Top Beginner Phrases in BASQUE
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 เม.ย. 2023
- Sometimes basics are key. Learn some basic phrases in Euskara, and start talking with your Basque people!
This video covers:
Polite phrases
Meeting and departing phrases
Phrases about Basque
Thanks for learning Basque with me!
Euskara ikasi!
Song: Lemak, Aingurak - Berri Txarrak
• Berri Txarrak - Lemak,...
Used with permission; all rights belong to Berri Txarrak and Only In Dreams.
I love your videos ❤😊
Aw thank you! You’re very kind! 🤗
What an interesting channel
but I`ve noticed that some words are extremely close to arabic
eskerrik is similar to Ashkuruk meaning (I) thank you أشكرك
pozten: bast meaning happiness بسط
arte: araa meaning (I) see أرى, or araitu أريت
bihar: bukrah meaning tommorow بكرة
izena: ism meaning noun اسم
there are many other similarities, I guess this hints at some forgotten history in relation between the Arabs of Andalus and this region, I hope that you can make a video about other similarities
I love relations between other languages! Even if they happen to be minor, strange coincidences occur or long-forgotten borrowings have been interchanged, and it’s really quite a nice mystery. Thank you for this little bit of comparison! 😊
لا علاقة أخويا بيناتهم
Egin duzun konparaketa ederra, zorionak. Batzuek aipatzen dute nondik datorren euskara, baina esaten dutena ez da zuzena. Gaur egun oraindik ez dakigu nondik datorren. Dakigun gauza bakara zera da, europako hizkuntzarik zaharrena dela.
Izan ongi
Ados nago zurekin. Euskara misterio izugarri eta ederra da. Eskerrik asko zure oharragatik! ☺️
I think Basque is a mysterious culture or ethnicity. And thats coming from a Siciliano.
Basque and Sicilian are both definitely unique and awesome.
Basque language has nothing to do with Sicilian. Basque is a pre indo-european language mixed with Celtic and Goth languages.
Stai Zitto! Who said it has anything to do with Basque. It was a joke.@@melgaard45
@@melgaard45 Nobody here claimed they were related (although some people do since both groups have the most similar DNA, apparently, [if I remember correctly] but I don’t hold with that language theory, so I get your frustration.) But they are still both unique and definitely underrated, in my opinion 😊
Yes yes yes
Crazy
Thanks!
Nere itzana===내래 있잖아
=====“”I am (actually) ~~~~””
in North Korean dialect
No mention of "Pintxo bat" or "sagardoa"?!
Haha! I will have to do a special video for those! 😊
Asko ====. Many????!
Aiko(Aigo ~~)==아이코~(아이고~~)
====when amplify emotional situation
in Korean
Aiko thanks!!=== many thanks
Mesedez ====Please?????
Moseodzuo ===모셔줘
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,(please serve something for someone)
Gere Arte. =====See u later
Gre Ita. ==Ok ~ Later. (그래 있따)
in Korean
Pixka===Little????????
Pisihk ===피식 ( little or slightly in Korean)
Bbala keulssi ???===빨라 글씨?? In Korean
==== can u write in fast??????
Oh but basque or euskera language is so esasy, i don't know why many people sat it's so difficult for the only reason of being so different to other languages.
Once you get the logic of it, it’s definitely not such a hard language! I think for me the hardest things are (still) word order and the multitude of auxiliary forms. Also I understand that the case system is tricky if you are not used to that sort of thing. It’s definitely a different way of expression and some people find it daunting. 😌
It would be helpful if you repeated each phrase at least 3 times to give the viewer time to practice.
I definitely should have, didn’t even think about it at the time of filming! Next time though ☺️
Oso ondo hitzegiten duzu euskeraz 😊
Eskerrik asko! ☺️😊 ez da perfektua baina beti praktikatzen ari naiz, txiri-txiri. 💪
Les basques sont les autochtones du Japon et iles voisines venus en Europe d aujourd hui a l époque solutreenne c est a dire il y a 20000a 23000 ans et ce qui est extraordinaire ils parlent la langue d il y a 70000ans c est a dire euskara ! !
Badakit. Sake -> txakoli, topa!
@@ernstkrudl4895 noun Bizi hiz ?
@@georgetteberho7293 ez dut ulertzen. Iparraldekoa zira? Untsa zira?
@@ernstkrudl4895 xiberoan izigari ountsa !!
@@georgetteberho7293 I am lost with your answer. Where do you live and do you speak Basque. Please answer in in English or in French si´l vous plait.
So then Z is pronounced like an S always?
When it's alone, generally yes, though I have heard one occasion when a native pronounced it like a Z, but maybe that was an outlier. When there are two Z's, they often like to pronounce it like "tz", like "ez zara" sounds a lot like "etzara". And sometimes, in the word "ez", they drop the Z before another word that starts with N or L, like "ez naiz" sounds like "ehnaiz". But that doesn't always happens. Some speakers pronounce 'tz' more like the 'ts' or 'tx'. So to answer your question, Z isn't always pronounced like S, but alone, yes.
@@basqueberserk in textbooks audios (slow talking) it is sometimes not shortened/changed, in songs and normal speed talking (FAST) the shortening/changing is the normal. I like examples: e(z) naiz hemengoa: I am not from here. I dare say after digging into this language on my own for some years, all these little side notes/comments of our "language fairy" are so much of the Basque language core and ultra helpful. Milesker!.
@@ernstkrudl4895 thank you for your insight! 😊