Can German and Yiddish Speakers Understand Each Other?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2025

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast  3 года назад +705

    Be sure to check out the short documentary I've made on Yiddish and its history:
    ruclips.net/video/-W7o-xTz058/видео.html
    Hope you enjoy this week's episode as we feature the Yiddish language for the first time!
    I would also like to share the link to Pinchas' Virtuoso Music page: instagram.com/virtuosolessons/
    Please follow and contact us on Instagram if you have any suggestions or if you speak a language that has not been featured before and would like to participate in a future video: instagram.com/BahadorAlast
    === Transliteration of the Yiddish part: ===
    א מענטש טראכט און גאט לאכט
    a mentsh trakht aun gat lakht
    זאלסטו וואקסן ווי א ציבעלע - מיטן קאפ אין דר'ערד און די פיס ארויף
    Zolstu vaksn vi a tzibele - mitn kop in dr'erd un di fis aroyf
    זאלסט פארלירן אלע ציינער א חוץ פון איינעם, און דער זאל דיר וויי טאן
    ‏Zolst farlirn alle tseyner achuts eynem, un der zol dir vey ton
    און דער נעמיראָווער פֿלעגט סליחות־צײַט יעדן פֿרימאָרגן נעלם ווערן, פֿאַרשווינדן
    מען פֿלעגט אים נישט זען אין ערגעץ: נישט אין שול, נישט אין ביידע בתּי־מדרשים, נישט בײַ אַ מנין, און אין דער היים אַוודאי און אַוודאי נישט. די שטוב איז געשטאַנען אָפֿן. ווער עס האָט געוואָלט, איז אַרײַן און אַרויס געגאַנגען: געגנבֿעט בײַם רבין האָט מען נישט, אָבער קיין לעבעדיק באַשעפֿעניש איז אין שטוב געווען
    Un der Nemirover flegt sliches tzeit yedn frimorgen neelam vern, farshvundn. Men flegt im nisht zen in ergetz: nisht in shul, nisht in baide botei midroshim, nisht by a minyan un in der heim avadai nisht. Di shtub iz geshtanen ofen. Ver es hot gevolt, is arein un arois gegangen. Gegannvet beim Robin hot men nisht ober kein lebedike bashefenish iz in shtub geven.

    • @franzaepinus2498
      @franzaepinus2498 3 года назад +6

      Just when I think you've topped yourself you come out with something interesting again! Well done!!

    • @doncorleone3082
      @doncorleone3082 3 года назад +3

      Is Yiddish still spoken in Germany or Central Europe?

    • @longlivepalestine8134
      @longlivepalestine8134 3 года назад +7

      I respect Yiddish because this is the language spoken by anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews, including the Neturei Karta, who are very active in standing against Zionism and supporting Palestine. While we are seeing that than most Arabs and Muslims of today are abandoning Palestine or using it for their politics only.

    • @faizullah6671
      @faizullah6671 3 года назад +2

      Please more videos with Bengali.

    • @santosh-un2bj
      @santosh-un2bj 3 года назад +8

      Sir in India we have Cochin Jews and they speaking Judeo-Malayalam and also we have bigger community that is Bene Israel and they are speaking the Judeo-Marathi

  • @shelbygabriellelafollette73
    @shelbygabriellelafollette73 3 года назад +11385

    That awkward moment when you can understand a Yiddish speaker better than Swiss German speakers in Zurich and Lucerne. XD

    • @hassanjamal4212
      @hassanjamal4212 3 года назад +47

      Can u understand hebrew

    • @j-e
      @j-e 3 года назад +536

      Hey was isch ächt schwirig a Schwiizerdütsch? Völlig easy 🇨🇭

    • @generalstrike7187
      @generalstrike7187 3 года назад +430

      @@hassanjamal4212 Hebrew is a totally different language family to both German and Yiddish.

    • @hassanjamal4212
      @hassanjamal4212 3 года назад +48

      @@generalstrike7187 not really... modern hebrew is just a mish mash of various languages esp yiddish and german

    • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
      @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture 3 года назад +92

      When I worked in what was then West Germany in Ueberlingen am Bodensee. I found the regional dialect pronounced many words the same as in Yiddish and the indefinite article was also the same. However, the two are distinct languages. Also, the diminutive in Yiddish is the same in Southern Germany.

  • @nelegrund5041
    @nelegrund5041 3 года назад +6770

    As a German, I very much relate to the German guy having the worst internet connection 😂

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +236

      Hahaha das beste Kommentar was hier drunter zu finden ist!😂

    • @hitzkinnemaher248
      @hitzkinnemaher248 3 года назад +22

      Uff

    • @throngalaxyxy2862
      @throngalaxyxy2862 3 года назад +19

      True

    • @Sam-cj1nr
      @Sam-cj1nr 3 года назад +91

      Neuland

    • @Stiegelzeine
      @Stiegelzeine 3 года назад +28

      Woran willst du denn erkennen das er schlechtes Internet hat? Hat er das irgendwo gesagt oder hatte er irgendwo Internet Probleme im Video? Oder denkst du weil seine Kamera nur in 30fps aufnimmt das er schlechtes Internet hat?

  • @karou.8947
    @karou.8947 3 года назад +2524

    Classic German move. "Say something in German!" (Guy presents one of the longest sentences he could come up with)

    • @unnutz5231
      @unnutz5231 3 года назад +141

      Some long Word like Donaudampfschiffgeselschaftfahrtkäpitänkombüseentürschlüsselanhänger could also be funny.

    • @karou.8947
      @karou.8947 3 года назад +122

      @@unnutz5231 a Dutch friend recently had to put up with Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher and was quite shocked to learn that this really exists :')

    • @unnutz5231
      @unnutz5231 3 года назад +35

      @@karou.8947 Sometimes German Words like Dreirädrigerkipplader sounds als funny for me.
      I had to google it ,to belive that germans uses this word in serious context.

    • @karou.8947
      @karou.8947 3 года назад +1

      @@unnutz5231 what's your native language if I may ask?

    • @Kig_Ama
      @Kig_Ama 3 года назад +10

      @@unnutz5231 German is a lot of things but not funny at all.

  • @GrimReaper-rc7fs
    @GrimReaper-rc7fs Год назад +771

    A Jew, a German and a Persian go into a bar... or just have a conversation and have a good time. This is the world I want to live in.

    • @JaWilli96
      @JaWilli96 Год назад +9

      You do!

    • @jaredini
      @jaredini 11 месяцев назад +28

      Go to Israel and this is the reality.

    • @JacobIX99
      @JacobIX99 9 месяцев назад +32

      Well, I'm from a Persian and Babylonian Jew ("Mizrahi"), and up till the Islamic revolution Persians and Jews were the most close friends culturally and historically.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto 9 месяцев назад

      @@jaredinigood one. The genocidal pigs made sure that is impossible

    • @theQueen.
      @theQueen. 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@JacobIX99 false, persians colonized us and enslaved us.. so, no

  • @vanessagiesbrecht4885
    @vanessagiesbrecht4885 3 года назад +2770

    "Du sollst alle deine Zähne verlieren bis auf einen, und der soll dir wehtun" SAVAGEEEEE

  • @compphysgeek
    @compphysgeek 3 года назад +4083

    good to see an Iranian, Jew and German having a good time together. That's how it should always be.

    • @sonjarutkowsky4140
      @sonjarutkowsky4140 2 года назад +158

      Das is so wunderschoen wenn Menschen miteinander Freundlich sein koennen ❣️ ❣️

    • @muratbektas5290
      @muratbektas5290 2 года назад +87

      Actually german boy is a turkish orginally:)

    • @compphysgeek
      @compphysgeek 2 года назад +8

      @Luis Alonzo hopefully.

    • @Nellsbells79
      @Nellsbells79 2 года назад +120

      An Iranian, a Jew and a German walked into a bar…… as the old joke goes 😉 everyone had a great time

    • @WisdomPrevails369
      @WisdomPrevails369 2 года назад

      Now Germany is a shit hole, Cohencidence?

  • @myralove1651
    @myralove1651 3 года назад +1908

    My mother was a Yiddish speaker. I grew up hearing it but not speaking it much. I did study German in college and learned it fairly easily because I understood Yiddish. When I was 19, I spent a summer in Germany studying at a program for foreign students. When the course was over my mother came to travel with me. She had help getting from Amsterdam to Germany. Two older German women helped her and she spoke Yiddish to them on the train and they spoke a German dialect to her. When we ran into one of the German ladies, my mother asked me to speak to her in German, which I did, but in standard Hochdeutsch which I was studying. The lady smiled and said my German was pretty good, but my mother's was better! I told Mom and she replied, of course, "For this I sent you to college?"

    • @manuelkluge383
      @manuelkluge383 3 года назад +142

      The ladies surely spoke 'Plattdeutsch', comes close.

    • @myralove1651
      @myralove1651 3 года назад +103

      @@manuelkluge383 Yes, they did speak Plattdeutsch. We were in Kiel.

    • @JonaxII
      @JonaxII 3 года назад +6

      @@myralove1651 hi fellow kieler

    • @myralove1651
      @myralove1651 3 года назад +10

      @@JonaxII I’m not from Kiel, but spent a bit of time studying in Kiel a long time ago. When I went back to visit the city hD grown and changed. It was amazing!

    • @Hun_Uinaq
      @Hun_Uinaq 3 года назад +27

      @@manuelkluge383 not possible. Yiddish is much closer to southern dialects than it is to Platt. Austrians appear to have a very easy time understanding it.

  • @Bassalicious
    @Bassalicious Год назад +498

    As a native German speaker I had no clue Yiddish was easier to understand than Bavarian. I never heard the language being spoken before I don#t think. Super interesting stuff.

    • @borisrohin127
      @borisrohin127 Год назад +23

      a mei, gstei di hoid ned so o! 😉

    • @Bassalicious
      @Bassalicious Год назад +12

      @@borisrohin127 Gesundheit :)
      Edit: Lesen ist aber tatsächlich einfacher als Gesprochenes zu verstehen. Quasi wie bei Niederländisch.

    • @borisrohin127
      @borisrohin127 Год назад +6

      @@Bassalicious 😄 Da hast du Recht

    • @JM-yn8mb
      @JM-yn8mb 9 месяцев назад +1

      I wonder why...

    • @silverchesnov5247
      @silverchesnov5247 7 месяцев назад

      I have had suspicions for a long time that the creators of the German nation were Jews. Ironically, a not very smart corporal with a funny mustache tried to kill those who created the German nation

  • @gabircik
    @gabircik 3 года назад +823

    I'm a Turkish native speaker living in Germany for more than ten years now. German is the the first foreign language I learnt. While watching Shtisel, I couldn't believe my ears how I could understand most of the scenes in Yiddish and ended up here. I still have problems understanding Swiss German and some Austrian dialects but Yiddish is like a piece of cake.

