MODERN JAPANESE & OLD JAPANESE

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2022
  • Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
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    Old Japanese is the oldest attested stage of the Japanese language, recorded in documents from the Nara period (8th century). It became Early Middle Japanese in the succeeding Heian period, but the precise delimitation of the stages is controversial. Old Japanese was an early member of the Japonic language family. No genetic links to other language families have been proven.
    Modern Japanese is considered to begin with the Edo period (which spanned from 1603 to 1867). Since Old Japanese, the de facto standard Japanese had been the Kansai dialect, especially that of Kyoto. However, during the Edo period, Edo (now Tokyo) developed into the largest city in Japan, and the Edo-area dialect became standard Japanese.
    If you are interested to see your native language/dialect be featured here.
    Submit your recordings to otipeps24@gmail.com.
    Looking forward to hearing from you!

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @ilovelanguages0124
    @ilovelanguages0124  Год назад +400

    Special Thanks to:
    Modern Japanese:
    あまひ₁ちゃんねる/amapichannel
    ruclips.net/channel/UCwQ6O1kjrSQYACboD7giKVw
    Old Japanese:
    Omizan Sakamoto
    ruclips.net/channel/UCXNUoaki5SOHCPv315zUnsg

    • @hamzahammami22
      @hamzahammami22 Год назад +5

      Can you please do the siculo arabic dialect

    • @cerebrummaximus3762
      @cerebrummaximus3762 Год назад +5

      Can you compare Albanian with Maltese. I know they're very different, but both have that "English" 'r' sound, and both are like a bridge between European and Oriental worlds.

    • @Ernest0591
      @Ernest0591 Год назад +3

      In "Moder Japanese", your cartoons about man and woman. Better put Goku and Sailor Moon dressed dolls. 🤣

    • @JuriBinturong
      @JuriBinturong Год назад +7

      I think old Japanese is an Austronesian language. (see comparison below using mostly the Bisaya language)
      are (I) === ari (here, to me)
      i (you) === ikaw (you)
      kore (this) === kiri (this)
      titi (father) === tatay (father)
      opodi (grandfather) === apohan (grandparent)
      ye (older brother) === iyo (elder), kuya (older brother)
      oto (younger brother) === otod (sibling)
      me (eye) === mata (eye)
      kami (deities/spirits) === kami (we/us)
      tura (facial profile) === itsura (facial profile)
      inu (dog) === iro (dog)
      wi (boar) === iwik (boar sound)
      kake (chicken) === kokok (a type of big bird)
      ki (tree) === kahoy (tree/wood)
      pa (leaf) === pakli (leaf)
      awo (blue) === bughaw (blue)
      siro (white) === sirohan (white/blank)
      kuro (black) === kurong (dark veil)
      na (name) === ngan (name)
      akatuki (early morning) === aga (early morning) from Hiligaynon language
      tosi (year) === tuig (year)
      pi (fire) === apoy (fire) from Tagalog language
      ama (heaven) === ama (father)
      tuti (soil) === yuta (soil)
      nani (what?) === ngano (why?)
      iduku (where) === diin (where)
      ikani (how) === ingon ani (like this)

    • @user-qu5rp9rn5d
      @user-qu5rp9rn5d Год назад +6

      あまぴちゃんねるは遊びの要素が強く、正確さはあまり期待できないと思います。

  • @Monkeymeep
    @Monkeymeep Год назад +2460

    Other languages: as time goes on long words become shorter.
    Japanese: all words must be longer

    • @sergiosantos6972
      @sergiosantos6972 Год назад +32

      Hahaha 😂😂😂

    • @fire_lord862
      @fire_lord862 Год назад +139

      Polynesian languages in a nutshell

    • @thalysonteixeira9836
      @thalysonteixeira9836 Год назад +83

      Portuguese became a bit more wordy. For example, in Old Portuguese you'd describe things with fewer words. Also, some shorter words have been substituted by more modern ones to resemble more Latin. Like, “Loor” got replaced by “louvor”. Both came from “laudāre”, but “loor” was the natural evolution without any ecclesiastical or academic intervention, whereas “louvor” was invented amidst the Relatinization process. Of course some words used to be longer like “mercee” which evolved to “mercê”. But the first cases mentioned are dominating.

    • @paul935ctc
      @paul935ctc Год назад +26

      It is at least parcially because Japanese phonemes have become too simplified in the last milenium. Ont only the number of vowels but its pitch accent system has learned to be more and more simple. Old Japanese had the much more complexed musical accent system which was nearly tones like Chinese. For example the pitch accent of ”歯” was once pronounced like the tone of ”美术" in Manderin, although its consonant and vowel were only "faa".

    • @Oktoberkun
      @Oktoberkun Год назад +10

      German:
      *"Hold my beer!"*

  • @ken.the.person
    @ken.the.person Год назад +962

    As a japanese, the old japanese voice actor was obviously acting as if this was an anime

    • @mio33
      @mio33 Год назад +80

      based

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Год назад +110

      Such is the problem with all people who are excited to do something, they rarely talk like its an everyday thing. Just look at how PIE is typically portrayed, all epic not the common everyday langauge it was.

    • @MrBeiragua
      @MrBeiragua Год назад +86

      His name is Omizan. His channel is pretty good, full of videos on old Japanese and other linguistics things. One thing that stands out to me about old Japenese is how much more diverse is the intonation of words. It sounds as complicated as Chinese, with ups and downs all over the word.

    • @user-vw4qj9ug7b
      @user-vw4qj9ug7b Год назад +47

      発音全然違い過ぎてもはや日本語でないw

    • @bellotto2551
      @bellotto2551 Год назад +19

      ​@@gunarsmiezis9321 But PIE can only be reconstructed through old, proto languages. Those proto languages themselves are reconstructed from old languages and the old languages were mostly written by the upper strata like the nobles, rich, clergy, etc. Therefore, you may expect a more formal language than an informal language, because one has almost no resource for informal discourse.

