How Most of the World's Alphabets Are Related
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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📖 SOURCES:
www.britannica...
www.worldhisto...
Salomon, Richard. Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the Other Indo-Aryan Languages (1998) www.google.com...
Daniels, Peter T. Bright, William. The World’s Writing Systems (1996) www.google.com...
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no
Why is the writing upside down?
did you know established titles is a scam? Just search it up
Established titles is a scam and you should look into them.
Bruh why you gotta bring up established titles?
"Now the Phoenicians can get down to business"
Hello, Bill Wurtz fan!
Nice pfp
@@Akame727 horrendous npc
@@mlgdigimon 🤓
By the way, can we switch to a metal that's easier to find? Thanks.
Dude, the amount of love and effort you've put on this video is worthy of my most sincere respect. Thank you very much
Established Titles is a scam, do not buy
It's pretty obvious that it's not.. The entire point is YOU get to buy a piece of land in Scotland, then it gets filled with trees and thats it! It's literally just a more business-y TeamTrees.
@@Straline. they dont plant the trees and you dont get the land or the title of lord. It's all bullshit
@@LakeGameCreepr then why tf is lord on my credit card now hmmm?
I really would love a t-shirt with multiple writing systems on it.
The t-shirts for Cyrillic have characters like е, у, х, щ, ы, ь, ъ wrong. е is ye. у is oo. х is h. щ is shch. ы is ui. ь makes the letter before softer. And ъ makes the letter before harder.
There is no brahmi for sanskrit. Dont spread wrong information. Sanskrit waa oral language it has no dedicated script until 400CE.
Dose South Africa have a great geography???
I am from Turkey and I just learned that there are so many alphabets around us. And we use Latin alphabet. There are no sounds suitable for our language in Arabic. It was already a good option to get away from the Arab influence 150 years ago. Sultan Mahmud II made the first attempt. Confident in the schools he opened, Mustafa Kemal and his friends made this innovation.
Shoutout to the Phoenicians for spitting their culture across the whole Mediterranean and Middle East
And South Asia.
They sure can spit alright
The Phonecians: the most influential culture most people haven't heard of
ruclips.net/video/R1odi73Yzz0/видео.html
this video explains why it is a scam. i cant find my original comment
HIEROGLYPHS ARE NOT MOSTLY LOGOGRAPHIC. This is one of the most pervasive myths surrounding them; the hieroglyphic writing system is mostly phonetic, with some ideographic elements. That house hieroglyph? Yes, it can simply represent a house, but it can also represent the syllable "pr," that is, how "house" sounded in Egyptian - same kind of principle that was applied in proto-Sinaitic, just using Egyptian words instead of Western Semitic ones. The water hieroglyph? Yes it can mean water, but more often it means the sound "n". The little man? Yes, it can mean person... or it can make the sound "i". This myth that Hieroglyphs were logographic stifled decipherment efforts for over a thousand years after they fell out of use, because the majority of people trying to figure out whet they said were trying to figure out codes that weren't there instead of learning the Egyptian language. Also, the Hieratic script is not a simpler alternative to the Hieroglyphic script, in fact it largely uses variations of the same symbols, it's simply a more abstracted form easier to write freehand. I have two videos about the decipherment of Hieroglyphs on my channel, as well as one discussing the origins of the Alphabet that goes over how Hieroglyphs became Proto-Sinaitic, and how Proto-Sinaitic eventually developed into the Latin Alphabet, if anyone wants to learn more.
Same thing is true of Chinese hanzi and Japanese kanji... they have a very strong and underappreciated phonetic core. Of course the elements and radicals are used for semantic emphasis, but the core of the system is phonetic.
Noticed the same thing is true for Mayan glyphs! A phonetic core may be a characteristic of several major writing systems frequently described as picto/logographic.
@@stereomachine You are right, it's definitely not consistent! But hanzji/kanji do have a strong phonetic component. In Japanese they call them, "keisei moji". If you Google it and click on the top link, there's a good article on them! It mentions that at least 80% of Kanji use keisei moji. The introductory kanji are usually not phonetic, but the complicated ones often are.
I don't know Egyptian hieroglyphic/phonetics very well, but recently learned that Mayan glyphs also often use glyphs phonetically! I think maybe it's just a useful and practical way to extend a picto/logographic writing system to cover more and more of a spoken language.
