How the CELTS Changed The ENGLISH LANGUAGE

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  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
  • The Celts were the dominant culture in England for many centuries from about 900 BC until 43 AD but who were there before them. Who built Stonehenge and the other Neolithic sites in Britain? And how did the Celts influence the English language. New research and DNA evidence tells us more than we knew even a few years ago. The answer is that they had a massive influence on English. In this video we see how.
    Love the English language? Get the LetThemTalkTV newsletter here - IT'S FREE!
    eepurl.com/izRKww
    00:00 Who were the native Britons?
    00:52 A word about sources
    01:13 Pre-Celtic history of Britain
    02:05 The first inhabitants
    03:05 Mesolithic period
    03:39 The Neolithic period
    05:26 The Bell Beakers
    07:47 The Celts arrive
    09:16 The Roman Rule
    11:42 The Anglo-Saxons and the Celts
    13:56 Celtic vocabulary in English
    21:09 The "meaningless DO"
    26:38 1000 years to adopt DO. Why?
    27:37 The present continuous
    .If you are a grammar lover you might be interested in our new range of grammarian merchandise exclusive to LetThemTalkTV
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    CREDITS
    Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of English by John McWhorter
    Amazon affiliate link
    amzn.to/3rug407
    The History of English Podcast
    historyofenglishpodcast.com/
    Kevin Stroud
    Verduria.org
    www.verduria.org/viewtopic.ph...
    The development of the Periphrastic Do by RÜDIGER ZILM
    www.grin.com/document/95594
    Many thanks to Bill Hicks for the Welsh recordings.
    Pytheas
    Par Rvalette - Travail personnel, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    DOGGERLAND
    By Max Naylor - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    ANATOLIA
    De Svenurban - Trabajo propio, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    STONEHENGE
    By garethwiscombe - www.flickr.com/photos/garethw..., CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    BELL BEAKER
    By Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden - Edited version of this image: File:Bell Beaker Rijksmuseum of Oudheden 136.jpg, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    BRONZE AGE TOOLS
    Zde, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... via Wikimedia Commons
    PONTIC CASPIAN STEPPE
    By Terpsichores - Own work Source :background : Natural Earth II (public domain) by Tom Patterson, US National Park Servicenational borders : File:NED worldmap 110m.svg by Gringerecoregion shape : File:Western palearctic biomes.svg by Terpsichores, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    THE CELTS
    By QuartierLatin1968, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    MAKING CRUMPETS by Kevin T Quinn via Flickr

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @chrisg7795
    @chrisg7795 Год назад +335

    Hi, German here. Yes, there’s a “do” over here. It exists in Plattdeutsch, which is the old version of German that is still being spoken by some elderly country folks in the north of Germany. That dialect is very closely connected to English. I don’t remember when the German pronunciation changed from pp to pf and from k to ch, it’s been too long that I studied this, but the old version that still exists as a dialect uses “do” exactly like you do in English, and instead of “Apfel 🍎”, they say “Appel” and instead of “machen” (to make) they say “maken”. This dialect is also very much alive in modern Dutch which is why us northerners who still understand that dialect and practise it for traditions sake or for the fun of it in certain situations can also understand Dutch quite well.

    • @Jc-ul9ff
      @Jc-ul9ff Год назад +34

      this is interesting, in the old scots language, we said mak for make, and some old people even speak like this today, also the word 'ken' that is widely used in eastern scotland means 'know' which is used by the young and old alike!

    • @chrisg7795
      @chrisg7795 Год назад +28

      @@Jc-ul9ff I find that fascinating as well. My uni professor once explained to us where our German word “Kind” (engl.: child) comes from.
      It’s derived from the word family “ken” or “gen”. And the German verb “kennen” actually means “know”. So a “Kind” 👧🏼👦🏻is an individual that belongs to those we know. The word “gender” is derived from it as well, as in “belonging together”. And thinking about it further the English “kind of” makes sense as well. I’m just guessing of course, but: If someone is “kind of” weird or “kind of” nice, he literally is the “child of weird/the child of nice”/belongs to those who are weird or nice. I love languages.

    • @Leoniiche
      @Leoniiche Год назад +22

      Hullo, south German here. I believe the "do" exists in Swabian as well, at least to some extend. Instead of "Hilfst du mir kurz?" we might say "Dursch mr gschwend helfa?", which translates to "Tust du mir kurz helfen?", the "dursch" merging the "tust" and the "du". That being said, not too many people (especially of the younger generations) really speak with Swabian grammar (or vocabulary) anymore, most tend to speak more standart German with a Swabian accent.

    • @Jc-ul9ff
      @Jc-ul9ff Год назад +12

      @@chrisg7795 that is cool! That reminds me of the English word 'kin' meaning family i think. And also the word kith meaning friends I think (?)

    • @chrisg7795
      @chrisg7795 Год назад +6

      @@Jc-ul9ff 🤩Yes indeed! I know the English word “kin” as “family member” as well. Kinship, akin to… I haven’t heard “kith” yet. Very interesting, I’ll look for more information about it 🤩

  • @jamesr1703
    @jamesr1703 Год назад +157

    Fascinating! I am a German teacher. Most of my students are native English speakers. When I tell them that German and English are first cousins, they want to know why and how. Your explanation of the movement of tribes will help me explain and the pie chart of the English language and its influencers will also be most helpful. Thank you.

    • @saulnierhenryedward6753
      @saulnierhenryedward6753 Год назад +3

      Most interesting. I am a Canadian whose first language is English. My second one is French, and I have taken Italian and Russian at school ( university ). But for the last 23 years I have taught English in South Korea ( yes I speak a fair amount of Korean too ). By the way, Korean has a present and past continuous too. However, in the spoken language you can often get by if you use the present simple etc.

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Год назад +1

      I wouldn't say that the movement of tribes explains the movement of languages, right? Lots and lots of people in North America speak English. A language very different from the Mandarin or Cantonese or Japanese that their ancestors spoke. Someone who was taking up a professorship in Norway asked me to say something in Norwegian. I stared at him blankly. My grandmother's maiden name was "Bakken" which might mean "hill" in Norwegian. Is "viking" a Norwegian word? That's all the Norwegian, I know. Oh, yeah! Lefsa! Is that the spelling? LOLOL!

    • @bonnieconnoster8590
      @bonnieconnoster8590 Год назад

      "wir alle leben in Amerika, es wunderbar"
      Ramstine

    • @felicitybywater8012
      @felicitybywater8012 Год назад +1

      @@dinkster1729 People of ribes from all over the world have moved to the USA where English established itself as the lingua franca. Same in Canada, here in Australia, in New Zealand, etc. And words from those tribes have this become part of the English language, often food words like tortilla, enchilada, dim sum, kebab/ kabob, etc.

    • @Thepourdeuxchanson
      @Thepourdeuxchanson Год назад

      @@dinkster1729 Lutefisk!

  • @qwitchyy
    @qwitchyy Год назад +149

    I’m a Celtic anthropologist, so I really enjoyed this. It’s interesting hearing things that differ from what I was taught, but hey - that’s the beauty of anthropology and history. We’re constantly gathering new information that helps us contextualize peoples of the past.

    • @jegsthewegs
      @jegsthewegs Год назад +2

      I only know what I know from doing a degree in Speech and Language Therapy.

    • @gwho
      @gwho Год назад +4

      like remembering a collective dream lost.

    • @patrickmcnelis1472
      @patrickmcnelis1472 Год назад +2

      What was you taught? Imagine saying what you have and claiming you are who you are and what your qualified in and not offering a full completion by stating what it is you've learnt. Utterly pointless 😴

    • @markhuckercelticcrossbows7887
      @markhuckercelticcrossbows7887 Год назад +1

      ooooo cwtsh, ill have a cuddle :)

    • @WallyPyneoil
      @WallyPyneoil Год назад +2

      Well, as the 'Celtic' notion in the UK dates only from the 1700s and the English were not majority Anglo Saxon, I take it you deal with a lot of fiction?

  • @russellsantana
    @russellsantana Год назад +7

    I'm an armchair linguist, and have studied this subject over and over and over again and never tire of hearing others talk about it too. Excellent video.

