About the Inuit language(s): Greenlandic, Inuktitut, Inupiaq, Inuvialiktun

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 329

  • @camrendavis6650
    @camrendavis6650 Год назад +409

    Good on Denmark for allowing the Greenlanders to keep speaking their language to the point where nearly everyone still speaks it. You seldom see that nowadays

    • @napoleonfeanor
      @napoleonfeanor Год назад +47

      Denmark generaally has had several far away territories such as previously Iceland and still Faroer. One reason for getting Greenland was to look if there are any remains, whether living or ruins, from the old Viking settlements. It was too cold for many Danes to want to settle there. The Greenlanders had the only way to survive in that land, which was not very appealing to most Danes.

    • @camrendavis6650
      @camrendavis6650 Год назад +9

      @@napoleonfeanor so I've heard. I've always wanted to visit the Faroes, it looks like the heavens here on earth

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Год назад +11

      @@camrendavis6650 You absolutely should go there. :-)
      Take Norrøna from Iceland or Denmark.
      It's a ferry so you can bring a car with you.

    • @camrendavis6650
      @camrendavis6650 Год назад +2

      @@Luredreier thank you!

    • @BENNY-THE-DOG
      @BENNY-THE-DOG Год назад +5

      All colonists should aspire to be like this 👏👏👏👏

  • @angycucumber4319
    @angycucumber4319 Год назад +180

    Can we take a moment to appreciate the effort she puts among us

  • @elizabethelias1005
    @elizabethelias1005 Год назад +22

    If anyone wants to hear this language spoken for 3 hours, watch "The Fast Runner". It's the first movie filmed entirely in the Inuit language. I believe it was filmed in Canada. Good movie. I saw it about 20 years ago in the theaters when it was released.

    • @danielfryer9693
      @danielfryer9693 Год назад +3

      Thank you. I'll look that one up. As a return favour, the fourth series of Borgen (Danish series) has a storyline which involves Greenland (and environmental issues). There's a decent amount of Greenlandic in a number of the episodes.

    • @RSLtreecare
      @RSLtreecare 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, this is very interesting film. I have see it a number of times.

  • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
    @JohnLeePettimoreIII Год назад +30

    fluent speakers of my tribe's language (Chikashaanompa) is down to about 450 and they're all over 55 years old. although, i am quite thankful that the tribe has recently begun a language revitalization project.
    you may be interested in looking into more information about the Chickasaw/Chikasha language.

  • @guillervz
    @guillervz Год назад +146

    I've always been fascinated by that region. As a kid I would spend hours looking at maps and looking for the most distant lands. I still do, actually, after three decades.
    This was a great video :)

    • @magellanicspaceclouds
      @magellanicspaceclouds Год назад +11

      I agree. Kinda mysterious out there.

    • @bobbygold3889
      @bobbygold3889 Год назад +1

      me too - i'm planning a trip there one day; you should come. Wouldn't that be crazy? Ha!

    • @mateusvalentim2627
      @mateusvalentim2627 Год назад +2

      Me too, when I as a child and actually I still lovin this Region and culture

    • @xryeau_1760
      @xryeau_1760 7 месяцев назад

      Good to know I wasn't the only one

    • @guillervz
      @guillervz 7 месяцев назад

      @@bobbygold3889 you should do it! where are you from?

  • @shaninnmarie
    @shaninnmarie Год назад +22

    I have a lifelong friend who is an Eskimo born, raised, and still living in Barrow, Alaska. She taught me how to sing "You Are My Sunshine" in Eskimo. If the term Eskimo isn't correct, I apologize. However, she is the one who said she was an Eskimo and that her language was Eskimo. Language in general fascinates me, but the languages of indigenous peoples

    • @Spaceosaurus68
      @Spaceosaurus68 Год назад +7

      the term eskimo is deemed derogatory for those that call themselves inuit, i have heard alaskan natives prefer eskimo over inuit as they do not see themselves as inuit :)

    • @snowbound4913
      @snowbound4913 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Spaceosaurus68im sure it depends on the person, but Inuit translates to people

  • @Jetjetson
    @Jetjetson Год назад +48

    👋 Aingai! qanuippit? ii. 🙏 Nakurmiik. thank you for all your work helping us to understand each other. aqaluq❤ inuktitut is a language close to my heart. konig 😘

    • @isabelaraujo4825
      @isabelaraujo4825 Год назад

      she just wants money from views and clout. she never cares about native people just the languages for clicks

  • @magellanicspaceclouds
    @magellanicspaceclouds Год назад +75

    The less-known, mysterious languages from remote places with few speakers are my favorite by far. More like this please!

