Anglish - What if English Were 100% Germanic?

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  • čas přidán 5. 12. 2016
  • Here's a little video about a something that caught my interest recently: Anglish, a new "pure" Germanic variety of English with all of its non-Germanic vocabulary removed and replaced by Germanic words. Anglish isn't a big movement as far as I know, but it's interesting! Learn more about it at anglish.wikia.com
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    Music: "Lord of the Land" by Kevin Macleod. http//incompetech.com
    Outro music: "Foundation" by Vibe Tracks.

Komentáře • 17K

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  Před 9 měsíci +43

    Hi, everyone! I hope you like the video.
    If you're learning a new language, try the world-famous *Pimsleur method* in its new-and-improved subscription format: ► imp.i271380.net/langfocus ► *Free trial - Use my link to gain access*
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    • @Yusuketh443
      @Yusuketh443 Před měsícem

      no reply after 7 month

    • @gloups-pf4vq
      @gloups-pf4vq Před měsícem

      language, famous, method , improved, subscription, format:, are french strange germanic language !!!

  • @GhostOfArtBell0935
    @GhostOfArtBell0935 Před 3 lety +2411

    Virign Greek: Theology
    Chad Anglish: *G O D L O R E*

    • @mobinmirshekari4884
      @mobinmirshekari4884 Před 2 lety +223

      Godknowledgekraft !!

    • @risyanthbalaji805
      @risyanthbalaji805 Před 2 lety +72

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 chad German

    • @mobinmirshekari4884
      @mobinmirshekari4884 Před 2 lety +8

      @@risyanthbalaji805 Really ?

    • @risyanthbalaji805
      @risyanthbalaji805 Před 2 lety +48

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 sounded like German. And also English is west Germanic language.

    • @SeasideDetective2
      @SeasideDetective2 Před 2 lety +63

      What's ironic is that Shakespearean drama is thought of as being old-fashioned, but Shakespeare himself probably did more than any other single person to Latinize our language. He coined many new words from Latin roots, some of which are still popular and some of which never caught on at all. And that's one of the reasons why "Renaissance fairs" annoy me when they depict English speakers of the period as just as antiquated and backward as they'd been in the Dark Ages. (Or, better yet, why can't those fairs ever depict Italy rather than England? Then we wouldn't have people conflating the medieval and Renaissance eras.)

  • @kaylagaerte4229
    @kaylagaerte4229 Před 4 lety +5708

    As someone who speaks both English and German this felt like them both fighting for my attention at once lol

    • @karlosthejackel69
      @karlosthejackel69 Před 3 lety +106

      @Kayla Gaerte If you learned old English, would you have 3 languages or just 1?

    • @abineshthangasamy6327
      @abineshthangasamy6327 Před 3 lety +172

      @@karlosthejackel69 I'd say 3 languages because the grammar of Old English is just so different than modern English, what with the case system and all.

    • @nothernstar2576
      @nothernstar2576 Před 3 lety +77

      @@abineshthangasamy6327 it would be closer to German since the 4 case germanic system is still preserved there as well as in other Germanic languages

    • @lizonyuh2290
      @lizonyuh2290 Před 3 lety +7

      Same

    • @larabijkerk7848
      @larabijkerk7848 Před 3 lety +42

      Old English is in my opinion more like Dutch than German so I would say three languages

  • @murgel2006
    @murgel2006 Před 2 lety +696

    Funny, I'm German and due to my background I had no problem at all to read and understand the "Anglish" sentences instantly, they did not feel weird, just out of date, more traditional, classic.

    • @Steve-zc9ht
      @Steve-zc9ht Před 2 lety +53

      This is how Americans imagine fancy British people sound lmao 😂 however even though English is my native language this anglish version of English made the language only 70% mutually intelligible for me I'm way to use to romance words.

    • @seaneustace9838
      @seaneustace9838 Před rokem +8

      I think of the king James Bible and it’s writing and I always thought that that would sound more Germanic, I thought that its beauty was coming from the old English, but apparently it’s beauty comes from the Latin.

    • @kitkatsinAlaska
      @kitkatsinAlaska Před rokem +1

      Englisc

    • @benanjerris6744
      @benanjerris6744 Před rokem +2

      So I suppose you're from Saxony, Hessen or Thüringen?

    • @priyapepsi
      @priyapepsi Před rokem

      @@benanjerris6744 cringe name.

  • @TheAnglishTimes
    @TheAnglishTimes Před 2 lety +2646

    I fully back this undertaking.

    • @seaneustace9838
      @seaneustace9838 Před rokem +27

      Being of Irish dissent I back at also but only for the English, that Ohta teach them a lesson.

    • @aliciavivi2147
      @aliciavivi2147 Před rokem +7

      Just found your website now I see you here minutes later lmao

    • @TheAnglishTimes
      @TheAnglishTimes Před rokem +5

      @@aliciavivi2147 Haha cool.

