The Persian Language IN DEPTH

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 май 2024
  • This video is all about the Persian language (aka Farsi) and its features. Learn Persian with PersianPod101: ► bit.ly/Persianpod101 ◄
    Special thanks to Soroosh Motevalli for his Persian samples!
    Langfocus on Patreon: / langfocus
    Current patrons include:
    Andres Resendez Borgia, Anjo Barnes, Auguste Fields, Behnam Esfahbod, Bennett Seacrist, Brandon Gonzalez, Brian Michalowski, Fiona de Visser, Georgina Toland, Guillermo Jimenez, Jacob Madsen, John Moffat, Matthew Etter, Michael Arbagi, Michael Cuomo, Nobbi Lampe-Strang, Paul Boychuk, Rosalind Resnick, Ruben Sanchez Jr, Sebastian Langshaw, ShadowCrossZero, Victoria Goh, Vincent David, Yuko Sunda, [APG]RoboCop[CL], Adam Fitch, Adam Powell, Adam Vanderpluym, Alberto del Angel, Alex Hanselka, Ali Muhammed Alshehri, Andrew Hopkins, Andrew Woods, Angeline Biot, Artur Kondrashin, Ashley Dierolf, Atsushi Yoshida, Avital Levant, Bartosz Czarnotta, Brent Warner, Brian Begnoche, Bron X, Bruce Schultz, Bruce Stark, Bruno Filippi, Carl saloga, Charis T'Rukh, Christian Langreiter, Christopher Lowell, Craig A Stewart, David Anglin, David LeCount, Diane Young, divad, Divadrax, Don Ross, Donald and Alexandra Wycoff, Donald Tilley, Duha54rus, Edward Wilson, Elzbieta Koziel, Eric Loewenthal, Erin Robinson Swink, fatimahl, Florian Breitwieser, Frank Sellers, Gary Walker, Gemmy, Grace Wagner, Haiko Eitzen, Hannes Egli, Harry Kek, Henri Saussure, Ideophagous, James and Amanda Soderling, James Lillis, Jens Aksel Takle, Jessica Morris, JESUS FERNANDO MIRANDA BARBOSA, JL Bumgarner, Justin Faist, Kevin J. Baron, Klaw117, Kristian Erickson, Laura Morland, Leo Barudi, Lincoln Hutton, Lorraine Inez Lil, M.Aqeel Afzal, Mahmoud Hashemi, Margaret Langendorf, Mark, Mark Grigoleit, Mark Kemp, Maurice Chou, Merrick Bobb, Michael Regal, Mike Frysinger, mimichi, Mohammed A. Abahussain, Nicholas Gentry, Nicole Tovar, Oleksandr Ivanov, Panot, Patrick Timms, Pauline Pavon, Paulla Fetzek, Peter Andersson, Peter Nikitin, Peter Scollar, Pomax, Raymond Thomas, Renato Paroni de Castro, Richard Kelly, Rick Gerritzen, Rob Hoskins, Robert (Bob) Dobbin, Robert Sheehan, Roland Seuhs, Ronald Brady, Saffo Papantonopoulou, Scott Irons, Scott Russell, Sergio Pascalin, Shoji AKAO, Sierra Rooney, Simon Blanchet, Sophia-Rose Marron, Spartak Kagramanyan, Steeven Lapointe, Stefan Reichenberger, Suzanne Jacobs, Sven Onnerstad, Theophagous, Thomas Chapel, Tomáš Paulicek, Tryggurhavn, veleum, William O Beeman, William Shields, yasmine jaafar, Éric Martin, Adam Anthony, Adam Wakeling, Aidan O'Rourke, Akin Budi, Ali F.FARAHANI, Alice Fielding, Alvin Hopper, Alyssa Bennett, André Regis, Angelia Parish, Ankita Maheshwari, Anthony Floccari, Anthony Kinread, Antonio Del Olmo, Arunima Choudhury, Barbara Pijan, Brandon Novy, Brendan McKeon, Brian Hack, Bruin, Caio Lourenci, Cansu Aydin, Christian Pirhalla, Christiane D, Christine Micancin, Christoph Kuppinger, Christopher, Christy Filipich, Chuck Milbourne, Daev Clysdale, Daniel Andersson, Daniel Leon, Daniel Martinez Tejeda, David Brown, David Mertz, Duane Bridges, eagertolearn, Eddy González, Edward Pinaula, Einat162, Eiren Rain, Eric James, Erik Sundquist, Fred Newson, Gassyr Bakubay, Gerry Tanner, Glenn Wichman, globgobgabgallab, Greg Boyarko, Greta McKinney, Heiricar, Henrik Jakob, Hugh M. Hilden, I CAN Party, Imon Bashir, Ivan Biketov, Jack, Jack Taylor, James Grahn, JC Edwards, Jean J. Rodriguez, Jeremy True, Jim Perris, Joe Pranevich, John Masucci, John Weiss, Jonas Lundholm, Jonathan Sarfati, Jordan Mandel, juliane Lehmann, Krupal Maddipati, Krzysztof Posytek, Larry Gabutts, Levi Zalmanov, Lionel Pöffel, Luciano Medina, Lynn Stone, Mandy Pauza, Marcel Podstolski, Marek Wrobel, Mark G, Mark S., Matias Jentoft, Melvin Nightingale, Michael Härle, Michael Mersol-Barg, Michael Wajda, Mike Ahern, Mike Hill, Mitch Miller, Morgana Sousa, Nathan Luciow, Nathaniel Philip, nelson guimaraes, Nicholas Gauci, Nicolas Biolay, nomadicism, Peter Dawson, Philip Tagg, Rachel Franco, Rasmus Kuschel, RedpoleQ, Rhys Davies, RJH, Robert Chico, Robert Griffith, Roger Smith, Ruta Maknyte, Ryan Honda, S.P. Somtow (Somtow Sucharitkul), Samuel Monath-Belmont, Sascha Brose, Sihan Chen, Silas Brontë, Stephen D Swaney, Stephen Kunzer, Sue Ann Saupe, Szymon Pyzalski, Tanner Muscarella, Tim, Tina Hong, Tito Burgos, Tom Benson, Tom Sjoberg, Tyler Frantom, Uwe Zimmermann, Victor Alfonso Hernandez Avila, Victoria Scheker, Viorel, Vladimir Jashi, William Gaule, Woody deJong, Yuet-Yan Pang, Zala Erklavec, Zoe Brown, Zsolt Sándor, Ömer Isikman.
    Music: "Drums of the Deep" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) - Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License - creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    Iranian languages map: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Still images containing this map are usable under Creative Commons 3.0 sharealike license.

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  4 года назад +289

    Hi everyone! If you're currently learning Persian, visit PersianPod101 ►( bit.ly/Persianpod101 )◄ - one of the best ways to learn Persian online.
    For 33 other languages, check out my review! ► langfocus.com/innovative-language-podcasts/ ◄
    I'm an active member on several Pod101 sites, and I hope you'll enjoy them as much as I do!
    (Full disclosure: if you sign up for a premium account, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But if I didn't like it, I wouldn't recommend it, and the free account is pretty good on its own!)

    • @ezatullah5697
      @ezatullah5697 4 года назад +3

      Anything about pushto language of Afghanistan and Pakistan

    • @nouredinebensaid2822
      @nouredinebensaid2822 3 года назад +1

      Origin's word al Farisi الفارسي Persian and al Faris الفارس Knight al Fars الفرس courier steed horse !!!

    • @ssam00
      @ssam00 3 года назад +4

      You are a good man!

    • @zettymoghimi7391
      @zettymoghimi7391 3 года назад +4

      @@nouredinebensaid2822 is not al farsi it's farsi
      الفارسی نیست .. فارسی است یا پارسی است

    • @wissam.alsaidi
      @wissam.alsaidi 3 года назад +1

      @@zettymoghimi7391 He is mentioning the arabic origin of the word. That is why he added the definitive article in Arabic to it.

  • @dreamermagister8561
    @dreamermagister8561 5 лет назад +2616

    As a student of persian language I shall say this. I am not dying untill I read shahname completely.

    • @farshadm.3882
      @farshadm.3882 5 лет назад +189

      As a shameful native Iranian I must say I did not read Shahnameh completely either just randomly through the stories... I must put some time daily to read it!

    • @golsashokri9652
      @golsashokri9652 5 лет назад +22

      That's really sweet!!!

    • @cyrusthegreat1893
      @cyrusthegreat1893 5 лет назад +17

      Shadow Bringer Well said, my friend. We’re proud of you.

    • @cyrusthegreat1893
      @cyrusthegreat1893 5 лет назад +8

      Asmigon 👍🏻

    • @mohsend72
      @mohsend72 5 лет назад +42

      For anyone interested in Shahname, there is this phenomenal Persian podcast called "Fedowsi Khani". The host is an Iranian doctorate in literature. He reads and explains Shahname from the beginning.
      readingferdowsi.com/
      برای کسانی که به شاهنامه علاقه‌مند هستن، پادکست فارسی عالی ای به نام «فردوسی خوانی» هست. مجریش یه دکتر ادبیاته. از اول شروع به خوندن شاهنامه می‌کنه و توضیح میده.

  • @cufflink44
    @cufflink44 5 лет назад +2618

    True story: When I was living in Iran in the mid ’70s, I once attended an opera. It was in Italian, put on by a traveling company. At one point in the opera there was a knock on the door and someone onstage said, “Who is it?” In Italian that’s “Chi è?” (similar to “Key A” in English). The Iranian audience immediately burst out laughing. The performer was bewildered, since the line wasn’t meant to be funny.
    Why the laughter? It turns out that in colloquial Persian, “Who is it?” ( کیه ) is pronounced virtually the same as in Italian. So the local audience thought the Italian performers were joking with them by throwing a little Persian into the opera!

    • @HoormazdKia
      @HoormazdKia 5 лет назад +121

      Awesome story

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +99

      That was hilarious! We use "ki" in colloquial Persian and "ke" in bookish Persian for "who". "Če-kasi" (what person) is also used in formal Persian. The Persian word for "(it/he/she) is" is "e" in colloquial Persian and "ast" in formal Persian. "Hast" is also used in the sense "(there) is, exists", but also "is".

    • @HH-qc7io
      @HH-qc7io 5 лет назад +22

      What is the colloquial Persian phrase for that?

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +41

      It's "Ki e?", @@HH-qc7io.

