A good Algerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly include Kabyle! 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
The Libyan guy seems to be a very fun guy to hang out with and actually all 4 guests are very friendly and outgoing. They make it even more interesting. I enjoyed it very much.
I can't wait for the part 2, I was following you for almost 2 years now, and I really like the content, but you shocked me with that video man, my mother language is there...omg, it was fun and constructive at the same time...keep the good content
I had tears in my eyes watching this video, I don't want all that heritage to disappear like it doesn't exist before... we have a great history, language, clothes, traditions, music, wisdom... i suffered a lot from racism when I was young, to that point that I don't want people to know my last name, because it's purely amazigh, we were treated as minority, I was feeling like an immigrant im my country, in my land, my ancestors land... but after growing up and learning about my history I realized the truth, and the truth is i'm proud to be an amazigh..thaks a lot
@@nonof6500 casablanca, morocco... I was born there, but my parents are from the south "souss" ... we get used to those kind of speech since my childhood, but now this discrimination thing, it's getting less and less, and it doesn't get me any more even if it happens again
@@Spopo9002 The same ones that were so hostile against you are unaware that over 90% of their heritage is Amazigh. People in NA tend to believe that because you speak arabic/darija your ancestors come from Arabia, which is not true by any means. So basically those ignorants were making fun of their own heritage.
@@muhammadm4582 genericly yes , but there are lot of arabized amazigh that think they are arabs but actually they are not so those people hate everything related to amazigh culture
I have so much love and admiration for the Amazigh people, their beautiful culture, their history, food, traditions and their battle and success in preserving their language! Lots of love from Iran 💞😻
Battle? Preserve their language? They had all the time from 743 AD to preserve their "language" (this video your commenting to just proves that a Southern Moroccan Amazigh and a Northern can't understand one another) and they never even established a unified literary language.
From tamurt n leqvayel. Fehmegh tarifit mlih, more than tachlhit and tanfusit. However we say agma/waltma like ichelhiyen but your language is the nearest. Tanemirt ik, hemlegh kenwi imdukal negh atas atas
@@ilyasaitaissa8936 iam from holland kabylie tarifit are near to chawi they undrestand eacht other more then kabylie but i like soussi are more near to our mentality riffi people are like mezabiya
Uf... I hope in Canary Islands you are planning to do with a serious scholar or simply with a non-professional normal person, but equally informed and serious, because canarian amazigh dialects were lost at XVI century, we have only a fragmentary knowledge of it (and also a minimal survival in canarian spanish) and specially because there are some fringe theorists minoritary groups claiming to "speak" a totally fake/invented version of guanche. They are a tiny group of people, they don't represent canarian nationalism and much less canarians in general. There are similar groups in many other places of the world were a language was lost but a people identity remains (Puerto Rico, indigenous northern Argentina and Chile or Andalusia, to cite some examples very similar to Canary Islands in when, how and by who were conquered and assimilated). I can feel empathy for these groups sadness about the lost of a language I feel the same way about my own identity, but lying and creating a clumsy language by mixing true historic features or words with other modern variants and totally invented parts is wrong and doesn't help in any culture development.
@@antoniomoreno8045 Very interesting things about the Canary Islands. What's your lost identity if you don't mind me asking? I once read that the Moreno family is Morisco/Andalusian. I am not sure if you are referring to that.
Amazing I was waiting for this for such a long time !! Thanks Bahador for this video, my grandma's native language is Tacawit (shawiya/ chaouia) the amazigh dialect of East Algeria (in the Aures). Having visibility for our languages is so important, thanks for the good work
I really admire the fact that they're speaking in English about their mother tongue when they also speak their Arabic dialect along with standard Arabic probably and then French as well. Absolutely mad. Roughly 4-5 languages under each of their belts.
👉 This's a racist ideology called "Amazigh" which constructed by the french in Paris 1967 when lost Algeria, to brain wash some Arabs (Kabyle) against the wider population of Arabs, to "devide to reighn" It's an evil a d racist plot for marginalising the Arab population, and drop Islam and Arabic from the "Arab Maghreb countries" Do not support racist ideologies without understanding their real motives. Peace
Yes We have our principal language Tamazight with its alphabet called TIFINAGH and more than 15 dialects,by the way every Amazigh speaks at least three languages : Tamazight our mother language French Arabic Some of them master English.
@@sigsigoise4709 ,the racist ideology is your Arabic one.Shame on you you’re lying in front of people who knows that North Africa is Amazigh . I am Kabyle and Amazigh ,I prefer dying than denying my origins and becoming arab as you .
@@sigsigoise4709 Just accept that there are people with different backgrounds culture and languages to you and stop denying people's identity. You are dividing yourself from a group of people you should be proud about not demonising them. Sounding racist yourself if you ask me.
You are not pure arab arabs live in middle east not north africa the arabs come and spread islam some of them married amazigh women btw the only arabic country is egypte ur arabic is a mix from france Spain amazigh if u dont like go back to middle east
Wow this is beautiful, my greatest regret in life is that I didn't learn tachlhit when my grandma used to talk with me. It feels like a great portion of my identity is missing. Bring these guys again and add someone from the kabylie region! It would be great.
Wow! Genuinely made.. Only four persons, and a few sentences gave a ton of variations.. some poeple would see in that an kind of an obstacle, but we see in it a richness.. i love your work.. do it again plz.
@@zazozazo400 الريف الشرقي، ممر تازة، الجزء الشمالي من الاطلس المتوسط، الجهة الشرقية هده مناطق زناتة في المغرب، اما الجزائر فأغلبهم من زناتة ما عدا القبائل و الطوارق. ليبيا و تونس زناتة ما عدا طوارق ليبيا.
There's also Tamasheq in Libya in the south spoken by the Tuareg, the people who preserved the Amazigh writing system (Tifinagh) in the desert. This was wonderful, thank you so much, great as always from Bahadoor. Edit: Siwi also in the East of Libya bordering Egypt. I believe the Libyan brother only mentioned the Mountain/Western Libya Tamazight dialects.
@@mohasalim8649 you think some arbitrary line made by the colonial powers represents the realities on the ground? The are people from the same families on either side of that border. That being said Siwi is also spoken in places like Awjilah oasis on the Libyan side.
