The Sound of Ancient Languages. You Haven't Seen Anything Like This Before!

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2023
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    Immerse yourself in the mesmerizing world of ancient languages with our captivating video. Experience the enchanting sounds of bygone civilizations as realistic characters bring them to life. Journey through time as you listen to the melodic tones of forgotten tongues, each carefully researched and expertly voiced. From the mysterious cadence of Egyptian hieroglyphics to the lyrical beauty of Latin, let the echoes of the past transport you to a realm of linguistic wonder. Discover the linguistic heritage of our ancestors and witness the power of language in preserving the legacy of ancient civilizations. Prepare to be captivated as history's forgotten voices resound once more.
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Комментарии • 18 тыс.

  • @thesjkexperience
    @thesjkexperience 3 месяца назад +8714

    Now you know what your pet feels like when you talk to them.

    • @JClover2
      @JClover2 2 месяца назад +70

      😂

    • @agc1161
      @agc1161 2 месяца назад +44

      😅😅😂😂😂😂

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 2 месяца назад +4

      Here are some sentences in the heavenly languages Norse and Icelandic...
      Ek heiti Freyja ok ek em at læra Norrænu því ek elski (elska) hana! (Norse)
      Hann ǫrninn vissi ekki hvaðan kemr Sólin... (Norse)
      Ek veit alt er þú veizt ekki! (Norse)
      Ég hef talað Ensku síðan þegar ég vas (var) tveggja eða triggja ára!
      En ég get líka talað Hollensku og Norsku og Spænsku og FornNorrænu!
      Ég get talað Íslensku reiprennandi og ég em (er) ekki með neina hreim!
      Ef ég gæti lært annað mál, hvað væri það? Það væri auðvitað Danska!
      Ég em (er) að hugsa að það er mikilvægt að læra að minnsta kosti eitt erlent tungumál, eða flest fallegu tungumálin!
      Svo ég valdi Íslensku og ég héld áfram að læra hana...
      Ég læri það í samhengi...
      Hvíslaðu að svaninum!
      En ertu frá hinum hlutanum?
      Ísland er ekki eitt sjálfstætt land ennþá!
      Þegar ég segi Ísland, hvað er það fyrsta sem dettur þér í (hug) hugi?
      Als ik Ijsland zeg, wat is het eerste wat naar boven komt bij jou?
      (These are some sentences in Icelandic / Norse / Dutch that I tend to revise a lot and analyze in detail - the words in these heavenly languages are just so pretty, they are áddìctive, and so poetic, I definitely wish I had learnt them in childhood, and they are one of the greatest works of art, and I feel this joy inside every time I see the Icelandic flag 🇮🇸 and every time I hear Icelandic, Norse languages being some of the languages that are the most fun to learn and speak and hear and see etc, because they are some of the prettiest languages ever, with gorgeous words and super cool modern sound patterns and sounds and pronunciation rules!)
      Also, here are some words in Gothic - namo, þein, hunds, þatist, ik, weis, eis, qen, brunna, wairþai, ains...

    • @MyLolle
      @MyLolle 2 месяца назад +12

      i love this! 😂 "now you know how your pet feels when you talk to them" 😁👍 i even tried to imagine it for a second. you made my day. 🙌...

    • @natia1925
      @natia1925 2 месяца назад +1

      😂

  • @QuietQuakerASMR
    @QuietQuakerASMR Месяц назад +2220

    Latin sounds like an Italian got drunk and a little high and just started shouting in the town square.

    • @dudanunesbleff
      @dudanunesbleff Месяц назад +60

      IA assumed a modern Italian accent. I doubt it sounded like that.

    • @oolivegreen
      @oolivegreen Месяц назад +44

      I feel like Latin sounds like Spanish French and Italian all together in one lol as if they were drunk

    • @jamesrussell2936
      @jamesrussell2936 Месяц назад +7

      yeah that's pretty much it

    • @antonellacapone5978
      @antonellacapone5978 29 дней назад +9

      Senti, bello, io sono italiana... Noi italiani parliamo più o meno in quel modo, ma non siamo ubriachi 😅. Rispondimi solo se hai capito ciò che ho scritto 😂. Ovviamente sto scherzando! I'm kidding, of course! 🌸

    • @creativesparks2164
      @creativesparks2164 29 дней назад +5

      @@oolivegreen
      Well that’s where they’re all from

  • @DDNN-db8ze
    @DDNN-db8ze Месяц назад +909

    old English : "rrr"
    modern English :"uyh"

    • @craig7591
      @craig7591 26 дней назад +11

      More like nuh uh

    • @kingkayfabe5358
      @kingkayfabe5358 26 дней назад +16

      Weird how we dont pronounce r in english like the other germanic languages right?

    • @ramyahwash5455
      @ramyahwash5455 23 дня назад +19

      They used to be more like MEN back in the days

    • @matthewsiregar
      @matthewsiregar 21 день назад +8

      @@kingkayfabe5358easier than the german r i must say. the only germanic language with a preserved thrill r is probably icelandic

    • @whyareyousophysical
      @whyareyousophysical 13 дней назад +1

      @@ramyahwash5455bro what 😭

  • @M-Rayan
    @M-Rayan Месяц назад +583

    As an arab speaker the phoenician is like someone making up a language without changing the accent.

    • @alephite
      @alephite Месяц назад +22

      sounds like early jewish ahh language to me dawg

    • @JujiCallisto
      @JujiCallisto Месяц назад +16

      Yup with all kkafs in there , akkadian felt kinda similar too

    • @IldenMelder
      @IldenMelder Месяц назад +14

      Im norwegian and thats exacly what norse sounded like to me

    • @-Islamic-Knight-
      @-Islamic-Knight- Месяц назад

      ​@@alephite
      🤮

    • @krakart8181
      @krakart8181 27 дней назад +12

      Phoenicians probably had their own accent but it was lost to time

  • @LongLiveTheBeat
    @LongLiveTheBeat Год назад +26731

    As an English speaker, hearing the Old English makes me feel like the foreigner trying to learn modern English for the first time

    • @thekamotodragon
      @thekamotodragon Год назад +1048

      that's the one thing i remember from my English class, when they covered Shakespeare and previous literary works from before him. They said old English would be less and less intelligible to us modern speakers the farther you go back because of how it evolved over the hundreds of years. So shakespeare plays in their original dialect, mostly make sense to us, (and made WAY more sense script-wise in their original language) but further back, they'd really get hard to understand until you get to this old English, where you can only understand every like 20th word.

    • @ibtiamat
      @ibtiamat Год назад +920

      I didn't realize that there were so many rolling "R"s in Old English.

    • @invisibl367
      @invisibl367 Год назад +351

      Modern english is not anything hard to learn, probably the most simple language world wide, perhapse that's the reason it's used world wide.

    • @meowcat5596
      @meowcat5596 Год назад

      @@invisibl367 it's not easy at all. the reason it's used worldwide is because white people rule the planet and hence we're all forced to live by their ideals

    • @AuditorMadness
      @AuditorMadness Год назад +439

      Sounds german

  • @SkieLoon
    @SkieLoon Год назад +6783

    This feels like walking through a dimly lit, super immersive museum wing with the speakers playing different languages as you walk passed each decorated display about the language being spoken.

    • @weltonvillegal6258
      @weltonvillegal6258 Год назад +40

      Exactly!

    • @potatheadd
      @potatheadd Год назад +10

      When I go with my parents my siblings come too

    • @kringle7804
      @kringle7804 Год назад +28

      To me it feels like a time traveler when back in time to get interviews

    • @TheCombraste
      @TheCombraste Год назад +5

      A museum would never rip apart linguistic cultures and put AI's mumbling gibberish . As a Greek I feel insulted by this video .

    • @kringle7804
      @kringle7804 Год назад +14

      @@TheCombraste you speak ancient greek

  • @MilekCliff
    @MilekCliff Месяц назад +264

    As a Slav I'm proud to have understood about 10% of the Old Church Slavonic bit.

    • @user-io1do3fl7v
      @user-io1do3fl7v Месяц назад +15

      I understood like 50%, but other 50% i really don't know what it can be, because Church Slavonic was formed by dialect of Old Bulgarian and i'm not into South Slavic languages, but i also have feeling, that it's just a different sentences that aren't connected to eachother, or it's just because it 's not a full text

    • @DzmitryKrakadzeyau
      @DzmitryKrakadzeyau Месяц назад +5

      Для беларуса дастаткова зразумела.

    • @user-io1do3fl7v
      @user-io1do3fl7v Месяц назад +7

      @@DzmitryKrakadzeyau А мені, як українцю теж досить зрозуміло

    • @DzmitryKrakadzeyau
      @DzmitryKrakadzeyau Месяц назад

      @@user-io1do3fl7v 🤝

    • @lotus5461
      @lotus5461 24 дня назад

      Who asked weird dogs?

  • @JefersonPaivFerreira
    @JefersonPaivFerreira Месяц назад +46

    As a native speaker of Romance languages, Portuguese and Spanish, and having studied Latin at the University, I could understand the central point of the speech in Latin. He is delivering a celebrative speech about the concepts of liberty, the empire, and unity.

    • @caclesi
      @caclesi 11 дней назад +3

      As Brazilian, I understand the tone and the general speech theme too.

    • @satchelsatchel
      @satchelsatchel 5 дней назад +1

      Having studied Latin for many years, I could understand some expressions. The pronunciation was very well done.

  • @vegetableman3911
    @vegetableman3911 Месяц назад +2537

    As a native English speaker, I can only describe old English as sounding familiar, almost like you’re half asleep and listening to someone in a different room

    • @HaYlEeXx19
      @HaYlEeXx19 Месяц назад +42

      Wicked familiar. Old Latin to. But so strange to. Like you wanna ask “Come again?”

    • @Dacangri2
      @Dacangri2 Месяц назад +30

      What makes New English sound the way it does today is the influence of Latin. Today, the language we speak comprises about 60% Latin words, with about 10% French, and a bit of Irish and other languages from the region. The only reason why English is considered a Germanic language is that the base of the language is Old English and not Latin.

    • @vegetableman3911
      @vegetableman3911 Месяц назад +21

      @@Dacangri2 60% Latin and 10% French? English is roughly 30% French and 15-30% Latin (sources conflict, Wikipedia says 15% Latin but others say 30%). A large portion of every day words that you speak colloquially are Germanic as they were used by commoners while ‘posh’ words are mostly French and Latin (languages of nobility and clergy)

    • @Dacangri2
      @Dacangri2 Месяц назад

      @@vegetableman3911 I would urge you to use better sources than Wikipedia…anyone can put whatever they want in there…I made a Google searched and literally the first thing that pop off. rharriso.sites.truman.edu/latin-language/latin-and-english/#:~:text=English%20is%20especially%20rich%20in,Latin%20origin%20due%20to%20borrowing.