@@stereomachine you are absolutely right that it's not easy to reliably pronounce kanji! But they do still have a strong phonetic component. A lot of scholars undervalue this phonetic aspect and focus on the semantic meaning of elements and radicals... perhaps because they appear picto/logographic.
Yes symbols are different from languages that are written and spoken, a system and comprehensive, a lot of people don’t differentiate, symbols can be found anywhere at anytime.
@@zejugames5045 But it doesn’t make it a real language, maybe the early phases and just interpretations of what the symbols sound like because it varied by individuals, not recorded proof.
Origin of Brahmi from phonecian scrip is a disputed theory and many claim it to be originated from indus script.
yeah he mentions that
It’s obvious as lndus is the native script and older, unique and not even as similar to others. Likely colonial claims and still in that phase, but I’m sure phonecian influenced many.
Indus script is undeciphered so it is impossible to say if the structure of the system shares any similarities with Brahmi. Brahmi does have similar shapes to phonecian letters, abugidas can easily be made from abjads, and Brahmi was created after aramaic expanded.
He... Quite literally said that in the video.
@@Uulfinnbrahmi was likely a created script designed after studying aramaic
Established titles is a scam
The “Lairdship” is just a novelty and a bit of fun. It’s a loophole in Scottish law that doesn’t confer any actual benefit. It’s the tree planting that’s the real reason for checking it out.
@@tobirates916 You dont own any land anz you arent legally allowed to be called Lord and their company is based in Hong Kong
Today the Philippines doesn't use the Baybayin script officially anymore, we use them only for merch purposes (cause they look good in shirts and signs 😁)
దాంట్లో నవ్వడానికి ఏముంది?
@@ashaypallav4158 ಏನೂ ಇಲ್ಲ, ಅದು ನಿಮ್ಮನ್ನು ಏಕೆ ಕೆರಳಿಸುತ್ತದೆ?
Shame. Asian languages look hideous in Latin script.
@@ashaypallav4158 ᜄᜎᜒᜆ᜔ ᜃ?
Might want to do a bit more research into Established Titles. It is a scam.
Chinese is not related to the original Egyptian that evolve a Phonecian and Latin and Aramaic alphabet and so on, but even Japanese (hiragana/katakana) is not random and came from Chinese script. 利 (li) became り (ri), and 以 (yi) became い (i). There's a theory that the Korean Hangeul was inspired by the Mongolian Phags-pa script. If that theory turns out to be true (as well as the Indian Brahmi script from Aramaic) then Korean Hangeul would also be related to the other evolved alphabets mentioned in the video.
I think what he meant that Han ji is unrelated to Aramaic(which is the focus of this video) it's not talking about.
the indic influence on japanese culture is not talked about much. there's linguistic evidence of contact with theravada buddism in modern japanese. 寺 for example is pronounced as tera, a borrowing from pali.
the gojuon ordering of japanese kana is also directly from the brahmic ordering.
I don't know why Korean Alphabet Hangeul was inspired by Phacspa letters theory hold ground. Dude, the king who personally made the new letter system wrote an instruction manual that describes how he came to invent them. He specifically wrote he made the consonants by replicating the oral structure when the each said letter was pronounced and he made vowels based of off symbolic traits of Chinese philosophy. He never once mentions this Phagspa letters in this manual, and the only word in the entire book some historians speculate it to be the vague alludement of the connection between the two is merely a mistranslation and misinterpretation of the English scholars...
@@paulhan1615 While that's mostly true, there are some deprecated (like ㆍ) or not entirely anatomically explained letters/markers.
Wikipedia says "Although it is widely assumed that King Sejong ordered the Hall of Worthies to invent Hangul, contemporary records such as the Veritable Records of King Sejong and Jeong Inji's preface to the Hunminjeongeum Haerye emphasize that he invented it himself" - meaning a possible influence outside of King Sejong himself (although unlikely) cannot be ruled out.
Nah it's unlikely. By the time writing systems got to central Asia, china would have already spread it to korea
It's a common mistake that vowels matter less in Semitic languages. It's just the way things happened. The Canaanites already got used to write without vowels and Greeks weren't committed to that system. We are stuck to this day with a bad system in Hebrew because of this
the concept of short vowels always confuses many of those western channels i don't know why. plus, abjad ISNOT just consonants its long vowels and consonants
@@rowantharwat9195 Well, pure abjad includes only consonants. Later abjads include matres lectionis
don't you have movements to represent vowel letters like in arabic?
