Thanks, good review. Dropping in some info: 1. Language. One of the oldest, that is used nowaays. But not solo, there are more. 2. Baskeball NBA. Arvydas Sabonis, Žydrūnas Ilgauskas, Jonas Valančiūnas, Domantas Sabonis, Kęstutis Marčiulionis., Linas Kleiza. 3. Nature: yes, we protect our lakes and forests. 4. History: Lithuania was the biggest and strongest country for three centuries in Europe. And we remember that. 5. Religion. Nowadays Lithuania strongly catholic country. But we held pagan religion longer than any european countries. 6. Tolerance. Lithuania in middle ages was tolerant to other religions and other nations. And we haven’t changed. We accept all. We had dark period when nazis came in ww2 and killed 95% jews population. But from Vytautas the great till now, lithuanians are friendly to other nations
Yo man, loved your video about the language of my country. Since you asked in the video, we use latin alphabet but we don't use every letter like "x" or "w" or "q", and we use some "modified" letters like "ą", "č", "ę", "ė", "š" and "į". And that long word is real but we don't really use it on daily basis. Fun fact about Lithuania: at some point we were the biggest country in whole Europe when Vytautas the Great was the grand duke.
Glad you loved the video brother. Thank you for the information and wow I just briefly read on the fun fact I had no idea Belarus, Ukraine, and parts of Poland and Russia were parts of Lithuania
@@dakashwaydkw9978 you should watch a video about Lithuania made by Jacob Laukaitis and listen to a song "Šventinis Bankuchenas - Lietuvos istorijos repas" if you want to find some more new information about some of the most important events in Lithuanian history
As a Puerto rican Lithuanian living in Lithuania I appreciate the vid fam. Great reaction, your lil gem of indo european language def made me smile. Good looks! Keep up the good work pana!
The Baltic Way - the event when three nations literally formed a live human chain across three states - is one of the earliest memories of my life. I remember the beautiful weather, the airplane flying over our heads throwing down flowers and, most importantly, THE feeling. The feeling of hope, love and freedom. Even as a little blob that I was at the time I understood that something huge is happening. This experience formed me as a person. No individual and no nation deserves anything that the generations of my parents and grandparents went through during the dark decades of brutal russian occupation. Slava Ukraini!
@@dakashwaydkw9978 hm i don't actually listen to Lithuanian artists that much. You can go with the group "The Roop". They attended the Eurovision this year. Maybe OG Version if you want something from rap music. Sisters on Wire too. If you use Spotify then you could search for Lithuanian music playlists and there are loads of Lithuanian artists and their songs :) sorry that i can't actually tell yuo that much about Lithuanian music.
@@dakashwaydkw9978' Justinas Jarutis "tell me your story", Monique "Make me human", "promise" , Daddy was a milkman "breathe in" , Sisters on Wire "parallel world", Gjan "not afraid" Beatrich "superstar".
try out "Salibarsciai" soup u will really love it or really hate it, its like all or nothing, deffinatly worth a try, especially amazing on hot summer days, cuz that soup is meant to be cold.
Arvidas sabonis is national hero especially after the stunt he pulled off vs russia and importance of the game for Lithuanian especially after reclaiming independence from them
and also "kibinas" or "kibinai" is not exactly a lithuanian dish but one of local minority groups dish, if i am not mistaken that dish is Karaim dish, they live in Lithuania since Vytautas the great time when he offered shelter for their people from the Mongolian empire
we have quite few strongman who won world stronges man competitions. even have jokes about few of them, like: when Zydrunas Savickas does pushups , hes is not pushing himself up, he is pushing Earth down. when Zydrunas Savickas was just a boy he liked to play with trains , but ones he played with wasn't toys
Lithuanian is really one of the oldest living languages. Not sure who takes 1st place. Last time I heard Mandarin language is older than ours. Probably we will never know for sure :)
Indoeuropean family of languages includes: -Slavic language -Baltic languages -Roman languages -Germanic languages -Celtic languages -Indo-Iranian languages -Greek -Albanian
I think there is need for corectio. Lithuanian language is not oldest. Researchers of Indo-European languages say Lithuanian is the most archaic of all the living Indo-European tongues. In this respect it compares to the earliest Indo-European texts written 2500-3000 years ago. Lithuanian has preserved the opposition of long and short vowels, floating accent, etc.
Not the oldest over the world, just the oldest among indoeuropean languages. And not the oldest -- all natural languages are equally old. Just the less innovated.
@ZeedooIsCringe There is no such thing as one “oldest language”. All languages come from earlier ones, and those from earlier ones, and those from still earlier ones. This is very much like asking which is the oldest family in the world. Well, every one of them still alive is the oldest: each one is growing older by the moment. Because languages do not just spring out of air, they must come from older forms: each language extant today has a genetic, family history, reaching back through human [pre-]history.