  • @shosho_hrubblefongers9311
    @shosho_hrubblefongers9311 Год назад +1120

    I'm a Native Japanese speaker. Old Japanese seems to lack any Chinese originated words. Kanji are all in kun-yomi and there are no on-yomi. It feels like what Japanese would sound like if we took out all the Chinese influence.

    • @user-bw1ol3ut2k
      @user-bw1ol3ut2k Год назад +71

      Imho, it seems that most indigenous Japanese (and Korean etc) words either (A) also exist in other non-Mandarin Chinese languages, (B) share a close common ancestor outside the realm of “Chinese/Japanese”, or/and (C) can be actually accurately transcribed using Kanji (but people just aren’t used to doing it).

    • @cch7410
      @cch7410 Год назад +50

      8th century(Tang Dynasty in China), the monks were probably still on their ways of bringing back the on-yomi sounds from China and it takes time for the old Japaneses to adapt them

    • @omnispring
      @omnispring 11 месяцев назад +25

      I watched a video once in which the creator replaced all Chinese-originated words with original ones from Japanese in a news clip, though he actually had to make up words. I remember he used 東の都 for 東京,大変おもしろ

    • @spiritsplice
      @spiritsplice 10 месяцев назад +10

      You have that backwards. Most of the pronunciations in the video are Chinese or nearly so. Given that Yayoi came from China, this makes sense.

    • @shachihoko4877
      @shachihoko4877 8 месяцев назад +56

      @@spiritsplice Chinese and Japanese are two completely unrelated languages. Japanese borrowed Chinese loan words and writing system but the indigenous vocabulary and the grammar are completely different. And in fact the words used in this video are almost entirely indigenous Japanese.
      If you think this sounds Chinese you probably heard stronger pitch accent and thought it was tonal language, but pitch accent is different from actual tones. Other than that this sounds nothing like Chinese tbh.

  • @CirclesForever
    @CirclesForever Год назад +2501

    It's funny that the old Japanese word for the sea is "wata"

  • @Meteorul
    @Meteorul Год назад +493

    it is funny to see that mother in old japanese for mother is "papa"
    awesome video!
    awesome content as always keep it up! :D

    • @kaito7132
      @kaito7132 Год назад +68

      Yeah, my parents are papa and father

    • @flowerdolphin5648
      @flowerdolphin5648 Год назад +39

      It is funny xD But makes total sense with the phonetic shift from p to h.

    • @user-xm6cs6ru5k
      @user-xm6cs6ru5k Год назад +36

      Hi! Japanese p consonant changed like this: Old p > f > Modern h.
      The change of f > h (> zero) is seen in Spanish: Sp. hacer vs. Fr. faire “do”

    • @elimalinsky7069
      @elimalinsky7069 Год назад +7

      I wonder where the word kaa for mother comes from, as in the root in modern Japanese o-kaa-san. Is it just an alternate native Japanese word for mother or is it a Chinese loanword?

    • @flowerdolphin5648
      @flowerdolphin5648 Год назад +16

      @@elimalinsky7069 according to wiktionary: kaa is an alteration of kaka. One way to call your mom in Japanese is kaka, kakasama etc. Wiki doesn't know why, but it lists a theory that it came from the way children spoke back in the Edo period or something.

  • @Monkey.D.Shinchan
    @Monkey.D.Shinchan Год назад +452

    Old : Aratasi
    New : Atarasi
    Old capital : Kyoto
    New Capital : Tokyo
    😆

    • @OBrasilo
      @OBrasilo 7 месяцев назад +21

      Kyoto-Tokyo only passes the reverse test if you omit the vowel length: Kyōto-Tōkyō. Once the vowel length are written, that falls apart.

    • @shu1671
      @shu1671 7 месяцев назад +22

      Kyoto means Kyo (Capital) + To(Capital), but Tokyo means Eastern Capital

    • @bucc56s
      @bucc56s 6 месяцев назад +3

      I have been Japanese,but I thought that when childhood.

    • @user-je1ug5yj1b
      @user-je1ug5yj1b 6 месяцев назад +1

      old japanese especialy bushi(Samurai) used simply kyo or miyako formaly kimino araserareru tokoro

    • @MrBrno
      @MrBrno 5 месяцев назад +5

      Akibahara >>> Akihabara, seems to be a common thing in japanese

  • @izzyneubs
    @izzyneubs Год назад +517

    As a non-native Japanese learner and linguist, it's so insanely interesting to see what changed, what didn't change, and the subtle phonetic differences! For such an old language, it has changed less than some people might expect, even though it is pretty much unintelligible for someone like me.

  • @dustgreylynx
    @dustgreylynx Год назад +1104

    Old Japanese sounds even more similar to Finnish

  • @thaiphanvevo
    @thaiphanvevo Год назад +242

    The Japanese transition from "tu" to "tsu" reminds me of English. Americans pronounce RUclips like "Yoo-Toob" but British people pronounce it like "Yoo-Choob".

    • @billylee6062
      @billylee6062 Год назад +35

      There are similar changes in other words, accepted in both American and British English as well. For example, “Situation” was pronounced si-TU-wei-sion in the past, but now it’s si-CHU-wei-sion on both side. This is called “palatalisation” (visit wiki if interested). There’s a great detailed video on this topic on RUclips, but I forgot the channel’s name :(

    • @irinaivanovna6380
      @irinaivanovna6380 Год назад +8

      Also ti in old Japanese and chi in modern. When t pronounced very soft it makes ch sound, same wich k

    • @sameash3153
      @sameash3153 Год назад

      It's what happened in German. Where English and German have words with the same root, the English T at the beginning of the word will become German Z (pronounced ts), and in the middle or end of the word, German S. So English "tide", German "zeit" (tseit). English water, German wasser. English what, German was.
      As for RUclips and youchewb, what's happening there is actually the combination of t+y. When those consonants come together, people sometimes say ch, but not always if they are enunciating very clearly. "I want you" often becomes "I wanchu", though an actor would probably be more clear. Americans don't say youchewb because we don't pronounce tube with a y, we say toob, Brits say tyoob. They do that because whenever the OO vowel is on a stressed syllable they just can't help themselves from putting a y before it.

