Hebrew and Arabic: Similarities

Ойын-сауық

Jordan and I took some guesses at words that are common to Hebrew and Arabic. FB: / polyglotpal
*Note: any racist, anti-semitic, islamophobic or otherwise offensive comments will be deleted immediately. This video is not about politics; leave politics out of it.

Пікірлер: 1 300

  • @MsAliyahj
    @MsAliyahj9 жыл бұрын

    "Salam" "Shalom" They even share the same words for peace... I think somehow that's really significant.

  • @TGDCChannel

    @TGDCChannel

    9 жыл бұрын

    Arabic: Assalamualaikum Hebrew: Shalom Aleikhem Maltese: Sliem Għalikom (daughter language of Arabic) Neo-Aramaic: šlama 'lokh Amharic: Selam

  • @abubaytnighan6480

    @abubaytnighan6480

    Жыл бұрын

    If only one didn’t start a colony on top of the other

  • @yasserali6805
    @yasserali68059 жыл бұрын

    Your Arabic is very good and by the way , Arabic and Hebrew have the same roots ..

  • @user-bw9kp3ew5m

    @user-bw9kp3ew5m

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yasser Ali It's not as good as Arabs speakers

  • @jrhermosura4600

    @jrhermosura4600

    4 жыл бұрын

    What's also amazing is the fact that both languages are related to Akkadian.

  • @homosapien.a6364

    @homosapien.a6364

    4 жыл бұрын

    JR Hermosura who's speak akkadian today ? Is there any native speakers

  • @jrhermosura4600

    @jrhermosura4600

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@homosapien.a6364 i don't know. Maybe no one does. Or maybe it evolved into some other more modern language.

  • @amineafaryate2598

    @amineafaryate2598

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jrhermosura4600 no arabic is central Semitic, while Hebrew is north-west Semitic derived from the canaanite

  • @IbtihalMahmood
    @IbtihalMahmood5 жыл бұрын

    I'm a native speaker of Arabic. I studied Hebrew for a whole year and was astonished by the similarities between the two languages. Learning Hebrew was very easy for me, especially that I also happen to know classical Arabic very well.

  • @VulcanTrekkie45
    @VulcanTrekkie4510 жыл бұрын

    Hebrew and Arabic are both Central Semitic languages, meaning that they're about as closely related as English and German. So much shared culture, it's a shame that they hate each other so...

  • @BlackBeardPRO

    @BlackBeardPRO

    9 жыл бұрын

    we don't hate Jews at all , we hate Zionist , we lived with Jews an our countries for thousands of years without any problems , in Iraq , Yemen , Tunisia , Morocco and Libya and there still a lot of Jews there specially in Yemen. and they also speak Arabic. But when the Europeans expulsion the Europeans Jews from Europe they gave them our land Palestine as a new home for them. at the beginning we had no problem with them because they were as guests in our lands. We sold them houses and lands and let them build their own towns. But after that they created militias and killed thousands of Arabs and dominated the Arabian towns and cities and that was with help of UK army. It's not shame that we hate them , The shame is what they did and do for us after we let them live among us. and if you care a lot about them just sent them back to their homes in Europe not just send them to Palestine because you don't want them to live in your countries. #GazaUnderAttack

  • @VulcanTrekkie45

    @VulcanTrekkie45

    9 жыл бұрын

    Of course Israel is to blame for the current situation. But what I mean is (and this is more to the Israeli government than the Palestinian one) why can't we just give peace a chance? Live and let live?

  • @Adirer1

    @Adirer1

    9 жыл бұрын

    i dont hate arabs

  • @imaaroncharles

    @imaaroncharles

    9 жыл бұрын

    BlackBeard PRO Palestine was under the British Mandate after the Ottoman Empire collapsed. The initial plan was to divide the lands between Jews and Arabs, with the Arabians having the majority. But who rejected that idea? I am not going to answer that. If we are going to start having an inane witter on who stole whose lands first, please note that the Jews land were taken when the Turks (Muslims) conquered the land of Israel in the 6th century. After the Ottoman Empire collapsed, the British saw this as an opportunity to let displaced Jews from all over the world to go back to where they came from, and thereafter the State of Israel was created. So, If i were to argue with you based on what you had jotted down, then Israel was only given back what they had lost in the first place, a land that they had way before Islam or Christianity even existed. It is a land that was promised to them by God to Abraham. It's in the Bible, and it is in the Quran. Why don't you take a look at the lands that Arabs have and compare it with the size of Israel? The Palestinian-Israel problem was never about the land. If we put it concisely, it is simply a war against Jews.

  • @BlackBeardPRO

    @BlackBeardPRO

    9 жыл бұрын

    last time Jews have been in Palestine was +2000 years ago. Christians and Muslims lived in Palestine for more than 1400 years. Why should we share our lands with European Jews who claim that their grandfathers lived here 2000 years ago ?! When they came in a peaceful way as guest not as a occupiers to our land we lived we them without any problem. But when they started killing Arabs and destroy Arab's towns to build their own Country in our lands the conflict begun And BTW you should know that there is no genetic relationship between Jews who lived here 2000 years ago and Ashkenazi Jews who came from Europe 60 years ago to occupy Palestine. As I said before. They belong to Europe. If they had problems with other Europeans it is not our fault and we will not share our land with them for that. Give them a land in Singapore if you care too much about them.

  • @keuir
    @keuir8 жыл бұрын

    arab from prophet ishmael a.s jews from prophet ishaq a.s and ismael and ishaq is son from prophet ibrahim a.s

  • @freshtv1150

    @freshtv1150

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sam Mok it's itzchak in hebrew

  • @annejosh1688

    @annejosh1688

    7 жыл бұрын

    Fresh TV Its/zchak(-khhak) modern Hebrew, (Y)ItsHāq original/Bible/Yemenite or Arab Hebrew. Arabic IsHāq and (English)Bible Isaac.

  • @7mudiabo6urshi27

    @7mudiabo6urshi27

    6 жыл бұрын

    uk england / The original Arabs were before Abraham... His son Ashmall married a woman From them...And from their marriage Come the Arabs you know today...The religion of Moses is not his name "Judaism" They have been named by this name, compared to Judas the son of Jacob... 😂😂😂😂👌 All they waa muslima to god Even the jews today don't know the name of god but in islam his name allah

  • @krisorder4122

    @krisorder4122

    6 жыл бұрын

    uk england Judaism it's the second religion after Hinduism

  • @Dravidian93gangster

    @Dravidian93gangster

    6 жыл бұрын

    +sulayman dubaishi you mean aramai

  • @BehavingBeaver
    @BehavingBeaver7 жыл бұрын

    the hebrew guy gets it wrong so many times...

