Each European Language Explained in 1 Sentence

2024 ж. 16 Мам.
142 322 Рет қаралды

From Spanish to Welsh and Ukrainian, to Romanian, Portuguese and Swedish, the langauges of Europe are an astounding patchwork of humanity and a rich tapestry of history - each language with its own cultural make up. In this video we make it simple to understand the cultural make up of each language in Europe - compressing them each into 1 sentence, so you know and you can explore further with this amazing knowledge. Enjoy!
00:00 Beginning
00:46 Portuguese
00:55 Spanish
01:03 Basque
01:14 Catalan
01:23 French
01:35 Breton
01:41 Cornish
01:51 Welsh
02:02 Irish
02:14 Manx
02:19 Scots Gaelic
02:26 English
02:28 Icelandic
02:43 Czech
02:54 German
03:13 Danish
03:21 Swedish
03:29 Norwegian
03:41 Lithuanian
03:56 Luxembourgish
04:05 Dutch
04:22 Polish
04:30 Slovak
04:43 Latvian & Estonian
05:10 Finnish
05:28 Russian
05:43 Belarussian
05:57 Ukrainian
06:13 Romanian
06:22 Bulgarian
06:37 Macedonian
06:49 Serbo-Croatian
07:19 Slovene
07:29 Greek
07:44 Albanian
08:01 Hungarian
08:38 Corsu
08:47 Italiano
Join me on Patreon: / benllywelyn Be a member of the channel: / @benllywelyn
Buy Me a Coffee www.buymeacoffee.com/benllywelyA Business enquiries: ben.llywelyn@gmail.com
Music. uppbeat.io (intro & outro by Jonny Easton)
Equipment: Canon2000D: amzn.to/3ndGZep Rode VideoMic Pro Plus camera microphone amzn.to/3uvkRjq Osmo Ambitful tube lights: amzn.to/3lJkZel amzn.to/3OJgwEs DJI Action 2 amzn.to/3qPP7Y6

Пікірлер
  • Very funny, with lots of sprinkles! I'd be interested in what would you say about Faroese, Rusyn, Sorbian, Romani, Tatar, Crimean Tatar, Bashkir, Gagauz, Chuvash, Saami, Komi-Zyrian, Komi-Permyak, Udmurt, Mari, Erzya, Moksha, Maltese, Yiddish, Kalmyk and everyone else on the European slides of the Caucasus? :)))

    @Dornwild@Dornwild3 ай бұрын
    • You could add Armenian, Turkish and Georgian to that list as all are spoken within Europe's boundaries. Kazakh straddles both Europe and Asia as well.

      @egbront1506@egbront15063 ай бұрын
    • There is no "rusyn" language, speaking as "rusyn"

      @rumenok@rumenok3 ай бұрын
    • @@rumenok There are at least 3 variants of Carpathian Rusyn spoken in Serbia, Romania, Ukraine, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland, with at least 2 literary languages. :)

      @Dornwild@Dornwild3 ай бұрын
    • @@Dornwild you can say anything you want I'm 100% " rusyn "on both sides, it's artificial term for ukrainians and language it's just archaic dialect of ukrainian, I know there is minorities in Slovakia and Serbia but it's just misunderstanding because of historic past reasons ("rusyns" were closed in Austro-Hungary for hundreds of years)

      @rumenok@rumenok3 ай бұрын
    • @@rumenok I understand what you're saying, but defining a language is not exactly from a purely linguistic point of view, it also respects the self identification of the people they speak the language. It also interferes with politics. See, the Russian policies were the same regarding Ukrainian and Belarusian, they were considered only dialects of Russian... Which is not true! Due to political factors, Serbo-Croatian was once considered one language, now considered 4 languages of their own, yet the differences are smaller than for example, between Czech and Slovak (also considered the same language for certain periods of times). The case for Rusyn is different, because it goes back long in history. Carpathian Eastern Slavic speaking peoples have been long separated from the rest of the East Slavic peoples under the kingdom of Hungary, so they developed somewhat differently, having their own distinctive ethnographical cultural identity. I know the Ukrainian opinion on the matter, and I understand it, yet almost every other countries recognise the self-identification of Rusyns. Also for the Csángó language from Moldva, Romania is considered a dialect of Hungarian, however Csángós don't see the two languages the same. (Nor they have a Hungarian identity.) For many cases in history, it will be a long debate... But in my opinion, we need to respect and recognise longstanding self-identifications of even minority languages and their speakers.

      @Dornwild@Dornwild3 ай бұрын
  • My Hungarian father in law always said, Dutch is like a drunken Englishman trying to speak German. Never heard a better analogy TBF.

    @Remcore020@Remcore0203 ай бұрын
    • Dutch is a wonderful language with some of the silliest sounds ever.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • It is known as the Chinese of the West. Some things you never learn.

      @telebubba5527@telebubba55273 ай бұрын
    • Or like a regular, sober Englishman attempting German.

      @maxgregorycompositions6216@maxgregorycompositions62163 ай бұрын
    • I always felt Dutch was 1/3 German, 1/3 English, 1/3 French, at least when written down.

      @zankerfeld9596@zankerfeld95963 ай бұрын
    • And we in Norway say Danes speak Norwegian but with a potato stuck in their throat.

      @filipefernandes870@filipefernandes8703 ай бұрын
  • The reaction to Hungarian didn't disappoint. This was both funny and deep. Great video.

    @sergioromanomunoz8155@sergioromanomunoz81553 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Hungarian is a nice hearty stew with many good ingredients, of which 30% are secret.

    @boomerix@boomerix3 ай бұрын
    • Goulash :)

      @deniseb.4656@deniseb.46563 ай бұрын
    • Caraway seeds, which I normally hate, are an irreplaceable and little-known ingredient. 29% to go.

      @digoryjohns2018@digoryjohns20182 ай бұрын
    • Fitting, considering most hungarian dishes can be described the exact same way.

      @Y_YX@Y_YX2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@digoryjohns2018 don't forget lard

      @peterpozman6972@peterpozman69722 ай бұрын
    • Yep, for example Goulash and Hungarian stew (pörkölt) is literally the same. Goulash is pörkölt with carots and more water.

      @filtheater716@filtheater7162 ай бұрын
  • Hungarian ... He just left 😂😂😂😂😂

    @alaakela@alaakela3 ай бұрын
    • Hungarian is proto-uralic spoken by germans and slavs with turkic sprinkles.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
    • Hungarian is proto-uralic spoken by germans and slavs with turkic sprinkles.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
    • Hungarian is proto-uralic spoken by germans and slavs with turkic sprinklos.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
    • Hungarian is proto-uralic spoken by germans, slavs and turks with italian sprinkles.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
    • Hungarian is proto-uralic spoken by germans, slavs and turks.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
  • As a Dutchman I have to say: "Gurgle blub grrrable burrr blub grr."

    @spambaconeggspamspam@spambaconeggspamspam3 ай бұрын
    • Wonderfully said.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • I understand you

      @dinkopausic6357@dinkopausic63573 ай бұрын
    • Goed gedaan gozer, groeten!

