Slavic Languages compared to Proto-Slavic - Body parts

2024 ж. 7 Қаң.
219 399 Рет қаралды

Comparison of Slavic Languages with Proto-Slavic through vocabulary of body parts.
Bulgarian, Czech, Croatian, Slovak, Slovene, Macedonian, Polish, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian, Belarusian and Bosnian compared with Proto-Slavic to see which one is the most similar.
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  • Всем братјам Славјанам Добрыј привет! Всем братьям Славянам Добрый привет!

    @Tautartar@Tautartar4 ай бұрын
    • I am a mammal and I eat other mammals. So much for being Slavic... ;)

      @maciekszymanski8340@maciekszymanski83404 ай бұрын
    • ​@@maciekszymanski8340Какую хрень вы написали. Славяне всегда будут братьями несмотря на все попытки врагов их рассорить. Бывают трудные времена, но в итоге все будут дружить.

      @MIKAIL05KADAR@MIKAIL05KADAR4 ай бұрын
    • @@MIKAIL05KADAR хрень несёте именнно вы. Про мифических врагов, которым славяне так усрались, что их непременно надо рассорить. Будто бы славяне за последние 1000+ лет были хоть когда-то в согласии.... Поменьше смотрите Россию-1 зимними вечерами))0)

      @AlexanderSergeevRus@AlexanderSergeevRus4 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@MIKAIL05KADARОчень хотелось бы чтобы это было так: некая панславянская конфедерация или союз близких культурных и этнических групп, но это невозможно. Даже если посмотреть историю, то как на западной Европе были междоусобные войны среди соседий из-за земель или марионеточных наместков, по аналогии как и в восточной еë части между князьями. Даже по сути против золотой орды не сразу и со скрипом обьединились. У меня есть мысли почему сейчас это все происходит (в глобальном плане), но оставлю их при себе. У нас же семь бед - один ответ: если твои мысли не совпадают с чьими-то, то ты бот и прочие клише от "не ботов" .

      @Kit-jus@Kit-jus4 ай бұрын
    • Доброго здравия, Брат!

      @user-hv1vs1ki1d@user-hv1vs1ki1d4 ай бұрын
  • Very awesome video! Hello from serbia! Love slavic brothers! ☮️

    @PAVLOVICDORDESERBIA@PAVLOVICDORDESERBIA4 ай бұрын
    • 🇷🇺❤️🇷🇸

      @StanislawKarbowski13@StanislawKarbowski134 ай бұрын
    • Браћа у век = Братья во век

      @Tautartar@Tautartar4 ай бұрын
    • Защо толкова е рядко да се срещне сърбин, който да не бъде шовинист?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • Phonologically, there have been shifts in the sounds of the languages. For example, Proto-Slavic had certain vowel distinctions that have blurred or disappeared in many modern Slavic languages. Similarly, some consonant sounds have changed or merged.

      @PoisonelleMisty4311@PoisonelleMisty43114 ай бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132Why did you think that this man is a chauvinist? 😳

      @pit_viper2013@pit_viper20133 ай бұрын
  • SLAVA RODU, BRACIA I SIOSTRY!

    @xdlol59@xdlol594 ай бұрын
    • 😊 Слава Роду!

      @user-zo2zh9ts1j@user-zo2zh9ts1j3 ай бұрын
    • главное чтобы фашистская россия не пошла во всех этих странах кого-то "освобождать"

      @kidsbrain6930@kidsbrain69303 ай бұрын
    • Слава роду, нет уроду!

      @Mardolok@Mardolok2 ай бұрын
    • Gdzie jest zona Roda Przy Rodzie

      @jedruskmicic1167@jedruskmicic11672 ай бұрын
    • Слава Роду!

      @WESTLOGDravir@WESTLOGDravir2 ай бұрын
  • Russian word for eye glaz is also related to the Germanic word glass. But Russian also has oko like other Slavic languages, although it’s considered outdated and used mainly in poetry, literature and some idioms/fixed expressions. For example well-known old Russian song “Dark eyes” (Очи чёрные / Ochi chornye).

    @alexstorm2749@alexstorm27494 ай бұрын
    • Перст для пальца тоже используется как устаревший. Есть много однокоренных слов продолжающих использоваться, вроде перстень или наперсток.

      @maratisaev6331@maratisaev63314 ай бұрын
    • Russian written with Belarusian Latin script: Oči čiornyje Russian written with Polish script: Oczi ciornyje Russian written with phonetic Slavic script: Očji čjornyje

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • Око вполне себе живёт в языке. Очки да очко тому подтверждение

      @user-sd6ff9os2t@user-sd6ff9os2t4 ай бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/o6uDdp2yqpt9hmg/bejne.html

      @marians7364@marians73644 ай бұрын
    • @@marians7364 Не могу углубиться в этимологию слов, но могу сказать точно. В эпоху Ломоносова и, так называемых, трёх штилей, для повествования на возвышенные темы приветствовалось использование церковнославянских заимствований. (Церковнославянский язык - язык, на который перевели Библию греческие пророки. Основан на диалекте южных славян, когда русский язык относится больше к восточным). По сему в русском языке в возвышенной лексики ввиду малой ея употребляемости и, как следствие, изменений застыли формы слов, которые когда-то были одинаковы. Так, из церковнославянского в русский язык пришло слово небо. В русском же оно претерпело со временем некоторые изменения слово с тем же корнем уже имеет другое звучание. Так многие слова, свойственные преимущественно южным славянам передались и Восточным по средством заимствования. Хоть и обозначены слова перст, око, чело и др. как архаизмы, но они употребляются в книжной возвышенной лексике (пусть и реже, чем было до творчества Пушкина). Эти слова стали полноценными словами языка многие сотни лет назад и является неотъемлемой его частию

      @user-sd6ff9os2t@user-sd6ff9os2t4 ай бұрын
  • in a russian we also have a word "oko", but it is the elder word, that don't use every day, but we have some words with base "oko", example: "очки(glasses)", "окно(window)". Actually all slavic language have forms "оче(one eye)" and "очи(eyes)"

    @Ax0I0tle@Ax0I0tle4 ай бұрын
    • ''окно'' exists but it's archaic in Bulgarian. Nowadays we say ''прозорец'' which comes from ''прозрачен'' (transperant) or ''прозирам'' (something that can be seen barely). Yes ''око, оче, очи'' are one of these leftovers when most Slavic languages had dual number case system like the Sorbian languages and Slovenian which kept it to this day. Bulgarian has another leftover from that: крило - крила - криле

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • я добавил слово "окно", только потому что оно от того же корня(корень ок(от слова око), суффикс н). вот насчёт него я не уверен в других языках, а вот например око=оче. но суть не в том, автор просто откуда-то взял слово глаз, но не объяснил откуда взялся этот синоним(указал ему на ошибку). кстати словообразование в разных родственных языках очень познавательно и помогает лучше понять даже собственный язык, спасибо за твои примеры@@HeroManNick132

      @Ax0I0tle@Ax0I0tle4 ай бұрын
    • @@Ax0I0tle За това съм съгласен, поздрави! :)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • Yes, okno (window), ochki (glasses) come from oko. Also Russian has the word “очевидно” (ochevidno) which means “obviously” literally “eyes-seen”.

      @alexstorm2749@alexstorm27494 ай бұрын
    • @@alexstorm2749 Bulgarian has ''очевадно'' as well which is like literally ''eye-taking moment.'' Also ''очебиено'' (eye-beating moment, literally).

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Slava Rodu Slovenskomu!

    @moeszyslak2295@moeszyslak22954 ай бұрын
    • Slovenskemu😊🇸🇮

      @e.m.2214@e.m.22144 ай бұрын
    • Tako je, Slava slovenskom rodu! 🇷🇸

      @Urogash@Urogash4 ай бұрын
    • Слава!

      @leon1890@leon18904 ай бұрын
    • Ród znaczy wspólna krew 😊

      @robertkowal6349@robertkowal63493 ай бұрын
    • 😊 Слава Роду! Живём, славяне! 😉 🇷🇺

      @user-zo2zh9ts1j@user-zo2zh9ts1j3 ай бұрын
  • 5:17 In Belarusian (also in Ukrainian), the word "jazyk" has the meaning only of the tongue, while language in Belarusian is "mova"

    @user-or7hm3db9f@user-or7hm3db9f4 ай бұрын
    • Russian also have similar word "molva".

      @forestbear6593@forestbear65934 ай бұрын
    • @@forestbear6593 Это не совсем то, молва это уже про само изречение, молвить-говорить.

      @VladimirNox@VladimirNox4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@VladimirNoxПушкин писал и молвила старушка.

      @user-ny2dx7lz3s@user-ny2dx7lz3s4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ny2dx7lz3s И, это вся мысль? какой посыл?)

      @VladimirNox@VladimirNox4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@VladimirNoxthat Pushkin can write)

      @salatykk@salatykk4 ай бұрын
  • In Russian Perst was used as finger, and it is quite poetic nowadays. The ring on the ring finger is therefore called persten Edit: actually, gloves are called perchatki, and a thimble is called naperstok. As one can see, they both belong to the same word family as aforementioned words, which is kind of cool

    @ryangosling239@ryangosling2394 ай бұрын
    • South Slavic languages call ring: "prsten/прстен" - and ring finger is "prstenjak/прстењак". So, from "prst" (finger) we get "prsten" (ring), and from "prsten" we get "prstenjak" (ring finger). "Prsten" is mostly ring that goes on finger, but could have other purpose. But there are other words to for other forms of ring (alka, for example).

      @sabkobds@sabkobds3 ай бұрын
    • @@sabkobds Wow. We name the ring finger "безымянный", that is "unnamed finger". More logic here in south languages. Man, I wish all the Slavs could understand each other without losing these cool facts about their languages

      @ryangosling239@ryangosling2393 ай бұрын
    • А ещё напёрсток, перстень/кольцо, перчатки. Всё это от перст.

