Slavic Languages Comparison

2024 ж. 15 Мам.
405 038 Рет қаралды

The Slavic Languages are a group of languages belonging to the Indo-European language family. Spoken throughout much of Central Europe, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and North Asia In this video we have a comparison of some Slavic Languages:
Rusian (Ру́сский): 0:00
Ukrainian (Українська): 0:36
Belarusian (Беларуская) : 1:05
Polish (Polski): 1:38
Czech (Čeština): 1:56
Slovak (Slovenčina): 2:26
Serbian (Српски): 2:54
Croatian (Hrvatski): 3:30
Bulgarian (Български): 3:58
Bosnian (Bosanski): 4:25
Slovene (Slovenščina): 4:57
Macedonian (Македонски ): 5:22

Пікірлер
  • As a French native speaker, I understood: - Russian 0% - Ukrainian 0% - Belarussian 0% - Polish 0% - Czech 0% - Slovak 0% - Serbian 0% - Croatian 0% - Bulgarian 0% - Bosnian 0% - Slovene 0% - Macedonian 0%

    @chienbanane3168@chienbanane3168 Жыл бұрын
    • 🗿👍

      @b0lkek@b0lkek Жыл бұрын
    • the Bulgarians often say "merci" for thank you... so you should pick like 0.00001 Bulgarian.

      @gregpeterson3144@gregpeterson3144 Жыл бұрын
    • It is never too late to learn 💜

      @ziltrauts@ziltrauts Жыл бұрын
    • @@gregpeterson3144 so do russians. Not often but it happens

      @ItsSuchACliche@ItsSuchACliche Жыл бұрын
    • @@gregpeterson3144 аnd they say "ciao(chao for eng)" instead of "goodbye", so even Italians may understand a little Bulgarian. 😄

      @KanasAudan@KanasAudan Жыл бұрын
  • As a Polish native speaker, I understand Polish quite well.

    @monkgyatso.@monkgyatso. Жыл бұрын
    • No shit, kurwa 🤣

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • Nie dziw się XD

      @rozeta2423@rozeta2423 Жыл бұрын
    • @@rozeta2423 Kurwa mać? xd

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 co kurwa ty do mnie pierdolisz po polsku

      @rozeta2423@rozeta2423 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 aaaa I know you XD

      @rozeta2423@rozeta2423 Жыл бұрын
  • Нужно один и тот же текст читать на разных языках. Желательно одним и тем же голосом. Тогда сравнение будет корректным.

    @1221Yonna@1221Yonna9 ай бұрын
    • Нет, не будет) Узнав содержание текста на родном языке, вы будете думать, что понимаете смысл этого текста на других. Тут и контекст включится, и какие-то общие корни, и так далее. Весь сок в том, что тут тексты разные и это правильно для сравнения.

      @TellHimNo@TellHimNo8 ай бұрын
    • @@TellHimNo Нет, не будет. Если читать разные тексты, как то, про поэзию, сельское хозяйство, политику... то придётся столкнуться с разным набором слов, заимствований и даже порядком слов в предложении. И второе. Смотреть, например, фильм "Ромео и Джульету" ещё со старым советским дубляжем и голосом Анны Каменковой - это одно. А с более современным - это совсем другое. Лучше даже и не смотреть. Тем более слушать. Эффект другой.

      @1221Yonna@1221Yonna8 ай бұрын
    • Нужно тебе коньки беговые привязать и пустить бежать по полю

      @valerie5764@valerie57648 ай бұрын
    • Или хотя бы на одну тему. Где-то был хороший ролик с прогнозом погоды на славянских языках. Выяснилось, что я спокойно понимаю польский 😹

      @margo7059@margo70597 ай бұрын
    • Да, но где взять человека с хорошим произношением нескольких славянских языков?

      @mariavolkova6968@mariavolkova69687 ай бұрын
  • Я русская, и все остальные славянские языки для меня звучат по мелодии родными, но я ничего не понимаю)) (кроме украинского и белорусского). Если , слушая , допустим англоговорящих или китайцев, тембр и интонации совсем чужие , и ты сразу чувствуешь - иностранец, то славянские языки вибрационно очень близки.

    @kiki-zt8fz@kiki-zt8fz9 ай бұрын
    • У тому то і суть. Що ти не розумієш ні польську, ні білоруську і тим паче українську. А от якраз таки українці добре розуміють білорусів і навпаки. Поляки розуміють українців і навпаки. А от росіяни не розуміють нічого. Між українсьою і російською мовами схожості стільки ж як між російською і англійською.

      @user-ff4nu5vy2v@user-ff4nu5vy2v8 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ff4nu5vy2v ты мой коммент читал вообще? я сказала, что не понимаю славянские языки, кроме украинского и белорусского! Вашу мову я в школе учила, между прочим

      @kiki-zt8fz@kiki-zt8fz8 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ff4nu5vy2v опять эти обиженки вылезли) Ты комментарий то вообще читать пробовал прежде, чем на него ответить?

      @user-xl1jw5uv5e@user-xl1jw5uv5e8 ай бұрын
    • Главный язык славян русский язык, язык ООН, русский язык являеься международным языком

      @user-lt1vn5dg3e@user-lt1vn5dg3e8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-ff4nu5vy2vПосмотри языковое дерево ЮНЕСКО, кое что новое для себя откроешь

      @dantisit@dantisit8 ай бұрын
  • As a Czech native speaker, I can speak Polish, Russian, Slovak and Czech is my native language. I love Slavic Languages!!!!!!!

    @mariasek2859@mariasek2859 Жыл бұрын
    • Ukrainian, Belarusian?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • Only a bit of Ukrainian and Belarusian.

      @mariasek2859@mariasek2859 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mariasek2859 What about the rest?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • You should learn Slovenian because it is the most advanced European language.

      @tongobong1@tongobong19 ай бұрын
    • А интересно Крейчи и ли Давид Пастернак могут говорить по русски или Ягр

      @user-vb1jl6og6b@user-vb1jl6og6b7 ай бұрын
  • мои родные языки русский и белорусский, я понимаю украинский на 100%. Также учила и знаю сербский (что априори дает знание хорватского и боснийского). Знание сербского помогает понять также и словенский. Сейчас я живу в Польше и только начинаю учить польский. Остальные языки даются на понимание сложно, выдергиваю лишь слова

    @vasilinasereda5100@vasilinasereda5100 Жыл бұрын
    • Македонският и българският са ти сложни за разбиране?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • Если родной язык беларуский, то с пониманием польского не должно быть трудностей особых

      @user-cr5jw6pc2g@user-cr5jw6pc2g Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132 У меня родной язык русский, также знаю словацкий, по этой причине понимаю на 80-90% чешский, польский, украинский, белорусский. Несколько хуже сербский, хорватский, боснийский, словенский. Болгарский и македонский понимаю хуже всего, где-то 30-40%

      @baboskin1@baboskin1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@baboskin1 Украински? Съмняваш ме да разумяваш дори и 60% от него!

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 мене теж дивує коли росіяни запевняють що знають українську на 90%. А коли починаєш спілкуватись , то одразу (давай на русский)

      @Pes_patron.@Pes_patron. Жыл бұрын
  • As a Ukrainian native speaker, I understood : Rusaian - 99% Ukrainian - 100% Belarusian - 90% Polish - 60% Czech - 30% Slovak - 50% Serbian - 20% Croatian - 5% Bulgarian - 5% Bosnian - 45% Slovene - 40% Macedonian - 5%

    @user-vg4nd1tn6n@user-vg4nd1tn6n9 ай бұрын
    • А болгарский то почему 5%? Вроде-же почти всё понятно.

      @user-xr7gq4oi9s@user-xr7gq4oi9s8 ай бұрын
    • @@user-xr7gq4oi9s я взагалі нічого не зрозумів. Якесь там одне слово

      @user-vg4nd1tn6n@user-vg4nd1tn6n8 ай бұрын
    • @@user-vg4nd1tn6n Я разобрал, что-то: "всё-таки сформированное правительство Болгарии вступило в должность,", а дальше так-себе перевод: "Президент туписа(?) тежку наследству(?) за служебный кабинет третьего состава сколько-то лет и три месяца". Потом дикторша что-то прожевала вроде: Какие послания министров кабинета Румена Радева озвучит наш телерепортер Вера Александрова."

      @user-xr7gq4oi9s@user-xr7gq4oi9s8 ай бұрын
    • 😂❤👍

      @user-wh1mn7lz4r@user-wh1mn7lz4r8 ай бұрын
    • @@user-gi1mj6fv7d укроина це туалет на окраине

      @user-wh1mn7lz4r@user-wh1mn7lz4r8 ай бұрын
  • Никогда не думал, что славянский языки настолько похожи. В принципе можно понять большую часть из того, что говорят дикторы нам всех языках ролика. Я знаю русский и украинский.

    @PhPavel777@PhPavel7777 ай бұрын
    • Знание двух славянских языков сильно расширяет понимание. Я знаю только русский, поэтому понимаю лишь украинский и белорусский - остальные прям очень примерно и приходится,вслушиваться сильно.

      @IanaAriadna@IanaAriadna6 ай бұрын
    • Ничего удивительного, все эти языки имеют общую основу. Когда-то давно, когда еще не было отдельных государств, а были только отдельные племена, они друг друга понимали, от сюда и само название Славяне, потому, что общее слово. Иностранцев же, которых они не понимали, называли немцами, то есть немые.

      @vanitwo@vanitwo5 ай бұрын
    • @@IanaAriadnaдумаю, остальные языки тоже было бы легче понять, если воспринимать не на слух, а на чтение, т.к часто проблема именно в фонетике, когда слова с тем де корнем в разных языках писаться будут схоже, но произноситься совсем по-разному, поэтому их на слух сложнее «узнать»

      @newpersonproductions5087@newpersonproductions50873 ай бұрын
  • As a Serb, I understand these languages ​​like this: 1.Croatian, Bosnian-100% Absolutely similar to the Serbian language, but there is a slight difference between them in grammar. 2.Russian-100% I know the Russian language, I learned it when I was in school and I have been to Russia several times. 3.Slovenian-90% Very similar to Croatian and slightly Czech languages. As a Serb, who knows the rules of the Croatian language, I understand this language well and without problems. 4.Macedonian and Bulgarian-80% Macedonian like Serbian mixed with Bulgarian,and the alphabet is certainly like ours. If you know the Macedonian language, then you can also understand the Bulgarian language, the Bulgarian alphabet is very similar to the Russian alphabet. It sounds very familiar, but it is still not similar to Serbian, unlike Macedonian. 5.Ukrainian and Belarusian-75% similar enough to Russian and have many words, which are very close to Serbian. 6.Slovak-60% Words from the Slovak language are a little similar to our words,but some words are strange and unintelligible sounds. Grammar, in principle understandable for me. 7.Czech-55% Same as Slovak, but harder grammar and slightly different sounds. 8.Polish-25% That language is not understandable to me, mainly because it sounds not only strange, but absolutely impossible for me to understand. Some sounds are just very difficult for me to understand, some sounds are terrible to hear, and some are even funny and make me laugh out loud. Some words are similar to ours, but they are very few. At the same time, I like all of them. All of them sound like something close and familiar to me. Sometimes they sound wonderfully similar to my native language, but there are exceptions and difficult sounds and words. I especially like Russian and Slovak. I don't want to offend Poles, but Polish sounds really strange and incomprehensible, but it's also a good language.

