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  • @yonj3269
    @yonj3269Күн бұрын

    What are pronouns and addition in Proto-Semitic?

  • @yonj3269
    @yonj3269Күн бұрын

    Please, we want clips about the Anatolian languages before the Indo-European migrations, which some scholars assume are related to the Caucasian languages.

  • @jgds9520
    @jgds952017 күн бұрын

    2:10 it is not saūle in latvian its just saule

  • @redacted461
    @redacted46118 күн бұрын

    Warhi is moon in tigrinia. I understood all the words. Surprised to see essata means fire in Aramaic. Essat is fire in amahric

  • @marook1501
    @marook150127 күн бұрын

    German cognate for the first word is "Haupt" meaning head.

  • @KateGladstone
    @KateGladstoneАй бұрын

    Near the end, in one place you have a typo in an English word. You have “bool” where it should be “bull” - please fix it.

  • @Ernest0591
    @Ernest0591Ай бұрын

    Don't forget Galician.

  • @pamanojol9938
    @pamanojol9938Ай бұрын

    ❤🥹❤️

  • @pamanojol9938
    @pamanojol9938Ай бұрын

    ❤🥹❤️

  • @thomasbarca9297
    @thomasbarca9297Ай бұрын

    I feel Celtic is similar to italic

  • @kefyrass
    @kefyrassАй бұрын

    Very similar to lithuanian 1. Vienas 2.Du 3.Trys 4. Keturi 5. Penki 6 Šeši 7.Septyni 8.Aštuoni 9.Devyni 10.Dešimt

  • @fueyo2229
    @fueyo2229Ай бұрын

    Asturleonese in fact has alternative Western or Eastern versions for most words. Like night, nueche but also nueite and nuoite in Western, fueu has many variants, fuou, fuibu, ḥuibu, and in my dialect ḥueu

  • @eitansoffer798
    @eitansoffer7982 ай бұрын

    עברית מאוד קרובה לאכדית...מפליא

  • @muhammedsener8241
    @muhammedsener82412 ай бұрын

    Bravo

  • @autumnphillips151
    @autumnphillips1512 ай бұрын

    How on earth did Goidelic get those words for night from Proto-Celtic *noxs? The Brittonic words obviously came from it, but the Goidelic ones seem to be from something else entirely...

  • @muhammedsener8241
    @muhammedsener82412 ай бұрын

    🫶

  • @muhammedsener8241
    @muhammedsener82413 ай бұрын

    Super

  • @phufadangbluered5544
    @phufadangbluered55443 ай бұрын

    more: The Jews called God in Hebrew. Elohim(אלוהים) (im) It is respectful in Hebrew. Therefore, if you cut (im) out This indicates that the Jews called God Eloah(אלה). Arabs and Muslims call God in Arabic. Allah(ٱللَّٰه) Therefore, Judaism and Islam believe in the same god But it's called in different languages. because they were sent to different eras But even though they are different languages But there are some similarities.

  • @Mihail_kotov38
    @Mihail_kotov383 ай бұрын

    Who Supports Plaestine or Israel?

  • @koordrozita7236
    @koordrozita72363 ай бұрын

    Celtic languages are very close to Kurdish 1- Yek 2- Du/Do 3- Sê/hre 4- Çar (char) 5- Pênc 6- Şeş (shesh) 7- Heft (Hepht) 8- Heşt (hesht) 9- Neh / Noh 10- Deh / Des 100- Sed 1000- Hezar

  • @abumeshaaladwan407
    @abumeshaaladwan4073 ай бұрын

    The Arabic language is not Semitic

  • @prn_97_
    @prn_97_3 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @KateGladstone
    @KateGladstoneАй бұрын

    If Arabic isn’t a Semitic language, then what kind of language is it?

  • @sabahaile4297
    @sabahaile42973 ай бұрын

    Even tigrigna,amharica they have similarly with those languages. It s sematic languages

  • @user-bh9pv5hp6y
    @user-bh9pv5hp6y4 ай бұрын

    Syriac = Aramaic ? or not?

