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Ah!! I was hoping you all would have a Siberian language on here!! The Siberian peoples have such a beautiful culture, and I’ve been searching far and wide to find some sort of audio of the language. All the best
Great, Wikitongues needs to post more Siberian and other endangered languages! 😃 P.S.: instead of writing the name of the language you wrote the name of the speaker.
@lordanzu8763 The language is Even, which is unrelated to Yakut and is closer to Manchu. It's just that when they posted the video, they wrote the speaker's name in the thumbnail rather than the language, but apparently, they have corrected it since.
when I studied linguistics, the prevailing theory was that ancestors from this part of the world migrated very rapidly into the area where your nation and other related peoples live today. the level of similarity between Yeniseian languages (which are in another language family from the language this woman speaks, but probably used to be spoken in the same area) and Na-Dené languages like Apache is much more than scholars would expect when the relationship is so ancient. I wonder for how long different nations were able to maintain relationships with each other across the ocean and keep influencing one another's traditions and languages.
@@hotwheelsearl As a UCLA student, this is not true at all. There are no Manchu classes offered here. Harvard does offer Manchu classes, on the other hand.
Artexerxes101 that’s wholly incorrect. I graduated with my MA in East Asian Studies in 2018. At the time they offered this class: international.ucla.edu/asia/article/166125 Which teaches Manchu in the context of reading Manchu sources from the Qing dynasty. Since I’ve graduated I’m not sure if they still have it; however as of Fall Quarter 2019 this class was offered. I had one friend in the class although I did not take it myself.
Alec Payne oh hell yes, it’s been dead for a couple hundred years. By Qianlong there were few people who could speak Manchu, although the official court language was still at least written Manchu. The imperial army still used Manchu for various marching and related commands, but mandarin superseded Manchu loooonngggg before the fall of the Qing
It is crazy just how close Turkic,Tungusic and Mongolic languages are.I feel like the similarity is mainly because of the heavy influence of Turkic languages.I don't really think that we have common ancestry.Mongolic people are so similar to Turkic people because they have always lived right next to them and obviously got asimilated.The grammar similarity must be because these three nations have lived together for a really long time.That grammatic exchanges like that happen in some languages.
U must get the ket language before it dies, they are the last remnants of the yenesei family that was overtaken by reindeer herders, only 1,000 kets left and 50 speakers.
As a Turk, all I hear is someone constantly speaking in Simple Present and Past tense with verbs mostly unknown to Turks. I picked up the phrase "one year in a Finnish city", if I am not making that up.
As a native speaker of a Turkic language (Bashkir to be exact), I heard A LOT of similar words, which confused me for a bit and I had to double check if this language is Turkic or not...
No, even(k) is considered a tungusic language, different family from the turkics. But there should be lots of loan words as they are all inhabitants of North Asia
@@pablocarino I know that, but the similarities I (and other people with Turkic languages as native) heard there makes me think even more that Turkic languages belong to Altaic language family...
@@bababashqort3598 Do you think you're able to transcribe this video? Using the orthography of the language en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Even_language Even if you don't understand all the words, hopefully you might still be able to write down what it sounds like?
it sounds alot similar to uralic actually. Tungusic came to siberia from north east china and most likely the uralic came from same direction before them. Liao civilization might be related to uralics maybe. When uralic speakers from east reached west siberia and ural, they came to contact with indo european/aryan people (andronovo culture maybe) between kama and irtysh, it created mix between them aka the finnougrics, half asian half white people that talk uralic language with lots of indo european/iranic loan words, while samoyeds staid just uralic as they staid behind more far away without as much contact to those europid folks and their languages. Well, also uralic words itself in uralic language are related to samoyed type of siberian native life and nature, while the loan words from ie are related to european life.
İt's so strange I'm a turkic language speaker in Kipchak group. When she start to talk I felt like there is something serious similiar sounds here almost gonna understand what she's saying but it's different language of course but I feel like I'm gonna able to understand if I listen again and again. Turkic languages have deep connections with Mongolic and tungustic
Hey! Her full name is Варвара Григорьевна Белолюбская (Varvara Grigoryevna Belolyubskaya) and her poetry has been published through bichik.ru ☺️ Thanks for your interest, I’m sure she will appreciate it!
