[PLEASE READ DESCRIPTION] Interview with an Anglo-Saxon in Old English

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  • Опубликовано: 22 фев 2019
  • DISCLAIMER: This obviously isn't an actual Anglo-Saxon, it's me in a sheet.
    RETROACTIVE DISCLAIMER - The Old English in this video comes from a time when I was much more interested in modern and recent dialectology, and is full of grammatical errors (and a number of pronunciation errors, as well). This should absolutely not be used as a reference text for somebody wishing to learn Old English; its main value now is in showing how different Old English is from Modern English, and in presenting an ancient language in a conversational context. My more recent videos are more focused on phonology (which I can talk confidently about) and contain fewer errors when I do use grammatical constructions, although there will certainly still be some dotted about. I'm in the process of making a short film in Old English which I hope to check with somebody else so that the speech is both natural and period-accurate.
    Original Description
    A fun little thing to show reconstructed pronunciation of Old English in a casual setting. I've tried to throw in a few natural abbreviations (for example 'c rather than ic), but I know I missed the mark on one or two of the diphthongs. Either way, hopefully this gives some idea as to how the language sounded in casual speech. Message or comment if you'd like any clarifications, want to correct me on anything, or if you're just interested in the topic and would like to know more!
    I didn't have any decent Anglo-Saxon clothing and, rather than cobble together something inaccurate, I just chucked on a linen sheet to hide my modern shirt. An actual Anglo-Saxon would be wearing something more like the reenactors shown in a couple of the other clips; a man would usually wear a tunic with a belt, although styles would vary massively from decade to decade and from place to place.

Комментарии • 12 тыс.

  • @nataliewn
    @nataliewn 4 года назад +21685

    Teacher: the listening test isn't hard!
    The listening test:

  • @amarat.
    @amarat. 3 года назад +12668

    Sounds like a danish guy who got drunk, moved to Germany, had a stroke, and then forgot danish, went to college in Scotland, than relearned danish, then he put on a sheet and went in a time machine

    • @jessicawang6558
      @jessicawang6558 3 года назад +568

      As an American, I’m a bit concerned of your timeline of getting drunk before going to college in Scotland

    • @amarat.
      @amarat. 3 года назад +269

      Jessica Wang naturally you’ll get drunk in Scotland. That’s a given

    • @anhlenhat5135
      @anhlenhat5135 3 года назад +7

      ADFGHJLLGSADHKLG

    • @amarat.
      @amarat. 3 года назад +23

      Anh Lê Nhật whæt

    • @berguaFuture
      @berguaFuture 3 года назад +60

      It does sound like that! Greetings from Denmark :)

  • @charlieackla2945
    @charlieackla2945 3 года назад +878

    My brain: *Is this English?*
    Me: *yesn't*

  • @augustjschroeder
    @augustjschroeder 2 года назад +692

    Lol I love how he's just like "I have 100 sheep, some cattle, what else... Oh yeah a wife, too!"

    • @maxpulido4268
      @maxpulido4268 2 года назад +42

      Don't tell er a forgot again

    • @BronzeTheSling
      @BronzeTheSling 2 года назад +10

      I love him! Protect him forever.

    • @MarcoNegrisEye
      @MarcoNegrisEye Год назад +13

      Priorities 😉

    • @charleswhite758
      @charleswhite758 Год назад +6

      100 sheep he'd be the equivalent of a millionaire back in the day. Probably 5 was a lot.

    • @hefeibao
      @hefeibao 7 месяцев назад

      This is the best comment - needs to be pinned!

  • @sharpshooter012345
    @sharpshooter012345 3 года назад +7400

    This is what the doctor's hand writing sounds like.

  • @pac-ice-tan806
    @pac-ice-tan806 4 года назад +7602

    Microsoft Windows: select Language
    English (UK)
    English (US)
    English (Anglo Saxon) ✔️

  • @Gabriel-sr1ld
    @Gabriel-sr1ld 3 года назад +429

    DISCLAIMER: This obviously isn't an actual Anglo-Saxon, it's me in a sheet.

    • @ETB3341
      @ETB3341 3 года назад +34

      But your name's Gabriel, not Baldric!

    • @skyler1887
      @skyler1887 3 года назад +2

      @@ETB3341 read the video description

    • @ETB3341
      @ETB3341 3 года назад +15

      ​@@skyler1887 I know thats what the description says lol.

  • @themax2571
    @themax2571 3 года назад +334

    I'm Flemish (northern part of Belgium) and my dialect sounds very much the same as old English, I can understand quite a lot of it. Before the French influence (1066 French invasion) English sounded very differently, more Germanic. I can easily understand old English, especially when I see it in written.

    • @deathonion404
      @deathonion404 3 года назад +14

      French didn't really affect English grammar and pronunciation apart from vocabulary and a few things like counting

    • @DieterRahm1845
      @DieterRahm1845 2 года назад +9

      @@deathonion404 I'm sure you're ricgt about the grammar thing, but it changed from the middle ages till now losing a lot of Germanic caractheristics and becoming much easier and simplier than it was before.

    • @deathonion404
      @deathonion404 2 года назад

      @@DieterRahm1845 yep, I agree

    • @gorkzop
      @gorkzop 2 года назад +3

      The (true) Flemish had much contact and trade with the English. The people from Brabant (east of the Schelde/Antwerpen/Brussels) ironically also sound much different since linguistical they don't speak Flemish but brabantic and have more in common with people in north-brabants as compared to west-flanders

    • @oliveranderson7264
      @oliveranderson7264 2 года назад +4

      @@gorkzop I don’t know about “true” Flemish but my father speaks a West Flemish dialect which is spoken on the coastal areas of Belgium and you’re correct in saying that the language spoken there has a lot of similarities with English because of loanwords and similar phonological developments. In comparison, Brabantian dialects spoken in Southern Flanders have had a lot more influence from French

  • @teenyweenykiwi
    @teenyweenykiwi 4 года назад +41690

    That moment when you need to translate English into English.

    • @aidy6000
      @aidy6000 4 года назад +1255

      A lot of British Dialects are like that.

    • @connorpusey5912
      @connorpusey5912 4 года назад +1495

      Old English wasn’t really what we would call English these days. It was more like a precursor to it. It was like a language that evolved _into_ what we know as English.

    • @barnabyaprobert5159
      @barnabyaprobert5159 4 года назад +239

      Honestly, this is about as easy to understand as a deep Southern accent in the USA.

    • @australian1018
      @australian1018 4 года назад +86

      @@connorpusey5912 Then what about English in a 1000 years, that wil have changed and still be English.

    • @captain-chair
      @captain-chair 4 года назад +17

      @@connorpusey5912 Like American English...

