No video

Tracing English as far back as possible

Enjoy this exploration to Proto-Indo-European! And start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get up to 60% OFF your subscription ➡️ Here: go.babbel.com/...
In this episode, we'll trace English back to its oldest known ancestor: an ancestor it shares with almost all of Europe's languages, as well as some Asian languages. That ancestor is called Proto-Indo-European.
I also talk about the controversial Nostratic language family and ask whether there could really be a "Proto-Earth" language.
📚LINKS📚
Quellant reading P-I-E: • "The King and the God"...
Britannica on Nostratic: www.britannica...
Proto-Indo-European vocabulary: en.wikipedia.o...
Simon Pulleyn's "Secret Life of Language" is also an enjoyable read
⭐️PATREON COMMUNITY: patreon.com/robwords
📝FREE NEWSLETTER: www.robwords.co...
Check me out on the web, on Twitter & TikTok:
robwords.com
x.com/robwordsYT
/ robwords
#English #etymology #linguistics
==CHAPTERS==
0:00 Introduction
0:17 English language family tree
0:57 What is Proto-Indo-European?
1:43 How P-I-E was discovered
5:00 Comparing Indo-European languages
7:20 Babbel
8:47 Tracing words to P-I-E
12:30 Surprisingly related words
15:45 What did P-I-E sound like?
16:55 Nostratic language
19:42 Proto-World

Пікірлер: 2 300

  • @RobWords
    @RobWordsАй бұрын

    Let me know what you make of P-I-E below. And start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get up to 60% OFF your subscription ➡ Here: go.babbel.com/t?bsc=usa-influ-eg-dt-1m&btp=default&KZread&Influencer..Jul-2024..USA-TATAM..1200m60-yt-robwords-jul-2024

  • @mizapf

    @mizapf

    Ай бұрын

    As a suggestion for a future edition, I'd find interesting to compare words (e.g. German/English) that were originally synonyms but which developed in different directions. Those are not really false friends, because they actually started from the same origin. I'd rather call them "estranged partners". Examples: Zaun/town, raten/read, ritzen/write, rechnen/reckon, stürzen/start, zählen/tell, tragen/drag, schlimm/slim, drehen/throw, Haut/hide, Bein/bone Can also be between other languages; I just know those two best.

  • @CAP198462

    @CAP198462

    Ай бұрын

    Not that I imagine it means anything to you, but I found learning Russian pronunciation useful for understanding and approximating the sounds of many other languages.

  • @enrott8560

    @enrott8560

    Ай бұрын

    Since ur learning Swedish sometimes the k sound turns into sh sound aswell like köttbular pronounced like shirtboolar(means meatball) this was interesting cuz you were talking about the origins of the word "kmtom" turns into the Sanskrit "shatam". Jag är studier svenska ochså.

  • @andrethoma5635

    @andrethoma5635

    Ай бұрын

    You are a genius to call it "Low". Up is not only English.

  • @KGTiberius

    @KGTiberius

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for picking up this episode. I’ve been asking and commenting on PIE for years on various videos. It is a fun concept.

  • @takanobaierun
    @takanobaierunАй бұрын

    Indo-Europeans: we are a big family! Finns and Hungarians: Who are you people?

  • @kcnmsepognln

    @kcnmsepognln

    Ай бұрын

    🤣

  • @miyojewoltsnasonth2159

    @miyojewoltsnasonth2159

    Ай бұрын

    *@takanobaierun* Who are you people SURROUNDING US? *Reply to:* _"Finns and Hungarians: Who are you people?"_

  • @purplemarsmotionpictures

    @purplemarsmotionpictures

    Ай бұрын

    Don't forget Estonians and the Sami! The big Uralic family outside of Russia

  • @Onionbaron

    @Onionbaron

    Ай бұрын

    Perkele!

  • @zoltanposfai3451

    @zoltanposfai3451

    Ай бұрын

    @@purplemarsmotionpictures Our Khanty and Mansi brothers.

  • @athulprakash4447
    @athulprakash4447Ай бұрын

    As someone who lives in India and speaks Hindi/Malayalam, being educated in English and after taking Sanskrit as a subject in school.. it was stunning to know that words like Father (Pitr), Mother (Maatr), Seven(sapta) and so many others were the same for what I thought were totally separate European languages. Gotta love linguistics and the people who put this together!

  • @anowarjibbali

    @anowarjibbali

    Ай бұрын

    Malayalam is a Dravidian language, the similar words are mostly just Sanskrit loans. Hindi is definitely related, though.

  • @qtheplatypus

    @qtheplatypus

    Ай бұрын

    The words for mother and father are very similar across all languages. They are all things like “mama” and “papa” sounds that babies will babble out.

  • @b1battledroid882

    @b1battledroid882

    Ай бұрын

    @@qtheplatypus Interesting tidbit: Some linguists believe the reason for the near universal use of the 'M' sound for mothers and 'F/P/D/T/B' sounds for fathers is due to babies spending more of their very early lives with their mothers, and only being able to vocalize simple mouth movements, like 'A' or 'M', which are then associated with mothers. Fathers spend a little bit less time with children's extremely early stages of development than mothers and are then associated with more complex sounds developed later down the road, like aforementioned 'F', 'P', 'D' or 'T'.

  • @jyjyjyj3

    @jyjyjyj3

    Ай бұрын

    @@b1battledroid882 in russian we have very similar words "papa", "mama", "sem"

  • @quiestinliteris

    @quiestinliteris

    Ай бұрын

    I took Latin in grade school, and part of the justification for it being on offer was ability to work out English words by using the roots, but also to make it easier to learn Romance languages later. And it has been very helpful in learning Spanish and being able to parse signage in France despite not having learned any at all. But I was SHOCKED to find myself recognizing cognates in Hindi. Not enough to help me genuinely communicate, but it was still a heck of a revelation years before I had ever heard of PIE.

  • @sanebooks
    @sanebooksАй бұрын

    My grandfather (Vittore Pisani, 1899-1990) was a world-renowned glottologist who taught linguistics at the university of Cagliari first and then at the university of Milan. I grew up knowing these notions in part because all of his children (he had 14) had to learn Latin and ancient Greek and so did a lot of his 30 grandchildren (me included) and basic word histories were passed down. I never realized how not normal this was, as a kid. I thought everyone knew these "basic notions" growing up! You can look him up in the Italian Wikipedia. He was a brilliant mind, but a very distant grandfather. He spoke 12 languages, most of them self-taught.

  • @arrunzo

    @arrunzo

    Ай бұрын

    A lot of "common knowledge" is not as common as one may think; especially when it comes to experts in certain fields overestimating the average person's knowledge. You're lucky to have been born into a family where this knowledge was easily shared and valued! A lot of families don't even truly value education in the first place.

  • @DS-ll5fn

    @DS-ll5fn

    Ай бұрын

    In my family (8 children) my siblings and I were also used to s father who had lots of books about languages. We always used to look up the etimologic origin of words in different languages. I now do the same with my 7 children 😂. Speak 7 languages and enjoy your videos!❤

  • @sendmorerum8241

    @sendmorerum8241

    26 күн бұрын

    About the whole "not normal" thing... A story comes to my mind, one about a child from an animal trainer family. On his first day of school he asked the other kids: "What kind of bears do you have at home?" 😂

  • @sanebooks

    @sanebooks

    26 күн бұрын

    @@sendmorerum8241 that is hilarious!

  • @serbonkers4130

    @serbonkers4130

    25 күн бұрын

    No way! We learned about your grandpa at school just a few weeks ago!

  • @quellant6937
    @quellant6937Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the shout-out! PIE is often reconstructed as having a pitch-accent system, contrasting high and low level tones, as well as a falling contour tone from high to low. This is something I didn't account for in my rendition of PIE. Vedic Sanskrit and Ancient Greek retained this ancestral system for a while. Modern Norwegian and Swedish have a their own new pitch-accent systems that evolved independently, as well as a few other Indo-European languages such as Serbo-Croatian and Punjabi. I've always been fascinated by proto-languages and the idea that, collectively, we humans may be more interconnected than we previously thought. Great video as always!

