeding my journey of English and i love it. It on of my favorite activities. I believe that once upon a time i start learning spanish))

    • @serexus
      @serexus Рік тому +4

      I find it a misconception we Poles can communicate with Czechs, each speaking their language. I don't understand Czech language almost at all. Only single words, but that wouldn't help me make sense of what someone is saying. On the other hand, speaking with Slovakians is easy, for real.

  • @Ice_V
    @Ice_V Рік тому +64

    Eastern Europe was more original this time😁 Greetings to Sophia and Ania🤗

  • @klarastimelapses
    @klarastimelapses Рік тому +14

    In polish doppelganger is: sobowtór :)

  • @Anna-yx6mi
    @Anna-yx6mi Рік тому +14

    Totally don’t understand putting Poland and Georgia together. Georgia is a completely different country, far away from Poland and with a language far different than Polish. And it is not in Eastern Europe (nor is Poland). English and German (languages) have more in common.

    • @Nils.Minimalist
      @Nils.Minimalist Рік тому

      Maybe they are put together because they are both slavic countries?

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Рік тому +12

      ​@@Nils.Minimalist God please educate yourself before you write any more comments here... First you write that Albania is Yugoslav and now you write that Georgia is Slavic... Gosh it hurts.

    • @rozumnaistota9489
      @rozumnaistota9489 Рік тому +1

      Bc it would have been boring if polish and other slavic language(i know Georgia isnt slavic) were put together bc they could sound similar sorry for grammar and mistakes

    • @Nichollaa
      @Nichollaa Рік тому +3

      Georgia is Eastern Europe, and yes, i think it would be more reasonable to put Greece next to Georgia as they are much more simillar to each other, and Poland with Ukraine

    • @XpYy-eo2js
      @XpYy-eo2js 11 місяців тому

      @@Nichollaa georgia is is west asia my guy, along with armenia and azerbaijan. Will never be european how hard you try.

  • @lee.minseo87
    @lee.minseo87 Рік тому +16

    I like Poland, now I live in Poland

  • @ChillStepCat
    @ChillStepCat Рік тому +84

    Nice to see cute Ania back. Serbia and Poland have so much similar language especially pronunciations. Here we would say:
    Police - Policija
    Twins - Blizanac
    Family - Familija or Rodbina
    Cream - Krema
    Theatre - Pozorište
    Movie theatre - Bioskop
    Football - Fudbal
    Leg - Noga
    House - Kuća or Dom
    Music - Muzika
    Pharmacy - Apoteka..

    • @queensvictoria
      @queensvictoria Рік тому +4

      In Malaysia 🇲🇾 we Say:
      1. Police : Polis 👮🏻
      2. Twins : Kembar 👯‍♂️
      3. Family : Keluarga 👨‍👩‍👦
      4. Cream : Krim
      5. Theatre : Teater 🎭
      6. Movie : Wayang 🎬
      7. Football : Bola Sepak ⚽
      8. Leg : Kaki 🦵🏻
      9. House : Rumah 🏡
      10. Music : Muzik 🎶
      11. Pharmacy : Farmasi ⚕

    • @80snewwavemusic-synthpostp80
      @80snewwavemusic-synthpostp80 Рік тому +1

      Most words you said were actually similar, but there are 3 words we don't have in our language.
      Theatre - teatr
      Movie theatre - kino
      Footbal - piłka nożna

    • @bwkktur
      @bwkktur Рік тому +4

      Russian:
      Police - Politsiya
      Twin - bliznets
      Family - Semiya or Rodnya (Familiya = Surname, Rodina = Homeland)
      Cream - Krem
      Theater - Teatr (Pozorishe = Shameful event)
      Movie theater - KinoTeatr (bioskop sounds greek huh)
      Football - Futbol
      Leg - Noga
      House - Dom
      Music - Muzika
      Pharmacy - Apteka

    • @worldoftancraft
      @worldoftancraft Рік тому

      Policiâ
      Bliznêcy
      Sêmjja
      Krêm
      Têatr
      Kinotêatr, usually pronounced as Kinotâtr
      Futbol
      Noga
      Dom or zdaniê
      Muzyka
      Aptêka
      ~ 🇷🇺

    • @worldoftancraft
      @worldoftancraft Рік тому

      @@bwkktur the spellings you used have nothing in common with propper switch of alphabet. What you wrote I call "Russian dialect of English". But aside that - you wrote clever remarks about different words

  • @anatsiklauri1421
    @anatsiklauri1421 Рік тому +72

    Firstly congats to Sophia and thanks for presenting our small country Georgia/Sakartvelo. For all these people claming that Georgians are asian nation or we are in asia not in europe..there are several ways to set a border between europe and asia and besidez that we Georgians consider ourselves closer to european ideology etc. Secondly Georgian language familly contains 3 languages and 4 alphabet and yet we are only max 5mln...yes there are many words mostly because we always were attacked by big empires..but still remain our identity..and lastly our name Georgia pronounce differently, Greeks gave us this name many centuries ago which translates like-" earth workers"..thanks for ur attention and much love from Sakartvelo/Georgia🇬🇪💜