  • @moniquehuchet3646
    @moniquehuchet3646 Год назад +215

    Coming from France and teaching French to 12 years old Canadians, I told them they already knew a lot of French words and asked them to research the etymology of words in their dictionary . It was a hit!

    • @darleenhampson3822
      @darleenhampson3822 Год назад +10

      Most effective style of teaching!

    • @pappy9473
      @pappy9473 Год назад +6

      Magnificent!!👍😁

    • @PM-ld4nn
      @PM-ld4nn Год назад +11

      Yes, the English "people" is a mix of ancient Anglo-saxons and NORMANDS, due to the Normands' invasion in 1066. It's very difficult for English society to admit that they are a mixture, not a pure nation, so English is more similar to Spanish, Italian or over all French than to any celtic language. Thousands of words that ethimologically are latin.

    • @brawndothethirstmutilator9848
      @brawndothethirstmutilator9848 Год назад +28

      P M, there is no such thing as a “pure nation” in that context. Every nation is a mixture of previous migrations.

    • @MrMirville
      @MrMirville Год назад +6

      @@PM-ld4nn But Normans are Vikings and Scandinavians had already been among the original North Sea peoples that resulted in the Anglo-Saxon original language and culture. Don’t forget that the Normans of Normandy themselves even though they had contrived some sort of Franco dialect had not forgotten therein much of their original Norse vocabulary. Cabbage is an example of those words that replaced cole and also French col due to the too big number of homophones in older English to denote the vegetable.

  • @LinaGuadagnuolo63
    @LinaGuadagnuolo63 Год назад +16

    You are endlessly fascinating. I'm a retired teacher of English, from Australia. My personal interest has always been the evolution of language in the lands following invasion and migration patterns. The Jamaican use of modern English sparked my interest years ago. I have since been looking for a video like yours to provide another piece of the puzzle that is English today. Thank you for your research and sharing of knowledge.

    • @alkante2962
      @alkante2962 Год назад +2

      The only puzzle I see in english is the difficulty to speak it!

  • @angelarasmussen1800
    @angelarasmussen1800 Год назад +10

    Brilliant thoughts on the Celtic influence I have not heard before as a lay linguist or a person fascinated by our English language but never a student in a linguistic class at university. Thanks for this break down.

  • @kyratejerozumeta9634
    @kyratejerozumeta9634 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this great video I have just discovered. I have been an English teacher for almost 37 years and I have always been interested in diving in old mysteries like the meaningless do, which I couldn’t find the explanation for. I will continue watching all the videos as they make me feel at Salamanca University long , long time ago. I love linguistics and I must thank you for giving me such an awesome opportunity to bring forward many of the things I studied but never used in my classes. Greetings from Spain.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Год назад +242

    Diolch yn fawr am eich dysg a wybodaeth. Thank you so much for your learning and shared knowledge. As someone whose Welsh ancestors left Britain in the 1730s, I found your talk highly informative and easy to grasp. I am proud that my family has retained a degree of fluency in Cymraeg for what is now almost 300 years after leaving. My children and grandsons, now scattered across four continents, continue to show interest in maintaining that tradition, though to varying degrees. Of course, your observations about use of "foreign" syntax is spot on. For the reasons you intimated, I have found Spanish and French grammar far easier than either Kiswahili or Kibukusu, and German the most challenging of all. Though I must admit that Swedish is the most difficult of my non-tonal languages to pronounce correctly from reading. Please keep up the great work. BTW, in more formal Welsh, the phrase you quoted, "I didn't open the door", is not written as, "Wnes i ddim agor y drws", which is used casually, but rather, "Agorwn i ddim y drws", which I suppose is best translated as, "Opened I not the door".

    • @ENGLISHTAINMENT
      @ENGLISHTAINMENT Год назад +19

      Agorais i ddim y drws. (south wales) Wnes i ddim agor y drws. (north wales) // both are colloquial, and the first one yes it's sort of formal too. Nid agorais y drws. - this is more literary

    • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
      @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Год назад +7

      @@ENGLISHTAINMENT Agorais (I opened), not agorwn (we opened), I agree. Blame my error on old age. However, this form was used by my Gog family too, so I don't think it's limited to the South.

    • @ENGLISHTAINMENT
      @ENGLISHTAINMENT Год назад +8

      @@t.a.k.palfrey3882 not limited to the south, but “neshi agor y drws” is what most gogs say

    • @billhicks7665
      @billhicks7665 Год назад +8

      I asked a friend from Ceredigion what he'd say and he said nes i agor y drws not agores i y drws. I think both are probably equally common with a verb like agor. But with less common and longer verbs the past tense becomes more and more formal. I don't know anyone who would say cyfarfyddes i o instead of nes i gyfarfod o.. a beth am cyfarfuont?? hmm.. Pa mor hen yw'r arferiad dwi ddim yn gwybod . dwi wastad wedi cael yr argraff ei fod yn dod yn fwyfwy cyffredin i ddefnyddio nes i ond does gen i ddim syniad os ydi o'n mynd yn ôl i'r ganol oesoedd neu beidio

    • @ENGLISHTAINMENT
      @ENGLISHTAINMENT Год назад +6

      @@billhicks7665 nes i agor construction is as old as the hills. this construction is found in cornish too. even in cornish english in the present tense. "i do go there"

  • @marcelroberto2270
    @marcelroberto2270 Год назад +13

    Dear Mr. Gideon . I owe you a lot .You're an outstanding professor, the finest . Your videos are amazing . Much obliged for all your effortness.

  • @Learnamericanenglishonline
    @Learnamericanenglishonline Год назад +3

    Great video! It's helpful for students of the English language to know about the various contributions other languages and cultures have made to it. As for "do," I think it's helpful in announcing to the listener that the question I'm about to ask is a question in the present tense or the past tense, and of course for forming negatives. Thanks for taking the time to go over this in such great detail.

  • @leighcanham763
    @leighcanham763 Год назад +9

    Diolch yn fawr!
    I cracked laughing at what you said, "Je suis femme." I was in Les Deux Magots, a restaurant in Paris with my French friend. This was around 1976/77. Waiter approached to take our order... "Je suis femme." I said. My friend almost crawled under the table. The waiter laughed and corrected my French: "Ja'i faim." Well, I learnt more French that day, and never made that mistake again. Similar thing when I was learning Spanish. I lived in Gibraltar not long after that incident in Paris. I made friends with local people very quickly and decided to learn Spanish. We were playing volley ball on the beach and I hit the sand, face down. I shouted: "Estoy muy embarazada." instead of "Estoy avergonzado." Embarazada = Pregnant. Avergonzado = Embarassed. The same very warm day I declared, "Estoy caliente." instead of "Estoy calor." Caliente = Hot as in hot water or sexually aroused. Calor if you are feeling very warm. My friends fell about laughing, literally. I never made that mistake again. The joy of learning!
    Thank you so much for yet another informative and interesting lesson. I always enjoy your presentations!

  • @d_mosimann
    @d_mosimann Год назад +22

    Thank you so much, Gideon, for this video and your work in general. Bringing togheter two of my special interests - Cultural History and Linguistics - in an entertaining way. Love from a Celt at heart (from the Helvetii tribe) with an obvious Germanic makeover (tongue, aswell as blond hair and blue eyes).

  • @christianspanfellner3293
    @christianspanfellner3293 Год назад +91

    "Are you wanting a coffee?" sounds like, "Are you one coffee short?" to my non-Scottish ears. I'll remember that. And let me just say that years of university education haven't taught me as much about the Celtic influence on English as this excellent video of yours. Changes at the grammar level are so seldom addressed in teaching materials.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +6

      I think few American ears would have understood your interpretation, it would just be like weird to them (or quaint).

    • @jverhoeff4835
      @jverhoeff4835 Год назад +5

      That is interesting. They say Afrikaans is the daughter of Dutch. Kort means short. Afrikaans seems to follow the Scottish tzther than Dutch in this sense. Ek kort een koffie. I lack or am short of a coffee implying l want a coffee. If you said in Dutch...ik kort een koffie... they may think you are shortening somehow a coffee

    • @juliadplume3097
      @juliadplume3097 Год назад +3

      Needing would be lacking, wanting is not needing, it’s getting something more even if what is wanted is not a need. That is how Americans, such as myself, think.

