Комментарии •

  • @lancemannly
    @lancemannly 2 года назад +362

    The fact that a person in the 21st century can recognize and understand any words from an ancestor language separated by nearly 2000 years at all is really very fascinating

    • @metalassassin8841
      @metalassassin8841 Год назад +22

      @decaesaris5093 Otrava's basically poison, so a concoction made by men. While venin is venom, animal's poison. At least, that's how I look at it.

    • @fateful2868
      @fateful2868 Год назад +2

      ​@de caesaris pentru ca e planta, nu animal. Exista totusi animale care sunt otravitoare, nu veninoase, broastele spre exemplu. Dar veninul este exclusiv produs de animale si se transmite prin muscatura sau intepatura.

    • @fateful2868
      @fateful2868 Год назад +1

      @de caesaris E biologie/chimie, nu lingvistica. Educa-te si ai sa vezi ca nu e tot una pentru ca te poti otravii, dar nu te poti "invenina", cuvant care dupa cum vezi, nu exista.
      Eu prost ca raspund pe youtube...

    • @rubenaenclub1962
      @rubenaenclub1962 Год назад +3

      Yes and yet people still call us slavic and russian. We literally remained Latin despite the influences

    • @omi685
      @omi685 Год назад

      ​@@rubenaenclub1962 Just the uneducated people are calling the Romanians Russians/Slavic.

  • @quask
    @quask 4 года назад +923

    Next up : Portugese vs Romanian vs French vs Italian vs Latin vs Spanish
    The grand finale

  • @ScorpioMartianus
    @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +717

    What a pleasure to do more Latin and Romanian with these fabulous people! 😃 Thank you so much, Norbert, for the opportunity. Summāsque grātiās, Īrēnē et Mārtīnē! Și mulțumesc mult, Gia, pentru această experiență minunată. 🇷🇴 ♥️

    • @aleksinatetka
      @aleksinatetka 4 года назад +7

      @Cassie Carr I strongly agree :)

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +12

      @Cassie Carr nah I’m just okay. ☺️ I think everyone else in the video is amazing.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +8

      @@aleksinatetka very kind of you, Nada! 🥰

    • @RomanianWithGia
      @RomanianWithGia 4 года назад +19

      It was great, thank you :)

    • @aleksinatetka
      @aleksinatetka 4 года назад +1

      @@ScorpioMartianus For kind people - kind thoughts. I've tried to google translate this into Latin, but I didn't like the result. 😇

  • @vladandrei09
    @vladandrei09 4 года назад +1066

    Idea for a future video, compare Latin with all the romance languages to see which speaker will get most of it, :D

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +63

      Fun! We kind of did that in a couple of the previous videos, didn’t we? How would you change the experiment?

    • @spir.tar.herc.129
      @spir.tar.herc.129 4 года назад +51

      @@ScorpioMartianus How about each one chooses scenes from tv/film in their respective language and the others try to explain what happened.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +25

      @@spir.tar.herc.129 a fun idea!

    • @spir.tar.herc.129
      @spir.tar.herc.129 4 года назад +1

      @@ScorpioMartianus Thank you.

    • @cheeveka3
      @cheeveka3 4 года назад +27

      @@ScorpioMartianus I noticed that Portuguese speakers can understand Latin pretty well. Maybe do a video with Romanian and Portuguese. I also heard that Romanians can partially understand Italian so maybe add Italian as well? If possible that would would be really amazing.😁

  • @catheadoff
    @catheadoff 4 года назад +309

    I speak portuguese, english and italian...I can understand (not every single word but...) I can understand latin and romanian

    • @854gabryel
      @854gabryel 4 года назад +12

      I'm learning portuguese and I love that I can understand some words and phrases

    • @ultras_fino_alla_morte
      @ultras_fino_alla_morte 3 года назад +1

      Qual'è la tus lingua madre?

    • @catheadoff
      @catheadoff 3 года назад

      @@ultras_fino_alla_morte portuguese

    • @catheadoff
      @catheadoff 3 года назад

      @@854gabryel portuguese is a beautiful language. 😊

  • @lucianodavila8889
    @lucianodavila8889 4 года назад +420

    There’s a lot of words that I understood. In some of them, more the pronunciation than the writing. Examples:
    2:12 - “două chestii” (portuguese: “duas questões”)
    2:17 - “E în apartament, în casă?” (portuguese: “É em apartamento, em casa?”)
    6:18 - “E un animal, ok?” (portuguese: “É um animal, ok?”)
    8:28 - “mulți dinți” (portuguese: “muitos dentes”)
    9:23 - “sânge” (portuguese: “sangue” - NOTE: “gue” has the pronunciation like “gay” in English, but without the sound of the Y letter)
    11:57 - “fatal” (exactly the same in portuguese)

    • @veghalexandru4514
      @veghalexandru4514 4 года назад +8

      All exept "sange" are new words enterd in the romanian dictionary in the last century.

    • @daniel.tufeanu
      @daniel.tufeanu 4 года назад +6

      @@veghalexandru4514 "două"is not but the rest probably yea :)

    • @danoprea3066
      @danoprea3066 4 года назад +31

      @@daniel.tufeanu That's doubtful. Beside două and sânge, also casă and dinți were common words 200 years ago. Perhaps animal and fatal are more recent, but their older synonyms are also of Latin origin: bestie and mortal respectively. Apartament is a modern concept, so obviously it has been recently imported to Romanian.

    • @daniel.tufeanu
      @daniel.tufeanu 4 года назад +2

      @@danoprea3066 casă is old indeed, I missed that. But a lot of words in Romanian that are easy to understand for other romance speakers are French and Italian loan words, sometimes words with a Latin origin that evolved naturally in Romanian don't resemble that much their original word (see "bătrân" for example)

    • @lucianodavila8889
      @lucianodavila8889 4 года назад +16

      @@veghalexandru4514 I didn’t understand you. Are “chestii”, “casa”, “animal” and “dinți” new words? I didn’t think so.

  • @channel_no_longer_active
    @channel_no_longer_active 4 года назад +310

    Romanian is such a beautiful language.

  • @JaKamille
    @JaKamille 4 года назад +443

    Romanian is the next language I’m gonna learn 😍🇷🇴

    • @murissantos
      @murissantos 4 года назад +27

      I wish I knew Romanian, but I'm studying too many languages now lol I want Romanian someday!

    • @matteotalotta
      @matteotalotta 4 года назад +44

      Great choice! I’ve been studying Romanian for 9 months now, it’s a beautiful and unique language!

    • @АлекАлистарх
      @АлекАлистарх 4 года назад +5

      Lol why

    • @JaKamille
      @JaKamille 4 года назад +27

      @@АлекАлистарх I’ve always wanted to learn a Romance language, but I don’t want to learn a mainstream language like Italian or Spanish 😅

    • @moorddroomke
      @moorddroomke 4 года назад +13

      I recently started learning it, great language

  • @christian.ity1917
    @christian.ity1917 4 года назад +238

    Damn, I'm studying Portuguese, and I can't help but notice that Romanian accent sounds like Portuguese one

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +42

      Yup! Romanian is, not too surprisingly, quite similar to other Romance languages

    • @pedrohmr22
      @pedrohmr22 4 года назад +7

      Sim, é bem semelhante.

    • @pedrohmr22
      @pedrohmr22 4 года назад +8

      @ARMANDO ROMEU PINTO DURÃO AQUINO ALCEU RÊGO ALBERTO bobagem

    • @dudanunesbleff
      @dudanunesbleff 4 года назад +3

      @ARMANDO ROMEU PINTO DURÃO AQUINO ALCEU RÊGO ALBERTO Tá bobo, sô?

    • @josivaldogaldino3318
      @josivaldogaldino3318 4 года назад +2

      @@fiorellino Are you romanian?

  • @BurstWalkthroughs
    @BurstWalkthroughs 4 года назад +181

    We need romanian, Spanish, French and Portuguese.

  • @johnandrez
    @johnandrez 4 года назад +197

    LOL! Squāmās (scales) in Latin became scamă in Romanian, but scamă means fuzz, lint, or fluff, so that's why she got confused and started asking about fur!

    • @ionbrad6753
      @ionbrad6753 4 года назад +40

      yes, but in the scientific / medical Romanian vernacular there also exist "scuame" / "descuama" - probably she wasn't exposed to such niche terms.