    @TFsevenking@TFsevenking9 ай бұрын
    • Funny that the Polish alphabet is similar to the Serbo-Croatian alphabet (More specifically to the Montenegrin because Montenegrin is the only one that has ''С́, З́'' like Polish - Ś, Ź) Polish diagraphs are literally like Serbo-Croatian one and Macedonian + Eastern Slavic. Also Polish palatalazes consonants with ''i'' while South Slavic languages only with ''j'' but in Polish ''j'' is used as desoften like how Macedonian has ''лj'' and ''љ.'' Or like ''ъ'' in Russian or ' in Ukrainian and Belarusian. And the fact that ''Ć'' is the same as Serbo-Croatian but as well ''ci.'' ''ci'' in Polish is like ''чь'' written, while ''ć'' is literally the same as ''ћ'' but used at the end of words only. Also ''rz'' was supposed to be a soft R sound that has similar diagraph as the Czech and Upper Sorbian ''Ř'' However in Polish is pronounced like ''ž'' or ''š'' (when it gets devoiced) like Upper Sorbian while in Czech it's combination of ''rž'' as single sound. This is why in Czech this sound is considered one of the hardest to pronounce. Polish is hard due to the hushing sounds, followed with extreme palatalization that even Russian doesn't have. However I'm not Polish but Bulgarian. Also Macedonian is a Serbified Bulgarian village dialect so no wonder why you understand it slightly better because unlike Standard Bulgarian you are in the same dialect continium where you replace ''ja'' with hard ''e'' while your Western neighbours soften it with ''je'' or ''ije.'' And you don't have free stress like Bulgarian. Your stress pattern is similar to Polish like 2 syllables - first vowel and 3 or more - at the middle of the word but never at the end of the word like in Bulgarian. Bulgarian like Eastern Slavic languages have many words that can change meaning by putting different stress like: вЪлна - wool, вълнА - wave извЕстен - famous, известЕн - notified бАба - grandmother, бабА - father (comes from Arabic, through Turkish) пАпа - pope, папА - father (comes from Latin) пАра - steam, парА - coin пАри - vapour, it burns, парИ - money обАди - he called (past), обадИ - you call (present) мУка - grief (dialect form of ''мъка''), мукА - flour (archaic) and many more. Polish is actually more similar to Serbo-Croatian than to Bulgarian and that's why you can understand Ukrainian, Belarusian better. You are lucky that you have learnt Russian otherwise you'll understand only 10-30% of it. I know that Serbian and Ukrainian are the only Slavic language which never devoice the words.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1329 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 i agree mostly. Polish and Serbian share a lot of the same or very similar words or even whole sentences and grammar only polish sz rz etc is problem for serbian ears when we listening. When we reading we can understand almost whole text, some text is identical , some text is very similar and all other understable from contexts! :) )) So Polish and Serbian are way more similar than looks like for "nenaviknuto serbsko uho especially" ! :) )) Opposite Polish people can better understand Serbian because of clearer pronauncing, just as Slovakian! :) )))

      @goranjovic3174@goranjovic31749 ай бұрын
    • @@goranjovic3174 I wonder with what do you disagree?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1329 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 with only 25 % Polish understable to Serb. I think it is 40 - 60 % if you have adapted ear on polish as i have through oftrn reading and l listening polish. And understand them even more than 60 %. Whole topics what they talking and even can speak with them when we both slowly talking with little help of English or Russian for some different words.

      @goranjovic3174@goranjovic31749 ай бұрын
    • Приколы, брат

      @brofuns6480@brofuns64809 ай бұрын
  • The Serbian reporter looks like she's about to say "and what you're gonna do about it? huh?"

    @ArturoStojanoff@ArturoStojanoff Жыл бұрын
    • Lmaoo

      @Mmm1222_@Mmm1222_ Жыл бұрын
    • 😅❤️🇷🇸

      @johnyamba5388@johnyamba5388 Жыл бұрын
    • because she is, it seems she is pro government media and is basically shitting on the opposition lmao

      @poki580@poki580 Жыл бұрын
  • Вот бы увидеть мир, где все славяне объединены и не воюют друг с другом😊

    @Kpoxa92@Kpoxa927 ай бұрын
    • Это, к сожалению, маловероятно. Слишком много исторических обид и культурных различий. Славяне очень давно разошлись, чтоб так просто объединиться. Что не мешает лично мне относиться ко всем славянам с симпатией. А уж украинцы беларусы и русские - братские народы, чтобы там мерзавцы ни рассказывали.

      @user-zk8bq6gz2i@user-zk8bq6gz2i7 ай бұрын
    • для этого нужно что бы фашистская росия перестала существовать, а всех русских изолировать от цивилизации, вот тогда мир будет

      @Dekhtyar66@Dekhtyar667 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-zk8bq6gz2iбаза

      @geraltofrivia7633@geraltofrivia76337 ай бұрын
    • Это опасно для запада

      @user-js4we1wi3l@user-js4we1wi3l7 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂 Как вы заебали со свлим объединением славян. РУССКИЕ БЛЯДЬ! Вы на своей территории бурят, татар, корейцев, чеченцев, якутов и т.д и прочих россиян объедените, чтоб они себя россиянами чувствовал , а не так что ты всю жизнь не русский, но когда надо русский. А потом уже к другим со своим объединением лезьте. Украина и Беларусь вон уже который год от такого брадства охреневают.

      @saranlove6662@saranlove66627 ай бұрын
  • Все славянские языки прекрасны❤ Пусть будет мир между славянскими народами. Слава Роду

    @babyin-88@babyin-888 ай бұрын
    • Зачем нам мир с агрессивной украиной?

      @StrongRespect@StrongRespect7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@StrongRespectскоро украина будет свободной ⚪🟡⚪

      @Xoxli_Pidari777@Xoxli_Pidari7777 ай бұрын
    • Поддерживаю! Слава Роду!

      @14Russkaya88@14Russkaya887 ай бұрын
    • @@Xoxli_Pidari777 от гундосой еврейской узурпации ))

      @kocehbka@kocehbka7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@StrongRespect🤡☠️

      @intelligentLeguy@intelligentLeguy7 ай бұрын
  • As a Russian I understood a handful of words and in some languages I even understood the topics 😊 I love our Slavic family ❤

    @gaminglife2480@gaminglife2480 Жыл бұрын
    • Понял ток русский, украинский, белорусский и болгарский(

      @woozy_artem@woozy_artem Жыл бұрын
    • @@woozy_artem не ну я не все понял сам, только часть из остальных 😅

      @gaminglife2480@gaminglife2480 Жыл бұрын
    • So why attack ukraine?

      @ultimatewarrior3310@ultimatewarrior3310 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ultimatewarrior3310 Where are you from?

      @woozy_artem@woozy_artem Жыл бұрын
    • @@woozy_artem Earth.. why?

      @ultimatewarrior3310@ultimatewarrior3310 Жыл бұрын
  • Jestem Polakiem syberyjskim. Mówię dwujęzycznie od urodzenia. W języku polskim i русском.То to daje mi wiele innych języków słowiańskich do zrozumienia. Ponieważ są splecione.😁

    @StanislawKarbowski13@StanislawKarbowski13 Жыл бұрын
    • Тобольск?

      @ndrechtseiter@ndrechtseiter9 ай бұрын
    • Bro how did ur ancestors get there ☠️☠️☠️

      @k_dccxiii@k_dccxiii9 ай бұрын
    • @@k_dccxiii Варшавский договор? А вообще в Сибири классно.

      @Vkusniashka1234@Vkusniashka12349 ай бұрын
    • I do not think there is any sane Pole who puts Russian Imperial flag as his profile picture. Maybe your ancestors were Poles but you are already mental Russian

      @Anton_Danylchenko@Anton_Danylchenko9 ай бұрын
    • @@Anton_Danylchenko I am a true Pole. My ancestors were winged Hussars from the Polish nobility. And they came to Russia as a result of the war. The Spalites fought for the Speech. And the imperial flag is my story. There is a flag of the Speech of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, too. You are not a Pole and not a warrior to tell me something.Who are you anyway? You are a Ukrainian slave. Your ancestors worked for mine in pigsties

      @StanislawKarbowski13@StanislawKarbowski139 ай бұрын
  • Все языки красивы, мелодичны и во многом похожи. Мира всем!

    @svetlankarazumnaya@svetlankarazumnaya8 ай бұрын
  • As a Russian native speaker, I understood: - Russian 100% - Ukrainan 90% - Belarusian 85% - Polish 30% - Czech 65% - Slovak 40% - Serbian 70% - Croatian 50% - Bulgarian 80% - Bosnian 70% - Slovenian 40% - Macedonian 30%

    @girl9551@girl95518 ай бұрын
  • As a native English speaker with some Romance language knowledge, I understood very little of this, but it was so interesting to listen to!

    @XxCastlegirl_07xX@XxCastlegirl_07xX Жыл бұрын
    • As a Chinese speaker with some Japanese knowledge, I couldn't understand anything neither, lol.

      @user-nx3by5gy1n@user-nx3by5gy1n Жыл бұрын
    • Who would guess...

      @artistbervucci1716@artistbervucci171610 ай бұрын
    • @@user-nx3by5gy1n Wait, I thought KZhead was banned in PRC... Are you from Taiwan?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1329 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 uhh, does it occur to you that some Chinese immigrants live in United States nowadays? And even in China, many use VPN to come out to blocked sites. Though illegal, the commy party doesn't really arrest you unless you make political videos or become influential out there. Plus, many of those Chinese users on KZhead are hired by Communists to influence the public opinions in the Chinese circle on KZhead. Seriously, there's a big Chinese community here

      @user-nx3by5gy1n@user-nx3by5gy1n9 ай бұрын
    • @@user-nx3by5gy1n 🤣🤣🤣👍

      @antonzhivkov2525@antonzhivkov25259 ай бұрын
  • I'm a Czech speaker. I must say that more to the south the Slavic language is, the more it sounds like Italian. It's even similarly fast as Italian -- short words, short syllables - sounds like a firing from a machine-gun :) Also, more to the east, the more it sounds like Russian -- softer and softer. Czech, Slovak and Polish are quite similar -- I can all understand 100% (but it is because I was born near polish borders). I understand when non-speakers say that Czech often sounds like German to them -- that language was under massive influence of German for centuries -- a lot of t, r, p sounds... Polish still has nasal vowels, which others lost. I love them! :-) Slovene grammar still has dual (besides obvious singular and plural). Wow! Czech lost it a long time ago (however I think some remnants in vocabulary still remain?). Bulgarian is oddity to me with those very short sounds -- is it a result of some Turkish influence?