  • @XumolsTV
    @XumolsTV 3 года назад +7905

    It actually sounds like English back in the days when I didn't know English

    • @ZnenTitan
      @ZnenTitan 3 года назад +267

      Back when I was a kid (At the dawn of time) I found myself in the odd position of hearing my family talk without being able to understand just what they were saying, and I swear it sounded for all the world like Dutch or something. And I said to myself "this is what it must be like to hear but not speak English."

    • @Anonimus693
      @Anonimus693 3 года назад +25

      Exactly =)

    • @bambilove1897
      @bambilove1897 3 года назад +6

      😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @paulmarin6380
      @paulmarin6380 3 года назад +4

      😂😂

    • @raixuh
      @raixuh 3 года назад +2

      Had the same feeling 😂

  • @zojo1498
    @zojo1498 3 года назад +144

    This is the best impresonation of a documentary i have ever seen.

  • @djcarlos687
    @djcarlos687 3 года назад +224

    Old English is a really beautiful language, I would like it to be revived ... And this whole simon seems to me to be a pretty cool guy!

    • @strange4107
      @strange4107 2 года назад +15

      Learn Dutch! It's closest to the old germanic languages. Maybe even danish...

    • @vhgiv
      @vhgiv 2 года назад +4

      Yeap learning German helps too

    • @mokkaveli
      @mokkaveli 2 года назад +4

      @@strange4107 as a native English speaker there is a lot of Dutch words that I can understand.
      Most Dutch I feel like I should be able to understand, but it’s as if I’ve just had a stroke and get the sentiment but not the meaning

    • @mariotoro6927
      @mariotoro6927 2 года назад +3

      @@strange4107 even better, Icelandic

  • @reoreborn1209
    @reoreborn1209 4 года назад +5410

    "DISCLAIMER: This obviously isn't an actual Anglo-Saxon, it's me in a sheet.
    "
    Best video disclaimer ever lmao

    • @blkgardner
      @blkgardner 4 года назад +32

      Did snopes confirm that, though?

    • @m.williams2619
      @m.williams2619 4 года назад +10

      No kidding, thank you for alerting me to this gem.

    • @adeptshadowprice394
      @adeptshadowprice394 4 года назад +4

      Ay I got tha 999 likes to 1k

    • @nspector
      @nspector 4 года назад +3

      Really.

    • @manuelminch7184
      @manuelminch7184 4 года назад +52

      Fuck I was high and I thought these ppl still live in remote parts of England or some shit

  • @boris-fv751
    @boris-fv751 4 года назад +1755

    "not an actual anglo-saxon, it's me in a sheet" best description

    • @mal_3157
      @mal_3157 8 месяцев назад +1

      To be fair I wouldn’t be surprised if Simon was an actual Anglo-Saxon

  • @ms_minna
    @ms_minna 2 года назад +116

    It’s so interesting how old English has many words from Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and some Icelandic sounding words too.
    I can understand roughly about 70% of this tbh. 👍🏼

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast 8 месяцев назад +6

      It had no words from Swedish, Norwegian and Danish. They are modern languages. Old English was almost 100% Old English

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE 3 месяца назад +1

      mourn for the Anglo Saxon tongue (not "language"), what we are speaking right now is mostly
      french with a layer of ?Germanic words.

    • @gametmane1093
      @gametmane1093 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, the Danes invaded England and estalblished control in a part of England of what is known as the Danelaw.

  • @priceyblackwinter2338
    @priceyblackwinter2338 3 года назад +324

    “My name is Baldric”
    *Blackadder has entered the chat*

    • @sweetnesslight5656
      @sweetnesslight5656 3 года назад +1

      🤣

    • @deansley174
      @deansley174 3 года назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣👍

    • @genericusername4206
      @genericusername4206 3 года назад +2

      i

    • @katewolfspirit6722
      @katewolfspirit6722 3 года назад +2

      @Bronze Spectre I see what you did there. I won't be a grammar nazi and correct your spelling. I met Tony Robinson once and wanted to chat but I just chickened out and got his autograph instead. I'm such an introverted dick ha ha!

    • @GanjaMasterBlaster
      @GanjaMasterBlaster 3 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @joaogomes9405
    @joaogomes9405 4 года назад +5763

    "Can you speak any new english at all?"
    "Nhyeawuh"

    • @Schwarzorn
      @Schwarzorn 4 года назад +95

      Uhh...... I don’t think that’s how you spell *né*

    • @joaogomes9405
      @joaogomes9405 4 года назад +239

      @@Schwarzorn The next thing I'm about to tell you may come as a surprise, but there's these things called jokes. And one type of these joke things is hyperbole. And this is one of those.

    • @Schwarzorn
      @Schwarzorn 4 года назад +38

      Beepus McBumpus
      Well, that’s a pretty bad joke. An exaggeration of something funny to make it funnier, I get. But it wasn’t funny to begin with, and one can only exaggerate to a certain extent before it stops making sense and the connection is lost.

    • @Schwarzorn
      @Schwarzorn 4 года назад +3

      Beepus McBumpus
      Well, that’s a pretty bad joke. An exaggeration of something funny to make it funnier, I get. But it wasn’t funny to begin with, and one can only exaggerate to a certain extent before it stops making sense and the connection is lost.

    • @joaogomes9405
      @joaogomes9405 4 года назад +89

      @@Schwarzorn Wow, such an interesting point you felt the need to post it twice for added emphasis. Humour is subjective, I'm glad you didn't like my joke and felt compelled to explain why you think it's not a good joke. 223 other people seemed to like it though, so that's nice.

  • @XneverstopfightingX
    @XneverstopfightingX 4 года назад +4399

    This has the same energy as that “what English sound like to non English speakers” video.

    • @darpanpatel8023
      @darpanpatel8023 4 года назад +19

      Indeed!

    • @zefanyalt5944
      @zefanyalt5944 4 года назад +8

      TRUE

    • @michaelmartin9022
      @michaelmartin9022 4 года назад +41

      What British English sounds like to people learning English from some CD that's in slowly spoken US "RP".

    • @drinkwater247
      @drinkwater247 4 года назад +2

      i think its some other european country

    • @AS-mw6pw
      @AS-mw6pw 4 года назад +6

      XneverstopfightingX probably what Scottish sounds like to non-English speakers

  • @toomaskarmo9435
    @toomaskarmo9435 3 года назад +46

    One of the best things on RUclips: creative, instructive, sensitive. Please don't stop. Ic þancie þē, þæt is gōd. - (signed) Toomas Karmo, in Nõo Rural Municipality, Estonia

  • @jessicamitchell2705
    @jessicamitchell2705 3 года назад +6

    I am THOROUGHLY enjoying your videos. I’ve always been interested in accents and the evolution of language. Thanks for what you do and please keep it up! 🙏

  • @x6ZeXiOn6x
    @x6ZeXiOn6x 3 года назад +2091

    Genuinely looks like you've pulled an unwitting time-traveller from a river and he confusedly agreed to an interview

    • @insanelyawesam1420
      @insanelyawesam1420 3 года назад +10

      This deserves more likes...

