Even in the Middle East , Iran is different from Arab countries like Saudi Arabia or Egypt , many think it is the same culture , but Iran 🇮🇷 is Persian , the language is different from anything i've ever heard
Yup, Farsi comes under a completely different language family than Arabic. There's a lot more in common between Farsi and the languages of India than between Farsi and Arabic, even though there are lot of Arabic loan words in Indo-Iranian languages.
When they say that Iran is an Arab country, it is like saying that Turkey is an Arab country, because Turkey is also located in the Middle East, but they do not speak Arabic. Iran has an Arab province and different ethnic groups, but the majority speak Persian
@@living_peace so speaking Arabic make people Arab? like, Egypt left Egyptian and officially spoke Arabic at the late 17th century, some say that happened by force
Fersi is Aryan but Arabic is Semitic that's all, at the time of Calipatis the great Ariana was under their rule and become 50% Arab genetically and linguistically also culturally
*TOP TEN FACTS ABOUT PERSIA* • Persian is an ancient language that has been spoken for almost 3500 years. This makes it one of the *classical languages of antiquity* with unique poetry that still exist today. It has contributed numerous words to the vocabulary of the English language, like "paradise," "pyjama", "rice," "amazon," "rose," "saffron," "asparagus," "spinach," "shawl," and "pistachio." • Persian is a member of the *Indo-European language family.* It shares fundamental characteristics in terms of both grammar and vocabulary with its relatives like Latin, English, French, and Russian. Words like "baradar" for brother, "madar" for mother, "pedar" for padre in Spanish (father), "dokhtar" for daughter, "to" for tu in French (you), "andar" for inter, "do" for dos in Spanish (two), "zamin" for zemĕ in Croatian and zdmyla in Russian (earth), and even "shahr" for "skaan" in Old Norse (city), show the strong and old ties of this language family. This similarity in language is due to the *Yamnaya culture,* which is believed to be the precursor to the *Proto-Indo-European expansion* that originated from the steppes of Central Asia where Iranian peoples come from. This suggests that the customs and practices of Indo-European peoples across both Europe and Asia are rooted in the Yamnaya culture. • Iran possesses a versatile array of natural attractions. This includes *grandiose mountains, verdant forests, panoramic landscapes, sunny coastlines, and abundant natural resources,* like minerals and metals. It is known for producing an abundance of pistachios, pomegranates, berries, saffron, and turquoise. The Persian turquoise boasts unique shades of blue that sets it apart from other varieties. The Iranian Caspian Horse belongs to the first domesticated equine species. Iranians have a *long history of horsemanship and equestrian sports.* Persian games like Chowgan date back to ancient times. Iran is known as the birthplace of horse riding and the earliest practitioners of this art have been Iranian peoples. The influence of Persian horsemanship can be seen in many modern equestrian sports like Polo, which has gained worldwide popularity. • Persians were trailblazers in wearing *trousers and footwear.* This distinguishes them from the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans who wore gowns and cloaks. The traditional Persian dress is specifically crafted to endure Iran's chilly weather and showcases the ancient Iranian culture's practicality and ingenuity. • Iran's native and ancient name means *"Land of Aryans,"* and it has been in use for over 2500 years. The name "Persia" was used by Greeks to describe Iran. • The *Persian/Iranian World* is an ancient name for a region that spans from the Plateau of Iran to the Caucasus and Central Asia. This region houses Iranian customs, languages and peoples. Persian architecture reflects ancient philosophical, mathematical, and mystical themes. The ancient shades of turquoise are revered in Persian culture and depict the link between the earth and the unknown spiritual world. The *contributions of Persian scholars and poets* like Avicena, Rhasis, Biruni, Farabi, Khwarazmi, after whom the word "algorithm" is named, Ferdowsi, Khayyam, Saadi, Hafez, and Rumi, to the fields of philosophy, literature, art, musical theory, chemistry, mathematics, astronomy, and metaphysics, have bestowed the world with a wealth of Persian knowledge and wisdom. • Persian cuisine is known for its ancient and unique gastronomic heritage. It *blends sweet and sour flavors* together and features fragrant and fluffy rice. Saffron and pistachios are conspicuously used in Persian cuisine and impart a rare flavor. This cuisine is also notable for its sour notes, which can be overpowering to those unfamiliar with it. The Iranian palate is accustomed to this sourness and sweetness and can even enjoy the tartness of limes on their own. • Persian decorative arts and crafts have deep historical roots. Iranian artisans are known for their skillful designs, brilliant colors, and remarkable craftsmanship. This is reflected in various mediums like carpet weaving, painting, calligraphy, pottery, and metalwork. Persian paintings are acclaimed for their precuse embellishments and lively tones. These *Persian styles have had a major impact on the world* and inspired and influenced artists and designers across different cultures and periods. Persian art has been a main source of inspiration for European artists during the Renaissance period. • The tradition of weaving carpets was invented in ancient Persia, when Iranian nomadic peoples used simple weaves of fabric to stay warm on cold and damp grounds. Over time, this basic need evolved into a sophisticated art form that produced the visually most beautiful patterns. *Persian carpets are praised for their beauty* and have been highly valued by royality, nobility, and collectors across the ages. Persian culture holds rugs as prized possessions that carry deep sentimental and cultural meaning. Today, Persian rugs are highly prized and sought-after decorative items around the world. Iran remains the center of carpet waving with unique and ancient styles. • Persian culture has inspired and influenced people worldwide. This includes minds like Voltaire, Montesquieu, Nietzsche, Thomas Jefferson, and Alexander, who is believed to be the first admirer of Persian culture in the West. The enduring legacy of Persian culture is evident in its profound influence on the world and attests to its magnificence and endearing qualities!
It makes me feel so great when people actually start knowing us Persians and talk about us and our culture since we have been criticized by different governments for generations I can only thank you for spreading your knowledge with a Persian sentence امیدوارم که همیشه شاد و تندرست باشی ممنون از شما❤
Correct mistakes: The word "Paradise /فردوس" is an Arabic word consisting of two parts: "br/بر" : means earth "tows/طوس" : means adornment and beauty Therefore, the peacock bird in the Arabic language is called "tawoos/طاووس" because it is the embodiment of beauty and adornment.
They don’t all speak Persian, Persian isn’t the language, it’s Farsi which they all speak a dialect of. Iranians speak Persian Farsi whereas Afghans speak Dari Farsi and people of Tajikistan speak Tajik. They are very different in accent and it would be cool to see a video if they can understand each other.
@@XsarahX1 oh I'm from Afghanistan. I grew up in Balkh in neighborhood of Tajikistan. I understand some Iranian accents and all TAJIKs and Afghanistan's Persian speakers accents. Afghanistan has different accents from region to region as well as Iran does.
@@kasrae192 چرا منطقيه، چون عربى هييييييچ كاربرد واقعى تو زندگى من نداشته در اين ١١ سال. يك مشت قوانين غير كاربردى افعالش رو يادمه + كلمات ابتدايى كه در كتابامون ياد گرفتيم
As a Moroccan, I like to hear Farsi. I remember a scene of a young child actor who was reviewing his lessons and then started singing. I liked the tone of the words. I find in them a beautiful melody, the words seem to be something from the past.
Africa is similar to Asia in terms of diversity , but the biggest major difference between the Islamic world in Africa and the Islamic world in Asia , is that Asia was under the rule of the Mongols , Africa on the other hand was never invaded by the Mongols , the Mongols never managed to invade Western Europe or Africa , in both cases they were defeated , they only managed to capture the Middle East and Eastern Europe
@@AttaJutt-uw6sh 😂😂😂 Urdu is a combination of Arabic Turkish persian and Indian Pakistan has no history or culture it’s a nation made up by balochis pashtuns and the newly created “Punjab” identity to look different from indian Dravidians
This is like sitting an American, Australian, British and a German and talk about how much they understand each other 😂 hint: one of them speaks a different language
As a native Persian speaker, I got really surprised to see comparing Farsi and Arabic once and for all so people could feel the difference between the two languages and stop misunderstanding Persian and Arabic or considering it as one of the various Arabic accents! Thank you, guys, so much for this fun-informative video 👍👌❤️
As a saudi i never thought people would think perisan is even close to arabic the persian way of speaking isn’t near arabic at all but similar to South asian languages like pakistan and india especially pushtan
@@fanafana9974 yeah, as Middle Easterners, the differences and similarities are more obvious and easier to understand for us. Also, we have to consider the fundamentals and structure of the languages, and as we know Persian is an Indo-European language, whilst Arabic is a Semitic language! as I mentioned Middle Easterners know the differences, but usually people from the Far East or the West can’t distinguish between the two languages and cultures!
As an Iranian I should clarify we learn Arbic in school but not as our main language it has more simularities like a side-lamguage and for that reason many Iranians can understand Arabic rather than speaking it . The second reason we understand Arabic it's becuase we share the same religion with Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia or Qatar etc. Great video guys ، keep the massively well-done work up .
so are you saying that Iranians are Muslims???? all Iranians I know don't say we are Muslims, besides the version of Islam you have is completely different than what we have, so practically speaking we don't share same religion
The Moroccan girl make her darija understandable and uses some standard arabic words if I talk with you in the familier moroccan language you won't understand a word from what i'm saying
I think Persian is a beautiful and fascinating language. It has a rich history and culture, and it is spoken by millions of people around the world. I am particularly interested in the Persian literature, which is one of the oldest and most sophisticated in the world. Here are some of the things I like about Persian: The sound of the language is very melodic and pleasing to the ear. The vocabulary is rich and expressive, with many words that have no equivalent in other languages. The grammar is relatively simple, making it relatively easy to learn. The writing system is based on the Arabic script, but it has its own unique features. Overall, I think Persian is a beautiful and interesting language that is worth learning. If you are interested in learning a new language, I would definitely recommend Persian. Here are some of the benefits of learning Persian: It can help you connect with people from Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and other countries where Persian is spoken. It can give you access to a rich and diverse culture. It can help you learn about the history of the Middle East. It can improve your understanding of other Indo-European languages. If you are interested in learning Persian, there are many resources available to help you. You can find textbooks, online courses, and even language partners. I would recommend starting with a basic textbook to learn the basics of the language. Once you have a good foundation, you can start practicing with other resources.
