@@yosaishu А...? Не понял, ты че, обидился чтоли? Все в комментах говорили то, что ты говорил, а я уточнил свою позицию. Какие мы обиженки, а главное я по твою сторону вообще ничем не обозвал. Ну и молчи сам тогда.
Naturally they can’t understand each other, they’re not even from the same language family: Indonesian is Austronesian, Thai is Kra-Dai, and Mongolian is Mongolic. Both Chinese and Burmese are Sino-Tibetan so they are under the same family, but they are from different branches so in effect not that closely related. If you want to look for similarities, you can pair them within the same language family, like Indonesian with Filipino (Tagalog) or Thai with Lao (although these two might be TOO similar with each other). Addition: Indonesia, Thailand, and Myanmar might share Sanskrit (and Pali for the latter two) loanwords, but these similarities have nothing to do with syntax, structures, etc. They are still very different languages.
In Indonesia, the Javanese language absorbs Sanskrit the most, because the Javanese have always interacted with the outside world , Javanese kings used to always say that we are the descendants of the sun god, so they used the titles RARA, RAKAI, RAI ,coincidence or not RA is the sun god in ancient Egyptian beliefs, very funny haha
@@utaofficial2966 While I agree that Javanese absorbed a lot of Sanskrit, those examples that you mentioned show Austronesian roots and have cognates within the Malayo-Polynesian languages. Mending jangan cocoklogi, biarin aja itu jadi kebiasaan tetangga yang suka main klaim itu lho hehehe 🤭
Would comparing Vietnamese to Khmer (Cambodian) work? They are both Austro-Asiatic languages, but I hear they are far from being even mutually intelligible, despite sharing a border. As far as I know, Vietnamese is full of Chinese influence like Korean and Japanese, hence why it is part of the Sinosphere. Cambodia was more part of the extended Indosphere, as you see Hindu temples like Angkor Wat, so I'm assuming it received a lot of loan words from Sanskrit.
I am from Myanmar, I speak Mizo language. Though I'm not a Burmese, it is really great to see a Myanmar girl (Chan Chan) enthusiastically participate in the discussion along with other respectful Asian girls.
Hello, I’m from Mizoram and I want to clarify that there is no such thing as a “Mizo” language. The language that you might be referring to is “Lusei” also known as “Duhlian” language. There are many languages spoken by the people living in Mizoram, who are collectively called “Mizo”. However, the term “Mizo” does not refer to a single language, but rather a group of related languages and dialects. Although this might seem like a very minor difference, it’s important to classify things in a well-mannered way. Chibai 🥰
@@aflow- Lusei tribes call the nomenclature for all Zo/Chin/Kuki tribes 'Mizo' whether their brethren accept the term or not, which automatically implies that all language and dialects are collectively Mizo langauge. So, when I say I speak Mizo, it means I speak Mizo while it can be Duhlian, Hmar or else.
@@davidzomuanpuia1269 I respect your choice of using the term Mizo to refer to the language and identity. But I would like to point out that the term Mizo is not a historical or indigenous term but rather a modern and imposed one by the British missionaries. The term Mizo was coined by Rev. J.H. Lorrain and Rev. F.W. Savidge who were British missionaries who came to the region now called Mizoram in the late 19th and early 20th century. They also devised the Mizo alphabet based on the Roman (Latin) script which is now widely used by the people of Mizoram. Before the arrival of the British and the missionaries the people of the region did not have a common name for themselves but rather identified themselves by their clan names, such as Lusei, Hmar, Ralte, Paite, etc. These clans had their own languages and dialects which were mutually intelligible to some extent but also had distinct features and variations. The term Mizo was used by the missionaries and the British to group together these diverse clans under one umbrella term which was later adopted by the people themselves for political and social reasons. Also, I want to add that Lusei is not a tribe, it is a clan. Lusei is one of the major clans of Mizoram which has its own sub-clans, such as Pachuau, Hrahsel, Chawngte, Chhangte, Renthlei, etc. The language that you call Mizo is actually the Lusei language, also known as Duhlian by the non-Lusei people. There are many other languages and dialects spoken by the people of Mizoram, such as Hmar, Mara, Lai, Ralte etc., which are also part of the larger Tibeto-Burman group of languages. In my opinion, Mizo should refer to all the people living in the state of Mizoram, regardless of their clan or language affiliation. I would also like to have a suggestion of using the term Zofa or Zohnahthlak to refer to the related clans as these terms are more inclusive and indigenous than the word Mizo. I hope you understand my point of view and I hope we can have a constructive conversation on this topic. Ka lawm e. ☺️
I am so proud of my self. ..Because I am able to read and write Burmese, (ဘာသာ)Indonesia ( bahasa) Korean and Chinese and thailand except mongolia. .. But I really interesting and love mongolia history they were greatest in history. .
@@menuju.kebenaran031 no, it means, "do you speak language?" So yeah, which language OP's referring to? The correct words are "bahasa indonesia" or simply just "indonesian". Many English speakers are mostly wrong on this part.
I am a korean. Among those languages, Mongolian, Korean, and Japanese are the most similar. So, when Mongolians learn Korean, they become fluent faster than other foreigners.
@@devindabuddhi7037 haha. No. China DNA haplogroup and language family is very different than Altaic group of people. Japan and Korea language have a some similarities with Chinese. But rest is different.
That's because the Native Americans were said to have migrated from Siberia across the land bridge to North America many centuries ago. There are many minority tribes in China and Russia such as Ewenki etc. who still have customs/dress/beliefs similar to some Native American tribes.
As a Mongolian, our language is totally different than Russian except we use Cyrillic letter. Russian and Mongolian belong to different language family as well.
As Mongolian from the heartland (🇲🇳), these girls have beautiful, unique features that show how diverse (and different) the people and languages of East and Southeast Asia are! I do have to comment that all Central Asian countries that have been under the influence of the Soviet Union (to varying degrees) like Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Mongolia still use Cyrillic to this day. The Kazakh and Mongolian people share a common history, language family (Altaic), old belief system (Tengrism aka nature+sky worship), and most importantly, nomadic way of life with falconry and horse equestrianism and have nothing to do with the Russian language (Indo-European family). For example, if Korea was under the Soviet Union, Koreans would write in Cyrillic their own language but still speak Korean.
🇲🇳·🇲🇳🇬 language is similar to 🇹🇷·🇹🇺🇷, 🇯🇵·🇯🇵🇳, 🇰🇷·🇰🇴🇷 languages. However, it is interesting. [ Монгол ] Би танд хайртай байна^^; [ 🇯🇵·🇯🇵🇳, 🇰🇷·🇰🇴🇷 ] Би танийг хайртай байна^^; | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
It’s interesting to hear how climate and landscape can be heard in the language somehow: Mongolian sounds like a bit “rough” language, while the softest ones are from the far south.