    • @Dacangri2
      @Dacangri2 Месяц назад

      @@vegetableman3911 I would urge to use better sources than Wikipedia…anyone can literally write anything they want in there. Made a Google search and quite literally the first thing that came out substantiate my claim. rharriso.sites.truman.edu/latin-language/latin-and-english/#:~:text=English%20is%20especially%20rich%20in,Latin%20origin%20due%20to%20borrowing.

  • @hannahkaye.mp4
    @hannahkaye.mp4 Год назад +3380

    all of these languages not only encompass a linguistic niche, but an entire society. people woke up every day in a time and place where each one of these languages came to them as effortlessly as thought. they spoke to their friends in this language. they fell in love with others who spoke it. they fought with nemeses and loved ones, and wrote poetry, sang songs, told stories and lies. to many people who came looong before us, one of these languages was their world. what would they think if they were thrown into this time, onto an older Earth, and realized that that world was gone?

    • @raymondtonns2521
      @raymondtonns2521 Год назад +129

      they would feel like i do do now , a man out of place in the land of his birth

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 Год назад +51

      @@raymondtonns2521 I feel a bit like that. When I grew up, there were some people of other ethnicities, but mainly people of my own, now there are mainly Indian people with a mix of Chinese, Vietnamese, Sudanese, Phillipino, Pakistani, Nepali and other ethnicities. Indians are the large majority where I live and I feel out of place. It's not just the ethnicities, it's also the culture, the culture has changed so much in my area, it used to be a friendly community, now everyone is in a rush, people are rude, most people don't want to help others anymore........Things have changed.

    • @odoylerules4503
      @odoylerules4503 Год назад +16

      @@raymondtonns2521
      "water flowing underground
      same as it ever was
      same as it ever was"

    • @udiptatalukdar116
      @udiptatalukdar116 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@SilentHotdog28where are u from?

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@udiptatalukdar116 West of Melbourne, Australia.

  • @kati-ana
    @kati-ana 25 дней назад +19

    I love how the Ryukyuan language sounds, it's so delicate. But I also like the Old English.

  • @asifiqbal1117
    @asifiqbal1117 Месяц назад +50

    The middle Egyptian one almost made me fall asleep...so hypnotizing ❤️

    • @WartenPresei
      @WartenPresei 12 дней назад

      I can mishear it

    • @larajones175
      @larajones175 7 дней назад

      The AI's were bad though. The Chinese looked European And The Egyptian didn't look Egyptian.

    • @satchelsatchel
      @satchelsatchel 5 дней назад

      @@larajones175 Please take a look at the ancient Egyptian figurine _The Seated Scribe_ from 2500 BC. You might find the Egyptian in the video to be more accurate than you'd realized.

    • @jameelagill5408
      @jameelagill5408 День назад +2

      ​@@larajones175
      What do you mean? He absolutely looked Egyptian. At least, middle Egyptian. Farther back they were darker skinned but this video is talking about middle Egypt.

  • @acidmana7920
    @acidmana7920 Месяц назад +1062

    Getting transmigrated into one of these eras would be a nightmare. I'd bawl my eyes out the moment they start speaking.

    • @LifeSizeNomi
      @LifeSizeNomi Месяц назад +31

      Fr lmaooo

    • @elkmeatenjoyer3409
      @elkmeatenjoyer3409 Месяц назад +41

      That would be the last of your worries.

    • @okayhellohihowyadoin
      @okayhellohihowyadoin Месяц назад +135

      @@elkmeatenjoyer3409 not being able to communicate with anyone would definitely be a very valid worry amongst disease, hunger, violence, etc. Especially because it makes a few of those things more likely.

    • @NiCoNiCoNiCola
      @NiCoNiCoNiCola Месяц назад

      I'm pretty sure they'd be very confused about some schmuck in unusual looking clothing trying to speak in an tongue that doesn't even exist yet

    • @Lolyewmadbruoh
      @Lolyewmadbruoh Месяц назад +3

      Learn cherades

  • @Jim.Frantzisson
    @Jim.Frantzisson Год назад +10454

    As a Greek I understood the context in ancient Greek not because it hasn't changed over the centuries but because they teach us to read and study ancient Greek in high school in Greece

    • @DG-qs1sr
      @DG-qs1sr Год назад +705

      I'm Italian and I have the same experience with Latin. It is really close to my native tongue but I can deeply understand it only because we learned it at school

    • @angelosmpesiropoulos7429
      @angelosmpesiropoulos7429 Год назад +385

      Μου λες πως καταλαβες αυτα που ελεγε???🤣🤣 γιατι εμενα μου φανηκαν ξενα. Πρεπει να ασχολεισαι με τα θεωρητικα μαθηματα μαλλον.

    • @Panos_Stayis
      @Panos_Stayis Год назад +80

      Is the erasmic accent, used here, even valid;

    • @SisselOnline
      @SisselOnline Год назад +87

      similar to here in HK and China XD
      Learning the ancient Chinese in high school

    • @Egw5
      @Egw5 Год назад

      @@angelosmpesiropoulos7429 Ή ξένος είναι και λέει μαλακιές ή απλά ασχολείται με τα αρχαία και τα φιλολογικά

  • @moorgrass22
    @moorgrass22 Месяц назад +104

    Я когда-то учила церковно-славянский. Темп речи должен быть в 1,5 раза медленнее, чем в разговорной речи. Потрясающее видео! Представьте, друзья, сколько разных людей жили до нас со своими взглядами, мыслями и чувствами. У меня мурашки по телу, когда я думаю об этом

    • @user-cp6zk9sn8v
      @user-cp6zk9sn8v 26 дней назад +2

      Ну вы бы ещё мо старорусским сравнили)
      Разница есть и немалая, всё же.

    • @rzsz
      @rzsz 9 дней назад

      Приятно было кое-что понимать из того что он сказал

    • @DinaGord
      @DinaGord День назад

      ​@@rzszи что он сказал?

    • @rzsz
      @rzsz День назад

      @@DinaGord из того, что я понял, что принесли слово Божие среди славян, про создание мира в 7 дней и прорицание пророков, что слепые прозрят, глухие услышат. Понимаю куски только

  • @user-vf2cn5mr8b
    @user-vf2cn5mr8b Месяц назад +91

    As a native Russian speaker I actually understood about half of the old church slavonic which is awesome

    • @ByBartinho
      @ByBartinho 28 дней назад +4

      Im Polish and also.

    • @ivorbuela1709
      @ivorbuela1709 26 дней назад

      Can you translate what was said?

    • @codemancz798
      @codemancz798 22 дня назад +1

      ​@@ivorbuela1709 Religious text. Couldn't tell you the exact translation, but it's talking about God, and knowing God.

    • @Octomimicus
      @Octomimicus 15 дней назад

      You and like a thousand other commenters who understood about a half.

    • @St.Kazachenko
      @St.Kazachenko 9 дней назад +2

      Sounds like part of Bible. Blinds become unblinds, lame become walkers, ect.

  • @AmberCommentsThings
    @AmberCommentsThings 11 месяцев назад +8891

    I won't lie, this sent chills down my spine. It's insane how English ~1000 years ago was basically a completely different language.

    • @mateusbertolaccini2224
      @mateusbertolaccini2224 11 месяцев назад +144

      Não havia sofrido influência do francês dos normandos. Imagina antes das invasões romanas e antes das invasões bárbaras. Como deveria ser a língua do primeiro povo a atravessar o canal da mancha?

    • @FullmetalChuunibyou
      @FullmetalChuunibyou 11 месяцев назад +633

      What’s worse is that English also changed in large part due to heavy influence from Latin and French (as well as Old Norse to a lesser extent). Nearly 60% of English vocabulary today has Romance origin because of borrowing (and about 5% is from Old Norse). This also forced English to simplify as these new vocabulary words could not easily be inflected with its existing grammar. As a result, the English language lost its gender and grammatical case systems, which are still prevalent in other Indo-European languages today. So, English has certainly changed a lot over the last thousand years. Some say English is the Frankenstein’s monster of languages. 😂

    • @CorModo
      @CorModo 11 месяцев назад +50

      That's a good take, compared to these mostly nonsensical other comments under the vid.

    • @MH-ms1dg
      @MH-ms1dg 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@CorModowhat comment was it?

    • @vetlogmobaho703
      @vetlogmobaho703 11 месяцев назад +57

      Ancient chinese still sound modern chinese 😂😂😂

  • @darqv9358
    @darqv9358 3 месяца назад +1812

    I've always LOVED the way Latin was spoken. It was so powerful and boistrous, but still very classy and refined sounding.

    • @JustAGuySlayingDragons
      @JustAGuySlayingDragons 2 месяца назад +87

      Sounds like Italian to me

    • @TalmoTheSell
      @TalmoTheSell 2 месяца назад +114

      @@JustAGuySlayingDragonswell, Italian is derived from Latin

    • @bobbiebeck5361
      @bobbiebeck5361 2 месяца назад +23

      ​@@JustAGuySlayingDragonsno way!!

    • @acylonepleidian9665
      @acylonepleidian9665 2 месяца назад +23

      That is a Patrician speaking late Latinuum Vulgus, not Classical Latin, my friend. If that gentleman was dressed like that, at the very least he had the income of a Lanista, at the most ideal we're looking at a Senator. If Senator, afraid to tell you, they spoke Greek or Classical Roman which is heavily imprinted by ancient greek. Watch some Metatron, I say it as a sincere suggestion because in essence you are right, I agree with your comment, what I cordially disagree with is that you took that modern latin made by an AI and you can hear the itallic lombardic 300 AD accent, not Cicero, not plutarch, not Cato. Matter of fact the owner of this channel used an LM from github that phoneticizes old writings, but couldn't bother credit the LM creator, or provide historical datation. Ancient Mayan? Oh, so you mean nahuatl? Ok, where's the clicks? That is modern, allthese are modern phonetizations of old texts which this dude was more busy putting some Civilization V cartoons with lipsync LM than providing datation, citation, source. I enjoy linguistics, and I know a few languages, but I don't stroke myself about being a polyglot, nor does it raise my brows much when some on YT go all "I'm polyglot", but you want proper latinuum? Coool. "American speaks Latin to Italians in Rome - watch their reaction! 😳 🇮🇹
      polýMATHY
      3.3M views 2 years ago" , or "Can I Fool Brits With a FAKE British Accent?!
      Langfocus
      210K views 1 month ago" or Ben Llewllynn (Yeah, from the Welsh Llewllynn clan) RUclips channel to learn actual umbro-itallic, umbro-fascia itallian predating latin, merged with ancient greek to give you Classical Latin, which lasted a yawn worth of time, compared to the last Roman administration being tore down, since the other side of the Senate was Popularii who spoke Vulgus, especially after Julius Caesar raised the limit of allowed senators by adding Gauls, Illyrians, et cetera as part of the Popularii party (Populist/Liberal) with the Optimates (Think of MS, Alphabet, IBM, Space X, andgo down forbes top 100 and that's who was in the Optimates party.) Do you seriously consider a Nubian trader selling hunt meat at an Aegyptus merchant would speak umbro-fasci-proto latin? I'd show you the middle finger, but you'd probably think I'm flipping you off, that's the rough estimate of how much historical knowledge you have about Roma Antica.