    • @noktuloespa2083
      @noktuloespa2083 5 лет назад +94

      And in Hungarian, "Who's it?" is "Ki ez?". It's strange, since Hu. isn't even an Indo-European language...

  • @plrc4593
    @plrc4593 Год назад +158

    I've bought a Persian textbook out of curiosity and because I like Iranians and Iran very much and I'm surprised how easy this language appears to be. I'd like to learn it some day. Greetings from Poland 🇵🇱❤🇮🇷.

    • @mahyars2731
      @mahyars2731 Год назад +4

      Viva Polska 🇵🇱
      Jestem z Iranu ale mieszkam w Poznaniu i bardzo dobrzy ludzie są tutaj

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 Год назад +6

      @@mahyars2731 Bardzo się cieszę :) Przez krótki czas miałem współlokatora Irańczyka. To był spoko gość, niestety nie zdążyłem go poznać dobrze. Cieszę się, że do Polski przyjeżdża co raz więcej Irańczyków. Uważam, że nasze kraje i narody łączy dużo więcej niż się Polakom i Irańczykom wydaje.

    • @mahyars2731
      @mahyars2731 Год назад +3

      @@plrc4593 Tak, na pewno, a Polacy są bardzo mili i gościnni, szczególnie w porównaniu z innymi krajami Europy Zachodniej.
      Iran ma wiele do zobaczenia i odkrycia i mam nadzieję, że odwiedzisz i spędzisz dużo czasu w Iranie!

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 Год назад +3

      @@mahyars2731 ☺ Chciałbym kiedyś odwiedzić Iran, najlepiej po tym jak się już nauczę podstaw języka :D W ogóle żałuję, że się nie nauczyłem perskiego rok, albo dwa lata temu, teraz by mi się przydał - bo sporo się u Was dzieje ostatnio ciekawych rzeczy :P
      Lubię Iran, bo uważam Iran za cześć szeroko pojętego europejskiego kręgu kulturowego i europejskiej cywilizacji. Tak jak Turcję, tylko w jeszcze większym stopniu. Dodatkowo Irańczycy i Polacy są ze sobą spokrewnieni. Jesteśmy Indoeuropejczykami, a nasze języki są satemowe. To oznacza, że Irańczycy są prawdopodobnie bliżej spokrewnieni z Polakami niż np. Niemcy.
      Przy okazji: trudny jest dla Ciebie polski? :P Co jest trudne, co łatwe?

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 Год назад +4

      @𓄂𓆃𓉱𓁩Persian Gulf Warrior𓁪𓉱𓄂𓆃 I have Persian on my list of languages to learn. I think will settle down to learning it in several years. ;) Currently I struggle to learn Russian because I'm interested in war in Ukraine, situation in Russia etc.

  • @deangomm3423
    @deangomm3423 4 месяца назад +39

    I studied for 6 weeks in Dushanbe, and I'm so grateful for my teachers, they taught us very rapidly and it was difficult at times but now I can completely hold a conversation in the most beautiful most poetic language in the world. Барои шеъри зебое дар дилам ба форсӣ шукр мегӯям.

    • @real_69_69_
      @real_69_69_ 3 месяца назад +1

      The language you are writing with is tajik, it has become very different after mixing with the Russian language. Its rich with poem But not as much as the original version

    • @fgg215
      @fgg215 2 месяца назад

      ​@@real_69_69_Tajiki is a pure persian without mixtures.Only alphabet another.

    • @nafiseh212
      @nafiseh212 Месяц назад

      I'm Iranian..I can help u

  • @ameerosamakhan8599
    @ameerosamakhan8599 5 лет назад +759

    I am from Punjab Pakistan and there is a saying in Punjabi that
    "Learn Persian, even if it won't make you a king it will not let you die of Hunger"

    • @alirezaasadiarbati8269
      @alirezaasadiarbati8269 5 лет назад +13

      Ameer Osama Khan wow cool

    • @vaxelband2439
      @vaxelband2439 5 лет назад +4

      Ameer Osama Khan Wow, really?

    • @ameerosamakhan8599
      @ameerosamakhan8599 5 лет назад +2

      @Huda Karimi Cool, I live in Sargodha, i think it can get as desi as it can be.

    • @ameerosamakhan8599
      @ameerosamakhan8599 5 лет назад +3

      @Huda Karimi nice. BTW i also moved to to Hungary last summer.
      So goodbye to all the desi stuff😅

    • @ameerosamakhan8599
      @ameerosamakhan8599 5 лет назад +2

      @Huda Karimi damn right it is👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻

  • @aleesea7275
    @aleesea7275 4 года назад +1515

    My best friend is from Iran and she gets homesick often, so for the past few months Ive been trying to learn farsi so she can at least feel at home with me. Its a beautiful language and such a rich culture.

    • @paralleliran8984
      @paralleliran8984 3 года назад +14

      Hello, We are an international group of volunteers working on a project called "Parallel Iran". This is an intercultural project our focus is on Iran, hoping to highlight
      this amazing country and its rich culture, at the same time we
      acknowledge the issues that exist. We want to use different media to
      collect and create topics about this amazing country, Iran.
      If you like to know more about our activity or join us please visit our Instagram: @paralleliran and our website: www.paralle-iran.com
      Thank you

    • @nazigol900
      @nazigol900 3 года назад +107

      ur such a sweet friend

    • @infamousa5082
      @infamousa5082 3 года назад +45

      ممنون.
      معلومه دوست خوبی هستی 😊⁦❤️⁩
      Love from iran

    • @Kaguyahime88
      @Kaguyahime88 3 года назад +19

      Awwwww...you're such an amazing friend! Can I be your friend?

    • @abdsnomadicescapades7773
      @abdsnomadicescapades7773 3 года назад +19

      I wish i had a friend like you

  • @khanrahimi
    @khanrahimi 2 года назад +73

    My beloved native language Farsi/ Dari
    In writing there are no differences between the Farsi and Dari , but there are some differences in accents and pronunciations of some words
    And we all understand each other’s like American English and British
    Nice and easy and thanks for the video🇦🇫❤️

    • @persianwithazin1290
      @persianwithazin1290 Год назад

      I teach Persian language. Check out my channel 🌼

    • @lurji
      @lurji 5 месяцев назад +1

      what is your opinion on tajik? is it too russified

  • @amirhossein9980
    @amirhossein9980 2 года назад +62

    As a native Persian, I learned a lot from this video😂

    • @user-yl1th5dl6j
      @user-yl1th5dl6j Год назад +6

      Ahahahahah, ore barodar, man ham darse nav omukhtam, khodam az Tojikiston. To az Iron?

    • @shayan4878
      @shayan4878 Год назад

      @@user-yl1th5dl6j che jaleb! Bel-akhareh yek tajik dar RUclips didam

    • @rozhinarazavian8392
      @rozhinarazavian8392 7 месяцев назад +3

      Ma iraniha Tajikha ra besiyar doost darim.
      We Iranians love Tojiks so much.

    • @EmmettElcielo
      @EmmettElcielo 17 дней назад

      ​@@user-yl1th5dl6jhaju ey kash hame ba ye xat mineveshtim

  • @helenborzouei1455
    @helenborzouei1455 4 года назад +2095

    I’m Persian I don’t know why I’m watching this lol
    edit: wow can't believe this comment got so many replies and likes omg that's actually cool. Thanks for the likes!*_* but GEEZ some of y'all need to relax. I'm not insane and I have a good darn reason to watch this. that comment was obviously just a joke, some of y'all are so nasty and offensive dude.

    • @wildfire4964
      @wildfire4964 4 года назад +111

      cus you are " KONJKAV " lol

    • @jsf3669
      @jsf3669 4 года назад +13

      Helen Borzouei Me too xD

    • @rezvan-5457
      @rezvan-5457 4 года назад +40

      We are all " Persian" here.

    • @gitac7726
      @gitac7726 4 года назад +26

      Haha me too! But I never looked at my own language in so much depth! Lol Great video, thanks!!

    • @vergil9023
      @vergil9023 4 года назад +5

      @@rezvan-5457 then spaake persian like سلام اهل کجایی

  • @ignacioparedes6529
    @ignacioparedes6529 2 года назад +423

    Love Iran 🇮🇷, Afghanistan 🇦🇫 and Tajikistan 🇹🇯 from Brazil 🇧🇷

    • @midas3987
      @midas3987 2 года назад +17

      Thanks bro😍
      I'm from Iran❤

    • @minico7790
      @minico7790 2 года назад +2

      Aaaww thxx :))))

    • @leilashahrestani4946
      @leilashahrestani4946 2 года назад +4

      Thx I'm from iran

    • @elimorix1722
      @elimorix1722 2 года назад +3

      Thank you honey 😍😍❤️❤️❤️

    • @Soltan7902
      @Soltan7902 2 года назад +4

      I'm Iranian and I love your country too🥰

  • @hamzasaleem3242
    @hamzasaleem3242 Год назад +91

    For Urdu Speakers, I think learning Persian is a piece of cake! We are already familiar with most of the verbs, nouns, expressions and even some grammatical rules (which most people don't even know). No new sounds to learn, exactly the same script, a lot of common Arabic loan words and the list goes on. Gonna learn Persian when i get done with my Studies!

    • @sinabagherisarvestani8924
      @sinabagherisarvestani8924 Год назад +3

      they also speak Farsi in eastern China in Xinjiang province , the majority speak Mandarin and ughyer but a small amount speak a form of farsi , its not the same as farsi , its got a lot of mandarin loan words but it is mutually intelligible , they would be able to understand farsi if they speak very slowly

    • @slayedclaw317
      @slayedclaw317 Год назад

      @@sinabagherisarvestani8924
      Who speaks farsi in xiang

    • @sinabagherisarvestani8924
      @sinabagherisarvestani8924 Год назад +2

      @@slayedclaw317 ya they speak Farsi , but its got a lot of loan words , not just China , but a small population also speak Farsi in India and Uzbekistan but the Farsi they speak in China is different , its completely different
      Its called the Sarikoli language

    • @mursalnikzad2113
      @mursalnikzad2113 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@slayedclaw317Tajik people who lives in west China but their accent is like pamiri like Pamir in Badakhshan province in Afghanistan and Tajikistan

    • @BenDover12366
      @BenDover12366 10 месяцев назад

      The script isn't 100% the same.