  • @superbrainil
    @superbrainil4 ай бұрын

    Aramaic started as a single language, but quickly diverged into several dialects. There have been a lot of historical Aramaic dialects, one of which is Syriac. Today, there are several other Aramaic dialects, although most are endangered. Syriac is still used today as the liturgical language of many Aramean/Assyrian churches

  • @hailehaile8229
    @hailehaile8229Ай бұрын

    @@superbrainil next time add Galilean Aramaic pls

  • @goering_hermann
    @goering_hermann4 ай бұрын

    good underated video

  • @LinasR
    @LinasR4 ай бұрын

    In Lithuanian word "mother" is usually translated as "motina" instead as was shown in the last example as "motė" (already extinct version). But word "stepmother" in Lithuanian is translated as "pamotė".

  • @user-ve6bc9ex6b
    @user-ve6bc9ex6b4 ай бұрын

    First

  • @wilhelmlegothdegascogne9674
    @wilhelmlegothdegascogne96744 ай бұрын

    I speak occitan but some words are different in some regions. I speak the northern gascon dialect (from Bordeaux/Medoc), so here the translations. : Sun - Sorehl (but we can say "Só") Moon - Lua (without the N) Day - Dia/Jorn (the second one is not really used in Gascon) Night - Nueit Lion - Leon Bear - Ors Dog - Can (Canha in feminine) Cat - Gat/Cat Castle - Castèth King - Rei Water - Aiga Fire - Huèc

  • @user-pi6oc4st4f
    @user-pi6oc4st4f4 ай бұрын

    Late Biblical Hebrew is similar to modern

  • @petarjovanovic1481
    @petarjovanovic1481Ай бұрын

    Not exactly. Modern Hebrew is the most similar to Mishnaic Hebrew if you compare overall characteristics like verb morphology, tense system, syntax... In my opinion.

  • @user-pi6oc4st4f
    @user-pi6oc4st4fАй бұрын

    @@petarjovanovic1481 I can read Torah without big problems, by knowing modern Hebrew, I think it is good proof of similarity of modern and ancient one.

  • @petarjovanovic1481
    @petarjovanovic1481Ай бұрын

    ​​@@user-pi6oc4st4f I can argue that it depends on the text and the time period. Of course we are only speaking about the written texts. Who knows how much you would be able to understand if you had a time machine to go to listen to it as the pronunciation was surely very different. However, you wouldn't be able to understand most of those written texts if you were not trained to understand it. Nobody speaks like that, ever, ever, ever, never. If you didn't go to school or synagogue you wouldn't be able to understand most of it. However, Mishnaic Hebrew you would be able to understand (not all of it of course) even if you grew up on the streets of Jerusalem as an orphan because this is mostly how people speak nowadays.

  • @David_Sirovsky
    @David_Sirovsky4 ай бұрын

    Slavic languages have very similar analogues of some Anatolian/Luwian words. Wow

  • @YouLittleRascal
    @YouLittleRascal12 күн бұрын

    Why wouldn't they?

  • @Ahmed-pf3lg
    @Ahmed-pf3lg4 ай бұрын

    Arabic is superior and more beautiful than both, by far.

  • @janisansbergs2441
    @janisansbergs24414 ай бұрын

    If you would add also sanskrit, you would see that there are more similarities between baltic language and sanscrit than between baltic languages and Russian or old Russian. Therefore I'm not sure there was a language like proto-balto-slavic. I do not think even all tribes within borders of nowaday's Latvia spoke dialects of one protolatvian language. From very different words with the same meaning still used by Latvians in latvian language in various regions I suppose that even in 10th or 12th century there were different languages and not dialects in different parts of Livonia, Couronia, Selia and other regions...

  • @pinnerup
    @pinnerup4 ай бұрын

    The segholates shouldn't be opened yet in the LBH words and definitely not in the EBH words. Even as late as the Secunda of Origen's Hexapla (around 240 AD), they still have the form qVtl. For instance, the word ארץ appears in the Secunda as αρς, reflecting a pronunciation like [ʔaʀʦˀ], and גבר appears as γαβρ, reflecting a pronunciation like [ˈgaβʀ]. See Benjamin Kantor's 2017 dissertation (or his recent work "The Linguistic Classification of the Reading Traditions of Biblical Hebrew") for more.

  • @ji3535
    @ji35354 ай бұрын

    you forgot the real and live and oldest samogotian language, course lithuanian are made from samogotian language.

