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Bahador Alast
Canada
Registrace 21. 08. 2013
In a divided world, people come closer together through what they have in common linguistically and culturally. We are all unique in our own ways, but as humans, we all have something in common. A simple cultural exchange can go a long way and have a lasting impact on the global community.
Contact us on Instagram if you'd like to take part in a future video: BahadorAlast
Contact us on Instagram if you'd like to take part in a future video: BahadorAlast
How Learning a Language Impacts One's Identity (Persian Conversation Between Non-Native Speakers)
A Mexican, an American, a Swede, and a Korean talk about how learning Persian impacted their identity
Does learning the Persian language impact one's identity and character? In today's video, we find out by talking to four individuals who have learned to speak Persian, and adopted certain cultural elements in the process. I am joined by Noori, from South Korea, Claire, from the United States who is of Belgian descent, Anton, from Sweden, and Alfredo, from the United States who is of Mexican and Salvadoran descent, as I ask about them about the impact of learning Persian on their identity, as well as a series of other questions
آیا یادگیری زبان فارسی بر هویت و شخصیت فرد تأثیر می گذارد؟ در ویدیوی امروز با نوری از کره جنوبی، کلر از آمریکا که اصالتا بلژیکیه، آنتون از سوئد و آلفردو از آمریکا که اصالتاً مکزیکی و سالوادوریه در مورد این موضوع صحبت می کنم
Here's a link to one of Noori's Sama performances: czcams.com/video/Z6RBXT2yCz0/video.htmlsi=LYbicxG5Slt-pFlH
If you would like to participate in a future video, be sure to follow and message me on Instagram: bahadoralast
The Persian language has many different accents and dialects, spoken primarily in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan, a significant percentage of the population in Uzbekistan, as well as by minorities who are native to other countries across Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, and the Caucasus. Although some people consider "Farsi" to be the term for the Iranian variety, the fact is that "Farsi" or "Parsi" is the endonym for the Persian language, and the term is natively used to refer to the language among all Persian speakers, not only Iranians. The terms "Dari" and "Tajik" are more often used by non-Persian speakers than Persian speakers themselves, who, regardless of their country, use the endonym Farsi or Parsi when speaking their language.
When talking about the Tajik variety of Persian, and the Persian language in Central Asia, it's vital to mention the Samanids (سامانیان), an empire that was established by the descendants of Saman Khoda, a wealthy Iranian Zoroastrian noble who converted to Islam. The Samanid Empire is part of the Iranian Intermezzo, which saw the creation of a Persianate culture and identity that brought the Persian language and traditions into the fold of the Islamic world. Ferdowsi and Rudaki were both born and lived during the Samanian era. Ferdowsi died after the collapse of the Samanian under the Ghaznavids, while Rudaki lived his whole life under the Samanids. Samanids revived the Persian language and culture more than the Buyids and the Saffarids, and despite being Sunni Muslims, they considered themselves to be descendants of the Sasanian Empire and took pride in having Zoroastrian ancestors. During the Samanid era in the 9th and 10th centuries, there was a large amount of growth in Persian literature, mostly in poetry, which expanded across Central Asia.
The Persian language is classified as one of the Western Iranian languages, and has strongly influenced many different languages, including numerous Turkic languages, as well as well as Armenian, Georgian, and many languages in the Indian subcontinent.
Does learning the Persian language impact one's identity and character? In today's video, we find out by talking to four individuals who have learned to speak Persian, and adopted certain cultural elements in the process. I am joined by Noori, from South Korea, Claire, from the United States who is of Belgian descent, Anton, from Sweden, and Alfredo, from the United States who is of Mexican and Salvadoran descent, as I ask about them about the impact of learning Persian on their identity, as well as a series of other questions
آیا یادگیری زبان فارسی بر هویت و شخصیت فرد تأثیر می گذارد؟ در ویدیوی امروز با نوری از کره جنوبی، کلر از آمریکا که اصالتا بلژیکیه، آنتون از سوئد و آلفردو از آمریکا که اصالتاً مکزیکی و سالوادوریه در مورد این موضوع صحبت می کنم
Here's a link to one of Noori's Sama performances: czcams.com/video/Z6RBXT2yCz0/video.htmlsi=LYbicxG5Slt-pFlH
If you would like to participate in a future video, be sure to follow and message me on Instagram: bahadoralast
The Persian language has many different accents and dialects, spoken primarily in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan, a significant percentage of the population in Uzbekistan, as well as by minorities who are native to other countries across Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, and the Caucasus. Although some people consider "Farsi" to be the term for the Iranian variety, the fact is that "Farsi" or "Parsi" is the endonym for the Persian language, and the term is natively used to refer to the language among all Persian speakers, not only Iranians. The terms "Dari" and "Tajik" are more often used by non-Persian speakers than Persian speakers themselves, who, regardless of their country, use the endonym Farsi or Parsi when speaking their language.