    • @AdamOwenBrowning
      @AdamOwenBrowning Год назад +6

      All sorts of weirdness like this within the accents of the UK. I'm English and a lot of people here pronounce "strong" like "schtrong"

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Год назад +5

      @@irinaivanovna6380 it's palatalisation, not "pronouncing softly". A language may associate palatalisation to lack of emphasis, but it might also associate it to emphasis, and most likely, to neither

  • @Shanaoh
    @Shanaoh Год назад +90

    I also commented this in your Old Japanese video but 頭/あたま/かしら in 2:56 does not translate to “heat.” It translates to “head.”

  • @pattymcfatty0
    @pattymcfatty0 9 месяцев назад +61

    It's so weird seeing ち and つ be pronounced in the way I always thought it should sound based on the other characters in their group being pronounced like each other with these two being the outliers. Super interested in how they changed to be outliers from the phonetics!

    • @noidexe
      @noidexe 6 месяцев назад +2

      All consonants followed by i pallatalize to some degree in modern Japanese. Hepburn romanization just changes spelling in the couple cases where a native English speaker can tell the difference, which makes the process feel more arbitrary than it really is

    • @insectoid_creature
      @insectoid_creature 6 месяцев назад

      "tu" is actually kinda hard to say without making it an affricate imo.
      Also i find that "t+i" being pronounced like chi makes more sense if you don't think about it in terms of the latin alphabet. ひ is a paletalised "hi" like how ち is a paletalised "ti", perhaps you'd think ひ is weird too if english had a way to spell a paletalised h sound

  • @Rugged-Mongol
    @Rugged-Mongol 9 месяцев назад +153

    As a Mongol, archaic Japanese sounds phonologically closer to Korean or Jurchen-Tungusic and ever so slightly Mongolic :)

    • @The_uglybastard
      @The_uglybastard 7 месяцев назад

      I mean they are derived from an assortment of tungustic peoples who broke away and became isolated for thousands of years

    • @iceblu4713
      @iceblu4713 7 месяцев назад +7

      Yeah, that's probably why *a lot* of türkish patriots say old japanese sounds so türkic or that it once was an altaic language branch but separated around the times of the first century (i think - please correct me if I am not right).

    • @Solotocius
      @Solotocius 7 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@iceblu4713They don't claim Japanese to have once been a branch of the Turkic language family; they claim both Turkic and Japonic languages (along with some other groups) to be part of a larger language family called Altaic (or Ural-Altaic depending on how patriotic the person claiming this is lol). There just isn't currently enough evidence to properly confirm the existence of such language family, however that doesn't prove that they weren't once related. We just don't have enough evidence to prove anything right now (unless you're one of _those_ types that will claim anything that will deem Turkic culture less relevant/irrelevant).

    • @jarblewarble
      @jarblewarble 6 месяцев назад +1

      The languages might have some areal features in common, even if they aren't related.

    • @cubeandcollect
      @cubeandcollect 6 месяцев назад

      All languages were related at some point innit@@Solotocius

  • @bustavonnutz
    @bustavonnutz Год назад +45

    The word for Pig being "Wi" with that voice made my day.

  • @user-yl2nr7gj5m
    @user-yl2nr7gj5m Год назад +65

    コメ欄で英語使って会話してる日本人すごいな...
    自分もこれぐらい会話できるようになりたい。

    • @kaon9101
      @kaon9101 Год назад +18

      頑張れ~

    • @rattus7881
      @rattus7881 6 месяцев назад +1

      They'er all weebs ....

  • @BlueCruiser
    @BlueCruiser Год назад +195

    First and foremost, it seems that Old Japanese could pronounce "tu", "ti", "si", etc. without the sound transformation... Very interesting indeed

    • @irinaivanovna6380
      @irinaivanovna6380 Год назад +12

      Also i see that all h sounds were p?

    • @zephyrk8937
      @zephyrk8937 Год назад +9

      it is indeed a foreigner pretending to be a Japanese..the pronunciations are mostly "gaijin" accent. these tone are non- existence in Japanese🤣確かに日本人のふりをしている外人です..発音はほとんど外人訛りです🤣

    • @nutellakinesis
      @nutellakinesis Год назад +17

      Well, it is a form of Japanese that doesn't exists anymore. Many of the sounds in old japanese simply don't exists anymore...

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Год назад +38

      @@zephyrk8937 your source? Why would "these tones don't exist in Japanese" be of any relevance when discussing Old Japanese?

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole Год назад +6

      @@zephyrk8937 Bro the reader is literally Sakamoto Omizan, one of the most famous Japanese historical linguists on RUclips.

  • @popeyeolive-vj1qg
    @popeyeolive-vj1qg Год назад +62

    As japanese, I can't stop laughing 🤣
    kokonotu🤣

  • @CarthagoMike
    @CarthagoMike Год назад +111

    I feel like the Kansai region had to deal with a lot of boars in their past.
    After all, they took a word that sounds more like an alarming scream rather than a name for it.

    • @chuksk8592
      @chuksk8592 Год назад +14

      Or maybe it's to be similar to pig squeals!

    • @ericjohnson6634
      @ericjohnson6634 Год назад +6

      Wi wi wi, all the way home.

  • @imperadordos10kcalendarios
    @imperadordos10kcalendarios Год назад +62

    Hello, I'm also quite a student of the Old Japanese language, I wanted to ask if there are any sites that cover Old Japanese and Proto-Japonic, because most of the ones I found are about Classical Japanese, I wanted to know how I can go deeper into Old Japanese, how to create entire sentences because I'm creating a story where a character can only speak Old Japanese.