    • @mysteriousDSF
      @mysteriousDSF Год назад +1

      Mine too, I hope to see a series on Nilotic languages some time

    • @And-xr4jj
      @And-xr4jj Год назад +2

      Mysterious to you lol

    • @kzm-cb5mr
      @kzm-cb5mr Год назад +1

      dude, it's not some arcane language

  • @jjhantsch8647
    @jjhantsch8647 Год назад +12

    I met a native Alaskan National Guardsman who'd been to Thule Air Base, (Qaanaaq Mitarfik, in Inuit.) He was able to speak with the locals with no difficulty.

  • @miles_quartz
    @miles_quartz Год назад +25

    These languages are so beautiful, I don't want them to go extinct. :( We need to establish language centers to keep the mother tongue of Indigenous people alive and allow them to thrive.

  • @yialoussa
    @yialoussa Год назад +8

    If you take a flight from Ottawa to Iqaluit then pre-flight instructions are given are Inuktitut . I recorded this on my flight there. Inuktitut is an official language of Nunavut. "The Inuit Language Protection Act states that the government must take positive action to promote the use of Inuktitut in all sectors of Nunavut society" All museum exhibits are trilingual (Inuktitut, English, French). By the way, a peculiarity of Inuit culture - there are six seasons not our typical four.

  • @ChrisMontgomery-xtrmagamr
    @ChrisMontgomery-xtrmagamr Год назад +12

    I spent time with an Inuit family in the Canadian arctic when i was a young teen, Very nice to see you cover a very friendly gracious people.

  • @FlipTekk23
    @FlipTekk23 Месяц назад

    I'm from Czech Republic. The country that never expected Inuit. We only got classes in a elementary school about Inuit. Culture and language is something fascinating to me. This culture has so many secrets to be told to whole world! I totally admire Eskimo culture ❤

  • @cuckoo61
    @cuckoo61 Год назад +28

    Just yesterday I was thinking, I miss Julie's videos lol and this one is precisely about one of my favorite languages 😁

  • @christopherantonio3612
    @christopherantonio3612 Год назад +22

    This was very informative in terms of the history and the linguistics. I hope the Inuk people continue to thrive

    • @inmyworldkindagirl
      @inmyworldkindagirl Год назад +4

      Just fyi, 'Inuit' is plural and 'Inuk' is singular, and 'Inuit' already means 'people,' so you don't have to say 'inuit people' because it's like saying 'people people'

  • @rvat2003
    @rvat2003 Год назад +43

    Btw most linguists do not consider Yukaghir to be a part of Uralic.
    There was also a small typo where you switched with as the Inuit vowels.

    • @mysteriousDSF
      @mysteriousDSF Год назад

      There seems to be a weird ambiguity whether Yukaghir is even Uralic or not... It's weird

    • @tovarishchfeixiao
      @tovarishchfeixiao 9 месяцев назад

      @@mysteriousDSF To be honest, there is always some controversy between linguists if the topic is not about the Indo-European family for some weird reasons.
      Not to mention that currently known "proto-uralic" is more like "proto-finnic" at this point because of how heavily finnish-centric the reconstruction is.
      In my personal opinion the idea of making altaic, uralic and inuit families to be a thing would be the best, since the languages that these terms contains are possibly had lots of interactions in mixing before it got into their current locations, so it won't be unreasonable to make them related just like how hindi or persan are related to english somehow.

    • @zeldatanit4346
      @zeldatanit4346 4 месяца назад

      @@tovarishchfeixiao I mean the Siberian Turkic cultures are almost identical to Inuits … the language is different but the sounds are so similar they seem to have a major concept in Turkic language which is “agglutination”

    • @tovarishchfeixiao
      @tovarishchfeixiao 3 месяца назад

      @@zeldatanit4346 Agglutination is not a turkic exclusive feature. And things like agglutination not really determine language relation either, at least not on it's own, and the phonetic inventory also not enough for that, especially because there is a very limited amount of sounds that humans can produce with their mouths.
      And of course Siberian and Inuit cultures can be similar because the Inuits literally originates from Siberia. They traveled when there was still a possibility to walk through with dry feet on the ice between the two continents. And the environment still very similar to where they came from, so their culture barely changed anything.