    • @foulmercy8095
      @foulmercy8095 Před rokem +7

      Really love seeing how devoted the people of niche topics can be

    • @anglosaxon4571
      @anglosaxon4571 Před rokem +8

      @@seaneustace9838 As an Englishman, I fully back Anglish, so take that Irishman.

  • @mikeyhamato2012
    @mikeyhamato2012 Před 4 lety +3173

    As a native German speaker, I sometimes accidentally say "handshoe" instead of "glove".

    • @herrbailey2118
      @herrbailey2118 Před 4 lety +144

      Mindestens verstehen sie wohl dich

    • @Dai_Abdurrahman
      @Dai_Abdurrahman Před 3 lety +47

      Keep going! ^^

    • @karlosthejackel69
      @karlosthejackel69 Před 3 lety +81

      I’d love to know what dark place Germans go to when very drunk!

    • @WereDictionary
      @WereDictionary Před 3 lety +242

      @@karlosthejackel69 we did that twice but nobody liked it

    • @karlosthejackel69
      @karlosthejackel69 Před 3 lety +21

      @WereDictionary It’s starting to look like you were right all along!

  • @WayneSpillett
    @WayneSpillett Před 3 lety +3557

    I can't remember who said this, but it's the best linguistic comment about English ever:
    "English doesn't borrow from other languages, it follows them into dark alleys, knocks them to the ground and rifles through their pockets for loose grammar and vocabulary!"

    • @ErykaSoleil
      @ErykaSoleil Před 3 lety +335

      Oh, I love it! 😂 I saw a CZcams comment once that said something like, "English isn't a language, it's three languages stacked in a trench coat pretending to be a single language."

    • @duncanwalduck7715
      @duncanwalduck7715 Před 3 lety +45

      I found a linguistic channel on CZcams called RobWords. Pun intended, I'm sure.

    • @jumhed994
      @jumhed994 Před 3 lety +51

      Sounds like the kind of thing Terry Pratchett would've said.

    • @vandanrauthan5328
      @vandanrauthan5328 Před 3 lety +26

      True for India, jail, loot, jungle came from hindustani

    • @anthony2384
      @anthony2384 Před 2 lety +5

      That’s Tom Scott innit?

  • @melvingroenewold7366
    @melvingroenewold7366 Před 2 lety +390

    As a dutch person i can see why dutch is the bridge between english and german as most of these sentences would work for us

  • @RobertBrockmann
    @RobertBrockmann Před 2 lety +776

    Speaking with a Berlin taxi driver once, who spoke six languages, including Esperanto, he said: "After all, what is English if not the pop version of German?"

    • @aleajactaest7242
      @aleajactaest7242 Před 2 lety +2

      ENGLISH: After a terrible accident, an ambulance arrived within six minutes to evacuate the victims to the morgue.
      FRENCH: Après un terrible accident, une ambulance arriva en six minutes pour évacuer les victimes à la morgue.
      GERMAN: Nach einem schrecklichen Unfall traf innerhalb von sechs Minuten ein Krankenwagen ein, um die Opfer ins Leichenschauhaus zu evakuieren.

    • @youssouferfromaids825
      @youssouferfromaids825 Před rokem +2

      Hope u gave him a happy ending

    • @Lampchuanungang
      @Lampchuanungang Před rokem +16

      The idea is good, sounds better imagine if anglish combines afrikaans, dutch, alsatian, low german, frisian, faroese, flemish, krio , norwegian, icelandic ,yola, limburguish ,tweentie,swedish, danish , old english , langobaric gothic. Woooowww seductive lang🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🎻🍾🌎🌐🗺👍👍🥂

    • @stephenmellor3572
      @stephenmellor3572 Před rokem +5

      Comment of the year!

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 Před 9 měsíci +13

      I used to know a German gentleman who once said ( and I quote) “ English is just a dialect of German”. Delivered in a thick German accent.

  • @TheKnaeckebrot
    @TheKnaeckebrot Před 5 lety +6257

    It sounds like a german forgot some vocabulary and just translated some stuff directly :D

    • @cddcdd7927
      @cddcdd7927 Před 5 lety +415

      Yes, as German has much less foreign influences, it seems to be the easiest way. Abendessen = Evening eating (dinner). Schweinefleisch -> swine flesh (pork) etc

    • @thurianwanderer
      @thurianwanderer Před 5 lety +110

      I had the sore same thought, when I first seeked* for Anglish. Now I may (am able to) outthrutch (Germ. ausdrücken = to express, to communicate), what I want to say, without having to sorrow and to wring with my inwit (consciousness).
      * = Besides the little mistake I made in blindly applying the transistive verb "to express (something)" over the broad spectre of more and less related terms describing the action of communication. I followed a straight word-for-word pattern from German, therefore, I assumed a rather weak class 2 Ind. preterite "suchen > suchte" ( -suohheta- but suohta) by mingling var. weak classes machen > machte (made), lachen > lachte (laughed).
      Overall, considering the quite meaningless and silly nature of my actual post, it's not worth a damn.

