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Evolution of the Indo-European Languages - Ancient Civilizations DOCUMENTARY 

Kings and Generals
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This video is brought to you by Aloud. Learn more about the video translation tool that’s breaking the language barrier: aloud.area120.google.com/?utm...
The Kings and Generals animated historical documentary series on the ancient civilizations continues with a video on the evolution of the Indo-European Languages, as we give a summary of how this language family formed and how the languages belonging to each are still connected to each other:
Arabia Before Islam: Religion, Society, Culture: • Arabia Before Islam: R...
Vandals: • Rise of the Vandals: H...
How Rome Conquered Greece: • How Rome Conquered Gre...
Did the Trojan War Really Happen: • Did the Trojan War Rea...
Demosthenes: • Demosthenes: Greatest ...
Ancient Greek Politics and Diplomacy: • Ancient Greek State Po...
Pyrrhic Wars: • Pyrrhus and Pyrrhic Wa...
Ancient Macedonia before Alexander the Great and Philip II: • Ancient Macedonia befo...
Diplomatic Genius of Philip of Macedon: • Diplomatic Genius of P...
Etruscans: • Etruscans: Italian Civ...
Bosporan Kingdom: • Bosporan Kingdom - Lon...
Ancient Greek State in Bactria: • Ancient Greek State in...
The Greco-Chinese War Over the Heavenly Horses: • The Greco-Chinese War ...
Ancient Greek Kingdom in India: • Ancient Greek Kingdom ...
Ghaznavids: • Ghaznavids: From Slave...
Huns: • Huns: The Origin
White Huns: • White Huns: Rise and D...
Gokturks: • Gokturk Empire - Nomad...
Yuezhi: • Yuezhi Migration and K...
Seljuks: • Rise of the Seljuk Emp...
Support us on Patreon: / kingsandgenerals or Paypal: paypal.me/kingsandgenerals or by joining the youtube membership: / @kingsandgenerals We are grateful to our patrons and sponsors, who made this video possible: docs.google.com/document/d/1o...
The video was made by Arb Paninken, while the script was developed by Georgi Kolev. This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & / @gameworldnarratives )
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#Documentary #DubbedWithAloud #Civilization

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8 июл 2022

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Комментарии : 6 тыс.   
@KingsandGenerals
@KingsandGenerals Год назад
Would you like to see more creators making videos available in other languages? If yes, support us in this tweet twitter.com/KingsGenerals/status/1545754075651866626 This video has been dubbed into Hindi, Indonesian, Portuguese and Spanish, using an artificial voice to increase accessibility. The translated audio tracks were generated using Aloud. #sponsored
@febrian0079
@febrian0079 Год назад
Please continue the series on criminal syndicates My recommendation for a video is history of the Russian mafia and then the Mexican cartel
@rehanansari009
@rehanansari009 Год назад
Austroasiatic people india has 70000 years of history !!!!! There language and script devlope indigenous !!!!! This indo European theory is given by British to justify their colonial rule ... They wanted to justify their colonial rule showing.. caucasian white people came and show indian people how to live ... Very bad theory and concepts !!! No one buys these lies in india anymore !!!!
@discombobulation3016
@discombobulation3016 Год назад
Pls make a video on the chola empire
@franciscofernandes8635
@franciscofernandes8635 Год назад
You a brasilian guy doing the portuguese cursed
@valentinojelencic7212
@valentinojelencic7212 Год назад
Look in to Vućedol culture, a proto bronze age culture, that had advance smiting and casting technology(for it's time) oldest knowing calendar, interesting navigation techniques(in pottery) and "big city" 3500 to 2500bc (if I'm not mistaken)
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 Год назад
It is important to realise that although less than a third of the English vocabulary is Germanic, it forms the majority of words actually used in daily speech and is the bedrock of its grammar.
@kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
@kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 Год назад
I once had a professor describe English as a Germanic skeleton with Greco-Latin flesh and organs. I've always thought that was a pretty solid way to put it.
@bureau31
@bureau31 Год назад
You are right, 83% of the 1000 most used English words are Germanic in origin.
@adamthetired9319
@adamthetired9319 Год назад
The best way to disprove the false notion of English not being Germanic is to appeal to the fact that one can speak English using only Germanic words, but not using only Latin ones.
@maiqtheliar789
@maiqtheliar789 Год назад
English is three languages in a trench coat pretending to be one language.
@Alexbfd94
@Alexbfd94 Год назад
@@alfieingrouille1528 No such thing as a hybrid language. English is a germanic language. It's like saying that Japanese is a sinitic language because of all the Chinese loan words, or that Persian is semitic because of all the Arabic loan words.
@jeepmega629
@jeepmega629 8 месяцев назад
As an Italian I’m proud to be part of such a large family. Cheers and love to all my Indo-European Brothers and Sisters!
@alter388
@alter388 7 месяцев назад
I am an Indian who works with an Italian team member named Chiara. Interestingly my cousin in India is named Kiara ( Sanskrit). Both Sanskrit Kiara and Italian Chiara mean exactly the same :)
@Soap_bubbles591
@Soap_bubbles591 7 месяцев назад
We're everywhere from Europe to the Middle East and Asia , from Russia to America and Australia ....all we need is to be united .
@wor53lg50
@wor53lg50 7 месяцев назад
​​​@@Soap_bubbles591why and who is we're? , europe is a big place not all of europe is Indo-European languaged from beginning as well as many more countries its not global and dosnt mean zilch really..
@Soap_bubbles591
@Soap_bubbles591 7 месяцев назад
@wor53lg50 lol, why would an Indo-european unity cause any kind of worries ? I mean we have the Turkic-union serving the interests of diverse Turkic peoples from Mediteranea to western China , we have the Abrahamic unity , we have Semitic peoples of all kind of backgrounds united under one flag , and thats ok ....but why would anyone oppose to an Indo-european union serving the common interests of IE peoples worldwide ????? The term "Indo-european" is applied to the indengious Indo-european speakers spread across Europe , India( Asia) and later on expanded to other continents , it's not a geographical/ continental term, WE the speakers of Indo-european languages (with a shared proto-indo-european past and cultural ancestry )have the rights to be unified atleast on a cultural/ economical level . Why would anyone be threatened by that ? It doesn't mean that the non-Indo-europeans of any specific geography would get harmed or conspiraed against.
@wor53lg50
@wor53lg50 7 месяцев назад
@@Soap_bubbles591 im telling you it is like that in someparts of europe, even with their own kinds as with immigrants, keep pushing this narrative if you want to see it turn nasty eventually, and stop with making up bullshit to make brain dead idiots squeeze into whatever agenda getting pushefd.. Like i say they fuk about their gonna find out, you think GFA that all tools was handed in from both sides then you must be daft... Careful who you bully as you might bully the wrong person one day.... For the sake of common goals alliances will be made?..
@alainfischer592
@alainfischer592 Год назад
When I was in school, it was explained to me that basic English had the same roots as German. When the French speaking Normans invaded England in 1066, they imported French words that were used by the nobility. For example: The chair comes from the old French word "une chaire" (today we say une chaise). On the other hand in German a chair is eine Stuhl, which has the same root as stool. The example of Beef which comes from the French Bœuf is striking. For the farmers who only raise them it is ox (as in German die Ochse (pronounce like ox)). For the nobility who ate it is beef(Boeuf) !!
@alani3992
@alani3992 Год назад
Yes the nobility sat on chairs, & the peasants on stools.
@icyelsa9747
@icyelsa9747 Год назад
*"ein Stuhl" and "der Ochse" :)
@DerEiserneBuerger
@DerEiserneBuerger Год назад
Gut erklärt!
@BETOETE
@BETOETE Год назад
Lot of unnecesssary words adopted just for fad and we still have the original ones in used but as a secondary option. I'm talking about LOFT (air), bloom(flower), mught(power), thorp(village),stead(city), dale(valley) snd hundred of silly latin words like color, paint, picture, LANGUAGE(speach), people(should lbe as in German-related mann)....seems to me as a silly and devastating change(ugly latin, in spanish cambio or canje).