    • @torigrad1139
      @torigrad1139 Год назад +3

      ruclips.net/video/Lzgln7QvojU/видео.html
      Links in the description of this video indicate sites that may fit your demand.
      And this channel frequently posts footage about the old Japanese language, including sentences made by this user in the ancient language.

    • @chicoti3
      @chicoti3 Год назад +1

      Japonês clássico se refere tanto ao Japonês antigo quanto ao Japonês medieval. A língua não mudou quase nada na gramática e escrita, só mudou na fonética mesmo (teoricamente, já que não temos provas concretas fonéticas).
      Mas é extremamente difícil produzir novos textos em Japonês clássico, ainda mais se estivermos falando do Japonês antigo, onde quase nada é atestado. Se mesmo assim o queres fazer, recomendo aulas de Japonês clássico (em Japonês)

  • @gilbertoez1994
    @gilbertoez1994 Год назад +25

    This is cool to listen to how language change over the years

  • @qwertykeyboard04
    @qwertykeyboard04 Год назад +21

    自づから おのづから onodzukara
    自ら みずから mizukara
    己 おのれ onore
    自分 じぶん jibun
    The kanji's meaning particularly are same, "myself, yourself, or someone-self" It is interesting to study old japanese and japanese dialect which is actually still relevant to this day

  • @user-rh6zi4hl8u
    @user-rh6zi4hl8u Год назад +74

    This video may make you feel that the old Japanese and the modern Japanese are different, but if you look at the kanji alone, not much has changed.
    If you study the classics, it is not difficult to translate them, and if you know Japanese, you will be able to predict the meaning even if you have not studied them!
    ex) ・honto ni?(本当に?)→ makoto nari ya? (真なりや?) 本当=真
    ・sekai (世界)→ yo (世)
    ・tenku(天空)→ama(天)
    And this is just one part of the story, and it is still used in novels and other works today.

  • @jaredf6205
    @jaredf6205 Год назад +326

    Old Japanese almost sounds like a Polynesian language

    • @oivinf
      @oivinf Год назад +115

      While there is no obvious linguistical link, the Polynesian people originally came from Taiwan (some time before 3000 BCE), so it isn't unthinkable that there is some sort of connection if you go far enough back

    • @oivinf
      @oivinf Год назад +20

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austronesian_peoples#Austronesian_expansion

    • @user-vw4qj9ug7b
      @user-vw4qj9ug7b Год назад +16

      This old japanese pronounciation is not accurate

    • @diamond82737
      @diamond82737 Год назад

      it does

    • @masin2671
      @masin2671 Год назад +7

      @@user-vw4qj9ug7b お前が知らんだけやで。

  • @paullisanti8673
    @paullisanti8673 Год назад +27

    I love your Wonderful Lessons

  • @andrewmikhailov3173
    @andrewmikhailov3173 Год назад +135

    Damn the resemblance between the two is like the resemblance between Old and Modern English.

    • @ShimmeringSky
      @ShimmeringSky Год назад +11

      Even less, I suppose

    • @AhmadOsamaMusleh
      @AhmadOsamaMusleh Год назад +6

      Not really. Modern English is a mix of Old English, Old Norse, French, and others. Taking Middle English for simplicity, it is a mix of Old English and Old Norse. This fusion reached even the grammar of the language; it went through huge simplification and change, and this was because English and Vikings lived together and married from each other. However, modern Japanese is only affected by Chinese in vocabulary, due to the cultural effects of Chinese civilization. Japanese used to go to China for education, but both have not lived together in one place. Additionally, slight changes in pronunciation happenned to Old Japanese (e.g., tu --> tsu, si --> shi, p --> h, etc.) in constant trackable rules.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Год назад +8

      Not even close. These are A LOT closer.

    • @Joseph-pz5bo
      @Joseph-pz5bo 22 дня назад

      I can Basically understand Old Japanese
      While old English is basically a foreign language to me
      With Japanese I only use it at home so sometimes don't even understand Regional Japanese English I use more often

  • @ncalba
    @ncalba Год назад +8

    I like Old Japanese Language and thanks for the video. It will help to learn and study the old languages.

  • @frogbear02
    @frogbear02 Год назад +29

    I think its a bit of a shame that some of the words cognates didnt make a more clear appearance. for example, the word used for modern japanese is "okasan", then "papa" in old japanese. This is true, however its important to note that modern japanese has the word "haha" for mother as well which follows the "p turns to h" trend thats clear in this video. another example is sister being "shimai", and old japanese being "imo". japanese still has the word "imoto" for a younger sister though.

    • @user-kf8gb2im6d
      @user-kf8gb2im6d 8 месяцев назад +1

      YOU ARE RIGHT.

    • @elsakristina2689
      @elsakristina2689 2 месяца назад +1

      The modern language also still has “chichi” for “father”.

  • @user-vu5bi4mn7h
    @user-vu5bi4mn7h 8 месяцев назад +15

    Addtional information
    Back then(before 20th century), Japanese people used completely different style of Japanese when they in talking or writting.
    For this reason, you may feel the recorded old Japanese is big diffrent from modern one. But, old Japanese people also talk like modern Japanese people to some extent.

  • @user-qo9iq6bd4x
    @user-qo9iq6bd4x 6 месяцев назад +6

    I see influence of old Japanese still left in Modern Japanese. Like the meaning of かしら still used to mention head of organization. Interesting video!

  • @kaon9101
    @kaon9101 Год назад +18

    the Modern Japanese dude tells the story like he talking to his friends 💀

  • @dogwb4680
    @dogwb4680 Год назад +21

    Modern Japanese in this video is "very casual".

  • @HaroldtheNihongoStudent
    @HaroldtheNihongoStudent Год назад +18

    This will be a fine addition to my vocabulary collection.