    • @jiznimore
      @jiznimore 3 года назад +15

      exactly, I was like "do they still live there in some secluded places like tribes in Polinesia (or how you write it)"

    • @BestKCL
      @BestKCL 3 года назад +7

      @@jiznimore Polynesia no longer has any secluded tribes lol. You're thinking of Indonesia, the Amazon, pygmy Africa and Papua

    • @johe64
      @johe64 3 года назад +1

      That's what I was thinking! lol

    • @selladore4911
      @selladore4911 Год назад +1

      ikr

  • @timothycook4782
    @timothycook4782 5 лет назад +1799

    Now this is what I call immersive journalism

    • @herrklamm1454
      @herrklamm1454 4 года назад +5

      True Gonzo

    • @mkuc6951
      @mkuc6951 4 года назад +4

      @@herrklamm1454 hahaha Gonzo time traveller journalism

  • @levi4979
    @levi4979 3 года назад +28

    As a Dutchman I recognise more of what he's saying from my Dutch experience than my English experience.

  • @cosmosheep4306
    @cosmosheep4306 2 года назад +17

    For those who are searching for the lyrics of the song at 2:43
    Wōden hēng from æsce trēow,
    Fugol sæt on sticca bufan,
    Drypte from þæs fugles mūþ,
    Þā word ‘ic secge simle sōþ.'

    • @Mirandajanewyatt
      @Mirandajanewyatt 2 года назад

      That's awesome

    • @kkuwura
      @kkuwura 2 года назад

      Thank you so much. Didn’t know how to search for it on google

  • @JeffreyB1983
    @JeffreyB1983 4 года назад +1884

    Imagine pressing 1 for English and getting that guy for the help desk.

    • @benedictpsamuelr
      @benedictpsamuelr 4 года назад +7

      😂😂😂😅😅😅😅

    • @TheStickCollector
      @TheStickCollector 4 года назад +44

      "Sorry, 1 for old english
      4 for middle english
      9 for modern english"

    • @JillWouters
      @JillWouters 4 года назад +3

      @@TheStickCollector which modern English though? OUR modern English or Shakespeare's modern English?

    • @TheStickCollector
      @TheStickCollector 4 года назад +11

      @@JillWouters ours
      Maybe 7 should be for Shakespeare

    • @cringeman4199
      @cringeman4199 3 года назад

      Ikr!

  • @janeadelaidelennox7193
    @janeadelaidelennox7193 4 года назад +4374

    I left auto play on and woke up from a nap to this. Thought I’d had a stroke

    • @savannahrose4447
      @savannahrose4447 4 года назад +30

      Jane Adelaide Lennox AHAHHHHH

    • @KingOfShenanigan
      @KingOfShenanigan 4 года назад +51

      Literally laughed out loud 😂💀

    • @robertallen6710
      @robertallen6710 4 года назад +19

      I woke up and discovered I had crapped my pants in my sleep...

    • @EastyOfficial
      @EastyOfficial 4 года назад +18

      I’m fucking dying.

    • @AS-mw6pw
      @AS-mw6pw 4 года назад +2

      Jane Adelaide Lennox hahahaha

  • @kamalindsey
    @kamalindsey Год назад +122

    The number of people who thought this was a real story, that there was a forgotten community of medieval peasants in modern-day England who have preserved Anglo-Saxon culture and live like the English Amish, is kind of funny to me.

    • @clubdeipensieri6572
      @clubdeipensieri6572 11 месяцев назад +5

      Honestly, I did wonder for a long minute if this was real.

    • @xorpe7172
      @xorpe7172 10 месяцев назад +6

      Who were those people . I would like to have a word with them .

    • @lindaross783
      @lindaross783 10 месяцев назад +1

      Imagination

  • @UncleShanky
    @UncleShanky 3 года назад +20

    "baldrick was originally from a community but they cast him out." this is something i could not relate to more

  • @alexlongthorne2150
    @alexlongthorne2150 4 года назад +5078

    I teach English in Japan. Today my English club kids were suddenly very interested in old English so I played this for them. They really enjoyed it, thanks!

    • @---zx9zf
      @---zx9zf 4 года назад +76

      Wholesome

    • @meganscureman578
      @meganscureman578 4 года назад +31

      Which program did you go through, Alex? Also, this made me smile. Thank you!

    • @alexlongthorne2150
      @alexlongthorne2150 4 года назад +82

      @@meganscureman578 I'm on JET living in Kyoto right now! It's a really long process from beginning the application to arriving, with a lot of random hoops to jump through and drawn out uncertainty... but ultimately absolutely worth it based on my own experience!

    • @ethanschell2605
      @ethanschell2605 4 года назад +63

      I feel like learning the old version of your native language is like when you "prestige" in some of C.O.D. games.
      You've mastered Japanese, now try *old* Japanese! *OG Godzilla sound* Native English speaker? Try *OLD English*!! *explosion sound*

    • @chillmint1726
      @chillmint1726 3 года назад +1

      It is not real. He mentioned it in the description.

  • @ThumpingThromnambular
    @ThumpingThromnambular 4 года назад +7252

    That's incredible acting. This video almost had me fooled that there was potentially a pocket of folks who still spoke old english.
    Like unwitting amish.

    • @TheLYagAmi
      @TheLYagAmi 4 года назад +567

      It took me a long time to figure out it was the same guy doing both the acting and asking the questions from behind the camera. What is also fascinating to me is his mannerisms throughout the video at 00:51 chewing the twig really sold it.

    • @jumpiko4553
      @jumpiko4553 4 года назад +16

      ARTOROBOTO {TV} what how do you know?

    • @FLmanActual
      @FLmanActual 4 года назад +124

      yea i thought the UK had their own version of the amish.

    • @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343
      @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343 4 года назад +59

      Not in England but actually theres a small island In america where they do

    • @PockASqueeno
      @PockASqueeno 4 года назад +35

      Wait, it’s not real??

  • @marieboutin9054
    @marieboutin9054 2 года назад +6

    An amazing video. Very well played. The young man who is an Anglo Saxon speaks Old English in a perfect way, using the idioms of that time. Very impressive

  • @rationalactor
    @rationalactor 6 месяцев назад

    What a magnificent piece of work! Simon brings this character totally back to life for us.

  • @clippedwings225
    @clippedwings225 4 года назад +4076

    He really does a good job acting like he's having a lot of trouble with Modern English pronunciation, even looking embarrassed.