    @defordefor9865@defordefor9865 Жыл бұрын
    • Very short sounds? Because of the lack of JE sounds replaced with schwa or hard E? It's not Turkish influence it's just that we use more the schwa sound like the Kashubians in Poland which is not very typical for Slavic languages. Schwa or Ъ was always has been the key to our language, just other Slavic languages don't use it as much as we do. Even the confused Bulgarians a.k.a the Macedonians. Turkish influence you can see in every Balkan country even Slovenia (but much less because Slovenia and Croatia weren't that for long part of the Ottoman empire). Serbs, Bosniaks and Macedonians actually use more Turkish words that we do. I guess if you count the Pomaks (Muslim Bulgarians in Eastern Rhodopi which speak their own dialect not presented here they use more Greek and Turkish words as addition). I find really odd as Bulgarian these long sounds in Czech and Slovak. Like I mean we also have some words like long I, E, O sounds but these are rare like for example "грее, пее, поостарях, поотпадна, технологии..." (gree, pee, poostarjah, pootpadna, tehnologii). It almost sounds like they are tonal languages but they are not. :D Slovenian somehow surprises me that it's the most tonal Slavic language. About the lact of JE sounds that's try. Only few words like ''йерархия, фойерверки'' (jerarhija/fojerverki) has it, we almost ditched JE for hard E. Most of these words have Я instead (JA) like мляко, хляб, пяна... (mljako, hljab, pjana...)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • нормално е да ти е странен защото българите не са славяни

      @macanmacan2977@macanmacan2977 Жыл бұрын
    • Regarding the South Slavic languages, I think you meant Serbian/Croatian/Slovenian? What you are describing is the pitch-accent which is from Wikipedia: Languages that have been described as pitch-accent languages include: most dialects of Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, Baltic languages, Ancient Greek, Vedic Sanskrit, Tlingit, Turkish, Japanese, Norwegian, Swedish (but not in Finland), Western Basque, Yaqui, certain dialects of Korean, Shanghainese, and Livonian.

      @frostflower5555@frostflower5555 Жыл бұрын
    • @@macanmacan2977 Защо му пишеш на български като знаеш, че повечето чехи едвам ни разбират, па камо ли повечето дали знаят да четат на кирилица... И ако не сме ''славяни,'' македонците са славяни, а? И какви сме според тебе - тракийци ли?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 makedoncite sa posrybcheni bulgari imat stotici hilyadi smeseni brakove toest polovin slavyani za mene ne sa bulgari nie sme bulgari toest sarmati imame i malko traki i 12 procenta slavyani naprimer rumancite i garcite sa poveche slavyani pisha na bulgarski zashtoto ne razbiram angliyski a toy moghe da go sloghi v prevodachka

      @macanmacan2977@macanmacan2977 Жыл бұрын
  • as a german who has a russian family i understood 🇷🇺🇺🇦🇧🇾 pretty well, 🇵🇱🇨🇿🇧🇬 quite well and the rest idk

    @wochkolol@wochkolol9 ай бұрын
    • Die ukrainische Flagge sollte nicht neben der Schweineflagge stehen

      @dzmmi@dzmmi3 ай бұрын
  • Я носитель русского языка, но почему-то больше всех поняла болгарский😂

    @user-dg1yd3ev6v@user-dg1yd3ev6v8 ай бұрын
    • Обяснението е много просто - Азбуката и езикът на Първото Българско царство.

      @user-xt6hl1xp4k@user-xt6hl1xp4k8 ай бұрын
    • Аналогично намного получше белорусский , ещё украинский и болгарский . В целом и общем Славянские языки прекрасны!

      @njdbm8nnfg2j@njdbm8nnfg2j8 ай бұрын
    • Я тоже)))

      @user-sd3qj9jh9d@user-sd3qj9jh9d7 ай бұрын
    • @@user-xt6hl1xp4k Нет . Много русских слов после реформы в 19 века

      @eugen-gelrod-filippov@eugen-gelrod-filippov7 ай бұрын
    • @@eugen-gelrod-filippov То при вас реформата с българските слова е последните 1 200 години. Така че от 19 век насам е твърде кратък период

      @user-xt6hl1xp4k@user-xt6hl1xp4k7 ай бұрын
  • as a basic Russian learner, i only understand здравствуйте 😌

    @aunisarah1565@aunisarah1565 Жыл бұрын
    • im norwegian and have never learned russian but still know привет, спасебо, хорошо, здравствуйик, с*ка, б*ять, теперь етс. you’re not special

      @gavins.9254@gavins.9254 Жыл бұрын
    • @@gavins.9254 I'm Bulgarian you did some mistakes, despite not knowing Russian but can understand it good. спасебо is спасибо, здравствуйик is здравствуйте which is similar to the Bulgarian - здравейте But I mean your country borders Russia so?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • It'll get easier.

      @Handle4511@Handle4511 Жыл бұрын
    • 😂👍

      @dinanasser3283@dinanasser3283 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Well I am from Stavanger, this is 30 hours just from the Russian border, it’s not like I live in Finnmark 😭 but a fair point nonetheless

      @gavins.9254@gavins.9254 Жыл бұрын
  • As a spanish speaker I only understood "temperatura" on the russian forecast"

    @zetaforce2538@zetaforce253811 ай бұрын
    • Así que el español es similar al ruso).

      @petersherwood1813@petersherwood18137 ай бұрын
    • ​@@petersherwood1813 no

      @C1tro3nManiac@C1tro3nManiac4 күн бұрын
  • Боснийский язык поняла хорошо, потому что ведущая говори про поездку Нэнси Пелоси на Тайвань 🤣

    @milana9536@milana95368 ай бұрын
  • As an Azerbaijani I have to say that Russian is the most sweet language of the world 🇷🇺❤️

    @samirbabakishiyev7156@samirbabakishiyev71569 ай бұрын
    • 🇷🇺🤝🇦🇲☦️✝️

      @saveeurope88@saveeurope889 ай бұрын
    • Спасибо!

      @Patriot_of_Russia@Patriot_of_Russia9 ай бұрын
    • Приятно слышать от Азербайджанца 🇦🇿💪

      @user-wf8sq7uo4x@user-wf8sq7uo4x9 ай бұрын
    • Манкурт

      @tatarnationalist@tatarnationalist9 ай бұрын
    • ♥...и ваши певцы на нем замечательно поют!

      @user-rd6rp3hb6v@user-rd6rp3hb6v9 ай бұрын
  • My favs are polish, Belarussian and Russian, also bosnian. Belarussian had some spechial extra sounds, and polish sounds somewhat smooth

    @martinkullberg6718@martinkullberg6718 Жыл бұрын
    • Bosnian is a dialect of Serbo-Croatian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132 Serbo-Croatian stopped existing 1990

      @alfamuzjaksakitomiznadpros5182@alfamuzjaksakitomiznadpros5182 Жыл бұрын
    • Polish sounds smooth? That is something new for me 😂

      @JolajnaLoja@JolajnaLoja8 ай бұрын
    • A ti si mi mnogo pametan... A kojim jezikom govori 20 miliona bivših Jugoslovena ?... Meni neće nekolicina probisveta koji su doveli do rušenja nekad veličanstvene zemlje,govoriti kojim jezikom govorim... @@alfamuzjaksakitomiznadpros5182

      @drazantodoric6040@drazantodoric60404 ай бұрын
    • My favorites are Russian and Polish

      @evelynmedranorubio2004@evelynmedranorubio20043 ай бұрын
  • These are some of my favourite kinds of videos...I can pick up so much more of their accents this way! Thank you!

    @supergene256@supergene256 Жыл бұрын
  • Как кыргыз, я понял прекрасно только русский )

    @kanakubatov5508@kanakubatov55088 ай бұрын
  • Большое вам спасибо за это сравнение

    @user-zw3ut5uq4v@user-zw3ut5uq4v8 ай бұрын
  • As a Romanian I can definitely understand more words from the Balkan Slavic Languages and their accent is also more familiar

    @czapkafaraday7040@czapkafaraday7040 Жыл бұрын
    • if you were from Moldavia(Moldova), you would understand even more. or even spoke russian or ukrainian

      @Igorr2010@Igorr201011 ай бұрын
    • The Romanian language is a language derived from Latin, probably you understanding Portuguese and Italian.

      @FELLIIP3@FELLIIP39 ай бұрын
    • Sami bag pula, inteleg romana , limba rapanosilor ţigani , и по русски понимаю идеально

      @hapergames4378@hapergames43788 ай бұрын
    • Romanu , sugemi pula

      @hapergames4378@hapergames43788 ай бұрын
    • cause romanian - bolgarian its no difference

      @Chaldon-hl6yk@Chaldon-hl6yk8 ай бұрын
  • LOVE POLAND!!! FROM PORTUGAL! ❤💚❤🤍

    @epictrismegistos3695@epictrismegistos3695 Жыл бұрын
    • M uito obrigado !!!!!!!!!!!!!

      @user-ok9dc5qt8d@user-ok9dc5qt8d Жыл бұрын
    • 👍

      @tiktak9827@tiktak9827 Жыл бұрын
    • Portuguese is very similar to Polish!

      @antonmurtazaev5366@antonmurtazaev5366 Жыл бұрын
    • Portuguese is what you get when a polish/russian person tries to speak spanish

      @mrtrollnator123@mrtrollnator123 Жыл бұрын
    • Why do you love Poland?

      @mademoisellenoellexo@mademoisellenoellexo Жыл бұрын
  • Я русская, с детства слышала украинский, потому хорошо понимаю, белорусский, что-то между русским и украинским. В остальных улавливаю лишь похожие слова. Иностранцы слышат русский, как довольно грубый, но по мне так из всех славянских он самый мягкий на слух))

    @oksast@oksast7 ай бұрын
    • Русский - один из самых «мягких» славянских языков.

      @elis8669@elis86697 ай бұрын
    • Сколько славянских слов в русском языке?И как он может быть мягким,если он груб очень наполнен на 90%заимствований из немецкого,французского,тюркского,английского,болгарского и т.д.Самый мягкий украинский-просто мелодия,песня соловья.

      @user-bj7im9gi2c@user-bj7im9gi2c6 ай бұрын
    • @@user-bj7im9gi2c Это не соревнование. В украинском тоже огромное количество заимствований. Как и в любом другом языке. И да, украинский тоже один из «мягких». Но кому-то нравится и пожестче. Так что это дело вкуса.

      @elis8669@elis86696 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-bj7im9gi2cя абсолютно не слышу песню соловья🤷 У людей при переходе с русского на украинский голос становится очень грубым .

      @monika-jn6sl@monika-jn6sl6 ай бұрын
    • @@monika-jn6sl это не украинцы говорят.Послушайте англичанина на русском, услышите совсем другую речь,более грубую,чем у русских. А потом возьмите и включите песню на украинском или настоящего украинца ....

      @user-bj7im9gi2c@user-bj7im9gi2c6 ай бұрын
  • Thx for leaving BIH out ..realy nice of you

    @dzemiljasarevic7269@dzemiljasarevic72699 ай бұрын
  • Well, let’s be honest. Serbian, Croatian and “Bosnian” are 100% the same languages. We can understand each other without problems. It’s like Germany, Austria and Switzerland, they all speaking German.

    @stefo5224@stefo5224 Жыл бұрын
    • But the native German speakers are hard to understand swiss "German"

      @edwardgeorge8673@edwardgeorge8673 Жыл бұрын
    • "croatian" and "serbian"

      @eh8706@eh8706 Жыл бұрын
    • There's a reason in linguistics it's called serbo-croatian. Call it whatever you want, it's the same language

      @ksica@ksica Жыл бұрын
    • "Bosnian" language was spoken long time ago,and had it's own alphabet called Bosancica,and has one of the oldest writen evidences-stecak,povelja kulina bana,long time before others wrote anything.