  • @Davlavi
    @Davlavi Год назад +6

    great video.

  • @user-bj3es7gm9b
    @user-bj3es7gm9b 7 месяцев назад +11

    /p/の音が/ɸ/や/f/を経て子音が消えるのがフランス語などと共通しているのが興味深い

  • @auli5786
    @auli5786 8 месяцев назад +20

    I love how you can really see the origins of a lot of Japanese words in there, it's so cool to see the change through time

    • @cheerful_crop_circle
      @cheerful_crop_circle 8 месяцев назад +2

      Modern Japanese developed double/long consonants and short/long vowel distinction. Modern Japanese also has a lot sk/ks/sht/shk/chk......... sounds because the devoiced/reduced "U" and "I" vowels create consonant clusters and consonant endings

  • @67875njkoygk
    @67875njkoygk Год назад +72

    Modern Japanese seems like more complicated than Old one.

    • @itsnotif.itswhen
      @itsnotif.itswhen 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@wgh-cs2nwhow would you explain the longer word form though? It’s the same meaning.

    • @user-kp9of7re9q
      @user-kp9of7re9q 5 месяцев назад +1

      On vocabulary side yes ,but On tense or conjugation side Japanese has been simplified

  • @dalubwikaan161
    @dalubwikaan161 Год назад +8

    Yes, more comparisons please

  • @yorgunsamuray
    @yorgunsamuray Год назад +16

    Some old words are still used a bit differently.

  • @issolomissolom3589
    @issolomissolom3589 Год назад +2

    Yeah that makes a lot more sense
    I was watching ooku anime on netflix and i could only get few words , turns out they were using old japanese ,thanks for making it clearer 👏👏
    #ooku anime

  • @artworld9799
    @artworld9799 Год назад

    Great work👍👍💯💯

  • @monikastoesniffer_
    @monikastoesniffer_ Год назад +10

    お父さん and お母さん’s formal form is 父 (chichi) and 母 (haha) and in old japanese is ティティ (titi) and パパ (papa) because ti (ティ/てぃ) > chi (チ/ち) so titi > chichi and pa (パ/ぱ) > ha (ハ/は) and ohisama (お日様) can be hi (日) like the next day (次の日) so the same reason p > h
    Edit: The word child in japanese can be ko (子) too

    • @monikastoesniffer_
      @monikastoesniffer_ Год назад +2

      also si > shi tu > tsu and i cant stop laughing because 星 in old japanese is ポスィ (posi) and my brain is like posi posi posi pusi pussi pu-😳😳😳

  • @abenas40
    @abenas40 Год назад +21

    Seems like Old Japanese sounds closer to Okinawan rather than the modern one

    • @user-kf8gb2im6d
      @user-kf8gb2im6d 8 месяцев назад +5

      It's because Ryukyu language and Japanese were used to be one language. Okinawa dialect still has the old Japanese sounds.

  • @flutterwind7686
    @flutterwind7686 Год назад +28

    Mother is papa

  • @japaneseapoist286
    @japaneseapoist286 Год назад +131

    自分は日本語話者で古典の授業とかは好きだけど、雅利安人の古代語と現代語を話したり、勉強したりするほうが好きです。ラテン系言語が特に好きです。
    I am a Japanese native speaker but I prefer to learn the old and modern Indo-European langauges, specially the Romance lanaguages.

    • @baobei.1300
      @baobei.1300 Год назад +3

      why

    • @ermirdestani
      @ermirdestani Год назад +20

      @@baobei.1300 why not

    • @bloggermood
      @bloggermood Год назад +9

      I’m Armenian, Love Japanese language ❤

    • @baqikenny
      @baqikenny Год назад +4

      @@baobei.1300 because of godzilla(just as good as any other random reason for a random thought from a random comment desu)

    • @MahouneArrow
      @MahouneArrow Год назад +8

      I'm native from a romance language (Portuguese). As a romance language's speaker who loves Japanese language, I welcome you.

  • @Hayan_Yeou
    @Hayan_Yeou Год назад +18

    I know Alexander Vovin thinks old Japanese is closely related to the language used in the southern part of the Korean peninsula and I have read his study before (From Goguryo to Tamna) but sometimes I do wonder, but by how much?
    I wish I could go back in time and study two languages. Vovin's studies do fascinate me.

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole Год назад +1

      Rest in peace Vovin... 😢

    • @MYHONESTREACTION400
      @MYHONESTREACTION400 10 месяцев назад +3

      It'a a pity he passed away 2 years ago, he was one of the best east asia linguists in the world.

    • @eruno_
      @eruno_ 6 месяцев назад

      I know that Koreans really didn't like his theory of proto-Japonic being spoken in Korean peninsula

  • @ludomian
    @ludomian Год назад +14

    Great video! Do you maybe also have a wordlist for proto Japonic?

  • @Lululu-ef1ob
    @Lululu-ef1ob Год назад +13

    未明を暁って言うのなんだかすき

  • @Jessica-kx2zg
    @Jessica-kx2zg 8 месяцев назад +21

    As a Chinese, I looked at these scripts and understood most of them😂

    • @wtz_under
      @wtz_under 7 месяцев назад

      wow

    • @nameistanya
      @nameistanya 6 месяцев назад +4

      I mean, "Kanji" literally means "chinese characters"-
      they are functionally the same-

  • @Svnfold
    @Svnfold Год назад +9

    Basically add an -s after or before -t in some places

  • @user-kx6rp4nm2n
    @user-kx6rp4nm2n Год назад +14

    Tsugaru ben (a northern Tohoku dialect) is so vastly different from standard Japanese and is notorious for being hard to understand that even this doesn’t compare to it in my opinion.