    • @mariaminghi4297
      @mariaminghi4297 4 года назад +79

      it’s acting???

    • @clippedwings225
      @clippedwings225 4 года назад +420

      @@mariaminghi4297 Yeah, nobody really speaks Old English as their main language anymore. This man is just Simon Roper dressed in a sheet and acting.

    • @von6058
      @von6058 3 года назад +20

      read the description

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob 3 года назад +49

      And him giving up on the rhotic r issue was brilliant

    • @expansivegymnast1020
      @expansivegymnast1020 3 года назад +41

      For real. This guy is killing it as an actor.

  • @samedman1
    @samedman1 4 года назад +6897

    Fluent in Dutch here.
    Sounds like a dutchman who had a stroke.

    • @Syndixal
      @Syndixal 4 года назад +520

      My grandmother was German, And she said Dutch is just a German who had a stroke 😂😂

    • @buttnuttz6119
      @buttnuttz6119 4 года назад +116

      samed halafi if old English is a mixture of English and Danish, that means we should call it Danglish

    • @Syndixal
      @Syndixal 4 года назад +36

      Buttnuttz as an Irish person it sounds a bit of Irish/gaelic as well

    • @Syndixal
      @Syndixal 4 года назад +2

      nickxxv 😂😂😂

    • @athelstandukeofdunham4843
      @athelstandukeofdunham4843 4 года назад +1

      @nickxxv 😂😂😂😂

  • @EddGorenstain
    @EddGorenstain 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for bringing this video back!

  • @kanishkanvariketta9701
    @kanishkanvariketta9701 Год назад +1

    Thank you very much for clarifying in your description. I thought that you had discovered time travel for a sec but the description cleared that up

  • @patrickmuller4953
    @patrickmuller4953 4 года назад +4966

    German here: I can understand him better when I accept this as a german dialect as If I'd try to understand it as english.

    • @andryuu_2000
      @andryuu_2000 4 года назад +249

      Actually it is a low German dialect lmao

    • @patrickmuller4953
      @patrickmuller4953 4 года назад +246

      @@andryuu_2000 Of Course. I just wanted to describe that thinking in german tongue, makes it easier to understand than thinking in english.

    • @SnowmanAgent
      @SnowmanAgent 4 года назад +41

      Ja !
      Du hast Recht, verrückte Sache.

    • @huskiehuskerson5300
      @huskiehuskerson5300 4 года назад +9

      as or than I'm confused English isn't my native language

    • @patrickmuller4953
      @patrickmuller4953 4 года назад +8

      @@huskiehuskerson5300 as and than are sometimes a bit tricky for me as well, because both are in german "als".

  • @ericko5232
    @ericko5232 4 года назад +2528

    -Can you speak any new English at all?
    -Nyeh
    -Would you like to learn?
    Me: DON'T CORRUPT HIM!

  • @thequeertelope7941
    @thequeertelope7941 2 года назад +1

    this is brilliant! even your face and demeanor give sort of an archaic vibe
    i founded a languages and linguistics club at my school and im going to show this video as an interest for old english was expressed :)

  • @deborahrobertson8606
    @deborahrobertson8606 3 года назад

    Discovered your channel this evening. Just fabulous. Thank you.

  • @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343
    @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343 3 года назад +2302

    The fact he looks uncomfortable makes it believable

  • @50shekels
    @50shekels 4 года назад +4409

    Danish person here: This sounds like someone trying to speak Danish but are doing so underwater

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 4 года назад +264

      wait isnt danish the one that sounds that it's being spoken underwater?

    • @50shekels
      @50shekels 4 года назад +59

      Leo Araujo you got the whole squad laughing

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 4 года назад +60

      no problem mate, I know my sense of humour is fucked because I decided to learn Norwegian instead of Danish.

    • @williamnexo12
      @williamnexo12 4 года назад +6

      @@leoaraujo8590 yeah, you gotta start with the basics

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 4 года назад +19

      @@williamnexo12 Sorry if I'm not into saying "2,5*20" just to say "50", i rather stick with "femti"

  • @Vortex__24
    @Vortex__24 3 года назад +3

    Found this in my recommended, and it is the best recommended video thus far.

  • @mdoughty
    @mdoughty 3 года назад

    brilliantly acted & the song was kinda chilling honestly. i love this video!!

  • @bradwooldidge6979
    @bradwooldidge6979 4 года назад +7867

    I feel that I should be able to understand him, but I can’t.

    • @katiefly5901
      @katiefly5901 4 года назад +286

      YES. THANK YOU.

    • @kaziu312
      @kaziu312 4 года назад +214

      Well, he's a farmer with 100 sheep.

    • @gford8551
      @gford8551 4 года назад +24

      @@kaziu312 zoom....right over their heads

    • @NJtheawesome
      @NJtheawesome 4 года назад +142

      You probably need to know German and combine it with English

    • @ernestpetu5691
      @ernestpetu5691 4 года назад +19

      @SomeRandomGuy that really makes sense

  • @ebob4177
    @ebob4177 4 года назад +4001

    Yep, you actually sound like a real person, not someone playing a character from Beowulf. Nice.

    • @simonroper9218
      @simonroper9218  4 года назад +421

      I appreciate that, that's pretty much what I was going for! With ancient languages, there are so few attempts on RUclips to speak them as a native speaker might.

    • @MajesticSkywhale
      @MajesticSkywhale 4 года назад +91

      @@simonroper9218 mate you might've discovered an amazing new GENRE of history/linguistic videos. Seriously consider doing more like this or even more involved with dialogues with other history/linguistics youtubers that would be good at something like this. History with Hilbert would be the first that comes to mind for me I guess. This gave me about a million ideas because this period of English history is so poorly remembered

    • @gonefishing6337
      @gonefishing6337 4 года назад +4

      @@simonroper9218 They actually said nej? Like a Swedish person?

    • @ebob4177
      @ebob4177 4 года назад +15

      @@gonefishing6337 seems so hmm? I mean, the Dutch say "nee" and the English themselves used to say "nay".

    • @patrickturner6878
      @patrickturner6878 4 года назад +6

      @@simonroper9218 Yeah. I agree with Roper. This is a genre.

  • @luckyswine
    @luckyswine 2 года назад

    Great job sir. Your videos (especially the time lapse London one) really effectively communicate the past as a foreign country.

  • @playthroughcinema
    @playthroughcinema 3 года назад +132

    can any of my fellow englishmen tell me why we don't celebrate the saxons like the scots/irish/welsh celebrate the celts of old? I'm proud of our anglo ancestors they deserve way more representation.
    I guess in a way our language, english, is representation..? but the culture... we should celebrate it more.

    • @DarrenMalin
      @DarrenMalin 3 года назад +39

      because the SJW types try to makes us feel ashamed of our past.