  • @alinasamuchove9237
    @alinasamuchove92373 ай бұрын

    Lietuviu kalbos gramatika dabartine yra sukurta suvalkieciu tarmes pagrindu, nes is ten kiles buvo Javlonskis. Aisku, jie derino visus variantus pagal bendra visuma

  • @sisjnwjwk7832
    @sisjnwjwk78324 ай бұрын

    Vocabulary is all good until you apply some grammar on it None of us would understand sh1t 😂 Peace and love Akhi ❤

  • @algirdasstarazinskas1995
    @algirdasstarazinskas19955 ай бұрын

    Protoceltics labai panasiai i lietuviu skaiciu pavadinimus

  • @kefyrass
    @kefyrassАй бұрын

    jojojo😊

  • @milana0710
    @milana07105 ай бұрын

    Proto-slavic sounds more like slavic

  • @robb3342
    @robb33425 ай бұрын

    I wished to see one of the Ethiosemetic languages alongside

  • @superbrainil
    @superbrainil5 ай бұрын

    There is a part 2 with Ge'ez and Amharic (as well as Akkadian). Check it out!

  • @robb3342
    @robb33425 ай бұрын

    Great thank u@@superbrainil

  • @asmaabubakar2646
    @asmaabubakar26465 ай бұрын

    وعلشان تعرف المكتوب في جداريات الاثار المصريه هي نفس اللغه الجءزيه والامهريه كذالك مكتوب بها في بعد الاثار وهي لغات شرق افريقيه يتحدث بها الي الان في ارتريا واثوبيا اما الاثرين الحالين مفسرين الاثار المكتوبه غلط يقصدون ام لا لا ادري وبذلك ضيعو الحضاره العظيمه ومحتوياتها واسرارها وصارت مجرد اثار وبس الاثار فيها ذكر جميع الامم فيها سدوم وعموره وفيها ابرهه الصباح وفيها ذكر الاقباط في ما بعض وفيهااشياء كتيره وفيها قوم جاؤ من اليمن بالمراكب مكتوب جاؤ من اليمن وفيها من جاؤ من جهت سيناء غساسنه وجاؤ ومعهم نساء ورجال وحمير واطفال ومكتوب جاؤ للجواز ومكتوب هدي باللغه المصريه القديمه معناها يتزوج وكتير وفيها التابوت ورجال حاملين التابوت ومكتوب تابوت لماذا مصر كتمه علي هذا ومكتفيا بترجمت الفرنسي الخطا كيف لخواجي ان يعرف لغه شرق افريقيه الي اللقاء😅😅😅

  • @AstekOst
    @AstekOst5 ай бұрын

    Funny how Arabic=Proto-Semitic in the way most words are pronounced

  • @ramawa
    @ramawa5 ай бұрын

    We Baltic Prussians have our own flag, and it is not the flag of the German colonizers and Hohenzollern family.

  • @superbrainil
    @superbrainil5 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately the modern flag of the Baltic Prussians isn't very recognizable, so I have to use the old German Prussian flag.

  • @EVO6-
    @EVO6-3 ай бұрын

    ​@@superbrainil fella you made a video about balto-slavic reflex cognates, you do not need to worry about appealing to a general audience.

  • @angobando
    @angobando23 күн бұрын

    @@EVO6- yeah, why not using nazi flag then, completes the logic

  • @efectovogel8295
    @efectovogel82955 күн бұрын

    @@angobandowhat? You make no sense

  • @angobando
    @angobando5 күн бұрын

    @@efectovogel8295 I bet you're german

  • @ali.k.5441
    @ali.k.54415 ай бұрын

    i love indo-europian languages they connection themself thats crazy

  • @pennypappas8096
    @pennypappas80965 ай бұрын

    As a Greek speaker, I immediately recognized the word tawr for ox as probably sharing the same root with the Greek ταύρος (tauros), meaning bull, which is also the origin of the zodiac sign Taurus ♉. Perhaps a very old loanword from a Semitic language.

  • @superbrainil
    @superbrainil5 ай бұрын

    Yes! linguists speculate that proto-Indo-European *táwros and the proto-Semitic *ṯawr are related, as either PIE borrowed it from proto-Semitic or the other way around. PIE gave rise to the Greek ταῦρος, Latin taurus, Persian ستور (sotor), Russian тур (tur), and more. As well as the English verb 'steer'.