@DerEiserneBuerger
@DerEiserneBuerger Год назад
@@BETOETE Loft, bloom, mught and thorb are actually the Germanic words. Air, flower, power and village are the words of latin origin. I know that, because my native language is German, and when I hear words like loft, I immediately know what it means, because it is almost written and pronouced as "Luft" (Air in german)
@LauraMamMusic
@LauraMamMusic Год назад
I really want to see Sanskrit and its spread across southeast asia and asia. Also would love to know more about the interaction between latin and sanskrit
@alani3992
@alani3992 Год назад
Sanskrit wasn't 1 constant thing. It was just a scripture language that evolved by interaction with local languages.
@ssgvegapunk
@ssgvegapunk Год назад
@@alani3992 you've got it wrong indo-aryan languages evolved from Sanskrit and not the other way
@ritikshaw5868
@ritikshaw5868 Год назад
@@ssgvegapunk nope. Sanskrit one of the branches from the proto indo European language.. And remained fairly constant because of it being considered almost perfect and also almost exclusively used by priests and in scriptures and not wide spread used to allow the introduction of slangs which ultimately changes a language over time.
@ssgvegapunk
@ssgvegapunk Год назад
@@ritikshaw5868 i am talking about indo aryan languages not Indo european languages
@trollarasan
@trollarasan Год назад
@@alani3992 False sanskrit doesnt have any so called loan words from local languages as no local languages have been found other than indo aryan.
@underratedbub
@underratedbub Год назад
I'm a historical linguist of Indo-European and I love that you're covering this! I do see a good number of oversimplifications and mistakes, though, so if you're going to continue with historical linguistics as a topic, I highly recommend consulting with an Indo-Europeanist scholar to guide the discussion and smooth any oversights.
@lucadelaurentiis6907
@lucadelaurentiis6907 Год назад
Yes, as an Italian, in particular, I thought that the assertion that an Italian from Tuscany would rather better understand a Spanish speaker than another Italian from Sicily is veeeeeery far-fetched. For one, they didn't explain whether they meant a Standard Italian speaker or a Tuscan dialect speaker. In fact, even though modern Italian is largely based on the Florentine dialect (which is not the same as other dialects from other parts of Tuscany because of centuries of political and cultural fragmentation and rivalries dating back from the Medieval Comuni era), many purely Tuscan pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar features are completely obscure and outright "strange" to Italian speakers and I am quite sure that those would make a Spaniard appall and think they are talking to an alien. My guess is that they meant that Standard Italian and Standard Spanish are more mutually intelligible than Tuscan and Sicilian (and they would be right), but for this to be true you don't need to use a Tuscan as an example of an Italian speaker. They could have used an Italian from any other part of the country. Then again, thanks to the shared Standard Italian substratum between a Tuscan and a Sicilian, they would understand each other much much much better than they portrayed, even if they talked their respective dialects, maybe a bit watered down or intermixed with Standard Italian. That was confusing at best, and I immediately felt that was going to give a misrepresentation to foreign audiences not knowledgable of Italian culture. Plus, they inverted the colours of the flag and that pissed me ahah.
@anthonysaffioti9048
@anthonysaffioti9048 Год назад
@@lucadelaurentiis6907 Hmmmm not tooooo far fetched given the tone of the statement Perhaps if you are familiar with Sicilian then maybe you don’t experience the difficulties that others do?
@lucadelaurentiis6907
@lucadelaurentiis6907 Год назад
@@anthonysaffioti9048 I’m not, but let me get this straight: I think they should have made it clearer that they meant that an Italian, from whichever part of the country, would understand better a Spanish speaker than a person who speaks exclusively in their dialect from another part of Italy. I think that, in the way they put it, somebody could think that the Tuscan dialect (and not Standard Italian) is more mutually intelligible with Spanish than any two Italian dialects with each other.
@brodiekeown4494
@brodiekeown4494 Год назад
are you seriously gatekeeping Indo-European linguistic history? this channel covers a massive variety of historical subject matter. if you wanted content made by the worlds premier Indo-European linguistic historian......then go by his book. this channel give its viewers a remarkably in-depth and entertaining overview of a huge variety of historical subjects in 20- 60 mins. it is what it is....and its good. i dont have the time to go and earn a doctorate in every facet of human history that peaks my interest. i did not even have any idea that Indo-European common language was a thing until i saw this video......people are getting informed form this content. it may not be up to your PHD academic elitist standards but not everybody need to be an expert in your field.
@richmont9557
@richmont9557 Год назад
My brother in christ how do you make money doing that. I am considering studying that or a similar linguistic history but i have no clue how to make money with it
@rafaelparo2229
@rafaelparo2229 Год назад
Wow guys!!!! My mother-in-law who’s 72 yo and doesn’t speak English loved watching your videos but I had to constantly pause it and explain it to her. Not anymore! Thanks a million guys!!!!
@dovahkiin3379
@dovahkiin3379 Год назад
paid shill
@DDKKAY
@DDKKAY Год назад
But you didn't tell the mother Tongue of your Mother-in-law.
@timl9724
@timl9724 Год назад
@@dovahkiin3379 doubt it
@ARCHITACADEMY
@ARCHITACADEMY Год назад
@@dovahkiin3379 hey I wanna learn spanish and vids like these help
@dimojanev
@dimojanev Год назад
Профан
@jaythewolf
@jaythewolf Год назад
Full videos on Sanskrit, Baltic-Slavic and Germanic languages would be interesting. More videos like this in general would be appreciated. The evolution of language is really interesting!
@AoiUmiki
@AoiUmiki 9 месяцев назад
i´m agree
@craiovamilan94
@craiovamilan94 9 месяцев назад
Also Dacian, which also has relations to Baltic and Sanskrit (and possible cognates in Romanian and Albanian)
@patrickhayes3099
@patrickhayes3099 6 месяцев назад
Bring it!
@GreatPolishWingedHussars
@GreatPolishWingedHussars 24 дня назад
Slavic does not appear in the video! And that although the Slavic languages ​​are the most important languages ​​in Europe because these languages ​​are spoken in half of the European territories.
@t0mn8r35
@t0mn8r35 Год назад
This was really interesting. More language specific presentations please!
@euskaldunbat7074
@euskaldunbat7074 Год назад
Definitely, Basque deserves a video. The only pre-indoeuropean language that still survives in Europe, with no other known relative languages and with an unknown origin, and since late 20th century fighting for recovery against Spanish and French assimilation
@markiec8914
@markiec8914 Год назад
I would have to disagree, as ancient Finno-Ugric speakers are still represented in their native lands of Norway, Sweden and Finland (the Finns being the most numerous group of this non Indo-European language group in the Scandinavian/Baltic region).
@euskaldunbat7074
@euskaldunbat7074 Год назад
@@markiec8914 Definitely, Basque heritage is quite older, since they live in Western Europe before the first Indo-European wave of migration arrive, and that's one of the reason why philologists and historians can't trace their origin nor identify any related language family
@craiovamilan94
@craiovamilan94 9 месяцев назад
Some Balkan languages definitely kept elements and vocabulary from proto European languages of the region, but since the assimilated the Indo European invaders, language overall didn’t survive. Albanian and Romanian (through Dacian and Pelasgian) have some old links for example
@craiovamilan94
@craiovamilan94 9 месяцев назад
Also Latin’s true origin comes from the east as well - some linguists now believe that Dacian was very much a related language to Latin, which is why in less than 200 years and only 28% of Dacia conquered, they were speaking a form of Vulgar Latin so quickly. Meanwhile Romanian survived Slavic and Ottoman invasions. Dacian likely shared the same substratum with Latin
@malendil
@malendil 8 месяцев назад
@@markiec8914 Uralic languages are later in Scandinavia and the Baltic than the Indo-European expansion. They are not surviving ancient relics, but traces of a later expansion and in part they replaced IE languages (for example almost certainly this happened in Estonia). Speakers of ancient Saami arrived from Siberia in the Bronze Age, speakers of ancient Estonian/Finnish arrived to their current territory in the early Iron Age. The latter was a migration from just a bit further east (so still inside Europe), but Uralic languages are ultimately of Siberian origin and spread to Europe _after_ the Indo-European expansion. BTW, even when we look at the line of languages leading to modern Basque, there is no reason to assume that they have a longer presence in Europe (the whole of it) that Indo-European. Of course that group/family likely an ancient remnant in sense that it pre-dates the expansion of IE in SW Europe.