      @user-yt9dp1vj2x@user-yt9dp1vj2x3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-yt9dp1vj2x про перстень написал, а вот про наперсток и перчатки не подумал даже, спасибо

      @ryangosling239@ryangosling2393 ай бұрын
    • На български: на- пръст- ник (na- perst- ok). Надява се на пръста при шиене ръчно с игла! Това е славянско и е разбираемо и без превод.

      @ivankazakov6691@ivankazakov66913 ай бұрын
  • 5:53 the most interesting word here I guess As a Russian yes, we use spina as the word for back, but other words used in Russian 1. Chrbát (slovak) and Hrbet (slovenian) in Russian we have хребет/khrebet, which also means back, literally a synonym. 2. Grъb (bulgarian), Grb (macedonian) in Russian we have горб/gorb, which means hump, humpback. 3. Záda (czech) in Russian we have зад/zad, which means butt. 4. Plecy in polish already appeared in this video, yes this is shoulders in Russian. 5. Ledzha (serbocroatian) is similar to Russian verb лежать/lezhat', which means to lay, to rest. That's truly fascinating, peace and love to all slavic countries!

    @SogoNotDrunk@SogoNotDrunk4 ай бұрын
    • В русском языке есть и слово глава, используется в книгах например, первая глава, вторая глава, и так далее.

      @Live-ok2do@Live-ok2do4 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian has ''гърбат'' which means a person who has a big back. And ''изгърбен'' a person's back who got deformed. ''Прегърбен'' when someone has bad posture on his back. And more... ''Хребет'' is like ''the back'' of a mountain. And hump is ''гърбица''

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Same 'Хребет'' is like ''the back'' of a several mountains, and also "гора" - as single mountain in Russian

      @LongMax@LongMax4 ай бұрын
    • @@LongMax ''Гора'' can be both forest and mountain as poetic. Yes, the historical geographic mountain ''Средна гора'' translates to ''Middle mountain'' not ''Average forest.'' And for forest we have many synonyms - лес, шума, гъсталак, дъбрава, дебри...

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • In Polish there is an equivalent of plecy (back), but it is used to describe the animal's back and in the phonetic sense it sounds similar to the Slovak and Slovenian version (gžbiet)

      @times4937@times49374 ай бұрын
  • *RUSSIAN 🇷🇺 & POLISH* 🇵🇱 Kto zvonil? (Russian) Kto dzwonił? (Polish) Who called? (English translation) Eto takoy milyi zapakh. (Russian) To taki miły zapach. (Polish) It’s such a nice smell. Gusenitsa polzala po stogu sena. (Russian) Gąsienica pełzała po stogu siana. (Polish) A caterpillar crawled along a haystack. Kaplya dozhdya vysokhla na kozhe. (Russian) Kropla deszczu wyschła na skórze. (Polish) A drop of rain has dried on the skin. Na stole lezhal pushistyy kot. (Russian) Na stole leżał puszysty kot. (Polish) There was a fluffy cat on the table. Zimniy den' i ulitsa v snegu. (Russian) Zimowy dzień i ulica w śniegu. (Polish) Winter day and the street is covered in snow. U menya bolit gorlo. (Russian) Boli mnie gardło. (Polish) I have a sore throat. Vorona sela na derevo. (Russian) Wrona usiadła na drzewie. (Polish) The crow sat on the tree. V Prage yest staryy most. (Russian) W Pradze jest stary most. (Polish) There’s an old bridge in Prague. Levaya stena byla zelenoy. (Russian) Lewa ściana była zielona. (Polish) The left wall was green. Kon yest ovyos. (Russian) Koń je owies. (Polish) A horse eats oats. U tebya charuyushchiy golos (Russian) Masz czarujący głos. (Polish) You’ve got a charming voice. Letnyaya pogoda za oknom (Russian) Letnia pogoda za oknem (Polish) Summer weather beyond the window. Kazhdyy imeyet pravo na schastie. (Russian) Każdy ma prawo do szczęścia. (Polish) Everybody has the right to happiness. Ty videl yego v shkole? (Russian) Widziałeś go w szkole? (Polish) Have you seen him at school? Nemtsy byli nashimi sosedyami. (Russian) Niemcy byli naszymi sąsiadami. (Polish) Germans were our neighbours. Pey bolshe vody. (Russian) Pij więcej wody. (Polish) Drink more water. Moy otets rodilsya vesnoy. (Russian) Mój ojciec urodził się na wiosnę. (Polish) My father was born in spring. Eto bylo trudno. (Russian) To było trudne. (Polish) It was hard. Gde (yest) moya mat'? (Russian) Gdzie jest moja matka? (Polish) Where’s my mother? Chego ty ot menya khochesh? (Russian) Czego odemnie chcesz? (Polish) What do you want from me? Ya nenavizhu zlykh lyudey (Russian) Ja nienawidzę złych ludzi (Polish) I detest evil people. Moy muzh zabavnyy chelovek. (Russian) Mój mąż to zabawny człowiek. (Polish) My husband is a funny person. Yego zhena poshla v les. (Russian) Jego żona poszła do lasu. (Polish) His wife went to the forest. Zvezdy padayut s neba nochyu (Russian) Gwiazdy spadają z nieba w nocy. (Polish) Stars fall from the sky at night. To narusheniye bylo strashnym. (Russian) To naruszenie było straszne. (Polish) That violation was terrifying. Vchera ya uvidel byka, kozu, zaytsa, medvedya, lva, i inykh zverey. (Russian) Wczoraj widziałem byka, kozę, zająca, niedźwiedzia, lwa i inne zwierzęta. (Polish) Yesterday I saw a bull, a goat, a hare, a bear, a lion and other animals. Ya khotel by vyrazit' svoyu mysl'. (Russian) Chciałbym wyrazić swoją myśl. (Polish) I’d like to express my thought. Tvoy strakh kradet sily. (Russian) Twój strach kradnie siłę. (Polish) Fear is disempowering (steals strength). Kazhdaya zhizn' vazhna. (Russian) Każde życie jest ważne. (Polish) Every life matters (is important). Eto testo sladkoye. (Russian) To ciasto jest słodkie. (Polish) That dough is sweet. Dobroye slovo raduyet kazhdogo, kto yego slyshit. (Russian) Dobre słowo raduje każdego, kto je słyszy. (Polish) A kind word pleases everyone who hears it. Moya babushka lyubit myod. (Russian) Moja babcia lubie miód. (Polish) My grandma likes honey. Ya boyus ognia. (Russian) Boję się ognia. (Polish) I’m afraid of fire. Proshu, ne priblizaisya ko mne! (Russian) Proszę nie zbliżaj się do mnie! (Polish) Please, don’t come near me!

    @zephyros3039@zephyros30394 ай бұрын
    • Again I still think writing Russian with Polish alphabet will make them more equal: 1. Kto zwonił? 2. Eto takoj miłyj zapach. 3. Gusienica połzała po stogu siena. 4. Kapla dożdaja wysochła na kozie. 5. Na stole leżał puszystyj kot. 6. Zimnij dień i ulica w sniegu. 7. U mienia bolit gorło. 8. Worona sieła na dieriewo. 9. W Pragie jest staryj most. 10. Lewaja stiena była zielonoj. 11. Koń jest owios. 12. U tiebia czarujuśćij gołos. 13. Letniaja pogoda za oknom. 14. Każdyj imiejet prawo na sczastije. 15. Ty widieł jego w szkole? 16. Niemcy byli naszymi sosiediami. 17. Piej bolsze wody. 18. Moj otiec rodiłsia wiesnoj. 19. Eto było trudno. 20. Gdie jest moja mat? 21. Ciego ty ot mienia choczesz? 22. Ja nienawiżu złych ludiej. 23. Moj muż zabavnij ciełowiek. 24. Jego żena poszła w les. 25. Zwiezdy padajut s nieba w noćiu. 26. To naruszenije było strasznym. 27. Wciera ja uwidieł byka, kozu, zajcja, miedwiedia, lwa, i innych zwieriej. 28. Ja chotieł by wyrazit swoju mysl. 29. Twoj strach kradiet siły. 30. Każdaja żyzń ważna. 31. Eto tiesto sładkoje. 32. Moja babuszka lubit miod. 33. Ja bojuś ognia. 34. Proszu, nie pribliżajsia ko mnie! I improved it since the last time I wrote this. Now it should be the best accurate writing to the Polish phonetics. I kinda also combined it a bit with the Belarusian ones.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 once I couldn’t switch the layout in the game, and I wrote in the chat not using transliteration, but something like in polish. In the early 2000s we wrote SMS using transliteration, and names on documents are also written in transliteration, but it is too difficult to read and even write. Latin script with diacritics is the most understandable, but polish one can easily be written with a regular english layout.

      @fumanchez@fumanchez4 ай бұрын
    • Oh my Gosh!! This is so interesting! Thank you for these wonderful examples from a fellow Russian.

      @MsMoonlightlily@MsMoonlightlily4 ай бұрын
    • I am from Belarus. Polish is mostly have such words as belarusian, but in Latin letters

      @threepeater3127@threepeater31274 ай бұрын
    • ​@@threepeater3127как это удивительно! что это может означать?😅

      @user-xu5ex7gy9w@user-xu5ex7gy9w4 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting 👍🏼 greetings from Bremen, Germany

    @papayo2200@papayo22004 ай бұрын
  • The Russian also has the word "Око", even though it's not commonly used anymore

    @kurilrick2207@kurilrick22074 ай бұрын
    • Око за око, и мир ослепнет!

      @user-pe3wr8fu6u@user-pe3wr8fu6u4 ай бұрын
    • Используется но редко.

      @user-ny2dx7lz3s@user-ny2dx7lz3s4 ай бұрын
    • Povel rozkaz Pravo hľadať Hľadí nárečie hladzi glazdia oči. Zočiť zbadať vidieť pohľadom Rozkaz v pravo oč. Bol by smiešny

      @jozefgarab@jozefgarab4 ай бұрын
    • У нас в Сибири часто можно услышать.

      @user-ly5dy6jr9v@user-ly5dy6jr9v4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ly5dy6jr9v Я из Сибири. И тоже это слово практически нигде не слышу.