    • @RayTC
      @RayTC Před 5 lety +269

      german here too, i use anglish when i forget the english word, most people usually understand it

    • @frogstereighteeng5499
      @frogstereighteeng5499 Před 5 lety +75

      A lot of the words that were new were really similiar to the dutch equivalent, underwarp - onderwerp, stuff - stuff, etc..

    • @baernackl
      @baernackl Před 5 lety +66

      True in some cases, but german has loads of latin loanwords that you maybe wont recognise directly, we would also have to borrow english words to germanize. Like Fenster- Windauge or go back from Schwimmbecken to Schwimm(p)fuhl, which is far more like english swimming pool . Interesting definately.

  • @baonkang5990
    @baonkang5990 Před 4 lety +3029

    Can you tell me about The universe?
    Anglish scientist: *STUFF*

    • @jay-cg8ri
      @jay-cg8ri Před 4 lety +34

      baon kang well, you’re not wrong

    • @DerPauleglot2nd
      @DerPauleglot2nd Před 4 lety +159

      German scientist: STOFF

    • @SammaelGwyn
      @SammaelGwyn Před 4 lety +49

      You'd actually say "The All" from German "Das All" or you could say "The Oneturn"

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Před 4 lety +19

      All stuff?

    • @turmuthoer
      @turmuthoer Před 4 lety +27

      Rick Grimes in a lab coat: *THANGS*

  • @fiscomoedjito4096
    @fiscomoedjito4096 Před 2 lety +110

    let me type the equivalence between Anglish and German in this video, to prove this:
    1:37 Rainshade = Regenschirm
    2:43 Showplayer = Schauspieler
    2:43 Farseeer = Fernseher
    3:06 Witship = Wissenschaft
    3:09 Outland = Ausland
    3:13 Forlaid = Vorlegen
    How mindblowing! Any opinions?

    • @thedarklord7354
      @thedarklord7354 Před rokem +5

      Nice job
      English, although, is an indoeuropean language, and still has cognates in latin even if we'd use germanic words: "show" is cognate with latin "cauēre", "wit" with "uidēre", "far" with "pro", "see" with "sequi", "out" with "usque, ut", "rain" with "rigāre", and so on

    • @alexlishinski9241
      @alexlishinski9241 Před rokem +6

      Forlaid would be cognate to verlegen, and also, relatedly, der Verlag.

    • @RichardWagnerEnjoyer
      @RichardWagnerEnjoyer Před rokem +7

      Another one would be Ancestor. In Anglish its Forekind (although Forefather is probably used) in German, its Vorfahr. Not very different from Forefather.

  • @LURTZcz
    @LURTZcz Před 2 lety +195

    I am Czech, and in czech we historically had language purism movement in 19th century. It was not successful, and think It shares the same issue with Anglish; going too far by trying to eliminate ALL loanwords. I think that if anyone really wants to do something like this, they should aim for 20/80. Reintroduce the words that are obscure or archaic (alltogether or in some if its meanings), but do not to replace words that would need to be replaced by newly invented ones.
    It is one thing to exclusively use "need" instead of "require", "stuff" instead of "matter" etc, and completely different thing to try to make people use "ymirstuff" istend of uranium

    • @DraeYHU
      @DraeYHU Před 2 lety +28

      Your suggestion is basically what Anglishers are doing today on Reddit & Discord - slowly introducing old/revived words & seeing how the community handles them, taking one small step at a time.
      The Anglish wiki also has informative articles on other aspects of Old & archaic English. Such as, use of second-person pronouns, umlaut, & revived cases for things like definite & indefinite articles, among others.

    • @jxg1652
      @jxg1652 Před rokem +7

      Very interresting! What were the motives of this language purism movement?
      My first thought would have been to reduce the number of german words and use more slavic vocabulary.... but.... despite Czechia always being historically close to Germany/Germans/Holy Roman Empire/Austria... I never noticed much of a language influence.
      Somehow Czechs say "Ahoj!", which is a german sailor greeting but not really used anywhere on the mainland... so... eeeh?
      So what was it about?

    • @Synths-n-Guitar
      @Synths-n-Guitar Před rokem +1

      @@jxg1652 Am not Czech but I have read Czech History, it was to revive Czech Language which was greatly weakened after the Czechs lost the Battle of White Mountain during 17th century to Hasburgs. Czech language was relegated to Language of lower classes. Prague at one point of German majority speaking city, this change in 18th and 19th century after the revial of Czech Language.