    • @cheerful_crop_circle
      @cheerful_crop_circle 7 месяцев назад +2

      Modern Japanese has a lot of words with consonant clusters and consonant endings

  • @karappononanashi
    @karappononanashi Год назад +3

    とても嬉しいです

  • @kibo98764
    @kibo98764 5 месяцев назад +1

    it would be cool to know more details over stuff like "tutumi naki wa?", for example. (meaning "how are you?")

  • @hiawog_
    @hiawog_ Год назад +16

    I noticed in Old Japanese he pronounces an "n" sound right before a voiced consonant, or rather does the vocalic sound becomes nasalized? I can't really distinguish.

    • @jonransdell
      @jonransdell Год назад +12

      The voiced obstruents were prenasalized in Old Japanese.

    • @clanDeCo
      @clanDeCo Год назад +6

      correct, voiced obstruents (b d g) are prenasalized which may be realized as vowel nasalization, or a short m, n, or ng sound before the consonant

    • @jonransdell
      @jonransdell Год назад +1

      @@clanDeCo/z/ was also prenazalized

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Год назад

      @@jonransdell oooh that's why obstruent and not stop!

  • @renatokobashigawa7025
    @renatokobashigawa7025 9 месяцев назад +7

    Seeing that Modern Japanese and the Ryukyu languages have a common ancestor, that becomes more evident with this video;

    • @Joseph-pz5bo
      @Joseph-pz5bo 22 дня назад +1

      Northern Okinawans dialects have a degree of mutual intelligibility with Japanese

  • @aosadoifbaiosdfna
    @aosadoifbaiosdfna Год назад +28

    Old Japanese was written in Man'yōgana.

    • @shinisan505
      @shinisan505 7 месяцев назад

      are Man'yōgana and Kanbun the same?

  • @Bill0102
    @Bill0102 7 месяцев назад +2

    The transformation detailed in this piece is significant. A book with akin material was a landmark event in my life. "The Art of Meaningful Relationships in the 21st Century" by Leo Flint

  • @Idontwantyourcookie
    @Idontwantyourcookie 6 месяцев назад +3

    I was reading the wikipedia article for the Yen currency japan uses specifically in regards to etymology (why is it called Yen if it's pronounced 'en'?) and found that in the 1600s when the Portuguese started trading with japan, /e/ and /we/ were pronounced as /ye/ - I would love to hear spoken dialog from around the time the traders first made contact with Japan!

  • @akira_ariga
    @akira_ariga Год назад +3

    It so interesting to see what survived from the old and what got switched around. I may have learned from my grandma but she wasn’t THAT old 😂

  • @krunkle5136
    @krunkle5136 Год назад +11

    Love how papa meant mother lol

  • @Urkiyawe
    @Urkiyawe Год назад +18

    Although some of the words in this video appear
    to be very different between modern and old Japanese,
    modern Japanese has words
    that correspond to most of the old Japanese in this video
    and are used from time to time.
    For example,
    kare is "彼 kare" at 1:33,
    titi is "父 chichi" at 2:00,
    and papa is "母 haha" in modern Japanese.
    And several other similar relationships can be found.

    • @Urkiyawe
      @Urkiyawe Год назад +2

      At 2:50, kashira is used as it is.

  • @simplethewaterbender6264
    @simplethewaterbender6264 8 месяцев назад +9

    i'm surprised by how old japanese say, "mata" to say or refer "see/seeing"
    in indonesian and other indonesian indigenous languages, mata means "eye"

    • @Arf700
      @Arf700 4 месяца назад

      Actually it means "again", not "see"

    • @jamesestrella5911
      @jamesestrella5911 3 месяца назад

      Fair enough, but the fact that the eye re-presents images does have the “repeat/again” connotation, so this may not be as far fetched.

  • @f-man3274
    @f-man3274 Год назад +4

    Cool you have even drawn that absolutely bizzare old japanese male hairstyle (mizura)

  • @oldskoolromantic
    @oldskoolromantic Месяц назад

    That was a great story, what title is it?, where can I find it? and is there more to it?

  • @andrem5135
    @andrem5135 Год назад +9

    Love Japan! ♥️🇯🇵🏯⛩🎎🎐🍱🍡🍵💴

  • @attilakreisz1870
    @attilakreisz1870 Год назад +9

    Kashira, tsura, uo and yo are still used in Japanese

  • @VeryAngryTree
    @VeryAngryTree Год назад +12

    I find it fun, then japanese word "father" sound nearly like slavic version of same word - otec. Even word "titi" looks like "tata". It's diminutive of otec.

    • @cantionaleecclesiasticum5378
      @cantionaleecclesiasticum5378 Месяц назад

      Diminutive is folk etymology. Otec/ojciec is formal name for man in the house. Tata is child call for his defender and nutritient.

  • @pinioio9143
    @pinioio9143 Год назад +1

    What happened to the old video about Japanese you uploaded before?

  • @SaotomeHana
    @SaotomeHana Год назад +17

    Old Japanese: Nani
    Modern Japanese: Nani
    Anime: NANI???!!!

    • @chaos856
      @chaos856 2 месяца назад +2

      Flashback: Omae Wa Mou Shindeiru

  • @XOXrisandyXOX
    @XOXrisandyXOX 6 месяцев назад +4

    3:15
    Modern: "Inoshishi🎎"
    Old: "Wi🙄💅"

  • @garyi.2954
    @garyi.2954 Год назад +16

    Just wondering how the sounds of Old Japanese were determIned. I know that Manyōgana derived from Kanji gives some basis for the sounds, but how do we know what were the sounds of Manyōgana back then around the 8th century?
    Also compared to Old English, I can make out more Old Japanese words since they are more similar to Modern Japanese.

    • @CannibaLouiST
      @CannibaLouiST Год назад

      Recontructions of Middle Chinese from medieval Imperial China are an important source.