@NeroIML
@NeroIML Год назад
Something I've always found fascinating with how languages have evolved over time is that certain words change meaning so that one word's translation is rather different, but then is very close to another, related word. The thing that struck me in the video was that all the words for "honey" at 4:40 doesn't sound like honey at all, but is very similar to "mead" which is made from fermented honey. An example that I've seen used for comedic effect is the swedish word for "worm". In most germanic languages (and a few others) the word is very similar; german - "Wurm", danish - "orm, icelandic - "ormur", frisian - "wjirm", romanian - "vierme", jiddish - "vorem" etc. And then you have swedish, where instead the "worm"-like word "orm" means "snake", something similar in many respects when compared to a worm, but then the translation of "worm" is "mask", and I have no clue how that particular lingustic detail came about. (The translation of "mask", as in something that you use to cover your face, is "mask" in swedish as well)
@Timurv1234
@Timurv1234 Год назад
You know, the thing with the word for honey is very interesting. For example in Persian the word for wine is می (mey), but the form of the word is descended from the Indo-european word for honey through the process of semantic shift. They first made mead out of honey and that mead was obviously more important for their culture than just the honey. Then they started making other types of alcohol and the expanded the meaning of what was originally honey-wine. For example in Serbo-Croatian, the word for honey is “med”.
@The-Plaguefellow
@The-Plaguefellow Год назад
Reminds me that the Modern Standard German word for "poison" is "Gift", which is pronounced near-identically to the English word "Gift", simply meaning "presented item". In this case, "Gift" in English and German once meant the same thing, but the latter turned the word into a euphemism for "poison" due to ancient Greek-borrowed-by-Latin-borrowed-by-English word "dosis", meaning "gift(ing)" also being the word describing giving someone medicine... or, _poison_ more specifically. Presumably, the Old High German shift from "Gift" meaning, well, "gift" to meaning "poison" came about after they saw the Romans and their peculiar habit of assassinating each other by _gifting_ each other healthy _doses_ of poison.
@NeroIML
@NeroIML Год назад
@Morer R I think it's most germanic languages. Honey-like words are used in swedish, danish, norwegian, german, jiddish, dutch etc.
@human_isomer
@human_isomer Год назад
@Morer R true, while the modern German word for honey is _Honig_, which comes pretty close to the English. Some assume the word is derived from a meaning of "yellowish", which would make sense, because -ig (or -ich) in German and -y (or -ly) in English usually are markers for adjectives. However, as English is basically derived from an ancient form of German, the languages show a lot more similarities.
@democracytherepublic5451
@democracytherepublic5451 Год назад
It makes sense the swedish worm cannot mean worm because in old norse, the w in the beginning of words was dropped, therefore I could already see it comming that worm has to mean something with orm in swedish and Worm has to mean something else. All these differences start making sense once you know and understand how langauges do NOT change randomly but according to laws that govern how phonetics change according to an internal logic. It's almost like algebra. Btw. in older german text "wurm" could also mean snake. "Lindwurm" (old norse: Linnormr) is an old german word for dragons for example.
@UnkeptSpaceman
@UnkeptSpaceman Год назад
Great video! I'm from the Netherlands and saw that you didn't include the Frisian language. Even though it's spoken by the population of a small province, it has a strong following of speakers. It's the same for the Galician-, Bask- and Catalan language in Spain. Would be great to see a video about the same kind of “smaller” languages.
@YesSir-ms3uk
@YesSir-ms3uk Месяц назад
500k people speak it
@RachaelWill
@RachaelWill 27 дней назад
The guy didn't include whole indo aryan 😂
@GreatPolishWingedHussars
@GreatPolishWingedHussars 24 дня назад
Great video!? For Real? Can you really call this a great video even though the Slavic languages, as the most important languages ​​in Europe because they are spoken in half of the European territories, were ignored?
@davidgriffin1267
@davidgriffin1267 9 месяцев назад
Great video. Thanks for putting it all together. There must be many hours of research sunk into this 18 minutes and it is appreciated.
@rogeriocardoso8258
@rogeriocardoso8258 Год назад
As a Historical Linguist who deals with the Romance languages, I can't stop thanking Kings and Generals for such an outstanding video. You have even mentioned my country, Brazil, which has indeed developed its own variety of Portuguese. We're all eager to watch the next video on the remaining branches of indo-european languages.
@hanoi9316
@hanoi9316 Год назад
É mais facil achar no Mato Grosso o Português de Cabral de que em Portugal .
@hanoi9316
@hanoi9316 Год назад
O Brasil fala um português mais vocálico o Português da Galícia .
@joaoespecial4168
@joaoespecial4168 Год назад
As linguas divergem sempre, pela geografia e pela historia, deixando nelas vestigios desses lugares e tempos. Abraço desde Portugal!
@kohlerofvox2605
@kohlerofvox2605 Год назад
Shrikanth G Talegiri and Subhas Kak have done lot of research on this. Check them out
@funkmachine9094
@funkmachine9094 Год назад
zzZZzzzz..that's the same for any country that has been colonized lol
@LordThunderJunker
@LordThunderJunker Год назад
I was hoping you guys would cover the evolutions of the Slavic and Indo-Iranian families in this video. As it is, the title of this video oversells the topic somewhat. As a person of Indian descent, I'd be particularly interested in learning about the divergence between the Indic and Iranic languages.
@Lyallpuriya
@Lyallpuriya Год назад
Indic is a wrong term! Indo-Aryan and Irano-Aryan are much better terms for that because when we say Indic, people will assume that we are talking about "Indian languages", which also include Dravidian languages that are completely different from the Indo-Aryan languages.
@evaforte4706
@evaforte4706 Год назад
Yes, a bit of that. I am interested in learning the rest of the story: proto-indo-european, needs to include indo ( and Sanskrit) and the middle eastern language concerned ! I’m curious even as a French speaker
@Lyallpuriya
@Lyallpuriya Год назад
@vijiya That would be much better term
@shukracharya_
@shukracharya_ Год назад
@@evaforte4706 only few in middle east are part of indo European family like Persian hittie and mittani
@thecrimsondragon9744
@thecrimsondragon9744 Год назад
Agreed, too much focus on the Western end and not enough on the Eastern side.
@BassFlapper
@BassFlapper Год назад
Great video, I'd love to see more detailed videos on this subject. I was a bit confused about which period was being discussed at each time. It would be great to have the year counter constantly up.
@jonahruffalo640
@jonahruffalo640 Год назад
Amazing video guys! Truly one of The Best introductory explanations of this awesome topic. What thorough research and pleasing graphics!
@blerst7066
@blerst7066 Год назад
This video is surprisingly accurate, although you forgot to mention one important detail: The IE languages don't only have similar vocabulary, but certain sounds in one language will always correspond to another in another language. This is extremely important since loanwords, which don't show regular correspondences, can fog a language's origin. Without keeping this in mind you could end up classifying English as a Romance language or Korean as a Sinitic one.
@reynoldtanto4853
@reynoldtanto4853 Год назад
That's not happeneed a lot bruh. Or did u find in this vid?
@duckmeister5385
@duckmeister5385 9 месяцев назад
Grimm's law!
@Dorkus89Malorkus
@Dorkus89Malorkus 8 месяцев назад
I find it to be surprisingly inaccurate. There are a lot of small mistakes which all in all makes the video inaccurate.
@UlyssesJonah
@UlyssesJonah 7 месяцев назад
like what please@@Dorkus89Malorkus
@luzboroughlane7948
@luzboroughlane7948 7 месяцев назад
Examples? @@Dorkus89Malorkus
@KrishnakumarRa7797
@KrishnakumarRa7797 Год назад
Absolute support for a historical linguistics video on Indo-Iranian languages
@jimhjortsberg2990
@jimhjortsberg2990 Год назад
And Tocharian. The outlier of the IE languages that doesn't fit in with either eastern or western yet seemingly had elements of booth.
@beowulf555
@beowulf555 Год назад
@Paddy Bateman Yes, when you don’t have any research or methodology or even a logic at hand, strike of the other person by labeling them Hindu nationalist or using troll words or what ever. May be you should look at your self in the mirror and see you’ve stuck a white supremacist label on your forehead that triggered your insecurities when an old meaningless theory that doesn’t fit into your tiny meaningless world.
@exploringnaturalbeauty2102
@exploringnaturalbeauty2102 Год назад
@Paddy Bateman listen kiddo Aryan invasion theory has been proved false by the scientists , now it only represents language family ..
@josh33172
@josh33172 Год назад
The Kings and General team could not do wrong delving deeper into any of the languages and origins. Fantastic content!
