ESKALEUT LANGUAGES (INUIT-YUPIK-UNANGAN)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 เม.ย. 2024
- Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
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*excuse if there are pronunciation mistakes. I tried. :D
The Eskaleut or Inuit-Yupik-Unangan languages form a language family native to northern parts of North America and northeastern Asia. This family includes languages spoken in Alaska, Canada (especially Nunavut, Northwest Territories, northern Quebec, and northern Labrador), Greenland, and the Russian Far East (Chukchi Peninsula). It consists of two branches: Inuit-Yupik and Aleut, with Aleut being comprised of multiple dialects. The common ancestral language of this family split into the Inuit-Yupik and Aleut branches around 4,000 years ago, while the Inuit-Yupik branch further divided into Yupik and Inuit branches approximately 1,000 years ago,
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I watch a channel called "Q’s Greenland," and I quickly picked up two phrases in Greenlandic: "aqagu takuu," which means "see you tomorrow," and "tulliani takuss," which means "see you next time.
Thank you Andy!
I was really curious about this. I tried to do research on the language spoken in the coastal areas of the region, especially during the times when the Thule culture was active, but I could not find a source that provided solid information on this subject.
Please video about Proto-Eskaleut language.
1:12 Western Aleut
1:28 Eastern Aleut
1:44 Proto-Inuit
2:00 Sirenik
2:21 Alutiiq
Needs to be pinned
Eskaleut = tallimat geng .
Austronesia = lima geng .
Meanwhile Aleut(s) is a CHAAANG
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 exactly
Interesting how some of the languages handle numbers 6, 7, 8, and 9. It's like they're not using base-10
I’ve always wanted to a see comparison of these languages! Tysm for this
Brilliant Andy!
Great video thanks.
Very interenting sound for me as a Lesser Polish speaker. Difficult to compare to other. Maybe a bit similar to mongolian-arabic...? No. It is incomparable. I propose you to focus on melodies of daily speech of dialects.
please do more on greenlandic languages, i love them
Could you compare Finnish and Mongolian despite being different?
THANK YOU
At 5:37 numbers from 6 to 9 in Labrador Inuktitut sound suspiciously close to Indo-European languages. Could they be borrowings from English maybe?
German loanwords traces back to the time of German missionaries from the Moravian Church in the 1760s.
@@ilovelanguages0124 Why would they borrow something as basic as numbers though?
Close language contact. One language served as a superstrate for the other, as it rose above it. The same phenomenon can be observed in Turkic languages, where even such basic things as adverbs were borrowed from Arabic and Persian. In fact, there are a lot of examples, sometimes even more surprising.
Plus, languages spoken by hunter-gatherers tend not to have words for numbers greater than about three or four, as counting exact quantities isn't super important to life as a hunter gatherer.
@polishhussarmapping258 If you notice, in all other Eskimo-Aleut languages the numbers from 6 to 9 are very long and complicated while in Indo-European languages they are monosyllabic or at most bisillabic, so they are much easier to pronounce. That’s the main reason in my opinion.
I love these languages
Hi, do you not add subtitles to your videos anymore?
All Persid languages compared, please
They are related to the Uralic and Yukaghir languages, and I will prove that, one day…
This proposal makes quite a lot of sense and I genuinely hope it is proven one day.
@@polishhussarmapping258Interesting my dear beloved polish hussar.
When I wrote almost the same comment nearly one year ago, about the Turkicness of the Magyars, you found that a mere sillyness.
But that's how the picture get completed!
When these theories get proven, and it makes perfect sense, as the Altaic, The Uralic, and Eskaleut peoples started from the same place in central siberia.
Therefore all of them linguisticly, culturally, and genetically related!
Even if distantly.
We need at least one Inuit-Yupik speaking country, which is Greenland
No no, we need all of them!
Sounds like Arabic.
The throat sounds