@ZeedooIsCringe Let’s take two languages X and Y at time t0. Then at a later date through times t1-t5, we will have Xt1, Xt2, Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 similarly, Yt1, Yt2, Yt3, Yt4 and Yt5. Now, which of these is oldest? Most would answer Xt0 and Yt0. But, in fact none exists other than Xt5 and Yt5. Since, languages are primarily spoken they don't exist beyond the point of utterance. Assume now, we have written records left for each of these, viz., Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 but Yt4, and Yt5. Now, I repeat the question, which of these is oldest? People would quip with Xt3. In fact, Xt3 wouldn't have come into existence without Xt0, Xt1, Xt2. Hence we should say Xt3 and Yt4 were the earliest recorded stages of X and Y but not the oldest representations of X and Y. Logically, Xt5 and Yt5 are the continuities of Xt0 and Yt0 through ages. Neither of X and Y is older than the other.
I am Lithuanian. Now I am watching this video on my Phone riding a car from Vilnius to Kaunas. No problem with mobile internet connection all the way.
Thanks, good review. Dropping in some info: 1. Language. One of the oldest, that is used nowaays. But not solo, there are more. 2. Baskeball NBA. Arvydas Sabonis, Žydrūnas Ilgauskas, Jonas Valančiūnas, Domantas Sabonis, Kęstutis Marčiulionis., Linas Kleiza. 3. Nature: yes, we protect our lakes and forests. 4. History: Lithuania was the biggest and strongest country for three centuries in Europe. And we remember that. 5. Religion. Nowadays Lithuania strongly catholic country. But we held pagan religion longer than any european countries. 6. Tolerance. Lithuania in middle ages was tolerant to other religions and other nations. And we haven’t changed. We accept all. We had dark period when nazis came in ww2 and killed 95% jews population. But from Vytautas the great till now, lithuanians are friendly to other nations
Yo man, loved your video about the language of my country. Since you asked in the video, we use latin alphabet but we don't use every letter like "x" or "w" or "q", and we use some "modified" letters like "ą", "č", "ę", "ė", "š" and "į". And that long word is real but we don't really use it on daily basis. Fun fact about Lithuania: at some point we were the biggest country in whole Europe when Vytautas the Great was the grand duke.
Glad you loved the video brother. Thank you for the information and wow I just briefly read on the fun fact I had no idea Belarus, Ukraine, and parts of Poland and Russia were parts of Lithuania
@@dakashwaydkw9978 you should watch a video about Lithuania made by Jacob Laukaitis and listen to a song "Šventinis Bankuchenas - Lietuvos istorijos repas" if you want to find some more new information about some of the most important events in Lithuanian history
Thank you very much for your reaction 💛💚❤️
My pleasure 😊
As a Puerto rican Lithuanian living in Lithuania I appreciate the vid fam. Great reaction, your lil gem of indo european language def made me smile. Good looks! Keep up the good work pana!
Loved the video! Greetings from Lithuania 🇱🇹❤️
Hello 👋 glad you enjoyed it 🇽🇰
Very cool video and GREAT reaction of yours!❤😊😊😊
Lithuania is very beoutyfool, smal country, but very nice!
The Baltic Way - the event when three nations literally formed a live human chain across three states - is one of the earliest memories of my life. I remember the beautiful weather, the airplane flying over our heads throwing down flowers and, most importantly, THE feeling. The feeling of hope, love and freedom. Even as a little blob that I was at the time I understood that something huge is happening. This experience formed me as a person.
No individual and no nation deserves anything that the generations of my parents and grandparents went through during the dark decades of brutal russian occupation. Slava Ukraini!
coming from a Lithuanian myself all i can say.. you’re quite smart. you got a lot of stuff correct so props for that!!
Thanks i appreciate you. do you has any suggestions on any Lithuanian music i should react to?
@@dakashwaydkw9978 hm i don't actually listen to Lithuanian artists that much. You can go with the group "The Roop". They attended the Eurovision this year. Maybe OG Version if you want something from rap music. Sisters on Wire too. If you use Spotify then you could search for Lithuanian music playlists and there are loads of Lithuanian artists and their songs :) sorry that i can't actually tell yuo that much about Lithuanian music.
@@dakashwaydkw9978' Justinas Jarutis "tell me your story", Monique "Make me human", "promise" , Daddy was a milkman "breathe in" , Sisters on Wire "parallel world", Gjan "not afraid" Beatrich "superstar".
try out "Salibarsciai" soup u will really love it or really hate it, its like all or nothing, deffinatly worth a try, especially amazing on hot summer days, cuz that soup is meant to be cold.
Salibarsciai? U mean Šaltibarščiai?