    • @flavoursofsound
      @flavoursofsound Před rokem +13

      @@DraeYHU I’d love to see for example the word “overmorrow” be reintroduced into English, as it’s way more concise than saying “the day after tomorrow”.
      German and Dutch still managed to keep hold of their “übermorgen” and “overmorgen” words respectively.

    • @christopherstein2024
      @christopherstein2024 Před rokem +2

      @@flavoursofsound I am fully with you! Bringing back the old way, while bettering the handling and linking the further folk. I love it and find it hard to believe that such a long word row held on in the speech to begin with.

  • @White_Hare
    @White_Hare Před 4 lety +1663

    "Just a little Waterstuff"
    "Actually dude, it's Hydrogen"
    "That's what I said! Waterstuff!"
    "Uh dude, that would be Hydrogen"
    "That's what I said!"

    • @SisypheanSeas13
      @SisypheanSeas13 Před 4 lety +17

      Not enough likes

    • @mbrusyda9437
      @mbrusyda9437 Před 4 lety +84

      I guess Helium would be Sunstuff, eh..

    • @fairaoarlen
      @fairaoarlen Před 4 lety +104

      We do say Wasserstoff - waterstuff in german. isn't that funny? i never tried to translate it and it sounds hilarious if you think about it 🤣 And you could try this with Oxygen, we call it Sauerstoff sauer=sour

    • @hugrit4027
      @hugrit4027 Před 4 lety +37

      LOL weirdstuff

    • @guguigugu
      @guguigugu Před 4 lety +32

      @@fairaoarlen in serbian the word is vodonik, coming from voda, which means water. so it can also be translated as waterstuff

  • @hhhieronymusbotch
    @hhhieronymusbotch Před 3 lety +1193

    3:25 - Anglish: Making science sound like Norse mythology since 1989

    • @Sam-lm8gi
      @Sam-lm8gi Před 3 lety +48

      Haha, well, the days of the week already sound like Norse mythology, so why not science too?

    • @vadz9733
      @vadz9733 Před 3 lety +10

      Anglo Saxon does not mean Norse.

    • @geoffreydonaldson2984
      @geoffreydonaldson2984 Před 3 lety +30

      @@vadz9733 the Angles, Jutes, and Saxons practiced Norse religion, even if they didn’t speak Norse. Englishmen and Frenchmen don’t speak the same language, but either could practice Christianity.

    • @ulfr-gunnarsson
      @ulfr-gunnarsson Před 3 lety +13

      @@geoffreydonaldson2984 Not really.
      Although the Norse and Anglo-Saxon religions and mythologies are fairly similar, they're still quite different, and similarity of theirs is coming from them descending from Common Germanic (i.e. Proto-Germanic), and ultimately Proto-Indo-European, mythology.

    • @tompatterson1548
      @tompatterson1548 Před 3 lety +2

      @@vadz9733 anglish is split on allowing norse loans.

  • @jameslovelady7751
    @jameslovelady7751 Před rokem +240

    I had a boss who told me it was much easier to say exactly what he meant in English than his native German. The incredibly nuanced vocabulary provided by loan words makes a very flexible language.

    • @seaneustace9838
      @seaneustace9838 Před rokem +20

      One would intuitively think that, one of the German speakers in the comments seems to think not, it would be interesting to read some examples and counter examples of this.

    • @jonyw8851
      @jonyw8851 Před rokem

      or random language

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Před rokem +1

      English is the Jack and master of all trades

    • @Jollofmuncher2000
      @Jollofmuncher2000 Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@ihsahnakerfeldt9280which is why I believe anglish is mostly a bit silly. I think old English sounds cooler then modern but languages evolve and take loan words for a reason. It's not a bad thing and my technical first language Dutch takes a bunch of loan words too

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Jollofmuncher2000 Why is it silly when English does it though?

  • @lensiax9276
    @lensiax9276 Před 2 lety +191

    Recognizing the different influences of English makes me understand why it feels as if English has almost too many words for everything; there’s linguistic overlap for a bunch of words. “Stuff” and “Matter” are used interchangeably here as could be done with the word “Things”. When I learned Spanish, all of these words would often translate to a single word.

    • @SpiritmanProductions
      @SpiritmanProductions Před 2 lety +51

      It's only a disadvantage if you make the mistake of thinking that loose synonyms are not loose at all. (For those who mix up loose and lose, loose means not tight and rhymes with moose.)
      Once you realise that most pairs like stuff and matter, house and home, friendly and amiable, etc. have subtle differences in meaning, you'll see why English can be both richly expressive in poetry and verse, and concise and efficient in the fields of science and technology.

    • @unlikelygamer
      @unlikelygamer Před rokem +27

      @@SpiritmanProductions beautifully written. Like a friend of mine always says, there are no exact synonyms in English.