    • @brawndothethirstmutilator9848
      @brawndothethirstmutilator9848 Год назад +1

      Julia D'Plume, I suspect that in generations that preceded the WW2 generation the use of “want” to imply the lack of something was significantly more common in the US. I’m familiar with it from the old proverb, “For want of a nail…”.

    • @allisonmarlow184
      @allisonmarlow184 Год назад +2

      @@meadow-maker I've heard the wanting/lacking terminology in European old English. (I believe it was also used in a movie based on that time. Great movie with Heath Leger as a knight. "A Knight's Tale," I believe is the title.) Anyway, after this, I just thought it was the way "wanting" was used "across the pond."

  • @deborahcalazans7413
    @deborahcalazans7413 Год назад +1

    Hello! I’m Brazilian and Portuguese teacher. I’m am fascinated by your video! I love languages History and have learned a lot about Celtic language. I have just subscribed to your channel and looking forwards to watching more videos to come! Bty your pronunciation in French and Spanish is fantastic. Thank you ever so much.

  • @genny9026
    @genny9026 Год назад +25

    I remember hearing often when I was a child ( in South Wales), some children and adults saying eg, ‘ I do do that’. ‘ I do do the food shopping on Thursdays’. The response would usually be, ‘ Oh, you do, do you. I do do mine on Fridays’. 🙂

    • @davidwong6515
      @davidwong6515 Год назад +4

      And Scousers say "ayyyy ayyyy ayyyy mate dey do do dat doe don't dey doe" calm down calm down

    • @rmp7400
      @rmp7400 Год назад +1

      "I do do that" comes from South Wales? Yikes!
      This American is of Low German ethnicity ...yet i have often utilized that positive emphasis on ...the Middle English "meaningless" "do"???
      "Do be .. a do bee🐝
      and
      Don't be...a don't bee"
      (A saying once taught to children...but I no longer even remember why!)

    • @genny9026
      @genny9026 Год назад

      @@rmp7400 Perhaps when the Welsh had to switch from their own language to English, much of which obviously comes from the Saxons from Germany, there was a mixup. 🙂

    • @Lostouille
      @Lostouille Год назад

      I thought the Dodos were instincts. Not in England ? 😶‍🌫️

    • @bron-sconcess.10
      @bron-sconcess.10 Год назад

      😏😳☺️

  • @cindyswimchick
    @cindyswimchick Год назад +11

    American here- love your channel and lessons. Keep it up!

  • @mjinba07
    @mjinba07 Год назад +35

    An ancestral surname in my family is a conjugate of Celtic and Old English. We trace that lineage back to the 1200's, not all that long after the use of surnames became a thing, or was becoming a thing. I just find it a charming reflection of those two languages coming together.

  • @JuniperJenico
    @JuniperJenico Год назад

    I’ve absolutely loved this video! Subscribed within the first 5 minutes! Thank you so much for putting this together for us history and language buffs.

  • @jamesewanchook2276
    @jamesewanchook2276 Год назад

    just great! I hadn't even the questions to ask. Now I have a brand new rabbit hole. God bless from Vancouver!

  • @ksbrook1430
    @ksbrook1430 Год назад +13

    I concur with others who have commented: your presentation is very informative and easy to follow.
    I had come across the concept that Celtic influenced English grammar once before. It makes a lot of sense to me, and explains why English, while a part of the Germanic branch, does not have similar structures to German. (Old Norse also played a part.)
    Thank you.

  • @hotdatedave
    @hotdatedave Год назад +52

    This was absolutely fascinating! In Cornish dialect, people still use "do" (in shortened form) for positive statements: I d'like sugar in my tea. I d'go down town Mondays.

    • @siarlb8115
      @siarlb8115 Год назад +8

      Same in the Southern Welsh valleys,

    • @gaiaiulia
      @gaiaiulia Год назад +6

      We Irish sometimes do the same. I do be is a phrase you'll still hear, much to the horror of my English teacher. 😃

    • @ezzovonachalm9815
      @ezzovonachalm9815 Год назад +3

      Same in german : ich tue die Frankfurter (Zeitung) lesen

    • @ENGLISHTAINMENT
      @ENGLISHTAINMENT Год назад +9

      Mosey in English probably comes from the Cornish word MOS (moz), meaning GO.

    • @mikehughes2183
      @mikehughes2183 Год назад +4

      We say it in North Wales.

  • @patriciacollins1156
    @patriciacollins1156 Год назад +2

    This is exactly the sort of video I enjoy; well researched, lucid and full of interesting connections. One issue I had was that when a list of three or four written examples was being displayed, it disappeared all too quickly. Thanks all the same. I did enjoy it, (emphatic did). Drawing attention to features with which you are already familiar but not especially conscious of is particularly good.

  • @TerryVanner
    @TerryVanner Год назад

    Brilliantly presented! Clear, concise and entertaining.
    Many thanks.

  • @Johan-vk5yd
    @Johan-vk5yd Год назад +60

    I was excited to know about the ”unnecessary do” being an element of celtic grammar, which influenced the english language profoundly, albeit celtic vocabulary left only sparse traces!

    • @HermanVonPetri
      @HermanVonPetri Год назад +13

      It's absolutely fascinating. I've often wondered why English requires two verbs where one would suffice.

    • @tohaason
      @tohaason Год назад +4

      It seems like 'to do' still kept increasing its presence until fairly recently. Not that I have much evidence for that, but in a book from 1880 I kept seeing "I know not". That *could* just be a particular way of speech of course, but I believe I've seen that elsewhere as well (in old books).

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Год назад +1

      @@tohaason A mode of negation shared with German, I think.
      Celtics, particularly Gaelic, has donated more vocabulary than I ever thought: 'trousers' for instance. More than just 'galore' and 'slogan.'

    • @Chris-mf1rm
      @Chris-mf1rm Год назад +1

      @@w.reidripley1968 I wonder, what did the ancient Persians call trousers? They famously wore trousers (infamously/scandalously to the contemporary Greeks).

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Год назад

      @@Chris-mf1rm IKR? Actually, a scholar of ancient Persian I am not..
      Those guys sure did think trousers were weird.
      Not sure either where Imperial Romans got 'braccae' from, for the britches their legions wore for bad weather marches etc up north. Might have taken the word from Gaulish. And we have what's left-- breeks, britches... and these only seem to come to just below the knee.

  • @No_P_and_1o
    @No_P_and_1o Год назад +41

    I'm an English teacher and I was always fascinated by the history of English. I've dabbled in a variety of different languages and realized that the "do" we use at the beginning of yes/no questions is similar to Arabic. In Arabic, they say "hal" at the beginning of any question that has a yes or no answer. We use do the same way but we also use are the same way in English. I don't think it's because these two languages connect in some way but it is interesting that they both have a word that signifies a yes or no question.

    • @flixuk
      @flixuk Год назад +11

      It's not so much that the word introduces a question. After all, a question could be "can you....?" Or "will they...." Or "should I...." . And the verb "do" has its own meaning: "do these tasks!" isn't a question, right? And also, question words without a yes/no answer also use "do": like "what do you want?" And "where do we go?". And "do" changes to "did" in the past, while we don't use "do" for future questions.
      What's really happening is this rule: unless it's in a simple affirmative statement, every verb must use an auxiliary. If there's not an auxiliary already, then "do" is inserted as an auxiliary verb.
      Emphatic sentences stress the auxiliary, negative sentences use auxiliary+not, question sentences invert the auxiliary and pronoun.
      In the sentence "I can play football," the verb play is already using "can" as its auxiliary verb, so it doesn't need any do-support:
      Affirmative: I can play football,
      Emphatic: I CAN play football,
      Question: Can I play football?
      Negative: I cannot play football.
      But in the sentence "I play football" there is no auxiliary, so we need to add "do" as a supporting axuiliary for everything except the simple affirmative:
      Affirmative: I play football
      Emphatic: I DO play football
      Question: Do I play football?
      Negative: I do not play football.
      So the "do" introducing a question is simply the inverting of the auxiliary verb "do" and the pronoun.

