PokeVideoPlayer v23.9-app.js-020924_
0143ab93_videojs8_1563605_YT_2d24ba15 licensed under gpl3-or-later
Views : 518,199
Genre: Music
License: Standard YouTube License
Uploaded At Mar 26, 2024 ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.942 (583/39,774 LTDR)
98.56% of the users lieked the video!!
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User score: 97.84- Overwhelmingly Positive
RYD date created : 2025-02-25T21:26:02.141766Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
My hungarian friends always told me hearing finnish hurts their brain because the tempo and sounds are similar so their brain is trying to pick out words but cant find anything. The more hungarian I begin to learn, the more I get what they mean. Its like that Italian dude who made a song designed to sound like English but contains no english words.
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Since you're so interested in the relationship of languages, there's a professor at the university of vienna who made extensive studies on why they're actually not related. Linguistically speaking it's just another misconception but if you ask me personally I'd tell you it always depends on how far back in time you want to go to decide if languages are related or not, because I believe in the primary language theory.
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I’m an American who lives in Finland and speaks Finnish.
You are right that Finnish is very different than its indo-European neighbors- especially when it comes to grammar and sentence construction.
One interesting thing is that because Finland was under Swedish rule for centuries, there is a high number of Swedish low words in Finnish. Although due to the relatively different sound inventory of Finnish, the cognates are harder to recognize.
I would suspect that for a keen Swede, they would be able to pick up a fair share of the vocabulary quickly.
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Also Finnish and Hungarian are that different, because, although they both belong to the same branch of uralic languages, which is called finno-ugric, the finno-ugric branch itself is divided into finno-permic and ugric branches very long time ago. That is, Finnish language today is part of finno-permic branch and Hungarian is part of ugric branch. The reason for division was kinda connected to migration of peoples. Finno-permic peoples a few thousands years ago decided to move west and settle in Europe (Finland, Estonia, Karelia, and just across all the land from Ural mountains to modern Finland), and most ugric peoples (namely khanty and mansi peoples) stayed around Ural mountains. Only Hungarians kept moving all this time; in the time of common era they crossed all modern russian territories, went past Ukraine and finally settled around Carpathian mountains region.
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@TLoD_
10 months ago
And imagine as i Finnish person you HAVE to learn Finnish, English and swedish in elementary school
Edit: and to all of the responders i meant the difference in the languages is way bigger than in the other languages yall have to learn.
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