      @ivansemyonov5891@ivansemyonov58914 ай бұрын
  • It is interesting to know that Slavic languages have the most sovereign countries, compared to other branches of the Indo-European languages.

    @hoangkimviet8545@hoangkimviet85454 ай бұрын
    • Germanics sleeping in the corner: 😊

      @codenameeaglecooldown900@codenameeaglecooldown9004 ай бұрын
    • do they though? there's ton of slavic languges that don't have countries, they are just not widely known

      @GdzieJestNemo@GdzieJestNemo4 ай бұрын
    • @@GdzieJestNemo Well, mainly Upper Sorbian, Lower Sorbian and Kashubian. Silesian and Rusyn are disputed if they are languages or dialects. There are more Uralic languages which don't have own countries unlike Slavic languages and most of them are spoken in Russia.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@HeroManNick132 as a croat, listened to rusyn, can't understand a word nor language patterns

      @jaypolas4136@jaypolas41364 ай бұрын
    • @@jaypolas4136 Many Ukrainians don't recognise Rusyn as separate language like Poles not recognising Silesian but they have some status of being independent like Silesian at least has own wiki, while for Rusyn I haven't checked but unlike Ukrainian they have Ы while Ukrainian doesn't.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Russian word “hrebet” literally means spine, ridge (mountains), backbone. But the main Russian word for spine is spina (speena) which is related to English spine.

    @alexstorm2749@alexstorm27494 ай бұрын
    • There is also the word "pozvonchnik". Which also means the spine. But "spina" means the spine with muscles and skin together. I am a native speaker of Russian.

      @Sottery@Sottery4 ай бұрын
    • В русском есть устаревшее слово "перст" (палец) и не такое устаревшее и ещё используемое "перстень" (кольцо на палец).

      @facepalmy@facepalmy4 ай бұрын
    • @@facepalmy А знаешь ли ты, что общего у кольца с колобком, колесом и коловратом? :з

      @user-fu9zr4pf6p@user-fu9zr4pf6p4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-fu9zr4pf6p Это уже что то из разряда Задорнова. Такое мне не надо.

      @facepalmy@facepalmy4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@facepalmy Малое знание отдаляет от Истины. Уровень Задорнова это Ра - ура и русские этруски, а коло это самое настоящее родное наше слово. Зря ты так, не веришь мне - проверь.

      @user-fu9zr4pf6p@user-fu9zr4pf6p4 ай бұрын
  • There is the word "oko" in Russian, it's considered archaic, but still used in idioms. I.e. "an eye for an eye" is "oko za oko", also there is a proverb "vidit oko, da zub neymyot" ("the eye sees, but the tooth can't reach"), the song "Ochi Chornye" ("The Black Eyes", "ochi" is the plural form for "oko"), etc. Hair: in Russian rural dialects there is a variant for plural form "volossiya", almost identical to Ukrainian. Also, in Russian "kosa" means "braid". Finger: in Russian also exists the word "perst" (archaic), the word "persten'" ("signet ring") in modern Russian has its roots in this word. Tongue/Language: in the (Church Slavonic) Bible this word also means "ethnos". The Bible citations became the part of some Slavic languages unchanged. Back: probably, the word "spina" comes from Latin word "spinum", which means "backbone". There is an old word "hrebet" in Russian which also means "backbone".

    @SteelyGlow@SteelyGlow4 ай бұрын
    • Случай со словом "волосья" на образование двойственного числа похож.

      @user-oe1bu5qw1w@user-oe1bu5qw1w3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-oe1bu5qw1w А листья на какое число похожи?

      @user-bi4eo3ys1f@user-bi4eo3ys1f3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-bi4eo3ys1f на то же самое. Как и прутья, сучья, братья, сватья, крылья и тому подобное. Во множественном: пруты́, суки́, бра́ты, сва́ты, крыла́. Хоть и "считается", что двойственное число было в древнерусском, а теперь его нет, но слова всё же остались.

      @user-oe1bu5qw1w@user-oe1bu5qw1w3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-oe1bu5qw1w А донья?

      @user-bi4eo3ys1f@user-bi4eo3ys1f3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-bi4eo3ys1f Защо вие руснаци не си създадете една читава славянска латиница, като беларуския и най-накрая да правите разлика между Й и Ы, както му е редно?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
  • Oko, prst, chelo, usta, rameno, obliche are all archaic words in Russian now. Glaz, palec, lob, guby, plecho, lico are the contemporary equivalents.

    @cuzsleepisthecousinofdeath@cuzsleepisthecousinofdeath4 ай бұрын
    • All of this words you mentioned are active in Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian . Oko, prst, čelo, usta, ramena etc. add prsten, palac, glava, noga, pleća, zub, koleno, obraz, lice etc... I have noticed that many your "archaic" words are our regular language. Did it mean that we kept more of the original Slavic language?

      @bosanskislavonac@bosanskislavonac4 ай бұрын
    • @@bosanskislavonac i know they're active words in south slavic langs (and how slovenes still say "zelo" and other 'primordial' words, kinda cool). Don't know kept or not, what i know is that russian experienced forced evolution by bureaucrats trying to "improve" or standardize it for a dozen times or so. That's why russian is the "farthest" one in the group.

      @cuzsleepisthecousinofdeath@cuzsleepisthecousinofdeath4 ай бұрын
    • @@bosanskislavonac Same words exist in Bulgarian with slight differences: око (oko), пръст (prăst), чело (čelo), (usta) - only the stress differs. пръстен (prăsten), палец (palec), глава (glava), плешка (pleška), крака (kraka), зъб (zăb), коляно (koljano), буза (buza), лице (lice). However ''образ'' (obraz) as cheek exist but only in some dialects, by default we use ''буза'' (buza). ''Образ'' is more used as image. Also ''нога'' (noga) is still used but bit rarely nowadays and we more often use ''крака'' (kraka). And ''колено'' (koleno) also exists in Western dialects but I know Croatian by default uses ''koljeno'' which is more similar to Standard Bulgarian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • Русский язык не родной для народов России. В центральной части родными языками являются языки финно-угорской группы. Это языки народов меря, мурома, эрзя и других. В 10-11 веках славянские завоеватели обучили местных по книгах, которые были написаны на старомакедонском языке. Поэтому сербский и болгарский ближе к русскому, чем белорусский и украинский.

      @Yurii_Shapovalov@Yurii_Shapovalov2 ай бұрын
  • *Fun fact: kosa means hair in Balkan Slavic languages and in Russian it means “braid”, which is connected with hair (volosy in Russian). The word kosa also has a second meaning in Russian - scythe.*

    @sempreviva4564@sempreviva45644 ай бұрын
    • Means the same in Polish btw

      @extrage3061@extrage30614 ай бұрын
    • foreland?

      @Eugene-The-Great@Eugene-The-Great4 ай бұрын
    • In Czech it means scythe and cold

      @matej07cz5@matej07cz54 ай бұрын
    • Not only in moscovian, but also in Polish, Czech, Slovak, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Serbocroatian, Bulgarian, and maybe in Slovenian .

      @Zaporizhzhian@Zaporizhzhian4 ай бұрын
    • @@Zaporizhzhian никто не спрашивал, как in vusrajinian.

      @Eugene-The-Great@Eugene-The-Great4 ай бұрын
  • Czech language fan facts: Back: Czech use all of it while 'záda' is just most formal. 'Hřbet' is informal, usually associated with pain or hardwork. 'Hrb' means actually' humpback in czech but it's also commonly used in the same sense as 'hřbet' is. Finaly 'plece' is used mostly for cattle and sportsmen back. :) Eyebrow: Both 'obočí' and 'brvy' are legit words for eyebrow. It's just that 'brvy' slowly become obsolete.

    @ondrejlukas4727@ondrejlukas47274 ай бұрын
    • В русском тоже есть слово хребет (и ещё хребтина) -- в значении спина, но более запанибратски. А близкое ему слово "горб" тоже связано со спиной (но только согнутой)

      @Olga-de3ru@Olga-de3ru4 ай бұрын
    • o, a w polskim na odwrót, ludzie mają plecy, a zwierzęta grzbiet

      @monikaurban1294@monikaurban12944 ай бұрын
    • @@monikaurban1294 Zwierzęta -- похоже на "Зверята", для русского уха звучит как детёныши зверей, но я так поняла, что и взрослые звери, животные, тоже zwierzęta? А как тогда сами зверята, звери-малыши?

      @Olga-de3ru@Olga-de3ru4 ай бұрын
    • @@monikaurban1294 vpravdě, i v češtině je hřbet hlavně pro zvířata, stejně jako plece. pro lidi se to používá jen expresivně. aspoň něco, co s Vámi, polskými bratránky a sestřenicemi, nemáme úplně naopak, ale jen tak trochu naopak! ;) :D

      @ondrejlukas4727@ondrejlukas47274 ай бұрын
    • małe zwierzę to zwierzątko słowo zwierz istnieje, ale jest rzadko używane, literackie i stosuje się do wielkich zwierząt, jak niedźwiedź, @@Olga-de3ru

      @monikaurban1294@monikaurban12944 ай бұрын
  • Plet'e/Orme - in contemporary Serbian, it is 'Rame', but in plural (Ramena), you can use 'Pleća', especially when one is carrying a great burden or helping another person to overcome some physical obstacle.

    @brankoprosic5852@brankoprosic58524 ай бұрын
    • In Bulgarian is ''рамо'' (ramo) and ''рамена'' (ramena) plural. Also we have ''плещи'' (plešti).

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 are you from West Bulgaria? Do they in the East read щ as "šč" instead like you said "št"?

      @brad0nja@brad0nja4 ай бұрын
    • in Polish "plecy" or "mieć plecy " mean give support too

      @andrzejbarankiewicz4690@andrzejbarankiewicz46903 ай бұрын
    • @@brad0nja That's more South Bulgaria but I'm from Sofia.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
  • I find these videos fascinating - thanks! 😁👍

    @giulianomarco@giulianomarco4 ай бұрын
  • Око и очи и сейчас любой русский поймёт. Здорового,широкоплечего мужчину в простонародье называют рама.