  • @blazer9547

    @blazer9547

    15 күн бұрын

    Proto indo European originated in eastern Europe , pontic steppe to be exact. Something hindu nationalists deny

  • @ami443

    @ami443

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@blazer9547we don't know. Maybe in turkey.. Maybe in Armenia.. Maybe in Caucasus mountains.. Maybe in Ukraine...

  • @economics12
    @economics12Ай бұрын

    i come from teh remote mountains of northern Pakistan where we speak an old hindi accent and when i listen to the very old people they say words like; Hithar (here) huthar (there) Gars (grass) Madar (mother) Is (this) Nak (nose) bund (behind) ma (I) chan (moon) suraj (sun) darya (river) tu (you) vo (he/they) nasa (nostril) mun (mouth) ladna (loading) marg (death/morgue) khunee (knee) ga (cow) and i could go on forever. i see so many similarities with the European words.

  • @kcnmsepognln

    @kcnmsepognln

    Ай бұрын

    Amazing! Just reading your list, there is much that is immediately familiar. EG "Hithar (here)": no very long ago "come hither" (come here) was in common usage! And "nasa (nostril)" is clearly related to "nasal".

  • @julius9055

    @julius9055

    Ай бұрын

    That's so cool, absolutely crazy

  • @youknow6968

    @youknow6968

    Ай бұрын

    That's not old hindi, that's urdu. Hindi has no history in any of the northern regions of Pakistan. It's Urdu.

  • @antonyreyn

    @antonyreyn

    Ай бұрын

    @@youknow6968Do you know that, as there was no Pakistan before 1946? Modern borders do not dictate ancient languages

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    @@youknow6968 Hindi and Urdu are dialects of a single language, namely Hindustani.

  • @charlesp.kalina4162
    @charlesp.kalina4162Ай бұрын

    Law school memory: Professor mentions in class that the word “testimony” comes from Roman men swearing an oath by reference to their testes. So I got to explain that this was a common misconception, that Romans didn’t do that, and that the word actually comes from PIE roots meaning “third person standing” (i.e. a disinterested bystander or witness). The anatomical term for male gonads comes from an unrelated PIE root meaning “dry”, via terms for baked clay containers. (Same root as "thirst", incidentally.) Didn’t do that well in the class, but at least I got to sharpshoot some etymological misconceptions. Good times…

  • @squirlmy

    @squirlmy

    Ай бұрын

    you not only corrected him but symbolically emasculated him! I'm sure he(assuming a male professor) was happy to have that association of legal-speak and masculinity, and you took it right from him. In his class no less! As someone diagnosed as "on the autism spectrum", this seems to me a very "aspy" faux pas.

  • @jonesnori

    @jonesnori

    Ай бұрын

    Yes. Well done, though!

  • @charlesp.kalina4162

    @charlesp.kalina4162

    Ай бұрын

    @@squirlmy -- Nah, it was all good. Granted, he did retire the next year, but I'm sure that was unrelated... :-)

  • @mfaizsyahmi

    @mfaizsyahmi

    Ай бұрын

    @@charlesp.kalina4162 would be funnier if it _is_ related. Like you shattered his whole world view that he's incapable of continuing on teaching.

  • @robcat2075

    @robcat2075

    Ай бұрын

    Whenever I hear a teacher spouting something obviously false, I have to wonder, how much of the rest of this class is BS too?

  • @user-xb5eo2bm1n
    @user-xb5eo2bm1nАй бұрын

    I'm Indian and I have basic knowledge in Sanskrit. I once tried learning Latin and I was amazed to find similarities not just in vocabulary but also structure. It might not seem obvious at first but my knowledge of Sanskrit and my overall interest in languages in general led me to observe those similarities. For example, in Sanskrit the third-person singular and plural verb conjugations are respectively -ti and -nti. In Latin they are -t and -nt. I also tried learning Persian and observed even more similarities there but that was more obvious are Persian is much more closely related to Sanskrit.

  • @staninjapan07

    @staninjapan07

    24 күн бұрын

    Thanks.

  • @Amos18289
    @Amos1828920 күн бұрын

    I'm a Sri Lankan who speaks Sinhala ( an Indo European language). Years ago whem I was learning English and German I recognised these similarities and studied about it. That's whem I fell in love with linguistics and became one of my hobbies. Here how we count one to ten if anyone is interested Eka Deka Thuna Hathara Paha Haya Hatha Ata(ahta) Nawaya Dahaya

  • @purplemarsmotionpictures
    @purplemarsmotionpicturesАй бұрын

    Growing up with Norwegian, English, Hindi, and Punjabi THIS has been the most obvious thing my whole life. I also learnt Norse, Latin, and Sanskrit as a teenager, and the words are one thing but the grammar takes this to the next level. Sentences in Latin make more sense translated into Hindi for me. And some Sanskrit idioms make more sense in Norwegian.

  • @colorswordsandlearning

    @colorswordsandlearning

    Ай бұрын

    This is so interesting. I love the interplay of languages and words and the depth all of it will add as you read . So many connections .

  • @danielzhang1916

    @danielzhang1916

    Ай бұрын

    the Indo branch kept many of the older sounds, maybe because they migrated earlier than everyone else

  • @davidfrogley7117
    @davidfrogley7117Ай бұрын

    child in Swedish is "barn", and child in Scots is "bairn". Fascinating!

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    And they're both related to English "born." A child is someone who was born only a few years ago.

  • @alexythemechanic8056

    @alexythemechanic8056

    Ай бұрын

    My pet theory is it comes from the Danes/Nords. "Bairn" exists in Scots, and also in dialects from North-East England like Geordie from Newcastle where the Danelaw existed. Another interesting one is "braw" in Scots, meaning "good", which is very similar to the Swedish "brå".

  • @LoverofHistory3000

    @LoverofHistory3000

    Ай бұрын

    @@alexythemechanic8056You’re right. In another of Rob’s videos he says how that these Scots/northern English dialect words come from old Norse, as the Vikings raided then settled these parts the most

  • @blackshard641

    @blackshard641

    Ай бұрын

    @@alexythemechanic8056 the Danes and the Nords did in fact settle the northern British Isles - quite possibly where my Scottish surname (which just so happens to also feature in Beowulf) comes from.

  • @user-gd4ku5se8h

    @user-gd4ku5se8h

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks! Now l know why Mr. Scott called the Enterprise's engines his "wee barins" 😂 Have mercy Captain!

  • @LiquidSolidus9000
    @LiquidSolidus9000Ай бұрын

    To explain more about "hundred", the "red" in hundred apparently comes from a word meaning "row", that was related to "read"

  • @brookekrovic7739

    @brookekrovic7739

    Ай бұрын

    "Red" still means row or order in Croatian, the language I'm learning. :-)

  • @satoru.nakata
    @satoru.nakata25 күн бұрын

    PLAT - word family • Platus, an ancient greek word means flat or brode. 1. Platypus- flat footed animal 2. Platinum- flat or inferior silver metal 3. Plate- flat metal disc 4. Plato- nick name for his brode chest 5. Plateau- flat area 6. Platitude- flat or empty saying

  • @p__vids
    @p__vidsАй бұрын

    Here's my favourite example showing how these languages are related: - Hindi/Punjabi: Javaan - Farsi: Javoon - Italian: Giovane - Spanish: Joven - French: Jeune - Dutch: Jong - English: Young They're all basically the same word! Pretty neat!

  • @aveekbh

    @aveekbh

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, that's one of my favourite things (as an Indian) when learning (non-English) IE languages - how some of the words are basically the same!

  • @tobiasharstel7941

    @tobiasharstel7941

    Ай бұрын

    Persian - Stan (in many countries, like KazakhSTAN) English - stay German - steh So Kazakhstan is the place were Kazakhs stay (live)

  • @mahatmaniggandhi2898

    @mahatmaniggandhi2898

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@tobiasharstel7941 well we dont use the word "stan" in persian anymore but we do use as a suffix for many places for example bolgharestan: bulgaria engelestan: england lehestan: poland . . .