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole Год назад

      It's from the Joudai Tokushu Kanadzukai. However, the vowels of the Joudai Tokushu Kanadzukai are up to debate, and scholars can't agree. o2 is almost certainly the schwa, but i1/i2 and e1/e2 is where it gets muddy. There is strong evidence that e1 must have been "ye" and e1 must have been "e" or "ey", given the fact that all Chinese /-ye[-]/ sounds were transcribed with e1 (this is also why modern Japanese doesn't contain the /-y-/ sound in between Chinese loans that have a /-y-/ in all other languages, e.g. 變 - Chinese bian - Korean byeon - Vietnamese biến - but Japanese hen, from Old Japanese pe2n (pyen)). This is also furthered by the Old Japanese monophthongization of Proto-Japonic diphthongs, where *ai collapsed into e2 while *iə and *ia collapsed into e1. This is also why there is a distinction between apophonic combining forms and regular forms, e.g. 手 (te) and 手 (ta) - the form with \-e in Modern Japanese is the reflex of the Old Japanese \-e2, caused by the combining of the original form 手 (ta) with the emphatic nominal particle い (i), related to Korean 이. The resulting form _tai_ was merged into te2, becoming the modern te. (This goes for all apophonic-nominal pairs ending in -a/-e). i1/i2 is another can of worms, but the leading hypothesis is /i/ or /iy/ and /wi/ based on the same apophonic nominalization (where combining forms ending in -u merge with the nominal particle い (i), resulting in -wi; e.g. 神 (kamu) + い (i) = kamui -> kamwi, compare Ainu カムィ (kamuy), which is almost certainly a Proto-Japonic loan or vice versa - John Batchelor argues for the Ainu origin hypothesis).

  • @FrozenBok
    @FrozenBok Год назад +15

    The "お元気ですか" is rarely used sentence

    • @user-kp9of7re9q
      @user-kp9of7re9q Год назад

      🤫🤫🤫

    • @Alya-hq2lu
      @Alya-hq2lu Год назад +1

      when you’re meeting someone for the first time, we use it but normally it’s 元気 among friends if I’m right

    • @shellgecko
      @shellgecko Год назад

      but as an example is ok to use

    • @user-gt6jq8fk4v
      @user-gt6jq8fk4v Год назад

      Maybe only in actual letters(not internet one).

  • @bananita5811
    @bananita5811 Год назад +4

    The old form of inoshishi caught me off guard 😂 kinda wonder if it was named after its sound

    • @gtc239
      @gtc239 Год назад +2

      Its old form is winoshishi (combination of wi+no+shishi), with the syllable wi being symplified to i later, it became inoshishi.

    • @bananita5811
      @bananita5811 Год назад +1

      @@gtc239 i mean i know that much. just makes me laugh that the word for an animal that goes “UII UII UII” is. wi

  • @JuriBinturong
    @JuriBinturong Год назад +13

    I think old Japanese is an Austronesian language. (see comparison below using mostly the Bisaya language)
    are (I) === ari (here, to me)
    i (you) === ikaw (you)
    kore (this) === kiri (this)
    titi (father) === tatay (father)
    opodi (grandfather) === apohan (grandparent)
    ye (older brother) === iyo (elder), kuya (older brother)
    oto (younger brother) === otod (sibling)
    me (eye) === mata (eye)
    kami (deities/spirits) === kami (we/us)
    tura (facial profile) === itsura (facial profile)
    inu (dog) === iro (dog)
    wi (boar) === iwik (boar sound)
    kake (chicken) === kokok (a type of big bird)
    ki (tree) === kahoy (tree/wood)
    pa (leaf) === pakli (leaf)
    awo (blue) === bughaw (blue)
    siro (white) === sirohan (white/blank)
    kuro (black) === kurong (dark veil)
    na (name) === ngan (name)
    akatuki (early morning) === aga (early morning) from Hiligaynon language
    tosi (year) === tuig (year)
    pi (fire) === apoy (fire) from Tagalog language
    ama (heaven) === ama (father)
    tuti (soil) === yuta (soil)
    nani (what?) === ngano (why?)
    iduku (where) === diin (where)
    ikani (how) === ingon ani (like this)

  • @cookiesnacks7611
    @cookiesnacks7611 6 месяцев назад +5

    For modern native Japanese,interestingly,old Japanese pronunciation is similar to Kanji's 'Kunyomi'.(Kunyomi is based on 'yamatokotoba')
    That's why I can understand almost all words of old one.

    • @eruno_
      @eruno_ 6 месяцев назад

      kunyomi is native Japanese and onyomi is Chinese so it makes sense

    • @cheerful_crop_circle
      @cheerful_crop_circle 6 месяцев назад

      Yes

  • @evdalzarrinolbistan
    @evdalzarrinolbistan 9 месяцев назад +7

    I was born in Istanbul and studied until high school in Istanbul. At school we were told that Japanese, Korean, Finnish and Hungarian were dialects of Turkish. Our teachers called Kurds "Mountain Turks", Greeks "Mediterranean Turks", and Egyptians "African Turks". 😂
    It was said that even American Natives were Turks and that they were descendants of Central Asian Turks. They said that the Amazon Indians spoke Turkish and that the word Amazon came from the Turkish word "Amma Uzun", which means Very Long. 🤪
    And all of these are written in the official History Thesis called "Türk Tarih Tezi" prepared by the state during the reign of Mustafa Kemal 😁
    Man, I realized all of this was a lie when I discovered the internet when I was 20. Before I learned how to use the internet, I believed it all... 🫤🫤🫤🫤

  • @Kanitofugu
    @Kanitofugu 6 месяцев назад

    Haha I didn’t expect to come across 三輪山伝説 (the legend of Mt. Miwa) in this video! So proud, cause that’s where my surname icomes from!

  • @user-rc3gh1ch6k
    @user-rc3gh1ch6k 25 дней назад

    This old traditional story was in Yamato age(AD3〜5Century).
    This story was wrote down on oldest japanese history book “Kojiki(古事記)”in AD712.

