Can North Africans Understand Maltese?

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast  3 года назад +239

    How much of the Maltese language can you understand? Hope you enjoy the video! Be sure to follow us on Instagram and send us all your questions, suggestions and feedback: instagram.com/bahadoralast

    • @mahirhaxhiu7846
      @mahirhaxhiu7846 3 года назад +8

      The Moroccan girl is sweet

    • @ahvaziarablion9204
      @ahvaziarablion9204 3 года назад +7

      @@mahirhaxhiu7846 all Arab girls are sweet

    • @faizullah6671
      @faizullah6671 3 года назад

      Please more Bengali videos

    • @alexeiabrikosov360
      @alexeiabrikosov360 3 года назад +10

      @Harj Singh Waraich I have been to Morocco and I was fine with just speaking English, though knowing some French can be helpful at times, I would say most of the young Moroccans I met spoke English just fine.

    • @SSSS-xj7qg
      @SSSS-xj7qg 3 года назад +2

      I understood nearly 95% of it even though I'm not North African!

  • @osamaroum
    @osamaroum 3 года назад +1999

    As an algerian it's funny to me understanding about 60% of Maltese without learning it, I can say Maltese is a mixture between arabic "Maghrebi dialect" with some Italian language .

    • @anthony.m5432
      @anthony.m5432 3 года назад +33

      It’s Phoenician

    • @Lion-qv7ns
      @Lion-qv7ns 3 года назад +29

      @@anthony.m5432
      Yes they often forget to mention the phoenicians that they are also the owners of the land in north africa and they have occupied parts of europe including Italy as we know their most famous leaders hannibal and their origin from the arabian peninsula they came from the old days so there are words similar to the Phoenician language in arabic and maghreb dialect and also amazigh people use alphabet originating from the middle east
      according to the monuments in north africa its ancient inhabitants have a connection to the civilizations that were on the middle east

    • @manou1157
      @manou1157 3 года назад +98

      @@Lion-qv7ns owner of the land? Where did get that from?? Myths, some of them came as refugees to North Africa,, amazigh gave them a place to stay, and Hannibal's mom was an amazigh, intermarriage was very common. Maltese sounds like maghrébin Arabic mixed with Italian , in fact most of the words he said can be traced to Arabic (North African prononciation) , nothing to do with Phoenician.

    • @yasminekaci1406
      @yasminekaci1406 3 года назад +5

      Same !

    • @kaiserof6treet
      @kaiserof6treet 3 года назад +53

      Im Proud Arab Algerian🇩🇿🇩🇿

  • @moezlamloum
    @moezlamloum 3 года назад +690

    maltese sounded like a tunisian born and raised in italy but learned tunisian dialect from his parents this is weird wow

    • @kadirouabdou1592
      @kadirouabdou1592 3 года назад +61

      Because historically it is 😂

    • @user-zh6bc4ei9o
      @user-zh6bc4ei9o 3 года назад +1

      Welcome to the algerian desert
      ruclips.net/video/brwh-GdgiLw/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/RdFkC6Gtb5A/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/qXM6_gb-WUI/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/jJSj5oxmAPQ/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/P9UkjSeg4k4/видео.html

    • @refkatayeb3222
      @refkatayeb3222 3 года назад +29

      That’s because Malta was ruled by Tunisia. That’s a fact

    • @mdmf117
      @mdmf117 3 года назад +8

      I have a Lebanese friend who tells me Maltese sounds exactly like a Lebanese person speaking to a child in baby terminology.

    • @chaamohamed6583
      @chaamohamed6583 3 года назад +4

      It sounds more like Libyan

  • @miriamacquaroli2989
    @miriamacquaroli2989 Год назад +97

    I am Italian and I graduated in Arabic language with my thesis on Tunisian dialect. I understood 100% of the speech. On top of that, I worked 2 years in Malta and I also took a short language course! Congratulations to Sean, you are really great in Maltese despite not being Maltese!!!

    • @JupiterMoon777
      @JupiterMoon777 Год назад +9

      He said he was born in the UK but is a Matlese speaker, which probably means he is ethnically Matlese with Matlese parents and mother-tongue. No British or an ethnic English man would introduce themselves with: "I was born in the U.K." Usually a comment of where one is born denotes not being from there, especially in introductions.

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 10 месяцев назад

      @@JupiterMoon777But he’s a British citizen for sure, what do you mean “no British would”? You can be British and of Maltese descent. Malta used to belong to Great Britain until no long ago.

    • @jouinihassen2699
      @jouinihassen2699 9 месяцев назад

      انت مهف برشا هه

    • @evothenew3333
      @evothenew3333 9 месяцев назад

      He said he was Maltese in the beginning.

    • @Wow-iw5vh
      @Wow-iw5vh 4 месяца назад

      Tunisian accent is not original is is just Arabic heavily influenced by the language of Phoenician colonizers who came from Lebanon, so Maltese, Libyan and East Algerian accent share Phoenician words with Tunisian accent
      I wanna to explain to commenters that East Algerian accent is different from Tunisian accent
      In East Algeria a lot of words are different from words used by Tunisians and we pronounce a lot of words different from Tunisians I'll mention some words not all of them
      in East Algerian accent we say سل = pull while Tunisians say شد = pull
      we say صوارد = money while Tunisian say فلوس like Egyptians
      We say ارواح = come while Tunisians say ايجي like Moroccans
      we say نروح للكوزينة = im going to the kitchen while Tunisians say نمشي للكوجينة
      We say اهدر = talk while Tunisians say اتكلم
      in East Algeria we say يرغي = he screams while Tunisians say = يصيح
      we say اوقف = stand while Tunisians say = قوم
      In East Algeria we say فركت = search while Tunisians say = فرقص
      In East Algeria we say كاين = there is. it exist while Tunisians say يوجد و فما
      we say وشيا = what while Tunisians say شنوا
      we say سقسي = ask while Tunisians say اسال
      we say سخفت على بيتزا = i craved pizza while Tunisians say شهيت بيزا
      we say ضركا = now more than توا which is used by Libyans more
      We say ياسر = a lot more
      we pronounce most words with ق as G while Tunisians pronounce words with ق as ق and we don't use masculine endings when referring to women.

  • @fellanefnaf3960
    @fellanefnaf3960 3 года назад +2126

    Maltese is basically how my cousins from France try to speak Algerian dialect when they come home

    • @user-gr2Algeria
      @user-gr2Algeria 3 года назад +39

      😂😂😂😂👍👍 true

    • @aymaneghammat5412
      @aymaneghammat5412 3 года назад +19

      🤣🤣

    • @yonniiisan
      @yonniiisan 3 года назад +26

      Kaaghim 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @sof8386
      @sof8386 3 года назад +26

      I'm dying 🤣 especially childerns 😂

    • @fatherodepus5978
      @fatherodepus5978 3 года назад +39

      When a French tying to speak Arabic, automatically have a Algerian Arabic accent 😀

  • @PhyllisienneBrincat
    @PhyllisienneBrincat 3 года назад +728

    I’m Maltese. How proud I felt while I was watching this video. Well done to you all and thank for appreciating our language.