  • @shawolzen4893

    @shawolzen4893

    Ай бұрын

    Juvenis in Latin hence the word juvenile

  • @mihanich

    @mihanich

    Ай бұрын

    @@tobiasharstel7941 also "stan" means "camp" and "stature" in Russian, and "yunyi" means "juvenile"

  • @blueeyedbaer
    @blueeyedbaerАй бұрын

    As a Lithuanian I'm so excited that you've included some examples of our language. We have lots of words that are literally the same or very very similar as in Sanskrit, and lots of our words sound similar to reconstructed PIE words.

  • @BGM16

    @BGM16

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly, Lithuanian is the closest living language in Europe to Proto Indoeuropean, cheers for that. 🍻

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan

    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan

    Ай бұрын

    Lithuanian is considered the closest living language to pie.

  • @ami443

    @ami443

    Ай бұрын

    Lithuanian language is extremely close to pie.... Yes

  • @CocoSon-we2rg

    @CocoSon-we2rg

    Ай бұрын

    @@ModernDayRenaissanceMan A linguist who could draw correct conclusions about PIE should know the following languages: Sanskrit, Ancient Greek, Lithuanian, Armenian, Romanian, Albanian and Ossetian.

  • @samroberts7404
    @samroberts7404Ай бұрын

    This is one of the most satisfying videos I've seen in a very long time...

  • @oldplucker1
    @oldplucker127 күн бұрын

    When I retired I decided, as a challenge ,to study my father’s Oxford Dictionary and see if I could work out the patterns in words and sure enough because there are so many variations I managed to work out that there was a common language from the past. And I then started buying books on Etymology and sure enough I was correct with all my findings. I also have a very neat way to determine if words from different languages are related. Spending lots of time in Spain reaffirmed the links. And visiting Wales! One annoying English word is Cupboard. But that is an open shelf for cups! Cupboards are closed off! Then I found an old Spanish word for Cupboard which related to Cubierta (Covered) So we actually should call a Cupboard a ‘Covered’. Because that is what it is! I found out all what is in this video and way more. I even worked out our original Proto Language from at least a hundred thousand years ago. And it is basic and understandable but very simple so not suitable for complex conversation. I think a lot of body language was used to impart meaning. Also words are actually ‘Recordings of speech’ in the same way musical notation is a recording of music. We still use the phrase ‘Keeping a Record’ when meaning to write it down. There is so much more to languages. I only speak English and a bit of basic Spanish and French but the patterns are there and electronic translators can find lots of words in many languages as can translator apps! So you do not need to have a second language to work all this out. 👍

  • @trafo60
    @trafo60Ай бұрын

    Small correction, the initial h in Greek 'hekaton' doesn't correspond to the initial k of PIE, but the middle k does. The he- part comes from a root meaning 'one', so the whole thing means 'one hundred', with the 'katon' part being a very close reflex of kmtom.

  • @davidsturm7706

    @davidsturm7706

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, the he- part comes from sm°- a root for one. So it's sm°-+km°tom. Greek initial s- becomes h-, m°- becomes a vowel... he+katon. *One* hundred

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan

    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan

    Ай бұрын

    ​​@@davidsturm7706That's also very similar to the progression of the word for son. Son & one probably were related at one time as 'firstborn." However language was much more simple back then so they probably said one born

  • @bacicinvatteneaca

    @bacicinvatteneaca

    Ай бұрын

    It ABSOLUTELY wasn't more simple. It was slower and with less vocabulary, but it had a BUNCH more grammar. Hunter-gatherer societies tend to have a lot more complex grammar because they have more time and less things to talk about.

  • @trafo60

    @trafo60

    Ай бұрын

    @@bacicinvatteneaca You're right for pointing that out, but what do you mean when you say that the language was 'slower'? Also, how would having more time and less things to talk about make grammar more complex?

  • @CarefulWithThatAx
    @CarefulWithThatAxАй бұрын

    My favourite PIE root is *bhel-, "shine, flash, burn". It's the root of the English word "black", as well as the French word for "white", "blanc", and thus the English "blank". English "white" comes from PIE *kweit-, which also meant "shine". I guess the PIE-speakers liked talking about shiny things a lot.

  • @SoulDelSol

    @SoulDelSol

    Ай бұрын

    I saw video about that. Pretty cool

  • @SchmulKrieger

    @SchmulKrieger

    Ай бұрын

    The French word blanc is exclusively a loan from Common Germanic into Latin because they lacked a word for it. Same as gris fro grey/gray or bleu for blue. Germanic loan words into Latin.

  • @SupGaillac

    @SupGaillac

    Ай бұрын

    Hey! Vsauce! :)

  • @CarefulWithThatAx

    @CarefulWithThatAx

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SchmulKrieger True! From Frankish (a Germanic language) into French, then into English, near as I could find. I'm just tickled by the fact that words for black and white have the same root.

  • @squirlmy

    @squirlmy

    Ай бұрын

    I like *lewk- in Old English lēoht , Latin lūceō (lūcēre) "to shine", lūx "light," and in Greek leukós. As in Lucifer; "the light bringer", the god of the evening star, son of Aurora (the Dawn). lol

  • @Parso77
    @Parso77Ай бұрын

    Maybe four things to expand on (including one to correct outright) here: 1. “Proto” is not Latin but rather Greek; it remains the Modern Greek for “first”; 2. The Ancient Romans pronounced “pater” roughly to rhyme with “latter” (not “later”), but note it did not rhyme with “mater” as that had a long “a”; 3. English “see” is actually ultimately cognate with Latin “sequor” (meaning “I follow”; hence also “sequence”, “consecutive” etc) and thus “I see” in English really means “I follow” (but often from context this now means specifically with the eyes); 4. “Chief” did not, of course, develop within English but was a borrowing specifically from Norman French (cf. “chef”, a later borrowing from Standard French).

  • @dbryn2

    @dbryn2

    11 күн бұрын

    About #2: it does not matter

  • @malvoliosf
    @malvoliosf22 күн бұрын

    You see the same phenomenon in non-PIE languages. “Medicine” is 藥 (yào) in Chinese, ยา (yaa) in Thai, and 약 (yak) in Korean. “North” and “South” in Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese are 北 (běi), 북 (buk), and Bắc; and 南 (nán), 남 (nam), and Nam (Vietnam is the “the land of the Southern Viets”, the Viets being in the dominant ethnic group in the area). Interestingly, Chinese, Thai, Korean, and Vietnamese words for bread - 包 (bāo), ปัง (pang), 빵 (ppang), and bánh - are similar for a different reason: the all come from the Portuguese word pão, I guess because bread came to the East with Portuguese traders.

  • @rustyredbeard
    @rustyredbeardАй бұрын

    Sir, in a platform rapidly filling with artificailly created non-content, your videos are more important than ever. I wish there was a 'real' verification mark that channels like yours could attain.

  • @shmurt11

    @shmurt11

    Ай бұрын

    I concur

  • @stephencoles3664

    @stephencoles3664

    Ай бұрын

    I've been on this platform since early 2007. It's always been filled with garbage. Not to discredit your point, however. I agree that Rob Words is a gem among the rough! I've found that if you're particular about what content you watch and you use the "do not recommend" button, you will eventually not receive trash. (Most of the time 😅)

  • @LightIceAurora

    @LightIceAurora

    Ай бұрын

    I feel like this comment is AI

  • @stephencoles3664

    @stephencoles3664

    Ай бұрын

    @@LightIceAurora Beep boop!

  • @LightIceAurora

    @LightIceAurora

    Ай бұрын

    @@stephencoles3664 oh you.

  • @boggled007
    @boggled007Ай бұрын

    That was insanely interesting and, as always, so clearly explained. Best of all... no background 'music'!

  • @erichbaumeister4648

    @erichbaumeister4648

    Ай бұрын

    *_NO BACKGROUND MUSIC IS WONDERFUL!_*

  • @colorswordsandlearning

    @colorswordsandlearning

    Ай бұрын

    Second this

  • @notdon245

    @notdon245

    Ай бұрын

    A quiet background music is better.

