Similarities Between Sanskrit and Lithuanian

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @LithuanianwithPaulius
    @LithuanianwithPaulius 6 месяцев назад +494

    Hi guys! This is Paulius, the Lithuanian speaker from the video. 🙋‍♂
    If you want to learn Lithuanian, I invite you to check out my comprehensible Lithuanian podcast for foreign students. 🎧

    • @simplexination9837
      @simplexination9837 5 месяцев назад +2

      Similar to Sri Lankan sinhala

    • @sunlit777
      @sunlit777 4 месяца назад

      @@simplexination9837yes nobody wants to learn neither Sinhala nor Lithuanian

    • @LithuanianwithPaulius
      @LithuanianwithPaulius 4 месяца назад +29

      @@sunlit777 Funny, because I have dozens of students learning Lithuanian. But you know better, don't you? :D

    • @sunlit777
      @sunlit777 4 месяца назад

      @@LithuanianwithPaulius Russians who were made to by Lithuanian government? 😉

    • @LithuanianwithPaulius
      @LithuanianwithPaulius 4 месяца назад +5

      @@sunlit777 haha, no, those who have friends, family or colleagues here.

  • @lokeshk4642
    @lokeshk4642 Год назад +2899

    The cultural minister of Lithuania thanked India for Sanskrit 2 years back. Many Eastern European languages and German has close similarities to Sanskrit but Lithuanian is the closest .

    • @1hindu-sthaani558
      @1hindu-sthaani558 Год назад +200

      Because of Sanskrit is base, sanskrit is world's oldest language at least few lacs year
      Same as Sanatan Hindu Dharm 🚩 🔱 🕉

    • @CosmosChill7649
      @CosmosChill7649 Год назад

      "Sanskrit" is the language of the supremacist Aryans ( brahmins ) who rule India currently
      It is believed to be a codified language, made up by the supremacists, and has not historical background

    • @msaw504
      @msaw504 Год назад +69

      ​@@1hindu-sthaani558 Sanskrit is a few lacs years old? Phew.
      You want to hear something even crazier? In daily hawans that we do during Sandhya (dawn and twilight), we utter current date which is equivalent to 1,960,853,124 years as of now and keeps on increasing everyday. So, does this mean Sanskrit is at least 1,960,853,124 years old?

    • @anti_fascist
      @anti_fascist Год назад

      @@1hindu-sthaani558 abbey jaa, sanskrit was derived from Pali, it is NOT the oldest language in the world stop peddling lies upper caste dindu scum

    • @cardboard_hat
      @cardboard_hat Год назад +125

      ​@@1hindu-sthaani558civilizations ain't even that old my guy

  • @去他妈的中国共产党
    @去他妈的中国共产党 Год назад +1390

    I am an Indian and understood almost all the Lithuanian words! The similarity is striking! However, the sentences were difficult.

    • @deividaszubLT
      @deividaszubLT Год назад +38

      It's because trough time our pronunciation changed a lot here is an example of how people talks in villages up to this day ruclips.net/video/S2RCQTFX6UU/видео.html&ab_channel=Balticfolk

    • @alaskapollock8750
      @alaskapollock8750 Год назад +12

      congrats to India

    • @СмыслЖизни-с3м
      @СмыслЖизни-с3м Год назад +24

      I guess you learned Sanskrit. As far as I know, Hindi is not as similar to Lithuanian as Sanskrit.

    • @gauravsharma_7
      @gauravsharma_7 Год назад +1

      ​@@СмыслЖизни-с3мHindi is basically Prakrit+Sanskrit, Prakrit came out of Sanskrit.

    • @Anonymous-8080
      @Anonymous-8080 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@СмыслЖизни-с3мthose who know Hindi can understand Sanskrit too as Hindi is derived from Sanskrit.

  • @Shiny9009
    @Shiny9009 Год назад +1540

    As a Lithuanian, I knew it was connected to Sanskrit, but I have never ever imagined it to be so similar! That is really interesting video!

    • @ishanabhavsar
      @ishanabhavsar Год назад +23

      At least you knew it was connected. I was clueless until this video popped up because I've subscribed channel. Very informative. And I'll be learning more about Lithuania now too 😊

    • @KanadMondal
      @KanadMondal Год назад +39

      Both are conservative and very old Indo-European languages. Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian branch was always rather closely connected and some think they have a common source later than the Corded Ware Culture. Indo-Iranians and Balto-Slavs are also R1a rather than R1b. Maybe you now all of this, but there is a reason we are similar beyond Indo-European connection. :D

    • @NeerajKumar-is2oh
      @NeerajKumar-is2oh Год назад +12

      Sanskrit is mother of all labguage

    • @ganjus0055
      @ganjus0055 Год назад +2

      Authors forgot that we have samogitian lithuanian dialect that sometimes is even more similar.

    • @AlgisBogomol
      @AlgisBogomol Год назад +1

      Yes, same

  • @sabrinaleedance
    @sabrinaleedance 6 месяцев назад +107

    Seeing 2 language nerds comparing their languages that share an ancient language family...this is so so interesting!!

    • @sgill2446
      @sgill2446 4 месяца назад

      Indo-European or Eurasian

  • @agung_bimantaraputra
    @agung_bimantaraputra Год назад +2674

    As an indonesian and javanese speaker. I can understand agni (agni/geni in Javanese), vayu (Bayu in Javanese), Madhu (Madu in Javanese/Indonesian), dina (dina in Javanese), and Deva (Dewa in Javanese/Indonesian).
    I think Javanese (Basa Jawa) got more influence from sanskrit than Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia)

    • @proudtobeaninfidelkafirand7471
      @proudtobeaninfidelkafirand7471 Год назад +65

      I used to enjoy Gudang Garam :)

    • @krishna-de2jb
      @krishna-de2jb Год назад +140

      Just a simple fact. The word bahasa in bahasa Indonesia itself means language. So it means the Indonesian language.😂

    • @diablodelfuego6633
      @diablodelfuego6633 Год назад +228

      Bahasa is also from Sanskrit word for language "Bhaasha" भाषा

    • @sahasransusbarik
      @sahasransusbarik Год назад +34

      @@proudtobeaninfidelkafirand7471 , yes, I too used to enjoy Gudang Garam , spicy cigarette. 😂

    • @godknifetube
      @godknifetube Год назад +72

      When I worked in Jakarta I understood many Bahasa Indonesia words as they had Sanskrit roots! Your name also has Sanskrit words Biman Tara Putra! Words such as Bhinneka, Rasa, Dirgh Aayu, are all from Sanskrit.

  •  Год назад +1122

    Very interesting! Greetings from Lithuania 🇱🇹♥️🇮🇳

    • @KESHAVKUMAR-fk8ff
      @KESHAVKUMAR-fk8ff Год назад +30

      🇮🇳❤🇱🇹

    • @saurabhsingh5263
      @saurabhsingh5263 Год назад +14

      ​​@@KESHAVKUMAR-fk8ff❤ from India 🇮🇳

    • @paulengels6926
      @paulengels6926 Год назад +20

      Labas. Married to a Lithuanian. Fascinating history, culture, language, food. Love it.

    • @jijinsundar2497
      @jijinsundar2497 Год назад +10

      Love from 🇮🇳

    • @Hitaro69
      @Hitaro69 Год назад +9

      Greetings from India🙏

  • @artrihs
    @artrihs Год назад +1748

    As Latvian it was very interesting, because Lietuva is our bralukai and Sanskrit sounded similar to Latvian as well.

    • @Sarkarifilmyrecap
      @Sarkarifilmyrecap Год назад +49

      Your ancient practices are also similar to "vedic Dharma". Like fire worship. We call it "yagna" and it's an integral part of Hindu Dharma (modern form of Vedic Dharma)

    • @parmykumar8592
      @parmykumar8592 Год назад +26

      The Greeks were always speaking of India as the sacred territory of Dionysus and historians working under Alexander the Greek clearly mentions chronicles of the Puranas as sources of the myth of Dionysus." Alain Danielou - 1907-1994.
      ~
      “Is it not probable that the Brahmins were the first legislators of the earth, the first philosophers, the first theologians ? The Greeks, before the time of Pythagoras, travelled into India for instruction.”
      ~ Voltaire.
      ~
      Nearly all the philosophical and mathematical doctrines attributed to Pythagoras are derived from India. ~ Ludwig von Shroeder
      ~
      It is true that even across the Himalayan barrier India has sent to the West, such gifts as grammar and logic, philosophy, fables, hypnotism and chess, and above all numerals and the decimal system.” Will Durant - American Historian.
      ~
      The history of how Indian fairy tales and fables migrated from one country to another to nearly all the people of Europe and Asia and even to African tribes from their original home in India borders on the marvellous. It is not a case of single stories finding their way by way of mouth ..... from India to other countries but of whole Indian books becoming through the medium of translations the common property of the world .... many fairy tales current among the most various people can be traced to their original home in India - A.A.Macdonell".
      ~
      The oldest Greek writers, observes Sir William Jones, allow that their mythologies were not their own invention (As. Res. III. 467) ; and it is now certain that the early divinities and legends of Greece were the same that were possessed by their brethren in India. If Hegel calls the discovery of the common origin of Greek and Sanskrit the discovery of a new world, the same may be said with regard to the common origin of Greek and Sanskrit mythology “ The legends of the Old Testament - Thomas Lumisden Strange.
      ~
      Mark Twain, American author: "India is, the cradle of the human race, the birthplace of human speech, the mother of history, the grandmother of legend, and the great grand mother of tradition. our most valuable and most instructive materials in the history of man are treasured up in India only."
      ~
      Will Durant, American historian: "India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe's languages: she was the mother of our philosophy; mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics; mother, through the Buddha, of the ideals embodied in Christianity; mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy. Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all".
      ~
      In the Vedic language we have the foundation, not only of the glowing legends of Hellas (Greece), but of the dark and sombre mythology of the Scandinavian and the Teuton" (Cox, Mythology of the Aryan Nations, I., 52, 53).
      ~
      Takshashila University
      Taxila as it is called today, Takshashila University established around 2700 years ago was home to over 10500 students where the students from all across the world used to come to attain specialization in over 64 different fields of study like vedas, grammar, philosophy, ayurveda, agriculture, surgery, politics, archery, warfare, astronomy, commerce, futurology, music, dance, etc. Famous graduates of this university include the ones like Chanakya, Panini, Charaka, Vishnu Sharma, Jivaka, etc. This is the world’s oldest university.
      ~
      India - the land of Vedas, the remarkable works contain not only religious ideas for a perfect life, but also facts which science has proved true. Electricity, radium, electronics, airship, all were known to the seers who founded the Vedas.
      ~ Wheeler Wilcox.
      ~
      Gravitation was known to the Indians before the birth of Newton. The system of blood circulation was discovered by them centuries before Harvey was heard of.
      ~ P. Johnstone
      ~
      "This is an attempt to show that the Druids were the priests of Oriental colonies who emigrated from India and were the introducers of the first or Cadmean system of letters and the builders of Stonehenge, of Carnac, and of other Cyclopean works in Asia and Europe”. Godfrey Higgins "The Celtic Druids”
      ~
      “I take issue with the old school of thought that the cultural and civic life we Westerners enjoy originated in the works of Greek and Roman philosophers. Instead the mind and soul that inspired our words sprang from neither Greece nor Rome, but from an Indo/euro homeland located much further north. In truth according to my studies the history of we Westerners does not begin with the Greeks, we were invented along with the Greeks by Vedic poet seers through their mother tongue, Sanskrit, which evolved into Greek and Latin, which are simple phonetic variants of it.“ Franco Rendich - Indo/European etymology

    • @AAKASHH367
      @AAKASHH367 Год назад +12

      Takshashila was a Buddhist University at that time The student came across the world for studies. Buddhism is the first Indian religion that crossed borders first & of course Sanskrit came later from Indo Eurasian invaders. Languages which were in india prakrut pali & Dravidian much older than Sanskrit.