Tunisia and Libya are extremely culturally similar, even the Arabic dialects are quite similar and the traditional dress. The biggest difference is that Libyans tend to be more religious than Tunisians
So happy to see this! I’m Moroccan from Tangier living in Europe. My grandma is Riffian Amazigh, but never taught my father and so now we have no knowledge at all of the language. So it’s beautiful to see that the language/ dialects are being kept alive and thriving. Rather than disappearing! ❤️
I learned about an Amazigh Group of People named the Siwii, known to the Greeks in the ancient times as Amonii for their renouned temple of Oracle of Ammon or Amun , located in the Oasis of Siwa that borders Egypt & Libya. I hope they got a dialect too :) Btw. I have alot of Amazigh friends mostly from Algeria...The Kabyles
I didn’t know that the Amazigh language has so many dialects and they are so different from each other. You always learn new things at Bahdor’s channel
@@AmericanEnglishBrent There is no "natural language" actually, the language has no native speakers it's a made-uo language from all the dialects and each country (Algeria and Morocco) have their own standard Berber language according to local dialects
Just in morocco par exemple un North Rif WE have same amazigh language but every region have different dialect hahahha and in all MOROCCO we have. More than 4
I had to laugh at 11:20 (after the "tongue twister"): - It's not Chinese, it's Tamazight. - Does one of the "che" mean "eating"? Me: Of course. 吃 (chī) means "to eat" in Mandarin Chinese 😆.
hahaha if i had one wish that i know for sure it will become true i would wish to travel back in time and be able to see how cultures interacted with each other to solve a lot of non-logical puzzles. I mean how a chinese word matches the same meaning and pronunciation of a Tmazight word and how (according to my experience) tunisians and Afghans have the same traditional dish but the other countries between them don't. 🤔🤔🤔 much love and peace ✌🏼❤
@@alexj9603 Oh nice, I'm currently learning German, but I'm still at an early stage. I mean, of course it has nothing in common with German, they say it because of the cliché about German sounding harsh and like a mess of consonants, I guess you know what I mean hahaha
Thank you for this video.. Tarifit is a Zenatti language, like Nefusa in Libya, Chaouia in Algeria and the Tunisian Amazigh dialect. We can understand it good. Tachelhit and taqbaylit is different, we can understand some words but we cant communicate with eachother.
Finally somebody explains it. Many (even in this video) find it weird that some Amazighs from a country would better understand a dilect from another country over another dilect from their own country, ignorin the fact that the language family has by thousands years predated any current political border :). Indeed Rifi, Chawiya are both from the Zenata sub-group that spans the northern part of North Africa. Chelha, Senhaja & Masmouda (Atlas) are other groups, Kabyle is sometimes considered Zenati and sometimes its own group... After all, they all come from a same language that was spoken across most of North Africa, maybe up to Eastern Libya and maybe not including Egypt (Siwis are said to have migrated to the Oasis from the west)...
Totally false, zenatti and sanhaji don’t mean anything today since tarifit and taqvaylit are really closed to each one. Listen to the riffian guy at the end, he said that he can understand taqvaylit’s song of Idir, that shows zenatti and sanhaji don’t mean anything nowadays, it was the case several centuries ago, but not today. For example, I am kabyle and I went to Morocco several times, I am able to understand tarifecht (70-80%) dialect more than tachelhit (30-40%)
So interesting to hear all this variety, but they all named amazigh. I'm proud to be a part of this culture. Really proud, I speak tamazight with my husband because I hope my children will be able to speak tarifit when they go older. It's so important for me.
Thank you so much for this video!!! I've been following your channel for a couple of years now but I've never expected you to talk about Amazigh languages. Well done 👏 I'm Moroccan from the very estern end of the Rif region, close to Algeria (you included someone from Nador, I was born there and lived in Berkane, like 80km away from Nador). Unfortunately I don't speak Amazigh I only know a couple of words. It kinda stopped at my father's generation 🙃 But I'm so proud of Amazigh languages being of both Amazigh and Arab blood. Thanks again I appreciated this video 😄
Very good initiative, I really enjoyed watching the video. As an Algerian Kabyle I have to say that I understood most of you guys because in Algeria we have Ichenwiyen and Ichawiyen whose languages are very close to some of the languages spoken in this video. Having mixed with both Ichawiyen and Ichenwiyen when i was at University in Algiers, i found it very easy to understand each other. The differences we have are similar to Arab people or Americans, Australians and British people, so keep up the good work and once again THANEMIRTH, MANY THANKS for bringing these people together.
Thank you for the content, it really nice specialy that you speak english, for me as Arabized riffian who don't speak Riffian, realy make it easy for me to learn..and the differences between the different amazigh tongues ! make it more understandable how the language structure is. Hope to see more english videos like this, i think it the language which most dominante nowaday , you should use it more, big up.
An zAlgerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly include Kabyle!
@@rifnador5937 iam kabyle girl riffi dialact is near to chawi in algeria and the mentality of riff are same like mozabites in algeria and kabyle are near to soussi mentality and dialact not all
Lovely to watch all this Imazighen dialect. Hope to see more videos from other Imazighen country like Algeria, Tunisia, And the Canary Island. Greetings from an Amazigh- Tunisian. ❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️ ❤️🇱🇾❤️🇹🇳❤️🇩🇿❤️🇲🇦❤️🇲🇷
As a riffian amazigh who lives in germany it was so interesting to hear other dialects but also to be able to recognise and perfectly understand my own dialect it really feels like home hearing someone speak tamazight ❤️
the zuwari guy gave wrong information 😅 there are currently a total of 6 tamazight dialects spoken vividly in Libya not only nafussi and Zuwari. There are also Yefreni (spoken in Yefren and surroundings in Nafussa), Ghdamsi (spoken in ghadames), Awjili (spoken in Awjila) and Tamaheq and tamasheq spoken by tuargi libyans. Kind of very irresponsible of him to say that without fact checking.
Nice initiative.am amazigh chawi from Aures/Numidia n understand other amazigh dialects at about seventy to ninty percent except taznagit of Mauritania , which diverged widely from the rest.
Me too, i'm an amazigh Chaoui from algeria, we located in the Mountain of Oures, our dialect is Chaoui, i hope next time they Will have a représentative of our dialect. Nb: in the vidéo i understand more the rifian dialect
Thank you very much for this video , it really shows the diversity of moroccan identity and languages 🖤 I'm from Ait Souab in the Souss region i speak "Tachelhit" some like to call it "Tasusit" and of course i did understand the girl from agadir since she speaks the same language as mine, i did understand the zagora guy even if he speaks a bit different from us. I also did understood the riffian a bit and the libyan i got the main idea bcs he used lot of arabic words. Tanmmirt nnk 💚
Truth be told, they language not very well preserved. Even if there are Berber teached in class in Morocco, but there are still many Berber people don't speak the language.
@@santosh-un2bj You mean the Copt? There are still millions Copt people in Egypt, they keep their cristian belief, but they all speak Arabic. May be when they only use it when they do the Misa. I know there are millions of Berber people still the Amazigh language, but the tendence it not very optimistic, or maybe I myself not very optimistic about this topic. Because I was going to learn it, but when I ask people to teach some words, there are plenty self-claimed Berbere don't speak it at all, or they speak a little, but for some words they know only Arabic. I mean what a pretty to forget one's history, identity and culture. I know it gives the interlocuteur not economic advantage to keep this language and culture, so I'm not very optimistic about the future of this language.
@@santosh-un2bj Actually just tachelhit it self has 7 million native speakers. Kabyle and tamazight of middle atlas both 5 millions ... so ye its still well preserved
You don't know for how long I've waited for this one. I want to learn tamazight, but because of the dialectical diversity, I technically learnt both Kabyle and Riffain.
I am Amazigh of the Rif and I understand perfectly with the Amazighs of Kabylia or Chawi. we can understand each other if we want.It is a pity that they are not in the conversation
@@mocro4life5713 there are differences in pronunciation. when I read it I understand. I know it looks more like the atlas. in Rifain it is very different from the rest of the Amazigh dialects.