  • @EVPaddy

    @EVPaddy

    Ай бұрын

    @@notdon245so add one for yourself

  • @arrunzo

    @arrunzo

    Ай бұрын

    I 100% agree! I hate so many jump cuts, background music and ads everywhere. I love videos that get right to the point! I find myself always clicking around KZread videos because so many of them implement these irritating practices.

  • @ChirkunovIvan
    @ChirkunovIvan18 күн бұрын

    My favorite English Russian cognates: 1. Sit - Sidieti 2. Wit - Vidieti and Viedati 3. Nest - Gniezdo 4. Milk - Moloko 5. Stuff - Stiebieli 6. Moon - Miesiats 7. Saddle - Siedlo 8. Stand - Stati 9. Rye - Rozh 10. Leed - Liudi 11. Skul - skuly 12. is - jesti 13. That - Tot 14. Wolf - Volk 15. Folk - Polk 16. Lie 1 - Liezhati 17. Lie 2 - Lgati 18. Tooth - Diesna 19. Stool - Stool (lol) and Stol 20. Murther - Smierti

  • @AngelaStone5678
    @AngelaStone5678Ай бұрын

    This video epitomises everything I love about the internet. Absolutely amazing and free to access. Brilliant!

  • @jasonguzik8660
    @jasonguzik8660Ай бұрын

    I have a fascination with languages, all thanks to Mr. JRR Tolkien and his constructed languages.

  • @colorswordsandlearning

    @colorswordsandlearning

    Ай бұрын

    He was very great with words and languages .

  • @peztopher7297

    @peztopher7297

    Ай бұрын

    Me, too! I ended up studying linguistics in college and was gratified to discover that Tolkien was a philologist.

  • @arrunzo

    @arrunzo

    Ай бұрын

    He was always quite a "celtophile", as evidenced by a certain Celtic influence on the languages of Middle-earth. The funny thing was he actually constructed the world and stories primarily to serve the languages. In other words, his love of languages came first and everything came after.

  • @mrharvest
    @mrharvestАй бұрын

    As a Finnish speaker, I enjoyed the discussion of Proto-Uralic. I would have also been keen to hear about Proto-Turkic and why seemingly PIE just missed that whole chunk of land.

  • @jujujuju4435

    @jujujuju4435

    Ай бұрын

    Actually a branch of the PIE was spoken in what's now modern-day Turkey. It was the Anatolian languages (Hittite, Lydian and others whose names I forgot). They were spoken during Antiquity and ended up extinct. So PIE reached this land but didn't maintain. Concerning Proto-Turkic, it was spoken somewhere in Central Asia (where exactly I have no clue, it's not the language family I'm the most interested in, but I guess hypotheses were made over time). Turkish didn't develop in what's nowadays Turkey. The turk arrived pretty recently (at the historical scale) in this region.

  • @ryanpangilinan5803

    @ryanpangilinan5803

    Ай бұрын

    To my understanding, they did there at one point. The Anatolian languages used to be spoken there, such as Hittite!

  • @gunnasintern

    @gunnasintern

    Ай бұрын

    Anatolia had a lot of indo-european speakers like Hittite and Lydian they went extinct over time, would have been cool if they survived to help connect the PIE bridge

  • @niall_sanderson

    @niall_sanderson

    Ай бұрын

    @@jujujuju4435Luwian is the third Anatolian language you’re thinking of I believe

  • @niall_sanderson

    @niall_sanderson

    Ай бұрын

    @@gunnasinternThose Anatolian speakers got Hellenized after Alexander the Great’s conquest, and the descendants of those Hellenized Anatolian spoke Greek in those regions until the 1920s. Or rather, the ones who stayed Christian kept speaking it, since modern Turks are descended from both the Turkic nomads who arrived in the Middle Ages and the people who were living there beforehand. And since Greek was closely associated with Orthodox Christianity and Turkish was closely associated with Islam, people living there who converted to Islam generally started speaking Turkish and raising their children with Turkish as their first language.

  • @mikasa2748
    @mikasa274812 сағат бұрын

    I love how excited he looks explaining the entire video. It makes me excited to learn as well

  • @xubluetree86
    @xubluetree8621 күн бұрын

    This was great. I was always fascinated by the word ‚mother’. It’s literally the same pattern all around the world.

  • @angelcollina
    @angelcollinaАй бұрын

    When you introduced the word “nostratic” as “countrymen” or “us” I had an AHAH!! moment! In Spanish “nosotros” which has that nos- beginning means “we”!! Which makes a lot of sense because Spanish retains much of its Latin roots. Also! Cheers 🥂 from a fellow linguist nerd!!

  • @Ellie-wl3rw

    @Ellie-wl3rw

    Ай бұрын

    My brain leapt in at that moment too, recognising nos-. It's common across the Romantic languages for "we" and to suddenly reinterpret that as "all of us", "a country" and beyond, was a head-exploding moment.

  • @angelcollina

    @angelcollina

    Ай бұрын

    @@Ellie-wl3rw *high fives*

  • @JimMonsanto

    @JimMonsanto

    Ай бұрын

    That's literally where it comes from. The Russian linguists who came up with it just wanted to call it "OUR langauge" (Our referring to all of us humans), hence "Nostra (our)"+tic.

  • @wraithlord9

    @wraithlord9

    Ай бұрын

    Not just the italic branch, in the indic branch it is used as the plural enclitic of the accusative, dative and genetive, its pronounced predictably as nas (all e and o sounds collapse to a), of the pronoun declension of 'I', the declension stem we call asmad, related to English - us.

  • @glitchy9613

    @glitchy9613

    Ай бұрын

    And "nosotros" is related to english "us" as well! "nosotros" "us" < proto germanic "uns" < PIE "nsme"

  • @BarbarosaAlexander
    @BarbarosaAlexanderАй бұрын

    Probably my favorite subject in linguistics, the origin and evolution of language. I can't even explain why I find it so fascinating. It's such a joy to, as I have in this video, learn something new. And, yes, the hundred progression was satisfying.

  • @danielzhang1916

    @danielzhang1916

    Ай бұрын

    our minds always look for patterns, it's satisfying that all indo european languages are connected

  • @Pastor24u
    @Pastor24uАй бұрын

    Vad roligt att du lär dig svenska. I have been following you videos for years and being a polyglot I really appriciate them! Hälsningar från Sverige!

  • @Lucius_Shiro
    @Lucius_ShiroАй бұрын

    As a bilingual Spanish-English speaker, I thought the coincidences between those two languages were impressive enough, but learning about Proto-Indo-European just made me realize how connected everything is. It's so god damn amazing to notice these similarities. It makes me want to learn all the languages of this world. And the fact that the Nostratic language means "Us" is just so beautiful I wanna cry a little bit. This world is amazing and I'm sad that I'll never get the full experience of it. The human mind and life is just too short for the wonders this planet has to offer.

  • @robinm1331
    @robinm1331Ай бұрын

    There are some stunning cognates in Sanskrit that surprise English speakers. Matri for mother, Patri for father, datri for daughter.

  • @stevemayes8799

    @stevemayes8799

    Ай бұрын

    I like 'meera naama", my name is...

  • @chanterellecryptid

    @chanterellecryptid

    Ай бұрын

    Matri and patri could have just been coincidental, to be fair. I mean, in this specific case they definitely aren't! But baby language acquisition follows a pretty set pattern no matter where they are, and babbling sounds get incorporated into parent terms all over the world. E.g. English and Arabic are not related, but English's 'mommy' sounds similar to Arabic's 'ummi'.

  • @andrewtheworldcitizen

    @andrewtheworldcitizen

    26 күн бұрын

    It's not matri, patri, and datri... The correct Sanskrit transcription and pronunciation are as follows: मातृ (mātṛ) - mother पितृ (pitṛ) - father दुहितृ (duhitṛ) - daughter भ्रातृ (bhrātṛ) - brother It is amazing to see how an ancient Indo-Aryan language can be so extremely close to even modern English..... Many Indians, unfortunately, are Hindu nationalists, and they confuse the political propaganda and pseudo-history/mythology that they're taught since early childhood for real history and science.... Therefore, they usually deny the fact that the speakers of Proto-Indo-European originally came from the Pontic-Caspian Steppe, c. 3,200 BCE, although it has been proven by science, i.e., a combination of archaeological data/physical remains, linguistic data, and genetic data.....

