No, Romanian is not the Dacian Language, it's from Latin

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @Alex-hz2xg
    @Alex-hz2xg ปีที่แล้ว +21

    Also "to eat" in Romanian can also be "a păpa". The same is found in Sardinian where "to eat" is "pappare".
    In Transylvania we also can say "(i)e" (pronounced "yeah") for "yes", from "este" (pronounced yea-ste) meaning "it is so". The same "ie" can be found in Sardinian for "yes". Another way to say "it is so" is "Aşa e!" or "Aşa-i" again the 'e' and 'i' from 'este' (yes-te)

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Interesting link with Sardinian.

    • @igorjee
      @igorjee ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@BenLlywelyn "Ie" might be a borrowing from the once large Transylvanian Saxon community. In Hungarian, we say 'igen' for yes, but 'ja' is often used informally, a German word obviously. Many also say Muter and Fater for Mom and Dad.

    • @razvanbarascu4007
      @razvanbarascu4007 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The romanian-sardinian link is quite fat.
      There are very similar words in both languages that can only be found in sardinian and romanian like 'limba' 'apa/aba' 'pisica/pisicu' 'cap' 'beciu/beci' etc. This words seems to be pre-roman, indo-european probably.

    • @brb4903
      @brb4903 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I've never heard in Transylvania "ie" (pronounced "yeah") for "yes". But we sometimes say "e" pronounced as the French "è" (e-grave) to express an affirmation.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@razvanbarascu4007 1. Latin is an Indo-European language; 2. there is a similar phonetical in some contexts evolution but not in all words, evolution from Latin, not from another language 3. Some Catalan words evolved the same as words from Romanian and have the same spelling, (e.g. cap, ou, bou, foc)but they came from Latin, too 4. Standard Italian has a lot of elements in common with Romanian unlike Sardinian, for instance ce, ci, ge, gi, che, chi, ghe, ghi, where there was no such palatalization. beciu (pronounced bechiu) means old = vecchio in Italian; 5. beci in Romanian measn cave and is from Slavic

  • @davidvaughn367
    @davidvaughn367 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I find the diversity of sounds, vowels And consonants as well as the case system, very beautiful, and the cadence, enchanting, like Spanish, Russian, and Irish, all had a party together.
    If I were to take on another Romance language, Romanian would definitely be the one.
    You touched on something in this video that I have noticed as well, which is the line that can be drawn right down the middle of Europe. Languages on one side tend to be more inflected, more conservative some would say. Languages to the west of this line, tend to have lost some of their inflection, Basque being a notable exception.
    This same line follows (very roughly) the division in the Church, And oddly, but not exactly, the Iron Curtain.
    I have always thought that was kind of odd,though I can offer no good explanation.
    By the way, Happy Thanksgiving.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Happy Thanksgiving.

    • @cezarstefanseghjucan
      @cezarstefanseghjucan ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Happy Thanksgiving to you as well!

    • @cernea1mihai
      @cernea1mihai ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/FxVtOgyqH2s/w-d-xo.html

    • @cernea1mihai
      @cernea1mihai ปีที่แล้ว

      Bătălia lingvistică pentru adevărata origine a limbii române

    • @gheorgheenache7789
      @gheorgheenache7789 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@cernea1mihai Bătălia cu nebunii.🤣🤣🤣

  • @sorindr
    @sorindr ปีที่แล้ว +58

    Ben, in “Manius me facit Numerio”, facit are not spelled “fasit”. correct are “fakit”. more similar with actual romanian “fãcut”. Cicero is not Sisero, but Kikero. as well correct pronunciation in latin classical or vulgar is Dekebalus, not Desebalus.
    Si/se came with eclessiastical latin in 13-14th AD.
    also… when Brutus pulled out his dagger, Cesar said ““Kaì sú, téknon” (You too, child). In greek, because roman elite use greek as main language

    • @ionbrad6753
      @ionbrad6753 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Well, for English speakers it's hard to adopt the classical pronunciation : )

    • @gheorgheenache7789
      @gheorgheenache7789 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Enlezii sint niste caraghiosi. Acum ei dau si lectii de istorie a limbii romane. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @gheorgheenache7789
      @gheorgheenache7789 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ionbrad6753 e greu? Păi, să stea acasă dacă doar atit le vine greu. Spun ai nostri prostii destule pe acest subiect, asa ca nu mai avem nevoie si de prostiile englezilor.

    • @ionbrad6753
      @ionbrad6753 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@gheorgheenache7789 1) Unde vezi tu aici englezi? 2) dacă au studiat temeinic subiectul - da, pot ajunge și englezi / francezi / chinezi - să dea lecții despre istoria oricărei limbi.

    • @gheorgheenache7789
      @gheorgheenache7789 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@ionbrad6753 Am zis io că văd englezi?? Tipul de aici părea englez. Pe urmă am aflat că el e galez.
      Degeaba studiezi dacă nu ai minte! Te umpli de gunoi doar.

  • @robertescu6435
    @robertescu6435 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    You concentrate on the textbook Romanian, Romanian has formal written and informal spoken (a classic and vulgar of some sorts). My grandmother had only 4 school years made, and in Russian language not Romanian, but she spoke the most beauty full Romanian, closer to Italian than textbook Romanian. She learned form speech generation to generation, they were farmers with no education.
    For example r-textbook-"transpirație/perspirație" grandma-"sudoare" italian-"sudorazione", r-textbook-"strecurătoare/sită" grandma-"setcă" in italian-"setaccio", grandma-"flanea" french-"flanelle". And she used words like "tunică".

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Glad you had exposure to a rich heritage.

    • @robertescu6435
      @robertescu6435 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thanks. You are a great person and I love your content.@@BenLlywelyn

    • @robertescu6435
      @robertescu6435 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      ​@@Alex-hz2xg I see an adoption of people for the word "sigur" or other frases instead of "da" when possible, this and the fact that in 6th year of university you start to surround yourself with people that talk differently, more polite.
      There are also opinions that "da" would come from the late Latin language, from the word "ita": ita>ida>da. (K.A.Massey).

    • @bogdan78pop
      @bogdan78pop 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Alex-hz2xg You also use .....ora doi , care nu are sens gramatical...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
      @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "strecuratoare", "sita" and "setca" are three different things :). also, "strecuratoare" and "sita" are definitely not "textbook" words.

  • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
    @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    the derived words for "torna, torna" in modern romanian would be "înturna" ("turn", "return" ) and "răsturna" ("turn over, knock over"). "înturna" is a bit old-fashioned and rarely used these days. "întoarce" is of another root - same as "torque" in english.

  • @florinblendea7446
    @florinblendea7446 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Hi Ben,
    Have you heard about Calusarii dance? That looks similar with morris dance and it looks like some dacians took it with them in England as roman legionnaires and so the english people have now morris dance. The word "morris" is similar with romanian "morisca" and might be a derivative of that.
    Any chance to look at this, please?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Morris dancers are quite silly. I would need to read up on this.

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@BenLlywelyn Any chance to compare the Morris dances whith Welsh Galic traditions?Its looking as a ritual of the Galic Goddes Epona,in the Calushari are also equestrial symbols used.

    • @mihaelac2472
      @mihaelac2472 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Look up the Romanian calusari dance. It is a beautiful dance, but in old times it was full of pagan beliefs, as it was considered to have healing properties, and the dancers had strict behaviour to observe during the period of the year the dance was danced. Makes me think of shamanic rites.

    • @cv5w
      @cv5w 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@mihaelac2472I saw basically the same dance in southern Italy.

    • @punclizme
      @punclizme หลายเดือนก่อน

      What in the world is this morris dance? Never heard of it and now that I see it, omg. thats one of our dances
      th-cam.com/video/sImsZJ7cX0o/w-d-xo.html

  • @daciaromana2396
    @daciaromana2396 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    @14:04 Classical Latin "Tunica", gave Romanian the word "intuneric/intunecat" meaning "dark/darkness"; a contraction formed from the Latin words "in tunica".

  • @tudorm6838
    @tudorm6838 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    What did Vasile Parvan say? The Romans were interested in the territory of Dacia much more than the one in the south of the Danube because they had two major economic interests: gold and agriculture. In addition, this was the new frontier and the army was concentrated there. This meant a more intense connection with the Empire on all levels. Even in 329 AD, decades after the Aurelian retreat, Constantine the Great built a bridge over the Danube, the largest of those times.
    In addition, the Romans colonized the center of the Dacian kingdom of Decebalus, their economic and power centers, so that those left outside had reasons to maintain contact with the former center and adopt similar changes.
    The Roman colonists were from all over the empire, they were also from the already Latinized regions around, but they were also Italian.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Very reasonable comment.

    • @andreivlad3518
      @andreivlad3518 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can look at the map of the Roman empire and you will see that the empire stretched all the way to the Crimea with Moldova. Free Dacians! Latin speakers!

    • @tudorm6838
      @tudorm6838 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​We cannot compare different regions. In that area, a part of the population was forced to migrate and the rest lost even the pre-roman language in most of the cases. The arab cultural influence was very strong in that region. More: they were in the Greek language area of the Roman Empire.
      However, in the early feudal period, there was a risk of losing both Latin and the local language (if has survived)
      Until 1000 AD Latin was still widely used (including the Balkans), but in many of the new feudal countries, Latin was somehow replaced by force. In our area, the first stable feudal states were created by locals (Walachia, Moldova), so there were no such risks, and in Transylvania, there were also some favorable circumstances.

  • @carron979
    @carron979 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    15:45 right, "cal" comes from "caballus", BUT the female horse "iapa" (the mare) comes from "equus/equa" ("aqua" turned into "apa" in Romanian by a similar process)

    • @dog79-p5l
      @dog79-p5l ปีที่แล้ว +2

      And minz (manz) where is coming from?

    • @carron979
      @carron979 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      "manzo" which is horse meat in Italian...@@dog79-p5l

    • @marcelprodan9132
      @marcelprodan9132 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@dog79-p5l Mânz is comming from caballus + equus/equua. 😁

    • @carron979
      @carron979 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@marcelprodan9132 right! :-))))

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว

      @@marcelprodan9132 No Minz in modern times is transgender,woke and so on

  • @mariusfilip1847
    @mariusfilip1847 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    'Torna' exists in Romanian, as 'toarnă' which means 'to pour'. The semantic shift is obvious: if you turn a vessel full of liquid, you spill the content (pour). But we also have a derivative of 'torna' that still mean 'to return, to turn around': întoarnă. It's archaic, but still used in participle form (înturnat). Aromanian kept the original meaning of 'torna'. When they say 'toarnă' it may mean both 'to pour' or 'to return'. 'Întoarce' is a later development in Daco-Romanian, it's a derivative of 'toarce' which means 'to spin (wool, cotton, etc. to produce a thread)'.
    As one can see, the semantic evolution of the Latin material in Romanian is quite different from Western Romance - another cause for Romanian looking 'different' from the Western sister languages. One of the cause is that Romanian split first from the whole Romance domain (Slavic invasion of the Balkans in the VI-th century) and the Dalmatian bridge to Western Balkans and Western Romance started to give in.
    One more proof that Romanian is not pre-Latin, but post-Latin, a remnant of the earliest fragmentation of the Romance realm.