    @user-ly5dy6jr9v@user-ly5dy6jr9v4 ай бұрын
    • 😳рама. Интересно....

      @makonaanime2599@makonaanime25993 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Necroctulhu В церковнославянском рамена означает плечи

      @igrok878@igrok8782 ай бұрын
  • its funny how some words in Lithuanian is more close to Proto-Slavic then some straight Slavic languages. Baltic languages belong to Balto-Slavic group which splits into Slavic and Baltic. both are related to Proto-Slavic. and we do have many words same as Slavic languages. also, we build sentences in the similar order most of the time.

    @labambeiro@labambeiro4 ай бұрын
    • As Bulgarian I can understand Latvian better than Lithuanian, even though both are harder than any Slavic language since they splitted long before the Slavic languages.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • For example drug as friend.

      @ingvarz7468@ingvarz74684 ай бұрын
    • Просто литовцы забыли свои славянские корни, ведь это выгодно западу. Интересно что запад и западло как то подозрительно похожие слова.

      @user-nz7kd3ck6r@user-nz7kd3ck6r3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-nz7kd3ck6rприбалты - не славяне. У них финно-угорское происхождение.

      @Parker-nf6sp@Parker-nf6sp3 ай бұрын
    • That sounds very interesting for me! Could you give some Lithuanian terms as examples? I would be inspired then.

      @barbar5822@barbar58223 ай бұрын
  • V spisovnom slovenskom jazyku používame obe slová. Prst = palec. Rameno = plece = vo východoslovenskom nárečí "pleco". Pozdravujem všetkých Slovanov!

    @Nezavisly-komentator@Nezavisly-komentator4 ай бұрын
    • Это особенность присуща всем Славянским языкам что всегда есть альтернативные или "запасные" варианты слов

      @adraym7352@adraym73524 ай бұрын
    • Письменный словенский почти понятен без переводчика. 🤝

      @timzilant5594@timzilant55943 ай бұрын
    • @@timzilant5594 soglasen, takoe chuvstvo chto prosto chitaesh text na russkom, no na latinice

      @adraym7352@adraym73523 ай бұрын
    • Пиши ещё я тебя понимаю😂. Попробуй латинские буквы на кирилицу заменить, вообще бомба будет😂

      @AntonKa-yn4mb@AntonKa-yn4mb2 ай бұрын
    • @@AntonKa-yn4mb это словенский. Чудик

      @adraym7352@adraym73522 ай бұрын
  • Koliko sam primetio prikazane reči su jako slične. A skoro sve prikazane reči drugih slovenskih naroda koje sam video se koriste u srpskom jeziku kao sinonimi . Postoji i mišljenje da je do osmog veka jezik svih Slovena bio jedan.

    @aleksandarnikolic2743@aleksandarnikolic27434 ай бұрын
    • Tak i je

      @dan_Chernysh@dan_Chernysh4 ай бұрын
    • Тоже самое про русский - все слова из видео есть в языке и используются как синонимы. Интересно было бы поговорить с сербом на родных языках и посмотреть, можно ли друг друга понять

      @starnigel6279@starnigel62794 ай бұрын
    • @@starnigel6279 Pa može biti da se srpski i ruski najviše razlikuju. Srpski je najsličniji sa slovačkim češkim i poljskim jezikom.

      @aleksandarnikolic2743@aleksandarnikolic27434 ай бұрын
    • Вроде болграры с волги ломанулись на балканы 3-4 веке. Тогда и пошло раздпление с южными славянами

      @user-hb2ky3by7p@user-hb2ky3by7p4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-hb2ky3by7p Не, славян не было на волге. Болгары с Волги уже ассимилировались полностью, от них только название и осталось . Они были тюрками, их потомки - чуваши и частично татары казанские. Чуваши даже в отдельной языковой группе сидят. Они прикатили на территорию Болгарии, завоевали всех и там растворились в местных славянах, которых было сильно больше. Ну а язык сам по себе меняется в зависимости от внешних и внутренних факторов в ходе истории. Вот те же чуваши изолированно жили от других тюрков и их язык отличается сильно от соседних татар и башкир. Так же и якуты, которые вообще никакого внешнего влияния не получили и их язык ближе всего к изначальному общетюркскому. Украинский развивался под сильным влиянием тюрков и поляков, польский под влиянием германцов и т. д. Ps. Простите за графоманию

      @starnigel6279@starnigel62794 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the video. There might be some inaccuracies but it was a pleasure to watch. I didn't expect Polish language to follow Proto-Slavic so strictly.

    @andrzejs8241@andrzejs82414 ай бұрын
    • This is because Polish and Kashubian retained the nasal vowels so that's why it may looks most similar to Proto-Slavic.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Отговаряш на 90% от комемнтарите в youtube. Трябва да призная , че си доста компетентен и имаш много свободно време

      @ivanuzunov4661@ivanuzunov46612 ай бұрын
    • @@ivanuzunov4661 Невинаги, но да.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1322 ай бұрын
  • One more interesting connection - "kosa" is a Polish word for scythe, and "kosić" is the word for cutting down wheat. The word changed meaning probably through connotation with the act of cutting hair.

    @TrollDragomir@TrollDragomir4 ай бұрын
    • Just like Russian коса(kosa) and косить(kosit') with the same meaning

      @dunnohow2live997@dunnohow2live9974 ай бұрын
    • @@dunnohow2live997 And it all goes around, as "kłos" means ear of grain in Polish, and is also sometimes used to describe braided hair.

      @TrollDragomir@TrollDragomir4 ай бұрын
    • @@TrollDragomir Bulgarian has ''влас'' (vlas) for hair but it's archaic. Nowadays we use ''коса'' (kosa) for scythe and hair. And for lawnmower we say ''косачка'' or ''тревокосачка.'' From the same word ''кося'' (kosja),

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • In Serbian kosa is both hair and scythe.

      @bone6495@bone64954 ай бұрын
    • @@bone6495 Same in Bulgarian, even though ''vlas'' exists but it's archaic.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Собрались славяне в комментариях и давай общаться на английском 😵‍💫

    @user-qe1do9sw1f@user-qe1do9sw1f2 ай бұрын
  • Slovanskí bratia, držme spolu

    @ZeeGreed@ZeeGreed4 ай бұрын
    • To napíš do Ruska a na Ukrajinu, alebo do bývalej Juhoslávie, nezabudni ani na Československo ...

      @marians7364@marians73644 ай бұрын
    • ​@@marians7364 Takto medzi sebou Slovania počas histórie bojovali, kto je najsilnejší. Jedného pekného dňa sa ukázalo, že je to mocný štát so slovanským jadrom, jeden zo svetových držiteľov. Už nemá zmysel bojovať, ale treba sa zjednotiť, aby nás ostatní nezožrali.

      @yastyman@yastyman4 ай бұрын
    • Agree with you bro, Slavic people must help each other, even better if all mankind will become united (sad that is almost impossible) @@yastyman

      @timelordthemaster@timelordthemaster4 ай бұрын
    • Some Slavs resist help and unification from their stronger brother so much the stronger brother is forced to force them into it.

      @popularmisconception1@popularmisconception14 ай бұрын
    • @@popularmisconception1 No, it is because of politics, politicians and power, normal people don't care, but today's Russian mentality is not Slavic, but rather Mongolian.

      @marians7364@marians73644 ай бұрын
  • Oko is the old Russian word for glaz. We used to use it till the 20th century.

    @ivydark9741@ivydark97414 ай бұрын
    • Start using it again

      @ClifffSVK@ClifffSVK2 ай бұрын
  • Apart from 'ramo' for shoulder in Bulgarian, we also have плещ /plesht/ (singular) and плещи /pleshti/ (plural) for shoulder(s), but it is an archaism and is mostly used in the literary language.

    @DonHorhe@DonHorhe4 ай бұрын
    • Сега използваме само ''плещи,'' но имаме също така и ''плешка.'' Забрави да споменеш, че ''коска'' съществува, но е архаизъм, както и ''влас'' за коса или пък ''язик.'' И ''тело'' е в западните ни диалекти.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • in Macedonian also плеќа/plekja; плеќи/plekji

      @hash-CCFF00@hash-CCFF004 ай бұрын
    • @@hash-CCFF00 I love this Serbicized Bulgarian dialect.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 thank you, your sister also loves it

      @hash-CCFF00@hash-CCFF004 ай бұрын
    • @@hash-CCFF00 Аз нямам дори сестра. Обсебен си от 2-те червени, знам те!

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Все:нос Украина😏:нiс

    @vandamhohooo@vandamhohooo4 ай бұрын
    • Потому что украинский выдуман, по его звучанию слышно, что он как язык, который стремится к русскому, но никогда его не достигает. Все просто - украинский просто русский язык изувеченный другими владельцами "украинской" земли. Если не верите можете об этом почитать. Подобные случаи в истории были и с другими языками. Как бы неприятно украинцам не было, но их язык только к нашему времени стал хоть чуточку не напоминать искусственно созданный.

      @marfio8331@marfio83312 ай бұрын
    • @@marfio8331 як відрізнити російську (мову рабів) від собачого гавкіту?

      @user-do5ol7qq1y@user-do5ol7qq1y2 күн бұрын
  • Eye "oko" exist in Russian language but only in poetic or vintage literature style of speaking, as well as perst (finger)

    @positiveenergy5004@positiveenergy50044 ай бұрын
    • Hair -kosa - transformed to female haircut

      @positiveenergy5004@positiveenergy50044 ай бұрын
    • ​@@positiveenergy5004 OKO,organ vida...2 OKA u glavi Gledam sa 2 oka...ili očima

      @rango831@rango8314 ай бұрын
    • But what about eyeS? Hehehe. (Not "очи")

      @sgame6093@sgame60933 ай бұрын
  • slavic word for muscle is related to the word meat like in Polish miesien - mieso, nothing to do with mouse which is mysz in Polish. Muscle is quite new word, in ancient time most of the people were muscular, muscles were called simply meat.