@AndrewJeyaraj
@AndrewJeyaraj Год назад
The very first graphic highlighting a southern region of the subcontinent where people typically speak Tamil seems to imply that Portuguese has something in common with a Dravidian language, which is not the case.
@Nagvanshieus
@Nagvanshieus Месяц назад
Southern Kings, nobles and merchants spoke Sanskrit as it was a common court language.
@valley6824
@valley6824 Год назад
Actually you are right about the Albanian word “Perëndi”. Perëndi is also used to identify “God”. Perëndi-God. “O Perëndi e madhe çfarë ke bërë kështu?” - “Oh mighty God, what have you done?” We also have another word for that: Indefinite/Definite Albanian: Zot/Zoti. It derives from Proto-Albanian: Zojzi which is considered as the Father (Lighting and Sky God) from Albanian mythology. I am pretty sure that it has similarities with the Greek one Zeus. We are basically neighbors with them so yeah. Really a great video. Loved it and most importantly I loved seeing my native language in your video. Keep it up K&G.
@sharknextdoor
@sharknextdoor Год назад
Albanian language is ancient ,greek has changed form many times, even recently .
@Someone-jz5pl
@Someone-jz5pl Год назад
In this case what kind of god is tomorri? Isnt he the god of lightning?
@valley6824
@valley6824 Год назад
@@Someone-jz5pl to be fair I have never heard of Tomorri to be a God or such in Albanian Myths. I gotta look into it. It doesn’t even sound as an Albanian word even though I have heard of it mostly as a part of Muslim Saint which these small memorial placea are built in honor of him. Nothing more.
@nickkoss9384
@nickkoss9384 Год назад
And were are the ancient Albanian scripts? What museums keep them, in case we believe you and want to see them? You Albanians didn't even have a school up until 1889ac were your first school established in in Korce, up until then you used Greek, Italian na dlocal dialects.
@ahad1609
@ahad1609 Год назад
@@nickkoss9384 They are Messapic and Illyrian.
@somerandomguywithinternet7979
I find it pretty interesting that Albanian, Armenian and Greek are language isolates within the Indo-European language family. Edit: Come to think of it, that would actually make a pretty good idea for a video. Exploring how each of the languages evolved and how they actually managed to become isolates.
@NandiCollector
@NandiCollector Год назад
*I'm Albanian and I would like to see more info about these 3 different & unique branches of the Indo-European.*
@somerandomguywithinternet7979
@@NandiCollector That makes us two Albanians lol
@rehanansari009
@rehanansari009 Год назад
They are original indo European !!! There was indo geek kindom in Bacteria !!! Geeks marries to indian that time !!!!! All Europe people got indians words by ancient geeks !!!! This indo European theory is fake !!!!! Created by British to justify their colonial rule they wanted to show indian were not worthy enough !!!! White caucasian people came India and teach indian how to live ... Very bad concept and theory !! Austroasiatic people are living in india since 70000 thausand years
@adrianmaksutaj2446
@adrianmaksutaj2446 Год назад
@@somerandomguywithinternet7979 3 now
@amitabhbobby6472
@amitabhbobby6472 Год назад
Allah hu akbar there is no god except Allah and no language except Arabic
@maximegrenier3965
@maximegrenier3965 Год назад
Great Video!! And great that you added several languages. Please add more and keep up the amazing work!
@prateekyadav9811
@prateekyadav9811 11 месяцев назад
Great video, many thanks! Please make part 2 soon. I am especially interested in the extinct branches and the indo-iranian branch.
@udayankarmarkar
@udayankarmarkar Год назад
The Indo Iranian sub family definitely deserves a whole episode. it is as complex if not more than the Romance family. Arabic, Turkic and Dravidian languages have had major impacts on the evolution of the many modern languages, dialects and writing scripts present in this family. Studying history makes you realize that language is a dialect with an army and religion is a cult with an army 😊
@shehzadadarashikoh9463
@shehzadadarashikoh9463 Год назад
What! Indo Iranian is thousands times more complex than romance family
@Crysizz
@Crysizz Год назад
@Thinking human lol seriously
@anmolmonga1933
@anmolmonga1933 Год назад
@Thinking human I think you are very eurocentric. Entire Asia has been influenced by Indo-Iranian language family. There are Iranian or Sanskrit influence in every language of asia from and considerable parts of East Africa. From chinese-japense to swahili you can clearly see indo-iranian influence. Even English has at least 5% Indian language loanwords.
@Pistolero007
@Pistolero007 Год назад
@Thinking human indo-Iranian is ten times more complex and certainly more eloquent. Poetry is the ultimate showcase for use of masterful, eloquent language. And The best poetry is from the indo-Iranian languages - because they are more eloquent.
@juanrguezfdezdc9245
@juanrguezfdezdc9245 Год назад
As a spaniard, I wear my arabic influence with pride.
@Ashishkumarsingh472
@Ashishkumarsingh472 Год назад
Would love to know more about the Indo-Iranian language family and the 'indo' part of the Indo-European family. Awesome explanation though
@lookoutforchris
@lookoutforchris Год назад
I vote for this next as well. I’m very interested in the evolution of Indo-Iranian and Anatolian and their relation to the various Egyptian, Levantine, and Mesopotamian languages that shifted and changed with the growth and fall of empires including what happened with the Arabic invasions.
@haseebjokhio259
@haseebjokhio259 Год назад
Yes Indo Iranian language video
@WaterShowsProd
@WaterShowsProd Год назад
​@@Deepak_Dhakad And Asoka The Great was instrumental in that influence.
@jmab721
@jmab721 Год назад
Indo Iranians are the ones who created the chariot technology. Sintastha aryans being by far the most badass group.
@danielzhang1916
@danielzhang1916 Год назад
the other half of the family moved east to the Iranian plateau region and beyond, and developed further
@ktqw4199
@ktqw4199 Год назад
About ten years ago I read much about this kind of knowledge in books, although I was never a linguistic student.
@LarsRyeJeppesen
@LarsRyeJeppesen Год назад
This channel is just the best, an absolute gold mine
@alexcarter2542
@alexcarter2542 Год назад
Persian needs its own video. The fact that the Persian language even survived is what most historical linguists refer to as a miracle. It's basically the eastern version of Welsh. There is almost no reason why it should have survived. Both Wales and Iran were conquered by numerous empires and their languages faced historical suppression, censorship, and at times, attempts at downright extermination. A video on Persian is very much needed. I loved this video. I was hoping that once you guys did everything you could do with historical nationalism that you would get to historical linguistics. I am a historical linguist and so I have always found this topic incredibly interesting and I know that many other people find it fascinating as well, they just haven't had a chance to learn about it. Keep it up you guys are the best.
@ummelofilo9642
@ummelofilo9642 Год назад
I don't quite get what you mean. Iran, "conquered by numerous empires"? As far as I know, Iran was the one pumping out conquering empires, with the leading dynasty being persian half of the time. Wales, on the other hand, is just a small celtic remnant country, it lead no big empires or such, I don't get how they could be compared at all...
@alexcarter2542
@alexcarter2542 Год назад
@@ummelofilo9642 The land that is modern day Iran was conquered in 333 BCE by the Hellenic empire established by Alexander the Great and his army. The land was later conquered by the Islamic Rashidun Caliphate beginning in 633 CE beginning the Islamic era in Iran. After the Arabs, Iran was invaded by various Turkic peoples throughout the early middle ages until the Mongol empire conquered all of Persia in 1219 CE. Iran was finally brought back under native Persian rule by the early 1500s under the Safavid dynasty ending almost 1000 years of foreign rule. So you have first the Hellenic empire, then the Islamic empire, then the various Turkic kingdoms period, and then finally the Mongols under the Khanate. So if you don't want to count the Turks, that's three different major world empires, and that's not including any of the early Mesopotamian empires like the Assyrians, Babylonians, or the Akkadians, all of whom having invaded and controlled various portions of the Iranian lands. Also by the 1800s the Russian empire under the Czars began to invade and control lands previously held under Persian rule. So there has been an incredible amount of foreign influence in Iran over the centuries, and none more culturally-devastating than the Islamic Arabs, who pursued a policy of linguistic genocide, attempting to eradicate the Persian language for centuries. They were very nearly successful. For all intents and purposes, they WERE successful in destroying almost entirely the native religion of Iran, Zoroastrianism, a religion which today hosts a population of less than 30,000 adherents, albeit in a state so watered-down, it is barely recognizable to what it once was. This is why historical linguists refer to the survival of the Persian language as a minor miracle.
