Dont take it like this bro. Learn like you can . The best way to learn a langage is immersion. If you cant use a app bro .good luck you can do it if its dear to your heart
Very good video, it's important that Canadians honor their first nation languages by using them. I wish I could learn the precolonial language of my homeland, but it's no longer spoken.
Man you encouraged me to keep going with my 100 days of Cree videos. I'm on day 44, and losing mustard. Thanks for motivating me. I'm on my way to learn Saulteaux and Cree.
It's good to see more native people teaching their ways.❤ I'm always looking for contact like this. It's really hard to come by. I appreciate your teachings thank you this means a lot I need to hear this at this time
Can I ask where you found that syllabics chart you showed at 6:57? It's the one that I put together for my classes! (I had it posted on a website that I unpublished, but I am working on putting up a different one for language teaching resources.) Awesome video by the way, I think you did a lot of really good work, it's a pretty thorough insight into beginning a language journey.. This is something to be very proud of. c:
I'm going back to Russia where I have some surviving family I'll probably be there for four months. Then I'm off to Vietnam maybe for five months so I may have my hands full with those two languages. However the mother's side seems to have been metis maybe Cree. Anyway they were from Quebec in the legend is that they were in the fur trade..... Cree is the dominant surviving language. Might end up going to the Saskatchewan to learn Cree someday Nice that you're making an effort.
Respect à toi mon frère Wahbi ! Vraiment très intéressant et très très bien réalisé on se serait cru sur national geographic ma sha ALLAH On attend le prochain épisode avec impatience 😉
You learned plains cree! An updated version of the books you used from Solomon Ratt need to be updated to reflect the other dialects instead of just referencing their differences.
Wahbi, you're the man! So cool. Made me happy. I want to learn Cree and Inuktitut. You speak Moroccan Arabic,French and English, right? I speak German, English and a bit Arabic :) And I live in Ottawa. I love what you did both meeting the people and learning Swampy Cree, I think it was, yes? Btw I might not understand your Arabic bc i learned Egyptian Arabic. But you would understand me! If I remember anything at all LOLLL
It is not Plains Cree all the way to Great Slave Lake. It is Woodland Cree (Y Dialect). ᓴᑳᐍᔨᓅᐘᐠ the natural border for our dialect is the Athabasca River all in Treaty 8 area.
My Great Grandmother was ran out of the tribe.I do not know why. My Grandma was a mean, scary lady. I’m part Irish. Many years ago my Aunt decided to write a book about her mother. I guess she thought it would be interesting. She Went back to ask them. They ran her ass out too. She dropped the whole idea. Don’t know what happened but nobody talks about it. Would love to know anything about my tribe.
I’m Eastern Cree I grew up learning moose Cree and hearing swampy And eastern in my grandparents house I was so confused so I tried speaking people look at me scratching their heads LMN dialects words shorten or longer I try I’m mixing the words together they look at me what so I speak English only
If you keep up with your comments, there are actual language keepers who have spoken Cree from birth. I am one of those people. I have knowledge of the written and spoken language. If you want to learn more, I have knowledge.
Sketen Nihiyawan ci? That means you understand cree? Lol namoya moniyawak. Ih wi pi ti mi ki si ni chi he is the first part of the alphabet. The word for university is kichi-kiskinwahamatowikamihk lol. Nihiyawan niya. Kisakitin Nihiyawin. Tansi kakiyaw
This is awesome, me being swampy cree decent I can't speak my language but you did it in 10 days and it really inspired me to learn my language.
Right! I agree completely.
Have you started learning yet? If so, what has it been like so far?
@@robynplett3086 hard af I can't get the pronunciations right but my tells me if I'm wrong, still trying tho
Dont take it like this bro. Learn like you can . The best way to learn a langage is immersion. If you cant use a app bro .good luck you can do it if its dear to your heart
Keep trying its the only way. You learn by doing mistakes dont be too hard on your self
Very good video, it's important that Canadians honor their first nation languages by using them.
I wish I could learn the precolonial language of my homeland, but it's no longer spoken.
I think it is awesome how you put yourself out there to learn the Creators Language. Thumbs up..
Very thoughtful... can’t wait to watch more !