    • @gabrieleguerrisi4335
      @gabrieleguerrisi4335 Рік тому +2

      The only way to establish a border between Asia and Europe (something I disagree, btw) is on Caucasus and Urals. Otherwise, we could just call it Eurasia, what really is. A continuum of caleidoscopic etnicity and stories. Even if I someway feel like this world is more meant as the space of Russia and ex former SSR, from Dniestr to Vladivostok, adding Europe as an appendix. India Japan China and so on are someway apart

    • @GiorgiGachechiladze02
      @GiorgiGachechiladze02 Рік тому +1

      Yes, real name for Georgia has always been Iberia. Real Iberia

    • @GiorgiGachechiladze02
      @GiorgiGachechiladze02 Рік тому

      Trust me bro they have no less Georgian words, even when vassalized Georgians were very privileged people everywhere, important figures on the throne. Best proof is that Turks say Vaime or Voaime when they are surprised, which is purely Georgian expression word 😂 Persians have albale , Georgian Alubali meaning red cherry or flame cherry in Georgian, Aznauri another Georgian word possibly and so on…

  • @renonaz1223
    @renonaz1223 Рік тому +23

    Nahh Poland is a central europe country not eastern

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 Рік тому +6

      Germany too ... the Eastern/Western division here seems constructed and a bit silly.

    • @lemonz1769
      @lemonz1769 Рік тому +5

      If you divide Europe to Eastern and Western Poland is Eastern.

    • @adamz7038
      @adamz7038 Рік тому +5

      Why would you divise Europe in half it is culturally and politically much more complex. Find commonnalitiwa between ‚western’ portugal or italy and finland. Poland is of course culturally closer to Finland than the south european countries would be. Hence the binary division is both wrong and wrongly done.

    • @samsara4085
      @samsara4085 Рік тому +3

      Division in western and eastern Europe comes from Iron Curtain times and is a bit dated now and has little to do with actual cultural, language and religious backgrounds of the countries.

    • @rhys244
      @rhys244 25 днів тому +1

      definitely eastern. Poland was on the wrong side of the iron curtain

  • @iabolkvadze4346
    @iabolkvadze4346 Рік тому +70

    Once again , Sophia , as always , represented us perfectly.. ❤ all languages are unique and amazing ❤

  • @arturceberek555
    @arturceberek555 Рік тому +21

    Lubię tą drużynę XD.
    I like that team :D. They so funny.

  • @Ice_V
    @Ice_V Рік тому +25

    I 'd like to see the same video with Greece, Finland, Albania, Lithuania together. It 'll be really interesting💫💫

  • @queensvictoria
    @queensvictoria Рік тому +7

    In Malaysia 🇲🇾 we Say:
    1. Police : Polis 👮🏻
    2. Twins : Kembar 👯‍♂️
    3. Family : Keluarga 👨‍👩‍👦
    4. Cream : Krim
    5. Theatre : Teater 🎭
    6. Movie : Wayang 🎬
    7. Football : Bola Sepak ⚽
    8. Leg : Kaki 🦵🏻
    9. House : Rumah 🏡
    10. Music : Muzik 🎶
    11. Pharmacy : Farmasi ⚕

  • @hollish196
    @hollish196 Рік тому +57

    This was great! Loved hearing so many similarities, and the Polish/Georgian languages were of particular interest.

  • @duda-cr
    @duda-cr Рік тому +4

    as a portuguese person from brazil, there're a lot of similar pronunciation of those words

  • @RickyMaveety
    @RickyMaveety Рік тому +10

    English also has apothecary. Older word, but still in use.

    • @Turkoktonos1
      @Turkoktonos1 Рік тому

      specially with 40k, if you know it.

  • @magdalenab5714
    @magdalenab5714 Рік тому +15

    Come on Ania! Doppelganger is "sobowtór" in polish! 😎

  • @nina-aptsiauri
    @nina-aptsiauri Рік тому +18

    SOFIA ❤❤❤❤🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪 ყოველმხრივ მაგარი გოგო ხარ❤❤❤ ვამაყობთ შენით❤❤❤❤🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪

  • @loboclaud
    @loboclaud Рік тому +38

    It was very interesting to see the differences and similarities between German, British English, Polish and Georgian. I really enjoyed the fact that they now have a girl from Georgia.

    • @unknown-ob4yn
      @unknown-ob4yn Рік тому

      even though this should be within europe not outside since caucasus is in asia

    • @giorgichikvaidze9594
      @giorgichikvaidze9594 Рік тому +1

      @@unknown-ob4yn Caucasus is NOT Asia. Georgia (like Armenia) is transcontinental nation, belongs to both. However Georgians identify themselves as Europeans. Just for information: Europe is NOT continent, Eurasia is. Any kind of border between Europe and Asia is artificial, subjective and mainly based on culture. Neither Caucasus or Ural mountain range create real separation between (European and Asian) continents, it is conditional, only ocean can separate continents. I think you have to watch association football (soccer) more and you will find out where Georgia is.

    • @unknown-ob4yn
      @unknown-ob4yn Рік тому

      @@giorgichikvaidze9594 კარგი ასეთ შეკითხვას დაგისვამ ლიბერალი ხარ?