@ummelofilo9642
@ummelofilo9642 Год назад
@@alexcarter2542 I see. I did not know that.
@alexcarter2542
@alexcarter2542 Год назад
@@ummelofilo9642 Yes it's a really fascinating history. Also, I love your channel. You have a really great selection of international music! ❤️
@behiran2252
@behiran2252 Год назад
Irans strength has been in iranian culture .today 'iran is the oldest and the first living nation in the world.iranian language'culture'nationality religion and geographi have remained untoched for2500years.islam is on the verge of destrocation in iran.
@tamless260
@tamless260 Год назад
I am truly appreciative on how much research this channel does to bring us these incredible informative videos. The best in my opinion. 👌
@pushkarnalawade3039
@pushkarnalawade3039 Год назад
Finally a good comprehensive and map assisted video on all the branches of Indo-European... Great work guys...
@dimojanev
@dimojanev Год назад
Профан
@kitoro846
@kitoro846 4 месяца назад
This in one of the most interesting videos ive ever seen Thank you 🙏🏻
@Wolfeson28
@Wolfeson28 Год назад
Great video. I love the connection drawn between linguistic and biological evolution as well. As a biology teacher, I've used language families to help explain evolution in class for years, and this really helps emphasize some of the key concepts.
@dimojanev
@dimojanev Год назад
Профаниииии
@_Ocariao
@_Ocariao Год назад
At first I thought it was an ad. Wait, Brazilian Portuguese brilliantly inside of the atmosphere of the topic. You are evolving even more with time, glad to see how you are growing. Love from Brazil.
@itsmeagain966
@itsmeagain966 Год назад
This was such a fascinating and informative video thank you!!
@theamazingbatboy
@theamazingbatboy Год назад
Best video you've released and certainly the most epic in scope! Absolutely more, injected intravenously if you please. Would love to see an exploration of the Vedic/Persian dialects and also the famed Fertile Crescent and Semitic languages. You could even go right back to the Sumerians and their links to the Assyrian empire and beyond!
@feather1229
@feather1229 Год назад
उसके Asia की चरित्र पर और भो video बनाना है |
@brodiekeown4494
@brodiekeown4494 Год назад
dear mr. kings and generals. I love your in depth analysis of military history, tactics and logistics. i watch it every day. i just wanted to say that if find these videos on culture, language and society every bit as informative and entertaining. please do not stop feeding my mind with this insightful content. you honestly deserve a contract with streaming service. the knowledge you share with people should be mainstream in a advanced society. love your work, keep it up!
@Mercure250
@Mercure250 Год назад
As a big linguistics enthusiast and historical linguistics "buff", I think this is a very good video. You did a really good job with it. The only somewhat major mistakes I noticed are : - Grouping Italian with the Western Romance group. Standard Italian comes from the Tuscan dialect, which is not in the Western Group. Corsican is also not in the Western Group. - At 4:10 we see the word for "sew" as *swé in Proto-Indo-European. But *swé is the reflexive pronoun, related to "self" in English. The descendants showed in Greek, Latin, and Balto-Slavic are descendants of derivations of that reflexive pronoun. The correct PIE root for "sew" is *syewh₁- . The Sanskrit word showed here does come from that root, though. Other minor points I'd like to add : - The Italo-Celtic group is not firmly established, compared to other groups. I'm personally prudent about it, and prefer to view Celtic and Italic as completely distinct groups. - You should have made clear that Basque isn't an Indo-European language. Watching this video, I thought someone who knows little about it could think it is the case, when it's not. - I'm not quite sure what the asterisks at 4:10 represent. Normally, asterisks represent reconstructed forms, but it's clearly not what it represents here, since none of the Proto-Indo-European words have it, and most of the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Balto-Slavic don't have it either. - While I'm at this screen, I would like to point out that the word for "wine" in Germanic and Balto-Slavic are borrowed from Latin, rather than direct descendants of the PIE word. It's not really a big problem to not specify it, as the Latin word does come from the PIE word anyway, but I just wanted to point it out. - This is extremely minor, but the Polish flag at the beginning is put where Switzerland would be, and at 2:19, the Russian expansion should be extended to the South a bit, especially in the far East. I know I'm being nitpicky here. Anyway, I'm looking forward to more videos about historical linguistics. Just be careful about the Altaic family, it is extremely controversial and most linguists consider it pretty much refuted. Edit : Thanks to Corvus for pointing out "Deiwos" isn't Latin; I missed that one. It's Proto-Italic; the Latin word would be "Deus". In fact, the more I look at the Latin words, the more wrong they seem. "swezōr" is also Proto-Italic, not Latin. I'm not entire sure "māedus" is a word. And why does "edō" have an umlaut instead of a macron?
@syko6973
@syko6973 Год назад
Underrated comment
@Wann-zo7rn2qn4i
@Wann-zo7rn2qn4i Год назад
If there are so many major mistakes in a supposedly documentary video how could it be a "very good" video?
@syko6973
@syko6973 Год назад
@@Wann-zo7rn2qn4i Because it's still fairly accurate and very informative and does a very good job breaking down all the basics
@eldromedario3315
@eldromedario3315 Год назад
bump
@uglywolf88
@uglywolf88 Год назад
Also, something else worthy mentioning regarding the map in the beginning of the video: where is the Albanian language tag?
@RobCortez0416
@RobCortez0416 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for making this. Great video. Super informative.
@Soap_bubbles591
@Soap_bubbles591 7 месяцев назад
Why are you so great ? You know youre my favorite history channel ❤
@zoltanas77
@zoltanas77 Год назад
Happy to see you doing some unusual yet fascinating and deeply connected to history videos. Would love to see your take on Hungarian, Basque and Albanian.
@RogerFrankl
@RogerFrankl Год назад
Português
@chocho8036
@chocho8036 Год назад
Basque considered non Indo European, possibly arriving before the Indo european speakers, and remaining isolated to their mountainous communities enabling them to hold onto culture and language. There were other non indo european early Iberian languages on the Spanish peninsula, but they were subsumed, but still influence Spanish today , aiding in part to give the Spanish dialects their unique sound and vocabulary from Vulgar Latin . I read that Basque is the source of these lisp sounds in Castilian and other Spanish dialects as they influenced each other due to alliances formed from 800's through 1300's, 1400's.. the lisp is a sound not found in other indo european languages .. but the lisp is a sound not found in southern spanish like andalusian due to the Arab Umayyad Caliphate and other Arab reigns in southern Spain, which kept the Basque away from those regions
@gwen6622
@gwen6622 Год назад
hungarian and basque are not indo-european, though albanian is
@181ld7
@181ld7 Год назад
I would definitely be interested in any future videos regarding the Illyrian, Thracian, Dacian, and Albanian languages.
@AB-gb1om
@AB-gb1om Год назад
That ought to start a quality cursed RU-vid Balkan comments thread
@katerinakoule8315
@katerinakoule8315 Год назад
Same here!, I'd love such a video! there is so much controvercy about these languages!
@illyriipropiedictitrueilly3135
Norbert JOKL : "" The Albanian lanGUAge serves as a fiber that keeps the trunk alive and connetct this branches with roots. As you descent along this fiber to the wonders of history, strands can be affectedt. The Albanian language is a tool through which the seeker can illuminate the dawn of Albanian people's beginnings and immerse themselves in time that goes beyong the historical evidence "". Holger PEDERSEN :"" The Albanian lanGUAge is the only tool for enlightenment and moral progress "" Or ÇELSI ( CHELSEA SYMBOL = The key.. GIUSEPPE KATAPANO : "" Atlantida which disappeared 12,000 years ago, was the land of the Illyrians ( Pelasgians), who escaped the flood of Atlantis and began new civilzations on all continents, especially in Europe, Africa and Small Asia small "" &"" THOT ( =Says) SPOKE IN ALBANIAN "". HAROLD WHITEHAL :"" Egyptian hieroglyphics created, 4,000 years ago have Albanian significante "" & "" PHARA ON- FARA JON = OUR TRIBE (Same ). Joseph SCALIGER 1540 - 1609 :"" The epirotic language of the past is the Albanian language of today ""( EPER/ EPIR = UPPER ). SOURCE : GREEK ENCYCLOPEADIA VOL.19 P.873 :"" The grandfathers of today's Albanians therefore, that is, the Pelasgians, lived since prehistoric times in most parts of the world then known "" ( Russian, French, Britann Encyclopeadia). TROJE ( Troy) = LAND BANK, ILLYRIA ( Epir, E MATHIA ( Antic Macedonia), ARBOI ( Abroi ) HECATAEUS OF MILETUS 550 - 476 BC, Dardania ,Delmatia, Mesa pia - Brention ,Daunia ,Pia k(c) enia,E truria ( RU-vid : LinGUA Etrusca = LinGUA Albanese). Herodotus names the Pelasgians as inhabitants of PLAKIA and SYKALE : PLAKIA ( Alb. = GRANNY . GEORGIES BABINIOTIS:"" PLAKIA FROM ARBER / Arvanit language PLJAK ATHENA = Altes Athena "".