    • @SpiritmanProductions
      @SpiritmanProductions Před rokem +2

      @@unlikelygamer thanks

    • @thekalamazookid4481
      @thekalamazookid4481 Před rokem +1

      This is a good observation!

    • @reginaldmercer2964
      @reginaldmercer2964 Před rokem +18

      I also noticed that purely Germanic English sounds a bit "lowbrow" compared to using Latin or especially French derived words, which feel more intelligent in conversation. I suspect that's due to the French derived words being introduced by aristocratic classes over the centuries

  • @Adam-tk3cx
    @Adam-tk3cx Před 3 lety +1047

    "Forekin", "bookcraft"
    Wow, this sounds like something from a fantasy novel.

    • @martinprochazka3714
      @martinprochazka3714 Před 3 lety +119

      Just make sure you don't accidentally press "s" after the "e", they are quite close to eachother on the qwerty layout.

    • @antoniocasias5545
      @antoniocasias5545 Před 3 lety +21

      @@martinprochazka3714 Wait What? I don’t under
      *_I GET IT!_*

    • @duncanwalduck7715
      @duncanwalduck7715 Před 3 lety +24

      @@antoniocasias5545 My Bonnie lies over the ocean, my twoskin lies over my three, my threeskin...
      PULL BACK, PULL BACK, OH ......
      Yeah, abjuring the lewdness - Tolkein was a scholar of ancient languages for his day job. Good for the world-building.

    • @antoniocasias5545
      @antoniocasias5545 Před 3 lety

      @@duncanwalduck7715 what??????

    • @duncanwalduck7715
      @duncanwalduck7715 Před 3 lety +9

      @@antoniocasias5545 Yeah, straight up, he was really into his Anglo-Saxon literature: advanced research - even if he made the Elves sound Welsh in the novels.
      [OP mentions the fantasy genre]...
      Oh, you mean the SONG!
      - Just highlighting my confusion on mis-reading the "ancestor" word; and not only mine, it seems.
      (The other could so easily have been "bonkcraft", too: you'll need your British slang for that, I reckon.)
      The tune is given by the first line, quoted from the 'traditional' version - but in the amended version it does begin at "one".

  • @michaelbianchi22
    @michaelbianchi22 Před 6 lety +1540

    This would be a cool way of speaking in a fantasy game.

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 Před 5 lety +59

      Don't they already sort of attempt that in a lot of fantasy games, like the Witcher for example.

    • @jlupus8804
      @jlupus8804 Před 5 lety +51

      I thought they usually go for Shakespearean speak or something

    • @glanni
      @glanni Před 5 lety +5

      JC Fennec thought the same lol

    • @Muvandfarve
      @Muvandfarve Před 5 lety +5

      It is a fantasy game.

    • @vaydaimages
      @vaydaimages Před 5 lety +2

      ..its better than that..

  • @tomgeurken2948
    @tomgeurken2948 Před rokem +82

    As a native Dutch speaker I am actually very thankful to the fact that English contains so many Latin words. It was still easy to learn as the grammar is not that different and provided me with a vocabulary that came in handy when learning Spanish and French 😃

    • @Kitulous
      @Kitulous Před 11 měsíci +5

      i agree
      English being half french helps Russian learners of English because Russian itself has a lot of French influence

    • @OatmealTheCrazy
      @OatmealTheCrazy Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Kitulous It's a Lingua Franca, some might say

    • @CodCodCod999
      @CodCodCod999 Před 10 dny

      Not at all. To me, it's actually very painful to realize that we hav lots of borrowed words from french

  • @rhvreugde
    @rhvreugde Před rokem +27

    This is very interesting.
    I could imagine a science fiction story of a couple hundred years in the future.
    In that future, Earth would have repeatedly failed to establish multi-generational colonies on Mars, primarily because most of the children and grandchildren of Mars colonists were not willing to continue the tradition of their parents and ended going back to Earth. Even most of the ones remaining on Mars did not want to do the drudge work in food production.
    Finally to solve the problem, NASA trained a cadre of Amish people who are willing to learn the necessary technology to live and farm on Mars. And who had the cultural DNA to perpetuate a shared, communal way of life for many generations. They end up becoming a major demographic on Mars responsible for most of the food production, while seeking to coexist alongside more atheistic scientists, space explorers and asteroid miners.
    I could imagine the "Marsamish" people adopting Anglish as their official language - since they have Germanic roots already in their language and culture - to remain a distinct community - like Orthodox Jews in New York - within the larger Martian civilization.

  •  Před 4 lety +1526

    Honestly, "uranium core" sounds boring compared to "ymirstuff heart"

    • @dorthusiast
      @dorthusiast Před 4 lety +74

      on the down side, "ymirstuff heart" sounds weird

    • @hassanalihusseini1717
      @hassanalihusseini1717 Před 4 lety +68

      @@dorthusiast I like ymirstuff blast...