    • @justme7920
      @justme7920 4 года назад +19

      “Scuame”. Like dandruff on the scalp, or those in seborrheic dermatitis. Something somehow related to scales or scaling.

    • @bilbohob7179
      @bilbohob7179 4 года назад +10

      Oh a false friend... I understand now the confusion. In spanish "escama" is identical. "Lagartos" has "escamas" skin. I was really crazy with this misunderstanded, for me was clear like water

    • @Air-Striegler
      @Air-Striegler 3 года назад +2

      @@justme7920
      In German Scales of Reptiles and Fish and dandruff are the same word. Schuppe(n).

    • @arsantiqua8741
      @arsantiqua8741 3 года назад +4

      It seems to be the case according to Wiktionary. Since it meant scale or flake, it could've been used as the word for both dander and scales. Over time it probably lost the meaning of scales and became associated only with dander/dandruff. Then afterwards, it could've been misused to describe lint, fluff, and fur.

  • @guillermorivas7819
    @guillermorivas7819 4 года назад +89

    Do one with Sardinian (nuorese), Spanish, Latin, Italian, and Portuguese.
    Gia the Romanian girl is absolutely stunning. Reminds me of a girl I know.

  • @oana-mariauliu5828
    @oana-mariauliu5828 4 года назад +361

    We also say "venin", not just "otravă". Speaking of snakes, we'd say "șarpe veninos"(venomous snake), not "șarpe otrăvitor".

    • @walter....
      @walter.... 4 года назад +114

      And in general, we have both the Latin and the Slavic version for a lot of other words: secret - taină, voce - glas, amor - iubire, servitor - slugă, brav - viteaz, speranță - nădejde, secol - veac, a termina - a sfârși and many others.

    • @ВикторИванов-ю7ю
      @ВикторИванов-ю7ю 4 года назад +26

      @@walter.... Interestingly, I was attacked under the previous video for defining "Da" as a Slavic borrowing. They wrote that now you will not find Slavic words in Romanian. And that all borrowings were made in the Soviet era hahaha.
      By the way, about the pair "brav - viteaz", it is interesting that in Russian we now use only "храбрый [hrabryj]" and "бравый [bravyj]" (borrowed from French), and Витязь (viteaz) is a folk hero, a knight.

    • @ВикторИванов-ю7ю
      @ВикторИванов-ю7ю 4 года назад +7

      What are the features of using "venin" and "otravă"? Just in Russian, "яд" and "отрава"(otrava) also have small differences.

    • @gerihuginn2143
      @gerihuginn2143 4 года назад +33

      @@ВикторИванов-ю7ю Is the scientific difference between them , venin which means venom is injected by a bite , while otrava which is poison is ingested. A venomous creature has a way to administer it and use it as a offensive weapon, a poisonous creature uses it as a defense.

    • @oana-mariauliu5828
      @oana-mariauliu5828 4 года назад +28

      @@ВикторИванов-ю7ю They are synonyms, but "venin" usually refers to venom, and "otravă" is a poison. We use "otravă" more often than "venin", true, but their respective adjectives are not interchangeable. "Veninos" normally refers to animals, while "otrăvitor" refers to things such as plants, gases, or man-made substances.

  • @novaseeker
    @novaseeker 4 года назад +61

    Very many Latin words are very close to their equivalent in Romanian, the pronunciation is just a little different, but if you would see them in writing you'd know exactly what they mean.

  • @thatdudedorian
    @thatdudedorian 4 года назад +35

    Yes! My favourite languages... Romanian and Latin.

  • @TAROTAI
    @TAROTAI 3 года назад +21

    The innocence of human interaction is so heart-warming in an epoch of sad divisions - Thank you for keeping the spirit of humanity alive in _language_ loving care! Mersi prieteni.

  • @fuckynickname
    @fuckynickname 4 года назад +107

    I love when you guys put the romenian language in the games!!! I'm brazilian but I really love romenian, it sounds like a jagged portuguese for me. I would love to see more about the similarities between romenian and portuguese.
    I love your channel!! ❤

    • @damantoniacotan9707
      @damantoniacotan9707 4 года назад +6

      Not trying to nitpick, I’m glad you like my mother tongue but it’s spelled Romanian :))

    • @emonlevircni4617
      @emonlevircni4617 3 года назад +12

      @@damantoniacotan9707 I think that he misspelled the name because we call Romanian as "Romeno".

    • @ihatethiscentury8798
      @ihatethiscentury8798 2 года назад

      @@damantoniacotan9707 sorry to correct, i think u meant ur mother language, tongue is just the one in ur mouth

    • @eliza7ioana
      @eliza7ioana Год назад +3

      I am Romanian and I love Portuguese, learned it this year and I’m practicing it everyday. To me it’s the most beautiful sounding language in the world ♥️

    • @ady25speed
      @ady25speed Год назад +2

      as a Romanian with Portuguese coleagues i can say there is an uncanny resemblance between the twoo languages that Romanian doesnt have with other Latin languages , i say it's uncanny because the phisical distance between them 🤔

  • @reuven1961
    @reuven1961 4 года назад +92

    Romanian differs significantly from western Romance due to 4 reasons:
    1. Different Latin substratum (sometimes Romanian kept more classical Latin like "intellego" or "scio")
    2. Different foreign influences: in the west Germanic in the east Slavic (and some Greek)
    3. Romanian kept some grammatical cases from Latin (makes it more complicated)
    4. Romanian belongs to Balkan sprachbund (e.g. replaces infinitive by subjunctive)
    Therefore the mutual intelligibility between Romanian and western Romance is small. Romanians can improve this by using Latin equivalents to Slavic (or Greek), like folosi=utiliza, prieten=amic, varsta=etate, but I think it is not worth the effort, because the improvement will be small due to points 1,3 and 4 above. However, it looks like Romanian-Latin mutual intelligibility is not less than western Romance-Latin intelligibility, and in this case using Latin equivalents can really help :). Gia, instead of "otrava" you could have said "toxicitate" or "venin", right ? :)

    • @a.c.5509
      @a.c.5509 4 года назад +7

      toxicitate would've been weird in this context, but venin is ok.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад +21

      You are 100% right. It’s sad when people don’t get this and automatically assume that because they don’t understand Romanian as well as _____ western Romance language, they think it’s less close to Latin. When in fact Romanian is one of the closest Romance language to Latin. Up there with Spanish.

    • @ppn194
      @ppn194 3 года назад +5

      # 1 is not about substratum. It is about conservativeness. Because Romanian was quite soon isolated fromthe rest of the Latin dialectum continuum and did not absorb new inventions. Substratum is a FACT: Daco-Thracian for Romanian, celtic, italic, celtiberic for the the West.

    • @eduardhagiu9836
      @eduardhagiu9836 2 года назад +2

      @@UlpianHeritor Actually Latin spread in europe from Dacia not viceversa.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 2 года назад

      @@eduardhagiu9836 Actually you’re a dacopath.

  • @drakl0r
    @drakl0r 4 года назад +38

    I am learning Spanish at the moment and I think Romance languages are beautiful.

  • @Heavy-metaaal
    @Heavy-metaaal 4 года назад +28

    I love this channel. It's funny, it unites many people. It makes us very close. Greetings from Brazil.
    Saudações lusófonas.

  • @misterkami2
    @misterkami2 4 года назад +45

    Every once in a while her Romanian sounds like Brazilian Portuguese to me (mostly due to pronounciation of some of the consonants)

    • @madscientist7430
      @madscientist7430 4 года назад +5

      Yea, Portuguese has such Slavic pronunciation

    • @im_so_bored3896
      @im_so_bored3896 4 года назад +1

      @Gwynbleidd yeah i think it's in pronunciation quite similar to portuguese bc we in romanian have a lot of "sh" sounds. like and - si (shee). and we both say eu for me, I.

  • @bjaarki
    @bjaarki 4 года назад +55

    Been absolutely loving this Latin series! As a consequence I found Scorpio Martianus and polyMATHY also! Great work Ecolinguist and all involved :)

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +6

      Aw thanks so much! I’m glad you like my channels. Yes, Norbert is the best!