@@mocro4life5713 all the dialects of Tamazight resemble each other. the raffle is the most different of all. in the rif there are 5 main kabilas and in the eastern rif closer to Algeria they have a similar pronunciation chawi. in rif the double LL for example is DJ, the L is R for example ULL is UR. LLAN is DJAN we use a lot of DJ TCH TSH
In Iran at least 30% of the population speaks other languages than Persian as their mother tongue such as Azerbaijani turkish, Kurdish and Arabic, but these minorities are not taught in their mother tongue at school despite many attempts made by activists, and this matter quickly turns into matter of national security resulting in arrest and multiple criminal case and long term imprisonment
@@umar4655 yes, they learn from their parents. Yes he is of Azerbaijani origin but ever since he became the leader nobody of Azerbaijani origin has been appointed in high ranking official positions.
This video is amazing, thanks for making it! As a speaker of Tamazight (Tashelhit, from oriental region, Oujda, Morocco), I could understand a lot of words, from the four speakers, even the Libyan. I used to think that us amazighs didn't share similar words, but I was wrong. Thadarth (home), itch (eat), uma (brother), walma (sister), yemma (mother), imadukal... The fact that Hajar shared about the mother (yemma) being the root of the family (walma, uma). Really enjoyed the video! 🥰
I love this. Also I’ve heard SOME Arabic and other foreign languages in tamazight spoken here (only tiny bit), where foreign words have been effectively Amazighised. We must not let our language disappear in this way. Let’s preserve our language and salvage aspects of our language that has been replaced by foreign loan words. This is a great video. Watching everyone smile while listening to each other speak made me smile ear to ear too. 😃😍
@@fo6748 It is an old Arab proverb, it's means literally "until we finally agreed to accept the worst, the worst didn't agree to accept us" - meaning something like: "we thought things couldn't get any worse, but apparantly they can" - said in a situation where things just keep getting worse. I find it a very funny proverb 🤣🤣🤣
Fun fact: it often seems to outsiders like Berber words have few to no vowels, but the vowels are actually often “voiceless” or whispered. This is a pretty unique phonological phenomenon.
Hello from Algeria i came to watch the video but unfortunately I found no algerian dialect in the video ...thank you sir , I am following your videos for many years ago ❤️
An Algerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly have participants from Algeria!
Wow they're so diverse in case of (Languages/dialects) they speak good job bahador and (Salam/Azul/Ahul) to our Amazigh brothers from Iraq 🇮🇶 I caught many Arabic words especially in the Libyan and the last man sentences also i loved how the libyan man used Arabic proverbs to translate some sentences 😂😂😂😂
the word for “to eat” that they used, presumably is a cognate to the Hausa wors “ci”, no? I know they’re somewhat distantly relates. Anyway, I used to work with a couple guys from Algeria who spoke one of the Amazigh languages, but when i asked which one they said it was “just Berber” like theres only one. So ive been very curious about how mutually intelligible they really are. Fascinating video.
there used to be a dialect continuum in north africa, from western egypt all the way to Canary Islands. Unfortunately, now, there is only pocket of places where amazigh (aka berber) is still spoken. Arabic has replaced amazigh in the sense that now, we have a dialect continuum of arabic from the middle east to north africa : the closer you are, the more likely you will understand other people.
Indeed, the word for “(to) eat” is thought to be a cognate of the Hausa word “ci” inherited from Proto-Afro-Asiatic. Also, Berber languages are rather closely related, but still distant enough for mutual intelligibility to be low between them. In spite of that, it’s very common for them to be simply referred to as “Berber,” even in linguistic literature. That phenomenon isn’t unique, though. A people can see themselves as part of the same ethnicity and believe they are speaking the same language, even though they may speak distinct languages. The same thing can be seen with Dogon people, for instance. So, even the perception of what one’s ethnicity and/or culture can at times be fluid.
I’ve been following for a long time and I never thought they you would do a video about the Maghreb. I double checked to see if it’s you hahahah. Amazing love the diversity
Salam 3alaykom . i really appreciate this e-meeting , it was an opportunity to discover and exchange our common linguistic expressions , also Re-collecting our diverse Amazigh heritage from different parts of North Africa. Thank you 😊
@@youdeservetheworld1313 I want to visit Algeria just for the sake of historical Amazighs places like the brown mountains, I'm from Morocco and one day I'll give it a visit in the near future
I want a vid for them all lol xD a fluent communication between em only in tamazight to see how far can they understand each other Also...... I'd like to see a Tergui included as well. They have the furthest dialect from french and arabic influence tho
Many thanks to you my dear bahador I'm amazighi also but i can speak little bit of persian language تشكر از شما بهادر عزيزم خيلي ممنون از مراكش شهر خوش امديد در مغرب
Hi everyone, an Amazigh girl (thamazight) passed here. I'm from Algeria and my mother tongue is "Kabyle" one of Thamazight language. Nice to meet y'all
This is fantastic! After having seen a lot of videos comparing similar languages I've always been looking forward for an Amazigh video following that topic, since my mom is Amazigh (Rif). It would be great to have someone from Kabyle or any Touareg for the next video. Greetings!
I'm so greatful that i raised up yo be an Amazigh person, I'm proud ov it it's just makes u special, specially when u have the knowledge abt where u came from.... Happy to gind u guys keep it up.
I really loved this one, oh I wish you can do a comparison between the various North Iranian Caspian languages, Mazandarani, Gilaki, Talysh, Tati and Semnani
They sound beautifully!!! It's sad that arabic, like latin in the past, have been imposed to so many people by the force of war or religion, erasing part of the culture.. You still have the chance to revert that, speaking and writing your beautiful languages and regaining status again.
@@BeyonDemm One of the speakers suggested it was a forceful attempt by the Arabs to stiffle the native Amazigh. Most of the comments here suggest the same. If you want to make it about Islam may be you need to read your history and that of the Arabs before commenting. Nothing suggests the Arab/ Turkish incursion into North, East, or Central Africa was a peaceful one. You must learn to separate between religion, culture, history, and identity.
Thank you very much for having them💖🦋🖤 ,i'm from nador i speak" rifya tamazight" and i understand a few words from each accent , such diversities are worth knowing ! You are the BEST!💖🦋💛💙💚
I don't know how to say this but I really feel grateful being a part of this big civilization I wish we knew all the details about our history Nd i really appreciate this link and bond between us
@@gmailyou367 you’re not gonna show me my language lol. Linguistically, Tamazight is one language that got diverged in all over North Africa. Distance between social groups result in such differences between dialects and languages.
@@yassineyassine4557 yes I’m gonna vote to you about MY language 🤣 not every North African is correct and the amount of BULLSHIT some of you say is embarrassing 🤣 I’m not gonna let you talk nonsense about my culture
@@yassineyassine4557 if there is an original language it’s the soussia one. But we all know Amazighs from Niger and mali doesn’t have the Same origin language 💀
The libyan amazigh said this phrase (Ula yatcha utchou yatcha, ula yatchich, aytcha yatcha) and the translation to rifian language is so similar. Wani yachin "utchou" yacha, wani waychinchi dodcha adich.