      @TheKamperfoelie@TheKamperfoelie3 ай бұрын
    • helemaal mee eens

      @worstebrooike@worstebrooike2 ай бұрын
    • That sounded like Swiss German to me honestly.

      @nenadireland@nenadireland2 ай бұрын
  • Esperanto. Sprinkles sprinkled with sprinkles.

    @Hellspooned2@Hellspooned23 ай бұрын
    • Nice.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • With some sprinkles of sprinks

      @ander4163@ander41633 ай бұрын
    • An old story my dad had read: "[Q.] Do you speak Esperanto?" "[A.] Like a native."

      @davidbraun6209@davidbraun62092 ай бұрын
    • @@davidbraun6209 it gets less funny with time, there are actually a few hundreds or thousands native Esperanto speakers nowadays

      @NickoOlimp@NickoOlimp2 ай бұрын
  • Italiano is a language ‘invented’ by Dante on his way back from the Inferno with sprinkles.

    @gwilwilliams5831@gwilwilliams58313 ай бұрын
    • As long it has pistachio cheese, nice.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • ... totally agree ...

      @bantorio6525@bantorio65253 ай бұрын
    • No, Dante spoke "Fiorentino” in republic of Florence, now a little part of Italy. Wises took this languages as a base for Italian language

      @Gogleespecedem@Gogleespecedem3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Gogleespecedem modern Italian (formed when the country was, in 1861 only) IS based on tre corone's - Dante, Petrarca, Boccaccio - speech and literature. That's also why a modern Italian speaker understands Dante from 1200 much better than an English speaker understands the Bard from nearly 400 years later.

      @laraklemencic9471@laraklemencic94713 ай бұрын
    • Welsh sounds a lot like a mix of Norse and Dutch and a bit of English on a Latin + Gaulish base, and it was influenced a lot by Norse, just like Dutch, while English comes mostly from Norse - I am learning all the Norse / Germanic / Nordic languages and the modern Celtic languages etc, and I keep seeing more and more new similarities between them, and, its sound patterns sound just like Dutch + Norse and Icelandic with English undertones, and I also noticed that, when there is a video spoken in Welsh, even the automatic voice recognition thinks it is Dutch!

      @FrozenMermaid666@FrozenMermaid6663 ай бұрын
  • Italian dialects uniting around a cookbook to form a standard language is perfectly plausible.

    @omerciftci4673@omerciftci46733 ай бұрын
    • I didn’t know about and am interested in the German sprinkles!! Thanks

      @TMD3453@TMD34533 ай бұрын
    • @@TMD3453northerner regions near Austria If we didn’t sell Nizza and the other regions to France we would have also French sprinkles

      @mr.archivity@mr.archivity3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mr.archivityit's Italian language as whole that have German sprinkles, he didn't refer to dialect or something at all. We doesn't have French sprinkles cause both of our language have the same origin. We doesn't use the same words because we took them from directly their language, like we did with German, because French and Italian words are similar just because they both came from Latin.

      @pietrodauria7022@pietrodauria70223 ай бұрын
    • @@pietrodauria7022 I know, I was jokingly requesting to reconquer Nizza

      @mr.archivity@mr.archivity3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mr.archivityon the way

      @pietrodauria7022@pietrodauria70223 ай бұрын
  • Lots of sprinkles everywere 😂

    @paulom8804@paulom88043 ай бұрын
    • To go with doughnuts.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Or crepes… lots of doughnuts and crepes

      @DanTheCaptain@DanTheCaptain3 ай бұрын
    • Ice cream

      @gendo1123@gendo11233 ай бұрын
    • ​@@BenLlywelyn Hilarious video 😂😂😂But I have to say there is no such language as Monetenegrian, that is just a dialect. Bosnian is also a dialect but officially a language due to politics. Serbian and Croatian have little to no differences. Similar to USA English and British English. Basically it's Serbian 🇷🇸 or Serbo-Croatian if you prefer with little to no differences.

      @boka5290@boka52903 ай бұрын
    • @@boka5290 I agree with YoU that is same language. ✋👌👍 When British English use Football, Serbian Croatian use Football instead Nogomet. Conclusion is British English and Serbian Croatian are same languages. 😏🤗🤔 When British English use History, Serbian Croatian use Historija instead Povijest. Conclusion is British English and Serbian Croatian are same languages. 😏🤗🤔 When British English and Serbian Croatian use Major instead Bojnik. Conclusion is British English and Serbian Croatian are same languages. 😏🤗🤔 When British English and Serbian Croatian use Chemistry (Hemija) instead Kemija. Conclusion is British English and Serbian Croatian very love ustashian letter H. 😏🤗🤔 I will say Serbian is Croatian sprinkled with English. 😏🤗🤔

      @damyankuzmic5605@damyankuzmic56053 ай бұрын
  • I like that you mentioned Yiddish influence on Ukrainian, not a lot of people know about that

    @siam_enjoyer8584@siam_enjoyer85843 ай бұрын
    • Well spotted.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Can you elaborate? Like I suppose many other languages have word borrowed from Yiddish, what makes it special for Ukrainian to be worth mentioning?

      @brainblessed5814@brainblessed58143 ай бұрын
    • ​@@brainblessed5814American English is the only other language I know of with considerable Yiddish influence.

      @sirwootalot@sirwootalot3 ай бұрын
    • Does ukrainian having any gottish influence on it, when the goths used to live in crimea few centuries ago, before their language went extinct.

      @jout738@jout7383 ай бұрын
    • @@jout738 I don't think so

      @siam_enjoyer8584@siam_enjoyer85843 ай бұрын
  • A Finn here. The Finnish one was spot on 🙏🏻😂 love that you gave us whole Swedish biscuits instead of just sprinkles, it makes sense tho😂

    @julleri783@julleri7833 ай бұрын
    • You deserve the full cookie!🍪

      @telebubba5527@telebubba55273 ай бұрын
    • Then what would be appropriate for a description of Meänkeli? Cakes? ;)

      @petergustafsson1670@petergustafsson16703 ай бұрын
    • Kanske en Svensk Kaka och En Finsker Maka får barn?

      @A.Sanchez.@A.Sanchez.3 ай бұрын
    • As an estonian, i waited for estonian sprinkles on finnish

      @0ll312@0ll3122 ай бұрын
    • Biscuits and some vodka maybe...

      @MilosBrajkovic-rc3ik@MilosBrajkovic-rc3ik2 ай бұрын
  • Is it just me, or does the phrase "Viking sprinkles" sound both hilarious and terrifying?

    @hoi-polloi1863@hoi-polloi18633 ай бұрын
    • Quite so.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • This guy is like a language person, but with unique _sprinkles._

    @amazingfireboy1848@amazingfireboy18483 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • There's actually just as much germanic words as arabic words in portuguese. So it's more like latin language spoken by celts with germanic and arabic sprinkles.