  • @hajarebrahimzadeh8175
    @hajarebrahimzadeh8175 2 года назад +94

    Thanks for sharing my language to the world.
    I'VE NEVER thought that people are interested in my language.
    🌹🌹❣❣🌷❣🇮🇷🇮🇷🇮🇷🇮🇷

  • @mravalik
    @mravalik 5 лет назад +876

    For someone who’s studying Farsi / Persian this is very informative and I am in love with the language and the people because Persians are such beautiful people 💙
    Salam or Darood from America 🙏🏻💙

    • @farshadm.3882
      @farshadm.3882 5 лет назад +24

      و درود بر شما و تمام آمریکاییهای نازنین از ایران (And hail to you and all dear Americans from Iran) 🍻♥️🙏🏼

    • @mirnowruz
      @mirnowruz 5 лет назад +9

      Salām my dear friend ❤ like you , l'm trying to learn your language 🌹✌... Because it'll make the nations to each other connected...

    • @mravalik
      @mravalik 5 лет назад +12

      Mirama Perysoon Awwww, that’s so beautiful, and I as well am trying to bring the world together because I am infatuated with Farsi and Persians 🙏🏻💙
      And I don’t know what flag your profile picture represents, and it’s a pleasure meeting you my friend 🌺💙

    • @mirnowruz
      @mirnowruz 5 лет назад +3

      @@mravalik thank you 🌹 that flag is nothing , just created by my imagination 😁 ...

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +6

      درود بر شما. پیروز باشید

  • @JamieDNGN
    @JamieDNGN 5 лет назад +634

    Now I want to learn Farsi. Ketāb e dars already ordered.

    • @nazigol289
      @nazigol289 5 лет назад +13

      Haha good luck

    • @vaxelband2439
      @vaxelband2439 5 лет назад

      The Dark Jamie Lol 😄

    • @aezexa
      @aezexa 5 лет назад +5

      The Dark Jamie haha i'm a persian speaker i can definitely help! I would happily teach anyone :)

    • @amirjafarinia4700
      @amirjafarinia4700 5 лет назад +1

      where are you from?

    • @daraarmand1221
      @daraarmand1221 5 лет назад +3

      Feel free to ask for help if you have not already given up)

  • @farshadvcf3992
    @farshadvcf3992 Год назад +70

    Persian is not only a language. It opens doors to RIIIIICH ancient poetry , old time phlosophy and rich music culture

  • @aypibaratamusa6877
    @aypibaratamusa6877 Год назад +35

    I’m an Iranian teacher of Farsi. In addition to “hā” as plural suffix there are some irregular plural words taken from Arabic. The learners need to learn them too. For example : Masjed= mosque 🕌
    Plural= Majed-hā or Masājed (Arabic)
    Also there are some other plural suffixes less used. Eg. -ān
    Mard=Man, Mard-hā / Mard-ān
    Both means Men

    • @user-oi7hj4go5i
      @user-oi7hj4go5i 5 месяцев назад +1

      Just in official writings we might say Masājed, but in ordinary talks no one use it and we simply say Majed-hā. we even don't pronounce -h- in hā. we write Mard-hā but we pronounce Mardā. in fact it's really weired if you talk official persian with ppl. the persian which ppl talk is really different with what is writte. we write yek(1) but we pronounce ye and...

  • @KlavierMenn
    @KlavierMenn 5 лет назад +857

    It is just me or Persian is a lyric language? They seem to sing while talking, so beautiful

    • @empiremediankurde8562
      @empiremediankurde8562 5 лет назад +15

      KURDISH ( KURMANCÎ) dialect language - Leng- Leg, êg- eggs, Nuw- New, Gow - Cow Newçe- News , Mouşk- Mouse, Tunder- Thunder, Komênt- Comment, Kartun- Carton, Shuger- Sugar , Dorî- Door, Tigor- Tigge , Murden -Murder, Rune- Run , Na- No, Rozê -Roses, Broder- Brother, Mamê- Mam , Darî- Dark , Garwm- Warm , Wair- fairy

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +105

      Persian have a huge collection of poems . Our best classical litrature are poetries.

    • @aezexa
      @aezexa 5 лет назад +29

      SardonicHarlequin Yes we have a lot of rhythm in speaking, i recommend you to listen to Hafez or Saadi's poems :)

    • @aliakbarzade230
      @aliakbarzade230 5 лет назад +8

      As a matter of fact, it is :)

    • @shaolindreams
      @shaolindreams 5 лет назад +25

      I don't understand any but it sounds beautiful to me.

  • @WarghaTai
    @WarghaTai 5 лет назад +409

    We used to speak French, Arabic and Farsi at home. I used Farsi to say "I am gonna visit a friend" because you don't have to mention male or female like English. In French or Arabic while saying you're visiting a friend you have to mention the gender.

    • @zahrazar9974
      @zahrazar9974 4 года назад +45

      Intelligent!

    • @spedramdaneshvar4869
      @spedramdaneshvar4869 4 года назад +62

      You just abused the language 😂

    • @rozhin6055
      @rozhin6055 3 года назад +15

      😂😂😂 Having he/she pronouns is useful when watching movies/dramas but yea not having it in Persian is pretty useful too! :)))))

    • @jcxkzhgco3050
      @jcxkzhgco3050 3 года назад +20

      We can do that in English as well, but cautious parents would give a follow-up question: Boy-friend or Girlfriend?

    • @hellomeloO
      @hellomeloO 3 года назад +3

      😂 then u visit the girlfriend

  • @mishkadavani
    @mishkadavani 2 года назад +86

    Both my parents are Persian, but I was born and grew up in Sweden. There were a lot of things/pronunciations that I had never heard of. Nonetheless, I really enjoyed this video

    • @KurosheBozorg
      @KurosheBozorg 2 года назад +5

      Kan du prata persiska?

    • @Suda11
      @Suda11 2 года назад

      For me, i was born in Iran, however, i moved to Norway when i was very young. So now i cant speak farsi as well

    • @KurosheBozorg
      @KurosheBozorg 2 года назад +5

      @@Suda11 You can always learn it, it's not hard. If your parents speak it maybe they can bring you to a Person school and help you too?

    • @rezagrans1296
      @rezagrans1296 Год назад

      @Mıshka Davani
      سنّتووووون ¿؟😶🤔😍

    • @trumjohannsmancave
      @trumjohannsmancave 10 месяцев назад

      Tjena kompis😀🤘

  • @sheralijuraev1156
    @sheralijuraev1156 11 месяцев назад +17

    I was born in a bilingual family in Chust, a small town in Uzbekistan. I spoke in Tajik with my family, but spoke in Uzbek with the people who lived in areas surrounding Chust. I must say the Tajik I speak is heavily influenced by some Uzbek and Russian words. However, still the fundamental words of Tajik are preserved. I thoroughly enjoyed this amazing video. A huge thanks goes to Lang Focus!!!

    • @fgg215
      @fgg215 2 месяца назад

      Sherali zaboni khudro faromush nakuned ba farzandonaton omuzed.

  • @garyandresbarba1707
    @garyandresbarba1707 5 лет назад +310

    As a Spanish and English speaker I find Persian easy to learn! It's a very straight forward language, I learned to read the arabic script and instead of arabic I'll go for Persian!

    • @CookintheApp
      @CookintheApp 5 лет назад +1

      dale hombre!!! Dale!!

    • @makmedia887
      @makmedia887 4 года назад +6

      Gary Andrés Barba it is much easier than Arabic

    • @hamedkadkhodaie7715
      @hamedkadkhodaie7715 4 года назад +2

      kie(که) means Who ? in persian, que means Who ? in spanish. Muerte means dead in spanish, morde (مرده) means dead in persian

    • @whey8028
      @whey8028 4 года назад

      I know persian it's my first language but unfortunately i couldnt learn it completly becuase of lack of learning and becuase i left iran when i was young.

    • @wildfire4964
      @wildfire4964 4 года назад

      good job

  • @fahimhakimi3268
    @fahimhakimi3268 5 лет назад +776

    I am a native speaker from Afghanistan and I say that this 3 dialects have the same words and we understand each other 100% (completely).
    I am listening to Dari, Tajiki and Iranian songs and love my language. Lets don’t allow politics and governments devide us. 🇦🇫🇹🇯🇮🇷

    • @farhadahmadi8442
      @farhadahmadi8442 4 года назад +62

      Exactly, I'm from Iran,we can understand each other completely, the governments want to change us into three nations and that's so bad because there is many of us in all three countries that helping them for doing that

    • @roye6961
      @roye6961 4 года назад +6

      not quite, there are different dialects of Farsi, in which set of vocab are very different: kachaloo = sibzamini. if you dont know this, simply you cant understand

    • @bytepunk2970
      @bytepunk2970 4 года назад +23

      @@roye6961 i personally think its cute and creative how gaps of time has pushed each region to come up with its own words, for example cream dandon vs. khameer dandon but to an afghani/tajiki using the word khameer(dough) is bc funny tooth paste is not like dough but like wise the word kachaloo(little thing or one) must be funny to an Iranian bc the word kucholoo is used in a different way ...... we are all unique in our own way but when it comes to literature specifically poetry all differences melt away like snow on a hot summer day.

    • @user-gr4fh9el3y
      @user-gr4fh9el3y 4 года назад +27

      I'm from Iran and I'm sure that the love and respect is mutual.

    • @wildfire4964
      @wildfire4964 4 года назад +21

      im iranian and im respect to afghaninan people

  • @learnenglishonlinewithfati8423
    @learnenglishonlinewithfati8423 2 года назад +18

    Hi everybody. First I am going to appreciate this channel for teaching my mother tongue to the world. I am Persian and proud of being a Farsi speaker. I am an English teacher and have been teaching English on RUclips. It seems interesting that others are teaching Persian while I am teaching English. When I read the comments I got happy that many people are keen on learning Persian. 🙏👌

  • @davidthediplomat2415
    @davidthediplomat2415 2 года назад +38

    Thank you for really interesting content and rich Persian class. I am from Tajikistan. I tought my Canadian friend Tajiki (Persian) within one week, now he can't stop learning more and more and singing Persian songs, poems and stories )). With love from Tajikistan

  • @milutinvukadinovic9244
    @milutinvukadinovic9244 5 лет назад +400

    I study Farsi on my own and I am Serbian. For a person who speaks Slavic language it is not to hard to learn this beautiful language. On scale 1 to 10, 7. This video makes it easier and more encouraging to do so. Thank you, sir. 😊😊

    • @Timurv1234
      @Timurv1234 5 лет назад +13

      If you ever need some help or literature, just message me, I'm a student of Farsi from just across the Drina! :) Good luck!