    • @zeldatanit4346
      @zeldatanit4346 3 месяца назад

      @@tovarishchfeixiao yeah but it’s not far fetched to relate two. People are honestly hyper sensitive when it comes to any Turkic because of Anatolian Turks and their Turkish nationalism with equating everything as ottoman or Turkish in the world lol
      But authentic Turkic cultures have nothing to do with that political BS
      If we can establish a genetic and historic link between Siberians and Inuits
      Then establishing a possible linguistic link between the two wouldn’t be illogical or surprising that’s all I’m saying.

  • @bjolofthoth1815
    @bjolofthoth1815 Год назад +9

    Been hoping for this language group

  • @AutomanicJack
    @AutomanicJack Год назад +4

    inuit languages are one of my favorites to listen to. they have a calming effect on me.

  • @Arlaat
    @Arlaat 9 месяцев назад +1

    Finally watched you vid, been seeing it on my recommended page. Great video, greeting from Kalaallit Nunaat 👋

  • @pauleugenio5914
    @pauleugenio5914 Год назад +5

    Really amazing source of language change, to taboo words on spiritual grounds, related to the naming of people -- I love it

  • @xaviert.123
    @xaviert.123 Год назад +3

    Incredibly fitting since I just moved to Canada. Thanks for the video!

  • @NelsonDiscovery
    @NelsonDiscovery Год назад +6

    Hey Julie. Nice to see you're back to the tube.

  • @buarath9
    @buarath9 Год назад +34

    It'd be nice if you made a video on any language of the Italian peninsula (obviously not Italian), since they are languages ​​that are almost never observed and are improperly recognized as dialects of Italian. I study and speak a little Venetian, which is a Gallo-Italic language of the historical region of Venetia, if you want information for a possible video just ask! ;)

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +8

      I'd love to see a video about languages of France as well. France has both languages mostly unrelated to French like Breton, Alsatian and Occitan, and languages close to French as Normand, Picard or Lorrain. They're all extremely marginalised by the French government which has one of the worst human rights records towards its linguistic minorities in Western Europe.

    • @barrymoore4470
      @barrymoore4470 Год назад +7

      @@gamermapper We should also remember Basque, still surviving in southwestern France and attested in the region since antiquity, a rare example of a non-Indo-European language enduring in Europe. I agree that France, despite its generally strong record of progressive values, has a baleful legacy in terms of recognizing and supporting language diversity among its citizens.

  • @stephanpopp6210
    @stephanpopp6210 Год назад +3

    I had hoped to learn a bit more about polysynthesis. It's not just the constructed example. You saw it in the subtitles. It's everyday speech there to say "paajatorusuneruvunga" = "I'd rather have another beer."

  • @gamermapper
    @gamermapper Год назад +11

    I think it's also very important to note that Inuit people and Inuit languages are also related to other indigenous Arctic people of North America. Inuit langauges are very close to Yupik and Aleut languages, together with whom they create the Eskimo-Aleut group. Those communities are also very interesting by itself, especially since the Yupik still exist not only in North America, but also in the far Eastern portion of Siberia.

    • @daveshen0880
      @daveshen0880 11 месяцев назад

      *Inuit. Not inuit people. Basically you wrote people people. Because the word inuit means people.

    • @zeldatanit4346
      @zeldatanit4346 4 месяца назад

      @@daveshen0880 😂 and how many people say Sahara desert? Naan bread ? Sharia law ?
      There’s nothing wrong with saying Inuit people in a language that’s not in Inuit …

  • @tesraisrey7465
    @tesraisrey7465 Год назад +12

    Hola Julie, espero que tengas felices fiestas!
    Muchas gracias por tu dedicación a este video

  • @igulyaev3140
    @igulyaev3140 Год назад +3

    Hello from Siberia, Republic of Sakha(Yakutia). I think it's more close language for me especially to Evenks, Evens,
    Yukaghirs from Yakutia. Sakha(Yakut) is a turks group, but some words are almost the same with Inuit, for exemple: khuyakh, khayakh. Inuittarga Sakha Siritten Ulakhan Egherde buoluokhtun!

  • @marsgal42
    @marsgal42 Год назад +15

    I heard a lot of the lateral fricative sound in the Greenlandic fellow's speech. Wikipedia says this sound is absent in other dialects.
    Tom Scott did a video on the syllabic writing system. A near-textbook example of a writing system (an abugida, in this case) tailored to how the language works.

