Is Sanskrit the Oldest Language in the World? (Sanskrit vs. Tamil)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 594

  • @jais4sure-b5p
    @jais4sure-b5p 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    Tamil was in India even before arrival of Sanskrit with Aryans .

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No one arrived lord shiva made Tamil and sanskrit

    • @rajmahanta396
      @rajmahanta396 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Ambedkar was the first person who rejected the Aryan invitation or migration theory........ Tum log to upna bap ko bhi nahi manta ..😂😂😂

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes exactly the Avestan brahmins(priestly clan) made Sanskrit later with Prakrit ( which is a mutation of Tamizh)...

    • @MantashKhandelwal-kc7kg
      @MantashKhandelwal-kc7kg 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Bro we know that tamil is older but there was no migration like aryan migration

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @MantashKhandelwal-kc7kg there was a migration like the moghuls bro...

  • @simardeepsingh9908
    @simardeepsingh9908 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    So it is right to say Tamil is the oldest existing language today!

    • @RahulVerma-iv8ph
      @RahulVerma-iv8ph 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      No, it's not right. The difference between latin and Italian is same as the difference between old tamil and modern tamil. Tamil kept it's name unchanged but latin's name has been changed to Italian. We say latin is dead , if we say so then old tamil is also dead because the difference between old tamil and modern tamil is same as the difference between latin and Italian. So, tamil is not the oldest living language, if we say tamil is the oldest living language then many other languages are oldest too

    • @SarathKumardev-j5f
      @SarathKumardev-j5f 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​​​@@RahulVerma-iv8ph what difference between old Tamil and modern Tamil is difference between latin and Italian 😂😂😂😂😂...what nonsense are you bluffing Pretty sure you know nothing about Tamil 😂.....
      Tamil is used in two ways ... vernacular form and standard form... vernacular spoken form is evolved modernized differs district to district even countries to countries...
      But standard Tamil haven't changed the old Tamil is preserved in standard form infact academy teaches old Tamil and to use for all official purpose....
      Old tamil is still alive and active among people that's why it is called as oldest surviving classical language of the world.

    • @SarathKumardev-j5f
      @SarathKumardev-j5f 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @simardeepsingh9908 your indeed correct Tamil is the oldest existing language which is still in use ...

    • @RahulVerma-iv8ph
      @RahulVerma-iv8ph 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@SarathKumardev-j5f that's not bluffing go ask a linguist. If Italians kept latin as standard form then nobody would have said latin is dead. It's just that tamilians prefered to keep the older version as standard form.

    • @SarathKumardev-j5f
      @SarathKumardev-j5f 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@RahulVerma-iv8ph so you mean to say Tamil is dead ???? Lol 🤣 so what are we studing in school is Chinese???
      Tamil is was an established language with lipi, literature and grammar even during 1st century...and who the hell are you to bluff nonsense like half baked nut
      Do you really know Tamil ?????
      Modern Tamil is just an evolution of old Tamil lol 😂 it's not completely an alien language...
      In old Tamil we say" magan"
      Modern Tamil is mage..in some rural areas it's mavan..in expression it mavane...so what is the difference??? Lol 😂 it's just the change in vernacular form...
      The same we use when ever it is necessary
      So stop your bull crap as if you ingaurated sangam in madurai ...

  • @swadhinchakraborty1
    @swadhinchakraborty1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

    mistake 1:30 , Sanskrit wasn't the language of Indus valley civilization, it was Tamil. We can see there is a language in Baloch(Pak) named Brahui, also another language in Bengal named malto. Those are Dravidian languages. By using linguistics we clearly see brahui and malto are more similar than modern Tamil. So it's not like some Dravidian just moved to north. It was some dravidian just moved to south after the fall of Indus. Now there are no dravidians no aryans our bloodline is mixed well, so we are both aryans and dravidians.

    • @ThePolyglotFiles
      @ThePolyglotFiles  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Hi there! Thanks for the input! You are correct, to an extent. The language spoken in the Indus Valley prior to the arrival of the Indo-Aryans is currently unknown, but many scholars believe it could have been Dravidian in nature. To say it *was* Tamil, however, is a stretch. The point is, the language of the Indus Valley became Sanskrit (or a Proto-Indo-Aryan language) after the Indo-Aryans arrived and displaced the previously-spoken language.

    • @tamobiswas6083
      @tamobiswas6083 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      then how does rigveda which was in sanskrit have the mention of Saraswati river which went extinct with the fall of IVC?

    • @37sairam
      @37sairam 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Indus valley is not proven to be Aryan or Dravidian. Rig Veda Saraswati river drying up might be a reason for its downfall.. till it's decoded, we can only assume things

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@tamobiswas6083
      It's just written in 200 bc.

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@37sairam
      Vedas are written in 200 bc.

  • @SB-xe4cg
    @SB-xe4cg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

    Tamil is the oldest. There are enough evidences. Let me share Hemanth's video here.

    • @vasanths6888
      @vasanths6888 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      th-cam.com/video/TKTxd2icycA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=bcDSvOdnZsMDoR6z

    • @AbhishekTiwari1111
      @AbhishekTiwari1111 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Vedic Sanskrit is the oldest.

    • @throttletorq5386
      @throttletorq5386 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Oldest book in Tamil is tholkaapiyam, and this is Sanskrit word

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No , oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      No , oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

  • @karthikeyanavatartellallth1308
    @karthikeyanavatartellallth1308 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Tamil is the 70000year old language in the world which was creates by shivan in the kumari kadam

    • @RajRaj-eu6uu
      @RajRaj-eu6uu 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Sangee sighted… stop tall claims.. feku

    • @mothilal6479
      @mothilal6479 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Don't insert idiotic religion in Tamil. So far no religious items recovered in Tamil excavation sites, including Keeladi. 👍

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂😂 70,000 ? 😂

    • @thejus36
      @thejus36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      LOL in which universe you are living 😂😂😂 even Dinauser speaks Tamil ?

    • @sivasankarpoovaragavan115
      @sivasankarpoovaragavan115 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Partially true that...its is developed from the period of shivan or Shiva (not the cosmic god shiva but shiva is the one who realized the cosmic god shivam at first) and its is 17000 years old ...not 70000 years....

  • @EriOliyanVaenthi
    @EriOliyanVaenthi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    I have studied both tamil and sanskrit in my school days and gone through the literature and I can firmly say the vocabulary, Perfectness of grammar, depth in it's literature and the amazing formation of words and sentences, amazing levels of expressiveness and availability of native word for everything, it can be safely concluded, that tamil should be atleast 50 thousand years old. I mean a language with such richness can't evolve in less than 10, 000 years. So tamil is the clear winner.

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      No , oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The language of 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 people
      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv’up =liquefied
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards-upwards >suvamak=to plaster
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something >to drive
      (Su-arpa)>chorba>surppa=soup /Surup>şurup=syrup /Suruppat>şerbet=sorbet /Surab>şarap=wine /Surah>şıra=juice şire=milky
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards /Süp-ğur-mek>süpürmek=to sweep
      -mak/mek>(umak/emek)=aim/ exertion (machine/ mechanism)
      -al/el =~obtain through
      -et =~ do /make
      -der = ~set /provide
      -kur=~ set up
      -en=own diameter > about oneself
      -eş=each mate/each other/together or altogether
      -la/le = ~make this by it /do it this way
      Sermek= to make it flow in four directions =to spread it by laying over somth
      Sarmak= to make it flow around somth =to wrap, to surround
      Saymak= to make it flow drop by drop /one by one from the mind =~to count, ~to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söymek= to make it flow through > Söy-le-mek= make the sentences flow through the mind =~to say, ~to tell
      Sövmek=to say whatever's on own mind=swearing
      Sevmek= to make flow/pour from the mind to the heart =to love
      Süymek=to make it flow thinly (Süÿt> süt= दूध/ milk)
      Soymak=to make it flow over it/him/her (to peel, ~to strip )(soygan>soğan=onion)
      Soy-en-mak>soyunmak=to undress (Suy-ğur-mak)>sıyırmak=~skinning ,skimming
      Siymek=to make it flow downwards= to pee Siÿtik>sidik=urine
      Say-n-mak>sanmak= to pour from thought to the idea >to arrive at a guess
      Savmak=to make it pour outward /put forward /set forth > sav=assertion
      Sav-en-mak>savunmak=to defend /Sav-ğur-mak>savurmak=to strew it outward (into the void)
      Sav-eş-mak>savaşmak=to shed each other's blood >savaş= war
      Savuşmak=scatter altogether around > sıvışmak=~run away in fear
      Sağmak=to ensure it pours tightly /Sağanak=downpour /Sahan=somth to pour water
      Sağ-en-mak>sağınmak= to spill from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sekmek=to go (by forcing /hardly) over it further
      Sakmak=to get/ keep/ hold-back forcely or hardly (sekar=?)
      Sak-en-mak>sakınmak =to ponder hard/hold oneself back/beware
      Soğmak=to penetrate (by force)> Soğurmak= make it penetrate inward= to suck in
      Sokmak=to put/ take (by force) inward
      Sökmek=to take/ force out from the inside(~unstitch/rip out)
      Sıkmak=to press (forcibly) into oneself > squeeze (Sıkı=tight)
      Sığmak=fit inside /Sığ-en-mak>sığınmak= to seek refuge
      Süzmek=to make it lightly flow from top to bottom / to filter
      Sezmek=to keep it mentally flowing gently /to intuit, sense
      Sızmak=to get flowed slightly / to ooze
      Suŋmak=to extend it forward, put before, present
      Süŋmek=to get expanded outwards /sünger=sponge
      Sıŋmak=to reach by stretching upward/forward
      Siŋmek=to shrink oneself by getting down or back (to lurk, hide out)
      Söŋmek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to fade out)
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to get the differences of =to recognize
      Tanınmak= tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak= tanı-et-mak=to make known >to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =to meet for the first time
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally >Tınlamak= ~to take into account/ respond
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >Dinlemek= to listen / 听
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to keep calm
      Denk= Sync>登克>~equal / a-thankDenge =balance
      Thenğ-mek>Değmek= to touch / to achieve a harmonious reaction
      Thenğe-mek>Denemek=to try to get a harmonious response in return
      teğet= tangent / tenger> değer=sync level >worth / teng-yüz>deŋiz=sea
      eşdeğer=equivalent / eş diğerine denk= equal to each other
      Deng-en-mek>değinmek = to mention /touch upon
      Deng-eş-mek>değişmek =to turn into something else equivalent /to get altogether a change.
      Deng-eş-der-mek>değiştirmek =to change it /exchange
      Çığ (chuw) = avalanche / 雪崩
      Çığ-ğur-mak =çığır-mak= ~to scream /read by shouting
      Çağırmak= to call / inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çığırı > Jigir > Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cığır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal /shout with a shrill voice
      Çığırgı >Jırgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çiğ (chee)= uncooked, raw / 生
      Çiğne-mek =to chew / 咀嚼
      (Çiğnek) Çene =chin / 下巴
      Çiğ (chiu)= dew / 汽 , 露 (çi’çek=flower/ çi’se=drizzle)
      Taş =the stone (portable rock)/大石头
      Taşı-mak = to take (by moving) it > to carry
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to have it transported
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak> to move oneself to a different place
      Kak-mak=to give direction (kak-qa-eun> kakgan=which one's directing>Kağan>Han) (Baş-khan>Başkan=president)
      Kak-der-mak>kaktırmak= ~to set aside
      Kak-el-mak>kağılmak =to be oriented via > get fixed anywhere >kalmak= to stay
      Kakıluk-mak=to tend upward >kalkmak=to stand up /get up
      Kak-el-der-mak>kağıldırmak>to make it being steered away> kaldırmak =to remove
      Kak-en-mak> kağınmak= to be inclined> kanmak / ikna olmak= to ac-know-ledge it's so /be convinced
      Kak-en-der-mak> kağındırmak= kandırmak (ikna etmek) = ~to trick (to persuade)
      Der-mek=to provide bringing them together to create an order /der-le-mek= to compile
      /deri= derm
      Dar-mak=to bring into a different order by disrupting the old /tarkan=conqueror
      /tarım= agriculture /tarla= arable field /taramak= to comb
      Dar-el-mak>darılmak=to be in a disturbed mood towards someone
      Dur-mak=to remain in the same order /keep being, /survive /halt on
      (thoru>diri= alive) durabilir=durable /boğa-thor>bahadır=冒頓=survivor-victim> war veteran
      boğa=sacrificed by strangling >buga > buhag > pigah> 피해자> pig
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak=~to stop /diri-el-mek>dirilmek= be revived
      Diremek=make to stand against / direnmek=resist / diretmek=insist
      Dür-mek=to roll it into a roll / dürülmek=get rolled / dürüm=roll of bread
      Dör-mek=to rotate it on its axis >thör =mix/ blend (döngü/ törüv=tour) (dörük=blended)
      Thöre-mek>türemek=become a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Thörük=order formed by coming together >Türk
      Töre=order established over time= tradition /torah=sacred order /tarih=history
      Thör-et-mek>türetmek= to create a new layout combining= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>Dörünmek= to rotate oneself /turn by oneself
      Törünmek>törn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself /döner=rotary /turna=flamingo
      Dön-der-mek>döndürmek=to turn something
      Dön-eş-mek>dönüşmek=turn (altogether) into something
      Dön-eş-der-mek>dönüştürmek=to convert /transform
      (Edh) Ez-mek=to thin something down by pressing over= to crush /run over
      (Edg) Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> to tilt it
      eğim =inclination
      Eğ-el-mek>eğilmek=to get being inclined /bend
      Eğ-et-mek>eğitmek= to educate
      Eğir-mek=to cause it another shape by spin it crosswise around itself
      / eğri =curve, awry > ağrı=crossways >uğru=~aspect of > doğru= true, right direction
      Evirmek= to make it return around itself or transform into another shape
      Çevirmek=turn into/encircle Devirmek =turn outer/overturn
      Eğir-al-mek>eğrilmek=to become a skew /be bended by
      Evir-al-mek>evrilmek=to get a transformation over time
      /evrim=evolution /devrim=revolution /evre=stage
      Uğra-mak>=to get (at) a place or a situation for a certain time= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak> uğraşmak=to drop by (altogether) each other for a certain time=to strive/ deal with
      Uğra-et-mak> uğratmak=to put in a situation for a specific time
      Öğre-mek=to get an accumulation above a certain stage
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to make somebody get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I’m teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun =You’re learning english
      Öğren-i-yor-u-sen (learn

    • @sivasankarpoovaragavan115
      @sivasankarpoovaragavan115 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CHRS-ri5mf holds the pillars until you not feel jealous....😂😂

    • @juliannaruffini
      @juliannaruffini หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      nonsense what you are writing

    • @sivasankarpoovaragavan115
      @sivasankarpoovaragavan115 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@juliannaruffini he is writing an exam...lol

  • @velayuthamkolanji4954
    @velayuthamkolanji4954 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    Tholkapiyam is world oldest grammar book it's written for tamil

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

    • @International-indic.
      @International-indic. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Laughable Tolkappiyam itself evolved from Sanskrit word Kavyam.😅 However old you go, every Tamil words has in its backbone a Sanskrit word. Lol

    • @bharathikannan5952
      @bharathikannan5952 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@International-indic.The word sanskrit itself a tamil word samakirstham which means derived or refined 🤫

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      By a Samana intellectual...