An excellent comment about the magnificent civilization of Iran but you have made a major incorrect statement about the Persian script. The Persian writing system isn't based on the _"Arabic"_ script. In fact, there exists no such thing as an _"Arabic"_ script. The Persian writing system is based on older varities of the Persian script and the letters were invented by Persian scholars in the Sassanian Persian city of Ctesiphon. Persian letters have unique features to them. The script was then borrowed to write Arabic. So it's Arabic which uses the Persian script. Get your facts straight. Learning Persian will open you up to the richest and oldest classical Indo-European language on earth and help you understand the rich history of Iran and Central Asia. Iran has nothing to do with the Middle East. The Middle East just used to be a colony of Iran.
@@arya_mehr2003 Everyone knows That Persian Is Written With Arabic Letters. The Main Letters Of Persian Language Are Disappearing & The Persian Language Is Written With Arabic Letters. Arabic Does Not Have Persian Roots. Lie Less, Dear User.
@@SantosOfficial614 It is very clear that you have no interest in researching the authenticity of words. The script you call Arabic is derived from the Kufic script, and the Kufic script is also rooted in the Avestan script, which was used by the Sassanid Empire, who were Persians, throughout the empire, and the Arabs also copied this script. Do it with Kufi name, then write the Arabic language in Kufi script. First, if you are a person who studies and researches, you will fully understand the truth
@hiooxkrmagkis9323 do not cry kid .Before the existance of any arabs, persia and persian existed . When arabs were used to eat the lizards in the deserts and drink the camel's pees ; Persian had a great civilizations and a cultured society. The arabic alphabet which is orginally persian and had been stolen from persia after the invasion of barbaric arabs to persia . Arabs burned all the libraries in old persia and stolen our alphabet. who believes that the barbaric arabs who used to live in a desert , had literatures and alphabet , Persian culturized the arabs and taught arabs the modern life
Very interesting video. I am Brazilian and I totally understand what it feels like when people don't know which language is spoken in your country lol. Just like many people think Arabic is the language of Iran, many also think we Brazilians speak Spanish when our language is actually Portuguese (which, interestingly enough, are two very similar languages in writing too but totally different when spoken).
I am saying this as an Iranian, he seems to be a calm and peaceful individual person and he has a very beautiful way of talking and pronounciation in words. Not all Iranians are like that ofc. But farzan had the best pronounciation of our language and so sweet to ears
@@minajdm4343Most Iranians are like that, he's the typical stereotype when I think of a Persian. Calm, polite & humble, even while being obviously disrespected.
Wow, I used to work in a facility in the summer of 1986 and there were only Iranian immigrants there. I learned some frases. I understood when he presented himself. I never thought I would remember that after almost 40years. I am Norwegian btw.
my city has a very large Moroccan immigrant community, and so a large proportion of my friends are Moroccan.... I'm always asking questions about the dialects, because language fascinates me and they are born polyglots. Of course all speak darija (the Moroccan dialect), all of them have learned English living here in the U.S., all are familiar with French (with many being fluent, some rusty), some speaking Spanish (a few fluent, but most rusty/minor), all can understand and typically speak fusha/classical arabic, but they also adopt other dialects. We have several Saudi friends, and of course I would hear my friends speak to them easily, so I asked them what language they speak to them in ("in fusha, since you both know it?") and he said "oh I just use a Saudi dialect" 🤯 The range is incredible. The hilarious part is that I am on a journey to learn Arabic so that I can converse with Arabic speakers, but I have become extremely familiar with Moroccan darija, so the only "arabic" I know is the dialect that no one else can understand 🤣 I don't think I will ever stop saying "bzaff" even when I learn other dialects properly. When Kenza said "w.... ah, aandi bzaff dial hobbies" I laughed so hard. That language and country will always be close to my heart. And I have one Saudi friend who speaks only a little English, so sometimes the two of us (him Saudi, me British-American) speak to each other in our broken Moroccan darija that we learned from exposure through our friends, just to level the playing field (down to "wili wili wili" 🤣) I love language because of these unique connections... not just because it allows you to communicate with more people, but because of the genuine affection and curiosity it inspires in people whose languages and cultures have overlap, such as displayed in this video and such as I've seen first-hand among my friends. We sometimes we call our smoke breaks "the united nations" because of how many countries we represent. It is one of the most playful and natural forms of cultural exchange, in my opinion, and it really instills a deep respect in the language skills of humankind.
Trust me, if you learn Darija, Moroccan Arabic , and then go and give yourself a 2 years kf listening to (Lebanese, Egyptian, Emirati songs) along with Darija , and then watch some Egyptian films .. you'd end up understanding more than 80% of like 15 counties different dialects Egyptian and Lebanese would help you to understand Palestinian, Jordanian and Syrian and even some Iraqi. Emirati would help for Saoudi, Yemeni, Omani, Qatari, Bahraini, Kuwaiti Moroccan would help you to get ready and adapt with them all since it's the hardest and sharpest one and the most diverse with all letters pronunciation. And also would definitely help for Some Tunisian، Algerian and Lybian When an Arab learn Moroccan, he would start understanding North African dialectes quickly, but if it was the opposite way, it's very hard because as I said, Moroccan is the most diverse in terms of words and sounds and pronunciation
In Iran,we have various languages,such as Turkish,Kurdish,BalochiTaleshi,Gilaki,Luri,Arabic,Farsi,etc But the official and administrative language that is taught in schools is Farsi
No in Iran it hasn't Turkish and Kurdish language it's azarbaijani language and 60% of it's is Persian about gilaki luri talesh they are persian decent
@@afsane_nezhadi the country Iran does have ethnic minorities such a Azari/Turk, Kurd, Baloch etc. Their mother tongues are separate from the Persian/Farsi language. Also I think you're mixing up "Persia" and "Iran". There's a reason Reza Shah changed Irans name, since "Iran" is a more inclusive term of it's diverse ethnic groups and languages.
I learned a lot about Morocco in the World Cup, an incredible campaign in the Cup, I thought they only spoke Arabic and in the Cup I heard fans on TV speaking in French in the France x Morocco game, I was impressed
I'm Jordanian, but was born and raised in Canada. There are a lot of Moroccans in Canada, and my family is friends with a lot of them. I love Morocco, and the ones I know all speak French. It's part of the colonial legacy...that's why a lot of countries in the population in the Middle East speak either English or French largely, and to this day teach it in schools. I think it's different in Iran because it was never colonized, and the Islamic revolution made sure the country wouldn't adopt Western practices.
@@ayahaltalhouni9272 We study Arabic and English for 7 years at school in Iran, starting from middle school. But unfortunately not many students remeber anything after they've finished school, mostly because of the old methods used. Most young people do speak English, but because they've taken English courses or they have self-studied, not because they had it at school.
@@ayahaltalhouni9272 Actually it's not because of the colonial past but because of school only. The majority of the population of todays Morocco is young and never lived under the french colonialism
Egyptian dialect is the most understandable among Arabs due to the shows movies and sitcoms a lot of us used to watch growing up, the only con with that is that you find it difficult understanding other Arabic dialects
I am French, I was listening to the video in the background and so when the Moroccan girl talked about her hobbies and started with "le week-end normalement..." I thought I was suddenly understanding arabic at first :')
@@karezaalonso7110 The Iranian Persian dialect is very close to the Persian spoken by the Tajik people but with a slight influence of Arabic. Therefore, as a Tajik, I was born in an Arab country & I speak both Persian and Arabic, which simply makes me understand Iranian easily and without complexity
@@ivvrr1very interesting thank you. I had watched videos like this tajik (Uzbek?). I thought people in iran would be able to understand (most) of it. ruclips.net/video/ZoVutoM5-kQ/видео.htmlsi=hLs29tWsp0D7NLih
I am Arab and i understood every Arabic dialect even Moroccan (i mean i a speak French also) and i understood some words in Persian Persian is my favorite language in the world
@@uhm175 Thanks. Greetings from Iran to you my dear and my other brother and sisters in Saudi Arabia, and my other Arab brothers and sisters, I love you all! But please speak Al-fusha, so that I can understand you, just kidding!
a lot of comment from Iran they are not happy about comparing farsi with arabic but actually There are similarities they took words from arabic and we took words from them and usually farsi words comes from Iraq and Iraqis are spreading the rest of the words to other arab countries I remeber that when I learned some farsi words years before
@@MultiSciGeek Well Doroud is the official Persian word for Hello and it has been used for a very long time (Sassanid period or older). Salam is a Arabic word, but it was intergrated into the Persian language because Islam was the main religion for many years
Did you know 1001 nights was originally an Indian story first translated to Persian and the main characters' names Shahrzad (yes it's not Scheherazade) and Shahryar are Persian? And after Arab invasion Arabs rewrite it with an Arab modified version and documented it as an Arab heritage while the original books (Persian which were faithful to the Indian root and the Indian) all ruined?! 😂 And the Arabic version is also take place mainly in Iraq where was a Sassanid land? And an Egyptian reminds you of sth completely non Arab! Such a wow for what the Britain and Arabs made in collaboration! 😂
We have three ways to talk. Book Persian, folk Persian and traditional Persian. In written and colloquial Persian, many of our words are the same as Arabic, but for all the Arabic words we use, we have alternatives in traditional Persian. That's why we can understand most of the Arabic sentences, apart from the fact that we have a lesson called Arabic in our schools, but we can speak in such a way that no Arabic language can be confused because we also have authentic Farsi. This is the beauty and magic of the Persian language :)
I'm really happy that there's an Iranian man and he speaks Persian, other people all over the world can get to know it, so thank you very much I also would like to mention that he speaks formal
I am Arab and I really liked the video. I understood all the Arabic dialects being spoken here, like Egyptian (since I am Egyptian) and Saudi but Morrocoan was a little challenging for me since they tend to mix French and Amazighi words and they speak so fast 😅. As for Farsi, I understood only the words that come from Arabic but it sounds like a beautiful language. Greeting to all MENA people from Egypt 🇪🇬 🇸🇦 🇲🇦 🇮🇷
I have friends in saudi arabia (im from Tehran) we met on Call of duty mobile, and i do understand some of their words when they talk to each other I dont care about haters, or those who try to drive us away from each other, i salute to everyone in arabian countries, and i love them all, i hope one they we get allies and remove the boundaries 😊🔥❤️
Sorry to disappoint you but this is not Moroccan. This is Arabic. You can’t even understand 1 word if I’m gonna speak the Moroccan language to you, trust me
This session was very interesting. I love Arab Countries and Iran too. In Spanish we have a lot of words that comes from Arabic: Guitarra, Alcancía, Alfombra, etc. 🇲🇽
@@Iceyfire12 It depends of what country we're talking. Egypt: their ancient Culture, pyramids, Sphynx, etc. Qatar, UAE, Bahrein and Saudi its human debeloplment and the good investments of oil sales revenue. Iran that people is well educated despite some things I don't agree with their government I love their people.