    • @Dexorfs
      @Dexorfs Год назад +22

      Amazing, right?
      The funny part was that the sentences were more difficult to pick up, but almost all the words that were shared with Sanskrit, also have a counterpart in latvian. I always thought our languages were similar because we lived so nearby, but I guess it's also largely due to their common ancestry!

    • @perpetuallearner8257
      @perpetuallearner8257 Год назад +4

      @@AAKASHH367 yes you're right 👍🏻

  • @hracekk
    @hracekk 8 месяцев назад +128

    this is the most interesting connection between languages, I'm so fascinated by this. Thank you so much for making this video!

    • @user-l4y7r04wy6iv
      @user-l4y7r04wy6iv 22 дня назад

      Now, for the trillion dollar question: Did the "Aryans" originate in India, Europe, or Central Asia?

  • @Diego-de6dq
    @Diego-de6dq 11 месяцев назад +546

    I'm kurdish, and I saw a lot of similarities with the majority of the words with my own language. Awsome to see the similar Indo-European words used in many of our languages.

    • @evdalzarrinolbistan
      @evdalzarrinolbistan 10 месяцев назад +29

      Kurdish (Kurmanci): Smoke=Dûxan, Dream-Aşop, Fire=Agir, Tooth-Diran, Who-Kî, Honey-Hingiv, Wind-Ba, God-Xweda, Wawe=Pêl, Old-Salmend, Your-Te, Day-Roj, To live-Jiyîn

    • @Chaprii_hu
      @Chaprii_hu 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@evdalzarrinolbistanAryans 🗿

    • @Aceliious
      @Aceliious 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@Chaprii_hu Aryans are the birth of civilization

    • @Chaprii_hu
      @Chaprii_hu 9 месяцев назад

      @@Aceliious where are you from I am from india

    • @RajnishMirikar-bq5cv
      @RajnishMirikar-bq5cv 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@Aceliious no aryans are hindu they go from indian in west and civilized the west part the indus civilization more than older than 5000 yeras and aryans are part of this civilization

  • @glambor1
    @glambor1 Год назад +680

    Latvian here🇱🇻🙂. historically 1000 years separate 🇱🇻 and 🇱🇹. we were one tribe waaayyyy back. loved this. We could easily do the same for Latvian and Sanskrit 👍

    • @Samavadaveda
      @Samavadaveda Год назад +48

      Absolutely! Latvian-Lithuanian and Sanskrit have incredible closeness. We probably evolved from same ancestors

    • @JekabaKapnes
      @JekabaKapnes Год назад +10

      c’mon! Latvian and Lithuanian tribes were never united (they had the wars instead).

    • @listenerererz
      @listenerererz Год назад +27

      ​@@JekabaKapnesthat's just a sibling's jealoysity.

    • @EternalflameC.L.
      @EternalflameC.L. Год назад +17

      @@JekabaKapnesyou are talking about close history..they are talking about ancestry ,common common sense!

    • @Samavadaveda
      @Samavadaveda Год назад +10

      They obviously came from the same ancestors. And probably very recent- say 1500-1600 years ago

  • @Apistoleon
    @Apistoleon Год назад +915

    Lithuanian needs to be preserved and spread all around at all cost. What a fascinating language that is!

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Год назад +97

      It was the last European country to be christianised in 1387

    • @GinGerani
      @GinGerani Год назад +37

      Love it: I listened to the lituanian sutartines :D

    • @Radamirs
      @Radamirs Год назад +28

      The same for LATVIAN!

    • @Apistoleon
      @Apistoleon Год назад +41

      @@varoonnone7159 Brutal vicious, murderous crusades had been done to christianize pagan Lithuanians, other pagan Baltics. Crusades had been done to Orthodox Christians, Apostolic Christians, Bogomil Christians, Cathar Christians, Protestants, Muslims and to many others. These are unbelievably sad parts of the history!!!

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Год назад

      @@Apistoleon
      The Islamic invasions of Persia and India, the invention of the black slave trade and its practice for 800 years by arabo-muslims, the genocides of Circassians by Orthodox Russians, Pontic Greeks, Armenians and Assyrians by Muslim Ottomans and the enslavement of white Balkans by North African Muslims were equally brutal and horrendous
      The Abrahamic religions are quite a curse

  • @awilum91
    @awilum91 4 месяца назад +45

    I'm a Spanish speaker which also is an Indo-European language and I was able to find many similarities between Spanish and the Sanskrit and Lithuanian words mentioned in this video.

    • @raimundas2204
      @raimundas2204 Месяц назад

      I don't know the correct name of Pius lx - is it the chronicle of x, I listened to a lot of interesting things there Jūratė Statkutė-Rosales lectures she lives in Venezuela Zeta the editor of the publication has been researching European history all her life and if it is true what she has dug up it turns upside down about gotų origin non avars they went further to portugal and that was earlier With respect p.s with respect Raimundas DARNOS to you

  • @birajguha4797
    @birajguha4797 Год назад +717

    This video BLEW MY MIND! As a Bengali Speaker, I learnt a lot of Sanskrit words as a child, and Lithuanian has so many of them almost identical!

    • @liucijusuberkindas112
      @liucijusuberkindas112 Год назад +32

      Greetings from Lithuania!!! ;)

    • @rolandas77
      @rolandas77 Год назад +33

      because we were one nation/tribe 15-20 000 years ago :)

    • @Tomas-hj1xv
      @Tomas-hj1xv Год назад +1

      ​@@rolandas77👍👍👍😂😂😂

    • @orcaokayork999
      @orcaokayork999 Год назад +2

      OhmyGaadoheDuggaDugga.

    • @mildacha8050
      @mildacha8050 Год назад +9

      Oh yes! For example:
      In Bengali you say "Mishti sopno"
      And in Lithuanian we say "Saldžių sapnų" :)

  • @shilarangarajan
    @shilarangarajan Год назад +910

    I never imagined this connection between Sanskrit and Lithuanian…. It was a delightful episode 🙂

    • @haiga9290
      @haiga9290 Год назад +48

      Being both indo-european and lithuanian being quite conservative make it less surprising tho

    • @prafful_sahu
      @prafful_sahu Год назад +39

      Sanskrit is the mother of all eurashian languages

    • @liveforever141
      @liveforever141 Год назад +75

      @@prafful_sahu wrong. Sanskrit and European languages are like cousins, but not descendants of one another.

    • @fidenemini111
      @fidenemini111 Год назад +39

      @@prafful_sahu Both descended from the common PIE language which split in dialects which in turn distanced from each other and developed into separate Indo-European languages.

    • @tantuce
      @tantuce Год назад +15

      ​@@liveforever141Lithuanian, Latvian and Sanskrit are temporaries. They existed at the same time back in the day.

  • @ArniPara
    @ArniPara Год назад +628

    Such an honour to have been a part of this video and to have met Paulius through you, Bahador :) The more I look into these languages the more I realise how much there is to delve into. Thank you for the opportunity. I'm sure Paulius and I could have kept playing this game for a long time, so credit to you for keeping it crisp 🤭
    Oh, and the Sanskrit word for son that I referred to here is Soonu (सूनु).

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Год назад +41

      Thank you Arnika! As always, it was a pleasure to have you be a part of it:)

    •  Год назад +31

      Sūnus ( Soonus) in Lithuanian🤓

    • @Poriotics
      @Poriotics Год назад +11

      I guess many languages have been evolved from Sanskrit

    • @uzstiklo7141
      @uzstiklo7141 Год назад +23

      I was impressed by your pronunciation of Lithuanian words, Arnika. People who speak Germanic languages, for example, usually have a bit of a problem repeating our words:) Cheers from Lithuania!

    • @uzstiklo7141
      @uzstiklo7141 Год назад +10

      @@Poriotics Lithuanian isn't derived from Sanskrit, though. It's like a sister language or a cousin:)

  • @oldschool86
    @oldschool86 5 месяцев назад +126

    As an Indian I hadn't heard the name of the country Lithuania before. After this video I found they are our distance brothers and sisters. ❤

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp 4 месяца назад +12

      Look up the ancient connection of Scandinavia and the Baltics in Europe, and The Northern Parts of India and Pakistan. Then look at Norse Religion compared to Vedic and Hindu Religion. They all have a shared ancestory.

    • @venkatfaraday
      @venkatfaraday 3 месяца назад +1

      It's similar to luthiyana from Bihar.....luthuania

    • @kiranshekhawat2457
      @kiranshekhawat2457 3 месяца назад +5

      When I was in 8th, my geography teacher told us that there are 3 baltic countries - Latvia, Lithuania and Astoniya.

    • @calamityZ-nh1yu
      @calamityZ-nh1yu 3 месяца назад

      It's Estonia ​@@kiranshekhawat2457

    • @AshishYadav-nj6qp
      @AshishYadav-nj6qp 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@kiranshekhawat2457 Estonia (not astoniya)

  • @Apache148414
    @Apache148414 Год назад +327

    As a Nepalese who took Sanskrit till 5th grade and a basketball fan (many Lithuanians in NBA), it was very interesting that the 2 languages have so much in common. Mind blown 🤯

    • @urosmarkovic9193
      @urosmarkovic9193 Год назад +14

      Serbian Is also simular to both languagea , And we Are better then Lithuanians in basketball

    • @benas_st
      @benas_st Год назад +3

      Love that argumentation xD

    • @rcg2144
      @rcg2144 Год назад +2

      ​@@urosmarkovic9193All Slavic languages in including Russian too

    • @KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv
      @KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv Год назад +1

      ​@@urosmarkovic9193serbian play football ⚽ and of course the tennis player 🐐

    • @labambeiro
      @labambeiro 10 месяцев назад +2

      cool man :D do Nepalese like basketball also? in Lithuania we dont know how to play football but we know basketball. its our national sport 😂

  • @anandawijesinghe6298
    @anandawijesinghe6298 Год назад +595

    As a Sinhala speaker from Sri Lanka, I understood this perfectly ! Sinhala is derived from Sanskrit, therefore is closely related to Hindi from India, and to the Maldivian Divehi which is derived from Sinhala. Greek is also an IE language related to Sanskrit and I understand Greek intuitively ! These Indo-European links are deep seated and have survived dispersion through space and time! Truly amazing indeed ! Thank you for this entertaining demonstration of our shared family links! 🇱🇰 ! 🙏 !

    • @chandra_has
      @chandra_has Год назад +19

      It's so fascinating first sanskrit speakers got out casted from Baltic Sea area.... After they reached India... Stayed for few centuries Then sri vijaya got out casted to Sri Lanka for misdeeds ... Bringing his language and out cast people who were half shaved head.... From their sinhalese started... Such awesome and inspirational linguistic history.

    • @MsLizzie50
      @MsLizzie50 Год назад +33

      ​@@chandra_hasno. The Sanskrit speakers went from India to other countries. There are migratory evidences.

    • @mayanksrivastava9313
      @mayanksrivastava9313 Год назад +1

      Fuk Tamil

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Год назад +7

      ​@@chandra_hasno even European languages aren't native to Europe like Sanskrit, they came from the Caucasus mountains.

