The 4 kinds of Human Language - Fusional Languages

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2024

Комментарии • 25

  • @reubenmetcalfe8920
    @reubenmetcalfe8920 4 месяца назад +1

    High def white noise / fonts sponsored by MS Paint. Foley, wardrobe by Salvador Dali. Slow-fade Kremlin was pretty fusional. 10/10 Would slow-zoom niche maps to nylon classical guitar again. Wir gingen spectrum my friend. High art.

  • @mayiintervene2131
    @mayiintervene2131 Год назад +1

    consonant mutation also happens a lot in german as a combination of "grammatischer Wechsel" from Verner's Law, some consonants changing according to vowels next to them which change through ablaut and umlaut as well as restrictions on syllable structure such as final devoicing or no coda /h/

  • @tedi1932
    @tedi1932 3 года назад +4

    A lot to take in, but is at the same time compelling and very interesting

  • @serkankinden5150
    @serkankinden5150 Год назад +1

    Fusional languages look like it formed after analytical and agglutinative language have come together. Possible?
    Can you answer Ben? Also, thank you very much because I learned lots of things about language structures and consonant mutation.

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  Год назад +1

      Indo-European itself was fusional. As are the oldest Semitic languages. I would say Fusional formed on its own. We don't know when. It is very old.

    • @serkankinden5150
      @serkankinden5150 Год назад

      @@BenLlywelyn Or can we say agglutinative is between analytical and fusional in terms of structure?
      Or should we say that each language structure are unique and unrelated?

  • @wsg4847
    @wsg4847 3 года назад +4

    So, was PIE probably fusional?

  • @GothicPurple
    @GothicPurple Год назад +1

    These kinds of languages never quite stick with me it would seem. Despite it being described as a middle ground, I find the structure of analytic and agglutinative languages a lot more straightforward.

  • @dazpatreg
    @dazpatreg 3 года назад +5

    Take a drink Everytime he changes clothes/background/has a massive style change 😁

  • @veuzou
    @veuzou 3 года назад +2

    very interesting " aller" is a very special case in French since it comes from 3 different verbs in late Latin : ire, vadere & allare. BTW speaking of Romance languages Corsican has got mutations too, something like "porta" (door) "a borta" (the door) - not sure about the spelling, a Corsican friend told me a few thinks but nor how to write! -

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  3 года назад +1

      That is intriguing about Corsican.

    • @veuzou
      @veuzou 3 года назад +1

      @@BenLlywelyn very similar to the Celtic languages!

  • @catherinemcmillan6111
    @catherinemcmillan6111 Год назад

    that's interesting, I never thought of the Welsh mutations as being grammatical before, I always thought they were more to make pronunciation smoother

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  Год назад +1

      Welsh mutations are what is left of our case system really.

  • @Paul-e9x4h
    @Paul-e9x4h 2 месяца назад

    Pada asal muasal penyebaran bahasa maka bahasa yang saat ini berasimilasi serupa menunjukkan ada keterkaitan ras dan keturunan dari nenek moyang yang sama . Proses penyerapan bahasanya berdasarkan nilai kesamaan lalu asimilasinya berdasarkan nilai perbedaan bahasanya

    • @BenLlywelyn
      @BenLlywelyn  2 месяца назад

      Memiliki hubungan atau kedekatan akan membantu suatu bahasa diserap oleh bahasa lain.

  • @auadisian
    @auadisian Год назад

    Even համաձայն in Armenian has two parts, roughly speaking:
    համա: same/similar (like 'homo' in Greek)
    ձայն: sound.
    Notice: Greek συμφωνος.