    @Bifito@Bifito3 ай бұрын
    • Nice.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • See my other post under this video, doing an analysis of Arabic versus Germanic words in Portuguese.

      @jboss1073@jboss10733 ай бұрын
    • I was going to say precisely the same. Even so the video is very, very good.

      @joaosalgado2312@joaosalgado23123 ай бұрын
    • Precisely

      @matichagak548@matichagak5482 ай бұрын
  • As a Hungarian I was curious, and you're reaction left me delighted😂

    @juankawai@juankawai3 ай бұрын
    • Splendid. Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • I was eagerly anticipating the Hungarian segment, and you didn't disappoint.

    @freddledgruntbuggly9408@freddledgruntbuggly94083 ай бұрын
  • "Spanish is latin spoken by Basques". That's the best definition I have ever heard of the language

    @pyrenaea3019@pyrenaea30193 ай бұрын
    • If you hear from a further distance a spanish person and a basque person speak on their own language, may you cannot hear the difference. This was my impression. Spanish is latin spoken by ancestors of basques

      @woygenya@woygenya3 ай бұрын
    • Not many people know this unfortunately. Spanish is the descendant of the Vulgar Latin that was spoken in the area surrounding the Basque region, and thus inherited Basque phonetics and even some vocabulary.

      @osasunaitor@osasunaitor3 ай бұрын
    • Further note: turns out primitive forms of basque might evolve from ancient Iberian native languages

      @CBZ-vk9bz@CBZ-vk9bz2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@woygenyaThat's really arguable! Your point only stands if by Spanish speaker you're referring by someone speaking Spanish from the historical Castille region. A whole different matter when that Spanish person is a native Galician, Catalan or Andalusian speaker, for instance. Vowels and some consonants will change considerably, let alone the tone, rythm and and musicality!

      @Basauri48970@Basauri489702 ай бұрын
    • @@Basauri48970 There is no such thing as "Spanish". What there is is the language of the castilians that rule over all of spain (for now). Galician is much closer to portugues then to "Spanish" for instance

      @carlosbelo9304@carlosbelo93042 ай бұрын
  • I'm Greek, ancient and modern greek are considered a continuous language. Even if someone who speaks modern greek hasn't been in touch with ancient greek (kind of difficult since we are taught since junior high school), he/she would be able to understand the general point of an ancient greek text. The biggest difference was probably the way of pronunciation and the different toning, but as with chinese, it's a continuous living language with steady core and characteristics.

    @aristarchos5342@aristarchos53423 ай бұрын
    • I understand.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • That's right. Greek is ONE language that has evolved. The last 2,500 years Greek has changed a lot less than English has the last 600 years.

      @Athmoneus@Athmoneus3 ай бұрын
    • @@Athmoneus Exactly.

      @MarbledKing@MarbledKing2 ай бұрын
    • I second that.

      @MarbledKing@MarbledKing2 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn Well, being a Greek myself, I tend to agree with your opinion. Greek in not mutually intelligible with Ancient Greek. Of course, the modern Greek language has evolved from the Ancient one, having been influenced by Latin, Slavic and Turkish, as you explained. In addition, although the huge majority of modern Greek words have kept the same or similar roots to the ancient ones, there are many differences in grammar, syntax etc, so that a Greek person cannot understand the ancient language unless he has studied it. To conclude, in my opinion there is the Greek branch of languages that all have evolved from Ancient Greek, which itself consisted of at least 3 main dialects (ie Ionian, Doric an Aeolian). This branch nowadays consists of modern Greek, Cypriot Greek, Pontic Greek,Tsakonian Greek, and Griko (southern Italy), although many consider all these as Greek dialects (I do not agree but I am not an expert). This means, that in the case of Greek, there is not a language continuum in the strict sense, but rather a discrete evolution from a common origin point.

      @npapatri@npapatri2 ай бұрын
  • Czech here. You’re spot on. Also a language of handmaidens and stableboys who were told by their superiors to finally learn some german ( because its cool) and than later being told not to speak german ( beacuse its not cool now) by the very same kind of people….

    @davidpohl9774@davidpohl97743 ай бұрын
    • Nice, thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Czech language has also English sprinkles from seamen who traveled rivers like Vltava. Thus you have ahoj/ahoy from there. Who knows what else.

      @petervlcko4858@petervlcko48582 ай бұрын
  • You forgot Maltese= basicaly arabic with lots of italian sprinkles

    @Yanzdorloph@Yanzdorloph3 ай бұрын
    • Maltese is arabic that converted to catholicism.

      @CanonessEllinor@CanonessEllinor3 ай бұрын
    • he could add rusin as well

      @sakesaurus1706@sakesaurus17062 ай бұрын
  • the french definition was gold

    @michaelchr4239@michaelchr42393 ай бұрын
    • I would add a Celtic Gaulish sauce over it all. Then the definition would be perfect.

      @jasminekaram880@jasminekaram8803 ай бұрын
    • Fascinating - liked the Lithuanian bridge to Old India.

      @markhughes7927@markhughes79273 ай бұрын
    • I laughed my ass off 😂

      @dzonybajlando9270@dzonybajlando92703 ай бұрын
    • true--especially with the funky counting@@jasminekaram880

      @michaelchr4239@michaelchr42393 ай бұрын
    • @@jasminekaram880 exactly... how did he miss that?

      @EricNoneless@EricNoneless3 ай бұрын
  • The contrast between the very academic diction and the absolutely unhinged definitions is hilarious

    @hollandvw4250@hollandvw42503 ай бұрын
  • Dutch gurgling water was genius.

    @thebeststoryevertold@thebeststoryevertold3 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • That is actually how they speak, he did not make anything up, at least with dutch

      @ander4163@ander41633 ай бұрын
    • expected Dutch to invoke more voice box sounds than gurgling

      @embreis2257@embreis22572 ай бұрын
  • Well, there is a myth that Russian was created when Mongolian horde tried to learn Ukrainian.

    @luciamacakova7516@luciamacakova75163 ай бұрын
    • Seems like it’s exact the opposite! Russians are not the ones who have slanted eyes, Ukrainians are!😊

      @gordonpi8674@gordonpi86743 ай бұрын
    • the ukranian language was made up in 19th century what else are ukranians making up to seem older than they actually are?

      @shef8764@shef87643 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @ThePanEthiopian@ThePanEthiopian3 ай бұрын
    • You mean, a myth that only Ukrainians tend to believe 😮

      @islmhhh4987@islmhhh49873 ай бұрын
    • yet old east slavic is more similar to modern Russian than it is to Ukrainian

      @militaryman111@militaryman1113 ай бұрын
  • 5:11 FINliam Shakespeare Met[h]odi ✍ Change nouns into verbs (verbing) ✍ Transform verbs into adjectives ✍ Connect words never used together before ✍ Add prefixes and suffixes ✍ Invent the word you need ✍ Listen to things people say #Sananmuodostus #Yhdistäminen #Johtaminen #Kontaminaatio

    @OkaJulKama@OkaJulKama3 ай бұрын
  • That was hilarious. I speak well two very different European languages and learning another. The sprinkles are KEY!