  • @BehavingBeaver

    @BehavingBeaver

    7 жыл бұрын

    you can clearly see that hebrew is not his main language 1:18 it's only in writing, but they wrote nine as "teka" instead of "tesha" 1:41 arm is not "za-roa" it's like the arbic guy says "zeroa" 1:46 hair is not "sha-ar" it's 'se-ar". 'sha-ar' is gate 1:53 tooth is not "shin" it's like it's written on the screen, "shen" (with a silent 'e') 1:55 "yoffi" is also a hebrew world and they didn't even catch that, it means "beauty" or "good" 2:03 too much emphasis on the "kha" sound in "melech" 2:04 salt is "me-lach" not "ma-lach". "ma-lach" is the past tense of "melech"(king), meaning "ruled" 2:13 law is not "khok" like how you say the 'o' 'hook'. it's "khok" with the 'o' sounding like the 'o' in 'knock' 2:41 the arabic guy speaks perfect hebrew, better than the hebrew guy did all along 2:46 the hebrew guy doens't say 'okhel' as in "food" but as in "eating" the syllables matter. "o-khel" is "eating" and "okhel" without any syllables is food.

  • @freshtv1150

    @freshtv1150

    7 жыл бұрын

    dmagen1994 yes yes yes גם אני שמתי לב

  • @anasmbirkou3852

    @anasmbirkou3852

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hhhhh lol

  • @ChaimSilber

    @ChaimSilber

    4 жыл бұрын

    I know I also speak Hebrew as a native language and you could just see he said it wrong so many times, and his accent was so different from what it should of been

  • @m3d2
    @m3d28 жыл бұрын

    اللغة العربية الفصحى واللغة العبرية (القديمة) التي كان يتحدث بها اليهود في المدينة المنورة بالجزيرة العربية في زمن النبي محمد عليه الصلاة والسلام قريبتان جدا من بعضها البعض وليست كما هي الحال بين العربية والعبرية في وقتنا الحاضر الشاهد على ذلك أن الصحابة كانوا إذا أرادوا تعلم اللغة العبرية فهم يتقنونها في أقل من اسبوع أحد الصحابة تعلمها في ثلاث ايام وهذا يدل على أن اللغة العبرية الحديثة بعيدة جدا عن اللغة العبرية القديمة التي كان يتحدثها أجدادهم الذين استوطنوا المدينة قبل البعثة النبوية على صاحبها أفضل السلام واتم التسليم والله أعلم .

  • @bolshevikalgerien8415

    @bolshevikalgerien8415

    8 жыл бұрын

    wAAd Aa تكلم انجليزي يا اخي حتى يفهم الجميع

  • @m3d2

    @m3d2

    8 жыл бұрын

    انجليزيتي ليست جيدة استطيع فمها لكن لا اجيد التعبير بها

  • @solid7468

    @solid7468

    8 жыл бұрын

    كلامك صحيح اغلب متحدثين العبرية هم يهود اوربين ولا يعفرون كيف ينطقون الاحرف مثل العين و الحاء ويبدولون هذه الاحرف بحرف الخاء

  • @solid7468

    @solid7468

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** كانت اللغة السامية

  • @solid7468

    @solid7468

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** علماء اللغة يسمونها اللغة السامية ومنها جائت اللغة العربية العبرية والاشورية..........الى اخره

  • @h3mmod1990
    @h3mmod199010 жыл бұрын

    Your Arabic is very good!

  • @haneendd4689
    @haneendd46898 жыл бұрын

    I speak Arabic because it's my first language and I speak Hebrew because I live in Israel and English I study it in school and there are many similarities between Arabic and Hebrew besides what you mentioned and you are right in everything you said

  • @questionreality6003

    @questionreality6003

    2 жыл бұрын

    shalom , pretty you

  • @asmaaboulekouane227

    @asmaaboulekouane227

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's called Palestine( occupied Palestine )

  • @AaronGeller

    @AaronGeller

    4 ай бұрын

    @@asmaaboulekouane227 you corrected an Arab on where she lives... seriously?

  • @Yasmino1994
    @Yasmino19949 жыл бұрын

    Your arabic is really impressive!! I just couldn't help but notice.. You always say "لو سمحت" when you make a mistake as an equivalent to "excuse me" which doesn't really work in this situation. I believe you should say "عُذراً" instead.

  • @ceeaseyeasasamcee1367

    @ceeaseyeasasamcee1367

    5 жыл бұрын

    Alternatively, you can also say: عفواً which means pardon as a polite gesture.

  • @Son_of_aesthetics
    @Son_of_aesthetics5 жыл бұрын

    Tim broooo you are amazing,awsome dude!You are an absolute inspirstion for me in this long and fun yet grueling journey!Thanks man,greetings from Iran👋

  • @maryel6266
    @maryel62666 жыл бұрын

    I'm half Arab and I love Jews a lot.I wish Jews and Arabs got a long :(

  • @Le.dictateur.africain

    @Le.dictateur.africain

    3 жыл бұрын

    not before Paletinians get their rights the probleme is not tbetween jews and arabs, coz jews live in tunisia and morocco since thousands years ago till today. the problem is with zionists.

  • @uribarel

    @uribarel

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Le.dictateur.africain When was "Palestine" established? Why was their flag created only in 1964? Why did she gain independence in 1988 and not before? Why did Jordan control them before 1967? All this happened long after Israel was established in 1948. Answer those questions for me..

  • @mahmoudhelal4706

    @mahmoudhelal4706

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@uribarel Your answers: 1- Palestine was under the British occupation, and it was called mandatory Palestine. 2- Their flag is based on most of the Arab flags "why wasn't it made before" because you didn't leave them a chance to do anything and you were getting them out of their lands D: 3- Jordan controlled them before 1967 because in the war of 1948 "your so called independence" Egypt and Jordan saved only these lands from your occupation. Palestine was there before you were and the Zionists came massively with their ideologies and brutality, taking weapons from the UK and the USA and started to kill them and get them out of their lands as gangs......and whenever you try to find Jewish monuments under Palestine's soil, you find Arab ones.....

  • @uribarel

    @uribarel

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mahmoudhelal4706 Lets start with - What is "Palestine" you guys talking about? Does anyone ever heard about "Palestine as a nation" before 1948 or 1967?? Everyone should ask themselves when was a Palestinian state? Who knew her? What's her flag? When is she gaining independence? The fact is that before 1948 the British ruled the place before thet the Ottoman and before that the Greeks and before that the Romans and before that was the kingdom of Judah (it is also written in the Qur'an). The one who illegally ruled the West Bank before 1967 was Jordan. "Palestine" its not even arabian name, its a Romans name since they occipite the middle east. So where or when exactly was a "Palestinian state"?? And this means that the Arabs lived there illegally without any recognition. The funny part is that the "Palestinians" adopted their flag in 1964 and they did not have an anthem or independence until 1988 (This is long after Israel was established). A state cannot be called a state without all these conditions Which means "Palestinian nation" its abiggest lie of the modern history. period.