  • @robinm1331

    @robinm1331

    26 күн бұрын

    @@andrewtheworldcitizen thank you! It's been a few years for me, so I appreciate the correction.

  • @andrewtheworldcitizen

    @andrewtheworldcitizen

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@stevemayes8799 That's Hindi/Urdu, which certainly descends from Sanskrit.... Sanskrit is like Ancient Greek or Latin, albeit even older..... The correct pronunciation is "merā nām" (meh-rah nahm) I'm a fluent speaker of Hindi/Urdu.... I've studied it for over 20 years... Here are a few simple sentences you'll find interesting: यह मेरा भाई है . - This is my brother. (yeh merā bhāī hai.) मेरे तीन भाई हैं . - I have three brothers. (mere tīn bhāī hain) आपका नाम क्या है? - (āpkā nām kyā hai) मेरा नाम अर्जुन है . (merā nām arjun hai)

  • @sera_kath
    @sera_kathАй бұрын

    The Sanskrit "ashta" and the German "acht" are astonishingly similar.

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    How about Sanskrit "atman" and German "Atem"?

  • @thorstenjaspert9394

    @thorstenjaspert9394

    Ай бұрын

    English night, German Nacht. All nights are starting with n.

  • @gabor6259

    @gabor6259

    Ай бұрын

    Where English has a silent gh, German has a ch. eight - acht light - Licht daughter - Tochter

  • @thorstenjaspert9394

    @thorstenjaspert9394

    Ай бұрын

    @@gabor6259 when was the gh voiced? The gh in Dutch is similar to the German ch attached with a r sound.

  • @CoolGuy-th7bl

    @CoolGuy-th7bl

    Ай бұрын

    @@thorstenjaspert9394 the 'gh' sound in English words was still spoken recently enough to appear in books made in printing presses, hence why they still appear in written English

  • @kitcutting
    @kitcutting24 күн бұрын

    The PIE word for the male reproductive organ is also directly responsible for giving us the English words: - “thigh” (via Proto-Germanic) - “daughter” (via Proto-Germanic) - “testimony” (via Latin) - “testify” and “testament” (via Latin) - … and yes, both “testes” and “testicles,” via Latin. The Persian and Hindi words for the organ are also very similar. 😅

  • @jonathanbergendahl7517
    @jonathanbergendahl7517Ай бұрын

    Fantastisk video, Rob. Jag ser fram emot att utforska din kanal ännu mer. Roligt att höra att du håller på att lära dig svenska :) Du är alltid välkommen till vårt land. Obs: Om du kommer till Sverige får du vara tydlig med lokalbefolkningen att du vill tala svenska med dem (vi tycker nämligen om att träna på vår engelska när vi träffar utlänningar ;)).

  • @gameking501
    @gameking501Ай бұрын

    Great video as always, Rob! Another interesting historical observer on Proto-Indo-European was the Ottoman traveler, Evliya Çelebi (1611 - 1682). He ventured across much of the Mediterranean basin, and his familiarity with Persian allowed him to draw comparisons between German and Persian in the 17th century, suggesting a potential root between them! Alongside this, Evliya Çelebi was something of an amateur linguist and etymologist, and he gave us very detailed notes on the pronunciation of early-modern languages across much of Western Eurasia!

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    There was also a Dutch professor named Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn (1612-1653) who noticed the similarity between many IE languages and proposed a relationship, but his ideas just didn't catch on among the academic community.

  • @danielzhang1916

    @danielzhang1916

    Ай бұрын

    @@aLadNamedNathan PIE wasn't really accepted until recently, same thing with plate tectonics that was proven much later on, a lot of people thought it was nonsense

  • @MrFearDubh
    @MrFearDubhАй бұрын

    At 12:15, the Irish "athair" for father is actually pronounced more like ah-her (th and sh are pronounced like an English h) so its pronunciation is even closer to the other words for father.

  • @authentiekaziatisch5949

    @authentiekaziatisch5949

    Ай бұрын

    If I remember correctly in PIE there were two roots for father: ‘pter’ and ‘atta’. Seems like the Irish took ‘atta’ (compare ‘atetz’ in Russian)

  • @MrFearDubh

    @MrFearDubh

    Ай бұрын

    @@authentiekaziatisch5949 I wasn't aware of that. Thanks for that info!

  • @MrFearDubh

    @MrFearDubh

    Ай бұрын

    That makes sense since in the Semitic languages, father is based on Aba/Abu so atta is close to those.

  • @rommelrivera6131

    @rommelrivera6131

    Ай бұрын

    No, actually, in Proto-Celtic, the Proto-Indo-European p sound became somewhat of an f sound, which then disappeared in all daughter languages. Modern f in Celtic languages comes from different sources @@authentiekaziatisch5949

  • @rommelrivera6131

    @rommelrivera6131

    Ай бұрын

    So *phter > *fater > *ather > athair Keep in mind that that's not the exact way the word evolved, but it's accurate enough to show that it did in fact come from the same word as father and pater

  • @sharonwilkes6648
    @sharonwilkes6648Ай бұрын

    Thank you for tracing the Indo-European language tree. I noticed the link when learning to intrduce myself in Hindi 'Mera naam Sharon hai', with mera being 'my', and naam being 'name', much more similar to English than the Turkish 'ad' for name - although the suffix indicating it's 'my name' is still an 'm' sound. Genesis Chapter 11 is an excellent attestation to the historical existence of a 'World language', and how the different language groups arose. They were so different from each other that the people immediately formed into different tribes and dispersed forthwith.

  • @Kramfors1
    @Kramfors1Ай бұрын

    Va härligt att höra dig prata svenska, Rob!

  • @TheCorgilorian
    @TheCorgilorianАй бұрын

    RobWords has become one of my favorite channels on KZread. You make learning about English and language interesting!

  • @amelinix
    @amelinixАй бұрын

    I'm from Sweden and is learning german and I'm acutally thankfull that I know both Swedish and English cause now I can find a word in either the languages which sounds closest and go of that. Like for example Nervous is German is Nervös which is exacly like swedish Nervös.

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    Watch out for false friends! The German word "Öl" means "oil," not "beer"!

  • @ControlledChaos-rk5tk

    @ControlledChaos-rk5tk

    Ай бұрын

    English is much more influenced by latin and French, which is also explained because British people are much more mixed bunch.. native britons, picts, gaels, romans, normans, anglo-saxons, and even some viking influence too.

  • @tux_duh

    @tux_duh

    Ай бұрын

    I learned a little swedish, I liked how it felt like French and English combined in a way Also Glass and glass are my favorite swedish words haha

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    @@tux_duh I've never studied Swedish, but I was watching some Swedish video once that was tailored for beginning speakers. I was surprised how much of it I could understand without any study whatsoever. One think that threw me off was that the teacher was talking about "glass," while she was showing a video of children eating ice cream out of glass bowls. I wondered why she was focusing so much on the bowls, when I realized that the Swedish word for ice cream is a borrowing of the French word "glace"!

  • @proosee

    @proosee

    Ай бұрын

    They all or Germanic languages, so this is a much tighter connection than one presented in the video.

  • @1234j
    @1234j29 күн бұрын

    Great job, again. Thank you. Polish numbers have surprising similarities to modern Hindi, too. And the best value thing in Scandiwegia is, 'Learn one, get two free' for Swedish, Norwegian and Danish. Swedish is Norwegian in a minor key, and Danish is Norwer, but only when spoken underwater. Great fun.