    • @KasiaB
      @KasiaB 4 года назад +3

      @@ScorpioMartianus Lingua Latina pulchra est! Thank you very much for contributing to Norbert's channel :) Greetings from Poland.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +1

      @@KasiaB Cześć! ♥️ 🇵🇱 Thanks so much for watching! ☺️

  • @wkostowski
    @wkostowski 4 года назад +77

    I like how Gia asks "(i)e un animal?" with this specific Romanian pronunciation, - and Luke automatically answers in Romanian "(i)e" , and the corrects himself, "est".;)

    • @bilbohob7179
      @bilbohob7179 4 года назад +6

      3 person singular portuguese and galician is "é", i think in italian too...
      Neolatin was interfering with classical

    • @tzelleru22
      @tzelleru22 4 года назад +5

      '(i)e' is short for '(i)este' in romanian, so the very latin est with extra e and a short i in spoken language.

    • @strictlyunreal
      @strictlyunreal 3 года назад +4

      I suspect that the "ie" pronunciation of "e" is of slavic influence. Even "el este", in a non-formal environment, is actually pronounced "iel ieste", at least in rural southern Romania.

    • @CRP17
      @CRP17 3 года назад +4

      @@strictlyunreal We are probably more Slavic than we think ;)

    • @empyrionin
      @empyrionin 3 года назад +11

      @@strictlyunreal no, this is a very widely appearing example of hypercorrection in Romanian:
      All instances of "el, este, e" are ALWAYS pronounced iotacized even in artificial, elevated speech and have NEVER been pronounced otherwise.
      Most other words are deiotacized in order to "remove" moldavianness, but these words have had this form for at least 1500 years and they are NOT regional.
      Once again, it is an official mistake to pronounce "el" instead of "jel" and "este" instead of "jeste".
      There is no dialect or speech variant where this is legal. None. Not even according to linguists.
      Please stop!
      It only shows lack of formal education!
      Claimed "formal speech" using the wrong forms is uneducated speech!
      Anyone using "este" or "ecsemplu" instead of "egzemplu" is uneducated!
      Romanian is NOT pronounced as it is written and hasn't been for at least 300 years. It's a myth of the 19th century.
      Another example is the loss of the definite article. This has happened by latest in the 1700s. Plenty of books and resources on the subject.

  • @lucavasile7804
    @lucavasile7804 4 года назад +119

    I'm romanian and i understand perfectly what the girl on the right is saying 😀😀😀

    • @anka6356
      @anka6356 4 года назад +2

      Omg, me too. :))) Nothing from the left side though. :) Well, almost nothing.

    • @adriana-loredanatolea7999
      @adriana-loredanatolea7999 4 года назад +15

      E romanca si vorbeste in romana, normal ca o intelegi

    • @lucavasile7804
      @lucavasile7804 4 года назад +17

      @@adriana-loredanatolea7999 Uau. Chiar nu mi-am dat seama

    • @hereticanthem5652
      @hereticanthem5652 3 года назад +8

      @@adriana-loredanatolea7999 no shit Sherlock.
      Dacă te arunci de la balcon tot așa greu te prinzi?

    • @ChavezRaptor
      @ChavezRaptor 3 года назад +1

      @@adriana-loredanatolea7999 r/woosh!!!

  • @mikejaques4702
    @mikejaques4702 4 года назад +36

    Not Nokia, not Vodka but languages are connecting people. Hello from Russia.

  • @wkostowski
    @wkostowski 4 года назад +22

    Norbert's videos are pure gold! And I am so happy to see how the forgotten, isolated Romanian culture is getting back in touch with its western romance cousins, and how everybody is interested in Romanian. This language is beuatiful and interesting. I think (but I am not sure) that otrava means poison in Czech.
    In general, it is easier to understand any European language if you use a lot of high-register words than when you use basic vocabulary and idioms.

    • @andreafalconiero9089
      @andreafalconiero9089 3 года назад +2

      That's true because all these languages have borrowed so much vocabulary from Latin and Greek that those words at the "top" are often shared between languages, whereas the common substrate of each language family varies widely from language to language.

    • @raduparvu2539
      @raduparvu2539 2 года назад

      Yes, otrava in Romanian means poison. Otrava is almost the same as venin.

  • @Patricia_LS
    @Patricia_LS 9 месяцев назад +3

    I’m Romanian and I understood immediately. Such a nice video

  • @alanbaesse3039
    @alanbaesse3039 4 года назад +71

    Please, Romanian vs Portuguese, Spanish, Italian and French.

    • @MrConsto
      @MrConsto 4 года назад +2

      All the modern Romance languages that are national languages. That should be interesting.

    • @hsjoihs_linguistic
      @hsjoihs_linguistic 4 года назад +1

      @@MrConsto (Andorra)

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 4 года назад +1

      @@hsjoihs_linguistic And Switzerland (Romansh).

  • @UlpianHeritor
    @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад +53

    Bucatarie comes Vulgar Latin buccata = mouthful. In Romanian "bucata" came to mean a piece of meat that is cut or dismembered from an animals body. Since food is prepared in the kitchen wherein meat is cut and prepared, this how the word bucatarie (kitchen) came to be. It may be related to English "butcher" through old French "bouchier" and ultimately Latin "Buccus" meaning "goat".

    • @pasaniucdaniel4112
      @pasaniucdaniel4112 4 года назад +10

      in romanian there is also the verb "a imbuca" (to put in mouth/to eat), but its usage declined recently, but it is most probably linked to the origin of bucatarie

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад +1

      @@pasaniucdaniel4112 Thanks for the contribution. I still remember my grandfather telling me "nu ai buca" when I did something wrong. I miss hearing that phrase from him.

    • @alinalexandru2466
      @alinalexandru2466 4 года назад +4

      "bucata" just means a piece of food in general not just meat, like a piece of something larger. Because you can say "bucata de paine" (a piece of bread).

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад +1

      Alin Alexandru the term eventually expanded to mean a piece of any food. But before that it was used for meat only

    • @alinalexandru2466
      @alinalexandru2466 4 года назад

      @@UlpianHeritor Just wanted to point out that today it isn't used to reffer only to meat.

  • @chrissfloren2041
    @chrissfloren2041 4 года назад +21

    This was so fun!! Love Romanian ❤️

  • @calingg8103
    @calingg8103 4 года назад +85

    "Bucatarie" meaning place to cook/eat -> from "bucata" meaning a piece (in this context of food or grains) -> which originates from Lat. "bocca".

    • @stevenv6463
      @stevenv6463 4 года назад +2

      Is this related to Spanish boca or French bouche?

    • @Daniela-wg9nz
      @Daniela-wg9nz 4 года назад +9

      @@stevenv6463 yes it is and bocca is italian too.

    • @puffyish
      @puffyish 4 года назад +14

      @@stevenv6463 Also to put something in your mouth in Romanian is “a îmbuca”.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +6

      I suspected as much! Thanks

    • @jadsonfelipepereiradelima9496
      @jadsonfelipepereiradelima9496 4 года назад +4

      @@stevenv6463 in portuguese boca is mouth, i think that is the same origin

  • @diegonochebuena2416
    @diegonochebuena2416 4 года назад +14

    Luke is such an interesting and knowledgeable Guy! I love this Romanian videos, as a Spanish speaker is very interesting to watch. Thank you Norbert. :)

  • @syndfordig357
    @syndfordig357 4 года назад +57

    Romanian seems to "lack" the endings of latin words but in fact it has them.
    In the case of latin "aurum", the Romanian word is "aur". Firstly think about the fact that all nouns derived from Latin stem from the Accusative case; "aurum" has the same Nominative as Accusative, but this is valid for words such as apple (N. malus/Acc. malum). Even during the Classical Age, Latin speakers would often omit the -m, so they would say "auru", "malu", etc. While these forms developed as nouns as we see them today in every other Romance language (oro,or), the same cannot be said about Romanian: in fact the form without the ending (aur, măr) represents the base form of noun while the word retaining the -u (+l for the written form) represents the word with the definite article. "Aur" means "gold", this is the form of a word we usually look for on a dictionary, it is also used in expressions such as gold objects (a gold ring = un inel din aur), while "auru(l)" is "the gold", refering to the gold as the subject or object of a sentence or even a specific gold. (Gold is a precious metal = Aurul este un metal prețios.(

    • @Morindor
      @Morindor 4 года назад +18

      Let's also not forget about regionalisms, people still say "auru" in Romanian not just "aurul" depending on the region.