A good Algerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly include Kabyle! 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
This was really amazing! I had no idea there was such diversity among the Berber people.
The Libyan guy seems to be a very fun guy to hang out with and actually all 4 guests are very friendly and outgoing. They make it even more interesting. I enjoyed it very much.
Too bad the Algerian rep couldn't come but the video is still nice. This way you have an even bigger reason for a part 2 👍👍
@@doncorleone3082 For sure. Part 2 would be awesome.
I can't wait for the part 2, I was following you for almost 2 years now, and I really like the content, but you shocked me with that video man, my mother language is there...omg, it was fun and constructive at the same time...keep the good content
I had tears in my eyes watching this video, I don't want all that heritage to disappear like it doesn't exist before... we have a great history, language, clothes, traditions, music, wisdom... i suffered a lot from racism when I was young, to that point that I don't want people to know my last name, because it's purely amazigh, we were treated as minority, I was feeling like an immigrant im my country, in my land, my ancestors land... but after growing up and learning about my history I realized the truth, and the truth is i'm proud to be an amazigh..thaks a lot
@@nonof6500 casablanca, morocco... I was born there, but my parents are from the south "souss" ... we get used to those kind of speech since my childhood, but now this discrimination thing, it's getting less and less, and it doesn't get me any more even if it happens again
Be proud of yourself, speak it, all languages belong to Allah and allah understand all the languages.
@@Spopo9002 The same ones that were so hostile against you are unaware that over 90% of their heritage is Amazigh.
People in NA tend to believe that because you speak arabic/darija your ancestors come from Arabia, which is not true by any means. So basically those ignorants were making fun of their own heritage.
I thought amazigh are majority in morocco...
@@muhammadm4582 genericly yes , but there are lot of arabized amazigh that think they are arabs but actually they are not so those people hate everything related to amazigh culture
I am so glad to see this. It’s so hard to find information on the Amazigh language. Keep up the great work.
Your a good English teacher. I watch many videos. I speak Korea.
@@ralphr.4816 Thanks so much!
Hey Brent! Your channel is great 💕
@@minaal-lami2855 oh, wow! Thanks so much. I love all languages, which is why I watch this one.
@oyo oyo that’s so sad.
Amazigh languages sound beautiful, from Serbia
Much love from morocco
Thank you so much.
thank you from algeria
Thanks from a Kabyle who lives in the USA, who has many Slavic friends. Hvala 🙏
It sounds like a DJ scratching
I have so much love and admiration for the Amazigh people, their beautiful culture, their history, food, traditions and their battle and success in preserving their language! Lots of love from Iran 💞😻
Btw The Libyan guy is so cute and hilarious. I loved all them all but he is just so funny 😂
Battle? Preserve their language? They had all the time from 743 AD to preserve their "language" (this video your commenting to just proves that a Southern Moroccan Amazigh and a Northern can't understand one another) and they never even established a unified literary language.
@@theking7908
Are you jealous or what
@@cocchannel9174 Jealous of what? I just hate people talking about something without knowing its history.
Thank you so much.. From Morocco 💐
As a Syrian/Suryoyo I wanna thank all my Amazighi friends they are the kindest and most supportive ❤️ ܬܰܘܕܺܝ ܣܰܓܺܝ ❤️
IAM from Rif Morocco, I speak amazigh tarifit this the most interesting video you made
Thank you very much
From tamurt n leqvayel. Fehmegh tarifit mlih, more than tachlhit and tanfusit. However we say agma/waltma like ichelhiyen but your language is the nearest. Tanemirt ik, hemlegh kenwi imdukal negh atas atas
@@ilyasaitaissa8936 iam from holland kabylie tarifit are near to chawi they undrestand eacht other more then kabylie but i like soussi are more near to our mentality riffi people are like mezabiya
@@izemlinda5807 You are right I am Riffian and I see that Chawi is very close to Riffian
@@mr.nobody.01 yes but the mentality of riffian are same to mezabite
@@izemlinda5807 I speak about the dielect
The mentality I don't know hhh
My fiance is a Kabyle from Tizi Ozou, Algeria. And I'm from Philippines. It's really nice to hear Amazigh language. All the love from 🇵🇭♥️
I am not amazgh but i am so happy to see this video 🇸🇦❤️🙌🏽 thank you
In the next video there should be all the Amazigh dialects : Canary Islands . Morocco. Algeria . Mali. Tunisia . Libya. Egypt. thanks for this vedeo
Algeria itself has many tamazight dialects
@@aminmed1824 Morocco, Algeria and Libya all have many dialects
Uf... I hope in Canary Islands you are planning to do with a serious scholar or simply with a non-professional normal person, but equally informed and serious, because canarian amazigh dialects were lost at XVI century, we have only a fragmentary knowledge of it (and also a minimal survival in canarian spanish) and specially because there are some fringe theorists minoritary groups claiming to "speak" a totally fake/invented version of guanche. They are a tiny group of people, they don't represent canarian nationalism and much less canarians in general. There are similar groups in many other places of the world were a language was lost but a people identity remains (Puerto Rico, indigenous northern Argentina and Chile or Andalusia, to cite some examples very similar to Canary Islands in when, how and by who were conquered and assimilated). I can feel empathy for these groups sadness about the lost of a language I feel the same way about my own identity, but lying and creating a clumsy language by mixing true historic features or words with other modern variants and totally invented parts is wrong and doesn't help in any culture development.
@@antoniomoreno8045
Very interesting things about the Canary Islands.
What's your lost identity if you don't mind me asking? I once read that the Moreno family is Morisco/Andalusian. I am not sure if you are referring to that.
There are sbout 100 people who speak an Amazigh language in Egypt, good luck to find one 😂😂😂
Amazing I was waiting for this for such a long time !! Thanks Bahador for this video, my grandma's native language is Tacawit (shawiya/ chaouia) the amazigh dialect of East Algeria (in the Aures).
Having visibility for our languages is so important, thanks for the good work
The Amazight languages and people’s are so badass and underrated. THANK YOU FOR DOING THIS 🙏🏼.
Iam Kurdish big salute To Native North African people Amazighs(TAMAZIGHA) ♓️♓️
Thank you so much Kurdish people
long live Iraq
@@rashidrosh Long live Kurdistan Her Biji Kurdistan❤️☀️💚
@@abdallah5905 ❤️
@@Brandon12-M Hoo you mean northern Iraq!! ohk biji komari Iraq
I really admire the fact that they're speaking in English about their mother tongue when they also speak their Arabic dialect along with standard Arabic probably and then French as well. Absolutely mad. Roughly 4-5 languages under each of their belts.
👉 This's a racist ideology called "Amazigh" which constructed by the french in Paris 1967 when lost Algeria, to brain wash some Arabs (Kabyle) against the wider population of Arabs, to "devide to reighn"
It's an evil a d racist plot for marginalising the Arab population, and drop Islam and Arabic from the "Arab Maghreb countries"
Do not support racist ideologies without understanding their real motives.