      @ibmujic4764@ibmujic476411 ай бұрын
    • @@ibmujic4764 Bosnian is a dialect of the Serbian language. The bosancica was written in Cyrillic. During the Ottoman occupation, many Serbs who now call themselves "Bosniaks" were Islamized. for example, most albanians have also been islamized. in contrast to the "bosniaks", the albanians have stuck to their nation despite everything, even though there are christians and muslims in albania. 1914-1980 Serbs were the majority in Bosnia and Herzegovina. if you take a closer look at the history of bosnia, most of the kings of bosnia were serbs and croats.

      @stefo5224@stefo522411 ай бұрын
  • I am Polish and have never learned Czech. Nevertheless, I am convinced that I can easily get along with a Czech these two languages sound very much alike.

    @kasiakatarzyna1981@kasiakatarzyna19819 ай бұрын
    • Nevertheless, "szukam dziecka w sklepie" sounds really differently in these languages :)

      @m00n3k_zolnierz_bnr@m00n3k_zolnierz_bnr9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@m00n3k_zolnierz_bnrTy sprosťáku 😂😂

      @ladujG@ladujG9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@m00n3k_zolnierz_bnr😂

      @angelinadobrovolska4260@angelinadobrovolska42609 ай бұрын
    • Почему бы вам не писать на польском, если вы поляк? Или вам НАТО приказало??😂😂😂

      @user-ul7rl9hu3n@user-ul7rl9hu3n6 ай бұрын
    • It was surprised for me, but Czech sounds very understandable for my russian ears!

      @user-hp3lb2qj7v@user-hp3lb2qj7vАй бұрын
  • Как интересно🤔, спасибо!!!

    @olgashati8020@olgashati80207 ай бұрын
  • As a Russian, I like to watch my compatriots and Ukrainians gnaw at each other: - You're not a Slav! -No, you! -Nope, that's it! It's so funny😂 My friends. Ukrainians, Russians (as a culture, not a nationality), Poles, Belarusians, Bulgarians, Serbs, Czechs, Slovenians, Slovaks, Macedonians are all Slavs and, first of all, ordinary people. Please! Stop shifting the political struggle to ourselves. This is in the pores of politicians who are fighting for the benefit of themselves. Only politicians are new in people's troubles. For example, as a resident of Russia, I dont asked Putin to attack Ukraine. I don't want a victim among them, but I can't do anything either, since there is a dictatorship in the country, and any word you say that runs counter to the interests of the elite, you are either a corpse or a prisoner. And it is not possible to fight, since Putin's personal guard, the so-called National Guard, is armed like an army. There is more of it than the same police. Therefore, there is no need to transfer the ideas and desires of politicians to the common people, since they only chose sweet speeches

    @PlazmaLin_51@PlazmaLin_519 ай бұрын
    • Ну тоді й не треба робити вигляд, ніби нічого не дієтся.

      @user-vg4nd1tn6n@user-vg4nd1tn6n9 ай бұрын
    • Фу...

      @Munchen2008@Munchen20089 ай бұрын
    • Перестаньте оправдываться уже!!! Это не мы скакали на майдане с призывами "москоляку на гиляку", что посеешь, то и пожнешь!

      @oxikoroleva5080@oxikoroleva50806 ай бұрын
  • As a Portuguese speaker, I understood nothing. 👍

    @allejandrodavid5222@allejandrodavid522210 ай бұрын
    • Nice.

      @Konpaku_Hungary@Konpaku_Hungary9 ай бұрын
    • You wellcome! ❤💋

      @clarisse1178@clarisse11789 ай бұрын
    • LOL

      @diogorodrigues747@diogorodrigues7479 ай бұрын
    • Я люблю португальский язык, и не люблю испанский😁 Португальский для моего уха очень мягкий и красивый)

      @elleelle8294@elleelle82949 ай бұрын
    • Portuguese language is better, i know i speak russian

      @gene4000@gene40009 ай бұрын
  • All languages are beautiful

    @A_Anastasiya@A_Anastasiya Жыл бұрын
    • That's true. No politics!

      @antonmurtazaev5366@antonmurtazaev5366 Жыл бұрын
    • Well said.

      @evelynmedrano522lover@evelynmedrano522lover Жыл бұрын
    • I find Slovenian the most beautiful because it is the most advanced European language.

      @tongobong1@tongobong19 ай бұрын
    • You obviously have never heard Dutch 😂

      @L333gok@L333gokАй бұрын
  • Прикольно, везде поняла основную тему🎉

    @user-fw8ze8pl5m@user-fw8ze8pl5m6 ай бұрын
  • As a Uzbek native speaker, I understood Czech: 100%, Russian : 100%, Ukrainian: 60-70%, Belorussian: 40-50%, Polish: 20%, Others:0 %

    @abrorumaraliev1053@abrorumaraliev10539 ай бұрын
    • 🇷🇺👊🇨🇿

      @Partizag@Partizag8 ай бұрын
    • Польский, очень похож на русский тоже, а также сербский

      @pussicafox7646@pussicafox76467 ай бұрын
    • А узбеки это тоже славяне?

      @Xoxli_Pidari777@Xoxli_Pidari7777 ай бұрын
    • @@Xoxli_Pidari777 неа, Узбекистан же ведь постсоветская страна.Один из государственных языков является русский, после узбекского конечно.Так вот из-за уклона обучения английского языка сейчас, узбекистанцы могут понимать польский язык, потому что польский это что-то вроде микса английского и русского.

      @pussicafox7646@pussicafox76467 ай бұрын
    • Кстати, интересный факт славяне имеют общее значение с словом "slave(раб)".Так англоязычные континент называл славян . Из-за торговли славянских рабов в шелком пути

      @pussicafox7646@pussicafox76467 ай бұрын
  • Любімая беларуская мова! ❤ Дзякуй за гэта цудоўнае відэа!

    @Belka_Ruska@Belka_Ruska9 ай бұрын
    • Живя только в русскоязычной среде лучше всего понимаю белорусский, украинский хуже, болгарский тоже, но понимаю о чём говорят.

      @elenayantsen1076@elenayantsen10769 ай бұрын
    • Жыве Белы Гусь

      @doorass9032@doorass90329 ай бұрын
    • Скоро будет русский язык

      @Rin3945gtd@Rin3945gtd9 ай бұрын
    • @@Rin3945gtd Ужо. Але мы ўсё роўна захоўвалі і будзем захоўваць сваю родную мову, нават коштам сваёй свабоды.

      @Belka_Ruska@Belka_Ruska9 ай бұрын
    • Родная мова-самая лепшая❤

      @user-hh4xx5nc4o@user-hh4xx5nc4o8 ай бұрын
  • knowing russian fluently, it’s interesting being able to decipher the rest but not easily

    @TheChickenFairy.@TheChickenFairy. Жыл бұрын
    • As a native speaker in Russian I understand 100% Polish, 90% Ukrainian, 80% Belorussian, maybe like 20% Czech. The rest is almost entirely enigmatic.

      @Hephasto@Hephasto Жыл бұрын
    • @@Hephasto Ти да не си учил полски някога?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Hephasto you must have studied polish, cause I'm russian too and don't understand a single word

      @nobody_2.0@nobody_2.0 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 учил да это правда

      @Hephasto@Hephasto Жыл бұрын
    • @@nobody_2.0 угу

      @Hephasto@Hephasto Жыл бұрын
  • Удивлен что на Болгарском почти все понял... Приходилось долго общаться с Боснийцем по работе, так вот когда долго прислушиваешься начинаешь понимать...

    @PPShow387@PPShow3877 ай бұрын
  • Im a native Polish speaker and i was actually suprised that I kinda undertood Slovak, I hear this language for the first time in my life actually

    @grigori4935@grigori49359 ай бұрын
  • As an Azeri, I gotta say Polish and Bulgarian are my favourites. Although I understand very little from both (thanks to my knowledge of Russian) the way they sound is so cool.

    @eklezia2829@eklezia282910 ай бұрын
  • Interesting fact, from a book from 1956, a Serbian traveller went to Greece for his holiday. He met one interesting looking man in a suit, he asked him about the direction in English. The guy saw that he had familiar accent and he asked him in Bulgarian if he is from Bulgaria, the men was shocked, he understood every single word perfectly. Then they tried to have conversation in their native languages and they could understand each other perfectly. Both of them were nicely surprised. Then the same Serbian man met another Slavic person, but this time from Slovakia. Again, almost the same thing happened, they started talking in their native languages and they could understand each other perfectly. But after the 90s, something shifted in those languages and they started changing rapidly, as a native Bulgarian speaker I can understand Serbian about 40-50%, it depends what is the topic. Croatian for some reason is very close to Bulgarian, the countries are not even close to each other. Macedonian 90%, Slovakian is very difficult for some reason. Polish 10-20%. Ukrainian 5%, if I listen very carefully 10%. Russian, almost the same thing. That's interesting because before that wasn't the case. my grandpa used to go to Yugoslavia and speak Bulgarian and everyone could understand him and he could understand them. But I don't think this is the case now.

    @dexter8549@dexter8549 Жыл бұрын
    • Thats because people are devoting more time to being book smart , and so in like more dumb in other areas-social skills barely exist nowadays. Worldwide issue

      @johnkern1878@johnkern1878 Жыл бұрын
    • This is totally false. Dont believe everything you read on the net. Mutual intelligibility of slavic languages is a complex science that goes back far into history..Slavic languages have diverged from one another in the middle ages. Bulgarian was no more mutually intelligible to Serbian and Croatian speakers and vice versa a 100 years ago than it is today, which means not much. It's factually absolutely impossible and ridiculous to claim that the languages could become unintelligible in the 1990s. LOL

      @pavlerunner@pavlerunner Жыл бұрын
    • @@pavlerunner First I never said 1990s, the book is from 1956, what is described in the book might've happened in the early 1900s or late 1800s. My grandpa told me the same when he went on holiday to Croatia in 1970, he speaks only Bulgarian. He himself was shocked when he found out that he can speak to the Croats so well. My grandma shared the same story. I'm not a linguist, I would assume that you are not either. I simply shared something I read. Study done by Misirkov. I'm saying from the top of my head. He is basically saying that all the Balkan Slavic languages derives from one language, old-Bulgarian. According to Karadzic Resavian dialect which is Moravian dialect is spoken to two-third of the Slavic population in Serbia. This dialect is very closely related to Shopski, which is the oldest dialect on the Balkans. From this we can conclude, or at least he concluded, that Serbian might come from a Bulgarian dialect. Im simply sharing what I've read and what I was thought.

      @dexter8549@dexter8549 Жыл бұрын
    • @@dexter8549 And you are right, After the war in Yugoslavia Bosnian muslims,Croats, Montenegro they all like to change their language so that language is further from Serbian. They have new words. But they can change what ever they want,me as a Serbian from Bosnia and Herzegovina I say we speak the same language,I have never seen a translation between them. Today we see in Ukraine, Russian forbidden, although 80% spoke Russian. Also in the 18 hundred Serbian and Russian were very similar,and slowly, they have changed.Crazy world.

      @mir-jan3496@mir-jan3496 Жыл бұрын
    • Fun fact from Wikipedia: Languages that have been described as pitch-accent languages include: most dialects of Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, Baltic languages, Ancient Greek, Vedic Sanskrit, Tlingit, Turkish, Japanese, Norwegian, Swedish (but not in Finland), Western Basque,[2] Yaqui, certain dialects of Korean, Shanghainese, and Livonian.