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@CHRS-ri5mfTamizh is related to Sumerian and Elam...

  • @ReiKakariki
    @ReiKakariki 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Sanskrit is the son of Indo-Aryan, Tamil is the source of Dravidian languages, scientifically and linguistically and archaeologically and anthropologically the current phase and stage that science is at.
    Research is carried out in these regions of India, but it is neither ethical nor correct to say that Indian languages ​​are the sources of the languages ​​of the world, which are not Indian religious theories that have this non-scientific vision that already enters the field of human belief.

  • @mayandiambalambalakrishnan
    @mayandiambalambalakrishnan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Sanskrit is not a language. It was created,

    • @Topquark1
      @Topquark1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yes exactly. It was created for a reason and that reason doesn't exist now.

    • @rsubhasify
      @rsubhasify 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes, that is why it is called Sanskrit which means artificial language and not natural or prakrit language

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sanskrit is language

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@rsubhasifyit is A natural language the language of gods celestial dieties

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Topquark1it exists

  • @Karlsewak-kempetai
    @Karlsewak-kempetai 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Vedic Sanskrit is the older,
    Mittani inscription is proof of that.
    Indus valley language if decoded could be parallel dated or even older than Vedic Sanskrit.
    Tamil is very modern language,
    North Indian languages are much older than tamil, indus valley to aryan civilization all are concentrated here.

  • @ramaeeesparks
    @ramaeeesparks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    From keezhadi excavations recently, we got glyphs that are similar to what we found in indus valley sites. This gives a fair possibilty that indus valley people are tamil and they migrated to different directions after downfall

  • @Taminlish
    @Taminlish 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

    1st like 👍 ❤
    Tamil oldest

    • @ThePolyglotFiles
      @ThePolyglotFiles  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Woo! Thanks for watching 😀

    • @Ishay7227
      @Ishay7227 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That’s just what Tamil people say

    • @TingTong2568
      @TingTong2568 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Tamil is the newest language in the world

    • @RaviVararo
      @RaviVararo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TingTong2568 but never your vulgar language

    • @RaviVararo
      @RaviVararo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@TingTong2568 Tamil is the oldest and forever novel evergreen language in linguistics and etymology

  • @kamalachandran5385
    @kamalachandran5385 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Tamil loan words found in ancient language elamite.
    Graffiti in tamil nadu now date to 3200BC.
    Recent article published by official harappan site claim Some sangam poem narration geographically fit indus valley cities rather than south india.

    • @praneethmashetty591
      @praneethmashetty591 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There is no evidence of Tamil before 700BC.

  • @Manikandan_supernova
    @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Early form tamil writting wer megalithic graffiti symbols not tamil brahmi. 2018-2024 archeologist recorded 11,000 graffiti from 300 sites in tamil region dated 3200BC-1000BC, last year TN,KERALA &PONDICHEERY archeologist collabrated with harvard university and kamraj university for extract archeo-genetic and dechiphere symbol hence symbol and brahmi wer used in inter-mediate phase around 1000Bc-800BC

    • @CHRS-ri5mf
      @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No , oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

    • @Manikandan_supernova
      @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@CHRS-ri5mf 7 years back, when we said tamil brahmi wer dated 600BC based on keezhadi excavation, people like you cried and said there is no way tamil brahmi can be dated before 200CE.
      Tamil people basically backed rationlist idea, dont give silly comment like " anthropology and science" we are not north india to do pseduoscience or wasting our time to prove mythology like mahabharata or ramanya.
      We wer well analyised ancient language like sumer,akkad,egyptian,hurrian, elamite,etc. We aware of ter script and there evolution over timeline.Dont give crappy statement, you have no idea about tamil and its antiquity.
      Its not just youtube video, its seminar given by ASI( archeological survey of india) about there recent excavation in 12 sites and material evidence with carbon dating. As i early mentioned- last year year ASI, madurai univerity collabrated with harvard university "david reich lab" its for genome extraction from ancient burial site in tamil region (sivagalai/adichanallur). Its too study about ancestral of ancient tamils.
      How d▪︎Mb you wer to say tamils dont aware anthropology and science. When i already mentioned about genome study which is going on in comment🤦you dont even read comment and started pouring your Id○cr@c¥
      Dont w@ste our time by giving fallacy statment to spread hatred againt tamil from your F@(

    • @Manikandan_supernova
      @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CHRS-ri5mf you mean archeogenetics wer not anthropology and carbon dating wer not science.
      600BC dating of tamil brahmi(now dates 800BC) which is "Abugida" writting system wer alpha-syllabic,
      sumer used "cuniforms" and egyptian used "hieroglyphs" both wer "logo-syllabic". Which can be date around 4000BC-3000BC
      Please understand carefully:
      Logo-syllabic writting also found in tamil region called "megalithic graffiti symbol" they dated to 3200BC.

  • @PerumPalli
    @PerumPalli 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    *It's Tamil*

  • @Raj-et7oj
    @Raj-et7oj 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    Dude your video will make sangis in my country triggered...😂😂😂 they will be crying in their closets..😂😂😂

    • @curious2379
      @curious2379 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah we can see who is triggered 😅

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@curious2379your reply shows you're triggered!

    • @ancientminds199
      @ancientminds199 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah. They're gonna be triggered because they see their Lemuria BS failing 😂😂

    • @mothilal6479
      @mothilal6479 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😀😀😀

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ancientminds199 lol lemuria is yours not ours

  • @vishnumarleycena4809
    @vishnumarleycena4809 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Thamizh is a God ❤
    தமிழ் என்பது கடவுள் ❤️
    Don't compare it with anyone❤️

    • @pradyumnama7
      @pradyumnama7 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      To you tamilians only
      For us Sanskrit is god

    • @vishnumarleycena4809
      @vishnumarleycena4809 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pradyumnama7 😂😂😂 deaden language 😏😏

    • @Nostalgic-24
      @Nostalgic-24 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@vishnumarleycena4809 Don't hate another language da baadu punde

  • @ranjithkumarnagarajan2874
    @ranjithkumarnagarajan2874 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Some similar origin Tamil words are in English.
    1)PATH - PADHAI
    2)KILL-KOLL
    3)NAVY-NAVAI
    4)SUDDEN-UDAN
    5)CULTURE - KALACHARAM
    6)SPONGE - PANJU
    7)ATTACK - THAKKU
    8)KERF - KARUVI
    9)VERSE - VARISAI
    10)LABOUR - ULAVAR
    11)GREEN - KEERAI
    12)EVIL - AEVAL
    13)PADDY - PAATHTHI
    14)VIA - VAZHIYE
    15)COOL - KULIR
    16)PASTE - PASAI
    17)BOTTLE - PUTTIL
    18)CASH - KAASU
    19)SPEECH - PECHU
    20)INN - ILL
    21)TOWEL - THUVATTAL
    22)BED - PADU
    23)PUT - PODU
    24)CATAMARAN - KATUMARAM
    25)BUSH - PUL
    26)WAY - VAZHI
    27)CORN - KURUNAI
    28)WIDE - VIDIYA
    29)TOWEL - THUVAI
    30)FADE - VAADU
    31)PLUS - PALA
    32)PLURAL - PAL
    33)POLY - PALVERU
    34)BIRTH - PIRATHAL
    35)ROUND - URUNDAI
    36)SQUARE - SADHURAM
    37)MANGO - MANGA
    38)GAUVA - KOYYA
    39)ONE - ONDRU
    40)EIGHT - ETTU
    41)VICTORY - VETTRI
    42)WIN - VEL
    43)WAGON - VAAKANAM
    44)ELACHI - ELLAKI
    45)COIR - KAYIRU
    46)EVE - AVVAI
    47)CALENDAR - KALANDHARAM
    48)TERRA - THARAI
    49)METRE - MAATHIRAI
    50)NAME - NAAMAM
    51)VOMIT - OMATTU
    52)SCRIPT - KURIPPU
    53)SPEED - PEEDU
    54)SNAKE - NAAKAM
    55)MAKE - AAKKAM
    56)LEMON - ILAMANJALKAI
    57)ROLL - URUL
    58)ORATE - URAI
    59)KNOWLEDGE - GNAANAM
    60)GINGER - INJI
    61)MOLECULE - MOOLAKKOORU
    62)PRIZE - PARISU
    63)OTHER - ITHARA
    64)TELE - THOLAI
    65)TEAK - THAEKKU
    66)RICE - ARISI
    67)AQUA - AKKAM
    68)VANAM - VIDAM
    69)MEGA - MIKA
    70)ACCEPT - ISAIPPADU
    71)MATURE - MUTHIR
    72)GOAT - KADAA
    73)PAIN - PINI
    74)YARN - GNYAAN
    75)TORQUE - THIRUGI
    76)LEVEL - ALAVU
    77)MAD - MADAMAI
    78)SURROUND - SUTTRAM
    79)GOD - KADAVUL
    80)CAPTURE - KAIPPATRU
    81)WANT - VENDI
    82)PLOUGH - UZHAVU
    83)ADAMANT - ADAM
    84)FAULT - PAZHUTHU
    85)SHRINK - SURUNGU
    86)VILLA - ILLAM
    87)COT - KATTIL
    88)NERVE - NARAMBU
    89)GRAIN - KURUNAI
    90)BUTTON - POTHAAN
    91)ANICUT - ANAIKATTU
    92)ANACONDA - AANAIKONDRAN
    93)CANDY - KANDU
    94)CORUNDAM - KURUNDHAM
    95)COPRA - KOPPURAI
    96)MULLIGATAWNY - MELAGUTHANI
    97)CONGEE - KANJE
    98)PATCHOULI - PATCHILLAI
    99)MORINGA - MURUNGAI
    100)PANDAL - PANDHAL
    101)VETIVER - VETIVER
    102)CULVERT - KALVETTU
    103)COOLIE - KOOLI
    104) PAGODA - PAGAVADI
    105)CURRY - CURRY
    106)CHETTAH - CHIRATHAI
    107)CHEROOT - SURUTU
    108)PETTY - PETTI
    109)VEIN - VEEN
    110)WELCOME - VANNAKAM
    111)CLAY - KALI
    112)CRY - KARAI
    113)BLARE - PILIRU
    114)JACK FRUIT - SAKKAI PALAM
    115)MEGA - MIGA
    116)CULPRIT - KALLAM
    117)BETROTHAL - PETROR OTHAL
    th-cam.com/video/cAeLh-seSK8/w-d-xo.html
    Some similar tamil and korean words and their meanings:
    Naal - Day
    Naan - me
    Nee - you
    Ulla va - come inside
    Pul - grass
    Paampu (bam) - snake
    Vaa - come
    Amma - mother
    Appa - Father
    Aariro(ஆராரோ)Thalatu - Lullaby for baby (Similar to Aarirang song in Korean)
    Akkachi - elder sister (southern slang)
    Ammani - Calling a girl with respect (coimbatore slang) like ommoni in korean
    Aiyo - Aigu
    Sandai - Fight
    Yean - why
    Anni - sister in law
    Athae - that's it (or ) yes in tamil
    Thae or dhae is yes in korean I guess...
    Arivom - To know (similar to aaro in korean)
    Ingu - here,
    Ithu - This (in korean igu means this )
    Aay - child (in olden tamil
    Eg : Most of tamil goddesses have 'aay' in ending like Maariaayi (goddess of rain))
    Pun - sore /wound
    Kattayam - must do
    Manam - Mind (mauem)
    Pal - teeth (ippal)
    In tamil we cry like "appa" when got a wound or feel a pain
    Konjam konjam - a little (like joguem joguem in korean)
    Tamil has more connections with other languages also like Japan and tamil has similarities with grammar,similar with cameroonian and Australian aboriginal language, Mayan language, English has many etymological backgrounds with tamil...
    Eg :
    Pyramid - பெரும் இடு (big graveyard)
    Anaconda - ஆனை கொன்றான் (elephant killer)
    Candy - கண்டு (கற்கண்டு)
    Molecule - மூலக்கூறு
    Button - பொத்தான் (பொத்தி வைப்பதால்)
    Kanyakumari is once called as Ayuta Which is a district Of Tamil Nadu, located Southern most end of India .which was once ruled by a king under Pandiya daynasity who were the strongest rulers of Tamil Nadu and spreaded all over the world as well, The ruler who roled Kanyakumari under Pandiya dynasty Married her daughter Princess of Kanyakumari to the Prince from Korea, There are still some historical witness that a princess from Ayuta has a brown skin tone and came by a ship flagged with a fish emblem on it (which was the symbol of Pandiyas) and packed with wealth and golds and servents to serve on the way, Still now some Hindu gods are worshipped by Peoples of Korea... thought the title was with the other people officially At least I'm happy still some Tamil family and Korean relatives Still recognise the bonding.

