I love this kinda stuff, thank you so much. I’m japanese native, learning chinese (for my gf), and this series makes me wanna try Korean again once my chinese is better. I love language learning and etymology this is awesome
It's so interesting, thank you for this video. 🌸I'm studying Japanese in university and Korean for only one year. I found lots of similarities in the pronauciation of some words which made my life easier.
0:33 ふた doesn't mean “two” in Japanese…. It's true we sometimes count things as ひとつ、ふたつ、みっつ etc but ふた usually means “a rid”. I think it is better to think that ふ means two instead of ふた because there is another way to count need numbers ひぃ、ふぅ、みぃ、よぉ. FYI we usually count numbers いち、に、さん、し, the first way is an old way to count. The word “ニ”, itself NEVER BE ふた, you need to add つ in front of ニ, when you want to read ニ as “huta”. And usually, these words are written in hiragana like ふた(つ). I know this content needs to be shown in a similar way in Chinese and Korean so it is what it is.🫠
Futa is the wago (native Japanese word word for two) but its bound morpheme, the tsu complete it as a basic form of counter in Japanese. The most broad counter after that wago case is ikko for beginner
I do agree they can't stand without the suffix -tsu. Theyre bound morpheme , kunyomi reading of the kanji. Traditional numeral, sino Japanese are usually used for differences purposes but are both common along with the kunyomi wago. Ikko is a diff case its counter word, the most general counter word for beginner, itsu (onyomi) meet + ko (counter wore for anything cuz it has a broad sense) Itsu + ko: ikko Morphological and phenological changes, 一個
I love this kinda stuff, thank you so much. I’m japanese native, learning chinese (for my gf), and this series makes me wanna try Korean again once my chinese is better. I love language learning and etymology this is awesome
These are so underrated. Inspiring me to take this approach to other areas of study beyond what's covered in this series too, thanks a ton.
It's so interesting, thank you for this video. 🌸I'm studying Japanese in university and Korean for only one year. I found lots of similarities in the pronauciation of some words which made my life easier.
This is fascinating! Thank you so much for making these videos!
0:33 ふた doesn't mean “two” in Japanese….
It's true we sometimes count things as ひとつ、ふたつ、みっつ etc but ふた usually means “a rid”.
I think it is better to think that ふ means two instead of ふた because there is another way to count need numbers ひぃ、ふぅ、みぃ、よぉ.
FYI we usually count numbers いち、に、さん、し, the first way is an old way to count.
The word “ニ”, itself NEVER BE ふた, you need to add つ in front of ニ, when you want to read ニ as “huta”.
And usually, these words are written in hiragana like ふた(つ).
I know this content needs to be shown in a similar way in Chinese and Korean so it is what it is.🫠
Futa is the wago (native Japanese word word for two) but its bound morpheme, the tsu complete it as a basic form of counter in Japanese. The most broad counter after that wago case is ikko for beginner
The most famous counting example in anime is prolly the morning stretching in the roof from anime shirobako
I do agree they can't stand without the suffix -tsu. Theyre bound morpheme , kunyomi reading of the kanji.
Traditional numeral, sino Japanese are usually used for differences purposes but are both common along with the kunyomi wago.
Ikko is a diff case its counter word, the most general counter word for beginner, itsu (onyomi) meet + ko (counter wore for anything cuz it has a broad sense)
Itsu + ko: ikko
Morphological and phenological changes,
一個
I'm soneone who is chinese but basically havent used it in years and this is a good refresher
very detailed really interesting video. thank you!
Thank you...
Vietnamese: Nhị - Hựu - Lực 🇻🇳
Very interesting comparing them. I really hope you add more languages.
im studying chinese and this helps :3
808CJK: the koreans have ‘him’
me: who!?