    • @Maria-cz5ro
      @Maria-cz5ro 3 года назад +33

      It’s so similar to our darija Moroccan omg I was shocked to know we have same language

    • @chouaibbenali5201
      @chouaibbenali5201 3 года назад +20

      I'm Algerian and it's pretty crazy when i think how much we share together,i really wonder how much culture we all share together

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +8

      We have to be more realistic and tell the truth.
      Every person brings the Maltese language close to his dialect because it is very similar to the Arabic language and is very similar to the dialects of the Maghreb, and it also has some similarities with the Arab Mashreq in some words, especially the lack of pronunciation of the qaf, in general the dialects of the Maghreb are very similar, but in fact it is more a dialect close to the Maltese language It is the Tunisian dialect.
      For example in the Maltese language and the Tunisian dialect:
      ''inħobbok''
      ''nagħmel''
      Algerian dialect and Moroccan dialect:
      ''nibghik''
      ''ndir''
      Libyan dialect:
      ''nibbik''
      ''ndir''
      Arab Mashreq dialects:
      'b'ahibbak'
      ''b'aghmil''
      In Standard Arabic:
      ohobbok
      afghal

    • @Salim54321
      @Salim54321 3 года назад +6

      Beatiful language

    • @meimene2394
      @meimene2394 3 года назад +2

      It is very very similar to Arabic and specially the algerian\ Moroccan , Tunisia and lybian dialects.

  • @rightslip8345
    @rightslip8345 3 года назад +32

    I am of Maltese Heritage and a 1st generation English speaker. I was at a Palestinian wedding & the table asked about me. When I said my heritage is Maltese & explained the language they asked my to speak it. They were absolutely pleasantly shocked! And a good time was secured from that moment on.

  • @ZezoSaa
    @ZezoSaa 3 года назад +472

    I like the Maltese guy very much, his personality is amazing, hope he's doing well 👍🏻

  • @MatCumb91
    @MatCumb91 3 года назад +603

    This was so interesting to watch as a Maltese person. From personal experience, when I visited Morocco, it was a bit surprising when our tour guides understood what me and my friends were talking about in Maltese. They thought we weren't Europeans since our language is so similar to theirs :D

    • @living_peace
      @living_peace 3 года назад +8

      Are Maltese? I think Maltese is closer to Hebrew than Arabic...I like visit to your country 😊😊👍👍

    • @curiousmind_
      @curiousmind_ 3 года назад +108

      @@living_peace lol nice joke, you got more?

    • @meriem7069
      @meriem7069 3 года назад +68

      @@living_peace just because Hebrew is close to arabic ..
      Anyway Maltese is clearly closer to Arabic because of you know .. history

    • @missyana8746
      @missyana8746 3 года назад +44

      @@living_peace Are you joking ?? How come its closer to Hebrew and the semitic words in Maltese are all from arabic lol

    • @wewenang5167
      @wewenang5167 3 года назад +22

      @@living_peace Closer to hebrew? lol how? Most Maltese cant even understand Hebrew :P

  • @trishabela7663
    @trishabela7663 3 года назад +64

    I was so pleased to find this! I’m an 82 year old English Lady who learnt Maltese over the years from my in laws and travelling back and forth. Recently I took a friend who fell and broke her hip so we had 5 weeks there while I looked after her. I spent the time talking to locals. It was wonderful. I’m thrilled I understood all of your programme especially as there are no Maltese in the part of the UK I live. I only get the chance to speak and listen if I’m there. Thank you SO much..

    • @kounmazian
      @kounmazian 3 года назад +1

      As salam alaykoum my sister

  • @rouahabouzamazem32
    @rouahabouzamazem32 3 года назад +64

    As a Libyan, I can say that I understood up to 85% of Maltese, it’s a real mix of the North African dialect, I used to live with Tunisian flatmates when I was in Europe, and whenever they ask for a hotspot, they be like “ partagili” and “ connectili” I think it’s quite the same how Maltese use verbs, to mix the Arab with Latin and then you get the verb !
    Interesting!
    And regarding the last Maltese proverb you said which was about “your heart goes where your legs lead you” in Libya we say “ yemchou errejlin win yheb il-khater” 🇱🇾❤️
    God job guys, and thank you for enlightening us about Maltese language, now I wanna go to Malta for sure 🔥🙏🏻

  • @kayvond9270
    @kayvond9270 3 года назад +208

    Glad you chose Sean as the Maltese speaker, it was fun to hear him share his language & culture with the rest! 🇲🇹

  • @zinebbnh5
    @zinebbnh5 3 года назад +310

    As a Moroccan who knows some Italian words, I can say that I literally understood 95% of Maltese. I'm totally adding Malta in my MUST places to visit LIST..

    • @michelealbanese3261
      @michelealbanese3261 2 года назад

      No please (I'm Italian), you moroccans ruin any place where you go

    • @Kalimat2023
      @Kalimat2023 2 года назад

      Hello, I transcribed an old malteese song in arabic here it is ruclips.net/video/tVq1HYnPNFc/видео.html

    • @badergargum4944
      @badergargum4944 2 года назад +4

      mzian

    • @ashbri
      @ashbri 2 года назад +1

      dont
      i live here and it sucks

    • @badergargum4944
      @badergargum4944 2 года назад +9

      @@ashbri we will go no matter what

  • @donyamalak
    @donyamalak 3 года назад +342

    Let's just appreciate how friendly is the Maltese guy

    • @bettyrose5387
      @bettyrose5387 3 года назад +12

      As a Moroccan I find his face so fimiliars he looks like the principal of my school i swaer he's lovely as well

    • @samleboeuf6993
      @samleboeuf6993 3 года назад +5

      Yes but be aware that most Maltese are not as friendly like him unfortunately. Especially with people from Arabic or islamic world

    • @bettyrose5387
      @bettyrose5387 3 года назад +2

      @@samleboeuf6993 we got used to it whenever I talk to a non Muslim non Arab I have to expain myself 😂💔💔💔😭

  • @danielmasters5484
    @danielmasters5484 3 года назад +228

    Excellent video! I’ll never forget standing in the airport in Malta and looking up and reading this sign - Stanna wara la linea safra. Wait behind (Arabic) the line (Italian) yellow (Arabic)!

    • @luiginocm
      @luiginocm 3 года назад +38

      You have a good memory, though the exact spelling is "Stenna wara l-linja safra". I'm Maltese.......

    • @danielmasters5484
      @danielmasters5484 3 года назад +1

      @@luiginocm Thanks!

    • @ghomraniadel9243
      @ghomraniadel9243 3 года назад +14

      Stanna wara la linea safra , The same context in the Algerian east hhhhh.

    • @Nashmi-JO
      @Nashmi-JO 3 года назад +5

      Stanna wara is the same in levantine dialects also 'wait behind'

    • @radowane101
      @radowane101 3 года назад

      😂🤣😂😂🤣

  • @mtgdragons7515
    @mtgdragons7515 2 года назад +8

    I'm an English Teacher in Malta and today I did a lesson on the Maltese language and RUclips decided to recommend this to me :)

  • @zedisdead9549
    @zedisdead9549 3 года назад +380

    As a French and Algerian Arabic speaker i understood almost every thing

    • @mini_jkooki_minkookieeeee
      @mini_jkooki_minkookieeeee 3 года назад +32

      @Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi cut the crap and enough with this sick mind full of conspiracy theories of yours
      We humans are created to get know each others and to learn from each others

    • @mini_jkooki_minkookieeeee
      @mini_jkooki_minkookieeeee 3 года назад +19

      @Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi what idols that we gonna to worship?!!! We worship only Allah and we are aware of everything don't worry
      Don't forget the command of Allah "وخلقناكم شعوبا وقبائل لتعارفوا ان أكرمكم عند الله اتقاكم"
      He creates us in order to re-know each others and this is possible only through knowing the languages and dialects of one another

    • @donyamalak
      @donyamalak 3 года назад +3

      @Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi give proof of what you say

    • @zombieat
      @zombieat 3 года назад +3

      @Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi But whoever earns an offense or a sin and then blames it on an innocent [person] has taken upon himself a slander and manifest sin.