Farsi is the Finnish of the Middle East haha. I remember the Nordic video where the Norwegian, Swede, and Dane understood each other but no one understood the Finn. Same thing here. Also the Moroccan dialect is the Chile Spanish of Arabic it seems!
@@bie-p1l Not true, finnish is part of a totally different language family (finno-ugric) while the others are northern germanic, and thus indoeuropean, languages.
No, Turkish would be the Finnish of Middle East since Turkish and Finnish are originally East and Central Asian languages that ended up in a different part of Eurasia. Farsi is not unique in that region. It's an Indo-Iranic language, just like Ossetian, Kurdish, Afghan Pashto, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Bengali etc. Basically a big chunk of Asia.
@@JohnDoe10350 He said in the Middle-east, not the whole Asia! The only Indo-European languages that are spoken by a relatively large number of people in the Middle-east are Kurdish and Persian. The rest are either Turkic or Arabic. It's the same with Finnish, which the only other Finno-Ugric language spoken beside it in Europe with a comparable populus of speakers is probably Estonian.
Im from the Gulf and I have strong Persian roots and also an Egyptian mother. It's a shame I didn't learn Farsi from my grandfather before he passed away, such a beautiful and smooth langauge.
I know a german who is learning it also and knows many speakers if persian not ethnic but they talk very good I’m also not ethnic persian but if you want I can give you his instagram
Wow ! It is interesting to know more about the dialect of others, and I understand the Saudi dialect but the Moroccan dialect is just difficult and takes a lot to understand, but I still love all dialects😂❤ Your friend from Egypt 🇪🇬 ✨
Maybe in the future videos, you guys can invite someone from Lebanon to make videos with the Arabic speakers group. Also, you guys can invite people who speak Tajik, Pashto, Dari, Tat, Kurdish, Ossetian to make videos with the Iranian guy.
The diversity of languages is an exploration of human beings, simulation and proficiency, and it is beautiful for whoever acquires it, he is happy to acquire it because it is not his mother tongue .. Greetings to you from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦❤🙏🙏🙏🙏
I was most interested in evolution of the language as related to space and time. In other words, Farsi (Persian) is a very ancient language and the Persians once ruled much of the Middle East. I assume the native languages of the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula were influenced and modified by that. Then, of course, after the 8th century when Arab armies conquered much of the Middle East and later North Africa, they spread their language as I had developed. But as someone in the video mentioned, by the time that language reached Morocco (and eventually Spain), it had to contend with local latin languages (including Latin itself and early Spanish) and certainly would have adopted certain words or phrases. I would expect Farsi to be most different from Moroccan Arabic and Egyptian Arabic to be closest to Saudi Arabic.
the modern arabic languge is influenced by persian but the classical arabic isnt it was mostly influenced by aramaiac and old hebrew the modern hebrew language is 40 percent arabic so no farsi is a beutifall language but its more closer to turkic than it is to arabic the arabic of arbian penunsila dosent have that much persian influence like the iraqi language
I think in majority of the Islamic world, people learn Arabic just enough to be able to read and understand the Quran, even if Arabic is not spoken in those places. Even here in India, there is obviously no formal education in Arabic, but some of my Muslim friends learned (probably from their parents or their local maulvis) some Arabic for religious purposes.
The arabic of the quran is different then the dialicts that why when people learn standard arabic they sometimes cant understand locals when they travel in arabic speaking world cuz the dialicts are different from one country to another
@@wildae. How is it a myth. I don't even speak Arabic but I can definitely hear the different in dialects between Gulf, Levantine, African and Iraqi/Kuwaiti Arabic.
@@rohitchaoji i think you are from india right, because your name rohit. So india is a big country with many dialects of hindi but can you understand them? I am from pakistan even i can uderstand different dialects of hindi even though we were never taught hindi words. Same is for arabic, they all understand quran and speak the same language. A person from 1400 years ago will be easily understood by the people of arab today, its just words like airport, car mobile etc which didnt exist back then would be new for him. This myth exists only in india/pak arabs don't say that, our mullah deceive us so that we don't read quran and realize our mullah are wrong and arabs are right
Very nice and informative video! The expressions on Karim's face when the Moroccan girl spoke are priceless! 😂 (He also has such a lovely smile!). Now I want to learn farsi! (I already speak Arabic)
As an Iranian now I see how friendly we can be with each other like the one in this video instead of competing and trying to prove our selves which one is more authentic. Just be friend's. Peace in Middle East 💚
Great video, so good to see young people from countries that have very strong national identities , cooperating and getting on so well together , it gives you hope for relations between those countries .Thanks World Friends for bringing them together .
Farsi is a different language. I mean Urdu has Farsi, Sanskrit, and Arabic. I have always seen Farsi and Arabic as different languages. A lot of people in Pakistan also read Arabic but don't understand it. There are many words that people can understand in South Asia (Urdu and Hindi). But that region has been othered a lot. Many people were surprised to know the script Urdu used is like Arabic or Farsi with extra alphabets- even though we speak it like everyday Hindi. Also, the moroccon girl had a tinge of French when she was speaking too. That's why I dont understand why you would group everyone together here lol. Might as well add more nationalities to it. Just saying.
I am from Iran 🇮🇷 I loved this Persian and Arabic have similar words And also people thinking similar words are Arabic just But for example din in Arabi is Persian in fact And ect We are living for long time in Middle East so similar and different ❤❤🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
as moroccan it's so funny to see their reactions especially when she talked abt her hobbies cuz she mixed french and english words within the sentences😂
Iranians are tought atleast two different languages in early school, Arabic and English, and Arabic to learn to read Quraan well. and fun fact, The grammatical rules are arabic were discovered and written by persians 14 centuries ago because back then Persia was a massive empire and according to texts, only 10 people could write in arab peninsula
The Arabic that was written and discovered by the Persians is not the Modern Standard Arabic that was organized and written by the Egyptians during the reign of Muhammad Ali Pasha The language you are talking about is Quranic Arabic, and the Persians developed it and wrote its rules However, classical Arabic developed after the liberation of the region from the Turks, especially the Egyptians
@@GhGh-sj4wb محد يفكر ان كل بنات السعودية بهالشكل الكل يعرف العباية والحجاب حتى بكوريا فيه مسلمين ومسلمات بس للاسف انك تنتقد بنت بلدك بالطريقة ذي بس عشانها مالبست عباية او حجاب وتترك كيف قاعده تدرس بتخصص صعب ناهيك عن انها تدرس التخصص بجامعة بكوريا وبلغة كورية وزيادة عندها طلاقة باللغة الانجليزية والتركية ؟
@@GhGh-sj4wb تفشل ؟ ممكن توضح اشوي كيف تفشل؟ كيف ملابس تخليك تفشل؟؟ ترى فقط لأنها مو لابسه عباية لا يعني انها ماتستحي , اذا انت تشوف ان ملابس الشخص يحدد مستواه كأنسان فا هذي مصيبة فقط لأنها مالبست العباية لايعني انها اقل من اي بنت ثانية لابسه العباية كل شخص مختلف عن الثاني وموضوع الدين بين الشخص وربه لا انت ولا اللي مثلك يحكم على الناس , في اخلاق وشخصية واحترام كلها مهمة والبنت هذي تنطبق عليها كلها ومسافرة وتدرس ومتعلمة لغات وسوت كل شي صعب , كل شي عنها يحترم ويقدر ويفخر فيه
An Iranian will understand some Arabic because he studied Arabic in school. On the other hand, Arabs will not understand an Iranian, because Persian (Farsi) and Arabic are two completely different languages. The Persian language is a language from the Iranian group of Indo-European languages (Iranians are Indo-Europeans) and has nothing to do with the Arabic language. Arabic is a language belonging to the group of Semitic languages. The Persian language (Farsi) is more similar to European languages than to Arabic.
I really like Morocco 🇲🇦🕌🧕🏻, it’s a very interesting country and several languages are spoken. Moroccan Arabic, Berber languages, French and even Spanish in northern Morocco.
As a Moroccan i would say that we can understand and/or speak different Arabic dialects because we grow up watching TV shows and programs of certain Arabic countries such as Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, UAE, especially Egypt
@@ijustwannabehappier-v4973 Well morroco is in north africa, but in the media when they want to put all the arab country together they use the term middle east in a sense of cultural, this is the reason why singers or footbalers from maghreb get throphies or award for middle eastern
For the people here who don't know, _Farsi (or "Persian" - the main language of Iran) is an Indo-European_ language, which means it is related to English, Russian, French, Greek, Armenian, Hindi, and so on, and so on. _Arabic, on the other hand, is a Semitic language_ and is related to Hebrew, Amharic and Aramaic. You find plenty of words in Persian that are similar to words in all the other Indo-European languages I mentioned, and there are also many structural similarities. Just take a look at the vocabulary for family members or numbers in Persian, then compare it to Arabic and you will see what I mean. Here are a couple examples: - Daughter in Farsi is _dokhtar_ - Father is _pedar_ - Mother is _madar_ - Brother is _baradar_ - And, not a family word but still interesting, the word for "bad" in Farsi is identical to English, even being pronounced the same: _bad_ If you happen to speak more than one Indo-European language, you're bound to notice even more similarities. Putting him in this group is absurd, it would have made more sense to put him in a group with a Greek speaker, a Hindu speaker, a Russian-speaker and an Armenian-speaker...
@@KoLoLoZ Sorry to disappoint you but Darija is Arabic, not Moroccan. Besides that, it’s called Darija, not Moroccan Darija. You don’t have to add the word “Moroccan” to make it look as if you speak Moroccan lol. You don’t. Just accept that you speak Arabic.