    • @hafizgaming100
      @hafizgaming100 5 лет назад +11

      Good to hear that bro
      I am a persian native speaker

    • @RahmanHaghparast
      @RahmanHaghparast 5 лет назад +11

      I'm a native Persian speaker and a language enthusiast. Don't hesitate to contact me if you need any sort of help in learning Persian.

    • @milutinvukadinovic9244
      @milutinvukadinovic9244 5 лет назад +3

      @@RahmanHaghparast Thank you, sir. :)

    • @milutinvukadinovic9244
      @milutinvukadinovic9244 5 лет назад

      @@Timurv1234 Do you mean textbooks or... ?

  • @stephenhaval6769
    @stephenhaval6769 5 лет назад +703

    I am kurdish ! Big love for Persian cousins

  • @ShaydaNejad
    @ShaydaNejad Год назад +26

    This is insanely detailed and extremely accurate and informative. I am in awe!

  • @DrAbdulSattarMalikLecturerUrdu
    @DrAbdulSattarMalikLecturerUrdu Год назад +5

    Wonderful! No doubt,your language profiles are very scienticific and linguistics based information.Ecellent job

  • @demetriusp.5020
    @demetriusp.5020 5 лет назад +1735

    In Greece we say "he speaks pharsi" when we want to point out the high proficiency of a foreign language learner.

    • @calmcmanus9928
      @calmcmanus9928 5 лет назад +104

      Yeah we arab the same we say pharsi

    • @veryverygentle
      @veryverygentle 5 лет назад +103

      I‘m sure many view Greek the same way..

    • @eduardoevaristo4749
      @eduardoevaristo4749 5 лет назад +162

      In Brazil when someone is speaking something that you don't know about we say "he's speaking Greek"
      Or when you tell someone to do something but they don't you can say "am I speaking Greek?" For example when you tell the students to talk lower but they don't

    • @nikolasmacedonites917
      @nikolasmacedonites917 5 лет назад +171

      Yep! That comes from the Ottoman times when for a very long time Persian was the administrative language and even after it was replaced by ottoman Turkish it was still very prestigious and a sign of the good education. Sort of like French in in the west. And so the phrase "speaking Farsi" meant what it means today in Greek

    • @Qwertyl6996
      @Qwertyl6996 5 лет назад +60

      @@eduardoevaristo4749 in the Philippines when we don't know what language it is ,we just jokingly say he speaks Aleman(German)😂

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast 5 лет назад +1564

    For every Arabic loanword in the Persian language, there is an equivalent Persian word that is preserved and used by many people, and frequently used in Persian poetry. There are also many important Persian words in the Arabic language, such as the word "فهرس", an originally Persian word that is very important in Arabic literature. The influence of Arabic on the Persian language is well known, but the opposite is often overlooked. Many people argue over such topics, but I personally find the commonalities, and the cultural exchange and understanding to be a great way for us to come together, which is what I try to highlight on my channel. When you put it in perspective, we all learn from other civilizations,
    no language has remained exactly the same for 3,000 years, none of us are original, but we all have certain aspects which are unique and interesting, and we all have influenced and been influenced by others in one way or another. This is something to celebrate and enjoy, not fight and argue over!

    • @abdalrahmanalassaf7989
      @abdalrahmanalassaf7989 5 лет назад +78

      As Arabian you said the truth, and Persian have great culture and love it a lot of scholars were Persians because Persians are people of science and can see that clearly, even prophet Muhammad said to his Persian friend: if there is kitab(book) between earth and heavens Persian guy will catch it, wish for our unite again and pass of each other and pass some wrong faiths wish Persians admit it in sword and back like islamic abbasid golden age time! And want to give you surprise bro these days will pass inshallah because prophet Muhammad told us about it so we don't get mad but work, even in history when Mongols crushed the islamic world then entered Syria and jordan valley they were crushed ,and when crusaders tried to entered Syria in second crusade they crushed too! And when Byzantine try to take Syria again and took Aleppo Seljuk came and crushed them too! Even prophet Muhammad told us that Syria will be the place were the enemies fall in it and today this is there last days ,history replay himself but in New characters

    • @HoormazdKia
      @HoormazdKia 5 лет назад +26

      Well said. Love your channel and everything you do. ❤

    • @gryf92
      @gryf92 5 лет назад +10

      @@abdalrahmanalassaf7989 it is hard to consider Iran as part of "unified Muslim world", it was cut off from it by Shia Turks, and modeled to their understanding of religion, hence on of the fillars of Sunni civilisation was ripped off.

    • @abdalrahmanalassaf7989
      @abdalrahmanalassaf7989 5 лет назад +15

      @@gryf92 yes true Islam is Sunni one bro, and when Persians were Sunni they gave that word a lot of noor and light and scholars ,but then Shia stopped that brains just like in Syria and Iraq and Yemen because there governments are Shia :(

    • @HoormazdKia
      @HoormazdKia 5 лет назад +30

      @@gryf92 Its a little more complicated than that. Pockets of Northern Iran was introduced to shia islam before sunni islam. Provinces like Gilan and Mazandaran held out longer, and were exposed to Islam by shia who were persecuted, and the Abbasid revolt first started in Iran due to the treatment of the descendants of Mohammed by the Umayyads. It wasnt the only reason, Umayyads were generally intolerant of Ajamis, but it was a prime reason. This gave some shias hope, but sympathy for the family and being sunni are not contradictory, Iran was staunchly sunni (and non-muslim) at that time.
      It wasn't until the Mongol invasion that most of the sunni strongholds were poorly defended. Mongols demilitarized most of Iran out of fear of retaliation for the mass killings. Iranians trained in secret in gyms known as "zoor khaneh" (house of power lol) during this time.
      They were still prominent in sunni Islam, the Ottomans would send their scholars there to learn, just like shias do today, because they didn't have the religious institutions to train everyone, but just like the Islamic conquest northern Iran faired better, and this time they had a significantly larger shia population that could eventually conquer the rest of Iran as their numbers grew.
      The pro shia people who conquered were Iranic(gilani, kurdish mazandarni, sistani, etc), Turkic(turkoman, qizbalshi, azeri), armenian, georgian, and circassian. This was the beginning of Safavid rule and the history of modern Iran.
      Under Shah Ismail they were extremely intolerant of sunnis. It didn't help matters that Selim (Ottoman sultan) was equally intolerant of shias and ruled at the same time. This caused a pretty large migration shift of sunnis and shias, and a lot of deaths.
      In the end, both sects are more similar than they are different.

  • @efstratiosfilis2290
    @efstratiosfilis2290 2 года назад +22

    Thank you! It seems that Persian is easier to learn than my own language (Greek). In Greek every rule has about a hundred exceptions!

    • @sohrab4371
      @sohrab4371 Год назад +5

      yeah in normal conversations but in poems these rules don't apply and vocabulary is much much harder and are written differently

  • @atamo8770
    @atamo8770 2 года назад +1

    This quick intoduction to persian language is really the most exact and authentic way to teach persian. I am so impressed.

  • @zuhuntati4920
    @zuhuntati4920 3 года назад +481

    I am Caucasian Tat. Our languages are same with little differences.Tati and Farsi are similar languages.Hello to my Persian brothers.We are same nation.

    • @kemann3815
      @kemann3815 3 года назад +16

      Respect brother respect 👋

    • @Batman-jq9jq
      @Batman-jq9jq 3 года назад +11

      Love you my brother💚❤

    • @hosseinsadeghi2468
      @hosseinsadeghi2468 3 года назад +11

      lots of love from iran

    • @s1noxios262
      @s1noxios262 3 года назад +9

      Love and respect to you my brother from south west iran, Persia

    • @HOS3EINRB
      @HOS3EINRB 3 года назад +1

      ❤️❤️

  • @soheylmoheb7273
    @soheylmoheb7273 5 лет назад +776

    This video brought a drop of tear in my eye.
    Since there are a lot of negative prejudice against Iranians for some past decades, I hadn't seen my language being taught for foreigners, and it filled me with pride.
    This was almost the first time that I saw a pure material of one of the basis of my life, my language, and I should say I don't know how to thank you for what you have made.
    Bless you and keep on the good work.

    • @TheMastermind729
      @TheMastermind729 4 года назад +21

      @Sepehr Rasoulimanesh You shouldn't worry about what other people think.

    • @lilmane1070
      @lilmane1070 4 года назад +4

      I feel the EXACTsame way

    • @dnranjit
      @dnranjit 4 года назад +32

      Farsi is a very respected language in India due to historic reasons

    • @iberius9937
      @iberius9937 4 года назад +30

      You people have a rich history, culture and language. I would love to visit Iran, someday. I happen to be learning Farsi.

    • @shubhamrathi5531
      @shubhamrathi5531 4 года назад +24

      Brother. I am Urdu-Hindi speaker from India and I love your language.
      I think your language is the coolest & sweetest & best language in the whole world.
      And the way you use the word e. Like in Mughal-e-Azam & Shayari.
      That's the coolest thing I've ever heard.
      Everytime I hear that, I feel so happy & so cool that you can't even imagine.
      Next level of talent.
      Next level of swag, bro. 😎😎😎😎
      For me, Farsi and French are the best languages ever.
      And one day, I will learn to speak your language.
      Insha Allah. Allah Hafiz 👍👍👍👍

  • @Theologos_Misantropos
    @Theologos_Misantropos Год назад +4

    I'm learning Persian and i love it ماشاء الله thanks a lot for sharing this knowledge Langfocus.

  • @CyrilNICOLAS-rp4yb
    @CyrilNICOLAS-rp4yb Год назад +5

    Indispensable ! En 20 minutes, les bases grammaticales du "farsi" sont posées et tout devient plus lumineux ! Félicitations, les explications sont claires, et le support visuel est très bien conçu. Un grand merci ! Cette vidéo fait suite à une première vidéo d'introduction à la langue perse que je vous recommande vivement car elle est toute aussi pertinente.

  • @bmr2104
    @bmr2104 5 лет назад +376

    Learn Persian until you can understand our poetry. Then you realize the true fascinating nature of this language. Thanks Paul for this great video!