Peace
Yes We have our principal language Tamazight with its alphabet called TIFINAGH and more than 15 dialects,by the way every Amazigh speaks at least three languages :
Tamazight our mother language
French
Arabic
Some of them master English.
@@sigsigoise4709 ,the racist ideology is your Arabic one.Shame on you you’re lying in front of people who knows that North Africa is Amazigh .
I am Kabyle and Amazigh ,I prefer dying than denying my origins and becoming arab as you .
@@sigsigoise4709 Just accept that there are people with different backgrounds culture and languages to you and stop denying people's identity. You are dividing yourself from a group of people you should be proud about not demonising them. Sounding racist yourself if you ask me.
You are not pure arab arabs live in middle east not north africa the arabs come and spread islam some of them married amazigh women btw the only arabic country is egypte ur arabic is a mix from france Spain amazigh if u dont like go back to middle east
Wow this is beautiful, my greatest regret in life is that I didn't learn tachlhit when my grandma used to talk with me. It feels like a great portion of my identity is missing. Bring these guys again and add someone from the kabylie region! It would be great.
It's not late to learn, today thanks to internet, TV, & books it's easiest to study
Azul flawn imazighin lmaghrib proud of Amazigh people all over the world from 🇲🇦
This video just made my day 😍 I'm really proud of being Amazigh ❤️
I'm so happy to see my language Tamazight dialects talking to each other. Great idea great job. Thank you 😊
Wow!
Genuinely made..
Only four persons, and a few sentences gave a ton of variations.. some poeple would see in that an kind of an obstacle, but we see in it a richness.. i love your work.. do it again plz.
الفتاة من اكادير و الشاب من زاكورة ينتميان لنفس العائلة اللغوية ( مصمودة / صنهاجة) ، الشاب الريفي و الشاب الليبي ينتميان لنفس العائلة اللغوية ( زناتة)
مع إختلاف النطق فقط أما الكلمة فهي واحدة مثلا أنا أتكلم السوسية و فهمت كل واحد منهم ولو %50 فهمت الريفية لأن لدي صديق ريفي
انا يزناسنية لغتنا الأمازيغية اسمها الزناتية، لم أكن أعرف أننا نتشاركها مع ريافة و الليبيين
هذا يعني أننا ربما نتشارك الأصول أيضا
@@zazozazo400 الريف الشرقي، ممر تازة، الجزء الشمالي من الاطلس المتوسط، الجهة الشرقية هده مناطق زناتة في المغرب، اما الجزائر فأغلبهم من زناتة ما عدا القبائل و الطوارق. ليبيا و تونس زناتة ما عدا طوارق ليبيا.
@@THEMHAMED1 شكرا على هذه المعلومات، يجب أن أبحث في هذا الموضوع أكثر، أصلك أصلك
@@THEMHAMED1 soo if i'm amazigh from u know next to taza is it considered as znata ?????
There's also Tamasheq in Libya in the south spoken by the Tuareg, the people who preserved the Amazigh writing system (Tifinagh) in the desert.
This was wonderful, thank you so much, great as always from Bahadoor.
Edit: Siwi also in the East of Libya bordering Egypt. I believe the Libyan brother only mentioned the Mountain/Western Libya Tamazight dialects.
Siwis are in the Egyptian side of the borded in Siwa oasis not Libya
@@mohasalim8649 you think some arbitrary line made by the colonial powers represents the realities on the ground? The are people from the same families on either side of that border. That being said Siwi is also spoken in places like Awjilah oasis on the Libyan side.
@@mohasalim8649 There are Amazighs at the Libyan eastern side as well, speaking similar to Siwis
@@averestless I'm Libyan i know my f*cking country better than anyone
@@mohasalim8649 good for you. lol
I'm a native speaker of Tamazight from Southern Tunisia and managed to understand everything the Libyan guy said :') almost similar
@sunny well some towns still uses Tamazight until today even it's kind of mixed with tn dialect
Tunisia and Libya are extremely culturally similar, even the Arabic dialects are quite similar and the traditional dress. The biggest difference is that Libyans tend to be more religious than Tunisians
@@AmalSaidi123 Libyans are just influenced by Italy while tunisians are influenced by france
@@ARMY4LIFe Do you know where we can learn any of the Tamazight languages spoken in Tunisia?
@@MehdiNakouriTn I really have no idea tbh , my parents and grandparents spoke the language, and that's how I learned it
This video was truly amazi(n)gh!
Love to the Amazigh people ❤️ was great session, thanks Bahador!
Thank you so much dear..
From Morocco 💐
@@abdallah5905 you’re welcome! Greetings from Iran 🌹
The best video I have ever seen till now .
So happy to see this! I’m
Moroccan from Tangier living in Europe. My grandma is Riffian Amazigh, but never taught my father and so now we have no knowledge at all of the language. So it’s beautiful to see that the language/ dialects are being kept alive and thriving. Rather than disappearing! ❤️
Thank you so much for this, it's a pleasure and they all seem so nice, best video so far!
I learned about an Amazigh Group of People named the Siwii, known to the Greeks in the ancient times as Amonii for their renouned temple of Oracle of Ammon or Amun , located in the Oasis of Siwa that borders Egypt & Libya. I hope they got a dialect too :) Btw. I have alot of Amazigh friends mostly from Algeria...The Kabyles
Siwi have their own dialect but its diying
Oh that's sad...hope their ancient language and traditions be preserved.
@@zakariamouchbaou siwi speak Zenete variante
@@jubanumidia8460 i know
Siwa speaking like libyan and tunisian amazigh
This is quite awesome. My best wishes for the Amazigh language/languages & hopefully it flourishes in its region.
this was so cute and wholesome they're all so cute i love it thank you for this video!!
I didn’t know that the Amazigh language has so many dialects and they are so different from each other. You always learn new things at Bahdor’s channel
So true. I couldn’t agree more. I just thought it was the one language.
@@AmericanEnglishBrent
There is no "natural language" actually, the language has no native speakers it's a made-uo language from all the dialects and each country (Algeria and Morocco) have their own standard Berber language according to local dialects
neither did I. Very interesting.
Just in morocco par exemple un North Rif WE have same amazigh language but every region have different dialect hahahha and in all MOROCCO we have. More than 4
@@cimoprachtige most of rif people speak zénète
It would be really interesting and insanely rare if you could find a Siwi speaker, its the easternmost Berber language.
Siwi is a zenati dlalect close to zuwara
I had to laugh at 11:20 (after the "tongue twister"):
- It's not Chinese, it's Tamazight.
- Does one of the "che" mean "eating"?
Me: Of course. 吃 (chī) means "to eat" in Mandarin Chinese 😆.
Really ? In tachelhit too we say " icha " = he ate
hahaha if i had one wish that i know for sure it will become true i would wish to travel back in time and be able to see how cultures interacted with each other to solve a lot of non-logical puzzles.
I mean how a chinese word matches the same meaning and pronunciation of a Tmazight word and how (according to my experience) tunisians and Afghans have the same traditional dish but the other countries between them don't.
🤔🤔🤔
much love and peace ✌🏼❤
Well, in morocco people say that Amazigh is German mixed with Chinese hahahahha, maybe there is something true about that lol
@@adamelhawari166 To me as a native German speaker it didn't sound like German at all.