@@naawam3027 1. They don’t understand your Darija (Arabic dialect) because it’s a different dialect. That’s why it’s called dialect. Go learn what a dialect means 2. “Middle Easterners don’t understand me. I’m Moroccan and I can’t understand your Darija either. How do you explain that?😂
We Moroccans it's easy for us to understand and speak other Arabic dialect , but what I noticed that the Moroccan girl when it comes to " hobbies" she could speak Arabic instead of entering some french words such as " sports, picnic, la natation, caffes... " But she she do it in purpose to show that why other Arab countries can't understand us because we always mixed Arabic with french but not all of Moroccans of course... For example if I were her I would say : كيعجبني نقرا كتاب ، كيعبجني نمشي نخيم ، كنشرب قهوة ، كتعجبني الرياضة ... And yeah this is also Moroccan Arabic.
I speak french and I still don't understand your arabic words it's really sooo difficult for us. When I was in university I had many morrocan friends and we used to talk in french in order to understand each other. I think the major problem for us is that you delete all the vowels from words
@@TheLibanais yes maybe this is the problem but you should know that we don't only mixed Arabic with french but also with some amazigh words that's why you find it difficult , but for me I think you should only concentrate little bit and you will understand it
I speak French and Persian, so it was easier for me to understand the Moroccan dialect, between the 3 arabic dialects 😆also I have many moroccan friends and I travelled to Morocco :)
Even in the Middle East , Iran is different from Arab countries like Saudi Arabia or Egypt , many think it is the same culture , but Iran 🇮🇷 is Persian , the language is different from anything i've ever heard
Yup, Farsi comes under a completely different language family than Arabic. There's a lot more in common between Farsi and the languages of India than between Farsi and Arabic, even though there are lot of Arabic loan words in Indo-Iranian languages.
Farsi is a total different language, no idea how it belongs here.
When they say that Iran is an Arab country, it is like saying that Turkey is an Arab country, because Turkey is also located in the Middle East, but they do not speak Arabic.
Iran has an Arab province and different ethnic groups, but the majority speak Persian
@@living_peace so speaking Arabic make people Arab? like, Egypt left Egyptian and officially spoke Arabic at the late 17th century, some say that happened by force
Fersi is Aryan but Arabic is Semitic that's all, at the time of Calipatis the great Ariana was under their rule and become 50% Arab genetically and linguistically also culturally
Persian is such a sweet language♡♡
Thank you
@Blink-bj1vz can you elaborate please? I'm Persian and I want to know how it sounds sweet to you?
Thanks.
Hi from iran 🇮🇷💗
@@cyrusm8498 It is very musical to hear even though I don't understand it.
Farsi is the language of poetry
*TOP TEN FACTS ABOUT PERSIA*
• Persian is an ancient language that has been spoken for almost 3500 years. This makes it one of the *classical languages of antiquity* with unique poetry that still exist today. It has contributed numerous words to the vocabulary of the English language, like "paradise," "pyjama", "rice," "amazon," "rose," "saffron," "asparagus," "spinach," "shawl," and "pistachio."
• Persian is a member of the *Indo-European language family.* It shares fundamental characteristics in terms of both grammar and vocabulary with its relatives like Latin, English, French, and Russian. Words like "baradar" for brother, "madar" for mother, "pedar" for padre in Spanish (father), "dokhtar" for daughter, "to" for tu in French (you), "andar" for inter, "do" for dos in Spanish (two), "zamin" for zemĕ in Croatian and zdmyla in Russian (earth), and even "shahr" for "skaan" in Old Norse (city), show the strong and old ties of this language family.
This similarity in language is due to the *Yamnaya culture,* which is believed to be the precursor to the *Proto-Indo-European expansion* that originated from the steppes of Central Asia where Iranian peoples come from.
This suggests that the customs and practices of Indo-European peoples across both Europe and Asia are rooted in the Yamnaya culture.
• Iran possesses a versatile array of natural attractions. This includes *grandiose mountains, verdant forests, panoramic landscapes, sunny coastlines, and abundant natural resources,* like minerals and metals. It is known for producing an abundance of pistachios, pomegranates, berries, saffron, and turquoise. The Persian turquoise boasts unique shades of blue that sets it apart from other varieties.
The Iranian Caspian Horse belongs to the first domesticated equine species.
Iranians have a *long history of horsemanship and equestrian sports.* Persian games like Chowgan date back to ancient times. Iran is known as the birthplace of horse riding and the earliest practitioners of this art have been Iranian peoples. The influence of Persian horsemanship can be seen in many modern equestrian sports like Polo, which has gained worldwide popularity.
• Persians were trailblazers in wearing *trousers and footwear.* This distinguishes them from the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans who wore gowns and cloaks. The traditional Persian dress is specifically crafted to endure Iran's chilly weather and showcases the ancient Iranian culture's practicality and ingenuity.
• Iran's native and ancient name means *"Land of Aryans,"* and it has been in use for over 2500 years. The name "Persia" was used by Greeks to describe Iran.
• The *Persian/Iranian World* is an ancient name for a region that spans from the Plateau of Iran to the Caucasus and Central Asia. This region houses Iranian customs, languages and peoples. Persian architecture reflects ancient philosophical, mathematical, and mystical themes. The ancient shades of turquoise are revered in Persian culture and depict the link between the earth and the unknown spiritual world. The *contributions of Persian scholars and poets* like Avicena, Rhasis, Biruni, Farabi, Khwarazmi, after whom the word "algorithm" is named, Ferdowsi, Khayyam, Saadi, Hafez, and Rumi, to the fields of philosophy, literature, art, musical theory, chemistry, mathematics, astronomy, and metaphysics, have bestowed the world with a wealth of Persian knowledge and wisdom.
• Persian cuisine is known for its ancient and unique gastronomic heritage. It *blends sweet and sour flavors* together and features fragrant and fluffy rice. Saffron and pistachios are conspicuously used in Persian cuisine and impart a rare flavor. This cuisine is also notable for its sour notes, which can be overpowering to those unfamiliar with it. The Iranian palate is accustomed to this sourness and sweetness and can even enjoy the tartness of limes on their own.
• Persian decorative arts and crafts have deep historical roots. Iranian artisans are known for their skillful designs, brilliant colors, and remarkable craftsmanship. This is reflected in various mediums like carpet weaving, painting, calligraphy, pottery, and metalwork. Persian paintings are acclaimed for their precuse embellishments and lively tones. These *Persian styles have had a major impact on the world* and inspired and influenced artists and designers across different cultures and periods. Persian art has been a main source of inspiration for European artists during the Renaissance period.
• The tradition of weaving carpets was invented in ancient Persia, when Iranian nomadic peoples used simple weaves of fabric to stay warm on cold and damp grounds. Over time, this basic need evolved into a sophisticated art form that produced the visually most beautiful patterns. *Persian carpets are praised for their beauty* and have been highly valued by royality, nobility, and collectors across the ages. Persian culture holds rugs as prized possessions that carry deep sentimental and cultural meaning. Today, Persian rugs are highly prized and sought-after decorative items around the world. Iran remains the center of carpet waving with unique and ancient styles.
• Persian culture has inspired and influenced people worldwide. This includes minds like Voltaire, Montesquieu, Nietzsche, Thomas Jefferson, and Alexander, who is believed to be the first admirer of Persian culture in the West.
The enduring legacy of Persian culture is evident in its profound influence on the world and attests to its magnificence and endearing qualities!
And now you are nothing
It makes me feel so great when people actually start knowing us Persians and talk about us and our culture since we have been criticized by different governments for generations
I can only thank you for spreading your knowledge with a Persian sentence
امیدوارم که همیشه شاد و تندرست باشی
ممنون از شما❤
@@cloud990 💀 Alright “Cloud” don’t pull out the 9
@@cloud990 Agree
Correct mistakes:
The word "Paradise /فردوس" is an Arabic word consisting of two parts:
"br/بر" : means earth
"tows/طوس" : means adornment and beauty
Therefore, the peacock bird in the Arabic language is called "tawoos/طاووس" because it is the embodiment of beauty and adornment.
You should compare Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan accents as they all speak Persian. Persian and Arabic are from different language families.
Yes, but all Indo-Iranian languages should be compared, such as the languages of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, and India
Also, Kurdish
They don’t all speak Persian, Persian isn’t the language, it’s Farsi which they all speak a dialect of. Iranians speak Persian Farsi whereas Afghans speak Dari Farsi and people of Tajikistan speak Tajik. They are very different in accent and it would be cool to see a video if they can understand each other.
@@XsarahX1 oh I'm from Afghanistan. I grew up in Balkh in neighborhood of Tajikistan. I understand some Iranian accents and all TAJIKs and Afghanistan's Persian speakers accents. Afghanistan has different accents from region to region as well as Iran does.
@@shukriarahimi4161 Very interesting. How well can Afghans understand Arabic? I already know that Arabic and Dari Farsi are different.
I'm from Tehran and I understood less than 5% of all the Arabic words I heard in this video. I think Farzan did really well in school unlike me 😂
من تو كنكور عربى ١٠٠ زدم ولى الان هيچى نفهميدم😂😂😂😂🤌🏻🤌🏻
Haha I thought that too😂
I did understand a lot as well.
@@spiritedsilverfox2606واقعا منطقی نیست 🗿😂
@@kasrae192 چرا منطقيه، چون عربى هييييييچ كاربرد واقعى تو زندگى من نداشته در اين ١١ سال. يك مشت قوانين غير كاربردى افعالش رو يادمه + كلمات ابتدايى كه در كتابامون ياد گرفتيم
As a Moroccan, I like to hear Farsi. I remember a scene of a young child actor who was reviewing his lessons and then started singing. I liked the tone of the words. I find in them a beautiful melody, the words seem to be something from the past.
Give Urdu a try! Its a sweeter and more royal version of farsi. And easiest to learn and express in.