    @sunrisings292@sunrisings2923 ай бұрын
    • Belgian or Swiss ?

      @PominReklamy@PominReklamy3 ай бұрын
  • Swede here, you forgot the old german sprinkles

    @lm7338@lm73383 ай бұрын
    • Fair play.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Plattdeutsch sprinkles.

      @clopec@clopec3 ай бұрын
    • … And old Lithuanian sprinkles)

      @DVladas@DVladas3 ай бұрын
    • @@DVladas In Swedish??? What? Care to give an example? As a Swede, that was a new assertion!

      @petergustafsson1670@petergustafsson16703 ай бұрын
    • And Romani sprinkles as well. Tjej (girl) for example is Romani.

      @aliceberethart@aliceberethart3 ай бұрын
  • I like it. As a Czech… I’d say we eliminated lot of German words from vocabulary, while lot of “German sprinkles” remained in the sentence structure and logic. Mmm … and being entirely Polish doesn’t cut it for me entirely 😆 Maybe being somewhere in between Polish in the north and Slovenians in the south with unbalanced cleansing of the German influence might 🤔

    @petrskupa6292@petrskupa62923 ай бұрын
    • Fair point about Slovenians as your relatives.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelynand then, might I add. Returning all the german sprinkles, disguised as slang

      @miagatwa2457@miagatwa24573 ай бұрын
    • Nah you just robbed Slovak and made it harder to pronounce

      @legg6221@legg62212 ай бұрын
    • @@legg6221 Kind of. Kind of true Slovak and Czech have immediate common origin (Great Moravia), while Czech have undergone further evolution (as frontier language of free people), Slovak is based on conservative lingo of people surviving up in the mountains in country ruled by Magyars since 899 AD. So Slovak retains more of the original forms Czech ancestral form also had. So yes, we Czechs (didn’t rob them, we were them) were kind of Slovaks who made our language harder to pronounce over time ☺️

      @petrskupa6292@petrskupa62922 ай бұрын
    • ​@@BenLlywelyn I suppose you are Welsh, aren't you. I mean, the name. Dear Welsh dragon, thanks a lot for your input but your understanding of Czech is completely wrong. We Czech hobbitses haven't got rid of our germanisms. They just got naturally absorbed into the Czech language and masked as something originally Czech. But every other word is actually originally German, even the words where you wouldn't guess it at all. We Czechs and Poles started off the same base but the languages started differing somewhere in the 13th to 14th century. Polish kept the spřežky like sz instead of š or rz instead of ř, and so on, and it's generally much more soft sounding than the quite harsh Czech, which in turn has a lot of pronunciations that sound like baby talk mixed with jard sounds. Polish sounds go up and down like Welsh and the language is sing-songy, while Czech is flat. You got us completely wrong.

      @Calucifer13@Calucifer132 ай бұрын
  • Linguistic shade. With sprinkles

    @davidjhills@davidjhills3 ай бұрын
  • This is what I have always thought when I saw Catalan. By extension, Occitan is also the missing link between Northern France and Italy, Spain or Portugual. But there were the Albigensian Crusade, French Revolution and then III Republic's school...

    @tibsky1396@tibsky13963 ай бұрын
    • I found it reasonably easy to read Catalan by interpolation between French and Spanish. Of course saying anything requires a lot more study.

      @bradwilliams7198@bradwilliams71983 ай бұрын
    • I find it incredibly interesting how Portuguese and Occitan/Provençal are similar

      @miguelpadeiro762@miguelpadeiro7623 ай бұрын
    • True, Occitan and Catalan are really similar, the main difference between them is that Occitan has borrowed more French words and Catalan has borrowed more Spanish in recent times.

      @osasunaitor@osasunaitor3 ай бұрын
  • Got inspired by this to do a description of one of my conlangs: Lavinian is a baltic language spoken by balts that are separated from the rest of the Baltic tribes, with Polish, Finnish, Serbian and Albanian sprinkles

    @alyss_aq@alyss_aq3 ай бұрын
  • Icelandic: modern old norse French: real bad latin😂 Finnish: ah yes, finnic spoken by finns😂 Hungarian: * leaves the room *

    @dawsonbrown8863@dawsonbrown88632 ай бұрын
  • Finnish: Finnic spoken by Finns, baked into mix of Baltic and ancient Indo-European loanwords, seasoned amply with fresh Swedish, with just a tiny sprinkle of Russian loanwords. The colloquial version includes heavily sprinkled English loanwords on top.

    @viljanov@viljanov2 ай бұрын
  • That was an entertaining Rundfahrt through the mess/maze of European languages! Thank you. As an Englishman living in Germany for the last 30 years, and who taught English to (mostly) German speakers for the last 20 of those, I used to tease my students with something similar, if not so comprehensive: German is a work of engineering, French is a work of art, Italian is a work of comedy and English is a work of... chaos!

    @digoryjohns2018@digoryjohns20182 ай бұрын
  • I like the faces of this man saying "sprinkles".

    @beorlingo@beorlingo3 ай бұрын
  • This brightened up my day, Multumesc!

    @bpopa27@bpopa273 ай бұрын
    • Un lucru excelent.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • same 👍 ✌

      @DacianRider@DacianRider3 ай бұрын
    • it's spelled mulțumesc, thoughbeit.

      @theaveragenormie7151@theaveragenormie71513 ай бұрын
  • I loved this, it was so informative!

    @amiwho3464@amiwho34643 ай бұрын
    • Excellent.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for taking the time, thought and effort to bring your interest into the form of a video. I enjoyed it so much! 😍

    @Dimension2364@Dimension23642 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
  • I don't know how, but I have stumbled upon this video and this channel. As a hungarian, I was eager to see ehat you have to say about the language, andbit brought a smile on my face. Greetings from Hungary, and üdvözletem minden magyarnak, aki eme sorokat olvassa (greetings to all hungarians reading these lines)

    @hank780@hank7802 ай бұрын
    • Köszönöm. Glad you came here.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn Thank you. And szívesen. This randomly popped up in my recommended

      @hank780@hank7802 ай бұрын
  • 4:53 🇪🇪 Estonian vocabulary: Germanic 35%; Russian 7%; English 5%, Finnish 3%. Laentüved eesti keeles 45-49% kõigist tüvedest (v.a võõrtüved) indoeuroopa laenud (4000 BC, 16-40: mesi, müü-, sool, vili

    @OkaJulKama@OkaJulKama2 ай бұрын
    • aitäh.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
  • Hi Ben, I loved the content, but I think you missed out on an opportunity to showcase your usual editing skills and slow down the video a bit, in order to give the viewer a chance to absorb the picture you are painting for each language. I had to pause several times, but I still quite enjoyed it. Some of the languages were hilariously defined and I laughed out loud. Others were very informative and I learned a bunch. I completely agree on Lithuanian, and the world almost lost that language to the Russians. I'm curious what examples in Portuguese you were thinking of that fulfills the "prehistoric" aspect. Surely "manteiga" (which even if explained through PIE is still from pre-Roman Iberia) as the flagship example, but what else did you have in mind?