    @woytzekbron7635@woytzekbron76354 ай бұрын
    • Mysz is more likely a mouse.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
  • 4:50 Russian word has the word "persten" which is a ring

    @matthewsteele99@matthewsteele994 ай бұрын
    • piestień is the more accurate Slavic translation. Russian should start using the Belarusian Latin alphabet for alternatives instead of this Anglicized one that is in the video.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 well, there's no official latin spelling for russian so I could even spell that word as "p'ersťeň"

      @craftah@craftah3 ай бұрын
    • Перстатая рукавица(перчатка).

      @user-sy4qc4hu6q@user-sy4qc4hu6q2 ай бұрын
  • We can say jezyk for a native speech and as a body part in Poland. Also for English speakers it might be interesting thst we do not differentiate between fingers and toes only can name specific fingers or toes - kciuk is the thumb and paluch is big toe.

    @bobeczek01@bobeczek014 ай бұрын
  • So much is missing here, such as both Slovak and Czech also having the word plece for shoulder (and actually rameno can be used for shoulder but really means more like arm, even metaphorically such as Milky Way Orion Arm), Czech also having the word hřbet for back, and Slovak and Czech also having the word maso/mäso for meat, i.e. dead muscles intended for eating, which is btw a more likely and meaningful etymology in my opinion than that silly mouse story. Therefore I think much more is also missing in other Slavic languages of which I'm not proficient.

    @popularmisconception1@popularmisconception14 ай бұрын
    • Right, telling that word "mouse" is a root word for "muscle" is ridiculous. In Protoslavic "meat" was *męso* . So "mięso" - meat and "mięsień" - muscle and it makes total sense. Please correct that.

      @worldclassyoutuber2085@worldclassyoutuber20854 ай бұрын
    • РАМО - ПО СТАРОСЛАВЯНСКОМУ ПЛЕЧО,РАМЕНА ПЛЕЧИ, ХРЕБЕТ - СПИНА , РУЦА - РУКА , ДЛАНЬ - ЛАДОНЬ........ СЛАВЯНЕ ВСЕХ КРАЕВ ,СОЕДИНЯЙТЕСЬ!😊 СЛАВА РОДУ СЛАВЯНСКОМУ!

      @vladimirvladimir5611@vladimirvladimir56114 ай бұрын
    • Mäso in Slovak is meat and nothing else!

      @branislavpetriska882@branislavpetriska8824 ай бұрын
  • Respect from smalest Slavic country From Montenegro!

    @bos4085@bos40854 ай бұрын
    • There are more Slavs which are inside another country without independence. Yes, Montenegro is smaller but Lusathia is even smaller.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 a lusathia is Lužička Srbija u Njemačkoj(Germany)

      @bos4085@bos40854 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 lusathia have onlu 5%Slavic people!

      @bos4085@bos40854 ай бұрын
    • @@bos4085 Точно

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • В русском языке иногда используют слова "космы", что так же обозначает слово "волосы".

    @user-id1qw5fv1h@user-id1qw5fv1h4 ай бұрын
    • Да просто слово "коса" используется, как прическа у девушки.

      @user-cc4gn5rh6f@user-cc4gn5rh6f2 ай бұрын
    • Ну...это-плохие волосы!😁

      @user-sy4qc4hu6q@user-sy4qc4hu6q2 ай бұрын
  • On side note this is Official language presentation, for example in entire south Croatia people use Tijelo and Tilo or Bijelo and Bilo, actually if not in Official buissines then Bilo/Tilo version or Ikavian version is used more often when speaking than Ijekavian version, City of Split which is second largest in Croatia is Ikavian.

    @stipe3124@stipe31244 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian has ''тяло'' (tjalo) and ''бяло'' (bjalo) by Standard a.k.a. Eastern dialects. In Western dialects we say ''тело'' (telo) and ''бело'' (belo)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Wait, Sofia is west but base for Standard Bulgarian is from east Bulgaria? Same in Croatia where Zagreb dialect is not base for Croatian language even if Zagreb is capital, also our capital is almost at the border with Slovenia, i think only Bratislava and Vienna are closer than Zagreb and Ljubljana .

      @stipe3124@stipe31244 ай бұрын
    • @@stipe3124 Not all words are from Eastern dialects but the majority of words are from Eastern dialects. For example the words звезда (zvezda), гнездо (gnezdo) are from Western dialects in Eastern dialects these words are ''звязда'' (zvjazda) and ''гняздо'' (gnjazdo). However the stress differs. In Serbian ''zvezda, gnezdo'' are pronounced at the stress of E, while in Bulgarian is at A and O (last syllable). Often Ja in Bulgarian words change to E in plural like: мляко (mljako) - млека (mleka) [From stress to ja to a]. The word ''млеко'' (mleko) has the same stress as mleka. промяна (promjana) - промени (promeni) [In this example stress is the same as ja and e] This is because before 1945 these words were united by the letter ''jat'' - ѣ like: тѣло, бѣло, звѣзда, гнѣздо, млѣко, промѣна, нѣма... Yes, Sofia is in the West part of Bulgaria and it's common in every day speech in regular talking (not official) to say these things, especially the Standard ''няма'' (njama) changing to ''нема'' (nema) like Serbian and Macedonian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@stipe3124 This is the main reason why unlike Serbian and Croatian which are 99% the same Bulgarian and Macedonian differ more but still the closest to Bulgarian. However Macedonian since it's a dialect continium of Serbian and Bulgarian it's a bit closer to Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Montenegrin than Bulgarian, even though some words in Serbo-Croatian is closer to Bulgarian than Macedonian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 I know that i understand alot of Bulgarian withouth translation but when people start to speak like they usully speak and that is mostly bit faster, than it is hard to understand even things that are simillar, in many times it is just about accent and nothing more .

      @stipe3124@stipe31244 ай бұрын
  • In some cases we can see a certain split in vocabulary between the Eastern + Western Slavic languages on one part and the Southern ones on the other.

    @andreitopala8502@andreitopala85024 ай бұрын
    • Yes, they were separated by Hungarians and Romanians for a thousand years or more, and the southern Slavs were a part of Turkey for several centuries. And they also have different dominant Y haplogroup.

      @popularmisconception1@popularmisconception14 ай бұрын
    • ​@@popularmisconception1 haplogroups have nothing to do with slavs and other language families.

      @fgts7674@fgts76743 ай бұрын
  • Bosnian flag is in Montenegro, Serbian in parts of Croatia (Dalmatia) and Bosnia and Croatian is more in Slovenia and Hungary then in Croatia. :) In BCMS (formerly Serbo-Croatian) there is word "pleća/плећа" used only in plural and has meaning "shoulders" like "ramena". It's archaic but it's used often figuratively. There is animal body part "plećka/плећка" related to it. Also "vlas/влас" is alternative for "dlaka" (1 hair). There is also plural "vlasi/власи". In Serbian is "uvo/уво" preferred over "uho/ухо" in Croatian and Bosnian.

    @sabkobds@sabkobds3 ай бұрын
  • Interesting observation: Russian УХО/UHO (ear) and Russian СЛУХ/SLUH (hearing). English EAR and English HEARING. The word formation is so similar.

    @alexstorm2749@alexstorm27494 ай бұрын
    • Все верно, германские племена это миф. Германские языки произошли сразу от словянских. Шотланцы скоты, в том смысле что потомки скотоводов, уельс Велес там много чего.

      @user-hb2ky3by7p@user-hb2ky3by7p4 ай бұрын
    • Also russian "why" is "po čemu", its literally like in spanish "por que"

      @nikich2186@nikich21863 ай бұрын
    • Its Bulgarian words.

      @OrthodoxBulgaria@OrthodoxBulgaria2 ай бұрын
    • @@OrthodoxBulgaria It’s Russian words.

      @alexstorm2749@alexstorm27492 ай бұрын
    • @@alexstorm2749 Russian is old Bulgarian.

      @OrthodoxBulgaria@OrthodoxBulgaria2 ай бұрын
  • Nice job! I recerded as reader indoeuropean numbers 1 -10 and other comparisions.

    @PolishSound@PolishSound3 ай бұрын
  • The biggest difference between Slavic languages is fonetic otherwise they are all incredibly close

    @rankoorovic7904@rankoorovic79042 ай бұрын
  • In Polish we also have the word "plecy" for shoulders/back and "zad" for rump instead of back.

    @r0ko899@r0ko8994 ай бұрын
  • In Czech: Shoulder - "Rameno" can be also ""Rámě" but is used mostly in poetry and is more archaic, while "Plec" (sg. from "Plece") is more connected with the same part in animals - No one would use it for human body with some exception of high literature, where mostly the fronal part of the shoulder is meant by the term. Hair - well, this is funny, cause ""vlasy" are pl. of hair, which is sg.-only in English. One hair is "vlas", while ""hairs" are "chlupy", where one of hairs is "chlup". But this is probably general Slavic concept. "V" before "O" is also common in spoken Czech from the Bohemian part of the country, i.e. spoken "voko" for eye. Finger - any finger or toe is "prst", but "palec" (similar to Eastern Slavic) is the name of the 1st one, i.e. thumb/big toe. Eyebrow - ""obočí" simply means the thing around your eye. We use term "brva" for any hair-like structure.

    @Fjertil@Fjertil4 ай бұрын
    • Sve mi je poznato.....Dalmacija...

      @malimate2660@malimate26604 ай бұрын
    • Sve tačno...👍👏🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸

      @rango831@rango8314 ай бұрын
    • Rame must be a loanword from German "Rahmen"

      @Necroctulhu@Necroctulhu2 ай бұрын
    • @@Necroctulhu Well, the stem of the word is "ram" same for "rameno" as well as "rame" and having the meaning "frame"... as in German. On the other hand (protoslavic) orme and modern rame seems like anagrams to me, so we cannot be 100% sure from my perspective. And do not forgot, that the Slavic ethnicity reached quite far to the current Germany in the early Middle Ages. I am afraid, we are in the similar confusion what "Slovan" / "Slav" meant - the one who is able to use "slova", i.e. "words / speach", i.e. is able to speak (to the opposite of "Němci" i.e. "Germans" meaning the people who are dumb, i.e. their sounds doesn't make any sense), or they were slaves or slavers of that time. Who can say for sure.

