Scholars traditionally divide Slavic languages on the basis of geographical distribution into three main branches, some of which feature subbranches:
Some linguists speculate that a North Slavic branch has existed as well. The Old Novgorod dialect may have reflected some idiosyncrasies of this group. On the other hand, the term "North Slavic" is also used sometimes to combine the West and East Slavic languages into one group, in opposition to the South Slavic languages, due to traits the West and East Slavic branches share with each other that they do not with the South Slavic languages.
The most obvious differences between the West and East Slavic branches are in orthography of standard languages; West Slavic languages are written in the Latin script, and have had more Western European influence due to their speakers' being historically Roman Catholic, whereas the East Slavic languages are written in Cyrillic and with Eastern Orthodox or Uniate faithful have had more Greek influence. East Slavic languages such as Russian have, however, during and after Peter the Great's Europeanization campaign, absorbed many international words of Latin, French, German, and Italian origin, somewhat reducing this difference in influence. And although the South Slavic group has traits apart from the West or East Slavic branches, within itself it has much the same differences; Bulgarian, for example, has some East Slavic traits (Cyrillic alphabet, Russian loanwords, and Greek influence), and Croatian many West Slavic ones (Latin alphabet, overall Central European influence like Czech), despite both being South Slavic.
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
-
-
-
-
-
1-Belarusian
2-Bulgarian
3-Czech
4-Polish
5-Rusin
6-Russian
7-Serbian
8-Slovak
9-Ukrainian
10- Slovenian
11- Macdonian
3:40
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
Frozen Let It Go Slavic Multi-Language
------------------------------------------------------
0:15 - Russian
0:37 - Ukrainian
0:51 - Slovak
1:15 - Czech
1:39 - Polish
2:02 - Slovene
2:34 - Serbian
2:55 - Croatian
3:17 - Bulgarian
Enjoy! - Copyright by: Disney
2:46
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translation here in blog http://learnukraine.blogspot.com/2015/01/ukrainian-russian-and-belorussian.html
3:18
The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to define the difference amoung these languages, it is more or less the same language
but with some variations or using a different accent and in each of these countries people speak different dialects which are still different.
In this video I divided these languages into two groups
CROATIAN using european alphabet
SERBIAN using cyrillic alphabet
5:20
Polish and Slavic languages
Polish and Slavic languages
Polish and Slavic languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
4:08
Connection between Slavic languages
Connection between Slavic languages
Connection between Slavic languages
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio. They pointed out the deep connections between various languages -- especially the Slavic languages. Simic pointed out that both Hungarian and Finnish have roots in the Mongolian language. They discussed the numerous different nationalities in the area around the North of Serbia including the Rusyns or Ruthenians who don't have a country. http://www.clevelandpeople.com/groups/serbian/serbian.htm
59:31
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Introduces Jakobson's principles of compatible and incompatible features (such as tonal accent, intensity accent, and vowel quantity). The paper then presents the historical implications of incompatible feature coexistence, resulting from phonological change, as exemplified by the various Slavic language zones after the loss of final jer vowels.
3:35
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I've finally did it, yay! Thanks to Disney Queens who made this possible! So, this is "Let It Go" in all Slavic languages! I know this video is not ONLY in Czech, but wait Czech is Slavic too, right :D?
So sorry Slovenia for putting you only one time, when I made the audio I didn't count how many times is a language used... I've just did it as I liked it :/.
As you know, pitch was changed to avoid copyright problems! Also, sorry for writing "srpski", but I have no idea how people write in Serbia... I've seen them writing with both chirilic and latin cha
7:31
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking English!
Please subscribe if you liked this video! Thanks for watching!
FIND ME ON:
BLOG: http://teaching-in-vogue.blogspot.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lilia.cardenas.1420?ref=tn_tnmn
VK: http://vk.com/liliacardenas
5:04
Cases in Slavic Languages
Cases in Slavic Languages
Cases in Slavic Languages
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direct object;
Dative - indirect object;
Instrumental - an actor in a passive construction; by/with
Prepositional - static placement; in/at/on;
+Vocative (some have and some don't)
2:55
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxQCf6eaToI
The second video in the series. I decided to focus on Indo-European languages for this one.
Featuring (in chronological order): Old Church Slavonic, Old Irish, Gothic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, Avestan, and the (hypothetical, but very probable) common ancestor of all these ancient languages, Proto-Indo-European.