    • @jessejordache1869
      @jessejordache1869 Год назад +3

      Just adding a minor historic point: the connections between Arabic and other languages are manifold because they sat at the center of two major trade routes. So, you have Vikings in 1000AD showing up with crucible steel, which was made in the Levant and literally nowhere else. That's just a concrete case, but it was just as true as Caesar was writing his commentaries and informing us that the "Gauls" refer to themselves as Celts.

    • @OneEpicEric
      @OneEpicEric Год назад

      Misinformation.
      The Celts were a tribe north of Italy and were fiercely anti Roman. Any other people's that resisted the Romans were labelled Celts. It's inaccurate and nothing but Roman propaganda.
      The English language isn't Germanic but has its roots in the Chaldean region.
      According to Ancient Brythonic history the language of the Chaldeans who came to Albion in 1500BC was Iceninglas. This is the root language of English. Iceninglas became English.
      The English were re-educated in the 1700s to believe they were Germanic as to be more accepting of their new Germanic Royal family

    • @yuyetube
      @yuyetube Год назад +2

      Interesting you mention Arabic. The closest languages to Scottish and Irish gaelic as far as grammar and syntax goes, are apparently Arabic, Hebrew and Ancient Egyptian. There are similar nouns too.. Laban (milk in arabic) bainne (milk in gaelic) I'm currently learning gaelic and I keep coming across words that are used in English that I can't find an origin for other than gaelic. For example, Tioraidh (pronounced: cheery) for saying bye. Bròg (English: brogue) a shoe, leabhar (pronounced; lore) a book ("folklore"). Theres loads.... also Glasweagians are known for putting vowel sounds in-between consonants that don't have vowels in the word.. Film becomes Filum, Girl becomes giril, arm becomes arem... that's a feature of gaelic that happens in almost every word of similar construction... Orm (wearing/on me) is said Orum, Alba is said Alaba, ainm (name) is said ainum...
      The present continuous tense thing is quite interesting too, you don't say "I want a drink" in gaelic, you would say (not literal translation) "I am wanting a drink" (literal translation would be "Is me wanting drink")
      Another thing I've noticed is in English you can say "that was well good!" meaning that was really good. In gaelic the word for good is "math"(pronounced ma) but if you say "gu math" it changes the meaning to "well" as in "I am well" or "tha mi gu math" but if you want to say something is really tasty you say "tha seo (this is) gu math blasda (well tasty) I wonder if that's another Gaelic influence on English?

    • @aarpftsz
      @aarpftsz Год назад +1

      @@OneEpicEric who's your dealer mate?

  • @Nana-vi4rd
    @Nana-vi4rd Год назад

    I wish you had been my English teacher when I was in school. The manner in which you explain what you're speaking about I would have understood and not have flunk English at all. Thank you so much for uploading this video. And I look forward to watching more of them.

  • @morganpatterson1349
    @morganpatterson1349 Год назад +22

    I feel baffled by my luck stumbling across this video randomly. In school, I struggled with grammar. I think it’s fair to say it was mostly due to a learning disability and missing lessons because it took me longer to finish tests (I would be sequestered to another room to finish while missing whatever the next lesson was). ANWAY, thank you sir, because feel like I have a second chance at learning this stuff. Especially from an intriguing historical lens!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +4

      A most enlightening comment. Many thanks

  • @amherst88
    @amherst88 Год назад +5

    Enlightening as always Gideon -- for what it's worth, I'm a native English speaker who had several years of French in grade school and studied Irish as an adult -- to borrow your term I was gobsmacked by the ways in which Irish felt like an *incredibly* *alien* (but immensely beautiful) methodology for constructing meaning (where, in retrospect, French seemed eminently 'reasonable'). I noted in your account that Welsh and Cornish were the Celtic languages at play in the dynamics you described (and, according to your chart, that Irish descended from a different branch of the Celtic language tree) -- there's no doubt a great deal more unpacking possible here. Thanks, as always, for the continuing information ❤

  • @katephillipson6149
    @katephillipson6149 Год назад +6

    Very interesting. I am a teacher of English as a foreign language in the UK and several of my students want to know why on earth we have to use the auxiliaries do and did when nobody else does. Now I can tell them, or better still, get them to watch your video. Many thanks

  • @katrinstoetzel1873
    @katrinstoetzel1873 Год назад

    Brilliant, thanks for covering a complex topic in a well-researched and interesting talk.

  • @pumitadh
    @pumitadh Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing all this information. I´m an English teacher (Spanish is my native language) and I studied this some time ago but I always learn something new from your videos. Really enjoyed it!!!!

  • @allisonmarlow184
    @allisonmarlow184 Год назад +27

    I just found your channel and I immediately subscribed. Fascinating history and information. You're also an excellent presenter. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and research with us. 🇺🇸🌴

  • @saraquitt2119
    @saraquitt2119 Год назад +7

    I'm a Cornish native living in Germany so this is fascinating.

  • @helenbenjafield7351
    @helenbenjafield7351 Год назад +1

    Brilliantly done!Thank you.

  • @carolbulmer8253
    @carolbulmer8253 Год назад

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video! I look forward to seeing more from you😊

  • @luiszuluaga6575
    @luiszuluaga6575 Год назад +4

    Really fun stuff to learn. Who says being an academic means being dry and boring. You explore the elements of language and all associations quite logically and that context really brings it all together. Thank you so much for an excellent presentation.

  • @lisasternenkind6467
    @lisasternenkind6467 Год назад +7

    In German we also say "I have hunger", so this English saying must be coming from the Old Germanic the Saxons spoke. Besides, Old English had a second phonetic shift to become modern English, while modern German only went through a single phonetic shift. This is why English is pretty similar to German and some German dialects, especially those named "Plattdeutsch", have lots of identical words English also has, and also the Grammar is almost the same.

  • @pensleepe
    @pensleepe Год назад

    I am so super grateful I came across Your channel on YT. I while ago I wrote my MA thesis on History of English Language so those videos are amazing for me. Thank you!! Btw Poland here

  • @pierrefournier5892
    @pierrefournier5892 Год назад

    Thank you for this most informative video. And your ability to present information clearly is impressive.

  • @stephenwilhelm
    @stephenwilhelm Год назад +42

    I've long wondered about this. One of the big features of English is it's ability to absorb words from other languages, but it seemed strange it did it so seldom with the Celtic languages native to Briton. My thought was that it's willingness to absorb vocabulary was tied to how valuable the source language was perceived to be, as opposed to how common the other language was spoken. This would explain why so many French words made it, but so few Welsh or Cornish. I never realized that if you switch from vocabulary to grammar, the story is a bit different.

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Год назад +1

      Welsh is VSO.

    • @voxveritas333
      @voxveritas333 Год назад +7

      We may have adopted vocabulary from French, but thank God we don't have their tortured grammar.

    • @GoGreen1977
      @GoGreen1977 Год назад +7

      Or the tortured grammar of its cousin, Spanish.

    • @KarenMariaMcCormack
      @KarenMariaMcCormack Год назад +2

      @@galinor7 as are Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Manx. I don't know about Cornish or Bretton but i imagine they're VSO too

    • @virginiamontaldo440
      @virginiamontaldo440 Год назад +13

      Syntax is deeper than loanwords. The fact some syntax stayed but most vocabulary didn't means people in Britain mostly switched vocabulary but retained more of the way they thought/composed sentences. This is a classic example of the backbone of a substratum language, previously spoken by most of a population that then was subjugated/conquered/invaded and forced to make a language switch.
      Also think of this: when a linguistically naive person, for example, creates a Spanish-speaking character in an anglophone context, they will have him/her throw random Spanish words in the English dialogue, like 'I went with my amigo to his casa'. That's the WRONG way to show this character was born speaking Spanish. The way we think in our most used language most often comes out in another with atypical, 'wrong' syntax. So a Spanish speaking characters would make 'errors' along those lines, not vocabulary.

  • @DownhillAllTheWay
    @DownhillAllTheWay Год назад +4

    A very interesting and informative video, which I will pass on to my Spanish son-in-law, who lives in England, and takes some interest in the history of the movement of peoples, and languages.