    • @unknown-ob4yn
      @unknown-ob4yn Рік тому

      @@giorgichikvaidze9594 ეტყობა შენ გეოგრაფიის გაკვეთილებს აცდენდი 😀👍

    • @giorgichikvaidze9594
      @giorgichikvaidze9594 Рік тому

      არა, რა ლიბერალი. კონსერვატორი. მიუღებელია ჩემთვის ისლამურ ან ბუდისტურ აზიასთან, ისლამურ ჩრდილო კავკასიასთან და წითელ რუსეთთან საქართველოს ასოცირება.

  • @Sally-md7ci
    @Sally-md7ci Рік тому +7

    საქართველოოოო🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪

  • @r1sic0
    @r1sic0 Рік тому +8

    Poland is Eastern Europe?!?!
    REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

  • @kj4923
    @kj4923 Рік тому +22

    Poland and the Czech Republic are the heart and center of Europe. As a Pole, however, I can agree that Poland is Eastern Europe, because such a term clearly indicates that Russia does not even partly belong to Europe.😂🤣👍

    • @HaruShinigami2002
      @HaruShinigami2002 Рік тому +4

      I think Slovakia and Hungary are much more in the middle than Poland and the Czech Republic, but that is a matter of detail.

    • @JimmyC-lx2hx
      @JimmyC-lx2hx Рік тому +6

      not any way Eastern. Always was Central.

    • @its.alciaa
      @its.alciaa Рік тому

      same

    • @vigdisrename2537
      @vigdisrename2537 Рік тому +2

      Russia isn't in Europe

    • @juliaj3706
      @juliaj3706 Рік тому +2

      Poland is not Eastern European tho…neither Georgians, countries that actually are Eastern Europeans are Romania Moldova Ukraine etc

  • @aenilies
    @aenilies Рік тому +16

    In Poland we do use the word doppelganger but not many people know about this word. It's mostly used in this... 'Magical, zodiac, demon', whatever you call those things, areas. People who are keen on those subjects probably know 'doppelganger'. Sorry if my explanation is messy, idk how to explain it properly haha

    • @Edidin
      @Edidin Рік тому +13

      Sobowtór. We have "sobowtór".

    • @aenilies
      @aenilies Рік тому

      @@Edidin Tak, aczkolwiek tak jak powiedziałam. Doppelgagner jest znany w konkretnych środowiskach. No plus losowe przypadki.

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie Рік тому

      I mean, it's a pretty German concept in the first place, Doppelgänger, although in Scandinavia we have Dubbelgångare, but unlike the rest of the Germanic languages we have Gengångare, which in German would become Malgänger, or in English Again walker, if they existed in either language, I believe everyone and their mother uses Zombie these days instead.
      Some words are just weird in other languages.

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 Рік тому

      @@livedandletdie I think the german word for Gengangare (sorry, german keyboard doesn't have this ° above a letter) would be 'Wiedergänger' - someone who literally 'walks again' after being not walking because dead. Usually it's meant to be the spirit or ghost of a dead person that is restless and can't move on for some reason, and thus inhabits a dead body without a soul (be it their own body, someone elses' body or a random skeleton lying around). But yeah, everyone uses Zombie nowadays, except in fantasy literature that likes older mystical words.

  • @swetoniuszkorda5737
    @swetoniuszkorda5737 Рік тому +7

    Family, fami(g)lia etc. stems from Latin, not Germanic languages. In Polish we say "familia" instead of "rodzina" only in an idiom like "to originate from a good family/ pochodzić z dobrej familii", meaning a noble lineage, some superior status, a good "catch" for matrimonial purposes etc.
    And as a bonus some Polish-Georgian similarities:
    warm - ciepły - tbil (like Tbilisi) c=t, p=b, ł=l
    wreath - wianek - venoki
    flower - kwiat -k'vavili
    potato - kartofel- k’art’opili
    asphalt - asfalt - aspalt’i
    today - dziś - dghes
    Probably much more.
    Some of them only because of "international" languages' influences, but not all, I think. Regards.

    • @hightidemidafternoon
      @hightidemidafternoon Рік тому +1

      We do have a german word for family which has germanic roots: "Sippe". Due to its use during the nationalistic genealogy madness it fell out of favour but it does exist.

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 Рік тому

      @@hightidemidafternoon But, as far as I know, it means more "clan", maybe even "tribe", not a 2+1 family of one Otto-Normalverbraucher.

    • @queenofesc7342
      @queenofesc7342 11 місяців тому

      not venoki it's gvirgvini

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 11 місяців тому

      @@queenofesc7342 Yes, I bet "gvirgvini" is right, too. It's what Google translator, for example, says. Are you Georgian, by chance?

