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Guess the Slavic language!
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
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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 alph
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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
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[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
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Polish and Slavic languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
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Polish vs Ukrainian: slavic languages battle
Polish and Ukrainian: how similar it is? You can compare two slavic langauges and decide by yourself!
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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 Ru
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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 a
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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)
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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 l
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Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
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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)
-
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...
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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, Es
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Are Some Languages Easier To Learn Than Others?
I often get asked questions like: ‘Which is easier to learn language a or language b?’ or variations of that such as ‘How long will it take me to learn xxx?’
Today I am going to talk about whether some languages are easier to learn than others.
The short answer is: Yes, some languages are easier to learn than others, but it all depends… It depends on the languages you already know, as well as
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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) com
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Macedonian Language
http://davidsbeenhere.com In this language episode, world traveler David Hoffmann sits down with Kate in the city of Bitola to show us what the Macedonian language sounds like. For those of you who don’t know about Macedonian, it is a South Slavic language spoken by about 2 million people. If you’re thinking it sounds similar to Bulgarian you’re right. Bulgarian is its closest dialect. Here, Kate
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European languages (families) TV fragments
Made on request - Europe language families 00:00 Greece; 00:30 South-Slavic languages (Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia, Serbia) 2:46 Basque (l...
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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.
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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
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Центр польского языка и культуры в Киеве - Slavic Languages Center
Slavic Languages Center в Киеве предлагает обучение в Польше
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MLP FiM- Braeburn- Slavic Languages
0:00 Polish 0:13 Czech 0:27 Russian
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is copyright by Hasbro
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Czech Basics 004 - What is Verbal Aspect?
Verbal Aspect (Perfective vs Imperfective) is one of the hardest things to grasp in Slavic languages. Many people give up. Here I do the best I can to explai...
Guess the Slavic language!
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-U...
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
wn.com/Guess The Slavic Language
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
- published: 15 Aug 2014
- views: 12006
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 sam...
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
wn.com/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
- published: 05 Oct 2014
- views: 16
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-russ...
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
wn.com/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
- published: 30 Jan 2015
- views: 4638
[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 - ...
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
wn.com/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
- published: 29 Sep 2014
- views: 12
Polish and Slavic languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q....
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
wn.com/Polish And Slavic Languages
Video Response to Feechy Steve Kaufman's Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCkUSak5JE&feature;=mh_lolz&list;=FLbRaUB7Hfe3clmKqqj8Nm1Q.
Polish vs Ukrainian: slavic languages battle
Polish and Ukrainian: how similar it is? You can compare two slavic langauges and decide by yourself!...
Polish and Ukrainian: how similar it is? You can compare two slavic langauges and decide by yourself!
wn.com/Polish Vs Ukrainian Slavic Languages Battle
Polish and Ukrainian: how similar it is? You can compare two slavic langauges and decide by yourself!
- published: 04 Oct 2015
- views: 131
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 -- ...
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
wn.com/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
- 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 ...
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.
wn.com/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.
- published: 22 Apr 2014
- views: 317
Cases in Slavic Languages
Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovenian, Ukrainian etc.
Nominative - naming a thing, the initial form;
Genitive - absence, possession, part of; of
Accusative - direc...
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)
wn.com/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)
- published: 13 May 2014
- views: 487
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 possibl...
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!
wn.com/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 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!
- published: 11 Jul 2014
- views: 85
Ukrainian, Czech and Russian: months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months....
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
wn.com/Ukrainian, Czech And Russian Months
Difference in 3 slavic languages: compareness od months.
- published: 12 Feb 2015
- views: 291
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)...
Research based on: wspanialarzeczpospolita.pl
http://pl.scribd.com/doc/14180564/INDO-ARYAN-AND-SLAVIC-LINGUISTIC-AFFINITIES
Vedas=wiedza (knowledge)
wn.com/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)
- published: 17 Apr 2015
- views: 206
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......
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...
wn.com/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...
- published: 10 Mar 2014
- views: 2022
-
author: Audiopedia
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 ...
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)
wn.com/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)
- published: 29 Sep 2013
- views: 142524
Are Some Languages Easier To Learn Than Others?