  • @kircyclone
    @kircyclone 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Sanskrit was never spoken at indus valley civilization....

    • @baibhabmazumdar007
      @baibhabmazumdar007 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      So, was tamil spoken in ivc??? 🤣

    • @kircyclone
      @kircyclone 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@baibhabmazumdar007 so, was Sanskrit spoken in IVC ? 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Actually Sanskrit was never spoken... it was never a spoken language.... 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Nostalgic-24
      @Nostalgic-24 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@kircycloneit is a spoken language not written is what this video and evidence says...if IVC spoke Tamil then why is the river Sindhu named in Sanskrit

    • @kircyclone
      @kircyclone 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @Nostalgic-24 who said sindhu is a sanskrit word....🤣🤣🤣

    • @Nostalgic-24
      @Nostalgic-24 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @ Dey Punde Sindhu na Thamizha adhukku vilakkam kudra...Sindhu yenbadhu vada mozhi Samskrutham thamizh ille da kuppe...idhe kooda theriyame yenda neengellam uiyrode irukeenge....

  • @Aritra_Karmakar
    @Aritra_Karmakar 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Alternative title : *How to start a civil war in 🇮🇳*

  • @CHRS-ri5mf
    @CHRS-ri5mf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    No , oldest known Language is Summerian, Egyptian. Oldest evidence of Tamil Itself is 6th Century BCE . You people Never Read Anthropology or Sciences. TH-cam video is evidence?

  • @kircyclone
    @kircyclone 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Hindi didn't exist during 600AD...

  • @EriOliyanVaenthi
    @EriOliyanVaenthi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Proto tamil is the language spoken in indus valley civilization. The proto tamil scripts unearthed in the Indus Valley civilization artefacts and the script found in keezhadi is exactly same. You are wrong when you linked indus valley and sanskrit at 1:32.

    • @StoneFireIce02
      @StoneFireIce02 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's Unknown What langage could be spoken in indus Valley during the period somee say Tamil,some say Vedic Sanskrit but considering the proof Vedic Sanskrit is the oldest in India.

    • @EriOliyanVaenthi
      @EriOliyanVaenthi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@StoneFireIce02 live in your own delusional world. Proof and history does not matter for guys like you 😂

  • @EriOliyanVaenthi
    @EriOliyanVaenthi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Scripts from indus valley civilization and the ones unearthed in keezhadi tamilnadu are 100% same. It concludes IVC is a proto tamil civilization.

  • @தமிழோன்
    @தமிழோன் 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Written accounts alone cannot tell the full story. Many ancient languages older than Sumerian did not have a written form. That doesn't make them younger than Sumerian. It's the same for Tamil and Sanskrit. The second oldest Tamil grammar book, Tolkappiyam, is 2000 years old. If the ancient Tamil speakers were advanced enough to write a grammar book for their language 2000 years ago, then their civilisation must be way older than 2000 years.
    Ancient Tamil and Sanskrit speakers used oral tradition to recite their literature before the efficient writing system was invented. There's a recent excavations going on in Keeladi where they have discovered ancient Tamil language written in hieroglyphs similar to Indus Valley.

  • @Dragoonoar
    @Dragoonoar 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    debating which language is the oldest language in the world is both irrelevant and childish

    • @kolikari3813
      @kolikari3813 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Why not? As long as its not shrouded in stigma affiliation and the ego its just a topic.

    • @RahulVerma-iv8ph
      @RahulVerma-iv8ph 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Because the concept The oldest language is flawed. All existing languages are continum of their precious versions so all languages are equally old

    • @tervaaku
      @tervaaku 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      realistically this discussion comes down to what is the oldest language we know about that ended up written down (so not reconstructed like proto-indoeuropean) that has a surviving speech tradition (so not ancient egyptian or sumerian). at that point it's a toss-up between oracle bone chinese and vedic sanskrit. even if we decipher the indus valley script and it turns out to be dravidian it's still not recognisably tamil to anyone who speaks tamil today. (also the amount of RSS wonks in the comments is,.. india mentioned)

    • @agnelomascarenhas8990
      @agnelomascarenhas8990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      True. All that we are interested is parent daughter relationship between languages. Between different families, comparison makes no sense.
      The question has it's origin in political discussions and ideology, not in gaining better understanding of language.

    • @agnelomascarenhas8990
      @agnelomascarenhas8990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@tervaaku Greek has written records to 14th century BCE.
      Sanskrit and Indo-Iranian in general are younger members of Indo-European.

  • @O.Thanapalji
    @O.Thanapalji 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    Coz is Tamil the oldest Language, it is almost 10.000 Years old and this is not even Pro-Tamil language. Pro-Tamil language is over 10.000 years old.

    • @tamileli
      @tamileli 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      10000aaa 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @tamileli
      @tamileli 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nyama irrukanum bro

    • @tamileli
      @tamileli 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Source???

    • @vijayakumar2967
      @vijayakumar2967 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      😂 I'm also Tamil but stop this garbage.
      Beware of numbers....

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Narikkurvar nomads have been migrating from Western India through the forests of Western Ghats to Southern India for hundreds of years, their dialect includes Marathi, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil and other language words, so can Narikkurvar language be called the mother of all South Indian languages?
      Sanskrit is the mother tongue of Brahmin nomads of European genetics R1A1. They migrated from Europe to the Indian plains in search of livelihood. Because they were nomads like the Roma Gypsies, their language was a mixture of European, Persian, Russian and Asiatic languages. Sanskrit absorbed other languages ​​and dialects to enrich its content, but to hide this fact some Sanskrit scholars falsely propagate that other languages ​​originated from Sanskrit. Sanskrit has no attested script of its own, and in earlier times, it was written in various Brahmi scripts such as Tamil, Nagari, Pali, and is now generally written in Devanagari. Some religions originated in North India and were propagated professionally by nomadic Brahmins, resulting in the spread of Sanskrit as a religious rather than a superior language. For example, Arabic is used in the homes of every Muslim and therefore it cannot be said that Arabic is the mother of all language.

  • @mayandiambalambalakrishnan
    @mayandiambalambalakrishnan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    संस्कृतं भाषा नास्ति। सृष्टं जातम्, .Sanskrit is not a language. It was created.

    • @agnelomascarenhas8990
      @agnelomascarenhas8990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Language means spoken language, so don't use terms like "not a language".
      Classical Sanskrit is derived from Vedic Sanskrit.

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@agnelomascarenhas8990
      Another name for vedic sanskrit is avestan which was used in karakum desert.

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Narikkurvar nomads have been migrating from Western India through the forests of Western Ghats to Southern India for hundreds of years, their dialect includes Marathi, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil and other language words, so can Narikkurvar language be called the mother of all South Indian languages?
      Sanskrit is the mother tongue of Brahmin nomads of European genetics R1A1. They migrated from Europe to the Indian plains in search of livelihood. Because they were nomads like the Roma Gypsies, their language was a mixture of European, Persian, Russian and Asiatic languages. Sanskrit absorbed other languages ​​and dialects to enrich its content, but to hide this fact some Sanskrit scholars falsely propagate that other languages ​​originated from Sanskrit. Sanskrit has no attested script of its own, and in earlier times, it was written in various Brahmi scripts such as Tamil, Nagari, Pali, and is now generally written in Devanagari. Some religions originated in India and were propagated professionally by nomadic Brahmins, resulting in the spread of Sanskrit as a religious rather than a superior language. For example, Arabic is used in the homes of every Muslim and therefore it cannot be said that Arabic is the mother of all language.

    • @agnelomascarenhas8990
      @agnelomascarenhas8990 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV Avestan is an Eastern Iranic language compared to Old Persian which was a Western Iranic language. The group is Iranic.
      Sanskrit, Pali are Old Indic. Indic and Iranic share a common ancestor termed proto-Indo-Iranian.
      Avestan and Sanskrit are thus cousin languages.

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No Brahmin are of European genetic they all are indian not European europe was stone age ​@@perambu3441

  • @Manikandan_supernova
    @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    2023 august, excavation in korkai &sivakalai confirm tamil brahmi dates to 800BC. Kodumanal and manalu(near keezhadi) confirm 700BC..

    • @praneethmashetty591
      @praneethmashetty591 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Still not the oldest language. Don't disrespect Tamizh Thai by spreading bullshit about her.

    • @gangadharhiremath7306
      @gangadharhiremath7306 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Prefixing Tamil to an old script does not make the language that old.Why call that script as Tamil Brahmi? Had you called it Southern Brahmi it would have been more appropriate.
      Moreover Script is not the basis that decides about the language or its antiquity.

    • @Manikandan_supernova
      @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@gangadharhiremath7306 tamil brahmi script is dedicated script only to write tamil langauge no other langauge. southern brahmi is term used before 1970s when langauge not dechiphered believe its might be prakrit due to bhattiprolu script.

    • @Manikandan_supernova
      @Manikandan_supernova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@praneethmashetty591 Scientist dating is bullshit? Dont be jerk.. if someperson tell sanskrit million year old you will get orgaism, no one disrepect to there ancestor than you people.

  • @senmuthuraj
    @senmuthuraj 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Based on stone script evidence (carbon dating), the oldest written language is Tamil. We can’t go by spoken language, because humans have been speaking over 350,000 years.

  • @Ashokkumar_Chennai
    @Ashokkumar_Chennai 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    Tamil is the oldest language proven

    • @caimaccoinnich9594
      @caimaccoinnich9594 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Nope

    • @vasanths6888
      @vasanths6888 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      th-cam.com/video/TKTxd2icycA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=bcDSvOdnZsMDoR6z

    • @rockerboy4184
      @rockerboy4184 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Nope
      Black man

    • @bhuvanapremkumar647
      @bhuvanapremkumar647 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes 🙌

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Narikkurvar nomads have been migrating from Western India through the forests of Western Ghats to Southern India for hundreds of years, their dialect includes Marathi, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil and other language words, so can Narikkurvar language be called the mother of all South Indian languages?
      Sanskrit is the mother tongue of Brahmin nomads of European genetics R1A1. They migrated from Europe to the Indian plains in search of livelihood. Because they were nomads like the Roma Gypsies, their language was a mixture of European, Persian, Russian and Asiatic languages. Sanskrit absorbed other languages ​​and dialects to enrich its content, but to hide this fact some Sanskrit scholars falsely propagate that other languages ​​originated from Sanskrit. Sanskrit has no attested script of its own, and in earlier times, it was written in various Brahmi scripts such as Tamil, Nagari, Pali, and is now generally written in Devanagari. Some religions originated in India and were propagated professionally by nomadic Brahmins, resulting in the spread of Sanskrit as a religious rather than a superior language. For example, Arabic is used in the homes of every Muslim and therefore it cannot be said that Arabic is the mother of all language.

  • @seid3366
    @seid3366 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Corrections: like Latin to the Romance languages, Sanskrit birthed the Indo-Aryan languages. But the middle IA languages that birthed the modern languages like Marathi, Bengali, Odia & others (aka Prakrits) had various dialects. Maharaśtri Prakrit birthed the Southern IA langs, Magadhi for the Eastern langs and Śauraseni for the Central langs, *including* Hindustani (split later to standard Urdu & Hindi)

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your claim is wrong. Lithuanian can claim the same status!

  • @ansanch
    @ansanch 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Hindi is not a prakrit. The closest Prakrit was Shauraseni. Shauraseni eventually developed into Khariboli, which is the mother dialect of standard Hindi.

    • @RaviVararo
      @RaviVararo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      khadiboli

    • @Sathish_12
      @Sathish_12 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I speak s dialect of Shauraseni😎

    • @Karlsewak-kempetai
      @Karlsewak-kempetai 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Surseni

  • @senthilkumarb2585
    @senthilkumarb2585 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tamil's (Thamizh) rich Literatures are well documented histories, lifestyles which has been followed on 4+1 landscapes called respectivly Kurinchi, Mullai, Marutham, Neithal and Paalai.
    The oldest Thamizh Grammer book called Tholkappiyam by Tholkappier itself talks more about the Lifestyles of Thamizh more than the language.
    I think this is the only Grammer book in the world which covers almost the complete Lifestyle of the people of the language.
    It's not fair to compare any language with other one.
    See what a language has for you.
    If a language has something lively, which is even suitable for this genAlpha age, It's not just oldest but also as youngest as oldest,
    "Yaadhum Oore, Yaavarum Kelir."
    - Kaniyan Poongundranaar
    Thanks for the video!!

  • @josejoseph8725
    @josejoseph8725 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Actually sanskrit enthusiasts show vedas for sanskrit being oldest language. The question is where are the ORIGINAL VEDAS? There is no original rig veda book! Vedas are part of oral tradition! How can any one believe oral tradition as a proof for oldest language? On the other hand tamil has ancient inscriptions of keeladi(6th century BC), thattapatti inscription (4th century BC), mangulam inscription (3rd century BC), pulimankombai inscription (2nd century BC).

  • @JMohaideenBatcha
    @JMohaideenBatcha 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Tamil has more than 10000Years scripts on record. Tamil is very very oldest language in the planet.