  • @HN-fz6um

    @HN-fz6um

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@uribarel according to you if I find a place that has no flag and it's not a country I can kill it's people and take over it I bet your origins are American because that what they did to the native Americans.

  • @PiyushBhakat
    @PiyushBhakat6 жыл бұрын

    Damn Tim, you look like Harry Potter.

  • @jerstumc5033

    @jerstumc5033

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's right hahahaha

  • @HappyPinkable
    @HappyPinkable9 жыл бұрын

    This video makes me want to learn Hebrew, it sounds so beautiful.

  • @khalilmeddeb201

    @khalilmeddeb201

    7 жыл бұрын

    Shaima Aljunaibi arabic is better

  • @user-dj6cd6hi9q

    @user-dj6cd6hi9q

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@khalilmeddeb201 not really

  • @alarabi98

    @alarabi98

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-dj6cd6hi9q Both languages are as great as each other.

  • @ISREALYAHWEH3INONE

    @ISREALYAHWEH3INONE

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@alarabi98 but sorry Hebrew is better than arabic and it fact Hebrew is language of kingdom ,kings ,prophets, holy scriptures Torah and tanakh

  • @alarabi98

    @alarabi98

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ISREALYAHWEH3INONE dude it's been months.

  • @naveneshata
    @naveneshata8 жыл бұрын

    Salem, great video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @tw1705
    @tw17057 жыл бұрын

    This is great to know. Currently Duolingo is very close to completing (or perhaps they already have completed - I haven't had time to check this week) a Hebrew course for English speakers. Perhaps once I get a basic feel for Hebrew, Arabic will come with ease.

  • @freshtv1150

    @freshtv1150

    7 жыл бұрын

    T Williams same I hope

  • @tinafrommars
    @tinafrommars10 жыл бұрын

    That is so amazing. I only know two languages at the moment: English and German (not too well however). Ich will viele verschiedene Sprachen lernen aber ich denke, dass ich keine Geduld haette. But seeing your videos makes me excited about languages again. Keep up the great work. You are inspiring so many people :)

  • @PolyglotPal
    @PolyglotPal11 жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't read too much into that - it's something I bought on the street in Shanghai and thought looked cool

  • @FloweyG
    @FloweyG11 жыл бұрын

    That's so insane! You have the entire romanized and original texts in both languages down! You're some sort of genius for sure, Trust me not everyone can do what you do. You're a great inspiration and I hope to see more of your videos this year. Happy 2013 Tim!!!

  • @jrodg46
    @jrodg4611 жыл бұрын

    What a beautiful piece of work that shows in a clear, entertaining way how close the Hebrew and Arabic languages are and thus how much Hebrew and Arabic speaking peoples actually have in common, since language marks the beginning of all culture. Thanks for this gem.^

  • @FaFa-gp6mk
    @FaFa-gp6mk8 жыл бұрын

    Your Arabic is good

  • @sadiqjbenglish1327
    @sadiqjbenglish13273 жыл бұрын

    I'm a native Arabic speaker and i speak Hebrew like a native, it was very easy for me to learn Hebrew, i also speak a little English and Russian, and I'm learning Turkish and Persian, i really love learning languages,

  • @irishpolyglot
    @irishpolyglot11 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating stuff Tim. Thanks for this! I'll definitely have to add Hebrew to my list some day!

  • @basemdz6516

    @basemdz6516

    2 жыл бұрын

    original Hebrew is no longer exists this is modern hebrew drove from arabic, German, ect

  • @Hebiscus998
    @Hebiscus99811 жыл бұрын

    you're an inspiration man. keep up the good work.

  • @TheAnikeenko
    @TheAnikeenko7 жыл бұрын

    Love how an israeli and an arab have fun together with no politics involved

  • @freshtv1150

    @freshtv1150

    7 жыл бұрын

    Aelin Uial he's not Arab, and many people like that are friends is not like we don't talk at all like we're sworn enemies. I'm a Syrian Israeli jew

  • @TheAnikeenko

    @TheAnikeenko

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lol i know im a Russian jew Who lives in Spain and i have muslim friends from morocco

  • @rogozan8903

    @rogozan8903

    7 жыл бұрын

    Aelin Uial He hasn't arabic access... I gess he isn't Arabic

  • @JustaRandomGuy890

    @JustaRandomGuy890

    7 жыл бұрын

    he is not arab he is an american jew from new york, and israelis and arabs on a personal level do just fine, i can assure you that

  • @JustaRandomGuy890

    @JustaRandomGuy890

    7 жыл бұрын

    an arab* (it doesnt let me edit)

  • @user-xd9su4hn9x
    @user-xd9su4hn9x7 жыл бұрын

    Chinese Sign behind: Revolution is not a sin ;)

  • @MBBchannel1

    @MBBchannel1

    7 жыл бұрын

    ni hao ;) ..from UAE

  • @jonahs92

    @jonahs92

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yunpeng Lyu 你好! (我从以色列。)

  • @user-xd9su4hn9x

    @user-xd9su4hn9x

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Jonah Safern 光明节快乐!

  • @jonahs92

    @jonahs92

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yunpeng Lyu 谢谢你! 圣诞快乐!

  • @omarfaraj9894

    @omarfaraj9894

    6 жыл бұрын

    I adore the chiness languge

  • @iDevoid
    @iDevoid11 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Always good to know a bit about languages I know next to nothing about, as it gets me interested in learning them.

  • @Motivationlife-cz9fk
    @Motivationlife-cz9fk6 жыл бұрын

    thank you for this bro its good to see similiarties

  • @MrBenchook
    @MrBenchook5 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful video! Salam and Shalom for those who choose peace !!!!! 💛💛💛💛💛

  • @AmitB
    @AmitB10 жыл бұрын

    Your Israeli friend pronounced some of the Hebrew words incorrectly, that's odd.

  • @TboneIsRogue

    @TboneIsRogue

    10 жыл бұрын

    He seems to have been Americanized.

  • @Mrbrainiac

    @Mrbrainiac

    10 жыл бұрын

    like what?

  • @Adirer1

    @Adirer1

    9 жыл бұрын

    hand is suposed to be pronaunced zroa not zaroa

  • @MahmurdSahara

    @MahmurdSahara

    9 жыл бұрын

    nowadays jewish ppl call themselves (if they live in israel) israeli but that might be wrong cuz of they even do not look like if they really come from there. i am pretty sure that those whites living in israel are pronouncing the words wrong cuz of before they lived in europe i bet these arent real hebrews, that would explain actually much (if my theory is true)

  • @Adirer1

    @Adirer1

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lihi Levy they will understand u they will just think ur wierd

  • @Mesopotamian28
    @Mesopotamian284 ай бұрын

    His arabic is really good, i really like it. Whenever we learn a new language sometimes we get really excited and we try to speed as fast as possible to sound as fluent, you sound perfect just stay calm and take your time while speaking, no rush!🌹☕

  • @alia31382
    @alia313828 жыл бұрын

    السلام عليكم و رحمة الله و بركاته. انا جدا فخور فيك و الأشياء التي تفعلها. أتمنى منك انه تستمر في تعلم المزيد من اللغات و لا توقف!