    @jboss1073@jboss10733 ай бұрын
    • With Portuguese it is mostly the rhythm and nasality which is so starkly unique compared to Spanish, Basque, and Catalan, and that we know Lusitanians and others in the south had alternate origins to being totally Celtic.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn "and that we know Lusitanians and others in the south had alternate origins to being totally Celtic." Lusitanian language shows the same pattern as you showed us in your Hungarian roots graphic in this video - namely, the largest percentage words are from "undifferentiated Indo-European" and a close second are from Celtic. Wodtko said "it is very hard to find names in Lusitanian which are not Celtic" and those that are found that way cannot be more readily assigned to another language but simply to "undifferentiated Indo-European". I think if a people, like the Lusitanians, called themselves Celts, as they did, then who are you to say they were not "totally Celtic"? Some more respect around this identity issue is in order.

      @jboss1073@jboss10733 ай бұрын
  • This is a truly great video lol, I’ve been looking for something like this my whole life

    @virgilflowers9846@virgilflowers98463 ай бұрын
    • Nice. Thank you

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • You have inspired me to do the same to my language. Amharic is a southern Ethiosemetic language closely related to arabic and hebrew, its what you get when southern ge'ez dialects get mixed with local languages like agaw, oromo and others to form its unique fusion with some arabic, greek, italian, french and english sprinkles.

    @ThePanEthiopian@ThePanEthiopian3 ай бұрын
  • The Portuguese definition was the best! I can feel it, that my mother tongue (Brazilian Portuguese) has something deep to do with Celtic. And I suppose that the Celtic influence spread to the Americas too! And Maltese? Maltese is a mix of Latin and Arabic.

    @ALEIJADINHOPATRIOTA@ALEIJADINHOPATRIOTA3 ай бұрын
    • Maltese, ah. Yes.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Ben, to be honest with you, I like to much your videos and your accurate way of explaining all the things. In Brazil there was before a native language called Tupi (Tupinambá). Nowadays linguisitcs say that Tupi was the most important language of a family. The Tupi was a very beautiful language too. I would appreciate if you would once try to study all the most important American native languages and maybe, perhaps, you could post a special video about them. I suppose that North American native languages could be related to the Celtics too. Why not start maybe with ALGONQUIN or CHEROKEE?@@BenLlywelyn

      @ALEIJADINHOPATRIOTA@ALEIJADINHOPATRIOTA3 ай бұрын
  • As a linguist and a historian, this is absolutely hysterical!

    @Jade.Phoenix@Jade.Phoenix3 ай бұрын
    • Fantastic.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Dude! You have totally smashed it! ❤

    @alfredflorin4419@alfredflorin44192 ай бұрын
    • Thank you. I may have to take down this video and reload it with different music because a song I paid for is being hit with a copyright violation.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
  • Spot on! Well done, Mate!

    @gaullie4449@gaullie4449Ай бұрын
  • thanks for mentioning the context for Latvian and Estonian languages! Quite accurate, but I would say that in Latvian there is more than sprinkles of finnic-uralic. I think I would say a lump of germans and finnic, and sprinkles of russian.

    @dagsfjodorovs7896@dagsfjodorovs78963 ай бұрын
  • Me as a bulgarian had a blast the moment he said that bulgarian had a sprinkle of Russian, as if it wasn't Bulgaria that gave the Russians their alphabet and Old Church Slavonic is not Old Bulgarian that later on evolved into Church Slavonic that is now the lithurgical language of the slavic countries :D Yeah we really did influence ourselves, thanks! :D P.S Modern Bulgarian is way more influenced by Turkish and French, more than anything. Turkish is related, since Bulgaria was under Ottoman rule for several centuries, so we are using some turkish words and in the 20th century many french words were adopted together with some Italian words. Yeah, if we're talking about modern russian language influence, then yes, there certainly is some, but not to the extent you'd expect x) Bulgarian is quite different and in fact has been distancing itself from Russian for a while now. The reason why we understand Russian fairly well, while at some point, bulgarian can seem alien at points to other slavs because we've stopped using some old slavic words and systems, and changed them for new ones, or started borrowing words from other languages, but we are still being taught bulgarian literature from the 19th century, so we know many of those *dead* words, which are still in use in many other slavic languages x)

    @Ne0LiT@Ne0LiT3 ай бұрын
    • Cheers.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Ohh… this is a great summary of our language situation. I can confirm we understand way more other southern Slavic languages plus Russian than they are able to understand modern Bulgarian.

      @stoyanstankov9158@stoyanstankov91582 ай бұрын
  • I love th way you have managed to describe each language in a single sentence :))

    @tedi1932@tedi19322 ай бұрын
  • I liked this video a lot and given how well you described the Czech language and Slovak I can assume that you described others just as well.

    @tibormalinsky8751@tibormalinsky87512 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
  • Ancient Greek and Modern Greek are not two different languages. The language has maintained such cohesion of structure and vocabulary that it is recognized by both scholars and native speakers as one language.

    @thanosgreco4859@thanosgreco48593 ай бұрын
  • Execellent work on simplification!!! Kudos! Πολλά συγχαρητήρια ;)

    @hellascommentor@hellascommentor3 ай бұрын
    • Συγχαρητήρια; Πας καλά; Άκουσες τι είπε ο άσχετος για τα ελληνικά;

      @crossroadsfootwear3408@crossroadsfootwear34083 ай бұрын
  • The best language summary I have ever heard. Actually, a few are ones that I also thought, like Catalan being like a mix of Spanish and French. Greetings from Hungary!

    @CastChaos@CastChaos3 ай бұрын
  • Nice one! And good acting! Are not most of these observations what we really think of each other's lingoes but usually dare not say in our faces? As a Pole I've never heard that opening description of our language. I myslef can't hear it, but I think it holds water with Russian to a certain extent - in my opinion, when it comes to cadence and phonics Russian is much like Balts trying to speak Slavic and then some. Spot on on the big lump and the sprinkles though. Also, I thought Welsh has some Hebrew (Phoenician? Or whatever similar ancient language from that very area?) sprinkles to it, doesn't it? I'd call German (that is "Hochdeutsch") a language created by the AI with some human sprinkles to it.

    @dpw6546@dpw65463 ай бұрын
    • No Semitic in Celtic Languages at all. That was a 18th century idea put forward by mainly English Linguists to make us seem more otherly and a mystic stereotype.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • True along with our brother ethnicity of Galicia who's more Celtic but hugely Spanish influenced recently

    @Yes-qj4bi@Yes-qj4bi3 ай бұрын
    • The language wasn't "influenced recently", i think you mean the mix of Castilian and Galician spoken in a few cities like Vigo

      @adrv7919@adrv79193 ай бұрын
    • @@adrv7919 I mean if I'm wrong I'm wrong I'm really just assuming on my historic based knowledge that since Porto split from Galicia and Galicia went to Leon and Leon to Castile while Portugal prior (high simplified obviously) becomes a thing that after years of being conquered by Castilians that the Galicians would be assimilated into speaking a strong Castilian dialect though I'd hope not because Galicians are cool.