    • @chandra_has
      @chandra_has Год назад +7

      @@MsLizzie50
      The following are evidence found till date which scientifically accepted unlike youtube evidence.
      The most common theory is that Sanskrit was brought to India by Indo-Aryan-speaking peoples who migrated from Central Asia. These peoples are thought to have arrived in India around 1500 BCE, and they brought their language with them.
      The linguistic evidence for this theory is strong. Sanskrit is closely related to other Indo-European languages, such as Greek, Latin, and Persian. This suggests that Sanskrit and these other languages share a common ancestor, which was spoken in Central Asia.
      The archaeological evidence for this theory is also strong. There have been a number of archaeological sites found in Central Asia that date to the 2nd millennium BCE. These sites have yielded evidence of Indo-Aryan-speaking peoples, including pottery, tools, and weapons.
      However, there is also some evidence that suggests that Sanskrit may have developed in India from a pre-existing language. This evidence comes from the study of the Dravidian languages, which are spoken by some of the indigenous peoples of India. The Dravidian languages are not related to Sanskrit, but they share some similarities with it. This suggests that Sanskrit may have developed from a Dravidian language, or that the two languages had a common ancestor.

  • @shantanushekharsjunerft9783
    @shantanushekharsjunerft9783 Год назад +763

    I had a Bosnian roommate in college and I could quite accurately guess his conversation with his parents. There are so many Sanskrit sounding words, it’s unbelievable.

    • @prstcufh
      @prstcufh Год назад +75

      In Serbia and Bosnia we speak the same language. I was also amazed hearing some Sanskrit conversations of which I could make out the meaning. By the way, we also have 7 cases and the word order in our sentences is also irrelevant!

    • @username_PK
      @username_PK Год назад +24

      ​@@prstcufhwhere did you hear someone having conversations in Sanskrit that is very rare

    • @prstcufh
      @prstcufh Год назад +20

      @@username_PK in India a couple of years ago.

    • @utubetruthteller
      @utubetruthteller Год назад +31

      @@username_PK sanskrit mantras are commonly recited everywhere

    • @KingshukMonsur
      @KingshukMonsur Год назад +19

      @@username_PK south Asian immigrant's are everywhere and Bangla,hindi/urdu are literary sanskirt language with large amount of loan words from Arabic, Turkic and Persian but still mostly Sanskrit

  • @manojmaitydm
    @manojmaitydm 4 месяца назад +17

    Really fascinating to see the similarities 😅 love from India 🇮🇳

  • @leonig01
    @leonig01 Год назад +1166

    Totally blew my mind. Would have never thought such distant languages would have that many cognates.
    Edit: After getting so much useful info in the comments I hereby realize what an illiterate jerk I was for not realizing these two were both less changed versions of the Proto Indo European language. Me not being a linguist cannot serve as an excuse, so please accept my sincerest apologies ;)

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod Год назад +41

      There's more! It was a great collaboration, thanks Bahador and Arnika!

    • @AmicusAdastra
      @AmicusAdastra Год назад +10

      It’s the same for Basque and Quechua

    • @JYHRO0
      @JYHRO0 Год назад +19

      @@AmicusAdastraquechua and basque? I don’t believe that. But that would be quite a revelation if true

    • @JYHRO0
      @JYHRO0 Год назад +10

      I’m not overly surprised but I wonder if the words had been chosen to be so similar. Probably not random.
      In any case thank you it was interesting.
      One funny thing when she said we still have the seven declensions; of course sanscrit did not evolve, it is a dead language😂

    • @pauldimarco7634
      @pauldimarco7634 Год назад +24

      Perhaps just as crazy is that most of those have cognates in English as well! I knew a few but had to look up most of these: fume, somno-, ignite, dental, virile, mead, vent/wind, divine/deus, bank, senior, thou, quick/vivo
      I love this stuff and enjoyed this video thoroughly!

  • @mordechaifogel6069
    @mordechaifogel6069 Год назад +374

    Lithuanian has actually been theorized to be the least changed Indo-European language from the original, so it makes sense but still very surprising.

    • @ppn194
      @ppn194 Год назад +16

      Add Latvian

    • @ArrowBast
      @ArrowBast Год назад +9

      @@ppn194 Maybe Latvian even 'purer' in native IE terminology. Sanskrit itself has Dravidian Influence events from earliest times.

    • @FlankCobra
      @FlankCobra Год назад +6

      I can't find it now, but I heard a new study suggest that Lithuanian can be even older than Sanskrit and is closer to what Arians actually spoke.

    • @PTI_USA
      @PTI_USA Год назад +16

      @@FlankCobrathat does not make sense given archaeological and scholarly research

    • @garmr214
      @garmr214 Год назад +14

      @@FlankCobrathat makes absolutely zero sense

  • @GinGerani
    @GinGerani Год назад +483

    I am italian and I have classical studies of latin and greek: I have recognized several words and radicals.
    Otherwise we are all indoeuropean :)
    I deeply love this channel!

    • @chicawhappa
      @chicawhappa Год назад +5

      ​@Cr00kedKnightIt's pretty much my conclusion of late, the evidence is hard to ignore.

    • @ayushmankrishna4600
      @ayushmankrishna4600 Год назад +7

      Indo aryan first then indo european we are different now. We are not what we used to be once during pie stage so stop calling all as one people. We are so different that genetic langauges culture everything moved so apart. Say we have a connection. Dont put us all in one group.

    • @GinGerani
      @GinGerani Год назад +11

      @@ayushmankrishna4600 Yes indo-arian is right but the furthest is indo-european: we all have connection. And we all are in the same macro group, then there are the subgroups like indo aryan, germanic, latin et cetera.

    • @GinGerani
      @GinGerani Год назад

      @Cr00kedKnight sorry but I did not understand what do you mean: would you please write shorter and paratactic sentences?

    • @_UCS_SwapnilSahaiSrivastav
      @_UCS_SwapnilSahaiSrivastav Год назад +3

      ​@@GinGeranihello fellow indo-Europeans brother.
      May the gods bless us all.

  • @nikocat2008
    @nikocat2008 7 месяцев назад +24

    I am Hungarian and we studied that baltic languages are unique without relatives.
    I am happy to find this video! Thank you for sharing it. ❤

    • @barnaerdelyi1
      @barnaerdelyi1 6 месяцев назад +6

      how could we have learned such stupidity? everyone knows that the Balto-Slavic language family exists.

  • @IfSoGirl88
    @IfSoGirl88 Год назад +378

    As a Lithuanian I found this very interesting but not surprising as I always knew my language has a lot in common with Sanskrit, one of the main reasons is that they both are ancient languages that haven't changed much over the centuries. Heck, I understand Sanskrit better than Latvian 😂

    • @alokm1233318
      @alokm1233318 Год назад +1

      🙃

    • @tarunmedi
      @tarunmedi Год назад +7

      yes... both have their roots in "aryan migration. "

    • @ravindra7791
      @ravindra7791 Год назад +6

      That's surprising. Is Lithuanian closer to Sanskrit than it is to Latvian?

    • @thatweirdintjkiddo6251
      @thatweirdintjkiddo6251 Год назад

      ​@@ravindra7791Thanks the great indo European milk drinkers!

    • @antrakirsone2992
      @antrakirsone2992 Год назад +9

      ​@@ravindra7791Yes, because Lithuanians use more old forms of the words.

  • @heresy1987LV
    @heresy1987LV Год назад +207

    Latvian is like a non identical twin of Lithuanian so this video gives me shivers. Beautiful similarities.

    • @saloninavale3826
      @saloninavale3826 9 месяцев назад

      Are there any similar words you have to what the girl is saying in Sanskrit?

    • @heresy1987LV
      @heresy1987LV 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@saloninavale3826 yes, basically Lithuanian and Latvian are as similar as Swedish and Norwegian. So it is just as similar to Sanskrit, we have words like Dievs meaning God and uguns meaning fire.

    • @simbasingh9576
      @simbasingh9576 4 месяца назад +1

      @@heresy1987LV amazing we are distant cousins

    • @raptor_il89lv
      @raptor_il89lv 12 дней назад

      As latgalien. word day-> dína -> diena(LT)->diena(LV) is same dīna at latgalien 😅

  • @arsenijskabihno5336
    @arsenijskabihno5336 Год назад +312

    As a Latvian speaker I also understood surprisingly lot from both of the languages

    • @friendlyatheist9589
      @friendlyatheist9589 Год назад +17

      ancient brothers.

    • @abhishvsudhakar
      @abhishvsudhakar Год назад +2

      @arsenijskabihno5336 I was in Latvia during my Erasmus study exchange program. Ive noticed lots of similarities between Latvian and Sanskrit. Especially pronounciation of numbers in Latvian

    • @pritsingh9766
      @pritsingh9766 Год назад +5

      There is a language called tamil ,which was copied from sanskrit and use 30% sanskrit words .That's why you can see so many tamiI zombies whenever any video is related to sanskrit.

    • @prakashsivan1234
      @prakashsivan1234 Год назад

      @@seethabedhikormastklgram Nobody is interested in your stupid theology. Dont poke yr DMK theory here.

    • @josejoseph8725
      @josejoseph8725 Год назад +1

      @pritsingh9766 comedy😁 sanskrit got copied from tamil when it was introduced by speakers of eurasia🙂Indian government itself declared tamil as first classical language in 2004 and sanskrit in 2005😁 sanskrit itself descened from hurrian language that is why you see similarities between sanskrit and Lithuanian languages

  • @gabrielgallardo5824
    @gabrielgallardo5824 6 месяцев назад +77

    I'm spanish speaker and I understood when the Lithuanian said dantis because sound similar to Dientes in Spanish and means the same

    • @GuzzarAwan
      @GuzzarAwan 5 месяцев назад +7

      Well it is also connected to much distant English language called DENTAL 😀.
      We all know Sanskrit and Lithuanian r oldest Alive laungauges in Tree of Indo European language

    • @clavilenyo
      @clavilenyo 5 месяцев назад +6

      Latin dens, dentis
      Greek odoús, odóntos (odontología)

    • @zippyparakeet1074
      @zippyparakeet1074 4 месяца назад

      Because Spanish is derived from Latin which is the oldest Indo European language in Europe and has a lot of shared words with Sanskrit.
      English "Dental" also is derived from Latin. English is a highly Latinized Germanic language.

    • @gabrielgallardo5824
      @gabrielgallardo5824 4 месяца назад

      @@zippyparakeet1074 the oldest Indo-European language was Mycenaean greek

    • @zippyparakeet1074
      @zippyparakeet1074 4 месяца назад

      @@gabrielgallardo5824 True, my bad

  • @MichalBrat
    @MichalBrat Год назад +334

    Slovak speaker here. I was really surpised how many of those words have a lot to do with their counterparts in my language. (Mádhu - Medus - Med, dhúmá - dúmas - dym...).

    • @Oberschutzee
      @Oberschutzee Год назад +25

      We are all indoeuropeans

    • @MichalBrat
      @MichalBrat Год назад +15

      @@Oberschutzee technically I know that, however, it is seldom so clearly manifested

    • @sahargubel2396
      @sahargubel2396 Год назад +15

      Same about the Russian language

    • @MichalBrat
      @MichalBrat Год назад +16

      @@sahargubel2396 sorry, but it's how you act, not how you speak, that determines who is a brother and who is not

    • @Oberschutzee
      @Oberschutzee Год назад +4

      @@MichalBrat 💯

  • @AngelTonchev
    @AngelTonchev Год назад +229

    I'm a Bulgarian. When I started learning Indology in uni, we studied Hindi from the get go and Sanskrit from the second year. But the Hindi professor/teacher, in the first Hindi class, showed us a text in the Latin alphabet of a short text in Sanskrit. The text was specifically written so that we could understand basically all of it, without knowing the language. It was quite magical and although I dropped out after 2nd year, this remained with me and it's been like a hobby to find more and more connections not only between Sanskrit and Bulgarian, but with many other languages. I mean.. I started understanding a bit of Romani just like that, haha!
    Quite fascinating to have a glimpse to the closeness to Lithuanian as well! Great video, will be digging up more on this matter for sure!

