The sameness of the noun dob and the verb dob is coincidental. The verb is of Finno-Ugric origin, but the noun is onomatopoeic. Also, fuvola comes from fúj which means to blow. For cello we have kisbőgő (lit. little howler) too, cousin of the nagybőgő. I think we do have the word tamburin.
The bagpipes are actually "-duda", or more like "tömlősíp", which means "hose-whistle" in Hungarian. The Hungarian version of the bagpipes is "kecskeduda" which means "goat-bagpipe".
@@leaczinkota1979 I am not an expert but the few words we have that are said to be finno ugoric in origin are some of the oldest words in our language. Thats why I would be surprised if instruments, which tend to be newer would be such
The sameness of the noun dob and the verb dob is coincidental. The verb is of Finno-Ugric origin, but the noun is onomatopoeic. Also, fuvola comes from fúj which means to blow. For cello we have kisbőgő (lit. little howler) too, cousin of the nagybőgő. I think we do have the word tamburin.
Double bass is also called "gordon" in hungarian. Gordonka means small gordon, so a cello is a small double bass.
The bagpipes are actually "-duda", or more like "tömlősíp", which means "hose-whistle" in Hungarian. The Hungarian version of the bagpipes is "kecskeduda" which means "goat-bagpipe".
Hearing Petra talk as Hungarian makes me realize how little I know about my own culture.
In French could you use batterie for drums as well?
So french roughly equals english, malay too if it was an european introduction to them, and than there is hungarian
Hungarian is Finno-Ugric that's why.
@@leaczinkota1979 I would be very surprised if any of these words are finno ugoric in their origin
@@Dekken88 maybe they aren't.
@@leaczinkota1979 I am not an expert but the few words we have that are said to be finno ugoric in origin are some of the oldest words in our language. Thats why I would be surprised if instruments, which tend to be newer would be such