+souhaibz not your brothers. language is the only bit and not entirely whatless than 200 years arab occupation left. so don't get excited.... not your brothers so back off
+souhaibz exactly so no more than even less than 200 arab occupation and nothing else plus ppl from malta better understand syrian or lebanese than tunisian, so jog on with your shit
I've noticed when Maltese people talk to each other that (every so often) they throw in an English sentence. Not just and English word or phrase but a full English sentence!
@@adamwoolgar5624 Not necessarily. I am bi-lingual with English being the dominant language. Every now and again l find myself throwing in a Maltese sentence even if the other person only speaks English. This may emerge in times of stress or particularly if l need to express something but don't really want the other person to know what l am saying. I may be swearing for example. Sometimes l may be speaking English and throw in a Maltese sentence when talking to someone who does understand the language simply because l can. Father is an example. Having two languages means l have two ways to express myself at my disposal and can revert from one to the other.
Does the meaning of the series in english translatin is(one way) ? As i am arab and i can understand it reaaly strange i didnt learn it but it sounds arabic
Blood had nothing to do with it. In fact the Maltese are of Sicilian and South Italian genetics. And as the Maltese came from Sicily so did the language. This language which is known as Siculo-Arab (an Arab dialect) died off in Sicily due to the "Florence", Italian being imposed on to the whole of Italy. However this did not happen in Malta and so Siculo-Arabic thrived there. Later on down the centuries more Latin words were introduced into Maltese along with many Italian, French and English amongst others. Eventually making in a different language standing on its own.
The *Maltese people* are justly proud of their *Arab* heritage, *Arab* roots, *Arab* traditions, *Arab* ways, *Arab* culture, *Arab* blood and their *Arab* language despite the input or pollution of Italian vocabulary. Most Maltese regard their country as just a Christian, Europeanised and whiter part of Tunisia. And most would like to see Malta and Tunisia merge into one country and be called either Maltisia or Tumalta. Many Maltese are now waking up to this and are discovering their *TRUE roots* despite the Zionist propaganda. They can clearly see the similarities between spoken Maltese and Tunisian dialect Arabic on RU-vid videos and elsewhere. The similarities are blindingly obvious! As a Tunisian Arab it makes me so proud to hear this wonderful language in a written romanised form. seeing our Arab brothers visiting the island and speaking with our cousins and feeling so at home! It warms my Arab heart. Many Arabs, like myself see Malta as something or rather a Arab child which has been 'stolen' from its Arab mother and will be returned one day to its RIGHTFUL parent! Inshallah! Say *YES* to pure Maltese ✔️🇲🇹➕🇹🇳➕🇩🇿➕🇱🇾✔️ Just say *NO* to polluted Maltese ☢️❌🇮🇹❌🏴❌🇫🇷❌🇪🇺❌☢️
?? It’s not that Serious lol, also Malta has its own culture it’s mot Tunisia and I’m saying this as an Arab. This is like thinking every Arab country should be part of Saudi Arabia since they speak Arabic
The Maltese are lovely people and I love the island: one of the best islands to visit in Europe, but this language is ugly for me, I am sorry. I don't like he sound of Arabic and this is too similar.