    • @Firecelebi
      @Firecelebi 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@acylonepleidian9665Any links where you can hear real ancient Latin?

  • @strongteamtv2639
    @strongteamtv2639 20 дней назад +225

    Old English: "rerrr frtlrr refkde"
    Modern English: Skibidi got gyatt dom yes yes

    • @Thegreatitsltallianbread
      @Thegreatitsltallianbread 6 дней назад

      I hate my languae I’m African American I should be speaking. my own language

    • @user-us2zg5uy5c
      @user-us2zg5uy5c 6 дней назад +8

      @@Thegreatitsltallianbread no one is stopping you from going back.

    • @writtenkiwi
      @writtenkiwi 5 дней назад

      ​@@user-us2zg5uy5c you almost made me racist

    • @idonthaveawidowspeak3689
      @idonthaveawidowspeak3689 4 дня назад +6

      @@Thegreatitsltallianbreadmy man American English is your language, you probably haven’t even set foot in Africa

    • @TheSaxon.
      @TheSaxon. 4 дня назад +1

      ​@@Thegreatitsltallianbread What language would that be? You certainly can't write in English, so good luck. 👍😂

  • @mrmotif1111
    @mrmotif1111 Месяц назад +41

    middle egyptian sounds like my geography teacher talking while im half asleep

    • @SalmaMohamed-cy3cu
      @SalmaMohamed-cy3cu 28 дней назад +1

      Bro😭😭😭😭😂😂
      It seems that I am the only one who liked the Egyptian language😂

    • @user-et8vm9cc3t
      @user-et8vm9cc3t 12 дней назад +1

      Not sure why he had to be almost whispering.

  • @sandram8516
    @sandram8516 2 месяца назад +822

    As a danish person, the Old Norse is pronounced in a way we still speak today and I also did understand a few words

    • @EmilyFormerBun
      @EmilyFormerBun Месяц назад +18

      I felt the same way with the old English, Latin, and Proto-Celtic! I only speak English and French but have been around a lot of Gaelic speakers, have a German speaking mother, and come from an area where English tends to be spoken in a heavily Gaelic/Gaelig manner moreso than in a standard North American English tv accent/city accent kind of manner. It's so cool how unknown languages can catch the ear like that! I always feel that way when I hear Spanish or Portuguese because I speak French (Italian is a bit too different sounding for this - written, definitely same thing though). Very cool that ancient languages can also have this effect!

    • @kisserdk3134
      @kisserdk3134 Месяц назад +5

      As a Danish person I didnt understand a word. My best guesstimate would be something about a bear?

    • @KronikAlkoholik
      @KronikAlkoholik Месяц назад +9

      This is from an icelandic sketch comedy show that might resemble old norse, but I wouldn't consider it academically accurate. I gonna find the original.

    • @najikaz
      @najikaz Месяц назад

      Like latin form a Italian

    • @yggdrasil4986
      @yggdrasil4986 Месяц назад +6

      What a bunch of misinformation. Danish sounds like a frog throwing up, this sounded more like Icelandic (which it should, all the other languages in Scandinavia became more Germanic since Christianity took over)

  • @ericwilestech
    @ericwilestech Год назад +4342

    I’m Icelandic, I’m fluent in old Norse and it’s very cool to hear how far this has gone. Old Norse is close but not constructing sentences correctly but individual words are correctly pronounced.

    • @aparna3685
      @aparna3685 Год назад +77

      Oh, that's so interesting, I was wondering what they say? can you translate it for me please?

    • @ericwilestech
      @ericwilestech Год назад +468

      ​ @aparna3685 Yes he says just random words to be honest but a little makes sense, but here are the words he says "it's very windy brother, what have you been carrying so bowed woman ... we are brothers that are ripe (or developed) for the women for us to get good sex, I heard they're pretty good. Looks like god has sent us some good stuff to love instead of dying alone and forgotten. I have a better idea to ask god for better days to live..." then it ends. It's not quite correct but the AI is close haha.

    • @lemmyhead8578
      @lemmyhead8578 Год назад +37

      I have been learning Icelandic and Old Norse. Having a hell of a time, but very fun.

    • @h6502
      @h6502 Год назад +262

      another Icelander here.
      understanding the guy wasrelatively easy.
      old norse guy:
      let's have a discussion brother.
      what have i done to attract women so poorly?
      the brothers are mature enough that women would come to us to have intercourse.
      why is it that we haven't had more success in these matters?
      I think I know better than that the gods have decided for me to die alone and abandoned.
      maybe he should try asking the ladies instead of sulking.

    • @ericwilestech
      @ericwilestech Год назад +17

      @@h6502 they blur the words but yeah similar

  • @lizygluck4068
    @lizygluck4068 29 дней назад +17

    The proto-Celtic and ancient Greek sound comforting for some reason.

  • @user-eg5pq8sd8i
    @user-eg5pq8sd8i Месяц назад +11

    As an Egyptian, I felt like I could understand ancient Egyptian but also the massages are like drawing because ancient Egyptian writing due to it contains only symbols and drawings.

  • @user-qj9uq8du2z
    @user-qj9uq8du2z 8 месяцев назад +2079

    As a history teacher, that was absolutely fantastic! Going to share parts of this with my class.

    • @TLnetpilot
      @TLnetpilot 8 месяцев назад +24

      Are you sure that AI is correct ? No you are not

    • @martian_2876
      @martian_2876 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@TLnetpilotWhat?

    • @voltydequa845
      @voltydequa845 8 месяцев назад +33

      @@TLnetpilot «Are you sure that AI is correct ? No you are not»
      --
      It is all fake. Depressing to see a teacher running to compromise the minds of his students. I hope that his students are free enough to answer him something in rhyme.

    • @katkadospisilova
      @katkadospisilova 7 месяцев назад +59

      @@voltydequa845 As someone who speaks Latin, I can confirm that the Latin at least is correct (in accordance with various in-depth studies by experts of ancient languages). Can't be 100% sure about the others though.

    • @voltydequa845
      @voltydequa845 7 месяцев назад +14

      @@katkadospisilova «As someone who speaks Latin, I can confirm that the Latin at least is correct (in accordance with various in-depth studies by experts of ancient languages). Can't be 100% sure about the others though.»
      --
      Had no doubts about Latin, since all this is based upon stochastic pattern matching nowadays passed as "AI out of 'machine learning'". Imho today's Latin pronunciation corresponds to the antique one for the simple reason that it survived through the Catholic Church. It had continuity because it was used actively, though in niche, learned in purity that saved it from 'dialect pronunciations'. But as for the rest, for example Slavic / Orthodox, the old languages were used just for liturgical reasons (translated: they didn't talk between them in old Slavic). They got the pronunciation patterns from liturgy and / or folklore, that were subject to temporal approximations.
      So Latin ok since it imitates how it is spoken today. As for the rest it's all bluff presented as certainty.
      I was answering, to the 'history teacher', because disappointed by his syllogism (as if this had anything to do with history). He could be impressed by the GPTParroting technique, but its history is extremely short and quite hyped. Oh, Mighty, save us from Matrix-like history! :)

  • @kayleeexx102
    @kayleeexx102 2 месяца назад +1556

    crazy how probably in the next few centuries people gonna look back at us talking in the same confusion as we are while watching this rn

    • @stringercorrales6627
      @stringercorrales6627 2 месяца назад +288

      They’re going to be saying “skibidi toilet cringe Minecraft rizz chabizness? Lgbt pear/pearls rizz lol incel spunchbob ze/zim.”

    • @AbelJosueDeJesusMartinezMujica
      @AbelJosueDeJesusMartinezMujica 2 месяца назад

      ​@@stringercorrales6627 Umm YASS kween Skinny-Legend Versace Boots-the-house-down S.L A.Y. kween hunty momma "And I oop-" daddy WORK (Tongue click) Charli XCX Snatch my WIG!

    • @user-xq3kq4gy4v
      @user-xq3kq4gy4v 2 месяца назад

      Say on Rizz?​@@stringercorrales6627

    • @xiyi4764
      @xiyi4764 Месяц назад +47

      only if the earth is not destroyed by that time 😂

    • @shafiezzahshafie8155
      @shafiezzahshafie8155 Месяц назад +17

      And they would be surprised on how fast we talk nowadays

  • @aydidmohammadarabshah7448
    @aydidmohammadarabshah7448 8 часов назад +2

    Kudos to the person who sailed the seven sea to record this for us!

  • @priscilaamorim5572
    @priscilaamorim5572 Месяц назад +6

    Thank you for this. It's truly fascinating!

  • @versailleschick1994
    @versailleschick1994 Год назад +2954

    My husband is Guatemalan, and he speaks the Mayan dialect of Achii. There are 23 Mayan dialects in Guatemala. 🇬🇹

    • @Sugarsail1
      @Sugarsail1 Год назад +183

      I spent some time in Guatemala and I laugh when ever I hear the Anglo-Latino narrative regarding the supposed "disappearance" of the Mayan Empire when I'm sitting having a beer with some guy speaking Mayan to me....I'm like dude, the Mayan Empire is right here collecting your colonialist welfare! LOLOL

    • @kevaughnramsay9846
      @kevaughnramsay9846 Год назад +32

      @@Sugarsail1 Ok?

    • @saturdayboy
      @saturdayboy Год назад +44

      The Spanish empire forbid native languages? First news. Is there any evidence of such laws or is this just nonsense and revisionism?

    • @versailleschick1994
      @versailleschick1994 Год назад +7

      @jjemail5284 Thanks for the correction. I meant languages 😅

    • @Zulu369
      @Zulu369 Год назад +16

      Fantastic! When I visited Mexico, I went to see the Chichen Itza. On my way to this historical place, we stopped over at Merida where I met some indigenous people who taught me a couple of words in the Mayan language: For example Chi for nose, etc ... I loved it.

