Anglish - Linguistic Purism in English (Sorry for Poor Audio Quality)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ต.ค. 2024
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    𝗙𝗼𝗿𝗲𝘄𝗼𝗿𝗱
    This is merely a beginning for the Anglish introduction series. Some errors including foreign languages pronounciations and other various linguistic research might be disturbing to some viewers, please bear with me on those slightest mistakes.
    And please, don't get political in the comment section. This is a fun linguistic project!
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    🎦 Filmwork:
    ••• Canva | Home
    ••• QuickTime Player | Apple In-built Filmer
    ••• Shotcut | Home (Encoder: h284_videotoolbox)
    shotcut.org/
    🖥️ Spec: MacBook Pro 8,3 (13"3 inch, early 2011)
    CPU: 2.3GHz Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2410M Dual-Core L3 Cache 3GB
    RAM: 8GB (2*4GB SO-DIMMs) DDR3 SDRAM @ 1333MHz
    STG: 256GB SATA SSD Drive
    GPU: Intel HD Graphics 3000 @ 384MB
    VRAM: 512MB
    NIC: IEEE 802.11n Specification
    Battery State: Plugged
    ••• Apple | MacBook Pro (13-inch, Early 2011) - Technical Specifications
    support.apple....
    ℹ️ Anglish Insights:
    Anglish is a kind of English which prefers native words over those borrowed from foreign languages. Anglish is linguistic purism applied to English.
    ••• Anglish Wordbook
    anglisc.mirahe...
    ••• Discord | Anglisc
    / discord
    ••• Reddit | Anglisc
    / anglish
    📶 Contact and Other Activity Links:
    ••• Twitch: / zantmcgaming
    ••• Twitter: / zaangtwyt
    ••• PMC: www.planetmine....
    ••• Discord: ZanSequenta(6752)
    ••• Reddit: / zaangtwyt

ความคิดเห็น • 25

  • @tamasmarcuis4455
    @tamasmarcuis4455 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The Scots language is significantly closer to Frisian and Dutch than English is. Some spelling and pronunciation being almost identical while very different from English.

    • @7mad211
      @7mad211 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Scots is like living middle english

  • @joaodavid2001
    @joaodavid2001 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    "Oneship" °sweys° better than "oneness" in that "frame", dostn't thou think?

    • @zaangtwyt
      @zaangtwyt  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Though oneness is brought through Old English anness, oneship would be more blatant to nowadays English-speaker. Thou hast gewit! :D

  • @zaangtwyt
    @zaangtwyt  ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I've received from the comments that I made a mistake at 8:30 of the clip miswording the term for eagle in German. It should be _die Adler_ instead. Though, _der Aar_ is also used once in German history (usage is poetic).
    Source: dwb.uni-trier.de/de/
    *Deutsches Wörterbuch von Jacob Grimm und Wilhelm Grimm, Aar m, 2023*

    • @armandonobrega5282
      @armandonobrega5282 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think 'erne' is more akin, so says the Anglish Wordbook.

    • @christianpipes2110
      @christianpipes2110 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Der* Adler

  • @ajrwilde14
    @ajrwilde14 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I like your voice, please make more videos.

  • @ferivertid
    @ferivertid 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    great video but side note your microphone is screamingt to my ears

    • @zaangtwyt
      @zaangtwyt  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thanks for your appreciation, I'm glad that you enjoy! And I'm deeply sorry for the intensive audio playback from the video. I was recording this on an old laptop (namely Macbook Pro early-2011) and its receiving audio ability is very poor. Sorry for such loud noise to bear. 🙏

    • @ferivertid
      @ferivertid 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@zaangtwyt its ok but dang macbooks last

  • @speedynurbesser
    @speedynurbesser ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Just out of interest, who told you that "Aar" is German for eagle? An eagle is actually an "Adler" which as far as I know also goes back to the Latin word "Aquila", just like in English.

    • @zaangtwyt
      @zaangtwyt  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Looks like my comment is disappeared due to poor wifi TAT, but yeah, after recording I did ask a German user in Discord and it is indeed “Adler”. Sorry for the misinformation. 😞

    • @speedynurbesser
      @speedynurbesser ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@zaangtwyt Stuff happens. Good Video though

    • @MixerRenegade95
      @MixerRenegade95 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Weird because in Old High German ''Adalaro (which Adler comes from) and Arn'' both meant Eagle and Old English (WS) had ''Earn'' so pray tell how does Adler relate to Latin: Aquila''? I don't see it whereas names like Arnold (Old Eagle) I see often.