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The language of 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 people
      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv’up =liquefied
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards-upwards >suvamak=to plaster
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something >to drive
      (Su-arpa)>chorba>surppa=soup /Surup>şurup=syrup /Suruppat>şerbet=sorbet /Surab>şarap=wine /Surah>şıra=juice şire=milky
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards /Süp-ğur-mek>süpürmek=to sweep
      -mak/mek>(umak/emek)=aim/ exertion (machine/ mechanism)
      -al/el =~obtain through
      -et =~ do /make
      -der = ~set /provide
      -kur=~ set up
      -en=own diameter > about oneself
      -eş=each mate/each other/together or altogether
      -la/le = ~make this by it /do it this way
      Sermek= to make it flow in four directions =to spread it by laying over somth
      Sarmak= to make it flow around somth =to wrap, to surround
      Saymak= to make it flow drop by drop /one by one from the mind =~to count, ~to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söymek= to make it flow through > Söy-le-mek= make the sentences flow through the mind =~to say, ~to tell
      Sövmek=to say whatever's on own mind=swearing
      Sevmek= to make flow/pour from the mind to the heart =to love
      Süymek=to make it flow thinly (Süÿt> süt= दूध/ milk)
      Soymak=to make it flow over it/him/her (to peel, ~to strip )(soygan>soğan=onion)
      Soy-en-mak>soyunmak=to undress (Suy-ğur-mak)>sıyırmak=~skinning ,skimming
      Siymek=to make it flow downwards= to pee Siÿtik>sidik=urine
      Say-n-mak>sanmak= to pour from thought to the idea >to arrive at a guess
      Savmak=to make it pour outward /put forward /set forth > sav=assertion
      Sav-en-mak>savunmak=to defend /Sav-ğur-mak>savurmak=to strew it outward (into the void)
      Sav-eş-mak>savaşmak=to shed each other's blood >savaş= war
      Savuşmak=scatter altogether around > sıvışmak=~run away in fear
      Sağmak=to ensure it pours tightly /Sağanak=downpour /Sahan=somth to pour water
      Sağ-en-mak>sağınmak= to spill from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sekmek=to go (by forcing /hardly) over it further
      Sakmak=to get/ keep/ hold-back forcely or hardly (sekar=?)
      Sak-en-mak>sakınmak =to ponder hard/hold oneself back/beware
      Soğmak=to penetrate (by force)> Soğurmak= make it penetrate inward= to suck in
      Sokmak=to put/ take (by force) inward
      Sökmek=to take/ force out from the inside(~unstitch/rip out)
      Sıkmak=to press (forcibly) into oneself > squeeze (Sıkı=tight)
      Sığmak=fit inside /Sığ-en-mak>sığınmak= to seek refuge
      Süzmek=to make it lightly flow from top to bottom / to filter
      Sezmek=to keep it mentally flowing gently /to intuit, sense
      Sızmak=to get flowed slightly / to ooze
      Suŋmak=to extend it forward, put before, present
      Süŋmek=to get expanded outwards /sünger=sponge
      Sıŋmak=to reach by stretching upward/forward
      Siŋmek=to shrink oneself by getting down or back (to lurk, hide out)
      Söŋmek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to fade out)
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to get the differences of =to recognize
      Tanınmak= tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak= tanı-et-mak=to make known >to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =to meet for the first time
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally >Tınlamak= ~to take into account/ respond
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >Dinlemek= to listen / 听
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to keep calm
      Denk= Sync>登克>~equal / a-thankDenge =balance
      Thenğ-mek>Değmek= to touch / to achieve a harmonious reaction
      Thenğe-mek>Denemek=to try to get a harmonious response in return
      teğet= tangent / tenger> değer=sync level >worth / teng-yüz>deŋiz=sea
      eşdeğer=equivalent / eş diğerine denk= equal to each other
      Deng-en-mek>değinmek = to mention /touch upon
      Deng-eş-mek>değişmek =to turn into something else equivalent /to get altogether a change.
      Deng-eş-der-mek>değiştirmek =to change it /exchange
      Çığ (chuw) = avalanche / 雪崩
      Çığ-ğur-mak =çığır-mak= ~to scream /read by shouting
      Çağırmak= to call / inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çığırı > Jigir > Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cığır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal /shout with a shrill voice
      Çığırgı >Jırgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çiğ (chee)= uncooked, raw / 生
      Çiğne-mek =to chew / 咀嚼
      (Çiğnek) Çene =chin / 下巴
      Çiğ (chiu)= dew / 汽 , 露 (çi’çek=flower/ çi’se=drizzle)
      Taş =the stone (portable rock)/大石头
      Taşı-mak = to take (by moving) it > to carry
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to have it transported
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak> to move oneself to a different place
      Kak-mak=to give direction (kak-qa-eun> kakgan=which one's directing>Kağan>Han) (Baş-khan>Başkan=president)
      Kak-der-mak>kaktırmak= ~to set aside
      Kak-el-mak>kağılmak =to be oriented via > get fixed anywhere >kalmak= to stay
      Kakıluk-mak=to tend upward >kalkmak=to stand up /get up
      Kak-el-der-mak>kağıldırmak>to make it being steered away> kaldırmak =to remove
      Kak-en-mak> kağınmak= to be inclined> kanmak / ikna olmak= to ac-know-ledge it's so /be convinced
      Kak-en-der-mak> kağındırmak= kandırmak (ikna etmek) = ~to trick (to persuade)
      Der-mek=to provide bringing them together to create an order /der-le-mek= to compile
      /deri= derm
      Dar-mak=to bring into a different order by disrupting the old /tarkan=conqueror
      /tarım= agriculture /tarla= arable field /taramak= to comb
      Dar-el-mak>darılmak=to be in a disturbed mood towards someone
      Dur-mak=to remain in the same order /keep being, /survive /halt on
      (thoru>diri= alive) durabilir=durable /boğa-thor>bahadır=冒頓=survivor-victim> war veteran
      boğa=sacrificed by strangling >buga > buhag > pigah> 피해자> pig
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak=~to stop /diri-el-mek>dirilmek= be revived
      Diremek=make to stand against / direnmek=resist / diretmek=insist
      Dür-mek=to roll it into a roll / dürülmek=get rolled / dürüm=roll of bread
      Dör-mek=to rotate it on its axis >thör =mix/ blend (döngü/ törüv=tour) (dörük=blended)
      Thöre-mek>türemek=become a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Thörük=order formed by coming together >Türk
      Töre=order established over time= tradition /torah=sacred order /tarih=history
      Thör-et-mek>türetmek= to create a new layout combining= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>Dörünmek= to rotate oneself /turn by oneself
      Törünmek>törn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself /döner=rotary /turna=flamingo
      Dön-der-mek>döndürmek=to turn something
      Dön-eş-mek>dönüşmek=turn (altogether) into something
      Dön-eş-der-mek>dönüştürmek=to convert /transform
      (Edh) Ez-mek=to thin something down by pressing over= to crush /run over
      (Edg) Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> to tilt it
      eğim =inclination
      Eğ-el-mek>eğilmek=to get being inclined /bend
      Eğ-et-mek>eğitmek= to educate
      Eğir-mek=to cause it another shape by spin it crosswise around itself
      / eğri =curve, awry > ağrı=crossways >uğru=~aspect of > doğru= true, right direction
      Evirmek= to make it return around itself or transform into another shape
      Çevirmek=turn into/encircle Devirmek =turn outer/overturn
      Eğir-al-mek>eğrilmek=to become a skew /be bended by
      Evir-al-mek>evrilmek=to get a transformation over time
      /evrim=evolution /devrim=revolution /evre=stage
      Uğra-mak>=to get (at) a place or a situation for a certain time= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak> uğraşmak=to drop by (altogether) each other for a certain time=to strive/ deal with
      Uğra-et-mak> uğratmak=to put in a situation for a specific time
      Öğre-mek=to get an accumulation above a certain stage
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to make somebody get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I’m teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun =You’re learning english
      Öğren-i-yor-u-sen (learn

  • @perambu3441
    @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Narikkurvar nomads have been migrating from Western India through the forests of Western Ghats to Southern India for hundreds of years, their dialect includes Marathi, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil and other language words, so can Narikkurvar language be called the mother of all South Indian languages?
    Sanskrit is the mother tongue of Brahmin nomads of European genetics R1A1. They migrated from Europe to the Indian plains in search of livelihood. Because they were nomads like the Roma Gypsies, their language was a mixture of European, Persian, Russian and Asiatic languages. Sanskrit absorbed other languages ​​and dialects to enrich its content, but to hide this fact some Sanskrit scholars falsely propagate that other languages ​​originated from Sanskrit. Sanskrit has no attested script of its own, and in earlier times, it was written in various Brahmi scripts such as Tamil, Nagari, Pali, and is now generally written in Devanagari. Some religions originated in North India and were propagated professionally by nomadic Brahmins, resulting in the spread of Sanskrit as a religious rather than a superior language. For example, Arabic is used in the homes of every Muslim and therefore it cannot be said that Arabic is the mother of all language.

    • @SinilkMudilaSama
      @SinilkMudilaSama 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Your text has no scientific support, it is just biased political, historical, cultural and religious fights between speakers of Arabic, Sanskrit and Tamil.
      It has no scientific basis, it is flawed, erroneous and biased, full of holes and ugly ideological friction.
      There is no scientific knowledge about his language at all.

  • @paperclips1306
    @paperclips1306 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    1:56 man named pankini ??? Its panini but u pronounced it as pankini. As if its a type of bikini

  • @paras4478
    @paras4478 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    SANSKRIT WAS DEVELOPED AROUND 1200 AD. EVERYTHING ELSE IS A LIE.

  • @imBabuOfficial
    @imBabuOfficial 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Tamil( தமிழ்) is mother of all languages

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bal = (Honey)
      Bal >Mel >Mer >Mil >Meli > Melit > Melis =(yumuşak, melul, balsam, hoş kokulu, tatlı / yummy, mellow, balmy, malleable, dessert, sweet)
      Al-Bal (red-sweet) =Alpal (Apple) >Afal >Almelo> >Alma > Elma
      (the dessert) > Alba> halba > halvah > helva
      Mel-ak (sweet-white)>(Mela >Mal >Mar >Milo >Melon >Melam) Melak>>>Milk >>>Lak
      (sweetie) > Balak > bala >>> bella ? >> well ?
      Almıla / Melah >> Elma = Apple
      (Ma-hoş-mela)> Moş-mela > Muşmula = Medlar ( not so pleasant but yummy)
      Meltem= mellow wind = breeze
      Mel-melat > marmelat = marmellata, marmalade
      Melisa = balm / jam / rosin
      Melamine = a type of chemical resin
      (Mel-hem)> merhem=(almost-balm) > ointment
      (Mel-sumac) merşumak> mercimek = lentil
      Mel-audio = melody
      (Dağ = mountain)> height > altitude
      (tow/toğ/tao/tai/tav/tag)>> high/ 塔 / 高 /ضيقة /ضيق
      dev/deva/devasa/diva/dheu/theo/theus/zeus/大>> huge
      (dar /tar /dai /tay /tav /dae /too /toi) = narrow / nearest /stuck / compressed / solid / hard / durable
      Phone / Phoon/ Fun / Wajan / Wehen = (Esen/ Esinti / Rüzgar/ Ses ) - Wind / Breeze / Sound / Voice
      Dae-vane /tai-fun / tao-wen/ too-phone/ typhoon/ 大风 = (loud sound) >> hard-strong wind
      Dağ= litosferik tabakaların sıkışarak yükselmesi / compression and rise of lithospheric layers
      Dar-lık= to rise upwards by squeezed, feeling of height, feeling of being squeezed
      Dar = narrow / nearest /stuck / compressed / solid / hard / durable
      Dar = birbirine yaklaşmış / sıkışık / sıkışmış / sıkıştırılmış / sağlam / sert / dayanıklı
      Darlık= sıkışarak yükselmek, yükseklik hissi, sıkışma duygusu
      Dar = yakın olmak , alakalı olmak, ilgilenmek / to be close, to be involved, to be interested
      Hüküm-dar = Hükümle ilgilenen , hüküm veren = Sovereign
      Mihman-dar = Misafire yakın olan , misafire alaka gösteren = ~hostess
      Darülaceze =(diyar-u-el-aceze) Acizerle ilgilenilen yer = ~hospice
      Dai-u > nearest he's = Dayı = (materal) uncle
      Toy = meeting /ceremony/feast/ immature-game boy
      Kurula-toy > Kurultay = scheduled meeting / council
      (Dai-emek)> Dayamak =to base on /make it support/fasten down / get it closer well to
      (Dai-en-mak)> Dayanmak= to recline upon / stay strong /be close literally
      (Dai-et-mak)>Dayatmak = to impose / insist / keep it completely nearest to
      Yanardağ ile ilgili / pertaining to a volcano
      Dağ-et-mak >Dağıtmak = to distribute /to deal out / to deploy
      Dağ-al-mak >Dağılmak = to get dispersed / to go to pieces
      Dağ-la-mak = krater şekline çevirmek / cauterize
      (Doğ-umak) = Doğmak = to come up / rising up / come into the world > to born
      Doğ-ğur-mak= Doğurmak= to make this come up > bring this into the world > to give birth
      Doğu=the direction where the sun comes up > East / 东方
      (Doy-umak) = Doymak = to rise to the top / to be full
      Doy-ğur-mak= Doyurmak=to satiate > to make it full > to feed
      Tok= has peaked, satiate, full
      (Tik) Dik= direct to endpoint / ~upright Dikey= vertical
      Dik-uğru =Doğru = right direction = true
      Diken= thorn
      Dik-mek =to make directly them overlap each other at the endpoints > sew / sow
      Doğa= upper surface structure of the earth > nature
      Doku = surface structure, texture
      Doku-mak=to weave (on the surface)
      (Toku-en-mak) Dokunmak=to touch / to contact the surface of..