  • @jitaru3707
    @jitaru3707 Год назад +2977

    As a Japanese speaker, Old Japanese was completely unrecognizable, as many of the sounds used simply don't exist in Japanese anymore. However when I see it phonetically written I can draw the connection.
    Edit: Ryukyuan in this video sounds much more like modern Japanese, likely because it is a language that is still spoken today and the version they were presenting is a modern version that evolved alongside Japanese

    • @fugeki2249
      @fugeki2249 Год назад +189

      I translate classical japanese texts for my Ph.D. dissertation and only recognized a few words of what this AI was saying. I don't think you are the problem; the pronunciation in itself might not have been off, it might just be that the words it used simply did not exist. Nevertheless, the grammar made absolutely no sense whatsoever.

    • @user-nf3kz9ee2n
      @user-nf3kz9ee2n Год назад +97

      As far as I know, the modern 'h' of Japanese was 'p' back in the Old Japanese language. (And also 'chi' would be 'ti', 'tsu' would be 'tu', 'zu' would be 'du', etc)

    • @thespectator5259
      @thespectator5259 Год назад +186

      I don't speak Japanese, but even I picked up how very much Ryukyuan sounded more Japanese than Old Japanese ironically enough. Pretty cool to have my thoughts confirmed by someone who actually speaks it.

    • @A_Simple_Neurose
      @A_Simple_Neurose Год назад +77

      @@fugeki2249 Same, I have a degree in Japanese Studies and have worked with classical texts before but this does not resemble anything I've read or heard before. I've spoken with Japanese people about this and this seems more like a hoax than anything. Then again, I'm not an expert. I wish the uploader provided sources, as far as I'm concerned this video is useless from a linguistic standpoint without proper sourcing or explanation on how it was made/generated.
      EDIT: This video is much more trustworthy in my opinion if only because of the rigurous notation used which at least shows that the uploader understands what he's doing.
      ruclips.net/video/lrBuftKQQQY/видео.html
      Either way this video, or at least that specific part seems to me like junk.

    • @realbanana0305
      @realbanana0305 Год назад +4

      ​@@user-nf3kz9ee2n makes a lot of sense tbh, I'm guessing that shi also used to be si

  • @petertrebilco9430
    @petertrebilco9430 22 дня назад +3

    One of the best videos ever made. As a linguist I appreciate the effort you went to… and, as a linguist, I would love to hear more proto-, early, and middle languages. In particular, as a Cornish Australian, I was fascinated by Proto-Celtic. Any chance you can make something that embraces proto-, early, middle and late Cornish, all in one transitional video? Perhaps the same text ‘spoken’ in all four stages? I’m studying SWF Kernewek (Cornish), and would be extremely grateful for the chance to hear Cornish as we imagine it once was pronounced. Thank you so much for an outstanding video. I endorse all the positive comments here and look forward to your next venture!

  • @user-fd9kq3rc7c
    @user-fd9kq3rc7c День назад

    I enjoyed this. Thanks for putting it together! 😊

  • @bdog95
    @bdog95 2 месяца назад +580

    My senior English teacher has learned Old English and when we were reading Beowulf, I still can hear her voice in my mind to this day speaking that

    • @shadrach6299
      @shadrach6299 Месяц назад +11

      Our teacher read it to us in Middle English

    • @Mone333Williams
      @Mone333Williams Месяц назад +7

      Me and my cousins speak in old English all the time as a inside joke becuz nobody talk like that at all now. Me and my brother grew up in church so our lingo caught in to others and now we all just "when does thou thinketh, ye may be scurrying off to thine trinket shop for some smoketh" 😅🤷🏾‍♀️😁. We learned old English from the KJV Bible during Sabbath and Sunday school. We didn't go to college for it.

    • @hp4602
      @hp4602 Месяц назад +13

      that's not old English

    • @ImperiumRomanum476
      @ImperiumRomanum476 Месяц назад +8

      That's not Old English. Old English (also known as Anglo-Saxon or Anglish) would be "Iċ bidde þē þæt þū sprece slāwor."​@Mone333Williams

    • @MariAnKenobi
      @MariAnKenobi Месяц назад

      @@Mone333Williamsincorrect usage. You don’t understand the grammar to use it properly.

  • @sofia_aa
    @sofia_aa Год назад +1509

    6:25 Peruvian here! Yes, quechua is very commonly spoken in many regions here in Peru, but most people who speak it also know Spanish. Nowadays, many people are interested in learning it and there are many resources you can find online, however, it was not always like that. I remember when i was a kid people who spoke it or had a noticeable accent when speaking spanish were mocked and ridiculed, even kids at school. It was a shame, since it's such a beautiful language and people were ashamed to speak it. I am very happy to see it represented here and i hope one day i can learn it too!

    • @marialalasmith9562
      @marialalasmith9562 Год назад +54

      It’s beautiful you want to learn such a beautiful language with ancient roots, keeping alive indigenous languages is so important. Those bullies are stupid and indoctrinated, because they can’t connect to something more ancient than their own nose.

    • @linoleon100
      @linoleon100 Год назад +61

      ​@@V-XENO que miserable debe ser tu vida, todos los comentarios están llenos de gente compartiendo lo que saben de cada idioma, pero como esta habla español te la quieres dar en gracioso.

    • @MrLuiyi02
      @MrLuiyi02 Год назад

      @@V-XENOÁbrase sapo. 🐸

    • @zirenitamon
      @zirenitamon Год назад +26

      @@V-XENO Tranquilo, yo le pregunté. :v

    • @theodore4460
      @theodore4460 Год назад +2

      yeah, city people would see you like uncultured village people right ?

  • @birthday_cakeman
    @birthday_cakeman 3 часа назад

    This video was AMAZING. Thank you for putting this together! So absurdly fascinating!

  • @burritonoodle4155
    @burritonoodle4155 11 месяцев назад +2527

    I think the old English just sounds like Danish. Turns out the Danes took over a large part of England just like it states. You can really tell where people migrate to and from based on languages. Such a beautiful thing. So neat to hear all of these.

    • @adamross1596
      @adamross1596 11 месяцев назад +95

      It does sound almost like Scandinavian, which is very interesting given that they migrated to Britain over 1000 years ago.

    • @Makuinv
      @Makuinv 11 месяцев назад +16

      Sounds like finnish

    • @RD-jc2eu
      @RD-jc2eu 11 месяцев назад +61

      @@Makuinv ????? Finnish is not a Germanic language (as Anglo-Saxon was). It's from a completely different language family, one which has no other related variants in Europe.

    • @thoraengell-kofoed4450
      @thoraengell-kofoed4450 10 месяцев назад +15

      I kinda get it a bit with how the sounds from the words forms in the throat haha - but not at all at the same time (I´m from Denmark) we don´t have that tongue rolling at all

    • @wrongturnVfor
      @wrongturnVfor 10 месяцев назад +17

      Lol, When you look at Europe and try to learn languages, you can clearly see the Norse languages branching out as you move south. On the other side you can see latin mutating into romance languages with heavy influence from arabic and all that meets in the cent re, Mixing with some celtic to form dutch. Which evolves in to the mishmash we call english. English aint a language. It is a frankemonster of 6 different ones, pretending to be a language. That is why the grammar and phonetics are so messed up.

  • @hoofhearted4
    @hoofhearted4 7 месяцев назад +1028

    as someone who only speaks one language, other languages blow my mind. To think, every culture on earth, from small tribes, to large nations, all formed a language they came to understand in order to communicate. how so many tones and clicks and sounds can all translate to the same thing is so cool. everyone in the world looked at a tree and all made a word for it, that all sounded differently.

    • @lilacbuni
      @lilacbuni 6 месяцев назад +62

      even cooler when u find out some "noises" can only be made by ppl who grew up with that language due to how their mouths form the noises being passed down genetically. Some alphabets are long (Japan has 3!) and some are very short and simple, just hearing today how some ppl struggle to pronounce letters in other languages due to it not being present in their alphabets is crazy enough e. g. Koreans don't have Z so it's often replaced with J so they would say Jebra if unfamiliar with English.

    • @NoCluYT
      @NoCluYT 6 месяцев назад +28

      @@lilacbuni also there are some sounds that can't be replicated as well by other ethnicities due to how our mouths are shaped. Notice how can sometimes tell when a black person or white person is talking even if they're both speaking a language that they both grew up with.

    • @Sr.Brownie
      @Sr.Brownie 6 месяцев назад +6

      There is only a set amount of sounds the human voice can make so there is mainly overlap only a few character vary. But those small differences can make pronounciation sound way off

    • @TakiMitsuha2016
      @TakiMitsuha2016 6 месяцев назад +4

      I speak 4 languages and 3 or 4 dialects of the same languages😂😂😂

    • @user-rw3bk6wp4m
      @user-rw3bk6wp4m 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@TakiMitsuha2016
      Are you European

  • @gsentinel4821
    @gsentinel4821 13 дней назад +1

    This is amazing- Well done and very very informative 👍👍👍

  • @hootowl5711
    @hootowl5711 Месяц назад +14

    The most unrealistic thing about this video is that they all have their teeth

  • @paulmark992
    @paulmark992 Год назад +2311

    Timetable:
    0:00 Old Norse
    0:24 Mayan Language
    0:54 Latin
    1:30 Middle Chinese
    1:58 Old English
    2:27 Old Japanese
    2:57 Old Church Slavonic
    3:27 Proto-Celtic Language
    3:56 Middle Egyptian
    4:27 Ryukyuan Language
    4:57 Ancient Greek
    5:30 Phoenician Language
    5:54 Hittite Language
    6:24 Quechua
    6:54 Akkadian Language

    • @JustSlav98
      @JustSlav98 Год назад +32

      Old Church Slavonic can also be called old Bulgarian since that was its original name

    • @MatteoBelongsInAmentalHospital
      @MatteoBelongsInAmentalHospital Год назад +22

      they put middle egyptian in the middle lol

    • @VioletScene2014
      @VioletScene2014 Год назад +5

      Thanks

    • @paulmark992
      @paulmark992 Год назад +5

      @@MatteoBelongsInAmentalHospital talk like an Egyptian 🕺💃🏼

    • @paulmark992
      @paulmark992 Год назад +3

      @@VioletScene2014 you are welcome

  • @sewerslidepark6656
    @sewerslidepark6656 7 месяцев назад +284

    I don’t know what it is about some of these languages but I get this deep remorseful feeling in my chest hearing them. Like to know that there is bounds of cultural and love that flowed through their words and that they had words that have unexplainable definitions. Just for all of it to be lost in time.. but I guess that’s why it so important to acknowledge their place because of the significance these old languages have on all of us…

    • @BrokenInBeauty
      @BrokenInBeauty 3 месяца назад +6

      ♥️ Very beautifully said, I resonated and felt quite similarly as the video went on but felt unable to articulate it as beautifully descriptive as you did! 🗣️ 🌏

  • @Yoyoyo224
    @Yoyoyo224 Месяц назад +1

    Great video live the idea

  • @FUBARGunpla
    @FUBARGunpla День назад +1

    been trying to learn the old tongue, i love that you added that little bit about mayans trying to revitalize the language, my tribes dialect no longer exists so it's been nice to learn something close to that dialect.