@@adonisarmanazi5346 Yes, they are used for both vowels and consonants. What a mess. In Arabic they are used for the long vowels. In Hebrew it's even messier
@ I am thankful for my ancestors for abugidas because they represent almost all phonemes aptly.
All Asian writing systems: "Understandable, have a great day."
Not just Asia, basically all alphabetical scripts in Europe, Africa and Asia (excluding Chinese, Japanese and Korean)
also related, through brahmi. besides sinitic of course.
@alexandergalitevstudentfvh8696 Brahmi is our native writing system, it has nothing to do with Aramaic. These colonials will do everything to make their religious timeline, the correct one.
India has 9 Indigenous scripts
1. Devanagari
2. Guru mukhi
3. Bengali - Assames
4. Gujarati
5. Odisa
6. Kannada
7. Telugu
8. Malayalam
9. Tamil
Almost Similar scripts
1. Devangari, Guru mukhi, Gujarati
2. Bengali, Assames
3. Kannada, Telugu
4. Tamil, Malayalam
5. Odisa
There are more. But they are extinct or near extinct.
Like Sharda (old Kashmiri), Mahajani (Rajasthani), Khudabadi (Sindhi), Modi (Marathi) etc.
@@visi9856 I'm not talking about incomplete script. I'm talking about existing rich in literature n everything that scripts.
@@visi9856 might be tribal scripts
@@visi9856 also mizo, meitei, munda and other tribal scripts
Kamrupi for Bengali-Assamese script
There are some more scripts not mentioned in this video, but likely or definitely falling in this category:
1. Korean. It is a phonetic alphabet invented by a Korean king Sejong with some scholars which seems to have borrowed from the phagba script, from which Tibetan is another variant.
2. The Cherokee sylabary. Invented by chief Sequoiah, inspired by the Latin alphabet, with some glyphs looking quite like Latin characters, but used as (very different) sylables.
He barely mentioned any lmao
@@HammerHeadzzz He mentioned 97% of the world? Apart from pre-colonial American scripts (which mind you are no longer in use) & the oddity that is Korean, that's basically all. Nearly all of the entire planet reads a script that in some way came from the Egyptians.
Bob Lazar of AREA 51 fame, said in an interview that he saw Alien writing on the wall inside one of the UFO's at AREA 51.
And that the Alien writing looked like Korean writing.
He didnt mention Cherokee because their are loads and loads of writing systems which we have records of being invented recently. The "toto" language of a tribe near the Indo-Bhutan border has an artificial script. Also there are many languages in the gulf of guinea which have artificial scripts
The Armenian and Georgian scripts were not derived from the Greek alphabet! There is some speculation among scholars that Mesrop Mashtots, the creator of the Armenian alphabet, may have been inspired by Greek, but even this is very unsure as there is hardly any ressemblance between either Armenian or Georgian and Greek (aside from letters borrowed later on like Ֆ for "F"). The only real similarity is in the order of the letters! In any case, your description is very misleading - you describe those alphabets as if they just naturally branched off from Greek... both were intentionally (and separately) created in the 5th century so as to translate the Bible into both Armenian and Georgian.
What language were they translating the Bible from?
Was it... Greek?
@@westrim Both the Syriac and Greek versions were used for the Armenian translation. I'm sure that both inspired Mashtots, but there's a big difference between alphabets being *inspired* by others and *deriving* from others. As I already pointed out, the last one implies that they either sort of just naturally developed, or are so close to the supposed origin alphabet that it is obvious to anyone with eyes (think Latin, Cyrillic, Greek...) - neither is the case with the Armenian and Georgian scripts.
@@adoberoots Ֆ DERIVED FROM 𐌚.
Georgian and Armenian don't look like Greek alphabet, but are based on it, the order of letters implies this (as you also pointed out). Creators of Georgian and Armenian alphabets definitely used Greek, maybe they used other alphabets too (some say the Georgian alphabet was also influenced by Gothic alphabet).
Interesting,since i memorized Latin,Arabic,and Cyrillic Scripts and also little bit of Javanese script myself.
I know latin, cyrillic, greek, and a bit of arabic.
Interesting 🤔
@@2wugs Yeah
I'm not the only one who learns scripts! 😄
@@darkalligraph Nice
javascript
ESTABLISHED TITLES IS A SCAM
Why are you accepting a sponsorship from a scam?