    • @rabiteer
      @rabiteer 3 года назад +62

      I as a German myself also have problems with Swiss and Austrian dialects. So it's not a foreign thing 👍

    • @gabircik
      @gabircik 3 года назад +12

      @@rabiteer Viele Grüße aus Sachsen.

    • @Ch-ew9tm
      @Ch-ew9tm 3 года назад +41

      Schwitzer dütsch isch halt schono schwär zum lärne abr d‘r walliser dialäkt chönen zum teil nid emol anderi schwizer verstah.

    • @rabiteer
      @rabiteer 3 года назад +21

      @@Ch-ew9tm Meine Augen wollen sich ertränken und mein Gehirn hat sich bei der Versuchung dies zu verstehen, kurzzeitig auf die Oberseite gedreht. Bitte mach das nie wieder und versteh mich nicht falsch :)

    • @viddl8267
      @viddl8267 3 года назад +13

      @@Ch-ew9tm i fingä z Bärner Oberland spannend, wes so langsam faht afah walliserä. Im Oberland heisi ono rächt luschtigi Usdrück, womä im Standartdütsch chum meh brucht. Quasi autdütschi Begriffä wos aber hankherum im änglischä no git. Fingä so züg extrem spannend.

  • @berkcandar8013
    @berkcandar8013 3 года назад +910

    I like the Jewish gentleman. He seems very knowledgeable, easy going and funny. Would love to chat with someone like that and learn more their history and culture.

    • @ShahlaSultanova
      @ShahlaSultanova 3 года назад +24

      totally agree.

    • @pennycooks1389
      @pennycooks1389 3 года назад +19

      You should watch Peter Santellos channel he did a whole series on Hasidic Jews in NY

    • @rbtm35
      @rbtm35 3 года назад +4

      @@pennycooks1389 I came here to say this lol. I recommend Peters video too.

    • @berkcandar8013
      @berkcandar8013 3 года назад +2

      @@pennycooks1389 Thanks for the recommendation. I am watching now.

    • @turan2815
      @turan2815 3 года назад

      yes

  • @franzneubauer6877
    @franzneubauer6877 3 года назад +657

    So funny ... I am Austrian and I basically understood everything ... it is very similar to south German dialects

    • @turan2815
      @turan2815 3 года назад +18

      stimmt 😂😂😂😂

    • @FrancisJoa
      @FrancisJoa 3 года назад +22

      Yiddisch wurde kreiert aus einem ostdeutschen Dialekt (Ost Preußen), der gemixt wurde mit ein paar Wörter Hebräisch. Daher können wir fast alles davon verstehen.

    • @42033
      @42033 3 года назад +4

      Deis scho 😂
      Is scho lustig
      Vo wo kummst du Franz ?

    • @acogsupercute
      @acogsupercute 3 года назад +1

      same

    • @gustaviii8299
      @gustaviii8299 3 года назад +1

      Ich dachte gerade das selbe

  • @bervar7043
    @bervar7043 5 месяцев назад +25

    Please get Yiddish, Pennsylvania Dutch and German speakers together. That would be fascinating.

    • @vast634
      @vast634 2 месяца назад +3

      Yiddish is actually easier to understand for Germans than the Pensylvania Dutch, as they use a very local German dialect.

  • @MrOnePieceRuffy
    @MrOnePieceRuffy 3 года назад +1921

    "tracht" is still a german word, just pretty uncommon. We use it in phrases like "Jemanden nach dem Leben trachten" (to think about the life of another one [and end it])

    • @luckyluke1038
      @luckyluke1038 3 года назад +59

      yeah but trachten always has a bad meaning
      fine, most of the time.

    • @stewartzayat7526
      @stewartzayat7526 3 года назад +119

      @@luckyluke1038 but it's still cognate. Words change meaning over time. Just like german schauen and english show are cognate, even though they mean something different.

    • @luckyluke1038
      @luckyluke1038 3 года назад +6

      @@stewartzayat7526 true

    • @Einstein52
      @Einstein52 3 года назад +122

      Yes the word "trachten (nach etwas)" is a still existing german word, but not only with a negative meaning. It is no more used very often, the modern german expression is "sich sehnen nach ..", and this is more used with a positve meaning. -- By the way, this whole yiddish sentence has an equivalent in german meaning exactly the same: "Der Mensch denkt und Gott lenkt.", direct translation "People think and god steers.", so may be better translation "People make their plannings, but god decides where to go."

    • @d.h.1999
      @d.h.1999 3 года назад +67

      @@Einstein52 Der Mensch trachtet und Gott lacht. Men desires and god laughs.

  • @じゅんじゅん-j7v
    @じゅんじゅん-j7v 3 года назад +408

    I think I’m the only Japanese who expect this video to come out for years since ever I found the Yiddish language and started to learn German. Thank you so much for everyone in this video !!

    • @Baksa81
      @Baksa81 3 года назад +20

      Nice, I was born in Germany and study Japanese.

    • @dan-3268
      @dan-3268 3 года назад +6

      That's exactly what happened to me! There hasn't been much material on RUclips dedicated to Yiddish

    • @titusmagnuseinuniversumaus6354
      @titusmagnuseinuniversumaus6354 3 года назад +3

      How interesting, do you still learn German?

    • @Recut
      @Recut 3 года назад +5

      I'm sure you'll succeed in learning german! 頑張って!!

    • @dermitdenfruechten
      @dermitdenfruechten 3 года назад +7

      I'm from Germany and I learn Japanese

  • @mark-o-man6603
    @mark-o-man6603 3 года назад +1180

    As a German I have to say that Yiddish is actually easier to understand than some local German dialects. I've once heard a very rural version of the Bavarian dialect and didn't understand a single word. Back in school we learned about Ephraim Kishon, which was probably my first encounter with "Yiddish", loved it since then, because it makes some German words "cuter" - like "Zwiebel" (German) vs. "Tsibele" (Yiddish)

    • @arktana
      @arktana 3 года назад +4

      Haha true

    • @flintb6559
      @flintb6559 3 года назад +38

      Historically there was no one "Yiddish", each german region had it's own kind of Yiddish which was very close to the local dialect.

    • @bineplumpi1249
      @bineplumpi1249 3 года назад +76

      Zwiebele ist das nicht auch Schwaebisch 😁

    • @CorvusLeukos
      @CorvusLeukos 3 года назад +6

      In my opinion „Zwiebel” actually sounds cuter and better than „Tsibele”

    • @kmit9191
      @kmit9191 3 года назад +28

      @@bineplumpi1249 in Franken würde man auch ca. so reden wie Jiddisch. La, Le, Li als adiminutiv, a als Artikel, etc.

  • @emiliacalabro3186
    @emiliacalabro3186 Год назад +381

    I am from Baden-Württemberg and we speak the Swabian dialect here and Yiddish is really way closer to Swabian than to German and I understand it really well 🤩

  • @larissarilling1928
    @larissarilling1928 3 года назад +643

    As someone from Baden Württemberg, the “Zibbele” part was really interesting to me. Bc in Schwäbisch (one of the most common dialects in this part of Germany) we do actually use -le instead of -chen in order to express that something is small or cute. I had no idea that it was the same in yiddish…

    • @Yorgos2007
      @Yorgos2007 3 года назад +27

      In Austrian German -el, in Swiss -li, as far as I know. Hungarian Schwabs also used -le or -li, for example cvekedli (zweckedli?) is a famous Schwäbisch food in Hungary, it is something like noodles with cabbage :)

    • @jimgulick9773
      @jimgulick9773 3 года назад +23

      My wife, who speaks the dialect from Middle Franken (Nuremburg and environs), says it is exactly the same there. She was surprised to find out she could understand spoken Yiddish pretty well.

    • @Nick-js8qh
      @Nick-js8qh 3 года назад +4

      Ich habe vor 3 Jahren an der Uni Tübingen studiert, und hab ja sofort an "Spätzle" und "Mädle" gedacht als er fragte ob man "-le" am Ende des Wortes stellen könnte. lol Hört sich wohl besser an, wenn eine Deutsche, statt einen Amerikaner, solche Fragen antwortet ahahaha

    • @acboesefrau7729
      @acboesefrau7729 3 года назад +5

      Exaclty! I also thought of schwäbisch!

    • @EVPaddy
      @EVPaddy 3 года назад +10

      In Bernese German ‘Zibele’ or Zybele or however you’d write it is just onion, not a small onion. That would be a Zibeleli

  • @Labroidas
    @Labroidas 3 года назад +924

    I feel like yiddish is a lot closer to my dialect (Austrian), or in general south-german. If you ever want to make a video with an Austrian German speaker and Yiddish, I would volunteer ;D

    • @DelgonidoDargo
      @DelgonidoDargo 3 года назад +69

      The languages diverged from middle German in Swabia. So its closer to Swabian and Swiss accents

    • @SirKingquote
      @SirKingquote 3 года назад +31

      Yeah I'm swiss and I generally get the same words he gets in the video, but much quicker.

    • @ingoinka6083
      @ingoinka6083 3 года назад +23

      actually it derives from middle age german spoken on the rhine between Mainz (Magenza), Worms (Warmaisa) and Speyer (Spira) (jewish names). but of course there are many influences of later times. and there was also a diffenrence between northern and southern yiddish like meschugge or meschigge (for meschugga משוגע)
      the first known written sentence is in the Worms Machzor from 1272 😉

    • @PeiGuy
      @PeiGuy 3 года назад +3

      Jiddisch ist eine westgermanische Sprache

    • @kiksmika
      @kiksmika 3 года назад +9

      To me it seemed as German with some Slavic influence. Actually I remember, being Slovak translating to my German friends Menu/Speisekarte in Austria (Blumenkohl/Karfiol, Kartofreln/Erdäpfeln) etc. Anyway, really great video.

  • @Acephale1312
    @Acephale1312 3 года назад +201

    As a Swiss German speaker I adore how much I can understand Yiddish, such a beautiful and fascinating language!

    • @byronofrothdale
      @byronofrothdale 3 года назад

      Is Yiddish much similar to Low German then?

    • @Acephale1312
      @Acephale1312 3 года назад +18

      @@byronofrothdale I think you’re getting things muddled. Yiddish is a high German/allemanic dialect and so are the German dialects of Switzerland (some of them even classified as highest German), together with Bavarian, vorarlbergisch and other variants. Standardised German is closer to central and lower German. But I’m pretty sure a conversation between a Swiss German speaker and yiddish speaker could occur with both speaking in their native tongue without too many problems. I’d love to test this myself one day...

    • @Grizzly_mike_00
      @Grizzly_mike_00 3 года назад +4

      @@Acephale1312 Yes I am from Vorarlberg and our dialect is much closer to Swiss German than to austrian. It's fascinating how "easy" Yiddish sounds for ous to understand.

    • @porky1118
      @porky1118 3 года назад +2

      When I heard Yiddish for the first time, I thought it's Swiss German.