  • @bron-sconcess.10
    @bron-sconcess.10 Год назад

    Fascinating stuff! As my curiosity toward both language/s grows, I feel more satisfied? A commanding and deft handling of the history and much appreciated. Thanks. 🌿

  • @user-om2ti8jj1f
    @user-om2ti8jj1f Год назад +1

    Fascinating video! Thank you very much for your tremendous work, Gideon! I love this historic excursion series!
    By the way, as a non-native speaker studying English, I've though about this "meaningless do". In "I have to do it", for example, it plays an essential role, marking an action that has to be performed. But in "Do you speak English?" or "I don't know" it has only grammatical meaning, making the logic structure of the English sentences, but doesn't bear any meaning itself. And in "How do you do?" the first "do" is grammatical, "meaningless do", but the second is actual, essential "do".

  • @LMB2301
    @LMB2301 Год назад +9

    A really interesting video which answered a number of questions I had floating around my head. Such as the word combe - having lived in France many years, where combe designates a valley, I assumed English had borrowed it from French. Not so! Also in parts of France and French-speaking Switzerland, the word nant is used for a stream or small river, just like in Welsh. Now I understand where the influence comes from! Thanks for posting 👍

  • @raychat2816
    @raychat2816 Год назад +6

    Quite an enriching video, thank you 😊😊😊, I’m from the Levant, and as you can guess, the last 10.000+ years or so of languages and they shaped us is a pretty fascinating one as well, with controversies alive and kicking today as well …

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +1

      The history of the Levant goes back way longer than Britain. You had agriculture and towns while we were still throwing spears at wildebeest

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад

      We celts came from the Levant originally so hey cuzz!

  • @rtheben
    @rtheben Год назад

    really great summary, thousands of years in 30 minutes, well done! It makes you want to buy a book about it

  • @Alasdair37448
    @Alasdair37448 Год назад

    I appreciate your unbiased opinion and sticking to the facts. a very good analysis.

  • @lilsprugga
    @lilsprugga Год назад +3

    I have always enjoyed finding out about the history of language.

  • @christinelegate8137
    @christinelegate8137 Год назад +4

    Hi from Canada 🇨🇦. I’m new to your channel. It just came up on my feed. This really interesting. I’m Scottish/Irish and English decent and can speak some Gaelic. My Canadian husband learned Gaelic due the same background and is fluent now. I’ve learned a lot from your video and I’ve subscribed.

  • @stallion1906
    @stallion1906 Год назад

    Love your video. I'm an English teacher in China and find your videos very useful. They are a bit advanced for my students, so I usually use part of the information with my students.

  • @alkante2962
    @alkante2962 Год назад +1

    😄 J'adore la subtile rectification des idées préconçues que certains pourraient encore avoir au sujet de nos ancêtres du Néolithique!
    Intéressant de voir comment les dernières découvertes en recherche génétique ont permis de valider/invalider certaines hypothèses concernant la Préhistoire et l'Histoire...

  • @dannestrom
    @dannestrom Год назад +33

    The Swedish word for iron is järn, and the pronunciation of haearn is quite similar to the Swedish word. According to the Swedish Wikipedia, järn and iron are from older germanic.

    • @susilgunaratne4267
      @susilgunaratne4267 Год назад +1

      Main iron source for extraction is called "Hematite".

    • @silverstreettalks343
      @silverstreettalks343 Год назад +6

      I'd taken the relationship between Eisen and iron to be due to rhotacism, as in the -is/-ir plural for lamb in English and German.
      However, even if iron came to England from Cuxhaven, that doesn't entirely negate the possibility of a Celtic origin.

    • @krysiabower55
      @krysiabower55 Год назад

      Àa

    • @krysiabower55
      @krysiabower55 Год назад

      A

    • @krysiabower55
      @krysiabower55 Год назад

      @@susilgunaratne4267 aàaaaa

  • @cathygillies7271
    @cathygillies7271 Год назад +25

    Here's a Scottish Gaelic (also Irish Gaelic) word construction that is heard in Nova Scotia, Canada --especially Cape Breton Island where thousands of Highland Gaelic-speakers settled --- I was just 'after' putting the kettle on when you came in. This is a direct translation from Gaelic but is part of the dialect in English.

    • @guidovaughan8767
      @guidovaughan8767 Год назад +4

      That is the construction in Welsh too, something like Dw' i WEDI rhoi'r tegell a ferwi, I think it is. I am after putting like Gaelic is used for "I've just put"... Unlike the dialectal Wnest ti... example they give in the video

    • @ladybug5859
      @ladybug5859 Год назад +2

      @@meadow-maker YES that sentence is good e2nglish tho a bit informal but the use of AFTER in the other sentences leaves me a bit confused as to meaning as we don't say that in American English

    • @eisirt55
      @eisirt55 Год назад +4

      We use that structure here in Ireland commonly as well.

    • @martinmuller2809
      @martinmuller2809 Год назад

      I want to thank you for the trouble you're after taking to come and explain.

    • @ezzovonachalm9815
      @ezzovonachalm9815 Год назад +2

      I am just after: the exact correspondent of the pusclavin " sem drö a.. sem drö a fà ...a legia, ..a ga pensà sü
      Poschiavo is an isolated . non- lombard language spot on the south Alps, 30 km from the Lombard border .

  • @dittepreznanszky2163
    @dittepreznanszky2163 Год назад +1

    I find your videos very interesting! Thank you for sharing. And, above all, I find your T-shirt in this video very cool :)

  • @johnalcala1284
    @johnalcala1284 Год назад +1

    These videos are amazing for me. I am very ignorant to the topic half the things go over my head but I cannot stop listening to it. I actually take little notes. Since I have been traveling to different parts of the UK over the past 15 years. I have become to realize that is not at all what I thought and it had been an amazing discovery. I have found, maybe a reach, some commonalities of blending of different cultures and people coming from my Mexican heritage. The various indigenous and remote peoples of the base I stand from. I am learning something similar with UK. I know it is nothing new to everyone. But for me it is amazing. This topic is rich and spans so much time it is such a treat to have to this and learn. If I could do it over it again and different circumstance I would of like to study this field properly. But I will stick to laying concrete and making furniture I guess lol. Thank you very much for this channel and all the knowledge that you offer. It is a deep rabbit hole to say the least.

  • @citizen1988
    @citizen1988 Год назад +15

    Hi, and thanks for your video(s).
    Concerning the use of "do", I must argue that even in Albanian we use it, but not so much as in Celtic or in English: e.g. we often say "bëj të flas" = I do speak, or "bëj të fle (or flë, in southern Tosk dialect)" = I do sleep, where Alb. bëj = English (I) do, is maybe used more in the sense of "(I) try to". Alb. "bëj" = I do is quite exclusively used in affirmative phrases, it is very rear in interrogative phrases, and quite never in negatives.
    Instead of English, we use the present continuous in two forms:
    1. The regular form uses "duke" + past participle, the former word being very difficult to translate, but in Albanian it relates to the verb "duke-m/-sh/-t" = I/thou(s-he/it) appear(s), which in northern Geg dialect yields "tu(j)", e g. Tosk (= standard Alb.) "duke fjetur", Geg "tu(j) fjet" = sleeping, "duke folur", Geg "tu(j) fol" = speaking, etc. I find this form with "duke, tu(j)" as an ekuivalent of English "to".
    2. The other form uses another supportive word, "po", which again is very difficult to find an ekuivalent in English, but we use the same word for yes, and as an abbreviation of "por" = but, as e.g. in "po fle" = (I) am sleeping, "po flas" = (I) am speaking, etc. This form is used in either affirmative, negative, or interrogative phrases.
    On the other side, Albanian has the word "do" - spelled do, not du as its English phonetic equivalent - and uses it in the supportive role of the future tense, as in "do të flas" = I will speak/talk, in the very sense of will, as it's a short form of the Alb verb, in Tosk "dua", in Geg "me/tu(j) dash" = to will, want, like, etc., which may only be found in the interrogative phrases of singular, as e.g. in "çfarë do?" = what do (thou) want/like/will?
    It is for sure not by coincidence the similarity both of grammatical forms and words used in both Albanian and English.