    • @juch3
      @juch3 3 года назад +24

      Because your ancestors were like, "man our norman kings and queens sound so cool, meanwhile our germanic language sounds like throat diseases."

    • @johnfused8281
      @johnfused8281 3 года назад +16

      @@DarrenMalin And Christianity

    • @DarrenMalin
      @DarrenMalin 3 года назад +5

      @@johnfused8281 true

    • @benjaminsnowden8626
      @benjaminsnowden8626 3 года назад +37

      @@DarrenMalin Not because of SJWs, because of French influence.

  • @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy
    @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy 3 года назад +5153

    Strange how language is always changing over time. Even if you watch a film from the 1930's, you can hear how the accents and the words they use are a little different from today.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 3 года назад +497

      That's partially because alot of movies and radio programs made before the 50s and 60s used the "mid-atlantic accent" which was a fake accent designed to be easily understood by all anglo-sphere countries (mainly the US and UK) by sort of blending the two together. It wasnt a real accent but began partially as an "upper crust" way of speaking taught in boarding schools and bled into radio and theater. Soem other accents we associate with the time like "gangster/mobster speak" was also popular in movies and was heavily an exaggerated inner city new york accent. If you watch some old movie bloopers from the 30s and 40s you'll hear people breaking character and going from "30s speak" to a more normal accent.
      Accents do change alot after major events, like radio and TV killed off alot of regional accents as the world opened up and old borders were eroded (a person in Boston now watch TV from New York and movies from LA instead of just being exposed to other Bostoners for example) and English did have a HUGE shift after the Norman invasion though. It basically became "German translated by French people" which is how the word "Knight" got a silent "K" whereas it used to be spoken like the "Knecht" as in "Landsknecht".

    • @nottreblinka4119
      @nottreblinka4119 3 года назад +59

      Ah so that explains why its the same guy doing every commercial and propaganda shit

    • @nickmatsnev1676
      @nickmatsnev1676 3 года назад +46

      @@arthas640 i think you should post this comment in the main section as I'm sure many people will find it interesting

    • @badbadfull
      @badbadfull 3 года назад +16

      @@arthas640 Very interesting, thank you for this comment.

    • @user-bj3jn1sq7y
      @user-bj3jn1sq7y 3 года назад +5

      Yes. In the era you are talking about they rolled their “R’s” more as well.

  • @AlgoCurioso4
    @AlgoCurioso4 4 года назад +1317

    Where's the dragon?

  • @Null-Red-Blue
    @Null-Red-Blue 2 года назад +2

    Great dedication, effort, and quality.

  • @ellierose6
    @ellierose6 4 года назад +3409

    The song was really nice but you promised him you wouldn't tell.

    • @theressomuchtowaitforseein3465
      @theressomuchtowaitforseein3465 4 года назад +19

      Just what I thought! Now everyone knows!

    • @sanoorpradhan
      @sanoorpradhan 4 года назад +12

      Jeliza Rose check the vid description

    • @mostsacredangel
      @mostsacredangel 4 года назад +2

      im trying to know the songs name, someone knows?

    • @EmdrGreg
      @EmdrGreg 4 года назад +12

      @@mostsacredangel Check the Wikipedia article on Yggdrasil, probably the name of the ash tree. The song sounds like one of the verses from the poetic 'edda':
      I know that I hung on a windy tree
      nine long nights,
      wounded with a spear, dedicated to Odin,
      myself to myself,
      on that tree of which no man knows
      from where its roots run.
      I bet that earlier or later verses in the same poem mention the bird. Odin is talking about having sacrificed himself 'to himself' on the ash tree. Maybe the song exists someplace just as Simon presents it, but I don't know where.

    • @mostsacredangel
      @mostsacredangel 4 года назад

      @@EmdrGreg this one? ruclips.net/video/2BPILaMT50k/видео.html

  • @Mansardian
    @Mansardian 3 года назад +1687

    As a German native speaker I find this fascinating. Here we have it: The connection between German and English. That's why our languages are siblings.

    • @AverageAlien
      @AverageAlien 3 года назад +138

      Anglo saxons came from the same place as Danes and Germans. We were just a bunch of germanic tribes actually, that migrated over the england.

    • @Wrz2e
      @Wrz2e 3 года назад +21

      I suppose the Angles and Saxons came from Germany. Could you understand much of what he said?

    • @Mansardian
      @Mansardian 3 года назад +85

      @@Wrz2e Back then there was no Germany, just germanic tribes, as someone said above. The old English language and the old German language developed from that base on different paths. Then the English language got influenced by the Norman conquerors, yet English and German are pretty similar languages today. The old English/Anglo-Saxon that is spoken here however is even closer to German. So yes, many sentences are quite understandable. Sometimes the vocabulary sounds strange but I guess that would be the same with old German words.

    • @Wrz2e
      @Wrz2e 3 года назад +25

      @@Mansardian Very true, I hope you'll excuse me using 'Germany' as a convenient shorthand for the lands where the Angles and the Saxons originated, which probably included some of modern day Netherlands and Denmark. I find it somewhat regrettable that the Normans adulterated the English language with French and Latin to the extent that we are now barely able to understand our Dutch and German brethren. I always find it very interesting to see cognates and identical words between our languages. Haus, Bier, Butter, Hand, Arm etc...

    • @disobey5615
      @disobey5615 3 года назад +17

      I wonder what the original Brits sounded like, before they had the saxons come defend them from the Norsemen.

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 3 года назад +10

    The resemblance to German, Dutch and the Nordic languages is striking. It really demonstrates that English is in the Germanic family of languages, though most of the changes from Old English to Modern English came via Romance languages, primarily Norman French.

  • @RargoFC19
    @RargoFC19 3 года назад +2

    This is exceptional work. Love it.

  • @williamcharnley2208
    @williamcharnley2208 4 года назад +1387

    People in the future watching this will be highly confused

    • @randomvagaries5140
      @randomvagaries5140 4 года назад +45

      William Charnley , what do you mean , future? I can’t understand any of it in the present!

    • @DICKdeNORMATITY
      @DICKdeNORMATITY 4 года назад +1

      What, why, who ummmmm

    • @kkhunt7
      @kkhunt7 4 года назад +21

      @LOCAL COPE I wonder if England's English will be a mix of Arabic and English in the future.

    • @999Claymore
      @999Claymore 4 года назад +2

      @LOCAL COPE Damn right

    • @999Claymore
      @999Claymore 4 года назад +29

      @@kkhunt7 Let's hope not.

  • @wdmertens
    @wdmertens 4 года назад +4066

    It kinda sounds like he’s just speaking English but backwards.