Myanmar and Thai share some Pali words. Myanmar's ancestors has close relationship with Tibetans. There was long term cultural crossover with Indians. So, some Burmese words have similar meaning to Indian and Tibetic languages.
What language do they speak as a common in this video so they all understand each other? It is fantastic to see and listen to them and then to hear the switch to their native ones. Lovely video ❤
@@silverchairsg no they just live in Korea probably. Not everyone in Korea listens to kpop. Actually majority of them doesnt. Dont be delulu and generalise and romanticize Korea and people living there
As a mongol I would say that Mongolian is nothing similar to Russian, apart the that in Mongolian we use Cyrillic alphabet but we also have our traditional writing Todo Bitchig
@@nimbus4899 yeah alphabets are similar to Russian but words are not similar to Russian like in Russia they say "Priviet" for hello and in Mongolia we say "Sain baina uu" for hello and im from Mongolia
@@Darkheart285 кстати, расскажи, монгольский - это один из тюркских языков или он не имеет тюркского происхождения? by the way, tell me, is Mongolian one of the Turkic languages or does it not have a Turkic origin?
Actually, in Thai, "ชื่อ (Chue)", which is the word for "name" spoken in this video, is the common and informal one we use in everyday conversation. However, talking about formal language, which we use a lot of loan words from Sanskrit and Pali, the word "name" will be used as "นาม (Nam)" which is similar to Burmese and Bahasa Indonesian in this video. I guess it's because of buddhism influence.
Yes, “nama” is a loanword but we also have many native Austronesian terms to refer to “name”. In Indonesian (and many other Indonesian languages) we borrow a lot from Sanskrit but not so much from Pali. This is because although Buddhism was a huge influence, Hinduism played a bigger part and Sanskrit was the liturgical language of the brand of Hinduism we adopted in our archipelago.
Yes, In Thai, we use a lot of “Nam” which from “Name” or “Nama” in many ways commonly. For example, - นามสกุล (Nam Sa Kul), which mean “Family Name” (Nam is Name, Sa Kun is Family (สกุล/ตระกูล) - นามปากกา (Nam Pak ka), which mean “Pen name” (Nam is name, Pak ka is Pen) or an Idiom : - ชื่อเสียงเรียงนาม (Chue sieng rieng nam) which mean “The Name”
Todo bichig is used in Xinjiang and Khalmyk (?). btw, Daur also belongs to the Mongolic language family, and once used Manchu script (derived from Mongolian script with circles and dots added). Daur: "haur erin bolosin" = Mongolian: "hawar/hawriin uliral bolson."
i think she's been living in korea for like 10+ years and also married to a native korean, and they even have a son or a daughter idk. she has a YT channel
Omg I am so proud of Tr Chan Chan. Everytime I watch world friends,I always thought to be someone who will participate from Myanmar. I am so happy today . Thank you so much Tr Chan and lovely Members. I hope I can watch next videos of this channel including Myanmar also.
Such an interesting topic to discuss. I'd love to study the language tree of all languages & how they branch out. And all these girls are stunning looking. I'd love to see where Japanese & Vietnamese sit among these languages presented here. Aswell as Mandarin v's Cantonese & Hokkien too.
As a Myanmar,I wanna say that our language is really difficult to learn.Speaking part is easier than writing.Our consonants and vowels are very beautiful but hard to write.However I love all countries on the earth because it's means we're human and humanity.🇲🇲🇲🇲
@@user-pd9ju5dk5s not usually eat horse meat and boiled sheep head that you thinking hahaha , but horse meat was yummy ,bit hard , i had been tried once in my entire life , yes i also ate boiled sheep head in Turkey , that was testy nice
Mongolian girl shouldn't have said it's similar to Russian because IT IS NOT. As a Mongolian I'd say central asian countries such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan sound similar to the ears of a foreigner. Oirat, Buryat, Tuvan, Altai, Inner Mongolian languages are directly related to Mongolian and are mostly considered dialects instead of seperate language
Saying Mongolian is similar to Russian is wrong but also dangerous to Mongol language identity. The only similarities are loan words from Russian, mostly technical and chemical terms.
No, firstly Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and other countries of Central Asia are Turkic countries. Turkic-speakers will not understand Mongolian-speakers, I tell you as a person from Central Asia! If you think that the Central Asian countries are culturally similar to Mongolia, then you are very much mistaken! Mongolian culture is similar to northern Asia where peoples such as the Yakuts Buryats Kalmyks live. These peoples are really similar to the Mongols, they also profess Buddhism or shamanism, languages are also similar and mutually intelligible, clothes and appearance are similar to these peoples. The Central Asian peoples either do not know Mongolia or think that the Mongols are savages, barbarians and eat pork and Buddhists like the Chinese and so on.
@@milaray4640 looks like you don't understand my comment, I said it sounds similar to the ears of a foreigner(a British person for instance) who doesn't know any central asian and mongolic languages both languages will sound similar for them than Mongolic to chinese or central asian to south east asian(u get the point). Also, kazakhs and kyrgyz people are historically nomads, just like Mongols, and you're saying they're different? I dont think so🤔
@@milaray4640 You do realize many Mongols migrated to Central Asia. Kazakhs and Mongols have high genetic similarity because many of the Kazakh clans can trace their lineage to famous Mongol clans. Same reason why Timur and Babur identified as Mongols/Mughals and not TURKS. Since Turks were the main force in the Mongol Army, many of the Mongols were raised as bilingual and eventually Turkified in the past few hundred years.
Myanmar particularly has a lot of different things to share to the world but just can’t. With many kingdoms from different backgrounds in the past, every part has different themes and styles of living. Wonder is endless
@@KukiCrusader Burma was able to feed the whole asean country with rice in the socialist era, advanced in sports and medicine and education. After the coup in 1962, Myanmar feel in the hands of evils who do not want to see the nation happy. And everything started to fall down and even brought Rohingyas genocide, but I do hope u understand being evil is not the civilians but the leader generation itself.
@@KukiCrusader I’m not so confident that the country will be in our hands again, but with a very little support from South Korea and Japan, and the continuing effort of civilian soldiers, there should not be any form of contempt whatsoever coming from me when I’m sitting here contributing nothing to the country. The fact that Korea helped us so much in the recent years. Burma in good hands used to donate rice to Korea in the the Second World War anyways.