    • @pts888
      @pts888 Год назад

      Albanian-Dardanian King Bretton

  • @freddiemercury8700
    @freddiemercury8700 Год назад +4

    YOU MUST've put lot of hours to made this video! Highly interested and informative. Thanks for all your effort gaffer! Greetings from pyssycat lover.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +4

      Many thanks. Yes, indeed it was a month's work at least. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Cheers.

  • @kathleenlindley6157
    @kathleenlindley6157 Год назад

    Facinating. It is amazing that we are able to communicate at all. Thank you.

  • @robertdoom8331
    @robertdoom8331 Год назад

    Excellent and truly delightful! Thank you!

  • @rubenporrasm.6199
    @rubenporrasm.6199 Год назад +7

    What a marvellous video Gideon! A real amazing research, entertaining and fantastic presentation!
    I'm from Venezuela and one of my dreams was to learn English, which l had the opportunity of study it in Coventry and Warwick, 39 years ago.
    I've been teaching it since then and l always say that all languages should have the simplicity of English regarding the most tedious matter, verbs conjugation!
    Just 7 main auxiliaries and 3 verb tenses! Whilst in Castilian for example, we have to learn 5 verbs for each tense, having around 23 tenses.
    Thanks for all your terrific and amusing videos! Blessings!

  • @Brumairevideo
    @Brumairevideo Год назад +141

    Hi, always so interesting. I'm half breton (then from France), we have this breton word still used "Mazout", it means diesel for heaters and in french slang it's a mixture with alcohol. "Avon" looks like "Aven" in breton, it means "River" too. Bard (Barde in french) is still used too and comes from Gaul also then celtic. In Breton "Pen" means "Head" and "Leader, Chief" (Penmarc'h is located in Brittany and means "horse head"). We have "Du" in Breton it means "Black" so what's the meanning of DUblin (blin?)? Great channel thank you!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +37

      Absolutely fascinating to hear this from a Breton speaker.

    • @denisdooley1540
      @denisdooley1540 Год назад +60

      The "Du" in "Dublin" does indeed mean dark, as does the "Doo" in my surname, Dooley (Dubhlaoich). The second syllable in Dublin means pool, so essentially "dark pond".
      Dark is actually "dubh" so the b goes with the Du- and not the -lin.

    • @Brumairevideo
      @Brumairevideo Год назад +27

      @@denisdooley1540 Finally I got the answer, thank you! Something I found weird when I went to Dublin, Gaelic really looks like Breton but it doesn't have any sense to me, I mean I can understand romance languages as a french even if I didn't study them but for these both celtic languages it was confusing, they seem so close and so far in the same time. Kénavo 🙂

    • @Brumairevideo
      @Brumairevideo Год назад +17

      @@LetThemTalkTV I can only read a sub Breton language from my area, a kind of mix between Breton and French spoken by sailormen that my mother used to speak. Literary Breton language is hard to learn and is dying in fact. Diwan school is trying to save it but it's a wager. I think in one or two generations this language will be extincted.

    • @FluxTrax
      @FluxTrax Год назад +1

      @@denisdooley1540 Svarttjønna

  • @maxbarrett2135
    @maxbarrett2135 Год назад

    WONDERFUL, indeed!
    Thanks a lot for your entertaining, sophisticated style, explaining such an interesting piece of history to the people.
    I do be subscribing, of course! ☘

  • @brendaroxde6471
    @brendaroxde6471 Год назад

    I’m a new follower . Love your lessons and know more about history . Thank you 🙏🏻👏🏼👍🏼

  • @Oluinneachain
    @Oluinneachain Год назад +54

    When I was in school, the teacher asked a young fella ( fellow) to come up with a sentence with the word “autumn” in it. He replied “ In the autumn, the farmers do be out in the fields “. Dobedobedo is very common in Ireland. And shure why not?👍🏼

    • @bryanjackson8917
      @bryanjackson8917 Год назад +3

      I always thought the phrase, was "shuren begorran".

    • @Oluinneachain
      @Oluinneachain Год назад +15

      @@bryanjackson8917 only in Hollywood and British TV.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Год назад +3

      I didn't realise Frank Sinatra was of Irish origin 😂
      ("Strangers in the Night")

    • @jegsthewegs
      @jegsthewegs Год назад +1

      @@Bjowolf2 millions of us have origins outside the country in which we were born. That's why research into ancestry is so popular.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Год назад +2

      @@jegsthewegs Yes, I know 😉
      You may have missed my little joke there about the Irish "dobedobedoo" - Sinatra actually sings that in his famous version of "Strangers in the Night", as you probably know 😂

  • @chcomes
    @chcomes Год назад +5

    a small correction. In Spanish we do have the same structure "estoy bebiendo café". "Bebo café" would be a generic, atemporal sentence like in " I drink coffee and not tea"

    • @veraahllof
      @veraahllof Год назад +1

      My thoughts exactly. "Bebo café" or "estudio" would sound odd as anwers to "que haces"

    • @JuanAlbertoAlonso
      @JuanAlbertoAlonso Год назад +3

      I do 😊 😊also agree. I would say that when referring to what you are doing ‘now’ there is a strong tendency for Spanish to use the ‘estar + gerund’ construction. ‘Estoy viendo un vídeo de Gideon’ is something you are doing ‘now’, whereas ‘veo vídeos de Gideon’ is something you usually do, but not necessarily ‘now’.

    • @wayneseex1595
      @wayneseex1595 Год назад +1

      Yes, but it comes from the Latin gerund, although admittedly you have pinpointed a similar present continuous tense in use in Spanish. It could of course also have been influenced by Celtiberian!

  • @ronaldl9085
    @ronaldl9085 Год назад

    I am thanking you for this wonderful and instructive video.

  • @adoptalandiaalisa5496
    @adoptalandiaalisa5496 Год назад

    Extremely interesting! Thanks a lot!

  • @williampatten9165
    @williampatten9165 Год назад +40

    Scottish, irish, welsh, cornish , and english genes flow through me, yet I was born in Montana from a long lineage of Americans. Can this cowboy be yearning for knowledge of his own history? I also have a strong desire to learn more about early humans, and proto-language. This channel helps calm that beast inside me.

  • @GizmoFromPizmo
    @GizmoFromPizmo Год назад +3

    What a GREAT video!

  • @hansdegroot8549
    @hansdegroot8549 Год назад

    Very interesting video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @sarahhhh775
    @sarahhhh775 Год назад

    Very interesting and informative. Thankyou!

  • @astronorthwet636
    @astronorthwet636 Год назад +23

    I’m learning Italian presently. I always wondered why the sentences seem to be structured backwards from English. Very interesting that Celtic language had not many words incorporated into English, but those that were changed the entire structure of sentences. I will be watching more of your videos!👍

    • @thomaswoodward3903
      @thomaswoodward3903 Год назад +2

      I thought the sentence structure in English mainly came from German, and the sentence structure in French, Spanish, Italian (which seems to be backwards compared to English) came from Latin.

    • @ferruccioveglio8090
      @ferruccioveglio8090 Год назад +1

      Structured backwards? Well, Italian doesn't have an interrogative form (but north italian languages like piedmontese have), is the pronunciation that gives you the "question feeling" (as is in Welsh, I see). In Italian (and French, Castillano, Català, Portuguese...) _usually_ the adjective follows the noun (una mela rossa - a red apple, un uomo ricco - a rich man) but some times it precedes (un buon caffè - a good coffee). Sometimes the position changes the meaning: "un uomo buono" - a good man, but "un buon uomo" - a simple minded man, "Hai una faccia bella!" - You (well, Thou...) have a beautiful face!, "Hai una bella faccia!" - You are insolent!!, "una donna buona" - an good woman, "una buona donna", a bit... ehm....

  • @schmozzer
    @schmozzer Год назад +5

    A very good introduction to a tricky but fascinating subject. Scholars have been responsible for a lot of assumptions about vocabulary that don't hold up. The British word 'coit' meaning wood remained in use as a place-name in Nottinghamshire until the C19th (even if no-one knew what it meant). It seems to have been used in the same way in Anglo-Saxon (coitan) but may have been mistranslated as cott or cottage. It was feminine the same as 'coed' in modern Welsh.