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The language of 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 people
      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv’up =liquefied
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards-upwards >suvamak=to plaster
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something >to drive
      (Su-arpa)>chorba>surppa=soup /Surup>şurup=syrup /Suruppat>şerbet=sorbet /Surab>şarap=wine /Surah>şıra=juice şire=milky
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards /Süp-ğur-mek>süpürmek=to sweep
      -mak/mek>(umak/emek)=aim/ exertion (machine/ mechanism)
      -al/el =~obtain through
      -et =~ do /make
      -der = ~set /provide
      -kur=~ set up
      -en=own diameter > about oneself
      -eş=each mate/each other/together or altogether
      -la/le = ~make this by it /do it this way
      Sermek= to make it flow in four directions =to spread it by laying over somth
      Sarmak= to make it flow around somth =to wrap, to surround
      Saymak= to make it flow drop by drop /one by one from the mind =~to count, ~to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söymek= to make it flow through > Söy-le-mek= make the sentences flow through the mind =~to say, ~to tell
      Sövmek=to say whatever's on own mind=swearing
      Sevmek= to make flow/pour from the mind to the heart =to love
      Süymek=to make it flow thinly (Süÿt> süt= दूध/ milk)
      Soymak=to make it flow over it/him/her (to peel, ~to strip )(soygan>soğan=onion)
      Soy-en-mak>soyunmak=to undress (Suy-ğur-mak)>sıyırmak=~skinning ,skimming
      Siymek=to make it flow downwards= to pee Siÿtik>sidik=urine
      Say-n-mak>sanmak= to pour from thought to the idea >to arrive at a guess
      Savmak=to make it pour outward /put forward /set forth > sav=assertion
      Sav-en-mak>savunmak=to defend /Sav-ğur-mak>savurmak=to strew it outward (into the void)
      Sav-eş-mak>savaşmak=to shed each other's blood >savaş= war
      Savuşmak=scatter altogether around > sıvışmak=~run away in fear
      Sağmak=to ensure it pours tightly /Sağanak=downpour /Sahan=somth to pour water
      Sağ-en-mak>sağınmak= to spill from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sekmek=to go (by forcing /hardly) over it further
      Sakmak=to get/ keep/ hold-back forcely or hardly (sekar=?)
      Sak-en-mak>sakınmak =to ponder hard/hold oneself back/beware
      Soğmak=to penetrate (by force)> Soğurmak= make it penetrate inward= to suck in
      Sokmak=to put/ take (by force) inward
      Sökmek=to take/ force out from the inside(~unstitch/rip out)
      Sıkmak=to press (forcibly) into oneself > squeeze (Sıkı=tight)
      Sığmak=fit inside /Sığ-en-mak>sığınmak= to seek refuge
      Süzmek=to make it lightly flow from top to bottom / to filter
      Sezmek=to keep it mentally flowing gently /to intuit, sense
      Sızmak=to get flowed slightly / to ooze
      Suŋmak=to extend it forward, put before, present
      Süŋmek=to get expanded outwards /sünger=sponge
      Sıŋmak=to reach by stretching upward/forward
      Siŋmek=to shrink oneself by getting down or back (to lurk, hide out)
      Söŋmek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to fade out)
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to get the differences of =to recognize
      Tanınmak= tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak= tanı-et-mak=to make known >to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =to meet for the first time
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally >Tınlamak= ~to take into account/ respond
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >Dinlemek= to listen / 听
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to keep calm
      Denk= Sync>登克>~equal / a-thankDenge =balance
      Thenğ-mek>Değmek= to touch / to achieve a harmonious reaction
      Thenğe-mek>Denemek=to try to get a harmonious response in return
      teğet= tangent / tenger> değer=sync level >worth / teng-yüz>deŋiz=sea
      eşdeğer=equivalent / eş diğerine denk= equal to each other
      Deng-en-mek>değinmek = to mention /touch upon
      Deng-eş-mek>değişmek =to turn into something else equivalent /to get altogether a change.
      Deng-eş-der-mek>değiştirmek =to change it /exchange
      Çığ (chuw) = avalanche / 雪崩
      Çığ-ğur-mak =çığır-mak= ~to scream /read by shouting
      Çağırmak= to call / inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çığırı > Jigir > Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cığır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal /shout with a shrill voice
      Çığırgı >Jırgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çiğ (chee)= uncooked, raw / 生
      Çiğne-mek =to chew / 咀嚼
      (Çiğnek) Çene =chin / 下巴
      Çiğ (chiu)= dew / 汽 , 露 (çi’çek=flower/ çi’se=drizzle)
      Taş =the stone (portable rock)/大石头
      Taşı-mak = to take (by moving) it > to carry
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to have it transported
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak> to move oneself to a different place
      Kak-mak=to give direction (kak-qa-eun> kakgan=which one's directing>Kağan>Han) (Baş-khan>Başkan=president)
      Kak-der-mak>kaktırmak= ~to set aside
      Kak-el-mak>kağılmak =to be oriented via > get fixed anywhere >kalmak= to stay
      Kakıluk-mak=to tend upward >kalkmak=to stand up /get up
      Kak-el-der-mak>kağıldırmak>to make it being steered away> kaldırmak =to remove
      Kak-en-mak> kağınmak= to be inclined> kanmak / ikna olmak= to ac-know-ledge it's so /be convinced
      Kak-en-der-mak> kağındırmak= kandırmak (ikna etmek) = ~to trick (to persuade)
      Der-mek=to provide bringing them together to create an order /der-le-mek= to compile
      /deri= derm
      Dar-mak=to bring into a different order by disrupting the old /tarkan=conqueror
      /tarım= agriculture /tarla= arable field /taramak= to comb
      Dar-el-mak>darılmak=to be in a disturbed mood towards someone
      Dur-mak=to remain in the same order /keep being, /survive /halt on
      (thoru>diri= alive) durabilir=durable /boğa-thor>bahadır=冒頓=survivor-victim> war veteran
      boğa=sacrificed by strangling >buga > buhag > pigah> 피해자> pig
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak=~to stop /diri-el-mek>dirilmek= be revived
      Diremek=make to stand against / direnmek=resist / diretmek=insist
      Dür-mek=to roll it into a roll / dürülmek=get rolled / dürüm=roll of bread
      Dör-mek=to rotate it on its axis >thör =mix/ blend (döngü/ törüv=tour) (dörük=blended)
      Thöre-mek>türemek=become a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Thörük=order formed by coming together >Türk
      Töre=order established over time= tradition /torah=sacred order /tarih=history
      Thör-et-mek>türetmek= to create a new layout combining= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>Dörünmek= to rotate oneself /turn by oneself
      Törünmek>törn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself /döner=rotary /turna=flamingo
      Dön-der-mek>döndürmek=to turn something
      Dön-eş-mek>dönüşmek=turn (altogether) into something
      Dön-eş-der-mek>dönüştürmek=to convert /transform
      (Edh) Ez-mek=to thin something down by pressing over= to crush /run over
      (Edg) Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> to tilt it
      eğim =inclination
      Eğ-el-mek>eğilmek=to get being inclined /bend
      Eğ-et-mek>eğitmek= to educate
      Eğir-mek=to cause it another shape by spin it crosswise around itself
      / eğri =curve, awry > ağrı=crossways >uğru=~aspect of > doğru= true, right direction
      Evirmek= to make it return around itself or transform into another shape
      Çevirmek=turn into/encircle Devirmek =turn outer/overturn
      Eğir-al-mek>eğrilmek=to become a skew /be bended by
      Evir-al-mek>evrilmek=to get a transformation over time
      /evrim=evolution /devrim=revolution /evre=stage
      Uğra-mak>=to get (at) a place or a situation for a certain time= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak> uğraşmak=to drop by (altogether) each other for a certain time=to strive/ deal with
      Uğra-et-mak> uğratmak=to put in a situation for a specific time
      Öğre-mek=to get an accumulation above a certain stage
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to make somebody get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I’m teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun =You’re learning english
      Öğren-i-yor-u-sen (learn

  • @schoolkid1809
    @schoolkid1809 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Tamil is oldest language with Proper Evidences 🧾 ~ Sanskrit only have a Fairy Tales 😢

    • @StoneFireIce02
      @StoneFireIce02 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Let's find out which is oldest

  • @subinoybag7572
    @subinoybag7572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Vedic Sanskrit is considered ancient, with an estimated age of around 1500 BCE to 500 BCE. It is the language of the Vedas, the oldest Hindu scriptures. On the other hand, Tamil has a history from about 500 BCE to 500 CE. The earliest known Tamil inscriptions and texts, such as Tolkappiyam and Tirukkural, date from around 300 BCE to 500 CE. So, Vedic Sanskrit is about 500-1000 years older than Tamil.

    • @visualeffects3965
      @visualeffects3965 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Coming to your point, I have a question "If vedic sanskrit is older, then why does it has Substrantum in it?". The vedic sanskrit has Substrantum (The loan words that are not native to Sanskrit and its Grammar). You can learn more about Substrantum through any linguistic books and Vedic Sanskrit Research books. Please read about it. Dont just be fool. Most of the Substrantum words were from Dravidian Language mainly from Brahui. And it also has loan words from Munda.
      Example the word like kulaya is a Dravidian word.
      Moreover, The vedic Sanskrit Gerunds are not present in Sanskrit's other counter part language named Avestan. Do Sanskrit was developed seeing other languages.
      So I Think Prakrit is Older than Sanskrit.

    • @subinoybag7572
      @subinoybag7572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@visualeffects3965 "The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not necessarily imply that it is not ancient or that it borrowed from other languages like Prakrit. Substratum can occur due to various reasons such as:
      1. _Language contact_: Vedic Sanskrit interacted with other languages, including Dravidian and Munda, leading to borrowing and exchange of words.
      2. _Geographical proximity_: The Indo-Aryan speakers migrated to the Indian subcontinent, coming into contact with existing languages, resulting in linguistic exchange.
      3. _Language evolution_: Vedic Sanskrit evolved from Proto-Indo-Aryan, which may have already had substratum influences.
      Moreover, the absence of gerunds in Avestan does not prove that Vedic Sanskrit borrowed from other languages. Avestan and Vedic Sanskrit developed independently, with distinct grammatical features.
      Prakrit is not older than Sanskrit; rather, it emerged as a descendant of Sanskrit, with simplifications and changes. Prakrit languages developed from the vernacular forms of Sanskrit, not the other way around.
      The presence of Dravidian loanwords in Vedic Sanskrit does not imply that Tamil or other Dravidian languages are older. Language contact and borrowing can occur between languages of different ages.
      The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not diminish its antiquity or suggest that it borrowed from Prakrit or other languages. Instead, it reflects language contact, geographical proximity, and linguistic evolution."
      My view admits the presence of the substratum but offers alternative explanations that support the antiquity of Vedic Sanskrit and its distinct evolution.
      (And don't worry, I won't be a fool - I'll keep learning and exploring these fascinating topics!)

    • @subinoybag7572
      @subinoybag7572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@visualeffects3965"The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not necessarily imply that it is not ancient or that it borrowed from other languages like Prakrit. Substratum can occur due to various reasons such as:
      1. _Language contact_: Vedic Sanskrit interacted with other languages, including Dravidian and Munda, leading to borrowing and exchange of words.
      2. _Geographical proximity_: The Indo-Aryan speakers migrated to the Indian subcontinent, coming into contact with existing languages, resulting in linguistic exchange.
      3. _Language evolution_: Vedic Sanskrit evolved from Proto-Indo-Aryan, which may have already had substratum influences.
      Moreover, the absence of gerunds in Avestan does not prove that Vedic Sanskrit borrowed from other languages. Avestan and Vedic Sanskrit developed independently, with distinct grammatical features.
      Prakrit is not older than Sanskrit; rather, it emerged as a descendant of Sanskrit, with simplifications and changes. Prakrit languages developed from the vernacular forms of Sanskrit, not the other way around.
      The presence of Dravidian loanwords in Vedic Sanskrit does not imply that Tamil or other Dravidian languages are older. Language contact and borrowing can occur between languages of different ages.
      The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not diminish its antiquity or suggest that it borrowed from Prakrit or other languages. Instead, it reflects language contact, geographical proximity, and linguistic evolution."
      My view admits the presence of the substratum but offers alternative explanations that support the antiquity of Vedic Sanskrit and its distinct evolution.
      (And don't worry, I won't be a fool - I'll keep learning and exploring these fascinating topics!)

    • @subinoybag7572
      @subinoybag7572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@visualeffects3965 "The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not necessarily imply that it is not ancient or that it borrowed from other languages like Prakrit. Substratum can occur due to various reasons such as:
      1. _Language contact_: Vedic Sanskrit interacted with other languages, including Dravidian and Munda, leading to borrowing and exchange of words.
      2. _Geographical proximity_: The Indo-Aryan speakers migrated to the Indian subcontinent, coming into contact with existing languages, resulting in linguistic exchange.
      3. _Language evolution_: Vedic Sanskrit evolved from Proto-Indo-Aryan, which may have already had substratum influences.
      Moreover, the absence of gerunds in Avestan does not prove that Vedic Sanskrit borrowed from other languages. Avestan and Vedic Sanskrit developed independently, with distinct grammatical features.
      Prakrit is not older than Sanskrit; rather, it emerged as a descendant of Sanskrit, with simplifications and changes. Prakrit languages developed from the vernacular forms of Sanskrit, not the other way around.
      The presence of Dravidian loanwords in Vedic Sanskrit does not imply that Tamil or other Dravidian languages are older. Language contact and borrowing can occur between languages of different ages.
      The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not diminish its antiquity or suggest that it borrowed from Prakrit or other languages. Instead, it reflects language contact, geographical proximity, and linguistic evolution."
      My view admits the presence of the substratum but offers alternative explanations that support the antiquity of Vedic Sanskrit and its distinct evolution.
      (And don't worry, I won't be a fool - I'll keep learning and exploring these fascinating topics!)

    • @subinoybag7572
      @subinoybag7572 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not necessarily imply that it is not ancient or that it borrowed from other languages like Prakrit. Substratum can occur due to various reasons such as:
      1. _Language contact_: Vedic Sanskrit interacted with other languages, including Dravidian and Munda, leading to borrowing and exchange of words.
      2. _Geographical proximity_: The Indo-Aryan speakers migrated to the Indian subcontinent, coming into contact with existing languages, resulting in linguistic exchange.
      3. _Language evolution_: Vedic Sanskrit evolved from Proto-Indo-Aryan, which may have already had substratum influences.
      Moreover, the absence of gerunds in Avestan does not prove that Vedic Sanskrit borrowed from other languages. Avestan and Vedic Sanskrit developed independently, with distinct grammatical features.
      Prakrit is not older than Sanskrit; rather, it emerged as a descendant of Sanskrit, with simplifications and changes. Prakrit languages developed from the vernacular forms of Sanskrit, not the other way around.
      The presence of Dravidian loanwords in Vedic Sanskrit does not imply that Tamil or other Dravidian languages are older. Language contact and borrowing can occur between languages of different ages.
      The presence of substratum in Vedic Sanskrit does not diminish its antiquity or suggest that it borrowed from Prakrit or other languages. Instead, it reflects language contact, geographical proximity, and linguistic evolution."
      My view admits the presence of the substratum but offers alternative explanations that support the antiquity of Vedic Sanskrit and its distinct evolution.
      (And don't worry, I won't be a fool - I'll keep learning and exploring these fascinating topics!)

