Buryat is my native language. Until the age of 7 I spoke only Buryat. But now I speak and think in Russian. I understood almost everything you said. "Almost" cause Buryat also has dialects. There is a mistake in the word "tomatoes". You have to say "помидоры" just like in Russian. This word has no translation into Buryat.
Buryat language is an another dialect of mongolian language. And buryats are part of mongolian ethnicity group. I am not talking about only country Mongolia. Modern day Mongolian ethnic majority is khalkha (one of the ethnics of mongolian ethnicity group). I mean mongolians are not only those people live in mongolia. If every mongolians reunite today we would be an ethnic minority without a doubt. My native language is Mongolian( khalkha dialect). And when I listen to buryat language I understood around 90 percents. Of course we have separated hundreds of years and that affected badly to too many things. But if you try to get closer to Mongolia you will find out how Mongolian language improved. After independence of 1921 like buryat language so many foreign words came into us. But each time no matter how many words they were we composed new words as possible as we could. For example помидор=улаан лооль(red veggie) Ананас= хан боргоцой (king nut(i think beacause of its shape)). Finally, I want to say no matter how long time have passed we are brothers forever, we cant forget each other for eternity.
That's inspiring what you're doing! People would understand you without any problem, but if you want to keep practicing, there are two main things in pronunciation, I guess: 1/ distinquishing h and kh sounds, 2/ paying attention to diphthongs (өө and γγ).
Irkutsk, Lake Baikal and Zabaykalsky Krai is part of territory of northern Mongolia. Buryatia has many dialects and lots of tribes. Some are like Khalkh-Mongols. What you are speaking is only Khori-Buryat dialect.
As a mongolian I can say it may be a little like Mongolian, but for sure a native mongol wouldnt understand much. As far I know some Buryats still learn mongolian, so some of them can easilly talk with mongolians.
You speak Buryat lang even better then many of young buryat people in Ulan-Ude. I can not critisize you at all. You construct the sentences in a correct way and not mixing it with Russian words, which is hard for many native speakers. Ехэ бэрхээр буряадаар дугардаг байнаш Wouter.
@@turuus5215 well when such a thing like passport was introduced, many people just got them with russianized variants of the names. Some people don't have it russianized, like my famous countryman Bazar Rinchino. It's a matter of will, if someone wants it Buryat way or any other way. The variant you wrote is more Mongolian way than Buryat. In buryat way it's Мунхын Доржо.
Mano você está de parabéns, sou brasileiro e moro no Japão a três anos e até agora não aprendi o japonês, agora peguei para estudar um pouco de inglês pois não sei nada, você poderia dar uma dica para que pudesse facilitar o meu aprendizado de idiomas.
It's interesting. Buryat is a Turkic language, right? Or is it Mongolian? I can recognize some things in Turkish, like "-da" for the locative, the "-b" at the end of verbs seems to correspond to "-m" in Turkish and "bi" sounds like Turkish "ben".
Why not learn a useful language more often because it seams that you keep learning like Naruatl, Yiddish, or Buryat why not learn something more useful
I think you mean 'Nahuatl'. First of all: I don't speak Nahautl or Yiddish. However, maybe I want to learn it in the future. In my opinion rare languages are very interesting and inspiring. Besides that, I speak common languages like Spanish, German, Portuguese and Russian. But I also like to inspire people to learn rare languages.
Buryat is my native language. Until the age of 7 I spoke only Buryat. But now I speak and think in Russian.
I understood almost everything you said. "Almost" cause Buryat also has dialects. There is a mistake in the word "tomatoes". You have to say "помидоры" just like in Russian. This word has no translation into Buryat.
Teach me russian 😭😅😆😆
now its time to learn a bit of mongolian 😄
Круть. Буряты, не забывайте свой язык.
Buryat language is an another dialect of mongolian language. And buryats are part of mongolian ethnicity group. I am not talking about only country Mongolia. Modern day Mongolian ethnic majority is khalkha (one of the ethnics of mongolian ethnicity group). I mean mongolians are not only those people live in mongolia. If every mongolians reunite today we would be an ethnic minority without a doubt. My native language is Mongolian( khalkha dialect). And when I listen to buryat language I understood around 90 percents. Of course we have separated hundreds of years and that affected badly to too many things. But if you try to get closer to Mongolia you will find out how Mongolian language improved. After independence of 1921 like buryat language so many foreign words came into us. But each time no matter how many words they were we composed new words as possible as we could. For example помидор=улаан лооль(red veggie)
Ананас= хан боргоцой (king nut(i think beacause of its shape)). Finally, I want to say no matter how long time have passed we are brothers forever, we cant forget each other for eternity.
@Michał Kowalski because it was taken from Russian, nie możesz do tego dogadać się?
As a Mongolian, I can understand you much better than I can understand actual Buryat people. IDK if that means you're learning well or poorly, lol.
we have the same name!
Maybe because buriat is even more rare than mongolian especially in therm of learning material
this man changes me to be language enthusiast
Me too
Me too. I frequently watch his videos to motivate me to study new languages. Truly an amazing individual.