Africa is similar to Asia in terms of diversity , but the biggest major difference between the Islamic world in Africa and the Islamic world in Asia , is that Asia was under the rule of the Mongols , Africa on the other hand was never invaded by the Mongols , the Mongols never managed to invade Western Europe or Africa , in both cases they were defeated , they only managed to capture the Middle East and Eastern Europe
@@AttaJutt-uw6sh 😂😂😂 Urdu is a combination of Arabic Turkish persian and Indian Pakistan has no history or culture it’s a nation made up by balochis pashtuns and the newly created “Punjab” identity to look different from indian Dravidians
Yes he was mehrad jam it was a comedic serise where he was learning the orgins of one of persian most important slangsاز ماست که بر ماست
OH MY GOD. AS A IRANIAN IK WHAT UR TALKING ABOUT. HE WAS SAYING "SEEYAHE, NARGEELE"
This is like sitting an American, Australian, British and a German and talk about how much they understand each other 😂 hint: one of them speaks a different language
righttttt????
More like... A French, an Italian, and a Spaniard... along with a person from Malta.
all from same sub family of languages, called Germanic, but here it'll different
It must be among Iranians, Afghans, Pakistanis and Indians
@@Chatelaine0exactly
thank you all for being such open-minded and tactful young people!
I have many Persian friends, such nice people, they sound very nice when they speak, i love Persian Food😂
yeah i love how their language sounds i want to learn it honestly
@@nour4828 learn it. You'll love it. Especially the beautiful poems.
The food is best 👌😋
غذا های ما واقعا خوشمزه ن حق دارین این حرفو بزنین 😊
Persia does not exist anymore. They are Iranians
As a native Persian speaker, I got really surprised to see comparing Farsi and Arabic once and for all so people could feel the difference between the two languages and stop misunderstanding Persian and Arabic or considering it as one of the various Arabic accents! Thank you, guys, so much for this fun-informative video 👍👌❤️
فرهنگ ایرانی خیلی زیباست و مردم پارسی خیلی مهربانند.
As a saudi i never thought people would think perisan is even close to arabic the persian way of speaking isn’t near arabic at all but similar to South asian languages like pakistan and india especially pushtan
@@fanafana9974 yeah, as Middle Easterners, the differences and similarities are more obvious and easier to understand for us. Also, we have to consider the fundamentals and structure of the languages, and as we know Persian is an Indo-European language, whilst Arabic is a Semitic language! as I mentioned Middle Easterners know the differences, but usually people from the Far East or the West can’t distinguish between the two languages and cultures!
Still 40% of Farsi is from Arabic 🤷♂️
@@fanafana9974 you think right, because root of the there language is "Farsi dari"
Persian is such a perfect and ear warming language
Because it's not related to throaty harsh Arabic at all 😅
@@marmary5555 ok?
i’m persian but grew up speaking arabic and i somehow can’t stand hearing persian.. fellow persians will surely hate me for this lol
@@strawberrypanic7609bc you are Arab
@@strawberrypanic7609It's good that you know you deserve hate😅
For me as an Iranian, Egyptian language is very pleasant to listen.❤
شكرا تسلمي 💐
As an Iranian I should clarify we learn Arbic in school but not as our main language it has more simularities like a side-lamguage and for that reason many Iranians can understand Arabic rather than speaking it . The second reason we understand Arabic it's becuase we share the same religion with Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia or Qatar etc. Great video guys ، keep the massively well-done work up .
HMDL Iran is muslim
@@az6802 Yes more important thing is we are all brothers and help each other and other communities all over the world
Me too!
Al Muslimu Akhul muslim
so are you saying that Iranians are Muslims???? all Iranians I know don't say we are Muslims, besides the version of Islam you have is completely different than what we have, so practically speaking we don't share same religion
I understood the arabic from Egypt and Saudi Arabia, a little bit of Morocco but nothing in Persian. I really loved the video.❤
The Saudi girl said that she understood the Egyptian that he's studying sports... he didn't say that. He said Mathematics lol
@@moemenshahawy tbh he could've studid sports too, but I understand we have the same word for both
The Moroccan girl make her darija understandable and uses some standard arabic words
if I talk with you in the familier moroccan language you won't understand a word from what i'm saying
@@commieking1443 how would you say in moroccan family darija what she says?
why should you even be able to understand it bro?
I don't get it.
persian has simply nothing to do with arabic.
proud to be moroccan , amazing video❤ so much love for kenza , you so pretty , you look wonderful ❤
She has made her makeup so much. She is shining like a plate. I think she could be prettier if she made her makeup less.
I think Persian is a beautiful and fascinating language. It has a rich history and culture, and it is spoken by millions of people around the world. I am particularly interested in the Persian literature, which is one of the oldest and most sophisticated in the world.
Here are some of the things I like about Persian:
The sound of the language is very melodic and pleasing to the ear.
The vocabulary is rich and expressive, with many words that have no equivalent in other languages.
The grammar is relatively simple, making it relatively easy to learn.
The writing system is based on the Arabic script, but it has its own unique features.
Overall, I think Persian is a beautiful and interesting language that is worth learning. If you are interested in learning a new language, I would definitely recommend Persian.
Here are some of the benefits of learning Persian:
It can help you connect with people from Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and other countries where Persian is spoken.
It can give you access to a rich and diverse culture.
It can help you learn about the history of the Middle East.
It can improve your understanding of other Indo-European languages.
If you are interested in learning Persian, there are many resources available to help you. You can find textbooks, online courses, and even language partners. I would recommend starting with a basic textbook to learn the basics of the language. Once you have a good foundation, you can start practicing with other resources.
An excellent comment about the magnificent civilization of Iran but you have made a major incorrect statement about the Persian script. The Persian writing system isn't based on the _"Arabic"_ script. In fact, there exists no such thing as an _"Arabic"_ script. The Persian writing system is based on older varities of the Persian script and the letters were invented by Persian scholars in the Sassanian Persian city of Ctesiphon. Persian letters have unique features to them. The script was then borrowed to write Arabic. So it's Arabic which uses the Persian script. Get your facts straight. Learning Persian will open you up to the richest and oldest classical Indo-European language on earth and help you understand the rich history of Iran and Central Asia. Iran has nothing to do with the Middle East. The Middle East just used to be a colony of Iran.
you can understand Rumi and Khayyam if you learn persian the language almost stayed the same after 1000 yeras😂
Iranians don't write in Arabic script. The root of Arabic script is Iranian. Research about Avesta script
@@arya_mehr2003
Everyone knows That Persian Is Written With Arabic Letters. The Main Letters Of Persian Language Are Disappearing & The Persian Language Is Written With Arabic Letters. Arabic Does Not Have Persian Roots. Lie Less, Dear User.
@@SantosOfficial614 It is very clear that you have no interest in researching the authenticity of words. The script you call Arabic is derived from the Kufic script, and the Kufic script is also rooted in the Avestan script, which was used by the Sassanid Empire, who were Persians, throughout the empire, and the Arabs also copied this script. Do it with Kufi name, then write the Arabic language in Kufi script. First, if you are a person who studies and researches, you will fully understand the truth
this crew is so chill and playful
The Egyptian man is very quiet and polite mashallah
Persian language is so ancient and rich you can feel it by hearing
@hiooxkrmagkis9323 do not cry kid .Before the existance of any arabs, persia and persian existed . When arabs were used to eat the lizards in the deserts and drink the camel's pees ; Persian had a great civilizations and a cultured society.
The arabic alphabet which is orginally persian and had been stolen from persia after the invasion of barbaric arabs to persia . Arabs burned all the libraries in old persia and stolen our alphabet. who believes that the barbaric arabs who used to live in a desert , had literatures and alphabet , Persian culturized the arabs and taught arabs the modern life
Farsi has a way better history and the language has retained its uniqueness in spite of the muslim conquest.
You are muslims have same culture arab culture
@@sunex6806 Persians are forced to be muslim by one of the worst and most corrupted governments in the entire world.
@@sunex6806 go first learn some basic English then come here and talk
Very interesting video. I am Brazilian and I totally understand what it feels like when people don't know which language is spoken in your country lol. Just like many people think Arabic is the language of Iran, many also think we Brazilians speak Spanish when our language is actually Portuguese (which, interestingly enough, are two very similar languages in writing too but totally different when spoken).
Hahaha “oh you speak Brazilian?” “You speak Spanish” I still get that from people even though I’ve corrected them 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Our languages are not the same, but we are all human and respect each other, from Iran ❤
Habibi from morocoo ❤️
Farzan was polite and kind, and I found a certain peace in his face!
thats kind of in persian culture
From my limited experience, they are a very kind and patient people!
I am saying this as an Iranian, he seems to be a calm and peaceful individual person and he has a very beautiful way of talking and pronounciation in words. Not all Iranians are like that ofc. But farzan had the best pronounciation of our language and so sweet to ears
He is indeed very calm for being lumped in there with Arabs who do not speak his language nor share his culture.
@@minajdm4343Most Iranians are like that, he's the typical stereotype when I think of a Persian. Calm, polite & humble, even while being obviously disrespected.
Wow, I used to work in a facility in the summer of 1986 and there were only Iranian immigrants there. I learned some frases. I understood when he presented himself. I never thought I would remember that after almost 40years. I am Norwegian btw.
Good for you dude! Pretty cool how memory and language work.
@@rehan3600 Thanks.
God bless you, from Iran 🇮🇷
@@arianpouzeshi8319 Thank you. ❤️
Am Iranian but isn't Scandinavian countries are full of Arabs immigrated??
The moroccan girl is so pretty 😭💗
my city has a very large Moroccan immigrant community, and so a large proportion of my friends are Moroccan.... I'm always asking questions about the dialects, because language fascinates me and they are born polyglots. Of course all speak darija (the Moroccan dialect), all of them have learned English living here in the U.S., all are familiar with French (with many being fluent, some rusty), some speaking Spanish (a few fluent, but most rusty/minor), all can understand and typically speak fusha/classical arabic, but they also adopt other dialects. We have several Saudi friends, and of course I would hear my friends speak to them easily, so I asked them what language they speak to them in ("in fusha, since you both know it?") and he said "oh I just use a Saudi dialect" 🤯 The range is incredible.