    • @mickael1277
      @mickael1277 4 года назад +17

      @@Morindor , I often skip the “l” terminology of my words when I’m talking to my childhood friends or more casual environment. Ex: “Aurul/auru ; Sucul/sucu ; Cuvantul/cuvantu ; Blocul/blocu and so on. I use the first one when I’m speaking to an intelectual or I’m in an academic situation.

    • @Morindor
      @Morindor 4 года назад +3

      @@florinalfonse4163 I know. Point is people use all manner of different ways to express a language. And some regionalisms sound more like the original word than what we have in the dictionary.

    • @Morindor
      @Morindor 4 года назад +6

      @@mickael1277 yep, same here. I only speak "proper" romanian when required. Otherwise it's free for all with word usage.

    • @TarebossT
      @TarebossT 3 года назад +5

      Proto-romanian had the ending of Latin words (auru, malu ...) in Nominative.

  • @ladymystyque
    @ladymystyque 8 месяцев назад +2

    Not my stumbling upon this video and recognizing my high-school class mate !! Hi Gia!!! Great video !!! Miss you love!!!

  • @ricois3
    @ricois3 4 года назад +79

    Français
    1- Cuisine
    2- Or
    3- Lézard

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 4 года назад +12

      In Spanish:
      1. Cocina
      2. Oro
      3. Lagarto (also in mexican spanish Iguana)

    • @stefanotincani
      @stefanotincani 4 года назад +12

      Português
      1 - Cozinha
      2 - Ouro
      3 - Lagarto

    • @spir.tar.herc.129
      @spir.tar.herc.129 4 года назад +6

      @@danymann95 or lagartija

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 4 года назад +8

      Iguana es un tipo de lagarto

    • @xjmmjbnqfstjdijoj2044
      @xjmmjbnqfstjdijoj2044 4 года назад +5

      In Italian :
      1. Cucina
      2. Oro
      3. Lucertola

  • @conejohh
    @conejohh 3 года назад +7

    I am a native spanish speaker and, I am surprised about how much of both sides I am able to pick! good content

  • @cortizoteodormoraru1528
    @cortizoteodormoraru1528 4 года назад +25

    Hi, as a Romanian we learned Latin a few years in elementary public school. It is a miracle to hear a dialogue in Latin, we have only learned Latin old school style, vocabulary, temps, verbs, famous quotes, etc.
    Decades ago they changed the public school doctrine, and this year Latin has been totally eliminated ad a discipline.
    I think your Romanian teacher has a limited Romanian and Latin vocabulary or studied less.
    For example - forest - silva is translated "padure", but we also use "ocol silvic" for forest guard agency, or "silvicultura" for the science of forest, and many more.
    There are a lot of words with slavic influences but for that word we have at least 3 synonyms with more than one with Latin roots.
    Let her use the Romanian DEX dictionary or Synonims dictionary (teacher must know) ;)
    AVE!

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад +3

      So Latin is no longer in the school curriculum? That's a travesty for Romania.

    • @martinusloch9039
      @martinusloch9039 4 года назад

      watch this please: ruclips.net/video/-ZwJKvvdQTI/видео.html :)

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr 2 года назад +1

      @@UlpianHeritor It is.

    • @asybaris
      @asybaris Год назад +4

      We all learned "In patriam nostram multe silvae sunt" :) I think she is from the younger generation and she didn't take latin classes in school. Oh, those declinations, the ablative ;)

    • @Nina-r5i
      @Nina-r5i 11 месяцев назад

      Not true. Latin is still studied in Romanian schools. Your comment is from 3 years ago. My nephew studied Latin 3 years ago, in middle school (8th grade). And he continues to study it now in High School (he is 10th grade now).

  • @robertofranciscomonsalvesp8080
    @robertofranciscomonsalvesp8080 4 года назад +14

    Loquendi ēlegantia! Multumesc pentru acest videoclip minunat! I really appreciate your work, Norbert. Dziękuję i razie!

  • @alexnita6871
    @alexnita6871 3 года назад +26

    there is another word for "otrava", which is "venin". I like this girl but I wish she shared those tiny details with them as well. Romanian language, like all languages, has various words with the same meaning, and even though we have words with other origins, they usually have a synonym coming from Latin.

    • @ionelpostolache7966
      @ionelpostolache7966 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely correct!

    • @danielbujor402
      @danielbujor402 2 года назад +4

      In fact "otrava" means poison, while animals poison (venom) is named "venin", the Romanian girl used it a bit incorrectly...

    • @ionelpostolache7966
      @ionelpostolache7966 2 года назад +2

      @@danielbujor402 She could have used "toxic/ toxin" as well

    • @MrQ454
      @MrQ454 Год назад +2

      @@danielbujor402 she remained blocked at ”otravă”, ”venin” was more specific for that case.

  • @Vilyan
    @Vilyan 4 года назад +19

    Oh my Gooood, I watched this like 3 times. I was soooo fascinated to hear living people talking Latin and directly comparing it with Romanian.

  • @anatomie83
    @anatomie83 4 года назад +29

    ◼ *Special Request* ◼ I speak a little-known minority language most often referred to as "Aromanian/ Vlach" and I find I can pick up Romance languages much easier because of this. Romanian in particular is very similar. ◼ I have found it difficult to learn more about my first language. Reliable resources are scarce and the drastic decline in native speakers has been recent - quite literally a language dying with the Aromanians of my grandparents generation (all deceased) &, sadly, many younger Aromanians are reluctant to speak it, pass it on to their children, and in fact have forgotten much of the language anyway. In part this is because they see it as irrelevant and partly because of the stigma attached to being seen as a "plebian minority" and the like. Many do not even identify as Aromanians but instead the country from which they hail from or still reside in. To illustrate --- My family emigrated from our home country when I was almost 3 years old and English became my "second lingua franca" :) yet despite the enormous geographical distance and 3 decades of speaking Aromanian in a very llimited capacity with older family members, I am more proficient in the language than all of my relatives of similar age and, surprisingly, even with many of my relatives/acquaintances of my parent's generation. I acknowledge that I have not had to endure the childhood bullying or adult awkwardness that comes with the minority stigma and that this likely has some role in my consistent dedication to my language and identity as a "Vlach". I also have formally studied linguistics & languages and continue to informally study as it is something that I have a genuine passion for learning. Setting aside these privileges, I lament the dismissive majority mindset and it saddens me to realise how rapidly the language (and with it the culture, the "identity") is dying. It is considered an endangered language and it concerns me that it may be almost entirely vanished during my lifetime. ◼.... Finally, My QUESTION 😊: Would you consider doing one of these videos which either includes Aromanian/Vlach or, an even bolder request, a video comparing the Aromanian/Vlach language in it's various manifestations in different countries? (interestingly, it can be found in minority pockets within Slavic, Balkan and other Eastern European countries which are not Romance language based) ◼ There are many "rumours", for lack of a better word, passed on as legitimate facts (grandparents and community elders are usually the culprits! :) within the Aromanian community - the 2 which I remain most curious about are 1) the claim that Aromanian is the closest living language to Latin (I am aware that the same is said of numerous living languages) and 2) that Aromanians/ Vlachs are descended of Wallachia and, scandalously, that Aromanians can be traced back to Vlad Tepes (you can imagine why these particular claims, especially the latter, continue to be circulated and are alluring to many). ◼ It would be great to see a video about this 💙 There are so few up-to-date and reliable videos on the subject. ◼ Apologies for my long response which is only tangentially related to the video posted - it seemed a perfect opportunity to put forth such a request 😄 ◼◼◼ Finally - thankyou for your work in creating these unique videos. It is fascinating to watch "real world, real time" comparisons and interactions between speakers - so much more dynamic than traditional linguistic comparison videos and the comments section is, truthfully, the most respectful and sensible one I've come across on RUclips 😂 I learn a lot from the discussions! -- So I thank fellow subscribers to this channel as well ❤

    • @Ecolinguist
      @Ecolinguist 4 года назад +6

      All languages are welcome on my channel as long as I have a native speaker willing to participate. :)

    • @anatomie83
      @anatomie83 4 года назад +2

      @@Ecolinguist i noticed! It's wonderful (I hope my comment didn't come across as critical- I did not mean to suggest that any language would be unwelcome in any way!) - I was super pleased to read the comments and note not only other Aromanians but suggestions for a few of the lesser known but similarly endangered minority Romance languages. Do you think you'll get a chance to create a video about these languages in future? They're a bit of a challenge but it would certainly make for a truly unique content! 😊

    • @ΠαναγιώτηςΛάιος-χ5ζ
      @ΠαναγιώτηςΛάιος-χ5ζ 4 года назад +5

      @@anatomie83 aromanian and daco- romanian are 2 dialects of romanian language!