  • @JustAkrm
    @JustAkrm9 жыл бұрын

    سلام عيلكم ..تيم.. أريد أن أسالك كيف هي الطريقة التي تتعلم بها اللغات ؟ (وأتمنى أن تجيب على سؤالي باللغة العربية).

  • @aleksandram.7800
    @aleksandram.780010 жыл бұрын

    I am glad I am not the only one who caught the Hebrew not being very accurate. Guess instead of simply stating it I will try to point out as much a possible seeing as I am Israeli. 1:16 six is spelled without the (yud "י") it is spelled like this שש 1:18 nine in Hebrew should be spelled this way: תשע 1:42 arm is pronounced slightly different (more like zroa' not ZAroa') 1:47 hair is more like sea'r instead of sa'r 1:53 tooth. what you wrote would the more correct to pronounce instead of what your friend said (it is Shen not shi'n) 2:05 he pronounced king instead of salt. Salt is pronounced Melakh (king is Melekh) 2:14 same thing as tooth. khok is the right way not khuk. That's all I picked up. I am honestly not trying to target your friend, but you are such an inspiration and I know how much accurate pronunciation matters. I would have hated if someone knew i was pronunciation something wrong and not tell me. Hope this helped.

  • @georgewtvr1911

    @georgewtvr1911

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the effort to correct this, I am trying to learn Hebrew as my fifth language xD

  • @simosgh4261

    @simosgh4261

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not much since i have started learning Hebrew and noticed the same!

  • @yaldar
    @yaldar11 жыл бұрын

    dude you are friggin ASWESOME... hope you become really successful using your gift for languages.

  • @Doug44393
    @Doug4439311 жыл бұрын

    Finally you put out another video.

  • @TheYARAandFLACOshow
    @TheYARAandFLACOshow11 жыл бұрын

    I love how he is truly excited by the similarities of these languages!

  • @Kira13865
    @Kira1386510 жыл бұрын

    Dude I just love how you mix Egyptian and Levantine accents to speak Arabic!

  • @Linaawad29
    @Linaawad2910 жыл бұрын

    I am totally impressed by how good you're at both languages. It's kind of interesting to see how you were able to combine Fos7a with both the Jordanian and Egyptian dialect. I mean even native speakers might find it hard to understand at first. But really good job. I am learning English as my second language and a bit of Spanish and yet I still find it challenging to learn new words in context. Keep up the good work.

  • @brpolyglot
    @brpolyglot11 жыл бұрын

    Nice to see a video of yours after so long, we can see that each polyglot has his/her language focus, and your work on Middle East languages has shown to be quite impressive. It's indeed interesting as motivating to watch this.I hope to be learning some Arabic and maybe Hebrew iin 2013. Though i've already started a little with this video.

  • @NogaUnicorn
    @NogaUnicorn9 жыл бұрын

    nine in Hebrew- tesha'- it's not "תקע" it's "תשע", and six in Hebrew- shesh- is not "שיש" its "שש"

  • @user-dj6cd6hi9q

    @user-dj6cd6hi9q

    4 жыл бұрын

    But he said it right but the writing was wrong

  • @alexmg3648
    @alexmg36487 жыл бұрын

    Am i the only one who noticed the poster of chairman Mao in the background?

  • @LeGendYasser
    @LeGendYasser9 жыл бұрын

    U're awesome! Man. This is pretty cool video.

  • @polyglot15
    @polyglot1511 жыл бұрын

    Wow! That's awesome! One day, I'll be like you! :D What an exciting thought. I was just editing my list of languages I'll learn. I was kind of worried though, thinking that after about thirty I'd start to find a boundary, but hearing you gave me a new hope. Thank you so much! I admire what you do. :)

  • @aaronboxerman
    @aaronboxerman11 жыл бұрын

    I'm a fluent Hebrew langauge speaker (high school student) studying fusha right now, and despite the similarities in vocabulary, the differences in grammar are immense. In fact, any help given by similarity between words is quickly becoming dwarfed by the immense and intricate system - far different from Hebrew - that I'm beginning to learn. Should be difficult, but interesting.

  • @TheMonkiAss
    @TheMonkiAss10 жыл бұрын

    This is great! I speak Arabic (my mother tongue, along with Norwegian and English) and I really want to learn Hebrew after my visit to Israel/Palestine...I found many similarities and I like the sound of Hebrew a lot! I'm also brushing up on my forgotten Russian (which as a child I used to be fluent in) and French. You probably already know, but your Arabic pronunciation of certain (difficult) letters is perfect! My goal for now is fluency in Russian and French. Later, Hebrew, Assyrian, Farsi :)

  • @L.Harris-oz4xt

    @L.Harris-oz4xt

    5 ай бұрын

    Wow! That is really impressive!

  • @cooled0quoin
    @cooled0quoin10 жыл бұрын

    Very good you did this video!! ;)) I am morrocan musulman and as an arabic point of view I observed too that there are a lot of similarities. Either I could say that's there pretty have between the social cultures too! We are all the same, and our similarities and differences being just because of the geographic distances. As we can say that's spanish and italian are approached because of it geographical proximity and it's historical origins; it's happens the same to arabic and hebrew. Congraats to youu you have a very good arab!! (wish I had it lol ;p!, I studied on a spanish school so my spanish and my french are waay better xpp) Good luck!! :)

  • @joshpage5887
    @joshpage588711 жыл бұрын

    Hey Tim. I just stumbled on your channel earlier, and I must say, I am impressed, but further, I find in you an absolute kindred that I honestly thought I never would. I took Spanish, then German, then French, and finally Arabic in school and via formal education, and then began teaching myself Hebrew, Latin, and Farsi, which I study concurrently today. Seeing that someone younger than myself is tackling foreign languages with such vigor, not for any 'practical' reason' per se...

  • @fayhares
    @fayhares10 жыл бұрын

    Ard (earth) Aretz, sabt (saturday) sabath,... My mom is Arab and learnt Hebrew in college, there are similarities as long as language is concerned and there are even more surprising similarities in culture, and if my mother speaks slowly I can pretty much understand most of it :)

  • @josephbel

    @josephbel

    10 жыл бұрын

    The children of Israel are Arabs by ethnic. This truth has been masked for a long time by those in power unwilling to correct history books. Hebrew is none other than Aramaic which a different Arabic tongue. Why else are they called even in the bible by their Arab name "The children of Israel" = "The Bani" only Arabians use this expression. You often hear that Jews and Arabs are cousins, the correct way would be "The Arab Jews and Arab Muslims are cousins" because they came from the same father, lived in the same land and spoke the same language.