    • @Lazurath101
      @Lazurath101 Před 4 lety +109

      Ymirstuff Heart? Wasn’t there a Skyrim quest about that?

    • @onesyphorus
      @onesyphorus Před 4 lety +6

      @@Lazurath101 yep!^^^

    • @xaverlustig3581
      @xaverlustig3581 Před 4 lety +3

      Is core a latinate word? I would have guessed it was Germanic, but I might be wrong.

  • @samrizzardi2213
    @samrizzardi2213 Před 2 lety +74

    I'd be interested in seeing a similar video on the "pure" Persian language promoted by Reza Khan Pahlavi in 1921, which apparently so few Iranians could understand that his son quickly dropped it upon his ascension.

  • @rainbow_vader
    @rainbow_vader Před 4 lety +5684

    You, a neanderthal: Literature
    Me, an intellectual: Bookcraft

    • @Charodeiski
      @Charodeiski Před 4 lety +126

      I see a Winnie the Pooh meme being made...

    • @Saskool
      @Saskool Před 4 lety +87

      Bookcraft A1 Literature C2

    • @simonlow0210
      @simonlow0210 Před 4 lety +247

      Bookcraft sounds way cooler. It sounds magical to be honest.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Před 4 lety +60

      Me, rather nervous in the waiting room: Are you sure leechcraft is necessary?

    • @stevetragg
      @stevetragg Před 4 lety +21

      savage! oh..uhm I mean wild!

  • @jiachengliu6595
    @jiachengliu6595 Před 4 lety +4929

    Nah Germanic languages are not pure either. We need to all start speaking Proto Indo European

    • @Someone111ify
      @Someone111ify Před 4 lety +131

      But are not you a Chinese?

    • @crusaderofthelowlands3750
      @crusaderofthelowlands3750 Před 4 lety +926

      I disagree. I think we should go a step further and just scream at each other until the other person does what you want.

    • @crusaderofthelowlands3750
      @crusaderofthelowlands3750 Před 4 lety +342

      @@Someone111ify Jiacheng Liu is actually a very common name among some Germanic cultures and is still used a lot in southern Germany and northern Austria.

    • @mbxoc954
      @mbxoc954 Před 4 lety +111

      @@crusaderofthelowlands3750 are you good?

    • @OP-1000
      @OP-1000 Před 4 lety +38

      Crusader of the Low Lands . I think pointing and over-articulating would work also.

  • @DillyBlue
    @DillyBlue Před 2 lety +17

    It's a fun experiment. There's something straightforward and raw about how the Anglish sounds compared with English.

  • @RadixSortable
    @RadixSortable Před rokem +52

    As someone born and raised in Quebec Canada, I think it is important that language be free to evolve and not forced to remain unchanged and stagnant.

    • @sat2625
      @sat2625 Před rokem +2

      Agreed

    • @Beleidigen-ist-Pflicht
      @Beleidigen-ist-Pflicht Před 9 měsíci +5

      Some changes are undesirable

    • @maryblaufuss7533
      @maryblaufuss7533 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Beleidigen-ist-Pflicht Oooh, I'm with you, for the most part. I'd hate it if "February" became "Febuary," just because of poor-quality schools, the dumbing-down of society, and people's lazy tongues. Furthermore, slang words becoming mainstream drives me nuts. Unless the context seems to justify it.
      Grudgingly, though, I agree with RadixSortable. It's sort of like the American freedom of speech, although freedom of speech opens the door for some people to be jerks. But freedom is precious, even so. I like to think of English as being 100% organic, almost alive.
      After all, to cite another example, I'm glad the creepy, 8-legged animal is called a spider, because it's too hard, for me at least, to say "attercop." And, to call its home a "copweb" would...well, just...suck.

    • @artifactU
      @artifactU Před 6 měsíci

      anglish doesnt force english to stay the same

    • @beanapprentice1687
      @beanapprentice1687 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Tell that the the Quebec government, LOL

  • @andrewg.carvill4596
    @andrewg.carvill4596 Před 4 lety +640

    When I was living in Germany years ago as a student, I remember trying to buy ingredients to make a burger, at the butcher's counter: "Ein halbes pfund von hackfleisch, bitte". I always thought this would go well into English as "One half-pound of hacked flesh, I bid thee" - Anglish indeed!

    • @alanthomas2064
      @alanthomas2064 Před 4 lety +46

      biddeth

    • @MineChitect
      @MineChitect Před 4 lety +13

      nothing more, nothing less

    • @nikobellic570
      @nikobellic570 Před 3 lety +75

      Using Germanic-English sentences sounds like what they would use in medieval fantasy setting.