I often get asked questions like: ‘Which is easier to learn language a or language b?’ or variations of that such as ‘How long will it take me to learn xxx?’
...
I often get asked questions like: ‘Which is easier to learn language a or language b?’ or variations of that such as ‘How long will it take me to learn xxx?’
Today I am going to talk about whether some languages are easier to learn than others.
The short answer is: Yes, some languages are easier to learn than others, but it all depends… It depends on the languages you already know, as well as your interest and motivation in learning the new language.
I studied Korean before I studied Russian, Czech, Ukrainian (and Romanian, which I only did for two months). I spent 6 months on Korean before we had it on LingQ. I was listening to it for an hour or more every day, bought lots of books etc. I later went through another bout of Korean language learning later on when it became a supported language on LingQ.
I understand 95% Russian, 85% Czech, Ukrainian and even Romanian, which I, like previously mentioned, only spent 2 months on. No matter how long I have spent on learning Korean, there is no question in my mind that I understand all these languages much better than Korean.
Why?
There are a number of reasons: Once I had put a lot of time into Russian, Czech became a lot easier, and so did Ukrainian. I have looked briefly at Polish and think it’ll be a piece of cake due to my knowledge of the other Slavic languages.
Romanian is also easy to learn, as 70% of the words are similar to Italian words, the alphabet is the same, the pronunciation is similar and the rest of the language has Slavic roots, so again, it was easy for me to learn.
Korean, even though 50% of the vocabulary is close to Chinese, it is not immediately obvious what those words are because the pronunciation is very different. A number of things make Korean difficult, but the thing I have found most difficult is that the material that I can find to motivate me is very limited; there isn’t much interesting content to read. The interesting stuff is very difficult, the easy stuff is of no interest to me and there hasn’t been any sort of urgency or anything that’s driving me towards that particular language. However I am going to visit Korea in March and that may turn things around.
To summarize: Yes, there are languages that are easier to learn than others, depending on the languages you already know, your opportunity, your motivation, and what other stimuli there might be.
It is therefore difficult for me to answer questions like: ‘How long it takes to learn a language’ or ‘Which language should I learn’ as it entirely up to the individual and their situation.
wn.com/Are Some Languages Easier To Learn Than Others
I often get asked questions like: ‘Which is easier to learn language a or language b?’ or variations of that such as ‘How long will it take me to learn xxx?’
Today I am going to talk about whether some languages are easier to learn than others.
The short answer is: Yes, some languages are easier to learn than others, but it all depends… It depends on the languages you already know, as well as your interest and motivation in learning the new language.
I studied Korean before I studied Russian, Czech, Ukrainian (and Romanian, which I only did for two months). I spent 6 months on Korean before we had it on LingQ. I was listening to it for an hour or more every day, bought lots of books etc. I later went through another bout of Korean language learning later on when it became a supported language on LingQ.
I understand 95% Russian, 85% Czech, Ukrainian and even Romanian, which I, like previously mentioned, only spent 2 months on. No matter how long I have spent on learning Korean, there is no question in my mind that I understand all these languages much better than Korean.
Why?
There are a number of reasons: Once I had put a lot of time into Russian, Czech became a lot easier, and so did Ukrainian. I have looked briefly at Polish and think it’ll be a piece of cake due to my knowledge of the other Slavic languages.
Romanian is also easy to learn, as 70% of the words are similar to Italian words, the alphabet is the same, the pronunciation is similar and the rest of the language has Slavic roots, so again, it was easy for me to learn.
Korean, even though 50% of the vocabulary is close to Chinese, it is not immediately obvious what those words are because the pronunciation is very different. A number of things make Korean difficult, but the thing I have found most difficult is that the material that I can find to motivate me is very limited; there isn’t much interesting content to read. The interesting stuff is very difficult, the easy stuff is of no interest to me and there hasn’t been any sort of urgency or anything that’s driving me towards that particular language. However I am going to visit Korea in March and that may turn things around.
To summarize: Yes, there are languages that are easier to learn than others, depending on the languages you already know, your opportunity, your motivation, and what other stimuli there might be.
It is therefore difficult for me to answer questions like: ‘How long it takes to learn a language’ or ‘Which language should I learn’ as it entirely up to the individual and their situation.