Arvidas sabonis is national hero especially after the stunt he pulled off vs russia and importance of the game for Lithuanian especially after reclaiming independence from them
Amazing reaction 💛💚❤️
Tamil and Sanskrit are the oldest in the world dated back to 5000bc and more
and also "kibinas" or "kibinai" is not exactly a lithuanian dish but one of local minority groups dish, if i am not mistaken that dish is Karaim dish, they live in Lithuania since Vytautas the great time when he offered shelter for their people from the Mongolian empire
Kibin became a Lithuanian national dish, inherited from the Karaim. Karaimski kybyn with lamb, and Lithuanians came up with all kinds of fillings.
we have quite few strongman who won world stronges man competitions. even have jokes about few of them, like:
when Zydrunas Savickas does pushups , hes is not pushing himself up, he is pushing Earth down.
when Zydrunas Savickas was just a boy he liked to play with trains , but ones he played with wasn't toys
Lovely thank you
Thaks for reaction
Nebeprisikiškiakopusteliausi it's a real word and yea we use it sometimes if the occasion is right😅
5:18 Ed Cota 97 - 1998 North Carolina Tar Heels, teammate of a Vince Carter.
you are very lovely!
also that longest word isn't exactly one word but actually a compound word
Greetings 🤘
The not having swear words is true
Lithuanian is really one of the oldest living languages. Not sure who takes 1st place. Last time I heard Mandarin language is older than ours. Probably we will never know for sure :)
Neprisikėškeliaudamasis. I think i wrote that one right.. took me three tries.. :D
Lmaoooo I respect the honesty
Lithuania: sanskrit. Dėkui už dėmesį. You 👍👏👏👏
It's baltic way it's lithuanian Latvian and Estonian. Joined together
Just so you know - longest lithuanian word is nebeprisikiškiakopūsteliaudavusiesiems. 😉
and the explanation of its meaning was real!
no longer attached to the swearing-instors
Labas
hmm, have not heard, well, read it in that tense, usualy seen it with a bit short last word
@@ciberzombiegaming8207 yea, my Lithuanian teacher taught me "technically grammatically correct" longest word. 😊
Indoeuropean family of languages includes:
-Slavic language
-Baltic languages
-Roman languages
-Germanic languages
-Celtic languages
-Indo-Iranian languages
-Greek
-Albanian
meat, potatos and sourcream
Hy - LT UNITED - You are the winners Ukraine - its WOW...
I think there is need for corectio. Lithuanian language is not oldest. Researchers of Indo-European languages say Lithuanian is the most archaic of all the living Indo-European tongues. In this respect it compares to the earliest Indo-European texts written 2500-3000 years ago. Lithuanian has preserved the opposition of long and short vowels, floating accent, etc.
Thanks for the information in this comment I appreciate it
Correction oldest STILL SPOKEN language
Not the oldest over the world, just the oldest among indoeuropean languages. And not the oldest -- all natural languages are equally old. Just the less innovated.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Arvydas Sabonis is the GOAT IN LITHUANIA
Lithuanian is the most archaic living Indo-European language, but not the oldest in the world
nebeprisikiskiakopusteliaudamasis longest word in Lithuanian
Tamil is the oldest living language in the world . 75 million native speaker and official language of India ,srilanka , Singapore, Mauritius
No
@ZeedooIsCringe there's no oldest language
@ZeedooIsCringe There is no such thing as one “oldest language”.
All languages come from earlier ones, and those from earlier ones, and those from still earlier ones. This is very much like asking which is the oldest family in the world. Well, every one of them still alive is the oldest: each one is growing older by the moment.
Because languages do not just spring out of air, they must come from older forms: each language extant today has a genetic, family history, reaching back through human [pre-]history.
@ZeedooIsCringe Let’s take two languages X and Y at time t0. Then at a later date through times t1-t5, we will have Xt1, Xt2, Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 similarly, Yt1, Yt2, Yt3, Yt4 and Yt5. Now, which of these is oldest? Most would answer Xt0 and Yt0. But, in fact none exists other than Xt5 and Yt5. Since, languages are primarily spoken they don't exist beyond the point of utterance. Assume now, we have written records left for each of these, viz., Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 but Yt4, and Yt5. Now, I repeat the question, which of these is oldest? People would quip with Xt3. In fact, Xt3 wouldn't have come into existence without Xt0, Xt1, Xt2. Hence we should say Xt3 and Yt4 were the earliest recorded stages of X and Y but not the oldest representations of X and Y. Logically, Xt5 and Yt5 are the continuities of Xt0 and Yt0 through ages. Neither of X and Y is older than the other.
@ZeedooIsCringe all the living languages originate from dead languages. They're just continuations of dead languages.
tamil and sanskrit are the oldest language in the world