      @Yes-qj4bi@Yes-qj4bi3 ай бұрын
  • 8:30 #teamunknown 🇭🇺 #sayitinsaami #sägdetpåsamiska #sidetpåsamisk #sanosesaameksi Davvisámi Northern Sámi 🇫🇮 🇧🇻 🇸🇪 Anarâškielâ Inari Sámi 🇫🇮 Sääʹmǩiõll Skolt Sámi 🇫🇮 🇷🇺 Dego sávzačora. Juávhust jollâvuotâ lassaan. Jooukâst jõllvuõtt lâssan. People get dumber in crowds Buot dat maid galgá gierdat Puoh mun koolgâm killáđ Uuʹd juʹn puk ǩeâllʼjed This is too much to handle Gos leat ceakkos gáissát ja eanemus muohta? Kost láá ciägu kááisáh já enâmus muotâ? Koʹst lie čåʹǩǩtuõddâr da jäänmõsân muõtt? Where are the steepest mountains and the most snow? Loavttán buorebut jiekŋačázis go geassebáhkkasis Mun kal makkuum pyerebeht runneest ko kesipaahâin Maaššam pueʹrben kaʹlddjest ǥu pašttjest. I like ice-swimming better than hot weather Sámi vocabulary: 34% unknown, 24% Germanic, 18% Uralic, 16% Finnic, 8% other known origin. Eastern Sámi Mainland Eastern Sámi Akkala Sámi † Inari Sámi (300 speakers) Kemi Sámi [Extinct now for over 100 years] Kainuu Sámi† Skolt Sámi (320 speakers) Peninsular Eastern Sámi Kildin Sámi (600 speakers) Ter Sámi (2 speakers) Western Sámi Central Western Sámi Lule-Pite Sámi Lule Sámi (1,000-2,000 speakers) Pite Sámi (20 speakers) Northern Sámi (26,000 speakers) Southwestern Sámi Southern Sámi (600 speakers) Ume Sámi (20 speakers) The above figures are approximate.

    @PerfectBrEAThER@PerfectBrEAThER3 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Ben for this amazing pamphlet. You forgot the pesky Austria, where they communicate in a german(ish) language, with cancerous sprinkles. Leaving the pun aside, I must thank you again, for you have made my day (evening) brighter. The Swiss, the Andorran, the Maltese, my o-my. We have so many on this tiny map. (Please, don't take this as criticism, because it is not. Your work is highly appreciated). If I may, I would suggest to take it as a germination for your next stream. Perhaps? And here we are. Me, expressing my respect for your invaluable work. And for the stylish exposé. Please, keep the streams coming.

    @Claudiu_Dumitru@Claudiu_Dumitru3 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video, Ben. I laughed so hard throughout

    @DianneWilderASMR@DianneWilderASMR3 ай бұрын
    • Excellent! Laughter heals.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn indeed, thank you

      @DianneWilderASMR@DianneWilderASMR3 ай бұрын
  • this will have a million views soon, excellent piece

    @vodbank9100@vodbank91003 ай бұрын
    • 😀 Hope so!

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • You forgot to put in Sami as it is a very distinctive language. But honestly great video! ❤

    @NoanNorvang@NoanNorvang3 ай бұрын
    • You're right!

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • This is lovely. Incredible how Ben managed to be funny and - at the same time - very accurate!

    @micheleferretto7079@micheleferretto70793 ай бұрын
    • Glad you gained good from watching.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@BenLlywelyn You can definitely say more than just "good": my fiancée is half Hungarian, so we really enjoyed the Hungarian part!

      @micheleferretto7079@micheleferretto70792 ай бұрын
  • Just brillant and I enjoyed every bit of it, though could be organised in a slightly more digestible way, as for me. I had to stop it topic after topic just to enjoy either a refined sense of humor or to devour a new bit od knowledge discovered. Nevertheless, thank you, Ben! I eagerly ask for more!

    @stanpodol8233@stanpodol82333 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for watching.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Catalan language shouldn't be represented by the separatist flag. Because 1) it's unofficial, the official one doesn't have blue triangle and star. 2)it doesn't represent the majority of Catalans who don't want the indepependence (and consider themselves Spanish).

    @Adson_von_Melk@Adson_von_Melk3 ай бұрын
    • When Madrid no longer fears a vote as put forward by Catalunya's elected government, maybe I'll change it

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn LOL. There's a Constitution, which Spain, as every country in Europe, except the UK, has and which says the country is indivisible. You may put whatever coloured rag in your video, it won't change that. Catalonia (that's how it's written in English, FYI) is part of Spain and you have to deal with it. That "elected government" should abide by the Spanish Constitution and Spanish laws as in every single civilized country. Madrid shouldn't abide by the whims of an ultranationalist, racist minority - and they are minority in Catalonia itself.

      @Adson_von_Melk@Adson_von_Melk3 ай бұрын
    • @@Adson_von_Melk do you know constitutions can get amended or changed? nothing is written in stone. if you would put down your tinted glasses and look at Spain with the neutral eyes of a foreign observer you would acknowledge there are problems with the concept of unitary states wherever you look. whether in Spain, in France or in the UK (even after 'devolution'). there are always frictions in nation states with a unitary concept because it doesn't accommodate local needs and interests in a sufficient enough way to make citizens of modern democracies feel content. Spain would probably be better off with a more federal structure.

      @embreis2257@embreis22572 ай бұрын
  • The Greek language including 7.000.000 unique words.The modern Greek language is an evolution of the Ancient one.For example when a Modern Greek read the original text of Homer Iliad and Odyssey (800BC-701BC)he have unknown words bur he understand the meaning.Also the New Testament (written in Koine Greek at the time of Christ )a Modern Greek ,read it directly from the original text , and fully understand the text.Koine Greek was the evolution of the Ancient Greek language that was formed in Alexandria from the time of Alexander -356 BC)to the time and death of Cleopatra - 30 BC.Even an uneducation Modern Greek understand the Koine Greek and read the gospels from the original text.

    @Erato7@Erato73 ай бұрын
    • That's also true of Romance languages vs Latin. I'm Portuguese and I can understand Latin fairly well, especially ecclesiastical Latin. It doesn't mean it's still the same language. I guess one could argue that Latin isn't a dead language and that Portuguese, Spanish, Catalan, French, Sardinian, Italian, Romanian... are just dialects with huge differences amongst themselves.

      @lucasribeiro7534@lucasribeiro75343 ай бұрын
    • True

      @cassandramalvasia3629@cassandramalvasia36293 ай бұрын
    • @@lucasribeiro7534but Greek language was evolved to Greek language. Same language. Latin is a dead language. And it’s not my opinion. All linguists are saying that the same Greek language survived throughout the centuries and is alive, spoken by the modern Greek people. In comparison Latin hasn’t survived.