  • @RajendraPrasad-y5l
    @RajendraPrasad-y5l หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tamil - Sumerian
    1. An(s). - வான்(vaan)- Sky.
    2 Udu(s) - ஆடு(aadu) - Sheep.
    Udugal(s)- ஆடுகள் (aadugal)- sheeps.
    3. Elu(a) - எழு(elhu) - raise up.
    il(s)- எழு(elhu)- raise.
    4. Gud(s) - கூடு(kuudu) - nest.
    Gud(s)- கடா(kada)- ox/male animal.
    5. Uru(s) - ஊரு(uuru) - village.
    6. Ur-mah(s) - அரிமா(arimah) - Lion.
    7. Ki(s) - கீழ்(keelh) - below.
    8. Tug(s) - துகில் (thugil) - garments.
    9. Sandu(s) - செந்தூர் (sendur)- red.
    10. Kad(s)- கட்டு(kattu)- tie / bind.
    11. Taru(a)- தரு(tharu)- give/return.
    12. Pilu(a)- பிளிறு(piliru)- elephant's blare.
    13. Sur(s)- சுற்று(sutru)- to spin.
    14. Ser(s)- சேர்(saer)- acquisition.
    15. Abba(s)- அப்பா(appa)- father.
    16. A-ia(s)- அய்யா(ayya)- father.
    17. Ama(s)- அம்மா(Amma)- mother.
    18. Ara(s)- அரை(arai)-grinding
    19. Siki(s)- சிகை(sikai)- hair
    20. Keser(s)- கேசம் (kesem)- hair.
    21. E(s)- இல் (il)- house.
    Bet/Beetu(a)- வீடு(veedu)- house.
    V becomes B.
    22. Saman(s)- சாமான் (saamaan)- vessel.
    23. Mah(s)- மாடு(mahdu)- cow.
    24. Tag(s)- தாக்கு(thakku)- attack.
    All three languages sound same
    25. Gukiri(s)- கொக்கரி(kokkari)- battle cry.
    26. Aya(a-u3)- அழு(alhu)- cry.
    27. Unu(s)- ஊண்/உணவு (uun/unavu)- food/meals.

    • @wothin
      @wothin 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Alright now give regular sound laws as well as grammar correspondences between them

  • @Mass.tamizha
    @Mass.tamizha 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sanskrit is Hebrew,
    Tamil is origin old tamil (brahmi tamil)

  • @Vivenk88
    @Vivenk88 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    3:21 And the date of 1500 BCE is based on assumptions which haven't been validated. It's a date agreed upon by British Indologists who weren't exactly unbiased. PIE language is entirely a hypothesis, there hasn't been a single document of evidence on it. Who knows if Sanskrit didn't migrate around the world the way Buddhism did? Genuine question.
    Also, Tamils themselves agree that Tamil was made by Sage Agastya in India and he knew the Vedas (which are in Sanskrit).

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      We don't believe in agastya muni BS. Only, BJP supporters in Tamil Nadu are spreading that kind of stories. Tamil is not a created language like sanskrit.

    • @visualeffects3965
      @visualeffects3965 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      A small clearification here "Tamil is not created by Agasthya". Lemme clear you.
      Tamil was thaught to Agasthya by Lord shiva. As per our belief. Dont hide the half truth Just because according to you Constructed Sanskrit is the Deva Bhasha.
      1. It is not agasthya it is Agathiya. Since Sanskrit grammatically cannot form अगत्तियं (agattiyan) it grammatically became अगस्तय. Hope you understood.
      2. Agasthya just wrote the Grammar explainations for Tamil Language which Lord shiva teached to him.
      So agasthya was not the creator of the language.
      Edit:- Thiruvilaiyaadal Puraanam (The divine plays of lord shiva) mentions that Tamil and Sanskrit were created from the both the sides of Damaru of lord shiva.
      Thirumandhiram (Written by Thirumoolar) says Lord shiva created the vedas in Tamil.
      So,
      listen half baked knowledge is not good sir.

    • @visualeffects3965
      @visualeffects3965 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Nebuchadnezzar_XXIVAccording to Tholkappiyam (Oldest known grammar book of Tamil) Agathiyam was the grammer book used before it. Iraiyanaar Kalaviyal says Agathiyar wrote grammar which lord shiva teached to him. But it doesnt not mention that Agathiya created tamil.

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@visualeffects3965
      Don't connect linguistics into mythology.

    • @visualeffects3965
      @visualeffects3965 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV Once again you need to read my comments fully. I quoted down whats written in Tamil Books. Just because you belong to DMK or NTK that doesnt mean what ever you say are correct enough.

  • @Kishor_Sharma657
    @Kishor_Sharma657 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Then why do Tamil priests chant in Sanskrit?😂

    • @praveenkumar-hk2oy
      @praveenkumar-hk2oy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Fool we are not talking religion here...its about language

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Because of Hinduism

  • @OmMurugansathish
    @OmMurugansathish 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Sanskrit is derived from prakrit

  • @VinithKumarS-kt2mt
    @VinithKumarS-kt2mt หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Tamizh🔥

  • @frankboulton2126
    @frankboulton2126 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't believe that it is possible to prove conclusively that and language is older than other languages. Some languages have a longer written history. Since human speech began long before writing, and evidence that might prove one language to be older than other is lost irretrievably.

  • @maangajuicemusician2516
    @maangajuicemusician2516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As Mr Pandian from the youtube channel 'Tamil CHinthanaiyalar Peravai' mentioned, Sanskrit real meaning is Senkathai; which means refined communication, but later, due to aryan (Khazer je_ws), invasion after capturing Nanda dynasty by mastermind Chanakya (Bn'ai je_w), The Sintrastrian Khazars who already settled in the northern part; near the saraswathi river after destruction of Harappan civilization, successfully settled in the northern part of India 3500 to 4000 years ago; hijacked saint Vishnu's teachings.
    Now, Sengathai was a need of that time because of the synonym haze between words and it's real meaning. The unique thing about tamizhl language is the way how they give name for something based on events, references, nouns, verbs. For example, Mithi Vandhi means Cycle. Now if you separate two words Mithi and Vandi; they give different means. Mithi means to press with legs a.k.a stomp. Vandi means vehicle. but Based on historic legends, Vandi was a term as per Sir Pandiyan, was when Saint Murugar, the first agriculturist create a vehicle for foxtail millet agriculture and that word 'Vandi' became 'Pandi' and it because Pandiyars (People who used vehicles for agriculture) and they deviated different from Nagas, and Yekkars even thought they are ancient tamizhls (Been in touch with tamizhl language of that time)
    Sakya Buddhists (Real lineages of Buddha clan) because Buddha has connection with Mallas who are Yekshas (Yekkars). Malla were people south Mallars who moved to north easter part to establish a civilization (Ancient Tamizhl Home architecture looks like the root architecutre of Nepal, Mainland China, Korea, and Japan). Buddha himself from the lineage of Indiran,as per pandiyan sir's objective conclusion, said that indiran was the biological son of Saint Ravana and he married daughter fo Saint Maayan (Mayan Civilization) [Hint: Pandiyan Sir's Rongo Rongo and it's link between Native America and Tamizhls RESEARCH video]
    So, everything is connected here.
    Tamizhl (Tamili) = Sngathai (Tamizhili used in north a.k.a brahmi). Later hijacked by aryans (According to Pandiyan sir, he called those people as Pindaris a.k.a Je_wish Brahmins; One that came through khyber pass, has connection with their ancestor Ramaah and the other one were people that came fro isRael to Udupi (south brahmins) and they have connection with parasuram
    To know more about the gaslighted truths, you shall visit his channel and learn more.

    • @maangajuicemusician2516
      @maangajuicemusician2516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      He also relates how Moses changed ethiopian hierography as a base for hebrew and it's the same with India's sanskrit; jew-brahmins used Senkathia and created their own script called DevaNaKiri.

    • @37sairam
      @37sairam 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Full of assumptions, anyone can say thousand stories like this

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@37sairamread about avestan and Bactria margiana archeological complex.

    • @maangajuicemusician2516
      @maangajuicemusician2516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@37sairam ok dear, you stick with what u mentioned. I mentioned in my comment that the person did these researches. Not me. And he himself was an ex-DRDO and an IISc-PhD in physics. Worked in early computers used in Indian security afaik by gathering. And he is doing his work to revive Aseevagam; Tamizhls ethnic way if living. A.k.a SamaThanaTharmam

    • @maangajuicemusician2516
      @maangajuicemusician2516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@37sairam so, if u may possibly help him to publish his findings as a paper, ask the elites (jewBrahmins and Jews) to allow his researches with the so called 'objectibe' mindset as they claim 🤣. #jewish_lineage_indian_brahmins.

  • @SaeeTapkir
    @SaeeTapkir 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I can't say which of these two is oldest but I can surely tell that even before Tamil there were languages used by the people of that era. And guys the history cannot be proved easily...many evidences are either vanished or destroyed... Maybe there is a civilization older than Indus valley...
    Don't take this in a wrong way...
    Edit- Have a fabulous day ✨

  • @sample.sanctuary
    @sample.sanctuary 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    There'll be a day where Brahui is celebrated

  • @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o
    @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Can you do a video about the origin of sinhalese language..?

    • @ThePolyglotFiles
      @ThePolyglotFiles  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That would be interesting! I'll look into it.

  • @menajeyaram4653
    @menajeyaram4653 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In terms of time what is meant by oldest since we know that there is a lot of unknown history. As writing developed some record keeping has come about. There is so much research going on that indicates human existence even far back as 200,000 years, for example the lost supercontinents.
    As you have said, Sanskrit belongs to the Indo-European language family. Survival needs and environmental changes may have led to a group migrating to the more prosperous Indus Valley. And when a group from one language family moves away they’d compose a new language to create a dominant identity for them. This also explains the reason for the influence of other words from the Indo European language family.The same is true for the Cheras in South India who originally spoke Tamil but composed Malayalam when they moved to the coastal regions.
    From what I have learnt so far about Tamil is that it has been a ‘stand alone’ language without belonging to a language family. Anyone who is well informed on this can comment .
    So, I am of the opinion that instead of wasting breath on ‘oldest’ and fixing it to a timeline, see language as stand alone’ or ‘ branch out’ or ‘ offspring ‘ from a language family. So, to be human and fair to both we must accept that the features and characteristics are certainly different. (Something like a team race and a marathon)

  • @Ishay7227
    @Ishay7227 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is not what it is when you ask yourself why Sinhala and dhivehi both indo aryan languages with completly distinct grammar features such as suffixes for non living and living beings අක් එක් ak/ek in Sinhala and human not human for dhivehi as well as both languages having family non family suffixes, a basic non existence on gender, lack of adjectives modifying in relationship to the noun and both languages containing another language or two within their own language with the other one being in its original script (dhivehi morphs with Arabic script and words, Sinhala morphs with Pali and English) so then one would have to ask if all came from Sanskrit then why do the languages of Sri Lanka and Maldives have such distinct languages, who’s features aren’t present in the nearby Dravidian language Tamil (and if Tamil has this feature then someone can enlighten me on it)

    • @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o
      @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No tamil doesn't.. but other dravdian languages got few because of the sanskrit influence obviously..

  • @redred017
    @redred017 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    தமிழ்❤

    • @rockerboy4184
      @rockerboy4184 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You're black

    • @SarathKumarDev
      @SarathKumarDev 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​@@rockerboy4184 so being black is crime ??
      It's just a skin tone...the ancestors of this land were supremely black including rama, Krishna,draubathi...etc😂 if present generations is in black tone means their ancestors were proud man 😂 especially their great Grandma's hope you understand what I mean 😂😂😂😂

  • @AbhishekTiwari1111
    @AbhishekTiwari1111 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There was no custom of inscribing texts on stone or clay in Indo Aryan society that's why there may be no lithic evidence here but there is indeed the evidences from ancient Mittani state where Vedic terms found to be written on tablets. Moreover Vedic Sanskrit is related to Yajna rituals and Indus valley civilization showed enough evidences of it. It is just a matter of time when the script of Indus Valley will be deciphered and we will find Sanskrit in it too.