    • @bryanl.morrison552
      @bryanl.morrison552 5 лет назад +15

      I enjoy Hafiz in English

    • @lvlonde
      @lvlonde 5 лет назад +16

      I've studied in Iran and I remember when we used to study language I was able to memorize lots of poems than any other language materials.. I enjoyed it a lot..!!

    • @webeskimo
      @webeskimo 5 лет назад +6

      can you explaine why? I am iranian and i know only 1 or 2 people who actually can understand poetry well lol
      You put the bar very high...if one would do that, they would at least get a job in their country in a university as a lecturer right?

    • @lvlonde
      @lvlonde 5 лет назад +5

      @@webeskimo
      Well it is up to what you are interested in.. I didn't say that I can understand the poetry from the first time.. but once I understand the meaning I memorize it by heart very quickly and I enjoy it a lot.. and that doesn't mean necessarily that I can be a lecturer in Persian literature.. but it is up to your mindset and the way you perceive other languages.. by the way I even right songs in Farsi..!!!

    • @TariqNavabiGaming
      @TariqNavabiGaming 5 лет назад +11

      webeskimo I’m Afghan-American and Persians my mother tongue and I’ve been recently learning how to read and write persian as well as the Iranian dialect. I LOVE persian poetry it’s SOO beautiful and unique. I love to listen to persian music for this reason as well. There is some great persian music out there and the lyrics help me a lot to learn and are very poetic.

  • @polakanonim4946
    @polakanonim4946 5 лет назад +121

    As a Persian learner I really enjoy how poetic this language could be, with those compound verbs and nouns. I struggle with the colloquial and non-colloquial variety

    • @jonusahamd3355
      @jonusahamd3355 5 лет назад +2

      try to learn by conversation it will be easier and faster you will learn ,dont think about grammer

    • @aminparsian370
      @aminparsian370 5 лет назад +3

      بله . درست هست . پارسی یک زبان شاعرانه هست . این را میشود از اشعار حافظ و سعدی و مولانا و سنایی و عطار و فردوسی و ... فهمید . ما ایرانی ها تاریخ و فلسفه و اسطوره ی خودمان را به شکل شعر در می اوردیم و به این صورت تاریخ و. فرهنگمان را حفظ میکردیم

  • @dalheeim8118
    @dalheeim8118 Год назад +4

    Oh! You explained everything super accurately!! Wow!
    I'm a Persian native speaker, but actually after listening to your explanation, I got a feeling like How interesting! I'm going to learn this language !!!
    And thank you very very much to make such an interesting and helpful content about Persian!

  • @tayebsafa4722
    @tayebsafa4722 Год назад +5

    Hi your information about Persian language is Unbelievable, I as Persian didn't know something that you discovered. 👏👏👏

  • @user-cm8ol9nm2h
    @user-cm8ol9nm2h 5 лет назад +1273

    محبوبترین زبون منه بعد از روسی که زبون مادریم

    • @pouyan74
      @pouyan74 5 лет назад +4

      Приветственный возглас 🍻

    • @funchidor
      @funchidor 5 лет назад +3

      У меня на абарот хаха

    • @yourshadowgirl5036
      @yourshadowgirl5036 5 лет назад +3

      Dude Thanks for your comment. I've now found a great channel

    • @fmfarhan
      @fmfarhan 5 лет назад +11

      Hats off to you, Afarin bar shoma афарин бар шома آفرین بر شما

    • @arminneashrafi2846
      @arminneashrafi2846 5 лет назад +39

      جالب است که روس ها زبان مارا یاد میگیرند و ما زبان آنهارا

  • @YuuViEtz
    @YuuViEtz 5 лет назад +458

    I am a fluent L2 speaker of Persian and have been learning it for over three years.
    In my opinion, the difference between written and spoken Persian is very structural and can be familiarized in no time. Persian can be learned quickly, especially if you are a native speaker of European languages or Arabic.
    The biggest challenge for Persian is the cultural elements embedded in the language itself. Idioms and slangs are very difficult to learn/memorize because of cultural factors. For example, in Persian, they say "Qorbonet beram" before saying goodbye to express proximity between people. In English, this expression literally means "I will sacrifice myself for you". Obviously, there is a story/reason for each of these idioms. Persian is full of these expressions and many of them make no sense to people from other parts of the world (like me). Learning them can be very very difficult since our brain tends to remember things better when we can relate to our existing knowledge.
    Obviously, if you are an Arabic speaker, for example from Lebanon or Syria, you will not find this as difficult because there are less cultural gaps. Some expressions in Persian may still sound odd, but it's guessable to some Arabic speakers. It all depends on your mother tongue, cultural gaps and exposure.
    Stella

    • @farbodtaheri3248
      @farbodtaheri3248 4 года назад +38

      I am native Persian speaker and I would say I still have problem with "Qorbonet beram" .
      it's a strange idiom. I never use it and it makes me uncomfortable when other people say it to me.

    • @user-nj5ih8su8i
      @user-nj5ih8su8i 4 года назад +11

      What cultural closeness is there between Iran and Syria/Lebanon 😕

    • @ethdow6817
      @ethdow6817 4 года назад +42

      Think of it like this: We are a nation who is very comfortable with exaggerations intended for flattery and cajolery. Although they might seem mushy, dishonest or even downright nonsensical to other cultures , we consider them to be endearing as long as they are for the purpose of courtesy. We don’t take these sayings literally believe it or not. I hope that helps.

    • @user-dg5vx8li8f
      @user-dg5vx8li8f 4 года назад +17

      On the contrary, I see that I, the Gulf dialects, are closer to Farsi than Lebanon or Syria. In our Gulf dialect we have letters that are not only available in Arabic, and they are found in Persian

    • @ardalanhamedi6974
      @ardalanhamedi6974 4 года назад +14

      I know 8 months since you posted this comment just passed but was wondering it can help you if you are still learning Persian. the reason for saying it goes back to Love stories mythologies and of course these days exaggeration( بزرگنمایی) exaggeration is also a big part of literature especially in poets like Shahname Ferdowsi. anyway in the stories most of the time the lover wanted to literally sacrifice (mostly)his life for the beloved girl to rescue her or even die due to excessive love and sadness. this Idiom is more logical if u see it in the history and literary context. ( you can find this idiom in different languages belong to Iran like Lorish, Kurdish, Azeri and maybe Northern Iran languages.)

  • @nellycastillo5396
    @nellycastillo5396 2 года назад

    I was looking for to learn Persian and I found this beautiful 😍 video, thank you for your job 😊

  • @vyacheslavzgordan6725
    @vyacheslavzgordan6725 Год назад +2

    Awesome, all Persian grammar in 20 minutes!!! Started to learn Persian 4 days ago and this is tremendously useful. Thanks a lot!

  • @vikvik9573
    @vikvik9573 5 лет назад +432

    LOVE FROM ROMANIA❤️
    Zende bad IRAN !!!❤️🙏❤️

    • @hekmat.1
      @hekmat.1 5 лет назад +1

      Salam how are you?

    • @vikvik9573
      @vikvik9573 5 лет назад +2

      South Turkestan Hazara, Uzbek, Turkmen
      Salam!
      Very good!!!🤗

    • @mahdimotamedi6812
      @mahdimotamedi6812 4 года назад

      درود بر شما 😅

    • @sepehrmaleki482
      @sepehrmaleki482 4 года назад

      ZENDEH BAD ROMANIA

    • @theodorintfp3318
      @theodorintfp3318 4 года назад

      In Romanian salam is a tipe of meat 🍖(kind of)

  • @trixina.pandina
    @trixina.pandina 5 лет назад +190

    When I learned Urdu, my professor said: You can not say you are a cultivated person until you know Persian.
    So I started learning Persian, mosty watching Iranian serials on RUclips. I found it quite easy.

    • @Mhm_Rhm
      @Mhm_Rhm 5 лет назад +10

      Oh, خدا به شما صبر دهد Iranian TV series's are not good at all compared to English ones. as we describe them آب دوغ خیاری
      watching tv shows helped me a great deal while I was learning English.

    • @EA-uj3ur
      @EA-uj3ur 5 лет назад +3

      impressive!

    • @odinn7597
      @odinn7597 5 лет назад +6

      @@Mhm_Rhm حیف این همه سریالایه کمدی و غیر کمدی مثل شهرزاد که برایه تو ساختن

    • @odinn7597
      @odinn7597 5 лет назад +4

      sharzad its one of the beutifull iranian serises
      sorry for my english

    • @trixina.pandina
      @trixina.pandina 5 лет назад +7

      @@odinn7597 You're right, Shahrzad is a great serial, I watched all three seasons. And your English is lovely 😍

  • @user-hw5de8nu5y
    @user-hw5de8nu5y 2 года назад

    It's very good to learn the Persian language from you. Thanks a lot.🙏

  • @honeysweet2740
    @honeysweet2740 2 года назад +3

    Hey there.
    I am a local Persian speaker.
    I really appreciate the fact that so many people are interested in our language and hope that you enjoy learning it because it is a very sweet and delicate language.
    I also thank you Langfocus for explaining it so well. I enjoyed it a lot❤️❤️
    Just a little correction here, the present stem isn't actually hard to create and we do not memorize it.
    To find the present stem of a verb, you should write the imperative form of the verb and remove the "b" sound from its start.
    For example, the verb «خوردن» (pronounced like: khordan)
    First, you write the imperative form: «بخور» (pronounced like : bekhor or bokhor dependent on the speaker)
    And then, you simply remove the "b" sound from the start: «خور» (pronounced like : khor)
    And wallah, you have the present stem.
    Another example is «شنیدن» (pronounced like: "shenidan" which means "hearing")
    The imperative is «بشنو» (beshno)
    Remove the "b" sound «شنو» (sheno)
    And there is your present stem.
    Another correction, the letters «غ» and «ق» are COMPLETELY pronounced differently. Even nowadays. You just need to see it in different regions of Iran to understand. Just the fact that people pronounce it similarly in our capital, doesn't mean it is pronounced similar in everywhere.
    Also, to answer your question, I believe that the formation of the words are also a very important part of Persian to understand. I don't know how to explain it since I'm not a teacher😅 but basically the formation explains how words are created in Persian and vasts your understanding of the words you hear. "Moshtagh" , "Morakab" and "Moshtagh Morakab" are the three main types of word makings. I love to see it explained.
    And at the end, I thank you again for such a great effort you did to explain Persian. And sorry in advance for the probable gramatic problems I had in my comment. I'm still not a very fluent English speaker.