    • @mariodezert
      @mariodezert 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We have the word TORNEIRA in portuguese. Which is a derivation I’m sure from Torna! Torneira is the TAP over the KITCHEN where the comes leaves or POURS out. 😀

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are wrong.
      Look at this evidence.
      All languages developed individually from one another.
      From LaDin and Romeika.
      Latin was also created from a Pre-Latin languages.
      There is a language in Dolomites called LaDin but this is also not the original LaDin.
      Yet. The numbers in Dolomites LaDin are almost identical with Romanian not with Italian.
      While Ladin people and Romanians never met. Therefore they came from Asia with a IndoEuropean language of the Dacians that is the nowadays Romanian. There were are romani people including the Gypsies and they called their languages also romani like.
      Aromanian, Istroromanians and other Vlachs have developed individually away from Romanian. They have the same Romanian words, nothing like Italian. This is an argument against Latinisation of Greek for Aromanians and of Slavic for Istroromanians.
      The only explanation is that there were tribes immigration from Asia of related people speaking the same language that was already a romani language and that spread through the mountains of Thracia and Dacia, developing individually.
      Rome occupied Dacia only for 150 years and only 1/4 of the territory. How come all Romania, Moldova, Basarabia and south of UKRAINE speak Romanian?
      Ottoman empire occupation was 500 years in Romania, yet nobody speaks Turkish unless they are Turks. The same about the 300 years of Germanic occupation. Nobody speaks Hungarian or German unless they are colonists.
      Your theory is wrong.
      Pleases read The Serpent's Trail of the lost tribes of Israel.
      Read also about the Jewish roots of the Serbes.
      Thracians were Sarmatians and both Sarmatians and Dacians are Semitic. The lost tribes of Israel.
      Etruscans are Semitic too. They left Egypt by boat to escape slavery their. They are part of the Lost tribes of Israel as well.
      Whole Europe is SEMITIC.
      Now see the rest of the information.
      Aromanian is like archaic Romanian.
      The tribe of Dan scattered all through Asia Minor and Europe and formed Romance languages.
      Aromanian and Romanian, as well as all the Romance languages including Latin, were not formed from Latin but from ancient-culture LaDin, a Semitic language that formed also the LaDin in the Dolomites.
      LaDin the mother of European language including LaTin. Ladin is a Semitic language of the tribe of Dan.
      The semitic Ladin language, is the basis of Romanian language
      It could be that the original Ladin is not from Latin but the other way around.
      Romanians have almost exactly the same numerals and they are formed far away from the Dolomites.
      Romanian comes from Ladin, Dacian, not Latin. Wow 😮😮😮😮
      Why Romanian Isn't Like Other Languages - because it is the closest to Ladin
      Origin of Romanic languages in Ladin, not in Latin. Amazing.
      Ladin and Ladino is the Semitic language, mother of all European languages.
      It is not that Spanish influenced this language. It is the other way around.
      Latin America is in fact Ladino America 🇺🇸.
      The continent where Ladinos or Jews emigrated.
      I always thought it has something to do with romance languages from Europe, but it is even prior to Americo Vespucci.
      Wow.
      It all makes sense.
      It comes full circle.
      Incredible.
      Ladino, romance language spoken in Israel 🇮🇱 coming from Europe, but basen on ancient-culture LaDin language. The language of the tribe of Dan.
      We found the connection with the language spoken by the tribe of Dan, the Dacian, back to Israel.
      Incredible.
      Ladin is the language Ladino are the people. In Spain they developed another version. Ladino. A Semitic language. Iberia is the country of the Hebreuws.
      Latin America, could be Ladino America.
      70% Jewish genes in Latin America. Either Ashkenazi or of the lost tribes of Israel.
      A huge revelation for today.
      Zal-Moxis Dacia Dan
      Look for the Serpent's Trail
      If you consider the other Romanian like languages such as Aromanian, istroromanian and others, that developed away from Dacia, you cannot say that the Dacian language was Latinised.
      And you cannot say that Aromanian is Latinised Greek.
      Because the way the latin words are spoken into these languages is close to Romanian and not Latin.
      How can a Latinised Greek develop 2000 km away from Dacia in the exact way as the Latinised Dacian language?
      No chance.
      It is more like Dacian language was a language that gave birth to Latin.
      Important to know!!!!
      Dacians and Sarmatians are THE LOST TRIBES OF ISRAEL.
      Sarmatians are Samaritans.
      Dacians are the Dan's. The lost tribe of Dan.
      They colonized first what became Thracia and Dacia and move forward up north when the Romans invaded Dacia and colonized Scandinavia known as Province of Dacia and formed also countries like Olan-da, Dan-mark.
      The people living in Olanda/Holland/The Netherlands, are called Dutch (pronounced Daci), also Dacians of the tribe of Dan.
      Dacians of Dacia were of the same tribe with Samson. That is why they had uncut beards 🧔🏽 and hair.
      Dan-mark was called Dacia in the 4th century.
      The tribe of Dan, colonized Iberia, France and Wallonia, as well as Irland and Scotland.
      Zal-Moxis was Chief Moses, the God of the Dacians. Why? Because Moses brought Israel out of Egypt. The Tribe of Dan was in Exile as well and got Moses worship 🛐 to be their protector.
      The Serpent with wolf 🐺 head on a pole, was the war flag of both Dacians and Sarmatians and it was inspired from the Old Testament book of Numbers 21.4-9. The serpent on the pole of Moeses.
      Moesia comes from Moses. Is the country of Moses people.
      Moesel is the river of Moses.
      Dan-ube is the river of Dan.
      Samarina is a colony of the Sarmatian, Samaritans.
      They were also Dacians
      Many rivers in Europe have the name based on Dan derivative in the first place.
      Saxons is derived from (I)saac sons. The sons of Isaac.
      Europe is therefore Semitic.
      România 🇷🇴 was occupied by many other powers over the centuries.
      The Ottoman Empire was there for 500 years yet Romanias don't speak Turkish. The Austr-Hungarian Empire was there for 300 years. Yet only the colonized villages in specific regions where Hungarians and Germans emigrated 700 years ago, speak Hungarian and German and are the emigrants. No Românian people ever spoke another language.
      The Roman occupation was only 150 years at maximum. It is no way the Dacian peasants were Latinised.
      Therefore Latin was not the language that formed Romanian language nor the other Romance languages from Iberic Peninsula, France, Wallonia, Italy. It is most likely that all these languages developed separately from a Semitic language that became Dacian language that got variations according to the region the segmented parts of the Tribe of Dan emigrated to.
      It is extraordinary and fascinating at the same time.
      Look for the article.
      The Serpent's Trail of the lost tribes of Israel.
      The tribe of Dan.
      Btw. The Gypsies are Semitic too. They are from the lost tribes of Simeon.
      Sardinia was also colonized by the Tribe of Dan. Romanian language and Sardinian language are similar. This is another hint.

    • @mariusfilip1847
      @mariusfilip1847 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@carteunu467 "Rome occupied Dacia only for 150 years and only 1/4 of the territory. How come all Romania, Moldova, Basarabia and south of UKRAINE speak Romanian?
      Ottoman empire occupation was 500 years in Romania, yet nobody speaks Turkish unless they are Turks. The same about the 300 years of Germanic occupation. Nobody speaks Hungarian or German unless they are colonists. "
      Rome occupied Dacia for 7 generations, enough to plant a stable Latin-speaking population there. The Aurelian Withdrawal was not meant to be permanent, Constantine himself did a partial re-occupation of Dacia 50 years later. It was short, but it indicated that the Romans saw Dacia as their turf, temporarily given to barbarians.
      Roman Dacia was not only 1/4 of the territory, and in addition Dacia under Goths was still at the border of the Empire. Moldova speaks Romanian because of the Romance-speaking population expanding from Transylvania there, at a later date. The abandonment of Dacia by the Empire actually opened up the way for those folks to expand eastwards. The Romanians in Southern Ukraine were brought over by the rules in the area, from Tatars to Russians. Those Romanians are not autochtonous there (whatever that may mean).
      The Ottomans never occupied Romania, except for very brief periods. The Romanian Principalities were vassal states to the Turks, and the Ottomans promised not to colonise the territory in exchange for obedience and monetary tribute (harach).
      You are wrong about the Hungarians and Germans in Transylvania. There were well known communities of Romanians in NW Transylvania that lost their language. They were saying they are Romanians, but in Hungarian. Same with Eastern Transylvania, where many Romanians got assimilated by the Szekely (the proof is the cemeteries that still exist in places where you can't find Romanians any more).

  • @Gamer-kr8tc
    @Gamer-kr8tc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    As a morden Romanian don't know what to say but all I know is that I can undrestand The Neacsu letter from over 500 years ago. I think Romanian language it's rlly old language

    • @MrBoazhorribilis
      @MrBoazhorribilis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The Neacsu letter was written in the language that we call today Romanian . It is a language fundamentally derived from Latin of course having exposure to many other neighboring languages : Slavonic, Greek, Turkish, while in Transylvania German and Hungarian.

    • @MasDeLoMismo-x2n
      @MasDeLoMismo-x2n 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MrBoazhorribilis old romanian

    • @daciaromana2396
      @daciaromana2396 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@MasDeLoMismo-x2n Old Romanian came from Vulgar Latin.

    • @MasDeLoMismo-x2n
      @MasDeLoMismo-x2n 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@daciaromana2396 avem 2000 de cuvinte de provenienta latina din 170000 cat are tot vocabularul actual al limbii romane dar este adevarat ca cele 2000+/- formeaza vocabularul BAZA al limbii..deci da ..limba romana provine din latina fara nici un dubiu ...cand am spus''old romanian'' ma refeream la scrisoarea lui Neacsu si la faptul ca limba vorbita pana la reforma se considera veche

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No shit. Proto-East-Romance was starting to form itself already by the 5th century AD (400s), and the first Proto-Romanian words are documented in the 6th century. So Romanian is about 2.600 year's old

  • @mariusmuresan8248
    @mariusmuresan8248 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    In Transylvania on the countryside people still say 'întoarnă' instead of 'intoarce'. Hence 'torna frate' would be 'întoarnă-te frate'.

    • @popacristian2056
      @popacristian2056 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      La fel si in Muntenia *întoarnă* se foloseste des, in special la tara in locul lui întoarce. Si in Moldova deasemeni.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Multusmec pentru ca

    • @europexiii3915
      @europexiii3915 ปีที่แล้ว

      si este foarte logic, pentru ca educatia in transilvania (confoirm izvoarelor istorice) a fost introdusa de ''Scoala Ardeleneasca'' -> catolici ce propovaduiau limba latina si crestinismul in detrimentul limbii de bastina si nu puteau accepta ca oamenii sa stie ca a existat un popor pagan candva aici pentru ca acest lucru contravine crestinismului (Stim foarte bine cat de agresiv era catolicismul pe acea vreme cand femei erau arse pe rug pentru blasfemii sau vrajitorii doar pentru ca nu erau pe placul anumitor cetateni influenti).
      Crestinarea fortata si violenta a venit la pachet cu limba latina.

    • @daciaromana2396
      @daciaromana2396 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yep. "Toarce" originally meant "twist". While "Toarna" originally meant "turn". But the meanings have changed in standard Romanian due to semantic drift. There are still some regional dialects that preserves the original meaning.

    • @yesman1743
      @yesman1743 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think it makes more sense to pour whine. Toarnă, toarnă frate.

  • @i.dr.8012
    @i.dr.8012 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Great work Ben
    Always love watching videos that shows how interconnected European languages are, a big family.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thank you

    • @supermarioxs1
      @supermarioxs1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Lmao 🤣. Seriously? This guy Ben is a joke …😂

  • @akuleet6029
    @akuleet6029 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This was very professional (compared to the last one🙃). I guess some people did need to hear this, good job sir.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thank you.

    • @larissagildarasina7580
      @larissagildarasina7580 ปีที่แล้ว

      If I dig deep enough, you may recognize that, in fact, you are an elephant. I swear!

  • @popacristian2056
    @popacristian2056 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    The Roman poet Ovidiu, exiled to Tomis (today's Constanta) describes the bagpipe used by the locals and called "tsampona". The current Romanian word "Cimpoi" is considered to have unknown etymology, but it is similar to "Tsampona". "Cimpoi" thus comes from the Geto-Dacian ancestors.
    th-cam.com/video/kwdkdeuHfco/w-d-xo.html

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Can you give the exact quote in Latin or in what work? It seems like it's made up.

    • @popacristian2056
      @popacristian2056 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lunadeargint540 Nu am decat informatii de pe aici : ro.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cimpoi si luceafarul.net/povestea-cimpoiului-si-a-muzicii-lui-ancestrale

    • @999mi999
      @999mi999 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, the presence of extremely few substrate vocabulary of balkanic origin only strengthens the argument that Romanians are Romans.

  • @adamd6972
    @adamd6972 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hi Ben. British guy here, living in Romania. I’m new to your channel - I guess the YT algorithm saw my interest in Romanian history and threw me in your direction!
    I will probably make further comments as I watch more. But in the meantime, may I ask please if you know where the lakeside location is, in your picture at 08:30 in the video?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I would guess Hoia Forest, but I am not sure - much of the footage is whatever I can find with CC copyright free sources.

    • @adamd6972
      @adamd6972 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BenLlywelyn I'm not sure there's a lake there but thanks anyway for the reply 👍

  • @dorneanudoru
    @dorneanudoru ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Romanians have also the verb "a pălăvrăgi"
    and is used when somebody speak to much and without importance. We also use "a flecări" from lat. FLACCUS,". "Palavre" mean lies or words without importance.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I'm sure Romanian has words for nice things too.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      palavra din turca, flecari from fleac, from german (cauta pe Wiktionary in engleza)

    • @dorneanudoru
      @dorneanudoru 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@lunadeargint540 , ​ dar de ce sa luam din turca si germana cand eram vorbitori de limba latina si cand semnificatia din limba latina este aceasi? Crezi ca turcii nu au luat cuvinte latinesti din Constantinopol sau germanii pe vremea Holly-Roman Carolingian Empire de la italieni? Nu mai zic ca si ei puteau sa ia de la latini . Wiki nu este cea mai demna sursa de informare.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@dorneanudoru turcii au luat cuvinte din latina, prin venetiana sau alte surse; cascaval de exemplu vine din turca, care l-a luta din venetiana. Wiktionary in engleza iti recomand este bun ca e bazat pe lucrari stiintifice; e o sursa mult mai buna de informare decat radio-șanț.

