Views : 452,709
Genre: Entertainment
Date of upload: Nov 28, 2023 ^^
Rating : 4.918 (183/8,797 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-22T04:10:56.233186Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
0:40 Greek does not come from Latin. Common knowledge lol. If anything, Greek posed a great influence on the creation of Latin languages
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Everytime I hear Turkish on here it feels so familiar, though I understand almost nothing. I guess that's because there are so many turkish people living in Germany and especially because my parents neighbours are turkish and I have been hearing them talking turkish in the garden right next to us all my life. I really like hearing it. It kinda feels a bit like home to me, which is kind of weird not understanding a word. 😅
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As a Bulgarian 🇧🇬 I understood Greek and Turkish perfectly. (I just have been learning these languages for years. 😅😅 Our languages aren't really mutually intelligible even tho we use many Turkish words in Bulgarian and there are Greek words in all world languages.) But I think the participants did a great job. They understood more than I expected. I'm really glad you included 2 of my most favourite languages in the world! 🇬🇷🇹🇷
Btw I don't agree that Turks don't conjugate the verbs. 🤔 I don't want to pretend that I know more than a native speaker but let's take the verb "gitmek" as an example:
Ben gidiyorum - I'm going
Sen gidiyorsun - You're going
O gidiyor - He/she/it is going
Biz gidiyoruz - We're going
Siz gidiyorsunuz - You're going
Onlar gidiyor(lar) - They're going
Obviously, the Turkish verbs are being conjugated. I think Oliviane got confused because Turkish is an agglutinative language and if there is more than one verb in the sentence usually only one of them will be conjugated and the other verbs will be in infinitive or something else. Like for example: I want to go. - Gitmek istiyorum. - Only the verb "istemek" (to want) is being conjugated while "gitmek" (to go) is used in infinitive. But still that doesn't mean that verbs in Turkish aren't being conjugated at all! Anywaysssssss. Great video. My inner language geek needed to explain all of this. 😅
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01:57 Her face says it all! 😂
Are they kidding me? The first word "Yoghurt" is of Turkish origin and you ask a Turkish girl how it’s spelled? It should be spelled in the only correct and original Turkish way all over the world…
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Andrea has a point, actually. For whatever reason, Greek sounds like someone speaking Gibberish in Spanish (Spain Spanish in particular). I once heard Greek people speaking at an airport, and I thought they were speaking Spanish until I got closer and realised I didn’t understand a thing lol. I’m sure it’s the same for Greeks when hearing Spain Spanish too. Lots of “th” sounds too.
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@mnktb5873
5 months ago
Turkish - Japanese - Korean - Finnish - Hungarian meeting should be also done which would be definitely interesting.
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