@@alexj9603 Oh nice, I'm currently learning German, but I'm still at an early stage.
I mean, of course it has nothing in common with German, they say it because of the cliché about German sounding harsh and like a mess of consonants, I guess you know what I mean hahaha
Thank you for this video.. Tarifit is a Zenatti language, like Nefusa in Libya, Chaouia in Algeria and the Tunisian Amazigh dialect. We can understand it good. Tachelhit and taqbaylit is different, we can understand some words but we cant communicate with eachother.
Finally somebody explains it. Many (even in this video) find it weird that some Amazighs from a country would better understand a dilect from another country over another dilect from their own country, ignorin the fact that the language family has by thousands years predated any current political border :). Indeed Rifi, Chawiya are both from the Zenata sub-group that spans the northern part of North Africa. Chelha, Senhaja & Masmouda (Atlas) are other groups, Kabyle is sometimes considered Zenati and sometimes its own group... After all, they all come from a same language that was spoken across most of North Africa, maybe up to Eastern Libya and maybe not including Egypt (Siwis are said to have migrated to the Oasis from the west)...
@@averestless kabyle is sanhaja
Totally false, zenatti and sanhaji don’t mean anything today since tarifit and taqvaylit are really closed to each one. Listen to the riffian guy at the end, he said that he can understand taqvaylit’s song of Idir, that shows zenatti and sanhaji don’t mean anything nowadays, it was the case several centuries ago, but not today. For example, I am kabyle and I went to Morocco several times, I am able to understand tarifecht (70-80%) dialect more than tachelhit (30-40%)
@@xenebidule9422 sanhaja and zenata aren't similiar wtf😂😂😂 masmuda and sanhaja are far more similiar
@@MB-hs4ld Tsad elhaq agma arifi, nukni dimazighen. Zemlegh fehmegh kunwi mlih. Kunwi daythmatnegh n Morocco, afous deg fous, we can’t separate blood brothers ❤️ ul amoqran i irifiyen imdukal negh
So interesting to hear all this variety, but they all named amazigh. I'm proud to be a part of this culture. Really proud, I speak tamazight with my husband because I hope my children will be able to speak tarifit when they go older. It's so important for me.
Thank you so much for this video!!! I've been following your channel for a couple of years now but I've never expected you to talk about Amazigh languages. Well done 👏
I'm Moroccan from the very estern end of the Rif region, close to Algeria (you included someone from Nador, I was born there and lived in Berkane, like 80km away from Nador). Unfortunately I don't speak Amazigh I only know a couple of words. It kinda stopped at my father's generation 🙃 But I'm so proud of Amazigh languages being of both Amazigh and Arab blood.
Thanks again I appreciated this video 😄
Love the libyan guy, bring him on the channel again!
He's so funny
Thanks so much for this video. Souss Morocco 😍✨
Very good initiative, I really enjoyed watching the video. As an Algerian Kabyle I have to say that I understood most of you guys because in Algeria we have Ichenwiyen and Ichawiyen whose languages are very close to some of the languages spoken in this video. Having mixed with both Ichawiyen and Ichenwiyen when i was at University in Algiers, i found it very easy to understand each other. The differences we have are similar to Arab people or Americans, Australians and British people, so keep up the good work and once again THANEMIRTH, MANY THANKS for bringing these people together.
Bahador!!! Thank you !!! I’ve been waiting for so long for a video featuring tamazight !!!
Thank you for the content, it really nice specialy that you speak english, for me as Arabized riffian who don't speak Riffian, realy make it easy for me to learn..and the differences between the different amazigh tongues ! make it more understandable how the language structure is.
Hope to see more english videos like this, i think it the language which most dominante nowaday , you should use it more, big up.
I love the rifiyan accent from amazigh sefrou 🇲🇦🇲🇦
Yeah I am a Riffia :)
Great video lacks only Algerian
Kabyle and Chaoui! Perfect job
The description says the Algerian participant couldn't make it last minute
An zAlgerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly include Kabyle!
There are a lot dialects in Algeria not only the 2
Thank you so much guys. I am from Meknès and I speak tachelhit. Very interessing. Your are so nice. God bless
Long live to all my native north Africans wherever they are
Thank you my brother from a Soussi Amazigh ✌️
Azul si Tmurt n laqvayel.
@footeur demeerde yes we came from sweden and china
@footeur demeerde from where ?
@footeur demeerde And in yemen they speak tamazight ? . but if amazighs are from yemen , arabs are from where ?
I'm kabyle and I understood the four of them easily, next time I hope you will bring a kabyle person it will be really interesting
Me too i understood above 95% of them
I'm kabyle too
The guy of nador?
ⴰⵍⴰ ⵉⵢⵣⵎⵉⵔ ⴰⵔⴰ
@@rifnador5937 he was the easiest to understand
@@rifnador5937 iam kabyle girl riffi dialact is near to chawi in algeria and the mentality of riff are same like mozabites in algeria and kabyle are near to soussi mentality and dialact not all
Lovely to watch all this Imazighen dialect.
Hope to see more videos from other Imazighen country like Algeria, Tunisia, And the Canary Island.
Greetings from an Amazigh- Tunisian.
❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️❤️♓️
❤️🇱🇾❤️🇹🇳❤️🇩🇿❤️🇲🇦❤️🇲🇷
As a riffian amazigh who lives in germany it was so interesting to hear other dialects but also to be able to recognise and perfectly understand my own dialect it really feels like home hearing someone speak tamazight ❤️
the zuwari guy gave wrong information 😅 there are currently a total of 6 tamazight dialects spoken vividly in Libya not only nafussi and Zuwari. There are also Yefreni (spoken in Yefren and surroundings in Nafussa), Ghdamsi (spoken in ghadames), Awjili (spoken in Awjila) and Tamaheq and tamasheq spoken by tuargi libyans. Kind of very irresponsible of him to say that without fact checking.
Exactly, i was going to say the same thing . I knew that there are other groups but he didnt mentionne them
Tamaheq is also spoken by Algerian Touareg there is another one called Tamasheq and a third one I don't know the name.
@@mohammedamine2712 tawellimt
@@mohammedamine2712 It's Tamajeq !
He removed Tawariq brothers from the family hahaha.
Nice initiative.am amazigh chawi from Aures/Numidia n understand other amazigh dialects at about seventy to ninty percent except taznagit of Mauritania , which diverged widely from the rest.
Waw,iam from Aures region from eastern Algeria and we speak chawi dielect (znati dielect )،i hope you will host Amazigh Aures. Thank u so much.😊👍.
Me too, i'm an amazigh Chaoui from algeria, we located in the Mountain of Oures, our dialect is Chaoui, i hope next time they Will have a représentative of our dialect. Nb: in the vidéo i understand more the rifian dialect
Thank you very much for this video , it really shows the diversity of moroccan identity and languages 🖤 I'm from Ait Souab in the Souss region i speak "Tachelhit" some like to call it "Tasusit" and of course i did understand the girl from agadir since she speaks the same language as mine, i did understand the zagora guy even if he speaks a bit different from us. I also did understood the riffian a bit and the libyan i got the main idea bcs he used lot of arabic words. Tanmmirt nnk 💚
This is awesome! Much respect to the Amazigh people for preserving their native languages and cultures!