  • @fayhares

    @fayhares

    10 жыл бұрын

    josephbel I totally agree, those who hold power don't want us to live in peace, they make us focus only on differences and enhance hatred, this is unfortunately sick and people fall in this dirty game, I am Arab and Muslim and I respect Jews, Christians, Buddhists, Atheists and every other religion and race, I have friends from all over the world and every ethnicity and I think that enriches me by allowing me to learn about their beliefs, it is really fun :)

  • @josephbel

    @josephbel

    10 жыл бұрын

    Right On!!! God has created us to be diverse in every aspect.

  • @skood999
    @skood99910 жыл бұрын

    اللغة العربية هي ملكة جمال لغات العالم، بالاضافة الى أن اللغة العبرية هي مشتقة من اللغة العربية. اللغة العبرية تاريخها ٤٠٠٠ سنه اما اللغة العربية ٨٠٠٠ سنه ويوجد بها إعجاز كبير حيث انهُ مثلا يوجد حوالي ٥٦٤٤ مفره فقط للجمل.

  • @tarfelagund
    @tarfelagund11 жыл бұрын

    Great vid...very interesting. There was a NYtimes article earlier this year that said that the two languages share as much as 40% of their grammar and word roots.

  • @phethallamn5466
    @phethallamn54669 жыл бұрын

    I'm happy to see you both not trying to kill each other. Didn't know that your languages are so similar. I'll subscribe :D

  • @pulsarstargrave256
    @pulsarstargrave2568 жыл бұрын

    ALLAH\ADONAI (Exalted Be HIS Name) knew what DNA has confirmed: that the Jewish, Bedouin and Arab people were ALL related and they are cousins. To see these young men get along so well gives me hope for peace in the Middle East.

  • @xxxpullmeouttgewatter6864

    @xxxpullmeouttgewatter6864

    8 жыл бұрын

    The problem with peace is not race or religion it's the terrorist illegal state of Israel.

  • @pulsarstargrave256

    @pulsarstargrave256

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Ismail Alnahdi Yes and no. As a Westerner, my knowledge of the specifics is sketchy at best. However, in the collapse of the British Empire, the UN made the tragic mistake of not creating a two nation solution in '49 (Israel and Palestine). Both the Jewish and Palestinian people have the right to live there because they are BOTH the children of Abraham and if they both worshiped, loved and feared ADONAI\ALLAH (Exalted be HIS names) they wouldn't treat each other the way they do. As far as the Israeli government is concerned, they seem to have learned the WRONG lessons from their grandparents' experiences in WW2!

  • @666isrorelfu8

    @666isrorelfu8

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Pulsar Stargrave *soon youll have to create

  • @orbiton10

    @orbiton10

    7 жыл бұрын

    More correct to say elohim in Hebrew

  • @queenofthorns6746

    @queenofthorns6746

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Ismail Alnahdi Israel is not an illegal state.

  • @guitar4life881
    @guitar4life8818 жыл бұрын

    So many similarities. Im indian there are many similarites between hindi and farsi. Learning german now only to find out how similar It is to english. Language is so powerful and helps one understand other cultures. I hope to start spanish and farsi after I get B2 in german. I guess I will have an advantage with farsi as hindi has many farsi words. Peace to all

  • @qaisarmushtaq8363

    @qaisarmushtaq8363

    8 жыл бұрын

    Alok sir how are u

  • @nenabunena

    @nenabunena

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Jabez Alok Singh that's because hindi is an indo european language like german so they're related

  • @mdub2000

    @mdub2000

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Jabez Alok Singh yes english is a germanic language mixed in with other influences

  • @nayrtnartsipacify

    @nayrtnartsipacify

    8 жыл бұрын

    you are awesome

  • @polyglot15
    @polyglot1511 жыл бұрын

    I'm studying 15 languages and adding on more. I can't wait to speak so many languages like you. I think finding similarities between languages is fairly fun. I'll start Arabic soon, and will learn Hebrew script to learn Yiddish. Perhaps I'll study Hebrew in the fall. :)

  • @memejun1
    @memejun111 жыл бұрын

    you're amazing i can spend the whole day watching your videos :)

  • @cr2372
    @cr237210 жыл бұрын

    If I'm not wrong, the guy on the right was famous because he learned to speak Icelandic very fluent.

  • @peterfilipovic

    @peterfilipovic

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's not him...

  • @nkel6111
    @nkel61118 жыл бұрын

    They are both semite people, language. We can expect no less than much similarity. Now to stop the killing.

  • @coven_crafter
    @coven_crafter10 жыл бұрын

    Wow, you've gotten really fast!! Great job!! :)

  • @yunarels
    @yunarels11 жыл бұрын

    Hello i AM really enjoy with your video i am native arabic speakers but i did not know nothing about Hebrew thanks man to do this waiting your next videos

  • @rudolfsnijder2427
    @rudolfsnijder24279 жыл бұрын

    Arabic is like a Hebrew and it also same as German and Dutch Malik (Arabic) and Melekh (Hebrew) = King Ich bin (German) and Ik ben (Dutch) = I am

  • @ahmadal_shanqeety802

    @ahmadal_shanqeety802

    6 жыл бұрын

    Rudolf Schneider emmm sorry what's the difference between Dutch and German??? I thought German calling them selfs "Dutch" and Germany in Germany is "Dutch land"

  • @FootballManagerTaraz

    @FootballManagerTaraz

    6 жыл бұрын

    'Deutsche' means people in german, and it has the same root as 'dutch' actually. Ditsch, Duutsch etc. all have the same meaning too.

  • @kasianvh

    @kasianvh

    5 жыл бұрын

    Germans call themselves 'Deutsch' in German, Dutch people call themselves 'Nederlands' in Dutch. Dutch is like a low German dialect which developed itself in it's own language. But Dutch/Deutsch/Duytsch/Duutsch all mean 'the people'.

  • @turkicwaraslan8521

    @turkicwaraslan8521

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thats all words Hebrwer Origin

  • @diegof8853
    @diegof88539 жыл бұрын

    Shalom Leikulam - hebrew Salem Aleikum - arabic

  • @diegof8853

    @diegof8853

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** Right ... is Salaam! thanks.

  • @YehudaLion

    @YehudaLion

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** The Hebrew equivalent is Shalom Aleikhem. The reply is Aleikhem Shalom (Aleikum Salaam in Arabic).

  • @bolshevikalgerien8415

    @bolshevikalgerien8415

    8 жыл бұрын

    YehudaLionWhen a old jews greets you, and says 'Death to you' (as-samu alaykum) , 'And to you.' " that means old jews hated saying "asalaam alykoom" back then, that have a very deep meaning, i think the new hebrew it's been influenced by arabic in the middle ages when hebrew nearly disappeared.