  • @shadelkurdi8754
    @shadelkurdi8754 5 лет назад +127

    As a speaker of Sorani Kurdish, I could understand this more than Kurmanji
    I love the Persian language. It's a beautiful language that has a LOT of history.
    Great video Paul.

    • @DarkTrevort
      @DarkTrevort 5 лет назад +9

      I speak kurmanji and I still got like 80% of the words before the english translation was shown

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +13

      Her beji Kurdistan, bra. ☀️ I’m a Persian (from Iran) and I’m also into the Kurdish language(s).

    • @mgr1282
      @mgr1282 5 лет назад +1

      Charayi jinar? Halita renda?

    • @wedemboys3024
      @wedemboys3024 5 лет назад

      Thats cause sorani isnt even kurdish lol.

    • @imhummingbird8043
      @imhummingbird8043 5 лет назад +2

      And we love our Kurdish brothers. We are all Iranic people. Kurdish, with all its varieties, are dear to us.

  • @indiananupam5715
    @indiananupam5715 4 года назад +691

    Farsi(Parisian) is a sweet language.I'm Indian & I know hindi,Bengali& English languages.there r many farsi(Persian) words in our Hindi & Bengali language.
    We Indians love Iran❤
    Long live Hindustan& Parisian friendship🇮🇷❤🇮🇳.

    • @imreza3643
      @imreza3643 4 года назад +41

      Love India too.I'm Iranian. :D

    • @behnamrahnama9193
      @behnamrahnama9193 4 года назад +33

      and we love indians
      and your languege is lovely for us

    • @dnranjit
      @dnranjit 4 года назад +35

      Farsi and Hindustani are two very poetic mother languages.

    • @dnranjit
      @dnranjit 4 года назад +16

      Persia and Hindustan/Bharat are as old as history itself.

    • @truthexplorer2939
      @truthexplorer2939 4 года назад +21

      actually URDU language have perisian words .indians usually mixing Urdu words in Hindi-

  • @drhaneenali
    @drhaneenali Год назад +1

    this video is incredible!!

  • @noorlingo
    @noorlingo 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hi I'm an English and a Persian Language and Literature teacher and I just wanted to say thank you for your most valuable video ✨️♥️

  • @ssoltani498
    @ssoltani498 4 года назад +617

    "There is no grammatical gender" makes this language perfect and easy to learn.
    Update: Also comparing it to most languages that have 1-3 articles, Persian doesn't have any definite article.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 3 года назад +17

      Uhm Uhmm *finnish

    • @aramr.1301
      @aramr.1301 3 года назад +29

      And also hard for US to actually learn other languages...😐

    • @saralovesthemoon
      @saralovesthemoon 3 года назад +11

      Lol try learning Farsi then think twice 😁

    • @samuelwallace2782
      @samuelwallace2782 3 года назад +21

      I really enjoyed learning farsi. It has rules that it generally sticks with to. Learning it to a basic level was very fun.

    • @yigitkagandavulcu7345
      @yigitkagandavulcu7345 3 года назад +14

      @@saralovesthemoon Im a Turkish speaker and its actually easy peasy for us to learn Persian since our grammar is similar.

  • @emmmetguzelemesnur9174
    @emmmetguzelemesnur9174 4 года назад +177

    This is my nameگۈزەلنۇر , I'm from the far west of China, I'm an ethnic minority . And my ethnic group is called Uyghur. Our written form is in Persian, but the language belongs to Turkish.

    • @valhalla-tupiniquim
      @valhalla-tupiniquim 4 года назад +3

      Very interesting. Brazil here!

    • @valhalla-tupiniquim
      @valhalla-tupiniquim 4 года назад +11

      Hi! How China treats the Uyghur people? Does it treat well?

    • @goldenmemes51
      @goldenmemes51 4 года назад +5

      Flávio Viana Gomide just like how bolsenaro treats amazonas peoples 😅😅😂😂😂🤣😅

    • @valhalla-tupiniquim
      @valhalla-tupiniquim 4 года назад +8

      @@goldenmemes51 Bolsonaro don´t like many people unfortunately. He´s not very democratic.

    • @zeriyx
      @zeriyx 3 года назад +14

      your people are on my mind a lot these days. i hope you are well. there are certainly horror stories leaking out to the west about what's going on there.

  • @elimorix1722
    @elimorix1722 2 года назад +2

    Thank you very much for this video and your good education. I feel very good that a small country knows us.

  • @vinofilo
    @vinofilo 9 месяцев назад +1

    simply perfect overview!

  • @cbrtdgh4210
    @cbrtdgh4210 5 лет назад +434

    We Europeans have far more in common with Iran than the Americans would like to admit. Iran is a cradle and beacon of civilisation, with a majority friendly/educated population. I hope ties can normalise one day.

    • @sighfigaming5789
      @sighfigaming5789 5 лет назад +14

      I mean north persians are europeans (genetically) generally speaking

    • @Si1ete
      @Si1ete 5 лет назад +4

      Actually the cradle of civilization is Mesopotamia ( modern day “Iraq”)

    • @KamramBehzad
      @KamramBehzad 5 лет назад

      Soon!

    • @abolfazlkhodaygani7019
      @abolfazlkhodaygani7019 5 лет назад +17

      @@sighfigaming5789 if anything, Europeans are northern persians :)))

    • @marsupius
      @marsupius 5 лет назад +10

      America is a big country. There are plenty of Americans that would admit that.

  • @dhank9860
    @dhank9860 5 лет назад +73

    Studied farsi for a hot second in high school, I loved the way it sounded and looked, it's like ur living in a world of poetry, and Persians always light up any time you try and practice with them. The hardest part really was all those compound verbs and colloquialisms. The funny thing is I ended up studying Japanese in college for my major, and I ended up finding a LOT of things (like SOV word order, particles, and compound verbs) easy because I had already studied Farsi. This video really makes me wanna open up my textbook again.

    • @faez_dabestani
      @faez_dabestani 4 года назад

      Screw the text book! I'll practice with you if you want :D

    • @NAsyn-kb1hh
      @NAsyn-kb1hh 4 года назад

      retake the language! 🥺

  • @Alyssa-bm1fy
    @Alyssa-bm1fy 2 года назад +1

    خیلی خیلی خوب هست که به دیگران زبان فارسی رو آموزش میدید 😍
    ممنون بخاطر آموزش خوبتون ❤️

  • @lylimthr3084
    @lylimthr3084 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for this video!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  9 месяцев назад

      You’re very welcome!

  • @MehmetOrdu
    @MehmetOrdu 5 лет назад +421

    Duolingo still doesn't have Persian, which is a shame.

    • @shahrzadmab9442
      @shahrzadmab9442 4 года назад +6

      Mehmet Ordu I agree

    • @movieclips7311
      @movieclips7311 4 года назад +9

      Rosseta stone app does

    • @Zara-np9yh
      @Zara-np9yh 4 года назад +3

      Please put the request on their suggestion website and let them know.

    • @kiryu2000
      @kiryu2000 4 года назад

      I use Mondly, it's not bad but there's a learning curve

    • @uchicha666
      @uchicha666 4 года назад +5

      memrise is much better, it has non-official courses too and persian amongst them.

  • @user-nc5yc9es6j
    @user-nc5yc9es6j 5 лет назад +217

    Love persia from korea!♥♥

    • @samiram5029
      @samiram5029 5 лет назад +4

      Iranian kpoper here haha im excited

    • @SuperThischannel
      @SuperThischannel 5 лет назад +1

      We love Korea!

    • @silibra2888
      @silibra2888 5 лет назад +1

      Your profile picture is scary!

    • @user-nc5yc9es6j
      @user-nc5yc9es6j 5 лет назад +1

      @@silibra2888
      You know the man who's in my profile picture?

    • @amirhossein5253
      @amirhossein5253 5 лет назад +1

      @@user-nc5yc9es6j is he the father of kim jung oon?kim il sok

  • @BAFREMAUXSOORMALLY
    @BAFREMAUXSOORMALLY Год назад

    PAUL, your documents are remarkable and very valuable. THANKS.
    BAFS

  • @firouzmosharraf654
    @firouzmosharraf654 7 месяцев назад +1

    As a Persian living in USA, I really enjoy watching this video.
    I am fluent in Farsi and English but I also study French, Spanish and Italian and found your videos related to these languages very interesting and educational specially the ones about similarities and differences between these languages. Thank you for doing a great job.
    Firouz

  • @ziawalizada3184
    @ziawalizada3184 4 года назад +89

    i am an Afghan Pashton my mother language is Pashto but I can speak perfect Persian language and I love it

    • @ziawalizada3184
      @ziawalizada3184 3 года назад +5

      @M310M همه اقوام خوب و بد دارند چه تاجک هزاره پشتون ازبک باشد قوم پریت ړنادان دارند خدلوند هدایت شان کنند تا از قوم پرستی وزبان پرستی دست بکشند

    • @thenoobprincev2529
      @thenoobprincev2529 2 года назад +4

      Greetings to Our Pashtun cousins!
      درود بر پسر عموهای پشتون ما

    • @voxaliqui4279
      @voxaliqui4279 2 года назад +1

      hey! Can you please tell me how big is the difference between Dari and Pashton?

    • @moltisanti745
      @moltisanti745 2 года назад

      Pashtuns are enemies of Persian culture, mordar hastan. Don’t ever speak Persian you khar

    • @hezbullahmomand4621
      @hezbullahmomand4621 2 года назад

      @@moltisanti745 Khor da gayem Majahir Go to your Country 🇹🇯🇮🇷🖕🏽🏳️‍🌈

  • @jackichan6164
    @jackichan6164 5 лет назад +163

    Drood bar ame farsi zabanan Tajikistan, Iran and Afghanistan and hands up 😊

    • @xamirreza7159
      @xamirreza7159 5 лет назад +1

      Dorood bar hameye farsi zabanane tajiiestan, iran and afghanistan, it is how we type it in iran 😊😉

    • @jackichan6164
      @jackichan6164 5 лет назад +1

      بله شما درست میفرماید 👍

    • @user-xr3vp7eh7p
      @user-xr3vp7eh7p 5 лет назад

      @blu lion
      معنی کلمه ame تو جمله ای که نوشتی چیه؟

    • @wedemboys3024
      @wedemboys3024 5 лет назад +2

      Long live all Persians!!