  • @lucaskanyodutra4177
    @lucaskanyodutra4177 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Anglish is already an outlandish language....it's GERMANIC

    • @noahrice6671
      @noahrice6671 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It’s not outlandish, it’s closer to our Germanic brothers. Fuck romance words

  • @SinarNila
    @SinarNila 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Friend, hi, good evening, colleague, the word eagle in English is of Latin, Hellenic and Neo-Latin origin. Eagle in Latin is aquilae, aetós in Greek, águila in Spanish and Catalan, eagle in Portuguese and aigle in French, these words, all synonymous, are sisters of the English word Eagle and never the German word adler. I'm not a layman, I'm a professional linguist, that's my job, I'm helping you because I saw laziness and errors in your video and work. Grammatically, Anglish is not pure, it never was nor will be, it follows grammatical norms from Norman Francian and French as well as in writing and literature, they are the same norms and conventions with adaptations for each language. Never fall for this trick, if you have been deceived, abandon all the material that deceived you. Anglish is a mere English without Latinisms with Neo-Latin, Latin and Greek norms, pure deception. English was thought of and created by the Francian French Normans, read the English language diaries from the Norman castles of France and England there you will discover more truths about the English you speak, you don't need to believe me, I'm a scientist, then come back to make me right. I'm helping you from the bottom of my heart, my friend. If you want to promote Germanic languages ​​throughout Anglophony, promote Old Norse, Limburgish, Dutch, Anglo Frisian and Anglo Saxon and in this way you will be helping Anglophony become Germanic again. English today and Anglish are lost normatively and linguistically they are Romance at the deepest level that you can study and Hellenic in depth, take the test and then come back to thank me. Good-bye 🫂👋 Health stay at peace. Real hugs.

    • @tiagorodrigues3730
      @tiagorodrigues3730 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Portuguese for "eagle" is _águia,_ similarly to Castillian, but with the lost intervocalic l as is common in Portuguese. Otherwise the idea that English is “Romance at the deepest level” is the kind of nonsense that would get you an F in a linguistics class. I do believe you are a professional linguist, but as a professional linguist,, you should really know better than to fall for the linguistic superiority trap. English is a Germanic language, with lots of influences from other Germanic languages, a bunch from Norman French, Latin, Greek, a little bit of Welsh, and just about every other language on the globe. This is neither good nor bad, it makes English a real language spoken by real people, as opposed to ethnonationalists. I hope you can think about what it is that you are seeking by “helping Anglophony become Germanic again.”

    • @zaangtwyt
      @zaangtwyt  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      First and foremost, thanks for your apprehensive comment on this video. I'm truly glad to see that this clip is being spread to more and more people. There are a few things I would like to talk about and address:
      Eagle in German should be *der Adler* instead of *die Aar* at 8:30 and it was my mistake for not doing a thorough runthrough before shooting this film. My slideshow is raw and barehanded, maybe lazy in terms of looking for information and its source as *Aar* is a poetic usage.
      However, I didn't said any word akin to English word _eagle_ being a Germanic origin. Maybe it was due to my unclear speech. I assume that you are indeed a linguistic researcher or professional, then to quote from yours:
      " _Eagle in Latin is aquilae, aetós in Greek, [...] are sisters of the English word Eagle_ "
      English is not a Romance Language, I thought, you, as a linguist would know that pretty well at first place.
      " _and never the German word adler_ "
      Maybe my wording is misleading in that part, but I was meant to do a comparison between English and the rest of Germanic languages in that page. Thus I listed English have *eagle* instead of German, Dutch, Nordic languages etc. where they have words similar to the root of Proto-Germanic *arô*
      " _Grammatically, Anglish is not pure, it never was nor will be, it follows grammatical norms from Norman Francian and French as well as in writing and literature, they are the same norms and conventions with adaptations for each language_ "
      Anglish isn't pure, neither does any lanuguage worldwide. I agree with that. But French influence on the transition of English langauge from inflectional to analytic or Old Norse influence are still disputed. They do have influence to some degree, but the majority to Old English transition to Middle English are the sound shift and ending vowels dropping out of use.
      " _Anglish is a mere English without Latinisms with Neo-Latin, Latin and Greek norms, pure deception._ "
      Again, maybe owing to my misleading wording, but, yes, that is the goal of Anglish. and I have spoken it at 12:48 and I also have said about different genres or subcategories of Anglish Project at 14:11
      " _If you want to promote Germanic languages ​​throughout Anglophony, promote Old Norse, Limburgish, Dutch, Anglo Frisian and Anglo Saxon and in this way you will be helping Anglophony become Germanic again._ "
      Although I do begin learning Old English (Anglo-Saxon in this case) I can't seem to relate on how would promoting other Germanic languages make English more 'Anglophony'. This is like, "If you want English to be more Germanic, go learn Dutch instead." I promote Anglish for it is a fun exercise for folks to understand better about the English language history and also work as a better bridge towards other various Germanic languages.
      " _English today and Anglish are lost normatively and linguistically they are Romance at the deepest level that you can study and Hellenic in depth_ "
      Again, English is not a Romance Language. I admit that learning English helps me get a better hand on acquiring Romance or Greek vocabularies due to mass import of inkhorns existing in the English language. But that is merely touching the surface.
      And lastly, again, thanks for your feedback on this clip. I hope we can have more discourse about this topic. Peace out.

    • @MixerRenegade95
      @MixerRenegade95 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lay out your credentials Bub.

  • @christianpipes2110
    @christianpipes2110 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Groß means big/tall 🫠

    • @eneasyou
      @eneasyou หลายเดือนก่อน

      It also means Great..
      Like in:
      Großbritannien = Great Britain
      Alexander der Große = Alexander the Great
      In all these cases it doesnt mean big or tall and has nothing to do with size.

    • @christianpipes2110
      @christianpipes2110 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I know, but I’ve never seen it used in the context as in the video.