    • @goelnuma6527
      @goelnuma6527 Год назад +6

      A relative went to study in Bulgaria from India in the 1980s, he picked up the language in a year the structure was very similar to Sanskrit

    • @KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv
      @KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv Год назад +1

      Cool

    • @Anuclano
      @Anuclano Год назад +2

      @@goelnuma6527 Bulgarian has lost all of its Indo-European structure. Only vocabulary remains.

    • @nikolaykolev1438
      @nikolaykolev1438 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@AnuclanoSanskrit started from the Balkans-Aria/bright,radiant/Perke/stone,roky/.
      Dionysu's campaign 6000 years ago to conquer India.
      In the march participated:Satri,Sinti,Siki,Brigi,Kikoni,Blagii/know as Thracians/.
      Today Bulgarian Language has developed from Sanskrit with 8 cases to analytical,no cases/two remaining,in the process of dropping aut/.
      In order for a maturity to fall,it is necessary to accumulate verb tenses.To replace them.
      This happens slowly,from 1000 to 2000 years,for a single maturity.
      So,for 7-8 maturities it took 7-8000 years.
      In Ingia,Sanskrit was brought from outside and adopted.
      That's why he canned and mixed,with lokal Languages.
      Therefore it does not develop.
      Because it is acquired,not natural.
      Most European Languages are derived from it..Bulgarian is the world's oldest analytical Language.

    • @NisCho754
      @NisCho754 11 месяцев назад +3

      I never knew we had similar words (I speak Bengali btw) like for example dever/devar/debor/dewor= husband’s brother (younger brother to be specific in Bengali)

  • @pandoramurals7058
    @pandoramurals7058 Год назад +121

    ❤from Australia 🇦🇺- father was Lithuanian and spoke 10 languages!

    • @dainiussla1649
      @dainiussla1649 Год назад +2

      O tu? Ar kalbi lietuviškai?

    • @EffectiveLearning-ek6vo
      @EffectiveLearning-ek6vo Год назад +2

      ​@@dainiussla1649tu is you in hindi , our national language in India

    • @karunalatchoumy6182
      @karunalatchoumy6182 4 месяца назад

      ​@@EffectiveLearning-ek6vo Hindi is not national language.but official language of india.English too another official language.

  • @burkcristacchio
    @burkcristacchio 7 месяцев назад +34

    You can find so many similarities with ancient Latin too (And by extension Italian and English)! So fascinating
    Edit. I am going to list some examples of the Latin counterpart, giving a latin-derived English word when possible as well:
    Dhumas - Fumus (like in "fume")
    Sapna - Somnium
    Agni - Ignis (ignite)
    Dantis - Dentis (dentist)
    Ka - Quid
    Vyras - Vir (virile)
    Medha - Melis (Mead is an English word that comes to mind, possibly from a Germanic root)
    Deva - Deus
    Sanas - Senex (senate)
    Dina - Dies
    Gyventi - Vivere
    Avis - Ovis

    • @eekamoose
      @eekamoose 6 месяцев назад +3

      Great job, thanks for sharing the Latin words!

    • @22747427
      @22747427 6 месяцев назад +1

      Bhratru- Bother
      Matru- Mother
      Pritu- Father

    • @GuzzarAwan
      @GuzzarAwan 5 месяцев назад

      All European languages match Sanskrit and North Indian current languages

    • @abhishekkumar-eh1gr
      @abhishekkumar-eh1gr 4 месяца назад

      Naam - Nome (Name)

    • @AnjelLee-f8c
      @AnjelLee-f8c 2 месяца назад +1

      They are Indo-European languages as well. Hence the similarities.

  • @akmaljaward
    @akmaljaward Год назад +296

    As a Sinhalese speaker, I understand many words from both Lithuanian and sanskrit

    • @Xxxlgey
      @Xxxlgey Год назад +3

      As an Odia speaker , me too ✌

    • @ExistenceUniverse6607
      @ExistenceUniverse6607 11 месяцев назад +8

      I'm Bangali speaker
      And I can understand clearly
      Because Bengali is the closest living language to Sanskrit

    • @derkov
      @derkov 11 месяцев назад +9

      It's amazing to me.. I assumed that the whole of Sri Lanka speaks Dravidian languages such as Tamil... And as I have found out now, most of the Lankans speaks the Indo-Aryan language.. It's amazing, I've discovered something new. :)

    • @upuldhanushkagajanayake2719
      @upuldhanushkagajanayake2719 11 месяцев назад +1

      ඔව් ඔව් මචං හීබෘ වලත් ඔහොමයි

    • @Hhhgew
      @Hhhgew 11 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/-MsDGOnNVXo/видео.htmlsi=6IgKljFyOtHUB30N

  • @bedtimestoriesforkids9755
    @bedtimestoriesforkids9755 Год назад +203

    Arnika describes the words so technically - "masculine, nominative, singular". I wish I could learn language in such a way that I can deconstruct it as beautifully as Arnika

    • @sakakaka4064
      @sakakaka4064 Год назад +20

      It's the basics of linguistics - if you're interested, learn it. It's a fascinating science!

    • @bretlir
      @bretlir Год назад +14

      Try taking a Latin class! Really helps you see language differently

    • @anti_fascist
      @anti_fascist Год назад +2

      Degree hogi uske pass, as simple as that

    • @sunlit777
      @sunlit777 Год назад +5

      you cannot learn Sanskrit without knowing this, because in sanskrit the word changes all the time depending on its relation to other words in the sentence, and the way it changes depends on what gender it is, and same applies to verbs, etc. An English speaker cannot comprehend how specific and accurate expression can be in the inflectional languages.

    • @Tesah77
      @Tesah77 Год назад +1

      Finnish speakers learn to do this in school. I wonder whether it’s because the Finnish wealth in cases demand us to be able to deconstruct it.

  • @Tamo8
    @Tamo8 Год назад +420

    I love this video, Lithuanian is like the last surviving ancient cousin of Sanskrit. I could correctly guess every word except for Banga. I have read somewhere that Lithuania was the last country in Europe to embrace Christianity which maybe why Lithuanians got to preserve their language for thousands of years. In Hindi, dream is called sapna so almost similar to sapnas. The similarities are truly astonishing.

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod Год назад +63

      Hi! Thanks for the comment. Yes, Lithuania converted to Christianity due to political isolation in the late 14th century. Also, the language was banned during the Russian Empire’s occupation. Nonetheless, it still persevered underground and maintained its uniqueness and conservatism throughout the ages. :)

    • @ShamankaIlona
      @ShamankaIlona Год назад +19

      Lithuanian is not a last surviving cousin to Sanskrit. Both languages are Indo-European and there are still a lot of Indo-European languages exist on this planet.

    • @Tamo8
      @Tamo8 Год назад +33

      @@ShamankaIlona Yes, even I'm an Indo-European speaker, what I meant is Lithuanian is the last classical/ancient Indo-European which is still living. Sanskrit and Latin, both IE, are now dead and gave rise to Romance and Indo-Aryan languages but compared to both Lithuanian has remained relatively unchanged.

    • @Hun_Uinaq
      @Hun_Uinaq Год назад +19

      I read somewhere that some of the peasants in Lithuania still secretly held on to pagan beliefs up until modern times and that now there is a movement to restore the worship of their old gods. I think it is called Rumova or something like that. This is extraordinary considering how brutally they were converted to Christianity during the northern crusades by the Teutonic Knights. They were not the last pagans in Europe though. Finland was pagan up until the 1600s. Their cousins further northhe, Saami were pagan up until like the 1800s. There’s supposedly a group in Russia called the Mari that retain their pagan beliefs unbroken even to this very day. Thing is though, their languages belong to the Fino Ugric not to the Indo-European family.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Год назад +1

      ​@@Hun_Uinaqjust bogus myths. These all rootless pagan movements just copy-paste pure Hindu spiritual practices, but they have no historical basis, unlike the Hindus, the oldest and purest community and religion.

  • @Vermont2023
    @Vermont2023 7 месяцев назад +100

    Such INTELLIGENT speakers!!
    You are all the BEST!!
    Keep up your presentations!! The world needs you.

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod 7 месяцев назад +4

      Thanks a bunch! I'm glad that you enjoyed our talk. Much love from Lithuania. :)

    • @ArniPara
      @ArniPara 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much for your kind words :)

    • @MrZabao
      @MrZabao 6 месяцев назад +1

      I was looking for that comment to join it 😊 you’re so beautifully interacting, joy and pleasure on your faces are so suggestive 😊 hugs from Poland

  • @chandrakantpatil983
    @chandrakantpatil983 Год назад +257

    I visited Lithuania, very nice ancient nation .salute from India.

    • @alaskapollock8750
      @alaskapollock8750 Год назад +8

      congrats to India

    • @jaichhabra6458
      @jaichhabra6458 Год назад

      Why do Indians always like compare ourselves with others we seek Eupropean approval n recognition.ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A VISA OR JOB IN LITHUANIA?
      SNEAKY !!!

    • @juodagalvesniegena714
      @juodagalvesniegena714 Год назад +3

      Lithuania is a nation that is old,it was created only a few hundred years ago basically by jews who took the minority language and forced everyone who is slavic to learn it,basically exterminating the real old languages like Samogitian because it was way to close to Russian culturally and the way language sounded,many dont know but Lithuania was created to basically be Israel for jews but it failed.For instance Vilnius used to be 70% jewish. They took the most western minority language,if you go to any museum before 16th century everyone wrote Ciricil and even before that same letters Russians had-runic.Latin letters and Christianity were introduced through genocide killing off the real culture and anyone who disagreed to convert to Judaic religion. Ukraine and Lithuania were created to be jewish land but then it failed and they are doing the same to Palestine now,I wonder if they will move Israel back to Ukraine now that it has been depopulated.Khazaria was basically old Israel,current emblems of Ukraine are Khazar.

    • @audriusvaitkevicius2185
      @audriusvaitkevicius2185 Год назад +1

      @@juodagalvesniegena714 Wow, what a clown you are, Samogitian is still alive today as a dialect and whole country would still understand it, also people wrote cyrillic (cricil?) because of close partner and neighbour Poland, in case you are not trolling but being serious here

    • @mbtopografija9180
      @mbtopografija9180 Год назад

      @@juodagalvesniegena714 prasiplauk galva sudo gabale tu krw

  • @e.8127
    @e.8127 Год назад +282

    Labai malonus akiai ir ausiai interviu. Intelektualūs ir išauklėti pašnekovai. Very pleasant conversation. Thank you!

    • @KotrynaMizaraite
      @KotrynaMizaraite Год назад +4

      Tikra tiesa 👍

    • @audriusjasiunas1649
      @audriusjasiunas1649 Год назад +5

      Malonu žiūrėti

    • @cyrillpresler3442
      @cyrillpresler3442 Год назад +1

      You do pronounce R in ir, right? It is not like Russian (I) or French(et) [i] ?

    • @e.8127
      @e.8127 Год назад +1

      ​@@cyrillpresler3442 not true. In lithuanian we pronounce "R" in the word "ir" very clearly :)

    • @Simonas.G
      @Simonas.G Год назад

      @@cyrillpresler3442 Right, we pronounce r. What you see is what you get :)

  • @rohitchaoji
    @rohitchaoji Год назад +220

    I had read about Lithuanian being one of the few languages that still sounds closer to old Indo-European languages. It was fascinating to actually hear the similarities with one of the oldest preserved Indo-European languages.

    • @Qvadratus.
      @Qvadratus. Год назад +14

      agni in Russian is ogon', jivati - zhit' or zhivot is the same root word and it means stomach, diena is of course den'.