    • @blueeyes5065
      @blueeyes5065 3 года назад +2

      @@mini_jkooki_minkookieeeee I like your comment I totally agree with you.salam

  • @YacineBoussoufa
    @YacineBoussoufa 3 года назад +259

    As an Italian-Algerian, i can understand 90% of what he said.

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +11

      In fact, the Maltese language is similar to Tunisian with Italian, but has an influence on the dialects of the Maghreb and the dialects of the Levant.

    • @marsdz2271
      @marsdz2271 3 года назад +9

      @@njoumellil people from the east of Algeria have almost the same dialect as Tunisians , first time i spoke with a friend from the far east it was a bit hard for me to understand all of his vocabularies because I'm from far west so I understood morrocans better .

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +2

      @@marsdz2271
      It is strange to you how difficult it is for you to understand the eastern dialects, your western dialects are much more difficult.

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +7

      @@marsdz2271
      Yes, the dialects of eastern Algeria, such as Souk Ahras, Tebessa, and Oued Souf are Tunisian dialects, but the Annaba dialect is slightly different and has an Algerian character.

    • @marsdz2271
      @marsdz2271 3 года назад

      @@njoumellil true

  • @akirafarrugia2313
    @akirafarrugia2313 3 года назад +47

    Im from malta and im maltese and this made me proud of my language ❤️

    • @goombrick1239
      @goombrick1239 3 года назад +3

      Anka jien !

    • @S.mat19
      @S.mat19 5 месяцев назад

      It’s not your language it’s Arabic language bc Arabs invaded your country for hundreds of years

    • @melissafarrugia9531
      @melissafarrugia9531 5 месяцев назад +1

      ❤ from an Aussie Maltese Farrugia ❤️

    • @autodidactic5611
      @autodidactic5611 4 месяца назад

      @@melissafarrugia9531 From another Maltese Aussie Mizzi.

  • @louisfisher614
    @louisfisher614 3 года назад +58

    All participants were excellent and smart.

  • @yesid17
    @yesid17 3 года назад +122

    My first language is Spanish and I took Arabic in college and even just knowing a little fusha helped me understand a surprising amount! i agree with Yaser Maltese feels like just basically Arabic with some Romance mixed in lol

    • @Pidro__
      @Pidro__ 3 года назад +10

      In fact Spanish, Maltese and North African Arabic dialects share the same major two Aspects : Arabaising Latin words and Spanishing, Italianising or Berberising Arab hard sounds.

    • @alaeaft
      @alaeaft 3 года назад +5

      @@Pidro__ I'm moroccan, and I love how you described it.

    • @Pidro__
      @Pidro__ 3 года назад

      @@alaeaft
      Thanks.

    • @sinabagherisarvestani8924
      @sinabagherisarvestani8924 2 года назад +1

      Spain , southern Italy and Portugal and Malta were part of the Islamic emirate , so that is probably why Malta has a similar language to Arabic , apparently Malta and Arabic are very similar , I think the Malta language is a mixture of Italian , old Latin and Arabic and Spanish

    • @pro369
      @pro369 2 года назад +1

      Spanish is a wonderful language, I speak French, English plus Arabic, with a little bit of Spanish, glad to be led here. Wish you all the best youtubefam

  • @soozb15
    @soozb15 Год назад +5

    Great video! I'm half Maltese but grew up in England, speaking only English...This has made me want to learn Maltese!!

  • @christianaquilina5434
    @christianaquilina5434 3 года назад +252

    As a native Maltese, living in Malta, I can identify that the Maltese guy speaks it VERY well, but has lived abroad and with our arab cousins (minor accent shift). His pronunciation was over 95% perfect. Love this Video showing how similar our languages have remained, albeit slightly differring over the ages, almost seeing the evolution of the languages.

    • @SR-jx8yu
      @SR-jx8yu 3 года назад +14

      Yes, having been so long in the Arab world and being fluent in Arabic it’s probably easy for him to get mixed up with some things and perhaps make mistakes in Maltese ... thinking it’s correct Maltese but actually using an Arabic construction

    • @giltedged7529
      @giltedged7529 3 года назад

      @@SR-jx8yu To me , he's like a European-looking Arab speaking Maltese

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +13

      The Maltese language is derived from the extinct Sicilian Arabic dialect. In fact, the Maltese language is different from what it was. The ancient Maltese used to speak the Arabic alphabet fluently. I was surprised to hear Cantellina’s poem in the old Maltese dialect as if it were a poem in the Tunisian dialect, but at present the Maltese cannot pronounce Some Arabic alphabet well.
      I encourage our Maltese brothers to learn Arabic dialects and the classical Arabic language, and learn the origin of the words in their language and where they are derived from.
      It seems that the Maltese are very fortunate that they can learn Arabic easily.
      The Arabic language is the most difficult language in the world. It has more than twelve million words. This is Standard Arabic only, without mentioning the dialects.

    • @crunchevo8974
      @crunchevo8974 3 года назад +5

      There's a bit of struggle imo. Maybe they're over enunciating so people may have an easier time understanding. But definitely one of the best if not the best non native speakers I've heard.

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 3 года назад +3

      His knowledge of Arabic helps him communicate better with Arabic speakers but that doesn't influence his Maltese. He probably uses English as his main language, his Maltese pronunciation is on point but slightly Anglicized (the r's). There are Maltese born and bred folks who speak the same way. I think maybe "ikkonvertjaw" instead of "ikkonvertew" is a bit strange.

  • @kais9ch
    @kais9ch 3 года назад +65

    Bravo to that Maltese guy, he has a very energetic personality, and has a good knowledge of Arabic and Maltese. Nice video as well, keep up the good work.

  • @mariamaoug5772
    @mariamaoug5772 2 года назад +15

    It basically sounds like a foreigner who learned tunisian arabic haha
    I will be visiting Malta this summer hopefully can't wait for it!
    Greetings from Algiers♥️

    • @sora9702
      @sora9702 2 года назад +2

      It sounds like Libyans too 😭 literally the same thing

  • @VermontStrolls
    @VermontStrolls 3 года назад +81

    Every time it gets better and more professional, the way you convoy knowledge in a very fun show.
    At the end of each episode I learn more, but more importantly I gain this pleasant feeling of connectedness and brotherhood to the rest of the world by just simply digging for common roots in our languages. Thanks.

  • @harihari7570
    @harihari7570 3 года назад +80

    As an Algerian i think Maltease is the easiest language to learn as a second language.
    Loved the video guys, it was Awesome !

    • @malteseguy8451
      @malteseguy8451 3 года назад +3

      You spelled Maltese wrong.

    • @harihari7570
      @harihari7570 3 года назад +3

      @@malteseguy8451 my bad 😅.
      Maltese! 😁😉

    • @davidstanley4962
      @davidstanley4962 3 года назад +4

      Tbh I'm currently learning it and it's not as easy as you might think well at least for me!

    • @harihari7570
      @harihari7570 3 года назад +2

      @@davidstanley4962 of course it wouldn't be easy for a non Arabic speaker. But for Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian it's easy to understand, it's almost the same dialect added up by some Italian which make it some charming.

    • @tommydache9255
      @tommydache9255 2 года назад

      @@malteseguy8451 hhh the Maltese is wrong Arabic

  • @lionne8538
    @lionne8538 3 года назад +265

    I love the fact that we speak Maltese without even realize it 💞😃 🇲🇦

    • @superpunchie2540
      @superpunchie2540 3 года назад +9

      aw siehbi kif int

    • @lionne8538
      @lionne8538 3 года назад +5

      @@superpunchie2540 I'm ok and you 😁

    • @superpunchie2540
      @superpunchie2540 2 года назад +5

      @@lionne8538 mhux ħażin grazzi

    • @lionne8538
      @lionne8538 2 года назад

      @@superpunchie2540 😊😊

    • @sanchoodell6789
      @sanchoodell6789 2 года назад +9

      I'm Tunisian & *We* speak (a form of) Maltese too. Minus the Italian pollution!