Info on the languages:
Old Church Slavonic (or Slověnĭskŭ Językŭ, its endonym) was the first Slavic literary language, used from the ninth to eleventh century before splitting in
1:33
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
36:07
Slavic languages
Slavic languages
Slavic languages
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern...
17:59
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
Serbian, 0:22 English, 1:03 Albanian, 1:18 Finnish, 1:43 Slovakian, 2:24 German, 2:55 Macedonian, 3:26 Portuguese, 3:48 Ukrainian, 4:19 Croatian, 4:48 Romanian (in Moldova), 5:45 Swedish, 6:15 Russian, 6:52 Italian, 7:20 Slovenian, 7:47 Danish, 8:21 Polish, 8:44 Romanian, 9:11 French, 10:00 Belorussian, 10:23 Bulgarian, 10:53 Greek, 11:21 Czech, 11:51 Dutch, 12:33 Bosnian, 13:00 Spanish, 13:30, Estonian 14:01 Norwegian, 14:52 Lithuanian, 15:20 Irish, 15:51 Latvian, 16:24 Icelandic, 16:50 Hungarian
* the last clip 17:22 is another Slovenian clip
(32 different european languages accents)
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
-
-
-
-
-
1-Belarusian
2-Bulgarian
3-Czech
4-Polish
5-Rusin
6-Russian
7-Serbian
8-Slovak
9-Ukrainian
10- Slovenian
11- Macdonian
3:40
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
Frozen Let It Go Slavic Multi-Language
------------------------------------------------------
0:15 - Russian
0:37 - Ukrainian
0:51 - Slovak
1:15 - Czech
1:39 - Polish
2:02 - Slovene
2:34 - Serbian
2:55 - Croatian
3:17 - Bulgarian
Enjoy! - Copyright by: Disney
2:46
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translation here in blog http://learnukraine.blogspot.com/2015/01/ukrainian-russian-and-belorussian.html
3:18
The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to define the difference amoung these languages, it is more or less the same language
but with some variations or using a different accent and in each of these countries people speak different dialects which are still different.
In this video I divided these languages into two groups
CROATIAN using european alphabet
SERBIAN using cyrillic alphabet
5:20
Polish and Slavic languages
Polish and Slavic languages
Polish and Slavic languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
4:08
Connection between Slavic languages
Connection between Slavic languages
Connection between Slavic languages
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio. They pointed out the deep connections between various languages -- especially the Slavic languages. Simic pointed out that both Hungarian and Finnish have roots in the Mongolian language. They discussed the numerous different nationalities in the area around the North of Serbia including the Rusyns or Ruthenians who don't have a country. http://www.clevelandpeople.com/groups/serbian/serbian.htm
59:31
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Introduces Jakobson's principles of compatible and incompatible features (such as tonal accent, intensity accent, and vowel quantity). The paper then presents the historical implications of incompatible feature coexistence, resulting from phonological change, as exemplified by the various Slavic language zones after the loss of final jer vowels.
3:35
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I've finally did it, yay! Thanks to Disney Queens who made this possible! So, this is "Let It Go" in all Slavic languages! I know this video is not ONLY in Czech, but wait Czech is Slavic too, right :D?
So sorry Slovenia for putting you only one time, when I made the audio I didn't count how many times is a language used... I've just did it as I liked it :/.
As you know, pitch was changed to avoid copyright problems! Also, sorry for writing "srpski", but I have no idea how people write in Serbia... I've seen them writing with both chirilic and latin cha
7:31
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking English!
Please subscribe if you liked this video! Thanks for watching!
FIND ME ON:
BLOG: http://teaching-in-vogue.blogspot.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lilia.cardenas.1420?ref=tn_tnmn
VK: http://vk.com/liliacardenas
5:04
Cases in Slavic Languages
Cases in Slavic Languages
Cases in Slavic Languages
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direct object;
Dative - indirect object;
Instrumental - an actor in a passive construction; by/with
Prepositional - static placement; in/at/on;
+Vocative (some have and some don't)
2:55
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxQCf6eaToI
The second video in the series. I decided to focus on Indo-European languages for this one.
Featuring (in chronological order): Old Church Slavonic, Old Irish, Gothic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, Avestan, and the (hypothetical, but very probable) common ancestor of all these ancient languages, Proto-Indo-European.
Info on the languages:
Old Church Slavonic (or Slověnĭskŭ Językŭ, its endonym) was the first Slavic literary language, used from the ninth to eleventh century before splitting in
1:33
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
36:07
Slavic languages
Slavic languages
Slavic languages
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern...