The hilarious part is that I am on a journey to learn Arabic so that I can converse with Arabic speakers, but I have become extremely familiar with Moroccan darija, so the only "arabic" I know is the dialect that no one else can understand 🤣 I don't think I will ever stop saying "bzaff" even when I learn other dialects properly. When Kenza said "w.... ah, aandi bzaff dial hobbies" I laughed so hard. That language and country will always be close to my heart. And I have one Saudi friend who speaks only a little English, so sometimes the two of us (him Saudi, me British-American) speak to each other in our broken Moroccan darija that we learned from exposure through our friends, just to level the playing field (down to "wili wili wili" 🤣)
I love language because of these unique connections... not just because it allows you to communicate with more people, but because of the genuine affection and curiosity it inspires in people whose languages and cultures have overlap, such as displayed in this video and such as I've seen first-hand among my friends. We sometimes we call our smoke breaks "the united nations" because of how many countries we represent. It is one of the most playful and natural forms of cultural exchange, in my opinion, and it really instills a deep respect in the language skills of humankind.
Trust me, if you learn Darija, Moroccan Arabic , and then go and give yourself a 2 years kf listening to (Lebanese, Egyptian, Emirati songs) along with Darija , and then watch some Egyptian films .. you'd end up understanding more than 80% of like 15 counties different dialects
Egyptian and Lebanese would help you to understand Palestinian, Jordanian and Syrian and even some Iraqi.
Emirati would help for Saoudi, Yemeni, Omani, Qatari, Bahraini, Kuwaiti
Moroccan would help you to get ready and adapt with them all since it's the hardest and sharpest one and the most diverse with all letters pronunciation. And also would definitely help for Some Tunisian، Algerian and Lybian
When an Arab learn Moroccan, he would start understanding North African dialectes quickly, but if it was the opposite way, it's very hard because as I said, Moroccan is the most diverse in terms of words and sounds and pronunciation
In Iran,we have various languages,such as Turkish,Kurdish,BalochiTaleshi,Gilaki,Luri,Arabic,Farsi,etc
But the official and administrative language that is taught in schools is Farsi
Farsi is the official language of Iran because half of Iran's population are Persian speakers
@@Maxhartmann2024 Azerbaijan is an ancient term for describing today’s Azerbaijan lands. It has nothing to do with Turkic world.
@@Maxhartmann2024 Azerbaijani language comes from Ajem Turkic and therefore Old Anatolian Turkish.
No in Iran it hasn't Turkish and Kurdish language it's azarbaijani language and 60% of it's is Persian about gilaki luri talesh they are persian decent
@@afsane_nezhadi the country Iran does have ethnic minorities such a Azari/Turk, Kurd, Baloch etc.
Their mother tongues are separate from the Persian/Farsi language.
Also I think you're mixing up "Persia" and "Iran". There's a reason Reza Shah changed Irans name, since "Iran" is a more inclusive term of it's diverse ethnic groups and languages.
Egypt accent is beautiful and melodic, ohh😍
As a tajik from Bukhara I only understood the persian guy
I learned a lot about Morocco in the World Cup, an incredible campaign in the Cup, I thought they only spoke Arabic and in the Cup I heard fans on TV speaking in French in the France x Morocco game, I was impressed
Yes it was a french protectorate that's why. Same in Algeria and Tunisia almost everybody can speak french too.
I'm Jordanian, but was born and raised in Canada. There are a lot of Moroccans in Canada, and my family is friends with a lot of them. I love Morocco, and the ones I know all speak French. It's part of the colonial legacy...that's why a lot of countries in the population in the Middle East speak either English or French largely, and to this day teach it in schools. I think it's different in Iran because it was never colonized, and the Islamic revolution made sure the country wouldn't adopt Western practices.
@@ayahaltalhouni9272 We study Arabic and English for 7 years at school in Iran, starting from middle school. But unfortunately not many students remeber anything after they've finished school, mostly because of the old methods used. Most young people do speak English, but because they've taken English courses or they have self-studied, not because they had it at school.
we don't speak French natively it's used only in business, and now it getting replaced by English.
@@ayahaltalhouni9272
Actually it's not because of the colonial past but because of school only.
The majority of the population of todays Morocco is young and never lived under the french colonialism
Loved it.
You guys are just awesome.
Greetings from Brazil.
greetings for u from morocco🎉
لطيفة مره مثقفه ماشاءالله وذكيه she kept catching words from the farsi language and she speaks english very well
Egyptian dialect is the most understandable among Arabs due to the shows movies and sitcoms a lot of us used to watch growing up, the only con with that is that you find it difficult understanding other Arabic dialects
Lol 😂 due to ancient egyptian being the parent system to arabic script 😊.
The Egyptian guy is cute like every video 😍
I am French, I was listening to the video in the background and so when the Moroccan girl talked about her hobbies and started with "le week-end normalement..." I thought I was suddenly understanding arabic at first :')
😂😂😂
haha same ! suddenly an unexpected "les weekend normalement" catches my attention >
@@gudetamaminiso513 SAME HAGAGA AND IM NOT EVEN FRENCH BUT I UNDERSTOOD THAT PART OF THE SENTENCE
haha I think everyone in the world understands le weekend!
I'm Italian and I also thought I was understanding ahahah
I loooovve the Moroccan girl and Egyptian guy 😍🇲🇦❤️🇪🇬 they're funny cute and smart
I'm Tajik and I live in an Arab country,
It's exciting to understand and speak both Arabic and Farsi with all its dialects.
How well were you able to understand the Iranian guy? Just curious
@@karezaalonso7110 The Iranian Persian dialect is very close to the Persian spoken by the Tajik people but with a slight influence of Arabic. Therefore, as a Tajik, I was born in an Arab country & I speak both Persian and Arabic, which simply makes me understand Iranian easily and without complexity
@@ivvrr1very interesting thank you. I had watched videos like this tajik (Uzbek?). I thought people in iran would be able to understand (most) of it. ruclips.net/video/ZoVutoM5-kQ/видео.htmlsi=hLs29tWsp0D7NLih
Good job latifa you are the best one 🇸🇦♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🎖
I am Arab and i understood every Arabic dialect even Moroccan (i mean i a speak French also) and i understood some words in Persian
Persian is my favorite language in the world
Thanks for liking Persian. We love you from Iran.
@@jamjar1948 I love you, From Saudi arabia
Greetings to our iranian sisters & brothers
You speak French that not mean u gonna understand Moroccan :)
@@uhm175 Thanks. Greetings from Iran to you my dear and my other brother and sisters in Saudi Arabia, and my other Arab brothers and sisters, I love you all! But please speak Al-fusha, so that I can understand you, just kidding!
@@hafssachamakh9983 most Mauritanian can understand Darija or speak it. I can understand and speak it as well and yes most of us speak French.
a lot of comment from Iran they are not happy about comparing farsi with arabic but actually There are similarities they took words from arabic and we took words from them and usually farsi words comes from Iraq and Iraqis are spreading the rest of the words to other arab countries I remeber that when I learned some farsi words years before
As a persian i truly liked it when he said" Dorod " as "hello" instead of " salam"
Me too. I try to avoid saying salam in my daily dialogues also. I just say Dorud
ریدم به ایران و زبان عن فارسی
ریدم به ایران و زبان عن فارسی
How come?
@@MultiSciGeek Well Doroud is the official Persian word for Hello and it has been used for a very long time (Sassanid period or older). Salam is a Arabic word, but it was intergrated into the Persian language because Islam was the main religion for many years
I'm gonna say something totally random, but the guy from Egypt could play Aladdin in a movie. Cute!😅Great video guys!
Aladdin is actually played by an Egyptian 😅
@@M.Salemx Nice! 😅
@@lureal-
The movie was already played by Egyptian actor Mina Massoud
Did you know 1001 nights was originally an Indian story first translated to Persian and the main characters' names Shahrzad (yes it's not Scheherazade) and Shahryar are Persian? And after Arab invasion Arabs rewrite it with an Arab modified version and documented it as an Arab heritage while the original books (Persian which were faithful to the Indian root and the Indian) all ruined?! 😂 And the Arabic version is also take place mainly in Iraq where was a Sassanid land? And an Egyptian reminds you of sth completely non Arab! Such a wow for what the Britain and Arabs made in collaboration! 😂
We have three ways to talk. Book Persian, folk Persian and traditional Persian. In written and colloquial Persian, many of our words are the same as Arabic, but for all the Arabic words we use, we have alternatives in traditional Persian. That's why we can understand most of the Arabic sentences, apart from the fact that we have a lesson called Arabic in our schools, but we can speak in such a way that no Arabic language can be confused because we also have authentic Farsi. This is the beauty and magic of the Persian language :)
I'm really happy that there's an Iranian man and he speaks Persian, other people all over the world can get to know it, so thank you very much
I also would like to mention that he speaks formal
The egyptian accent is the famoust because the Egyptian movies and drama and the Egyptian music ❤😂
And beacuase it's so beautiful ❤
Also Egypt has largest population.
@@yohanapereira1629 and the oldest civilisation 😌☕️ 🚬
بنتنا تجنن 🇸🇦
I am Arab and I really liked the video. I understood all the Arabic dialects being spoken here, like Egyptian (since I am Egyptian) and Saudi but Morrocoan was a little challenging for me since they tend to mix French and Amazighi words and they speak so fast 😅. As for Farsi, I understood only the words that come from Arabic but it sounds like a beautiful language.
Greeting to all MENA people from Egypt 🇪🇬 🇸🇦 🇲🇦 🇮🇷
¿El dialecto Saudí cómo es que lo has logrado entender?
In Egypt we can understand most of arabian accent but Morocco and Algeria an Tunisia is kinda hard
what is “Amazighi”😮?
@@ivanovichdelfin8797
Saudi dialect is easy to understand.. all Middle East dialects are easy.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg ¿Pero no es bastante diferente al dialecto egipcio o lo entendéis por las películas, etc?
I have friends in saudi arabia (im from Tehran) we met on Call of duty mobile, and i do understand some of their words when they talk to each other
I dont care about haters, or those who try to drive us away from each other, i salute to everyone in arabian countries, and i love them all, i hope one they we get allies and remove the boundaries 😊🔥❤️
🇸🇦💗🇮🇷
Thank you for this video! Slavic episode please. :)
I had so much fun Latifa happy to see u there
I can understand Moroccan perfectly...the problem is that they only speak fast... love you from Kuwait ❤
Had Sata rah matathdarech bi darija asln hhhhhh
Sorry to disappoint you but this is not Moroccan. This is Arabic. You can’t even understand 1 word if I’m gonna speak the Moroccan language to you, trust me
@@John-pk9rw yeah it's Mifta7 darija hhhh
3tini mafati7 mn sayara like Istiqlal members dialect
instead of saying Ara liya swarut dyali mn tomobila
@@commieking1443 I don’t understand your language
@@John-pk9rw yeah it's darija moroccan !
and yes there's a lot of moroccans speak it As second language after Berber !