    • @rohitchaoji
      @rohitchaoji Год назад +17

      @Cr00kedKnight But there's no way to determine if Sanskrit is the source. It's just one of the older languages of the family, and the oldest one that has been preserved. I know people love to say it is the source, but it's a rhetoric everyone likes to claim for their own language.

    • @indianboy59
      @indianboy59 Год назад +3

      ​@Cr00kedKnight "I find it hard to believe"
      That's your personal incredulity therefore not a problem with the argument or the evidence.

    • @AKumar-co7oe
      @AKumar-co7oe Год назад +4

      @@indianboy59 and your obsessive sense of nationalism is not an argument for it

    • @akapbhan
      @akapbhan Год назад

      @Cr00kedKnight That's because of the use case of both the languages. People put the entire vedic scripture to memory and kept it as is. It's a language which was largely used by scholarly class and not by the masses. Whereas Lithuania is a living language which has to change based on interaction with other languages.

  • @zabacinjsh
    @zabacinjsh 2 месяца назад +3

    As a latvian I was in awe with how I could guess most of the words in latvian as well with ease, I had heard before that there was a relation to Sanskrit in school, but we were never given examples, so this was pretty cool. Big thanks to everyone who made it happen! This was really dope

  • @Notsurprising
    @Notsurprising Год назад +126

    Hi, Maldivian here! here are some similarities witrh Maldivian language:
    Sanskrit - Lithuainian - Dhivehi - English
    Dhuma - Dumas - Dhun - Smoke
    Svapna- Sapnas - Huvafen - Dream (Suvapen) I asume is older word replace S for H and P for F Commonly occurs ( eg;- Soma - Homa -Moon/ Fani - Pani- water )
    Danta - Dantis - Dhathe - Teeth
    ka - Kas - Kaa/ Kaake - who
    Vira - Vyras - Veeru - Man (Storng man in Dhivehi)
    Vayu - Vejas - Vai - Wind
    Deva - Dievas - Dheyvathaa - God
    Tava - Tavo - Thage - your
    Dina - Diena - Dhuwas - Day
    Thanks Bahador for another fantastic Video!

    • @Notsurprising
      @Notsurprising Год назад +4

      @@SouthAsianDassHunter Yes we speak this language as an official language of Maldives and even invented our own script for this language.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Год назад +3

      ​@@Notsurprisingyou don't even use the actual script for your own language, Dives Akuru is long dead.

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Год назад +1

      ​@@Notsurprising
      Isn't your script just a modified version of nastaliq ?

    • @Notsurprising
      @Notsurprising Год назад +2

      @@infinite5795 ދެން އެހެންމައި ކޭކޮވް؟
      The original script was Brahmi to Grantha. It eventually evolved to Adoption of Pali - Devanagari- Eveylaa Akuru - Dives Akuru- Thaana Akuru.
      So what do you mean “Actual Script” ?
      Also it doesn’t matter when it comes to spoken language, that stays the same.

    • @Notsurprising
      @Notsurprising Год назад +5

      @@SouthAsianDassHunter Genetic Studies suggest we are 50-60% Indian, mostly equal parts North Indian and South Indian. So we are not “Sanskritized” we are a Hybrid 😄

  • @PI0TYCH
    @PI0TYCH Год назад +183

    As a Polish speaker I also guessed several Sanskrit words, though as I see Lithuanian and Sanskrit have more in common. BTW, Lithuanian and Polish also have some common vocabulary core. For example: dina (sanskr.), diena (lit), dzień (pol); agni (sanskr.), ugnis (lit), ogień (pl-in nominative case, but "ognia" which is more similar - in genetiv case); I also guessed danta, but this because of knowing a bit French. Same with deva/dievas. I should guess also tava (yours) in Polish "twój" (masculin), twoje (neutral gen, and plural), twoja/twa (feminin- two variations of the same word). That's amazing.

    • @susantagiri4252
      @susantagiri4252 11 месяцев назад +2

      Morality we are one but we divided .
      So our #Veda said
      Basudev kutumbakam 🙏

    • @fernandoitri1045
      @fernandoitri1045 10 месяцев назад +6

      Portuguese here: dia (day) ignição (ignition), dente (tooth) divino (from devas)

    • @farukhsheikh5790
      @farukhsheikh5790 10 месяцев назад +5

      Can you guess these--
      Matre, pitre, bhatre, asva.

    • @PI0TYCH
      @PI0TYCH 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@farukhsheikh5790 matre=mother? (as mater in latin or mać, macierz in ancient-Polish and similar in Russian), pitre=father? (as pater in latin), bhatre =brother? (as in English or "brat" in as far I know all Slavic languages; letter "h" after "b" changed into "r" and letter "e" after letter "t" had been added in other languages (also "braterstwo"-Polish, "brotherhood" - English, where the "r" after "t" is present); asva - I have no guess. Using the context of the whole question I could unclearly guess that it asva means sister, but the context is the only my clue; the only core is letter "s" and "a" at the end which can mean a female gender.

    • @farukhsheikh5790
      @farukhsheikh5790 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@PI0TYCH The first three are correct. It means Mother, Father and Brother in Sanskrit. Asva means horse. I assumed common words like these might be similar in the Indo-European languages, just like Deva for god, or agni, vayu and varun for fire, Wind and water.

  • @informatikos-pamokos
    @informatikos-pamokos Год назад +173

    Oh wow, as a Lithuanian, this was wonderful to watch! History of languages is an amazing thing!

  • @vgn3590
    @vgn3590 6 месяцев назад +11

    So impressive. Both have deep knowledge of the languages and communication methodology of tough words in simple way is amazing.

  • @greta116
    @greta116 Год назад +231

    Incredibly nice video, incredible simmilarities and incredibly nice participants and representors of both languages! I feel proud to be lithuanian and speak our language 🥰 Warmest greetings to everyone from Lithuania!🧡🧡🧡

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod Год назад +15

      Thanks Greta! I'm glad that you enjoyed our conversation! 🤗

    • @greta116
      @greta116 Год назад +3

      ​@@theinkwellpod🧡🧡🧡

    • @suyashneelambugg
      @suyashneelambugg Год назад +6

      Labas Geras Greta! From an Indian in the UK who has dated two Lithuanians in life. Warmest people I know. 😊
      But I also felt a lot of western inclination owing to the past occupation by Russia. This also meant that the present generation is typically identifying as closer to Anglo-Saxons than as anything else and may also have unfavourable views of the east.

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod Год назад +3

      @@suyashneelambugg Hi! The young and the old might have unfavourable views about Russia rather than the East itself, as the East encompasses many countries.

    • @ArniPara
      @ArniPara Год назад +1

      Thank you, Greta! :) And right back at you!

  • @tolyko9159
    @tolyko9159 Год назад +50

    I'm speaking Lithuanian language and I'm shocked by the similarities

  • @compatriot852
    @compatriot852 Год назад +106

    It's nice seeing how many words Lithuanian has in common with those of India. Our languages are so conservative that it still retains most of its roots

  • @Greo999
    @Greo999 6 месяцев назад +60

    That's interesting. In Russian Smoke = дым (dym) , Who = кто ( kto), Honey = мёд (myed), Wind = ветер (veter), Your = твой (tvoi) , Day = день (den) Also similar to Sanskrit. ( I can’t convey Russian sounds well in Latin letters.)

    • @Ignash
      @Ignash 6 месяцев назад +7

      I can read Cyrillic and I think you did pretty good job to convey the sounds. There is long history of Ruthenians and Lithuanians forming alliances and being ruled by the same rulers so there are many similar words in Lithunian/Latvian, Ukrainian and Belarusian triangle and Russian has a lot of similarities with both Ukrainian and Belarusian as both are slavic languages.

    • @00MSG
      @00MSG 5 месяцев назад +2

      In Croatian / Serbian its of course very similar. Dhuma (smoke) is dim, svapna (dream) is san, agni (fire) is similar to ugljen, which means coal. Ka (who) is Kto. Madhu (honey) is med, vayu (wind) is vjetar, tavo (you) is tvoj, jivati (live) is zivjeti

    • @rayaenelmar4283
      @rayaenelmar4283 5 месяцев назад +2

      Agni je na srpskom oganj😉​@@00MSG

    • @KanadMondal
      @KanadMondal 5 месяцев назад +4

      Ogon or ogni or however you might say is something I noticed a long time ago as a native Bengali speaker, before I knew about Indo-European languages. We say Agun or some variation, and in some mutations of the word we use "ogon". "Eto" is very similar to how we use "eto, eta, ota," etc. The prepositional case is pretty much identical and verbs in past tense sound very similar. "On, ona, ono, oni" are cognates with "O, ona, uni," and some other stuff I guess. Both Bengali and Russian have 6 cases.
      So, not just lexically, but also grammatically Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian languages are close. Balto-Slavic languages are also partially satemized, and Indo-Iranian is fully satem.
      One big difference betwen Russian and Bengali grammar is that Bengali has no grammatical gender and neither does English. As a result, if I try to learn Russian, I will be mixing up all the genders!

    • @MatPete
      @MatPete 5 месяцев назад +4

      Same in Polish: dym, kto, miód, twój, dzień. Both Lithuanian and Sankrit words for „wind” are strikingly similar to the Polish verb „wiać, wieje” which means „to blow (wind)” - used exclusively in this context (wiatr wieje - wind is blowing). Slavic „tooth” (ząb / зуб - zub) seems unrelated but our versions of „the gums or gingiva” - „dziąsło / десна - desna” are suspiciously similar to Sanskrit and lithuanian words for teeth. (Note: Polish „ą” and „ę” are nasal „o”and „e”, respectively)

  • @96KurTi
    @96KurTi Год назад +195

    Love Lithuanian language:) it seems to me most beautiful language in Europe :)

    • @FrederikJolle
      @FrederikJolle Год назад +1

      then you haven't heard danish

    • @vyktorzhuravlev8304
      @vyktorzhuravlev8304 Год назад +1

      Try slavic -celtics, especially Irish. Preferly west and south dialects.

    • @kodilodinoza
      @kodilodinoza Год назад +4

      Thank you. gera girdėti tokį gražų įvertinimą

    • @limel710
      @limel710 Год назад +1

      Thank you for such kind words. It’s nice to know that others can appreciate its beauty too ❤

  • @marissants1164
    @marissants1164 Год назад +166

    I loved this video. I don't know Sanskrit, nor I know Lithuanian. I am Latvian and I am quite fluent in all Latvian dialects. Some of the words in Latvian are closer to Sanskrit, than the ones in Lithuanian does. Sometimes opposite. Sometimes in an eastern dialect of Latvian the form is identical to Sanskrit while Latvian and Lithuanian both have quite different words. Please, please make more this kind of videos.

    • @quiet7632
      @quiet7632 Год назад +22

      I grew up in the US with a close friend who was Latvian, and he would every now and then say "hey I know that word" when I was talking to my Indian parents.

    • @TheContrariann
      @TheContrariann Год назад +4

      Absolutely 💯

    • @andrisrode7584
      @andrisrode7584 Год назад +7

      ​@@quiet7632 Latvians & Lithuanians are brother folks . Broliukas 😎.

    • @RealRatchet
      @RealRatchet Год назад +1

      Latvian is more close to sanksrit grammatically, meanwhile Lithuania is closer phonetically.

  • @voaniopalm3209
    @voaniopalm3209 Год назад +166

    As an indonesian I can also understand many words here, thank to our history. It's fascinating that Sanskrit to Indonesian, Javanese, Balinese and any other indonesian local languages is like Latin to western European languages. Yet it still alive today.
    Btw, I just found out that "dina" means "day" in Sanskrit as well as in Javanese, never thought about it!