@@linmyataung5397 interesting what you said about Korean help, I’ll read on that. But don’t back down, young people are the future. Seize it! Or you be helpless like this once again. Democracy should be installed in such a diverse country as Burma, and I’m waiting for the day, your constitution is drafted. As we have seen, newer and newer constitutions are drafted better. There are so many to analyse, and you young can have the opportunity to take the best parts of the worlds constitutions and apply it in your nation. As I said, let’s hope the Burma of the future will be admired by the world, as much as Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Thailand of today is.
Mongolian word for religion is call Shashin which is related to Burmese word Thathana which is also mean religion but only use in Buddhist contexts that word is ultimately from Sanskrit.
Notice how Mongolian girl is different from the others. She seems so tall and beautiful, just like a model. I have a classmate from Mongolia. She also looked tall and beautiful 😢.
II was in Beijin China a long time ago. Visited a club, huge dance floor and stuff. There were girls so tall and sooo pretty like this Mongolian girl. Then I met a couple of girls, they were all from Mongolia. I had landed there in Beijin from Berlin, this club was called "BANANA" at that time. A Spanish musician played there. I can remember very well now
The mongolians are actually the most westernised people in Asia, as mindset. Even as a body size, they are taller and bigger than other asian countries. Yes, they are tall and naturally beautiful. i In Korea, the girls, the most of them had plastic surgery, while the mongolians don't.
actually each of them, has its own font character Especially Indonesian Indonesia has many regional writings, in each particular region But because of colonialism in the past we can't use it 🗿 *ꦗꦮ* *ᬩᬮᬶ* *ᮞᮥᮔ᮪ᮓ* *KAWI* *PALLAWA* *BATAK* *SURAT ULU* *REJANG* *etc.*
@@armajhkc609 Different languages BUT very similar culture and created joint military confederations together like Turkic Khaganate, Hunnic Empire, and Mongol Empire. Many Mongol Empire soldiers were Turkic while the leaders were Mongolic. A European analogy would be Austro-Hungarian and Greco-Roman. Also, Turkic refers to Asian nomadic groups in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uyghurstan. Turkey is a far away country
- Mongolian belongs to Mongolic language family which shares many vocabs and grammar with Turkic as well as Tungusic languages. - Indonesian belongs to Austronesian family (Malayo-Polynesian) and has many Sanskrit loanword, e.g. saya (sahāya), nama (nāma), suka (sukha). - Chinese and Burmese belong to Sino-Tibetan family but Burmese grammar and vocabs are more similar to Tibetan. - Thai belongs to Kra-Dai family (Tai-Kadai) but many vocabs and grammar are similar to Chinese, especially Cantonese, e.g. numbers. Thai word for cat “maew” is similar to Chinese “māo” as well as Vietnamese “mèo”. Thai word for name “cheu” is from Middle Chinese “dzɨ “ (字: Mandarin: zì). However, in terms of grammar and word order, Thai (and its closest relative Lao) is more similar to Vietnamese and Khmer (Austroasiatic family) than Chinese. Translation can be done exactly word by word using the same order.
Thai was my favorite language. Very soft. Or maybe it was just the speaker. Very nice, anyway. Interesting that the Asians all speak Korean in the video, but the Europeans all speak English (in other videos, obviously). Yes, I realize they are all filmed in South Korea. Very fun video.
Bruh in Indonesia, if you take 2 hours trip in any direction from the Capitol city, you'll find they speak entirely different language there. that's how Insanely diverse Indonesia is. And here you are trying to find similarity between countries?!
For peopel who don't know. The classical or traditional Mongolian script, also known as the Hudum Mongol bichig. It is traditionally written in vertical lines Top-Down, right across the page. Mongolian people all know our traditional Mongolian script (it's troublesome to learn) and the alphabet we currently use is similar to Russia. Cause it's more easy to write.
Mongolian people all know the traditional Mongolian script? Then why are there many students who come to Inner Mongolia of China every year to learn the traditional language?
@Sfran_ Mongolians forget a little because we don't use traditional Mongolian script. But they all study it at school. It is a prejudice thing that they go to Inner Mongolia to study the Mongolian script
@@Daisy-pl4yi Some news reported that there have been Mongolian students studying in Inner Mongolia over the years, not in large numbers, I guess. It is said that Mongolia planned to restore the traditional Mongolian script along with Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet in 2025. If it does carry out, it would be nice.
@@Sfran_ Mongolian script was banned in Inner Mongolia. Therefore, inner Mongolians come to Mongolia to learn the Mongolian script. Mongolians go to Inner Mongolia in the sense of Chinese.
I find the cat sounds to be interesting. As we know, cats no matter where they are make the same sounds, so why do the countries make different sounds for them?
It is so interesting programm. These girls are all pretty. Thank you combined and tried to understand each other. Even we speaks diffirent languages , we are the Human. At the finally we are same product of the Nature Mother. Must understand and respect each other. From Mongolia.
While I know they’re different upon direct comparison, I notice the different languages have a similar…I don’t know the word for it…the tones swing up and down in similar ways and some of them share a similar soft palate (?) spoken sound sometimes. I imagine it must be similar to an english speaker hearing dutch or german (or maybe even simlish despite it being a fictional example) for them though since the languages are truly very different and even the tone thing I’m talking about isn’t quite the same within each.
About Mongolia it's complicated topic. People in westren part of country have slitly different pronunciation and even words are diffrent then centeral and Eastern part of country. Westren part's accents and words are more sounds like Centrel Asian other languagies. Which is I proud of my origin.
I'm Vietnamese and I thought Thai would have similar words, but it's actuallg really different 😅 the only word I found similar was the word for cat. In Vietnamese, it's mèo, which is like a cat's meow
When we visited Canyon DeChelly (Adam Teller story teller that took Senator McCain on a trip) told us as our tour guide that when he visited mongolian, he could understand what they were talking about... Canon Dechelly is a National monument in Arizona/American Indian.
@@pichupuche2474 yeah Myanmar and Han Chinese and Tibetan are same root, called ancenit-Qiang race They have similar DNA. Japanese looks like Chinese,but actully not the same root with Chinese.
@@TK-my7jg But why they look completely different with Han Chinese interm of face structure and skin color? They look like Tibetans mixed with Indian than Chinese.
@@pichupuche2474 bro maybe you mean those Rohingya people , they are Indians Actully Chinese can't tell the diffrence between Soutwest Chinese and myanmar people. I mean, Michelle Yeoh(Han Chinese)act as Aung San Suu Kyi in "The Lady" , right ?
I am from Myanmar and I am proud of my language. Even though, we speak different languages, our hearts are the same. God bless you all!
O
I wish your people their country back. May the wind forever be at your back ❤️🇲🇲
@@illusionist1872 thank you so much and I appreciate it 😁
How is your military government recently?