The Eritrean/Ethiopian Ge'ez script doesn't descend from the phoenician script, but from the Old-South-Arabian, which derived from the Proto-Sinaitic, which was actually an ancestor from the proto-kanaanitic script, from which then the phoenician script has derived.
Brahmi of indian subcontinent is not derived from Phonecian/Aramaic. Possible influence, maybe. Brahmi is largely derived from Indus script which was simplified over the course of many centuries during the vedic period.
You can’t even read Indus script so how can you make this absurd claim? Shang dynasty script is clearly the ancestor of modern Han writing, many characters can even be read by modern Chinese. You can’t say this about Indus Script.
@@nomanor7987 no. But many of the Indus script symbols are similar to the brahmi ones
@@theisheep2676 they are? Then one wonders why the Indus Valley Script is still not deciphered.
@@nomanor7987 Because there are too many symbols and very few inscriptions. Most of the things we have a just small words on the stamp signs with the bulls. There are no long texts or scrolls…if there were we would easily be able to decipher it by common repeated words
@@nomanor7987 because a good big rosetta stone with that script hasen't been found yet
be it phonecian or eygyptian alphabet the only way to decipher them to feed the computer large amounts of input data from the stone, which hasen't been the case with indus script
But one day we will find a rosetta stone for indus script also
0:48 ESTABLISHED TITLES IS A SCAM!!!!
DO NOT GO TO THIS WEBSITE!!!
The “Lairdship” is just a novelty and a bit of fun. It’s a loophole in Scottish law that doesn’t confer any actual benefit. It’s the tree planting that’s the real reason for checking it out.
@@tobirates916 It's a scam, most youtubers acknowledged the same. Some youtubers are dropping future sponsership. Check Scott Shafer video.
The local script present in the indian subcontinent was indus script therefore it is obvious that brahmi will descend from indus script. The Phoenician script was created much later than indus script and brahmi script
ሀለመሠረሰሸቀበተ
establsihed titles is a scam
The runic alphabet may not necessarily have come from Etruscan but from more northerly italic tribes like the Veneti and the Rhaetians.
I've been meaning to make an entire map that shows this but never got around to it :(
Consider this video your reminder/motivation!
Mesrop Mashtots created the Armenian alphabet in Jerusalem. Amharic and Armenian were created around the same time before Greek even. If you look at Amharic and Armenian alphabets they are almost identical
Tamizhi ( tamil brahmi ) is older than brahmi( which is originally Damm script). History that has been told so far must be scrutinized. More research and archeological excavation should be done.. I believe Indian History is not what it has been told .
Why is everything established titles stop scamming
India's most scripts are called " Varna ".
No, Varnamala means the string of characters. Lipi denotes the script.
Varna means alphabets in hindi script is called lipi in hindi
Most of the world's alphabets, yeah, but over 20% of the people in the world use systems that are in no way related to your point. At least you admitted it and moved swiftly on. What even is the point, then.
the majority use related alphabets from the Aramaic phoenicians there is nothing wrong with that. Japanese and korean come from china so?
The better question, what is even your point?
That's why they teached me how to write essays in school for 5 years, so I could explain what I'm talking about if I had to say something. This is clearly not the case with you.
actually runic writing is alot older than alot of the writing systems, its been shown to exist on every corner of the planet on very ancient artifacts, makes me wonder how much of this is garbled history. Theres also a theory that the writing system we have that was passed down is a combination of the different zodiac signs being split into two to form 2 different letters, seems to check out.
unproven.
@@agalitev by whom do you put your blind faith of proof into
the Gay Street part got me
All hail Lord KhAnubis of Scotland!
Lord Khanubis banneth the devil's cilantro. All hail parsley, the lord's lettuce
should be: *"Lang lebe die große khanubische Republik", at 5:20
My man Established titles is a scam. Please do your research while you did for this video before promoting sponsors.
shoutout to Gay St.
You skipped the part where the Aramaic script becomes the square Hebrew script
Huge historical and Christian moment
Bengali is not a script. The name of the Script is "Eastern Nagari". It is used in Assamese and a few other languages as well.
It's called Kamrupi script
0:07 the most cursed street and place to go.
A 2017 study by O'Connor et al. shows that men demonstrate more homophobic behavior when they are insecure about their masculinity.