    • @questionnowho
      @questionnowho Год назад +20

      It's normal because of the hindu influence once HINDUISM was a major religion in Asia .Even the first scripture in China named diamond sutras translated from Sanskrit.Sanskrit is one of the oldest language so it's common that many languages have influence of Sanskrit

    • @sahasransusbarik
      @sahasransusbarik Год назад +3

      Sanskrit - dina, divasa means day in english

    • @hrbaskar
      @hrbaskar Год назад +1

      These all are not sanskrit. They are prakrit which is very old than sanskrit. Sanskrit is mixed language of prakrit tamil and European languages. Sanskrit is not pure language

    • @questionnowho
      @questionnowho Год назад +14

      @@hrbaskar prakit is older than Sanskrit kudos to you knowledge who teach you this history?

    • @questionnowho
      @questionnowho Год назад

      @@sahasransusbarik look the hrbaskar comment 🤣🤣

  • @ytu77
    @ytu77 4 месяца назад +8

    I'm learning so much from you guys ❤️ Best regards from Poland❤...not to mention phonics that sound very familiar to my language ❤

  • @varoonnone7159
    @varoonnone7159 Год назад +214

    Holy cow ! I speak Hindi and understood the Lithuanian words immediately
    Actually, the Lithuanian words are closer to modern Hindi pronunciations than to Sanskrit which doesn't make much sense
    Lithuania was the last European country to be christianised in 1387

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Год назад +2

      @@SouthAsianDassHunter
      My grey eyed father is so fair, people think he's european
      I'm an Indo-Mauritian lawyer in France. My sister has a PhD in chemical engineering and works in Australia
      I feel closer to an educated Dravidian than to an intellectually deficient imbecile like you

    • @aleksanderpetkevic3857
      @aleksanderpetkevic3857 Год назад +1

      So what that it was christianised the last? Do you think its connection to ancient languages automatically became weaker after that?

    • @SBH3356
      @SBH3356 Год назад +20

      'Sapnas' was bang on

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Год назад +27

      @@aleksanderpetkevic3857
      First, it's an interesting fact about Lithuania
      Second. It gives perspective on how the christianisation of Europe was gradual. Between Clovis' baptism in France and Christianity being adopted as official religion in Lithuania, 891 years passed
      Third. Christianisation brought Lithuania in the Western and Orthodox realms with an influx of Hebrew, Latin, Germanic, Romance and Slavic languages
      I'm no linguist but european pagans probably preserved a purer version of proto indo-european than converted ones?

    • @aleksanderpetkevic3857
      @aleksanderpetkevic3857 Год назад +4

      @@varoonnone7159 Lithuanians were in contact with East Slavs way before the christianisation. Plus, pagan tribes were not isolated from their neighbours entirely and migrated and mixed with others.

  • @watchmakerful
    @watchmakerful Год назад +492

    There are similarities to Russian as well.
    Dūmas = дым (dym), "smoke".
    Sapnas ~ сон (son), "sleep".
    Ugnis = огонь (ogoň), "fire".
    Medus = мёд (m'od), "honey".
    Tavo ~ твой (tvoj), "your".
    Diena = день (deň), "day".

    • @rolandasb7502
      @rolandasb7502 Год назад +32

      yes, balto slavic languages possibly were of the same language branch and later split from each other

    • @Yasa5na
      @Yasa5na Год назад +8

      soa/soyan means sleep in Prakritized languages 😂

    • @rituparna6133
      @rituparna6133 Год назад +20

      In Bengali also, ugnis is aagun.

    • @Yasa5na
      @Yasa5na Год назад +27

      @@rituparna6133 Because all of them are Indo-European languages

    • @watchmakerful
      @watchmakerful Год назад +27

      @@rituparna6133 And in Latin it's "ignis", from which (possibly via French) our "ignition".

  • @ryangill1461
    @ryangill1461 Год назад +78

    I’m of Indian ancestry, and have studied Sanskrit quite a bit, and I truly enjoy your videos! They’re so informative and interesting! ❤

  • @eSupRx44
    @eSupRx44 9 месяцев назад +7

    this has been an excellent competition. thank you for allowing me the chance of comparison! :D you are both so skilled!!!

  • @mravalik
    @mravalik Год назад +103

    I’m of a quarter of Lithuanian descent from my mothers side, and having learned of the history of the language itself, it’s vastly interesting alongside its strong ties with Sanskrit.
    Thank you for the video!

  • @lidiachumak7473
    @lidiachumak7473 Год назад +74

    An yes, it was a pleasure to see the participants. So calm, very intelligent and respectful. Thank you for the video!

  • @ideasforu358
    @ideasforu358 Год назад +76

    Incredible video. I been looking for such kind of video for literally ages. I learnt Sanskrit in my +2 and I speak Telugu as my mother tongue. Every time I heard Lithuanian spoken it often sounded very close to heart. I cant wait to share this video with my Lithuanian friends. Thanks so much.

  • @claudioferrara4455
    @claudioferrara4455 6 месяцев назад +30

    I’m an Italian speaker and I studied Latin and Greek in grammar school. I could guess all the words through Latin, except banga.
    I had a Latin teacher in high school who was able to have a basic conversation with her Indian neighbour (the wife of a diplomat, who’d studied Sanskrit) with the two using their respective ancient languages (my teacher was very old and she didn’t speak English).
    Dhuma/dumas > fumus (dh > f)
    Svapna/sapnas > somnium (pn > mn)
    Agní/ugnis > ignis
    Danta/dantis > dens/dentis
    Ká/kas > qui/quis
    Vīrá/vyras > vir
    Mádhu/medis > mel/melis. (Dh > L)
    Devá/dievas > deus
    Vāyú/vėjas > ve-ntus
    Sána/senas > senex
    Tava/tavo > tuus/tua/tuum
    Dína/diena > dies
    I couldn’t find a direct equivalent for jīvati/gyventi, but I suspect it’s connected to the stem gen- that means ‘being born’ and that you find in Latin words like ‘genus’ or ‘gens/gentis’.

    • @misterpip1153
      @misterpip1153 6 месяцев назад

      Davvero impressionante.

    • @sumanlata-xi6ft
      @sumanlata-xi6ft 2 месяца назад

      Janm means born in sanskrit

    • @GamesYT.1
      @GamesYT.1 2 месяца назад

      Tuum means you in hindi

    • @rrajan5476
      @rrajan5476 2 месяца назад

      @@GamesYT.1 Derived from tvam...

  • @priyashmukherjee3015
    @priyashmukherjee3015 Год назад +107

    Sanskrit and Lithuanian are two ancient Indo-European languages that share some linguistic and grammatical similarities due to their common ancestral heritage. While they are not mutually intelligible, they exhibit certain resemblances, as both belong to the Indo-European language family. Here are some similarities between Sanskrit and Lithuanian:
    Common Indo-European Roots: Both Sanskrit and Lithuanian have evolved from a common ancestral Indo-European language. This shared ancestry means that they have some lexical and grammatical similarities.
    Case System: Both languages have a rich case system with several grammatical cases. Sanskrit has eight grammatical cases, while Lithuanian has seven. These cases are used to indicate the role of nouns and pronouns in a sentence, such as nominative, accusative, dative, genitive, etc.
    Gender: Sanskrit and Lithuanian both have a gender system for nouns. In Sanskrit, there are three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Lithuanian also has a gender system, though it is more simplified, with two genders: masculine and feminine.
    Verb Conjugation: Both languages feature complex verb conjugation systems. Verbs are inflected to indicate tense, mood, voice, and person. This is particularly evident in classical Sanskrit, which has a highly developed system of verb conjugation.
    Word Order: Sanskrit and Lithuanian typically exhibit a subject-object-verb (SOV) word order in sentences, which is relatively uncommon among Indo-European languages, where subject-verb-object (SVO) is more prevalent. However, this SOV word order is not as strict in Lithuanian as it is in Sanskrit.
    Declension of Nouns and Adjectives: Nouns and adjectives in both languages undergo declension to agree in case, number, and gender. This means that their endings change based on their grammatical function in a sentence.
    Inflectional Endings: Sanskrit and Lithuanian both use inflectional endings to convey grammatical information. These endings are added to the end of words to indicate various grammatical features, such as case, number, and gender.
    Root Words: Both languages have root words from which other words are derived. These root words form the basis of the vocabulary in each language.
    Cognates: There are some cognates, or words with a common origin, between Sanskrit and Lithuanian. These cognates demonstrate their shared Indo-European heritage. However, the number of cognates is relatively limited compared to other Indo-European language pairs.
    LOVE FROM INDIA.

    • @kestutisurbas6096
      @kestutisurbas6096 Год назад +3

      Laba diena. Linkėjimai iš Lietuvos. Noriu papil dyti : Gender: Sanskrit and Lithuanian both have a gender system for nouns. In Sanskrit, there are three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Lithuanian also has a gender system, though it is more simplified, with two genders: masculine and feminine..... In the Lithuanian language, there is a nameless genitive, but it is used in adjectives: bálta, šálta, míela, malonù
      Geros dienos

    • @alaskapollock8750
      @alaskapollock8750 Год назад +1

      congrats to India

    • @bpmalanadu7136
      @bpmalanadu7136 Год назад +2

      Until few hundred years ago people lived in Europe were peasants and hunter gatherers. Sanskrit is the most advanced and scientific language in the world. Peasants cannot create such an advanced language. Sanskrit is purely Indian. . There was no grammar in European languages so scholars used ancient Indian scholar named Panini's book Ashtadhyay to modify and uplift their languages, this is the reason why European languages are similar to Sanskrit. There is no such a thing called PIE.

    • @Mscellany1
      @Mscellany1 Год назад +11

      ​@@bpmalanadu7136European languages were not "created" by scholars, as you imply!! They evolved over millennia influenced by a horde of factors including trade, conflict and migration. You really have a limited understanding of linguistics and sociology and have a misplaced superiority complex... I'm Indian too btw but am not overly prideful about my culture, which is just one among many equally rich ones. Learn some humility.

    • @bpmalanadu7136
      @bpmalanadu7136 Год назад

      @@Mscellany1 Every language is evolved so are European languages but heavily influenced by Indian languages due to the cultural, academical, religious and trade influence of ancient India happened in those times.

  • @wild_trail_flow
    @wild_trail_flow Год назад +82

    Enjoyed playing the guessing game. Greetings from Latvia 🇱🇻

  • @SaturnineXTS
    @SaturnineXTS Год назад +50

    I had heard a lot about Lithuanian being conservative, but I had no idea it was this much!

  • @tofanpolaki8473
    @tofanpolaki8473 7 месяцев назад +6

    This video is amazing. To understand the connection between Indian and European languages. This video explains why these languages are known as sister languages and how they are connected. This video is a goldmine for all the polyglots. I was able to guess half the words without even knowing Sanskrit.

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv 5 месяцев назад

      It’s not that they’re sister languages. Lithuania’s sister language is Latvian. Rather that Lithuanian is the most conservative European language. That is, it’s most similar to PIE, therefore, it’s more similar to Indo-Aryan languages than other European languages.

  • @prasasti7141
    @prasasti7141 Год назад +85

    as indonesian i can understand agni, madhu, vayu, deva, dina

    • @Pain53924
      @Pain53924 Год назад +7

      Even your name is a sankrit word "Prashasti" which means in praise of. Fellow indians would know it from the word "prashansa"

    • @prasasti7141
      @prasasti7141 Год назад

      @@Pain53924 prasasti = inscription in indonesian

    • @_UCS_SwapnilSahaiSrivastav
      @_UCS_SwapnilSahaiSrivastav Год назад

      As an indian I can understand meaning of your name since prashasti is also a Sanskrit word

    • @Pain53924
      @Pain53924 Год назад

      @@_UCS_SwapnilSahaiSrivastav mera comment kyo copy kar rahe ho

    • @ashblackhawk
      @ashblackhawk Год назад +2

      Indonesia was ancient Vedic land, peoples names still are from that era and Bali still has culture too. It has just changed its religion and culture is still similar to India.