    • @metsys1
      @metsys1 4 года назад +29

      I heard that about any other language from such kind of you

    • @andrewmccloud8581
      @andrewmccloud8581 4 года назад +42

      Get OFF my territory.

    • @Jaylink15
      @Jaylink15 4 года назад +51

      Wtf is this thread?

    • @maximilianraley2457
      @maximilianraley2457 4 года назад +36

      @@Jaylink15 I'm wondering the exact same thing? Im so confused.

    • @urbanpeltier1622
      @urbanpeltier1622 4 года назад +1

      Agree sounds backwards

  • @genethemachine7169
    @genethemachine7169 3 года назад +1

    Simon, you've got a rather well-suited voice to the old songs. I wouldn't mind hearing more!

  • @mollyk3768
    @mollyk3768 Год назад

    As an english speaker who's been slowly learning Swedish, the only thing I understood the first time is that he doesn't have any kids, but when I put on the subtitles the second time the words seemed much more similar and I got the missing context I needed to connect what I heard to my modern vocab. Amazing video, thank you.

  • @buster117
    @buster117 4 года назад +3903

    You like to learn?
    Anglo-Saxon: Yæòú

  • @saintjiub8202
    @saintjiub8202 4 года назад +2733

    Me, a german who learned english and also speak icelandic, almost understand everything he is saying. Interesting.

    • @wildrain8602
      @wildrain8602 4 года назад +100

      Not surprised. That's awesome man.

    • @vdagr8795
      @vdagr8795 4 года назад +141

      All 3 of those languages are germanic

    • @zetaleonis4745
      @zetaleonis4745 4 года назад +26

      Me, a English/Irish/Scottish tatie, welcomes your pure self

    • @Harry-om5lm
      @Harry-om5lm 4 года назад +30

      Well the Anglo Saxon era in England was a time when Germanic languages ruled ruled of the regions till Norman

    • @lllxxcvhvvb8017
      @lllxxcvhvvb8017 4 года назад +3

      Was gehhtttt

  • @MindMetalworks
    @MindMetalworks 3 года назад

    These brilliant videos, impressive, unique and you are brilliant actor aswell. Thankyou

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 2 года назад

    Wow! - this is incredibly well done! Bravo.

  • @Inescapeium
    @Inescapeium 3 года назад +4631

    You can't speak modern English?
    *nÆeH*

  • @frankthetank2550
    @frankthetank2550 3 года назад +961

    "Can you sing it? We won't tell anybody."
    2.7 million people: 👂

  • @michaeltaylor8835
    @michaeltaylor8835 3 года назад +4

    Simon is living history of long lost languages. Bless you.

  • @TheSnyderWeb
    @TheSnyderWeb 3 года назад +2

    You are just incredible. I mean I can’t believe how amazing you are.

  • @dreamcatcher1690
    @dreamcatcher1690 4 года назад +1363

    He sounds like a german guy who talks danish and englisch at the same time

    • @Sebbir
      @Sebbir 4 года назад +36

      As a danish english speaker who understands german i cant say i agree

    • @bordenfleetwood5773
      @bordenfleetwood5773 4 года назад +10

      @@Sebbir I'm curious what this sounds like to you. From what I can tell, his pronunciation is fairly good, and I'm curious as to what you're hearing.
      I speak English, Spanish and some Irish. To me, this just sounds archaic, like listening to someone from 1850 who spoke entirely in a regional vernacular.

    • @Sebbir
      @Sebbir 4 года назад +4

      Borden Fleetwood im not sure really. Maybe a bit faroese with parts that sound more czech. But im sure people who actually speak those languages would disagree

    • @nebucamv5524
      @nebucamv5524 4 года назад +4

      More like Icelandic.

    • @halli4779
      @halli4779 4 года назад +8

      Im German and I understood some of it, but by far not everything. Some words appear to be The Same or almost The Same but there were some sentences I didnt catch a Word from

  • @user-jx1rs5my4u
    @user-jx1rs5my4u 4 года назад +19367

    sounds more like German. Now it makes sense it is a Germanic language.

    • @jamesp.3220
      @jamesp.3220 4 года назад +1027

      As I took German in High School; I can understand about 85%-90% of it.

    • @invhest77
      @invhest77 4 года назад +1288

      Yes, the fact that Englisch is like it is nowadays is because of the normand invasion and the French language. It was through the Norman conquest that the English lost their germanic roots.

    • @jasper677
      @jasper677 4 года назад +329

      James Johansson frisian, an northwest german dialect is 99% similar to this

    • @nieczerwony
      @nieczerwony 4 года назад +340

      Well Anglo-Saxons were germanic tribes who conquered todays England terrains in about V century. All them Islandia beleonged to Celts.

    • @tayk5078
      @tayk5078 4 года назад +438

      @@jamesp.3220 Im German and that's a pretty bold estimation.

  • @toberwine
    @toberwine 2 года назад +2

    My grandfather N R Ker was a paleographer at Oxford University… he studied and catalogued old Anglo Saxon texts. He died in 1982 but I like to think he would have really enjoyed your content.

  • @candle6183
    @candle6183 Год назад

    That song is a banger Baldrick
    Definitely going on my playlist

  • @jgenard
    @jgenard 4 года назад +1755

    Shit, this is 10x more natural sounding that all others on youtube

    • @simonroper9218
      @simonroper9218  4 года назад +95

      I really appreciate that :) That was the aim. Unfortunately, I think I didn't give myself enough time to rehearse, so I make a few mistakes!

    • @theabsurdveganakadonderric1101
      @theabsurdveganakadonderric1101 4 года назад +9

      Every generation of 40+ people trashes the teenagers.

    • @simonroper9218
      @simonroper9218  4 года назад +28

      @@theabsurdveganakadonderric1101 Will be interesting to see how the teenagers of the 2050s will be talking

    • @baronzemo420
      @baronzemo420 4 года назад +8

      @@simonroper9218 I reckon they'll communicate mostly by cognitively-linked animated emojis transmitted via enhanced contact lenses. Artificial intelligence will probably play a significant role in streamlining communication. Most people will be very reliant on AI to get through their daily affairs. It don't think it will be as nightmarish as Black Mirror, but it will still have a lot of negative aspects like difficulty communicating without AI assistance. The majority of children may well fall on the autism spectrum as we currently define it.

    • @PS3Vids10
      @PS3Vids10 4 года назад +5

      @MrA 2309 OK boomer

  • @paulm6529
    @paulm6529 4 года назад +552

    "DISCLAIMER: This obviously isn't an actual Anglo-Saxon, it's me in a sheet"
    Oooh, god. Thank you for explaining. I was totally confused.

    • @paulm6529
      @paulm6529 4 года назад +5

      @Steven Moore it did not! I was actually thinking about time travelling, indeed. But then read this, so everything got clear. Fascinating!