Thank you Soukaina
Fantastic video! Indigenous language revitalization is so important
Congratulations Wahby you are the best . I m proud of you 👍 ( Fatnanazih)
Merci Fatna pour ton soutien comme d'habitude
Great job. I would suggest to do a report on the Saulteaux language as there are many First Nations of Saulteaux descent. Mikwec.
Hello Faye. Thank u for ur beautiful words. We re thinking strongly about Saulteaux for our third episode
My great grandma was saulteaux from poplar river :)
Man you encouraged me to keep going with my 100 days of Cree videos. I'm on day 44, and losing mustard. Thanks for motivating me. I'm on my way to learn Saulteaux and Cree.
cree is my language, my town is full of people who speak it, cree is such a beautiful language.
Infested? You should probably find a new word to describe what you're trying to get across ♥️
@@natekakakaway274 nono im serious.. like everybody in my town speaks cree, im tryng to learn it myself.
Why the word "infested"?? Why not "inhabited by" or "full of"??
@tumao_kaliwat_napulo lol sorry I can say dumb things... ill edit it 🙏🏽
@@ScottQueskekapow must be a vocabulary issue then... Well it happens all the time regardless if it's your 1st or 2nd language... Glad I could help...
Great job very interesting , it's a difficult challenge but you have achieved success.
Thank you very much. It was a wonderful experience
It's good to see more native people teaching their ways.❤ I'm always looking for contact like this. It's really hard to come by. I appreciate your teachings thank you this means a lot I need to hear this at this time
one of the best videos I've ever seen
Working with you in this project just allowed me to make a new friend, let's keep this great idea rolling. Cheers
I am still impressed by your commitment to your work. I rarely met people that concerned. U re unique Tony
Awesome video. I’m preparing for my intro to Cree class that I will be taking this fall. I would love to see content on the denesuline language!
Beautiful work, Wahbi! Looking forward to watching more episodes!
Thank you very much John for your beautiful words
Excellent travail wahbi bon courage
Merci beaucoup
I like how you have done something different from what I’ve seen you doing. It was a good challenge and you did very good. Great job boss!!
Thank you very much Ani for your beautiful words. I am sure that you can do the challenge too, one day and succeed
Fantastic video. Thank you.
Good job I love the style of the film!
Thank you very much Louise. Your opinion is important to us
Well done Wahbi..This is great and I am glad you are doing this to get us aware and interested in these kinds of topics. - Dolapo
Dolapo so nice to hear from you. I am glad that you liked the movie. It's a wonderful subject to discuss
Can I ask where you found that syllabics chart you showed at 6:57? It's the one that I put together for my classes! (I had it posted on a website that I unpublished, but I am working on putting up a different one for language teaching resources.) Awesome video by the way, I think you did a lot of really good work, it's a pretty thorough insight into beginning a language journey.. This is something to be very proud of. c:
Hi sorry for this late response. I found the syllabics chart on google. Thank u for ur encouraging word and also for the chart
@@canadianlanguages2527 are you gonna make new videos?
I'm going back to Russia where I have some surviving family I'll probably be there for four months. Then I'm off to Vietnam maybe for five months so I may have my hands full with those two languages. However the mother's side seems to have been metis maybe Cree. Anyway they were from Quebec in the legend is that they were in the fur trade..... Cree is the dominant surviving language. Might end up going to the Saskatchewan to learn Cree someday
Nice that you're making an effort.
Courage success inchaallah
Merci beaucoup pour tes encouragements
Wonderful you also inspired me to learn cree, it's funny I had a cree language book already from Solomon Ratt LOL
How's the learning process going?
As nêhiyawêwin, this makes me so happy to see.
this is a truly wondeful video! well done!
Great video! please make more
I would suggest the 3rd episode focus on Saulteaux language. Great work!
Thank you so much Sheena for your feedback. For our third episode we received 2 strong suggestions : Saulteaux and Michif
It was Great working with you!!! Get ready for the next one. 👍🙏
Tony i am always ready to work with u
Good thinking !
Great job bro, keep it up.
(Simo)
Simo merci beaucoup pour ton soutien
Respect à toi mon frère Wahbi ! Vraiment très intéressant et très très bien réalisé on se serait cru sur national geographic ma sha ALLAH
On attend le prochain épisode avec impatience 😉
Amadou merci beaucoup pour ce message encourageant. J espere qu on se verra prochainement
J'espère aussi mon frère !