- published: 08 Jan 2015
- views: 10
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 se...
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!
wn.com/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!
- published: 28 Sep 2014
- views: 4273
Macedonian Language
http://davidsbeenhere.com In this language episode, world traveler David Hoffmann sits down with Kate in the city of Bitola to show us what the Macedonian langu...
http://davidsbeenhere.com In this language episode, world traveler David Hoffmann sits down with Kate in the city of Bitola to show us what the Macedonian language sounds like. For those of you who don’t know about Macedonian, it is a South Slavic language spoken by about 2 million people. If you’re thinking it sounds similar to Bulgarian you’re right. Bulgarian is its closest dialect. Here, Kate and David go over some common words in English then in Macedonian to give you a taste for what it sounds like. If you’re headed to Macedonia, we encourage you to learn some of these frequently spoken words to help you meet new people and show them you’ve made the effort to learn some of the local words (although you’ll find that there are many English speakers throughout the country). We hope you enjoy this intro to the Macedonian language. Special thanks to Kate for participating in the video and to our sponsors, XShot and Macedonia Timeless. Vi blagodarime za glendanje!
wn.com/Macedonian Language
http://davidsbeenhere.com In this language episode, world traveler David Hoffmann sits down with Kate in the city of Bitola to show us what the Macedonian language sounds like. For those of you who don’t know about Macedonian, it is a South Slavic language spoken by about 2 million people. If you’re thinking it sounds similar to Bulgarian you’re right. Bulgarian is its closest dialect. Here, Kate and David go over some common words in English then in Macedonian to give you a taste for what it sounds like. If you’re headed to Macedonia, we encourage you to learn some of these frequently spoken words to help you meet new people and show them you’ve made the effort to learn some of the local words (although you’ll find that there are many English speakers throughout the country). We hope you enjoy this intro to the Macedonian language. Special thanks to Kate for participating in the video and to our sponsors, XShot and Macedonia Timeless. Vi blagodarime za glendanje!
- published: 25 Sep 2015
- views: 140
European languages (families) TV fragments
Made on request - Europe language families 00:00 Greece; 00:30 South-Slavic languages (Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia, Serbia) 2:46 Basque (l......
Made on request - Europe language families 00:00 Greece; 00:30 South-Slavic languages (Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia, Serbia) 2:46 Basque (l...
wn.com/European Languages (Families) Tv Fragments
Made on request - Europe language families 00:00 Greece; 00:30 South-Slavic languages (Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia, Serbia) 2:46 Basque (l...
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 Buturlin...
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.
wn.com/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.
- published: 22 Oct 2014
- views: 272
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.ht...
Practical tips for organizing your language learning before going abroad.
Good ressource for intermediate Russian learners: http://russianpodcast.eu/podcasts.html
wn.com/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
- published: 28 Nov 2014
- views: 95
Центр польского языка и культуры в Киеве - Slavic Languages Center
Slavic Languages Center в Киеве предлагает обучение в Польше...
Slavic Languages Center в Киеве предлагает обучение в Польше
wn.com/Центр Польского Языка И Культуры В Киеве Slavic Languages Center
Slavic Languages Center в Киеве предлагает обучение в Польше
- published: 15 Aug 2013
- views: 38
MLP FiM- Braeburn- Slavic Languages
0:00 Polish 0:13 Czech 0:27 Russian
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is copyright by Hasbro...
0:00 Polish 0:13 Czech 0:27 Russian
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is copyright by Hasbro
wn.com/Mlp Fim Braeburn Slavic Languages
0:00 Polish 0:13 Czech 0:27 Russian
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is copyright by Hasbro
- published: 12 May 2015
- views: 16
Czech Basics 004 - What is Verbal Aspect?
Verbal Aspect (Perfective vs Imperfective) is one of the hardest things to grasp in Slavic languages. Many people give up. Here I do the best I can to explai......
Verbal Aspect (Perfective vs Imperfective) is one of the hardest things to grasp in Slavic languages. Many people give up. Here I do the best I can to explai...
wn.com/Czech Basics 004 What Is Verbal Aspect
Verbal Aspect (Perfective vs Imperfective) is one of the hardest things to grasp in Slavic languages. Many people give up. Here I do the best I can to explai...