Khodaro shokr, ferdosi o yaghub leis ro dashtim k alan majbor nabashim mesle araba ar ar konim❤
This session was very interesting. I love Arab Countries and Iran too. In Spanish we have a lot of words that comes from Arabic: Guitarra, Alcancía, Alfombra, etc. 🇲🇽
What about the countries makes you love it????
@@Iceyfire12 It depends of what country we're talking. Egypt: their ancient Culture, pyramids, Sphynx, etc. Qatar, UAE, Bahrein and Saudi its human debeloplment and the good investments of oil sales revenue. Iran that people is well educated despite some things I don't agree with their government I love their people.
@@Iceyfire12 Morcco arquitecture is beautiful. Gorgeous cities such as Casablanca and Matrakech
I love spanish too i wanna learn it. El gato also is the same word in arabic😂
@@M.sami12 Wow I didn't know that
Okay, but can we talk about how handsome the Egyptian guy is? 😭✨❤️🔥
Are you sure he is 32?
He looks like 18
@@uhm175 That adds to his handsomeness tho.
Agree
@@uhm175 I was shocked
Pharaohs grandsons always win 🇪🇬🇪🇬
Farsi is the Finnish of the Middle East haha. I remember the Nordic video where the Norwegian, Swede, and Dane understood each other but no one understood the Finn. Same thing here. Also the Moroccan dialect is the Chile Spanish of Arabic it seems!
not really, farsi is just a completely different language from arabic while finnish and other nordic languages have the same root.
@@bie-p1l Not true, finnish is part of a totally different language family (finno-ugric) while the others are northern germanic, and thus indoeuropean, languages.
Moroccan is the Chile and Cuba Spanish of arabic
No, Turkish would be the Finnish of Middle East since Turkish and Finnish are originally East and Central Asian languages that ended up in a different part of Eurasia.
Farsi is not unique in that region. It's an Indo-Iranic language, just like Ossetian, Kurdish, Afghan Pashto, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Bengali etc. Basically a big chunk of Asia.
@@JohnDoe10350 He said in the Middle-east, not the whole Asia! The only Indo-European languages that are spoken by a relatively large number of people in the Middle-east are Kurdish and Persian. The rest are either Turkic or Arabic. It's the same with Finnish, which the only other Finno-Ugric language spoken beside it in Europe with a comparable populus of speakers is probably Estonian.
Im from the Gulf and I have strong Persian roots and also an Egyptian mother. It's a shame I didn't learn Farsi from my grandfather before he passed away, such a beautiful and smooth langauge.
You mean persian gulf?
@@OmiDJamshidzad The Gulf countries, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, etc....
@@amilitarymind aha, arab countries
@@amilitarymind yes the persian gulf countries
@@OmiDJamshidzad I know what you're trying to do...
Is it really necessary? Whats the gain out of it?
Fine. Its called the Persian Gulf. Happy?
Latifa is so smart at catching words She founds some similarities between Turkish and Farsi impressive❤
Latifah is a Love of the group ❤
i wanna learn farsi so bad its so interesting
I could teach you 😇
I know a german who is learning it also and knows many speakers if persian not ethnic but they talk very good I’m also not ethnic persian but if you want I can give you his instagram
Useless
@@ziyadpepe6291200 Million speak that language I do think it is useful
@@dertyp7916 That's not correct. Even the population of Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan combined wouldn't reach 200 million.
The Egyptian guy looks like the actor from Aladdin (Mena Massoud)
Mena massoud is Egyptian too
Güzel bir etkileşim tanıtımı olmuş 👍. Farsça bilmiyorum ama seviyorum 😂
Wow ! It is interesting to know more about the dialect of others, and I understand the Saudi dialect but the Moroccan dialect is just difficult and takes a lot to understand, but I still love all dialects😂❤
Your friend from Egypt 🇪🇬 ✨
Maybe in the future videos, you guys can invite someone from Lebanon to make videos with the Arabic speakers group. Also, you guys can invite people who speak Tajik, Pashto, Dari, Tat, Kurdish, Ossetian to make videos with the Iranian guy.
Armenian doesn’t belong in this list. It’s not an Iranic language like the others you mentioned.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg
Is Armenian an Indo European language, or Caucasian isolate?
لطفي فخوريييين فيك يا فخر العرب وأن شاءالله نشوفك بالـ مكان الي تتمنيه one family💚💚💚💚💚💚💚.
The diversity of languages is an exploration of human beings, simulation and proficiency, and it is beautiful for whoever acquires it, he is happy to acquire it because it is not his mother tongue .. Greetings to you from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦❤🙏🙏🙏🙏
I miss them putting Egypt in videos I'm from Egypt but I really would like to have it in at least 1 or 2 new videos lmao
I was most interested in evolution of the language as related to space and time. In other words, Farsi (Persian) is a very ancient language and the Persians once ruled much of the Middle East. I assume the native languages of the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula were influenced and modified by that. Then, of course, after the 8th century when Arab armies conquered much of the Middle East and later North Africa, they spread their language as I had developed. But as someone in the video mentioned, by the time that language reached Morocco (and eventually Spain), it had to contend with local latin languages (including Latin itself and early Spanish) and certainly would have adopted certain words or phrases. I would expect Farsi to be most different from Moroccan Arabic and Egyptian Arabic to be closest to Saudi Arabic.
the modern arabic languge is influenced by persian but the classical arabic isnt it was mostly influenced by aramaiac and old hebrew the modern hebrew language is 40 percent arabic so no farsi is a beutifall language but its more closer to turkic than it is to arabic the arabic of arbian penunsila dosent have that much persian influence like the iraqi language
I think in majority of the Islamic world, people learn Arabic just enough to be able to read and understand the Quran, even if Arabic is not spoken in those places. Even here in India, there is obviously no formal education in Arabic, but some of my Muslim friends learned (probably from their parents or their local maulvis) some Arabic for religious purposes.
The arabic of the quran is different then the dialicts that why when people learn standard arabic they sometimes cant understand locals when they travel in arabic speaking world cuz the dialicts are different from one country to another
yup, you right.
@@docaz9453 its just a myth
@@wildae. How is it a myth. I don't even speak Arabic but I can definitely hear the different in dialects between Gulf, Levantine, African and Iraqi/Kuwaiti Arabic.
@@rohitchaoji i think you are from india right, because your name rohit. So india is a big country with many dialects of hindi but can you understand them? I am from pakistan even i can uderstand different dialects of hindi even though we were never taught hindi words. Same is for arabic, they all understand quran and speak the same language. A person from 1400 years ago will be easily understood by the people of arab today, its just words like airport, car mobile etc which didnt exist back then would be new for him. This myth exists only in india/pak arabs don't say that, our mullah deceive us so that we don't read quran and realize our mullah are wrong and arabs are right
Very nice and informative video! The expressions on Karim's face when the Moroccan girl spoke are priceless! 😂 (He also has such a lovely smile!). Now I want to learn farsi! (I already speak Arabic)
Whenever a Moroccan girl or Egyptian boy talks, I find myself smiling happily. They have very good energy❤❤❤❤
As an Iranian now I see how friendly we can be with each other like the one in this video instead of competing and trying to prove our selves which one is more authentic.
Just be friend's. Peace in Middle East 💚
Latifa is so cute😭😭 nice video 🎉❤
اكبر تحية لكافة الدول العربية من سوريا 🇸🇾❤🇲🇦🇪🇬🇸🇦
nah Morocco is not a arab country
@@RichardSMikkelsenIm moroccan.
Proud to be Arab💪
🇲🇦❤🇸🇾
I'm Egyptian
I've understood the Saudi
I've found Persian to be so beautiful ❤
It's hard to understand Moroccan dialect 😅
نديرو في كرك هادي تفهميها بالمغربية؟
@@mr.m5393ناااري هربتيه ليا 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 انا فارسية إيرانية كبرت في المغرب و تنهضر فحال خوتي المغاربة ❤
@@mr.m5393😭😭😭😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 arabiiiiii tyrtini
I can't understand Arabs from Morroco or Yemen at all as an Egyptian
@@jebrilwe Moroccans Arabs have many dialects, the Hilalian Arabic, the Andalusian Arabic, the Hassaniya arabic etc
Iranians AREN'T ARAB WE'RE PERSIAN
التعليقات عبارة عن وسامة و حب ف الراجل المصري و نفتخر بيكي لطيفه 😂😂😂 استمرو استمرو
Great video, so good to see young people from countries that have very strong national identities , cooperating and getting on so well together , it gives you hope for relations between those countries .Thanks World Friends for bringing them together .
only strong emotions between them would be between Iran and Saudi Arabia, but even that was solved early this year.
Farsi is a different language. I mean Urdu has Farsi, Sanskrit, and Arabic. I have always seen Farsi and Arabic as different languages.
A lot of people in Pakistan also read Arabic but don't understand it. There are many words that people can understand in South Asia (Urdu and Hindi). But that region has been othered a lot. Many people were surprised to know the script Urdu used is like Arabic or Farsi with extra alphabets- even though we speak it like everyday Hindi.
Also, the moroccon girl had a tinge of French when she was speaking too.
That's why I dont understand why you would group everyone together here lol. Might as well add more nationalities to it. Just saying.
The Egyptian boy is kind, polite and refined, I am proud to be Egyptian.
One day Egypt will shine again.🇪🇬🇪🇬
Egypt is always shining
Egypt IS shining wdym
@@M.Salemx and You are right, EGYPT ALWAYS SHINE!
While we have Türkiye🇹🇷 and dominate the Mediterranean waters, Egypt only does the work of itsy bitsy things.
@@Berserker0000 what a nice turkey lol. Our name is TÜRKİYE 🫡🇹🇷
Latifa We love you and proud of you🇸🇦❤️❤️❤️❤️.