  • @TheSwitch747
    @TheSwitch747 Год назад +899

    My grandfather would speak quechua regularly. I didnt realize how old of a language it was until i was older.

    • @skywriter4308
      @skywriter4308 Год назад +62

      Quechua is definitely a pleasure to hear. I'm glad it survived. I would say that all languages are equally old though, in a sense; Italian, for instance, is just Latin, but taken at a different snapshot in time. In the same way, English is just how a certain variety of Old Germanic is spoken now. Who knows what Quechua sounded like three thousand years ago!

    • @henrystoes6508
      @henrystoes6508 Год назад +12

      @@skywriter4308 yes, it bothers me when people claim certain languages are older than others.

    • @mananmody9355
      @mananmody9355 Год назад +3

      Why didn't you learn it?

    • @mananmody9355
      @mananmody9355 Год назад +4

      @@henrystoes6508 dude English is clearly older than Latin. Romans were jealous of the British and so they rewrote history

    • @skywriter4308
      @skywriter4308 Год назад +20

      @@mananmody9355 The point that I (and I suspect Henry's toes) was trying to make is that the labels we give languages are just for a certain stretch of time in history of a branch of some language. If we go far enough back in time, English recedes into Old Germanic (along with Dutch, High German, etc.), Latin/Italian recedes into Old Romance, and Old Germanic and Old Romance both eventually come from Indo-European. If both Latin and English descend from the same ancestor language, we can't really say that one is older than the other. The only thing we can really claim is that human language in itself is unfathomably old.

  • @The23Anonymous
    @The23Anonymous Год назад +1129

    As a German, i think i understand some bits of Old English. It sounds like a weird mixture of English and German

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Год назад +228

      Old English sounded more Germanic,
      Until the Normans came and added french vocabularies.

    • @Ge1Ri4
      @Ge1Ri4 Год назад +84

      As a native English speaker who has studied both modern German and Old English, I agree!

    • @potentatewags
      @potentatewags Год назад +95

      English is derived from Germanic, just as modern German is. However, due to a lot of invasions and royalty crossover, English became influenced by French, Greek, and Latin.

    • @rtwhitson3
      @rtwhitson3 Год назад +53

      Just put Old German, Celtic (fading into Gaelic/Pictish), Old Nordic, French, Latin, and Greek into a blender, set it on LOW for two thousand years, and ... BINGO! You have ENGLISH! I LOVE this!

    • @rb98769
      @rb98769 Год назад +13

      It's basically the long lost cousin of Low German

  • @denji5604
    @denji5604 Месяц назад +10

    Why did i think the thumbnail was Ice cube🤣🤣🤣

    • @lainhikaru5657
      @lainhikaru5657 25 дней назад +2

      Today was a good day to buy copper.

  • @RomeroRomeral
    @RomeroRomeral Месяц назад +3

    It would be great if there were any sources on how they made this video in the description.

  • @gengotaku
    @gengotaku Год назад +2271

    It’s really cool to hear old languages, because it inspires us to keep on learning. Old Norse sounds like Swedish to my ears. Middle Chinese reminds me of Cantonese which I am also learning. Old Japanese is impossible to understand, even knowing some Japanese dialects. The Ryukyuan language is still spoken on the main land of Okinawa and this version is the “Shuri” dialect, which was the standard language in Okinawa. I studied it when I lived there but most people don’t speak it because they were forced to learn Standard Japanese, Interestingly, Okinawans who fled to Brazil during the Japanese immigration still speak the language.

    • @violett000
      @violett000 Год назад +104

      Nooo, as a Swedish speaker, Old Norse definitely sounds more Icelandic.

    • @muzikbud
      @muzikbud Год назад +26

      As a swedish speaker myself, the voice and the accent sounded like finnish to me.

    • @hereiam2942
      @hereiam2942 Год назад +10

      ​@@muzikbudAs a non swedish speaker, and scot, I also thought it sounded finnish to me. How strange.

    • @ImagineHeroism
      @ImagineHeroism Год назад +7

      When I was in Japan, I was part of a book club of sorts that would read and break down old texts (mostly Heian works). Which makes me wonder what era the Japanese was suppose to be from and how how they reconstructed it. I’m not sure how’d you reconstruct it other than written works. Which means you’re likely looking at 8-9th century works, which don’t sound anything like what was playing here.

    • @viysnjor4811
      @viysnjor4811 Год назад +15

      @@trekker7530 Not all of them are, some, like Old Norse, we know many of the accents and pronunciations because we have Icelandic and Faroese to compare it to, as well as old rhymes which don't rhyme in Icelandic or Faroese, but did in Old Norse. This kind of process of elimination and reverse extrapolation with cross referenced poetry or song is how we figure out a lot of these old pronunciations. It's how we learned, for example, that Middle English is much closer to a West Country or Irish sounding accent than modern British English

  • @inkadinkadoodle
    @inkadinkadoodle 5 месяцев назад +439

    I just wanted to make my appreciation a bit more tangible, because I'm absolutely awe-struck by this beautiful presentation! Thank You!

    • @holysoremelon8777
      @holysoremelon8777 3 месяца назад +2

      yeah he put some really hard work in this

    • @laoch5658
      @laoch5658 3 месяца назад

      yeah his AI worked hard@@holysoremelon8777

    • @mediatrade-nk1su
      @mediatrade-nk1su 2 месяца назад

      Why is there only 1 comment he deserves more

    • @matronarona
      @matronarona 2 месяца назад +1

      It is all AI...

    • @stringercorrales6627
      @stringercorrales6627 2 месяца назад

      @@matronaronaWhat the hell did they train AI with to verbalize so many dead languages?

  • @barneytheblonde5252
    @barneytheblonde5252 Месяц назад +3

    I had Old English during my English Studies and I can tell you, it sounds just like that. Some things you can understand but it still feels like another language

  • @cdatlas
    @cdatlas Месяц назад +3

    When I was a senior in high school we had to recite the prelude to the Canterbury Tales, I think it was Middle English but as I recall it sounded like that old English…it was over 30 years ago though.

  • @aravindulgent
    @aravindulgent Год назад +1830

    0:01 Old Norse
    0:24 Mayan
    0:53 Latin
    1:29 Middle Chinese
    1:57 Old English
    2:28 Old Japanese
    2:57 Old Church Slavonic
    3:26 Proto-Celtic language
    3:56 Middle Egyptian
    4:26 Ryukyuan language
    4:56 Ancient Greek
    5:30 Phoenician language
    5:53 Hittite language
    6:23 Quechua
    6:53 Akkadian language
    Edit: Lmao stop asking me why this or that language isn't here, I only listed what is there in the video and I'm not affiliated with Equator AI in any way.
    Also, these are all obviously extinct languages, so calm down about why your language does not appear here. Not everything is a conspiracy.

    • @finishgoogl7960
      @finishgoogl7960 Год назад +47

      and Sanskrit ??

    • @questionnowho
      @questionnowho Год назад +32

      @@finishgoogl7960 they intentionally not added one of the oldest language in the earth , cause the the creator of this video have ultra level of knowledge and he/she also can change the history

    • @alhamdulillah23x
      @alhamdulillah23x Год назад +3

      @@AnhNguyen-hn9vj no its scary bro 😭😭

    • @Moringa453
      @Moringa453 Год назад +13

      The oldest language in the world that people still speak is Arabic

    • @questionnowho
      @questionnowho Год назад +51

      @@Moringa453 it's Sanskrit

  • @ZackDuck-rm4dt
    @ZackDuck-rm4dt 4 месяца назад +446

    Something about those slower languages just hits harder. I cant understand what they say but it feels very important and clear. Slowing down to understand each other properly and to make our points solid

    • @steveget1186
      @steveget1186 3 месяца назад +13

      If anything, they talked about God in Church Slavonic.

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 2 месяца назад +3

      Norse / Germanic languages are the most refined languages ever with the prettiest and most poetic words and the most Important languages that all should be learning, but these audio samples aren’t accurate at all, and the pronunciation isn’t right and isn’t clear, but I have the right Norse pronunciation rules - also, Proto European is not an Indo language, and it is a one hundred percent European language and it is also the first language ever created that was created by a dude of germanic origin from scratch a long time ago 2gether with the first writing system, which inspired all other languages and writing systems that exist today, either directly or indirectly, but mostly indirectly, as newer languages were created by modifying previous languages and by creating many new words based on the new spelling rules that their creators had set, so it’s also logically incorrect to have sentences implying that ‘languages split into other languages on their own’ which is totally untrue and not logically possible, as it’s a fact that each language was created by a dude and then taught to a group of ppl that he controlled, and languages didn’t change on their own, they were changed by their creators, but the previous languages are still there, so it’s not like they never existed, and, by the way, Proto Germanic and Norse come from Latin, so they have many similarities, but still, Norse languages are way more refined, they are as refined and as elegant as Modern English, though Latin is also a refined language, which is why it directly inspired most newer European languages the most, as Latin was the biggest language during those times, but anyways, it is also incorrect to refer to Latin languages as romance, since they aren’t romantic, and the truly romantic languages are the Germanic and the Celtic languages, with Icelandic being the most romantic language ever with the breathiest pronunciation, and, the Italic languages are Italian and the other Italian-based languages that haven’t been recognized as a language yet, and Latin most likely came from Ancient Greek or some other ancient Greek-based language!