@@hydong9747 still so bad
As a Mongolian, our language is so hard to learn for foreigners. It is unique. Nothing similar to Russian.
А может быть она именла ввиду "похож больше чем остальные"?
Я сам Тюрк, но мы тоже говорим, что наш язык похож с русскими.
@@Uran_KH-98 может она имела ввиду киррилицу за схожесть? ну и плюс куча взаимозаимствованных слов в русском и монгольском
@@yosaishu Ну и что ты повторяешь вслед за остальными? Все как раз таки именно это имеют ввиду, но я сказал как раз таки напротив вашей дедукции
@@Uran_KH-98 вслед за кеми я повторяю? Что я повторяю? Лучше даже не отвечай, с токсиками я диалогов не веду
@@yosaishu А...? Не понял, ты че, обидился чтоли? Все в комментах говорили то, что ты говорил, а я уточнил свою позицию. Какие мы обиженки, а главное я по твою сторону вообще ничем не обозвал. Ну и молчи сам тогда.
Myanmar really is a unique country and Burmese Writing looks totally beautiful!! People are so kind and friendly.
Nah lee myanmar
@@leekyitrlrkmkl69 ur fr goin' 2 hell👍🏻
@@leekyitrlrkmkl69 quit being rude
Then would have to say the same for Thailand! Language wise Thai is more palatable to my ears! Culture and History also!
@@leekyitrlrkmkl69 min may sat pat Lee ko Myanmar lr Myanmar ka min ko Lee lote nay loot lar
Good thing that my country Myanmar is getting notice now. I’m proud because of these kind of videos existing here💗
you mean about your good side?
@@mobagenie yea
Smth like that lol
Lee myanmar right?
@@leekyitrlrkmkl69 oh how dare u say that to my country
@@sayarkyaw3977what means Lee,who can tell me that
Naturally they can’t understand each other, they’re not even from the same language family: Indonesian is Austronesian, Thai is Kra-Dai, and Mongolian is Mongolic. Both Chinese and Burmese are Sino-Tibetan so they are under the same family, but they are from different branches so in effect not that closely related.
If you want to look for similarities, you can pair them within the same language family, like Indonesian with Filipino (Tagalog) or Thai with Lao (although these two might be TOO similar with each other).
Addition: Indonesia, Thailand, and Myanmar might share Sanskrit (and Pali for the latter two) loanwords, but these similarities have nothing to do with syntax, structures, etc. They are still very different languages.
In Indonesia, the Javanese language absorbs Sanskrit the most, because the Javanese have always interacted with the outside world , Javanese kings used to always say that we are the descendants of the sun god, so they used the titles RARA, RAKAI, RAI ,coincidence or not RA is the sun god in ancient Egyptian beliefs, very funny haha
@@utaofficial2966 While I agree that Javanese absorbed a lot of Sanskrit, those examples that you mentioned show Austronesian roots and have cognates within the Malayo-Polynesian languages. Mending jangan cocoklogi, biarin aja itu jadi kebiasaan tetangga yang suka main klaim itu lho hehehe 🤭
@@kilanspeaks Cok sesat
So Sanskrit was the Latin of South Asia, Classic Chinese the Latin of East Asia, and Arabic the Latin of West Asia?
Would comparing Vietnamese to Khmer (Cambodian) work? They are both Austro-Asiatic languages, but I hear they are far from being even mutually intelligible, despite sharing a border. As far as I know, Vietnamese is full of Chinese influence like Korean and Japanese, hence why it is part of the Sinosphere. Cambodia was more part of the extended Indosphere, as you see Hindu temples like Angkor Wat, so I'm assuming it received a lot of loan words from Sanskrit.
I am from Myanmar, I speak Mizo language. Though I'm not a Burmese, it is really great to see a Myanmar girl (Chan Chan) enthusiastically participate in the discussion along with other respectful Asian girls.
Oh hi there, I am also from Myanmar, I speak Zomi.
@@tuangpi8357 Hi, glad to get to know you, Tuangpi. I speak a little Zomi, too.
Hello, I’m from Mizoram and I want to clarify that there is no such thing as a “Mizo” language. The language that you might be referring to is “Lusei” also known as “Duhlian” language. There are many languages spoken by the people living in Mizoram, who are collectively called “Mizo”. However, the term “Mizo” does not refer to a single language, but rather a group of related languages and dialects. Although this might seem like a very minor difference, it’s important to classify things in a well-mannered way.
Chibai 🥰
@@aflow- Lusei tribes call the nomenclature for all Zo/Chin/Kuki tribes 'Mizo' whether their brethren accept the term or not, which automatically implies that all language and dialects are collectively Mizo langauge. So, when I say I speak Mizo, it means I speak Mizo while it can be Duhlian, Hmar or else.
@@davidzomuanpuia1269 I respect your choice of using the term Mizo to refer to the language and identity. But I would like to point out that the term Mizo is not a historical or indigenous term but rather a modern and imposed one by the British missionaries. The term Mizo was coined by Rev. J.H. Lorrain and Rev. F.W. Savidge who were British missionaries who came to the region now called Mizoram in the late 19th and early 20th century. They also devised the Mizo alphabet based on the Roman (Latin) script which is now widely used by the people of Mizoram.
Before the arrival of the British and the missionaries the people of the region did not have a common name for themselves but rather identified themselves by their clan names, such as Lusei, Hmar, Ralte, Paite, etc. These clans had their own languages and dialects which were mutually intelligible to some extent but also had distinct features and variations.
The term Mizo was used by the missionaries and the British to group together these diverse clans under one umbrella term which was later adopted by the people themselves for political and social reasons.
Also, I want to add that Lusei is not a tribe, it is a clan. Lusei is one of the major clans of Mizoram which has its own sub-clans, such as Pachuau, Hrahsel, Chawngte, Chhangte, Renthlei, etc. The language that you call Mizo is actually the Lusei language, also known as Duhlian by the non-Lusei people. There are many other languages and dialects spoken by the people of Mizoram, such as Hmar, Mara, Lai, Ralte etc., which are also part of the larger Tibeto-Burman group of languages.
In my opinion, Mizo should refer to all the people living in the state of Mizoram, regardless of their clan or language affiliation.
I would also like to have a suggestion of using the term Zofa or Zohnahthlak to refer to the related clans as these terms are more inclusive and indigenous than the word Mizo.
I hope you understand my point of view and I hope we can have a constructive conversation on this topic.
Ka lawm e. ☺️
Mongolian girl looks like a model so pretty.
I am so proud of my self. ..Because I am able to read and write Burmese, (ဘာသာ)Indonesia ( bahasa) Korean and Chinese and thailand except mongolia. .. But I really interesting and love mongolia history they were greatest in history. .
bahasa=language, so which language do you mean?