    • @dorneanudoru
      @dorneanudoru 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lunadeargint540, pai wiki chiar este un fel de radio sant din care multi se adapa fara sa dea macar un search pe google sa caute cuvintele similare din limba latina si prefera sa creada ca sunt turcesti, pentru ca romanii cei latinii trebuiau sa ia de la turci cuvinte care seamana cu cele latine. Cred ca bunul simt si cel putin google ne poate spune mai multe decat radio-sant-wiki. Nu cred ca este locul potrivit de balacareala romaneasca fara rost. Sper ca nu trebuie sa vobesc turceste ca sa ma fac inteles asa cum crezi ca o faceau taranii romani dupa cum crezi tu!

  • @youngshatterhand810
    @youngshatterhand810 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I very much like your videos about Romanian history. You're like fresh air and as a Romanian, I thank you for the way you dealt with the idea that Dacia was Rome's precursor which is just crazy and easily verifiable

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Appreciated. Multumesc ins.

    • @danamunteanu3866
      @danamunteanu3866 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is the truth,Dacians spoke an older language ,before latin

    • @danamunteanu3866
      @danamunteanu3866 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What do you think about the name of Danmark, dutch , or deuch.Where these names come from?
      The Europe had a much older culture,from Tracians and Dacians.
      Traian ,what name is this ?
      Traian declared he spoke to Decebal like cousins and he was proud of his Tracian roots.
      Check what i say.
      The first king of Normandie was Rollo, a trac, not a viking.
      Spartacus was a trac warier .
      Many kings of Rome had been Dacs.

    • @zuraorokamono204
      @zuraorokamono204 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​​​​​​​​​​@@danamunteanu3866Trajan never said that, stop spreading that falsehood, he was born in Spain from parents of Umbrian Latin origin, the Ulpii family, their name is clearly Italic in origin
      Rollo, or by his native name Hrólfr, was clearly a Germanic northman
      Dutch and Dane have separate Germanic origins, they don't mean the same thing, Dacian is the latinization of Dákoi or Dáoi which are Greek words that described the Dacians (we do not have a surviving Dacian endonym), just because they sounds similar to you it doesn't mean the are related
      Rome never had any Dacian kings, just emperors of Dacian origin such as Maximinus Trax but that was way after Rome's conquest of Dacia
      The only correct thing you said is that Spartacus was indeed ethnically Thracian, but that doesn't really say anything
      there is still no proof of your outlandish theories about the Thraco-Dacian language ever being relevant outside the Carpatho-Balkanic space

  • @h.adrian8911
    @h.adrian8911 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    "Torna, torna, frate!" .. "Torna" , today, in aromanian, ""tornu" has several meanings depending on the context, including "to return". Romanian " intoarce" ( turn back, twist, etc) .comes from the Latin "intorquere", "to twist". Following the historical developments in the Balkan area and the physical separation (through the occupation of the area by the Slavs) between the "Latins from the north", the Romanians and the "Latins from the south", the Aromanians, "Balcanic Vulgar Latin" sometimes had different evolutions.

    • @h.adrian8911
      @h.adrian8911 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Note: Words, "Romanian" and "Aromanian" comes form the same word, latin "Romanus" and means the same thing "romanian". Most of "aromanians" use in their speech letter "a" front of words that starts with consonants. This is where comes " a - romanian".

    • @Sofia-0001
      @Sofia-0001 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wonder how can anyone prove that cognate words come from this and that, when basically we talk about related IE languages, originated in the same cultures, proven to be sharing historical, linguistic and genetic background.

    • @carron979
      @carron979 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      there is a bar in Bucharest called "Torna, fratre!" meaning "turn the bottle upside down and fill my glass, brother!"

    • @Sofia-0001
      @Sofia-0001 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@carron979 lol

    • @h.adrian8911
      @h.adrian8911 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There are phonetic laws specific to each language and the shape of the words often shows their route from one population to another, from one language to another. There are specialists (linguists) who study these evolutions of words. Genetics has nothing to do with the evolution of words.@@Sofia-0001

  • @InAeternumRomaMater
    @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Theophanus documents actually: Torna, Torna Fratre! Which is likely Proto-Romanian (Balkan-Latin) form of latin Tōrno meaning Come back and Frāter meaning brother. Both being inherited into Romanian as Inturna and întoarce-te, and Aromanian Tornu, as well Frate.

    • @nestingherit7012
      @nestingherit7012 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Intoarna in Moldavian idiom too

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@nestingherit7012 *Moldavian dialect, but yes, you are right

    • @carron979
      @carron979 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      There is a bar-pub in Bucharest called "Torna fratre!" (Toarna frate!)

  • @Retrogamer71
    @Retrogamer71 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Growing up in modern Wessex I was exposed to the languages of our historic overlords from Italy and France. Knowing both Classical Latin and Modern French, Romanian language is very beautiful on the ear whilst intriguing verb and noun grammar. The agglomerative noun feels like the neighbouring Turkish language. Whilst formal verb construction having Dative and Accusative personal pronouns preceding verbs to mean things that in other languages are expressed more simply, has me perplexed as I approach the language mostly through the textbook. Romanian definitely feels like the living version of Latin from time to time, which surprises me since my formative schooling relied on romance language teaching excluding Romanian language.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Romanian certainly has had a varied and pluralistic influence on it in a way which is unique and enriching. Thank you.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Turkish is not a neighbouring language, and Romanian was already formed when the Turks arrived. Agglomerative is really not an appropriate term. There are enclitic articles, like Scandinavian languages. Constructions with Dativ are inherited from Latin.

  • @BogdanASima
    @BogdanASima 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you Ben for your awesome video!😃🖖 No only this one but all your videos are awesome because you have the gift to explain complicated things in a simple language. I agree with you, being a Romanian, that most of the Romanian come form vulgar latin. Our linguists, however, have identified a group of usual words that don't belong to either languages that influenced Romanian: Latin, Slavic, Turkish, etc. They concluded that - because of the usage of those words in older writings - that those word have a Dacian root. There are some studies regarding this vocabulary, however I can tell you a few with the English translation: vrabie (sparrow), stejar (oak), mistreț (boar), dor (can't be translated in full but is close to "missing someone"). I would like to know your opinion about that part of Romanian. Cheers and all the best!

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank Bogdan. I think there is undeniably a pre-Roman substrate in Romanian, that is Dacian, maybe even some Thracian. And that earlier several languages, Gothic, Illyrian, whatever the Celtic Boi spoke, left some of their culture and some words were picked up from each wave of people over a very long time. But the structure and core and prestige words, are Latin.

  • @catalinmarius3985
    @catalinmarius3985 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I know it's not your main field, but if you can, please continue making more videos like these, they are very informative!

    • @kamipersonal2687
      @kamipersonal2687 ปีที่แล้ว

      he's brainwashing you, don't know why, but he does...

    • @larissagildarasina7580
      @larissagildarasina7580 ปีที่แล้ว

      Marius, te minte, Ben nu e englez... adios marios...

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oh yes,the rest of romanians are educated by Johannes.

  • @elvistermopan2944
    @elvistermopan2944 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    My friend, for word SHIRT, in Romanian there are at least two words: CĂMAȘĂ and TUNICĂ. Tunică is an older word that means men's (uniform) coat, usually closed to the neck and worn over the shirt. Tunic-like garment (1), worn by women. 2. A (loose) garment worn by some ancient peoples, knee-length or floor-length.

  • @KertPerteson
    @KertPerteson ปีที่แล้ว +3

    good someone finally disproved this claim

  • @andreigeorgescu9643
    @andreigeorgescu9643 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The changing of the "s" sound for plural is more complex than what is presented in the video (18:20). Italian also changed the "s" sound for plural and this is not part of the sprachbund.

  • @aNu-9017
    @aNu-9017 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    10:52 I was SURE that you will make that mistake Ben.
    So, if any romanian has told you this, in Romania the indefinite and definite articles are tricky. So, ,,a bird" will be ,,o pasăre" (feminine) BUT ,,the bird" is ,,pasărea"

  • @tudorm6838
    @tudorm6838 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great video!

  • @vintagepipesnightmares
    @vintagepipesnightmares ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Thank you for your work about my language and country !
    So many people in UK think that we are Gypsies because they are called Roma people. It’s just a coincidence. Only 5% are gypsies and their name has nothing to do with Romania
    Thank you 🙏

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Bun venit!

    • @vintagepipesnightmares
      @vintagepipesnightmares ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BenLlywelyn bun găsit! 😁👍

    • @popacristian2056
      @popacristian2056 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      The census showed 3%. In general, Gypsies have a high percentage of South Asian (Indian) DNA. According to some statistics made by the companies that do DNA tests, there are 2.7% Indian DNA carriers here, which is in line with many other countries in Europe. It is interesting that in United Kingdom 4.8% have Indian DNA.

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@popacristian2056 They have a INdoeuropean language Dromari is very related whith the spoken Sanskrit.

    • @rohanofelvenpower5566
      @rohanofelvenpower5566 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@ver_idemwhere can one learn gypsy language (-s) or at least more information and analysis about them ?

  • @ovidiuswatart
    @ovidiuswatart 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    what about those words and roots of them
    A: abeş, Abrud, abur, acăţa, adămană, ademeni, adia, aghiuţă, aidoma, ală, alac, aldea, ameţi, amurg, anina, aprig, argea, Argeş, arunca, azugă.
    B: baci, baier, baligă, baltă, bară, Barbă-cot, barză, bască, batal, băga, băiat, bălan, balaur, beregată, boare, bordei, bortă, brad, brânduşă, brânză, brâu, brusture, bucur, buiestru, bunget, burghiu, burlan, burtă, burtucă, burtuş, butuc, butură, buză.
    C: caier, caţă, căciulă, căpuşă, căpută, cătun, cioară, cioban, cioc, ciocârlie, ciomag, cârlan, cârlig, codru, copac, copil, creţ, cruţa, cujbă, culbec, curma, curpăn, cursă, custură,
    D: darari, daş, dărâma, deh, deretica, descăţa, descurca, dezbăra, desghina, dezgauc, doină, don, dop, droaie, dulău.
    F: fărâmă.
    G: gard, gata, gălbează, genune, ghes, ghiară, ghimpe, ghiob, ghionoaie, ghiont, ghiuj, gîde, gîdel, gordin, gorun, grapă, gresie, groapă, grui, grumaz, grunz, gudura, guşă.
    H: hojma.
    I: iazmă, iele.
    Î: încurca, înghina, îngurzi, înseila, întrema.
    J: jilţ.
    L: leagăn, lepăda, lespede, leşina.
    M: mal, maldac, mazăre, măceş, mădări, măgură, mălai, mămăligă, mărcat, mătură, melc, Mehadia, mieru, mire, mistreţ, mişca, mânz, morman, mosoc, moş, moţ, mugure, munună, murg, muşat.
    N: năpârcă, năsărâmbă, niţel, noian.
    O: ortoman.
    P: păstaie, păstra, pânză, pârâu, prunc, pururea.
    R: raţă, ravac, răbda, reazem, ridica, râmfă, rânză.
    S/Ş: spânz, stăpân, stărnut, sterp, stejar, steregie, stână, străghiată, strepede, strugure, strungă, sugruma, suguşa, şale, şiră, şopârlă, şoric, şut, scăpăra, scrum, scula, scurma, sâmbure, sâmvea, sarbăd, Sarmisegetuza.
    T: tare, traistă, tulei,
    Ţ: ţap, ţarc, ţarină, ţăruş, ţundră, ţurcă.
    U: uita (a se), undrea, urca, urcior, urdă, urdina, urdoare.
    V: vatră, vătăma, vătui, viezure, viscol,
    Z: zară, zăr, zburda, zestre, zgardă, zgîria, zgârma, zimbru zârnă

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I am glad you included brânză, this is my favourite Romanian word so far.

  • @UlpianHeritor
    @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +44

    Another amazing video which explains what we already know but dacopaths need to hear. By the way, the Romanian word "din" is a contraction of the Latin words "de" + "in".