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 2 месяца назад +2

      I am upper intermediate level in Old Norse and advanced level in Icelandic, and I have the right Norse pronunciation, which is the most logical, and by the way, I will use DH for the TH sound in the English words this and that, which is the approximant of D and not the approximant of T like the TH in the English word think, and I will use AO for the ‘closed’ A sound that is like an A and O sound said 2gether in one sound (similar to the A sound in Hungarian) that melts into a soft O sound!
      For example...
      - hvat sounds like hvat or vat or kvat
      - mæra sounds like mera
      - ávast sounds like avast
      - nágrindr sounds like naogrind:r
      - líkligr sounds like liklig:r or likliguhr
      - frænda sounds like freinda or freoynda or frenda
      - þat sounds like that
      - ræðir sounds like reidhir
      - hárr sounds like haruhr or har:r (could have also been har / harr)
      - gæfr sounds like gev:r or gevuhr
      - hverfa sounds like hverva or verva or kverva (any of them or all 3 could’ve been used)
      Also...
      - hæll sounds like heyl
      - saltr sounds like solt:r
      - mæla sounds like mala
      - drápa sounds like drapa or dropa
      - kæra sounds like kaera or kaira
      - ferr sounds like fer:r
      - jafna sounds like yavna
      - hœgri sounds like heoyri
      - girðing sounds like girdhing
      - hádegi sounds like haodegi
      - ørendislaust sounds like eorendislaust
      The word...
      - verr sounds like ver
      - ekki sounds like eki or ehki
      - þverra sounds like thverra
      - gegna sounds like gekna
      - vefja sounds like vevya
      - yfir sounds like ɪvɪr as in Icelandic
      - ætla sounds like etla
      - ofn sounds like ovn
      - náliga sounds like naoliga
      - sauma could have been pronounced either saima or seoyma like in Icelandic or both or even sauma as it is written
      - ofleti sounds like ofleti
      The emphasis of stress in Norse languages such as Norse and Icelandic etc is always at the beginning of the word - for compound words made of multiple smaller words, one should add a bit of stress at the beginning of each word that the compound word is made of and the most stress always at the beginning of the compound word...
      I don’t think there was any fixed way of pronouncing the diphthongs, and it’s most likely that the pronunciation of diphthongs such as AU would differ depending on the word, including pronunciations such as ai / au / ao / eoy / oy / ey etc, and it may have also differed depending on the region and accent, and the Æ in Norse can have many pronunciations, depending on the word, so it can sound like e / ei / a / eoy / oey / uey / ai / ea / ae etc, depending on what sound sounds best and the most natural and easiest to say in each word, so one should use one’s intuition a lot in Norse...
      The Rs are always different depending on the region and depending of the speaker in every language, but in Germanic languages, a soft normal R is usually used by most speakers and by younger speakers, and I highly recommend using a soft normal R in Norse and in all other languages that aren’t English as soft Rs have the best and most refined sound, soft Rs that are pronounced as fast as possible being the types of Rs that truly suit such refined languages as Norse and the other Germanic languages, whereas hard or prolonged or thrilled Rs sound very harsh and unrefined...
      By the way, it’s also important to know that in Norse and Icelandic the G is usually pronounced like a K sound, especially at the end of the word, and in many words the G is pronounced K even in the middle of the word, and there are also some words where the G is pronounced as a K even when it is at the beginning of the word, so it is normal to hear a lot of K sounds when there is a G in spelling - for example, lots of speakers of Icelandic will pronounce even the G in góðan (góðan daginn) as a soft K sound, without even realizing, and this pronunciation rule comes from Norse!

    • @KTheChristianArtist
      @KTheChristianArtist 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@FrozenMermaid666 I've seen you before and I have to ask you something. Are you real?

    • @_lordtachanka_2314
      @_lordtachanka_2314 Месяц назад +3

      @@KTheChristianArtist the ultimate yapper

  • @teyanuputorti7927
    @teyanuputorti7927 Месяц назад

    Very fascinating thank you

  • @hotmandead1
    @hotmandead1 Месяц назад

    Wow what an effort to bring these back to life truly amazing !

  • @samirgabriel2627
    @samirgabriel2627 Год назад +2306

    *Old Norse **0:00** ||* 0:37 *Mayan Language*
    0:56 *Roman Empire* *(Latin)*
    1:42 *Empire of China*
    2:08 *Anglo-Saxon (English Ancient)*
    2:40 *Ancient Japonese*
    2:57 *Old Slavonic*
    3:29 *Proto-Celtic Language (Common Celtic)*
    4:00 *Egyptian Language* *(2000 BC)*
    4:32 *Ryukyuan Language*
    5:06 *Ancient Greek* *(1500 BC to 300 BC)*
    5:43 *Phoenician Language*
    6:01 *Hittite Language*
    6:22 *Quechua*
    7:12 *Akkadian Language*

    • @mschoy1597
      @mschoy1597 Год назад +26

      THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @angrycharcoalcat
      @angrycharcoalcat Год назад +10

      Thanks Champ!!

    • @7h268
      @7h268 Год назад +4

    • @user-co4hk7hk9t
      @user-co4hk7hk9t Год назад +40

      Where is Ancient Sanskrit Language 😢😢😢

    • @SC-zq6cu
      @SC-zq6cu Год назад

      @@user-co4hk7hk9t
      ruclips.net/video/wC0UG-Oq_90/видео.html

  • @borislavgorlukovich8960
    @borislavgorlukovich8960 Год назад +729

    I’m from Okinawa. Day to day, Modern Okinawans speak Japanese but with a different accent and vocabulary than mainlanders with a little ryukyuan mixed in depending on the social setting.
    Sometimes it’s 90/10 , 60/40, but when my family elders talk with each other it’s completely unrecognizable compared to Japanese

    • @VinzentVega
      @VinzentVega Год назад +18

      Where were you born? Ur nckname sounds like Slavic

    • @erikeriks8788
      @erikeriks8788 Год назад +1

      @@VinzentVega he is nothing but a slavic slave

    • @poppymoon777
      @poppymoon777 Год назад +21

      You don’t look or sound like you’re from Okinawa 😜

    • @ShesMongolianASMR
      @ShesMongolianASMR Год назад +9

      Sure “Borislav” …. (Lol jk)

    • @RusMentor
      @RusMentor Год назад +55

      ​@@poppymoon777 You know that the far eastern Russian territory is not far from Japan, right? Vladivostok for instance... It is perfectly normal that he was raised in Japan.

  • @rafaelbriganti502
    @rafaelbriganti502 Месяц назад +4

    I studied Circassian language for about one year (It feels like one week for a challenging language), and I swear it sounded quite similar to Hitite on this video.
    Also the Akkadian fragment seems to be about mythology as I understood the word "Enkido" more than once!

    • @okyes9155
      @okyes9155 20 дней назад

      yeah i had the same impression about circassian and hittite especially the combination and pronounciation of sounds really felt familiar

  • @hughmongus6191
    @hughmongus6191 21 день назад +3

    I wish there where subtitles so I could understand what they are saying.

  • @experienceexperte3096
    @experienceexperte3096 11 месяцев назад +794

    As one of the rare people who are able to speak the Phoenician language and appreciate its beauty, this video is approved.

    • @kelvinflores1460
      @kelvinflores1460 11 месяцев назад +21

      Where did you learn?

    • @blacklight4720
      @blacklight4720 11 месяцев назад +25

      Out of all examples in the video, Phoenician sounded the worse. I'm not sure what beauty you're talking about.
      The Phoenician example in the video, sounds like he is statering.

    • @experienceexperte3096
      @experienceexperte3096 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@blacklight4720 I was talking about the beauty of the language, the interpretation is a little robotic. Why I approved this video is that he did include it. The stuttering you are talking about is just because you are unfamiliar with the language, it is normal for some of its dialects, and that is not stutter that is simple the word having repeated sounds in it, like many words may appear as stutter for those who don’t know English.

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 11 месяцев назад +19

      I'm sure that I can hear similarities in Phoenician and Maltese. It would make sense historically and geographically.

    • @surfdocer103
      @surfdocer103 11 месяцев назад +14

      Suuuuure you can. …and I speak Assyrian

  • @SoftTangerineDreams
    @SoftTangerineDreams 9 месяцев назад +1007

    Would love a museum like this with actors walking around in their environments speaking their languages. Like the Old Norse in a look-alike viking village section of the museum and one sections for a pyramid-like area for the Egyptians. I think that would be cool. Not interactive as we wouldn't be able to understand, but watch and listen to them talk and "live their life" on a sort of stage. I think the idea is cool bur obviously needs a lot of work.

    • @sarahestrada-nk1oi
      @sarahestrada-nk1oi 9 месяцев назад +40

      That would be so cool!! I’d love to go to something like that!

    • @aliza_h
      @aliza_h 8 месяцев назад +47

      I often wish I could go back in time as a sort of ghost. Like I can people-watch without anyone perceiving me. This sounds pretty similar, and I'd totally go to something like that!

    • @forgottenvictories3951
      @forgottenvictories3951 8 месяцев назад +19

      It's called reenacting lol. Good living history museums are able to pull this sort of thing off too

    • @theoriginalkyttyn7724
      @theoriginalkyttyn7724 8 месяцев назад +4

      THAT is an _amazing_ idea!!!!

    • @RandomGuy-uj4hn
      @RandomGuy-uj4hn 8 месяцев назад +12

      Pretty much sounds like the human zoo from the previous century to me 😅

  • @arima_song
    @arima_song Месяц назад +1

    What a joy it is to understand at least one word! :)

  • @sameaster5150
    @sameaster5150 6 дней назад

    I got a sense of cultural intent through language as to how threatening each sounds like. Edibles man.

  • @Eyes-of-Horus
    @Eyes-of-Horus Год назад +355

    When I hear the Old English languages spoken I always remember Mr. Frola, an English teacher I had in high school. We were talking about Chaucer and he read it in its original form. It was quite interesting. I'm sure that most of the students sat there bored to tears. I liked him a lot as a teacher.

  • @edim108
    @edim108 4 месяца назад +123

    As a native Slavic language speaker Old Church Slavonic is like listening to a conversation in your native language through a door where you understand every 4th word. You can ALMOST make out what it's about. It's like hearing Italian when you're Spanish: it sounds so familiar yet so different.

    • @user-kj4tw3jh2h
      @user-kj4tw3jh2h 4 месяца назад +16

      Я как носитель русского языка понял что в старославянском говорилось что то о пророке (но и ещё встречались знакомые окончания слов)

    • @derkonig162
      @derkonig162 Месяц назад +1

      It sounds like Bulgarian

  • @valnadis8577
    @valnadis8577 Месяц назад +3

    I'm guessing some of these are records of someone attempting to sound like how they did back in ancient times. The "old english" part sounded really familiar.

  • @bryanmanx
    @bryanmanx 3 дня назад +1

    I like how ancient Egyptians had echo in their voices

  • @justanothermortal1373
    @justanothermortal1373 Год назад +819

    I love how language is something that constantly evolves.