  • @Ahmed-hy8eh
    @Ahmed-hy8eh 3 года назад +57

    It sounds like he's speaking Libyan dialect not Maltese lol its almost identical thats crazy, great video 🇱🇾🇲🇹

    • @giltedged7529
      @giltedged7529 3 года назад

      He probably was

    • @peppaslittleadventures5935
      @peppaslittleadventures5935 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, Maltese sounds like Libyan Arabic 😊

    • @hamrounisamira4837
      @hamrounisamira4837 3 года назад +2

      Catar non non non UK bé. Tunisa. Sa pais. Bé. Irehab UK Trémoille bé irehab UK non gbe catar UK dégage

    • @magrebinoberbero
      @magrebinoberbero Месяц назад

      🇩🇿🇱🇾🇲🇦🇹🇳💓💓💓

  • @mahirhaxhiu7846
    @mahirhaxhiu7846 3 года назад +45

    Sean has such a loving vibe! The kind of guy I'd like to listen to explain things :)

  • @LD-vl7cu
    @LD-vl7cu 3 года назад +12

    Back in 1968 a group of friends and I went camping at Chenoua plage (~50 miles from Algiers) where we happened to meet two young Maltese guys playing music. We sympathized, had dinner together and played some music. We were happily surprised by the language similarity. A day later they went off to wherever they planned to visit. These were the days where borders were practically open and hate was not common. I long for those days.

  • @Sepp37
    @Sepp37 3 года назад +31

    This was a great video!! As a moroccan, I knew that Maltese language is close to Maghrebi Arabic, but i didn't expect that I would understand most of it, so I think what helps is knowing the consonant shifts and the alphabet. Also, the Maltese guy was amazing and happy to expose us his beautiful language.

  • @alexj9603
    @alexj9603 3 года назад +101

    I don't speak any Arabic, but at least I could spot all the words of romance origin.

  • @souadfahmi3309
    @souadfahmi3309 3 года назад +5

    Hello from Morocco
    This is amazing. It's so easy to understand you .

    • @magrebinoberbero
      @magrebinoberbero Месяц назад

      Azul, tanmirt
      🇩🇿🇱🇾🇲🇦🇩🇿💓

  • @ilyeshammadi7278
    @ilyeshammadi7278 3 года назад +379

    As an Algerian, I'm so happy to see this kind of video that highlights our common heritage in the Mediterrane see area. The Maltese guy is so nice and so cultivated.

    • @amrdel2730
      @amrdel2730 2 года назад +3

      Yeah its our common mideteranean history tgat made us have close languages and perhaps culture our world is the medeteranean region not africa and not the arabs of middle east

    • @ninapark4342
      @ninapark4342 2 года назад +5

      Common heritage ??? Malta used to belong to Tunisia.

    • @ishakabdelalimbouziane1497
      @ishakabdelalimbouziane1497 2 года назад

      Nina Park Well don't we talk the same dialect? eager to appropriate anything u find as if it'll make u rich or something WE UNDERSTAND MALTESE AND WE HAVE IN COMMON WITH IT AS MUCH AS U DO STOP YOUR CHILDISH BEHAVIOR

    • @theawrasystringer6217
      @theawrasystringer6217 2 года назад

      @@amrdel2730 we are north African we are mediteranean

    • @theawrasystringer6217
      @theawrasystringer6217 2 года назад

      @@ninapark4342 yeah with the help of whom ? Of course with the Algerian pirates don t forget that history

  • @cba2make1up
    @cba2make1up 3 года назад +59

    Sean is such a great guy and simply a joy to be around.
    Also I cannot emphasize this enough, Tunisian and Maltese sound extremely similar it's crazy! Great video.

    • @sinabagherisarvestani8924
      @sinabagherisarvestani8924 2 года назад +2

      Spain , southern Italy and Portugal and Malta were part of the Islamic emirate , so that is probably why Malta has a similar language to Arabic , apparently Malta and Arabic are very similar , I think the Malta language is a mixture of Italian , old Latin and Arabic and Spanish

  • @DreeTheSupplier
    @DreeTheSupplier 3 года назад +12

    I am 🇵🇭 Filipino and 🇲🇹 Maltese. Thanks for sharing and shedding light on the beautiful Maltese language 😌 and so cool how North Africans understand it too!

  • @SamsungJ-qe9bs
    @SamsungJ-qe9bs 3 года назад +33

    I'm Algerien and i understood most of what he said ..

  • @ac1dicsalt
    @ac1dicsalt 3 года назад +56

    Hi a fluent Maltese speaker here from Malta, this is such a interesting video and also the word "minħabba" means "because" so the whole sentences in english is: "It has been half a year since I came to Malta because of COVID." The word "Pjeċir" in the text is actually spelled "pjaċir" and "Tgħiex" is actually spelled "Tgħix". :) Overall, well done!

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 3 года назад

      Pjecir tintuza imma. Varjanti ta’ pjacir, biss mhux standard.

    • @ac1dicsalt
      @ac1dicsalt 3 года назад

      @@mattiamele3015 Imma f'dan il-kaz le il-kelma pjecir ma tintużax

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 3 года назад

      @@ac1dicsalt Ifhem jien dejjem pjacir ghidt, però naf li hemm min jghid pjecir ukoll, bhal dan tal-video. Ma rridx immerik.

    • @ac1dicsalt
      @ac1dicsalt 3 года назад

      @@mattiamele3015 Hekk ma nafx issa ghax personalment lil hadd ma smajt lil xi hadd jghid pjecir minflok pjacir :/

    • @mirabel6715
      @mirabel6715 3 года назад

      Thanks for explaning that word " minhabba"
      Dan kelma was the most difficult for me as algerian. Lol

  • @mohammedyacinebouacida1712
    @mohammedyacinebouacida1712 2 года назад +3

    Thank you Guys ,really appreciate your contribution

  • @AngshumanBiswas23
    @AngshumanBiswas23 3 года назад +14

    Everybody seemed so knowledgeable. Fantastic video!

  • @arkham1329
    @arkham1329 3 года назад +28

    I've waited for such a video for years! Since I've known Bahador's concept and his work on this channel basically! And I couldn't be more satisfied! We had participants from all over the Maghreb region of North Africa along with the Maltese speaker whose knowledge of Arabic was the cherry on the cake! Everyone was amazing! Whether at connecting the dots and guessing almost everything, or at giving adequate comments here and there. Thank you Bahador, Sean and to all my North African people for this incredible video ❤

  • @samhussein9100
    @samhussein9100 2 года назад +7

    Sean is such a great guy, i love how he's explaining things

  • @zainabal-marayati5525
    @zainabal-marayati5525 3 года назад +26

    Sean has such a positive and friendly attitude!! And he's very informed on the subject.

  • @chaymala6496
    @chaymala6496 3 года назад +12

    I'm tunisian who never visited Malta and never heard Maltese language before. I found it astonishing that I understood about 60 percent of what the Maltese guy said from the start. This was very entertaining and informative video. And I feel very motivated to visit Malta now. Much love to all the participants. especially the maltese guy for sharing his culture and personal experiences with us. He has a great personality .