      @frostflower5555@frostflower5555 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm Polish and lazily learned some Russian at school many years ago. Thus, interestingly, I'm more familiar with Russian and understand more than Ukrainian that is in fact closer to Polish than Russian when it comes to vocabulary. Slovak sounds a lot like Czech and generally close to Polish. Czech has an opinion of being funny in Poland. It sounds like it would have many diminutives, like a cute child talk and it also has many "false friends" that makes misunderstandings often and very funny. All countries of former Yugoslavia has very similar language to my ear. I've heard that it split because of the war and it's indeed one language with different dialects. (Excluding Slovene and Macedonian) They all sounded alike. The more south we go, the stranger it gets. Macedonian is already strange but Bulgarian is mindblowing. I can only grasp some words from time to time. I would like to learn Bulgarian because my grandfather was from Bulgaria and he moved to Poland after WWII. All languges were great, greetings to all of you. ❤

    @katarzynalpzm0arajko-nenow32@katarzynalpzm0arajko-nenow329 ай бұрын
    • Я учил польский язык по музыке. Конечно, в польском языке много отличий от русского, но и общего тоже много. Жаль, что между нашими народами целая пропасть. Я считаю Польшу хорошей страной, а поляков хорошими людьми. Как я думаю, негативное отношение между двумя нашими народами, складывается из-за отсутствия настоящей информации о жизни простых людей, к тому же, несколько лет подряд, через телевизор, нам внушали образ поляков, которые ненавидят русских и вообще всё русское. Думаю и на польском телевидении из русских делают кровожадных монстров. Но поверьте, это не так.

      @sergiuszprzewest@sergiuszprzewest8 ай бұрын
    • @@sergiuszprzewest Most of Poles, at least my friends, has warm and positive feelings towards ordinary Russians and Russian culture. Bułhakov, Dostojewski are obligatory to read at school among others so, when it comes to Russians as a people, your tv propaganda is false. On the other hand vast majority of Poles dislike Russian politics. We think of them as of psychopaths, vengeful, focused on imperialistic wars instead of takeing care of internal problems and developing their country and economy.

      @katarzynalpzm0arajko-nenow32@katarzynalpzm0arajko-nenow328 ай бұрын
    • ​@@katarzynalpzm0arajko-nenow32All countries do not like each other, if we take precisely politics, especially large ones, because most of the governments are imperialists and contradictions are growing among them, and not among the peoples, but in small countries that have no resources for imperialism and exploit their own population, and them in turn other major powers This will always be the case with a large number of different states, war is inevitable sooner or later, because contradictions are accumulating between these states People are too stupid to create one state

      @user-zx4sv2kt8g@user-zx4sv2kt8g8 ай бұрын
    • @sergiuszprzewest There's definitely some Polish historical resentment towards Russia for the communism in the 20th century, war, etc. It's a reason why Eastern Europe is so retarded economically in comparison to the West till these days. There's also an ongoing military Russian "actions" in Ukraine...I don't have problem with ordinary people from Russia. I can forgive history. But the problem is I never met Russian who would actually acknowledge the bad things their country has done and who would've actually say sorry...never. They sit silent about the war, pretend like it's not there. They hold grudge to Poles that they are resentful to Russians for the whole history. But like- it wouldn't be a prob if Russians just simply acknowledge that and not saying all the time how Russia is amazing and the best. That's the problem. We should be fair to each other and not delusional. Examplary, I know that at some point of history our country betrayed Lithuania or provoked Ukraine. And this is something I acknowledge, I'm aware of, and I'm sorry for. There wilo be never peace if all the nations/races will look at the other ethnicities only from their limited national point of view.

      @aziatix1168@aziatix11687 ай бұрын
    • @@aziatix1168 Оставь историю предкам. Живи будущим. Русские, к примеру, совершенно не обижены на немцев. Хотя есть за что. Хранить обиды - удел слабых. Как и извиняться за своих предков.

      @user-ym4mj1pg3h@user-ym4mj1pg3h6 ай бұрын
  • That's for certain a selection of good samples.

    @HansDunkelberg1@HansDunkelberg18 ай бұрын
  • If we all gather at the table, then after 6 drinks we will all understand each other without problems. 😆🍺🍺🍻

    @ManteIIo@ManteIIo10 ай бұрын
  • I love all of the slavic languages. They all sound so beautiful to me. But I think the most unique one (and for me personally most beautiful one) is Czech. And not only because of the Ř, which none other language worldwide has (as far as I know, correct me if I'm wrong). Just love the language and that's why I'm learning it right now. I was surprised to see how similar it sounds (to my untrained German ears) to some other ones from which I'd never expected it like Bosnian for example. Greets from Germany!

    @spiritofthewinds9089@spiritofthewinds9089 Жыл бұрын
    • All languages are unique in their way

      @user-cr5jw6pc2g@user-cr5jw6pc2g Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-cr5jw6pc2g of course! I didn't mean to implicate that the other Slavic (or any) languages aren't unique! I just meant to say that to me personally, in comparison to the other Slavic languages, Czech sounds the most unique

      @spiritofthewinds9089@spiritofthewinds9089 Жыл бұрын
    • Dude hats off to you, I'm a native Czech speaker and even I know it's a really difficult language. That's really impressive, that you decided to learn it just like that! Good luck!

      @amberoostrom5732@amberoostrom5732 Жыл бұрын
    • @@spiritofthewinds9089 Actually Upper Sorbian has Ř too, which is a minority Slavic language that is endangered spoken in Eastern Germany in the region of Lusatia. There is also Lower Sorbian which is different from Upper. Technically Czech and Upper Sorbian are the onlh Slavic languages with Ř and the only languages with that letter. Both Sorbian languages have not more than 20k speakers sadly which is even less than the population of Montenegro. Rusyn, Kashubian, Silesian are debatable if they are dialects or languages but they are endangered too.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • Polish has kind of similar phoneme written as RZ - like in "rzeczpospolita" which means "republic".

      @defordefor9865@defordefor9865 Жыл бұрын
  • As a spanish native speaker, I find Serbian similar to italian just the way it sounds.

    @MyAlexlatino@MyAlexlatino9 ай бұрын
    • I am an Arabic native speaker, and thought the same way.

      @lachhabhamza6821@lachhabhamza68212 ай бұрын
  • Племена.Молодцы хорошо проделали работу,интересно позновательно.

    @cheesegorche3195@cheesegorche31958 ай бұрын
  • If you are a foreigner and do not understand any language, you can share your impressions on how they sound for your ear, to which languages they are closer and what associations do you have.

    @sergii2945@sergii294510 ай бұрын
    • Slovak sounds like rhyming words in a poem

      @user-vh4kt4mz3j@user-vh4kt4mz3j10 ай бұрын
    • Interesting, but some languages sound similar to Romance languages

      @skaen9529@skaen95298 ай бұрын
  • IT was very interesting and excited to listen those languages. As a native Hungarian spraker I want to characterize these tongues. The Russian has a very rhytmical and heroic character like Tschaikovsky or Rachmaninov music. Ukrainian has a very passionate and combative feeling. Belarosian is the same as the Russian with some melodic intonation. The Polish is like Chopin music. It is very sensitive and expressive and sometime revolutionar. In the Czech and Slovak I feel this kind of sensitivness, but they are brave, outspoken and open languages. The Polish is introverted, the Czech and Slovak are extraverted like Dvorak music. It is strange what I will write that in the Slovak language I feel the special Hungarian "Palóc" dialect which has a very special mannered atmosphere. The Slovenic language is very expressive and melodical like Polish, but also outspoken like Czech and Slovak. In the Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian I very feel át the same time the dance character and melodical intonation. In these languages I really feel the effect of the slavic folksong and dance music. In Bosnian I feel a little bit the effect of Arabic culture and music maybe because of their religion. In Serb and Croatian I feel special Hungarian accent it is named "Szögedi" dialect. In Bulgarian and Macedonian I feel the rythmical and heroic Russian emotion, but I feel also effect of the very expressive folksong and hard dance music like Bartók Mikro kozmosz dances In Bulgarian rythem. I really liked these languages. A lot of emotion, folk culture.

    @vm6128@vm6128 Жыл бұрын
    • Azta. Ez amúgy az általános véleményed az adott nyelvekről, vagy csak abból, amit ezen a videón hallottál? Csak kiváncsiság.

      @Konpaku_Hungary@Konpaku_Hungary9 ай бұрын
    • The so-called "roSSians" are not Slavs🤷 What are they doing here? 🤷🤦 Authors of the video - learn the history of the resettlement of the Slavs starting with the Ant Union of Slavic tribes☝️

      @KRONUS1ify@KRONUS1ify9 ай бұрын
    • @@KRONUS1ify 🐖🙋

      @user-rc6jy3kw6y@user-rc6jy3kw6y9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@KRONUS1ifyтогда почему россияне понимают межславянский язык и абсолютно не понимают тюркские языки? Фантазëр😂

      @Utars@Utars9 ай бұрын
    • @@Utars у них там своя история, не удивлюсь, если этот кретин через пару лет и Белорусов Латиносами начнет считать...

      @Rusty_Needle@Rusty_Needle9 ай бұрын
  • Лайк за классную сербскую ведущую))) по интонации многие ведущие и корреспонденты жутко похожи друг на друга (уж не знаю, кто взял эту одну манеру речи за стандарт), и всегда приятно видеть что-то чуточку другое)

    @AriesGames2503@AriesGames25037 ай бұрын
  • То великолепное ощущение, коли ты зрозумів весь видеоряд од почанту до кінця. Хвала !

    @MajedSalih@MajedSalih9 ай бұрын
    • Круто)

      @firstandlast4435@firstandlast44353 ай бұрын
  • It seems like Czech, Slovak, and Slovene have a bit less of that stress timing that distinguishes Slavic languages. The syllables seem more evenly spaced. I wonder if this has to do with any influence from Hungarian prosody.

    @morrisonhannah@morrisonhannah Жыл бұрын
    • Interesting observation.

      @jvkanufan8115@jvkanufan8115 Жыл бұрын
    • Historically all West Slavic languages lost the stress accent and the pitch accent distinction of Proto-Slavic and shifted the stress to the beginning of the word. Polish, however then further shifted the stress to the penultimate syllable and then lost vowel length distinctions, which makes it sound different from the other ones. Slovene is a South Slavic language, not a West one, and so lost neither pitch accent, stress accent nor vowel length, although all of these changed from Proto-Slavic in different ways, and in fact added new vowel distinctions based on openness and closing of stressed vowels, but it may have been influenced in its intonation by other West Slavic languages due to its proximity to them. I doubt what you're hearing is "influence" FROM Hungarian, but more likely a tendency for languages existing in close contact to one another eventually acquiring similar characteristics (Sprachbund), with none of them in particular being the originator of those characteristics.

      @ArturoStojanoff@ArturoStojanoff Жыл бұрын
    • @@ArturoStojanoff Interesting points Arturo. Latvian is probably closer to Proto-Indo European/Proto-Balto-Slavic and has a bit of the Finno-Ugric intonation, at least to my naive ear. Maybe it is something native to Proto-Balto-Slavic, maybe proximity?