  • @taronsar4960
    @taronsar496025 күн бұрын

    English - Armenian Mother - Mayr Daughter - Dustr Mouse - Muk Heart - Sirt Smoke - Mukh Bear - Berel (bring) Summer - Amar Light - Luys Cat - Katu Hound - Shun Door - Dur Father - Hayr Kind of rough, though)

  • @renerpho
    @renerphoАй бұрын

    One of the best KZread channels to follow if you want to stay in the loop about P-I-E is Jackson Crawford. He looks at new discoveries and theories -- from the recent archeological find of a newly attested language that's closely related to Hittite, to attempts to link the Indo-European languages with Basque. Crawford discusses them with colleagues, shares his criticism and questions, etc.

  • @arrunzo

    @arrunzo

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the recommendation! If I'm not mistaken, he was on an Ecolinguist video about Old Norse. I didn't know he talked about Proto-Indo-European.

  • @EvaldasBuinauskas
    @EvaldasBuinauskasАй бұрын

    No surprise that Lithuanian was mentioned plenty of times. Was really interesting to hear numbers sounding almost native

  • @stevenjlovelace

    @stevenjlovelace

    Ай бұрын

    I've heard that the Baltic languages are sometimes considered to be closest to PIE.

  • @ANCalias

    @ANCalias

    Ай бұрын

    @@stevenjlovelace yeah especially old prussian

  • @ASChambers
    @ASChambersАй бұрын

    Rob, it was wonderful watching you completely nerd out on this one and get soooooo excited. I’m totally with you about how fascinating the whole thing is.

  • @jonathanbrett-warren2031
    @jonathanbrett-warren203118 күн бұрын

    Another fascinating video, Rob!

  • @Lulugu
    @LuluguАй бұрын

    10:34 Swedish does this in words like Kök and Keramik (Kitchen and Ceramics) which is prounced more like Shök and Sherameek

  • @user-fo6oe9ec4j

    @user-fo6oe9ec4j

    Ай бұрын

    The 'sh' sound in 'kök'/'keramik' is a modern development. Before 20-30 years ago it was a sound like german 'ch' in 'Mädchen' (but not like in 'ach'). The same 'replacement' has happened in many Norwegian dialects. The younger generations often don't hear the difference.

  • @cognomen9142

    @cognomen9142

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-fo6oe9ec4j And in the 1800's it was typically more like English 'ch' with a "t" sound at the beginning. This is still the standard in Fenno-Swedish.

  • @bacicinvatteneaca

    @bacicinvatteneaca

    Ай бұрын

    This is called lenition (in general) and satemisation (when related to K sounds turning soft)

  • @bobthemagicmoose
    @bobthemagicmooseАй бұрын

    I’m really interested in patterns shared between unrelated languages. Like “hi” “nihao” “aloha” “hola” “marhaba “ all have the aspirated “h” sound; perhaps because it’s a word you need to shout a bit more? I’m sure even mentioning this exposes my ignorance… which is exactly why such a video would be awesome!

  • @bobthemagicmoose

    @bobthemagicmoose

    Ай бұрын

    In other words: are sounds arbitrary or do they have meaning?

  • @vacuumdiagram

    @vacuumdiagram

    Ай бұрын

    @@bobthemagicmoose It was very interesting that "m" was usually the beginning of "me", across so many languages. i assume because its such an easy sound to make - don't even have to open your mouth, hah! Having the same level of knowledge/ignorance, the shouting part seems reasonable - works for Halt! too!

  • @inyobill

    @inyobill

    Ай бұрын

    Segue into the final topic of the video ... . I believe you got where he was leading.

  • @inyobill

    @inyobill

    Ай бұрын

    @@bobthemagicmoose I would hazard that the sounds are mostly arbitrary, but not all. See "buzz", "hiss", "bellow", the list goes on, even "piss".

  • @Markone99

    @Markone99

    Ай бұрын

    Marhaba is a stretch, the h there is a semitic sound found in Arabic and Hebrew and almost no other language (which is why Arabs sometimes put numbers in their words, cuz they resemble the original letter; Marhaba would be written as Mar7aba, and that's cuz 7 resembles ح in مرحبا). A closer word would be Hala or Ahlan, which are Arabic words, and resemble the ones you mentioned much more!

  • @franciscocarpio256
    @franciscocarpio256Ай бұрын

    Congratulations! This vídeo is (like the ones you’ve posted before…) fascinating and inspiring. 👏🏻👏🏻🥰🥰

  • @e.gonnermann4646
    @e.gonnermann4646Ай бұрын

    On my travels, every nation I came accross sang the song Frere Jacques in their own language. Loved it.

  • @kelisurfs247
    @kelisurfs247Ай бұрын

    I love watching your videos because you show how much you love what you know. It’s a pleasure to watch 😊

  • @Ellie-wl3rw

    @Ellie-wl3rw

    Ай бұрын

    Rob's delight is infectious, isn't it? 😍

  • @manaphy1007
    @manaphy100722 сағат бұрын

    19:47 i love how excited he sounds here

  • @wscottwatson
    @wscottwatsonАй бұрын

    As a child, I spoke varying amounts of Italian, Hausa, Swahili that I have completely forgotten and until 01/01/79 some Farsi. Over the last couple of years, I have been learning Ukrainian. It has become interesting the number of related words we have with what some people thought was the "other end of Europe! Some of the numbers as you described but also their word for want "hocho" is very similar to a Scottish word "hoaching". Their word for clothes "odoor" is very similar to a word used by the army "order", as in "short sleeve order" and "order arms"! The child name for mother is the same across the world! - "mama"...

  • @grampa6682
    @grampa6682Ай бұрын

    My personal favorite is the word for Mom being the first thing any baby pronounce, just by sticking togheter the lips and then open them quickly. Is very similar in every language because of that. The mother would be the first person that the baby "spoke" that "word" for, so that sound just mean that: mother

  • @SchmulKrieger

    @SchmulKrieger

    Ай бұрын

    It's actually what a lot of people here when a baby cries, ah, ah, ah, to mah, mah, mah. Like people are laughing like hahaha, or muha, muha muhaha. But that's actually absurd, because pa + -ter (blood relative marker) changes to fa + -ter. So does ma changes sometimes to la or ra.

  • @runnynose8341

    @runnynose8341

    Ай бұрын

    My Daughters first words were Ipad and tiktok.

  • @siryogiwan

    @siryogiwan

    Ай бұрын

    It's a myth that it's the 1st word spoken, it all depends on what you teach them, a lot of kids don't say either mum or dad

  • @sophiejones3554

    @sophiejones3554

    Ай бұрын

    That's a myth. Babies make "baba" and "dada" before "mama" and the first sound every baby makes is "gaga" which is not even a word in many languages let alone a term for a parent. It is true though that "mama" is practically universal, but it doesn't have to do with how babies talk. Irish mothers are mamas, and Chinese mothers are mamas, Maori mothers are mamas, and Russian mothers are mamas... but you know who isn't? Chippewa mothers, Maya mothers, Cherokee mothers, etc. everyone south of the Arctic Circle in the Americas. Same for the indigenous people in Papua New Guinea and Australia. The cultures who have been in their current locations for more than 10,000 years, when the Bering land bridge as last exposed.

  • @user-lm8ou6rw9e

    @user-lm8ou6rw9e

    Ай бұрын

    My son's first words were mim mee. I was calling the dog and he joined in. Her name was Minnie.

  • @OlaHime
    @OlaHimeАй бұрын

    I honestly didn't expect "Welcome to another RobWords" to be earliest english ancestor! :3

  • @Sandro-rp9un
    @Sandro-rp9un17 күн бұрын

    As someone from Georgia (Kartvelian language family), I can say that I always wondered about the possible connection between Indo-European language family with Kartvelian. Here are my observations of words in Georgian that might be connected to the common ancestral language: Three - Sami Six - Eqwsi Me, I - Me He, She, It - Is This - Es We - Chwen You - Tqwen

  • @gaufrid1956
    @gaufrid1956Ай бұрын

    Having studied French, Latin and Sanskrit in my youth, I really appreciate your video about *P-I-E, Rob. On the Asian side of things, I think that there was probably a Proto-Austronesian language, which gave rise to the Taiwanese tribal languages, the many Filipino languages, and Proto-Malay (which was the Lingua Franca of South East Asia for a long time), and Bahasa Indonesia. It's easy to see how many similarities there are between many languages throughout South East Asia.