      @issith7340@issith73403 ай бұрын
    • @@issith7340 Suppose we called your language "Cypriot", then. Would you consider Greek to be a dead language? That's what happened with Latin. After the fall of Rome, Latin speakers renamed the language based on their dialects/countries. I don't think modern Greek is any closer to ancient Greek than Italian is to old Latin.

      @lucasribeiro7534@lucasribeiro75343 ай бұрын
    • @@lucasribeiro7534 you csn call my language Cypriot if you like, cause it’s the same languagess we speak in Greece. If you don’t know about definitions of language and dialects, go study that first. And also there are specific historical reasons why the Greek language didn’t split in Greek-derived new languages. Also you need to study this before declaring whatever your mind invents, as it is a universal truth.

      @issith7340@issith73403 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant and highly entertaining, thank youze.

    @jamespardue3055@jamespardue30553 ай бұрын
  • Nice video! Leuke video! (saying this with water in my mouth wondering why? Because of the sea level? Because of the guttaral G?? Just wondering ;))

    @torrawel@torrawel3 ай бұрын
  • As a Romanian Hungarian, hungarian never seemed strange to me because my parents and grandparents speak it regularly, but after a while if I think about it doesn’t make any sense, it’s like alien language, and they kind of made us learn Romanian and spoke with us only in Romanian because is easier.

    @cosmindvd@cosmindvd3 ай бұрын
    • It would be fascinating to speak with people more familiar with Hungarian.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn Such a strange language and is 4th hardest to learn in the world for English speakers, after Mandarin, Arabic and Japanese.

      @cosmindvd@cosmindvd3 ай бұрын
    • You should be ashamed!

      @vasarelly37@vasarelly373 ай бұрын
    • @@vasarelly37 Are you one of those brainwashed ultranationalist hungarians? I am not ashamed that I don't know to speak my ancestors language properly, I was born in Romania not in Hungary, Romania is my home, we make a lot of friends with hungarians, but with those who actually have a brain unlike ultranationalists brainwashed ones.

      @cosmindvd@cosmindvd3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelynyou just made me subscribe. By the way I’m Hungarian living near to Wales.

      @Macskapajti@Macskapajti3 ай бұрын
  • 😂😂Brilliant overview. Fun and informative.👍👍

    @waynejones1054@waynejones10543 ай бұрын
    • Diolch. Thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Each language mentioned is a lifetime of study put into words and explained within seconds. An excellent presentation. "Do it on the radio." Susan´s (aka Rita), entire essay on Ibsent´s Peer Gynt Educating Rita.

    @leighcanham763@leighcanham7633 ай бұрын
  • Excellent! I was especially impressed by the description of English and German

    @OLDCHEMIST1@OLDCHEMIST13 ай бұрын
  • For Norwegian, you could have added: with English (especially the American kind of English) sprinkles.

    @mariiris1403@mariiris14033 ай бұрын
    • And I forgot, historically: Lot's of low-German sprinkles!

      @mariiris1403@mariiris14033 ай бұрын
    • Many of them these days.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • Yes, true! 😄@@BenLlywelyn

      @mariiris1403@mariiris14033 ай бұрын
    • With very large Danish sprinkles

      @magnusschive4696@magnusschive46963 ай бұрын
    • That too, even though the Danish have some problems with recognizing them. 🤭@@magnusschive4696

      @mariiris1403@mariiris14033 ай бұрын
  • Just wondering, doesn't Bulgarian also have a few Greek sprinkles (or is it less than I think)?

    @dominikschmalstieg2912@dominikschmalstieg29123 ай бұрын
    • Indeed.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • We are NOT turks, dudes!

      @ladinark1672@ladinark16723 ай бұрын
    • We do, just like every other country in Europe/North America.

      @ladinark1672@ladinark16723 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ladinark1672I was looking for this comment, lol. Cmon what's wrong with having turkic origins

      @yasinmehmed5600@yasinmehmed56003 ай бұрын
    • @@ladinark1672Nowadays, certainly not, but the First Bulgarian Empire started off as a khaganate ruled by people who spoke Bulgar, an extinct Oghur Turkic language that, despite its name, was in no way related to any of the Eastern South Slavic dialects Bulgarian was assembled from.

      @fabiomorandi3585@fabiomorandi35853 ай бұрын
  • thank you , you are great !

    @maringasca9128@maringasca91283 ай бұрын
  • Great presentation!

    @FaustasEdinburgas@FaustasEdinburgas2 ай бұрын
  • That 18th century Kernewek speaker has spent much of the last century trying to improve his spelling!

    @bradwilliams7198@bradwilliams71983 ай бұрын
  • Dutch was really the best. Karelian is Finnish with lots of Russian sprinkles. Meänkieli is what Swedes call Finnish in their own country. Sami is the ancient Finnic language that gave Karelians more options for keyboard: ž, š and their own đ.

    @stasacab@stasacab3 ай бұрын
    • Wait.... is "kieli" actually a word in swedish? Because that means "language" in Finnish.

      @tovarishcheleonora8542@tovarishcheleonora85422 ай бұрын
    • @@tovarishcheleonora8542 Meänkieli means "our language" and it seems to be the same in most languages. But no, "kielli" is not a word in Swedish.

      @stasacab@stasacab2 ай бұрын
  • Your were spott on in all the languages I know something about.

    @andreehobrak1425@andreehobrak14253 ай бұрын
  • Lovely! Haha. Great vid again!

    @CBernardo1@CBernardo13 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting video, thank you. On Greek, my view would be that it actually is the same as ancient Greek - a language spoken continuously for over 3,000 years. Given this, changes are, of course, expected - is today's English the same as that of Shakespeare's time? So, Homer's Greek differs than that of the Classical (5th C. BC.) era, that differs than the Greek of the Gospels, that differs from the Byzantine Greek, and that differs from the Greek (actually, what's left of it) of today.

    @ioannishatzitheodorou4878@ioannishatzitheodorou48783 ай бұрын
    • Byzantines went through profound changes.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • @@BenLlywelyn Changes yes, profound definitely not. The most important changes in the language happened in the hellenistic period and during the roman conquest when greek became the lingua franca of a vast region. The name of that language was koine greek which of course is also the language of the new testament and other literature of the era, both pagan and christian. Koine greek is also descended from a vulgarized version of the attic dialect and is the direct ancestor of modern greek. Byzantine changes were comparatively far less significant.

      @kappani5734@kappani5734Ай бұрын
  • 0:51 when there’s 20 people behind me in line at the ice cream shop and I’m ordering their whole menu

    @jackboyle5142@jackboyle51423 ай бұрын
    • Delicious.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • That was awesome 😂. We need more videos like this

    @cardenmanning2455@cardenmanning24553 ай бұрын
  • What is the name of that music which was playing during the graph about the language origins of Hungarian words?