17:59
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
32 languages of Europe - newscasters speaking
Serbian, 0:22 English, 1:03 Albanian, 1:18 Finnish, 1:43 Slovakian, 2:24 German, 2:55 Macedonian, 3:26 Portuguese, 3:48 Ukrainian, 4:19 Croatian, 4:48 Romanian (in Moldova), 5:45 Swedish, 6:15 Russian, 6:52 Italian, 7:20 Slovenian, 7:47 Danish, 8:21 Polish, 8:44 Romanian, 9:11 French, 10:00 Belorussian, 10:23 Bulgarian, 10:53 Greek, 11:21 Czech, 11:51 Dutch, 12:33 Bosnian, 13:00 Spanish, 13:30, Estonian 14:01 Norwegian, 14:52 Lithuanian, 15:20 Irish, 15:51 Latvian, 16:24 Icelandic, 16:50 Hungarian
* the last clip 17:22 is another Slovenian clip
(32 different european languages accents)
3:36
Frozen - Let It Go (Slavic Mix)
Frozen - Let It Go (Slavic Mix)
Frozen - Let It Go (Slavic Mix)
Slavic Elsa's singing Let It Go
Slovak: Andrea Somorovská
Slovene: Nuška Drašček Rojko
Croatian: Nataša Mirković
Polish: Katarzyna Łaska
Russian: Anna Buturlina
Ukrainian: Shanis
Bulgarian: Nadezhda Panayotova
Serbian: Jelena Gavrilović
Czech: Monika Absolonová
The pitch is changed and video mirrored due to copyrights.
I own nothing.
8:16
! Slavic Rap !
! Slavic Rap !
! Slavic Rap !
5:11
All European languages are Slavic. Part 1 - History and Genetics
All European languages are Slavic. Part 1 - History and Genetics
All European languages are Slavic. Part 1 - History and Genetics
Research based on: wspanialarzeczpospolita.pl
http://pl.scribd.com/doc/14180564/INDO-ARYAN-AND-SLAVIC-LINGUISTIC-AFFINITIES
Vedas=wiedza (knowledge)
19:05
Learn languages to travel + Slavic languages
Learn languages to travel + Slavic languages
Learn languages to travel + Slavic languages
Practical tips for organizing your language learning before going abroad.
Good ressource for intermediate Russian learners: http://russianpodcast.eu/podcasts.html
3:16
slavic language slavianstvo-01
slavic language slavianstvo-01
slavic language slavianstvo-01
Universal slavic language SLOVIO is understod by 400 million in Russia, Slovenia, Macedonia, Czech Republic, Ukraine, Kazakhstan ... see the video!
4:09
Slavic Languages Center - Центр польского языка и культуры
Slavic Languages Center - Центр польского языка и культуры
Slavic Languages Center - Центр польского языка и культуры
http://www.parta.com.ua/lang_courses/view/389/
- курсы польского языка (по новейшим методикам с опытными польськими и украинскими филологами; для получения Карты поляка; для поступления в польские вузы)
121:45
The Jesus Film - Macedonian / Macedonian Slavic / Makedonski / Slavic Language
The Jesus Film - Macedonian / Macedonian Slavic / Makedonski / Slavic Language
The Jesus Film - Macedonian / Macedonian Slavic / Makedonski / Slavic Language
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God). According to the Gospel of Luke. (Macedonia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greeece) Macedonian / Macedonia...
0:53
MLP FiM- Braeburn- Slavic Languages
MLP FiM- Braeburn- Slavic Languages
MLP FiM- Braeburn- Slavic Languages
0:00 Polish 0:13 Czech 0:27 Russian
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is copyright by Hasbro
3:51
Donatan & Cleo - My Słowianie - We Are Slavic (Poland) 2014 Eurovision Song Contest
Donatan & Cleo - My Słowianie - We Are Slavic (Poland) 2014 Eurovision Song Contest
Donatan & Cleo - My Słowianie - We Are Slavic (Poland) 2014 Eurovision Song Contest
Powered by: http://www.eurovision.tv Donatan & Cleo will represent Poland at the 2014 Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen with the song My Słowianie.