    • @anatomie83
      @anatomie83 4 года назад +2

      @@ΠαναγιώτηςΛάιος-χ5ζ tell me more..... (genuinely interested). I know people differ on this, sometimes vehemently, and I'm just curious to learn as much (reliable info!) as I can 😊

    • @ady25speed
      @ady25speed Год назад +2

      @@ΠαναγιώτηςΛάιος-χ5ζ DacoRomanian is the main language in Romania - Romanian Language (Limba Romana) and it is not a dialect - Aromanian -Magleno Romanian are dialects , before people called the country Romania it was named Dacia and so linguists around the world agreed upon the fact that the language spoken in now days Romanian is Daco Romanian (Limba Daco Romana)

  • @bren_mcguire
    @bren_mcguire 3 года назад +16

    I'm an italian man with a romanian wife. I've been studying latin in high school.: it helped me a lot learning the dacoromanian language. Altough italian has the most of latin grammar, I think romanian has plenty of latina terms (and some greek term like karakatitza).

    • @IFARTED09
      @IFARTED09 2 года назад +2

      Romanians also learn latin at school but the language itself isnt as important ad the history of the language, so we learn more history.

    • @ady25speed
      @ady25speed Год назад

      yes but we write it like true latins in the form of Caracatița and we avoid at all cost the use of K- W - Y - KZ- CZ , we use them only if we are aware your name has it or the word we use has it , the scientifical name of Caracatiță is Cefalopode ...mabe Cefalopode make more sense (for the others Caracatița = Cefalopode = Octopuss) 🤷

    • @Nina-r5i
      @Nina-r5i 11 месяцев назад

      I guess you probably meant that Italian has most of the Latin vocabulary, not grammar.
      Because Romanian is the one which has the most Latin grammar (among the major Romance languages, at least).

    • @bren_mcguire
      @bren_mcguire 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Nina-r5i As an italian native speaker and as latin student in high school, I can assure you italian language has most of its grammar from latin (most from vulgar latin). I don't speak romanian as well as italian, but I think romanian is sometimes more conservative than western romance languages.

    • @teddy98100
      @teddy98100 11 месяцев назад

      @@bren_mcguire I think you confuse vocabulary with grammar. While yes Italian probably has the most words that descend from Latin. Romanian has the grammar rules, like preserving the neutral case, declinations and cases.

  • @lucastperez
    @lucastperez 4 года назад +15

    The more romanian, the better :D
    I get impressed that they get all the words right, I wouldn't be able to.

  • @deovolente5867
    @deovolente5867 4 года назад +386

    Wow its so fascinating how Romanian sounds like a fusion of Latin and slavic languages.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +100

      Yeah! And really the similarly to Slavic is coincidental. It’s quite similar in phonology to Italian and Sardinian.

    • @deovolente5867
      @deovolente5867 4 года назад +29

      @@ScorpioMartianus I think the case is that many slavic words have latin origin. And it's so much fun to listen to you guys and, if not fully understand you, but get a little snippets of the conversation. Absolutely amazing.

    • @farngoggo4636
      @farngoggo4636 4 года назад +20

      @@ScorpioMartianus for example in slavic people use domu as house,in latin house is domu,so slavic language has a lot of latin words,

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +45

      @@farngoggo4636 domu, or Russian дом, are not borrowed from Latin; they are from Proto-Slavic and both it and Latin got the word from Proto-Indo-European en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/domъ

    • @RaduRadonys
      @RaduRadonys 4 года назад +17

      @@themapleleafforever1526 I have never heard "doma" in Romanian. We have "dom" and plural "domuri" but it means a big cathedral, or another imposing very large building, not house.

  • @Kalifornya040605
    @Kalifornya040605 4 года назад +10

    I loved it, this was really amazing. The romanian girl was really smart... thank you Norbert.

    • @NickyRikki
      @NickyRikki 3 года назад

      Well if you speak romanian not hard to understand

  • @ScorpioMartianus
    @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +35

    8:02 mrau 😸

  • @ubuntuposix
    @ubuntuposix 4 года назад +41

    Though the difference between Latin "habemus" (we have) and Romanian "avem" (we have) is small, you still have to figure it out.

    • @puffyish
      @puffyish 4 года назад +5

      In German is “haben” to have for example wir haben=we have=noi avem.

    • @H0704
      @H0704 4 года назад +7

      @@puffyish the fun part is that German “haben” and Latin “habere” are false cognates. The real pairs (from PIE roots) are:
      Latin - German/English:
      Capere - haben/have
      Habere - geben/give
      It’s super interesting and a really cool coincidence. Languages are awesome!

    • @maoudante6006
      @maoudante6006 4 года назад

      @@H0704 Are you sure they are false cognates? Aren't they too similar for this to be a coincidence?
      Two thirds of the these words are identical and the meaning is also the same: Habēre; Haben, Have-Habban (Old English).

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 4 года назад +1

      @@maoudante6006 No, they look almost identical, but their actual roots are from completely different words in PIE.

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor 4 года назад

      Try the difference between “habent” and its Romanian descendant “au”. How “habent” morphed into “au” where as other words like “sunt” and “unde” stayed the same is beyond me.

  • @fernandocamacho1708
    @fernandocamacho1708 4 года назад +11

    Wow, I loved this episode! Can't believe she understands a dead language so easy.
    I'm a spanish and french native speaker and I have difficulty to unterstand it all :)
    I understand less than 50%.

    • @francks3544
      @francks3544 3 года назад +2

      I am Romanian but I understood about 80% of the Latin spoken here. It is true, I also speak French, English and Italian. În Spanish I understand also about 80% of the languages, Catalan a similar percentage, Portuguese 60-70%.

  • @默-c1r
    @默-c1r 3 года назад +3

    I love your channel! Thanks so much Norbert and all the guests too!

  • @GRAYgauss
    @GRAYgauss 3 года назад +4

    One of the most infectious things about these videos is the smile on everyone's face, but especially Luke's.

  • @tortellinifettuccine
    @tortellinifettuccine 3 года назад +9

    It's really interesting, it's seems that with enough time a Roman could pretty easily understand a Romanian in most instances and vice versa.

  • @vgt1117
    @vgt1117 4 года назад +10

    Love these vids 🇷🇴!!

  • @TheCarlScharnberg
    @TheCarlScharnberg 4 года назад +35

    Is that an Italian speaking actual Latin? Love it.

    • @gioq4702
      @gioq4702 4 года назад +10

      Luke is an american military

    • @g.3581
      @g.3581 4 года назад +31

      @@gioq4702 The Latin-speaking woman is Italian

    • @MUNTraiano
      @MUNTraiano 4 года назад +4

      Luke (the bald guy) is american

    • @juanme555
      @juanme555 4 года назад +6

      @@gioq4702
      Irene (Satura Lanx) is an Italian living in Belgique.

    • @MrKuriIIko
      @MrKuriIIko 4 года назад +34

      don't listen to them, Lucus is a time travelling Roman

  • @cornelia18
    @cornelia18 4 года назад +13

    About "otravă" in Romania we can also say "venin" when we talk about an animal, it's the same meaning ; so i think is quite similar with latin.

    • @cornelia18
      @cornelia18 4 года назад +1

      @BAD RAPOT nu le confund, daca ai citit cu atentie comentariul meu ai fi vazut ca am scris că spunem "venin" cand ne referim la animale. Fata din videoclip le-a confundat
      Nu spunem "șarpe otrăvitor " ci "șarpe veninos" ; la asta m-am referit. Poate nu am fost suficient de clara in exprimare, greșeala mea

  • @A-ID-A-M
    @A-ID-A-M Год назад +3

    This is so cool. I speak Spanish fluently, Portuguese pretty decently, and have studied French + Italian (plus I speak English). I just finished the video and realized I never turned on subtitles, but I understood all of the main ideas.