      @jvkanufan8115@jvkanufan8115 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ArturoStojanoff Thanks for sharing that about the West Slavic split! Yes, of course, “influence” in the Sprachbund sense. I think I think of it as “from” Hungarian because I’m Hungarian so I’m biased 😂

      @morrisonhannah@morrisonhannah Жыл бұрын
    • True, I always thought that Czech and Slovak sound more "monotonous" than other Slavic languages, with their initial syllable stress and very distinct long vowels making them sound slightly "robotic" to my untrained ears. Coincidentally I have the same impression of Hungarian (so I guess the sprachbund theory makes sense), and also Latvian (but not Lithuanian)

      @osasunaitor@osasunaitor Жыл бұрын
  • So interesting how many slavic languages are mutually intelligable. As a native Czech Speaker I understood about Russian - 20% (especially numbers) Ukrainian - 10% Belarusian - 10% Polish - 40 % Czech - 100% Slovakian - 100% Serbian - 50 % (but e.g. the last sentence about wheat I understood completely) Croatian - 20 % Bulgarian - 35 % Bosnian - 65% (?? how) Slovenian - 65 % (??? how) Macedonian - nope. 5-10 % (mainly numbers). I think I would've understood more with subtitles.

    @eliskakordulova@eliskakordulova Жыл бұрын
    • I'm surprised how Bulgarian isn't the least intelligible Slavic language when most Czechs find Bulgarian the hardest from all. 😂 I guess you've been in holidays in Bulgaria and that's why since Czechs are the most common tourists here. But surprised how Bosnian was more intelligible than Serbian and Croatian when they are like Czech and Slovak or Bulgarian and Macedonian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Could be just the clip they used, but you're right, I've been to Primorsko many times, very pretty :)

      @eliskakordulova@eliskakordulova Жыл бұрын
    • If you have undrestood 65% Bosnian, how have you understood only 20% croatian? They are 99% same languages.

      @nolifegaming6930@nolifegaming6930 Жыл бұрын
    • I, as a native speaker of Russian, and I understood quite a lot of Slavic languages and I think that they are similar because, the closest language family, grammar, sounds, similarity of words, this is a very close language family from other language families Russian-100% Ukrainian-95-100% Belarusian-95-100% Polish-80-85% Czech-75-80% Slovak-80% Serbian-75% Croatian-75% Bulgarian-90-95% Bosnian-70-75% Slovenian-75-80 Macedonian-70% At the same time, I read a lot in these languages, watched films, but I already understood Ukrainian and Belarusian languages, and I understood Bulgarian without even studying them, and when I started studying, I just began to understand better, and other Slavic languages I studied for interest and self-development and began to understand better, if I hadn’t studied, the percentage was less, many times less than Western and Southern Slavs, with the exception of Slovenian and Bulgarian, because. I understood them easier than other languages, it would be well, somewhere from 30% to 50%

      @Danchik.@Danchik. Жыл бұрын
    • @@nolifegaming6930 Well, actually, brother, Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian, Macedonian are very similar, it seemed to me that the same language, like the Western Slavs, it seemed to me that they were the same Polish, Czech, Slovak, it seemed to me that they were the same, but there are slight differences

      @Danchik.@Danchik. Жыл бұрын
  • Я понял то, что "если мне бы захотелось наладить контакт" с любыми из вышеперечисленных, то возможно, это бы удалось сделать. Надеюсь, так оно и будет. Люблю людей! Люблю жизнь! Люблю всё вокруг! В этом мире всё есть для счастья. Но почему то все выбирают ненависть...

    @user-td8vv5xn5g@user-td8vv5xn5g7 ай бұрын
    • Интересно, почему же в украине нас ненавидят? Надо подумать

      @siniyden@siniyden6 ай бұрын
  • As a former journalist for 25 years (who also taught English in Russia for 5 years), I noticed not only the languages, but also the reporting styles for the different reporters. The Serbian woman was definitely no-nonsense!

    @haroldcampbell3337@haroldcampbell33379 ай бұрын
  • Freaky how you get closer to the Mediterranean they start to sound more Greek and italian 😄 pretty cool

    @Nopejams@Nopejams Жыл бұрын
    • I have a theory that Mediterranean proximity makes languages phonetically simpler by losing vowel sounds. You have Greek and Spanish with an identical inventory of just 5 simple open vowels, Italian kinda similar (although depending on the dialect) and South Slavic languages as well, being the most phonetically simple of the whole Slavic family (they even lack the 6th vowel that all other Slavic languages have). Then if you go to Central and Northern Europe you find that every language has an incredible amount of vowel sounds, especially in Scandinavia and around the Baltic region

      @osasunaitor@osasunaitor Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@osasunaitorEven in Serbia, in the south we traditionally often use ь instead of vowels, or don't use any at all.

      @ras573@ras573 Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-uu9gz2tj8g Formal Serbian language has 5 vowels (A,E,I,O,U). But a loss of vowels is noticed compared with other Slavic languages. For example the word: "Srpstvo" (means like Serbianhood) it has only 1 vowel and 6 consonants. This is especially the case in my (Torlakian) dialect in the south-east, as I replied before. Instead of vowels we would often use the "ugh" sound. Kьd? -Sьd (Kada? -Sada.) But my dialect is disappearing into the formal Serbian, because they're mocking us, and only old rural people would say it that way.

      @ras573@ras57311 ай бұрын
    • @@ras573 The Torlakian is more Bulgarian than Serbian. Simply because Nish & Pirot were traditionally populated by Bulgarians before Yugoslavia happened. In Yugoslavia though, anything "Bulgarian" was deleted, renamed or suppressed. Tito even managed to create a whole new nation in the south using that policy (of stick & carrot)...

      @gregpeterson3144@gregpeterson314411 ай бұрын
    • @@gregpeterson3144 Thanks for a lesson in my own history. Our ancestors identified as Bulgarians (Bugari) until, roughly, the 19th century. But they didn't really care. If you asked them "who are the Serbs?" They'd answer: "Oh, we are, that's how people in the west call us all." (referring to all south Slavs). Tito didn't invent the Macedonian nation. Even in the 19th century there are mentions that they had a concept of a regional identity, that differentiates them from other Bulgarians, and unrelated to their cultural origins, the region was called Macedonia, so they eventually picked up on the name, and during Yugoslavia the idea strengthened and they made up a ton of quasi history around their name. The communists added fuel to the fire.

      @ras573@ras57311 ай бұрын
  • the Polish take on the Latin alphabet is just mind-blowing. Guys, the language is already difficult enough...cmon

    @gregpeterson3144@gregpeterson3144 Жыл бұрын
    • Blame the division between the Orthodox and Catolicm.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • But as horrific as it looks the spelling and pronunciation match almost perfectly. And the grammar is so regular it's possible to spot errors without knowing the meaning of the words.

      @ak5659@ak5659 Жыл бұрын
    • True, they should do a reform but keep ż instead of ž and maybe adopt ś for sz and ć for cz and å looks cleaner than ą

      @mratkins2611@mratkins261111 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mratkins2611The things is, those sounds you described aren't pronounced exactly the same, although almost. So joining them would probably create confusion in pronunciation.

      @mr.sidious9163@mr.sidious916310 ай бұрын
    • Wait until you see Vietnamese language

      @jonathancandra8190@jonathancandra81909 ай бұрын
  • Я татарка и русский язык мой второй родной язык ,для меня звучит как мелодия ,очень красивый и богатый❤❤❤

    @Vozmozhnoe@Vozmozhnoe7 ай бұрын
    • Какво ще кажеш за българския?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1327 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 болгарский не понимаю ,если только от силы 10 % похожие на русские слова 😋

      @Vozmozhnoe@Vozmozhnoe7 ай бұрын
    • А мне очень нравится татарский. Очень приятный и мягкий. Соскоблено в сравнении с другими тюрскиии языками. А еще татарская музыка очень приятная, много гармони)

      @Moments_In_China@Moments_In_China7 ай бұрын
    • Мне кажется татарский из всех тюркских ближе всего к русскому.

      @arthurgrosse959@arthurgrosse9597 ай бұрын
    • Вам татарам лишь бы даром.

      @harry.cromberg@harry.cromberg7 ай бұрын
  • as a polish person thats why i love czech people and slovaks, its so funny to understand eachother that much, even if you never spoke to someone with their language

    @novy1198@novy11989 ай бұрын
    • jesteśmy braćmi Słowianie wszyscy podzieleni na trzy grupy Południowe wschodnie i zachodnie

      @user-eh8oz2vj6z@user-eh8oz2vj6z9 ай бұрын
    • Oh, it's such a warm, fantastic feeling!

      @user-hp3lb2qj7v@user-hp3lb2qj7vАй бұрын
  • as someone of Polish/Ukrainian/Carpatho-Rusyn family, and having to teach myself the languages they spoke (they spoke Polish, Ukrainian, Russian, Carpathian Ruthenian/Rusyn, and also incorporated Church Slavonic symbols when writing. Earlier generations immigrated West in 20th century, did not pass down very much language or phrases to each generation after, it dwindled), every single one felt pleasing to my ears. it felt as if I was sitting with my great-grandfather and hearing him spout some random story while dipping in and out of English and Slavic. Despite major and minor regional differences and influences between East, West, and South, they all sound so fluid, like the same voice speaking. yes, Slavia are big cultural and language family. I recognize that strongly when listening to this. listening to every single one of them and the differences in stressors, syllable pronunciation focus, etc. It feels like home, and gives me peace.

    @ameliakuntz1350@ameliakuntz1350 Жыл бұрын
    • Закарпаття тут👋

      @virshyk@virshyk9 ай бұрын
  • Sorb here, my native language is Lower Sorbian Here is my order from most I can understand from top: Polish Slovak Czech Belarusian Slovene Ukrainian Russian Serbo-croatian Macedonian Bulgarian You should add more Slavic languages: Upper Sorbian, Lower Sorbian, Kashubian, Silesian, Rusyn, Pomak (not a complete list)

    @Lusatian_Sorb_Patriot@Lusatian_Sorb_Patriot Жыл бұрын
    • Kashubian, Silesian and Rusyn are dialects

      @P8_Polak@P8_Polak Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@P8_PolakKashubian is not a dialect but it derives from the Pomeranian branch of Lechitic West Slavic. Rusyn is also not a dialect of Ukrainian but it derives from Ruthenian.

      @unbeatable_all@unbeatable_all9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@unbeatable_allРусины - это бывшее название украинцев до 18 столетия

      @viramys2289@viramys22899 ай бұрын
    • This is completely understandable, since you only had contact with your neighbors. Your language sounds like Polish. Greetings from your relatives from Serbia .