Researchers used a scale known as the "precarious manhood score." When subjects experienced a threat towards their sense of masculinity, those whose score rose demonstrated a propensity to find jokes funnier if the joke was at the expense of women or gay men. The research team theorizes that this serves as a defense mechanism to reassure oneself of his own manhood. The effect can occur in both straight and gay men.
Have a blessed day :)
@@teehee4096"theorizes"
BAYBAYIN SHOUTOUT
Just in the last month i.e. July 2024 a discovery has come about in Keeladi, an archaeological site in Tamilnadu in Southern India where a potsherd dated to 6th century BCE has the Tamil letter "ta".
Now Persians occupied parts around Indus river only in 6th century BCE, from which you have your theory that this transmitted the Phoenician script which influenced Brahmi script. But how will it reach deep in South India and that too on a pot sherd, not some regal inscription.
The fact that it's on a potsherd indicates that the script was in common usage, even a potter was literate, which means the script had been in circulation for a long period of time.
See as new discoveries emerge all these fanciful notions of Western dissemination of script, language, astronomy etc will get punctured. Unfortunately in India archaeology is complicated because many potential sites are populated cities and also the media used to record knowledge, writing etc like parchments, bark etc easily get destroyed.
This might just be one of the only good cases for hyperdiffusionism. Its amazing how efficient humans are at moving around ideas, even deep in the past.
Thank you for this video. But according to what I know, Vietnam didn't use alphabet after European empire but during french protectorate
It has always been there since Alexander de Rhodes but it wasn’t official until around 1920s.
@@gambitacio yep I read more about that too. Apparently it's Portuguese first. But anyway it's not after the french 🤭
Great video...
It's explain a lot...
But you have one mistake...
The Hebrew language ( the original letters called "ashurit")
Have been here way before aramic and Acadian languages and letters...
Because the Jewish people were the ones that use Hebrew and they been alive way before the acadians and aramic.
But they never used the Hebrew language out of their holy places because it was a holly language for them and they aren't allowed to teach anyone who wasn't a Jew this holy language.
Outside of their holy places they used the native languages that surrounded them,
But in their holy places they speak only Hebrew (ashurit).
Meanwhile Brahmi: I am gonna be an alphabet, abjad and syllabary **evil laughter**
I'm really glad that you mentioned my languages Telugu (తెలుగు) & Odia (ଓଡ଼ିଆ) ❤️
This is a fascinating thing to ponder over.
Love to everyone!
I was wondering, isn't odia just like a cousin of Bangla, almost mutually intelligible. I was really interested (and still am) on linguistics and I am Bengali- American. I know a second language which is Bangla but I actually really don't know it, so I tried learning to read it and I researched a lot about it's history and culture and many other things. I learned its a descendant of Sanskrit and its related to many languages and dialects all over Bengal like Assamese and Odia, I wanted to research other similar dialects/ languages and found I could almost fully understand Odia and I'm not amazing in Bangla. I just thought it's very interesting. It sounds similar to the way I think when I hear old English. It's not even that close to Bangladesh physically but I can understand the language somewhat
@@ahnafj416 Many words are similar in several Indian languages. Although, not really knowledgeable when it comes to the origin and all.
@@TestTubeBaba At least listen to some Bangla, can't you understand it? I searched up Odia language on RUclips and I'm surprised I can understand almost fully
@@ahnafj416 of course I can xD except for the extremely detailed and specific words, basic sentences are very easy to understand
Great video! Learned many new things from it.
Giorgio Tsokalous answered:
"Of course, the extraterrestrial has taught our ancestors long ago."
Yeah so african
Weird Indian nationalists "there were no foreign influences, it developed among our superior people!"
Weird western seethers "you know pyramids were build by white Europeans we r kangz n sheit"
@@dhimankalita1690 Only Indians would call Egyptians western, presumably under some Indian race theories.
@@joebloggs396 Europeans who invented race concept to feel superior accusing Indians of using race..u r a funny dude for sure
@@dhimankalita1690 Have you examined your caste system, it's been going for a few thousand years. Skin tone, or race as people say now, is a big part of it. Everybody can read about this with the internet now.
@@joebloggs396 yes I'm indian i know about the caste system. Do you know we have reservation for socially marginalised caste and we r living in 21st century modern india?
Do you know when will europeans return us our historical artifacts paintings statues back that they stole?