    • @saiberunato
      @saiberunato Год назад +35

      I always felt languages were basically organic - always in a state of change by evolving, adaptating, and mutating. Branches split off from larger groups and then develop separately. Different groups sometimes combine together. But are all still related somehow. Some, perhaps most will eventually become extinct, but new ones emerge to replace them.

    • @robdom91
      @robdom91 Год назад +26

      Language is a symptom of human thought. It has to keep changing to accommodate its user.

    • @diizzii
      @diizzii Год назад +4

      Ikr.. I wuz actually like literally like foreal

    • @suyahatesntr
      @suyahatesntr Год назад +11

      @@diizzii and people talk like this 😆😂

    • @jotaleonel4818
      @jotaleonel4818 Год назад

      Thats what he said.

  • @miguelpalma7077
    @miguelpalma7077 Год назад +905

    As a Peruvian it is great to know that more young people are interested in learning Quechua and that it is the most widely spoken native american language of the continent. Also Wari civilization was the one that expanded Quechua in the peruvian Andes six hundred years before the Incas, but the latter introduce the language in the territories of nowadays Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile and Argentina.

    • @elmarquescon_s
      @elmarquescon_s Год назад +10

      Deberían enseñarlo en las escuelas

    • @chilliam00
      @chilliam00 Год назад +16

      Shadow of the Tomb Raider game has NPCs that speak Quechua (if settings are turned on to hear background characters speak their native language).

    • @aberamat3461
      @aberamat3461 Год назад +7

      when i was visiting peru i met and slept with a quechua family, this culture is amazing

    • @miguelpalma7077
      @miguelpalma7077 Год назад +3

      @@aberamat3461 It is indeed. Andean culture is the foundation of our peruvian identity.

    • @myblueskye777
      @myblueskye777 Год назад +1

      As I was listening I was wondering if the Native American Indians and the South American peoples are from the same origin, but spread out over time into different locations and establishing different languages. What do you think? I'm just curious, I hope you don't mind me asking for your hypothesis.

  • @eugeniakatsafadou331
    @eugeniakatsafadou331 Месяц назад +5

    I found the text spoken in Ancient Greek! It's from the Iliad, book 19 lines 1-6:
    Ἠὼς μὲν κροκόπεπλος ἀπ' Ὠκεανοῖο ῥοάων
    ὄρνυθ', ἵν' ἀθανάτοισι φόως φέροι ἠδὲ βροτοῖσιν·
    ἣ δ' ἐς νῆας ἵκανε θεοῦ πάρα δῶρα φέρουσα.
    εὗρε δὲ Πατρόκλῳ περικείμενον ὃν φίλον υἱὸν
    κλαίοντα λιγέως· πολέες δ' ἀμφ' αὐτὸν ἑταῖροι
    μύρονθ'· ἣ δ' ἐν τοῖσι παρίστατο δῖα θεάων.
    English translation:
    Now Dawn the saffron-robed arose from the streams of Oceanus
    to bring light to immortals and to mortal men,
    and Thetis came to the ships bearing gifts from the god.
    And she found her dear son as he lay, clasping Patroclus,
    and wailing aloud.

  • @Ik34thyD1ngus
    @Ik34thyD1ngus 8 дней назад +4

    0:43 “why you so hot”

  • @koolandblue
    @koolandblue Год назад +455

    Maybe it’s the distant, echoing sound of the voice, but Middle Egyptian is exactly what I would think a “ghostly” language would sound like. It sounds like a spirit from another dimension.

    • @adstix
      @adstix 11 месяцев назад +37

      Keen observation!
      Perhaps the reason for this lies in the close connection between the powerful cult of Ra and ancient Egypt!
      It afforded the Pharaohs all kinds of occult powers and probably also made an ethereal impact on the language of that era!

    • @SIMO-eb1hw
      @SIMO-eb1hw 11 месяцев назад +16

      if it was spoken normally like the rest you wouldn't think so

    • @TiestoCalvinHarris
      @TiestoCalvinHarris 11 месяцев назад +28

      It's like some ancient spell that will start put huge blocks of stones together

    • @princcessmoon
      @princcessmoon 11 месяцев назад +16

      Omg yes I got a lil scared 😂😂😂

    • @axamesvc
      @axamesvc 11 месяцев назад +7

      I think that reason for this could be in such difficult climate conditions there at that times, espec. because of very high heat, dry air, dehydration and exhaustion. Guess they saved own body's energy in this way and that loud talking was very rare.

  • @miniblasan5717
    @miniblasan5717 Год назад +1001

    As a Swede, it was actually quite difficult to understand Old Norse, but I can imagine that Icelanders will find it easy, while the Norwegians and Danes may find it a little easier than for us Swedes to understand Old Norse.

    • @JhoferGamer
      @JhoferGamer Год назад +18

      it's from a comedy clip where a icelandic person does not understand what he's saying. He also mumbles a bit. I can only catch a few words, and I'm from western norway

    • @Applestripe
      @Applestripe Год назад +15

      Swedish and Danish are East Norse, Norwegian and Icelandic are West Norse

    • @jennyteresia
      @jennyteresia Год назад +38

      As a Swede I found it easier to understand the old English than the old Norse…

    • @thecommonlinnetsilsedelang820
      @thecommonlinnetsilsedelang820 Год назад +3

      I’m learning Swedish and I didn’t understand a word 😂

    • @miniblasan5717
      @miniblasan5717 Год назад +4

      @@Applestripe Common sense for those of us who are slightly interested of the Germanic languages.

  • @karenfindlay4185
    @karenfindlay4185 9 дней назад

    Fascinating!

  • @DeeDeexx
    @DeeDeexx 3 дня назад

    Major credit to the guy who went back in time to record these languages being spoken

  • @nakenmil
    @nakenmil Год назад +413

    The Old Norse sounds hilarious to my ears, because the way he speaks sounds like he's sitting down with you, after doing some forest work in the snow, having a cup of coffee, and telling you some anecdote or other. It's just sounds so casual. Love it.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад +4

      Why do all these animations feature people who can't keep still like bobble heads?

    • @pandarue
      @pandarue Год назад +24

      ​@@thursoberwick1948they look like that because they don't have any other animationd than the head movements, where most of us also speak with our hands and our bodies, so it never stands out.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад +4

      @@pandarue They are distracting and irritating, and creepy. I saw this done previously on animations of Scottish poetry. I had to stop watching that channel, or at least looking at the screen while they were on.

    • @luxborealis
      @luxborealis Год назад +31

      From what I understand of the Norse guy, he literally asks someone to sit down with him and chat because he’s got women troubles and is frustrated.

    • @josephblomberg7077
      @josephblomberg7077 Год назад +3

      @@luxborealisI'm pretty he called a woman a witch towards the end, so that checks out.

  • @NAYouTuCA
    @NAYouTuCA Месяц назад +5

    Tamil - தமிழ் almost 5000-10000 year old language is still being used on a day to day basis in it's classical from by 100 million people.

  • @eliskabrodova9193
    @eliskabrodova9193 Год назад +514

    Fun fact: if you decide to study Czech language at one of the Czech universities, you are guaranteed to do a course in Old Church Slavonic. You won't be expected to fully master the language, but you'll spend most of your time learning about how it came to be, reading excerpts from Bible and trying to translate it to modern Czech.
    Actually, now that I'm thinking about it, I'd like to know if lessons like these are a thing in other Slavic countries...

    • @izasvakoguglavrebadragankeba
      @izasvakoguglavrebadragankeba Год назад +18

      Serbian here and i understand all,except there are few words like Glusi and now it is Gluvi it means deaf people...and other.

    • @hshx1n
      @hshx1n Год назад +1

      sounds like fun

    • @eliskabrodova9193
      @eliskabrodova9193 Год назад +18

      @@izasvakoguglavrebadragankeba See, that’s the most interesting thing. Gluši changed to hluší in modern Czech, the meaning remained the same. 😀

    • @hshx1n
      @hshx1n Год назад

      @@IvanIvanov-ni4rs sounds even more interesting

    • @eliskabrodova9193
      @eliskabrodova9193 Год назад +9

      @@IvanIvanov-ni4rs Correct me if I’m wrong, but didn’t Old Church Slavonic develop from Old Bulgarian? I mean, Old Church Slavonic is the first Slavic literary language, not the first Slavic language. And I also remeber something about Cyril and Methodius borrowing linguistic material from Old Bulgarian language when creating the system of Old Church Slavonic, but that might as well be me misrepresenting the stuff I learned.

  • @lisaselby-brood1897
    @lisaselby-brood1897 6 дней назад

    Absolutely FASCINATING!!!😮

  • @BarcelonaChill
    @BarcelonaChill 18 дней назад

    Wow! Interesting sounding languages!

  • @TheMinarus
    @TheMinarus Год назад +409

    Watching this makes me realize how crazily amazing it is that the human brain can create deep meaning out of sounds which are so varied and different and have their own particularities

    • @dallas7000
      @dallas7000 Год назад +42

      and what’s crazy is we’ve been doing it way before recorded history. These are just the languages we know of lol

    • @TheMinarus
      @TheMinarus Год назад +18

      @@dallas7000 Of course! the more you go back and frankly, the more languages there were to be fair given how isolated older civilizations and tribes were from one another and all had an independent language base with likely such a small number of speakers. All of them obviously disappeared and we have no idea of them... It's crazy

    • @Raven5431
      @Raven5431 Год назад +8

      I imagine even within their own societies people were constantly creating and learning new words. Everytime you met someone chance you might learn a word even if it ment the same thing you already had a word for since their was not as much collective learning.

    • @darko.v
      @darko.v Год назад +8

      Our ancient roots provide us with the pattern sensing ability, giving us a little boost whenever we understood a pattern. Birds evolved from dinosaurs and we can listen to their complex songs daily, maybe some of them chants of the old days haha. Imagine the future where an AI will be able to translate them to something understandable to us.

    • @jurgenjung4302
      @jurgenjung4302 Год назад

      RUclips KANAL:'die Zuversicht' mit "Die grösste Verschwörung der Geschichte" /// Vielleicht interessiert es sie ja, es handelt von der deutschen Sprache.

  • @princealigorna7468
    @princealigorna7468 Год назад +319

    You can hear the similarities to German in both Old English and Old Norse, but you can also hear how different they are to each other (Old English has a more melodic quality, while Old Norse is more rhythmic and sharp)

    • @rey_nemaattori
      @rey_nemaattori Год назад +33

      Being able to speak Dutch, English and German makes these old germanic languages extremely familiar whilst at the same time so foreign.
      It's like you can _almost_ understand them...

