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Saarinen_East
Russia
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 มิ.ย. 2021
Celtic languages comparison (basic words)
In this video you will see a comparison of all modern celtic languages - Welsh, Cornish, Breton, Irish, Manx and Scottish Gaelic. They are presented in comparison with the their older word ancestors for understanding the roots of words.
If you'll write in the comments I will make a continuation with other topics for you.
If you'll write in the comments I will make a continuation with other topics for you.
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Celtic languages without accent (languages comparison)
มุมมอง 525K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
This short video demonstrates what Celtic languages should actually sound like. Many students of these languages (most of all Irish and Breton) do not pay enough attention to pronunciation. This video is just another reminder of how these languages sounded among native speakers. And of course, let’s not forget how beautiful and diverse the Celtic languages are! This video presents all 6 existin...
Finno-Ugric languages comparison (basic words)
มุมมอง 133Kปีที่แล้ว
In this video you will see a comparison of all Finno-Ugric languages - Saami, Finnish, Estonian, Karelian, Livonian, Hungarian, Komi, Udmurt and others. They are presented in comparison with the their older word ancestors for understanding the roots of words. If you'll write in the comments I will make a continuation with other topics for you. Enjoy!
Slavic languages compared to Proto-Slavic - Animals
มุมมอง 41K2 ปีที่แล้ว
In this video you will see a comparison of several Slavic languages - Russian, Ukrainian, Serbo-Croatian, Polish, Bulgarian, Slovak and Croatian. They are presented in comparison with the Proto-Slavic language for understanding the roots of words. This video is inspired by "The Language Wolf" channel and his "Romance languages compared to Latin" video. If you'll write in the comments I will mak...
Try to guess slavic language! / Language challenge
มุมมอง 9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
In this video you have a chanse to try yourself in languages knowlage and guess what slavic language people speak. Good luck! Leave the comment with your results and write if you would like me to do same content!
Fun fact: "Dublin" in Irish... isn't "Dublin"
I can here an accent in all these languages
🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
Song name? Also love this stuff
Every speaker here has an accent, the accent of where they're from, what does the title mean "without accent"?
there is no spoken language without accent
Fingottam és ugrottam.
Is the Cornish a native speaker ? I somewhere read that the last native Cornish speaker died in 1918.
sounds like gibberish
Has anyone told you if you have nothing nice to say don't say it, plus you don't make any sense when Language in itself is just made up words
Prpps to the cameraman allowed into Hogwarts to film the 2nd Irishman
Wonderful. My great grandparents were from SW Donegal. I can now imagine how they sounded
The french are also celtic
It's half celtic
First guys sound like the tape was playing backwards
They sound alittle semetic
"Он говорил по-корнски с легким уэльским акцентом" :)
4:04 I found it in a Russian self-study book on Ingermanlandic/Izhorian. "играть гл. - pelata, lututtaa, rühmätä, soittaa, tiukata."
As someone who knows only a few words and phrases in Irish and Welsh but would have no hope of speaking to someone, let alone holding a conversation, what’s fascinating is the sound of Breton. Even though I know it’s part of the Welsh-Cornish Brittonic branch, it sounds to my ear much closer to the Goidelic group, whereas I can hear a definite similarity between Welsh and Cornish in the same way as I can with Manx, Irish and Scots Gaelic. I suppose it shows that there is a clearer connection between, say, Irish and Welsh, which my ear would not naturally pick up. Really interesting, nonetheless, to have this comparison.
That Cornish one was very close to welsh. Interestingly the Irish Gaelic doesn’t sound like it’s in an Irish accent to me at all but what do I know.
as a breton, i feel ashamed not to learn my language. i care a lot about my ancestors and the history. my family comes straight from the furthest part of brittany (finistère) and i grew up in the part that's further east. (loire atlantique) but my knowledge of the language is less than small. hell, i know german better than breton and i'm not good at german.
European languages are fascinating.
Gaelic is tough!
The sign "Myfywyr" made me laugh so bad, I imagined pronouncing it in French 😂
Очень интересно. Надо чтобы эти языки распространились наравне с английским языком.
In Polish we have also LIS (male) and LISICA (female). Why didn't you specify this in Polish and the other Slavic languages? All the Slavic languages have the same names in both genders.
As being Australian born from Scots/Irish I am learning our ancestral language Scots Gaelic. and love it. '
1: very short snippet of Vangelis spotted ❤️ 2: OMG, they're all speaking Alsatian 😄 at least in sounds and intonations #F**kColonialism
Fun fact alot icelandic has a lot of irish words from gaelic and I don´t know what accent n2 is (sounds northern to me) but I imagine thats what I sound like to people who dont speak icelandic
Just found this. Truly fascinating…
What's the music played?
Are they somehow understandable each other?