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
-
-
-
-
-
1-Belarusian
2-Bulgarian
3-Czech
4-Polish
5-Rusin
6-Russian
7-Serbian
8-Slovak
9-Ukrainian
10- Slovenian
11- Macdonian
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
-
-
-
-
-
1-Belarusian
2-Bulgarian
3-Czech
4-Polish
5-Rusin
6-Russian
7-Serbian
8-Slovak
9-Ukrainian
10- Slovenian
11- Macdonian
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translation here in blog http://learnukraine.blogspot.com/2015/01/ukrainian-russian-and-belorussian.html
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translation here in blog http://learnukraine.blogspot.com/2015/01/ukrainian-russian-and-belorussian.html
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to define the difference amoung these languages, it is more or less the same language
but with some variations or using a different accent and in each of these countries people speak different dialects which are still different.
In this video I divided these languages into two groups
CROATIAN using european alphabet
SERBIAN using cyrillic alphabet
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to define the difference amoung these languages, it is more or less the same language
but with some variations or using a different accent and in each of these countries people speak different dialects which are still different.
In this video I divided these languages into two groups
CROATIAN using european alphabet
SERBIAN using cyrillic alphabet
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio. They pointed out the deep connections between various languages -- especially the Slavic languages. Simic pointed out that both Hungarian and Finnish have roots in the Mongolian language. They discussed the numerous different nationalities in the area around the North of Serbia including the Rusyns or Ruthenians who don't have a country. http://www.clevelandpeople.com/groups/serbian/serbian.htm
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio. They pointed out the deep connections between various languages -- especially the Slavic languages. Simic pointed out that both Hungarian and Finnish have roots in the Mongolian language. They discussed the numerous different nationalities in the area around the North of Serbia including the Rusyns or Ruthenians who don't have a country. http://www.clevelandpeople.com/groups/serbian/serbian.htm
published:21 Dec 2013
views:1461
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Introduces Jakobson's principles of compatible and incompatible features (such as tonal accent, intensity accent, and vowel quantity). The paper then presents the historical implications of incompatible feature coexistence, resulting from phonological change, as exemplified by the various Slavic language zones after the loss of final jer vowels.
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Introduces Jakobson's principles of compatible and incompatible features (such as tonal accent, intensity accent, and vowel quantity). The paper then presents the historical implications of incompatible feature coexistence, resulting from phonological change, as exemplified by the various Slavic language zones after the loss of final jer vowels.
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I've finally did it, yay! Thanks to Disney Queens who made this possible! So, this is "Let It Go" in all Slavic languages! I know this video is not ONLY in Czech, but wait Czech is Slavic too, right :D?
So sorry Slovenia for putting you only one time, when I made the audio I didn't count how many times is a language used... I've just did it as I liked it :/.
As you know, pitch was changed to avoid copyright problems! Also, sorry for writing "srpski", but I have no idea how people write in Serbia... I've seen them writing with both chirilic and latin characters... so I went with latin because it was easier :P.
Please write in comments, if you want, which are your favorites :D!
Hope you liked it! Please subscribe if you like my videos, more surprises are coming soon!
- - -
All rights reserved to Disney!
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I've finally did it, yay! Thanks to Disney Queens who made this possible! So, this is "Let It Go" in all Slavic languages! I know this video is not ONLY in Czech, but wait Czech is Slavic too, right :D?
So sorry Slovenia for putting you only one time, when I made the audio I didn't count how many times is a language used... I've just did it as I liked it :/.
As you know, pitch was changed to avoid copyright problems! Also, sorry for writing "srpski", but I have no idea how people write in Serbia... I've seen them writing with both chirilic and latin characters... so I went with latin because it was easier :P.
Please write in comments, if you want, which are your favorites :D!
Hope you liked it! Please subscribe if you like my videos, more surprises are coming soon!
- - -
All rights reserved to Disney!
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking English!
Please subscribe if you liked this video! Thanks for watching!
FIND ME ON:
BLOG: http://teaching-in-vogue.blogspot.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lilia.cardenas.1420?ref=tn_tnmn
VK: http://vk.com/liliacardenas
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking English!
Please subscribe if you liked this video! Thanks for watching!
FIND ME ON:
BLOG: http://teaching-in-vogue.blogspot.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lilia.cardenas.1420?ref=tn_tnmn
VK: http://vk.com/liliacardenas
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direct object;
Dative - indirect object;
Instrumental - an actor in a passive construction; by/with
Prepositional - static placement; in/at/on;
+Vocative (some have and some don't)
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direct object;
Dative - indirect object;
Instrumental - an actor in a passive construction; by/with
Prepositional - static placement; in/at/on;
+Vocative (some have and some don't)
published:13 May 2014
views:487
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxQCf6eaToI
The second video in the series. I decided to focus on Indo-European languages for this one.