@@monita3690Contohnya kayak "Do you speak Bahasa?" Itu sama artinya dengan "Do you speak Indonesian?"
No one asked
@@jaydenooi3392 No one asked you to be rude so just shut up if you have nothing nice to say
@@menuju.kebenaran031 no, it means, "do you speak language?" So yeah, which language OP's referring to?
The correct words are "bahasa indonesia" or simply just "indonesian". Many English speakers are mostly wrong on this part.
I am a korean. Among those languages, Mongolian, Korean, and Japanese are the most similar. So, when Mongolians learn Korean, they become fluent faster than other foreigners.
Most these languages based on chinese language
Mongolian, Turkish, Manchu, Korean, Japan and Sakha language is same group language.
@@devindabuddhi7037 haha. No. China DNA haplogroup and language family is very different than Altaic group of people. Japan and Korea language have a some similarities with Chinese. But rest is different.
@@dalaivanco7486 yeah japan,korea,vietnam etc
⁰¹Ural-Altaic grammar ⁰²Sinosphere = ¹越南[Việt Nam], ²习近平empire [中华人民共和国PRC], ³ROC[臺灣Taiwan], 澳門[Macao], 香港[Hongkong], ⁴Singapore, ⁵Indonesia, ⁶Malaysia, ⁷Japan[日本[にほんNihon・にっぽんNippon]], ⁸ROK, ⁹金正恩dynasty [朝鮮民主主義人民共和國·北韓·北朝鮮·DPRK] etc. | Миру мир!
Mongolian has similar letter sounds to Dine (Navajo) language! Very very cool
That's because the Native Americans were said to have migrated from Siberia across the land bridge to North America many centuries ago. There are many minority tribes in China and Russia such as Ewenki etc. who still have customs/dress/beliefs similar to some Native American tribes.
As a Mongolian, our language is totally different than Russian except we use Cyrillic letter. Russian and Mongolian belong to different language family as well.
Mongolian same as turkic from one family Altay
Mongolian is more closer to Korean than russian .
sn uu
Russia tried to russificate Mongolia so hard in 20th century, they even abolished traditional mongolian script to cyrillic.
Yeah, its like saying indonesian and english shares similar root just because both are using latin alphabet 😂
As Mongolian from the heartland (🇲🇳), these girls have beautiful, unique features that show how diverse (and different) the people and languages of East and Southeast Asia are! I do have to comment that all Central Asian countries that have been under the influence of the Soviet Union (to varying degrees) like Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Mongolia still use Cyrillic to this day. The Kazakh and Mongolian people share a common history, language family (Altaic), old belief system (Tengrism aka nature+sky worship), and most importantly, nomadic way of life with falconry and horse equestrianism and have nothing to do with the Russian language (Indo-European family). For example, if Korea was under the Soviet Union, Koreans would write in Cyrillic their own language but still speak Korean.
that's true . Thank you from kazakh
No, i am from Kazakhstan
I am Kazakh and tengrist 🙏
🇲🇳·🇲🇳🇬 language is similar to 🇹🇷·🇹🇺🇷, 🇯🇵·🇯🇵🇳, 🇰🇷·🇰🇴🇷 languages. However, it is interesting. [ Монгол ] Би танд хайртай байна^^; [ 🇯🇵·🇯🇵🇳, 🇰🇷·🇰🇴🇷 ] Би танийг хайртай байна^^; | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
All are beautiful, but Mongolian girl stands out🤩
It’s interesting to hear how climate and landscape can be heard in the language somehow: Mongolian sounds like a bit “rough” language, while the softest ones are from the far south.
there are no rough languages, there are only the preferences of people to hear the familiar sounds around them.
Myanmar and Thai share some Pali words.
Myanmar's ancestors has close relationship with Tibetans.
There was long term cultural crossover with Indians. So, some Burmese words have similar meaning to Indian and Tibetic languages.
How about 🇯🇵·🇯🇵🇳, 🇲🇲·🇲🇲🇷 languages? | Миру мир!
Huh?
Mongolian girl is so beautiful lol others are gorgeous too omgomg
The girls from China, Mongolia, Indonesia, Thailand, Myanmar are really beautiful. I am Mongolian. I love these countries❤❤
What language do they speak as a common in this video so they all understand each other? It is fantastic to see and listen to them and then to hear the switch to their native ones.
Lovely video ❤
Korean, this was filmed in South Korea
@@JosephOccenoBFH Kpop and love for handsome oppas unites all of them
@@silverchairsg no they just live in Korea probably. Not everyone in Korea listens to kpop. Actually majority of them doesnt. Dont be delulu and generalise and romanticize Korea and people living there
As a mongol I would say that Mongolian is nothing similar to Russian, apart the that in Mongolian we use Cyrillic alphabet but we also have our traditional writing Todo Bitchig
I don't know man most people told me that Mongolian people sound like kinda Russian.
@@nimbus4899 yeah alphabets are similar to Russian
but words are not similar to Russian
like in Russia they say "Priviet" for hello
and in Mongolia we say "Sain baina uu" for hello
and im from Mongolia
Mongolian in china no use cyrillic
@@Darkheart285 кстати, расскажи, монгольский - это один из тюркских языков или он не имеет тюркского происхождения?
by the way, tell me, is Mongolian one of the Turkic languages or does it not have a Turkic origin?
@@yosaishu it’s not Turkic family. It’s just Mongolic. Even though you didn’t ask.
I love Mongolia and Myanmar
Thank You I am from Myanmar too!🇲🇲
Манай Монгол Хүн Байнаа Намуунийгаа Маш Их Дэмжиж Байнаа Хөөрхөн Шүү Намуунаа 👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌😘😘😘😘😘😊😊😊😊😊 Our Mongolia 🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳
Love Mongolia ❤
Actually, in Thai, "ชื่อ (Chue)", which is the word for "name" spoken in this video, is the common and informal one we use in everyday conversation. However, talking about formal language, which we use a lot of loan words from Sanskrit and Pali, the word "name" will be used as "นาม (Nam)" which is similar to Burmese and Bahasa Indonesian in this video. I guess it's because of buddhism influence.
Yes, “nama” is a loanword but we also have many native Austronesian terms to refer to “name”. In Indonesian (and many other Indonesian languages) we borrow a lot from Sanskrit but not so much from Pali. This is because although Buddhism was a huge influence, Hinduism played a bigger part and Sanskrit was the liturgical language of the brand of Hinduism we adopted in our archipelago.
Similar with Myanmar နာမည် (Narme).