    • @user-ws2zq8rq2o
      @user-ws2zq8rq2o 4 года назад +20

      I know nothing about england history and i firstly thought its a tribe or something

  • @freepagan
    @freepagan 11 месяцев назад +6

    I LOVE this so much. Native English speaker from the USA here :D

  • @dandoran5854
    @dandoran5854 2 года назад

    This is great, thank you very much for posting this.

  • @TopRanky
    @TopRanky 4 года назад +2286

    Looks like the Norman’s didn’t reach him yet.

    • @kidrebel20002000
      @kidrebel20002000 4 года назад +33

      😆😆😆 Don’t be so HASTIngs! They’ll get there. Lol

    • @Gwynnfevar12
      @Gwynnfevar12 4 года назад +47

      old english is actually more germanic. Anglo-Saxons originally from Denmark. Angles, Saxes and Jutes.

    • @tommarquet8271
      @tommarquet8271 4 года назад +10

      *harrying of the north intensifies*

    • @thenorthside102
      @thenorthside102 4 года назад +13

      *This enraged his father who punished him severely*

    • @Gizzard4400
      @Gizzard4400 4 года назад

      Nope

  • @luiginocharles9990
    @luiginocharles9990 4 года назад +2945

    When you defreeze a guy from the old days.

    • @ibonnie1047
      @ibonnie1047 4 года назад +47

      Luigino Charles that’s why he’s all wrapped up.

    • @reme7903
      @reme7903 4 года назад +2

      thank you.

    • @JoeyMe
      @JoeyMe 4 года назад +1

      True

    • @kovarbasich80
      @kovarbasich80 4 года назад

      Ahh shedding light laughter to makes us feel all warm and fuzzy on the inside except that guy he needs a quilt

    • @no1dolso752
      @no1dolso752 4 года назад +11

      Defrost

  • @paavobergmann4920
    @paavobergmann4920 3 года назад +6

    That is extremely interesting, and extremely well made, thank you!!

  • @TheUnforgiven59
    @TheUnforgiven59 2 года назад +8

    AS A GERMAN LEARNER THIS HITS DIFFERENTLY AFTER I FOUND OUT ABOUT OLD ENGLISH YEARS AGO

  • @th0ck
    @th0ck 4 года назад +346

    My head canon is that this man went back in time and just started interviewing random villagers

    • @johng.8327
      @johng.8327 4 года назад

      Me too lol

    • @hopesy12u4
      @hopesy12u4 4 года назад

      I'm think either a Tardis or a Vortex Manipulator.

  • @laypyu
    @laypyu 4 года назад +1046

    The acting was so good that he really looked lost. Imagine waking up to a different world.
    Damn!

    • @RealHugga
      @RealHugga 4 года назад +2

      Why do you have over 900 likes and no comment until now?

    • @theinfamousbigslurp618
      @theinfamousbigslurp618 4 года назад +3

      Imagine waking up in a cart and hearing “hey you you’re finally awake”

    • @pumpkinfaerie
      @pumpkinfaerie 4 года назад

      The Infamous Big Slurp I-

  • @trollololololololo1173
    @trollololololololo1173 3 года назад +72

    Hmm as a German, that sounds like Frisian or Low German (Plattdeutsch) in Low Saxony and like norse maybe Danish?

    • @ansems3309
      @ansems3309 3 года назад +10

      I commented here a year ago and saw your comment on accident. I do speak Frisian and Flat/Low German fluently and I was able to understand him better than my girlfriend who lives in Austria.

    • @trollololololololo1173
      @trollololololololo1173 3 года назад +2

      @@ansems3309 Ja das glaub ich dir, der Alpendialekt hat's schon in sich ^^
      Aber ich finde es toll das du Plattdeutsch und Friesisch sprichst, gerade jetzt wo die Dialekte verschwinden.

    • @flutterwind7686
      @flutterwind7686 3 года назад +7

      Anglo-Saxon (old English) is directly related to Frisian and Low German(which used to be called Saxon). Good ear!

    • @thematthew761
      @thematthew761 3 года назад

      Anglo Saxons were from Saxony.

    • @choonbox
      @choonbox 3 года назад

      @@thematthew761
      No, Anglosaxons are from the British isles. They are a mixed group of mostly Angles, Frisians, Saxons and Jutes.

  • @hoos.crypto
    @hoos.crypto 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing this content, it's fascinating.

  • @dylanlampin8404
    @dylanlampin8404 4 года назад +2354

    When he said “jdrjjrndjdbdndndnei” I felt that

  • @times-n-seasons
    @times-n-seasons 3 года назад +2755

    I'm a german living in Norway with roots to the netherlands. I definitely hear all three languages. This is awesome!

    • @LEDDi_Matth7-7
      @LEDDi_Matth7-7 3 года назад +40

      Ich habe auch Niederländische Wurzeln, lebe in Norddeutschland an der DK Grenze, ich höre auch 3 sprachen :)

    • @HoFabii
      @HoFabii 3 года назад +35

      Same here, northern german. Sounds a bit like the closely related low german, Plattdeutsch.

    • @martingarciaarvidson6684
      @martingarciaarvidson6684 3 года назад +20

      All non-latin languages come from Germanic that's why the further back you go the closer they are to being the exact same language literally

    • @hopclang9409
      @hopclang9409 3 года назад +36

      @@martingarciaarvidson6684 erm no. Celtic and Hungarian certainly do not. As they predate Scandinavian and Latin languages.

    • @martingarciaarvidson6684
      @martingarciaarvidson6684 3 года назад +10

      @@hopclang9409 yea ok there are obviously exceptions, but the vast majority of non-latin European languages.

  • @modmutha8608
    @modmutha8608 3 года назад +13

    As someone who is absolutely fascinated about the English language and it’s many accents and dialects, this is absolutely brilliant.

    • @tonytucker7264
      @tonytucker7264 2 года назад

      Where are you from ?

    • @modmutha8608
      @modmutha8608 2 года назад

      @@tonytucker7264 I’m from Sheffield

    • @tonytucker7264
      @tonytucker7264 2 года назад

      @@modmutha8608 are you anglo saxon

    • @modmutha8608
      @modmutha8608 2 года назад

      @@tonytucker7264 I’ve no idea. But I know a few swear words

    • @tonytucker7264
      @tonytucker7264 2 года назад +1

      @@modmutha8608 so do I lol

  • @tibormalinsky8751
    @tibormalinsky8751 3 года назад

    This is mesmerizing! I love it!

  • @benbennit
    @benbennit 4 года назад +18491

    Post brexit we will all start speaking like this.