  • @RaviVararo
    @RaviVararo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The connection between the words for gum and resin in many world languages arises from their similar physical properties, natural origins, and uses. Both substances are plant-derived exudates with sticky, viscous qualities, often employed for similar purposes in traditional practices. This overlap in function and form often leads to linguistic convergence, where words originally describing one substance are extended to cover the other as well.
    Historically, gum and resin have been used in various applications such as adhesives, incense, and medicinal preparations. Their shared roles across different cultures may have reinforced the use of a common word to describe them. Additionally, many languages derive their terms for these substances from the names of the trees or plants that produce both, further blurring the linguistic distinction.
    Cultural and trade influences also play a role in this linguistic overlap. In regions with extensive trade and cultural exchange, terms for gum and resin might blend or merge, especially when traders and merchants used the same word to describe similar products. Over time, this practice would contribute to a broader, more generalized use of the terms.
    The etymological roots of words and shared linguistic connection further reinforces the use of a single term for both substances, illustrating how language evolves in response to the practical needs and experiences of its speakers.
    கோ²-த்தல் (kō-) [Tamil] 11 v. tr. 1. To string, as beads, flowers, ola leaves; to file; to insert; to thread, as a needle; மணி முதலியவற்றினூடு நூலைப்புகுத்தியிணைத்தல். கோத்தணிந்த வெற்பு மணி (பெரியபு. மானக்கஞ். 22). 2. To compose, compile, arrange, reduce to order; to systematise; ஒழுங்குபடுத்துதல். பார்த்த விட மெங்கணுங் கோத்தநிலைகுலையாது (தாயு. கருணாகர. 4). 3. To narrate in order; முறையாகக் கூறுதல். பூமியாண் முறையுங் கோத்தார் (பாரத. சம்பவ. 113). 4. To enumerate, recount; தொகுத்துரைத்தல். கோமின் றுழாய்முடி யாதியஞ்சோதி குணங்களே (திவ். திருவாய். 4, 1, 7). 5. To invent, as a story, in a clever and fitting manner; சாதுரிய மாகக் கதைமுதலியன புனைதல். 6. To put on, to wear; உடுத்துதல். கோத்த கல்லாடையும் (தேவா. 509, 2). 7. To clasp, join, interlock, as the hands; கை பிணைத்தல். குரவை யாய்ச்சியரோடு கோத்ததும் (திவ். திருவாய். 6, 4, 1). 8. To unite, merge; ஒன்று சேர்த்தல். அன்பரைக் கோத்தற விழுங்கிக்கொண்டு (தாயு. பொருள்வ. 3). 9. To envelop, cover; கவிந்துகொள்ளுதல். வல்லிருள் கோத்தது கருங்கடல் கொள்ளைகொண்டென (கம்பரா. இலங்கைகேள்வி. 3).
    கோ²-த்தல் (kō-) [Tamil] -> கோந்து (kōntu/gōndu) [Tamil] n. Gum; பிசின். Colloq.
    ഗോന്ത് (gōnt/gōnd) [Malayalam] Gum
    గోదు gōdu, గోందు [Telugu] n. Gum. బంక, జిగురు.
    ಗೋಂದ (gōnda), ಗೋಂದು (gōndu) gum [Tu.];
    गोंद (gōnda) [Marathi] n. Gum.
    goṅd (گوند), [Urdu] n. Gum
    गोंद (gōnda) [Hindi] n. gum, wood gum
    cwidu, cweodu, cwudu, cudu [Old English] The portion of food which is brought back into the mouth by ruminating animals from their first stomach, to be chewed a second time.
    code, coode, cood, cude, kude, quede, quide, cuyd, coude, cudde [Middle English] 1. Any kind of plant gum; a gummy or resinous substance. 2. Cud; regurgitated food chewed upon by livestock. 3. (rare) A mass or lump; a large pile of something.
    cud [English] The portion of food which is brought back into the mouth by ruminating animals from their first stomach, to be chewed a second time.
    quid [English] 1. A piece of material for chewing, especially chewing tobacco. 2. (US, colloquial) The act of chewing such tobacco.
    cude, cuid [Scots]
    quiti, kuti [Old High German]
    küte, küt [Middle High German]
    Kitt [German] putty (certain kinds of cement used for fixing e.g. window panes)
    This one example is enough to prove what is the relationship between Tamil and European languages.

  • @Flying_Spaghetti_Monsterr
    @Flying_Spaghetti_Monsterr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Let’s take two languages X and Y at time t0. Then at a later date through times t1-t5, we will have Xt1, Xt2, Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 similarly, Yt1, Yt2, Yt3, Yt4 and Yt5. Now, which of these is oldest? Most would answer Xt0 and Yt0. But, in fact none exists other than Xt5 and Yt5. Since, languages are primarily spoken they don't exist beyond the point of utterance. Assume now, we have written records left for each of these, viz., Xt3, Xt4 and Xt5 but Yt4, and Yt5. Which of these is oldest? People would quip with Xt3. In fact, Xt3 wouldn't have come into existence without Xt0, Xt1, Xt2. Hence we should say Xt3 and Yt4 were the earliest recorded stages of X and Y but not the oldest representations of X and Y. Logically, Xt5 and Yt5 are the continuities of Xt0 and Yt0 through ages. Neither of X and Y is older than the other. Ofcourse! It's lot more complex than this. The closeness between X0 and X3 could be higher than the closeness between Y0 and Y1. It gets even more complex. X0 not only creates X1 in T1, but also X1-1,X1-2 and so on,in the same T.X1-2 then to X2-2--1,X2-2--2etc.... Then X2-2--2 to X2-2--2---1,X2-2--2---2 etc.... So does Y0. You can call them different languages or different dialects. It's subjective. Things don't end here. X3-3--3---4 might influence X3-3--1---2 to create a new language (X3-3--3---4)(X3-3--1---2). But whether this newly created language be given an independent language status is subjective. It depends on the magnitude of influence. Just like there's magnitude of influence, there's magnitude of mutation too to pave the way for more vagueness.(Plot twist: The language X0 was P5-6--9---2----7-----12 and Y0 was P5-2--4---2----7-----1). Now I'd like to know which one is the oldest living language.
    ((X3-3--3---4)(Y3-3--1---2)3-3) ((X2-1--3)(X2-3--1)3-1--3).
    (OR)
    ((Y3-1--2---1)(Y3-3--1---2)3-2) ((X2-1--2)(X2-1--1)3-2--3)?????
    What I mean here is that it's very illlogical to claim any language to be oldest/oldest living language

  • @WayChuangAng
    @WayChuangAng 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    2:01 A guy from 400 BC had a stack of papers. Oh my.... that drawing is ....

  • @GunaSeelan-u4c
    @GunaSeelan-u4c 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sanskrit was developed by ancient Tamil siddhars specifically for religious and spiritual purposes !

  • @nissar_fasil
    @nissar_fasil 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "Because they didn't
    just come to us from outer space" 😂 😂

  • @KLYTfj7up
    @KLYTfj7up 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Both tamil and Sanskrit are the same language but tamil survived and devloped so much than Sanskrit

    • @ranjito7131
      @ranjito7131 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah exactly, tamil language daughter is sankrit, and sankrit only used by higher cast people..
      A common man can easily use tamil, Ancient time to still.

    • @sachinpotdar7798
      @sachinpotdar7798 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@ranjito7131Tamil daughter lol sanskrit and Tamil developed same

    • @thejus36
      @thejus36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      not same They are different family languages

    • @KLYTfj7up
      @KLYTfj7up 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thejus36 yes buts it's a same thing

    • @thejus36
      @thejus36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@KLYTfj7up How it will be Same ? Tamil is Dravidian familly Language and Sanskrit is Indo european family Language both are different if you say it is Same you should also Say Chinese and Hindi is Same lol

  • @joshikumar7048
    @joshikumar7048 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wrong information, Sanskrit entered India only during the gall of IVC ,.IVC is Dravidian not Aryan . BIASED VIDEO

  • @yahqappu74
    @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Prakrit is a mutation of Tamizh and Sanskrit is the attempt by the Avestan brahmins to relate it to pan India by getting into the feudal monarchs and enslaving the people, it became an elite language of pan India for some time...

  • @toyodanissi8002
    @toyodanissi8002 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You missed the "Lithuanian" which contains lots of proto indo European words

    • @idraote
      @idraote 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      which is not true

    • @toyodanissi8002
      @toyodanissi8002 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@idraote dziva
      esmi
      ašis
      bebras
      labui
      kraujas
      šaka
      brolis
      dieveris
      pekus
      ratas
      smakras
      anglis
      raudoti

    • @SinilkMudilaSama
      @SinilkMudilaSama 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @toyodanissi8002
      Don't talk nonsense, current Lithuanian is a son of archaic Lithuanian, which is a son of ancient Baltic, which derives from Kurganian or Indo-European.
      Stop spreading falsehoods, not even remotely, not even remotely, Lithuanian is the oldest language in the world or in Europe.
      If ya have nothing to say, stay remains silent and seeks to learn true and scientific information.

    • @idraote
      @idraote 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SinilkMudilaSamayou really should revise your linguistics as it is very questionable

    • @ancientminds199
      @ancientminds199 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Sanskrit:
      Kas tvam asi? Asmi svapnas tava tamase nakte. Agniṃ dadau te śradi tada viśpatir devas tvam asi.
      Lithuanian:
      Kas tu esi? Esmi sapnas tavo tamsioje naktyje. Ugnį daviau tau širdy, tada viešpatis dievas tu esi.
      English:
      Who are you? A dream in your dark night. I gave you the fire in your heart, so you are god our lord.
      Sanskrit:
      Kas tava sūnus?
      Lithuanian:
      Kas tavo sūnus?
      English:
      Who is your son?
      Just some words. Lithuanian on the left, Sanskrit center, English on the right:
      DIEVAS-DEVAS-GOD;
      BŪTIS-BHUTIS-EXISTENCE;
      VIEŠPATS-VISPATI-Another expression for God (more or less equivalent to the christian expression: “our lord”);
      RASA-RASA-DEW;
      MEDUS-MADHUS-HONEY;
      JAVAS-YAVAS-CEREAL;
      UGNIS - AGNIS-FIRE;
      VĖJAS-VAJUS-WIND;
      AKMUO-AKMAN-STONE/ROCK;
      BANGA- BHANGA-WAVE;
      VYRAS-VIRAS-MAN;
      SŪNUS-SUNUS-SON;
      SENAS-SANAS-OLD;
      ESU-ASMI-I’M...

  • @neerajaram8198
    @neerajaram8198 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wrong !!! More than 1000 old tamil words found in indus valley civilization, it means they could have spoken in tamil language. IVC is City Civization like tamil people but Sanskrit people followed villege civilization.

  • @ruthnaswamy4741
    @ruthnaswamy4741 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    A few scrips claimed to be from Rig Veda is kept in the Bhandarkar Institute it is carbon dated to be from 1464 CE

  • @praveencad1
    @praveencad1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sanskriti not related to Harrapan indus valley civilization...!

  • @natesanmanokaran7893
    @natesanmanokaran7893 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Thamizh/Tamil (தமிழ்) Father of all languages in world 🌎

    • @thejus36
      @thejus36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      in your Dreams😂

    • @natesanmanokaran7893
      @natesanmanokaran7893 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thejus36 Baby

    • @thejus36
      @thejus36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@natesanmanokaran7893 You are living in an unrealistic nut shell. Tamil is belongs to Dravidian family languge. it has no connection with indo european family languages. when will You understand the truth ?

    • @natesanmanokaran7893
      @natesanmanokaran7893 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@thejus36 Thamizh Language spoken 20000 yrs ago.(minimum)
      Sangam period
      Saiva God Sivan ,Murugan & vishnu all are Thamizhan
      Hindu religion/ethics origin from Saivam/Thamizh God
      Search Keeladi & Adichanallur (indian archaeological report)
      U r well frag, come on men plz wake up

    • @natesanmanokaran7893
      @natesanmanokaran7893 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@thejus36 draidian language's (telugu & kannada) only
      U r Wikipedia Genious

  • @Gowrisankar__gs
    @Gowrisankar__gs 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Tamil

    • @yahqappu74
      @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Tamizh

  • @Topquark1
    @Topquark1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    But I can give many examples to show that Sanskrit itself is created by Tamil siddhas. Samam+ Kirutham (Both Tamil words) meaning Equaliser + script= Samaskirutham= Samskrit= Sanskrit. Why equaliser. This language was created by the southern Siddhas to make the language compatible with all languages Tamil, Pali and Prikrit for easy administration those days for entire Indian sub continent.
    Arathi the so called Sanskrit word is a combination of two Tamil words Aaram + Tee (Thee) Aram means Circular in Tamil+ Tee means fire in Tamil. Aaram Tee means fire in circle. Arathi.
    Similarly Priyanka = Piriya + Angam. Piriya means inseparable in Tamil+ Angam Part of the body in Tamil. Total meaning One is an inseparable part of the other's body . That close.
    Similarly Aaditya so called Sanskrit word Aadi+ Tee means Aadi means oldest , earliest, or first in Tamil+ Tee means fire . i.e the Sun the first or oldest or earliest fire.
    Similarly hundreds of Sanskrit words can be decoded only by Tamil. Sanskrit need not be diminished in its beauty of it's own however. But at the same time Tamil's claim for its oldest and original natural language status should not be diminished because of over dominating narratives against it.

  • @Topquark1
    @Topquark1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sanskrit will only remain as a mantra language i.e Liturgical language which no one can use for any practical purposes. People are simply in awe of this artificially coded and mystified language, out of fear of the unknown. Every time you try to reason out with them you will be argued out quoting about some bizarre sound frequency working wonders for the users of the language. If that was the case all users should be nobel prize winners, geniuses. I too love the language, it's special turns and twists and some times the sweetness just like any other language for its novelty. It's use for liturgical purposes is like latin or Armenian for Christians. It should not be for creating fear because one cannot understand what is the mystery behind a particular God for which it is being used. Language should be for the public to easily understand, use it for normal communication daily, get much closer to God's feelings, the preachings directly without any interpreter and feel secure with God.

  • @thirumalmurugan6942
    @thirumalmurugan6942 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    What is the proof samskrit was spoken in IVC? Dont spread wrong information..

    • @gauravshah89
      @gauravshah89 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What is the proof Tamil is oldest? Don't spread wrong info.

    • @rgegrsegerghyuj4994
      @rgegrsegerghyuj4994 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      harrapan intermingled with beautiful aryans coz them did not wanted to be with dark Tamils

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So far no archaeological evidence of Aryans living in the Indus Valley Civilization and using the Sanskrit language has been found. More importantly, there is no single proof that the Sanskrit Vedas are ancient.
      A recent research articles published by Ms. Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay decoded and proven in her reserch paper "Ancestral Dravidian Languages in Indus Civilization: Ultraconserved Dravidian Tooth-word Reveals Deep Linguistic Ancestry and Supports Genetics" that the Indus Valley Civilization was a dravidian civilization and they speak dravidian language.
      The evidence of trade links between the Indus Valley Civilization and the mesopotamian and persian gulf has been proven early. As ivory was not present in mesopotamia and persian gulf it was imported from indus valley and they called it as ‘pīru’/‘pīri’ the variant dialect of true name given by indus valley people.
      As per Ms. Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay the words used for elephant (like, ‘pīri’, ‘pīru’) in Bronze Age Mesopotamia, the elephant-word used in the Hurrian part(Anatolia, Syria and Northern Mesopotamia) of 1400 BC, and the ivory-word (‘pîruš’) recorded in certain 600 BC Old Persian documents, were all originally borrowed from ‘pīlu’, a Proto-Dravidian elephant-word, which was prevalent in the Indus valley civilization, and was etymologically related to the Proto-Dravidian tooth-word ‘*pal’ and its alternate forms (‘*pīl’/‘*piḷ’/‘*pel’). The word "pal - பல்" means tooth in tamil.