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Multumesc pentru 'de + in'.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@BenLlywelyn cu placere

    • @ionbrad6753
      @ionbrad6753 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Same thing for ”întoarce-te”. The leading ”in” is glued there with the meaning ”turn-in-(direction)”.

    • @gheorgheenache7789
      @gheorgheenache7789 ปีที่แล้ว

      „dacopaths” know better than you. You crazy latinopaths!!

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ionbrad6753 In latin I think is retorna

  • @anthonyhiggins6342
    @anthonyhiggins6342 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What I love about the Indo-European spread graphic at 2:53 is that it shows the initial spread of the IE speakers all the way out to Ireland and parts of Spain, displacing many languages along the way; which means, even though Celtic languages are historically attested in places like Britain and Iberia, whatever was spoken in those places after the initial spread did not become Celtic. They became something else that was later overridden by Celtic language speakers a thousand or more years later. Irish legend has it that there were 4 "migrations" into Ireland over time. 1st the Hunter-Gatherers; 2nd the First Farmers; 3rd the IE speakers; 4th the Celtic speakers.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Many of the differences in European Language families are due to variations in the pre-Indo-European populations that influenced them

  • @carron979
    @carron979 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    15:21 in fact in Romanian for people or animals you don't use "vechi" (which is rather used for objects), but "batran" (from "vetus" or "veteranus")

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +7

      My dad is a veteran.

    • @elenabibescu1848
      @elenabibescu1848 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@BenLlywelyn Romanian is from Dacian language, no Latin. We have basic worlds similar to Albanian.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@elenabibescu1848 Our language, the Romanian language, comes from Vulgar Latin, after the Romans conquered the Dacians and settled Dacia with Romans.

    • @carron979
      @carron979 ปีที่แล้ว

      oh, so dacopathy does exist... 🙂 Hi, there!@@elenabibescu1848

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @lucasdancs “they weren’t even Roman” what were they then, Japanese? You didn’t have to be born in the city of Rome to be Roman, genius.
      The only fact is Vulgar Latin was the dominant language spoken in Dacia after the Roman conquest. It was never a “minority language”. The minority language was Dacian, which went extinct in the 4th century, just like many Native American languages lost to us after European settlers displaced the natives in the US.

  • @mango2005
    @mango2005 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There are a few possibly pre-Roman words in it though, and some of them are shared with Albanian, which in turn is thought to be a descendent of the Illyrian language. Illyrian, Dacian and Thracian languages are thought to have been related, though Dacian and Thracian were probably closer. Albanian can give clues to possible Dacian words in Romanian. There are also suggestions of a link between Dacian and the Baltic language family. Theres even a word in Kartvellian for a town that is shared with the "dava" ending in Dacian towns, though this may be rare.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      A few, yes.

  • @daveh893
    @daveh893 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    A very good explanation of the source of Romanian. I wonder how Latin skipped over other areas but wound up in Dacia. Was it through conquest? There must have been significant migration to the area. Maybe Roman soldiers being paid by being given land in Dacia.

    • @falkirk667
      @falkirk667 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      There was gold in Dacia, hence why the Romans wanted to civilize the area 😂

    • @mihai3117
      @mihai3117 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Latin didn't skip over areas. This is what survived after centuries of migration from the east. Mainly thanks to geography. Romania and the Balkans were more isolated and had many environments where the locals could thrive but migrating populations could or would not - mountains, forests, swamps. In general, Migrating peoples had plains animals like horses, and cattle. The people used to living in the mountains had mainly sheep, goats, bees and those in forests had pigs. These are not very good migratory animals over long distances. So niches were easily created. And most of the times, even though there were indeed raids and open conflicts, the migrating populations collaborated with the local population, eventually ending up being assimilated. Sedentarism is a good vector of stability and survivorship over longer periods of time. This is the best explanation I know of why the Romanian language survived and continued to develop as a direct continuation of a Daco/Traco-Roman language north and south of the Danube for so many centuries.

    • @georgearden7075
      @georgearden7075 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You didn't understand it dear, it seems that Latin derives from old Latin in Dacia, so Latin comes from Dacia

    • @tudorm6838
      @tudorm6838 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      All the surrounding regions that were part of the empire spoke Latin. It's just that they were affected by the Slavic migration, which differed from most of the other migrations coming from the East due to the large number of those who migrated. The Slavs passed through the territories of today's Romania, they have language influence, but mostly they crossed the Danube to the south and southwest. South of the Danube, the Romanized Thracian element survived as a language and civilization until after the year 1000, when it began to be more strongly assimilated by the Slavic culture.
      Similarly, the Hungarian migration changed the language in the area where they settled. The other migrations, which passed through the territories of today's Romania, did not assume a significant population compared to the locals, because they left no traces in the DNA of the locals, neither here nor around.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@georgearden7075 That’s absurd. Dacian and Latin have nothing to do with each other, dear. Dacian is an extinct paleo-Balkan languages, while Latin gave birth to Romanian among other Romance languages.

  • @andrefmartin
    @andrefmartin 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Maybe Romanian might keep some substract influence from Darcian, as you suggested that Portuguese has from Celtic.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Indeed so.

  • @olgaroche2929
    @olgaroche2929 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Exactly Ben ! thank you for bringing up that Romania peoples are the smartest and most intelligent people from the fact they learned so easily and so fast a very advanced and educated language and they were able to keep it during all invasions of other peoples with complete different languages , and still speak it today even Latin is very limited spoken only in Vatican! And mostly Latin was and still is the language spoken only by educated people! Than you!

    • @alexandruvasiliu4295
      @alexandruvasiliu4295 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Good point...

    • @carminaburana9163
      @carminaburana9163 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dacă găsiți pe undeva revista lui Gabriel Gheorghe numită " Getica" şi publicată in anii ' 90 veți găsi informații cvasinecunoscute despre acest subiect.

    • @carminaburana9163
      @carminaburana9163 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Italian languagfe is ONLY the OFFICIAL LANGUAGE in Italy. The Italians are speaking in their homes dialects. There are 2000 different dialects currently spoken in Italy.

    • @doizece6002
      @doizece6002 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I must add that Romanians are so intelligent that 2/3 of them learned it even if their territory was never under Roman rule (only about 1/3 of Dacia was actually colonized, for no more than 170 years) and even if in that part of the world, Greek was more comune and used as a lingua franca in those times, in an era when books and schools where only available to very few . And this in contrast with other territories ruled by the Romans for hundreds of years, where no latin language is spoken today.... Still Romanians are so stupid as in almost 1000 years of Hungarian control of Transylvania (which is about 1/3 of Dacia) the romanized population didn't learned hungarian, or even got much of that language into Romanian, even if there was constant pressure from the Hungarian authorities in this direction, in an era when schools and books started to become an everyday thing...

    • @carminaburana9163
      @carminaburana9163 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@doizece6002 Foarte frumos spus, mulțumesc !

  • @cipriannecsutu
    @cipriannecsutu 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Romanian language has many variants of saying the same thing. Some you can find in vulgar latin, some you can find in clasical and older forms of latin. But these are unknown for a beginner romanian speakers, or not used in all parts of Romania. For example, lets take the word "petra" today romanians use "piatra" but we also use "lespede" you didn't mention that. These variants that you didnt mention, are harder to access as a non-native speaker. So the discussion should continue on this topic. Imagine the area between the Carpatian muntains and the Danube before the 18-19th century, there was mostly forest, were people lived in scattered, and isolated in extremely hard to access communities, in underground huts (bordeie). There was no lookout point, terrain is flat. Roads were basically along the sides of the main rivers. I personally think is impossible to imprint a linguistic homogeneous tone in this background.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm sure that Romanian's many influences have left with a rich girth of synonyms to express very similar ideas in the language with precision and shaded of meaning.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you can translate lespede with stone, it has a specific meaning.

  • @RI-go5zl
    @RI-go5zl ปีที่แล้ว +14

    I liked it all. The fact that some romanians need to believe that the teritory of today's Romania was somehow the starting point of civilization is not unique. Ataturk also tried to convince himself and his fellows turks that turkish was the root for every other language including greek and latin (that turkish okul gave greek scoleio and latin scola and romanian scoala instead of the other way around :)). No amount of logical explanation will change somebody's belief !

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The Turkish one sounds interesting!

    • @octaviantimisoreanu5810
      @octaviantimisoreanu5810 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Yeah, it's like arguing with a religious fundamentalist. Facts, logic and reason can't overcome beliefs stemming from emotions. Dacopaths are a lost cause.

    • @seaman5705
      @seaman5705 ปีที่แล้ว

      All Balkanics are the same . The most idiots are the Serbs and the Greeks .But Romanians push hard to beat them .

    • @cristibrad6742
      @cristibrad6742 ปีที่แล้ว

      so that explains the never ending banther between turks and persians!

    • @alex.nn85
      @alex.nn85 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BenLlywelyn Look up "Sun Language Theory". It emerged in the nationalistic fervour of the 1930s in Turkey, and Ataturk (who, at that point, was becoming a bit high on his own success) indeed loved the idea, but it was quickly dropped after his death.

  • @9du4ze2
    @9du4ze2 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ...nice linguistic analysis but how would you describe the social contest to sustain this symbiosis...

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I would not describe it.

  • @EnToutoiNika
    @EnToutoiNika ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I am a Latinist but I also support the idea that Romanians are descendants of the Dacians.
    Language wouldn't be the only proof there is about Dacian ancestry. Culture and tradition also exist, y'know?
    Not to mention, I don't think any person well-versed in Romanian history would claim that the Dacians gave birth to Latin. But culturally and ethnically we are not solely and only Italic/Latin. If all Latin countries were like that, we would all be the same country and indistinguishable. However the Latin countries, including Romania, are a mix of multiple elements, because the Romans INTEGRATED other cultures, they didn't forcefully culturally convert entire regions/peoples.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I agree many Romanians would be descendants of the Dacians.

    • @ihatetiktok475
      @ihatetiktok475 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No they are not descendants of Dacians. Look up their genetic tests compared to ancient civilizations.

    • @aurashene8422
      @aurashene8422 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ihatetiktok475 xddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd

    • @geluurs8235
      @geluurs8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ihatetiktok475 :))))))))))

    • @daciaromana2396
      @daciaromana2396 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I mean, the so called "Daco-Romans" were simply known as Romans.

  • @nourmajzoub8328
    @nourmajzoub8328 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Many words in romanian that don't appear of latin origin ,have somehow a latin origin
    The word for garlic is widely known as"usturoi"but i heard people in the country side saying"aliu"it's latin I think

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Somehow?

    • @cv5w
      @cv5w 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Mujdei, Romania's favorite sauce (it's garlic-based) comes from Latin (must de ai, all Latin words per Wiktionary).

  • @Aries13139
    @Aries13139 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    In Romanian we have "parabolă" meaning allegory, in Italian "frate" means monk, "fratello" means brother.

    • @stevesteve8529
      @stevesteve8529 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      dude, parabola is a neologism brought into the Romanian language in the 19th century. frate in Romanian has both the meaning in Italian and more

    • @doizece6002
      @doizece6002 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      In Romania, we also have "pălăvrăgi" meaning speaking a lot and without much sense, empty words / to talk a lot. eg: Ce tot pălăvrăgesti acolo

    • @stevesteve8529
      @stevesteve8529 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yes, but a palavragi is also new word, dwrivative from the neologism palavra. Stefan cel Mare wouldn't know it

    • @Aries13139
      @Aries13139 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@stevesteve8529 the only foreign words brought and adopted in the 19th century were from French, in the late 20th and beginning 21st centuries are from English. Pălăvrăgi sounds more Slavic than Latin whether it's Ancient or Medieval.

    • @doizece6002
      @doizece6002 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@stevesteve8529 Wikipedia mentions the origin of "palavragi" as being turkish. Now if they took it from latins or vice versa that's another story. So chances are Stefan cel Mare knew about it.

  • @MarsUltor1990
    @MarsUltor1990 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video as usual!

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Kind indeed. Thanks.

  • @enricovecchioni4928
    @enricovecchioni4928 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Gratias tibi ago. Very interesting as usual. The right fibula's name is FIBVLA PRAENESTINA. My dad's family origin is from that area. PRAENESTE and GABII, two glorious towns belonging to LATIVM VETVS.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      È sempre bello conoscere i collegamenti.

    • @enricovecchioni4928
      @enricovecchioni4928 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@BenLlywelynSemper bonvm est. You should do a video about the connection between proto-celtic and proto-latin.😊

    • @enricovecchioni4928
      @enricovecchioni4928 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jboss1073 I didn't say there was a connection. I was just asking Ben to make a video on the topic.