Proud for what ?
Proud for what ?(1)
What's the very special thing she did and made u proud of her ? Went to Korea?!🥴
I know this girl and I know what she went through so I’m proud of everything she has achieved🫶🏻
@@bokoya8396 none of your business 🤨
I am from Iran 🇮🇷
I loved this
Persian and Arabic have similar words
And also people thinking similar words are Arabic just
But for example din in Arabi is Persian in fact
And ect
We are living for long time in Middle East so similar and different ❤❤🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
as moroccan it's so funny to see their reactions especially when she talked abt her hobbies cuz she mixed french and english words within the sentences😂
صحيح بس السعودية متعجرفة وردة فعلها م*رفة خصوصا لما تتكلم المغربية تحسها محسوسة منها ههههههه
@@ريم-ل3ب3خو الله محد غيران شكلك عندك نقص و تبي شخص يغار منك
@@ريم-ل3ب3خ وين متعجرفة؟ اسمه رد فعل اي شخص بيظهر على وجهه الاستغراب المغربيين ليسوا عرب فلغتهم العربيه شبه معدومه خليط بربريه وفرنسيه وكملتين عربيه!
@@ahes0771Not true, they have descendants from Arabs, and Amazigh who were there before.
Iranians are tought atleast two different languages in early school, Arabic and English, and Arabic to learn to read Quraan well. and fun fact, The grammatical rules are arabic were discovered and written by persians 14 centuries ago because back then Persia was a massive empire and according to texts, only 10 people could write in arab peninsula
The Arabic that was written and discovered by the Persians is not the Modern Standard Arabic that was organized and written by the Egyptians during the reign of Muhammad Ali Pasha The language you are talking about is Quranic Arabic, and the Persians developed it and wrote its rules However, classical Arabic developed after the liberation of the region from the Turks, especially the Egyptians
I'm an Egyptian and I really love listening to Moroccan peoples ❤ 0:03
Latifa we love you 🇸🇦❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
لكنها حرفيا تفشل من ناحية اللبس مي متحتشمة ولا متستره باللبس الشرعي مثل بناتنا وكانه بنات السعودية كلهم كذا ويلبسون ذي الملابس الاجنبية حرفيا ما تستحي
@@GhGh-sj4wbلجن نزنید به کشورتون با اسلام خاک بر سرتون من فک میکردم تفکر مردم عربستان تروریستی دیگه نیست ولی تفکر طالبانی هنور هست
@@GhGh-sj4wb محد يفكر ان كل بنات السعودية بهالشكل الكل يعرف العباية والحجاب حتى بكوريا فيه مسلمين ومسلمات بس للاسف انك تنتقد بنت بلدك بالطريقة ذي بس عشانها مالبست عباية او حجاب وتترك كيف قاعده تدرس بتخصص صعب ناهيك عن انها تدرس التخصص بجامعة بكوريا وبلغة كورية وزيادة عندها طلاقة باللغة الانجليزية والتركية ؟
@@GhGh-sj4wb تفشل ؟ ممكن توضح اشوي كيف تفشل؟ كيف ملابس تخليك تفشل؟؟ ترى فقط لأنها مو لابسه عباية لا يعني انها ماتستحي , اذا انت تشوف ان ملابس الشخص يحدد مستواه كأنسان فا هذي مصيبة فقط لأنها مالبست العباية لايعني انها اقل من اي بنت ثانية لابسه العباية كل شخص مختلف عن الثاني وموضوع الدين بين الشخص وربه لا انت ولا اللي مثلك يحكم على الناس , في اخلاق وشخصية واحترام كلها مهمة والبنت هذي تنطبق عليها كلها ومسافرة وتدرس ومتعلمة لغات وسوت كل شي صعب , كل شي عنها يحترم ويقدر ويفخر فيه
@@GhGh-sj4wbمالك دخل نلبس الي نبيه 💋💋🇸🇦💋🇸🇦💋
Kenza is so sweet and I love the way she expresses herself ❤
this is so much fun! and the egyptian guy is so cute. i wish this would've been longer though
I love This honestly cause I’m Saudi Egyptian and Moroccan so I understood a lot😂❤
Iran 🇮🇷 is Persian , the language is different🥰
Can you guys lower the music a little? Amazing video btw!
An Iranian will understand some Arabic because he studied Arabic in school. On the other hand, Arabs will not understand an Iranian, because Persian (Farsi) and Arabic are two completely different languages. The Persian language is a language from the Iranian group of Indo-European languages (Iranians are Indo-Europeans) and has nothing to do with the Arabic language. Arabic is a language belonging to the group of Semitic languages. The Persian language (Farsi) is more similar to European languages than to Arabic.
Right
Actually some Arabs in the Gulf (Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain) have some Persian words in their dialects some they can understand many Persian words.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Just like many people around the world know at least a few phrases and words in English.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Iraq is not a Gulf country.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg persian gulf
I really like Morocco 🇲🇦🕌🧕🏻, it’s a very interesting country and several languages are spoken. Moroccan Arabic, Berber languages, French and even Spanish in northern Morocco.
Tamazight is a language, not languages
@@John-pk9rw I think they meant dialects? Because thamazight has a lot of different dialects depending on where you're from ^^
@@John-pk9rwwhy you lying you think people are uneducated 😂😂😂😂
no it s language i can speak amazigh@@John-pk9rw
Also tunisia and algeria
As a Moroccan i would say that we can understand and/or speak different Arabic dialects because we grow up watching TV shows and programs of certain Arabic countries such as Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, UAE, especially Egypt
I'm moroccan and I can't understand all the countries located between lybia and irak
the fact that you see nothing wrong with them stating morocco is middle eastern shows your ignorance
Stop watching too much tv dude
@@AdamAzzr I’m Yemeni and can understand morracan well we have alot if similar words other dialects don’t have
@@ijustwannabehappier-v4973 Well morroco is in north africa, but in the media when they want to put all the arab country together they use the term middle east in a sense of cultural, this is the reason why singers or footbalers from maghreb get throphies or award for middle eastern
For the people here who don't know, _Farsi (or "Persian" - the main language of Iran) is an Indo-European_ language, which means it is related to English, Russian, French, Greek, Armenian, Hindi, and so on, and so on. _Arabic, on the other hand, is a Semitic language_ and is related to Hebrew, Amharic and Aramaic. You find plenty of words in Persian that are similar to words in all the other Indo-European languages I mentioned, and there are also many structural similarities. Just take a look at the vocabulary for family members or numbers in Persian, then compare it to Arabic and you will see what I mean. Here are a couple examples:
- Daughter in Farsi is _dokhtar_
- Father is _pedar_
- Mother is _madar_
- Brother is _baradar_
- And, not a family word but still interesting, the word for "bad" in Farsi is identical to English, even being pronounced the same: _bad_
If you happen to speak more than one Indo-European language, you're bound to notice even more similarities. Putting him in this group is absurd, it would have made more sense to put him in a group with a Greek speaker, a Hindu speaker, a Russian-speaker and an Armenian-speaker...
Get a German speaker along with an Arabic and Morroccan and throw a Gaelic speaker in that would be interesting.
Good idea 👍
Sorry to disappoint you but this is not even Moroccan what she’s speaking
@@John-pk9rw its moroccan darija
@@KoLoLoZ Sorry to disappoint you but Darija is Arabic, not Moroccan. Besides that, it’s called Darija, not Moroccan Darija. You don’t have to add the word “Moroccan” to make it look as if you speak Moroccan lol. You don’t. Just accept that you speak Arabic.
@@naawam3027 1. They don’t understand your Darija (Arabic dialect) because it’s a different dialect. That’s why it’s called dialect. Go learn what a dialect means 2. “Middle Easterners don’t understand me. I’m Moroccan and I can’t understand your Darija either. How do you explain that?😂
As Arab Person from Yemen, I love Morocco accent because it is so passionate and has the Amazigh, Arabic, and french mix 🤩
It also has a bit of Spanish.
@@andiehernandez1995 Interesting , I had no idea about Spanish
@@badriahhaidar9073 مطبخ -كوزينا =cocina for example
@@azouzn7ila112 the same in French and English so it must be Latin right?!
@@andiehernandez1995 no
We Moroccans it's easy for us to understand and speak other Arabic dialect , but what I noticed that the Moroccan girl when it comes to " hobbies" she could speak Arabic instead of entering some french words such as " sports, picnic, la natation, caffes... " But she she do it in purpose to show that why other Arab countries can't understand us because we always mixed Arabic with french but not all of Moroccans of course... For example if I were her I would say : كيعجبني نقرا كتاب ، كيعبجني نمشي نخيم ، كنشرب قهوة ، كتعجبني الرياضة ... And yeah this is also Moroccan Arabic.
I speak french and I still don't understand your arabic words it's really sooo difficult for us. When I was in university I had many morrocan friends and we used to talk in french in order to understand each other. I think the major problem for us is that you delete all the vowels from words
@@TheLibanais yes maybe this is the problem but you should know that we don't only mixed Arabic with french but also with some amazigh words that's why you find it difficult , but for me I think you should only concentrate little bit and you will understand it
it's not just french, it's also a lot amazigh words. I know arabic and french but still get sometimes confused at a morroccan accent.
@@raniabouslamti2862 yes. When you speak slowly I can understand. I hope one day I'll be able to understand perfectly :)
@@TheLibanais yes you're right we speak fast that's why you don't catch it that's another reason ☺️ insha Allah I hope so 👍🏻
It's a bit annoying that the background music is same volume or even a bit louder than their voices.
Farsi and Arabic, such beautiful two languages ❤
اللغه الفارسيه تقارن ب التركية والكردية
اللغه العربيه لغة عظيمة لا مجال للمقارنة
It’s amazing 😂😂I’m really love this group ❤
I speak French and Persian, so it was easier for me to understand the Moroccan dialect, between the 3 arabic dialects 😆also I have many moroccan friends and I travelled to Morocco :)
we are you from it s good welcome to morocco
I understand almost all of them even the Moroccan because I’m from Algeria 🇩🇿
For Algerians, the Moroccan dialect is easier for us to understand since it’s very similar to our Dardja
Egyptian guy is handsome! 🙈🙊