  • @evimba
    @evimba Год назад +68

    As a Latvian I knew/understood each word said in Sanskrit and in Lithuanian, cos they just the same in Latvian, except “dantas”.
    I also didn’t get the Sanskrit sentence at all, but figured out Lithuanian sentence in a moment.
    Great job done! :)

    • @evimba
      @evimba Год назад +3

      We call it zobs or zobi (plural). But I guess it’s borrowed from Slavs, maybe Poles.

    • @guodaripinskaite6314
      @guodaripinskaite6314 Год назад

      @@usr0377-xvtit is dantis in lithuanian, for some reason :)

    • @dimioo
      @dimioo Год назад

      In Czech /Slovak/ Crroatian- zub, Bulgarian - зъб, Polish - ząb

    • @xxxyyy8779
      @xxxyyy8779 10 месяцев назад

      ​​@@evimbaRussians, of course. Just like 50% of the rest of your "language".

    • @evimba
      @evimba 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@xxxyyy8779 hatred combined with zero knowledge just shows the cultural niveau your at.

  • @davinataylor2189
    @davinataylor2189 Год назад +141

    This is SO freaking coooool, please do more!! I’m proud to be half Lithuanian and delving deep into our history especially Baltic paganism 😍🙏

    • @Quranavirus786
      @Quranavirus786 Год назад +4

      Hey Davina we hindus follow paganism

    • @nisargdhamecha8476
      @nisargdhamecha8476 Год назад

      ​@@Quranavirus786stop licking Western A*ses. Hinduism is not Paganism. Hinduism is a henotheistic Dharmic religion.

    • @ДенисД-ф5в
      @ДенисД-ф5в 11 месяцев назад

      @@Quranavirus786
      А хорошо ли это?

    • @Provocative-K
      @Provocative-K 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@ДенисД-ф5в Nope it's not good

    • @labambeiro
      @labambeiro 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@ДенисД-ф5вI mean, in Lithuania Paganism never was eradicated or forced converted.
      Pagans are official minority in Lithuania and we have Pagan sculptures and idols across villages everywhere.
      we even celebrate some Pagan celebrations as a national holidays.
      but obviously most people are Catholics.
      but Paganism is something that is our mythology, and early folk music, ethnic ornaments, are all Pagan. we literally have many Swastikas as our early Pagan ornaments. :D
      we just have Paganism as part of our national identity and history.
      I mean, we was the last official Pagan country in Europe, and we accepted Christianity only on our terms peacefully.
      northern Teutonic crusade was beat in 1410, Grunwald Battle.

  • @reluctanttechnologist3766
    @reluctanttechnologist3766 8 месяцев назад +9

    This is both astounding and relaxing. I have language envy.

  • @bringbacktheolddislike305
    @bringbacktheolddislike305 Год назад +136

    I speak Russian and I could understand a lot of those words... Languages are really amazing

    • @korana6308
      @korana6308 Год назад

      Yep.Almost all words are the same.

    • @justme2012lena
      @justme2012lena Год назад +19

      Me too. Old Russian language is close to Sanskrit -counting numbers, for example and many more

    • @ДенисД-ф5в
      @ДенисД-ф5в 11 месяцев назад +2

      Все верно часть славян ( или их предков) мигрировала в индию вот и связь

    • @rebbekathatcher9792
      @rebbekathatcher9792 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ДенисД-ф5в о проматеринском языке не слышали видимо.

    • @ДенисД-ф5в
      @ДенисД-ф5в 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@rebbekathatcher9792 Материнский нет не слышал, скорее отцовский. Пришедшие в Индию были восновном мужчинами. Это носители гаплогруппы r1a, общий предок на русской равнине с русскими был примерно 4000-4500 т лет назад

  • @irinaspalve8356
    @irinaspalve8356 Год назад +80

    I've heard about similarities between Sanskrit and Lithuanian. But I was surprised, that I could guess almost all words myself, as a speaker of other Baltic language - Latvian. Many words are almost the same - dūmi, uguns, sens, vējš, diena, Dievs, vīrs and so on. And word "to live" - dzīvot... also is very close by pronunciation. We also have 6 cases plus Vokatīvs.
    Thanks for the video. And hello to our lovely neighbours Lithuanians))))

    • @theinkwellpod
      @theinkwellpod Год назад +6

      Big thanks and a hug from Lithuania!

    • @rankingresearchdata
      @rankingresearchdata Год назад +4

      Even some Georgian word is similar to sanskrit text I found almost 1/4 major language having various sanskrit words across Europe, south east asia, east asia and south Asia

    • @manfredneilmann4305
      @manfredneilmann4305 Год назад +1

      ... we also have 6 *cases ...

    • @irinaspalve8356
      @irinaspalve8356 Год назад

      @@manfredneilmann4305 thanks for noticing the typo. But we also have 6 declensions 😅

    • @Youdonknowme96
      @Youdonknowme96 Год назад

      Many of these are the same in the Slavic languages. It is also funny how dzīvot is живот (zhivot) in Bulgarian, which means "life", while in Russian живот means "belly". Life is жизнь (zhizn') in Russian.

  • @justicedoesntexist1919
    @justicedoesntexist1919 Год назад +116

    They are so so polite anf respectful. I love how genuinely nice they seem to be. Just loved this interaction.

  • @Joaquinokc
    @Joaquinokc 6 месяцев назад +6

    Great practice and learning for an American who’s lived in Lithuania. Thank you!

    • @LithuanianwithPaulius
      @LithuanianwithPaulius 6 месяцев назад

      I guest if you want more practice, you will love my podcast as well!

  • @davidk6022
    @davidk6022 Год назад +46

    This blew my mind! Lands so far apart (and seemingly dissimilar) yet with obvious ancient language connections. 🙏

  • @renukaporwal780
    @renukaporwal780 Год назад +59

    Wonderful similarities between Lithuanian and Sanskrit 😊

  • @SR-mv2mf
    @SR-mv2mf Год назад +84

    Omg I don’t even speak proper Sanskrit (though am Indian) and I guessed 70% of the Lithuanian words correctly

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 Год назад +2

      The Native sanskrit speakers brahmins are just as nomadic in the past like the roma gypsies. As bramins were nomads and therefore the influence of the other dialect(European, Russian and Asian) on sanskrit. Sanskrit is a mixture of many dialect and it has developed words from other language and dialect to make itself better.
      I would like to inform you that Sanskrit does not have its own script.

    • @anuragjain37
      @anuragjain37 Год назад +2

      @@perambu3441 its still much older than Tamil if you wanna prove something here.

    • @perambu3441
      @perambu3441 Год назад +2

      @@anuragjain37 There is no archaeological evidence that suggests Sanskrit Vedas are ancient, it is a false propaganda of Sanskrit scholars and supporters.

    • @vanisridhar5509
      @vanisridhar5509 Год назад

      @@anuragjain37 🤣🤣 many hymps in your oldest Rig Veda is written by a tamil post Agastya 💪💪

    • @anuragjain37
      @anuragjain37 Год назад +9

      @@vanisridhar5509 you guys have so much hate.. Anyways I don't wanna argue with you Tamils as you all are my brothers.. And Rsi Agastya ki Jaya 🙏😊

  • @sarnathk1946
    @sarnathk1946 3 месяца назад +3

    Nice way to present this without boredom! Nice! Way to go!

  • @spokenlithuanian7186
    @spokenlithuanian7186 Год назад +50

    Thank you so much for this video! I am a native Lithuanian and I have been teaching Lithuanian on RUclips for quite some time now, and I was so surprised when I a lot of the viewers/students from India and other countries started to comment on the similarities between the languages. As I have recently started to be really interested in in Hinduism and Buddhism (which Sanskrit is a liturgical language of) I find this connection of Sanskrit and Lithuanian as some sort of sinchronicity in my life. Simply awesome :)

  • @hilatchikkakul8980
    @hilatchikkakul8980 Год назад +127

    As a Thai, I can recognize most of the words. Thai borrows a lot of Sanskrit vocabularies. However, most of them are not used in everyday lives. They are considered "high" words used in religions, poems, state official documents. Some words are used in everyday life such as Vayu (Payu in Thai pronunciation) which means storm (not just wind as in Sanskrit). It's meaning shift.

    • @Vk-sk7nm
      @Vk-sk7nm Год назад +18

      Same. In india Sanskrit words are also considered ' High' and used in religious activities and official documents.

    • @Royalbob123
      @Royalbob123 Год назад +3

      Nice. Thai language is based on Sanskrit or any other similar one like chines etc ?

    • @Heywjebbs
      @Heywjebbs Год назад +11

      Same here in many South Indian languages, I’m a native Telugu speaker and most of our poetic words come from Sanskrit. Guess what , even vayu means air in our poems😂

    • @BG-hz8fh
      @BG-hz8fh Год назад +1

      Finaly this will debunk the Aryan invasion theory and establish that it was Indians who moved out of india and spread to other parts of the world because German, French, English did not create Sanskrit but Sanskrit ended up as these languages as they rooted out from it mostly out of mispronunciation. And the land where the orginal language exists even today is India while the so called Aryan invasion theorists brag about it coming into India thousands of years back never find it as intact as it is India despite having no invasions in their land.

    • @hilatchikkakul8980
      @hilatchikkakul8980 Год назад +6

      @@Royalbob123 Thai belongs to Kra-Dai language family. It's based on neither Chinese nor Sanskrit. However, Thai ancestors contacted so closely with Chinese that they borrowed a lot of words and some phonetic features from ancient Chinese. This is due to the fact that Tai speaking people homeland are in southern area of today's China. Therefore, their language were influenced by Chinese both geographically and authoritatively.
      Later when some groups of Tai people migrated down to today's Thailand, they associated with Mon-Khmer people who had already absorbed Indian culture, including Sanskrit and Pali languages mostly via Buddhism and Hinduism religions.
      In addition, there were Indian merchants and priests in the area at the time. So Thai heavily received Sanskrit and Pali words both directly via Indian and indirectly via Mon-Khmer peoples.

  • @whatapp4797
    @whatapp4797 Год назад +159

    It's insane. The similarities go from India to Spain and from Iceland to Russia. It would be interesting to know where it all started and how it spread.

    • @arjungulliya2270
      @arjungulliya2270 Год назад +51

      Read about the battle of ten kings....it's in the aftermath of that battle that losing tribes moved northwards...some travelled north east to modern day Mongolia & Russia, others travelled north west towards modern day Europe & some settled near Iranian region...that's why all these regions have similar language & ancient gods of all these regions are similar.
      However, many European supremacists don't want to accept that and thus came up with Aryan invasion theory(which says that civilization in Indian subcontinent began after Aryans from Europe invaded it)....which gets debunked when you look at recent findings of the existence of ancient river sarasvati (found to exist thousands years earlier than so called Aryan invasion) which finds mention in ancient Sanskrit text Rigveda.

    • @mattdamon4544
      @mattdamon4544 Год назад +4

      Aryans

    • @NirvanaMarketing-do8uv
      @NirvanaMarketing-do8uv Год назад +16

      Sanatana dharma

    • @liveforever141
      @liveforever141 Год назад +17

      Research Yamnaya peoples. Somewhere in the past, few thousands of years ago, part of them went West and later became Europeans we know today, another part went East, then South, and became ruling class of India. Ruling class spoke Sanskrit. Sanskrit and all Indo-European languages in Europe are sister languages.