@batuhan timuçin ATTİLA And attila is Hungarian. Not Muslims. Now Turkish people are Arab. Look like Manchu. Because Turkish look arab, culture is Arab, religion is Muslim, land is Kurdish. Turkish are nothing with Siberian people. Now Tungustic people are died. And Anatolian Turkic people died in 1300 years.
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Ah!! I was hoping you all would have a Siberian language on here!! The Siberian peoples have such a beautiful culture, and I’ve been searching far and wide to find some sort of audio of the language. All the best
Great, Wikitongues needs to post more Siberian and other endangered languages! 😃
P.S.: instead of writing the name of the language you wrote the name of the speaker.
I was wondering if that's what it meant. Thanks for clearing up my confusion
I assume the language is Yakut right?
@lordanzu8763 The language is Even, which is unrelated to Yakut and is closer to Manchu. It's just that when they posted the video, they wrote the speaker's name in the thumbnail rather than the language, but apparently, they have corrected it since.
Wow I’m Apache and she looks like a Native sister of North America First Nations! Especially the bead work!
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when I studied linguistics, the prevailing theory was that ancestors from this part of the world migrated very rapidly into the area where your nation and other related peoples live today. the level of similarity between Yeniseian languages (which are in another language family from the language this woman speaks, but probably used to be spoken in the same area) and Na-Dené languages like Apache is much more than scholars would expect when the relationship is so ancient. I wonder for how long different nations were able to maintain relationships with each other across the ocean and keep influencing one another's traditions and languages.
Long live natives....greetings from Turkic people....far cousins
@@xlarge7370 not really
A branch of Siberian people did populate the Americas. Still, it's absolutely incredible to see traditions have kept alive since prehistoric times.
We must protect this tungusic language
Tungusic languages are so interesting. I hope we can hear Manchu here, it's dying.
Not at UCLA, which is one of the few universities in the US that teaches Manchu!
@@hotwheelsearl As a UCLA student, this is not true at all. There are no Manchu classes offered here. Harvard does offer Manchu classes, on the other hand.
Artexerxes101 that’s wholly incorrect. I graduated with my MA in East Asian Studies in 2018. At the time they offered this class:
international.ucla.edu/asia/article/166125
Which teaches Manchu in the context of reading Manchu sources from the Qing dynasty.
Since I’ve graduated I’m not sure if they still have it; however as of Fall Quarter 2019 this class was offered. I had one friend in the class although I did not take it myself.
Earl McEarl isn't manchu already dead as a native language?
Alec Payne oh hell yes, it’s been dead for a couple hundred years. By Qianlong there were few people who could speak Manchu, although the official court language was still at least written Manchu.
The imperial army still used Manchu for various marching and related commands, but mandarin superseded Manchu loooonngggg before the fall of the Qing
Yes what a great feature!!!
Heard some very familiar words in there! Mongolian speaker here.
Same, I even had to double-check what language family this language is in. Bashkir speaker here
It is crazy just how close Turkic,Tungusic and Mongolic languages are.I feel like the similarity is mainly because of the heavy influence of Turkic languages.I don't really think that we have common ancestry.Mongolic people are so similar to Turkic people because they have always lived right next to them and obviously got asimilated.The grammar similarity must be because these three nations have lived together for a really long time.That grammatic exchanges like that happen in some languages.
Oh, I would love to see this language written down. It sounds so interesting.
U must get the ket language before it dies, they are the last remnants of the yenesei family that was overtaken by reindeer herders, only 1,000 kets left and 50 speakers.
I agree, as someone who’s trying (and not succeeding) to learn that language
Did she at any point mention the Finnish city of Rovaniemi? Because I thought I heard that somewhere in there
As a Turk, all I hear is someone constantly speaking in Simple Present and Past tense with verbs mostly unknown to Turks. I picked up the phrase "one year in a Finnish city", if I am not making that up.
@@gogeyeryuzune9095 damn how cool would it be if that's really what she said? :D
@@jancovanderwesthuizen8070 :))
As a Finn i think i heard Finland, Rovaniemi and Tornio
@@TheNikz0rrr awesome! Kiitos paljon
Looks like her name is where the language should be
As an AnatolianTurk, i may have %5,5 Even genes in my blood Eurogenes k13 classification.
Excellent document! Thanks a lot!