    • @LMvdB02
      @LMvdB02 Před 3 lety +12

      Germans say hackflesh, the Dutch just say hacked (gehakt)

    • @Nejvyn
      @Nejvyn Před 3 lety +19

      @@LMvdB02 You can also say "Gehacktes" in German, it's used quite as often as "Hackfleisch"

  • @jkrause365
    @jkrause365 Před 3 lety +1133

    I think Anglish might be an interesting device to use if a writer wanted to create an exotic culture with a somewhat foreign sounding language that would still be understandable to a modern speaker of English.

    • @yourowndealer
      @yourowndealer Před 2 lety +78

      Anglish would not maybe craft an outlandish kithlike since its basically English itself with Germanic words in place of outland words.

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 Před 2 lety +54

      So J.R.R. Tolkein. Basically the Rohirm speak something almost like Anglish.

    • @ulischmidt03
      @ulischmidt03 Před 2 lety +16

      good for wizard speak

    • @alexram14
      @alexram14 Před 2 lety +1

      I vote Remove It! Romance language is not important in Anglish!

    • @theartistformidablyknownas3807
      @theartistformidablyknownas3807 Před 2 lety +5

      On my way to the firststuff realm

  • @gustavovillegas5909
    @gustavovillegas5909 Před 2 lety +7

    The only thing is that “very” itself is an outland word, so we might put in its stead “mighty”, “truly”, “well”, and so on and so forth
    For byspel:
    I’m mighty happy
    She’s a truly ithand woman
    Thank you well!

  • @chrais78
    @chrais78 Před 2 lety +342

    I think "purifying" English is an interesting intellectual activity, but I don't think it's necessary or even desirable to purge English of foreign influences. I think the development of English under the influence of myriad loan words from other languages is far more interesting and an artifact of the historical processes at work in Great Britain, America, Canada, etc., over the last 1000 years.

    • @Voodoomaria
      @Voodoomaria Před 2 lety +41

      I think "Purifying" any language simply turns it into unnecessarily unintelligible gobbledygook.
      Languages, like cultures are dynamic, and evolving entities, in real life, there are no few languages free of slang, idiom, or outside influences, and those are mostly spoken by un-contacted indigenous cultures.
      If you want to be elitist, learn Esperanto, if you just want to be obscure, learn Klingon.

    • @memetrove7614
      @memetrove7614 Před 2 lety

      @@Voodoomaria I think you have no idea about what you're talking about. Languages have been spoken "Purely" (nigh-devoid of foreign influence) since the dawn of Mankind, they could do it why couldn't your ass?
      P.S.: these nerdy-ass made-up languages are spoken by nobody, they're a waste of time.

    • @aandrewa4238
      @aandrewa4238 Před 2 lety +27

      @@Voodoomaria Bruh nobody is tryna stop ppl from learning Modern English, some ppl just wanna learn and speak Anglish because it's cool to speak a language that is fully centered on the core of Modern English.

    • @Voodoomaria
      @Voodoomaria Před 2 lety +9

      @@aandrewa4238 LOVE this, and of course understood every word.
      If, however, you handed it in to an English professor, they would be using their own blood to mark errors because s/he would have run out of red ink after the first half. ~LOL~
      I had an argument with a teacher once regarding a short story I wrote, she marked it down because the grammar was inconsistent.
      I told her to read it again carefully, and circle the passages that all had inconsistent grammar.
      She was half way through the second page before she noticed that all of the poor grammar portions were in dialogue.
      I then told her to compare all of the grammar errors for one specific character through the story to those of the others.
      She noted the same grammatical errors occurred in all the dialogue for one character, but the other characters made different errors.
      She reversed her grade and I got an "A".
      English isn't my first language, but I love it's variety, and it's versatility.

    • @theimps8787
      @theimps8787 Před 2 lety +26

      @@Voodoomaria Anglish is in no way elitist or trying to deny outside influences. Contrary to what you said, modern english right now actually IS "unintelligible gobledeegook" and unnatural because it's literally artificially trying to "improve" itself by replacing perfectly fine Germanic words with ridiculous neologisms from latin and ancient greek because they're more "prestigious" languages (whatever tf that means). If anything anglish is MORE natural and interesting than modern English because word derivation actually makes sense and it uses inborn roots instead of foreign ones. For example a dictionary in anglish is a wordbook. Whilst we might know the definition of dictionary we cant explain why it means what it means, "dict" isnt a standalone word in english and so just from seeing the word we cant gather its meaning, but in anglish a wordbook is a wordbook because it's a book of words! Anglish does actually keep an appreciable portion of latin loans if they were either loaned in old english or all the other Germanic languages loaned the word as well. Anglish isnt some "hyper-pure" conservative language like icelandic as loanwords are totally allowed, it's just when native old english words were displaced by latin or French ones for no reason other than "prestige" then a new words is coined. If anything modern english is ridiculous with its fetish for latin/greek/french words. Also having lots of synonyms isnt inherently a good thing, it only complicates communication which is the exact opposite point of a language. Nobody is advocating for anglish to replace modern english, it would be almost impossible to do anyways but calling anglish unnatural and some kind of hyper-purism is ridiculous. It's more about ease of understanding and aesthetics more than purism.

