this'll be interesting to watch, knowing the amount of grey areas there are within history groups on their understanding on Maghrebi existence, colonisation and influence upon the Berbers, Sicilians (etc) and of course, those of Malta.
@@letsmapdialects5248 oh that sounds nice! I can't remember what was written for the episode plans, but getting to see that and punic will be interesting!
i would still argue argue the Maltese accent is still more siculo (or just generally "Italian"). I'll often accentuate my speech and most people will think i'm doing an italian accent. that saying, though, I am not sure how 'arabic' the accentuations of standard tunisian is. I presume, rather than the general accent is the same, that some letters or words are similar inflections upon vocabulary. Similar to that, something i do find interesting, is the latin/roman accentuation roots you can find in Maltese. That being the 'j' (pronounced "yuh/'yeh'") is almost identicle to the classical latin 'j" (Julius Caesar being almost "Yuu-le-oos"). Or, in my family for example, we will say the 'v' as a 'wuh' - almost identiticle, again, with classical latin (such as "Salve" being said as 'sal-weh') but yeah
This side of things is all new to me so I will wait until I get close to a big picture before I can do that. But Noel has offered us some charts already that cover the eseence of it.
So interesting! Thanks.
this'll be interesting to watch, knowing the amount of grey areas there are within history groups on their understanding on Maghrebi existence, colonisation and influence upon the Berbers, Sicilians (etc) and of course, those of Malta.
and the influence of Berber on Arabic as well, which we shall see soon.
@@letsmapdialects5248 oh that sounds nice! I can't remember what was written for the episode plans, but getting to see that and punic will be interesting!
Im tunisian, the maltese langage and accent is almost identical to the tunisian one, its even more similair than algerian and lybian accents.
i would still argue argue the Maltese accent is still more siculo (or just generally "Italian").
I'll often accentuate my speech and most people will think i'm doing an italian accent.
that saying, though, I am not sure how 'arabic' the accentuations of standard tunisian is.
I presume, rather than the general accent is the same, that some letters or words are similar inflections upon vocabulary.
Similar to that, something i do find interesting, is the latin/roman accentuation roots you can find in Maltese.
That being the 'j' (pronounced "yuh/'yeh'") is almost identicle to the classical latin 'j" (Julius Caesar being almost "Yuu-le-oos").
Or, in my family for example, we will say the 'v' as a 'wuh' - almost identiticle, again, with classical latin (such as "Salve" being said as 'sal-weh')
but yeah
Miss you on other sites, Mel. I'm not on YT much anymore. Please post other places so I can see your videos.
It no longer does it automatically and I simply don't have the time to upload manually on multiple sites. Sorry about that.
*Its gets super complicated and confusing while studying islam, Arabic, genealogy...we need graphic chart to narrate how islam evolved*
it very complicated, that is true.
This side of things is all new to me so I will wait until I get close to a big picture before I can do that. But Noel has offered us some charts already that cover the eseence of it.
@IslamicOrigins wow👍🏻🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