      @drazantodoric6040@drazantodoric60404 ай бұрын
  • Обожаю славянские языки и славянские народы! Верю, что наступит время, когда все славяне будут жить дружно, ездить друг к другу в гости и быть самыми счастливыми в мире! Привет всем из России ❤

    @Kresty_Fox@Kresty_Fox7 ай бұрын
    • Привет, frosty! 🙂☝️👌

      @user-mu9nj3yh1i@user-mu9nj3yh1i6 ай бұрын
    • И тебе не кашлять

      @siniyden@siniyden6 ай бұрын
    • Россия очень для этого старается)

      @user-sg4iq6ww1g@user-sg4iq6ww1g6 ай бұрын
    • @@user-sg4iq6ww1g да, что все славяне косо смотрят на наш гнойник

      @siniyden@siniyden6 ай бұрын
    • Конечно ну, сейчас все обьеденятся ага😂😂😂. Руских если что ни где не любят, ни в прибалтике ни в европе.. Не подскажите почему?)) Даже в беларусии свиньями за глаза называют и маскалями.. Хммм, как странно да? Почему же так?))) 😂😂😂 Как для России все кавказцы и азиаты чурки, так для европы вся росия чурки)))

      @kot_sova@kot_sova6 ай бұрын
  • It's funny to see Slavs calling each other Tatars and Finno-Ugrians lol, the level of discussion in Eastern Europe

    @hohoryashka228@hohoryashka2284 ай бұрын
    • i'm pretty sure anyone who isn't slavic can't tell the difference between these languages

      @shrimpfry880@shrimpfry8804 ай бұрын
    • @@hohoryashka228 These are used by Poles, Ukrainians, Macedonian and Serbian chauvinists against Bulgarians and Russians which were supposed to be ''Asian.'' But there is another case where Slovenians and Czechs are called Germans.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@shrimpfry880 They use it as slur.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132 these are actually used by all the radical types of slavic nationalists. Russian propaganda even have some gradation on which slavs are not slavs; ukrainians are turks/polaks/russians, belorussian are polaks, polaks and czechs are germans, south slavs are serbs and etc. I don't think that any type of propaganda have such big fantasy world as in russian TV lol

      @hohoryashka228@hohoryashka2284 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@@hohoryashka228украинцы это не турки а потомки кочевников - половцев, печенегов и хазар! Эти народы кочевали по современному югу Украины а потом влились в украинскую нацию. Был несколько раз на Украине и все время видел как много там смуглых черноволосых и черноглазых!

      @user-nc6vn3bt3v@user-nc6vn3bt3v21 күн бұрын
  • As a native slovene its so interesting for me to listen to these and hear a word here and there that i completly understand. Very interesting

    @jasastopar@jasastopar Жыл бұрын
    • I've heard the Slovenian part of this video, the pronunciation feels Italian

      @syrian_lucianos@syrian_lucianos Жыл бұрын
    • @@syrian_lucianos there is a dialect group in west slovenia called "primorščina" and it sounds much more italian. It even has a lot of italian words and most people over 30 speak italian there

      @rokblazic8377@rokblazic837711 ай бұрын
    • @@rokblazic8377 Nice to know I think this is normal, considering that Slovenia is close to Italy

      @syrian_lucianos@syrian_lucianos11 ай бұрын
    • @@syrian_lucianos It is interesting that Italians got their pronunciation from Slovenians.

      @tongobong1@tongobong19 ай бұрын
  • I love the idea of the lnterslavic language, semiartifitial language based on ancient panslavic roots, I can understand 85-100 % of the information I hear or read, that is amazing, my native language is Russian

    @Man_008@Man_0089 ай бұрын
    • The so-called "roSSians" are not Slavs🤷 What are they doing here? 🤷🤦 Authors of the video - learn the history of the resettlement of the Slavs starting with the Ant Union of Slavic tribes☝️

      @KRONUS1ify@KRONUS1ify9 ай бұрын
    • @@KRONUS1ify Russians are a Slavic nation and I support Ukraine 100%.

      @tongobong1@tongobong19 ай бұрын
    • ​@@KRONUS1ifyуспокойся, нацист

      @anatoliyturkulets6014@anatoliyturkulets60149 ай бұрын
    • @@KRONUS1ify okey, but without Russians slavic nations doesn't have many scientists, musicians, painters and writers that are famous all over the world. Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, Brullov and Surikov, Musorgsky and Prokofiev - this is the classic of world culture. It's slavic's culture necessary to have Russians in their numbers

      @governor.of.spermograd@governor.of.spermograd5 ай бұрын
    • @@governor.of.spermograd These are not "classics". It's just a lie from your mouth. They did not make any contribution to world culture. Moreover, they are not "rossians". All their lives, the moscovite emperors attributed other people's: achievements, other musicians, other writers, other scientists. There is no Slavic "rossian" nation and there never was - they are Moscovites. Moscovites are not Slavs. Moscovites are liars and thieves.

      @KRONUS1ify@KRONUS1ify5 ай бұрын
  • I'm Russian. I can understand every Slavic language, not word to word, but I can catch what they're speaking about. I adore Slavic languages, all of them sound beautiful for me. All of them are similar and unique at the same time.

    @user-zu6it8hk2i@user-zu6it8hk2i7 ай бұрын
    • Скуяли ты рашен, ты инглиш. Рашен пишет на своем родном языке.

      @potapotapov@potapotapov6 ай бұрын
  • В целом ясно, особенно если у диктора хорошая дикция, то есть говорить умеет!!!! ))) при желании можно понимать все языки 😊

    @user-qwerty-qwerty@user-qwerty-qwerty7 ай бұрын
  • I am a native english speaker and this is what I hear: Russian - lots of ‘u’, ‘yu’, ‘a’, ‘ya’, ‘y’, ‘yo’, ‘v’, ‘l’, ‘ts’, ‘sh’ and ‘kh’ sounds. Very dark phonology. Ukrainian and belarusian - lots of ‘a’, ‘u’, ‘o’, ‘i’, ‘y’, ‘v’, ‘l’, ‘ts’, ‘sh’, ‘k’ and ‘kh’ sounds. In belarusian, sounds ‘a’, ‘y’ and ‘ts’ are used more often than in ukrainian. Polish - nasal vowels and ‘i’, ‘o’, ‘ie’, ‘ia’, ‘sh’, ‘ch’, ‘shch’, ‘k’, ‘j’, ‘g’, ‘ts’, ‘z’ and ‘zh’ sounds. Lots of consonant clusters. It’s phonology is very robust. Speaks quicker than other slavs. Czech and slovak - has more words without vowels but less consonant clusters than polish. ‘E’, ‘o’, ‘i’, ‘a’, ‘k’, ‘r’, ‘n’, ‘m’, t’, ‘d’, ‘ch’, ‘s’, ‘h’ and ‘p’ are used a lot. Slovak has softer consonants than czech. Both seem to have some sounds absent in other slavic languages which might be german influences. They speak more slowly than other slavs. Serbo-croatian - consonants appear less than in other slavic languages. Slovene - it has a few sounds not heard in other slavic languages. Might be influences from german. Bulgarian and macedonian - Like czechs and slovaks, they also speak slower than other slavs. In macedonian, vowels are used more frequently than bulgarian which uses more consonants.

    @mayleecao3063@mayleecao3063 Жыл бұрын
    • As a Serbian, I actually could follow the Czech language the most.

      @violetstameski664@violetstameski664 Жыл бұрын
    • @@violetstameski664 Виолет е мъжко име? Ти не си ли банатски българин?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • Macedonians don't use more vowels than Bulgarians 😁. Actually, the dialect taken as official Macedonian language was the one furthest away from Bulgarian, and with some Serbian influence, the shwa is being ignored in the natural Macedonian pronunciation in Skopie for example.

      @huskytail@huskytail Жыл бұрын
    • @@huskytail Всъщност, той е прав, но и македонците понякога изпускат гласни букви! Като например: такава - таква клоун - кловн пълен - полн И т.н.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick132 Жыл бұрын
    • @@huskytail No. Kumanovo dialect is The most similar to serbian language.

      @eleonoremoreau5717@eleonoremoreau5717 Жыл бұрын
  • Странно, когда я был в Чехии, я практически не понимал, что говорят по телевизору. Но сейчас смотрю и как-будто все понятно, прям как словацкий. Хотя я и не знаю эти два языка, но как-то интуитивно они в общем контексте предложения понятны.

    @vadim001@vadim00110 ай бұрын
  • You should make a comparison video between Arabic dialects

    @connormurphy683@connormurphy6839 ай бұрын
  • Vjera u Boga i slavenska sloga! Pozdrav slavenskoj braći i svim ostalim dobronamjernim na kanalu! Pozdrav svima koji se odupiru globalistima i njihovim ucjenama s iglama i klimom. 🇭🇷

    @ivanfrankovic85@ivanfrankovic859 ай бұрын
    • Hello from Russia! Как же хочется, чтобы все славянские народы жили дружно😢

      @user-cx2dl4th9p@user-cx2dl4th9p9 ай бұрын
    • @@user-cx2dl4th9p Здравствуйте! Для глобалистов не в интересах славянского единства или какого-либо сближения славян. Нам, славянам, это должно быть понятно. Посетите канал Slaweniska dela где люди всех наших славянских стран общаются друг с другом.

      @ivanfrankovic85@ivanfrankovic859 ай бұрын
    • Привет из России! Мы сопротивляемся!

      @Artcomp87@Artcomp878 ай бұрын
    • Pozdrav iz Jugoslavije.

      @austria-hungary4981@austria-hungary49818 ай бұрын
    • takodje long live slavs

      @vlada91bulbulder@vlada91bulbulder7 ай бұрын
  • As a Bulgarian i understood with easy Russian,Ukrainian, Macedonian,Serbian, Bosnian, Slovenian than Slovac, Tchech and Polish.

    @evavlad1@evavlad111 ай бұрын
    • Как можеш по-лесно сръбски и босненски, отколкото хърватски?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick13211 ай бұрын
  • I'm Brazilian, live in Austria and constantly visit Slovenia/Croatia. Due to that, I learned some words and even sentences in Slovenian and Croatian languages. Watching this nice video, I understood 0% of it. (Ok, I'm joking; I got some words).

    @rafaelpaiotti7011@rafaelpaiotti70119 ай бұрын
  • Русский язык для меня родной. Очень хорошо поняла украинский, белорусский, болгарский. Остальные поняла общий смысл и тему новостных выпусков. Не услышала ни одного знакомого слова в польском выпуске.( вернее поняла всего 3слова от силы и это были предлоги и междометья). Поэтому вообще не поняла о чем идет речь. Тему новостных выпусков чехов, боснийцев поняла только по географическим названиям и фамилиям. У макендонцев речь идет про 3 миллион людей и пандемию . П. С.:Все славянские языки прекрасны. Давайте будем их ценить, беречь и уважать!❤👍

    @Gloria87877@Gloria878778 ай бұрын
    • Ну, ещё бы. Ведь там новости, которые уже все слышали))

      @user-ul7rl9hu3n@user-ul7rl9hu3n6 ай бұрын
  • Удивительно но после просмотра ролика я осознал, что как русскоговорящий легко воспринимаю и в общих чертах понимаю почти все из перечисленных в видеоролике.

    @realamour2856@realamour28568 ай бұрын
  • As a native Croatian speaker, Russian sounds like drunk Slovenian.

    @DuolingoBird99@DuolingoBird99 Жыл бұрын
    • 😂😂

      @gvirupot@gvirupot10 ай бұрын
    • Сам ты пьяный. Русский язык очень красивый язык.

      @Munchen2008@Munchen20089 ай бұрын
    • @@Munchen2008 i was kidding. I agree that every language is beautiful. I know a little bit of Slovenian so in other words, to me is sounds like ankward Slovenian

      @DuolingoBird99@DuolingoBird999 ай бұрын
  • Szukam dcieci w sklepie: Poland:🙂 Czech: 💀

    @Mudamir@Mudamir9 ай бұрын
  • Очень похожи 😊

    @user-ji1yo9sn3m@user-ji1yo9sn3m9 ай бұрын
  • Мой родной язык русский. Понимаю польский, украинский, белорусский. В этих языках много старинных слов. 😊Типа разумеешь и т.д.

    @Nik-ed1zt@Nik-ed1zt9 ай бұрын
    • я читала мнение поляков о русском языке, они тоже говорили, что в русском есть устаревшие польские слова...Видимо, древние слова исчезают в одном, остаются в другом.