  • @aLadNamedNathan

    @aLadNamedNathan

    Ай бұрын

    There was a proto language for every language family that exists.

  • @6099x
    @6099xАй бұрын

    Rob, linguistics was my field of interest I never pursued - I did something very unrelated instead in the end. It is so very exciting to be exposed to linguistics through your channel! Thank you very much 🎉

  • @The_Ubatron
    @The_UbatronАй бұрын

    Brilliant video! Thanks 🙏🏼 What a tragic shame that so much prejudice about alphabetised 'written' language was inflicted by past anthropologists, historians and linguists, and that so much systemic and government-sanctioned destruction of Indigenous languages has occurred so swiftly over the centuries. Australia's First Languages are still spoken and used today by the longest living continuous cultures known to this world. Some may well have been continuously used for some 65,000 years, and, if 'discovered' by Indo-European linguists of today (and KZreadrs such as Rob!) might well have been conserved and celebrated rather than violently exterminated as was attempted for past two centuries up until recently... Thankfully, the cultures have survived, and many across First Peoples and linguist communities are reviving such languages, which, I hope, many of us will learn to use in our everyday lives. They link between language, culture and humanity must never be lost to us.

  • @TheLinguistsLibrary
    @TheLinguistsLibrary28 күн бұрын

    The perfect video! Well done. Sanskrit is one of the three earliest ancient documented languages that arose from a common root language now referred to as Proto-Indo-European: Vedic Sanskrit ( c. 1500-500 BCE). Mycenaean Greek ( c. 1450 BCE) and Ancient Greek ( c. 750-400 BCE).

  • @toddscott6899
    @toddscott6899Ай бұрын

    This was the best episode yet! Mind blown!

  • @mizapf
    @mizapfАй бұрын

    15:04 And the related word to "caput" in German is "Haupt" (c→h), while the German "Kopf" is related to English "cup" (from Proto-Germanic *kuppaz, "round object, bowl").

  • @ivanskyttejrgensen7464

    @ivanskyttejrgensen7464

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for that. I was wondering about the Haupt->Kopf change in German. It's interesting that it means a small container because something similar happened in Italian Capo->Testa (testa roughly means "small jar"). Now I wonder why both languages had such a similar change to the word for head...

  • @julius9055

    @julius9055

    Ай бұрын

    @@ivanskyttejrgensen7464 Maybe from people using them like slang? In English too, 'noggin' is a slang word for head that comes from a word meaning a small drinking cup.

  • @ivanskyttejrgensen7464

    @ivanskyttejrgensen7464

    Ай бұрын

    @@julius9055 I doubt it. I think the change in Italian and German happened much too early for that, and slang rarely crosses languages.

  • @julius9055

    @julius9055

    Ай бұрын

    @@ivanskyttejrgensen7464 I'm saying the fact that it happened in English too, further suggests it's a common transition of meaning.

  • @foolcat23

    @foolcat23

    Ай бұрын

    The German word for “hood” (that which covers the head) is “Kapuze” [kaˈpuːt͡sə]. And fitting into that as well is the word for “cap” (another head ornament), “Haube” [ˈhaʊ̯bə].

  • @mykonomen
    @mykonomenАй бұрын

    Really good work on the Swedish letter Å! Hard for many English speaking people I’ve noticed. Love you channel! / Håkan.

  • @hcolcombet
    @hcolcombet18 күн бұрын

    Wow... probably the most interesting video I have seen in a very loooooong time. Merci!

  • @Reubentheimitator6572
    @Reubentheimitator6572Ай бұрын

    O Rob, I had learned most of this information already, but I really liked your way of saying it, thank you.

  • @EngineerLewis
    @EngineerLewisАй бұрын

    Thanks for opening my eyes to the history of English and other associated languages! A great and fascinating presentation.👍

  • @Eveseptir
    @Eveseptir13 күн бұрын

    I'm never going to take words for granted again after this video.

  • @SaulRadford
    @SaulRadfordАй бұрын

    My favourite word "source sharings" are that "black" and "blank" have the same route, as well as French "blanc" meaning white! This is as it was used to describe burning and whilst some cultures saw this as the bright burning others saw it as the dark ashes it left. Interestingly and very unexpectedly "insect" and "sex" have the same route.

  • @marshaprice8226
    @marshaprice8226Ай бұрын

    Fascinating and informative, as always! Thanks!

  • @tselengbotlhole750
    @tselengbotlhole750Ай бұрын

    I studied The Origin of the English Language at varsity. There were only 5 of us in that class, taught by the Dean of our faculty. Lessons took place in his office. It was one of the best experiences I've ever had at Varsity

  • @s.l.taylor4057
    @s.l.taylor405722 күн бұрын

    ‘Tell me that isn’t satisfying…” How can I??? It’s wonderful x

  • @anacarolvito
    @anacarolvito19 күн бұрын

    Brazilian Portuguese speaker here and fascinated by this! I've always found so odd that English speakers say tooth/moon and dental/lunar because I didn't see any link between these words... not anymore 😂

  • @DavidHamster88
    @DavidHamster88Ай бұрын

    Such a well crafted video!

  • @InfernalPasquale
    @InfernalPasqualeАй бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating and enlightening. I had never truly appreciated the history of language until watching this.

  • @chansetwo
    @chansetwoАй бұрын

    Speaking of observations, I'm delighted to see that after only 12 hours, this video has accumulated over 85k views. I'm glad that such a subject generates such interest. it gives me hope for humanity.

  • @luzma.villela2165
    @luzma.villela21654 күн бұрын

    Wow! Wow! Wow! Super-hyper interesting! Thank you very much ❤

  • @maxkim7937
    @maxkim7937Ай бұрын

    in korea, we have gyeon or gae for dog. many linguists in korea believe we also owe our language to sanskrit. dola (not exactly sure how it's spelled...) has a meaning similar to turning (which by the way, turn and dola both having t/d and r/l is remarkable) in sanskrit. in korean, we have dor-a (it's how i would spell it to be more accurate) which also means to turn. it wasn't a borrowed word from hanja (chinese characters). makes me confident that we have sanskrit baked-in in our language. the word for tower in sanskrit is atta, udarka, attaka. in old chinese and cantonese it's taap, in korean it's tab (탑), in mandarin it's tǎ, and in japanese it's to-. i can easily see how we go from atta to taab/tab/tǎ/to- and tower. remove the "a" at the beginning, and you can see that they all kept the sound "t + vowel" and evolved from there. there really should be a europe/asia/north africa proto language. but i'm guessing it's too archaic to find the link (edit) just thought about this while reading comments. this might be a stretch, but i thought it was interesting so i'm sharing my opinion on it. in korean, we have two words for fire. one is borrowed from hanja and the other is just korean. we have hwa, which if we replace hw to f, it's fa. although, it's spelled fire, it still kinda sounds like fa (not that it needs to have the same exact vowel sound but it works in this case). the other word is bul (yes, like the buldak noodles) which sounds similar to what happens when there is a fire, things burn. we then have a word to ride, to be on, or to take "tada" or just "ta" so to take flame or to burn is bultada or bul e tada (e is just a preposition for in/on). tocar in spanish means to touch. which is similar to taking something. fuego is fire. so in a very stretched way (i told you, this is an opinion of mine that could just be a stretch from my adhd mind) tocar+fuego, in a very bad barely making sense way, is the same as to take flame and therefor bul e tada. glad i got that out of my system. now i can move on with my life 😅🤣 (edit) okay yeah, i should stop where i was. but my mind says otherwise... e is a preposition for in or on like i mentioned before. but we also have the literal word for "in" which is "an" this is very similar to "en" in spanish. in korean, "an e" is "inside" what is happening to my mind... hopefuly this is the last "edit" i make to this... but i don't know anymore 😅🙃. it's still fun to let my mind go wild with languages i guess...

  • @garnedmatser

    @garnedmatser

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, can you share something more that Korean is originated from Sanskrit. Very surprised.