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jboss1073 And how many PIE roots has Latin the written language for thousands of years?Wtf is going here,which Germano celtic branch are you comparing whith German and Latin?

  • @msbarnes40342
    @msbarnes40342 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love your videos! I have noticed something though… in classical Latin, the V is pronounced like an English W. Like you said Ventus for old, when it is like Wen-toos. However you got it right in Vulgar Latin.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you for watching.

  • @octavian8b
    @octavian8b ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I'm learning more about my country and culture from your videos than I learned in school 😅

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I'll do my best for you! Something on Basarab before long, I hope. Thank you for the support.

    • @paulcovrig6603
      @paulcovrig6603 ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/FxVtOgyqH2s/w-d-xo.html

  • @MrFefefofo
    @MrFefefofo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    One important source to study the history of Transilvania, the early hungairan tax and other letters. From these letters you can see, the origin of the name of a viilage where the tax was collected.. And you mus explain, why the first letters are from the XIII century, where you can see clearly, that the name of the settlement has wlach origin... Second. Look after what was the so called "Wlach rights" in the hungarian kingdom. And what kind of taxes they had to pay. The first arriving wlach shephers were free to use the highland region, what the hungairan have never used. With the sheeps they were free to go everywhere. The Ispan took the tax 1 sheep in evevry year after 50....And these wlach shephers were going on the Charpatians even to today to the 3 boarder Slovaky, Chekia, Polland. In some villages there today it is in Moravia, 150 years ago they spoke, the wlach lengauge used before 1800... So... the romaian lengauge were "reformed" 200 years ago......

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The Romanian Language was indeed reformed, but it is indeed still the same language, though a lot changed.

    • @MrFefefofo
      @MrFefefofo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BenLlywelyn If that is the same, watch if an aroman is talking to a romanian, what can they understand... The aroman lenguage does not consist that thousends of imported words.. I have some friends from Transilvania, they speak perfect romanian, they hardly undertand, what a wlach or aromanim macedoroman,,,- they have many names - speak....

    • @l.e.i.4111
      @l.e.i.4111 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Another Horthyst troll.👎

    • @MrFefefofo
      @MrFefefofo 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@l.e.i.4111 your sweet mother, my dear! Science,,, do you know what is that?

  • @dorneanudoru
    @dorneanudoru ปีที่แล้ว +3

    We have both "de la" or "din" for from

  • @corpi8784
    @corpi8784 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    BTW toarnă, toarnă, frate is perfectly modern Romanian but a turna in modern Romanian usage would mean to pour (meaning something like to pour (some wine etc) in, my brother) original obviously missing the wine part....😊

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Nothing wrong with brothers sharing wine.

    • @arcadie8155
      @arcadie8155 ปีที่แล้ว

      Inițial verbul A TURNA se referea la recipientul în care era lichidul de vărsat. Toarnă cana cu vin. Toarnă găleata cu apa.

    • @corpi8784
      @corpi8784 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@arcadie8155 Absolut
      Numai din Latină in Romăna sa schimbat înțelesul măcar partial fie ca vprbim de a turna/tornare sau că votbim de torquere /toarce /a intorce

    • @yesman1743
      @yesman1743 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Toarnă, toarnă frate că nu torni de la mă-ta.

    • @geluurs8235
      @geluurs8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Inseamna a intoarce vasul. Vinul sau raul curg, nu toarna.

  • @nocsiou
    @nocsiou ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thanks, I’ll link this to my facebook conspiracy theorist mom, who after a single dacopath video(and clearly no recollection of basic middle school history lessons) imediatelly became enamoured with it.. after all it’s easy to believe yours is the superior folk who everyone else wants to keep down because they don’t wanna admit they’re inferior, it’s what russia’s been going with since ivan the terrible

    • @paulcovrig6603
      @paulcovrig6603 ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/FxVtOgyqH2s/w-d-xo.html

    • @razvanbarascu4007
      @razvanbarascu4007 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      When I was trying to explain this to people, that is just Kremlins propaganda to divide us and depart us from Europe and to wash away our identity I've been called naive and sheep...
      I also studied the Faculty of Letters at the Valahia University of Targoviste and did a lot of Etimology and related curriculum. They had no related studies or any Uni at all, but I was the one in the wrong🤦
      Later on Russia invaded Ukraine and some understood the russian danger and it's propaganda, but some of them remained there dancing on kremlins music even harder😐

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yes indeed, dacopathy is a sign of inferiority complex of uneducated people, unable to understand science

  • @alibababauu3217
    @alibababauu3217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ca sa afirmi ca nu se trag din limba daca, ar trebui intai sa stii macar cateva cuvinte din daca, nu?

  • @mugurelparaschiv8662
    @mugurelparaschiv8662 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Mulțumesc!

  • @ovidiudraghici9941
    @ovidiudraghici9941 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think that the idea that Latin evolved from the Thracian group is far fetched, to put it mildly. On a side note: ”tunica” and ”camisia” both made it into Romanian, but tunică is an older term in and it means coat, these days used only for military coats together with ”veston”. It's quite common in Romanian to have synonyms originating from 2-3 languages, generally latin, slavonic, and celtic/dacian/turkic/hungarian/germanic/french. I suppose this characteristic of Europe in general due to the massive and multiple waves of migration from Eurasia.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, layers of prestige gradually came to be words for similar but different things, or even the same thing but within a different social class.

  • @carteunu467
    @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Manducare wow!
    The word food in Romanian is Mâncare (mangiare in Italian)

    • @scorilo6779
      @scorilo6779 ปีที่แล้ว

      Bucate 😉and many other neologisme but ...........he knows romanian goagle .

  • @andreeas.2362
    @andreeas.2362 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well, almost all languages in Europe are indo-european (latin and germanic too). Indo tribes, passed through iran/persia and assiriaa, then anatolia and entered Europe through Balkans (the only place not covered in snow). First they settled for a while (centuries), then as climate changed, some of them emigrated to new territories. They took with them the balkanik sprachbund, not the other way around, then it changed as centuries passed. It changed, but is logical that infuence was from balkans , not the other way around. I am not saying they are dacian or thracian, iliran, agatarshi or others they were here, but it is a bit logical that the western languages (as they are people that came from balkan area- first stop in Europe) to have infuenced them, not the other way around, as they lived for a while in balkans then continued their journey west. Also, if you look, vulgar latin is quite a different language to latin like english and french. They have some comonalities, but they have techically other words. As you see with the word horse and others. There are very different words. And in my book, vulgar latin is quite the balkan initial language but latinesed. As english is germanic language, but latinised. Some vulgar latin is in french since they have celtic ancestry and celts stationed in balkans for a while in their route to west. Reserarch should be made on the vulgar latin origin.

  • @hagitudose1118
    @hagitudose1118 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    If only dacians people would have started to write we would have now a live dacian language

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      Fair comment.

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว

      They for sure had writings, especially the visigoths.
      But I think when they become normal Christians from Arianism christian, the new Christians destroyed all the books since they contained heresy.

  • @silviuvelovici8307
    @silviuvelovici8307 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are great, thank you so much for your videos. I am a Romanian who moved to Los Angeles 32 years ago. Finally, somebody explains the Romanian history in a way that makes sense.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you.

  • @zizzyballuba4373
    @zizzyballuba4373 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    dacopaths confuse the ancient movement of early european farmers and aryans into europe through what is now romania with latin getting its origins from dacia

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You could make thar argument about anywhere between Romania and Egypt too, to burst their bubble.

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, I argued against them many times and proved them wrong. They can't accept the fact.
      Those lies comes from the channel _Daniel Roxin,_ of whom is a dacopath himself and makes only bias claims

    • @nestingherit7012
      @nestingherit7012 ปีที่แล้ว

      Then give Transilvania to Hungarians, if we are not Geto/ Dacians.

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nestingherit7012 We are Romanians, our ancestors were the Roman's who conquered Transylvania before Hungarian's were even in Europe

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nestingherit7012 How Hungarians and Romanians settle their histories and build a friendship is up to those 2.

  • @CipiRipi-in7df
    @CipiRipi-in7df 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wish to point a detail. Latin horse is "equs" (which gave us the social class of "equites", Roman knights). But vulgar Latin used the gaulish loanword "caballus" (work horse), which gave all those romanse words: caballo (sp), cavallo (it), cheval (fr), cal (ro). But in Romanian, Latin word "equs" also gave the word "iapa", which is a female horse.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Equestrian.
      Thank you.

    • @cv5w
      @cv5w 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​@@BenLlywelynmare is "yegua" in Spanish from the same etymology, even though horse is "caballo"

  • @razvanbarbaud8792
    @razvanbarbaud8792 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    It is very interesting to see how linguists think and discover facts.

  • @MrFefefofo
    @MrFefefofo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    can you explain the similarity between albaninan bukurisht and romanian bucuresti? How is it possible?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I will have to look into that.

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@BenLlywelynIn romanian bucurie means joi and esti is to be. So what he says is that Bucuresti means to be joyfully or to be happy. Same in romanian language but this is a name not 2 words.

  • @adriansparlac8517
    @adriansparlac8517 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Ben, this is a better material than the so called Dacomania but nevertheless Romanian is not a Neo - Latin language nor a dialect of an Italic tongue either, as many Wikipedologists are poised to prove. But no scientist said that Latin comes from Dacian so I don't know why you need to prove something like that. You see most of the words you have chosen as example in your material are to be find in Romanian, predominantly the ones from older Latin or Latina Vulgaris and not from classical Latin for instance the word Passaros=Pasăre. Or here another word: Peulvan in old french = Bolovan in Romanian = rock ( also Roca in Romanian)in English. Another one: Pocal in Romanian = Pocolom in Etruscan = cup in English. Plinius the Elder (23 - 79 AD) reminds of Caseum Coebanum = Caș Ciobănesc = Shepherd Cheese . The so called linguists say that Cioban word comes from Turkish but this word was in use long before the Turks were dreaming to come to Europe. You see, Latina Vulgaris is older than Classical Latin because it was the language of the people while the later one was for the elites which sprang from Latina Vulgaris. Now, before the Latin language from the Romans, it was already a similar language but older, spoken in Dacia, Iberia, Gaul, Italia even Germania and Baltic countries, Libya too and in accordance with the region they had their own dialects. As I previously told you, ancient sources made clear that in Dacia, Iberia, Germania and Baltic countries, people were speaking a Latin like language before these territories were invaded by the Romans or new colonists. As Ovid (43 BC - 17 AD) wrote that language of the Getae (Dacian) was a barbaric language but a kind of Latin. Rome did not invade Dacia at that time! Cassius Dio (165 - 235 AD) said that after first defeat of Decebalus by Trajan, the Dacian king sent a group of ambassadors before the Roman senate where they agreed on the terms op peace in Dacian language and the senators over there understood them. Isidore of Seville (560 -636 AD) wrote that Gaetuli from Libya, migrated there from the territory of the Getae long before existence of Rome. Well the Indo - Europeans migrated from the east towards west and many people who sat in the Carpatho - Danubian region for a while, migrated further in to western Europe so Italy as well and beyond. Paleo genetic studies show a match in the DNA of northern Italic people with Carpatho - Danubian people so you think they did not have the same language back than? I think I wrote enough now....Whoever have eyes to see and ears to hear and brain to think with.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hungarian migrated through Slavic lands, it does not make Hungarian a Slavic Language.

    • @adriansparlac8517
      @adriansparlac8517 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Ben, you can not compare the number of Hungarian migrators with the number of Indo - Europeans. Hungarians came with their own language just like the Indo Europeans did. Being a tremendous larger population than the Hungarians, their impact on European continent was decisive regarding the language. But another difference is that Indo Europeans did not all leave the places where they went because large populations decided to remain on those areas while others carried on moving westward, where again populations remained there while other split and move on up to Atlantic ocean. Remember! Herodotus (484- 425 BC) wrote that the Thracian folks were even then the second to the Indians regarding the numbers. So it was the largest population in Europe even back then. Hungarians however, they went from one place to another and did not make it as far as the Indo - Europeans did. Speaking of Hungarians and because you said something about Romanian writing too....well, the Hungarians even in XIII century called the so called Cyrillic letters, Literae Blachorum or Romanian letters and even in XVIII and XIX centuries were called Olah Betuk - Litere Românești - Romanian letters. So much for Slavic alphabet theory....They got it from the Romanians. You see Ben, just like the Hippocrates oath, they say is from the Greeks but in fact is being stolen from the Getae-Thracian medics ( Those guys who believed in Zamolxes, you know? ) which were Hippocrates teachers in medicine and I am not saying that but Plato en Socrates did but if you learn from wikipedia like many others do, you will keep coming up with bent theories like that. @@BenLlywelyn

    • @daciaromana2396
      @daciaromana2396 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Everything you wrote is Dacomanic propaganda. You even misquoted Pliny the Elder, Ovid, Cassius Dio in attempt to sound more credible. But any person who has studied these sources immediately notices that you are twisting their words and completely fabricating the facts.
      Romanian does indeed come from Latin and has nothing to do with Dacian or any pre-Roman language. Next you are going to argue that English comes from Romanian because Romanian borrowed English words like "miting" , "soft" and "instagramabil". Ridiculous.