    • @SeverityOne
      @SeverityOne 10 месяцев назад +2

      My late father-in-law, who was Maltese, told me that, if he chose his vocabulary carefully and restricted himself to words of Arabic origin as much as possible, Tunisians would understand him.

  • @mister4593
    @mister4593 2 года назад +2

    I LOVE this video thanks, soukran,hafek, Im an moroccan amazigh , born and rased in the Netherlands.

  • @mabdewn
    @mabdewn 3 года назад +141

    As an Egyptian Arabic speaker married to an Algerian, a lot of it was intelligible. But to a standard Egyptian Arabic speaker this would be a lot tougher

    • @mouath_14
      @mouath_14 3 года назад +1

      Makes sense

    • @lukman_427
      @lukman_427 3 года назад

      @@Noorinvests lol

    • @ilosayan
      @ilosayan 3 года назад +1

      @@Noorinvests 🤦🏻‍♂️Such a troll comment.

    • @Noorinvests
      @Noorinvests 3 года назад

      @@ilosayan it’s not a troll comment, you’re just not African.

    • @Noorinvests
      @Noorinvests 3 года назад

      @@ilosayan africa is for Africans, if your recall, your Caucasian arabic people from Morocco decided to attack the west African Songhai Muslim empire and collapse it in 1590, and then you collaborated with the English and other European countries to run the slave trade

  • @Dzlyesful
    @Dzlyesful 3 года назад +447

    As an Algerian I understood like 99% of Maltese, but I have to say it is way closer to Tunisian dialect.

    • @butt3rcxp_572
      @butt3rcxp_572 3 года назад +48

      Yeah like im tunisian and like i understood almost everything. It even sounds similar Tunisian like the accent and everything-
      It feels like its a mixture between italian and north-african dialects

    • @butt3rcxp_572
      @butt3rcxp_572 3 года назад +1

      Yeah like im Tunisian and i understood almost everything. It even sounded so similar to Tunisian like the accent and everything-
      It feels like a mixture between italian and north-african dialects

    • @broader.horizons
      @broader.horizons 3 года назад

      تقولو الراجل تاعها في تونس؟ 😁
      حنا نقولو راجلها

    • @nayasavage
      @nayasavage 3 года назад +16

      Most east Algerian cities too

    • @jikuclt7172
      @jikuclt7172 3 года назад +5

      yh the pronounciation of the words is more tunisian

  • @itslamarspamzz3560
    @itslamarspamzz3560 3 года назад +7

    It’s VERYYY RARE that Libyans get to participate in yt videos, i am super happy they get to participate more!!🤍🇱🇾

  • @benelhajdahmenwael5063
    @benelhajdahmenwael5063 3 года назад +55

    as a Tunisian, I can tell that I almost understood everything (reading the sentences was very helpful)

  • @HxBoy9
    @HxBoy9 3 года назад +5

    You did more for the people of earth than most governments and organizations combined.thank you Bahador from Tunisia

  • @MarcoTheMediterranean
    @MarcoTheMediterranean 3 года назад +12

    This might be my fav video that you’ve ever done!

  • @Ahmed-pf3lg
    @Ahmed-pf3lg 3 года назад +231

    Maltese uses a lot of standard Arabic tbh, and their accent isn’t very strong like Algerian or Moroccan. It sounds more like Tunisian and Libyan, which are almost 100% intelligible to Middle Easterners.. so yes Maltese is fairly easy to understand even for Middle Easterners, the only issue is the Italian/French/English words.

    • @Dingleberry_123
      @Dingleberry_123 3 года назад +25

      Tunisian sounds like a beautiful mixture of Maghrebi & Levantine Arabic

    • @Ahmed-pf3lg
      @Ahmed-pf3lg 3 года назад +17

      @@Dingleberry_123
      Yes they do have a slight levantine accent in their speech, but I believe you also hear this accent in Tunisian and Libyan anyways.

    • @Dingleberry_123
      @Dingleberry_123 3 года назад

      @@Ahmed-pf3lg Yes this is true

    • @qwertt-tg8rd
      @qwertt-tg8rd 3 года назад +17

      Us Maltese can find it difficult to understand Libyan/Tunisian/Algerian/Morrocan etc when we hear them speak. Meanwhile they can understand us 90% of the time

    • @Ahmed-pf3lg
      @Ahmed-pf3lg 3 года назад +9

      @@qwertt-tg8rd
      Well that’s because Maltese is only like 60% Arabic.
      While Arabic is almost 100% Arabic or arabized words (even if their french/italian the pronunciation becomes Arabized).

  • @DreeTheSupplier
    @DreeTheSupplier 3 года назад +33

    I’m half 🇲🇹 and half 🇵🇭. I mostly understand Tagalog but I wanna learn Maltese. I never knew how similar it was to Arabic. Seeing the North Africans understand it is so cool! Thanks for shedding light on my Maltese heritage sir 😌✨

    • @wewewowo960
      @wewewowo960 2 года назад +4

      Malta is a historically Tunisian territory the Maltese accent is the closest to the Tunisian accent besides Maltese Arabic is Sicilian Arabic which was also a territory of the kingdom of Iffriqya of Africa therefore of Tunisia

    • @rob_loxxO_o
      @rob_loxxO_o Год назад

      @@wewewowo960 add to that the andalusiyan arabic that appeared in Spain during the reign of the Umayad and nasrid empires

  • @yass5671
    @yass5671 3 года назад +57

    OMG the first time in my life I feel I can understand a language without being able to speak it 😅!! ..shout out to my north africains and maltese people

  • @IzzyMontana
    @IzzyMontana 3 года назад +15

    I was born and raised in Germany but my familiy is from Lebanon. So I learned Arabic through my parents but even as a non-Northafrican I understood almost 50% of Maltese. If not more! I am really fascinated. By the way, Sean seems like such a cool guy. Very friendly and always with a smile on his face. I wish him all the best.

  • @ZooMoo315
    @ZooMoo315 3 года назад +43

    I’m from Syria and I understood around 90% of the paragraphs
    For me Maltese language sounded close to the Tunisian accent
    Much love to all Mediterranean brothers and sisters

    • @GG-ff6hh
      @GG-ff6hh 2 года назад +5

      Same .. I am from iraq 🇮🇶

    • @mubarakfarhan3115
      @mubarakfarhan3115 Год назад +4

      Me to l am from Yemen

    • @fadelaelzalet8674
      @fadelaelzalet8674 Год назад +1

      قريبة من اللهجة الليبية اكتر العديد من العائلات المالطية من اصول طرابلسية

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@fadelaelzalet8674
      The Maltese language is the same as the Tunisian dialect

  • @historicastafiilyy1588
    @historicastafiilyy1588 3 года назад +34

    Maltese is similar to Maghrebian dialect since it comes from Arabic and have been influenced by Tunisians. Algerian have more difficult to understand it but we can easily understand more with writing like 70% or 80%
    Excellent work Bahador thanks for this video 🙏🙏 lot of love to our
    Love to our Maltese cousins 🇩🇿🇲🇦🇱🇾🇹🇳❤️🇲🇹

    • @last_hope
      @last_hope 3 года назад +5

      I'm algerian and literally understood everything...

    • @historicastafiilyy1588
      @historicastafiilyy1588 3 года назад

      @@last_hope it depends Algerian but yea we can understand it

    • @sof8386
      @sof8386 3 года назад +3

      I'm Algerian (extrem ouest near morrocan borders) and i understood 99%

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +5

      I am Tunisian. It is true that the Tunisian dialect is very close to the Maltese language, but all the words in the dialects of the Maghreb are known and similar. They can understand the Maltese language as easily as we understand it.

