Why Papua New Guinea has the MOST Languages in the World (of ALL countries)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 19

  • @quantus5875
    @quantus5875 Месяц назад

    Love your enthusiasm!! Is having that many languages a good thing? Diversity yes -- efficiency... 🙂

  • @calitaliarepublic6753
    @calitaliarepublic6753 Год назад +5

    I find it hard to believe New Guinea really has 840 distinct languages, even if they have 18 language families. A lot of those languages must be highly mutually intelligible, what we would count as dialects in European countries.
    I live in Japan, a country with similar geography to New Guinea, but about half the land area. Japan has steep, densely forested mountains separating dozens of isolated river valleys, with a few coastal plains. Accordingly, there are dozens of dialects of Japanese spread across the islands of Japan, and one language isolate, Ainu. In the 1950s the Japanese linguist Misao Tojo classified Japanese dialects with high mutual intelligibility into 16 regional groups.
    I read on Wikipedia that the 18 languages families of New Guinea can be divided into about 60 smaller groups. That numbers seems to like a much more reasonable estimate of how many distinct languages there are given the size of the island.

    • @simplicioquiocho1492
      @simplicioquiocho1492 27 дней назад

      My friend come to Papua New Guinea and experience the last of the world's unconuquered frontiers unpolluted and undilluted by foreign influence.

  • @benjamindaur3641
    @benjamindaur3641 Год назад

    Amazing video, thank you and keep up the great work

  • @barbarahaupt8482
    @barbarahaupt8482 Год назад +1

    Super interesting!

  • @zeegg8
    @zeegg8 Год назад

    this is so fascinating! is this something you would learn about as a linguistics major? i would love to take a class on topics like this, and learn about how environment and history affects language.

  • @jailjill2540
    @jailjill2540 Год назад +1

    very interesting !!

  • @darkkestrel1
    @darkkestrel1 Год назад +2

    I'd think colonialism doesn't have such an effect of Papuan (and even generally southeast asian) linguistic areas due to there not being any major population replacements and settler colonialism unlike in the Americas. In the Americas, Spain and Portugal replaced a lot of the indigenous populations, while in the Philippines (although we have many Spanish loanwords), our languages weren't replaced because indigenous Filipinos remained as the majority throughout our colonial history
    So glad I've found this channel though!!! looking forwards to watching the other vids

  • @omen8523
    @omen8523 Год назад +2

    She looks a bit like Pam from Office

  • @davidlevy3948
    @davidlevy3948 Год назад

    Great video!!! Super interresante!

  • @goldbullet50
    @goldbullet50 Год назад

    I love your enthusiasm :D

  • @simplicioquiocho1492
    @simplicioquiocho1492 27 дней назад

    The reason why in the modern world PNG has more languages is because we were never conquered by one group of people.
    Thank you, Becca, for highlighting my country. NZ has become the first country in the world to embrace PNGs' linguistic diversity and gazetted a full week in recognition of this fact.

  • @peterauwa
    @peterauwa 8 месяцев назад +1

    Doe's Tower of BABYLON RING A BELL IN YOUR MIND'S?

  • @Remarema-we9qj
    @Remarema-we9qj 11 месяцев назад

    Even tokpisin has developed different regional accents and dialects in PNG

  • @endezeichengrimm
    @endezeichengrimm Год назад +2

    Free Palestine 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸

    • @Marlone-uu3sm
      @Marlone-uu3sm 4 месяца назад +1

      🇵🇬🇵🇸✊🏾🙏🏿

  • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
    @carkawalakhatulistiwa Год назад

    And Indonesian 704
    0:27 nugini is second biggest island in the world
    3:00 weh is not. Egypt only have1 nation language and poor

  • @nebelnoob5086
    @nebelnoob5086 Год назад

    How can this video only have 379 clicks

  • @burakayan3360
    @burakayan3360 Год назад +1

    İsolation