When talking about the Tajik variety of Persian, and the Persian language in Central Asia, it's vital to mention the Samanids (سامانیان), an empire that was established by the descendants of Saman Khoda, a wealthy Iranian Zoroastrian noble who converted to Islam. The Samanid Empire is part of the Iranian Intermezzo, which saw the creation of a Persianate culture and identity that brought the Persian language and traditions into the fold of the Islamic world. Ferdowsi and Rudaki were both born and lived during the Samanian era. Ferdowsi died after the collapse of the Samanian under the Ghaznavids, while Rudaki lived his whole life under the Samanids. Samanids revived the Persian language and culture more than the Buyids and the Saffarids, and despite being Sunni Muslims, they considered themselves to be descendants of the Sasanian Empire and took pride in having Zoroastrian ancestors. During the Samanid era in the 9th and 10th centuries, there was a large amount of growth in Persian literature, mostly in poetry, which expanded across Central Asia.
The Persian language is classified as one of the Western Iranian languages, and has strongly influenced many different languages, including numerous Turkic languages, as well as well as Armenian, Georgian, and many languages in the Indian subcontinent.
zhlédnutí: 9 144
Video
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zhlédnutí 15KPřed 14 dny
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zhlédnutí 8KPřed měsícem
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zhlédnutí 12KPřed měsícem
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zhlédnutí 2,8KPřed 2 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 27KPřed 2 měsíci
In today's video, I am joined by Chiara, Naiyer, Eszter, and Shuce, from Italy, India, Hungary, and China, respectively, who have all learned to speak Persian. We'll have a discussion about their journey to learning the language, along with a series of questions I have. شرکت کننده های این ویدیو اهل ایتالیا، هند، مجارستان و چین هستند. ویدیو رو تماشا کنید و ببینید که چطور با همدیگر به فارسی صحبت ...
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zhlédnutí 38KPřed 2 měsíci
Ottoman Turkish (لسان عثمانى) was the form of Turkish that was spoken during the time of the Ottoman Empire. In comparison to modern Turkish, the Ottoman era language contained a lot more Arabic and Persian words, with some estimates putting the use of Arabic and Persian vocabulary as high as 88% of the Ottoman vocabulary in some texts. In this video we take a look at how well modern Turkish sp...
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zhlédnutí 18KPřed 2 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 15KPřed 3 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 8KPřed 3 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 83KPřed 3 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 112KPřed 4 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 5KPřed 4 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 176KPřed 5 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 47KPřed 5 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 51KPřed 6 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 23KPřed 7 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 15KPřed 7 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 22KPřed 8 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 1,7MPřed 8 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 9KPřed 8 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 12KPřed 9 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 12KPřed 9 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 15KPřed 10 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 26KPřed 10 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 9KPřed 10 měsíci
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zhlédnutí 45KPřed 11 měsíci
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I am Tajik, and that proverb made me laugh so hard because😂😂😂😂 it is true
the arabic girl has more turkish and god knows what nationaty DNA in her, that she'll ever know or accept. btw American's are so socially awkwardly cringe its insane.
درود القایی که مکزیکی است عالیترین وسوئدی باز عالیتر از همه است❤❤❤
Most north indian words especially hindi has most Persian words.. Which connects to all of the all middle east countries languages
kasheer🍁
sanskrit & serbo-croatian languages are more similar than any other language in the world, Sanskrit has words around 30-40% of the serbo-croatian language,it is still in 2024 Sanskrit have serbo-croatian words.
Sanskrit ko sabhi language ki janani mana gya he 🎉
Almost all words are same in all four languages.
Is for those videos that i watch CZcams
vāyú sounds like waaien in dutch.
♥
Dohni is boat in Tamil and Baldi is bucket in Sinhala, Koppa is eating plate in Tamil. Tamils may have come from horn of Africa and settled in Southern India and Sri Lanka by Dohni in the ancient time.
Alfredo is a firend of mine. I'm very glad to see you here. long time no see!
Serbian: j = y ž = French j Dim - smoke San - dream Oganj - fire Ko - who Med - honey Tvoj - your Dan - day Živeti - to live
you can just say karnool. it's very popular place in andhra. iam from tamilnadu
Did this similarity come from the Yamnaya language?