Same
ryska
That's inspiring what you're doing! People would understand you without any problem, but if you want to keep practicing, there are two main things in pronunciation, I guess: 1/ distinquishing h and kh sounds, 2/ paying attention to diphthongs (өө and γγ).
seriously thank god for the internet. I enjoy this so much
Thank geeks, lol
true, theres also tonnes of rubbish on the net unrelated to this @@wandererkh
wow! Even tho you have a Dutch accent, I can totally understand you. Thanks for learning Buryat!
Irkutsk, Lake Baikal and Zabaykalsky Krai is part of territory of northern Mongolia. Buryatia has many dialects and lots of tribes. Some are like Khalkh-Mongols. What you are speaking is only Khori-Buryat dialect.
What resources have you used to achieve this?
That's cool. I've never heard this language spoken before. Is it a little like Mongolian?
As a mongolian I can say it may be a little like Mongolian, but for sure a native mongol wouldnt understand much. As far I know some Buryats still learn mongolian, so some of them can easilly talk with mongolians.
When i hear buryat i can understand almost all of it but without concentrating well i wouldnt be able to just talk to them normally
If you think the Buryat dialect is hard
Try Khalkha dialect or just the language the sovereign nation Mongolia speaks.
Where to learn buryat mongol language? Thanx
for what
You speak Buryat lang even better then many of young buryat people in Ulan-Ude. I can not critisize you at all. You construct the sentences in a correct way and not mixing it with Russian words, which is hard for many native speakers. Ехэ бэрхээр буряадаар дугардаг байнаш Wouter.
Why does Buryats have this kinda Russianized name? Why can’t yours be simply “Дорж Мөнх”?
@@turuus5215 well when such a thing like passport was introduced, many people just got them with russianized variants of the names. Some people don't have it russianized, like my famous countryman Bazar Rinchino. It's a matter of will, if someone wants it Buryat way or any other way. The variant you wrote is more Mongolian way than Buryat. In buryat way it's Мунхын Доржо.
@@dorzhimunkuev3959 Oh, okay. I’m Mongol, so…
Do you consider yourself a Mongolian?
@@turuus5215 no, why should I?
Mano você está de parabéns, sou brasileiro e moro no Japão a três anos e até agora não aprendi o japonês, agora peguei para estudar um pouco de inglês pois não sei nada, você poderia dar uma dica para que pudesse facilitar o meu aprendizado de idiomas.
Boa sorte !
Сайн байна, бэрхэш!
Hey, good job
Amazing, I have never heard about this language, honestly I didn't know this Russian republic.
Amazing 👍👍👍.
Sounds alike with Mongolian
Maybe because Buryatia is former Mongolian territory
Buryats are a subgroup of Mongols
It's interesting. Buryat is a Turkic language, right? Or is it Mongolian? I can recognize some things in Turkish, like "-da" for the locative, the "-b" at the end of verbs seems to correspond to "-m" in Turkish and "bi" sounds like Turkish "ben".
Тюрки жили на территории Бурятии, Якутии, Монголии десятки веков назад - поэтому остались следы как археологические, так и языковые.
It is Mongolic. What he is saying is completely intelligible to Mongolian speakers.
@@MB-rb9tk Ah, thank you!
Buryat is a Mongolic language. Turkish is a Turkic language.
Mongolic and Turkic are different languages but both belong to Altaic language family.
Hi. I like the Buryat anthem.
Hi its me Malik
I can speak 13 languages
And i am your fan you are doing to good man
im from mongolia and i can understand 90% , because the Buryat language is came from Mongolian language do you know?
He should try Mongolian
Hello, i speak Chinese but i also speak English and Dutch and Swedish and French.
Try basque and navajo language... : P
El vasco es ez. Agurrr 🤡😎
Амар сайн! һаiн!
تدرب على العربية في الفيديو القادم 👍🏻
Sounds like pashto mixed with mongolian
В россии по приколу (ну и старики их не различают) всех азиатов бурятами называют.
maak een video Neverland aub
красавчик бро от бурята
Ямар гоёор зугаалнаш
Do you speak English?
buryad zon hain baina geje baidag, sain baina bisi.
Бурат мой до дыр...
Он правильно говорил ?
Learn Tatar language (my Mother tongue)! Pleaaaas!
how difficult is it?
@@tchek24 To be honest I can't say exactly because it's my Mother tongue.
Tatar is similar to Turkish 🇹🇷 a little.
Try Malayalam and Armenian language
You are not Dutch
Привет! Люди не понимают, например, ингуши, буряты, чеченцы считают на своем языке, но говорят и по-русски.
First
This language like turkic,Mongol mix slavic
No, its entirely Mongolic.
Why not learn a useful language more often because it seams that you keep learning like Naruatl, Yiddish, or Buryat why not learn something more useful
I think you mean 'Nahuatl'. First of all: I don't speak Nahautl or Yiddish. However, maybe I want to learn it in the future. In my opinion rare languages are very interesting and inspiring. Besides that, I speak common languages like Spanish, German, Portuguese and Russian. But I also like to inspire people to learn rare languages.
It’s more practical to learn Standard Mongolian rather than learn some dying dialect.
do not pay your time for Buryat because there is none speak in Buryat . max 10 - 20 thousand people .
Interesting to hear about another languages spoken in Russia.