Featuring (in chronological order): Old Church Slavonic, Old Irish, Gothic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, Avestan, and the (hypothetical, but very probable) common ancestor of all these ancient languages, Proto-Indo-European.
Info on the languages:
Old Church Slavonic (or Slověnĭskŭ Językŭ, its endonym) was the first Slavic literary language, used from the ninth to eleventh century before splitting into the Church Slavonic languages. It is the oldest attested Slavic languages.
Old Irish (or Goídelc), used from the fifth to ninth centuries, was an early celtic language. It had particularly complex grammar and phonological systems, and is the ancestor of Modern Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Manx.
Gothic, an early East Germanic language, was used from the fourth to eighth centuries. It is the best attested East Germanic language and is important to the reconstruction of Proto-Germanic and PIE.
Classical Latin was the standard language of the Roman Empire from 75 B.C. to the 3rd century A.D., as opposed to Vulgar Latin, the "speech of the masses." Vulgar Latin was the ancestor of the Romance languages.
Attic Greek is a dialect of Ancient Greek used from 750 B.C. to the 3rd century B.C., when it was replaced by Koine (Common) Greek.
Avestan was an Iranian language spoken from the late Bronze Age to the early Iron Age, and is the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language. It is closely related to Vedic Sanskrit, the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language.
Proto-Indo-European is the unattested, yet highly supported common ancestor of all Indo-European languages, including Hellenic (including Greek), Italic (including Latin and the Romance languages), Germanic, Celtic, Slavic, and the Indo-Iranian languages. There are about 439 Indo-European languages, with almost three billion native speakers, by far the most of any widely recognized language family. The most accepted hypothesis places it spoken in the Pontic steppe, about six thousand years ago, although estimates vary greatly.
Texts used:
Old Church Slavonic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Church_Slavonic#Example_text
Old Irish: http://www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/sengoidelc/donncha/labhairt.html
Gothic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_language#Examples
Classical Latin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Attic Greek: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Avestan: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avestan_language#Sample_text
Proto-Indo-European: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_king_and_the_god (2013 version)
Stuff used:
Recorded on an iPhone 4s, audio edited in Logic Pro 9, pictures made in Gimp, video made in iMovie.
****DISCLAIMER****
As all these languages are extinct and only attested through text, pronunciations are approximate. It is unlikely that any language in the video sounded exactly as I said it, but I am also likely not far from how they actually sounded (except for maybe PIE).
Thanks for watching, and keep your eyes open for another of these videos! Tell me what you think in the comments and suggest languages I should do!
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxQCf6eaToI
The second video in the series. I decided to focus on Indo-European languages for this one.
Featuring (in chronological order): Old Church Slavonic, Old Irish, Gothic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, Avestan, and the (hypothetical, but very probable) common ancestor of all these ancient languages, Proto-Indo-European.
Info on the languages:
Old Church Slavonic (or Slověnĭskŭ Językŭ, its endonym) was the first Slavic literary language, used from the ninth to eleventh century before splitting into the Church Slavonic languages. It is the oldest attested Slavic languages.
Old Irish (or Goídelc), used from the fifth to ninth centuries, was an early celtic language. It had particularly complex grammar and phonological systems, and is the ancestor of Modern Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Manx.
Gothic, an early East Germanic language, was used from the fourth to eighth centuries. It is the best attested East Germanic language and is important to the reconstruction of Proto-Germanic and PIE.
Classical Latin was the standard language of the Roman Empire from 75 B.C. to the 3rd century A.D., as opposed to Vulgar Latin, the "speech of the masses." Vulgar Latin was the ancestor of the Romance languages.
Attic Greek is a dialect of Ancient Greek used from 750 B.C. to the 3rd century B.C., when it was replaced by Koine (Common) Greek.
Avestan was an Iranian language spoken from the late Bronze Age to the early Iron Age, and is the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language. It is closely related to Vedic Sanskrit, the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language.
Proto-Indo-European is the unattested, yet highly supported common ancestor of all Indo-European languages, including Hellenic (including Greek), Italic (including Latin and the Romance languages), Germanic, Celtic, Slavic, and the Indo-Iranian languages. There are about 439 Indo-European languages, with almost three billion native speakers, by far the most of any widely recognized language family. The most accepted hypothesis places it spoken in the Pontic steppe, about six thousand years ago, although estimates vary greatly.