Чему удивляться? Литовцы- славяне, язык используют старославянский, от которого и произошёл санскрит. Много похожих с санскритом слов вы найдёте в других славянских языках, в частности в русском.
In proper Romanian we would adjectivise it on the spot, almost instinctively and ask you „Al cui ești tu, băi bahadorule, bă?”. N-oi fi tu de-al lui Dariu al lui Istaspe?
Çıma tu qala zimane Kurdi nake?
Some of these words are similar to DARI and PASHTOON as well. Very interesting
Please coul you explain to me why those languages are similar? 😮
The Maltese People are origin ethnically Arabs!!! But they are forcibly europeanized and catholicized!! Most form the British empire! They are no longer allowed to be and practice Arabic Christian! And were raised European Christian! The Order of Malta gave Malta the artificial name. They are originally our Christian Arab brothers!
The Maltese People are origin ethnically Arabs!!! But they are forcibly europeanized and catholicized!! Most form the British empire! They are no longer allowed to be and practice Arabic Christian! And were raised European Christian! The Order of Malta gave Malta the artificial name. They are originally our Christian Arab brothers!
и "татар", и "узбек", и " турк" это одни из бывших имен казахского народа. казахи в разные периоды истории называли себя по разному. татары раньше называли себя булгарами, турки османлы, а узбеки карлуками
همه شما شگفت انگیزید! خیلی عالی بود🙌👏
Oroma❤❤❤
Am a malayali can write and read. Four languages. Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi, English . Can speak in Arabic.. can't write it. And Some words in urdu also ..
Portugiese: (dántas)= dente... (ká)= quem... (vayú)= vento... (devá)= deus...
Malayali boy you selected. not that much upto the mark..
Tamil and malayalam 70% Malayalam and Kannada 45%
I am a native speaker of Polish, and I know German and also Czech, Slovak, and Russian, but it still does not really help a lot. I just get a lot of random words out of the Yiddish text, mostly where they are identical with German. Besides, the Yiddish text contains too many hermetic Hebrew words and specific expressions. I mostly understand the topic (about shopping, or about food) but not really the whole sentence. Still, I understood 'chainik';)
agni in polish it would be ogien ! before i heard the translation i understood it is incredible
Greetings from Tatarstan❤Tatarstannan sələmlər
J apprends le grec ancien et votre cours m aide beaucoup merci beaucoup
Found some similarities with slovenian language as well dhuma - dim; svapna - sanje; agni - ogenj (ognji for plural); ka - kaj, kak, kakšen, kateri, kako; vayu - veter; tava - tvoje; dina - dan; jivati - živeti; some other words that I have found online doing a quick search, the similarities are striking! bhaga - bog sveta - svetla griva - griva osta - usta matr - mater jnana - znana buddga - buden isva - vsa madhja - med pena - pena kut - kot tamas - tema nagna - naga muska - moška prcchat - pričati pac - pekel sila - sila plavate - plavati mada - med lipyate - lepite megha - megla
In Persian use "Afarin" should be used! , Barikalla, is Arabic!
Namm´e man, should say1 Naam = Name !
Namm-e man, should say! Naam = name!
Vaalga tamil❤❤❤❤
Namaskar Madam, is your surname Ganguly!!
احسنت براین همه پشتکار و همت هر موقع از یادگیری یک زبان خارجی نا امید شدید برگردید و این دست ویدیوها رو ببینید و دوباره با جدیت بیشتر ادامه بدید
Beautiful video and really encouraging me to study and become better at Farsi.
Lkhmis wslt lmalta bech nzour ommi, li sana ou nes ma jitch l malta mnin ja l COVID. O khti t3ich f Manchester m3a rajel dialha ou wledha. Khti tekhdem f ministery ta3 sociale, 3ndha sbah w9t ou mchina fterna f cafe khdina 2 cappucino ou khdina chi haja manaklo Mary makhdatsh chi haja hitesh deja klat f lkhdma (chogh ). I understand 90% of that 😂
gjegje eshte i gjuhes shqipe origjinale DAkort
That’s not Iran flag anymore, stop insulting our intelligence
So impressive. Both have deep knowledge of the languages and communication methodology of tough words in simple way is amazing.
1:58 it's not double N... Armenian grammar says that's its's 1 n - ինը
1:10 we too call plums as aloocha or aloo bukhara
Heyy I am very Fluent in Punjabiii and if you want a Person who can speak Punjabi or want anyy help.... I'll be veryyy happy to help
بچه ها همه باحالید دمتون گرم👏👏👏