    • @byronofrothdale
      @byronofrothdale 3 года назад +3

      @@Acephale1312 Thanks, bro. That was very clarifying indeed. For linguistics purposes, at least what they told me at primary Spanish school, Yiddish is considered a dialect of German, not more details. Until now, I did not knew about its specific relationship with High German.
      Personally, when I think in High German in general, my mind goes to Swiss German rather than Austrian or Bavarian. But it's my brain, no reason attached.

  • @sandrareiling8769
    @sandrareiling8769 Год назад +24

    Herrlich ! Ich liebe diesen Kanal 😍.
    Sprache spaltet nicht ,sie drängt uns tiefer zu hören ,zu blicken und zu spüren!
    Danke mit tiefer Verneigung ☺

    • @buffsky6151
      @buffsky6151 3 месяца назад

      Toller Kalenderspruch.

  • @Asendra01
    @Asendra01 3 года назад +511

    Pinchas: *Tells the whole story of the Yiddish language*
    Tayfun: Hi, I'm Tayfun and I speak german.😅

    • @SoWhat89
      @SoWhat89 3 года назад +7

      I thought the same

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +97

      Hahaha i was quite nervous

    • @SoWhat89
      @SoWhat89 3 года назад +7

      @@tayfun8975 Dikka ich feier dich!

    • @SoWhat89
      @SoWhat89 3 года назад +3

      @@tayfun8975 Wir sind die auf dich gekommen?

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +30

      @@SoWhat89 ich hab Bahador mal vor nem Jahr angeschrieben ob er denn mal Lust hat Videos zumachen die Deutsch involvieren. Dann kam er vor ein paar Monaten auf mich zu und meinte er hätte jetzt eine Videoidee wo ich mitmachen könnte , daraus ist das entstanden :)

  • @theusersam
    @theusersam 3 года назад +208

    I'm German-Iranian and I've always been kind of fascinated by the fact that I understand Yiddish so well :-) Thanks for the episode.

  • @davidbaldwin9023
    @davidbaldwin9023 3 года назад +447

    The word "trachten" is also a fairly infrequent verb used in German, meaning "to strive/aspire," which makes sense here: "A human aspires, and God laughs."

    • @martinn.6082
      @martinn.6082 3 года назад +34

      True, and it's still used in some expressions, like "jemandem nach dem Leben trachten" - to be after someone's life.

    • @littlemermaid8638
      @littlemermaid8638 3 года назад +16

      The word 'Tracht' is a word (in my region here in Lower Austria) for the traditional Austrian clothing - the 'Dirndl' and the 'Lederhose' :)

    • @ScherrHrenner
      @ScherrHrenner 3 года назад +29

      @@littlemermaid8638 That word however is not related to above verb. Instead, it belongs to 'tragen' in the sense of 'to wear'.

    • @mariadamen7886
      @mariadamen7886 3 года назад +2

      Trachten is a Dutch word too.

    • @davidklein1903
      @davidklein1903 3 года назад +8

      My Dad used to say, “Man plans and G-d laughs” which is very similar. Today would have been his 101st birthday.

  • @zerofra5297
    @zerofra5297 Год назад +56

    It's so funny, I am an Austrian farmer in the styrian Alps and I understand the Yiddish quit good. Seams like an old dialect. Please more from this stuff!

  • @joaopedrodamasio9833
    @joaopedrodamasio9833 3 года назад +213

    Bahador, you're better than UN to unite different cultures. Keep doing your awesome work, Kuddos from Portugal 🇵🇹

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC 3 года назад

      Not impressed that in the notes he links to a known women basher’s show that he WENT ON. All the cultures minus women, I guess.

  • @christoph3187
    @christoph3187 3 года назад +173

    Im German and understood everything the Yiddish speaker said right away. Amazing! 😮 It reminded me of southern German dialect (Swabian).

    • @gloria7334
      @gloria7334 3 года назад +8

      most of the southern dialect especially the alleman ones use the -le and have similar words which explains why people southern germany understand yiddish a bit better than people from bremen for example

    • @_metastabil9570
      @_metastabil9570 3 года назад +1

      Yes or the old-german language my grand grand mother spoke

    • @knownuser0815
      @knownuser0815 3 года назад +5

      Zwiebele 🤭

    • @ifly2themoon171
      @ifly2themoon171 3 года назад +1

      @@gloria7334 just don't confuse allemanic with swebian

    • @SchwarzeSonne1965
      @SchwarzeSonne1965 3 года назад

      CHRIS yiddish is a german dialect...

  • @breakthroughmoment1647
    @breakthroughmoment1647 3 года назад +442

    “Le” is also the diminutive used in the Swabian (Schwäbisch) dialect spoken in southwest Germany. So, one would say “Zwiebele” for little onion. Perhaps, Yiddish was influenced more by Swabian than standard German. Even the way you pronounced the word “today” in Yiddish was more like they would say it in Swabian (instead of the two-syllable standard German “heute”).

    • @sprachschlampe353
      @sprachschlampe353 3 года назад +51

      Bahador should try this again with a speaker from southwest Germany.

    • @breakthroughmoment1647
      @breakthroughmoment1647 3 года назад +21

      @@sprachschlampe353 Exactly!! With somebody from Stuttgart, etc.

    • @viddl8267
      @viddl8267 3 года назад +21

      Or just all Swissgerman.

    • @helenna_me
      @helenna_me 3 года назад +11

      I'm pretty sure it's based on the alternative diminutive suffix -lein (FreuLEIN) that has just changed through the time and because of people in all cultures cutting things of to make them shorter. It's less used nowadays in Hochdeutsch (which is spoken in Bremen), but it exists and is theoretically legitimate for all words as well. And was definitely used more before.

    • @joschkanetzerco4534
      @joschkanetzerco4534 3 года назад +21

      @@gopfertami An area with a high concentration of Jewish population throughout the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age was on the banks of Rhine River and it's affluents, first of all Moselle and Main (coties: Metz, Treves/ Trier, Mainz, Speyer, Worms, Landau, Frankfurt, Würzburg and Bamberg). There are many words in Yiddish that sound more like the German of the regions of Palatinate and Franconia than Swabia, as the tribe who settled there were the Franks.
      E.g. a bit: - a bisl (Yiddish)
      - e bissel (Palatine
      German)
      small town - shtetl (Yiddish)
      - Stettel (Palatinate
      German, pronounced exactly like the Yiddish equivalent)
      girl - meydl
      :: - Mädel
      Older word for the Yiddish language:
      - (yiddish) taytsh
      - daitsch (Palatinate
      German)
      There are many other examples. It's also very close to neighboring dialects like Alsatian and the northern dialects of Baden.

  • @Banananaish
    @Banananaish Год назад +18

    This was 50 minutes of how the world should, and could be. So wholesome..

  • @AC-hi4ni
    @AC-hi4ni 3 года назад +322

    I'm Jewish and I just loved absolutely everything about this video. Mostly the fun and connection between these three men. I wish the whole world could be so beautiful!

    • @kaderathebeekeeper22m3
      @kaderathebeekeeper22m3 3 года назад +13

      This is amazing. As a Kenyan 🇰🇪 German speaker I was surprised to realize how much of Yiddish I actually understand. So basically I’ve learned a little bit of Yiddish 🇮🇱 by learning German 🇩🇪😁.

    • @adrianj6795
      @adrianj6795 3 года назад +6

      @@TheOwlHead Yiddish is a Jewish language so of course they'd mention that they're Jewish

    • @adrianj6795
      @adrianj6795 3 года назад +2

      @@TheOwlHead that's like asking why a person mentioned being German when talking about the German language

    • @adrianj6795
      @adrianj6795 3 года назад +3

      @@TheOwlHead wtf are you on about? The guy in the video literally explained that Yiddish is a mixture of Hebrew and whatever language that was spoken where the Jews speaking it were, there are many variations of Yiddish, the one that this guy spoke just had more German influence since it's likely that his family lived in a German speaking country.

    • @adrianj6795
      @adrianj6795 3 года назад

      @@TheOwlHead honestly mate, you sound like some kind of neo-nazi with your nonsensical ramblings

  • @chrishd84
    @chrishd84 3 года назад +1327

    It's kind of funny that you guys chose the German guy from a Northern State. The Northern German States speak the "cleanest" German. Yiddish sounds partwise like a Southern German dialect, the guy from Bremen probably would have had the same level of difficulty understanding Yiddish as understanding an old Swabian Grandmother 😁😂
    For me it was so much easier to pickup Yiddish, coming from the South

    • @LVZVRUS
      @LVZVRUS 2 года назад +41

      It’s kind of funny I only know Afrikaans and reading German and understanding it is super easy.

    • @SteamCheese1
      @SteamCheese1 2 года назад +46

      I know right!? It sounds like a mix between the Swabian, Badisch and Palatine dialect with some Jewish words sprinkled in.

    • @linab4901
      @linab4901 2 года назад +11

      Somehow. I‘m from Stuttgart and My father is from Prague and this kind of Yiddish dialekt he speaks I understand very well.

    • @Shiva-mh6td
      @Shiva-mh6td 2 года назад +4

      Bin leider selbst aus dem Süden und kenne niemand der unironisch mit einem Dialekt spricht.

    • @linab4901
      @linab4901 2 года назад +37

      @@Shiva-mh6td ? Wie meinst du das? Hier sprechen sehr viele sehr unironisch schwäbisch 😅

  • @i.e.5089
    @i.e.5089 3 года назад +204

    In my opinion the German sentences are too specific (I am German), also the guy did not explain very well.
    The Yewish guy is much better in choosing the texts and giving much better hints

    • @eineeins1848
      @eineeins1848 3 года назад +3

      Ich fande den letzten Text von dem jüdischen Mann viel zu lang aber die anderen waren gut für sowas

    • @thomashering1482
      @thomashering1482 3 года назад +2

      ...and talking about Mördern Things Like sicher Clubs....and Brötchen ein Sandwich ????

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 3 года назад +10

      It'd be better if they had someone with better knowledge of German dialects. I saw a lot more parallels between Yiddish and Swabian, Bavarian, etc.

    • @Stuntmandouble08
      @Stuntmandouble08 3 года назад +1

      The standart German we speak today is a reformated modern language. It is easier for you to understand Yiddish then vice versa.