    • @queenofesc7342
      @queenofesc7342 11 місяців тому

      @@swetoniuszkorda5737 yes, I'm Georgian. Venoki is russian word

  • @likagogia8178
    @likagogia8178 Рік тому +8

    🇬🇪❤️

  • @gurandagegeshidze3393
    @gurandagegeshidze3393 Рік тому +7

    Sophia ❤🇬🇪

  • @GigaBitchikashviligiguca
    @GigaBitchikashviligiguca Рік тому +4

    Lovely ❤

  • @nevfancy777
    @nevfancy777 Рік тому +65

    Polish language is pretty as there women's ❤️

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 Рік тому

      @TheNonBiasAmerican Well, good luck on your journey to find your perfect match.

    • @dvalimariam2785
      @dvalimariam2785 Рік тому

      Yep, for some reason I want to learn Polish, but I don’t know if I’ll be able to :_)

  • @WarriorsCats777
    @WarriorsCats777 Рік тому +62

    I love the addition of Georgia! Loved the video. I am always curious about learning more on the different languages and cultures and I really appreciate what you guys do!

  • @BlackHoleSpain
    @BlackHoleSpain Рік тому +17

    To the british guy: english is 60% latin, its germanics roots are not so deep. We've already discused this lots of times before.
    Family is a Latin word (familia) with exactly that same form 2500 years ago.
    Pharmacy is greek, but not the usual ἀποθήκη apothḗkē form, but φαρμακεία pharmakeía 'use of medicins'.

    • @gabrieleguerrisi4335
      @gabrieleguerrisi4335 Рік тому

      Yes. Pharmacy was originally just the art of drugs, but this became also the name of shop/lab. As in italian "farmacia"
      We had also an ancient word about drug shop, "drogheria", which was the spices and flavours (and so even medicines) shop. But for the last 200 years has not sold drugs anymore and today is a shop disappearing, as you can immagine, due to less relevance of spices in modern society. Maybe it's also due to "droga" having a meaning shift from "substance generally having some effects on the body" to "bad drugs". So speaching "droga" is bad seen. The opposite happend to "pharmakon" which was neautral in ancient greek and became more positive in recent times.

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Рік тому +9

      Its Germanic roots are very deep. It's only the vocabulary that is heavily Latin-influenced, just like every other European language. Wait until you find out that German/Dutch/etc also have +30% of Latin vocabulary.

    • @Adriano70911
      @Adriano70911 Рік тому

      ​@@andyx6827 that's because German and dutch also have Latin roots

    • @Skyl3t0n
      @Skyl3t0n Рік тому

      But there is a 90% chance an everyday word has germanic origins.
      The french/latin influence trickled down from high society.

    • @c.i.a8359
      @c.i.a8359 Рік тому +2

      Wrong most Latin in English is loan words and not deep roote, whereas Germanic in English is literally deep rooted since it created English.
      I’ll make it easier, think of English as a margarita pizza and the extra toppings like chicken, pepperoni etc is the added latin.
      You can’t speak English without Germanic but u can without the Latin.
      In fact most people speak Germanic English 90% of the time as everyday words. The Latin is the more posh and refined words.

  • @ThePaciorr
    @ThePaciorr Рік тому +15

    Doppelganger in polish is sobowtór (sobovtur)

  • @Anderssea69
    @Anderssea69 Рік тому +3

    From a northgermanic language (Swedish)as follows Polis.Dubbelgångare.Familj.Kräm.Teater.Biograf.Fotboll.Hus.Musik.Apotek.Farmaceut.

  • @mikaelmoss1233
    @mikaelmoss1233 Рік тому +5

    Doppelganger in polish is "sobowtór" ;)

  • @spotlight3465
    @spotlight3465 Рік тому +3

    In Polish and other Slavic languages, the word "Rodzina" (family) has the root "Ród".
    Ród - Ancestry
    Naród - Nation
    Rodak - Countryman
    Rodzina - Family
    Rodzenie - Give Birth
    Przyrodzenie - Sex organs
    That is, the root was the word "Ród" (spelling same as word root) (Ancestry) as a whole and the largest part, they are not with us, we are seemingly separate, but nevertheless we are still connected, we are the same organism. And only then the branches, until the furthest branch which gives a new fruits is a "Przyrodzenie" (Sex organs). The fruit that falls goes into the ground and gives the power for this organism to continue to grow.

    • @robertwisniewski2029
      @robertwisniewski2029 11 місяців тому

      plus the Slavic "rod" and the root may have the same Indo-European origin (although this is not officially confirmed) from the Proto-Indo-European word "ord" - growing

  • @vitalvolvol6862
    @vitalvolvol6862 Рік тому +24

    Ania from Poland is so beautiful. Glad to see her again here.

  • @alexlumatau
    @alexlumatau Рік тому +4

    Several words that the girl from Georgia spoke are exactly the same as in Brazilian Portuguese.

  • @ethelmini
    @ethelmini Рік тому +4

    Soccer is of English origin. Derived from asSOCiation, as opposed to Rugby football etc.