  • @Pingthescribe
    @Pingthescribe Год назад +6

    This was a great Christmas present to your viewers! Hope you're having a great holiday and a wonderful New Year!

  • @raboullesfritas
    @raboullesfritas Год назад +2

    "Outstanding eyebrows" this is lovely :p

  • @stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
    @stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 Год назад +5

    a surprise arrival - a new video from julie. such a pleasant end of year gift!

  • @9UaYXxB
    @9UaYXxB Год назад +11

    I found this examination of the Inuit languages compelling. I had an indigenous uncle from the far north (Northwest Territories region, on the lower Mackenzie River ) of the Arctic here in Canada. Our current governor-general in Canada, a woman named Mary Simon, is Inuit (from the Nunavut region), a former broadcaster/diplomat/public servant dedicated to the advancement of her people.... she delivers virtually all her addresses in French, English, and her native Inuktitut. I'll have to explore this Inuit language topic more fully, you've really piqued my interest. Thank you, Julie, and Happy New Year to you!

    • @juliansmith4295
      @juliansmith4295 Год назад +1

      Mary Simon (ᒥᐊᓕ ᓴᐃᒪᓐ) is from Kangiqsualujjuaq, Québec. Also, Nunavut is a territory, not a region.

  • @RSLtreecare
    @RSLtreecare 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much. You have amazing skills...i have spent some months living with The Cree, Ojbwa and other small groups in Saskatchewan. I have found the native hunters relate to their Forest, snow locations with a special understanding. Take care.

  • @pravoslavn
    @pravoslavn 20 дней назад

    Julie - Your EN is becoming excellent !!! I would like to see you do a video on cтарославянский язык (Old Russian.) Especially I am interested in knowing how to write modern RU using the characters (like the Yat and the Yer's) which were kicked out of RU orthodography in 1918. Love your presentations. keep up the good work. Боже, царя храни !

  • @cheeveka3
    @cheeveka3 Год назад +10

    You should a video about Arpitan language spoken in parts France, Italy, and Switzerland 😁

  • @cupcakkeisaslayqueen
    @cupcakkeisaslayqueen Год назад +6

    You need to make a video on the cherokee language

  • @giovannamanara776
    @giovannamanara776 Год назад +7

    Extremely interesting, as usual. What I would add at the end of the video, is a short bibliography concerning the trated language

  • @Artyom178
    @Artyom178 3 месяца назад

    Julie you are an angel!

  • @NoahNobody
    @NoahNobody Год назад +43

    My wife's family had their genetic genealogy done and they are between 98.4 - 98.8 Finnish and the other percent is Eskimo/Inuit. Finnish language also has similarities like Lentokonesuihkuturbiinimoottoriapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas - which means "An airplane jet turbine engine auxiliary mechanic non-commissioned officer student".

    • @polishhussarmapping258
      @polishhussarmapping258 Год назад +3

      Finns do indeed have some Siberian/North Asian ancestry.

    • @gerald4013
      @gerald4013 Год назад +13

      Not really a "similarity", they are just agglutinative languages. You can even do that in certain non-agglutinative languages that form compound nouns by sticking elements together, as German and many other languages.

    • @magellanicspaceclouds
      @magellanicspaceclouds Год назад +11

      That just seems to be a compund noun. That's different from polysynthesis.

    • @totallyapng7315
      @totallyapng7315 Год назад

      Isn’t the word you put before Inuit a slur? I’d stray away from using it!

    • @tovarishchfeixiao
      @tovarishchfeixiao 9 месяцев назад

      @@polishhussarmapping258 Every Uralic language has, since currently it believed that Uralic languages originated from the "khanty-mansi autonomous okrug".

  • @peteshour768
    @peteshour768 Год назад +2

    I'm really intoit, you know learning the inuit.

  • @shadowhenge7118
    @shadowhenge7118 Год назад +2

    Hope to immigrate to those regions someday. My family was Ojibwe. Before we were relocated.

  • @peterbreis5407
    @peterbreis5407 Год назад +3

    I love your ability to both speak and comprehend so many different languages and to have a face that looks like it is being dubbed when you speak! 😜

  • @mysteriousDSF
    @mysteriousDSF Год назад +2

    7:20 this is a very similar concept to Hungarian megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért which also has one prefix and some 15-ish suffixes (meaning something like "because you (all) acted like you could not be subjected to defamation").

