Thank GOD someone made an International Phonetic Alphabet chart for crows! Istg I’m making a conlang for an anthropomorphic Xenoavian species and I NEEDED this
Hey jack, great video! The spotted seatrout actually not a real trout, it just shares the name. Me and my pops used to fish 'em up from the river on Saturdays, and you can tell a drummer and trout apart, like they was a beaver and a raccoon. Crazy to see how easily city slickers make that mistake lol. my names not Jack
When I was little I think I read in a Ripley's Believe it or Not that there was a man who could make numerous sounds by farting. I misinterpreted that to mean he could make _any_ sound by farting, including fluent speech
You put way too much rigor and thought into this I love this. Seriously, kudos for putting so much effort into making articulation diagrams of animals' mouthes.
I can't believe you didn't use some video of a grey parrot speaking to show how a bird _would_ talk. You not having an animal's voice box kinda makes it impossible for you to sound like one without effects (which would have been cool to hear).
Wonderful! Your videos deal with the subject in the most interesting ways, please keep it up! By the way, this video really makes me excited about the exploration of more possibilities. What kind of mouth should an animal have to produce sounds beyond the actual palette?
Wow, this is really well made, I love it! One question: wouldn't most animals not have the tongue flexibility to make sounds that require movement of the tongue? I remember it being said that humans are unique in the capabilities of their tongues.
What about other members of the Homo genus? Seems like that Neanderthals would be smart enough to speak like humans. What would their language(s) have been like?
wait, can lizards make bilabials? you didn't say anything against that, and neither does the image during that part. I simply assumed they couldn't because they *look like* they lacked human lips.
a collaboration between you and EtymologyNerd would either save the world or destroy it
And with Human1001
One speaks the truth, the other only lies
9:00 Frogs don’t inhale or exhale, they just hale
Thank GOD someone made an International Phonetic Alphabet chart for crows! Istg I’m making a conlang for an anthropomorphic Xenoavian species and I NEEDED this
That sounds pretty badass ngl 🙏🙏
This is the ultimate collaboration between my favourite linguistics channel (zzineohp) and my favourite biology channel (zzineohp)
Hey jack, great video! The spotted seatrout actually not a real trout, it just shares the name. Me and my pops used to fish 'em up from the river on Saturdays, and you can tell a drummer and trout apart, like they was a beaver and a raccoon. Crazy to see how easily city slickers make that mistake lol.
my names not Jack
smh why would you lie about your name like this
just wait 'til you hear about "cod"
When I was little I think I read in a Ripley's Believe it or Not that there was a man who could make numerous sounds by farting. I misinterpreted that to mean he could make _any_ sound by farting, including fluent speech
this has actually been so cool, I love the fact that you actually tried to emulate what a fucking /komodo dragon/ would sound like amongst the aothers
Pro tip: Don't use slashes around linguists, you will get sent creepy recording of them pronouncing /komodo dragon/
so true
@@I_Love_Learning Luckily this is pretty similar to the English pronunciation, just with a rolled r.
@@Jpteryx Yeah. Phew.
Now make a trout conlang
You put way too much rigor and thought into this I love this. Seriously, kudos for putting so much effort into making articulation diagrams of animals' mouthes.
I didn’t even know you could whistle so kudos for that
My mouth mostly screams
I can't believe you didn't use some video of a grey parrot speaking to show how a bird _would_ talk. You not having an animal's voice box kinda makes it impossible for you to sound like one without effects (which would have been cool to hear).
this is the youtube video with probably the largest target audience ever
I was hoping you’d cover cats and/or dogs because they are actually pretty similar to humans and it’d be interesting to see how they’d sound.
Bird sounds like Minecraft villagers and frog sounds like !Xoo language from South Africa
Bro where did you come from holy moly this is a pleasantly educationally and hilarious channel, you're the next jan misali hahaha
Also lizards usually have thin tongues that wouldn't affect airflow as easily as our tongues do, and fish have barely mobile tongues.
I wish I was a trout
Wonderful! Your videos deal with the subject in the most interesting ways, please keep it up!
By the way, this video really makes me excited about the exploration of more possibilities. What kind of mouth should an animal have to produce sounds beyond the actual palette?
Wow, this is really well made, I love it! One question: wouldn't most animals not have the tongue flexibility to make sounds that require movement of the tongue? I remember it being said that humans are unique in the capabilities of their tongues.
you're growing fast
Thanks! Pretty soon i'll be tall enough to go on the big ride
@@zzineohp Hoping you don't come back
What about other members of the Homo genus? Seems like that Neanderthals would be smart enough to speak like humans. What would their language(s) have been like?
Maybe they spoke indo european
@@50gensthe neanderthals have gone extinct before proto-indo-european even existed 😅
@@CristiChiri10 Humans may have adopted their language when they went to that territory
@@50gens Please for the love of God look up when Neanderthals stopped existing
@@enricobianchi4499 Maybe they time travelled
Yet another banger
haling so hard rn
Is that a Tom Sellick poster??
wait, can lizards make bilabials? you didn't say anything against that, and neither does the image during that part. I simply assumed they couldn't because they *look like* they lacked human lips.
They could at least make a voiceless bilabial nasal I think, but their lips aren't muscular like mammal lips.
Ok, but how the hell birds can mimic human sounds? I'm talking about parrots and crows
auēs canere possunt
clicks :(