  • @YehudaLion

    @YehudaLion

    8 жыл бұрын

    brahim kadi Not sure I understand your comment. "Death to you" is not a greeting at all. It's an insult or threat. Modern Hebrew is mainly based in ancient Hebrew but contains indeed some words of Arabic origin, which is normal considering that many words could not exist 1400 years ago when Jews lost their final battle for Israel's independence against the Byzantines in 628 CE, not to mention in 701 BCE when Assyrians invaded Israel and introduced Aramaic as the official language . On the other hand, the Arabic dialect spoken in Israel is also influenced to some extent by Hebrew and even Aramaic, which is normal considering the History of the land, the Israelite origins of most Muslims and Christians living therein and the re-introduction of Hebrew as the official language of Israel.

  • @GmilionRBLX

    @GmilionRBLX

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** lol i always fought that salem aleikum means "Peace on you" xD but i guess i am wrong

  • @PolyglotPal
    @PolyglotPal11 жыл бұрын

    I think "eye" comes from a Germanic root (related to oog in Dutch and Auge in German) which is linked via Proto Indo-European (PIE) to the Latin "oculus" (think "ocular" in English). The word for tooth is "dens" in Latin (think "dental") and "dat" in Sanskrit -- Grimm's Law, which determines consonant shifts from PIE into Germanic languages, shows that roots with D will change to T or a voiced fricative, creating English's tooth, Dutch's tand and, after mutation, German's Zahn from PIE *h₃dónts

  • @invincible5609

    @invincible5609

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hi Tim, I'm currently learning French, Russian and Japanese....I already know English and Hindi....wish me luck. I wanna be like you

  • @suleozz9822
    @suleozz98227 жыл бұрын

    Glad to see you two together. This friendship should be example for the others who do not understand the beauty of the harmony.

  • @MingBaiLiaoJie
    @MingBaiLiaoJie9 жыл бұрын

    You had some inaccuracies in your video Tesha, in hebrew should be: תשע shesh, in hebrew should be: שש אבא should be אביו And "Father" should be changed to "Father of" Otherwise change the arabic word to 'baba' in this arabic context, אמא should be אם "i eat" should be "food"

  • @salamarizka7123

    @salamarizka7123

    9 жыл бұрын

    Father in Arabic is Ab أب Father of is abo أبو, aba أبا or abi ابي. Depending on the tense.

  • @MingBaiLiaoJie

    @MingBaiLiaoJie

    9 жыл бұрын

    Salama Rizka "Ab" means "father", but so does "baba" "abo" does mean "father of" or "his father". But "aba" just means "Father", and "abi" means "my father", not "father of". Did I misunderstand you? Was I wrong on something?

  • @wifi2166
    @wifi21664 жыл бұрын

    dude your arabic is insane, congrats

  • @RexGalilae
    @RexGalilae10 жыл бұрын

    I just sooooo wanted to see such a video!! Thanks dude and I found it interesting as I can speak arabic apart from hindi, urdu, marathi, konkani, nawayathi, français, some malayalam and Tamil and also German. And to a polyglot like me, this was the video I always wanted! Also to note that "ben" is used in Arabic as well!! Like my name is "Zaid bin-Hasan" and so on.....

  • @dreamyreemy4066
    @dreamyreemy406610 жыл бұрын

    Omg you are amazing id love to be like you , btw im from kuwait so yeah I know arabic and ive noticed that u tend to say some words in Egyptian more than العربية الفصحه we as arabs have one language but we have made it into idk accents? Where we say some words in a different way than others .. and pronounce some letters in different ways . Such as Egyptian when they say a for القاف and g for jeem. And there are many many ways to say one word in a arabic. .. but seriously though I love what you're doing ♡♡♡♡ I hope to be like you one day Right now im 17 I can speak all the arabian accents , I know english , french , some Japanese , korean and Italian.

  • @king4DJ
    @king4DJ8 жыл бұрын

    اللغة الخالدة هي العربية و الامة الاسلامية

  • @velvethamster9809

    @velvethamster9809

    8 жыл бұрын

    !!كلامك صح

  • @imii-98

    @imii-98

    7 жыл бұрын

    eastern hitman ولا تشرح ، ولاتخطي ولا تصحح

  • @hajar3482

    @hajar3482

    6 жыл бұрын

    IDon IRock يارجل ، شوية احترام للغات الأخرى

  • @ElieElKhoury19

    @ElieElKhoury19

    6 жыл бұрын

    ... اللغة العربية ليست أفضل من غيرها

  • @rhf101

    @rhf101

    6 жыл бұрын

    صحيح

  • @simbbam
    @simbbam10 жыл бұрын

    your Israeli friend pronounces some of the Hebrew words incorrectly, that's very weird. Are u sure he's Israeli? If he is, I'm afraid he misunderstood the Arabic words you were saying and was refering to different things in Hebrew in some cases (which actually made the differences between Arabic and Hebrew sound bigger than they are)

  • @joaodavid2001

    @joaodavid2001

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah for example shen שן and zohar זהר

  • @halilkarabulut2139

    @halilkarabulut2139

    4 жыл бұрын

    maybe he grew up newyork and so accent may be corrupt ,even russian jewish and speanish jewish accent is not same in israel

  • @joshpage5887
    @joshpage588711 жыл бұрын

    but rather as a hobby and to revel in the fascinating intricacies of languages and their lore, is, to me, so unbelievably remarkable, that the very least I could do was send you this message. You have inspired me in my own efforts, sir, and I wish you the best of luck in your continued efforts. It would be great to communicate with you further, but I honestly see you as a celebrity, therefore I won't be too disappointed if you decline. Thank you again for showing me I am not alone in my passion.

  • @Ammour_Nadir_Automotive
    @Ammour_Nadir_Automotive9 жыл бұрын

    thank you , really eye opening .

  • @ninsamir9054
    @ninsamir905410 жыл бұрын

    you speak egyptian arabic

  • @Niroosh1997
    @Niroosh19979 жыл бұрын

    Hebrow & arabic are way more close than few farmiliar words... the grammar system are so simular. דרישת שלום מישראל!

  • @NellyAver

    @NellyAver

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** וגם אני!! ^_^

  • @BinaryTechnique

    @BinaryTechnique

    8 жыл бұрын

    don't forget about aramaic

  • @khalidkk7

    @khalidkk7

    8 жыл бұрын

    the old hebrew is far more similar to the classical Arabic and the proof of that, the old Arab when they want to learn hebrew they master it in a few days

  • @lybrebel7593

    @lybrebel7593

    8 жыл бұрын

    The 3 sisters (Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic)

  • @0box0man0
    @0box0man011 жыл бұрын

    That's actually really damn cool, loving this 3

  • @amir_learner
    @amir_learner11 жыл бұрын

    Great stuff Tim! Wie immer :-) Amir

  • @hamadaljuwaied
    @hamadaljuwaied7 жыл бұрын

    Are you sure that you are not Arabic ? Cuz your Arabic is so great and your accent or dialects is a mixture of Tunisian and Egyptian! That's so cool. I loved the video alot.Free Palestine

  • @jonahs92

    @jonahs92

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hamad Aljuwaied No, free Israel. Fakestine doesn't exist.