Texts used:
Old Church Slavonic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Church_Slavonic#Example_text
Old Irish: http://www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/sengoidelc/donncha/labhairt.html
Gothic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_language#Examples
Classical Latin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Attic Greek: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Avestan: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avestan_language#Sample_text
Proto-Indo-European: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_king_and_the_god (2013 version)
Stuff used:
Recorded on an iPhone 4s, audio edited in Logic Pro 9, pictures made in Gimp, video made in iMovie.
****DISCLAIMER****
As all these languages are extinct and only attested through text, pronunciations are approximate. It is unlikely that any language in the video sounded exactly as I said it, but I am also likely not far from how they actually sounded (except for maybe PIE).
Thanks for watching, and keep your eyes open for another of these videos! Tell me what you think in the comments and suggest languages I should do!
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern...
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern...
Slavic Elsa's singing Let It Go
Slovak: Andrea Somorovská
Slovene: Nuška Drašček Rojko
Croatian: Nataša Mirković
Polish: Katarzyna Łaska
Russian: Anna Buturlina
Ukrainian: Shanis
Bulgarian: Nadezhda Panayotova
Serbian: Jelena Gavrilović
Czech: Monika Absolonová
The pitch is changed and video mirrored due to copyrights.
I own nothing.
Slavic Elsa's singing Let It Go
Slovak: Andrea Somorovská
Slovene: Nuška Drašček Rojko
Croatian: Nataša Mirković
Polish: Katarzyna Łaska
Russian: Anna Buturlina
Ukrainian: Shanis
Bulgarian: Nadezhda Panayotova
Serbian: Jelena Gavrilović
Czech: Monika Absolonová
The pitch is changed and video mirrored due to copyrights.
I own nothing.
Practical tips for organizing your language learning before going abroad.
Good ressource for intermediate Russian learners: http://russianpodcast.eu/podcasts.html
Practical tips for organizing your language learning before going abroad.
Good ressource for intermediate Russian learners: http://russianpodcast.eu/podcasts.html
http://www.parta.com.ua/lang_courses/view/389/
- курсы польского языка (по новейшим методикам с опытными польськими и украинскими филологами; для получения Карты поляка; для поступления в польские вузы)
http://www.parta.com.ua/lang_courses/view/389/
- курсы польского языка (по новейшим методикам с опытными польськими и украинскими филологами; для получения Карты поляка; для поступления в польские вузы)
published:28 Nov 2013
views:11
The Jesus Film - Macedonian / Macedonian Slavic / Makedonski / Slavic Language
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God). According to the Gospel of Luke. (Macedonia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greeece) Macedonian / Macedonia...
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God). According to the Gospel of Luke. (Macedonia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greeece) Macedonian / Macedonia...
Powered by: http://www.eurovision.tv Donatan & Cleo will represent Poland at the 2014 Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen with the song My Słowianie.
Powered by: http://www.eurovision.tv Donatan & Cleo will represent Poland at the 2014 Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen with the song My Słowianie.
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
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1-Belarusian...
published:15 Aug 2014
Guess the Slavic language!
Guess the Slavic language!
published:15 Aug 2014
views:12006
Don't look at the description before you try to guess the language!
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1-Belarusian
2-Bulgarian
3-Czech
4-Polish
5-Rusin
6-Russian
7-Serbian
8-Slovak
9-Ukrainian
10- Slovenian
11- Macdonian
3:40
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
Frozen Let It Go Slavic Multi-Language
---------------------------------------------------...
published:29 Sep 2014
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
[Frozen] Let It Go | Slavic Multi-Language [HD]
published:29 Sep 2014
views:12
Frozen Let It Go Slavic Multi-Language
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0:15 - Russian
0:37 - Ukrainian
0:51 - Slovak
1:15 - Czech
1:39 - Polish
2:02 - Slovene
2:34 - Serbian
2:55 - Croatian
3:17 - Bulgarian
Enjoy! - Copyright by: Disney
2:46
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translatio...
published:30 Jan 2015
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian
published:30 Jan 2015
views:4638
Difference between 3 slavic languages: Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian.
Read translation here in blog http://learnukraine.blogspot.com/2015/01/ukrainian-russian-and-belorussian.html
3:18
The Slavic Languages
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to de...
published:05 Oct 2014
The Slavic Languages
The Slavic Languages
published:05 Oct 2014
views:16
Serbian
Croatian
Slovenian
Montenegro
Bosnian
there is a big problem when one wants to define the difference amoung these languages, it is more or less the same language
but with some variations or using a different accent and in each of these countries people speak different dialects which are still different.