  • @erikak8665
    @erikak8665 Рік тому +8

    Cinema in Swedish (another Germanic language) is bio or biograf. Completely different 😁

    • @Anderssea69
      @Anderssea69 Рік тому +4

      BioGraf is Latin and means Alive Picture there where an older word in Swedish. Kinematograf (Kino) also Latin meaning motion-picture. the orgin of Cinema= Kinetic= Moving

    • @Nils.Minimalist
      @Nils.Minimalist Рік тому +3

      When the first cinemas were built here in Germany in the late 19th / early 20th century (1907), our great-grandparents still called them "Lichtspieltheater". That's 3 words put together: Licht (Light) Spiel (Play) Theater (Theatre)

    • @erikeriksson1660
      @erikeriksson1660 Рік тому +2

      @@Anderssea69 Boigraf is from Greek

  • @lolhcd
    @lolhcd Рік тому +10

    English and German are both West-Germanic languages, making them "cousins" in modern context (they used to be more like siblings when looking at Old English). Further, they belong to the "Centum" family branch together with Albanian, whereas Russian belongs to the "Satem" branch where the slavic languages developed from.
    As for Georgian... I think they don't belong neither in Centum nor Satem? They are their own family branch, which is very interesting (correct me if I'm wrong tho!)
    Sanskrit, Hindu-Urdu and Bengali (and Punjabi (?)) also belong to the Indo-European languages!

    • @arvantsaraihan5777
      @arvantsaraihan5777 Рік тому +6

      Georgian is not in the Indo-European family, so they're neither a centum or a satem language 😊

    • @lolhcd
      @lolhcd Рік тому

      @@arvantsaraihan5777 Glad I did not say something wrong/spread wrong information then thanks for affirming that haha

    • @annats4439
      @annats4439 Рік тому +7

      U are right, Georgian is part of Kartvelian languages - including 3 others spoken in different regions of Georgia.

  • @adamkozianowski4910
    @adamkozianowski4910 Рік тому +5

    Doppelganger sobowtór

  • @SALx96
    @SALx96 Рік тому +7

    Glad to see more of germany here

  • @dragonfuckekr1869
    @dragonfuckekr1869 Рік тому +3

    Doppelganger in Georgian is Oreuli

  • @band_bea3756
    @band_bea3756 Рік тому +4

    სოფიკოო ძალიან კარგად ისაუბრა💕

  • @hanpyulkong3676
    @hanpyulkong3676 Рік тому +5

    Greetings from Korea.
    I have known that Poland will be the leader of Eastern Europe since 2002.
    South Korea's first opponent in the 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup was Poland.
    At that time, South Korea did not win a single FIFA World Cup, but Poland was a football powerhouse which won third place in the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain and silver in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
    South Korea won 2-0 against Poland with speed and mobility.
    As I'm a Korean, I was delighted all night when South Korea won their first World Cup finals 2-0 against Poland.
    Poland's goalkeeper, Yeji Dudek, was Liverpool's main goalkeeper and was moved by the kindness of the Koreans and congratulated Korea on its advance to the round of 16.
    He made many Koreans have a friendly image of Poland.
    It contrasts with Italy's reversal defeat to South Korea, which was an opponent in the round of 16, which angered Koreans by showing the appearance of destroying accommodation properties with anger.
    I think Dudek also contributed to South Korea and Poland's cooperation at the level of allies 20 years later.

  • @ManuelLopez-zq9up
    @ManuelLopez-zq9up 11 місяців тому +1

    This has been veeeery interesting! Please, do more!

  • @ivanovichdelfin8797
    @ivanovichdelfin8797 Рік тому +2

    IN SPANISH:
    -Policía
    -Familia
    -Crema
    -Teatro
    -Fútbol
    -House: casa
    -Música
    -Farmacia

  • @fandzejka9540
    @fandzejka9540 Рік тому +3

    Nożna is adjective dervied from the noun noga (leg)

  • @anndeecosita3586
    @anndeecosita3586 Рік тому +3

    I’m not sure where the Bri’ish guy gets his intel about the USA or even why he is bringing us up in a conversation about Europe. What he is saying isn’t entirely accurate. It’s NOT that we don’t say pharmacy but that many times our pharmacies are a section/department within a drugstore. Drugstores sell over the counter medication, cosmetics, hair products, candy and so on. With corporate companies there is often a pharmacy that operates semi-independently inside the drugstore. So I’m going to the drugstore when I’m not picking up a prescription. The hours of operation and the phone numbers for the drugstore and the pharmacy are not the same. On the other hand with mom and pop businesses the pharmacist is usually the owner and we call the whole thing a pharmacy because it’s all one operation. Even hair and makeup brands like Cover Girl and Tresemme are called drugstore brands. I commonly say “I don’t wear drugstore foundation” and obviously foundation isn’t a drug.

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini Рік тому

      It's actually similar in the UK. Chemists were makers & retailers of all things chemical. They'd have done dyes, cosmetics, poisons... We still have stores that are more general retailers that will have a pharmacy that dispenses prescription medicines. They can also be referred to as dispensing chemists. One difference is that you can't buy much more than an aspirin in the UK without a prescription from a doctor.

    • @nikhilnagboth8425
      @nikhilnagboth8425 Рік тому

      I have never used or heard the words "drug store" and I'm American. Is there a specific area in the country where people use the term?

  • @makounagokhelashvili9157
    @makounagokhelashvili9157 Рік тому +2

    I'm so happy to see Georgian language on this Channel !