    • @demonikreaper6139
      @demonikreaper6139 4 года назад +461

      Immediately. The moment it happens. The moment the bill passes. 😂

    • @DameOfDiamonds
      @DameOfDiamonds 4 года назад +565

      Fuck yes, i wanna fucking speak like that

    • @FlorianHuberFH
      @FlorianHuberFH 4 года назад +215

      then you will speak more close to german

    • @Born1e
      @Born1e 4 года назад +51

      I'm down

    • @calvinstulip
      @calvinstulip 4 года назад +84

      That would be AWESOME.

  • @Ludwig1625
    @Ludwig1625 4 года назад +2811

    It sounds like all the Germanic languages combined

    • @WhattAreYouSaying
      @WhattAreYouSaying 4 года назад +114

      Haha, yes indeed. I'm Norwegian. It sounds like a mix off Icelandic, Norwegian, German and Dutch. Or something like that...

    • @brumav9779
      @brumav9779 4 года назад +97

      Well that’s what English is, without the Romantic (French and Latin) influence

    • @edwinvanderkooij8713
      @edwinvanderkooij8713 4 года назад +15

      Funny, I am Dutch I understand him..😅

    • @emerald_kiwi4046
      @emerald_kiwi4046 4 года назад +3

      It is

    • @highgroundproductions8590
      @highgroundproductions8590 4 года назад +2

      SIMP

  • @hieronymusgandt9235
    @hieronymusgandt9235 3 года назад +4

    The acting in this one seem so refined, so good somehow

  • @pauloconnor4511
    @pauloconnor4511 2 года назад +1

    Amazing channel! I’ve learned so much. Thank you. I can’t make out a word in Anglo Saxon lol

  • @metitfour131
    @metitfour131 4 года назад +1333

    I would unironically watch this if this was a mini-series

    • @Donjuanantoine
      @Donjuanantoine 4 года назад +11

      Same, so simple yet so fascinating.

    • @MM-vs2et
      @MM-vs2et 4 года назад +18

      Baldrich, The Old Young Man

    • @ekulio
      @ekulio 4 года назад +7

      I didn't know how much I wanted this until I read your comment

    • @bk2active
      @bk2active 4 года назад

      Yeah him trying to learn new english lol

  • @Sawrattan
    @Sawrattan 4 года назад +1220

    2019: Englishmen reenact Anglo-Saxon speech.
    1019: Anglo-Saxons reenact Proto-Brythonic speech.
    19: Britons reenact Indo-European speech.

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 4 года назад +47

      Major challenge for the subtitle writer.

    • @WyrmrestAccord
      @WyrmrestAccord 4 года назад +122

      3019: Muslims reenact English speech.

    • @alexnickolaev
      @alexnickolaev 4 года назад +20

      @@WyrmrestAccord 2050 Chinese reenact 2019 Mandarin

    • @Nnnnn636
      @Nnnnn636 4 года назад +5

      @@WyrmrestAccord bingo. I was gonna say it

    • @selbos
      @selbos 4 года назад +35

      Acid Trip Muslim is the name for followers of Islam. English is a language and the people. That’s like saying, “Christians reenact Arabic (or any other Semitic language)”. Does it make sense?

  • @nmestre2
    @nmestre2 3 года назад +27

    1:21
    Old English: Da can ich nocht.
    Modern English: That I can not.
    Modern German: Das kanne ich nicht.
    Am I hallucinating? :Þ

    • @KlavierMenn
      @KlavierMenn 3 года назад +1

      Nah. Old english still had its german roots

    • @Reichstaubenminister
      @Reichstaubenminister 3 года назад

      It's "kann" not "kanne" if you wanna be precise.

    • @wolfgangharden61
      @wolfgangharden61 3 года назад +3

      Dat kann ick nich = low German
      That I can not = English
      Das kann ich nicht = German
      It is not very different

    • @Jaquass
      @Jaquass 3 года назад +2

      Germanic languages, both german & english.

    • @stephanieboyce4860
      @stephanieboyce4860 3 года назад

      Black Country : ar cor

  • @jayleigh4642
    @jayleigh4642 3 года назад

    I love theses educational videos. Thank you

  • @dustin2006
    @dustin2006 4 года назад +2831

    10 centuries later: “We visit a direct descendant of Baldric. An Anglo American.”
    Hank Hill: “I sell propane and propane accessories.”

    • @CedarPinesFieldGrove
      @CedarPinesFieldGrove 4 года назад +62

      Dang ol, Boomhower

    • @CedarPinesFieldGrove
      @CedarPinesFieldGrove 4 года назад +48

      @@robroux6074 idk man, I know plenty of Americans who are happy to sit on the couch bitching all day long

    • @robroux6074
      @robroux6074 4 года назад +13

      @@CedarPinesFieldGrove you're confusing Americans w/ Texans & Scotchirish. That's like confusing Brits w/ Welsh & the Scotts.

    • @jackduncan4228
      @jackduncan4228 4 года назад +7

      Rob Roux Americans still to this day have a frontier mindset and live in a frontier society.

    • @robroux6074
      @robroux6074 4 года назад +10

      @@jackduncan4228 The frontier Society comes from the Iriqouis & Algonquin doesn't it?
      The Vikings didn't expand and they loved to scout and pillege but the americans were different. They really did integrate into the land and adopted a lot of Native American customs...some say that SOME of our Democratic ideals come from the Natives.
      British and Americans are really different and even the Canadians are very different from Americans. Canadians are way more pompous and carry traits of the bourgeois British. The American do have a strong frontier mindset that is very similar to Native Americans.
      There a lot of aspects of German (Volga) that also influenced the Americans too.

  • @Kovukingsrod
    @Kovukingsrod 3 года назад +2027

    I adore this video

  • @johnny196775
    @johnny196775 2 года назад

    I love your work.

  • @patriotallen9717
    @patriotallen9717 3 года назад +9

    Thanks for this. I remember in high school (In Tennessee) took an honor's english course. Part of the requirement was to recite the prologue to Cantebury's Tale in Old English. It was actually fun, and 45 years later I still remember a lot of it.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 3 года назад +5

      Chaucer actually wrote in middle English, the language spoken from (very) roughly 1100 to1500 A.D.

  • @Toni1193
    @Toni1193 4 года назад +1300

    “We won’t tell anybody” *literally puts it on the internet lol*

    • @Freakincident
      @Freakincident 4 года назад +52

      I mean, it’s not like he’s ever gonna find out lol

    • @bismarck6
      @bismarck6 4 года назад

      @@Freakincident lmao

    • @Chaguarr
      @Chaguarr 4 года назад +23

      Freakincident Considering the description I think he knows XD

    • @invhest77
      @invhest77 4 года назад

      Hahahahahjaahja i thought the same

    • @fundip78
      @fundip78 4 года назад +7

      He’s acting. It’s not real