Thank you from Souss Land the capital of Amazighs in Morocco ❤️
Truth be told, they language not very well preserved. Even if there are Berber teached in class in Morocco, but there are still many Berber people don't speak the language.
@@leocharlie4738 But many millions still speak it I believe, whereas in country like Egypt I don't think many speak the pre-Arabic languages?
@@santosh-un2bj You mean the Copt? There are still millions Copt people in Egypt, they keep their cristian belief, but they all speak Arabic. May be when they only use it when they do the Misa.
I know there are millions of Berber people still the Amazigh language, but the tendence it not very optimistic, or maybe I myself not very optimistic about this topic. Because I was going to learn it, but when I ask people to teach some words, there are plenty self-claimed Berbere don't speak it at all, or they speak a little, but for some words they know only Arabic. I mean what a pretty to forget one's history, identity and culture. I know it gives the interlocuteur not economic advantage to keep this language and culture, so I'm not very optimistic about the future of this language.
@@santosh-un2bj Actually just tachelhit it self has 7 million native speakers. Kabyle and tamazight of middle atlas both 5 millions ... so ye its still well preserved
Loved it!! Please do more ❤️, I’m learning more about other Amazigh dialects. Ps : Hajar Rocks 😍
You don't know for how long I've waited for this one. I want to learn tamazight, but because of the dialectical diversity, I technically learnt both Kabyle and Riffain.
How were you learning it? I'm struggling to find sources
I am Amazigh of the Rif and I understand perfectly with the Amazighs of Kabylia or Chawi. we can understand each other if we want.It is a pity that they are not in the conversation
Kabyle isn't similiar to tarifit IMO it's more similiar to atlass tamazight
@@mocro4life5713 there are differences in pronunciation. when I read it I understand. I know it looks more like the atlas. in Rifain it is very different from the rest of the Amazigh dialects.
@@user-hq7lk7gg9b it has some zenata influences riffians and kabyles both THmazight while most other say tamazight
@@mocro4life5713 all the dialects of Tamazight resemble each other. the raffle is the most different of all. in the rif there are 5 main kabilas and in the eastern rif closer to Algeria they have a similar pronunciation chawi. in rif the double LL for example is DJ, the L is R for example ULL is UR. LLAN is DJAN we use a lot of DJ TCH TSH
@@user-hq7lk7gg9b i am from the rif too i am ghmari from mtiwa village but only speak darija
Happy International Mother Language day to everyone
Thank you sir. We have started in Bangladesh this movement and it's national holiday for us
In Iran at least 30% of the population speaks other languages than Persian as their mother tongue such as Azerbaijani turkish, Kurdish and Arabic, but these minorities are not taught in their mother tongue at school despite many attempts made by activists, and this matter quickly turns into matter of national security resulting in arrest and multiple criminal case and long term imprisonment
@@faizullah6671 wow... ❤️
I am british pakistani, love Bangladesh 🤗
@@payamabbasi3555 so how do people learn the languages? Just from their parents? But isn't Ali Khamenei Azerbaijani Turk himself?
@@umar4655 yes, they learn from their parents. Yes he is of Azerbaijani origin but ever since he became the leader nobody of Azerbaijani origin has been appointed in high ranking official positions.
I was waiting for this video for so long, thank you bahador
This video is amazing, thanks for making it! As a speaker of Tamazight (Tashelhit, from oriental region, Oujda, Morocco), I could understand a lot of words, from the four speakers, even the Libyan.
I used to think that us amazighs didn't share similar words, but I was wrong. Thadarth (home), itch (eat), uma (brother), walma (sister), yemma (mother), imadukal...
The fact that Hajar shared about the mother (yemma) being the root of the family (walma, uma).
Really enjoyed the video! 🥰
berkane
Am Ethiopian and I love theses amazigh languages they are so beautiful 😍
I love this. Also I’ve heard SOME Arabic and other foreign languages in tamazight spoken here (only tiny bit), where foreign words have been effectively Amazighised. We must not let our language disappear in this way. Let’s preserve our language and salvage aspects of our language that has been replaced by foreign loan words. This is a great video. Watching everyone smile while listening to each other speak made me smile ear to ear too. 😃😍
the Libyan guy is so funny 18:29 (رضينا بالهم والهم مو راضي بينا ) I'm dying hahahahahaha
What does that mean?
@@fo6748 It is an old Arab proverb, it's means literally "until we finally agreed to accept the worst, the worst didn't agree to accept us" - meaning something like: "we thought things couldn't get any worse, but apparantly they can" - said in a situation where things just keep getting worse. I find it a very funny proverb 🤣🤣🤣
@@ZezoSaa oh thank you for clarification. So this is what the Libyan guy said in his comment?
@@fo6748 yes
Fun fact: it often seems to outsiders like Berber words have few to no vowels, but the vowels are actually often “voiceless” or whispered. This is a pretty unique phonological phenomenon.
Hello from Algeria i came to watch the video but unfortunately I found no algerian dialect in the video ...thank you sir , I am following your videos for many years ago ❤️
An Algerian friend of mine who lives here in Canada was going to be a part of this video and represent Kabyle. However, something came up last minute so she couldn't join us. While I understand that it would have been better if she was a part of it, rest assured that we will do more Amazigh videos in the future and certainly have participants from Algeria!
@@BahadorAlast I hope next time ❤️❤️❤️
I am algerian amazigh girl and proud ♓🇩🇿
Wow they're so diverse in case of (Languages/dialects) they speak good job bahador and (Salam/Azul/Ahul) to our Amazigh brothers from Iraq 🇮🇶
I caught many Arabic words especially in the Libyan and the last man sentences also i loved how the libyan man used Arabic proverbs to translate some sentences 😂😂😂😂
احبكم من الجزائر🇩🇿
@@dzsollking4670 وانا كمان كنبغيكم بالزاف خاوتنا الجزايريين🇮🇶❤🇩🇿
@@th9827 احنا منتكلموش بالكاف كنبغيك كنحبك اخي😅 احنا كلامنا عادي❤
@@dzsollking4670 أحاول أتعلم لهجتكم بالمغرب بصورة عامة ولكن اختلافات واسعة وشاسعة وكل منطقة إلها لهجة لذلك ديصير خربطة 😂😂
@@th9827 هههه والله بالجزائر الشرق لهجة الوسط لهجة الجنوب لهجة الغرب لهجة الشمال لهجة العاصمة الجزائر لهجة🤣🤣🤣
Wow this was so interesting!
Amazighs are amazing
Lovely people, great video. I enjoyed it alot!! Thank you.