    • @HSkraekelig
      @HSkraekelig 10 месяцев назад

      As I recall, Finnish and Hungarian are unique in Europe because they are only related to each other (Finno-Ugric Languages) and not to any other (except maybe Estonian). It makes sense that they have similar structures.

  • @volkerwendt3061
    @volkerwendt3061 Год назад +3

    Happy to have you and your appreciated videos back ;)
    Wish you a happy New Year

  • @ChrisBattrick
    @ChrisBattrick 8 месяцев назад

    Julie, I very much love all of your videos. Thanks for your great efforts. You're simply an amazing humam being!

  • @koolandblue
    @koolandblue Год назад +4

    The elderly woman speaking Inupiaq uses some English words when she speaks.

  • @markosieohmarkosie
    @markosieohmarkosie 8 дней назад

    Anglicizing the pronunciation

  • @Jerfish1
    @Jerfish1 Год назад +20

    Just as an aside with regards to Alaska, the United States does not have any official language. Obviously, the most widely spoken is English. However, there is no official language for the United States, which may be why Inuit language doesn’t have any official status in Alaska, because there is no official status for any language.

    • @manuelmed98
      @manuelmed98 Год назад +10

      As far as I know, USA doesn't have any official language only at the federal level. Some states have chosen to have an official language or languages though. Alaska is one of them. They made English an official language in 1998, and 20 Native languages official in 2014. Truth be told this latter move was largely symbolic. English is required for government documents while Native languages aren't.

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +4

      If that's the case, there's no reason that the US should require me to speak English if I want to become a citizen. Especially since English is technically a foreign language to the United States.

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +7

      You would think that this will mean that minority langauges will be always protected in the US but you'd be very, very wrong 🤣🤣🤣🤣 that's the biggest joke ever, same as the USSR who officially didn't have an official language 🤦‍♀️ this didn't stop the US from forcibly assimilating Louisiana Creoles, German speakers, Hawaiians and basically every single Native American group 😡

    • @Jerfish1
      @Jerfish1 Год назад +1

      @@gamermapper true enough!

    • @huskydogable
      @huskydogable Год назад

      ​@@gamermapperOf course there is a reason you need to speak English. You won't be able to take the naturalization and citizenship test without English. Your point that English is a foreign language is silly.

  • @sterlingdafydd5834
    @sterlingdafydd5834 Год назад +1

    Really really interesting and well done..!!!

  • @manustorm5617
    @manustorm5617 Год назад +2

    1st new video I see after subscribing

  • @truefriend5332
    @truefriend5332 Год назад +2

    Long time no see. Happy to see you again :)

  • @emmanuelstamatakis8218
    @emmanuelstamatakis8218 Год назад +1

    Very educational you’re probably very highly educated wonderful presentation beautiful !!

  • @michaelwho3284
    @michaelwho3284 Год назад +1

    Yay! Your back !

  • @charlesdp
    @charlesdp Год назад

    I´m amazed at how much you know about all languages. Congratulations.

  • @just4nothersoul
    @just4nothersoul Год назад

    Yes!! I’ve been waiting for another one. Good day to you!!

  • @marcod1302
    @marcod1302 Год назад

    This is a great Chair you are sitting in. I guess it's very, very comfortable.

  • @fcsolis
    @fcsolis Год назад +3

    Great! Thank you.

  • @rickynoodles2816
    @rickynoodles2816 Год назад +9

    I notice a nice and gradual improvement in content quality since first introduced to the channel years back. But as always, great information. Please keep teaching and educating the world!

  • @konstantinavalentina3850
    @konstantinavalentina3850 Год назад +6

    To my untrained stupid ear, the Greenlandic guy sounded like he was speaking with a Nordic/Skandanavian accent. The rest seemed to sound more N. American Native Peoples/Aboriginal.
    That, however, might just be me and my untrained, stupid ear. :)

    • @eaterdrinker000
      @eaterdrinker000 Год назад +2

      Good point! That's how they sounded to me as well.

    • @steech193
      @steech193 Год назад +3

      Yeah I heard that too and think it might be some phonetic interference from Danish as that is a language that Greenlanders study in school and is likely more useful for business than Greenlandic. Just a guess though.