  • @ldshk
    @ldshk Год назад

    Wow! Thanks for this historical context 🤔

  • @Deparis73
    @Deparis73 Год назад

    Congratulations on your marvelous work... I was going to comment about the present continuous in Spanish but your video noted that case as well. I paused too quickly :)
    I have learned a lot, especially the History of Languages and Europe.

  • @frederikstucki9971
    @frederikstucki9971 Год назад +15

    The "do/does/don't/doesn't" in front of another verb is - still today - totally common e.g. in Alemannic (the native Swiss language, of pre-medieval Germanic origins and with many similarities to the Scandinavian languages). It took me 3 weeks to be fluent and secure in Danish, and 4 weeks for Dutch, as they're so obviously similar in structure, vocabulary, grammar and syntax) to my Swiss mother tongue. Of course, our Helvetian origins are Celtic as well. Things are changing fast now (standardised media gibberish, general decrease of active vocabulary).

    • @annatinaschnegg5936
      @annatinaschnegg5936 Год назад +3

      The «meaningless do» immediately made me thing of the swiss german « go/ga » as in « I gange ga ichoufe », which when translated word by word gives something along the line of “I go (to) go shopping”. I’ve often wondered why we have that “useless go”..

    • @ruedihuber8798
      @ruedihuber8798 Год назад

      @@annatinaschnegg5936 ichaufe ist hochdeutsch, schwizertütsch heissts poschte

    • @annatinaschnegg5936
      @annatinaschnegg5936 Год назад +1

      @@ruedihuber8798 Äuä!! hie sägämr ichoufä!!

    • @harrynewiss4630
      @harrynewiss4630 Год назад

      And there are other examples in other Germanic dialects too. The claim that these constructions in English are Celtic influences is highly contentious.

    • @MMM-dq9jj14up
      @MMM-dq9jj14up Год назад +1

      Frederik Stiki..Yep, you hit it, on the head. We are losing words.

  • @user-vn2on9tz9g
    @user-vn2on9tz9g Год назад +9

    Thank you for this video, Gideon! Celtic influence on English is very interesting, cause it was almost forgotten by linguistics, but it clearly exists and made it all the way through the centuries by the Celts, who started speaking their vernacular English

    • @jeantuathail
      @jeantuathail Год назад

      Anglo-Saxon/Germanic "scientists" and "linguists" will never admit to the heritage of Celtic in the English language. It is/was a political thing, continued to this day by tally sticks and economic incentive.

  • @Sunjoy1
    @Sunjoy1 Год назад

    As always, so interesting.!!

  • @gregreilly326
    @gregreilly326 Год назад

    Great video! I had no idea of these things.

  • @petrusliger3717
    @petrusliger3717 Год назад +4

    I've always regarded that meaningless do as a funny thing.
    Regarding the similarities between welsh an french, here are some examples :
    Eng: sad
    French : triste
    Welsh : trist
    Eng : bridge
    Fr : Pont
    Wlsh: Pont ( or bont)
    Eng : Church
    Fr: église
    Wls : eglwys
    Eng : horse
    Fr : cheval
    Wls : ceffyl ( sounds "kefal" like the old french word "cavale)
    Eng: Windows
    Fr : fenêtre
    Wls : fenestr
    And many more these...

    • @alkante2962
      @alkante2962 Год назад +1

      A cousin of mine from Brittany and speaking Breton married a Welsh. She soon spoke welsh fluently and better than her husband(hubby, children and welsh collegues'opinion)!
      edit : She had to reverse to french with me, though 😅

  • @MarcoMenozziPro
    @MarcoMenozziPro Год назад +79

    I'm from Emilia, in northern Italy. We speak a Gallo-Romance language that has many words of Celtic origin and is intelligible with the Occitan and Catalan languages. After watching this video it seems to me that our Emilian language is definitely more celtic than English.

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад +17

      Yes I had a weird gallic discussion with a lady in the hills north of Udine, close enough to welsh to understand it!

    • @pennypiper7382
      @pennypiper7382 Год назад +10

      Marco Menozzi. This is fascinating. So many Celtic words are hidden in the ancient Italic dialects. Italian is just a mere 900 years old…or thereabouts.
      The family of Indo European languages is vast and amazing. Thank you for this video.

    • @angelolaurenzaMJJ
      @angelolaurenzaMJJ Год назад +7

      @@pennypiper7382 Even italian has several celtic words. This is because mainland celts lived in northern Italy (they founded Milan) and were strictly linked to the romans. So, several imperial latin Words derived from celtic. Celtic is more present in northern italian languages and in french and iberian languages, since the only contact with the south was through latin.

    • @ezzovonachalm9815
      @ezzovonachalm9815 Год назад

      @@angelolaurenzaMJJ
      The archaeologic findings made in the center of Milan a few years ago reveal findings of the LIGURIAN horizont of Golasecca. Under this stratum, the terrain is sterile.
      So Milan , has been founded by the Ligurians in the center of the wast forest of Cispadania where they had a sanctuary. Nortern Italy was densely populated by the Ligurians, the main nation that had repopulated north- west Europe after the last glaciation.Ligurian toponyms, hydro- oro- zoo- and phytonyms are found from the British Isles (Albion)to Sicily (the Siculi) and from the Baltic to France (la tarasque de Noves )and Spain.
      The Celts immigrated much later in small dispersed groups , seeking new ground for agriculture. The Ligurians were redoutable warriors ( Aeschilos in his Prometheus liberated
      warns Herkules from the Ligurian army:
      ηξεις δε Λιγυων εις αταρβητον στρατον
      cited by Strabo, Geographica p 256 of the bilingual edition Biblioteca Universale Rizzoli).
      As the Etrucans penetrated the padan forest and encountered the Ligurians there was no military conflicts.
      After the Romans had conquered Cis and Transpadania, the Ligurians entered the military as auxilliares, and acceded to the class of the Knights among which the senate recruited his members.
      The myth of the foundation of Milan by some savage Gallic rabbles has been debunked by archaeology and genetics. As preindoeuropeans the Ligurians had majoritarily the A Rhesus negative Bloodgroup.7.11.22.

    • @MrMirville
      @MrMirville Год назад +7

      Northern Italy used to be called Gallia cisalpina by the Romans, didn’t it?

  • @loredana8716
    @loredana8716 Год назад

    I really enjoyed your video. Thank you!
    I started studying some Welsh a while ago and I also noted that the grammar structure of the English language, especially with regard to that meaningless “do,” comes from the Celtic language

  • @patricknorton5788
    @patricknorton5788 Год назад

    Very interesting content and engaging presentation. Thanks!

  • @InfoBabe
    @InfoBabe Год назад +5

    In the mid-1980's I visited Israel and worked on a Kibbutz with 3 West German girls. I kept up a correspondence with one of them. She told me that when she wrote out English essays in college, she always used Latin derived forms of English words. She found that she received higher marks then when using other English words with etymologies from Norman French or Saxon origins, etc.

  • @yossiraz7183
    @yossiraz7183 Год назад +5

    Shalom Gideon, really like this video - the English language does have a fascinating story (at least before your friends from across the pond ruined it). Keep making your videos, they are fascinating to watch and very insightful!

  • @tsgillespiejr
    @tsgillespiejr Год назад

    I've always loved McWhorter's book, and I loved this video! Excellent presentation!

  • @hclaireaux
    @hclaireaux Год назад

    Fantastic presentation!

  • @carlinamarie59
    @carlinamarie59 Год назад +4

    Loved this. Makes total sense as TESOL teacher. Some comments I'd like to make.
    I have noticed many people who speak an Indian variety of English have a tendency to apply present continuous tense in a range of situations that English L1 speakers do not. I'm not sure if this reflects their own grammar system, or if it's over compensation in applying new grammar.
    Also, in Vietnamese language I notice the word "lam" which usually translates to "make" is often also used similarly to the English "do", however I'm not sure if that's the meaningless "do".
    In the the German language "do" can translate to "tun", but again, Germans seen to use "machen" in a similar way to the English useless "do", and perhaps "tun" is the useful form if the word.
    I'm not fluent in any language but English so I'm not sure about these observations.
    I do however, explain the "emphatic" form of do to my students.