We here in Sri Lanka also use" nama" for name...and we also a Buddhist country and we have other religions too...🥰🇱🇰🇱🇰
Yes, In Thai, we use a lot of “Nam” which from “Name” or “Nama” in many ways commonly. For example,
- นามสกุล (Nam Sa Kul), which mean “Family Name” (Nam is Name, Sa Kun is Family (สกุล/ตระกูล)
- นามปากกา (Nam Pak ka), which mean “Pen name” (Nam is name, Pak ka is Pen)
or an Idiom :
- ชื่อเสียงเรียงนาม (Chue sieng rieng nam) which mean “The Name”
In Hindi we also say nam for name.
Mongolian girls are so beautiful and talk so well.
Todo bichig is used in Xinjiang and Khalmyk (?).
btw, Daur also belongs to the Mongolic language family, and once used Manchu script (derived from Mongolian script with circles and dots added).
Daur: "haur erin bolosin" = Mongolian: "hawar/hawriin uliral bolson."
As a Mongolian, I am happy to see that there is a representative from our country. All the girls are beautiful.
Ok
Mongolian language is new for me. So difficult to learn I guess. Different from others. 😅❤
that mongolian girl in shinig i love her
the Mongolian representative is soooo pretty omg
All of them 👌🏼
It`s amazing how the girl from Myanmar was able to understand so much.
i think she's been living in korea for like 10+ years and also married to a native korean, and they even have a son or a daughter idk. she has a YT channel
Shes a social influencer
@@ohfelia1643 Name of YT channel, pls. 🙂
@@JosephOccenoBFH Study with Chan Chan or Chan Mya Mya Thaw, sth like that
she's a language teacher too so i think she picks up structure and phonology really well
Mongolia is Beautiful!
Even though they’re all from other countries it’s wonderful that they’re all speaking Korean
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ 루추 세칼리
They all live in South Korea right now because of their fondness of Korean cultures & language.
@@chongleongchua4059 because they feel more privileged in Korea because it is actually true
@@chongleongchua4059 Yes bro
omg mongolian girl look so stuning. mogolian language sounds greatest
HAHAHAHHAHA
I love this !! all the ladies are beautiful and intelligent and such a positive vibe they giving!!
Mongolian lady is so beautiful ❤️
Omg I am so proud of Tr Chan Chan.
Everytime I watch world friends,I always thought to be someone who will participate from Myanmar.
I am so happy today .
Thank you so much Tr Chan and lovely Members.
I hope I can watch next videos of this channel including Myanmar also.
She’s so annoying. Can’t zip her mouth. So rude
She’s so annoying. Can’t zip her mouth. So rude
Such an interesting topic to discuss. I'd love to study the language tree of all languages & how they branch out.
And all these girls are stunning looking.
I'd love to see where Japanese & Vietnamese sit among these languages presented here. Aswell as Mandarin v's Cantonese & Hokkien too.
As a Myanmar,I wanna say that our language is really difficult to learn.Speaking part is easier than writing.Our consonants and vowels are very beautiful but hard to write.However I love all countries on the earth because it's means we're human and humanity.🇲🇲🇲🇲
i like 🇲🇲·🇲🇲🇷TT | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
전 미얀마 사람인데 이체널을 항상 봤는데 드디어 우리나라를 보게 되어서 너무 너무 감사하고 특히 우리 나라의 휼룡하고 따뜻하고 아름다운 국모 더 아웅수찌를 말해주는 우리쎔 찬찬 도 굉장히 갓하고요 ❤❤
၀လုံးတုတ်ချောင်း
Mongolians are taller like Europeans i was shocked when i saw them in china.
Mongolian people eating good quality foods 😂 thats why they have big and tall body
I m also shocked
@@sogooish Like what? Boiled sheep head? Horse meat? 😂
@@user-pd9ju5dk5s not usually eat horse meat and boiled sheep head that you thinking hahaha , but horse meat was yummy ,bit hard , i had been tried once in my entire life , yes i also ate boiled sheep head in Turkey , that was testy nice
Mongolian girl shouldn't have said it's similar to Russian because IT IS NOT. As a Mongolian I'd say central asian countries such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan sound similar to the ears of a foreigner. Oirat, Buryat, Tuvan, Altai, Inner Mongolian languages are directly related to Mongolian and are mostly considered dialects instead of seperate language
Saying Mongolian is similar to Russian is wrong but also dangerous to Mongol language identity. The only similarities are loan words from Russian, mostly technical and chemical terms.
No, firstly Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and other countries of Central Asia are Turkic countries. Turkic-speakers will not understand Mongolian-speakers, I tell you as a person from Central Asia! If you think that the Central Asian countries are culturally similar to Mongolia, then you are very much mistaken! Mongolian culture is similar to northern Asia where peoples such as the Yakuts Buryats Kalmyks live. These peoples are really similar to the Mongols, they also profess Buddhism or shamanism, languages are also similar and mutually intelligible, clothes and appearance are similar to these peoples. The Central Asian peoples either do not know Mongolia or think that the Mongols are savages, barbarians and eat pork and Buddhists like the Chinese and so on.
@@milaray4640 looks like you don't understand my comment, I said it sounds similar to the ears of a foreigner(a British person for instance) who doesn't know any central asian and mongolic languages both languages will sound similar for them than Mongolic to chinese or central asian to south east asian(u get the point). Also, kazakhs and kyrgyz people are historically nomads, just like Mongols, and you're saying they're different? I dont think so🤔
@@milaray4640 You do realize many Mongols migrated to Central Asia. Kazakhs and Mongols have high genetic similarity because many of the Kazakh clans can trace their lineage to famous Mongol clans. Same reason why Timur and Babur identified as Mongols/Mughals and not TURKS. Since Turks were the main force in the Mongol Army, many of the Mongols were raised as bilingual and eventually Turkified in the past few hundred years.
@@milaray4640 LOL
Myanmar particularly has a lot of different things to share to the world but just can’t. With many kingdoms from different backgrounds in the past, every part has different themes and styles of living. Wonder is endless
@@KukiCrusader Burma was able to feed the whole asean country with rice in the socialist era, advanced in sports and medicine and education. After the coup in 1962, Myanmar feel in the hands of evils who do not want to see the nation happy. And everything started to fall down and even brought Rohingyas genocide, but I do hope u understand being evil is not the civilians but the leader generation itself.
@@KukiCrusader I’m not so confident that the country will be in our hands again, but with a very little support from South Korea and Japan, and the continuing effort of civilian soldiers, there should not be any form of contempt whatsoever coming from me when I’m sitting here contributing nothing to the country.
The fact that Korea helped us so much in the recent years. Burma in good hands used to donate rice to Korea in the the Second World War anyways.