    • @historicastafiilyy1588
      @historicastafiilyy1588 3 года назад +1

      @@njoumellil yea of course we can understand it.

  • @brandongarcia2765
    @brandongarcia2765 3 года назад +22

    I love each time their faces lit up when they understood something in Maltese!

  • @Demitchii
    @Demitchii 2 года назад +4

    3:37 Whoa! 😲😲 My reaction right off the bat that I had to pause the vid for a sec lol I just about understood most of what was read! 🇸🇦🇲🇹 How crazy cool is this?

  • @Momonosekai
    @Momonosekai 3 года назад +18

    Wow Bahador you never fail to impress me with your content...
    My parents are Arab-Moroccan but I was born in Germany that makes me speak Darija(Moroccan Dialect), Standard Arabic, German, English, French, Korean, Japanese and some Spanish
    I was so surprised that I was able to basically understand like 80-90% of Maltese...Thats sooo interesting
    Thanks for educating us once again🙏
    I will always keep supporting you
    Keep it up👏❤

  • @jmudikun
    @jmudikun 3 года назад +8

    ما شاء الله
    Bahador
    As a Spanish and French speaker who knows FusHa and Moroccan Darija this was so wonderful to watch
    🥰🥰🥰
    It was really enjoyable and another reminder of how culturally connected we all are
    Thank you

  • @hichamelalaouiabidi9096
    @hichamelalaouiabidi9096 2 года назад +3

    That’s really enjoyable to watch! Loved it immensely! Well done guys ❤️
    I’ve had idea of similarities between Maltese and Arabic especially the Arabic Darija of the MAGHREB. I am Moroccan British and I can easily say that Maltese language is as close as to my native language with the help of my knowledge of Latin languages. Thank you all for this beautiful experience. It gives me more pleasure and willing to visit Malta 🇲🇹 in future inshallah ❤️

  • @dd0708
    @dd0708 3 года назад +11

    The Woman from Morocco 🇲🇦
    The Man from Algeria 🇩🇿
    The Woman from Tunisia 🇹🇳
    The Woman from Libya 🇱🇾
    The Man from Malta 🇲🇹
    Thats them, but they were trying to understand the man from Malta.

    • @marsdz2271
      @marsdz2271 3 года назад +1

      The most useless comment on internet so far

    • @dd0708
      @dd0708 3 года назад

      Lol

  • @LS-zd5mm
    @LS-zd5mm 3 года назад +19

    I'm half Maltese and my Saudi Arabian roommate at University in England was shocked and smiling when I started saying the Maltese numbers lol. Anyway, I wish I was at Cafe Cordina now buying ice cream.

  • @AABb-hs9jt
    @AABb-hs9jt 2 года назад +2

    امتنا هي امة الاسلام (ان هذه امتكم امة واحدة) . نحن قوم اعزنا الله بالاسلام،
    افتخروا بهويتنا الاسلامية دين القوة والاخلاق

  • @linguafiqari
    @linguafiqari 3 года назад +5

    Grazzi, Bahador, ta' filmat ieħor dwar il-Malti! Dan kien interessanti ħafna għax ma tantx hemm filmati onlajn li juru kemm huma kapaċi kelliema ta' djaletti Għarbin tal-Afrika ta' Fuq jifhmu l-Malti. Ħadt ħafna gost narah.
    Thank you, Bahador, for another video about Maltese! This one was really interesting because there aren't that many videos online that show how much Maltese speakers of North African dialects of Arabic are able to understand. I really enjoyed watching it.

    • @drissexx
      @drissexx 3 года назад

      hna tansaynu videowat okhra bhal hadu bach nt'arfu ala logha lmalteya

  • @dianegrech473
    @dianegrech473 3 года назад +88

    As a Maltese, I found this video super interesting!

    • @Pidro__
      @Pidro__ 3 года назад +4

      I'm from Algeria, and I have understood everything, have you understood what were the North Africans saying?

    • @curiousmind_
      @curiousmind_ 3 года назад +1

      I was surprised that you guys say Allah ibarek
      I thought this was exclusive to Algerians

    • @dianegrech473
      @dianegrech473 3 года назад +7

      @@Pidro__ I wouldn't say I fully understood it but yes whenever I hear arabic I do pick up some words here and there.

    • @dianegrech473
      @dianegrech473 3 года назад +8

      @@Pidro__ also I think you would find it even easier to understand the Gozitan accent/dialect. I'm actually from Gozo, the sister island of Malta.

    • @Pidro__
      @Pidro__ 3 года назад +3

      @@dianegrech473
      Is it a Maltese or Italian island?
      I'm curious to hear this dialect!

  • @nathanielattard9268
    @nathanielattard9268 3 года назад +12

    Such an interesting video. As a Maltese, it feels so good that people around the world can somehow understand a semitic language which mixes English, Italian, Arabic and many other languages together. In fact Kċina comes Kucina in Italian meaning Kitchen! 😊

    • @rehan3600
      @rehan3600 2 года назад +3

      The base is Arabic. It’s basically an Arabic dialect, for the most part. If Moroccan Darija-with all of its Amazigh and French words-can be classified as an Arabic dialect, then Maltese is absolutely an Arabic dialect.

    • @23xz
      @23xz 3 месяца назад

      @@rehan3600bro it’s not morrocan stop claiming shit to be Moroccan without research or facts the facts is it’s the closest to the tunsian dialect and the base kf Maltese language is the maghrebi dialect aka Algeria tunsia and Morocco

  • @joelkaplan5011
    @joelkaplan5011 3 года назад +5

    I love the vibe of your videos!! It's connecting people globally. It also seems like they build friendships through the process. I sure hope your participants end up maintaining the frienship you started between them. It would be great to see. ☺😊

  • @youssefkchaou869
    @youssefkchaou869 3 года назад +125

    so I am a teenager from Tunisia and I speak, along with arabic, French and English and when I speak casually I would find myself often using verbs and terms from the french and "Arab-ify" them and I sound exactly like the Maltese spoken in this vid. This led me to believe that maltese eveolved exactly how me and other teenagers in my country would speak. For example when he said "yconvertiw" which is the Maltese verb for "to convert" it sounds exactly how I would express the same verb in my daily/casual speech.

    • @KNG-fm1kj
      @KNG-fm1kj 3 года назад +6

      I'm tunisian and I only know like 8 french-tunisian all day words

    • @maysaswisi4851
      @maysaswisi4851 3 года назад +6

      omg that's true! that's how we tunisian youngsters speak

    • @lhzayn8699
      @lhzayn8699 3 года назад +3

      'Ychatew'..... it's they are chatting .... boi I was astonished myself about how similar it is to our youngsters way of speaking

    • @rouahabouzamazem32
      @rouahabouzamazem32 3 года назад +4

      Yeah, totally agree, as a Libyan who used to live with her Tunisian flatmate abroad I can relate!
      Sometimes she was asking me to get her a hotspot on and then she be like “bartajili” and “connectili” 👌🏻😂

    • @mouath_14
      @mouath_14 3 года назад +1

      I find that so ironic, that despite all these centuries of disconnection between Malta and Mainland Tunisia/Carthage, the languages in both have evolved in a very similar way. I only wish that we keep making English more widely used instead of French in Tunisia. We would honestly connect much better with Malta and the rest of the world. Fuck french, sincerely from Carthage.

  • @libya17freeable
    @libya17freeable 3 года назад +10

    When i was a kid i have played with maltes kids back then in malta, i understood 60% of what they saying I’m from libya big love to slema❤️🇱🇾

  • @th3-a801
    @th3-a801 3 года назад +24

    being tunisian this encourages me to learn maltese because i already speak 80% of it i guess 😂😂❤

  • @Ohiology
    @Ohiology 3 года назад +88

    They say that Arabic would be difficult to write in the Latin Alphabet, but the Maltese language proved otherwise.