  • @SB-xe4cg
    @SB-xe4cg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The above is in tamil. You may want to get it translated in English if you need to know the real facts

  • @VDL650
    @VDL650 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Topic that may serve your research some edge would be is "Tamil the oldest compared to other surviving languages such Greek, Hebrew, Sumerian, Chinese etc..Unfortunately Sanskrit doesn't quality as a language, it's like a poem and script never a spoken language (may be in the mythological world)

  • @mr.lonely36
    @mr.lonely36 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brother Tamil language it has own Pride Tamil are speaking in Srilanka Malaysia Singapore Indonesian and South Korea ( there many similarities ) even you see Chinese people many learning Tamil ... Is any country people showing interest in learning other language in India'... Not yet
    Tamil alphabet (247) -Ayuda alphabet pronunciation -1 Vowel -12 Consonant -18 Vowel -216
    Tamil-Brahmi script has been paleographically and stratigraphically dated between the third century BCE and the first century CE, and it constitutes the earliest known writing system evidenced in many parts of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Sri Lanka.
    The places are Keezhadi(not fully completed )and its surrounding areas (Konthagai, Agaram, Manalur) in Sivaganga district (Phase VIII), Sivakalai in Thoothukudi district (Phase-III), Gangaikondacholapuram in Ariyalur district (Phase III), Mayiladumparai in Krishnagiri district (Phase-II), Vembakottai in Virudhunagar district, and Most oldest is adichanallur archaeological site(still not start process ) and Mangulam Madurai Tamil Brahmi inscription 270-BCE
    The Tolkappiyam belongs to second Sangam period. Iravatham Mahadevan dates the Tolkappiyam to no earlier than the 2nd century CE, as it mentions the puḷḷi being an integral part of Tamil script
    Finally Indians will come to conclusion that Sanskrit is the old language in India oops sorry in world whatever proof is given Indian's will say all' language except Tamil there ego won't leave them to accept ....
    திருமந்திரம் “அணுவில் அணுவினை, ஆதிப் பிரானை அணுவில் அணுவினை ஆயிரம் கூறு இட்டு அணுவில் அணுவை அணுகவல் லார்கட்கு அணுவில் அணுவை....
    Thirumantiram is a Tamil poetic written in the 2nd century BCE and 4th century CE by Tirumular. Written about NUCLEAR REACTION
    Without any modern technology is anything like this in Sanskrit or any other Indian language like this pride in india not yet only தமிழ் language has
    In india there is no language have such a history and Pride❤expect தமிழன்

  • @asokank4511
    @asokank4511 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sanskrit is a Progitha Language Created in Prakirutham at 3rd Centurey Spocken language in Northern Sanskirit isn't Spocken Language today till The Karppan Came from Aryanavaja Central Asia 1500 BC SentAvestha is Based on Eropean Language.

  • @idraote
    @idraote 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I find it rather unethical for a scholar to clickbait viewers.
    As you correctly say AT THE END of your video, no language is older than another because they all have parents languages and their evolution go back to the beginning of speech. What we can talk about is which language has the earliest written records (and that is Sumerian, as for our current knowledge).
    There are already too many uneducated people babbling about "oldest languages". Linguists shouldn't be adding fuel to that fire.

    • @SinilkMudilaSama
      @SinilkMudilaSama 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Your sentence in itself is false and made by a layman and stupid person in the science of communication and information.
      Sumerian is one of the ancient languages ​​in the world, it is oldest in West Asia only, not in all of Asia, Tamil is scientifically the oldest in all of Asia.
      Everything reopens because science is made of discoveries and reinventions. Your sentence in itself already starts out dogmatic, crazy, false and without conscience and without consistency with the science of language and the science of information now.
      What you say is pure rubbish, stay in your insignificance and go back to school stupid, you passed by cheating and still want your opinion on sciences that you don't master, shut up and stop talking nonsense, stop being crazy, take care of your mind. Goodbye.
      Farewell.

    • @mastertheblaster9360
      @mastertheblaster9360 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What you mean parent language?

    • @idraote
      @idraote 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mastertheblaster9360 languages don't exist in a vacuum and they are not born perfect and complete like Venus from the sea.
      Each existing language has an older form.

  • @spami0
    @spami0 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    இவன் மூலையில்லா tharkuri 😂😂😂

  • @balramterry6697
    @balramterry6697 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Lord Krishna spoke the Bhagavada Gita 3000BC. Sanskrit was written in the oldest Veda, the Rig Veda 11.000BC.

    • @Gowrisankar__gs
      @Gowrisankar__gs 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Who's this brainless joker😂😂😂

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Written only on 200 bc!

    • @mothilal6479
      @mothilal6479 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And he wrote Brahmin born out of head. 😃😃😃

  • @ranjithkumarnagarajan2874
    @ranjithkumarnagarajan2874 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It is an unprovable fact that Sanskrit has been spoken orally since 1500 BC. The written form of Tamil came before Sanskrit. So according to the evidence Tamil is the oldest language. Tamil was spoken in the Indus Valley and not Sanskrit. Please provide evidence to prove it.

  • @cratonic_
    @cratonic_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    dude, sanskrit wasn't spoken in indus valley civilization, its in vedic aryavarta.indus is dravidian

  • @ShahirNishana
    @ShahirNishana 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are trying to catch Indian viewers,
    Understandable, have a nice day👌🏻

  • @fauzialaroni5102
    @fauzialaroni5102 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Oldest language in the World is Prophet Adam's language, because Adam the first human on earth was existed before 6000 BC😊😎

  • @swadhinchakraborty1
    @swadhinchakraborty1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Asking which is the oldest language among them is very childish, despite that both are very old language. Old Tamil was the great language of a one of the oldest civilization and Sanskrit was a great indo-aryan language which is very similar to old Syrian(Hurrian) language, Old Greek, Old Latin. And both Tamil speakers and Sanskrit speakers formed Sanatan dharma(tree of all the indic religion).

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Tamils were pagans. Sanatan Dharma has nothing to do with indian subcontinent.

  • @cattubuttas4749
    @cattubuttas4749 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    One point to mention is that Sanskrit is a complete language I mean we have a 100% complete grammar, vocabulary, phonetics etc. all the remaining languages are VERY incomplete and we only have small fragments of them.

  • @sanskratisanskratsanskarsa9282
    @sanskratisanskratsanskarsa9282 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    101% Vaidik sanskrit is The Mother Language of all languages

  • @bhavanikumar7150
    @bhavanikumar7150 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    For all these debates one thing is clear. Both Tamizh and Samaskritam are organic languages of Bharat that is India. They prospered simultaneously.

    • @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV
      @Nebuchadnezzar_XXIV 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No

    • @prajeshragavendra9704
      @prajeshragavendra9704 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      By evidences,even a south indian language Tulu along with Tamil is older than sanskrit.

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So far no archaeological evidence of Aryans living in the Indus Valley Civilization and using the Sanskrit language has been found. More importantly, there is no single proof that the Sanskrit Vedas are ancient.
      A recent research articles published by Ms. Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay decoded and proven in her reserch paper "Ancestral Dravidian Languages in Indus Civilization: Ultraconserved Dravidian Tooth-word Reveals Deep Linguistic Ancestry and Supports Genetics" that the Indus Valley Civilization was a dravidian civilization and they speak dravidian language.
      The evidence of trade links between the Indus Valley Civilization and the mesopotamian and persian gulf has been proven early. As ivory was not present in mesopotamia and persian gulf it was imported from indus valley and they called it as ‘pīru’/‘pīri’ the variant dialect of true name given by indus valley people.
      As per Ms. Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay the words used for elephant (like, ‘pīri’, ‘pīru’) in Bronze Age Mesopotamia, the elephant-word used in the Hurrian part(Anatolia, Syria and Northern Mesopotamia) of 1400 BC, and the ivory-word (‘pîruš’) recorded in certain 600 BC Old Persian documents, were all originally borrowed from ‘pīlu’, a Proto-Dravidian elephant-word, which was prevalent in the Indus valley civilization, and was etymologically related to the Proto-Dravidian tooth-word ‘*pal’ and its alternate forms (‘*pīl’/‘*piḷ’/‘*pel’). The word "pal - பல்" means tooth in tamil.

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Narikkurvar nomads have been migrating from Western India through the forests of Western Ghats to Southern India for hundreds of years, their dialect includes Marathi, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil and other language words, so can Narikkurvar language be called the mother of all South Indian languages?
      Sanskrit is the mother tongue of Brahmin nomads of European genetics R1A1. They migrated from Europe to the Indian plains in search of livelihood. Because they were nomads like the Roma Gypsies, their language was a mixture of European, Persian, Russian and Asiatic languages. Sanskrit absorbed other languages ​​and dialects to enrich its content, but to hide this fact some Sanskrit scholars falsely propagate that other languages ​​originated from Sanskrit. Sanskrit has no attested script of its own, and in earlier times, it was written in various Brahmi scripts such as Tamil, Nagari, Pali, and is now generally written in Devanagari. Some religions originated in India and were propagated professionally by nomadic Brahmins, resulting in the spread of Sanskrit as a religious rather than a superior language. For example, Arabic is used in the homes of every Muslim and therefore it cannot be said that Arabic is the mother of all language.

  • @tamileli
    @tamileli 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Please help 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
    Fm nirmala m said indus script is decoded
    Why nobody releases it

  • @raviraajsputnik8449
    @raviraajsputnik8449 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Misbelief:
    Sanskrit is spoken around Indus Valley Civilization.
    Truth:
    Languages spoken in Indus valley civilization is still unknown. Veteran Indian Archeologists suggested that the language spoken at the time of Indus Valley Civilization must be a Dravidian Language obviously it's Tamil. Prof Poorna Chandra Jeeva also deciphered Indus scripts as Tamil sentences which are found in the numerous Seals found during excavation. But Govf is yet to nod for approval.
    Hence, it can't be concluded as Sanskrit spoken in Indus Valley Civilization.
    Also, Sanskrit must be a mixture of more languages like English, Hindi as the name itself depicts the meaning (in Tamil) as mixed languages. So, it clearly tells that Sanskrit is not the mother of languages.
    Meanwhile, Tamil can be mother of all languages as Tamil is the one of the few languages in the world which stands live even if we remove the loan words from other languages.

    • @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o
      @ChannaJayawardhana-h1o 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      When I saw a mixture of English amd hindi I understood your knowledge about linguistics deeply😂.. please study well..

    • @raviraajsputnik8449
      @raviraajsputnik8449 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ChannaJayawardhana-h1o ohoo

    • @ThePolyglotFiles
      @ThePolyglotFiles  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hi there! Thanks for the input! You are correct, to an extent. The language spoken in the Indus Valley prior to the arrival of the Indo-Aryans is currently unknown, and many scholars believe it could have been Dravidian in nature. To say it *must be* Tamil, however, is a stretch. The point is, the language of the Indus Valley became Sanskrit (or a Proto-Indo-Aryan language) after the Indo-Aryans arrived and displaced the previously-spoken language. It *could* be a Drividian language (research pending) or it could be something completely different.

    • @SachinPotdar-p3q
      @SachinPotdar-p3q 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​@@ThePolyglotFiles no one was aryan aryan a propganda arya means noble English words are loan words

    • @ThePolyglotFiles
      @ThePolyglotFiles  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Okay... Regardless of whether you call them "Indo-Aryan" or not, peoples from the Pontic-Caspian Steppe came to the area now known as northern India and Pakistan. They brought a language that became Sanskrit, from which other languages like Hindi developed. That's not propaganda: that's what scientists believe happened.

  • @DineshSingh-rt4nz
    @DineshSingh-rt4nz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sanskrit language is civilized language european language is like animals language 😂

  • @yahqappu74
    @yahqappu74 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sanskrit without written evidence and you ascribe to it antiquity but Tamizh with so much antiquity literature you cannot say it is older....clearly a prejudiced and bias narrative...

  • @mogambo4565
    @mogambo4565 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is nothing called oldest language. Every human spoke in some form. The question is stupid and anyone claiming to be oldest is just weirdo. Now written script is helpful in dating past civilization but there was always communication between people through language.

  • @chandraathithan11
    @chandraathithan11 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    தமிழ்

  • @ssa9382
    @ssa9382 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Isn't Mesopotomia the oldest civilization. Their language would be oldest?

    • @SinilkMudilaSama
      @SinilkMudilaSama 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Nope, never, in others continent in all earth we have others idioms oldest than sumerian in a deep scientifically talk by science of information and science of languages perspectives.
      Never, even by far, this a superated and won dogma in our actual,hodiern era.

    • @ssa9382
      @ssa9382 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SinilkMudilaSama Sumerian were ancestors to Mesopotomia. I think that the Mesopotomia extended to present Pakistan and I always wondered that Sanskrit developed in Pakistani regions (as per archaeological finding) is a sign that it's improvised on Mesopotomian languages, considering oldest Sanskrit found is 5000 years old and oldest Mesopotomia books were 12000 years old.

  • @abhilashgrover6376
    @abhilashgrover6376 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Oldest language is either summerian or Egyptian .

  • @Infini8i
    @Infini8i 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tamil is the oldest. Tamil inscription is also oldest.

  • @mothilal6479
    @mothilal6479 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Why worry about which is the oldest. Sanskrit is a dead language. The priests who recite & the people who listen, both don't know what it means. Again Sanskrit borrowed script from other languages, which proves it is not the oldest. Whereas Tamil has its own script, which evolved for thousands of years & is still being spoken by millions worldwide. Tamil will never die like Sanskrit. 😃😃😃

  • @gayathridharan-5532
    @gayathridharan-5532 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    atamil is oldest language in the world's first language 😊sanskrit is not the olden & worlds fist language.ni ecer sanskrit is not an oldest language.