How much u pay for that gay st stock footage? 🤣
Do a t-shirt for Old Mongol Script! 😅
There are not much evidence on Indian Brahmi and Korean Hangeul script for now there are only hypothesis on their origins.
? Hanguel scripts history is very well known though. It was made by Joseon King Sejong and is a nearly a completely original writing system. It was created in a way for idiots to learn and the looks of the blocks are because for Koreans thats what the sound of your mouth makes
Would the Romans be considered anti-Semitic since they fought the Carthaginians?
No
Yes
I don't think so.
Would jews be anti-semitic since they fought arabs?
Shower thought of the century.
Ah yes just what i needed to watch while I eat pizza.
I used to eat salami and other Italian cured meats while watching cam models.
True man of culture
Aramaic is just pidgin Aeabic. Any average Arabic speaker can read it once transliterated, same for"""" phoenician""""
Shout-out to Africa for spreading it's writing systems!
It was thr Egyptians and phoenecians, not the subsaharans though. Two COMPLETELY different peoples
@@rehangarg4869 video has some mistakes
First alphabets didn't originate or influenced from Egypt but from Mesopotamia!
@@rehangarg4869 still africans
East Asia stronk
5:36
Totally not being proud since it happened in Bulgaria
It is true the Old Greek Script inspired the Old Georgian And Armenian Scripts But The New One Is Fresh And Different
Yeah thats what i thought too, wasnt nuskhuri the one that was inspire by greek? mkhedruli being totally original?
@@anegg84 Nah, asomtavruli was inspired by Greek, than it developed into nuskhuri and nuskhuri developed into mkhedruli (modern alphabet).
established titles is a confirmed scam fyi
8:47 Baybayin is pronounced like buy-buy-in not bye-bye-yin
Cool
Glagolitic looks so fucking beautiful it makes me wish it was the standard alphabet.
Glagolitic looks so fucking ugly and the name is too, Cyrillic looks much better 😭😭💀💀
the cyrillic shirt is innaccurate
Some South Indians claim that southern Brahmi (called Tamil Brahmi) came first cause its recorded as early as 500s BC while Northern Brahmi (Ashokan Brahmi) comes up 2 centuries later. The south did also trade with the Middle East during that time so there’s a possibility that Brahmi did arrive in India but by sea rather than by land
Yep
You guys still believe in that fake North-south divide? Grow up people!
200 years is not a big difference
@@_Mohit_Joshithere is indeed a linguistic divide
They’re both native and different from others globally, it’s not possible because they’re older, the literacy in the middle or a large portion of the Middle East was among the last to develop, look up the maps.
No more established titles please.
def those tshirts are the fastest way to look like a target while travelling🤣
8:33 *you forgot to mention 🇮🇳Gujarati (ગુજરાતી) & 🇮🇳Punjabi’s Gurmukhi (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ) - even though they’ve got far more speakers than 🇧🇹Tibetan.*
8:37 *…and in the South, you forgot to mention 🇮🇳Malayalam (മലയാളം) - even though it has far more speakers than 🇱🇰Sinhala (and Malayalam has almost similar number of speakers as Kannada).*
8:44 *…and in SE Asia, you forgot to mention 🇱🇦Lao (ພາສາລາວ) - even though it is an Official Script of a country!!*
Tibetian isnt anywhere close to Mandarin.
Tibetian isnt chinese.
@@thebestevertherewas bro he does have not Tibetan flag in emoji section
@@runajain5773 he looks high
@@thebestevertherewas why you Pajeets starts crying nowhere?
لبنان العظيم 🇱🇧🇹🇳🌷
Now the Phoenicians can get down to business 🎶
Sharing the link to a paper which compares the Indus script to Brahmi and Aramaic. I think currently Brahmi looks a lot more like Indus (there is also archeological evidence of mixed Brahmi and Indus script). But there is a clear link between semetic and the Indus script to begin with. Now that's some interesting stuff there.
www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwi9u86ix9P7AhU0S3wKHUFCB_0QFnoECBMQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fvixra.org%2Fpdf%2F1507.0212v1.pdf&usg=AOvVaw1HgqqMHYKB6Ny-QQjBpFwQ
likely indus may have had aesthetical influence on brahmi.
At 7:00 you mentioned “China and by extension Korea and Japan.” I cant wait to hear what the Koreans and Japanese think about being called extensions of China.