To my ears it sounds like A Turkic or Mongolic language (yes, I know about the Altaic hypothesis, do I believe in it? I’m not sure).
could be a sprachbund effect
@@pentelegomenon1175 Well,it is.There is even a loanword in Manchu(enie) that came from Turkish which means mom.Ana is how it is called in Turkish.
As a native speaker of a Turkic language (Bashkir to be exact), I heard A LOT of similar words, which confused me for a bit and I had to double check if this language is Turkic or not...
No, even(k) is considered a tungusic language, different family from the turkics. But there should be lots of loan words as they are all inhabitants of North Asia
@@pablocarino I know that, but the similarities I (and other people with Turkic languages as native) heard there makes me think even more that Turkic languages belong to Altaic language family...
@@bababashqort3598 Do you think you're able to transcribe this video? Using the orthography of the language en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Even_language
Even if you don't understand all the words, hopefully you might still be able to write down what it sounds like?
Merhaba Başkurt karındaşım!
I will love to learn this language. It sounds amazing. Where is this language spoken? Please someone tell me. Thank you very much for sharing.
JustAuto Channel russia
This speaker in Far East Russia, in Northern Yakutia and some nearby oblasts
Make a playlist with languages of Russia please
Sounds a bit like khanty or Mansi with the three syllable strings
it sounds alot similar to uralic actually. Tungusic came to siberia from north east china and most likely the uralic came from same direction before them. Liao civilization might be related to uralics maybe. When uralic speakers from east reached west siberia and ural, they came to contact with indo european/aryan people (andronovo culture maybe) between kama and irtysh, it created mix between them aka the finnougrics, half asian half white people that talk uralic language with lots of indo european/iranic loan words, while samoyeds staid just uralic as they staid behind more far away without as much contact to those europid folks and their languages.
Well, also uralic words itself in uralic language are related to samoyed type of siberian native life and nature, while the loan words from ie are related to european life.
@@gx8con17 No actually.Tungusic people are Siberians and Manchus migrated to China.
Thank you for the video but the language is actually *Even* and not *Evenki* (though a close relative of the latter)
I think Even is spoken more east
So what does she say if you play it forwards?
Sounds like a Turkic language. Beautiful
It is tungus-manchurian language group, somewhat related to turkic and mongolic
@@KateeAngel exactly. I speak a turkic language as well
İt's so strange I'm a turkic language speaker in Kipchak group. When she start to talk I felt like there is something serious similiar sounds here almost gonna understand what she's saying but it's different language of course but I feel like I'm gonna able to understand if I listen again and again. Turkic languages have deep connections with Mongolic and tungustic
Why do Turkish people involve themselves in everything? No one asked
Give us her full name so we can look for her poetries!
Hey! Her full name is Варвара Григорьевна Белолюбская (Varvara Grigoryevna Belolyubskaya) and her poetry has been published through bichik.ru ☺️
Thanks for your interest, I’m sure she will appreciate it!
@@kristentcherneshoff4260 спасибо большое. Обязательно буду читать ее стихи.
I hear some words in Turkish. Also Kazakh and Kyrgyz
im manchurian!
Like turkic tungusic
It sounds kinda like Hungarian
possibly ancestors of native Americans
Not ewenki, ewen language
Спасибо
It really sounds as if it has ties with Turkic languages (I speak Anatolian Turkish.) . The Altai theory may rise up again, who knows...
It's been debunked numerous times
And also eskimo and tungusic are Mongols
@batuhan timuçin ATTİLA Attila mongols leader not Farmer from
@batuhan timuçin ATTİLA I read history from historian Chinese and Roman
@batuhan timuçin ATTİLA
And attila is Hungarian. Not Muslims. Now Turkish people are Arab. Look like Manchu. Because
Turkish look arab, culture is Arab, religion is Muslim, land is Kurdish.
Turkish are nothing with Siberian people. Now Tungustic people are died. And Anatolian Turkic people died in 1300 years.
@@Би19настайамьдралсайханбайна I'm half Tungus, it's not like I'm half dead though...
@@Би19настайамьдралсайханбайна Atilla is actually Turkic.He was the king of European Huns and European Huns are actually Turkic.
There are onle a few people who speak Tunguisic language :(
I'd love to learn, but it's just too useless
Sounds like it comes from the Turkic language sphere.
historical turkish
No,Tungusic languages are waaaaay more different than Turkic languages.
Шо это язык? Странный язык. Шо она голдит, шо то древнего.