    @ollikoskiniemi6221@ollikoskiniemi62213 ай бұрын
    • A Peasant's Sonnet, by Jonny Easton.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • 4:16 that was very accurate dutch

    @o_s-24@o_s-243 ай бұрын
  • i got intrigued by the title, and hooked by his impression of the accents. Because learning etymology and history of the many many countries of europe is one thing, concentrating those in individual sentences SPOKEN with the appropriate accent, is another. French was appropriately violent, finnish and hungarian got me rollin'!

    @asilnorahc8910@asilnorahc89102 ай бұрын
    • Glad you liked it.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn2 ай бұрын
  • My senior year of high school, we had a Finnish foreign exchange student live with us, and I learned how to pronounce Finnish, as well as a few Finnish words and phrases. I found Finnish grammar a bit daunting, though. Mind you, I had taken two years of Latin in junior high school and two years of German in high school, but Finnish ... 15 cases for nouns! Fifteen! I found Japanese (which I studied in college when I was 49) to be easier grammar-wise than Finnish.

    @shadowlynx1958@shadowlynx19582 ай бұрын
  • 0:39 my cat tryin to tell me he wants to come inside

    @jackboyle5142@jackboyle51423 ай бұрын
    • Yes.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • One of the best videos i ve ever seen.

    @lorenzoloviselli1900@lorenzoloviselli19003 ай бұрын
    • Considerate, thank you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • you have a calming voice

    @polarmane@polarmane3 ай бұрын
    • The calm of the storm.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • if he is as Welsh as his name sounds, than that should come as no surprise^^

      @embreis2257@embreis22572 ай бұрын
  • That was interesting. With the only correction -- Bulgarian is the modern version on the Old Slavic, and Russian borrowned Old Slavic through the texts of the Orthodox church.

    @sliiiin@sliiiin2 ай бұрын
  • I've heard that Hungarians would be somehow related to the Finnish-Ugrian language family, or then the relation was genetic in nature, but some kind of connection there is said to be..

    @rapu89@rapu893 ай бұрын
    • élve vagy halva elossa tai kuollut *elä- to live *vai or *kale- to die

      @PerfectBrEAThER@PerfectBrEAThER3 ай бұрын
    • Yes, the " Uralic " segment of the vocabulary implies that.

      @csabasalzinger4566@csabasalzinger45663 ай бұрын
    • Finno-Ugric is not a family. That's a (merged) branch of the Uralic family.

      @tovarishcheleonora8542@tovarishcheleonora85422 ай бұрын
    • SAAMI FINNIC MORDVIN MARI PERMIC MANSI ΚΗΑΝΤΥ SAMOYED HUNGARIAN The branches of the Uralic family in an approximate geographical order along the east-west axis "Thus, in the present framework the traditional concept of "Proto-Finno-Ugric" is essentially synonymous with Proto-Uralic." - Proto-Uralic , Luobbal Sámmol Sámmol Ánte (Ante Aikio) 2022, Marianne Bakró-Nagy, Johanna Laakso & Elena Skribnik (eds.): The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages

      @PerfectBrEAThER@PerfectBrEAThER2 ай бұрын
    • @@PerfectBrEAThER Most of the names you wrote are languages, not branches. Maybe next time stay silent if you know nothing about the topic.

      @tovarishcheleonora8542@tovarishcheleonora85422 ай бұрын
  • Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian are languages spoken by ancient slavic brothers who hate each other because they chose different friends to hang out with. Croatians chose Germans and Italians, Bosniaks chose Turks and serbians chose greeks and Russians. The family feud got so bad that they pretended they were victims of the tower of Babel when in reality it was a three story apartment. In other words they speak the same language but pretend its 3 different ones because they have their heads too far up their hmmm haaah. This is just an observation and opinion of a Bošnjak living in America since 93.

    @Sanel_C@Sanel_C3 ай бұрын
    • Add to that Montenegrin which is a language spoken by people too sleepy to realize it's the same as Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian

      @BlindBosnian@BlindBosnian3 ай бұрын
    • Не всё так просто, что бы сводить всё до просто "выбрал других приятелей" - у каждой из культур свои убеждения и правила жизни, которые не совместимы между собой, отчего и конфликты. Потому что каждая культура автоматически навязывает свои правила жизни, которые недопустимы для тебя и ты вынужден защищаться и даже вести войну за свою свободу.

      @user-uu4kz8sr5i@user-uu4kz8sr5i3 ай бұрын
    • The family feud happened because one brother tried to dominate over other brothers. It's as simple as that. And as a Bosniak you should know that. Or you just don't give an eff, since you're too far from here anyway.

      @damyr@damyr3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-uu4kz8sr5i Not really. The most frustrating thing about all of the ex-yugoslav nations is the fact that their lifestyles and cultures are VERY similar and usually vary from region to region (for example: a Dalmatian will have more in common with a Montenegrin than a Slavonian and a Slavonian will have more in common with a Vojvodinian). The rift between them occurs because they all wanna rule over each other and because they've been fed propaganda from different great powers so they see their neighbors as inferior and so they try to eliminate them. Realistically if they stopped seeing each other as inferior due to their religious views and saw each other as equals there would be no problems.

      @madmasseur6422@madmasseur64223 ай бұрын
    • @@damyr The family feud existed before Yugoslavia was ever formed. It started as divide et impera by the Austro-Hungarians prior and during WWI, then by Germans and Italians during WWII, and finally Yugoslavia was ravaged from the inside by sellouts Milošević and Tuđman. Everything else is just a consequence or a byproduct of the aforementioned.

      @BlindBosnian@BlindBosnian3 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video, very educational and funny😂

    @the_Dark_Knight_12@the_Dark_Knight_123 ай бұрын
  • Words come not only from other languages ​​and not only from prehistoric times. You can still create new words today. A large number of words of uncertain origin are medieval or modern new word formations.

    @Akitlosz@Akitlosz3 ай бұрын
    • Yes.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • As a Greek learning both ancient greek and Latin, does it mean I ll be able to understand everything?

    @scgamesonline7771@scgamesonline77713 ай бұрын
    • Latin will open up a lot of German for you.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
    • At least you will be able to distinguish and identify the numerous latin words that we say in our daily life. I'm Greek too.

      @DimitrisTziounis@DimitrisTziounis3 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@BenLlywelynGerman and Greek are much more similar between themselves you should have known this since you have an opinion for every language....

      @user-vw1vf5cw7d@user-vw1vf5cw7d2 ай бұрын
  • Love the french and english definitions.

    @Gl00ten@Gl00ten3 ай бұрын
    • Merci beaucoup.

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Just brilliant! 👏🏻🙏

    @jmegapixel7@jmegapixel73 ай бұрын
  • Great analysis in only 10 minutes. And funny, also. Greetings from Romania, Ben.

    @flaviucalin@flaviucalin3 ай бұрын
    • Bun venit!

      @BenLlywelyn@BenLlywelyn3 ай бұрын
  • Gotta love them sprinkles.

    @JasonMoir@JasonMoir3 ай бұрын
KZhead