    • @mudde123
      @mudde123 3 года назад +4

      I totally agree with you. The German guy was not a very good choice; his first German sentence with 'Werder Bremen' in it was nonsense. 🙄

  • @forgiven212
    @forgiven212 Год назад +25

    This made my day. 😂 Shalom and Guten tag! We are one people! 🙏

  • @kouroshmarx8646
    @kouroshmarx8646 3 года назад +248

    As being half Iranian half German this becomes very interesting for me as I also love the Jewish people.
    That -le at the end of words to show that things are small exists in standard German as well in the form of the suffix -lein and not only -chen so the small onion (Zwiebel) can be both "Zwiebelchen" or "Zwieblein/Zwiebelein". I believe in the southern German dialects such as Swabian or Swiss German they even use the suffix -le instead of -lein so it would be "Zwiebele/Zwieble".
    بهادر جان مانند همیشه برای کارت ازت سپاسگزاری میکنم! :)

    • @odaenathus7825
      @odaenathus7825 3 года назад +1

      There is no “Jewish peoplel, there are Jews who come from dffierent racial and cultural backgrounds that have nothing in common besides religion. What you said doesn’t make sense, but I doubt you will be able to comprehend what I just said.

    • @kouroshmarx8646
      @kouroshmarx8646 3 года назад +85

      @@odaenathus7825 and I believe you're to arrogant to have a good conversation.

    • @samb2
      @samb2 3 года назад +31

      @@kouroshmarx8646 Very wise response 👏🏻

    • @odaenathus7825
      @odaenathus7825 3 года назад +1

      @@kouroshmarx8646
      Who said I intend to have a conversation with you?! That would be a waste of time, my time.

    • @berserk9085
      @berserk9085 3 года назад +8

      so viel ich weiß ist die Basis des yiddischen bayrisch.

  • @mschnayd
    @mschnayd 3 года назад +63

    In 1989 my family and I were moving from USSR to USA via a long route that included stay in Austria. My grandmothers were very well versed in Yiddish and were very successful in communicating basics with Austrians. They are both long gone, but the memory of them walking into grocery stores and having a conversation with a cashier or people on the street is always with me.

    • @mithridatesi9981
      @mithridatesi9981 3 года назад +7

      I speak German and I understand your surname, Mr. Schneidermann ^^

    • @karunakar2229
      @karunakar2229 Год назад +3

      Which region of ussr you belonged to? Can you still speak russian language

  • @lumarei1
    @lumarei1 3 года назад +815

    Just to clarify. The ending “le” is used in South Germany and “chen” is used in the north to minimise a word.

    • @RacTac
      @RacTac 3 года назад +117

      -lein could also be used

    • @strattybird5310
      @strattybird5310 3 года назад +77

      "chen" und "lein" machen alles klein.
      Those suffixes are added for diminutive. In South Germany they use "le" a lot.

    • @murryjcohen
      @murryjcohen 3 года назад +6

      @@strattybird5310 "Le" is the one used in Yiddish. It's the diminutive that is sometimes used in English, as many Yiddishisms are found in English.

    • @murryjcohen
      @murryjcohen 3 года назад +11

      @@RobVaderful How is this different from what I and others have said? "-Le" is the one used in Yiddish, which makes sense given the similarity between Yiddish and southern German (and Schweitzer Deutsch) dialects. For instance an endearing term for a young boy in Yiddish is "yingele".

    • @foosonnenkern1885
      @foosonnenkern1885 3 года назад +15

      "le" is also used in austria and in switzerland we add "li"

  • @lokibloom1586
    @lokibloom1586 Год назад +12

    Loved that video, there are a lot of beautiful Yiddish songs you can partially understand as german too

  • @g.v.3493
    @g.v.3493 3 года назад +182

    Yiddish is a precious, precious treasure. I am acutely aware of this because my grandparents were among the last speakers of the East Prussian dialect. I had the chance to learn it, but as a dumb kid I didn’t know what I was losing by not having the interest. Just try to learn it somewhere today. Keep Yiddish alive!

    • @מעין-צ9ג
      @מעין-צ9ג 3 года назад +13

      Luckily doulingo added it recently and there are a lot of people learning it these days and interested in reviving it😊

    • @Rynbur
      @Rynbur 3 года назад

      De Lorbass un de Marjell een wirklich scheener Schlach

    • @asatrv
      @asatrv 3 года назад +2

      My grandmother grew up in Königsberg, I guess I should try to learn that dialect.

    • @magicAAA
      @magicAAA 3 года назад

      Yiddish with an icing of icke speak must be hilarious! x)

    • @joewitt5638
      @joewitt5638 3 года назад +4

      @ G. V. Belive me, jiddisch Wont die in 1000 years bc in 45 years a third of Israel will speak it.

  • @modestoney1577
    @modestoney1577 3 года назад +648

    As a native German speaker from Vienna, Austria it is absolutely no problem to understand Yiddish right away.
    I was surprised how hard it was for the guy from Bremen.
    Also he doesn´t know a lot about german dialects, because the ending "-le" as a diminuative form is very common in certain german speaking regions.

    • @tesfuweldemikael2902
      @tesfuweldemikael2902 3 года назад +39

      It would also help if he actually knew the English for the few words that he understands. I won't compromise myself saying more.

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 года назад +12

      I don't think you have "absolutely no problem" except you understand hebrew too. There are too many hebrew or words of other languages in Yiddish to understand it with "absolutely" no problem when you only speak German or the austrian dialect.

    • @modestoney1577
      @modestoney1577 3 года назад +32

      @@vomm Maybe i wasn´t precise enough, that´s right. I meant the first examples with little/no hebrew in them. Still, we did actually transfer some yiddish/hebrew words into the German language and especially the Viennese dialect like "mischpoche", "Hawerer", "Schmonzes", "Masel", "Bahö", "Ezzes", "Zores", "Tacheles"......so yeah i have absolutely no problem understanding it.

    • @tesfuweldemikael2902
      @tesfuweldemikael2902 3 года назад +13

      @@vomm Also, there's context. If there's just one word one doesn't understand in every sentence, that's not a real problem. But yeah, there are some difficulties.

    • @modestoney1577
      @modestoney1577 3 года назад +12

      @@vomm btw. there is no such thing as "the Austrian dialect", there are plenty varieties, and especially the Viennese has incorporated quite some Hebrew words. But of course you can think and believe whatever you want.

  • @kaderathebeekeeper22m3
    @kaderathebeekeeper22m3 3 года назад +795

    This is amazing. As a Kenyan 🇰🇪 German speaker I was surprised to realize how much of Yiddish I actually understand. So basically I’ve learned a little bit of Yiddish 🇮🇱 by learning German 🇩🇪😁.

    • @MitsukiHashiba
      @MitsukiHashiba 3 года назад +14

      Wohnst du in Deutschland oder in Kenya?
      Do you live in Germany or Kenya?

    • @kaderathebeekeeper22m3
      @kaderathebeekeeper22m3 3 года назад +27

      @@MitsukiHashiba
      Ich wohne in Deutschland 🇩🇪
      Du auch?

    • @kaderathebeekeeper22m3
      @kaderathebeekeeper22m3 3 года назад +23

      @ranjirapperstar2011
      I’m Kenyan born but moved to Hessen Germany 14 years ago.
      You?

    • @kaderathebeekeeper22m3
      @kaderathebeekeeper22m3 3 года назад +30

      @ranjirapperstar2011
      Servus Bro.
      How’s the going in Düsseldorf?
      Actually I had a lot of friends who had taken German classes in Kenya. Every time I visit, we speak as much German as we can just for fun 😁
      Do you speak any other languages besides German and English?
      Thanks for the warm welcome! Much appreciated!
      I don’t pay too much attention to the right wing scene. Mostly because it’s just too depressing.
      I’d rather mingle with kind folks like you and the folks in this video who show the world that we can coexist peacefully on this planet despite cultural differences.
      Our differences should be seen as something positive ✌🏼 🌎

    • @PeiGuy
      @PeiGuy 3 года назад +3

      @@kaderathebeekeeper22m3 why do you live in Germany?

  • @elvisd3947
    @elvisd3947 Год назад +33

    That was awesome.
    My family is of German origin, but they have lived in Russia for ~250 years. The way they spoke German is so incredibly similar to Yiddish, that I, now as a German speaker, was astonished how much I understood.
    Didn't even sound or feel like a foreign language to me. Mind-blowing stuff

  • @forestmanzpedia
    @forestmanzpedia 3 года назад +443

    I can understand like 80% Yiddish as a German native speaker.

    • @jonahs92
      @jonahs92 3 года назад +23

      Interesting to see a German with a Hebrew letter in their username 😂

    • @vincent-ti5lz
      @vincent-ti5lz 3 года назад +11

      @@renedupont1953 lol youre mad

    • @guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272
      @guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272 3 года назад +45

      @@renedupont1953 You shouldn't respond with such animosity towards someone who is probably a young person. I also come from Holocaust survivor heritage (my mother herself survived the Holocaust in Hungary) and although we must never forget, and never forgive, the actual perpetrators, it's uncalled to be be rude to someone who was probably born many decades after the end of the Holocaust. While it's quite possible that this person's grandfather or great grandfather was involved in the atrocities, it's almost guaranteed that the person you are addressing had nothing to do with it.
      Also, this person may have been making the claim of 80% comprehension based on the video, which deliberately cherry-picked examples of sentences that are likely to be understood. So you could have made the same point that due to the many Hebrew and Aramaic words in Yiddish a native German speaker will not understand much, but more politely without accusing someone who you don't know of being a liar and exaggerating. And you just deliberately picked two examples of such sentences.
      I personally can understand a lot of Yiddish not because I am Jewish (my father was Sephardic and not from a Yiddish-speaking background, and my mother, though Ashkenazic, has Hungarian as her native language and later learned modern Hebrew and English). But much of my Yiddish comprehension also comes from having learned German.
      Aber ich kann auch viel Jiddisch wegen ich habe Deutsch studiert (als Fremdersprache). Ich kann nicht so gut Deutsch, aber ich verstehe viel, und wegen spreche ich Hebraisch auch es ist nicht so schwer Jiddsich zu versthehen.

    • @suikafan12
      @suikafan12 3 года назад +27

      @@renedupont1953 What's even your problem? They didn't say he could understand Yiddish 100% but around 80% which is mostly true. Nobody denied the atrocities that Germany did to the Jews however to deny that Yiddish is a Germanic language or the be more clear descends from the German language is stupid.

    • @renedupont1953
      @renedupont1953 3 года назад

      @@suikafan12 It's obvious that you're not qualified to discuss this matter. Your comment is full of mistakes.

  • @yoops66
    @yoops66 2 года назад +157

    As their "secret language", when they didn't want us (their children) to understand what they were saying to each other, my father spoke German (learnt in Buchenwald) and my mother Yiddish (learnt from her parents). They understood each other much too well. 😅

    • @stinestotzel2671
      @stinestotzel2671 Год назад +5

      I am from Frankfurt am Main and my Great grandmother was from inner city Frankfurt. Her dialect was formed around the turn of the last century and her German Frankfurt dialect was almost indistinguishable from Yiddish. Also, in the south of Germany we also use 'le or 'je to make things small. Zwiebele or in Frankfurt Zwiebelje. ❤

    • @gingerjoe4759
      @gingerjoe4759 Год назад +7

      Thats very wholesome and dark at the same time

    • @mylupylu
      @mylupylu Год назад +5

      Your father made something positive out of his worst experience. Wow! You can be extremely proud of him!

