Edited Using MS Paint and Sony Vages Pro 17.0 Frames used in making - 101 Adventure | Royalty Free Medieval Fantasy Music • Adventure | Royalty Fr...
Комментарии • 35
3 года назад+8
Ive been following your channel since it was named "Sweden Ball" and your video "The world in the next 200 years". I also just wanna comment that your musical choice in this video was extremely good and well timed, well done indeed.
Thank you! Finally the differences and the lack of a dialect cline between Welsh and Gaelic make sense. Their parent tongues arrived in the British Isles separately: Proto-Celtic / Insular Celtic / Goidelic arriving first; Brythonic arriving later and supplanting Goidelic in Britain. This pattern of language migration in the British Isles is supported by genetic research (R-L21 Y haplogroup migrations).
This is a alternate history, also Brezhoneg existed mostly due to native Celts on Britian fleeing anglo-saxon invaders. So if the Anglo-Saxons didn’t exist or invade, Brezhoneg wouldn’t be a different language. Also if Gaulish never went extinct, Brittany would probably speak it.
Irish Celtic is older than Brythonic Celtic, maybe not even under the insular category (Irish is a q Celtic language and the rest are p Celtic). It’s thought Irish could have arrived thru traders. Great video otherwise :)
@@endovelicus74 from around gaul! gallic celtic languages pronounced indo-european *p as *kw in some contexts, which irish keeps. meanwhile, brythonic languages kept indo-european *p in those contexts. since gaelic and brythonic diverge on this very major and old sound change, it’s likely they represent two different language introductions (or something weirder)
Ive been following your channel since it was named "Sweden Ball" and your video "The world in the next 200 years". I also just wanna comment that your musical choice in this video was extremely good and well timed, well done indeed.
Nice man and thank you so much, Strange to think how long ago that video really was now!
Cool idea! Makes you wonder what this world looks like on a geopolitical scale.
Nice job on this!
If I may suggest, could you do a alternate history of the Slavic languages?
Thank you very much! Definitely will be a video in the making!
Added to best mapping videos playlist
Great job !
Thank you! :)
Thank you! Finally the differences and the lack of a dialect cline between Welsh and Gaelic make sense. Their parent tongues arrived in the British Isles separately: Proto-Celtic / Insular Celtic / Goidelic arriving first; Brythonic arriving later and supplanting Goidelic in Britain. This pattern of language migration in the British Isles is supported by genetic research (R-L21 Y haplogroup migrations).
I think the brezhoneg/Breton part is missing
This is a alternate history, also Brezhoneg existed mostly due to native Celts on Britian fleeing anglo-saxon invaders. So if the Anglo-Saxons didn’t exist or invade, Brezhoneg wouldn’t be a different language. Also if Gaulish never went extinct, Brittany would probably speak it.
Yooo, he's back :D
He is back ;)
I wish this could have happened in real life.
Thanks! Do Slavic languages next!
Can you make a video about Iraq?
Awesome format
Thank you mate! :D
You forgot the Celts of Anatolia.
I am subscribing with this one 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
i am addicted to celt
Hispano-Celt languages are Q-Celtic as well. And curiously, Italic languages has this Q/D division as well.
What are languages Q or D
very new, you have an original content.
Thank you!
Irish Celtic is older than Brythonic Celtic, maybe not even under the insular category (Irish is a q Celtic language and the rest are p Celtic). It’s thought Irish could have arrived thru traders. Great video otherwise :)
Yeah Irish isn’t insular
Excuse me but traders from where?
@@endovelicus74 from around gaul! gallic celtic languages pronounced indo-european *p as *kw in some contexts, which irish keeps. meanwhile, brythonic languages kept indo-european *p in those contexts. since gaelic and brythonic diverge on this very major and old sound change, it’s likely they represent two different language introductions (or something weirder)
@@valentinaaugustina oh, coincidentally you were around, I'm lucky. Thanks for the response! :)
@@endovelicus74 yea lmao i was like is it weird to respond in minutes to a comment from a year ago? yeah but i’ll forget if i don’t comment now lmao
do pannonian celts in this timeline suffer the same fate of the germans after ww2 with all the ethnic cleansing?
Hi