      @user-rd6rp3hb6v@user-rd6rp3hb6v9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-rd6rp3hb6vтак и есть

      @IanaAriadna@IanaAriadna6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-rd6rp3hb6vВот было бы интересно соединить все устаревшие слова из разных славянских языков, и был бы ещё один язык))) общий старославянский))

      @irinaj7368@irinaj73686 ай бұрын
  • As a Pole, I understood Polish and Slovakian the most - about parking cars on sidewalks that they'd be prohibited. Parking will be paid. Than Czech, Ukrainian and Bulgarian a little bit. Belarusian sounds to be similar to Russian with a few differencies. South slavic languages are less understandable. Serbian and Croatian sounds similar although I know both have different alphabet, names and both are still changing.

    @sh4dy49@sh4dy499 ай бұрын
    • Lol Serbian uses both Cyrillic and Latin, while Croatian uses only Latin. Montenegrin has the Polish С́, З́ (and in Latin forms Ś, Ź) which no other Serbo-Croatian variant has. Bosnian uses Serbian version with the same dialect as Montenegrin, but Cyrillic is rarely used so they use Latin the most.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1329 ай бұрын
    • Belarusian sound completely different in compare with russian))

      @kristoferrobin2404@kristoferrobin24049 ай бұрын
  • As a russian, ukranian and bulgarian speaker i understood almost all of these languages 😳 (at least I understood the common sense). Russian, Belorussian, Ukrainian, Polish are similar, and Czech. And Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian are similar (and other, I didn’t remember all of the languages) This is so interesting!! It’s like i have access to all slavic languages.

    @eugeniaglugan@eugeniaglugan10 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian and Macedonian are just the same language. Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian too.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick13210 ай бұрын
    • The so-called "roSSians" are not Slavs🤷 What are they doing here? 🤷🤦 Authors of the video - learn the history of the resettlement of the Slavs starting with the Ant Union of Slavic tribes☝️

      @KRONUS1ify@KRONUS1ify9 ай бұрын
    • @@KRONUS1ify Зачем ты кидаешь под каждый второй комментарий этот спам?

      @Vkusniashka1234@Vkusniashka12349 ай бұрын
    • @@Vkusniashka1234 I see that the Moscow Nazis don't like the truth🙂 So we are moving in the right direction☝️

      @KRONUS1ify@KRONUS1ify9 ай бұрын
    • @@KRONUS1ify I'm not the one putting forward a deliberately false theory about the wrong Slavs, so you're the one with the rotten mind.😉

      @Vkusniashka1234@Vkusniashka12349 ай бұрын
  • Bulgarian, Ukrainian, Russian, Belarusian are apparently very close to each other, the words and meaning are 100% clear, but in other languages ​​you need to guess about the words, it’s still easier to understand the Slavic than the Germanic, Celtic or Romance branches, but there’s still a difference strong between these Slavic languages.

    @dimushka383@dimushka3837 ай бұрын
    • болгарский непонятен на 90%, польский наоборот

      @user-bb9lq7gr8p@user-bb9lq7gr8p4 ай бұрын
    • Русский создан на основе староболгарского поэтому и схож...Украинский совсем другой

      @azazell061@azazell0613 ай бұрын
  • Мир братьям славянам

    @VolaRus@VolaRus9 ай бұрын
    • мир без россии

      @Hentschlager_Lucht@Hentschlager_Lucht8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Hentschlager_LuchtOr without USA.

      @danielg.1698@danielg.16988 ай бұрын
    • 🙏💓

      @elena.777@elena.7778 ай бұрын
    • @@Hentschlager_Lucht Мир только с Россией! В России говорят на разных языках и никто не никому не мешает!

      @Us1911in@Us1911in8 ай бұрын
    • @@Hentschlager_Lucht тебя буквально хвалят, зачем говорить эту хуйню, или каждый кто родился в России террорист?

      @Pruss_ball@Pruss_ball7 ай бұрын
  • Jako Polak rozumiem tyle: - Polski - 100% chyba xD - Słowacki - 80% największe podobieństwo do polskiego - Czeski - 75% mimo że jest bardzo podobny do słowackiego - Ukraiński - 50% dużo zapożyczeń od polskiego, więc można nawet dużo zrozumieć - Białoruski - 50%? podobny ponoć do ukraińskiego - Ruski - 35% tak bym oceniał że co trzecie słowo rozumiem. - Bośniacki/Sersbki/Chorwacki - 35% piękne języki, szkoda że u nas w Polsce nie ma z nimi styczności :( - Słoweński - 30% słyszę mocno różnicę jak bardzo odstaje od pozostałych jugosławiańskich języków - Macedoński/Bułgarski - 25% - kompletnie mi nieznajome języki, brzmią jak mieszanka ruskiego z jugosławiańskimi

    @Zoombieknr1@Zoombieknr110 ай бұрын
    • 💀Ти току-що обиди нас!

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick13210 ай бұрын
    • Я українка, і саме словенська, з південнослов'янських мов найбільш зрозуміла для менею

      @loraforina@loraforina9 ай бұрын
    • ахахах, запозичених з польської? Може навпаки?

      @user-vg4nd1tn6n@user-vg4nd1tn6n9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-vg4nd1tn6nнет, поляк прав.

      @Artcomp87@Artcomp878 ай бұрын
    • @@Artcomp87 тебе взагалі не питали та слова тобі я не давав.

      @user-vg4nd1tn6n@user-vg4nd1tn6n8 ай бұрын
  • as a russian native speaker, i understood: russian 100% ukrainian 100% belarussian 75% bulgarian 50% slovak 40% czech 35% serbian 15% polish 10% bosnian 7% slovene 5% croatian 0% macedonian 0%

    @alicebalashova@alicebalashova9 ай бұрын
    • I'm literally the other way around, I'm Croatian XD

      @dragonplaysminecraft3170@dragonplaysminecraft31709 ай бұрын
    • Беларусский проще понять, чем укр

      @Moments_In_China@Moments_In_China7 ай бұрын
    • @@Moments_In_China я просто в детстве читала сказки на украинском, поэтому знаю его лучше

      @alicebalashova@alicebalashova7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Moments_In_Chinaвсем по-разному. Мне проще было украинский понимать, но сейчас слышу, что они очень схожи

      @IanaAriadna@IanaAriadna6 ай бұрын
    • А мне и украинский и белорусский примерно одинаково понятны (процентов на 85), но белорусский по звучанию, кажется, больше на русский похож, как будто полностью из родных звуков состоит. А украинский более шустрый и смягченный. Всегда интересно было, как наши языки звучат со стороны, изнутри, конечно, сложно оценить звучание.

      @user-hp3lb2qj7v@user-hp3lb2qj7vАй бұрын
  • As a Russian speaker, I understood: Russian - 100% Ukrainian - 95% Belorussian - 95% Polish - 50% Czech - 50% Slovak - 50% Serbian - 60% Croatian - 20% Bulgarian - 30% Bosnian - 40% Slovene - 40% Macedonian - 10%

    @mezzopianoforte2016@mezzopianoforte20168 ай бұрын
  • Довольно много поняла на всех этих языках

    @user-dj1ws9ng3i@user-dj1ws9ng3i8 ай бұрын
  • As a Russian, I seemed Ukrainian (and Belarusian, they are similar) the most beautiful of these. Western Slavic languages seemed unusual and a bit understandable

    @svyatozad_ubitsa@svyatozad_ubitsa9 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1329 ай бұрын
  • It was very difficult for me to understand Polish. I am not sure what she spoke about: a celebration of Thanksgiving in the family on a Saturday ... with Radio Maria... and 'something' all over the world? Polish seemed so distant today from Croatian. Mind somebody to help out? But maybe, I don't have a good day today. Even the verb of the first Serbian sentence I did not understand well. Surprisingly, Slovenian and Czech, both, I understood coherently. Somewhat disappointing was my grasping of Slovak, which at other occassions I remember to have understood a fair bit. Unexpectedly, Ukrainian too, I found to be difficult to understand.

    @ZvonimirVZ@ZvonimirVZ11 ай бұрын
    • You got it pretty well. Polish reporter was talking about celebration of 14th(czternastego) Thanksgiving and about gathering of family Radio Maryja on Saturday who are spread all over the world (rozsiani po całym świecie) Also as a Pole I understood Slovak and Czech at 80-90%

      @worldclassyoutuber2085@worldclassyoutuber208511 ай бұрын
    • @@worldclassyoutuber2085 Thank you for your explanation.

      @ZvonimirVZ@ZvonimirVZ11 ай бұрын
  • Нахоя нам нужна информация про "благотворительный фонд"

    @Filoret@Filoret8 ай бұрын
  • Я русский ☝️🇷🇺, понимаю хорошо белорусский язык 🇷🇺♥️🇧🇾 это навсегда ♾️

    @Aleksey.2002@Aleksey.20028 ай бұрын
    • вы так же раньше про Украину говорили, а теперь она с вами ничего общего не хочет иметь. Лугабе сдохнит или режим поменяется, с Беларусью будет тоже самое.

      @kaznach@kaznach8 ай бұрын
    • Ничего вечного нет😢

      @noob2317@noob23178 ай бұрын
    • не дай бог нам россиянцев в Беларуси

      @Hentschlager_Lucht@Hentschlager_Lucht8 ай бұрын
    • Моя бабушка белорусска, её отец поляк. Всю сознательную жизнь прожила в России. Никто её национальностью не утыкивал, даже в голову такое не приходило.

      @Semi_svetik@Semi_svetik8 ай бұрын
    • А схуяли немец за белорусов говорить будет ?

      @DmitriyRA80@DmitriyRA807 ай бұрын
  • As a Ukrainian, I could almost completely understand Belarusian.

    @adamvega1461@adamvega1461 Жыл бұрын
    • That makes sense.

      @Banana_Split_Cream_Buns@Banana_Split_Cream_Buns Жыл бұрын
    • Because Ukraina and Belarusian ealier than 1600 arę the same languages

      @czarnoniebieskihdmapping4196@czarnoniebieskihdmapping4196 Жыл бұрын
    • @@czarnoniebieskihdmapping4196 well, I think it applies to every Slavic language, since they all come from proto-Slavic.

      @adamvega1461@adamvega1461 Жыл бұрын
    • @@adamvega1461 на скільки я знаю, то праслов’янської мови як такої не існувало, з початку було купа діалектів котрі або ж зникали, або ж переростали в повноцінні мови

      @Vydyvoo@Vydyvoo Жыл бұрын
    • @@Vydyvoo не знаю, може ти правий, але ж ці діалекти мусили ж походити з якоїсь мови? Як тоді пояснити їхню подібність?

      @adamvega1461@adamvega1461 Жыл бұрын
  • Прикольно! Есть слова понятные. Если бы еще и говорили по медленней...🙂

    @user-vv9vg9lm2r@user-vv9vg9lm2r3 ай бұрын
  • У полячки приятный голосок !

    @Team_Beside@Team_Beside8 ай бұрын
  • Как хорошо что я знаю русский и якутский, я могу понять и на славянских, и на тюркских языках, плюс английский учим всю жизнь по тихоньку по фильмам и песням, а в школе учила французский 😂 так что понимаю и там

    @user-fe3hc8df7g@user-fe3hc8df7g7 ай бұрын
    • Вообще крутяк!

      @IanaAriadna@IanaAriadna6 ай бұрын
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