  • @zichengliu3703

    @zichengliu3703

    6 жыл бұрын

    No he's speaking Fusha.

  • @vipOyoutoo
    @vipOyoutoo10 жыл бұрын

    لغتك العربيه ممتازه جدا

  • @rhettye
    @rhettye11 жыл бұрын

    when i was watching your video i got the idea of telling numbers in all different languages.nice work haha!

  • @misokanenshi9570
    @misokanenshi957011 жыл бұрын

    Je trouve vraiment intéressant que tu montres les similitudes entre ces deux langues qui finalement ne sont pas s'y opposé!

  • @Lo1e
    @Lo1e8 жыл бұрын

    كنت تقصد انه من فلسطين المحتله

  • @eden4248

    @eden4248

    3 жыл бұрын

    @- اليهود من قبل الاسلام اصلاً كانو بالجزيره العربيه بس العرب عندهم اصرار على انكار هالشي

  • @eden4248

    @eden4248

    3 жыл бұрын

    الارض كان اسمها ارض كنعان ما كان في دولة قبل اسرائيل تأسست لي الكذب ؟ الكنعانيون كانو يعبدو الطبيعه وليس الاسلام تقدر بنفسك تبحث متى تم تأسيس اسرائيل ومتى تم تأسيس فلسطين ف خلص كذب

  • @u0923718
    @u092371810 жыл бұрын

    by the way , we have no issue with Jews as people or culture or history , we have an issue with Israel colonization , Arabs and Jews are cousins and they have too many similarities in every thing but no one can accept that current jews come from all over the world and take the lands of arabs ! I am from saudi arabia and i do respect jews as smart people who participated positively through the human history , but i can not accept their actions in Palestine !

  • @roizelinsky

    @roizelinsky

    9 жыл бұрын

    man ther was never palestin this is israel it was always israel and it will be israel

  • @u0923718

    @u0923718

    9 жыл бұрын

    Roi zelinsky Are you sure ? could you tell me a bit about Israel before 1940 ?

  • @u0923718

    @u0923718

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** Stop lying man ! before 1948 there was not a country on the map called Israel there were Jews in Europe and north Africa !

  • @u0923718

    @u0923718

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** All Arab countries ( today ) use to be under Turkish colonization including Palestine , so there were lands called Jordan ,Syria , Palestine etc .. until Sykes-Picot Agreement the Middle East use to be unformed area ! but please tell me where did Israel come from to this area ? who brought it to the Middle East ? my friend Israel does not belong to this area at all ! different language different religion different culture different mentality !

  • @u0923718

    @u0923718

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** you are confused :) so , you went through the history to find any historical link between this land and Jews ! Arabs use to rule Spain 1300 years ago , do they have a right to claim Spain today because they ruled it for 600 years ? Do German- Americans have a right to go back to Germany and claim their grandparents land ?

  • @69wolf69pack69
    @69wolf69pack699 жыл бұрын

    could you do more such videos? Perhaps between hindi and arabic/hebrew/persian ? or even lesser related languages like English and swahili

  • @paholainen100
    @paholainen10011 жыл бұрын

    cool video. Wanna see more vids from you soon! i'm a big fan of yours and i tend to be a bit of a language nut myself.

  • @IndianaJones664
    @IndianaJones6649 жыл бұрын

    "Eye" and "Tooth" are the same because they both come from Phoenician, where the letter 'ayin - a glottal stop - meant "Eye", and the letter 'siin' - /s/ - meant "Tooth". The word for eye is the same in Arabic, Hebrew, Amharic, and Maltese.

  • @khalidkk7

    @khalidkk7

    8 жыл бұрын

    ayn ع is not a glottal stop، the glottal stop are these ء آ أ ؤ ئ، for Maltese people they phenocian people mixed with roman people and they spoke variety of Arabic (Maltese language) similar to Moroccan Arabic. the Amharic and Ge'ez is mixed semetic with hametic because of the great influence of the ancient Saba kingdom (they spoke Qahtanite ancient south arabian but the modren south arabian have nothing to do with it) in yemen over the Arabian Peninsula and the horn of Africa.

  • @IndianaJones664

    @IndianaJones664

    8 жыл бұрын

    +K Khalid I didn't say it was, I said that it was a glottal stop in *Phoenician*

  • @khalidkk7

    @khalidkk7

    8 жыл бұрын

    IndianaJones664 not a glottal stop in Phoenician either

  • @bolshevikalgerien8415
    @bolshevikalgerien84158 жыл бұрын

    arabic was there since 2100 years ago, hebrew just desapeared after the 2th century, and it's been revived in the late 19th century with a very very tiny amount of information i can say it's roots are weak compared to arabic, so i can say arabic is a stronger language it's an unchangable language and very interesting for sure.

  • @MrEVAQ

    @MrEVAQ

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hebrew never disappeared, it simply ceased to be spoken colloquially, but it continued to be spoken till this day as a liturgical language.

  • @bolshevikalgerien8415

    @bolshevikalgerien8415

    6 жыл бұрын

    MrEVAQ yeas that's true but some words's meaning and pronounciation is unknown to us today.

  • @Emsyaz

    @Emsyaz

    6 жыл бұрын

    Proper formal arabic is preserved due to the preservation of the Quran. Hebrew is lost due to the corruption and abandonment of Torah

  • @alainarnaud9528
    @alainarnaud95285 жыл бұрын

    Great video, shukran !

  • @AysarAburrub
    @AysarAburrub11 жыл бұрын

    how much you understand from TV depends on which dialect they're broadcasted in, and how technical the content you're listening to is. Like you said, cartoons are easier to understand, where as a historical Syrian series like Bab Al Hara would be much more difficult, considering the huge amount of metaphors and regional specific words they use, plus the very different culture and time they're set in.

  • @icyburger
    @icyburger8 жыл бұрын

    this made me tear up... why are we still fighting...

  • @ronaldhassan9452
    @ronaldhassan94528 жыл бұрын

    The word for god in Arabic and Hebrew, respective, Allah and Eloh, both come from the same monotheistic Semitic root. Thus is not a surprise, as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Ishmael are the same. It is opposite of the Christian trinity view of god.

  • @atlasblz
    @atlasblz10 жыл бұрын

    Hey I'd like to add some input in regards to two numbers in Hebrew: While the common words for the numbers 3 and 8 sound different in Hebrew they have other versions which are much closer to the Arabic words. The word Tlat- תלת in Hebrew describes an object with a feature of the number 3 (similarly to the word 'tri' in English). The word Metuman- מתומן is a geometric shape of 8 shapes (octagon in English). It has different variations such as the animal octopus- Tamnun תמנון.