@@KukiCrusader lastly, thank you for hearing me out because everyone nowadays think Myanmar people are evil
@@linmyataung5397 interesting what you said about Korean help, I’ll read on that. But don’t back down, young people are the future. Seize it! Or you be helpless like this once again. Democracy should be installed in such a diverse country as Burma, and I’m waiting for the day, your constitution is drafted. As we have seen, newer and newer constitutions are drafted better. There are so many to analyse, and you young can have the opportunity to take the best parts of the worlds constitutions and apply it in your nation. As I said, let’s hope the Burma of the future will be admired by the world, as much as Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Thailand of today is.
this whole conversation just made me feel so much, both positive and negative as a teen living myanmar gosh
Myanmar language alphabets are very beautiful, Long Live Union Burma Myanmar 🇲🇲
Yea
Omg i am from mongolia! I am so happy that Mongolian person is in this video !!
同じアジアでもそれぞれの国で違いがあり、面白かったです。
確かに😊
Fr
的确😁
very diverse
Finally!! People from my country are included in this kind of content. I thought people don't even know what Myanmar is.
Mongolian word for religion is call Shashin which is related to Burmese word Thathana which is also mean religion but only use in Buddhist contexts that word is ultimately from Sanskrit.
How does Shashin sound similar to Thathana? Mongolian language has nothing to do with Sanskrit or South Asian languages
@@Tulga244Thathana=Sasana=Sasaan=Shashin
I’m from mongolian and she is stunning and as a Mongolian our language is unique from others
Монголоор ярьж сурах та нарт хэцүү байх болно. Харин бид ямарч хэлээр төгс ярих боломжтой 😊
Notice how Mongolian girl is different from the others. She seems so tall and beautiful, just like a model. I have a classmate from Mongolia. She also looked tall and beautiful 😢.
I think she is a model
Their people used to be warriors who conquered lands back in the 13th century. I would like to see her in a warrior costume riding a horse 🐎🗡️🛡️😂
She's indeed a model in Korea, you should watch her other video she explain it
@@JosephOccenoBFH, what kind of fetish is that????😂😂😂
@@Fatima-xf8xp 😉😄 ...
Mongolian girl Namuun is so beautiful ❤🇲🇳
Only Mongolian people say that
Myanmar Girl is like an angel .
She has the best communication skill ❤
May the revolution be succeed ❤
Im from Mongolia! Proud of youu Namuun
你会中文?
@@liberal8083 内蒙的呗
II was in Beijin China a long time ago. Visited a club, huge dance floor and stuff. There were girls so tall and sooo pretty like this Mongolian girl. Then I met a couple of girls, they were all from Mongolia. I had landed there in Beijin from Berlin, this club was called "BANANA" at that time. A Spanish musician played there. I can remember very well now
did you iced one?
The mongolians are actually the most westernised people in Asia, as mindset. Even as a body size, they are taller and bigger than other asian countries. Yes, they are tall and naturally beautiful. i
In Korea, the girls, the most of them had plastic surgery, while the mongolians don't.
@@soyondoyon mongolian is short but strong.
@@kimjongun2062 not short im comparing with other asian countries not to compare with Europeans
@@soyondoyon Very different from Europeans. Mongolians are slit eyed, have darker skin and are shorter.
actually
each of them, has its own font character
Especially Indonesian
Indonesia has many regional writings, in each particular region
But because of colonialism in the past
we can't use it 🗿
*ꦗꦮ*
*ᬩᬮᬶ*
*ᮞᮥᮔ᮪ᮓ*
*KAWI*
*PALLAWA*
*BATAK*
*SURAT ULU*
*REJANG*
*etc.*
The language use in Myanmar, Burmese is So beautiful, It's totally a circlr
Lee myanmar right?
@@leekyitrlrkmkl69 min may sat pat pal john mater :)
I never thought Mongolian language pronunciation would be this complex until i saw this vid😮😱
I’m Mongolian. It sounds like that solely because we use a lot of throat while speaking
@@antisocialyuAre Turks Mongols? or not
@@armajhkc609wtf u talking about Mongolians are Mongolians turks are turks their not mongolian
@@armajhkc609 Different languages BUT very similar culture and created joint military confederations together like Turkic Khaganate, Hunnic Empire, and Mongol Empire. Many Mongol Empire soldiers were Turkic while the leaders were Mongolic. A European analogy would be Austro-Hungarian and Greco-Roman. Also, Turkic refers to Asian nomadic groups in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uyghurstan. Turkey is a far away country
- Mongolian belongs to Mongolic language family which shares many vocabs and grammar with Turkic as well as Tungusic languages.
- Indonesian belongs to Austronesian family (Malayo-Polynesian) and has many Sanskrit loanword, e.g. saya (sahāya), nama (nāma), suka (sukha).
- Chinese and Burmese belong to Sino-Tibetan family but Burmese grammar and vocabs are more similar to Tibetan.
- Thai belongs to Kra-Dai family (Tai-Kadai) but many vocabs and grammar are similar to Chinese, especially Cantonese, e.g. numbers. Thai word for cat “maew” is similar to Chinese “māo” as well as Vietnamese “mèo”. Thai word for name “cheu” is from Middle Chinese “dzɨ “ (字: Mandarin: zì). However, in terms of grammar and word order, Thai (and its closest relative Lao) is more similar to Vietnamese and Khmer (Austroasiatic family) than Chinese. Translation can be done exactly word by word using the same order.
Yep, Asia is so diverse! Much of Europe is Indo-European, while Asian languages have their own categorizations.
The best comment so far 👍🏽👍🏽
ene turkuud yum bolgon deer bidniig oorsdteigoo adilhan bolgoh geed bdag bolj shuu tiktok deer duuren ter haan manaih ene haan manaih gesen garuud
@@reflex6126 haha thh hcn pisdanud
MONGOLIAN LANGUAGE DO NOT SHARE ANY VOCAB OR GRAMMAR SIMILARITY WITH TURKEY LANGUAGE
Thank You So Much 🇲🇲🙏
mongolian girl looks like a celebrity! Straight outta movies or smthing
I tell ya how similar they are they all focking gorgeous
In Indonesia, we have 711 languages
I'm from indonesia and i can speak 5 languages even sometimes they're dificult but i was still learning on russian and germany language
Ok
🇲🇳🇲🇳🇲🇳 Mongolian women is more beautiful and strong ❤
NOPE! Chinese women is more beautiful and strong
uh ok
Icece sdaMn
@@liloistheendiahater yes in some ways they can be
what ethnicity are you?