This is GOLD, Thank you very much for this
Iam from Rif ( alhoceima) and i loved to see this video, too much material here
the word for “to eat” that they used, presumably is a cognate to the Hausa wors “ci”, no? I know they’re somewhat distantly relates. Anyway, I used to work with a couple guys from Algeria who spoke one of the Amazigh languages, but when i asked which one they said it was “just Berber” like theres only one. So ive been very curious about how mutually intelligible they really are. Fascinating video.
there used to be a dialect continuum in north africa, from western egypt all the way to Canary Islands. Unfortunately, now, there is only pocket of places where amazigh (aka berber) is still spoken. Arabic has replaced amazigh in the sense that now, we have a dialect continuum of arabic from the middle east to north africa : the closer you are, the more likely you will understand other people.
Indeed, the word for “(to) eat” is thought to be a cognate of the Hausa word “ci” inherited from Proto-Afro-Asiatic.
Also, Berber languages are rather closely related, but still distant enough for mutual intelligibility to be low between them. In spite of that, it’s very common for them to be simply referred to as “Berber,” even in linguistic literature. That phenomenon isn’t unique, though.
A people can see themselves as part of the same ethnicity and believe they are speaking the same language, even though they may speak distinct languages.
The same thing can be seen with Dogon people, for instance. So, even the perception of what one’s ethnicity and/or culture can at times be fluid.
I’ve been following for a long time and I never thought they you would do a video about the Maghreb. I double checked to see if it’s you hahahah. Amazing love the diversity
Salam 3alaykom .
i really appreciate this e-meeting , it was an opportunity to discover and exchange our common
linguistic expressions , also
Re-collecting our diverse Amazigh heritage from different parts of North Africa.
Thank you 😊
I'm Soo happy , it's my first time seeing a video about this topic , thank you so much
We want a video about Tunisian and algerian Tamazight
Yep there are a lot of amazighs in Algeria and I'm one of'em, d aqvayli
Yeah Algeria have a lot of amazigh
@@youdeservetheworld1313 I want to visit Algeria just for the sake of historical Amazighs places like the brown mountains, I'm from Morocco and one day I'll give it a visit in the near future
I want a vid for them all lol xD a fluent communication between em only in tamazight to see how far can they understand each other
Also...... I'd like to see a Tergui included as well. They have the furthest dialect from french and arabic influence tho
Many thanks to you my dear bahador
I'm amazighi also but i can speak little bit of persian language
تشكر از شما بهادر عزيزم
خيلي ممنون از مراكش شهر
خوش امديد در مغرب
Persians love Amazigh peoples. May you preserve your beautiful language and culture forever 🙏❤
We love persians too ♥️♥️
@@keyda4372 non
Mamnoun we love persian history and culture
@@krausssama8286 You Arabs hate them and so as a result we adore them.
Persians love everything bad
Hello seeing you guys all communicate in amazigh with each other made me so happy as an amazigh!! thank you for this
Love this!! Keep posting more videos of Amazigh! Love from nador morocco. I’m proud to be amazigh/RIF 🇲🇦♊️
Hi everyone, an Amazigh girl (thamazight) passed here. I'm from Algeria and my mother tongue is "Kabyle" one of Thamazight language.
Nice to meet y'all
This is fantastic! After having seen a lot of videos comparing similar languages I've always been looking forward for an Amazigh video following that topic, since my mom is Amazigh (Rif). It would be great to have someone from Kabyle or any Touareg for the next video.
Greetings!
His pinned comment say the Kabyle participant pulled out last minute
@@umar4655 I see, looking forward for the next time then. Thanks!
Azul fellawen from kabylie
I understood everything guys💙💚💛👄
Nek nath irathen am kem 👌
Nek nath irathen am kem 👌
@@valdark4260 Nek si Ait Yenni, azul a gma
@@xenebidule9422 th l jiran ihi 😁 s3 igh imdukal nath yanni lahibarek 👌
@@valdark4260 Tanemirt ik a gma, theghzi n tudert nwen ay imdukal negh nath Irathen. Hemlegh kunwi atas atas wallah ❤️❤️
I'm so greatful that i raised up yo be an Amazigh person, I'm proud ov it it's just makes u special, specially when u have the knowledge abt where u came from.... Happy to gind u guys keep it up.
Thanks for this vidéo !! I'am from Khanechla ( Chawi) region in Algeria and I indetstood most of our amazigh brothers
I really loved this one, oh I wish you can do a comparison between the various North Iranian Caspian languages, Mazandarani, Gilaki, Talysh, Tati and Semnani
Greetings from Nador, Morocco ❤️ for more years speaking tmazight !!✌️
Bahador I am really glad you made this video, super interesting!!
تحية من أمازيغ الاطلس الكبير والصغير المغرب
Amazing work, amazing video ! Proud of you guys !!!
What about a video of siwa (Egypt) dialect & lybian & tusnisian & algerian &Moroccan ... It would be quiet nice
They sound beautifully!!! It's sad that arabic, like latin in the past, have been imposed to so many people by the force of war or religion, erasing part of the culture.. You still have the chance to revert that, speaking and writing your beautiful languages and regaining status again.
🐍
👍
Where did you get that from ?
@@BeyonDemm It is not about religion but history and self respect. Even Gadaffi spoke on it.
@@BeyonDemm One of the speakers suggested it was a forceful attempt by the Arabs to stiffle the native Amazigh. Most of the comments here suggest the same. If you want to make it about Islam may be you need to read your history and that of the Arabs before commenting. Nothing suggests the Arab/ Turkish incursion into North, East, or Central Africa was a peaceful one. You must learn to separate between religion, culture, history, and identity.
Thank you very much for having them💖🦋🖤 ,i'm from nador i speak" rifya tamazight" and i understand a few words from each accent , such diversities are worth knowing ! You are the BEST!💖🦋💛💙💚
I don't know how to say this but I really feel grateful being a part of this big civilization
I wish we knew all the details about our history
Nd i really appreciate this link and bond between us
Nice video, greetings to all Amazigh people
Love the Tamazight language family ❤😍🙏
Apparently Amazigh isn't a single language but instead a family of languages. Wonderful heritage.
Not true. It’s one old language who got diverged in the whole North Africa.
@@yassineyassine4557no it’s not one language but many different languages
@@gmailyou367 you’re not gonna show me my language lol. Linguistically, Tamazight is one language that got diverged in all over North Africa. Distance between social groups result in such differences between dialects and languages.
@@yassineyassine4557 yes I’m gonna vote to you about MY language 🤣 not every North African is correct and the amount of BULLSHIT some of you say is embarrassing 🤣 I’m not gonna let you talk nonsense about my culture
@@yassineyassine4557 if there is an original language it’s the soussia one. But we all know Amazighs from Niger and mali doesn’t have the Same origin language 💀
Do Swahili from the different areas like tanzania, Congo, Kenya, Mozambique and rwanda
This is great and I would love to see. Perhaps if you can speak Swahili language please contact Mr. Bahador on Instagram for involvement.
Would love to see this!
I would love to see this
I didn’t know you had different types of swahili …
Swahili its arabic cryol
Thank you very much for this video. I m Kabyle and I understood more the Riffi than the other dialects.
The libyan amazigh said this phrase (Ula yatcha utchou yatcha, ula yatchich, aytcha yatcha) and the translation to rifian language is so similar. Wani yachin "utchou" yacha, wani waychinchi dodcha adich.