      @Fjertil@Fjertil2 ай бұрын
    • @@Fjertil Well yes seems like Rámĕ is actually of Slavic origin while there is a Russian word Rama that related to construction and it seems to come from German (guess it's the same word in Czech) which is a bit confusing. Also seems to be there is also word "ramja" in Russian which means shoulder but it's very archaic.

      @Necroctulhu@Necroctulhu2 ай бұрын
  • It would be more interesting to trace modern languages to proto Indo European roots. Being Russian I've always found it fascinating the similarity of words in different languages: daughter - дочь (dotch) brother - брат (braat) brow - бровь (brov') sister - сестра (sestra) nose - нос (nos) door - дверь (dver') mother - мать (mat') tree - [old form] древо (drevo), [newer form] дерево (derevo) snow - снег (sneg) wolf - волк (volk) That's just English and Russian. And there are lots of other words with such similarity. Moreover, it's amazing that Icelandic and Hindi belong to the same language family... Though where is Iceland and where is India?

    @olegs3783@olegs37834 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian has some false friends: доч - stop (for horse only) бръв - wooden logs for a bridge However other forms are either archaic or slightly different: Daughter - дъщеря or щерка Brother - брат brow - вежда sister - сестра nose - нос door - двер (archaic, дверь - used till 1945 form), врата - modern mother - мати (archaic), майка - modern (false friend with Russian which means ''undershirt'') tree - дърво snow - сняг (Standard), снег (Western dialect) wolf - волк (archaic), вълк - modern

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132 thank you, that was really interesting. In Russian врата (vrata) is an archaic form for "gate". The modern form is ворота (varota). But врата is still used to express something epic, for example, the famous Stargate movie is "Звёздные врата" in Russian localization. I also find it interesting that in western Slavic languages they use old Slavic names for months - "leden, Únor" etc, while in Russian, Bulgarian and some other eastern Slavic we use Latin names: January - январь (yanvar') February - февраль (fevral') etc. It would seem that it should be the other way around because western Slavic nations were closer to the Romans. Btw, I know another falso friend with Bulgarian - направо (napravo) wich means "to the right" in Russian and "straight" in Bulgarian. What is more interesting, is that English "left" sounds similar to лево (levo) in Russian, but English "right" is completely different in Russian - право (pravo). However the English word "right" has all the same meanings in English as право in Russian: Turn right - Поверни направо (Poverni napravo) You're right - Ты прав (Ty prav) Civil rights - Гражданские права (Grazhnanskiye prava) The words are completely different, but they have all the same meanings. I don't think it's a coincidence.

      @olegs3783@olegs37834 ай бұрын
    • @@olegs3783 ''Поверни направо'' sounds funny like in Bulgarian ''повърни направо'' means - puke ahead. That would make more sense if it is said ''повърви направо'' - walk straight. ''Лево'' exists in Western dialects as left, but by Standard we use ''ляв, лява, ляво'' but in plural it changes to ''леви.'' But others like like ''граждански права'' and ''ти си прав'' are almost the same. We add auxillay verb like: аз съм, ти си, той е... etc which in Russian lacks and you use ''есть'' instead but rarely. I notice you have some archaic phrases like ''я сам'' which is more similar to аз съм and ''aз'' in Old Russian if I'm not mistaken was ''азъ'' like in Bulgarian till 1945 but you dropped it, while we kept it. ''Я'' as I exists but mostly as dialect, we use it as pronoun like ''ѝ'' and ''я'' like the Russian ''eё'' (depending of the context). Month names are also in Latin as well with slight differences: януари - январь февруари - февраль and etc Gate in Bulgarian is порта nowadays but двер was used bit likely the Russian ''врата/ворота'' ''Врата'' (with same stress as door, but last A is pronounced like Ъ it means ''the neck'' when it's not subject, otherwise it will be ''вратът'' like: Вратът му е дълъг. - His neck is long. Боли ме врата. - My neck hurts. Това/Туй е врата. - This is a door. And ''Звёздные врата'' will be translated like ''Звездни врати'' And we have the diminutive form ''вратичка'' There are more false friends besides that: BG: висок - tall RU: висок - temple (part of the body, Bulgarian: слепоочие. Otherwise tall in Russian is ''высок'') BG: доч - stop (for horse) RU: дочь - daughter (Bulgarian: дъщеря or щерка.) BG: пила - file (tool for cutting metal) RU: пила - saw (tool for cutting wood, Bulgarian: трион) BG: мишка - mouse (in some dialects - armpit, Standard: мишница) RU: мишка - bear (diminutive. Bulgarian: мече or меченце. Russian: мышка) And there are more.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • as far as I remember in Ukrainian jazyk is the body part, whereas the spoken language is mova; in Polish jezyk means both

    @walterweiss7124@walterweiss71244 ай бұрын
    • Belarusian as well.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • "Перст" существует в русском языке в качестве так называемой поэтической лексики ("указующий перст", "перст Божий"). Наряду с такими словами, как "око", "уста", "чело". PS "Перст" также присутствует в таких словах, как "напёрсток" и "двенадцатиперстная" (кишка).

    @dmitriyf.5736@dmitriyf.57364 ай бұрын
    • ...и "перстень"

      @timopheyokraken7341@timopheyokraken73414 ай бұрын
    • Всё верно)

      @dmitriyf.5736@dmitriyf.57364 ай бұрын
    • @@dmitriyf.5736 Пръст на български може да означава и почва, но това става така, когато от мъжки род става на женски род: пръст - пръстта (ж) (пръсть и пръстъ преди 1945) пръст - пръстът/пръста (м) И разбира се пръстен.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • Перчатки еще (надевают на персты)

      @user-mw4li6rq1m@user-mw4li6rq1m4 ай бұрын
    • Да, точно. Спасибо за подсказку.

      @dmitriyf.5736@dmitriyf.57364 ай бұрын
  • > 1:06 Lol we have a slang word in Russian "rama" which means a man with wide shoulders. I always thought it's related to the vehicle's "rama" ("frame") because it's wide but apparently it's an old Slavic word for shoulders we somehow preserved

    @Sander38rus@Sander38rus4 ай бұрын
    • In Polish: rama - frame ramię - part of arm (from shoulder to elbow) przedramię - forearm (part from elbow to hand) bark - shoulder

      @worldclassyoutuber2085@worldclassyoutuber20854 ай бұрын
    • ​@@worldclassyoutuber2085 Wiktionary podaje, że zarówno polska, jak i rosyjska "rama" pochodzą z języka niemieckiego (Rahmen). Ale wydaje mi się, że "rama” dla "frame" i "rama” dla "wide man" mają inną etymologię 🤔

      @Sander38rus@Sander38rus4 ай бұрын
    • @@Sander38rus for "wide man" it would be "barczysty"

      @worldclassyoutuber2085@worldclassyoutuber20854 ай бұрын
    • @@worldclassyoutuber2085 We have these as well in Bulgarian: рама - frame of a car, also we use шаси; рамка - frame of a painting рамо - shoulder презрамка - belt that holds like backpack or some clothings. Hower funny that барка is small cargo ship, coming from the Italian barca.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Yes, barka is a cargo ship, while the word "bark" in Polish has it's roots in P.S. br̥kъ (spike, sharpness). We have saying/metaphore "dźwigać coś na swoich barkach" - having weight of the world on your shoulders

      @worldclassyoutuber2085@worldclassyoutuber20854 ай бұрын
  • There is a Word in russian "Khrebet / Hrebet" . It means bone carcass in our back or a spine as well too. We use both words but Hrebet more used in a literature-way to describe Hardworking..

    @TakerAMD@TakerAMD2 ай бұрын
  • Nice to see how polish language preserved old slavic nassal vowels.

    @adrianrokosz1054@adrianrokosz1054Ай бұрын
  • В русском языке есть слово perst (палец), но оно устаревшее так же, как и oko (глаз). Kosa имеет несколько значений. Одно из них - женская прическа. Glava означает главного человека или раздел какого то текста.

    @user-oh4nd2hj9m@user-oh4nd2hj9m4 ай бұрын
  • Also in russian there's word Око with the same meaning as "Eye"

    @mishavuimo5753@mishavuimo57534 ай бұрын
  • in Belarusian and Ukrainian "tongue" and "language" are different words. We use Mova

    @KGBkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbk@KGBkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbk4 ай бұрын
    • there is a similar word in Russian, "molva".

      @polikhov@polikhov4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@polikhovin belarusian, Ukrainian mova means "language", but Russian молва doesn't mean "language".

      @reasonableargument645@reasonableargument6454 ай бұрын
    • @@reasonableargument645 nevertheless, the meaning is somewhat similar, molva is the designation to speak, although it is not the designation of the word language, but still there are similarities.

      @polikhov@polikhov4 ай бұрын
    • @@polikhov in polish mówic means "to speak". And?

      @reasonableargument645@reasonableargument6454 ай бұрын
    • @@reasonableargument645 and what. Well, I just noted that there are just related words in all these languages.

      @polikhov@polikhov4 ай бұрын
  • 3 missing languages - would be interesting to see it in both Lusatian/Sorbian languages and in Kashubian x

    @jurekfryczkowski6674@jurekfryczkowski66744 ай бұрын
    • If you also count Silesian and Rusyn. Silesian at least to me sounds more distinctive than Rusyn, despite the alphabet is unique in Rusyn.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Correct - I'm actually from Silesia myself - OK let's agree 5 more Slavic languages are missing!

      @jurekfryczkowski6674@jurekfryczkowski66744 ай бұрын
  • Just a note: in Slavic alphabets and transcriptions the letter „j” is always pronounced phonetically as [j] (in english it's written as consonantal „y”).

    @RafalRacegPolonusSum@RafalRacegPolonusSum4 ай бұрын
    • Also there is another mistake that in Russian E should be at least IE like Belarusian. And ''Я'' should be ''Ja'' or ''Iа'' because as you said in Slavic language ''Y'' is a different sound (even though it's lost in Czech and Slovak, despite some dialects kept it.) I think ''Ъ'' in Bulgarian should be at least ''Ă'' because ''Ŭ'' is ''Ў.''