    • @adriansparlac8517
      @adriansparlac8517 ปีที่แล้ว

      Do your research first and than come back. Until than you are just another Romanian history denier and with people like you, Romania has no future@@daciaromana2396

    • @geluurs8235
      @geluurs8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@daciaromana2396 ,, nothing to do with Dacian or any pre-Roman language'' good dealer you found . Its obvious you have nothing but propaganda.. the hungayrians are the dacians , right? and they were of course cathoholics :))

  • @003mohamud
    @003mohamud ปีที่แล้ว

    13:33 what is that place called? It looks beautiful

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      It may be Lake Como, but I may be wrong.

  • @octavianciutacu6162
    @octavianciutacu6162 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great educational video. It answered many of my questions regarding the birth of the Romanian language! Thank you!

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If I answered your questions then I did my job. Thank you.

  • @jboss1073
    @jboss1073 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Ben, Italo-Celtic was thoroughly refuted in 1966 by Calvert Watkins.
    "It's just not true, I'm sorry."

    • @cezarstefanseghjucan
      @cezarstefanseghjucan ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Objectively false because Gaulish and Latin were not only similar, but shared a mutual level of intelligibility.

    • @Ajemone
      @Ajemone ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Completely wrong and dated, the R1b haplogroup in Italy, especially in the North, proves the opposite and I want to remind you that in Italy there were the Celts and it's not as if after being conquered by the Romans they went elsewhere or we were all exterminated by them , no lol we are still here where we were more than 2000 years ago... (I’m R1b)

  • @pavelaevii6687
    @pavelaevii6687 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Congrats for your great work in your moovies. We admit you're quiet documented. We learn from your confrontations of words. I do aswell compeare romanian with slavic or latinic or turkic, hungaric or greek. I saw lately 5 of your posts

  • @constantinparaschiv5036
    @constantinparaschiv5036 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Yes it is not a evidence there Dacian language give birth to Romanian language and we should be aware of this wiled we speak a Romance language! Alls won’t understand what Italian and Spanish speak without to learn first!

  • @MrFefefofo
    @MrFefefofo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Can you explain the reason, why there is no wlach origin name of geographical places in the charpatian basin, but thousends are south of Danube?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yea, there was a Vlach migration, not suddenly or abruptly, but slowly over time with shepherds into Carpathia. And we must remember Goths were there.

  • @oisinmaguidhir2902
    @oisinmaguidhir2902 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Eh, it doesn't hurt anyone and potentially is good for Romanians' nationalism and the way they view themselves. It is a shaky foundation to build an identity on since it's demonstrably not true. Emphasising a connection between Dacian and Italic languages and viewing Dacian as some "sort-of-Latin" language (which means the shift to Latin was like Dacians switching to another fairly different dialect or something) seems more sensible as it's closer to the truth. This would involve maintaining a decent amount of ambiguity about exactly how close Dacian and Latin were.
    Lots of nation building origin stories and history aren't quite true, look at how the French romanticise the Gauls and imagine a single Gaulish language and culture when the Gauls of France instead had spoke different Celtic languages and had different cultures.
    P.S. It's nice that Ben seems to like Romanian, it's come up a lot in his videos. It seems like a lovely language.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Romanian coming from Vulgar Latin has been clearly demonstrated. It isn't good for Romanian nationalism to build an identity based on the lie that Romanian comes from Dacian. While there are similar "movements" in other countries which try to reinvent their own history (like the French thinking of themselves as Gauls), that isn't a good thing either.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Romanian is a lovely language.

    • @cezarstefanseghjucan
      @cezarstefanseghjucan ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Romanians are Latin by definition and then something else.
      But as you astutely highlighted: Dacia is to Romania what Gaul is to France.

  • @GholaTleilaxu
    @GholaTleilaxu ปีที่แล้ว

    18:07 So...if "dwyrain" means "east", then Durin means "Apuseanul" in Romanian? (not sorry for confusing you)

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No.

    • @ephamox
      @ephamox 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BenLlywelyn apus-răsărit-miazănoapte-miazăzi?

  • @bububaba8727
    @bububaba8727 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The romans ocupied for a short period of time only 14% from the old Dacia ... how in the world could have suddenly replaced dacian with latin as long as the most of the old dacian territory NEVER SAW not even a foot of roman soldier ??

    • @valentinovidiucornea4525
      @valentinovidiucornea4525 ปีที่แล้ว

      Soldiers spread death not languages. Trade and other types of interactions spread languages. Where the soldiers did not reach, the merchants reached. Let's not forget that Latin was the lingua franca. Would you have wanted the Romans to learn the dacian language so they could get along with the Dacians?

    • @bububaba8727
      @bububaba8727 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@valentinovidiucornea4525 Really? Explain me how the roman merchants reached the teritory of the free dacians (that was for the romans the enemy teritory) and mooved freely across the land to make business with ALL of them? And how the roman merchants reached in person the houses of the dacians and convinced the dacian women to speak that aristocratic latin with their kids ?? That language that we know today as ''latin'' was oficial in the roman administration but on the streets of Rome allready they spoke nobody knows how many languages spoken all over the empire....and again...how could they spread latin in the conquered teritorys as long as the majority of the ''roman'' population including soldiers and merchants barely understood and used latin in the daily life??

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Trade. Culture. Religion. Roads. All spead languages.

    • @razvanbarascu4007
      @razvanbarascu4007 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your math sucks!!!
      Banat, Oltenia, Transylvania, Dobrogea, Muntenia, south Bessarabia is 14% of Dacia?
      That's a fat lie from the very begining!

    • @adrian.farcas
      @adrian.farcas 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dacia aia exista doar in capul tau bolnav, bolovane

  • @darkmagic151
    @darkmagic151 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My personal opinion, I repeat my personal opinion(I’m not a dacopath) I think Latin and the indo-european language Dacian(And I think mostly Latin) got a huge role in the Romanian language. Well as I read, the Dacian people need to learn that language in order to survive, because Szarmisegetusa was the capital of Dacia back then, and I think the economic point of the country. So I think they teached they’re kids Latin and Dacic language as well, and as the time passed they merged together and made the old Romanian language I think, of course with the other ones like Slavic, etc.
    that’s just my opinion, not an istorical fact.

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Romanian mal = latvian mala 'shore' 😅

  • @valentinovali2575
    @valentinovali2575 ปีที่แล้ว

    dear Ben i have a question for you…. wich one came first….the DRACO or the CARNYX ?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      They likely arose independently of one another. I would guess carnyx, but It is impossible to say.

  • @danielcojocaru6076
    @danielcojocaru6076 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    How to explain the fact that the Visigoths and Ostrogoths, speakers of the "Germanic" language, who started (approximately) from the territory of present-day Romania, conquered the Western Roman Empire and established some kingdoms that ruled the respective regions for at least 300 years, did not succeed to impose their "Germanic" type language and everyone from Romania, France, Italy, Spain and Portugal use a "Latin" type language? How did the Goth rulers communicate with their Latin subjects for three hundred years, did they use translators? Maybe the "Goths" who came from "Romania" also spoke a kind of "Latin"? Or maybe the Goths were a northern branch of the Geto-Dacians, who had closer contact with the Germanic nations (from which they borrowed words), and whom the Germans, unable to pronounce their names correctly, called them "Goths" ?... And how could the Goths speak "old Latin", if they were a Germanic race, which had its roots in Scandinavia, somewhere too far north to speak a Latin-type language?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      Vlachs in the mid Balkans moved north, as well as their being Latins in Constanța and Oltena. The Vlachs took the fertile plain of Wallachia which has the best agricultural land for crops and their population was able to expand and accrue political and socio-economic power over other groups.

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว

      Goths ( particularly visigoths) are not germanic but dacian.
      Goth historian Iordanes says that.
      And they spoke an older type of Latin.
      These are the visigoths that sacked Rome and Athens twice and brought the dark ages. Do they dress like dacians? 😂 th-cam.com/video/IazxJLHisyU/w-d-xo.htmlsi=NceoAsSeizq3Kvhf

    • @danielcojocaru6076
      @danielcojocaru6076 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BenLlywelyn Where are the goths in your explanation?

    • @valentinovidiucornea4525
      @valentinovidiucornea4525 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@BenLlywelyn Hey sir, that's Roesler's theory. This theory is a big historical fake elaborated for political reasons. You disappointed me, I thought you were a serious man!!! The Roman historian Florus wrote "The Dacians live bound to the mountains." The ancestors of the Romanians always took shelter there, and then the Romanians when the migratory tribes invaded. These tribes came from the steppes of Asia, unfamiliar with the mountains and were afraid to enter them. That is why the first capitals of Wallachia and Moldavia were in the mountains and moved to the plains when the states gained power.

    • @tudorm6838
      @tudorm6838 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@BenLlywelyn There is no evidence for this claim. The fertile plains with agriculture have always had a denser population and could extend their territories.

  • @mariusfilip1847
    @mariusfilip1847 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ​@nestingherit7012 I can't say about Sardinians but I haven't heard any Aromanian saying 'ie' for 'da'. I heard 'da' from those in Romania and 'nă' from those in Greece (from ναι).

  • @stevesteve8529
    @stevesteve8529 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I luv this ! You gave an additional instrument to us, clear minded Romanians, to fight against that bs of the protochronism

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      Excelent și bun.

    • @geluurs8235
      @geluurs8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      every time somebody uses ,,ism''s , do not immediately believe him

  • @MrFefefofo
    @MrFefefofo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As I know the oldest wlach text is from ca 1512...I say romanian legnuage was born ca 200 years ago when thousends of frrench, italian, etc words were imported to the romanaian lengauge tu reduce the percentage of the slavic origin wordds. and this renewing process did not happened in all walch speaking people. So if you want to study the origin of the romanains lenguage you should take texts that are older then 250 years old. Befiore the XVIIi century we can not speak about romaians legnauge but wlach lenguage. Even the name of romanian is new word. Do you know the document where first time "romanian" appeared?

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I would say reforms and nationalist restructuring are different from birth.

  • @sorescudragos5231
    @sorescudragos5231 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Multi, foarte multi oameni, atat din trecut cat si din prezent, au simtit si simt ca acest pamant ascunde „ceva”. Acest „ceva“ pare a fi nedefinit, fara de forma si totusi avand o forma, insa aceasta forma nu poate fi sesizata decat de ochii sufletului. Urma lasata in sufletele noastre a luat apoi forma dorului... un dor inefabil si inexplicabil, iar acel dor de ,,ceva“ nu s-a putut pierde si nici nu se va pierde vreodata. Este dorul unei civilizatii care a ales sa inchida ochii... pentru putina vreme.
    Cu totii stim cate ceva despre civilizatia geto-dacilor. Acesti „barbari”, dupa cum erau numiti de catre greci si romani, au avut una dintre cele mai deosebite civilizatii din aceasta lume. Geto-dacii si-au construit aceasta civilizatie avand o baza spirituala deosebit de solida, care isi are radacina in vremuri foarte, foarte indepartate. Ruptura de aceasta radacina a impins civilizatia geto-dacilor aproape de prapastia uitarii, caci simtamintele inimilor urmasilor acestui neam s-au inchis fata de simtamintele propriului pamant, iar fiii sai si-au plecat urechea si chiar inima altor invataturi, straine de glasul sfantului pamant al acestui neam.
    S-au scris multe lucrari despre acest maret neam geto‑dac, dar aceste lucrari au disparut subit din analele istoriei. Nu v-ati intrebat de ce? Oare au disparut degeaba? Nu, nu au disparut degeaba. Ceva aparte trebuia protejat. time will tell .

    • @supermarioxs1
      @supermarioxs1 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Foarte bine descris!!! omul acesta care a făcut acest video din păcate este rătăcit foarte rătăcit pentru că duhul românului și spiritul acest popor strigă și lăcrimează după adevărul strămoșilor noștri care de fapt nu au fost romanii ci 0:09 geto-dacii!!!