    • @user-xr3vp7eh7p
      @user-xr3vp7eh7p 5 лет назад

      @@wedemboys3024 I know the meaning of whole sentence except the "ame". What does "ame" means? Also I'm Persian.

  • @bekad4049
    @bekad4049 Год назад +16

    Thank you very much for this video. I'm Tajik from Uzbekistan and for me it was very interesting. Even though I'm a native speaker, I've never thought about how grammar works, because I've never learned it.
    Since official language of the country is Uzbek, there are very very few schools that are fully taught in Tajik(Persian/Farsi). But after finishing one of those Tajik schools you don't really need it in your future career so you still have to choose either Uzbek or Russian to continue your education, so almost noone learns the language properly. For these and other reasons our daily spoken language has changed very much. Uzbek(one of the Turkic languages) influenced our language a lot. And it's continuing to change with every new generation.
    But nevertheless, we still understand Iranians, they understand us. Of course with some difficulties, but it's possible to communicate 👌🏼

    • @pers-te7tw
      @pers-te7tw Год назад

      ты не таджик наглим образом врешь.я был в Таджикски земля Самарканду Бухарои Шариф Шахри Сабз.то што ты пишешь ложь.ты узбака.

    • @sinabagherisarvestani8924
      @sinabagherisarvestani8924 Год назад +1

      they also speak Farsi in eastern China in Xinjiang province , the majority speak Mandarin and ughyer but a small amount speak a form of farsi , its not the same as farsi , its got a lot of mandarin loan words but it is mutually intelligible , they would be able to understand farsi if they speak very slowly

  • @sachapecaric5686
    @sachapecaric5686 Год назад +1

    Excellent explanation!

  • @CryRight
    @CryRight 5 лет назад +43

    As an Arab, I started learning Persian through free online stuff and now I am quite mastering more than conversational skills. I need to learn more vocabs, and improving listening might be a challenge.

    • @officealireza9097
      @officealireza9097 5 лет назад +3

      Thank you for your interest in Persian. I admire your efforts. I live in the US and know several Arabs folks (mostly from SA) learned Persian to good degrees.

    • @nomesa7374
      @nomesa7374 5 лет назад +1

      Start reading poetry if you feel you are good enough in day to day life.
      Without poetry, Persian is just a language.

    • @CryRight
      @CryRight 5 лет назад +1

      DAS Sure. It's a bit challenging.

    • @nomesa7374
      @nomesa7374 5 лет назад

      @@CryRight
      True! But with practice it is possible. The poetry has rhythm. If you get their rhythms, then everything flows.

    • @CryRight
      @CryRight 5 лет назад

      DAS خيلي متشكرم. واقعا لطف داري

  • @dilafruzmeylieva5999
    @dilafruzmeylieva5999 5 лет назад +66

    I'm uzbek and from Samarkand where most of the citizens speak tajik I really love the language Many of the words in uzbek come from takik and arabic and It's pretty simple for the Central Asians to learn farsi .Colloqual tajik is even easier as a child I used to hear tajik conversations around so I understood it quite well and I took me a month learning tajik to get into conversation )

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 5 лет назад +2

      I think you might be the first Uzbek person I've encountered on youtube. Greetings!

    • @wedemboys3024
      @wedemboys3024 5 лет назад +5

      Arent most people in samarkand Tajik Persian?

    • @krsn77540
      @krsn77540 5 лет назад +2

      @@wedemboys3024 they were
      most of central asia was persian before the mongols came al bukhari was persian too

    • @Set_Get
      @Set_Get 5 лет назад +2

      And your name in Farsi:
      دل‌افروز
      In Iran, we say: Delafruz
      Beautiful name, beautiful word

    • @Amin-zv8yi
      @Amin-zv8yi 5 лет назад

      Nice name :)

  • @sasorinakkkk4507
    @sasorinakkkk4507 2 года назад +2

    I am Iranian and I really admire you that your original language is not Persian but you like Persian
    ممنونم بابت زحماتتون💜

  • @persiancampus
    @persiancampus 2 года назад +1

    Great video, as always, informative and to the point. Good job. Open to your comments, too :)

  • @baekhyun9822
    @baekhyun9822 5 лет назад +86

    I don't know why but Persian sounds to me so sophisticated and royal and I like it. If it weren't that I'm currently learning Japanese and Korean I'd go and give it a try. The fact that is S.O.V like Japanese and Korean and that it uses postpositions as well plus the fact that the vocabulary is Indo-European related makes it more intriguing. The ease of pronunciation and moreover the way Farsi adapted Arabic script reminds me of the relationship between Chinese and Japanese. I don't know if anyone can relate, I love this channel.

    • @alittlebitgone
      @alittlebitgone 5 лет назад +3

      According to the Persians I know to them Afghans speaking Farsi sounds royal and elegant in contrast to their own modern and rougher Farsi.

    • @1doubtist
      @1doubtist 5 лет назад +9

      @@alittlebitgone not really! Iranians prefer the Iranian dialect for sure. it's softer and way more complete.

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 5 лет назад +8

      The comparison between Arabic/Persian and Chinese/Japanese is actually pretty accurate.

    • @mgr1282
      @mgr1282 5 лет назад +2

      Persian has a very rich literature. In the past it was used as a official, literature, .... language in India, Ottoman empire, Seljuk empire, .... By the way there is some words in english from persian (not cognate) like paradise, magic, bazzar, ...

    • @veryInteresting_
      @veryInteresting_ 5 лет назад +2

      @@alittlebitgone I don't know about that. In Iran you usually hear Afghan Farsi spoken by poor Afghan immigrant construction workers. So hearing it doesn't really bring royalty into most people's minds. I'm not racist I love all the Afghan people I'm just stating facts here.

  • @Koshteg
    @Koshteg 5 лет назад +118

    As an Ossetian and Russian speaker I now realise that I'm going to learn Farsi. The language seems to be more familiar to me that I've ever imagine

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +9

      Arfæ iz Irana. I’m a Persian and I would also like to learn some Ossetian someday. The Ossetian cognates with Persian that I found on Glosbe and elsewhere were pretty interesting.

    • @mgr1282
      @mgr1282 5 лет назад +11

      Ossetian are a branch of iranic peoples

    • @avskardi
      @avskardi 5 лет назад +12

      I’m 3/4 Azeri-Iranian and my grandmother was Ossetian from Georgia. She fled communism in the 30’s from Tbilisi to Tabriz then to Tehran. Unfortunately, she never learnt neither Ossetian nor Georgian, but she did speak Russian, Farsi, Torki (Azeri), English and French (I grew up in Geneva).
      I’d love to learn her two mother tongues, especially Ossetian, that seems so close to Farsi, that I speak fluently, but that sounds so similar to other Caucasian languages!

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +1

      M Gr, their language is one of the Iranic languages, but we‘ve been apart for a long long time and we’re all racially and culturally diverse.

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +1

      That’s interesting, Qafqazi Alenov. I’d never known of an Ossetian residing in Iran. Many Ossetians migrated to Asia Minor, Central Europe and other places and got assimilated. Fortunately, the language is still preserved in Ossetia.

  • @Morrey77
    @Morrey77 Год назад +1

    Excellent analysis.

  • @Pk-wb3xt
    @Pk-wb3xt Год назад +1

    As a native Persian speaker this just makes my heart happy
    Good luck! موفق باشی

  • @anushervon4861
    @anushervon4861 5 лет назад +53

    I speak farsi-tajiki and I absolutely love this video❤️❤️❤️ and thank you for letting people know that in Tajikistan we also speak persian (because so many people thinks that in Central Asia all “stan” country’s speak the same language ,which is very annoying me) and i know my English is awful lol
    Tashakkore ziyod (thanks a lot) Paul ❤️

    • @rezachitsaz4923
      @rezachitsaz4923 5 лет назад +2

      In ja dar Iran ham baghie keshvar ha fekr mikonan maha mesl hamsayeha arabi harf mizanim... Jalebe shoma ham in Tory hastid. Shoma aya alefba ye Ma ro mifahimid? مثلا وقتی این طوری تایپ میکنم، میتونی بخونی ؟

    • @anushervon4861
      @anushervon4861 5 лет назад +4

      Reza Chitsaz Salom doste azizam :) Ore, alifboye shomora kame khonda metavonam, chunke dar ba’ze maktabho alifboye shomora meomoozand. Vale az sababe, ke har ruz istefoda namikonim, khob yodam nest.

    • @rezachitsaz4923
      @rezachitsaz4923 5 лет назад +2

      @@anushervon4861 Sepas :)

  • @louleloup2607
    @louleloup2607 5 лет назад +149

    I'm learning Persian and you summed it up well ! It is really quite a fluid language to learn as an English speaker (even more for me who speaks many other Indo-european languages). You get rewarded at every step by how the language is beautiful and how you can actually use it a bit. Also, learning the script isn't difficult! من عاشق زبان فارسی ام!

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +1

      Love you from iran. What other languages are you fluent in?

    • @louleloup2607
      @louleloup2607 5 лет назад +6

      @@poorang900 Thanks! My mother tongue is French, and I also speak English, German, Spanish, Esperanto (if this counts xD), and a little Italian :D

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +2

      @@louleloup2607 woah . So jealous of people who know a lot of languages.i only know parsi and english and a little bit of arabic. What do you use spranto for?i mean where do they speak in espranto?

    • @louleloup2607
      @louleloup2607 5 лет назад +4

      @@poorang900 Esperanto is a special language because it's a "constructed"language: it was entirely invented by a man who wanted to make a language very easy to learn that could become an international language (cause it would be fairer than to learn the language of another country) =)
      And I learn/learned Persian, Esperanto and Italian on my own you know, I'm sure you can too!

    • @naturalglory6311
      @naturalglory6311 5 лет назад

      lou leloup how are you learning Persian. I would love to learn too

  • @anicho27
    @anicho27 2 месяца назад

    Thank you this is fantastic our cleared up a lot of my uncertainties 🙏💞

  • @WaqasAhmaddar
    @WaqasAhmaddar Год назад

    Great brother continue

  • @enesgonen1332
    @enesgonen1332 5 лет назад +104

    For a Turkish person it is really enjoying to learn about Persian language just like Arabic. Most of Turkish people are not aware of using Persian and Arabic words in daily life. I feel like enlightened when I realize Persian words in Turkish language. And it sounds amazing.