  • @tomcioraj1464
    @tomcioraj1464 Рік тому +1

    As for the system of government that prevailed in Poland and later in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth for centuries, Poland and Lithuania were even more Western than Germany, and perhaps even more than England and France. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was a republic / parlamentary monarchy where the parliament ("Sejm") made the law, and for 2 centuries Polish kings were elected by the nobility (people of high social class - 10% Polish-Lithuanian society).
    According to the provisions of the Polish-Lithuanian constitution of May 3, 1791, not only the nobility but also the townspeople (burghers) had the right to elect members of parliament and be elected members of the parliament.
    Poland has also belonged to Catholic countries such as France, Spain and Portugal for hundreds of years. However, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was inhabited not only by Catholics but also Orthodox Christians. Large group of people professing Judaism was in Poland too, and in the common Polish-Lithuanian state were Muslims too.
    By adopting Catholicism (by establishing Catholicism as the state religion) in the 10th century, Poland joined the circle of states of the Latin civilization.

  • @aghastinagharta
    @aghastinagharta Рік тому +6

    Poland, that famous Eastern Europe state in which there's snow 24/7 for an entire year and polar bears are casually roaming the streets. Bleh.

    • @Anna-yx6mi
      @Anna-yx6mi Рік тому +1

      What a beautiful bunch of stereotypes ❤️

    • @iorreneft
      @iorreneft Рік тому +1

      That's Scandinavia not Eastern Europe

  • @flomil8333
    @flomil8333 Рік тому +8

    Poland is central europe...

    • @lemonz1769
      @lemonz1769 Рік тому +2

      In classification where there is only Eastern and Western it’s Eastern.

    • @adamz7038
      @adamz7038 Рік тому +1

      I answered you on this one in another comment pleae stop spamming.

    • @flomil8333
      @flomil8333 Рік тому

      @@adamz7038 its my only comment lol

    • @adamz7038
      @adamz7038 Рік тому

      I responded to luca’s comment

  • @stephenrowell9373
    @stephenrowell9373 Рік тому +2

    Really interesting video, thank you .Great to see four more people who were all quite new to me , they all did a very good job .

  • @radhikamahesh8165
    @radhikamahesh8165 Рік тому +2

    I mean I think in the uk a pharmacy was 'apothecary' for a long time. But now apothecary is related to just beauty and skin-care shops.

  • @ThePaciorr
    @ThePaciorr Рік тому +25

    Tbh grouping Poland with Georgia when there is Germany in the opposite team is kinda bonkers. There are a lot more similarities between UK, Germany and Poland than any of those countries and Georgia.

    • @Anna-yx6mi
      @Anna-yx6mi Рік тому +5

      Właśnie dodałam podobny komentarz. Polski przecież nie ma nic wspólnego z gruzińskim, bardziej by pasowały Czechy czy Słowacja. No ale oba państwa są według autorów filmu „Europą Wschodnią” 😀

    • @ThePaciorr
      @ThePaciorr Рік тому +4

      @@Anna-yx6mi Pomijajac juz geografie, kulture i historie to Gruziński nie jest przede wszystkim językiem indo-europejskim tak jak cała reszta. Chociaz dam im to ze slowa o ktore pytali tak naprawde sa dosyc uniwersalne na calym swiecie nie tylko w europie wiec główną kwestia byla tutaj wymowa itp

    • @m.n.5140
      @m.n.5140 Рік тому +2

      and what do you say about the fact that the ancestor of the Europeans is the proto-Georgian?? 😎

    • @ThePaciorr
      @ThePaciorr Рік тому

      @@m.n.5140 I say that I have no idea what you talk about. Georgian belongs to Kartvelian language group and it's one of the primary language groups.

  • @fivetimesyo
    @fivetimesyo Рік тому

    Ryan is very smart. Good acquisition.

  • @MrBallistico
    @MrBallistico Рік тому +6

    Soccer is an English (from England) word. It was in common use in the UK through the 1970’s.

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 Рік тому +5

      No it wasn't mate, it has always been called Football in this country, The English brought the name Soccer over to America though.

    • @liukin95
      @liukin95 Рік тому

      No it was not! Stop lying!

    • @fricatus
      @fricatus Рік тому

      Yes! Younger English people don’t realise this. There was even a programme on BBC or ITV called “Soccer Saturday” IIRC. The “soc” bit came from AsSOCiation Football - apparently among university students in England in the 1920s, they used to put “er” on the end of words to make them into cool slang. Then when the Americans started their league in the ‘70s and ‘80s, they only called it soccer and then the English disowned the word 😂

  • @michuXYZ
    @michuXYZ Рік тому +3

    Poland is culturally very western so this video would make more sense if you used a Russian, or Romanian instead, contrast would be bigger

  • @EddieReischl
    @EddieReischl Рік тому +8

    In Wisconsin, you'll have some names for things that are actually German, but when we're saying them, we're thinking of them as English. "Haus" is used quite a bit, especially food and drink establishments. It's probably actually Swiss or Bavarian German too that you will see here. You might hear the word "hinkelhaus" if you're out on someone's farm. Sometimes "scheisshaus". When we're 10 pin bowling, and you knock 9 pins down, we'll say "nine, nine, nine" which also works as "nein, nein, nein". Maybe a "guten nacht" right before you leave to go home, our apologies to Germany, I'm sure we're butchering it.