@ratatatuff
@ratatatuff Год назад
Illyrian never existed.
@enokasmi8001
@enokasmi8001 Год назад
Albanian and Illyrian are the same man
@GlaucioRSem
@GlaucioRSem 8 месяцев назад
Fantastic video, as always, K&G! 👏👏👏👏
@drakontas1
@drakontas1 Год назад
Excellent work as always! As about me I would love to see a detailed presentation of the Finno-Ugric languages.
@justarandomaspie4132
@justarandomaspie4132 Год назад
as an avid Fan of both maps and languages, I absolutly love this Video and Hope to see more content similar to this.
@juliamadelin3825
@juliamadelin3825 Год назад
As over my life I have learned several languages (French, German, Italian, Swedish and Spanish) this was absolutely fascinating. Just about everything I read I wonder about word origins . Travel does that to you! There are vocabulary linkages everywhere. Thank you very much
@michaeldeierhoi4096
@michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад
Well done review of the history of languages in primarily western Europe.
@raccoonboi969
@raccoonboi969 Год назад
this was fascinating and done in a way that made it easy to follow, thankyou
@endo4137
@endo4137 Год назад
This topic has always fascinated me, thank you for covering it!
@manfreds.6384
@manfreds.6384 Год назад
This is all LIES! Indian language pre date the "arrival" of the yamana people it was used in the harappan civilization. They are not even similar example look at the wine example only the sankrit was different.
@davidrichards8793
@davidrichards8793 Год назад
@@manfreds.6384 You do realize the Indus river valley civilization disappeared, sure maybe some words are used but there's more similarities than differences to write all of common day knowledge about North Indian languages off.
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Год назад
@@manfreds.6384 harapan was not indians they migrated there
@s_dharni2483
@s_dharni2483 Год назад
@@manfreds.6384 lanuages are dynamic in nature and changes with time. Dont be a ignorant, so digest it.
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Год назад
@@manfreds.6384 harrapa nobody knows who they was
@logank444
@logank444 Год назад
Could you imagine 8 thousand years ago you tell your brother you'll be back after a raid but you never come back. Instead you make a family. His line becomes Iranians and yours Scandinavian. We are so genetically similar yet we see one another as so different
@Carlos271aht
@Carlos271aht Год назад
Today's population of so distant countries are veeeery different. There are lots of genetic mixture throughout history
@valley6824
@valley6824 Год назад
Because we are different lol. That would be 8000 years ago. Their blood and ancestry would almost be gone. Like 0.1%.
@jacksonquinn8744
@jacksonquinn8744 Год назад
Culture culture culture. That defines our differences in plain language enough. We can look exactly the same but what really matters is what we see eye to eye on
@logank444
@logank444 Год назад
Could you imagine your brother or sisters family in say 5000 years becoming a completely diffrent race of people and on top of that you must now commit genocide because your genetics are more "pure" or some b.s. We have this idea that a race of people is smarter or better because are genetics are stronger when in fact 8000 doesnt make a difference genetically speaking. Culturally yes genetically no. That's my point. And if you dont agree with me you are dumb and it's because you come from the dumb sibling 8000 years ago
@logank444
@logank444 Год назад
@@valley6824 dude we are one of the most genetically similar species on earth. People across the world are more closely related then fucking the same species of birds 10 miles apart.
@shikhagupta4200
@shikhagupta4200 Год назад
Excellent piece of work, Ranbeer!! Hugely informative. I'm as it is a HUGE fan of this erudite gentleman ... and bece an even bigger one! Your questions were very well researched; pertinent and incisive! ☀️
@mayurkanth6987
@mayurkanth6987 Год назад
Ranbeer?? Who is Ranbeer?
@rgochina
@rgochina Год назад
Excellent video, thanks a lot for your work!
@keeganretzlaff6582
@keeganretzlaff6582 Год назад
Love this video, I find history of languages very fascinating. More please!
@ericbruce11
@ericbruce11 Год назад
Hell yes I'm so glad you did this video.
@Soap_bubbles591
@Soap_bubbles591 8 месяцев назад
Thank you kings and generals for being the best history page❤️
@user-md9yv7jx2c
@user-md9yv7jx2c 9 месяцев назад
Thanks, this helps wind up the bits and pieces for me.
@deanceliku4095
@deanceliku4095 Год назад
Really loved this video. Keep up with the great work. I hope that you guys continue to make language-related videos.
@erdaberg6968
@erdaberg6968 Год назад
I felt the same about Kurdish, a language spoken by a population of over 40 million people and a member of lndo-European family.
@msbee4768
@msbee4768 Год назад
I’m an indo-Iranian live in Myanmar , burmese is my native language! Burmese is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Myanmar (also known as Burma) ❤️ please make a video on our language group 😭 thank you for being so educating , 3/4 of history I know is I Learnt from your channel , our schools have poor educational systems so we should never learn these things there 😭❤️ May almighty bless you guys ❤️
@mrkslva4231
@mrkslva4231 Год назад
How are you indo iranian if you're native language is Burmese.
@chocho8036
@chocho8036 Год назад
@@mrkslva4231 i think they mean that it is the language they speak, first language, not indo iranian
@xeuoe1249
@xeuoe1249 Год назад
Hi from India From Northeast
@emperoroak7331
@emperoroak7331 Год назад
@@mrkslva4231 she’s mean , she’s a Indo -Iranian language but I’m think she’s might be Urdu or something, like that , but Yeah in Myanmar , we use Sino-Tibetan language - Burmese more related to Chinese and Tibet
@bratwurststattsucuk4517
@bratwurststattsucuk4517 Год назад
whats your ethnicity
@DontBeAfraid100
@DontBeAfraid100 Год назад
More language history videos!!! Loved this one! Would love to hear more about Anatolian, pre-Roman continental Celtic languages, or any other extinct languages. Also, what about a vid on Linear B? It's a fascinating story, ajd still a partially unsolved mystery.
@feather1229
@feather1229 Год назад
संस्कृत का क्या?
@null7879
@null7879 6 месяцев назад
@@feather1229jeet
@JakeJustIs
@JakeJustIs 5 месяцев назад
This was a good one. Thank you.
@Agastya_Prince
@Agastya_Prince Год назад
Cover the non-European languages in part 2. Would love to see Armenian, Persian, Sanskrit, etc.
@adrianvelez4147
@adrianvelez4147 Год назад
cant get enough of this channel
@christophercousins184
@christophercousins184 Год назад
Excellent presentation, as always!
@sheikowi
@sheikowi Год назад
Took a great shot at a very complex phenomenon. Looking forward to your future productions.
@sorayacatfriend
@sorayacatfriend Год назад
interesting that you brought up Vasco Da Gama's voyage to Southern India to start the video, because Southern India is the part of India (along with parts of Central and Northeastern India) where Indo-European languages AREN'T spoken.
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Год назад
@@supernovaversion3.05 very corect sanskrit aramaic was tongue of gods sumeryans annunaki probabil with turco mongols becuse the turkhis have same strong intonations vocabulary with latins and celts tongue
@basilbrushbooshieboosh5302
@basilbrushbooshieboosh5302 Год назад
Great episode. More on the Yamnaya thanks. ........ and the people who formed the Yamnaya, from the southern edge of the Ural mountains. Sounds something like the Shintasha I think. I watch every one of your vids, but this one was the best. Thanks
@mehrdad4784
@mehrdad4784 Год назад
Recently I was thinking about similarities between Persian and English words and this video came out really on time. there are many similar words like: door-dar, brother-baradar, father-pedar, mother-madar, daughter-dokhtar, thunder-tondar, typhoon-toophan, cow-gov, bad-bad, good-khoob, better-behtar, pressure-pheshar, new-nou, devil-div, fairy-pari. at first I thought some might be imported words but later I did find out that those are really old words before Europeans contacted us (I mean French and British people).