    • @anneli1735
      @anneli1735 Год назад

      German 1.L (spoken) English 2.L (spoken fluently) Latin 3.L French 4.L (just some basics left from school time) Spanish 5.L (spoken fluently)
      “Tun” in German is often used like the meaningless “Do” in English at least in the northern part of Germany especially where people still use “Plattdeutsch” which is very close to English (and Dutch).
      “Machen” in German translates to “make” or the meaningful “do” in English - though it’s the other way round 😉

  • @NikhileshSurve
    @NikhileshSurve Год назад +3

    15:07 Sounds very interesting. Seems like you should make a video on that too "Celtic influence on French".

  • @martinvoet217
    @martinvoet217 Год назад

    This was a very interesting video. Thanks!

  • @ahmedoum4718
    @ahmedoum4718 Год назад +1

    Interesting lesson to be honest. Thank you very much .

  • @lidiaadobato7822
    @lidiaadobato7822 Год назад +8

    I'm not a linguist, just a lover of languages and I can tell that you speak from a vast knowledge. And you're very clear. Thanks a lot! I was fascinated by the names of train stations in Scotland. Gealic has such a beauty and sonority! Please, can anyone tell me how to say thank you in Gaelic Celt? Thanks!

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 Год назад +4

      In Irish it is “Go raibh maith agat”. Literally, “ May good (maith) be at you”.

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 Год назад +1

      And here is another video you might find interesting, on how Irish influences the English spoken in Ireland. ruclips.net/video/DyGpq4yKPG4/видео.html

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад

      @@gerardacronin334 But what is "maith"?

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 Год назад

      @@mikespearwood3914 As I said above, “maith” means “good”.

    • @ogaram
      @ogaram Год назад +1

      Maith = good. Is maith sinn = that is good. Smashing = is maith sinn. There are lots more Gaelic words in English than the list shown here. Of course, the influence of the language of an inferior race (according to the superior invader) would not be acknowledged.

  • @phylbrake3719
    @phylbrake3719 Год назад +5

    Diolch o galon am y fideo addysgiadol hon!/Thanks a million for this informative video! I am sure that you have heard about the 'Celtic from the West' theory. If true, it could mean that the Celtic languages arrived in Britain, and Ireland, a lot earlier than previously thought. Your analysis of the origin of the names of the river Thames is interesting. The orthodox theory is that it is from the Proto-Celtic *tamesās, which is also the root of other river names such as the Tamar (Devon/Cornwall), Afon Taf (x2 in South Wales). It's true that there are very few words thought to be of Brittonic/Old Welsh origin in English, but one of them is "car" which comes from the Welsh for a sled. Again, especially in the west (of England), English and Welsh populations lived side by side. Any place-name begining with "bret-" usually signifes a Welsh-speaking population. The theory of Welsh substrates in English is beginning to gain a lot of currency. You mention the auxiliary "do" in the video. Another one is the present particle (gerund) -ing which mimics the use of the imperfective (I think you call it "continuous" in the video.) marker "yn" in Welsh, e.g. Mae'r dyn yn siarad. ('The man is talking.)

  • @davidwhelan1545
    @davidwhelan1545 Год назад

    A great documentary.
    Thank you.

  • @BLVE
    @BLVE Год назад +2

    I do love this video. Very, very interesting. And your Castilian sounds really good, enhorabuena.
    As basque I also heard about oxonian Prof. Stephen Oppenheimer's the theory about basque landing in Great Britain after the glaciation 16k years ago and their huge influence in the Irish, Welsh, Scottish and English people's DNA (more than Celts or AngleSaxons one). Luckily, their influence has been limited to genetics and they didn't pass on our difficult grammar (sintaxis and our crazy verb system).

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian Год назад +23

    I really find the topic of the effects of Celtic languages on English fascinating. As you consider things like the status of English following the Norman conquest, one potential situation is that just was English was relegated to a lower class dialect, possibly, though not attested in writing, that Celtic influence was already present. The sagas of the Saxons and Danes would have been "high court" entertainment, but if the Celts really did stay right where they were and were not displaced, well, how likely is that their language was displaced? Other words like "cat," "uncle," and a number of other words are more or less cognates across Celtic, Italic, and Germanic languages. When combined with grammatical survivals you describe, perhaps the legend of the origins of English has been vastly over simplified, and continues to be more simplified than it really was.

    • @paulduffy4585
      @paulduffy4585 Год назад +2

      Isn't that the case with so much though? And it's a real pity. What we might have of the truth gets lost in the desire to simplify things that are by nature complex. And also this compulsion to make definitive statements, when in reality we absolutely don't know.

    • @cowsharkdefin6376
      @cowsharkdefin6376 Год назад

      Another possibility is that the invention of the printing press allowed for much more writing to be produced, including works in informal English. You're less likely to use a quill and parchment for something casual, but maybe a printing press.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Год назад +3

      The Celts did not stay where they were, large populations likely migrated to the west where their kingdoms were based to an ever greater extent with the passage of time. This is attested to by modern genetic studies. This was an interesting video but given the hostile relationship between the Anglo-Saxons and the Britons I find it very surprising he suggests that there was not substantial migrations of Celtic populations westwards from the areas under Saxon rule.

    • @theeddorian
      @theeddorian Год назад +2

      @@roberthudson3386 The genetic evidence mentioned in the video says that by and large they did. By the time the Danes and Saxons are arriving there was no place left to migrate to on the planet that did not populations already in place. Earlier migrations may have replaced significant portions of populations. There is support for that in European genetics. The account in the video though discusses the surprise that population genetics does not reflect evidence of wide spread replacement. That indicates the population remained as an "under class" for the the Saxons, just as the Sacon/Celtic population did when the Normans arrived. All I suggested is that the language is more of a layer cake than the common account describes. If the Celtic population stayed when the Saxons moved then their language stayed right there with them.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Год назад +1

      @@theeddorian What evidence? He didn't provide evidence that I'm aware of, just an assertion. There have been multiple studies that have suggested the populations in modern day Wales and Cornwall are distinct genetically, there are also studies that suggest more Scandinavian DNA in areas of northern England and the Scottish Highlands, which are areas settled by the Old Norse.

  • @reintsh
    @reintsh Год назад +11

    The "meaningless do" also exists in the dialect of Helmond and surroundings, a town east of Eindhoven (Netherlands).

    • @peteymax
      @peteymax Год назад +1

      The do used in Hiberno-English and in Scots English has a very specific purpose, it expresses habituation. That is what usually or normally occurs. It’s really useful 😊

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад +1

      Yep, runaway celts there. Hi cuzz 🙋‍♀️

    • @andeekaydot
      @andeekaydot Год назад

      Nein, es ist nicht meaningless in deinem Beispiel. Es ist eine Art Verlaufsform. Present Continuous:
      Was tust du gerade?
      Ich tu lesen. Ich bin gerade dabei, zu lesen.
      Im Ruhrgebiet: ich bin grad am Lesen dran...

    • @reintsh
      @reintsh Год назад

      @@andeekaydot I merely cited the term "meaningless do" from the video... In Helmond we can for example say "Doe dè mar op-ète" (i.e. "Doe dat maar opeten" i.e. Tu das nur/allerdings aufessen") where proper Dutch would be "Eet dat maar op" ("Iss das einfach"). I occasionally use this example to correct people saying "Did you went" in their English, which is obviously wrong, it should of course be "Did you wented?" 😀🎼🎵🎶🎻

  • @vernonrozelle74
    @vernonrozelle74 Год назад

    Excellent and done (Do) with a great sense of history , and humor to keep us amateurs engaged. William Safire (On Language) was my favorite writer and I (Do) speak some Duetsche - so here is my favorite German expression: SEHR Gut !!! Und Danke Schöene!!

  • @carolinedegraef5603
    @carolinedegraef5603 Год назад

    Love your videos- thanks!