How to say 'HELLO' in Tatar | Tatar language in 3 minutes.

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • I'm really excited to start the series of Tatar lessons. I received quite a few requests to record some Tatar language lessons. In this very first lesson, we'll learn how to greet people and say bye in Tatar. There are formal and informal ways to do that. Let's dive in! #Tatars #TatarLanguage #TatarLessons

Комментарии • 16

  • @ihorperec4990
    @ihorperec4990 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for your lessons, Aysylu! They are very useful, especially for Tatar communities in California, Turkey and Finland. But also for a larger audience interested in Tatartsan and Tatar culture.

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for your kind words and support. ❤️

  • @theowlhouseseason3213
    @theowlhouseseason3213 Год назад +4

    Beautiful language, it's so similar to my native language - kazakh! Im learning tatar to great my elder tatar neighbour, she must miss her homeland and i want her to feel as welcome as possible

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Год назад +1

      That’s really nice of you 💚 Thank you for finding the opportunity to learn Tatar

  • @sashawiellette984
    @sashawiellette984 2 месяца назад +1

    This is so cool, I didn't know the literal meaning of Isenmesez. Watching the basics again to fill in gaps in my knowledge as I study. This is helpful especially in promoting Tatar to English speakers, thanks for your lessons!

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Месяц назад

      Sasha, thank you for watching and learning Tatar! I’m really happy to hear that you find these lessons helpful ❤️

  • @bogdan_salavat
    @bogdan_salavat 7 месяцев назад +1

    рахмат - сенкс :)

  • @Zas3340
    @Zas3340 7 месяцев назад

    Salam also means peace in Arabic and we use to greet as well ... thank you so much for the great informations...keep it up

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Месяц назад

      There are quite a few commonalities between Arabic and Tatar. Thank you for watchingthe these lessons!

  • @krlyszd1676
    @krlyszd1676 7 месяцев назад +1

    Dear Aysylu, thnaks for the great videos! Do you have the these text in pdf? Greetings from Hungary!

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for watching these lessons and expressing your necessity for the PDF version! I’ll be working on them soon!

  • @danielvanr.8681
    @danielvanr.8681 Год назад +1

    Not to nitpick, but I found it a bit confusing that you were seemingly mixing three alphabets to replicate the pronunciation. The schwa was rather self-explanatory (although to my knowledge, the norm is to use schwa in Tatar Cyrillic, and ä in Latin-scripted text, but I'm willing to stand corrected), but it took me a while to pick up on the fact that 'ee' stands for long /i/, so basically /i:/.
    Maybe you could provide pronunication using English approximations, Tatar Cyrillic and official Tatar Romanization? Ideally also pronunciation in the IPA, but that might just be a bit overkill. But overall a great channel and great initiative! We just got a Tatar/Turkic girl at work, and I can't wait to surprise her tomorrow with a säläm / сəлəм. :)

    • @AysyluTatarTalks
      @AysyluTatarTalks  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the feedback Daniel. It’s extremely valuable to me. I’ll think about how to better sync the phonetics so it’s easier to read and comprehend.

  • @8shkay
    @8shkay 4 месяца назад

    to me it sound like a mix of Russian and Turkish somehow