@shikhagupta4200
@shikhagupta4200 Год назад
Excellent discussion! Highly informative and beautifully comprehensive insights into the mind and strategies of our Glorious PM!!
@PENGAmurungu
@PENGAmurungu Год назад
I've been interested in this exact subject for a while but there's not a lot of easily digestible material out there, this video was perfect and I'd love to hear more, especially about the indo-iranian branch!
@danielzhang1916
@danielzhang1916 Год назад
I did my own research online and searched through videos, there is stuff out there
@kohlerofvox2605
@kohlerofvox2605 Год назад
Subhash Kak & Shrikanth G Talegiri have done lot of research on this. Check them out also
@abhinavchauhan7864
@abhinavchauhan7864 Год назад
@@kohlerofvox2605 lol lol lol. That bank Clark talegiri hasn't done any research on anything. He is a bank clarke not a scholar. Learn stuff from expert and scholars not from bank Clarkes
@clarion7018
@clarion7018 Год назад
Check out the Andronovo & BMAC cultures, that caused the spread of Indo-Iranian.
@joshuaimhoff659
@joshuaimhoff659 Год назад
Check out David Anthony and Razib Khan
@syedafzaalalishah3835
@syedafzaalalishah3835 Год назад
I am a Pashto native (Afghan language) and it surprises me when i find similar vocabulary and composition in languages like Polish and German and Russian, For example the Polish word Bohater and Pashto word Batur both means Hero/ Champion. The russian word Mozgu and Pashto Mazgu both means brain, And sometimes different words but similar composition and use. Astonishing!
@mongol100mongol3
@mongol100mongol3 Год назад
I believe both Batur and bohater originated from Mongolian word Bagatur which means hero. Mongols probably spread this in 13th century.
@syedafzaalalishah3835
@syedafzaalalishah3835 Год назад
@@mongol100mongol3 could be true but there are many other words too
@syedafzaalalishah3835
@syedafzaalalishah3835 Год назад
@@mongol100mongol3 the Slavic word for Axe (Topor) and Iranic word for Axe is Tabar, Pashto is Iranic and Polish is slavic
@sectorgovernor
@sectorgovernor Год назад
Hungarian is Uralic language, but we also have the word 'bátor' for 'brave'
@MarfSantangelo
@MarfSantangelo Год назад
@@sectorgovernor Yep! Some of the Turkic peoples whom the Magyars made contact with during their nomadic days also used "baghatur" as a word for hero, so that's to be expected.
@otterlyawesome8850
@otterlyawesome8850 Год назад
Lithuanian also is the closest cognate to Sanskrit, which isn't something people would expect. Also, Zeus and Jupiter come from an even older god, Dyaus or Dyaus Pitr. Sky Father from the proto Indo European and Indo Iranian. He is also a Rig Vedic god. Dyeus is a cognate with Zeus, Zeus Pater and Deipaturos
@treeaboo
@treeaboo 9 месяцев назад
Dyeus is also where "Deity" comes from in English.
@bijoydasudiya
@bijoydasudiya 8 месяцев назад
The name doesn't exist in Rig Veda though. Jupiter is Brihaspati or Guru.
@bijoydasudiya
@bijoydasudiya 8 месяцев назад
​@@treeabooDeva in Sanskrit.
@gediminaszilinskas1807
@gediminaszilinskas1807 6 месяцев назад
LIETUVIŲ KALBA PRIKLAUSO 10 SENIAUSIŲJŲ INDO - EUROPIETIŠKŲJŲ KALBŲ PASAULYJE, IR AIŠKIAI YRA ARTIMA - SENOVĖS INDIJOS SANSKRITUI ...Kai prieš 30 tūkstančių metų, savaime - pasitraukė į šiaurę : amžinasis ledynas - nuo Baltijos jūros, dabartinės Gyvenamosios - būtent šiaurinės dalies, Vidurio - Rytų Europos kontinento teritorijos ; tai prieš 7000 metų - atsikraustė gyventi - mūsų, Baltų Protėviai, iš kurių išsivystė : prūsų, sūduvių, jotvingių, lietuvių
@gediminaszilinskas1807
@gediminaszilinskas1807 6 месяцев назад
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@erfantavoosi100
@erfantavoosi100 Год назад
Could you make a video on the Indo-Iranian language family and how various sublanguages evolved?
@RandomNorwegianGuy.
@RandomNorwegianGuy. Год назад
As a Norwegian I often get alot of "Deja vu" moments when hearing/reading English, German and Dutch. Even the way some words in those languages is spoken is identical to Norwegian. One of my cousins is married to a Dutch girl, and she became fluent in Norwegian in almost record time
@danielzhang1916
@danielzhang1916 Год назад
not surprising, considering the Viking migration and language contact
@ewoudalliet1734
@ewoudalliet1734 Год назад
Vocabulary is extremely similar. Add to that, Norwegian (but also Swedish and Danish, not Icelandic though) grammar is really easy, even moreso if you're already familiar with another Germanic language.
@worndown8280
@worndown8280 Год назад
I remember I medieval movie about a knight, I think it was called Arn. Pretty sure it was in Swedish or Danish. It had subtitles, but I didnt need them. I dont speak either of those language though. Only English. As a side, now hard is it for you all to understand Finnish? Has it had any effect on your language?
@jiritichy7967
@jiritichy7967 Год назад
When you know English and German, learning Norwegian is relatively easy. And Dutch people? Amazing speakers of several languages.
@mutantpig4218
@mutantpig4218 Год назад
@@worndown8280 That`s interesting. And although I have no knowledge of Norwegian, but as a Hungarian speaker, Finnish sounds somehow familiar, maybe because of the harmonization. There are around 1000 words that we share, but altogether it`s still incomprehensible to the listener. And I guess it`s vice versa the same. I can say I understand the word "Talvisota", and I think of "Télicsata", but things like this are rare. talvi (winter) = téli, télvíz (winter) sota (war) = csata (battle)
@aaronmarks9366
@aaronmarks9366 Год назад
I'm a professional linguist, and I was delighted to see my favorite historical documentary channel put out a linguistics video today! Very well done, and I hope to see future videos on the other Indo-European branches as well as the multitude of other language families around the world. While it's impossible to go into detail in an overview video, it's worth noting that while the continental Celtic languages disappeared, the still exercised an influence on the Romance and Germanic languages that replaced them, particularly in some of the basic vocabulary of the Western Romance languages. Also, I conduct my professional research on the Indigenous languages of California. I'd love to help K&G produce a future video on the languages and history of the Native Californians! Please PM me if you're interested!
@zonda456
@zonda456 Год назад
Can you explain where Albanian language came from?
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Год назад
@@zonda456 from greek with turkhis influences greek sanskritic greco iranic bactrians
@zonda456
@zonda456 Год назад
@@venomvenom9926 lmao. Unfortunately we use non of their words in our language nor sentences. Thx for trying though
@kerimbabic6124
@kerimbabic6124 Год назад
@@zonda456 isn't albanian only surviving language of ilyrian branch of proto indo european??
@elainechubb971
@elainechubb971 Год назад
@@zonda456 Albanian is an Indo-European language in its own branch--the only surviving language in that branch (if there were others). The big branches are or were Romance (Latin-derived), Greek, Germanic, Slavic, Celtic (now not so big), Iranian, Indic (Hindi and Urdu). Smaller branches include Albanian, Lithuanian, and the now-dead Hittite. (This is not a complete list.)
@ManuelMartinez-bt5yg
@ManuelMartinez-bt5yg Год назад
Excelente explicación y calidad de producción, solo me hubiera gustado más que se presentará cronologíacamente la aparición y dominio paralelo y simultáneo en el mundo, la influencia por zonas y las mezclas , así podríamos ver desde su nacimiento, evolución o transformación al mezclarse con otras y su fin.
@mieciu9239
@mieciu9239 11 месяцев назад
WOW! Thank you for this video!
@byzantinetales
@byzantinetales Год назад
I will add the endagered Grico languages of southern Italy in the Greek branch. Also there are still a few speakers of Romeyka(Roman language) which is now called Pontic dialect of Greek.