Great stuff
Nitotem I hope you do more videos in the future. Ai Hiy!
We re planning a second doc about the Nakota language. Thank you for your support
You learned plains cree! An updated version of the books you used from Solomon Ratt need to be updated to reflect the other dialects instead of just referencing their differences.
I appreciate you learning our language :)
Great video
This was awesome. Recommend Gwich'in or one of the Coast Salish languages for your series
Thank you Jens sonmuch. I ll do my research about this language for sure. Wonderful suggestion
Where can we get a cree recourse book?
Awesome!
Thank you very much James
Wahbi, you're the man! So cool. Made me happy. I want to learn Cree and Inuktitut. You speak Moroccan Arabic,French and English, right? I speak German, English and a bit Arabic :) And I live in Ottawa. I love what you did both meeting the people and learning Swampy Cree, I think it was, yes?
Btw I might not understand your Arabic bc i learned Egyptian Arabic. But you would understand me! If I remember anything at all LOLLL
Mashallah 3aliek khouya
I like watching Regina in Cree
Regina is in Cree. Thsnk you for your support
I've always wanted to learn my traditional language Blackfoot and my mom was Creed. I want to learn both languages
Miyo atoskiy kakiyaw. Miyo maskikiy. Miyasin wakomakan.
Do Haudenasaunee
TANSI///GREETINGS FROM VANCOUVER////
Her dil korunmalı gerçekten. Hepsi farklı düşünüş biçimlerini yansıtıyor.
I agree Halil, we should protect all indigenous languages in the world
Any schools in Vancouver to learn local Native languages?
Great
Thank U Mitu
It is not Plains Cree all the way to Great Slave Lake. It is Woodland Cree (Y Dialect). ᓴᑳᐍᔨᓅᐘᐠ the natural border for our dialect is the Athabasca River all in Treaty 8 area.
Hello there, would you know the best place to go to travel and learn the cree language?
Thank you,
Quinn
@@lenguafranca4524 its dependent on dialect. Figure out which region you want to learn from and try the local reserves
Tansi Nihiyawan. Wapsewsipi niya ochi. Sakaw Nihiyawan. Neweyak oti kosapahtamowin. Yotin pimohkitiw niya. Tansi kakiyaw
I’m from kinuso lol bush Cree. Or sakaw Nihiyawan niya. Wapsewsipi niya ochi
@@yotinpimohktiw7766 ikawiya moskacimo ota kika kehkamitin kwaysk kespin ki we moneyawatisin
Oui, il n'a pas beaucoup de ressources en français. Meme pour apprendre l'algonquin.
Crees, Denes, Mohawks, And Iroquois
Thats chief cadmus!
My Great Grandmother was ran out of the tribe.I do not know why. My Grandma was a mean, scary lady. I’m part Irish. Many years ago my Aunt decided to write a book about her mother. I guess she thought it would be interesting. She Went back to ask them. They ran her ass out too. She dropped the whole idea. Don’t know what happened but nobody talks about it. Would love to know anything about my tribe.
BILL QUINN WAS MY CREE TEACHER/////
I’m Eastern Cree I grew up learning moose Cree and hearing swampy And eastern in my grandparents house I was so confused so I tried speaking people look at me scratching their heads LMN dialects words shorten or longer I try I’m mixing the words together they look at me what so I speak English only
If you keep up with your comments, there are actual language keepers who have spoken Cree from birth. I am one of those people. I have knowledge of the written and spoken language. If you want to learn more, I have knowledge.
I love how you added Black Lives Matter! - Dolapo
I think it was a goo idea Dolapo. Glad that u liked it
You can’t reconcile a relationship we never had.
Nihiyaw chi? Tanti ochi kiya? Tansi kitsikason wakomakan? Nihiyaw niya. Yotin pimohkitiw nitsikason. Wapsewsipi niya ochi. Ninaskomitin
Sketen Nihiyawan ci? That means you understand cree? Lol namoya moniyawak. Ih wi pi ti mi ki si ni chi he is the first part of the alphabet. The word for university is kichi-kiskinwahamatowikamihk lol. Nihiyawan niya. Kisakitin Nihiyawin. Tansi kakiyaw
No you didn't. That's not how language acquisition works.
Do you know what weent tuguy means? Lmao