    • @cuoresportivo155
      @cuoresportivo155 Год назад +2

      @@rey_nemaattori Totally agree. Don't think it would take long to understand

    • @swankelly
      @swankelly Год назад

      I was just thinking how the Old English sounds the most identifiable, for lack of a better word, to me. Maybe it's because Modern English, which is the what I'm used to hearing is still melodic? hmm

    • @KingWilliamI
      @KingWilliamI Год назад +5

      I'm convinced that the Old English clip could be reciting Beowulf (a famed Old English epic poem). So it might only sound melodic because he's literally reciting poetry.

    • @textus9459
      @textus9459 Год назад

      It Is not Old Norse but Icelandic.

  • @blakesmith5092
    @blakesmith5092 Месяц назад +2

    Feels like I just stumbled upon them for the first time in Civ

  • @rubenschusterpostiglione2705
    @rubenschusterpostiglione2705 Месяц назад +3

    In case you want to hear old Norse in action, you should watch the beforeigners series

  • @SunriseTango
    @SunriseTango 11 месяцев назад +364

    I was born in Eastern Europe and understood a big chunk of Old Church Slavonic. Middle Egyptian however, was hauntingly magical. It was like listening to time and the universe itself.

    • @tibormalinsky8751
      @tibormalinsky8751 9 месяцев назад +1

      Where exactly in Eastern Europe? Romania? Hungary? "Eastern Europe" doesnt mean anything particular.

    • @bettyrouch1833
      @bettyrouch1833 9 месяцев назад +1

      The pronunciation of ancient Egyptian is mostly a guess, so I doubt that Middle Egyptians would understand the speaker in this recording today.

    • @shamz5722
      @shamz5722 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@bettyrouch1833i think the language is extinct , Egyptians only speak arabic in modern times

    • @bettyrouch1833
      @bettyrouch1833 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, of course. Did you misunderstand my comment? I was saying that people in the period called "Middle Egypt" would probably not understand the speaker in this video, because they are so far removed in time and modern linguists cannot really know what the language sounded like. By the way, even Arabic speakers in our day who live in different countries can have a hard time understanding each other well, since there are various dialects of Arabic and different accents, too!@@shamz5722

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@LucMtl1wrong a few villages still speak coptic as a first language

  • @julianmahler2388
    @julianmahler2388 11 месяцев назад +891

    For me as a non-native speaker, Ryukyuan sounds 95% like modern Japanese. I don't know if Japanese speakers can understand Ryukyuan, but if you're Japanese and wonder what your language sounds like to others, listen to Ryukyuan.

    • @jonathandonovan1802
      @jonathandonovan1802 11 месяцев назад +376

      My wife's japanese, she didn't understand any of the old japanese but understood everything in ryukyuan. hell even i did.

    • @nenask
      @nenask 11 месяцев назад +42

      sounds a bit like korean to me

    • @hooligans7618
      @hooligans7618 10 месяцев назад +85

      @@jonathandonovan1802 same i understood a decent portion of ryukyuan and the old japanese was like ?????

    • @jonathandonovan1802
      @jonathandonovan1802 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@hooligans7618 i think they mockingbus here. who's valued thier sources?

    • @42kellys
      @42kellys 10 месяцев назад +6

      Interesting that's what I thought, too.

  • @jeffreyabbey9592
    @jeffreyabbey9592 Месяц назад

    Enjoy that Latin ❤
    Great video n effects
    Thanks channel

  • @user-nc6xw8cc5r
    @user-nc6xw8cc5r Месяц назад +8

    Thanks to the man who travelled back in time to film these people

  • @silviad.r.3536
    @silviad.r.3536 Год назад +522

    The Ancient Greek text is the beginning of the book XIX of Homer's Iliad. I studied it at school when I was 16. I'm 50 now and still remember it by heart. Absolutely fascinating.

    • @onetolla7918
      @onetolla7918 Год назад

      αυθαίρετη αναπαράσταση βασισμένη στην κακοφορμισμένη Ερασμιακή προφορά.
      η ελληνική γλώσσα είναι μια ζωντανή ενιαία και αδιαίρετη στους αιώνες πριν και με τα Χριστό παρά τις εξελικτικές μικροδιαφορές.
      η επίσκεψη και συνομιλία με ελληνικούς πληθυσμούς σε χωριά εκτός κέντρου και περιφερειακά εκτός ελληνικών συνόρων είναι ικανή να δώσει μια ζωντανή εικόνα και ήχο σε όποιον αμφιβάλει για αυτό.

    • @Cool-yr8go
      @Cool-yr8go Год назад +3

      In which language is ancient Greek written 😅 why the new Greek language is too different with ancient in fact is nothing to do you know explain to me I'm curious 😅

    • @Cool-yr8go
      @Cool-yr8go Год назад

      @Numerius I didn't understand you say ancient Greek is from Latin and Italian 🤔

    • @gm6719
      @gm6719 Год назад +14

      @@Cool-yr8go who told you that the modern Greek has nothing to do with the Ancient Greek?

    • @Cool-yr8go
      @Cool-yr8go Год назад

      Because with the new Greek difficult to translate the old Greek and it's weird 🤷 was just a question I don't understand

  • @AlphaBravoCharlie777
    @AlphaBravoCharlie777 Месяц назад +372

    Old Egyptian sounds like an explanation of my last night's dream

  • @user-yh1br6qz7n
    @user-yh1br6qz7n Месяц назад

    "Thanks but it's not my birthday"
    "Yeah and that's not a cake...it's an ancient Hittite hat, bro"

  • @helixzenith
    @helixzenith 5 дней назад +1

    Didn’t know Karl Anthony Towns was such a linguist, but when I saw the thumbnail, I couldn’t resist clicking.

  • @sakaki912
    @sakaki912 Год назад +583

    The Middle Chinese part is actually a recitation of two famous Chinese poems. Even though Middle Chinese is unintelligible to me, the phonemes of Middle Chinese still exist within several Chinese/Taiwanese dialects, such as Hakka and Hokkien, so I am able to recognize the similarities and recall the sources.
    Here are the transcriptions, juxtaposed with translations, of the two poems:
    1:28-1:45
    《烏衣巷》- 劉禹錫
    「朱雀橋邊野草花,烏衣巷口夕陽斜。舊時王謝堂前燕,飛入尋常百姓家。」
    "The Black Clothes Alley" by Liu Yuxi
    "Wild blooms beside Zhuque Bridge bide,
    at the mouth of the Black Clothes Alley, the sun sets aside.
    Swallows that once graced the noble halls,
    now seek the humble homes where common life resides."
    1:45-1:57
    《問劉十九》- 白居易
    「綠螘新醅酒,紅泥小火爐。晚來天欲雪,能飲一杯無?」
    "Questioning Liu Nineteen" by Bai Juyi
    "Fresh wine with a veil of verdant lees,
    a humble hearth of red clay glows.
    As twilight descends with the promise of snow,
    might you partake in a cup's warm glow?"

    • @hilltownlady
      @hilltownlady Год назад +8

      Thank you

    • @icecold5707
      @icecold5707 Год назад +22

      It actually sounded like a mix of modern mandarin and cantonese to me.

    • @felikspark2513
      @felikspark2513 Год назад

      I right nuw cant read nun uf them ,but i know that 1 is Cantonese & anuther try replicat Mandarin !!! Why taiwan ??? Why it nut Furmusa as it used 2 be ???? And after this when i bought frying pans ,,made in taiwan !!! , fuck them !!! I still have stainless steel ring 2 remember !!! 8@8 $mile ...p.s.& yur generalissimus gaishek was nut best if he lust war agai st mao.... my & my maya support 1 world & 1 china & 1 My Kingdom policy '!'

    • @mz2433
      @mz2433 Год назад +7

      these poems were composed with ancient pronunciation, why are the rhythm and tones in the poems still so perfect when we appreciate them in modern mandarin? Thank you sir

    • @fannyboni472
      @fannyboni472 Год назад +2

      Thank you 🙏👍

  • @runjumpdie
    @runjumpdie Год назад +1099

    Old English was interesting to hear as a native English speaker. I’ve learned a few things about old English words and grammar and although I couldn’t understand most of what he was saying, I definitely picked up on a few words. English is sort of a hodge-podge language so it was cool being able to pick up on some of the words that have survived until today.

    • @kyntyr5474
      @kyntyr5474 Год назад +69

      It’s very similar to old Norse(regionally and linguistically), more Germanic than Norse though, since the Englanders are descended from 3-4 main Germanic groups, which congregated in England, and we now call the Anglo-Saxons. It’s awesome to see how similar the two languages are, at the time they would be mutually intelligible, much like if a Norwegian was to speak to a swede in their native language.

    • @cheesehands3112
      @cheesehands3112 Год назад +19

      @@kyntyr5474 Norse is Germanic. Specifically North Germanic, hence 'Norse'.

    • @Giovanni_Team_Rocket_UK
      @Giovanni_Team_Rocket_UK Год назад +46

      Old English is related to Old Frisian language in the Frisian area of the Netherlands. The Frisian language today is similar to Dutch and Dutch is similar to today’s English too.

    • @cheesehands3112
      @cheesehands3112 Год назад +13

      @@Giovanni_Team_Rocket_UK I'm not sure what that has to do with what I said. But yes. Anglo-Frisian languages are closely related to Dutch, since they're both West Germanic languages.
      Stop reading Google and start reading Wikipedia. It's free.

    • @neosan3002
      @neosan3002 Год назад +27

      Modern English has a lot of Latin and French mixed in

  • @KingJermaine
    @KingJermaine Месяц назад

    This vid is awesome

  • @janmachala5297
    @janmachala5297 22 дня назад +1

    I can understood about 50% of Old Church Slavonic. Which is enough for me to identify the speech as "Proglas" (Foreword of the Slavonic translation of the four Gospels). Google it if you want to hear a full speech.

  • @beccalynn4445
    @beccalynn4445 Месяц назад +68

    Old Church Slavonic and Ryukyuan are so lovely sounding

    • @matusmotlo3854
      @matusmotlo3854 17 дней назад +3

      Absolutely, the nasal vowels of OC Slavonic remind me of French a lot

  • @notyourbiz235
    @notyourbiz235 5 месяцев назад +100

    When I wrote my M . A. paper about Old English almost 40 years ago , I tried to imagine its pronunciation, sounds and intonation . It was amazing to hear it in your video. Excellent !! ❤

  • @beepbopp54
    @beepbopp54 6 дней назад +1

    Confirmed: if I time traveled I would be screwed

  • @Bashar120
    @Bashar120 3 дня назад +1

    the Egyption one looks so eviiiil!