  • @itzmeehn4nh1
    @itzmeehn4nh111 жыл бұрын

    Oh My Goodness. You truly are an inspiration! Keep going! I think that you can really get a message out to so many people. You should try Vietnamese! Or even more asian Languages! I also think you would benefit so much by traveling to the actual countries. AMAZING job bud... AMAZING... Absolutely.. AMAZING.

  • @josephbel
    @josephbel10 жыл бұрын

    The Bani Israel or as they are called The children of Israel are Arabs by ethnic. Who are they? They are the descendants of Israel, who is this Israel? Some say it is Jacob some say it is someone else but still from the Ibrahim family. The children of Israel language was one of the Arabic different tongues called today Aramaic. There was never a language called "Hebrew", the word "Hebrew" in ancient Arabic and even today means "those who cross over" and it was given to anyone who crossed to the Surat Mountains in Arabia. Ancient Arabic had few tongues depending on the region.

  • @SomeMan001

    @SomeMan001

    6 жыл бұрын

    It is said that Hebrew evolved from the Canaanite language.

  • @amirrapping
    @amirrapping10 жыл бұрын

    I know the two language אני יודע את שתי השפות האלה انا اعرف ان اتكلم الوغتين Respect from ISRAEL !

  • @safa_f_nadhim7366

    @safa_f_nadhim7366

    9 жыл бұрын

    It's writ like this اللغتين Not like this الوغتين

  • @amirrapping

    @amirrapping

    9 жыл бұрын

    Safa Falah OK thanks man :)

  • @safa_f_nadhim7366

    @safa_f_nadhim7366

    9 жыл бұрын

    You welcome

  • @987inuyasha

    @987inuyasha

    9 жыл бұрын

    למה? אתה שמאלני

  • @amirrapping

    @amirrapping

    9 жыл бұрын

    987inuyasha לא אחי !

  • @danielsmith4979
    @danielsmith497911 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant vidoe your Egyptian Arabic has improved fluency I see you should do a longer arabic vidoe and maybe some more arabic comparison videos as arabic influence seems to be in so many languages

  • @519djw6
    @519djw610 жыл бұрын

    So I think you've shown that there are quite a few vocabulary items in common. How about the grammar of the two languages?

  • @monamona8013
    @monamona80137 жыл бұрын

    انا يهوديه من اصل يمني وافتخر بليمن

  • @man1987cool79

    @man1987cool79

    6 жыл бұрын

    هههههههههههههههههه اليهوديه ليست قوميه او عرق حتى تقولي يهوديه من اصل يمني اليهوديه ديانه حالها كحال بقيه الاديان هناك يهود موجودين حتى الان في اليمن قصدك مواطنه اسرائيليه من اصل يمني

  • @man1987cool79

    @man1987cool79

    6 жыл бұрын

    uk england.. نعم صحيح اسرائيل دوله يجب التفريق بين اليهوديه كديانه وبين اسرائيل كدوله موجوده. ليسو جميع الاسرائيليين يهود هناك اسرائيليين مسلمين وهناك اسرائيليين مسيحيين وهناك الكثير من الاسرائيليين اللادينيين و الملحدين . لكن كعاده الشعوب المتخلفه دائما يربطون اديانهم بالدوله المتقدمه حتى يجملو انفسهم . كأن يأتي اليك مسيحي متخلف من احدى دول افريقيا الناميه المتخلفه ويقول امريكا مسيحيه وروسيا مسيحيه انظر ماذا صنعنا نحن المسيحيين !

  • @mal02R

    @mal02R

    6 жыл бұрын

    حبي انتي يهودية المسلمين يقبلون فيك بس الاسرائليين ماراح يقبلون فيك يحسبون انهم شعب الله المتخار وبني جنسهم فقط من سيدخل الجنة ولااي شخص يمكن ان يكون اسرائيلي اصلي الا البريطانين والانجليز

  • @ahmadal_shanqeety802

    @ahmadal_shanqeety802

    6 жыл бұрын

    يجب عليك الوقوف ضد هذا الاحتلال بصفتك عربية ...

  • @Green-zw9pv

    @Green-zw9pv

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sam Aden // الحوثي يهجر يهود اليمن غصب عنهم لتغذية دولة اسرائيل المزعومة وبدورها إسراىيل تدعم اصدقائها الحوثييين في المحافل الدولية مثل الامم المتحدة وتأمر اسرائيل حلفائها من دول الخليج بمساعدة الحوثي للقضاء على الشرعية وحزب الاخوان (الاصلاح)

  • @gherbihicham8506
    @gherbihicham850610 жыл бұрын

    Your Arabic is very good actually ...but you should'nt have learned this Labanese/Syrian Arabic ..IMO you should have learned "al fossha" which is the original Arabic language which is used in education/religion/politics and in formal international speech(that is if you want to use it in some proffessional matter) ,you can definately pull it of though, you already have the vocabulary.. all you need is some alteration in the prononciation and it will be perfect.

  • @abde0065

    @abde0065

    9 жыл бұрын

    Fosha is worthless in any practical setting. Shami (lebanese/syrian/palestinian/jordanian) is spoken in those countries. Egyptian is understood by all Arabs, so he's on the right track.

  • @gherbihicham8506

    @gherbihicham8506

    9 жыл бұрын

    "Fosha is worthless in any practical setting." lol please specify what you mean by "practical setting " , as i said above :education, formal speech and so on are all done in alfosha which is the formal Arabic language with the little exception of Egyptiens , also you can't write in labanese/Syrian/ ,Egyptien Arabic, i have never seen any document written in those dialects , you would have to convert what ever you are saying to the original Arabic ... Also unless you're visiting Lebanon or Syria or fighting with some Israeli Arabic speaker on Aljazeera there is basically no use for Labanese/Syrian Arabic ... Also if you are looking for undertanding , formal arabic is the best way as all arab countries actually teach it in schools...and no, Egyptien is not understood in most north African countries: Tunisia, Algeria , Morroco .I don't know about the rest but you're definitely not going to reach all arabs if you speak in an Egyptien tongue ...

  • @TheHamzyDumzy

    @TheHamzyDumzy

    9 жыл бұрын

    As said above, fus7a is the key to the entire Arab world.

  • @TheHamzyDumzy

    @TheHamzyDumzy

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** For a tourist or outsider it is.

  • @TheHamzyDumzy

    @TheHamzyDumzy

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** Ah fair enough, I'd personally just prefer learning Standard Arabic mainly because the idea of the world being under one language makes me feel sick lol

  • @ELICARLO11
    @ELICARLO113 жыл бұрын

    Hi. can you help please with some etymology of the last name Schuldiner... well in Austria it apparently means Janitor or custodian..

  • @ronzac55
    @ronzac5511 жыл бұрын

    In my hometown language (Manadonese), Regel means small pillars (Foundation) that supporting something, mainly supporting the handrail of a staircase or balcony/corridor. It has different meaning, but it shares similar function, which is supporting something. Anyway, Manado is located on the north of Sulawesi Island, Indonesia.