    • @malolelei3937
      @malolelei3937 5 лет назад +9

      evet Turkce'de bircok Farsca kelimeler var.ama Farsca'da da Turkce kelimeler var.mesela acar,kacak,kap,surme,surtme,kirmizi(biz "ghermez" diyoruz),olgu,oda...Turkceyi ogrenmeden once ben de onlari Farsca saniyordum o yuzden ogrendigimde cok sasirdim ve onlarin kokenlerini bilmek cok hosuma gitti.neyse Iran'dan selamlar :)

    • @khanfederation3141
      @khanfederation3141 5 лет назад +2

      Kırmızı Türkçe değil Arapça kökenli. Türkçeleri Kızıl ve Al.

    • @lexxypexxy2831
      @lexxypexxy2831 5 лет назад +2

      the Ottoman empire deliberately used a lot of Persian for their vocabulary back then

    • @joshi3518
      @joshi3518 5 лет назад

      Never forget what you Turks have done to Greece.

    • @enesgonen1332
      @enesgonen1332 5 лет назад +4

      @@joshi3518 what is the connection
      Didn't get it

  • @mohammedsy1590
    @mohammedsy1590 5 лет назад +87

    9:12 well, I guess it's time to learn a new *beautiful* language

  • @suhaimi14
    @suhaimi14 Год назад

    I liked the grammar crash course in the video. Opened up the language much more.

  • @shayanghafoori2611
    @shayanghafoori2611 Год назад +3

    Many of those compound verbs have only one verb of their own too for example for "to stand up" instead of "pâ šodan" we can say istâdan also instead of "zendegi kardan" (to live) we can say "zistan", "sar zadan" is mostly like a phrase but also a compound verb but if we wanna use one word we can say "didan" which is known as the same verb for "to see"

  • @Tenahio
    @Tenahio 5 лет назад +55

    I have studied Persian for quite some time now, and I can ad that it is EXTREMELY rich in idiomatic expressions, both in formal language, poetry, and colloquial.

  • @naysan5520
    @naysan5520 5 лет назад +182

    The Farsi language was born in balkh currently balkh located in Afghanistan

    • @LeoniDAS643
      @LeoniDAS643 4 года назад +15

      Have a beautiful life and lots of blessings, dear sister.

    • @maryd329
      @maryd329 4 года назад

      خیلی خوبه که اینقدر خوب انگلیسی بلدی آفرین 👏👏من در منجلابم 😫😓😢

    • @valhalla-tupiniquim
      @valhalla-tupiniquim 4 года назад

      Very good.

    • @shekib08
      @shekib08 4 года назад +4

      Thank you love iran🇮🇷❤️🇦🇫

    • @spedramdaneshvar4869
      @spedramdaneshvar4869 4 года назад +1

      Wish you two health, wealth and happiness.

  • @sanhey8260
    @sanhey8260 2 года назад +1

    You explained very nicely even you know more native speakers
    Dari lover

  • @jas_mine6549
    @jas_mine6549 2 года назад +5

    It was awesome! As a Persian speaker, I really enjoyed it💗

  • @dastanparviz9613
    @dastanparviz9613 5 лет назад +378

    Zenda bod forsizabononi rui dunyo. Durud az Tojikiston.

    • @pouryaazizi6967
      @pouryaazizi6967 5 лет назад +19

      zenda bosh ey vatan, Tajikiston e Azad e man ( sa'y kardam ba lahjeye shirine tajiki begam. bebakhsh age eshtebah dasht 😂) Make IranShahr (the greater Iran) happen again! ❤️

    • @dastanparviz9613
      @dastanparviz9613 5 лет назад +19

      Pourya azizi
      Siposguzoram barodari azizam. ❤️😍. Zinda bod Iran-e bozorg (great Iran= Tajikistan, Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq...)

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +7

      همینطور هم درود بر تاجیکهای عزیز

    • @amirsabbaghi209
      @amirsabbaghi209 5 лет назад +1

      Learn persian script

    • @2009KAPLAN
      @2009KAPLAN 5 лет назад +12

      ZINDEH BAAD VATANAM ,Iran, Tajilistan, Afghanistan, Samarghand, Bokhara

  • @kacperwoch4368
    @kacperwoch4368 5 лет назад +39

    For Polish speakers questions seem very familiar: ki-kto, che-co, key-kiedy, chera-czemu, kodam-który, and forming questions by rising intonation is a basic feature of spoken language.

    • @MagusMagnus
      @MagusMagnus 5 лет назад +1

      I think Indo-iranian languages in general and Persian especially belong to satem family language. Slavic languages are also satem.

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +5

      There’s more: Polish “jestem, jesteś, jest”, and Persian “hastam, hasti, hast”.

    • @MagusMagnus
      @MagusMagnus 5 лет назад +2

      @@lilray5470
      That's correct!
      I always belive the language represents the mindset and mentality of peoples and reverse, speaking a language can form the mentality.
      I think that's why as an Iranian I always had good relationship with people from Slavic countries like Ukraine, Poland and Russia!

    • @kacperwoch4368
      @kacperwoch4368 5 лет назад +2

      reza kh It's so nice to hear that. There is definately some common mindset, no wonder Polish nobility claimed ancient Iranian (Sarmatian) origin/connection instead of a western european one or whatever.

    • @lilray5470
      @lilray5470 5 лет назад +1

      Well, I think we’re all more similar and related than what we think, regardless of what languages we speak, and that the language of friendship is universal, Reza.

  • @sanchezmarkez2274
    @sanchezmarkez2274 2 года назад +1

    Nice job brother.👍💚

  • @barsamshahi5637
    @barsamshahi5637 Год назад

    I speak Persian as my first language, this video explained the language pretty good are accurately, awesome👏🏼

  • @FIWspaceelite
    @FIWspaceelite 5 лет назад +40

    As a native Kurdish speaker, it felt really weird watching this, as I knew most of the Persian words without even the English translation. These languages are very close to each other

    • @farshadm.3882
      @farshadm.3882 5 лет назад +14

      They are both Iranian languages.

    • @javadsameri6436
      @javadsameri6436 5 лет назад +1

      I suggest you watch this video to see how similar these languages are : ruclips.net/video/alYtE9pdZBY/видео.html

    • @officealireza9097
      @officealireza9097 5 лет назад

      Old Persia comprised of 7 cousin ethnicities including Kurds. Not surprising to see many similarities. I live in the US and have found many non-Iranian Kurds learned Persian with minimum exposure to Iranians or through songs (especially Hayedeh).

    • @beback_
      @beback_ 5 лет назад

      They’re very closely related.

  • @hhbb7710
    @hhbb7710 4 года назад +151

    i love Iranians
    love frome 🇩🇪🇩🇪❤🇮🇷

    • @s1noxios262
      @s1noxios262 3 года назад +4

      Love you too bro, from iran 🇮🇷

    • @ehsanmousawi2998
      @ehsanmousawi2998 3 года назад +2

      ❤❤

    • @akinoxx2003
      @akinoxx2003 3 года назад +2

      🇩🇪🤝🇮🇷❤💋💋💋💋💋

    • @ocean3401
      @ocean3401 3 года назад +2

      ❤❤❤

    • @maryam.asadi97
      @maryam.asadi97 2 года назад +2

      Iranians Love Germans a lot as well ♥️

  • @dr_zark
    @dr_zark 2 года назад +3

    خوبه که درباره این زبان قوی تحقیق میکنی آفرین،🤝🎁

  • @rezafazelrezafazel5868
    @rezafazelrezafazel5868 2 месяца назад

    Paul, you are doing a great job as usual.

  • @tansly5001
    @tansly5001 5 лет назад +142

    I'm a native speaker of Turkish and I've been learning Persian for a few months. It's been quite enjoyable. Turkish has lots of loan words from Persian and learning the origins of such words is fun.
    Having lots of Persian words in my native language helps a lot while building up my vocabulary, but there are times it actually hurts. That is when we have a Persian loan word but its meaning has slightly changed over time. You guess its meaning, but oops, it has a similar meaning but it's not exactly the same.
    It is also challenging to pronounce Arabic loanwords. I find it easier to guess the pronunciation of native Persian words.

    • @DrAmiry
      @DrAmiry 5 лет назад +5

      It is quite fun to learn a language that shares many words with your mother language. I am from Afghanistan and a Persian speaker. Similarly, I learned the Urdu Language just by watching Bollywood movies, because the Urdu Language has many loan words from the Persian language.

    • @CookintheApp
      @CookintheApp 5 лет назад

      Evet!!

    • @shapurthegreat8314
      @shapurthegreat8314 4 года назад +3

      Tansly
      Don't be stupid my fiend.
      Persian and turkish have no Similarity or relationship. 100% different...

    • @talksolot
      @talksolot 4 года назад +4

      there are many Turkish words in Dari as well probably in Farsi too and likely even more so in Tajik. I love Turkic languages they sound so nice to my ears.

    • @makradars8150
      @makradars8150 4 года назад +3

      Shapur the great
      Don't be stupid my friend
      He just said that there are loan words.

  • @medrissarwary464
    @medrissarwary464 5 лет назад +186

    I'm Tajik(persian) from Greater Khorasan/Afghanistan there is no Dari or tajiki, it is just dialect of Persian language, in Afghanistan we says Parsi or Farsi for our language that means Persian.
    Long live all Persian.
    Tajik,Persian,iranian and Aryan are all synonym with each others.
    Panjshir

    • @poorang900
      @poorang900 5 лет назад +5

      درود بر شما

    • @medrissarwary464
      @medrissarwary464 5 лет назад +3

      @@poorang900
      درود همچنان

    • @ia285
      @ia285 5 лет назад +5

      You're a farsiwan and not a Persian. Tajiks are speakers of Persian. They used to speak Sogdian which is an east Iranian language like Pashto.

    • @medrissarwary464
      @medrissarwary464 5 лет назад +15

      @@ia285
      Lol farsiwan mean Persian in English.
      Tajik, Persian, Iranian are synonym with each others

    • @ia285
      @ia285 5 лет назад +5

      @@medrissarwary464 nope, 'fars' means 'persian' like the ethnicity. 'Farsiwan' means Persian-speaker.
      Why don't you consider Hazaras as Persian as well? They also speak Persian.

  • @user-qv7gl7yu8w
    @user-qv7gl7yu8w 2 года назад

    I'm from Iran I'm so happy who you make a video about our language. 🇮🇷🇮🇷
    Thanks 🔥👍