  • @Mackyle-Wotring
    @Mackyle-Wotring Год назад +4

    It is amazing of how much the language has changed over the last 3 thousand years.

  • @getwildandtough2663
    @getwildandtough2663 6 месяцев назад +6

    In this comment section, there many people who claim that Japanese language is a descendant of ancient Chinese.
    But why? It’s two completely different languages. They don’t belong to the same language family.
    Why do you want to make Japanese language Chinese? I don’t think it’s just a simple ignorance. Is this coming from Chinese nationalism??

    • @cheerful_crop_circle
      @cheerful_crop_circle 6 месяцев назад +3

      Completely different languages, civilizations and cultures

    • @jumpvelocity3953
      @jumpvelocity3953 27 дней назад

      @@cheerful_crop_circlecomplete over exaggeration and pendulum swing

  • @Stef77777
    @Stef77777 6 месяцев назад

    1:41 the “Apare” sound in old Japanese sounds like our Greek «Ώπα ρε» (Opa re) and it’s an exclamation to show surprise, wonder or irony. And this is exactly what I said when I heard it😂

  • @mdjcsmith
    @mdjcsmith 11 месяцев назад +1

    Surprised you didn't add the "chi-chi" add "ha-ha" for the modern Japanese, would have matched well with the "ti-ti" and "pa-pa" of the old Japanese

  • @user-ol7bt4wp1j
    @user-ol7bt4wp1j 11 месяцев назад +10

    Old Japanese sounds weirdly Siberian.
    Like it sounds reminiscent of Mongolic/Turkic/Uralic languages or even Korean (but i guess that makes more sense.)
    Especially with the vowels, like the Ö for example is something that makes it very familiar sounding for me a Turk.

  • @Daphnis_et_Chloe
    @Daphnis_et_Chloe Год назад +6

    不思議な事に、津軽弁と沖縄弁に古い日本語の特徴が残っています。
    津軽と沖縄は地理的に遠く離れている。

  • @67875njkoygk
    @67875njkoygk Год назад +1

    2:58, there's mistake: not the "heat", but the "head".

  • @gustavoabreu3097
    @gustavoabreu3097 Год назад

    3:16 ah yes my favorite console!

  • @amabiko
    @amabiko Год назад +9

    In modern Japanese, fathers are sometimes called chichi which sounds similar to titi.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Год назад +1

      More importantly than sounding similar, it's the standard sound mutation of t when followed by i in Japanese

    • @attilakreisz1870
      @attilakreisz1870 Год назад +1

      And mother is haha

  • @RexoryByzaboo
    @RexoryByzaboo Год назад +17

    Imagine running to a medieval Japanese boy calling his mom "papa".

  • @user-xs3wx5hm9g
    @user-xs3wx5hm9g 7 месяцев назад +1

    The Moon rises differently in different planets depending on various factors. On the Earth, for example, the Moon rises in the east and sets in the west in an arc which varies in size throughout the lunar cycle. On Venus, the Moon rises in the west and sets in the east and is seen as a small, crescent-shaped disc in the sky. On Mars, the Moon rises in the east and sets in the west in a way similar to Earth, and is seen as a thin crescent-shaped disc in the sky. On Mercury, the Moon rises in the west and sets in the east in an arc that is eventually circular. On Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Jupiter, the Moon's time of rise and set varies significantly due to the significant atmospheric conditions combined with the different seasons experienced in the outer planets. No matter which of the 8 planets is considered, the Moon has a unique rise and set throughout its orbit, providing its own unique beauty in the night sky.

  • @mitsuhashii
    @mitsuhashii 6 месяцев назад

    uh are we completely sure that the "tu" and "si" are pronounced like that? in nihon-shiki it's common for them to write つ as tu and し as si and that's how i write them too...

  • @mana807
    @mana807 Год назад +4

    I’ve heard that old Japanese didn’t have h sounds. Originally they used p sound instead. And some words turned p into h. That’s way mother used to be called papa. Nowadays, we say haha. This video called okasan though.

  • @skywalker5575
    @skywalker5575 Год назад +3

    Is it possible that the Dong yi people mentioned in Chinese sources who lived in the Shandong peninsula or people of the Dawenkou culture in Shandong being Japonic speakers?

  • @DamselMinnieMandy
    @DamselMinnieMandy 7 месяцев назад

    I mean, some words still are used today. Like "na" for name, or "yo" for world.

  • @henriquealmeida8511
    @henriquealmeida8511 11 месяцев назад

    Could you do a video exactly like this one but with Modern and Acient Greek?

  • @MairlonFromBrazil86
    @MairlonFromBrazil86 7 месяцев назад +3

    It's funny that in Old Japanese "papa" meant "mother" instead of "father" like in western languages. I guess babies spoke this word to mothers instead of fathers back then.
    And you can realize that OJ "papa" evolved into the modern "haha" (母) (and "titi" (father) into "chichi" (父))
    But now even modern Japanese has the word "papa" (パパ) for "father", probably back formed due to English word "papa"'s influence.

  • @user-gu2ev2kz8p
    @user-gu2ev2kz8p 6 месяцев назад +3

    Old japanese really sounds maori im blown away 😮

  • @toratsugumiNUEDORI
    @toratsugumiNUEDORI 7 месяцев назад +1

    すごくおもしろかった。 
    古語になれると現代語に聞こえた。

  • @maxwellquipey1
    @maxwellquipey1 4 минуты назад +1

    The fact fathers were called titi and mothers were called papa is so insanely funny to me for some reason

  • @liamkolomoisky4832
    @liamkolomoisky4832 Год назад +3

    3:16
    me riding the roller-coaster

  • @rs1389
    @rs1389 Год назад +5

    Old Japanese sounds nice

  • @HappyBeezerStudios
    @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

    Quite a couple vowel shifts it seems. And the old form is more tonal.