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Trăiești pe o altă planetă. Poate îție dor de pământ😂

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@supermarioxs1 Voi sunteți retardați să mor eu de nu😂😂😂

    • @Diviny369
      @Diviny369 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Geto-Dacii au fost urmașii civilizației Cucuteni care datează la 8 mii de ani din ziua de azi! Noi suntem speciali pentru toată lumea și va veni timpul când adevărul va ieși la suprafață. Una e clar că romanii antici știau că dacii sunt strămoșii lor. Nu se fac statui din granit de metri pentru niște barbari. Noi suntem speciali și avem o misiune specială pentru omenire. Ca argument nu există nici un popor pe tera care locuiește pe același pământ de peste 8 mii de ani păstrându-și limba, obiceiurile și teritoriile aproape intacte. Autorul ca să ne înțeleagă pe noi trebuie să înțeleagă mai întâi sensul cuvintelor dor, doină, vatră de la început.

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Diviny369 🦧🦧🦧🦧

  • @dexro2005
    @dexro2005 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    from can also be used as "a" or "al" in romanian. But it has a more strange way... like belong to. My suspicion is that Dacian and Latin where related languages and that's way you find sometimes strange things like this plus the easy adapt of "latin" in romanian. Like two similar languages come together with the power of Rome behind the vulgar latin. Related as in Italian and Romanian now

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Proximity between Latin and Celtic languages within Indo-European made Latin assimilation of Celtic languages across the West much easier. And I think something similar happened with Dacian.

  • @ginov266
    @ginov266 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    No, Romanian is the evolution of Vulgar Latin via Dacian, whereas Latin is a derivation of Vulgar Latin created via the "beautification" changes applied by the Roman elite, since Latins emigrated from the Banat area around 1200-1000 BCE. Check out Micheal Ledwith's youtube entries regarding the Romanian language.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +3

      "Romanian is the evolution of Vulgar Latin via Dacian" looool. Next you're gonna tell us that Dacians colonized Mars.

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater ปีที่แล้ว

      You are a such a joke mate. Who were the Dacians then? Founder's of the world civilizations who came from outer space?😂

  • @SuperClau07
    @SuperClau07 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The main problem with latin in Romania is that the Roman Empire was here only from 106 AD to 227 AD and occupied only 14% of the territories. We had here turks and hungarians for centuries and we just borrowed words from then but we didn't change our whole language. We are the most unified latin lagnuange, we only have accents and regional terms, but it's the same language. The 2nd problem is with the the Romanian Dialects: Istro-Romanian, Megleno-Romanian and Macedonian dialect, from parts of Macedonia, Serbia and other balkanic regions. The are very similar even though they evolved hundreds of kilometers apart. The south of the Danube river, from Romania to Greece was called for a time "Mediterranean Dacia" by the Romans. And the last problem with the latin languages is more of a question: why do Spanish, French, Italian and Romanian languages share more similarities between them than each one of them with latin? I think this has to do with the Pelasgians and their spread across Europe. Keep doing these videos, I appreciate you doing the research and trying to shed a light in European ancient history.

    • @BozgorSlayer
      @BozgorSlayer 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's because it's a well-known fact that Dacia was a retirement home for many Roman soldiers,

    • @SuperClau07
      @SuperClau07 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BozgorSlayer yes, but most of the roman soldiers weren't from Rome, they were from all over the world. We have seen all around the world colonized countries and countries with big minority populations that were not culturally changed 100%. The romans in those regions were not treated very nice by the neighbouring tribes after Aurelian's retreat. The retreat in itself was triggered by the raids and battles fought against the local "free" population of dacians.

    • @BozgorSlayer
      @BozgorSlayer 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SuperClau07 Most the soldiers who retired in Dacia were Southern Italians and other Romans from the poorer parts of Italy. There's a reason Romanian and Sicilian are sister languages.

    • @CipiRipi-in7df
      @CipiRipi-in7df 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wrong on all counts.
      - we had Romans for 165 years. But the same "historians" that have a problem with romanization of Dacia in 165 years have no problems for Gallia and Hispania being romanized for a bit more than 100 years. Double standard at it's finest.
      - that 14% of Dacia is a blatant lie. It's 14% of Dacia under Burebista, at it's larger extent, in 1st century BCE. By the time of Decebal (2nd century AD), Dacia was only a fraction of that Dacia. Get your measures straight.
      - we had here Turks... had we? No, we never had here Turks. Since the days of late 14th century when Turks showed on the Danube till late 19th century, Turks were never here. Except as marauding armies. Even the taxes due to Ottomans were collected by local rulers, not by Turks. Turks never settled north of Danube. There is never mentioned a single mosque in Valahia or Moldavia for 500 years.
      - we had Hungarians in Transylvania. But unlike Romans, Hungarians were never keen to assimilate locals untill late 19th century. They had other concerns that make locals into Hungarians.
      - no, Istro-Romanian, Megleno-Romanian and Macedonian dialects are NOT "very similar" to Romanian. They are so different that they are not mutually intelligible. And the best proof they evolved differently is that they used a different Latin word that Romanian for the same notion. (luna / mesu - month, tânar / giune - young man, douazeci / gingiti - twenty). THere are even more differences in grammar.
      - there was no "Mediterranean Dacia" in Roman Empire. It was only the province "Dacia Mediterranea" (Serdica/Sofia). It was the result of splitting Dacia (formed by Aurelian in 271) in "Dacia Ripensis" (Dacia on the river border) and "Dacia Mediterranea" (Dacia inland).
      - "why do Spanish, French, Italian and Romanian languages share more similarities between them than each one of them with Latin "? Because they evolved from a different Latin that we know. They all evolved from VULGAR Latin, not Classical Latin. But we have little to no information of Vulgar Latin, as it was not written. Those who spoke Vulgar Latin had other concerns that write. They had to make a living. And those who had the possibilities to write did not bother with the language of the unwashed plebs around them.

    • @geluurs8235
      @geluurs8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Maybe the Dacians from unoccupied territories had great passion for foreign languages and did their homework in school ;)

  • @alexandrav745
    @alexandrav745 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    We also have tunică in romanian . It is a coat you take over the cămaşă. 😊

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Buna!

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว

      I think a neologism imported in the XIX century.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      tunică este imprumut din franceza, nu e mostenit din latina

  • @user-international
    @user-international 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    About : vulgar latin ”parabola” , this word (parabola) was taken in the romanian language as ”parabolă/parabole”
    So, This word exists today in the romanian language with several meanings, one of them is ,,, ”PARABOLĂ2, parabole, s. f. Povestire alegorică cu un cuprins religios sau moral; pildă; p. ext. exprimare alegorică, afirmație care cuprinde un anumit tâlc; fabulă, alegorie. - Din fr. parabole, lat. parabola.” ((means in english: Allegorical story with a religious or moral content; parable; allegorical expression, statement that includes a certain interpretation; fable, allegory. - From Fr. parables, lat. parable));
    Other similar meaning is ” Vorbire învăluită, neclară.” (means in english: Muffled, slurred speech).
    The most used expression in romanian language is : ”tu vorbești în parabole” (you speak in parables, which means you don't speak clearly)

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I like the Romanian expressions. Multumesc pentru câ

  • @mihaiilie8808
    @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Carpathian horn (tulnic or bucium) it's way older than the alpenhorn. Those Romansh shepherds from Switzerland originate from Romania.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +3

      "Japanese people breath through their nose and sometimes their mouths, Japanese people originate from Romania"

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@UlpianHeritor Pathetic that you have to invoke such nonsense about Japanese or aliens, to combat something true .
      All the Latin languages originate in south east Romania on the Danube. We have the best place on the Danube and it's obvious the Latin world started here.
      We also speak the cleanest, most ancient Latin like language which makes even the extinct old Latin look modern.
      Check the new romanian etimological dictionary made by Mihai Vinereanu and you will be enlightens.
      Also, I'm not hating Roman's at all. My grandfather name is Traian.
      I have no reason for supporting that Romanian is older than Latin, other than the truth.
      I'm not pushed like Ben or Dan Alexe by politics( communists) into creating fantasy stories.

    • @nestingherit7012
      @nestingherit7012 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@UlpianHeritor
      Leave us alone 'would be Italian'

    • @ver_idem
      @ver_idem ปีที่แล้ว

      OMG Rumansh in Switzerland comes also from the Dacians?

    • @MrBoazhorribilis
      @MrBoazhorribilis ปีที่แล้ว +1

      People living in the mountain areas came to similar conclusions about basic intermediate communication tools.

  • @nourmajzoub8328
    @nourmajzoub8328 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    About "da" in romanian ,i think,i'm not sure it may come from itac in latin . Kind of a short version.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It could be Slavic.

  • @robertberger4203
    @robertberger4203 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Romanian is also unique among the Romance languages in having. borrowed a fair number of words from Slavic languages such as Serbian and. Bulgarian . Instead of Si for yes, it has "Da ". Time is. "vreme " but "timp " is also used . There are quite a few other borrowings from Slavic languages , and until fairly recent linguistic reforms , there were far more . And there are also several words derived from Dacian , such as "brinze ", for cheese .

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      A very rich language with its diverse roots.

    • @akuleet6029
      @akuleet6029 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      The 'Relatinization' of the Romanian language is not what you think it is, Romanian was already very much Latin even before that point. It was just a bunch of loan words entering Romanian (which was already a Romance language) from French which did push up the % of Latin words of the lexical volume but I challenge you to go read texts before the relatinization such as the 'Scrisoarea lui Neacsu' and see how many Slavic vs Latin words you can find.

    • @catalinmarius3985
      @catalinmarius3985 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I read a theory once that the Romanian da could also come from latin "ita" which was a way of saying yes popular in the Balkans.

    • @seaman5705
      @seaman5705 ปีที่แล้ว

      Da , ia numara tu cuvintele de origine slavica din scrisoarea lui Neacsu . Eu le-am numarat si sunt aproape jumatate - fara formulele de introducere si incheiere care sunt in limba bulgara. Te tii cu dintii de toate aberatiile . Vezi ca in romana , in ziua de azi sunt mult peste 30% cuvinte provenite din franceza , dintre care 22% sunt cuvinte folosite in vorbirea curenta . Ia vezi tu ce cuvinte au inlocuit cele 22% provenite din franceza ! Iti spun eu ca tu ai idei fixe - pe cele provenite din slava . @@akuleet6029

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว

      Da is not only Slavic because it exists in Italy. It's obvious that we have it from Bulgaria, the oldest country with the oldest city and culture of Europe.
      Sofia is 6000 years old.
      Old bulgarians are the ancestors of Greeks and Romanians are the ancestors of Roman's.

  • @JustMe-ob7lu
    @JustMe-ob7lu 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    @19:15 could be translated also as this in a street slang or farmer slang:
    Intoarna intoarna frate

  • @nightday9009
    @nightday9009 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Romanian comes from Dacian. Romans and Slavs made an impact on the language, but none of them managed to replace it entirely. Modern Romanian can be considered at most a half-latinized language due to the continuous latinization since the 19th century.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Complete and utter nonsense.

    • @octaviantimisoreanu5810
      @octaviantimisoreanu5810 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Nope. Romanian comes from Vulgar Latin. What you wrote is a fabrication.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +9

      No doubt Dacian has influenced Romanian, but Romanian is at its core a Latin based Romance language in every way.

    • @mihaiilie8808
      @mihaiilie8808 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      ​@@BenLlywelynEven the old school lingvists that tryed hard to make us look more Latin, found only 20%Latin words in our dictionary.
      Now we have The Romanian etimological dictionary just released which proves 72% of the Romanian words are dacian, 7% Latin, 5% slav, 3,5%Greek, 0.6 germanic, 0.5 hungarian.

    • @seaman5705
      @seaman5705 ปีที่แล้ว

      Prost de bubui !

  • @carmenl3433
    @carmenl3433 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for your interest in Romania
    I will follow your channel

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Appreciated.

  • @scorilo6779
    @scorilo6779 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Eu sunt da/ci (pronouncietion is the trick) , de aci , de aici ! 😉Just showed you that you read propaganda nothing else ,you know nothing about our language .
    Your fishing for wievs/money .
    Khazar propaganda.🥇

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว

      Khazar?

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +1

      "De aici".? You can't be serious lol. These are signs of apophenia. Ben knows more about the foundations of Romanian than you and that is a shame because you are supposedly Romanian. Although clearly a very uneducated Romanian.

    • @cristiangaban960
      @cristiangaban960 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      ''Daci'' comes from '"daos'' and ''daoi'' , ''wolf people'', not ''D'aci'' .You watched too much Daniel Roxin and forgot to care about facts.