  • @garnedmatser

    @garnedmatser

    Ай бұрын

    The word you share about fire is Agni(Sanskrit) & Igni(Latin). How similar is still surprises me (Igni = Agni). The English word Ignition comes from there, if you noticed you will see it written near key switch, I dont know in korea whether it written in English or not, you can confirm me.

  • @VORASTRA

    @VORASTRA

    20 күн бұрын

    ​​@@garnedmatser russian word огонь reads something like "agon" with softened n sound which is like there was 'i' in the end [agon(i)]. The connection is everywhere.

  • @jorgelotr3752
    @jorgelotr3752Ай бұрын

    Quite interesting for you to use the word for "hundred", because that's what's commonly used to divide Indo-European (not Proto) into two main families: "satem" and "centum". PS. I believe that, apart from the "reconstruction from reconstructions" issue, the Nostratic hypothesis has to deal with the fact that those peoples lived close to one another and cross-contamination during millenia is bound to happen.

  • @sandrafaith
    @sandrafaithАй бұрын

    This is _so_ interesting! You really make it so fun, so thank you. Always enjoy the videos and your newsletter.

  • @WandaDT
    @WandaDT17 күн бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thank you so much for taking the clearly massive amount of time to put this together and explain it so plainly and succinctly. I've always thought that if I could have any superpower, I'd like to be able to speak and understand ALL the languages 😀

  • @jeffmendolo
    @jeffmendoloАй бұрын

    I’ve been watching your videos for a couple of years now, this is the best! Wonderful job.

  • @jaded_gerManic
    @jaded_gerManicАй бұрын

    Love your content! 🌻

  • @frankhoffman9329
    @frankhoffman9329Ай бұрын

    I always award you a "Like", but I figured I would pause today and tell you that your videos are ALWAYS entertaining and educational... and, for me, much valued.

  • @Karen-ul9hd
    @Karen-ul9hdАй бұрын

    So cool, this. Very satisfying! Getting together with you and all those people from all over the world in your German forest. Nostalgic Nostra-humans. Thank you from a Dutch immigrant to New Zealand :)

  • @lewisgiles8855
    @lewisgiles8855Ай бұрын

    Thanks for your persistence Rob! Your vids are the best

  • @AmvC
    @AmvCАй бұрын

    i love our ability to travel through time

  • @annieontheroad
    @annieontheroadАй бұрын

    You, sir, are a wizard with words. I am in awe.

  • @NeilBlanchard
    @NeilBlanchardАй бұрын

    Humans seek patterns - language and music are "built" with patterns. Excellent stuff, Rob! A trend/pattern that I have noticed is that as we learn more about the past - it almost always is more complex/sophisticated than we had thought before. Take the discovery of Ötzi (The Iceman) - this pushed back our estimate of the Age of Copper - by about 2,000 years! The copper axe that he had is essentially equivalent to a computer, in terms of technology.

  • @FakeMaker
    @FakeMakerАй бұрын

    When elementary school me found out about the Indo-European language family, I was stunned and very excited. Seemingly unrelated languages following very similar patterns and ancestral vocabulary was the coolest thing I've ever heard at that time. I think this single piece of information was what sparked my interest in linguistics as well as learning foreign languages and cultures. Even the controversial Altaic and Nostratic language families are an interesting topic, factual or not. I think a video about the hypothetical Altaic language family would be very cool.

  • @zarinaromanets7290

    @zarinaromanets7290

    Ай бұрын

    Why is Altaic considered controversial? All I know is there are not a lot of speakers left but they're trying to get recognized

  • @FakeMaker

    @FakeMaker

    Ай бұрын

    @@zarinaromanets7290 The Altaic language family doesn't refer to a single specific language or culture, it's a proposed language macro-family that would include Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic and sometimes even Japonic and Koreanic language families. So imagine it like the Indo-European language family, but with very limited evidence in favour of this grouping. This proposed macro-family is controversial because it has been rejected by the vast majority of linguists, though some continue researching it and are in favour of it.

  • @zarinaromanets7290

    @zarinaromanets7290

    Ай бұрын

    @@FakeMaker I'm aware, just didn't write family bc of saving time typing 😅 do it's controversial bc linguists don't agree on it? I'm curious to look into it a bit more now.

  • @FakeMaker

    @FakeMaker

    Ай бұрын

    @@zarinaromanets7290 Oh, I see now, sorry for the misunderstanding. Yeah, the Altaic language family is considered controversial as it's much more likely their similarities don't stem from common ancestry, but as a result of geographical proximity and prolonged contact. Hence, most linguists don't agree with them being closely related enough to be in the same family. There also seems to be quite a bit of confusion between "Altai languages" and the "Altaic language family". Though that isn't surprising, idk who thought it would be a good idea to have the names be so similar lol.

  • @zarinaromanets7290

    @zarinaromanets7290

    Ай бұрын

    @@FakeMaker No worries, the internet comment space is confusing and lacking lol. Oh wow that is interesting. I wonder exactly how they evolved as languages being as most original people from the region were nomadic and following there herds so they could eat and protect them from wolves. I wonder if they've been doing this since the ice age and only spoke when meeting another family unit to trade or intermarry, a couple times a year. Could be they had their own evolution all together.

  • @ABode-er7rz
    @ABode-er7rzАй бұрын

    Thanks for this interesting video. This reminds me of a conversation I had with some of my colleagues some tome ago. I am German and have have two colleagues from Italy, one from India and one from Iran. I never grasped the concept of the indo-germanic language, as the languages sound very different to me. However, my colleagues from Italy, India and Iran realized, that they each have some words with a similar meaning and nearly similar pronunciation. I was truly fascinated by that. I love our diversity and that we never the less have so much in common.

  • @TomMS
    @TomMSАй бұрын

    This really makes me appreciate the varied origin of English. Rather than just a mish-mash of a bunch of random languages, most of its words, however different they seem, can trace their origin to PIE. Really makes things feel more cohesive.

  • @robertkimber822
    @robertkimber822Ай бұрын

    Really fascinating - thank you!

  • @andeeanko7079
    @andeeanko7079Ай бұрын

    Fascinating stuff, Rob! ❤

  • @WrightsW5
    @WrightsW5Ай бұрын

    I'm glad you pronounced 'centum' correctly, the Latin way. I've been irritated recently on KZread and elsewhere with people pronouncing Galla Placidia as Plasidia rather than Plakidia. Although, it's deeonisius not die-onisius. (From Dionysios). I have never heard about trying to prove that Romans are Greeks, but southern Italy before it was Italy was called Magna Graeca, Greater Greece, which was conquered by the Roman Republic. Greece had colonies to the east up to the far coast of the Black Sea, and to the west up to part of Spain.

  • @snowfloofcathug
    @snowfloofcathugАй бұрын

    “Now jag pratar lite svenska” Swedish is funny with this, it’s a verb second language, meaning it’d be “Now pratar jag lite svenska”! Impressive pronunciation, especially of måne

  • @TheGlebeLaird
    @TheGlebeLairdАй бұрын

    As for the odd use of “the” I suspect the author was using “language” as understood, as in “the Celtic (language)”. Thoughts?

  • @skipmcilvaine

    @skipmcilvaine

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly what I was thinking.

  • @AAArend

    @AAArend

    Ай бұрын

    In Dutch (related to English) you can actually use an article before a language name (i.e. "Ik haat (het) Frans" = "I hate French") so maybe English dropped it somewhere between now and when the author used it

  • @lucaslourenco8918

    @lucaslourenco8918

    Ай бұрын

    He didn't use it for the other languages, though. I cam only guess that back then, "Old Persian" was not viewed as one syntactic element, and was more like "the old version of Persian", and maybe he felt that using the article was more natural

  • @XL-5117
    @XL-5117Ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating Rob, I love how you make this channel not just about word meanings but go further and further to explain earlier explanations of language. It’s really interesting that other people from non English speaking countries are finding this fascinating and engaging with their languages. I look forward to seeing a new video release from you, they make my day! 🎉

Келесі