    • @FlorianWendelborn
      @FlorianWendelborn 6 месяцев назад

      Damn, at least there’s a tiny speck of wholesomeness that came out of that terrible situation

    • @squaretriangle9208
      @squaretriangle9208 4 месяца назад

      ​@@stinestotzel2671 that a Mensch had to learn something in Buchenwald is horrific nie wieder

  • @musicxxa6678
    @musicxxa6678 3 года назад +43

    Yiddish dude is so nice. Greetings from Turkey. Good video as always Bahador.

  • @LindaHaghgoo
    @LindaHaghgoo Год назад +33

    My German grandmother chatted with her Yiddish-speaking neighbor when they sat outside on their rowhome porches and understood each other perfectly. This was back in the first quarter of the 20th century. My grandmother's ancestors came before 1850 and managed to hold onto their German because Germans are so insular.

  • @joelleson3313
    @joelleson3313 2 года назад +122

    I served seven years in the Army in what was West Germany. I found that the Yiddish I learned from my parents enabled me to understand much of what my German friends and others were saying.

    • @montanus777
      @montanus777 11 месяцев назад

      it still _is_ west germany. :P

  • @marwellus1
    @marwellus1 3 года назад +79

    Yiddish is such a beautiful variant of the Germanic language, it preserves a piece of the past of this language. It always takes some time fro me to wrap my head around it (as a German) but when it clicks, it tells me a lot more than just what it means word for word, its kind of a glimpse into the far past. Thanks you for keeping it alive :-)

    • @pyruvicac.id_
      @pyruvicac.id_ 11 месяцев назад

      You should try speaking Dutch; It’s insane how little people speak about the fact that much of Yiddish is Dutch and vice versa, including the modern accepted Dutch accent is a Yiddish accent.

  • @claraowens6830
    @claraowens6830 3 года назад +137

    When i was in Israel my jewish friend, who was not able to speak jiddish but hebrew, once read out jiddish letters out loud to me, so i could translate to her from german to english. So i could understand it and she was able to read it! It was a very connecting feeling (:

  • @igorvoloshin3406
    @igorvoloshin3406 Год назад +13

    A classmate of mine moved from Dnipro city, Ukraine to Duesseldorf, Germany. His grandmother speaks not Getman but she speaks Yddish. So when she felt bad with her hearth and they've called a doctor, it appeared that she could successfully communicate with this German doctor!

  • @balabochur
    @balabochur 3 года назад +785

    The Jewish guy gives off such wholesome vibes

    • @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065
      @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065 3 года назад +23

      Says the Jew...

    • @jtabendland
      @jtabendland 3 года назад +62

      @@aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065 I find it, too and I'm German and not jewish at all 😊
      The problem with the German guy is that he does not speak English perfectly (like myself). I am very interested in Jewish culture and know many single jiddish words and developed a little feeling for the differences between Jiddish and German. In fact, it is so similar, the one is almost the other, the Jewish guy was a bit quicker in getting many of the similarities. Also the German guy had a slower internet connection, it seems like he was reacting very slowly. One could misinterpret it as arrogance? (I only say that because of the comment above). But that's not true, he is an intelligent and friendly guy, no doubt.
      The Jew (don 't wanna be disrespectful - what's his name, let's see ah: Pinchas), is someone I'd really like to have a conversation with. Because he is so smart and knows a lot about topics I like (Judaism, maybe he also knows famous writers and artist I am interested in). I live in a small town in Germay so my only connection to Jewish culture is self-taught 👨🏻‍🎓
      Anyway I liked the video 👍

    • @georgyzhukov6409
      @georgyzhukov6409 3 года назад +25

      @@aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065 your name makes sense...

    • @etherospike3936
      @etherospike3936 3 года назад +6

      @@georgyzhukov6409 In Greek that name is Odisseus !

    • @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065
      @aseriesoftriangleswecalltr6065 3 года назад +4

      @@etherospike3936 Hahaha, you know your classics!

  • @marcwittkowski5146
    @marcwittkowski5146 3 года назад +114

    I was honestly surprised how hard it seemed to be for the German guy to understand the Yiddish sentences. They were basically like a German talking in some Rheinländisch/ Bavarian dialect to me. Love it.
    Edit: Okay,that paragraph was tough.

    • @istkeingeheimnis8093
      @istkeingeheimnis8093 3 года назад +12

      His performance was pretty weak. Gegannvet - ergaunert
      Gegannvet beim Robin hat men nisht. Ergaunert beim Rabbi hat man nicht. He didnt even recognize the “man” man oh mann

    • @istkeingeheimnis8093
      @istkeingeheimnis8093 3 года назад +1

      Avadai nisht. Erwarte nicht.

    • @istkeingeheimnis8093
      @istkeingeheimnis8093 3 года назад +6

      Men flegt - Man pflegt

    • @woltschgal
      @woltschgal 3 года назад +2

      @G P "His performance was pretty weak", aber geganvet ist gestohlen, nicht ergaunert... flegt ist engl. "used to", also vergangenheit... avadai ist hebräisch, hat mit erwarten nichts zu tun... und anspruchsvolles jiddisch findet man natürlich in der literatur, wie bei dem literaturbeispiel (that paragraph) oder bspw. hier auf youtube in "parshes" und dergleichen...

    • @istkeingeheimnis8093
      @istkeingeheimnis8093 3 года назад

      @@woltschgal ich hab nur den möglichen zusammenhang mit deutschen wörtern zeigen wollen, die noch heute benutzt werden stehlen ist in der synonymgruppe von ergaunern. Den rest gehe ich jetzt nicht durch. Ich glaube dich stört einfach nur meine arroganz.

  • @leonig01
    @leonig01 3 года назад +66

    As an Israeli who studied German, Yiddish is like 90% German written in Hebrew letters and some Hebrew loan words. It is nice reading the Hebrew letters, waiting for the word to transform into its German equivalent in your mind. So I started Duolingo's Yiddish course and were able to check out the first 5 checkpoints simply by knowing German.

    • @denkedeligekanal9059
      @denkedeligekanal9059 3 года назад +13

      i am a danish person and we have learned german in school. i tried once being in estonia talking with an israeli guy, who of course spoke hebrew but didnt know yiddish. i had a short text in yiddish, and i couldnt read it, as i dont know hebrew letters. and he couldnt read it as he didnt understand the german words. but he could read it for me what it sounded like, and then i could recognize the word from german and then translate it for him into english. this was a quite interesting and nice experience to see how far you can get when you cooperate.

    • @martenkats6915
      @martenkats6915 3 года назад +2

      I'm a German-speaker (I'm from The Netherlands but I learnt German as a child so I'm near-native) and I find it interesting how much I can understand of Yiddish. I'm a linguist and have always been interested in Hebrew, despite not speaking it. I've got friends in Israel, been there before and planning to go there again post-Covid. I'm starting to consider looking into learning basic Yiddish to get familiar with the letters in order to help me doing Hebrew later.

    • @leonig01
      @leonig01 3 года назад

      Also hast du wahrscheinlich die meisten von Yiddish Sätze verstanden?

    • @martenkats6915
      @martenkats6915 3 года назад

      @@leonig01 Ja, ich habe ziemlich viel verstanden. :)

    • @TheoEvian
      @TheoEvian 3 года назад

      I am a Czech and I studied german in school (sadly not as proficient in it in speaking as I would like but I can read news basically). I have done a lot of work in performing folk culture of Bohemia and by extension of Czechia generally and we have also done a little bit of Jewish folklore (because that was a part of the reality of 19th century, so we shouldn't ignore it either) where I have of course came across Yiddish because that is what most of the songs are written in (there are also some surviving in Czech but that is a minority). The biggest difference between standard German and Yiddish for me is the pronunciation, mostly long vowels changing into diphtongs and a few other shifts. Of course there are Hebrew words too but the main thing for me is the pronunciation makes it much harder for me to recognise those ordinary german words for what they are.
      Of course there is always the question of language vs dialect but I think of the difference most of the time as political, if you want to call Yiddish a dialect you can but calling it a language is just as valid, as Max Weinreich said, "אַ שפּראַך איז אַ דיאַלעקט מיט אַן אַרמיי און פֿלאָט a shprakh iz a dialekt mit an armey un flot" :D

  • @Triplechorus2
    @Triplechorus2 3 месяца назад +3

    „Der Mensch denkt - und Gott lenkt“ sagt man heute auf Deutsch. Danke für das hochinteressante Gespräch!
    Als mittelaltem Pfälzer sind einem die jiddische Grammatik und auch so manch altmodisches Wort, das man in unserer Elterngeneration noch hörte („Isch geh in die Schtubb“) viel näher als unserem jungen und sympathischen Bremer hier. Aber er hat sich wacker geschlagen!
    Greetings from Germany!🇩🇪🤝

  • @jlp6864
    @jlp6864 3 года назад +93

    as a german i had NO IDEA just how similar our languages were! thank you for this

    • @aaronfitzgerald9109
      @aaronfitzgerald9109 3 года назад +4

      They basically stole the German language and added their own crap

    • @jlp6864
      @jlp6864 3 года назад +11

      @@aaronfitzgerald9109 you can't steal a language jewish and German peoples are just somewhat siblings

    • @FrancisJoa
      @FrancisJoa 3 года назад +1

      @@jlp6864 Wrong. Yiddish was created out of an East German dialect from East Prussia mixed with some Hebrew words. It was never a real Jewish language it was/is more like a made up slang Jews were speaking in Germany.

    • @aaronfitzgerald9109
      @aaronfitzgerald9109 3 года назад +2

      absolutely not, they are not German in any way shape or form.

    • @Maigodseki
      @Maigodseki 3 года назад +12

      @@aaronfitzgerald9109 How can you steal a language :D languages change and develop over time. How do u think English came to be?

  • @alyssarosenbaum1
    @alyssarosenbaum1 3 года назад +224

    As someone who is Jewish and a German speaker, I can attest that someone who knows German should probably automatically understand maybe around 70-80% of Yiddish. I remember after I had started learning German in high school when I went to peruse my friend's family's bookshelf and pulled a book off the shelf with Hebrew characters that didn't have vowels. Having gone to Hebrew school growing up, I could read the aleph-bet--but not without the vowels. But then I looked at it more closely and found that I could, in fact, read it, because it turned out the book was Yiddish and was following Germanic phonemes and some of the syntax. And yes, it is easier to understand than some other German dialects. But if you know both German and Hebrew, it especially plugs in to your prior knowledge quite neatly, almost like you automatically know Yiddish that way. The pronunciations and grammars are a little different, though.

    • @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit
      @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit 3 года назад +8

      i love your great last-names...
      rosenbaum is wonderful.