In this video I divided these languages into two groups
CROATIAN using european alphabet
SERBIAN using cyrillic alphabet
5:20
Polish and Slavic languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&...
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
4:08
Connection between Slavic languages
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio...
published:21 Dec 2013
Connection between Slavic languages
Connection between Slavic languages
published:21 Dec 2013
views:1461
Mike Simic, Milan and Richard Cesar talked languages at a Serbian picnic in Cleveland Ohio. They pointed out the deep connections between various languages -- especially the Slavic languages. Simic pointed out that both Hungarian and Finnish have roots in the Mongolian language. They discussed the numerous different nationalities in the area around the North of Serbia including the Rusyns or Ruthenians who don't have a country. http://www.clevelandpeople.com/groups/serbian/serbian.htm
59:31
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Int...
published:22 Apr 2014
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
Jakobson's Remarks on the Evolution of Russian and the Slavic Languages
published:22 Apr 2014
views:317
Analyzes the methodology of Jakobson's pioneering 1929 book on historical linguistics. Introduces Jakobson's principles of compatible and incompatible features (such as tonal accent, intensity accent, and vowel quantity). The paper then presents the historical implications of incompatible feature coexistence, resulting from phonological change, as exemplified by the various Slavic language zones after the loss of final jer vowels.
3:35
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I...
published:11 Jul 2014
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
Frozen - Let It Go - Slavic Multilanguage
published:11 Jul 2014
views:85
Another day, another video! This is my first multilanguage ever, after millions of tries I've finally did it, yay! Thanks to Disney Queens who made this possible! So, this is "Let It Go" in all Slavic languages! I know this video is not ONLY in Czech, but wait Czech is Slavic too, right :D?
So sorry Slovenia for putting you only one time, when I made the audio I didn't count how many times is a language used... I've just did it as I liked it :/.
As you know, pitch was changed to avoid copyright problems! Also, sorry for writing "srpski", but I have no idea how people write in Serbia... I've seen them writing with both chirilic and latin characters... so I went with latin because it was easier :P.
Please write in comments, if you want, which are your favorites :D!
Hope you liked it! Please subscribe if you like my videos, more surprises are coming soon!
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All rights reserved to Disney!
7:31
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking Englis...
published:14 Apr 2014
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
Top 8 Mistakes Russian Speakers Make
published:14 Apr 2014
views:84
Discover Top 8 mistakes the majority of Russian speakers tend to make when speaking English!
Please subscribe if you liked this video! Thanks for watching!
FIND ME ON:
BLOG: http://teaching-in-vogue.blogspot.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lilia.cardenas.1420?ref=tn_tnmn
VK: http://vk.com/liliacardenas
5:04
Cases in Slavic Languages
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initia...
published:13 May 2014
Cases in Slavic Languages
Cases in Slavic Languages
published:13 May 2014
views:487
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direct object;
Dative - indirect object;
Instrumental - an actor in a passive construction; by/with
Prepositional - static placement; in/at/on;
+Vocative (some have and some don't)
2:55
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
htt...
published:28 Sep 2014
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
Extinct Languages Spoken 2 - Old Church Slavonic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, and more
published:28 Sep 2014
views:4273
Watch the previous video (containing Ubykh, Old English, Proto-Germanic, and more):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxQCf6eaToI
The second video in the series. I decided to focus on Indo-European languages for this one.
Featuring (in chronological order): Old Church Slavonic, Old Irish, Gothic, Classical Latin, Ancient (Attic) Greek, Avestan, and the (hypothetical, but very probable) common ancestor of all these ancient languages, Proto-Indo-European.
Info on the languages:
Old Church Slavonic (or Slověnĭskŭ Językŭ, its endonym) was the first Slavic literary language, used from the ninth to eleventh century before splitting into the Church Slavonic languages. It is the oldest attested Slavic languages.
Old Irish (or Goídelc), used from the fifth to ninth centuries, was an early celtic language. It had particularly complex grammar and phonological systems, and is the ancestor of Modern Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Manx.
Gothic, an early East Germanic language, was used from the fourth to eighth centuries. It is the best attested East Germanic language and is important to the reconstruction of Proto-Germanic and PIE.
Classical Latin was the standard language of the Roman Empire from 75 B.C. to the 3rd century A.D., as opposed to Vulgar Latin, the "speech of the masses." Vulgar Latin was the ancestor of the Romance languages.