    • @redsippy02
      @redsippy02 Рік тому

      Greetings from Wisconsin also

    • @pommes0078
      @pommes0078 Рік тому

      You also have a German name. When i was in America for visit i recognised that a lot of Americans have German lastnames and also German Street names or Companys with German names

  • @sababamba
    @sababamba 4 місяці тому +1

    ძაან კაია ქართველი რომ არის იქ I mean its good when Georgian is in

  • @TheSolvenceny
    @TheSolvenceny Рік тому +4

    Even though germany and poland are neighbours there are totally different words.

    • @xdlol59
      @xdlol59 Рік тому +7

      That's why we (Poles) call Germany "Niemcy" (from "niemi" which is something like mute/silent), because 1000 years ago we speak with ours neighbors basically the same language (with Czechs and Kiev's Russians etc), but Germans stood out and we couldn't communicate with them.

  • @souldrakula8353
    @souldrakula8353 Рік тому +3

    Try to say 'Taxi' in many languages.
    Germany: Taxi.
    UK: Taxi.
    France: Taxi.
    Poland: Taxi.
    Georgia: Taxi.
    .
    .
    .
    .
    USA: Cab.

    • @Belle17036
      @Belle17036 Рік тому +1

      Americans say taxi as well. Only heard people from New York City ever use “Cab”. The rest don’t, and this is coming from a American who lives in Midwest region.

  • @pablobalres6564
    @pablobalres6564 Рік тому +4

    the German girl talking about "family" 😩🤦‍♀ they need a history book (Roman Empire......), because most of the European commons world comes from Latin or antiche greek

  • @adriano84
    @adriano84 Рік тому +4

    Since when did Poland become Eastern Europe?

  • @Turkoktonos1
    @Turkoktonos1 Рік тому +247

    Poland is not eastern Europe, it is central Europe. Easteuropean countries are russia, belorussia, ukraine, georgia, armenia and aserbaitschan. the baltics are disputed, east or central european countries.

    • @CutMeUwU
      @CutMeUwU Рік тому +103

      I like how every polish person is so defensive about this, like I grew up in Poland but it’s not that big of a deal lmao

    • @SuHrskyy
      @SuHrskyy Рік тому +79

      stop crying, just accept that Poland is eastern europe.

    • @Turkoktonos1
      @Turkoktonos1 Рік тому +17

      @@SuHrskyy not crying, only precise. I am no lemming, who follows others brainlessly.

    • @mydreams4you501
      @mydreams4you501 Рік тому +19

      I knew it !😂 As soon as i saw the the title i knew that somebody would be teaching about Poland being central europe not eastern. What a great surprise.

    • @maxxneverland
      @maxxneverland Рік тому +2

      it depends where the line ends

  • @novy1198
    @novy1198 Рік тому +8

    Ania from Poland could said "sobowtór" for a doppelganger

    • @Bernadetta93
      @Bernadetta93 Рік тому

      I don't think so 🤔 doppelganger is a person that looks exactly like you BUT this person lived in different times. Sobowtor can live in your lifetime and be similar to you.

    • @shion3948
      @shion3948 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Bernadetta93 od kiedy doppelganger nie może żyć w tym samym czasie

  • @mariamipaitchadze4358
    @mariamipaitchadze4358 Рік тому +3

    Sophia you are amazing 🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪❤️❤️🥹

  • @GdzieJestNemo
    @GdzieJestNemo Рік тому +3

    hmm the split between the countries is weird

  • @tatiakokhia439
    @tatiakokhia439 Рік тому

    🇬🇪didn’t expect see such adorable girl from Georgia at this channel

  • @liukin95
    @liukin95 Рік тому +22

    As a Russian speaker it always amazes me when I hear how similar the Slavic family is: Like Russian has the same words as Polish and Georgian like Music (Музыка/Muzika), House (Дом/Dom), Pharmacy (Аптека/Apteka), Theatre (Театр/Teatr) and Cinema (Кино/Kino).

    • @imanberliyeva
      @imanberliyeva Рік тому +1

      Agree with u

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Рік тому +6

      In Czech, muzika is more like archaic word for a band, for music we say hudba, theater is divadlo and pharmacy is lékárna. 🙂 I don't know why Polish is half latin, they probably didn't have such strong national revival movement in 19th century as we had.

    • @liukin95
      @liukin95 Рік тому +6

      @@Pidalin I'm pretty sure big reason why Polish is half Latin is because they are a Catholic country and not Orthodox.

    • @GdzieJestNemo
      @GdzieJestNemo Рік тому +14

      georgian is not slavic though

    • @BlackHoleSpain
      @BlackHoleSpain Рік тому +9

      Surprise: all those 4 words are just *greek* not english, not german, not slavic... they all got them from greek.

  • @gregmuon
    @gregmuon Рік тому +12

    The word "soccer" is British. It's just that you guys stopped saying it, whereas in the US it continued to be used.