    • @scorilo6779
      @scorilo6779 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BenLlywelyn Go fish , Im done with you , I was listening to you , you were interesting until you jumped on Khazar boat of the khazar history dillusion . Dan Alexe,George Hodorogea (small hint ,tiny ) and others

    • @scorilo6779
      @scorilo6779 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@cristiangaban960 If you say so , but from what I remember they called us Getae not Daoi ,but your the experts here . And Roxin didn't invent anything is just what it is ,nothing elese, and by the way he is not a guru in dacian history , there are people there more educated in the mater . 😉
      "The Dahae, also known as the Daae, Dahas or Dahaeans (Old Persian: 𐎭𐏃𐎠, romanized: Dahā; Ancient Greek: Δαοι, romanized: Daoi; Δααι, Daai; Δαι, Dai; Δασαι, Dasai; Latin: Dahae; Chinese: 大益; pinyin: Dàyì;[1] Persian: داه‍ان Dāhān) were an ancient Eastern Iranian nomadic tribal confederation, who inhabited the steppes of Central Asia"
      Wait is that DAOI ?
      How is your friend Dan Alexe or George Hodorogea ? Say hy to them from me .

  • @bogdantudor7195
    @bogdantudor7195 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good job, mate. as a Romanian I find this very interesting

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you.

  • @demonking1319
    @demonking1319 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    ...Dacian was a sister language to latin slightly similar but not the same ..we didn't get born out of Latin 😂 There's no way ...dacia got conquered only 33% of it initial size ..let me ask you this what does Arabic and Egypt has to do with Latin? They've been conquered in the entire length for far more decades than us 😂..how do you explain that Egypt has nothing to do with Latin but romania does? Yet we haven't been conquered on our entire length and somehow all 100% of the empire forgot our roots language to learn Latin? 😂lolll ..recent discoveries prove that dacians were very respected by the romans ..in fact we are the only conquered "empire" who eventually ruled Rome 😅 2..more than 80% of the so "called Roman sculptures" are actually dacians 😅 3 that is old dacian language...many of us still speak it mostly in Moldavia region they speak the romanian closet to ancient dacian ..you should look at the manuscript wrote by Michael the Great in 1599 you'll be surprised it is 90% the same ...4 the only reason dacians ruled Rome is because they spoke similar languages not entire the same bcs undoubtedly we do have slavic in our language...you look at the bad words 😂in romanian polish and Russian they are identically the same prononciation too

    • @alareiks742
      @alareiks742 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Celtic languages are also sister languages to the Italic

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Sorry to burst your bubble. but Romanian did in fact come from Latin. Quit the daco nonsense and come back to reality. Thanks.

    • @hereintranzit
      @hereintranzit ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@UlpianHeritor When did Rome rule Moldavia all the way to the Dniester River? Then, why did they forget their mother tongue “dacian-getae” and adopted the eastern version of the vulgar latin as their own language which then survived centuries and actually thousand plus years of Russian and Ottoman occupation with the Austrian occupation of Bucovina / Buchenland in the northernmost area of Moldova? Moldova wasn’t even under the Constantinople rule to say that they adopted the language of Byzantium which was not latin but greek, especially after the great schism.
      I’m not a “dacopath” since allot of that stuff they talk about is nothing but a bunch of ‘Bravo-Sierra’, very whacky stuff, but darn it boys and girls, to claim that an entire nation which never ever lived under Roman occupation just decided some two thousand yers ago to willfully forget their mother tongue and adopt latin it’s just as whacky as the dacopathy crap !

    • @demonking1319
      @demonking1319 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@UlpianHeritor lol 😆 😂 noob go read more

    • @demonking1319
      @demonking1319 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@hereintranzit they never did ..rome only conquered wallachia ..@ulpian is Arabic latin tooo? Romans were in Egypt for far more years than us ..and Egyptian has nothing but nothing to do with Italian ..how can you pathetically believe after 169 years under roman rule the entire length of the country forgot their own roots religion and language to simply incorporate Latin..its absurd look at Egypt and any other country take England..nothing in English is latin ..or Egypt after 600 years of being conquered in the entire length they still speak Arabic 🙄 🤔 and somehow us only being conquered 33% of our length we forgot everything lmaoo 😂 noobs

  • @thebiblepriest4950
    @thebiblepriest4950 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are certainly correct in refuting the overreaching claim that Dacian gave rise to Latin. There may be have been features that blended well with Latin, because of shared Indo-European ancestry. But that would only mean that Dacian was a cousin, and not that it was an ancestor. There must have been something special that made Romania the only Eastern province of the Roman Empire to retain a Romance language.
    In a recent video of mine, I mentioned that the Aramaic language, like Romanian, attaches the definite article to the end of a noun. The Aramaic MARA means "The Lord," for example: MAR is "Lord" and final 'A is "the." I commented, "I don't know how the Romanians and the Aramaeans got together and decided that they were going to do that, but somehow it happened." th-cam.com/video/OSA6hg8Bjuk/w-d-xo.html

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, I think shared Indo-European did spur assimilation through cognates with Latin absorbing Dacian.

    • @cv5w
      @cv5w 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dacia was not the only Roman province to retain a Latin based language in the east. There are plenty of pockets and with speakers of various eastern Romance dialects (fewer now than before, as nation states formed their borders, and rural populations have begun moving to the cities).

  • @unumartialarts706
    @unumartialarts706 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    History says that the Dacians were part of the Thracian tribes, an Indo-European population. So it is an Indo-European language. The Indo-European area stretches around the Black and Caspian Seas. Or from all the old and extensive pollutions, the Thracian-Dacian language has disappeared , not Slav, not Greek, not Persian, not Hindi,only Tracho-Daca?!Well, let's see. I will use the same way as you. Ex. there are many, but I will give only a few. The word OAIE, OI (PL) is said to come from Lat. OVIS, which comes from PIE H²OWIS. But between PIE and Lat is proto-Italic where we have OWI, just like in ancient Greek. But we also find it in other ancient languages, Germ. OUIS, Dutch OOI, Irish. OI, snskrt AVI, lit AVIS, Slav. OVICA.As you can see, it does not belong to Latin, there are other languages ​​where it is closer to Romanian.We are told that the word PIATRA (stone) comes from the Latin PETRA, but we also have ol Greek PETROS and the Indo half of Indo-European PATHARA, PATAR. The word PUSTIU (wildness, desert) with unknown etymology (like many others) is as autochthonous as possible. The evidence attacks the Latinity of another primordial word which we are told is comes from Latin.The word CASA is also found in South Slavs with different variations KUSATA (casătă) KUCA etc. and in Northern Slavs DOM and variations. Both DOM and CASA are also found in Latin. The 2 languages ​​did not come into serious contact. The migration was made by north to south, not the other way around, many centuries later. TOPOR, primordial word (AXE, Eng-Lat.) is said to come from the Slavic TOPORU but we also find it in Persian TABAR! Now, historically speaking, the population of Dacia numbers between 750 thousand and 2 million people. Decebal's army numbered approximately 35 thousand. After the victory, the military-administrative formation numbered approximately 55 thousand people, concentrated in a few cities in approximately 35% from the current territory of Romania. The majority of the Dacian population was rural and spread over the entire surface. In that period, contacts over medium and long distances were rare, so information between them circulated very difficult. Or in this situation, how was the linguistic influence at such a time short enough to impose his language?!
    An etomological dictionary has recently appeared in which the author, an expert in Indo-European studies, after a 40-year study, proves that 75% of Romanian words do not come from Latin but from Proto-Indo-European (PIE). Ex. the verb A GANDI (to think) comes from the Hungarian GOND together with other words, but the same words, the Hungarians say they come from Romanian. The author claims that it comes from the radical PIE GAN. I found in Sanskrit, GANIT which means mathematics. Or mathematics implies thinking! GANDIT -think, thinking. So, there are no crazy people on the other side either. The arguments about the non-Latinity of the Romanian language are strong.So there you have it, these elements of words common or not with Latin, common with both Latin and Slavic, with Slavic but not with Latin but also found in other Indo-European languages, along with historical elements and analysis based on Proto-Indo-European Don't they show the exact opposite? Non-Latin language?!

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      History is written by many with opposing views.

  • @ionbrad6753
    @ionbrad6753 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Scurt și la obiect! Thank you!

  • @cezarstefanseghjucan
    @cezarstefanseghjucan ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!
    Our Dacian heritage is pretty much relegated to claiming ancestry back to the Dacians, adopting their rulers and greatest identifiers as our own and that's it.
    If anything, when you think about the Dacians you think about their metallurgy, wine-making and subsequent banning of wine drinking and the Romans are known for their organized military and road-building, to be as brief as possible.
    Thus, we are no offspring of the Dacians and/or Romans, because we have a nation-wide drinking problems and we have trash roads and underdeveloped infrastructure, no matter how much linguistic evidence we bring to the table.
    Romanian is part of the Italo-Dalmato-Dacian Latin continuum.
    Also: „brânză” doesn't come from Dacian, but from the Latin "brandeum" while respecting the "mantica" like for Portuguese or Spanish and "forma" in the case of French and Italian.
    Some may also state that it comes from the Albanian "brëndës" which means intestines, very sound phonetical hypothesis, but very low logical backing, due to the fact that no one would slaughter some of the sheep just to convert their guts into cheese packing.
    I am much more of a backer of the Indo-European heritage above all else, but our linguistic goal should be literary Romanian of 100% Latin origin that tries to resemble Latin-origin English lexicon whenever possible to ease the learning of the lingua franca of the modern day.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Romanian's Slavic, Hungarian and Turkish blending with several variations of Latin and a gentle, faint Dacian underlayer, make it beautiful.

    • @cezarstefanseghjucan
      @cezarstefanseghjucan ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@BenLlywelyn I respect your appreciation, but from a lucrative standpoint, re-Latinizing the language will work wonders in the long run.

    • @cristibrad6742
      @cristibrad6742 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@BenLlywelyn Romanian core lands were never occupied by turks. The connection to the Black Sea was a migration hot spot and does have a turkish heritage to this day, but the region itself is small in population in the grand scheme. I myself have met ethnic turks from Dobrugea, great people.

    • @lunadeargint540
      @lunadeargint540 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@cezarstefanseghjucan "re-Latinizeing the language" is an incorrect thing to say, because how would you do that? what does it really mean? It's a nonsense, Romanian adopted the same "international" words needed in the XIX c. to describe new realities in society, science, culture, etc, the same words that were adopted by all the languages, Germanic or Slavic. The language of culture "happened" to be Latin and French. So were the Germanic or Slavic languages, latinised for that? Only words that no longer reflected reality disappeared or become obsolete, and not only of Slavic or Turkish origin, but unfortunately words inherited from Latin, too. So there was no such thing. The constant re-Latinization of the languages happened actually in (standard)Western Romance, because they were early codified and developed under the direct influence of Latin and the grammarians would conscientiously preserve or reintroduce grammatical structures from Latin etc. The Latin loans in these languages began during Middle Ages. So, because Romanian had no contact with Latin it can be considered much more conservative than the Western standard Romance. The Italian local languages for instance developed more naturally as Romanian did, while standard Italian was a dialect of an elite that introduces words from classical latin all the time, that's the only reason Italian is "closer" to Latin, because it is a half-artificial language that only was spoken about 10%-20% of the population when Italy was unified.

    • @cv5w
      @cv5w 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@BenLlywelynall of this linguistic diversity and different borrowings during different times lead to interesting outcomes - like the words carte (book), hartă (map), and hârtie (paper) coming from the same root through Latin, Greek, and South Slavic dialects, respectively. But I agree with the comment above, the Slavic-derived words in Romanian simply sound unpleasant (is it the cluster of consonants? Is it the association with communism?) Whereas the Latin-derived ones sound more natural and pleasant to pronounce. It's a very difficult thing to explain as a non linguist. Turkish borrowings also sound natural (and ironic in many cases), whereas the Hungarian ones sound totally alien.

  • @aresdraguna
    @aresdraguna 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In my honest opinion, you just showed the opposite with the 10 words exercise. If you were correct, there should be NO (literally zero) words inherited from old latin since when 1/3 of Dacia was conquered, Romans spoke vulgar latin, not old latin. The existence of even one shows at least a common root. In my research, I've come to the conclusion that Romanians, Bulgars, Greeks, Serbs, Bosnians, Montenegrans, Albanians, Macedonians and parts of today's Turkey and Ukraine, are descendants of the ancient Pelasgi (or Hyperboreans), which were THE indo-european tribes which populated Europe. And their language is a precursor to latin and romanian

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Languages ebb into eachother in social waves over centuries.

  • @rawstephen4734
    @rawstephen4734 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video 👍👍👍