    • @novadhd
      @novadhd 3 года назад

      I used to speak hebrew and knew a lot of Yiddish growing. Remembered a lot of the funny/bad words of course.

    • @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit
      @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit 3 года назад

      @@novadhd i first read "yiddish growling"... lots of good metal coming from israel. 🤘

    • @Quallenkrauler
      @Quallenkrauler 3 года назад +3

      If you study a bit of "Mittelhochdeutsch" (medieval German), the pronounciation becomes even easier to understand. Which makes sense, since Yiddish derived from it and then became its own language, it never had the "Lautverschiebung" (sound shift) that formed the modern German pronounciation. For example, the way "ei" is pronounced in Yiddish is exactly how it was pronounced in medieval German.

    • @slXD100
      @slXD100 3 года назад

      I have a question, I've seen this proverb "dying while young is a boon in old age." everywhere, but i've never found the yiddish or hebrew version. is there any?

  • @StephenRosenbach
    @StephenRosenbach 3 года назад +51

    Bahador, I just stumbled upon this v;ideo, and I have to tell you, you made a thing of real beauty!
    My father, whose family had lived near Kassel since at least the 1600s, narrowly escaped Germany to come to the US in 1940. Sadly, his parents were not able to leave, and eventually were murdered at Auschwitz. My mother and her family lived in western Poland, Kalisz, and were able to flee eastward to Russian, Ukraine, and eventually, Kazakhstan to survive the war.
    My parent spoke German at home for at least the first few years of my life (born in 1950) and my mother and grandparents spoke Yiddish. As my parents both worked, I spent a lot of time with my grandmother until about age 8. So I absorbed both some German (a lot of vocabulary, but clueless about grammar) and Yiddish.
    So I thoroughly enjoyed this video, mentally cheering on both the Hasidic man from Brooklyn and the young German man. I think they did very well, and I got that they both enjoyed discovering the similarities in their two languageds.
    Meanwhile, I've started going through your videos, and they are all wonderful. You are doing a great service to the world.
    May I second the request by someone earlier to do a video with a Ladino speaker and a Spanish speaker? If it helps, I recall that there is a robust Sephardi community in Washington, DC, and many speak Ladino.
    All the best to you and your lovely family!

  • @stevea2588
    @stevea2588 6 месяцев назад +4

    This is how the world should be. Everyone getting along and having a wonderful time together.

  • @BWWolves1337
    @BWWolves1337 3 года назад +201

    As a German the first one could have been understood easily because 'trachten' is an older german version of 'longing'. "Nach etwas trachten" could be translated to "to want something really bad"

    • @manzanasrojas6984
      @manzanasrojas6984 Год назад +32

      Ye, was my first thought as well. Guess the guy was just slightly too young to immediately think of a word that isnt used as commonly nowadays.

    • @binaa2309
      @binaa2309 Год назад +8

      It also means striving or aspiring - freely translated it means basically that „god laughs about a human‘s lifeplan - bc things will change“

    • @jonathanjonsson9205
      @jonathanjonsson9205 Год назад +11

      That's interesting! I'm Swedish and "eftertraktad" means something that is desired or sought after. "efter" is Swedish for "nach", similar to English, so it would be "nachgetrachtet". There are so many older German terms in Swedish, that sometimes when I try to speak German, I've been told that I sound like I'm trying to be Goethe - but with terrible grammar :)

    • @andreasdracker8018
      @andreasdracker8018 Год назад +8

      Der Mensch denkt und Gott lenkt.

    • @MustardSkaven
      @MustardSkaven Год назад +2

      tracht is also Dutch for trying (to achieve something).

  • @jeouseth
    @jeouseth 3 года назад +873

    Can you please make a video of “Can Spanish speakers understand Ladino speakers?”

    • @curiousmind_
      @curiousmind_ 3 года назад +36

      Ladino?

    • @fivantvcs9055
      @fivantvcs9055 3 года назад +144

      @@curiousmind_ The Jewish version of medieval Spanish.

    • @curiousmind_
      @curiousmind_ 3 года назад +15

      @@fivantvcs9055 ohhh

    • @samb2
      @samb2 3 года назад +15

      Do Ladino speakers still live in Spain?

    • @daniel3139
      @daniel3139 3 года назад +92

      @@samb2 not since 1492

  • @Gritez
    @Gritez 3 года назад +33

    Zwibele is used in southern german dialects. I love this video! It is so nice. I love both German and Yiddish.

  • @Einradmechaniker
    @Einradmechaniker 4 месяца назад +5

    I have been on vacation in Antwerp a couple of weeks ago. I had a nice conversation with an elderly Jewish man. At first, we tried to talk i English, but his English wasn't very good.
    The we spoke Netherlands, but my Dutch isn't very well.
    As soon he found out I was German, he talked in Yiddish and I in German, and it worked very good.

  • @RealMrSmit
    @RealMrSmit 2 года назад +85

    As a native Austrian German and afrikaans speaker I could understand the Yiddish very good. It kind of sounds like a Swiss German I can more easily understand.

  • @Danke1982
    @Danke1982 3 года назад +318

    I'm German, German is my native tongue. Yiddish is easily to unterstand, just a few differences in the pronunciation but with careful listening and thinking it is easy to unterstand. Even the word Yiddish sounds like the german word Jüdisch(Yiddish).
    Very interesting the video.

    • @dougbennet2035
      @dougbennet2035 3 года назад +11

      There's a difference between jüdisch and Jiddisch, what would be the correct word for the language. Jüdisch is an adjective to describe e.g. a Jewish person or practice.

    • @JudeAndTrains
      @JudeAndTrains 3 года назад +4

      It is like the Dutch word Jiddisch

    • @seanpennhauer9133
      @seanpennhauer9133 3 года назад +11

      @@dougbennet2035 In german jüdisch is used in both cases, so he was actually right

    • @dougbennet2035
      @dougbennet2035 3 года назад +2

      @@seanpennhauer9133 no it's actually not

    • @ctlspl
      @ctlspl 3 года назад +2

      @@dougbennet2035 Doch. A person can be jüdisch and speak jüdisch. It just means jewish.

  • @doomprophetess6286
    @doomprophetess6286 3 года назад +212

    Spending time around Yiddish-speaking friends in Brooklyn has taught me more German than I learned from my German-speaking father

    • @murryjcohen
      @murryjcohen 3 года назад +19

      My former mother-in-law, who knew no German, got along fine in Germany speaking Yiddish.

    • @wideolink
      @wideolink 3 года назад +4

      haha nice one !

    • @fayereaganlover
      @fayereaganlover 3 года назад +1

      No one cares

    • @Blackbirdinthedeadofnight
      @Blackbirdinthedeadofnight 3 года назад +2

      Lol that’s cool actually

    • @gastarbeiter8384
      @gastarbeiter8384 3 года назад +2

      We got dialects in germany from different parts that sre way harder to understand then yiddish lol

  • @dagostork9545
    @dagostork9545 9 месяцев назад +5

    Ein wunderbarer Kanal, da werde ich viel lernen, so eine schöne Sprach, klingt sehr liebevoll ❤ Liebe Grüße

  • @herbertfoelser3845
    @herbertfoelser3845 3 года назад +60

    I'm from Austria. The typically Austrian and Vienna dialect is using a lot of Yiddish words. . Good and very interesting video. greatings from Austria.

    • @gabircik
      @gabircik 3 года назад +1

      Could you give some examples?

    • @Flex2212
      @Flex2212 3 года назад +7

      Ramsch, Bohei(Pahöll in Austrian), Gauner, Ramsch, zocken, Reibach, Masel, meschugge, mies, verkohlen, betucht, Kaff, Haberer, Mischpoche, pleite, schachern, Zoff, ...

    • @herbertfoelser3845
      @herbertfoelser3845 3 года назад +4

      @@gabircik for example the wording: "do hot ma glick ghobt "- i. German: da hat man Glück gehabt. Das Beisl = kleine Kneipe (a small Barroom), Schmuck, d'Schmier ( police), Chuzpe, Hallelujah,
      "wo der Barthel den Most holt", Knast (for jail)

    • @kon_radar
      @kon_radar 3 года назад +5

      German Brötchen is Semmel Austrian German, zeml in Yiddish

    • @guiltywaffles
      @guiltywaffles 3 года назад +2

      @@Flex2212 haberer kommt vom hebräischen חבר oder חברה chawer/chawera was freund/Freundin bedeutet

  • @Aaron-sy5yx
    @Aaron-sy5yx 3 года назад +280

    Given the way I grew up, with the shadows of the holocaust every present in my upbringing, it's beautiful to see a German and a Jew laughing and sharing each other's language.

    • @nieselpriem
      @nieselpriem 3 года назад +38

      I'm a German Jew. There is nothing unusual about that. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @robb0000-b5e
      @robb0000-b5e 3 года назад +58

      @@nieselpriem he didn't said that its unusual, he just said that its nice to see

    • @TitovIgorBro
      @TitovIgorBro 3 года назад +6

      You are being fucking weird

    • @lemes1154
      @lemes1154 3 года назад +4

      Dont want to be Toxic PR something
      But this guys Name is Tayfun
      But maybe hes half german

    • @nieselpriem
      @nieselpriem 3 года назад +18

      @@lemes1154 I don't get your point. Why shouldn't he be fully German? Just because of his name? I went to school with an Aranka, a Marcella, a Siv, a Pierre, a Jean-Pierre, a Roger and lots of other people who doesn't sound very German but totally were. And that even was in the GDR, which wasn't exactly well known for being very "multicultural". 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @alpo2smith
    @alpo2smith 3 года назад +44

    My wife and I were on holidays in Amboise,France in 2012. Another gentleman and I were drinking a coffee away from the shopping of our spouses. I tried speaking in French with him and he said that he didn’t understand French and said he was from Israel so I started speaking in German with him and he Yiddish to me and we actually understood each other very well. Just a reminder to me how much multiple language abilities are so important

  • @Alex-jb5tb
    @Alex-jb5tb 3 месяца назад +1

    This video is a gem for everybody interested in etymology. A must-watch. Thank you !

  • @thomastschetchkovic5726
    @thomastschetchkovic5726 3 года назад +473

    Funny thing is that I (as a native German) actually understood Yiddish better than the guy in this Video, and that is because of my accent. I speak allemannisch and it seems to be a lot closer to Yiddish than standard German

    • @alexj9603
      @alexj9603 3 года назад +70

      Indeed. Tayfun is from northern Germany, but knowing southern dialects helps a lot in understanding Yiddish.

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +48

      Ja glaube auch das ich da besser weggekommen wäre wenn ich mit süddeutschen Dialekten aufgewachsen wäre 😄

    • @alexj9603
      @alexj9603 3 года назад +10

      @@tayfun8975 Aufgewachsen oder zumindest in Kontakt gewesen. Mich schockt inzwischen zwischen der Schweiz und Sachsen kein Dialekt mehr. Dafür ist der Norden nicht so mein Ding.