Attic Greek is a dialect of Ancient Greek used from 750 B.C. to the 3rd century B.C., when it was replaced by Koine (Common) Greek.
Avestan was an Iranian language spoken from the late Bronze Age to the early Iron Age, and is the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language. It is closely related to Vedic Sanskrit, the earliest attested Indo-Iranian language.
Proto-Indo-European is the unattested, yet highly supported common ancestor of all Indo-European languages, including Hellenic (including Greek), Italic (including Latin and the Romance languages), Germanic, Celtic, Slavic, and the Indo-Iranian languages. There are about 439 Indo-European languages, with almost three billion native speakers, by far the most of any widely recognized language family. The most accepted hypothesis places it spoken in the Pontic steppe, about six thousand years ago, although estimates vary greatly.
Texts used:
Old Church Slavonic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Church_Slavonic#Example_text
Old Irish: http://www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/sengoidelc/donncha/labhairt.html
Gothic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_language#Examples
Classical Latin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Attic Greek: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%27s_Prayer#Greek_and_Latin_versions
Avestan: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avestan_language#Sample_text
Proto-Indo-European: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_king_and_the_god (2013 version)
Stuff used:
Recorded on an iPhone 4s, audio edited in Logic Pro 9, pictures made in Gimp, video made in iMovie.
****DISCLAIMER****
As all these languages are extinct and only attested through text, pronunciations are approximate. It is unlikely that any language in the video sounded exactly as I said it, but I am also likely not far from how they actually sounded (except for maybe PIE).
Thanks for watching, and keep your eyes open for another of these videos! Tell me what you think in the comments and suggest languages I should do!
1:33
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months....
published:12 Feb 2015
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
published:12 Feb 2015
views:291
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
36:07
Slavic languages
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a su...
The Slavic languages , a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern...
Slow-moving Typhoon Koppu weakened after blowing ashore with fierce winds in the northeastern Philippines on Sunday, leaving at least two people dead, displacing 16,000 villagers and knocking out power in entire provinces, officials said ... ....
It's not every day that Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders see eye-to-eye on an issue. But on Sunday the two candidates from opposing ends of the political spectrum stood in agreement that former President George W. Bush's Iraq invasion was a serious mistake. ... ... Trump was happy to return to the subject on Fox News Sunday, and offer an assessment of the 9/11 attacks using Sanders-esque language. ... ....
Afghanistan’s Chief ExecutiveAbdullah Abdullah has said that Kabul would welcome potential assistance by Russia in the war-wracked country’s ongoing fight against terrorism. Abdullah told a press briefing on Sunday that the Afghan government would welcome a potential move by Russia to extend its support to Kabul in order to curb terrorist groups operating across Afghanistan ... (Photo by AFP). ... ....
Article by WN.com Correspondent DallasDarling. Imagine rushing to the emergency room only to find your son with a tear gas canister embedded in his chest, leaving a large enough hole that he dies in your arms ... Neither Palestinians nor Israelis have to imagine these atrocities because they live it everyday ... Undeniably, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has produced the longest “living” refugee crisis in modern times ... Censored 2016 ... 287 ff....
(Source. KU - The University of Kansas) ... In 'Coming of Age Under Martial Law. The InitiationNovels of Poland's Last Communist Generation,' Svetlana Vassileva-Karagyozova, associate professor of Slaviclanguages and literatures, examines more than 30 Polish novels written about or by the generation known as the 89ers, a reference to the year communism ended in Poland ... This political dynamic was mirrored in the world of Polish fiction....
(Source. KU - The University of Kansas) ... A professor at the University of Kansas can speak about Alexievich's background, literary career and thematic focus. Vitaly Chernetsky, associate professor of Slaviclanguages and literatures and acting director of KU's Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies, said as a writer of nonfiction, Alexievich is a somewhat unusual choice for the Nobel Prize ... distributed by ... (noodl. 30248523) ....
... expanded its foreign language and area studies programs ... Army, graduated in 1963 with a bachelor's degree in Slaviclanguages and literature; and Marie Harf, senior advisor for strategic communications to the secretary of state, graduated in 2003 with honors with a bachelor's degree in political science; both from the College of Arts and Sciences....
linguistic, literary, language teaching / learning, and translation studies of Romance, Germanic, Slaviclanguages, development of intercultural competence and its links with language teaching / learning, as well as the issues of New Generation and language projects....