@@liloistheendiahaterhelp
Love You So Much teacher Chan❤🇲🇲
Thai and Myanmar so beautiful ❤
I like Myanmar girl 🥰 she is so beautiful (from Thailand)
thanks and I am from Myanmar but I like Thailand girl she is drop dead gorgeous haha
@Merry oh nice 😅😂 but I think she's still beautiful naa ,I like her honey skin mak
@@oyefirangi2624honestly both r gorgeous!
thai girl look so sweet❤
Thai was my favorite language. Very soft. Or maybe it was just the speaker. Very nice, anyway.
Interesting that the Asians all speak Korean in the video, but the Europeans all speak English (in other videos, obviously). Yes, I realize they are all filmed in South Korea.
Very fun video.
I think the equivalent of english in europe would probably be chinese in asia (not to the extent of english dominance though)
it's nice to see how they laugh and are not stiff compared to the previous video session .....감사 합니다
As a myanmar I happily respect the my Country and myanmar is a very hard language to learn!❤
Liberty, independence, democracy to 🇲🇲·🇲🇲🇷^^! | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
Bruh in Indonesia, if you take 2 hours trip in any direction from the Capitol city, you'll find they speak entirely different language there. that's how Insanely diverse Indonesia is. And here you are trying to find similarity between countries?!
For peopel who don't know. The classical or traditional Mongolian script, also known as the Hudum Mongol bichig. It is traditionally written in vertical lines Top-Down, right across the page. Mongolian people all know our traditional Mongolian script (it's troublesome to learn) and the alphabet we currently use is similar to Russia. Cause it's more easy to write.
Mongolian people all know the traditional Mongolian script? Then why are there many students who come to Inner Mongolia of China every year to learn the traditional language?
@Sfran_ Mongolians forget a little because we don't use traditional Mongolian script. But they all study it at school. It is a prejudice thing that they go to Inner Mongolia to study the Mongolian script
@@Daisy-pl4yi Some news reported that there have been Mongolian students studying in Inner Mongolia over the years, not in large numbers, I guess. It is said that Mongolia planned to restore the traditional Mongolian script along with Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet in 2025. If it does carry out, it would be nice.
@@Sfran_ Mongolian script was banned in Inner Mongolia. Therefore, inner Mongolians come to Mongolia to learn the Mongolian script. Mongolians go to Inner Mongolia in the sense of Chinese.
@@Daisy-pl4yi Inner Mongolia uses the traditional Mongolian script. This conversation ends here and I won’t reply again:)
Mongolian language like Finnish language in Europe, Very different from east Asian languages
for me, i love the thai girl
ကျတော့်ရဲ့ဆရာမ အကုန်လုံးထဲမှာအလှဆုံးပါ🎉
I find the cat sounds to be interesting. As we know, cats no matter where they are make the same sounds, so why do the countries make different sounds for them?
It's not about who ist most beautiful
It is so interesting programm. These girls are all pretty. Thank you combined and tried to understand each other. Even we speaks diffirent languages , we are the Human. At the finally we are same product of the Nature Mother. Must understand and respect each other. From Mongolia.
Mongolian girl is so beautiful
all are so pretty
In Filipino (Tagalog) "Kutíng" means "baby cat." In another Filipino language, Hiligaynón, cat is "Kuríng" similar to Indonesian "Kucing." 🐈😹
Baby cat in indonesia (java) is cemeng.
Malaysian also call kucing
Dog
indo- Asu, Anjing
Tagalog- Aso
@@kenmasters797
babi -> baboy
kerbau -> kalabaw
😄
Yes. I have read somewhere Indonesian language has similarities to Tagalog. Like "salamat" in tagalog, in Indoesian we say "selamat".
love Thai 🇹🇭language❤from China🇨🇳
It is a tonal language like Chinese. You will find a number of words in Thai have the same sounds as Chinese southern dialects.
Northern Thai is similar to Dai, Baiyue, Zhuang and more.
Is there a common language that they all were using to communicate to each other?
korean
🇰🇷
I love this channel❤🧡💛
Cool video 😎
see their appearance ,we can recognize countries immediately ! Mongolia,Manchuria and Korean are sibling.
While I know they’re different upon direct comparison, I notice the different languages have a similar…I don’t know the word for it…the tones swing up and down in similar ways and some of them share a similar soft palate (?) spoken sound sometimes. I imagine it must be similar to an english speaker hearing dutch or german (or maybe even simlish despite it being a fictional example) for them though since the languages are truly very different and even the tone thing I’m talking about isn’t quite the same within each.
The girl from Myanmar looks like the girl from the twilight saga...
lmaoo
This was a fun video! I can spend the entire day just listening to these girls making cat sounds. 😹 Meow ..
l'm from Thailand and in my opinion thai language is very difficult to understand but if some people who learn thai just don't give up. you can do it😊
About Mongolia it's complicated topic. People in westren part of country have slitly different pronunciation and even words are diffrent then centeral and Eastern part of country. Westren part's accents and words are more sounds like Centrel Asian other languagies. Which is I proud of my origin.
namuun is stunning🥰🥰
Always encouraging, Mrs. Chanchan
I'm Vietnamese and I thought Thai would have similar words, but it's actuallg really different 😅 the only word I found similar was the word for cat. In Vietnamese, it's mèo, which is like a cat's meow
But to me, Thai and Vietnamese sounds similar lol.
When we visited Canyon DeChelly (Adam Teller story teller that took Senator McCain on a trip) told us as our tour guide that when he visited mongolian, he could understand what they were talking about... Canon Dechelly is a National monument in Arizona/American Indian.
Myanmar and Chinese are in same language system
They are the same root?
@@pichupuche2474
yeah
Myanmar and Han Chinese and Tibetan are same root, called ancenit-Qiang race
They have similar DNA.
Japanese looks like Chinese,but actully not the same root with Chinese.
myanmar is more close to tibetan
@@TK-my7jg But why they look completely different with Han Chinese interm of face structure and skin color? They look like Tibetans mixed with Indian than Chinese.
@@pichupuche2474 bro maybe you mean those Rohingya people , they are Indians
Actully Chinese can't tell the diffrence between Soutwest Chinese and myanmar people.
I mean, Michelle Yeoh(Han Chinese)act as Aung San Suu Kyi in "The Lady" , right ?
9:25 BUCIN is actually an abbreviation of "Budak Cinta", literally means "slave of love"
Myanmar girl is so beautiful ❤❤
Yes it is!
Yeah she is
And her voice is very pleasant to hear🔥🔥
No. The Mongolian girl is.
And u r burmese too
They are so beautiful, they make me dream ❤
only Indonesians pronounce their language with their mouths, the others pronounce them with their throats.. kho kha khkhkhhh
Yeah and thats what makes them unique
I think Myanmar & Thai have a exact same word and meaning. That is နေဦး which means wait in English.