    • @aliceche714
      @aliceche714 3 года назад +10

      Yo, ikh hob dos oykh bamerkt! :)

    • @davidbraun6209
      @davidbraun6209 3 года назад +22

      I'll write in English, but "tzibele" in Yiddish should remind one of the Swabian (schwäbisch) diminutive -le (e.g., Mädle for standard Mädchen).

  • @jasmadams
    @jasmadams 3 года назад +25

    This is wonderful! I grew up speaking German, and then I encountered Yiddish as a teenager volunteering at an elder home. It's a gorgeous language; I'm so glad it's living on. And it's not just the languages, I've found so many Jewish friends over the years who eat the same foods (or near enough). Thank you for doing this.
    Oh almost forgot, it's important to remember that Hebrew/Yiddish also enriched German with words like Massel and vermasseln!

    • @sarahvonnissen5733
      @sarahvonnissen5733 3 года назад +3

      Thank you for this beautiful information 🥰 “vermasseln” 😁

  • @chitownbangin
    @chitownbangin 2 года назад +51

    Really nice seeing these people brought together. We are all brothers and sisters, even when we forget.

  • @estahadassah9470
    @estahadassah9470 3 года назад +28

    In Southern Germany, Austria & Switzerland, they say "Zwiebele". They use the "le" suffix for the diminutive 😍

  • @Прохожий-э7в
    @Прохожий-э7в 3 года назад +47

    Good afternoon everyone! I am a Jew from the Caucasus, we speak a dialect of the Farsi language (Persia), but I speak German and it was almost easy for me to understand Penchas' Yiddish language. ))) Very interesting video, thanks. Seien Sie gesund. . ))))

    • @groeleorg
      @groeleorg 2 года назад +2

      so you could do the same thing with Bahador, right?

  • @amym.694
    @amym.694 3 года назад +152

    I’m Jewish, so thank you for doing this. One of the biggest reasons why Yiddish isn’t widely spoken is because the Jewish parents who came from Europe didn’t teach their children Yiddish so they could speak with each other so their children wouldn’t be able to understand what they were saying to each other.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 3 года назад +17

      I know people say that but that is not always true. The kids typically didn't want to speak it. My great grand parents immigrated to Canada in the 1800s. Up to my parent's generation they spoke fluent Yiddish (and English of course). My generation weren't so interested but as I grew older I became more interested.

    • @michelnahasfilho1958
      @michelnahasfilho1958 3 года назад +17

      I'm Brazilian , my folks came from Syria (Christians) and they used to do the same. it's very rare for a third generation (grand children to immigrants) to be able to speak the Arab.

    • @dashingdave2665
      @dashingdave2665 3 года назад +10

      It's not "cool" for kids to speak another language than the other kids! It's hard to keep them fluent but access to other language media like cartoons help.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 3 года назад +7

      @@michelnahasfilho1958 Jewish people ( and linguists) are learning Yiddish more and more. So it is not just being spoken by the Ultra Orthodox.
      In fact German linguists are studying Yiddish to get a better understanding for eh roots of modern German.
      Yiddish is taught in most Jewish schools as well. Even in Israel Yiddish (once frowned upon) is now being taught. Int was a shame it was not made an official language after Hebrew. Hebrew was revived as a spoken language in an attempt to unite the Jewish people that came back from 4 corners of the world. Int would be a common language, not like Latin which is just used in prayer.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 3 года назад +3

      @@michelnahasfilho1958 PS Interesting that the Yiddish speaker is from Brazil too. You can tell his accent when he speaks English. He doesn't look especially Ashkenazi so I find it interesting that he speaks Yiddish so well!

  • @Standoffmuffin
    @Standoffmuffin Год назад +6

    I love talking to Yiddish people it's always nice to share cultures even though I only know a bit of German.

  • @netzdame
    @netzdame 3 года назад +62

    That was fun! I studied medieval German at university, so I guess I had a bit of an advantage here. Yiddish keeps quite a lot of features that High German lost and that the dialects of southern Germany kept. The syntax is also closer to older German, but also influenced by English and Hebrew too I guess.

  • @elizaa.367
    @elizaa.367 3 года назад +247

    Haha, I think I can add Yiddish to my CV, since I understand 80-90% of it, as I speak German 😂
    Two very intelligent gentlemen, fantastic work 😊👏

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +9

      Vielen Dank :)!

    • @elizaa.367
      @elizaa.367 3 года назад +5

      @@tayfun8975 Sehr gerne! Du hast es geschafft 😊👍

    • @jonahs92
      @jonahs92 3 года назад +14

      @@tayfun8975 Liebe Grüße nach Deutschland, aus Israel! 🇮🇱💚🇩🇪

    • @tayfun8975
      @tayfun8975 3 года назад +9

      @@jonahs92 Grüße zurück aus Deutschland nach Israel !😁

    • @renedupont1953
      @renedupont1953 3 года назад +3

      Liebe Eliza --- Please read my answer to 1847. Your statement about understanding 80-90% is completely wrong. I can provide thousands of typical Yiddish sentences that you wouldn't even begin to understand --- so don't be ridiculous. During World War II, your "wonderful" German mother tongue was the language of mass-murderers. Die schrecklichen und schändlichen Verbrechen gegen die Menschheit, welche Deutschland begangen hat, wird die Welt nie vergessen. Sie haben keine Jiddischkenntnisse und Ihre Äusserung ist nicht wissenschaftlich begründet.

  • @CHEF2077
    @CHEF2077 3 года назад +63

    As a Portuguese person who lives in Switzerland, therefore speaking three fluent languages (english, german and portuguese - ofc also swiss german) I pretty much understood everything. I‘m impressed that it‘s actually so reachable, because the different alphabet made me always think, that the language is completely different.

    • @Tiqerboy
      @Tiqerboy Год назад +1

      There are a lot of Portuguese people living in the French part of Switzerland as well.

    • @milleziano
      @milleziano Год назад

      The language is completely different, bc Yiddish uses the Hebrew block script to phonetize its mixture of German dialects. Though it also has many words that are derived from Hebrew, Yiddish isn't quite the same as Hebrew.

    • @Ultrapro011
      @Ultrapro011 Год назад +1

      @@milleziano yiddish also looks weird for hebrew speakers and and most of the time looks like gibberish

    • @milleziano
      @milleziano Год назад

      @@Ultrapro011 Yeah, I can imagine. But, you have to admit it's quite clever how Yiddish came about.

    • @ThrE3-GeS
      @ThrE3-GeS Год назад +1

      @@Tiqerboy portuguese are everywhere in switzerland. Im living in luzern

  • @FHIPrincePeter
    @FHIPrincePeter Год назад +2

    The book that helped me, an English man, crack German was Astrid Stedje's "Deutsche Sprache gestern unde Heute" it made me realise that Language is a living and evolving means of communication where the rules and meanings change , new words are added and old deleted.

  • @AndersGehtsdochauch
    @AndersGehtsdochauch 3 года назад +148

    Der Mensch tracht (auf Hochdeutsch: *strebt)* und Gott lacht.
    Ein herrliches Sprichwort. So wahr 💜

    • @Lindalindali
      @Lindalindali 3 года назад +24

      Bei uns ist diese Version geläufiger: "Der Mensch denkt und Gott lenkt."

    • @AndersGehtsdochauch
      @AndersGehtsdochauch 3 года назад

      @@Lindalindali Genau, so kenne ich es auch.

    • @ullielch7592
      @ullielch7592 3 года назад +7

      Der Mensch denkt und Gott lenkt. - Der Mensch dachte und Gott lachte.

    • @Max77Prime
      @Max77Prime 3 года назад +3

      Gott lacht auch wenn kinder sterben, vergewaltigt werden, menschen sterben bomben explodieren ect. Er ist ein voyorist

    • @AndersGehtsdochauch
      @AndersGehtsdochauch 3 года назад

      @@Max77Prime Ein Voyeurist, meinst du? Das ist etwas Anderes. Aber ein Sadist, der würde das tun, was du hier beschreibst.

  • @Crazy_Humorous
    @Crazy_Humorous 3 года назад +31

    I am a native Dutch speaker and I only understood the first Yiddish sentence he said. We say the same thing in Dutch: "De mens plant, God lacht." I understood 80% of the German sentences. Very interesting! I enjoyed watching this video.

    • @toade1583
      @toade1583 Год назад

      Amsterdam had a big Yiddish population prior to the Holocaust so it makes sense that it would be a common phrase over there. It's also a common phrase in English and the US(the largest English speaking population) has a very large Eastern European (so traditionally Yiddish speaking) Jewish population so it goes without saying that there is a lot of Yiddish influence on American English

  • @juliasteiwer
    @juliasteiwer 3 года назад +52

    I'm German and currently learning Yiddish on duolingo, and yes, it's no problem for me to understand it! ^_^

    • @Alexandre.Hamann
      @Alexandre.Hamann 3 года назад

      I'm a German teacher, if need help!

    • @mllesamedi84
      @mllesamedi84 3 года назад +1

      Griaß Di, Julia! Ich mach auch grad den Duolingokurs und habe fast ein schlechtes Gewissen den anderen Teilnehmern gegenüber 😉

    • @ems7623
      @ems7623 3 года назад

      I've never taken a class to learn a dialect. Interesting idea.
      I'm sure this is feasible if it is a dialect of your native language, but I'm not sure I could learn a dialect of a language i learned as an adult. I found learning Italian almost too confusing, given it was difficult to seperate from the French already in my head.
      Hell, I've even been known to accidentally use German words when speaking French in France. Once, I couldn't think of "lunettes" and out came "mes Brilles!"
      I think i will stick to Hochdeutsch!

    • @mllesamedi84
      @mllesamedi84 3 года назад

      @@ems7623 There's nothing wrong with sticking to the official version of a language 🙂
      In fact I find it rather disturbing when some people watch too much gangster movies and then use this kind of speech with normal people. (I'm sure you wouldn't do that).
      After watching the series "Shtisel" I just wanted to dig into Yiddish and it's a nice way to learn the Hebrew characters.
      As for dialects of foreign languages: I have very little experience with Sicilian and would rather stick to the tuscanic Italian myself.

  • @toxikprophetbeats
    @toxikprophetbeats 2 месяца назад +2

    Amazing video! Really entertaining for me to watch considering I know the hebrew alphabet and learn german on daily basis. I am from Czech republic, so even some words are also similar in my region.. Really love this video. Wish I have learned some yiddish sooner before my grandma passed away, but I was too young back then. I will honor her now by learning at least something if I haver the cnance. Thanks again and I wish you the best.