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Yeah, the video lacks consistency. Probably due to a lack of sufficient linguistic knowledge

      @RafalRacegPolonusSum@RafalRacegPolonusSum4 ай бұрын
    • @@RafalRacegPolonusSum I noticed that elbow in Macedonian is wrong. It should be ''лакт'' not ''лактот.'' ''Лактот'' is like ''лакътят'' in Bulgarian. I bet he also used Google translate for this and didn't even think of putting Upper Sorbian, Lower Sorbian, Kashubian and the more controversial ones like Silesian and Rusyn. Also why not even Old Church Slavonic since there is a Proto-Slavic? Plus I think the Baltic ones should be included as well. I feel like almost of these videos that I've watched are the same.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Nice. "лактот" is a definite form, while "лакт" is indefinite. I agree. An easy video to make. Most people wouldn't even bother to verify those stuff. But for me the transcription/transliteration stuff hit very close to home and I just couldn't resist. Thanks for your comment. Are you studying linguistics or are you just casually interested?

      @RafalRacegPolonusSum@RafalRacegPolonusSum4 ай бұрын
    • @@RafalRacegPolonusSum There are other forms but less used like ''лактов'' and ''лактон'' just like how Bulgarian has ''лакътя'' Funny that ''лакта'' are type of hard candies.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Interesting that we all have different default words for back, but some of those words can be still familiar. In Czech we say záda, but hřbet when it's an animal or in more archaic or bookish language even for people, hrb means a hump. What is not familar to me at all ais south slavic Leda and eastern slavik spina/spyna, I would not guess what it means. Plec in Czech is another part of animal, but not back, so I would not guess even polish word.

    @Pidalin@Pidalin4 ай бұрын
    • Spina in East Slavic languages is of Latin origin The funny thing is that Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian borrowed this word from Polish Zad and Zadnica are also russian words, but these are buttocks 😅 Szadi is behind

      @SB-fw3yr@SB-fw3yr4 ай бұрын
    • Also according to the etymological dictionary the Old Czech had the word Glaz for eye

      @SB-fw3yr@SB-fw3yr4 ай бұрын
    • @@SB-fw3yrThe buttocks are "zadek" or "zadnice" in colloquial czech. But the formal word is "hýždě".

      @marketak5141@marketak51414 ай бұрын
    • @@SB-fw3yr How did they borrowed in from Polish? Huh, I just checked it, it's actually a borrowing that has not been used for centuries, but it existed in Polish and referred to spine, until we came up with the word "kręgosłup" literally "column/pillar made of circles/rings". And I thought that we had kręgosłup from the beginning.

      @Dread_2137@Dread_21374 ай бұрын
    • Pleća na srpskom i hrvatskom...je gornji deo leđa ka ramenima,PLEĆAT ČOVEK JE RAZVIJEN ŠIROKA RAMENA,recimo plećati su vaterpolisti..😅😊

      @rango831@rango8314 ай бұрын
  • Vlas\Vlasi are used in Croatian dialects for hair. Also "pleća" for shoulders.

    @NeNozg@NeNozg2 ай бұрын
  • You put all official languages of ex-yugoslavian countries except official language of Montenegro. Why?

    @crnogorskosrce5351@crnogorskosrce53514 ай бұрын
    • Montenegro is the least spoken one + most websites skip Montenegrin. In fact there was an attempt to make Montenegrin more distinctive than the rest by adding 2 letters but isn't Montenegrin like Cyrillic Bosnian?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 And just because one of the Yugoslav languages ​​(all internationally recognized) is used less than the other, it should not be listed in the statistics? Isn't that a bit fascist? I see you are familiar with the standardization of the Montenegrin alphabet, which has 32 letters, I'm glad about that.

      @crnogorskosrce5351@crnogorskosrce53513 ай бұрын
    • @@crnogorskosrce5351 Is divide and conquer not like that as well? As long is there nationalism between nations. Also what's next? British, American, Canadian, Australian?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 A što se ti toliko oko toga śekiraš? :) America, Canada, Australia, Mexico, etc. are colonized territories with culture from Europe. You are comparing the incomparable.

      @crnogorskosrce5351@crnogorskosrce53513 ай бұрын
    • @@crnogorskosrce5351 Добре, тогава напиши всички думи на черногорски в това видео да сравня колко са по-различни от останалите сърбохърватски варианти. :) Дано да си ме разбрал (разумявал) сега.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
  • Back then in polish only the thumb was palec. All the other eight fingers were parstki. The relict of this word we can see in the word "naparstek" which is this little metal armor for your finger not to be injured by a needle.

    @askarufus7939@askarufus79394 ай бұрын
    • 😮 “naperstok” we have that word in Russian language too

      @0zzburn313@0zzburn3134 ай бұрын
    • In Serbian thumb is "palac", and other fingers are "prst, prsti".

      @jeremija_crta@jeremija_crta4 ай бұрын
  • In Russia we have oko too, but use it as old form

    @ggerdagg@ggerdagg4 ай бұрын
    • 😂Ні, це - запозичення від слов'янської мови. Московити мають суржик.

      @user-dq2uz7tk6x@user-dq2uz7tk6x3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-dq2uz7tk6x Мойвоносцы как обычно блещут интеллектом и образованием 😂 Побратимы плоскоземельщиков, хотя те адекватнее.

      @user-xf7tm9nq3i@user-xf7tm9nq3i2 ай бұрын
  • Также в русском языке есть слово "перст", синоним "палец". Фраза "указующий перст". Или стих Пушкина: "Перстами легкими как сон Моих зениц коснулся он: Отверзлись вещие зеницы".

    @galvk@galvk2 ай бұрын
    • Чаще всё же используется палец

      @onefun3641@onefun36412 ай бұрын
    • ​@@onefun3641но от устаревшего слова "перст" сохранилось слово перстень.

      @olelek7520@olelek75202 ай бұрын
  • In Croatian human hair is kosa but a single hair is vlas. Also arm is rame but pleća is also body part, upper part of back between neck and shoulders. Finger is indeed prst but a thumb is palac.

    @kristijangrgic9841@kristijangrgic98412 ай бұрын
  • Tsar Simeon did a great job, as well as the scholars in Preslav and Ohrid.

    @user-hx2xl2km2e@user-hx2xl2km2e4 ай бұрын
  • Also should add that in Russian language the word "мускул" (muskul) is a common synonim to the word "мышца" (myshtsa)

    @thedreamscripter4002@thedreamscripter40024 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the video, but at least in Russian there are most of the words that you did not specify: eye, finger, hair and back. За ролик спасибо, но по крайней мере в русском есть большая часть слов которые Вы не указали: око, перст, коса и даже зад.

    @modronmk2289@modronmk22892 ай бұрын
  • Fun fact - Ą and Ę are nasal vowels originated from proto-slavic and among Slavic languages are preserved in Polish only.

    @vranix@vranix3 ай бұрын
  • That's Celtic music playing, at least it should be proto-slavic.

    @NyabsinoFyles@NyabsinoFyles4 ай бұрын
  • Hey, as I know Croatian H is read as CH or KH. So word uho = ucho, at least you should write it in brackets, so everyone see it's even more close and similar with other Slavic languages.

    @marians7364@marians73644 ай бұрын
    • They should start using some more universal alphabet for these slavic comparisons, they already use Czech letters Ď and Ť for eastern slavic languages, so they could use Czech alphabet completely for everyone because it's only one correct alphabet and everything else should be banned. 😀 🤣

      @Pidalin@Pidalin4 ай бұрын
    • @@Pidalin Okay, Catholic.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • South Slavic H is pronounced the same as the Polish H. In Polish CH/H is the same. This only matters if languages like Ukrainian, Belarusian, Rusyn, Czech, Slovak, Upper Sorbian and Southern Russian dialects have the fricative H sound which changes from G to H sound, they need the CH diagraph, otherwise for the rest is useless. Polish only keeps it for historical reasons, while for the rest Slavic languages it's completely pointless. Serbo-Croatian langusges have 1 letter, 1 sound. Adding C to H will just ruin that rule. If they had the fricative H, then yes but as we said Polish does that but yet they have CH/H.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@Pidalin No práve to je ten problém, že všetky krajiny si myslia, že ich abeceda je najlepšia, lebo sú na ňu už zvyknutí a chceli by to aplikovať na všetkých Slovanov. A tu nastáva problém, lebo všetci vedia, že niektoré slová sú totožné ale píšu sa rôzne. Osobne si myslím, že poliaci sú na tom najhoršie, lebo ich abeceda je asi najviac odklonená od ostatných slovanských jazykov.

      @marians7364@marians73644 ай бұрын
    • @@marians7364 This is just pointless for languages that don't have the fricative H. Polish keeps CH and H for historical reasons, even if nowadays both are exactly the same no difference. This only matters for languages like Czech, Slovak, Rusyn, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Upper Sorbian and the Southern Russian dialects.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • 1:20 Плешка it also exist in macedonian however this part of the body is not the shoulder itself but just bellow the shoulder rear area

    @antondavidoff150@antondavidoff1504 ай бұрын
    • Нямате ли ''плеќи'' също така? Мисля, че при вас лакът е ''лакт,'' защото ''лактот'' е все едно като ''лакътят'' на български, нали?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Плешка Плеќи - множина Лакт - има грешка во видеото Лакти - множина

      @antondavidoff150@antondavidoff1504 ай бұрын
    • Srpski plećka je rameni deo sa lopaticom, nekada su stari ljudi predviđali budućnost, gledajući u plećku jagnjeta ili jareta, to jest u ,, lopatičnu kost,,

      @VladimirCukovic@VladimirCukovic4 ай бұрын
    • @@antondavidoff150 Да, забелязах, че лактот е все едно лакътят при нас, въпреки че имате и ''лактов, лактон,'' както имаме ''лакътя.'' И множественото число при нас е ''лакти'' също. Разликата при нас е ''плеќи'' е ''плещи.''

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@VladimirCukovic Вие не можете да си разкарате ноктите от тях?

