Mistakes: 1. What you said was "C" for cryillic was actually a letter combo named 'TS' 2. What you said was "C" for Greek was a letter representing 'G' named "gamma" 3. Greek does not have a distinct "F" letter. The closets thing to F in greek is "phi" making the 'ph' sound 4. For greek you said "gamma" was C and G??? 5. Greek does not have J (i don't think maybe i am wrong). You used "Iota" 'I' as J 6. What you used as "Q" for Greek is a deleted letter 7. Greek "Upsilon" 'U' is only used as U in most cases. Whenever a 'V' sound is made in greek it will use "Beta" 'b' 8. Cryillic commonly does not have X. The letter you used is "X" which can be used for 'KH' and 'H' but not X. Just because it looks like X doesn't need it means X 9. Greek does not have X the letter you used was "X" meaning 'CH' not 'X' 10. Greek letter "Upsilon" is *N O T* a 'Y'. It looks like Y but it does *NOT* mean Y. Commonly used as U and U only There was 10 total mistakes inside this video which some people may think are real uses for letters
Mistake 3, 5, 6, 8 and 9 are Wrong, Greek does have a distinct "F" Letter called digamma, Greek does have J and J is derived from Iota, Q for Greek is not a deleted letter, it's actually archaic and the letter is called qoppa, Kha can also be used for X for Romanization and Kh is a true pronunciation for X and Greek does have X as it sometimes romanized and X is derived from Chi. This is just a correction
*BUT:* 1. Ц is Cyrillic's only *closest* equivalent to C. 2. Γ was splitted into C *AND* G in the late Romans. 3. Ϳ (U+037F) was Greek's J. 4. Though Beta makes a /v/ sound, Upsilon was splitted to *U, V, W AND Y*. 5. When Upsilon is being connected to Alpha or Epsilon, it makes the /v/ sound. There are 5 proofs that contradicts what you say.
Letters for Cyrillic and Greek: W - russian Уу or belarusian🇧🇾 Ўў (Cyrillic) X - greek🇬🇷 Ξξ (Greek) Q - kazakh🇰🇿 Ққ (Cyrillic) V - greek🇬🇷 Ββ (Greek) F - greek🇬🇷 Φφ (Greek)
The order you wrote them all in makes no sense, and you made mistakes as to the link between letters. Η in greek gave И in cyrillic and Ν in greek gave Н in cyrillic. Also Ι in greek gave I in cyrillic (see ukrainian who kept it). I could go on and on but yeah something’s definitely wrong about this. Also Cyrillic is not ONLY russian. If you really wanted to be accurate there would be far more letters but I think I’ve ranted for too long. writing is pretty as always
I think he made a pretty good list, but I would have placed a F (can't type the ancient [wow]) for the greek W and the Cyrillic mix is pretty weird indeed, Kazach would have a sign for Q (but that one might seems a bit irrelevant here since it derived from К) and isn't Й for Y/Υ a bit weird (I'm really not sure about that)? I'm not an expert btw so maybe I'm wrong... But well done, dear creator!
@@Helvetia-1 it is or isn't wierd, it just depends on the romanization. Most slavic languages like czech which are written in latin use j for that softening sound, whereas for some reason that i do not know, the romanization for russian and ukrainian and all that stuff throws those conventions out of the window, including the accents for sounds like ž and such and skipped to diagraphs with zh, sh and all that shit. This includes j being replaced by y for й and such.
Очень интересно смотреть видосы, видно, что это рост мастера. Поэтому, если не укажу на фактические ошибки, то проявлю неуважение. Е в русском это И. I а русском это тоже И. (русская Е это английское YE). X в руссеом не закрывают иксом, в русском это КС. W - тут можно ничего не ставить, но русские активно произносят её как В.
I’ve been following this channel for a little bit! I’m a collector of Old Japanese swords and military from ages ago. This has helped me amazingly!!!!!! So THANK YOU!!!!
I dont know a lot of greek, but i think there is a letter wrong. The F it should be like F/Ф/Φ, i think the greek letter that you wrote doesn't exist. I search it but i can't find it. If you can tell me where it comes from that greek "F" I would appreciate it. Anyway good video.
I know what is q for greek. Apparently coptic alphabet has 32 letters. That way you could search shai. The 26th letter from the coptic alphabet. Omega (lowercase version) with a tail.
Қ: K with descender (Qaf) Ң: N with descender Һ: H Ҷ: Ch with descender Ҳ: H with descender Ӣ: I with macron Ә: Schwa Ҭ: T with descender Ҟ: K with stroke Ҵ: T Ts Ҩ: O-hook Ӡ: Abkhaz Dz Ҽ: Abkhaz Ch Ҿ: Abkhaz Ch with descender Җ: Zh with descender (zhj) Link of non-Slavic Cyrillic letter: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillic_script
@@leeshangjinmoe5848I agree, Cyrillic W is We (Which is almost the same as Latin W), and either Qa (Used in Kurdish), or Early Cyrillic Koppa which is based of Greek Koppa, which is the source of Latin Q.
you have to understand that they aren't english and russian, they're latin and cyrillic, and-well-you have to know that a lot is CORRECT unlike you think. You have to know about other language sounds as well as evolution of languages to know why GAMMA is the greek equivalent of both C and G
I was wondering if you could write something in Japanese for me. I don't know if this translates correctly. "My mind wanders in the garden of wonders" Whenever I do any paintings, I like to imagine I'm in a garden instead of sitting at desk.
Can you upload a video where you turn the letters of the English alphabet into the animals whose names start with them pwetty pwease with sugah on top?
ф is the Greek f ќ is the Cyrillic q ў is Cyrillic w β is Greek v because vē(t)ā it makes the b and the v sound Greek x is ξ it makes the (ks) sound like the x sound Greek w is ω it makes the w and the o sound Greek y is the ϋ it makes the y sound