    • @haythemlakrab4531
      @haythemlakrab4531 3 года назад +15

      Actually many arabs write arabic in latin alphabet on social medias it's called "Arabizi"

    • @malidif456
      @malidif456 3 года назад +12

      I think it's more easier with the accents.. But in the formel Arabic believe me it's a crime for the language

    • @GHOSTs-Shadow
      @GHOSTs-Shadow 3 года назад +3

      acutally that's how we text each other but we use numbers like 3 and 5 and 7 and 9 to express sounds that doesn't exist in latin alphabet. btw we do it because we are too lazy to switch keybords or we don't have the arabic keybord on our device

    • @vk.infp_daeguboysstan9992
      @vk.infp_daeguboysstan9992 3 года назад +1

      @@GHOSTs-Shadow are Moroccan or Algerian

    • @GHOSTs-Shadow
      @GHOSTs-Shadow 3 года назад

      @@vk.infp_daeguboysstan9992 I didn't really understand your question but people do it in morocco and tunisia and egypt too

  • @drsunny6538
    @drsunny6538 2 года назад +20

    This is incredible, as a Moroccan, I could understand almost all of it especially when it’s written and spoken slowly . I can add Maltese to my list of languages I can understand

  • @maisseben2779
    @maisseben2779 3 года назад +39

    WOW 🤩 ! I’m algerian and I speak Italian and I understand 99% of maltese ! It’s unbelievable how you can be completely capable of speaking a whole language without even knowing 🤩 ! I’m AMAZED !!! Thank you so much for spreading the knowledge and letting us explore this beautiful twin language to ours 🥰 Shoutout to all my maltese brothers and sisters ❤️

    • @pamle1
      @pamle1 2 года назад +1

      How come you don't get connected to tropical African culture? Why is it always north, north, north? Why go down south for a change?? You're African, not European. Learn Yoruba, Swahili, or Bantu. How about migrating there? 20% of your DNA is from down there.

    • @unsertrefflicher4678
      @unsertrefflicher4678 2 года назад +4

      @@pamle1 Chill out

    • @deanticocombar7529
      @deanticocombar7529 2 года назад

      @@pamle1 here come jealous Italian who has nothing to do with semetic when Maltese are proud to be semetic then why are you crying.

    • @pamle1
      @pamle1 2 года назад

      @@deanticocombar7529 I'm not talking about Semitic languages. All sorts of races voluntarily or involuntarily adopted Semitic languages over history. Sri Lankans speak an Indo-European language, but theyr'e not in any way European. I can learn Japanese, but it wouldn't make me Japanese. I would just like someone to explain to me why these uppity people with major links to Tropical African DNA, never move down there, but instead try to pretend they're European? Just once I would like to see a North African stand up proudly and say "I AM PROUD TO BE AFRICAN!!" They have 20% Sub-Saharan DNA... that's Mama Africa!

    • @deanticocombar7529
      @deanticocombar7529 2 года назад

      @@pamle1 so are you Italian or African reply me

  • @arghachowdhury
    @arghachowdhury 3 года назад +206

    The Moroccan lady has such a beautiful accent and soothing voice!

  • @ramonfarr
    @ramonfarr 2 года назад +11

    Maltese is a mixture of English, Italian, Arabic, it's a nice language to learn
    Greetings from Malta

  • @josepharbash9264
    @josepharbash9264 3 года назад +9

    I enjoyed the video HAFNA!

  • @unspglitched
    @unspglitched 3 года назад +34

    As a Maltese resident, I love this video! I knew Arabic had a big influence in our language but it was still cool to see other people understanding it!

    • @njoumellil
      @njoumellil 3 года назад +4

      The Maltese language is very similar to the dialects of the Maghreb, especially the Tunisian dialect, a very easy language for us, even easier than Standard Arabic.

    • @EissaProd
      @EissaProd 2 года назад +1

      Maltese is a dialect of Arabic...
      As a Tunisian polyglot I understood 90% of written Maltese

    • @skanderibnziyad8702
      @skanderibnziyad8702 2 года назад

      Is very semilar to aAlgerian langage

    • @skanderibnziyad8702
      @skanderibnziyad8702 2 года назад

      @@njoumellil nonon nonon Ça n'a rien à voir puisque c'est lalgerie qui a colonisée malta et a combattue les chrétiens et a aportee les esclaves
      Donc لا تركب الموجة من فضلك التونسي

    • @skanderibnziyad8702
      @skanderibnziyad8702 2 года назад

      @@EissaProd no is more algerian bécasse the history between algeria and malta

  • @mohammedyacinebouacida1712
    @mohammedyacinebouacida1712 2 года назад +1

    I watched your video a second time with delight & we share a lot with the maltese even proverbs !!!! I visited Malta & felt at home from day one , highly recommend ...Thanks Bahador for the upload

  • @claracapiluppi790
    @claracapiluppi790 3 года назад +70

    Since i'm italian with moroccan origins i can safely say i understood like 99% of the text

    • @abdelhakwinston6200
      @abdelhakwinston6200 3 года назад +7

      yea that i was thinking about its italian and darija simple as that

  • @jadjad4666
    @jadjad4666 3 года назад +6

    Very nice video i was able to get everything when spoke slowly, thank you again bahador
    I suggest you to make lebanese dialect vs cypriot arabic(an endangered language i've discovered recently spoken in cyprus)

  • @halasahall6652
    @halasahall6652 3 года назад +2

    Im Sudanese and I understood 90% of the content mainly based on my Arabic knowledge!
    Amazing video, such good vibes!

  • @worldly8888
    @worldly8888 3 года назад +33

    Maltese is the descendent of Sicilian Arabic

  • @oldschoolgrech
    @oldschoolgrech 3 года назад +14

    From a Maltese here.
    First of all I would like to say well done to Sean and all other N.African representatives. However, I must point out that the displayed Maltese texts had a number of spelling mistakes, and at some points Sean’s way of speaking was not really how we spell it (such as jithenna, since the h is a silent letter, and in fact is not written as jitħenna but as jithenna). Maybe because he has been influenced by living abroad.
    Another point which I would like to add is about the second paragraph of text (the history-based one). The Arab period in Malta lasted between 870 till 1091, when then Malta became Norman. As documented, Malta was emptied (although debateable) and then inhabited again by the Arabs from around 1048. Thus, the Maltese were themselves the Arabs then, hence not a situation where the Arabs shared their religion and mixed with the Maltese, but they were the same people, Arabs.
    (One can argue that Malta used to be like an extension of Sicily, but with its own uniqueness. In fact, the Maltese language evolved from Siculo-Arabic which was spoken in both Sicily and the Maltese archipelago. As time progressed, it was lost in Sicily due to influence from Romance language, while it remained and was able to develop both independently and with other influences here in Malta.)
    The mentioned date, 1249 (in the displayed text in the video) is the approximate date when it is thought that Islam was abolished from Malta. Muslims converted to Christianity, while other were sent to Lucera in Italy.
    Thanks, and well done.

  • @ibnbattoutaamouddouchanel6535
    @ibnbattoutaamouddouchanel6535 2 года назад +2

    Really love it. I love foreign languages too. I am an amazigh from Morocco. Living in The Netherlands. You did a good job all. Thanks

  • @si0422
    @si0422 3 года назад +25

    I am a Moroccan born and raised in Italy, I'm so shocked by the Maltese accent. This is how us North African immigrants talk😭 we mix some random Italian words to our darija.