  • @TwentyOneBasses
    @TwentyOneBasses 4 года назад +76

    7:57 "non ego" I died with that hahahahah

  • @velvet3484
    @velvet3484 4 года назад +9

    We need more romanian videos please. Maybe you could get more romanian guests to form a group with her.

  • @td9250
    @td9250 4 года назад +65

    Otrava is poison.
    Venom is venin.

    • @togha11
      @togha11 4 года назад +2

      Otrava :D means poison in the Czech language. Funny you can see the Slavic influence there in so many words

    • @ArissXAS
      @ArissXAS 4 года назад +3

      Yeah, we basically have words from all surrounding countries. I wonder myself how some words are identical in croatian, turkish, and other slavic languages, like also russian. We don't understand the slavic languages, but have many words from them. For example sour cherry in romanian is "vișine", in polish is "wiśnia", in turkish is "vișne", in croatian is "kisela višnja", in russian sound almost like in croatian and the Czech only have the first of the slavic words to it, "kyselá třešeň".

    • @CaimAstraea
      @CaimAstraea 4 года назад +2

      @@ArissXAS I think there are some really ancient words that came from the India area thousands of years ago ? Like Perdea which means curtain. I remember hearing the word in an indian movie and noticed the connection between all the geographic regions between India and Romania.
      RO - Punjabi ( Perdea - ਪਰਦਾ ) / پردے in Urdu ( Pakistan) / پردے in Farsi ( Iran? ) / Perde in Turkish all with similar pronunciation. Maybe there was a trade route between these countries thousands of years ago and people bought curtains from India peddlers? Seems fascinating to me

    • @ArissXAS
      @ArissXAS 4 года назад

      @@CaimAstraea that's really interesting indeed..

    • @obrambor
      @obrambor 4 года назад +1

      @@ArissXAS Czech has "višeň" as well. And "otrava" in czech means poisoning, not poison.

  • @alexs.4551
    @alexs.4551 2 года назад +5

    What a great video, Norbert. Bring more latin and greek, please :) Romanian is such an interesting and unique language with its latin and slavic influence

    • @ady25speed
      @ady25speed Год назад

      it is a Latin language with Slavic influence (Slavona old slav language as we called it) than a bit of German influence and a bit from all our neighbours and the hardest is the Dacian words wich are quite difficult to descipher since it has some resemblance to Albanian

  • @pierrenilsson6189
    @pierrenilsson6189 3 года назад +5

    Wow, I have studied Romanian and I understood almost everything they said in Latin. The first two I undestood quickly but the third took a bit longer. Now I want to study latin!

  • @amiltonsj
    @amiltonsj 4 года назад +4

    I love those videos. This time I closed my eyes not to see the subtitles in Latin so I could be in her shoes and I got all the words right!
    I studied a little Latin in college, but I was impressed that I could understand someone speak it.
    Saudações do Brasil!

  • @nannunbgd
    @nannunbgd 4 года назад +9

    Venom in latin.Venin in Romanian. Otrava- Poison in English. I dont known why Gia dont said venin.

  • @MoonHoont
    @MoonHoont 4 года назад +34

    That was really nice, could understand most of it
    The 3 words in portuguese:
    1-Cozinha
    2-Ouro
    3-Lagarto

    • @gustavodeoliveira5254
      @gustavodeoliveira5254 4 года назад +5

      A cozinha foi a mais difícil pra mim, as outras duas foram mamão com açúcar

    • @MoonHoont
      @MoonHoont 4 года назад +3

      @@gustavodeoliveira5254 Eu também. O mais fácil foi lagarto, não anda(não "ambula") mas rasteja, tem quatro membros, escamas e não possui veneno nem carapaça

    • @lucastperez
      @lucastperez 4 года назад +5

      @@MoonHoont O lagarto foi surpreendentemente fácil, as palavras chave da descrição em latim eram bem parecidas com português, enquanto que em romeno eram bem diferentes. Acho que as vezes damos um pouquinho de sorte :P
      A cozinha eu podia ficar o dia inteiro que não ia descobrir nunca!

    • @momo_bg
      @momo_bg 4 года назад +6

      Yo pude entender oro y lagarto, pero en lugar de "cocina" pensé que hablaban de "comedor". Un saludo amigos lusófonos desde Andalucía!!

    • @MoonHoont
      @MoonHoont 4 года назад +2

      @@momo_bg O mesmo conosco, um abraço do Brasil para os hermanos hispanos

  • @stevenv6463
    @stevenv6463 4 года назад +9

    These videos are so helpful. I am really starting to understand Latin and I never learned it formally.

  • @cheeveka3
    @cheeveka3 4 года назад +7

    Still hope you do Latin, Portuguese, Romanian, and Italian. That would be an amazing video 😍

  • @edehalaszy
    @edehalaszy 4 года назад +29

    I'm delighted when watching this kind of short recordings when one should guess a word explaind in latin. I often guess very fast since I speak Romanian (born and raised in Romania, but I am Hungarian). I speak Italian and French, and understand at some extent Spanish and Portuguese/Brasilian. I like also the multi-language guessings when a latin or a neo-latin word is described in that particular language for neo-latin speakers or a spanish/portuguese/catalan/napolitan word for other neo latin speakers without the possibility to use the dictionary. It's a challange for me and an invitation to enrich my neo-latin vocabulary. How one could participate to this kind of challanges? I am intersted in.

  • @horos5870
    @horos5870 Год назад +3

    This video is literally a joy for Latin nerds 😂😂 thank you 🙏🙏

  • @sava.bogi25
    @sava.bogi25 4 года назад +70

    im romanian and I can almost understand all of what they're saying. its amazing that we, the romance language family, still have some remnants of Latin in our language, beautiful!
    EDIT: I also enjoy their curiosity with the romanian language, they find it so interesting, as well as the fact that it has slavic influence :D

    • @854gabryel
      @854gabryel 4 года назад +6

      How can you understand latin? I have to use my intuition to barely get what they're saying.
      There are few words that are similar to ours apparently

    • @sava.bogi25
      @sava.bogi25 4 года назад +4

      @@854gabryel da, nu am zis că ii înțeleg cuvânt cu cuvânt, dar în mare îi înțeleg și înțeleg ce vor să spună

    • @854gabryel
      @854gabryel 4 года назад +4

      @@sava.bogi25 da, nu stiu. Nu m-am uitat la tot, dar imi e greu sa inteleg ce zic.

    • @unutilizzatoreyoutubbicoca7749
      @unutilizzatoreyoutubbicoca7749 4 года назад +6

      I'm native in both romanian and italian, and i understood most of the latin part

    • @sava.bogi25
      @sava.bogi25 4 года назад +1

      @Luka Srbin indeed! Romania had a really strong influence from its slavic neighbours, especially Serbia/Serbian, thats why my name is full slavic 😉.

  • @justames5979
    @justames5979 4 года назад +13

    I love how when listening to Latin I get these moments where a word sounds almost exactly like one in Lithuanian and my brain snaps back to Lithuanian. For instance anguis-angis (snake), repit-ropoti (crawl). I always find that quite weird and cool

    • @simonlow0210
      @simonlow0210 4 года назад +5

      Lithuanian preserve a lot of Proto-Indoeuropean words and went through less pronunciation changes. :)

  • @ionut5367
    @ionut5367 4 года назад +7

    Firstly, it was a good video. The previous one with Gia was better, IMO - this one had a very easy second question, and required charades at the third one - although I was expecting more than 3 questions (maybe 5 or 6). Anyway, hats off to Luke for trying to revive people's interest in Latin (it certainly worked in my case), and to you Norbert for the overall work, but especially the one related to Romance languages.
    IMO, the best thing about this one was that, as opposed to the other Latin vs '*insert Romance language*' clips, this one showed how differently the Romanian language evolved (in isolation from the other Romance languages). I.e. the use of Slavic word like 'otrava' (poison) or 'blana' (fur), or even (possibly Albanian or maybe Thracian?) ones like 'soparla' (lizard)... or 'pisici' (cats).
    Would be interesting to see Aromanian touched upon as well (I mean, it is even more often overlooked than Romanian is), but for now I'm glad about the interest shown here for Romanian.