Not a Celtic language speaker, but rather Latin with a sprinkle of Germanic. Still, I've got a basic knowledge of Gaeilge and Cymraeg, and am an enthusiastic learner of Gaulish. What you've done is wonderful. Go raibh maith agat! Diolch yn fawr! If I may, sūl gave súil (eye) in Irish Gaelic. This root alongside sonnu- existed in Gaulish. The Gaelic version "grian" might be related to gwher- (burn). Mother was matir in Gaulish. Egg was auio-, flower was blato-, tree was bilio- (-> Manx), prenno- (<kwresno- -> Gaelic) or uidu- (Breton, Cornish). Day was diio- or lation*. Dog was cu (with Genitive cunos). Sky was also nemos*. Tongue was tengats*. Root "sagi-" meant "search" in gaulish but became "narrate, say" in Insular Celtic. In Gaulish, "say" might have been "labaro-" (-> Breton/Cornish). "Menman" meant "thought", so "men-" could be "think".
As someone who can’t understand a word they’re saying it really does sound beautiful to listen to: deliberate, each syllable stands out
The word 'mother' in modern Hungarian is 'anya', but we use 'emse' for female animals. However, in the earliest Hungarian chronicles there is one of the first known Hungarian leader, Álmos, whose mother was called "Emese". This name is still used today. According to the etymological dictionary, the name Emese means 'anyácska' (mother in diminutive form).
I am passionate about the languages and culture of the Celtic nations.
Taught Welsh at school. 70. Still don't speak it, but it sounds so familiar. But so do all the other Celtic tongues. It's not the vocabulary of the grammar or the pronunciation - IT'S A MATTER OF RHYTHM! Phrasing. A Welsh-speaking friend once told me that Irish and Scots Gaelic speakers cannot understand one another, while the Welsh can handle the Bretons. Don't know whether or not this is true. Whatever - these are VERY beautiful languages, and, in the case of Welsh, this is the language many in the British Isles were speaking before the Viking, Anglo-Saxon, and Norman invasions. Even in the south of Scotland, for example. And, apparently, the 'accent' persisted even once English had taken over. So it's reasonable to imagine Shakespeare speaking with a quasi-Welsh accent. What we now accept, at least in the UK as 'standard' RP English is largely an 18th C upper class invention. The promotion of this 'version' of English was promoted and encouraged by law in the 19th C. This was not such a bad idea, and it means that nowadays there is not a single person in the whole of the British Isles who cannot communicate delicately with another. Yet we have somehow preserved our accents and, to a certain extent, our dialects. Oddly, though, it is only WELSH which has kind of 'thrived'. Why? Because there was a very strong movement in Wales to enforce its teaching in schools - to foster it. Bravo! That said, there are still very few people in Wales who speak Welsh at home. And, if they choose to do so in public (as I witnessed in the largely English-speaking Welsh capital, Cardiff!), these people are 'making a point'. There's a lot of linguistic hypocrisy going on here. Pulling rank. Having lived in Scotland for most of my life, I never once encountered a single Gaelic speaker. Mr Simon Jenkins made a good point to Mr Alex Salmond at Edinburgh Airport where signage is in both English and Gaelic. He told him, 'All these signs really should be in WELSH!'. He was quite right. If you wish to live your life speaking Welsh, go to Patagonia.
My great grandfather spoke Scots Gaelic when he came to Canada, but refused to teach his kids.
Ho i can hear for brezhoneg that the one with colorful scarf is more used to speak french that the one next to her. Her tone is more...flat ? Like french tend to be 🙂 Otherwisd it's really nice to hear the language without the accent 😭 I grew up in Brest (the very west of Britany, in pen ar bed, the name is "Finistère" in french) i'm used to hear brezhoneg with an french accent (in the tramway a pre registered voice annonce each stop in both languages )and it alway felt off for me. Thank you ❤️
4:09 oh my god she is beautiful… how do you say “marry me” in Scottish
As A Brazilian, Here's My Guesses And Answers: 1. Macedonian 2. Ukrainian 3. Polish 4. Czech 5. Slovenian 6. Serbian 7. Russian 8. Slovak 9. Croatian And 10. Belarusian So, I'll Say 10/10
Shame the British destroyed these cultures and ended up them losing their languages and speak English instead
Welsh is like fairies and elves speaking 😂
I go in summer to Basque Country in south France, there is a spanish Basque Country too, I always wanted to know what was the real basque accent because I always hear the french and spanish accent in those ones who speak on each side of the border, never found out.
You are missing on this map the millions of Hungarian speakers collectively in Transylvania (Romania), Banat (Serbia) and Felvidek (Slovakia). Want to be accurate? Fix the map.
If i offend someone, I am sorry. It is not my intention. But, to make a language study using a bunch of toothless old people it is by far not the best study material. The clarity of the speech counts.
They are literally the only remaining speakers of the languages
@@fresh8137 Make records of them talking, put an IA to listen to them, put the AI to repeat them and clear out the speech errors. It is very doable, and the quality of the study reaches a usefull quality.
It sounds slavic doesn't it.
A new Conlang! Inspired by Finnish,Hungarian and Japanese phonology Sina,Te,Anata He,Ok,Karera Aiti,Anya,Haha Kolme,Harom,San Ihminen,Ember,Hito Koira,Kutya,Inu Metsa,Erdo,Mori Paa,Fej,Atama Silma,Szem,Meme
Sounds Scandinavian and weirdly Turkish 😅
cElTiC
I wish schools in Scotland would teach this instead of Scots languages
I am Welsh and further to the previous comment there was a period in British history when English landowners came up with the idea of "Welsh Not" people were punished for speaking Welsh.