@A_Saddler
@A_Saddler Год назад
Always thought Indo-European was a lot older than 4000BC. There must've been so many other languages in Europe before then that are now lost to pre-recorded history...
@michaellejeune7715
@michaellejeune7715 Год назад
Yes, and so much culture and mythology that we barely know of. Some gods and stories may have survived and been adapted into Greek mythology (from Pelasgian, Minoan and Cycladic predecessors), but other than that, Basque is probably the only language that actually survived.
@fallendown8828
@fallendown8828 Год назад
Yeah isn't some people in Iberia (Western one not the east) most in Galicia spoke a non indo-european language in Roman times? Also Etruscan could be non indo-european as well since we don't have enough evidence to say for sure and of course Basque is a language with tens of thousands of speakers and it is for sure isn't indo-european and a good example that people lived in Europe before indo-europeans came
@manfreds.6384
@manfreds.6384 Год назад
They was no Indo-European culture, it is only due the the brits seeing light skinned Indians ruling over dark skinned Indians. They believe their ancestors travel all the way to India just to subjugate brown people. PLEASE! Stop believing these LIES Indian culture and language long before these so called yamana people.
@DarthMatusHolocron
@DarthMatusHolocron Год назад
It is much older. Indo-European/Aryan stuff can get traced back to 12,000 BCE and there's some tertiary evidence for longer. These things play out over EONS. I feel like many people are a bit behind on the research, and as such they don't truly appreciate the gulfs of time we are dealing with. But I can assure you, the journey described in this video unfolded over many thousands of years, going back to the Neolithic
@Turin_Turumba
@Turin_Turumba Год назад
Me too, but the earliest that I knew of was the Hittites
@Dave_Sisson
@Dave_Sisson Год назад
Great stuff. I'd like to see a bit on the non Indo-European languages of Europe such as Basque and Finnish/Estonian. Also, what languages was Pictish related to, was it Brythonic - Proto-Welsh or something different?
@kingdomofgeorgia1751
@kingdomofgeorgia1751 4 месяца назад
Georgian, Circassian and Ingush are not Indo-European languages. They are Caucasian languages.
@donnysandley4649
@donnysandley4649 Год назад
This channel's content is always top notch 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@spherical89
@spherical89 Год назад
loved the video ♥️ would love to see a video about the slavic languages
@OctaviusRomulus
@OctaviusRomulus Год назад
This is probably the best overview of Indo European language families that I've ever seen. Exceptionally well done.
@circuitsandparts
@circuitsandparts 10 месяцев назад
As usual... This KnG video is an example outstanding research.
@user-hg1es8wi1v
@user-hg1es8wi1v 11 месяцев назад
这期视频说的太好了❤❤
@stephenschroeder6567
@stephenschroeder6567 Год назад
Outstanding presentation! I wish this had been out around a year ago when I was studying these topics during my overall anthropology degree program. I know my classmates would have enjoyed the concise overview. I plan to feature it in the classes I teach. Please continue your work. It has great value! 😎
@-----REDACTED-----
@-----REDACTED----- Год назад
Christopher Beckwith‘s “Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present” is highly interesting and about the indo-germanic language
@dimojanev
@dimojanev Год назад
Профан
@badwolf963
@badwolf963 Год назад
now its added to my knowledge how language revolutionise😊kudos to the narrator very fluent in english&other languages very linguistic
@knockemoutjohnjustjohn2763
@knockemoutjohnjustjohn2763 Год назад
Loved the video. As an American I speak an unintelligible version of English. Even as lower middle class person it's very easy to note how our language is spoken. There are vast differences depending largely on class, education, even geographic, ie. rural or urban . And that's just in my little slice of eastern Iowa. Thank you very much for this video. It was fascinating. God bless and keep your powder dry. The ugly gentile putz.......John
@modicantspeakenglish
@modicantspeakenglish Год назад
America is will always be my 2nd home though I don't live there any more. Being admitted at Iowa state university 27 years ago fulfilled my urge to be in the USA. Apart from all the bitterness I'd say USA & the American are the coolest people in the world. The media screwed all the people. Take care & good luck from your Bangladeshi siblings.
@bentufte7774
@bentufte7774 Год назад
This is super interesting, and I'd love videos on other branches of Indo-European languages; but I'd also be fascinated with videos about other language families like those in East Asia or the Americas
@cu9424
@cu9424 Год назад
In America, the Spanish language predominates, which comes from Latin but is no longer. Even the word 'America' is a Latinization of the Italian Latin name Amerigo Vespucci, which can also be Americus or Americvs Vespvcci, which is also understood in Spanish and not in English. America the continent, is clear evidence that Spanish is dominant in most Spanish-speaking American countries. Only Canada and the United States which are English (Germanic) speaking.
@99068401
@99068401 Год назад
Parabéns pelo vídeo, e obrigado por traduzir.
@larysacherner312
@larysacherner312 10 месяцев назад
I really enjoyed the video. Please make the 2 part, on Slavic languages etc
@moongrass217
@moongrass217 Год назад
Eagerly waiting for the next episode
@Arviragus13
@Arviragus13 Год назад
It's worth noting that Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian, and the Sami languages aren't Indo-European, but are part of the unrelated Uralic family, and also that Basque is a language isolate with no living relatives
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Год назад
Grover S. Krantz (1931-2002), a world-renowned American anthropologist and professor at Washington State University, in his work "The Geographical Formation of European Languages", recognizes Hungarian, which until now has been treated as a stepchild of Europe, as the founder of Europe's civilization. According to him, the u.n. "Indo-European languages" developed very late in Europe. That is why 30% of their vocabulary is not of "Indo-European" origin, and there are no "Indo-European" river names on the early maps of Europe. We are more interested in the following sentence: "...so the Greek language was formed in its current location in 6500 BC, and the Celtic language in Ireland in 3500 BC. The antiquity of the Hungarian language in the Carpathian Basin is similarly surprising; I find that its origins lead to the Mesolithic, preceding the Stone Age." Furthermore: "At least on one important point, the theory of people's migration is the opposite of the previous theorem. It is generally believed that the Hungarians of the Urals lived in the 9th century. century, they moved into the Carpathian basin from an eastern area. I find that all groups speaking the Uralic language spread from Hungary, in a much earlier age, in the opposite direction." Grover S. Krantz, The Geographical Formation of European Languages. (Ősi Örökségünk Alapítvány, Budapest, 2000) Original title and publisher of the work: Geographical Development of European Languages ​​Peter Lang Publishing Inc. New York 1988. Translated by: Imre Kálmán
@ahG7na4
@ahG7na4 Год назад
​@@benyovszkyistvan408 no offense but sounds like Fomenkoism. every newly independent state in the 1990's seems to have had one of these "everything great is secretly ours" kinds of ideologies, I wonder why
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Год назад
@@ahG7na4 I am not offended, but if you have a problem with the American scientist's book, then write your own book in which you refute your claims. Until you do that, Grover S. Krantz is the more credible of the two of you. No one has refuted his book in nearly 40 years...
@Basil-HD
@Basil-HD Год назад
Very good video. It should have some little details though about the variations of the medieval greek dialects like kappadocian, mariupol, pontic, griko and cypriot greek.
@chocho8036
@chocho8036 Год назад
kappadocian is greek ? what ? fascinating ! i spent a. couple months there because i think it's gorgeous for hiking around , had no idea about the language
@sumanmishra269
@sumanmishra269 7 месяцев назад
Thankyou so much sir ❤❤😊🙏🥰
@anjavojnic9634
@anjavojnic9634 Год назад
Can you do part two of this? Im really interested in a second video... Or maybe more videos about languages!
@ghanshyam1990
@ghanshyam1990 Год назад
I remember Ubisoft made a game Far Cry Primal where the studio tried to recreate a common Indo European language. A Hindi and English speaker myself I was able to understand quite a lot of it.
@adamshafi541
@adamshafi541 Год назад
Please cover Indo-Iranian! I had always thought it was the closest to the original indo-Aryan language and had the most cultural influence
@alonecoder600
@alonecoder600 Год назад
@Roche Ferero Steppe hypothesis shown in the video is now outdated. Most scholars believe now that Proto-Indo-Europeans came from Anatolia and/or Balkans. That's the place where most of the groups were first documented. Including the Indo-Iranians (see Mitanni Aryan).
@awedelen2
@awedelen2 7 месяцев назад
This story is marvelous.
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