  • @mimimusa757
    @mimimusa757 3 года назад +8

    As a Libyan Arab , i understood 50% of what you the Maltese dude said , it's like they are speaking Arabic but with a broken accent , but it sounds cute 💛
    Also i hope you invite the amazighi Libyan sister again , i want to know more about Libyan amazighian dialect 💚🍀
    Fun fact : we have a tribe which called the malti , maybe they are from maltese origin , also alot of Libyans going to malta for they honey moon
    And also i think the western Libyan dialect of Arabic is closer to Tunisian dialect , than the eastern part of libya

    • @abdullahaljbale460
      @abdullahaljbale460 3 года назад

      بالعكس فهمت 90% من كلام المالطي

    • @mimimusa757
      @mimimusa757 3 года назад +2

      @@AmalSaidi123 i am who i am , it's not up to you to decide that .
      You probably don't know how diverse Libyans are 💛
      Do i have to mention Libyans from Greek , Crete , Turkish , andalusian origin , are you gonna deny the tabu people and arab libyans , omer mukhtar was a Libyan arab .
      I am not denying amazigh and when i say i am an arab libyan that doesn't mean i say there's no amazigh Libyans even though i lived in the east of libya and moved to the west still the city i am leaving in doesn't have much amazigh and still haven't met any amazigh person .
      From an arab libyan all respect to our amazigh Libyans 💛

    • @AmalSaidi123
      @AmalSaidi123 3 года назад

      @@mimimusa757 I’m an Andalusian Libyan and even I have amazigh ancestry… all Libyans do

    • @mimimusa757
      @mimimusa757 3 года назад

      @@AmalSaidi123 oh so did you do a dna test for all libyans , can you show me a proof .
      Again our people are mixed , that's why our culture is mixed also , you can see the change from east to west and from north to south if you tried to go out of your own city and visit different Libyans cities , it will show you alot .
      And about the ancestors thing i do have a turkish ancestor from my mother side , does that make from a turkish origin , i don't think so .
      And if all libyans have amazigh ancestors why don't they marry other non amazigh Libyans ( if you are a libyan you should know that most amazigh libyans marry amazigh only , and the families usually refuse other non amazigh Libyans ) every one has the freedom of deciding who they wanna marry , and i am not criticising our amazigh people , it's their choice.
      You can say whatever you want to say , It doesn't represent or define me , you can say that i am not an arab Libyan , and i will definitely say I am an Arab Libyan , whatever you accept that or not , it has nothing to do with me .
      I don't want to engage with you anymore , it doesn't change anything , لو مش عاجبك تعليقي فوته 🍀👌

  • @lapawl
    @lapawl 3 года назад +2

    Really interesting video. 👍 Greetings from Malta! 🇲🇹

  • @mohamedaminechakroun5834
    @mohamedaminechakroun5834 3 года назад +7

    Im tunisian I put on the radio and accidentally put a Maltese station on and I was listening and understanding I didn't realise for while it was not arabic I thought it was just some form of Arabic or Italian I did not know about Maltese back then.

  • @angelikadegabriele2635
    @angelikadegabriele2635 3 года назад +42

    As a Maltese it's really cool to see someone else talk it😅😅

  • @abderrazakbaddou
    @abderrazakbaddou 2 года назад +4

    I love this Sean guy ... he's a great teacher ...

    • @SR-jx8yu
      @SR-jx8yu 2 года назад +1

      Thank you! Glad you liked the video! Sean

  • @saud319
    @saud319 3 года назад +56

    As someone from Saudi Arabia I was shocked at how much I understood these Maltese sentences! Fascinating video. Thank you all :)

    • @Allinda.
      @Allinda. 2 года назад +7

      It's like 90% Arabic in my opinion as an Native Arabic speaker

    • @azozmjewel8868
      @azozmjewel8868 2 года назад +4

      The strange thing for me was habah (هبة) here in Najad, Saudi Arabia we use the same word when we are talking about something becoming and starting to be trendy.

    • @Demitchii
      @Demitchii 2 года назад

      Same

    • @thamer469
      @thamer469 2 года назад

      @@azozmjewel8868 😂😂😭😭 wow i just noticed that howwww did they get the same meaning !!!??they are tooo far from us and Tunisian don’t use this Word with the same meaning like us

  • @isaacadkins2344
    @isaacadkins2344 3 года назад +5

    Nice video! Greetings from Algeria 🇩🇿 i would love to be part of one of these videos in the futur

  • @Gingervodka80
    @Gingervodka80 Год назад +1

    I'm Italian and I speak Arabic Lebanese but I understand it and it is so interesting to watch these videos

  • @liberalegypt
    @liberalegypt 3 года назад +19

    As Egyptian i am shocked that i understand 66% of Maltese language when it was written and slowly talking .. the accent a little bit Tunisian or Libyan .. and i agree with the Moroccan girl learning a Latin language it will be useful to understand more the foreign vocabulary of the Maltese language

    • @amelhl6235
      @amelhl6235 3 года назад +7

      يا اخي اذا كنتوا المصريين ماتفهموش جزائري و تونسي كيفاش تقدرو تفهموا المالطية و هي مثل اللهجات المغاربية

    • @liberalegypt
      @liberalegypt 3 года назад +1

      @@amelhl6235 انا كتبت أنها لو مكتوبة و تنطق بالبطيء يمكن فهمها و ليس خلال التحدث بها سريعا

    • @makkam2371
      @makkam2371 3 года назад

      @@amelhl6235 التونسي مفهوم أكثر من جزائري ..الجزائر يتكلمو أسرع في لهجتهم

  • @Pidro__
    @Pidro__ 3 года назад +82

    In North Africa, we took Latin words and conjugating them in Arabic way, this is why the eastern Arabs have difficulties understanding us, Maltese have the same aspects.

    • @oussamat612
      @oussamat612 3 года назад +4

      the other way around
      latin words were derived from arabic

    • @Pidro__
      @Pidro__ 3 года назад +5

      @@oussamat612
      Latin and Arabic influence each other but the Latin influence is more noticeable in the Arabic dialects than El Fussha. El fussha is more strong to borrow from Latin in such huge way like the dialects, we Arabs have a problem, we don't spread our language amongst our own people.

    • @ThrashBayArea
      @ThrashBayArea 3 года назад +11

      The difference is that the substrat of our dialect is Berber not arabic.
      And we mix a lot of Berber, Italian, French, spanich words. So the real arabs in the middle east struggle to understand us.

    • @broader.horizons
      @broader.horizons 3 года назад

      @@ThrashBayArea
      Give me examples of Berber in Algerian dialect ,please?

    • @Tenast_
      @Tenast_ 3 года назад +1

      @@ThrashBayArea
      Well said mate ❤️♓️❤️

  • @colino9mam
    @colino9mam 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely loved the video! One of your best, Bahador!

  • @Hamzaben9
    @Hamzaben9 3 года назад +47

    Fascinating ! This the first time i find out about Malta , its crazy how similar it is to North African dialects , especially wit the grammar and how they Arabize Latin words , i thought we re the only ones that played with languages like that. Greetings to All North Africans and Maltese people from Morocco .

    • @rashajouhar3613
      @rashajouhar3613 3 года назад +1

      I'm Palestinian and understood everything! All arabs Arabia foreign words !!

    • @TehAbdullah
      @TehAbdullah 3 года назад

      Then you must speak some French

    • @sajjettablu1977
      @sajjettablu1977 3 года назад

      @@Noorinvests stop being so rude and ignorant

    • @sajjettablu1977
      @sajjettablu1977 3 года назад

      @@Noorinvests and from which country your philosophy comes from?