  • @englishworldchannel9788
    @englishworldchannel9788 3 года назад +4

    First time I hear somebody speaking Latin! It was such an amazing experience! Loved it! And left me totally puzzled as I did not know there were people who could speak this language so fluently. Except for maybe Latin teachers... And even so, I thought that even those would not speak the language so fluently. Very nice to watch the videos you organise. Thank you, gracias, gràcies, grazie, merci, obrigada ;)

  • @hereticanthem5652
    @hereticanthem5652 4 года назад +26

    This girl Could be a model.
    She looks so beautiful.

    • @im_so_bored3896
      @im_so_bored3896 4 года назад +10

      the majority of Romanian girls could tbh. the most beautiful British or German girl would be just average in Romania.

    • @janteo1
      @janteo1 3 года назад

      it is a country full of them

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan 3 года назад +2

      @@im_so_bored3896 That s not true. the most beautiful german girls can be really beautiful.

    • @ardeiuti
      @ardeiuti 3 года назад +5

      She is too smart to be a model

    • @MartinProavis
      @MartinProavis 3 года назад

      Yes. She is😍

  • @galahad749
    @galahad749 Год назад +5

    This is scary, as a portuguese speaker, i was able to understand almost everything. actually impressed

  • @vojtechdubcak6135
    @vojtechdubcak6135 4 года назад +59

    In Czech 'otrava' means 'poisoning', 'otrávit' means 'to poison'. Funnily enough, the word for 'poison' or 'venom' is 'jed'. Also when talking about animals you wouldn't use 'otrávit' but rather different verbs depending on the kind of animal, for example, 'uštknout' (snakes), 'žahnout' (jellyfish), etc.

    • @Olymus
      @Olymus 4 года назад +12

      same in russian, we have отравить, отрава и яд.

    • @forbidden9531
      @forbidden9531 4 года назад +7

      Otrava, jad, ukusit' (snakes), užalit' (jellyfish) in Russian

    • @Robertoslaw.Iksinski
      @Robertoslaw.Iksinski 4 года назад +8

      "Otrawa" in Old Polish (and "trucizna" or "jad" in contemporary Polish) means "poison", but verb "otrawić" or "trawić" in contemporary Polish means "to digest". It makes Pan-Slavic sense, because strong acid is also a good poison :)

    • @forbidden9531
      @forbidden9531 4 года назад +5

      @@Robertoslaw.Iksinski you can also trawić coś with acid in russian. Pictures on metal for example.

    • @ilijamitrevski1210
      @ilijamitrevski1210 4 года назад +2

      I think Macedonian is a bit different otrov means poison, truenje is poisoning (as in food poisoning), da otrue/da true means to poison (we don't have the proper -ti infinitives) and jad means like sorrow, grief, sadness and jaden means pitiful (or eaten it's a homonym).
      You'd hear jad mostly as " Poln/a e so jad" or "Dušata mu/ì e polna so jad."

  • @marincalmic2630
    @marincalmic2630 4 года назад +12

    Romanian "BUCATARIE" (kichen/cuisine) from "BUCATA" (=1. piece/bit 2. dish; in the meaning of the food inside a dish, not the dish containing food) +"ARIE" (=Latin-origin English suffix -ARY).
    BUCATA from Latin BUCCA=ōs (mouth) + feminin suffix -ATA (=Italian -ata, Spanish & Portuguese -ada) meaning initially the thing or quantity/food you put in or you can take with mouth, mouthful.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE 4 года назад +2

      Bocada in Portuguese is literally a bite. A bocado can be a mouthful or generally generous amount of something.

  • @TheInfinityy
    @TheInfinityy 4 года назад +321

    My Russian heart melted when she said "Da" 😪💔😂

    • @matthewphilips5387
      @matthewphilips5387 4 года назад +34

      well yes that is how we say yes in romanian

    • @Ralphsmaster
      @Ralphsmaster 4 года назад +15

      «Да» и на русском, и на румынском звучит одинаково)

    • @TheInfinityy
      @TheInfinityy 4 года назад +10

      @@matthewphilips5387 da 😜

    • @matthewphilips5387
      @matthewphilips5387 4 года назад +8

      i know a little russian :) like , da is Да and no in romanian is nu and in russian is нет

    • @ВикторИванов-ю7ю
      @ВикторИванов-ю7ю 3 года назад +34

      @gaby
      1) rus. да (yes, old. and), bulg. да «and; but; in order», serb. да̏ « in order; yes», sloven. dȃ « in order», old-czech. da «of course», pol. da «in order to» etc. This was about the spread of the word "да" in Slavic languages.
      2) About, "It comes from verITAs or verIDAs". I will write again for the millionth time, historical phonetics is a SCIENCE and it has its own LAWS. Can you give 100 examples with "verI" disappearing at the beginning of a word? Of course, etymology is a probabilistic thing, but the probability of the Slavic origin of "da" against the background of many other Slavic loanwords in Romanian is incomparably greater than the probability of an arbitrary *game* with letters.

  • @hazemshamma
    @hazemshamma 4 года назад +7

    My mother tongue is Arabic but I speak Romanian plus some French and English and Latin was pretty intelligible to me.

  • @jeffersonroth
    @jeffersonroth 4 года назад +7

    I'd love to see one with Tupí-Guaraní languages, like Nheengatu (Brazil) vs Avañeʼẽ (Paraguay).
    Also Hunsrückisch (Brazil - Rio Grande do Sul) vs Pomerano (Brazil - Espirito Santo).

  • @gwenengillsdottir1511
    @gwenengillsdottir1511 4 года назад +2

    Wow!i can't believe I understood almost everything in latin!!! Great video!!

  • @MickyBane
    @MickyBane 4 года назад +45

    We need Spanish (from Spain) and Portuguese (from Portugal) together with the Mexican and Brazilian altogether for the other vids

    • @Danilo-wq9vm
      @Danilo-wq9vm 4 года назад +1

      Sim 🙏

    • @gustavodeoliveira5254
      @gustavodeoliveira5254 4 года назад +1

      Tenho curiosidade de saber as diferenças entre espanhol europeu e americano

    • @user-hr3jb4on5g
      @user-hr3jb4on5g 4 года назад

      Seria massa

    • @larlecchinoallegro495
      @larlecchinoallegro495 4 года назад

      Castellano

    • @g.3581
      @g.3581 4 года назад +7

      @Loin Uxis Quisiera ver los idiomas criollos del español y portugués. Quizá chavacano de Filipinas y papiamento o kriolu de Cabo Verde

  • @jing-xingxu2462
    @jing-xingxu2462 4 года назад +11

    Martinus is definitely having a great time😂 as someone who understands the most in the room.

  • @GlossaME
    @GlossaME 4 года назад +58

    VENIN is venom (venenum) in romanian. OTRAVA is just poisson.

    • @KM-sr71
      @KM-sr71 8 месяцев назад

      its because Romanian has many slavic words, otrava is otrova in Serbian/Croatian

    • @GlossaME
      @GlossaME 8 месяцев назад

      @@KM-sr71 Maybe it's the other way around. We are Latin based speakers, the only country in East Europe. Maybe Slavs have many words from us

    • @KM-sr71
      @KM-sr71 8 месяцев назад

      @@GlossaME yeah you are latin speakers, but you have slavs everywhere around, so some words mixed. Otrova sound completely slavic not only in Serbian, in Poland we say Otruć which means to give someone poison. In Serbian they say Treba, while you say Trebuie. Vreme is like in Serbian or Russian. Also Romanian ceas sound exacly like Russian часы which has same meaning. I found more words like that but can't remember. Btw I love Your language and would like to learn it some day

    • @GlossaME
      @GlossaME 8 месяцев назад

      @@KM-sr71 Some, maybe. But not "many". Talking to a Bulgarian/ Serb/ Ukrainian/ Russian is impossible to us. There are close to zero common words. But talking to an Italian, for the first time ever, it's at least 70-80% the same common words.