  • @ankra12
    @ankra12 Рік тому +2

    In Norway we say kino.

  • @dibaj
    @dibaj 11 місяців тому +1

    0:40 actually there is a word for doppelgänger in polish, it's "sobowtór"

  • @doglover3740
    @doglover3740 Рік тому +8

    I just love the videos they're just amazing❤️👌😘

  • @diggity1039
    @diggity1039 Рік тому +5

    Will someone please remind the British that the words "soccer" came from them, it's not strictly and American word.

    • @gregmuon
      @gregmuon Рік тому +2

      Ernest Shackleton described his shipwrecked men as playing "soccer" on the ice, not football. So it was in common use about a hundred years ago.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Рік тому +3

      He doesn’t know that soccer isn’t strictly an American term, and he asserts that we don’t say pharmacy. 🤦🏾‍♀️

    • @diggity1039
      @diggity1039 Рік тому

      @@anndeecosita3586 I don't recall saying anything about a pharmacy.

  • @katarinask139
    @katarinask139 Рік тому +1

    We also say kino in Slovak😄

  • @daniiiiij6695
    @daniiiiij6695 Рік тому

    In Croatian we say:
    Police - policija
    Doppelgänger - dvojnik
    Family - obitelj
    Cream - krema
    Theatre - kazalište
    Football - nogomet
    House - kuća, dom
    Music - glazba
    Pharmacy - ljekarna

  • @antoniocasias5545
    @antoniocasias5545 Рік тому +9

    1:08 no honey no
    Family is of Latin origin

  • @_Killkor
    @_Killkor Рік тому +16

    To anybody confused why Polish has "dom" for _house_ , there's an English word "domicile".
    Indo-European languages are connected, but sometimes it's trickier to find those connections.

    • @souldrakula8353
      @souldrakula8353 Рік тому +1

      But in German 'Dom' means Cathedral, for example Koelner Dom.

    • @_Killkor
      @_Killkor Рік тому +2

      @@souldrakula8353 perhaps "the house of God"? And cathedrals are the type of building where people can take shelter. The latin domus also meant a dwelling, place where someone/something resides (i.e. Holy Ghost), (rarely) place where important people lived and governed (i.e. priests used to be high on social ladder) - just throwing quick guesses here.
      So I went to look for the German etymology of the word dom and found this:
      The use probably goes back to domus episcopatus/episcopalis (“house of the bishopric”). An alternative theory derives it from domus ecclesiae (“church house”), after Ancient Greek οἶκος τῆς ἐκκλησίας (oîkos tês ekklēsías).
      Fun fact, apparently at some point in the past the word dom morphed into "thum", perhaps you have more German words that contain it and are in some way related to the concept of housing/dwelling?
      I hope this answers your question.

    • @borzmir9326
      @borzmir9326 Рік тому

      In Poland for dom is also chata or chałupa

  • @JulianGutie
    @JulianGutie Рік тому +2

    I didn’t know those language had so many words similar to Spanish…I was shocked because they were Germanic and Slavic language

  • @fbo7147
    @fbo7147 9 місяців тому +1

    Funny the polish word for cream sounds exacly the same in portuguese "creme".

  • @bruhmoment2312
    @bruhmoment2312 Рік тому +3

    Doppelganger in polish is sobowtór 💀

  • @Pidalin
    @Pidalin Рік тому +9

    Polish is like half latin, it would be more interesting with Czech with our original words which nobody else uses. 😀 In Czech - pharmacy = lékárna, theater = divadlo, cinema = kino (archaicaly biograf), doppelganger = dvojník, twins = dvojčata, family = rodina, music = hudba (muzika is possible too, but it has slightly different meaning). Rest of words is similar to international or slavic word.

    • @burakbam2210
      @burakbam2210 Рік тому +7

      For us Poles, the Czech language is funny because it is a mixture of old Polish words that no one uses anymore, words that sound like diminutives of Polish words and words that sound the same as in Polish but mean something else. 😅

    • @pawelpiotrowski9558
      @pawelpiotrowski9558 Рік тому +1

      Do you mean that the movie with Polish language is less interesting than with Czech language?

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Рік тому +4

      @@burakbam2210 I saw some comparison between medieval Polish and today Czech and we would understand each other much better if Polish was still like few hundred years ago. 🙂 During Czech national revival, many very old and archaic words were returned to use just to get rid off germanisms and latinisms.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Рік тому

      @Mira Szemys Germanismy se dneska už skoro vůbec nepoužívají, většinou jde o slang a ne o spisovnou Češtinu. Z Latiny máme určitě taky hodně slov, ale určitě Češtině nebudeš rozumět jenom díky znalosti Angličtiny jako se to někdy stává s Polštinou. Vy pořád něco interestwujete a podobně.....půlce slov opravdu rozumím jenom protože je to podobně i v Angličtině. 🙂

    • @pawelpiotrowski9558
      @pawelpiotrowski9558 Рік тому

      @@Pidalin I see, I have to ask again. Do you mean that the movie with Polish language is less interesting than with Czech language?