    • @HSkraekelig
      @HSkraekelig 10 месяцев назад

      I think so to. It seems likely. After all, German speaker speaking English speaks with a German accent and rhythm. It makes sense the Greenlanders would have picked up a bit of a Scandinavian accent, or vice versa.

  • @tashuntka
    @tashuntka Год назад +1

    Well done on a complex topic 👏 👏👏👏
    Love the gesticulating.. Hands like white doves 🕊 🙌 🕊🕊🕊 (sorry, just an errrrmm... observation) 🫠😶‍🌫️

  • @vadelledhem2945
    @vadelledhem2945 Год назад +2

    very useful channel

  • @Ryonross
    @Ryonross Год назад

    Qallunaat 🤩thank you for your research

  • @omarbarbosaazevedo8123
    @omarbarbosaazevedo8123 Год назад

    Lovely that your cat participate

  • @marjankrebelj4007
    @marjankrebelj4007 Год назад +5

    Am I the only one who always hopes you'll be performing the video in the same outfit as the thumbnail? Even though I love your videos already, that would make it a thousand times cooler. :) Anyways, thanks for your work, it is really good to have this channel.

    • @angycucumber4319
      @angycucumber4319 Год назад +4

      yeah the thumbnails are insane haha

    • @eaterdrinker000
      @eaterdrinker000 Год назад

      That'd make her the Emily Ratajkowski of linguists. If she isn't already.

  • @eswain4785
    @eswain4785 Год назад +1

    Really excellent videos. I hope you might make a video on Carthaginian and Amizigh languages.

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Год назад +6

    Love Inuit peoples from Turkiye❤

  • @tedgemberling2359
    @tedgemberling2359 Год назад +12

    It's interesting that Alaskan Inupiat isn't more vigorous. Yupik is. It is definitely not endangered. Even young whites who grow up in Yupik areas such as Bethel, Alaska speak Yupik fluently.

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +2

      It's crazy overall there's way more Inuit than Yupik people but somehow in Alaska it's Yupik that's thriving

    • @tedgemberling2359
      @tedgemberling2359 Год назад +2

      @@gamermapperI read an interesting book that was published about 1960. It said that Eskimo languages in Alaska were surviving better than Athapaskan languages. The Athapaskan languages were dying because Athapaskan culture was competitive. They took pride in their children leaving the village and going to college, for example. Eskimo culture was communitarian, and few people got much education. But I wonder if the coming of oil money to the Inupiat areas may have threatened that cohesion.

  • @avamc4089
    @avamc4089 Год назад +1

    In Nunatsiavumiutitut (idk) we call Europeans Kalunâk (or pronounced haloonaak) and I heard it’s cause they kept on saying hello to the inuks lmao

  • @FatMann-e1l
    @FatMann-e1l 6 месяцев назад

    ❤🦾 I would like to thank you for the lesson. While I admired what you taught you brought your beautiful self to my screen and I have never seen a female look as gorgeous as you. The diagrams laid out are perfect for my thoughts that are leading me in new directions. When I die I wish to have a lady such as yourself at my side.❤

  • @agun214
    @agun214 Год назад

    i love your videos and this is one of my favorites so far

  • @sagmilling
    @sagmilling Год назад

    Excellent video. Happy New Year from Canada.

  • @briendraper4818
    @briendraper4818 3 месяца назад

    How do you know all of this? Just Wow. I'm writing a screenplay with some inuit people heavily involved. Interesting on how the language changes per region but also has a singular, a dual and a plural. Also how the words for almost anything can be a little different from village to village. It has to be a hard language to grasp. Cool Thanks for this info. 😊

  • @bonbon-cy2zl
    @bonbon-cy2zl Год назад

    And you represent the word beauty in every language

  • @FlatlandMando
    @FlatlandMando Год назад

    You have my dream job that I never had!

  • @henriklykkejensen8225
    @henriklykkejensen8225 Год назад

    Kalaallit is from the Neu Herrnhut (DK-Norden Herrnhutterne/GL-Noorliit), which is from Herrnhut in Germany. They called Greenlandic Inuit people Karaler/Kareler (Karels/Karalerne) and Karelen/Karalen for an Inuk person. Herrnhuten Samuel Kleinschmidt wrote a book entitled "Kalaallisut allattarissorneq" in 1851. He called the Greenlandic Inuit language Kalaallisut. Because the German Herrnhuters called Greenlandic Inuit Karaler (Germanic in Danish for Greenlandic Inuit) - Kalaallit. My grandparents and great-grandparents never called themselves Kalaallit but Inuit. And it was in the 1960s that some young Greenlandic Inuit began to call themselves Kalaallit.
    Just wanted to correct a detail. But what a good and informative documentary. Thank you!!