    • @curiouskid1547
      @curiouskid1547 Год назад +1

      Somewhere between iran and India, probably Afghanistan.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch 6 месяцев назад +8

    Wow. What a wonderful combination of linguistics, reasoning, and charm.
    Thanks to all of you. Subscribed. Cheers from a language freak in rainy Vienna, Scott

  • @taral927
    @taral927 Год назад +79

    We had to study Sanskrit until Grade 7 in Nepal back in the day. So, I still knew most of the words. But to see the base of Sanskrit in the Lithuanian language is mind-boggling.

    • @manmohanr7840
      @manmohanr7840 Год назад +3

      We study sanskrit upto Grade 8 mandatory in India. But after grade 8 its upto student.

    • @taral927
      @taral927 Год назад +1

      @@ArrestMe-k5l not sainik, Sanskrit.
      Government school had it in the curriculum several decades ago.

    • @juniordev4190
      @juniordev4190 Год назад +1

      I didn't get chance to learn the sansrikt but almost all words spoken here are easy cake for us to understand.

    • @manmohanr7840
      @manmohanr7840 Год назад

      @@Megaminddominator good for you. We like it that way.

    • @murali5247
      @murali5247 Год назад

      Unfortunately some selfish politicians in Tamil Nadu seem to keep Sanskrit away. Little they realize that Sanskrit is entrenched in Tamil.

  • @AtoZ-fk8rw
    @AtoZ-fk8rw Год назад +127

    Very interesting how Lithuanian kept the language so preserved, so it's now probably the closest language to the Proto-Indo-European alongside Latvian compared to other European languages. That's probably why these two languages have still some common words with Sanskrit

    • @ALOK-pe5fp
      @ALOK-pe5fp Год назад +8

      Sanskrit is closest because we Brahmins upper caste people in India have perfect course for Brahmin kids for exact chanting of 5000+ year old rig veda (oldest indo european text) , we follow proper Aryan custom even marriage in our community, we say india as aryavart in sanskrit , but less than 5 percentage are Brahmins so only few people know but perfectly preserved.

    • @IndoManiac90
      @IndoManiac90 Год назад +3

      Sanskrit is probably closer to proto-indo-european than Lithuanian is

    • @templaryzta5927
      @templaryzta5927 Год назад +1

      Lithuanian has a lot of borrowings from Polish

    • @goelnuma6527
      @goelnuma6527 Год назад

      Sanskrit is not the language of the Brahmins originally @@ALOK-pe5fp

    • @Anuclano
      @Anuclano Год назад +4

      Bad thing is, Lithuanian was first rcorded only lately. If it was recorded when Sanskrit was...

  • @kanhaibhatt913
    @kanhaibhatt913 Год назад +97

    Man, these Indo Europeans huh ? Whoever they were, where ever they may have come from, they left such a huge legacy all across the world, its incredible.

    • @hijet3279
      @hijet3279 Год назад

      There is two main theories of Indo-European areal origin:
      1. Yamnaya culture hypothesis
      2. Anatolian hypothesis
      If you want to discover more, you can google it))

    • @sahasransusbarik
      @sahasransusbarik Год назад

      European are Indian. Indian people went to Europe rather than their bullshit Arayan invasion theory. The ancestors of all the European today are the originally Indian. These so called historian will never do research and will never agree.

    • @autumnphillips151
      @autumnphillips151 Год назад +4

      It is.

    • @Aniruddha197
      @Aniruddha197 Год назад +11

      Change the word indo European to aryans. Arya is the word for these people. Arya means well cultured and well educated aka gentleman.

    • @kanhaibhatt913
      @kanhaibhatt913 Год назад +17

      @@Aniruddha197 Aryas is reserved for the Indo-Iranians. Other IE people are not Aryas.

  • @shreeniwaz
    @shreeniwaz 5 месяцев назад +14

    It's always inspirational to know people so far away from you have been sharing something with you forever.. Kudos to all the three of you.. 🙏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @jayahreebharambe3954
    @jayahreebharambe3954 Год назад +47

    This video is undoubtedly the best and meaningful video I have seen in recent times. Best wishes to the organizer and both the presenters.

  • @Bad_Artist_
    @Bad_Artist_ Год назад +52

    It was fascinating to hear the connections between Lithuanian and Sanskrit. Since I know a fair amount of Lithuanian, it was fun to play along!

  • @Cokgooooo
    @Cokgooooo Год назад +33

    That's very awesome! I'm from Latvia, it's neighbour country with Lithuania and it's fascinating that I could understand 80% of all those examples

  • @davidstenow5055
    @davidstenow5055 9 месяцев назад +9

    This is so cool! I had no idea Sanskrit and Lithuanian were similar

  • @daivitaobrien5949
    @daivitaobrien5949 Год назад +59

    Finallly, a video like this! I have been studying languages myself and I have always been facinated with the origins and similarities of languages. I am a Lithuanian speaker and have been working with Indian people from Kerala for some time. They do not speak sanskrit but a Dravidian language, called Malayalam; but they still find it astonishing me being able to repeat their words flawlesly. The world is really a small place. Love to all :). Ačiū- SvastyakSara.

    • @satishkumarl4999
      @satishkumarl4999 Год назад +8

      Among the south Indian languages, malyalam uses almost 70% Sanskrit words

    • @Mscellany1
      @Mscellany1 Год назад +4

      Malayalam is a mix of Tamil (a Dravidian language) and Sanskrit.

    • @SiddharthGargYT
      @SiddharthGargYT 10 месяцев назад

      @@satishkumarl4999I'm so envious lol

    • @rrajan5476
      @rrajan5476 2 месяца назад

      Malayalam has lots of Sanskrit in it and the speakers dont abhor Sanskrit words due to their religious orientation

  • @kasparflueck
    @kasparflueck Год назад +68

    As a swiss i have to say that you all deserve a slice of cheese for this awesome work!

    • @Siamak-l8j
      @Siamak-l8j 8 месяцев назад

      😂😂

    • @kc4276
      @kc4276 5 месяцев назад +1

      Can we have some gold instead?

    • @8421brijesh
      @8421brijesh 4 месяца назад +1

      So you dont want to share your Swiss Chocolates?

  • @Madhugodse
    @Madhugodse Год назад +49

    Yes I hosted a lituanian couple few years before and I was astonished to note know how similar Sanskrit and Lithuanian is! ❤

    • @commanderofkesariyaknights
      @commanderofkesariyaknights Год назад

      Nathuram Godse ji ki Jai

    • @psuyog
      @psuyog Год назад +1

      ​@@commanderofkesariyaknightsthat's not funny. Don't glorify terrorist.

  • @eekamoose
    @eekamoose 6 месяцев назад +10

    With a Master’s in Applied Linguistics I found this absolutely fascinating. I guessed some of the words because they are so similar to Latin. And what charming people you are. What’s not to like about this video? 😊

    • @claudioferrara4455
      @claudioferrara4455 6 месяцев назад +2

      I’m an Italian speaker and I studied Latin and Greek in grammar school. I could guess all the words except banga (the Latin equivalent would be unda, I’m not familiar enough with linguistics to tell whether you can get from banga to unda through phonetical changes).

    • @manimani-xe3xg
      @manimani-xe3xg 3 месяца назад

      There is nothing to amazed. Sanskrit came to Northern India with an Aryan invasion / migration / diffusion whatever way you may choose to say.

  • @laurentsalomonoriginals3438
    @laurentsalomonoriginals3438 Год назад +38

    Excellent ! Perfect illustration of the Indo-European language family!

  • @anil4nature
    @anil4nature Год назад +89

    WoW...WoW Fantastic to know Sanskrit & Lithuanian languages has so much similarities 👏👏👌👌👌🇮🇳🇱🇹
    And Lithuania, Latvia & Estonia are my favorite countries.

    • @ironman_4050
      @ironman_4050 Год назад +6

      Sankrit is mother of all languages its more than 5000 years old

    • @siddyray3361
      @siddyray3361 Год назад

      @@ironman_4050 STFU. Guys like you are cringey af. Give Indians a bad name.

  • @paul1u5
    @paul1u5 Год назад +48

    Much love from 🇱🇹, loved watching this video. And also i have a big respect for 🇮🇳 people who came to Lithuania work/travel and learn our language. Most immigrants from Middle East and Africa do not impress me with my native language, but Indians do. ❤

  • @Jeroen4
    @Jeroen4 8 месяцев назад +8

    I smiled a lot watching this video. Very cool

  • @shaan1166
    @shaan1166 Год назад +23

    I was in Mariampoles formerly Kapsukas for 3 months and i consider that Lithuanians are the finest people in Europe

  • @Jasmine_breeze
    @Jasmine_breeze Год назад +80

    I am Polish and we have similar words 😊 We used to be in union with Lituanians because Poles accepted their ruler as our king 👑 In some polish families is a tale about an ancient empire originating from...Asia which we took a part thousands years ago. I was told that it was way before Christianity and even before Roman times 😊

    • @RichieLarpa
      @RichieLarpa Год назад +4

      O litewskim lubię mówić, że to jest język, który brzmi po słowiańsku, ale słowa często nie mają sensu. Jednak tam jest wiele podobnych słów i dlatego mnie litewski tak interesuje.

    • @kartikthakur2440
      @kartikthakur2440 Год назад +1

      Can you tell me the whole story?

    • @Jasmine_breeze
      @Jasmine_breeze Год назад +17

      @@kartikthakur2440 Unfortunately, I don't remember many details, but my grandfather told me that his ancestors believed that once, before the first countries in Europe were established, there was already an Eastern Empire here. Part of it was the mythical Sarmatian tribe that lived in Central Europe. In my family it was believed that this country was founded in the east and simply reached as far as Europe. No one talked about the Aryan invasion of India, only the opposite! In the sense that my family considered themselves descendants of the descendants of those who joined and created tribes here. This myth was once ridiculed and that is why few modern families repeat it. However, archeology finds single artifacts from Indian culture in Europe. Interestingly, the Slavs worshiped Gods similarly to the Hindus. We had a God with a blue body and a black face, a god of thunder, civilization and power (ILord Indra?! Lord Vishnu?), a God with a trident accompanied by the bull (Lord Shiva?), four faced God (lord Bramha ?) etc . Knowing Hinduism you can see the similarities. We have no preserved temples - everything was wooden and then destroyed by Christians. Only a single, small artifacts are excavated and no one knows where they came from. Looking at the similarities in beliefs and language, I think there is something true in it. Indeed, as if someone's culture, beliefs and language came from afar. I don't have any facts to support it. It's a family story. Nevertheless, I am fascinated by the thought: what if it was people from India who founded the beginnings of civilization in the West? What if we were once part of that culture? 😀❤🙏

    • @Jasmine_breeze
      @Jasmine_breeze Год назад +1

      @@RichieLarpa mnie się kojarzy z mówią Elfów - nie wiem dlaczego, bo Tolkien, chyba (nie jestem pewna) korzystał z języków skandynawskich.

    • @silverplays871
      @silverplays871 Год назад

      Fuck that commonwealth

  • @thevaliantkautilya
    @thevaliantkautilya Год назад +65

    Never imagined Sanskrit to be so close to Lithuanian. Interesting project

    • @MrAki28820
      @MrAki28820 Год назад +1

      It is the other way around.

    • @keralanaturelover196
      @keralanaturelover196 Год назад +2

      ​@@Megaminddominatoraustrodravisian not a word man😂

    • @MrAki28820
      @MrAki28820 Год назад +1

      @labas9817 they cant have same start point in history and share similar words. Languages are derived from others. That's how it works.

    • @tsoii
      @tsoii Год назад +1

      ​@@labas9817languages do not have an age. Languages are constantly changing. One changing slightly less does not make it "more old"