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Can you make same video with common animals? Greetings from Poland :)

    @kamilzalewski3286@kamilzalewski32864 ай бұрын
  • Zabawne Wydaje mi sie że polski jest najbardziej zblizony do protosłowiańskiego It seems to me that polish is the closest to proto-slavic

    @krzysztofkawajtys2120@krzysztofkawajtys21204 ай бұрын
    • zgadzam się

      @soulfire2588@soulfire25884 ай бұрын
    • Тебе кажется, в русском много архаизмов, просто их редко употребляют в официальной речи

      @kiraReen@kiraReen4 ай бұрын
    • @@kiraReen A w polskim codziennie

      @sebastiankrupinski7306@sebastiankrupinski73064 ай бұрын
    • Параноя

      @sandpiper2949@sandpiper29493 ай бұрын
    • Doubt it, Polish has tons of German and Latin loanwords (Dziękuję, dach, honorować, waga, szlak, sens, kolor, rachunek, koszt and many more)

      @Necroctulhu@Necroctulhu2 ай бұрын
  • Perst - old Russian for palets. )

    @ivydark9741@ivydark97414 ай бұрын
  • I think the words for Muscle and Back vary the most.

    @WindowsDrawer@WindowsDrawer4 ай бұрын
  • serbian word "plecka" is the part of the shoulder "rame" on the back of your body, that big flat bone. hair "kosa" and word "vlas" is the singular hair, or "vlasi" multiple strands of hair. word "spina" in latin comes from the slavic word as its much younger language. and there is many many latin words with roots in slavic language.

    @zoki.to974@zoki.to9744 ай бұрын
    • Shouldn't be ''plećka/плећка'' more correctly and not ''плецка/plecka?''

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 you are right, i was just lazy to pull up cyrillic ћ and ć... thank you for correcting that for me

      @zoki.to974@zoki.to9744 ай бұрын
    • @@zoki.to974 ''Plecka'' also sounds more Polish than Serbian.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • In the Ukrainian language (as well as in Belarusian as far as I know) the word "Yazyk", means only a part of the body, and for "language" we have a separate word. Mova, in both of them

    @leonilakoriagina9636@leonilakoriagina96364 ай бұрын
    • In Belarusian and Ukrainian it's both mova.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 ок, дякую, виправила

      @leonilakoriagina9636@leonilakoriagina96364 ай бұрын
    • @@leonilakoriagina9636 За нищо! :)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • ​@@HeroManNick132 yazyk is also related to language in Ukrainian, it is just an archaic form.

      @fgts7674@fgts76743 ай бұрын
    • @@fgts7674 It's Jazyk not yazyk.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1323 ай бұрын
  • In Ukrainian and Belarusian, язик/язык has only one meaning - tongue. In Ukrainian, in some contexts, it can be used as borrowed (like Russian язык, meaning specifically "Russian language", or Church Slavonic ѩзыкъ, meaning "people" or "nation").

    @pavloslav@pavloslav4 ай бұрын
    • Bulgarian has ''мълва'' as ''мова'' but slightly different used.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • "Rumor", I guess? In Ukrainian, it's чутка, поголос. Or is it "speech" (like "he gave a speech") - промова?

      @pavloslav@pavloslav4 ай бұрын
    • Пока что я ни одного украинца не встречал, который бы русский называл языком, только "российскою/кацапскою мовой"

      @mayakstudios7292@mayakstudios72924 ай бұрын
    • @@pavloslav Rumor or speech yes. ''Мълвя'' means to talk quietly.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • В словаре Гринченки одно из значений слова "язик" -- это как раз "мова". Так что это не заимствование скорее, а изначальный смысл.

      @qaz2173@qaz21734 ай бұрын
  • Very cool thx

    @dorianosatane7244@dorianosatane72442 ай бұрын
  • In Serbian for bone Koska is also used similar to Russian and Ukrainian but it is rarely used especially related to humans. For instance when you say give that bone to the dog some would use Koska instead of Kost

    @drarsen33@drarsen332 ай бұрын
  • In Serbian: arm - ruka hand - šaka palm - dlan thumb - palac finger - prst fist - pesnica

    @starton4@starton44 ай бұрын
    • In Bulgarian: arm/hand - ръка (răka) palm - длан (dlan) thumb - палец (palec) finger/dirt - пръст (prăst) fist - юмрук (jumruk) beating - плесница/шамар/пердах (plesnica/šamar/perdah)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Googlator says you have четка for hand, it is кисть in russian, if i got the part right.

      @user-fu9zr4pf6p@user-fu9zr4pf6p4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-fu9zr4pf6p Четка is a brush. Кист exists as paintbrush like Russian (before 1945 written ''кисть'') but it's old-fashioned. However ''кистта'' should not be confused with ''киста'' - a painful bubble with liquid inside of the human body.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 Yes! I know киста as paunful bubble with liquid. I meant кисть like hand, not кисть like paintbrush though.

      @user-fu9zr4pf6p@user-fu9zr4pf6p4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-fu9zr4pf6p We always used ''кист'' as paintbrush. ''Четка'' means brush in general.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Привет всему славянскому семейству

    @EcoZen24@EcoZen244 ай бұрын
  • Спасибо!очень интересно.

    @user-zw7we9kb1i@user-zw7we9kb1i3 ай бұрын
  • There is not only "glaz" but also "oko" for "eye" in Russian language though "oko" is used rarely. In Slavic "spina" can be divided in two words "spi" "na" that means "sleep" "on". So "spine" is in fact the part of body used to sleep on.

    @maksimsharamko6545@maksimsharamko65453 ай бұрын
  • Also Palec' in Bulgarian mean Thumb.

    @Mr55330@Mr553304 ай бұрын
  • Все перемешено, слова которые исчезли в одном, ныне встречаються в другом из языках. Однако церковно-славянский, который лёг в основе нынешного русского языка это староболгарский язык, на котором были переведены первые славянские церковные книги.

    @vg4241@vg42414 ай бұрын
  • Can you include all Indo-European languages?

    @FebruaryHas30Days@FebruaryHas30Days4 ай бұрын
  • примечательно, как "братья славяне" общаются на английском языке!!!))) английский - язык общения славян. братья

    @user-yk6ok5jg6n@user-yk6ok5jg6n2 ай бұрын
  • Can you do a video like this but for Lithuanian and Latvian?

    @NicolasVycasNery@NicolasVycasNery4 ай бұрын
    • In general for all attested Baltic languages: Old Prussian and Samogitian (perhaps Curonian too?)

      @barbar5822@barbar58223 ай бұрын
    • ​@@barbar5822 Yes, adding old Prussian, Curonian, Latvian and Lithuania dialectics would be nice

      @NicolasVycasNery@NicolasVycasNery3 ай бұрын
  • It would be nice to have Slavic unity, instead of shooting at each other :(

    @borislavb292@borislavb2924 ай бұрын
    • Абе, това с панславянството е много оспорван термин, а и друг е въпросът как такъв мегасъюз ще функционира като една нация, като това е много трудно да се приложи на практика, поради многото причини за това? Ние си имаме свои неразрешени проблеми, пък сме се запътили да се обединяваме. Не съм против това, но засега изглежда твърде хубаво и невероятно, за да е истина, макар и след време това може да стане реалност... Стига от нас да зависи туй!

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • Pleće is used in Serbian in some archaic sayings. For instance "his is bearing weight of this on his shoulders" would be said "on to nosi na svojim PLEĆIMA" and not RAMENIMA.

    @drarsen33@drarsen332 ай бұрын
  • "Очи чёрные, очи страстные...", "Видит око, да зуб неймёт"... Голова - глава семьи (например)... Указующий перст, например...

    @nladema5735@nladema57352 ай бұрын
  • Праславянских языков не существует, существует только один конкретный праславянский язык

    @StudiaButerbrod@StudiaButerbrod4 ай бұрын
    • Old Bulgarian :)

      @nanculito@nanculito4 ай бұрын
    • Ні

      @sandpiper2949@sandpiper29493 ай бұрын
  • The word "prst" (for finger) looks suspiciously with the Russian word "PeRSTen" for ring.

    @pogolas@pogolas4 ай бұрын
    • Perst is an outdated word for a finger in Russian

      @wesavis5592@wesavis55924 ай бұрын
    • @@wesavis5592 ''Пръст'' in Bulgarian is both finger and dirt (they only differ in articles). ''Палец'' is thumb. However we kept the word ''пръстен'' for ring. пръст - пръстта - dirt - the dirt (feminine) пръст - пръста/пръстът - finger - the finger (masculine)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
    • @@HeroManNick132 interesting, thank you for your comment!

      @wesavis5592@wesavis55924 ай бұрын
    • Isn’t prsten a pan -Slavic word for ring? And yes it would come from association with prst, finger. Certainly south Slavs use it.

      @kruscica4644@kruscica46444 ай бұрын
    • @@kruscica4644 yes, it means finger-thing

      @popularmisconception1@popularmisconception14 ай бұрын
  • Overall, while there are similarities and shared features between modern Slavic languages and Proto-Slavic, the evolution and linguistic diversification over time have resulted in distinct differences among the individual languages.

    @PoisonelleMisty4311@PoisonelleMisty43114 ай бұрын
  • I don't understand why these misconceptions persist. It's laughable, I mean, Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian-they treat them as separate languages😅😅😂😂😂😂😂😂

    @Leonidas_Papadakis@Leonidas_Papadakis3 ай бұрын
    • Ask the government from these countries what they think.

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1322 ай бұрын
  • 🇧🇬🇷🇺

    @Levskarceto1914@Levskarceto19144 ай бұрын
  • А как на праславянском будет"натягивать сову на глобус"? 😂

    @susanin0@susanin04 ай бұрын
  • pleća are also shoulder part in serbian, vlas is piece of hair

    @nundata@nundata4 ай бұрын
    • In Bulgarian is similar: плећа - плещи влас - влас (even though it's archaic for us.)

      @HeroManNick132@HeroManNick1324 ай бұрын
  • If all the Slavs united, we would be the strongest on the whole world. Pozdrav iz Slovenije

    @kavbojctinko4131@kavbojctinko41312 ай бұрын
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