Well yeah their scripts were inherited from China
Because it hard truth
Japan, South Korea and Vietnam are all under the influence of ancient China, and their ancient books are all written in Chinese characters.
Sinosphere
Korea and Japan used the Chinese script for most of their histories.
Bro, established titles is fraud
wow you mentioned every southern indian script except malayalam, not cool
Fun fact, established titles is a scam
My main languages are Hindi and Bengali and I mostly like to combine English sentences with both languages
So you talk like "Namasto, My naam Banerjee ho, mujhe like rosgulla"
@@im-moralNo, this seems weird. There are much more complex nuances.
@@arnavranka4510 jk, it a jk
“In linguistics terms, a word”
Linguistics, who can’t even determine what a word is: 😖
Sponsor is a scam
The Indus Valley script looks so unnecessary complicated.
Cyrillic E is pronounced /je/. The one that looks like the Euro sign is pronounced /e/.
Fantastic as usual
How did you comment before the video was uploaded
@@reed-l-fisch They’re a patron
That makes sense
7:03 മലയാള എവിടെ മോനെ 🙄
My noble Lord: I you come down on the same side of the cilantro issue as me.
Why the Greek alphabet has the modern flag of Greece while the Latin alphabet doesn't have the modern flag of Italy?
Greeks still speaks Greek, but no one today speaks Latin?🤔🤷♂️
@@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions nobody speaks ancient Greek today.
We simplistically call them both "greek" but they aren't the same tongue.
@@ilFrancotti
Yes, but generally people keep their surnames as the generations go by.
@@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions yeah and so?
@@ilFrancotti
What I mean is that they inherited their language and thus it still _Ελληνικά_ even if they technically cannot speak what was once Greek long ago, but it still Greek no matter where you slice it.
Romance speaking peoples don't all see themselves as speaking the same language as the Romans.
Sinhala is related more closely to the North Indian languages.
Kalinga
Script is South indian most related to Tamil
Do the geez langage and a matching shirt
So Chinese is unique?
Yea because they developed their scripted independently, there are others who did this as well though
@@muhammaddaffaarvianda5050 Egyptians, Sumerians, Harrapans, Maya and Chinese only. Everyone else are copiers.
@@nomanor7987 Dravidian ( Tamil, kannada, Malayalam,Telgu,Tulu ) are laughing in corner 😂
Thank the countries that forced their ancestors to make them speak
Is there some sort of website with a list of all languages with examples of their letters. I’m trying to find translate a certain language but I don’t know what it is written in, but it looks related to Brahmi
Try omniglot
Baybayin is related to egyptian hieroglyphs, I just re re re learnt that now
How?
@@francine13
From
Egyptian
to
Proto-Sinaitic script
to
Phoenician script
to
Aramaic script
to
Brahmi script
to
Tamil-Brahmi script
to
Pallava script
to
Kawi script
to
Baybayin
to
@@RickrollFoot that's just a theory, not proved tho.
@@RickrollFoot That's just a theory. It has been disputed by others.
Nice
The Ancestor of Brahmi Script is Indus Script of Indus Valley Civilization not Aramaic Script.
Brahmi coming from Aramaic was a Colonial Propoganda like Aryan Invasion Theory.
What can you expect more ? I am not criticizing this guy from any way but the sources used. The ones who put out try there best to bring a 'European centric' viewpoint, and if they fails to do so they go with the one closer like egyptians. From languages, scripts, invention, education etc you will find the same pattern that India is always left out, but it is because of our ignorance too, we didn't focused more on such researches more and the one who do are shadowed over something else like glorifications of mughals and how british empire was not 'cruel' etc bs.
@@harshit2.02 Exactly 💯 👏
you are saying the aryan migration is a myth, how can a person with sense even say that its a myth bruh
@@sidharth9046 come on bro . He is right. Aryan Invasion/Migration doesn't matter by what stupid name you call it, it was a propaganda promoted by British to create a divide between Arya and Dravidians under there infamous 'divide and rule policy'. There are many research work by many indian scientists who proved this theory was fake . You can look into it too.
Its okay if our previous generation believed in it but it would be nothing but a shame if we believe it now and futher on create tensions between arya and dravidians when ultimately are the same people.
Same Nationality i.e Indians and same people i.e Hindus That's it
@@sidharth9046 Aryan Invasion is a Myth I said. Aryan Migration is a Historical Fact.