  • @GeneaVlogger
    @GeneaVlogger 3 года назад +39

    In my experience growing up in a Reform Jewish Synagogue in the US, while very few spoke Yiddish fluently (mostly the elderly), Yiddish was still very prevalent in the community. It seemed that most everyone knew at least a few dozen words and phrases, with many knowing much more, and many people would commonly intersperse Yiddish words while speaking English. Saying things like 'look at that punim' or calling girls 'sheyn maidel'.

    • @SamAronow
      @SamAronow 3 года назад +5

      That's interesting. I also grew up in a Reform synagogue in the US, and it was entirely Hebraized- we had to learn modern Hebrew with an Israeli accent. I know virtually nothing of Yiddish.

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC 3 года назад

      I know which I’d prefer!

  • @alexeiabrikosov360
    @alexeiabrikosov360 3 года назад +77

    Yiddish has two major dialects. Pinchas speaks Eastern Yiddish, which is by far the more common one, and historically it was mainly spoken in Ukraine, Romania, Poland, Hungary, Lithuania, and Russia. It has further divisions of course. Then there is Western Yiddish which was spoken mainly in Germany, Austria, Netherlands, and the surrounding regions.

    • @sallylauper8222
      @sallylauper8222 3 года назад +3

      Would Western Yiddish speakers understand a lot more German?

    • @amiwho3464
      @amiwho3464 3 года назад +2

      Interesting. But do you know why particularly german ended up being the base language?

    • @noamto
      @noamto 3 года назад +11

      Western Yiddish stopped being spoken almost completely by the end of the 19th century.

    • @noamto
      @noamto 3 года назад

      @@sallylauper8222 yes but mostly because they lived in areas were German was spoken/taught in school.

    • @noamto
      @noamto 3 года назад +5

      @@amiwho3464 because they just settled in southern Germany after arriving from the former Roman empire and decided to keep the language after moving from there.

  • @SgtRocko
    @SgtRocko 3 года назад +19

    This is awesome! We are a Yiddish-only speaking home here in the US (The door shuts, NO ENGLISH) - even my Gaelic speaking Hub and his son had to learn Yiddish when they moved in (they can both read and write it, as well). When I speak to my work colleagues in Germany, we can understand a good 80% of what we're saying. One of them told me the Yiddish de-emphasis on the Du and Sie forms of address are the biggest thing they have to adjust to (for US, you use Sie with G-d, not man LOL). Pinchas' Yiddish is interesting to hear - totally understandable, but he uses more long "oh" and "ai" sounds than we do; we tend to "oy" and "ey" - but since my American co-workers here in the Midwest LOVE making me say words with my Brooklyn accent it's about the same (Dey make me say woids at woik LOL). Anyhow, we love Yiddish. I raised my kids to be Yiddish speakers, and even though they're now all in Israel and are under 35 and secular, they only speak Hebrew with non-Yiddish speakers. My whole very large extended family there is like that, and they have a large network of friends who are the same...

  • @stefanocicale9269
    @stefanocicale9269 4 месяца назад +1

    One of the funniest and most interesting videos I've ever seen.

  • @Lars_1301
    @Lars_1301 3 года назад +36

    Hello, thanks for this nice Video. I live in the south of Germany near the Lake Konstanz. I understood every word. Jidish is like an German dialect and very similar to the dialect in southern Germany. We also add "le" to many words. In the north we say for goodbye "Tschüss" and for a Onion "Zwiebel", in the south we say "Tschüssle" and "Zwiebele". In the first sentence there was the Yidish word Tracht. This comes from "trachten" to strive for something.
    Many greetings from Germany, Lars

    • @IgorDellaPietra
      @IgorDellaPietra 3 года назад

      are you sure about your definition of "trachten"? i thought it had a negative connotation like.. "to envy"
      to the one suggesting fräulein as a standard german word - what about "fräuleinchen"?

    • @IgorDellaPietra
      @IgorDellaPietra 3 года назад

      @Krister L tha's somewhat helpful, but i take that suggestion with caution because every language is different in details. if i translate your word into english it becomes "desire" which also has only positive connotations but vice versa ends up beeing "wünschen" in german ^^

    • @marengrape2244
      @marengrape2244 3 года назад

      @@IgorDellaPietra "trachten" is originally not negative: www.dwds.de/wb/trachten (Link to the "DWDS" (Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache), an online dictionary of German, including the etymology of words, so where they stem from). But I would agree that nowadays, as it is a very old word and hardly used anymore, if it is used, it is usually in a negative context.
      Fräulein is a standard word but also old fashioned. Fräuleinchen is a word that can be used, but usually to make fun of someone or to make a "Fräulein", so a young woman or a girl, appear even more "cute" or "small" (what the diminutive is usually for).

  • @dafdeutschalsfremdsprache8204
    @dafdeutschalsfremdsprache8204 3 года назад +8

    Love it. I could speak to Pinchas for hours just analyzing Yiddish and German sentences and find out the similarities. He has a great background knowledge on the history of the Yiddish language. So interesting!

  • @salalal7491
    @salalal7491 3 года назад +50

    yiddish dude's first sentence: short and simple
    german dude: haha long sentence go brrrrrrr

    • @whukriede
      @whukriede 3 года назад

      Yes, he should have broken it down more, to single words and then recombine from there.

  • @OttQwumm
    @OttQwumm Год назад +1

    Such a great video! Could watch the Yiddish vs German for many hours :)

  • @martinv.352
    @martinv.352 3 года назад +47

    The ending "...le" to make things small like "Zwiebele" (small onion) is very common in the northern part of Bavaria, called "Franken". There are dialects in Germany which are closer to Yiddish and others are not.

    • @thenamen935
      @thenamen935 3 года назад

      And then there are "northern" Swiss Dialects which just has 'normal' words ending in "...le" without it telling you anything about its size.
      E.g. "Zweebele" (Zwiebel, onion) "Huusklingle" (Türklingel, doorbell).
      We sometimes use "...li" for small things, but not always "...li" is small. E.g. "Glöckli" (Glöckchen, small bell) whilst a "Drämmli" (Strassenbahn, Streetcar/Tramway) is rather big.

  • @danaschumacher1663
    @danaschumacher1663 3 года назад +11

    Guys, this is so awesome! I watched 'Shtisel' recently and was really blown away how close Yiddish and German could get. I even found Yiddish words that my granny and german people in general use. Like 'süßerlein', 'meschuge' and 'kaff' (not sure about the spelling).
    In the south of Germany the term '-le' is also used to make things smaller. As in 'Häusle' which is a small house.
    To put ot in a nutshell: This video was soooo fun. It was like a riddle to get the Yiddish right myself and so exciting to watch Pinchas guessing the german meanings. Thanks a lot!

    • @chrisrudolf9839
      @chrisrudolf9839 3 года назад

      Schlamassel and Tohuwabohu are two other examples that even made it into non colloquial German. Some regional dialects have adapted many more Yiddish expressions, often without people nowadays being aware of their origin.

  • @speakingupforpointmolate4670
    @speakingupforpointmolate4670 3 года назад +68

    I am of Ashkenazi Jewish heritage. I know some Yiddish, but I am certainly not fluent. My mother was born in Berlin, and is a survivor of the Holocaust. I grew up among German Jews speaking German, but my mother did not speak German to me, therefore I know some German, but again, I am not fluent. This was so interesting. I could understand a lot of the Yiddish,and German.

    • @denizon5859
      @denizon5859 3 года назад +2

      Das ist schön das du uns verstehst!

    • @zsualite7984
      @zsualite7984 3 года назад

      Weird how they just let so many survive. What's the reason?

    • @aShyBuhBye
      @aShyBuhBye 3 года назад +2

      @@zsualite7984 weird how people like you even exist.

    • @zsualite7984
      @zsualite7984 3 года назад +1

      @@aShyBuhBye That ask legitimate questions instead of just believing everything?

    • @goodputin4324
      @goodputin4324 3 года назад

      Deus velt

  • @eg4016
    @eg4016 Год назад +4

    So cool to see how people get connected through languages! I think the understanding of Yiddish, first, depends on where from Germany you come, because I translated tracht into "trachten" and this can also mean "to think" in some parts of south Germany. And second, it depends on your knowledge of the old meanings of the words. If you know the old meanings or the origin of the word, you can understand Yiddish better because it is more similar to old German than to the German that is spoken today. Today for example, you can still find these old words in German bibles.

  • @narcissamalfoy6789
    @narcissamalfoy6789 3 года назад +35

    I love how pinchas chose an easy sentence with 6 words to start off and then tayfun was like: anyways please translate this whole paragraph about werder bremen 🥰

  • @nichtich4633
    @nichtich4633 3 года назад +12

    I’ve had a chat once on a flight from Manchester to Stuttgart with an elderly fella who spoke Yiddish. He was actually more comfortable speaking Yiddish/german with me than English. We understood each other quite well.

  • @StamboulTrain
    @StamboulTrain 3 года назад +13

    Great video, Bahador, as always! Keep up the good work. Here's my wishlist for future videos, in approximate order of preference: 1. Turkish + Egyptian Arabic. 2. Romani + Sanskrit (or one or more modern Indian languages). 3. Scots + Jamaican Patois. 4. Haitian Creole + Papiamento (or a similar creole). 5. Arabic + Swahili + Hausa (or other Arabic-influenced African languages). 6. Various Bantu languages (Swahili, Chichewa, and so on). 7. Old English (Anglo-Saxon) + modern Germanic languages. (I was going to include Yiddish and German on this list, but it seems you beat me to it!)

    • @buddabulletproof
      @buddabulletproof 3 года назад

      Some of those have absolutely zero mutual intelligibility despite lots of cognates, e.g. Turkish & Arabic, or Arabic, Swahili and Hausa. Will be a boring video. But I think 6. Swahili, Chewa, Shona and Zulu would be very very interesting.

    • @StamboulTrain
      @StamboulTrain 3 года назад +1

      @@buddabulletproof O.k., but the lack of mutual intelligibility would apply to most of the videos on this channel. I think the raison d'etre of Bahador's channel is to surprise and startle people by showing that even the most far-flung language pairs have words in common.

    • @buddabulletproof
      @buddabulletproof 3 года назад

      @@StamboulTrain English and Russian also have lots of common words / cognates (borrowings from French, German, Greek, etc) but a video of speakers trying to understand each other would be pretty pointless.

    • @StamboulTrain
      @StamboulTrain 3 года назад +1

      @@buddabulletproof Some of Bahador's videos (esp. the recent ones) focus on mutual intelligibility between languages/dialects, but most do not. Sometimes it's precisely because two languages are not closely related that people enjoy seeing that they have words in common (hence my suggestion to do a Romani + Sanskrit/Hindi/Bengali video: I for one think it would be cool to show that Roma people actually speak an Indian language). If you prefer the former type of video, I'd recommend Norbert's "Ecolinguist" channel, which focuses exclusively on mutual intelligibility.

  • @farnaztari6267
    @farnaztari6267 2 месяца назад +1

    It‘s so interesting !! Thank you.