  • @EzooAzzz-mu8pe
    @EzooAzzz-mu8pe3 ай бұрын

    The first city founded by the Canaanites in Greece was Thebes, founded by Cadmus. The Greek letters were originally Canaanite, and the European name was Canaanite.

  • @abanduazar2612
    @abanduazar26126 ай бұрын

    Berber does not belong to the Afroasiatic languages, but rather it is definitely related to the Basque and Songhai languages, and very possibly to the Greek and Iberian languages, because of the similarity found between the ancient Greek language and Basque, and the similarity also found between Basque and Iberian.

  • @Kovelis
    @KovelisАй бұрын

    tf are you talking about, greek is an indo european language and basque is an isolate language (a language with no living relatives)

  • @SABDBL
    @SABDBLАй бұрын

    Never take drugs

  • @pavulugjimene8869
    @pavulugjimene88696 ай бұрын

    1:13 Kārtējais rašist, kurš grib pierādīt, ka viss ir cēlies no krieviem un krievi visai pasaulei stāvus čurāt iemācīja. Gribēja pierādīt, bet apdirsās jau pēc minūtes. Glaz nav krievu vārds un nav arī slāvu, bet ģermāņu vārds un nozīmē - stikls. 1:46 Un atkal apdirsās dižais valodnieks - lietuviski miškas ir mežs, bet meška ir iegājies kā pa apli caur slāviem izgājis sinonīms. Latviski to varētu tulkot kā - mežainis. 2:54 Tālāk vairs neklausīšos - ja jau ,,luna" šim rašistam skaitās slāvu vārds, tad ko tur vairs runāt.

  • @zaboybagoi8636
    @zaboybagoi86366 ай бұрын

    Additional information: Proto-Anatolians did not have Steppe-related DNA,they were not related to Yamnayans.

  • @nukhetyavuz
    @nukhetyavuz6 ай бұрын

    patik seems to have derived from patta,in turkish,ayak,kalp for heart,su for water,ağız for mouth,katir for horsedonkey...although turkish is an agglunitative language,and in the uralic family,it seems to have things in common with both language family trees...

  • @polpottribute9102
    @polpottribute9102Күн бұрын

    Patik word is from Greek

  • @polpottribute9102
    @polpottribute9102Күн бұрын

    And other words is purely Turkic

  • @eljosafatespinoso3087
    @eljosafatespinoso30876 ай бұрын

    Syriac Leg is the same as spanish Rule: Regla Hebrew Leg is the same as german Rule: Regel... wtf

  • @contrarian8870
    @contrarian88706 ай бұрын

    The black eagle/white flag represents the later, German-speaking Prussia (derived from the earlier black-on-white cross flag). it has nothing to do with the Old Prussian you discuss here, even though some Germanized Old Prussians did merge into the later (13-20 cent) German-speaking state of Prussia

  • @superbrainil
    @superbrainil6 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Unfortunately, there was no Prussian flag before the Germanisation of the region and the disappearance of the Old Prussian language, so I had to use the later (and also more recognizable) flag

  • @Name-og4th
    @Name-og4th6 ай бұрын

    Star: zvaigzda, swaigsta, swastika.

  • @fidenemini111
    @fidenemini1115 ай бұрын

    Possible.

  • @ankhkeymaker
    @ankhkeymaker5 ай бұрын

    that symbol represents milky way galaxy, close enough

  • @edwardsaulnier892
    @edwardsaulnier8926 ай бұрын

    Interesting to is how we can observe Lithuanian 'sunus' for 'son' has cognates in the Slavic, Germanic, and Indo-Iranian languages. This root, however', became taboo in other Indo-European languages such as Latin as one example. In Latin it came down from the Proto-Indo-European root *dhelios / *dhelyos meaning the one who 'suckles or is being nursed' The Proto-Itaiic form was "felios, and eventually as in Latin 'filius'. Notice the Latvian word for son 'dels' fits in here as a cognate to the Latin form.

  • @janisansbergs2441
    @janisansbergs24413 ай бұрын

    I suppose Latvians changed their word from "sunus" into "dels", because they invented name for dogs "suns" and decided that it would be not appropriate to keep so similar word in use for their sons.