    • @daveshen0880
      @daveshen0880 9 месяцев назад

      Inuit people 😂😂😂

  • @renatofigueiredo603
    @renatofigueiredo603 Год назад

    Thank you for this video.

  • @markw4206
    @markw4206 Год назад +1

    So according to her narration of paleohistory, the first Americans who populated most of North and South America came over the Bering Strait thousands of years before the Inuits followed, just 2-4000 YBP, populating the northernmost regions. I never knew this.

  • @ronaldl9085
    @ronaldl9085 Год назад

    Thanks for this interesting video.

  • @TheAntsNest
    @TheAntsNest Год назад

    Great info & education for me, ty

  • @eldesconocido5734
    @eldesconocido5734 Год назад +1

    Yesssss finally someone speaks about this languGe

  • @Denneth_D.
    @Denneth_D. Год назад +8

    I remember making a Inuit inspired conlang a few years ago it didn’t last long so I scrapped it in favour of other projects (plus I wasn’t satisfied with it)

    • @cuckoo61
      @cuckoo61 Год назад +3

      I made one with roots from Yuto-nahua but the phonology and grammar of Inuit languages, I don't remember the name of the language tbh but it meant something like "we all constantly speak and speak" :)

    • @Denneth_D.
      @Denneth_D. Год назад +2

      @@cuckoo61interesting

  • @hopfer66
    @hopfer66 Год назад

    Thanks!! For resson yournever probably never kwonw

  • @zachchen9564
    @zachchen9564 Год назад

    Hi JuLingo, Great and informative as alaways. And I would like to see a video of a Sino Tibetan language❤❤❤

  • @phoebica
    @phoebica Год назад

    thank you, that was really interesting.

  • @jwrappuhn71
    @jwrappuhn71 Год назад +1

    Excellent.

  • @acrylicpourn6132
    @acrylicpourn6132 Год назад

    amazing!!!!

  • @elnomadaespacial
    @elnomadaespacial 11 месяцев назад

    Nos naichi cus nalomajna'us as be'nra che lacam'ba.
    Greetings from Bolivia brothers.

  • @PriangonHalder
    @PriangonHalder Месяц назад +1

    მე მიყვარს გრენლანდია🇬🇱🇬🇱❤❤❤❤

  • @david_oliveira71
    @david_oliveira71 Год назад +3

    Welcome back!
    Oh, btw: What do you think, whether you know these 2 or not, about *Omniglot* (website) and Ilovelanguages (YT channel) as resources?

  • @alejandroto3094
    @alejandroto3094 Год назад

    Julie 💜

  • @rosamwen2267
    @rosamwen2267 Месяц назад

    Canada also have yupik

  • @NL-tq1yr
    @NL-tq1yr Год назад +1

    You should do one on circassian language.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Год назад

    Yes. Thanks.

  • @zzzpqd
    @zzzpqd Год назад

    Juli, I enjoy your podcasts. I like it when you show your hands talking. You voice, hands and eyes feel deeply beautiful and Angelic. What is your native language?

  • @ILexiconI
    @ILexiconI 9 месяцев назад

    Having "Usually flies" as a word for an aeroplane must be slightly worrying for some Inuits

  • @sumperdeph
    @sumperdeph Год назад

    In Greenlandic we have e and o which has a distinct sound from i and u. but it only comes when it's accompanied with r,q or rl sound after

  • @pulsar2049
    @pulsar2049 Год назад +5

    Western languages are pretty cool. You should definitely do one for the Algonkin/Iroquoian, or maybe another polynesian language.

  • @oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072
    @oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072 Год назад +1

    In Ainu ‘i~nu’ means to listen ‘pi ‘ nu no Ye ‘ means wisper! ‘ I~ nu~p~I~ aq’

  • @edwardgrenke6417
    @edwardgrenke6417 Год назад

    I heard that Basque people being a sea fearing people picked up some Inuit words.

  • @Jaiven
    @Jaiven 11 месяцев назад +1

    Kalaallit - almost means in Estonian (Kala Liit): Fish Nation. Coincidence?