AYMARA LANGUAGE, PEOPLE, & CULTURE
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ต.ค. 2024
- Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
Please feel free to subscribe to see more of this.
I hope you have a great day! Stay happy!
Please support me on Patreon!
www.patreon.co....
Please support me on Ko-fi
ko-fi.com/otip...
Aymara (Aymar aru) belongs to the Aymaran language family. It is spoken by the indigenous Aymara people in Bolivia, Peru, Northern Chile, and Argentina. The total population of Aymara speakers is estimated at 2.8 million people. It is believed that the original homeland of Aymara was Peru and that the language later spread into neighboring areas of Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina. Prior to the Spanish conquest of Peru in the 16th century, Aymara was spoken over a larger area than today having lost speakers to Spanish and Quechua.
If you are interested to see your native language/dialect be featured here.
Submit your recordings to otipeps24@gmail.com.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Ok, if anybody interested purely in the native side. Lets clear out the non-native "spanish" influenced words.
*Greetings:*
Winus tias, winus tartis, winus nuchis.
*Objects and one color:*
Muraru, tiliphunu, llawi, tina, tucha, pasapurti, credit tarjita, jawuna, aphitatura, sipillu, tuwalla, kuchillu, kuchara, palatu, kasirula.
*Food and drinks:*
kukakula, tiyi, sirwisa, winu, lichi, kaphiya, k'awna, tustat, asukara, mantikilla, kisu, arusa, ajusa, papa phirita, pitsa, jamwursjisa, manku, mansana, pirasa, phurutilla, turunja, limuna, larankha, mura, uwasa, tumati, sanawrya, siwulla, pipinu.
*Body parts:*
Mijilla, nasa, tuwillu, Muñika.
Did I miss something?
The Aymara language has the same letters as in the Ingush language (Caucasian region), which are not present in the Indo-European languages, Ch', Kh, K', P', Q, Q', Qh', T'. However, there are more such letters in Ingush: 'A, M', N', X, X', H, Zh', Z', B', V', C', G'. The Ingush language has 55 letters.
but, Aymara sounds very similar to the Caucasian languages
I hope for videos like these over for the Mayan and Uto-Aztecan languages!
Could you do the Purépecha language?
I like those colorful totems, look like Taiwanese natives but more colorful
Could you do the Atacama (also known as Linkanay) language of Chile?
Incredible!
Piękny język. Dziękuję Andy from Middle Polish :)
Szkoda, że słychać już wpływy hiszpańskie
Does remind me of Quechua
Of course because it’s south-native american language:)
0:50 there
Another great deep dive.😍
I really liked the sample part. For moments I can almost, almost hear click sounds
They’re electives! Such a cool sound.
3:24 tight
3:24 clean
3:24 fresh
me gusta muchissimo esto idioma❤
I wish western bolivians must learn & speak Aymara as national language.
hmm it looks like they also use "tatay" for father in Aymara, just as Philippine languages. perhaps, the term came from them
It doesn't sound like any other native american language we usually know of like Nahuatl, Navajo etc. Instead like some iranic language or from the caucasus mountains.
Janitï droga aljirix utjkaspän ukhaxa, jupax ministrunakapampix 2.000 jaqinakaruw katuntapxaspäna, wawanakas jan kuna juchanïsax yaqha jaqinakan utanakap t’unjapxaspänwa, qhathunakar mantapxaspäna ukat mä jan juchani jaqiruw carcelan jiwañapatak jaytapxaspäna.
Almost every food and drink comes from spanish words
With one very notable exception
Question, is the -äna the marker for past tense?
Thanks but it was better firstly explain
has a lot of spanish loanwords
moi
Non, moi.
Indonesian language pleasee
Nayax mä goofy goober ukhamätwa
Tai khamti language please
It sounds weirdly Caucasian to me
What do you mean by that?
@@thatguyhahaIt means it sounds like a language from the Caucasus mountains in West Asia.
@@annmaryjohn3258 oh thanks for explaining
Lionel Messi
No? He's not from that region
his last name is messi, that should tell you something
@ It tells me nothing 😅
Care to explain?
@@Coteoki its a italian surname,
@ And what does that have to do with a video of the Aymara language?
vai tavu seuraavaksi
Too much spanish influence
Recently I thought about Indian languages, and here comes the video 🤭