    • @KM-sr71
      @KM-sr71 8 месяцев назад

      @@GlossaME Yeah, I know. I am from Poland and our languages are completely different, but it is interesting how Latin and Slavic language can have some words in common

  • @Theodwarf11
    @Theodwarf11 4 года назад +5

    I'm Romanian and I could understand what Luke was saying (most of the time) and knew it wasn't a șarpe or a țestoasă but I just would've never thought about șopârlă, so good job to Gia on that one!

  • @margrg21
    @margrg21 2 года назад +2

    this is adorable. this is better than any movie

  • @adrianpop6978
    @adrianpop6978 4 года назад +2

    Love these series, we need some more!!!! Keep up the good work! 👏👏

  • @DragonDeFord
    @DragonDeFord 4 года назад +4

    A fost foarte fain 😁 mă bucur că ați făcut un altă videoclip cu gia pentru că am învățat românește pentru soțul meu și e foarte interesant c-am înțeles mult de limba latina (sunt americanca și vorbesc franceza deja și un pic de românește) scuze că nu vorbesc perfect că e o limbă un pic mai greu să învăț dar incerc. Mulțumesc încă o dată și sper sa vad mai multe videoclipuri cu Gia 😊

    • @doruvlahu3365
      @doruvlahu3365 2 года назад

      Am o sugestie . Urmareste pe youtube profesoara de dictie Vera Nastasiu . O sa-ti placa .

  • @SunsetLover89
    @SunsetLover89 4 года назад +6

    Next, Romanian vs Italian and Portuguese! Let's see Gia vs Paola and Gustavo! :D

  • @rabbitrah8616
    @rabbitrah8616 4 года назад +41

    I think it would be SO COOL to see one of these with multiple sign languages. I have a feeling that someone speaking American Sign Language (ASL) would have an easier time understanding French Sign Language (LSF) than British Sign Language (BSL) for example! It would be cool to see, and also draw attention to how beautiful and diverse the sign languages of the world are!

    • @luhinopalermo7339
      @luhinopalermo7339 4 года назад +5

      That would be absolutely amazing! I really hope this happens!!

    • @anatomie83
      @anatomie83 4 года назад +1

      I agree, this is an excellent idea and would definitely be something I would watch!

    • @lucianodavila8889
      @lucianodavila8889 4 года назад

      Yes!!!!

  • @tubinho79
    @tubinho79 4 года назад +2

    Wonderful!!
    Oh BTW, I noticed that the Romance language speakers on your vids are mostly from the America's. We need a vid of European Spanish and European Portuguese as well. Can they be understood by French, Italian and Romanian??

  • @danielepappalardo1810
    @danielepappalardo1810 4 года назад +2

    I absolutely love this kind of content! Great job! 👏👏

  • @norielgames4765
    @norielgames4765 10 месяцев назад +3

    As a romanian I understood everything easily.
    She struggled with the last one, but I got it instantly.
    He said it has caput which sounds like romanian cap, meaning head.
    Caudas sounds like romanian coada meaning tail.
    Squamas sounds like Romanian scame meaning scales.
    He said it repts, as in, drags itself along the ground. In Romanian o reptila means a reptile becuase it repts.
    He said it has four members, quattor membres. In Romanian that would be patru membruri. Again, similar.
    I just got everithing he said instantly.
    Furthermore, one can make it easier to communicate with romans and other romance languages by using synonyms. In romanian most often you'd say otravă for venom but we also have venin, and I'd just drop any slavic synonyms and use the romance synonyms for ease of communication.
    But seriously it's surprising how incredibly easy it is for me to understand spoken latin. I don't even need to look at the subtitles.
    Of course the people here all spoke pretty slowly and clearly. That's not really natural speech. But I mean if some farmer from all the way in Lusitania met me, a daco-roman we'd definitely have different dialects and we'd both slow down our speech and enunciate every word correctly so it is easier for us to communicate. So again, I think I'd stand a change talking with Romans. I'd just tell them I'm like a romanized barbarian that learned from farmers all the way in Dacia which would explain my accent.

  • @robinbruce7838
    @robinbruce7838 3 года назад +4

    I just have to give the biggest thank you to all of you. I studied latin in school and got my advanced latin certificate or whatever it's called (in Germany it's called "großes Latinum") but sadly I only studied to be good at the tests and not to be good at the language if you know what i mean. I had no innate understanding of the language whatsoever it was all very analytical and very far from how we as humans actually understand and use language to me (i treated it more like maths than an actual nuanced and expressive language) And now since I have started watching these and especially Scorpius Martianus' videos by accident actually I have gone from understanding a word here and a word there to understanding 90 percent of spoken latin and started speaking myself. WITHOUT PUTTING IN EXTRA EFFORT. It just all happened naturally by enjoying these kinds of videos. It's like it's using the resources i already had in my brain from studying all these years and rewiring them to be actually used as a language. I'm now going back and reading the works our latin teacher (which btw was also fluent but at the time I sadly didn't see / seize the opportunity :/ ) had us read but with a much much much better and deeper (I'm really missing a word to describe it something between instinctive and intrinsic 😂) understanding of the nuances, meanings and quit frankly the beauty of the language. It's been a lot of fun and I just wanted to thank everybody participating in projects like these and making them accessible FOR FREE! All of you are amazing and the reason more people are able to learn this beautiful language.
    Propino vobis salutem plenis faucibus❤️

  • @YuriyKuzin
    @YuriyKuzin 4 года назад +6

    Gia 💕
    every one laughed when she's asked color of metal :)

  • @nicolasespindola2852
    @nicolasespindola2852 4 года назад +2

    My man Luke likes puzzling the guests, doesn't he? Very cool vid Norbert!

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus 4 года назад +2

      lol I wasn’t trying to be too difficult. But I was confident she would figure it out. We had to *prove* Romanians can understand Latin. 😃

  • @HaciendoCosasRaras00
    @HaciendoCosasRaras00 4 года назад +3

    Your videos are amazing! I don´t have latin, romanian or italian education, but somehow i´m still able to understand a lot! I do have some degree of knowledge in portuguese, catalan, french and english, and I´m a spanish native speaker, this helps!

  • @wallachia4797
    @wallachia4797 4 года назад +3

    Another awesome video! I am still sticking to my guns and I am requesting a video featuring a Romanian and an Italian speaker.

  • @MarynaRGurzuf
    @MarynaRGurzuf 4 года назад +60

    Romanian 'otravă' sounds like the russian word with the same meaning. Romanian language is interesting for Slavic perception. Gia, you are a very nice person! 😊
    It's so cool when modern people speak Latin! I love listening to all of you, guys! 😍
    Hugs, Norbert! 🤗 Your videos appear exactly when I miss them and want a new one 😀

    • @minkone007
      @minkone007 4 года назад +5

      Romanian: otravă, Bulgarian: otrova

    • @stratant.8722
      @stratant.8722 4 года назад +10

      Romania has also slavic, turkish and hungarian influence.

    • @alinalexandru2466
      @alinalexandru2466 4 года назад +10

      @@stratant.8722 Slavic mostly. Turkish influence is pretty much non existant, and hungarian is small.

    • @Ralphsmaster
      @Ralphsmaster 4 года назад +3

      В румынском языке на самом деле довольно много заимствованных слов из славянских языков.

    • @alinalexandru2466
      @alinalexandru2466 4 года назад +3

      @@Ralphsmaster True, just like I said. Slavic is the main influence of Romanian.

  • @hxdtrwsuytfgbfr4428
    @hxdtrwsuytfgbfr4428 Год назад +4

    In Romanian "venin" is something toxic that only animals can produce and inject by stinging or biting you (like the English word "venom" ) . "otrava" is a generic word for any toxic substance that could kill or severely harm you ("like the English word "poison"). She was not using the words correctly as we dont usually say that snakes have "otrava". We say snakes have"venin".

  • @ExotikEli
    @ExotikEli 4 года назад +2

    Really enjoyed this! I took three years of Latin in high school and I am surprised to see that I can still understand it and guess what they were saying as well!

  • @justynetubbs211
    @justynetubbs211 3 года назад +5

    I'm fairly fluent in Spanish (a Romance language), and I took two years of high school Latin, so I just about understood all of the clues for the second word: aurum = gold. In Spanish, gold is oro, which sounds a lot like "aurum".