  • @pqbdwmnu
    @pqbdwmnu Před 5 lety +2176

    Go to random land
    Start village inviting family and friends
    Slowly start speaking Anglish until it becomes mainstream
    Slowly start turning Latin letters to runes
    Profit?

    • @cfroi08
      @cfroi08 Před 5 lety +11

      καρδ οφ, γιατί χρησιμοποιούσες η Σλαβίκη "φ" και οχί "φ"?

    • @guidoylosfreaks
      @guidoylosfreaks Před 5 lety +103

      Sounds like the wet dreams of those white supremacists.

    • @Pankli_Yuman
      @Pankli_Yuman Před 4 lety +235

      @@guidoylosfreaks how does this even relate to white supremacy?

    • @andreipop5805
      @andreipop5805 Před 4 lety +144

      @@guidoylosfreaks how?
      How im the name of God does that sound like White Supremacists?

    • @guidoylosfreaks
      @guidoylosfreaks Před 4 lety +28

      @@andreipop5805 Anglish is a pretty common topic in sites like Stormfront.

  • @Ivy3h
    @Ivy3h Před 4 lety +1059

    This sounds like German literally translated.
    Wasserstoff really does mean hydrogen.

    • @tiwaz4598
      @tiwaz4598 Před 4 lety +55

      Same with Dutch.

    • @DCLayclerk
      @DCLayclerk Před 4 lety +111

      I love to breathe sourstuff.

    • @windows95_de
      @windows95_de Před 4 lety +6

      :D

    • @mastim6617
      @mastim6617 Před 4 lety +93

      One time my houseanimal got stuck in a dustsuckersnake. We couldn’t open it, even when using a pinchtong or a circlesaw. When our houseanimal was in hungersneed, we tried to feed it dogchunks through the dustsuckersnake. It didn’t really work, so we called the animalnurse. When our houseanimal got out, we got applecake out of our coolcloset to celebrate.
      This was Dutch literally translated into English. Try to translate it.

    • @Sporkonafork1
      @Sporkonafork1 Před 4 lety +22

      @@mastim6617 Animal is a Latin-derived word huehuehue

  • @simonhole8661
    @simonhole8661 Před 2 lety +12

    I find myself doing this all the time. I come from Somerset in the UK and speak this dialect of English. I am also a Norwegian speaker and have lived most of my adult life here. I think this language would be useful as a diving board into germanic languages and vice versa.

  • @stephanginther9051
    @stephanginther9051 Před 2 lety +12

    There already exists a language that could match the title question. Low German, sometimes called 'High Saxon' is a language spoken in Northern Germany and parts of....Norway...or was it the Netherlands, I always get two those mixed up. Anyway its the second closest language to modern English there is with #1 being a language called Frisian and #3 being Dutch. High German, being spoken in Germany for several hundred years, has developed closer to German over time and is almost a German dialect at this point (it is technically not one though). It can trace its roots back to Saxon and Anglo Saxon just like English and had more influence from other Germanic languages unlike English which was heavily influenced by non-Germanic languages.

  • @FaisalKhan-iw6tw
    @FaisalKhan-iw6tw Před 3 lety +2604

    You: Germanic purity
    Me: oh shit....here we go again

    • @thehalalreviewer
      @thehalalreviewer Před 3 lety +100

      Stormfront Ironic name for this comment lol! 🤣

    • @RodGibsonMusic
      @RodGibsonMusic Před 3 lety +18

      HAHAHAHAHA same thought ran through my head. lol

    • @frankblum5480
      @frankblum5480 Před 3 lety +135

      Being the German anglophile I am, I cannot help but like the idea since it might actually help the English to strengthen their bond to Germany and their own heritage. The twentieth century created a big divide that never should have been there in the first place and that I´d love to see being overcome. Language is importenat, words form thoughts and thoughts become actions.

    • @noahjones8616
      @noahjones8616 Před 3 lety +33

      @Cricfusion so was ww2

    • @someguy3766
      @someguy3766 Před 3 lety +43

      I am English, and I am all in favour of a Pan-Germanic empire rising to assert its rightful destiny.
      Think about it: we could finish off the French. For good this time. >;D

  • @n124ac9
    @n124ac9 Před 4 lety +2024

    The word for “language” would be “speechship”.

    • @silvestrien
      @silvestrien Před 4 lety +273

      I would rather put forward "tongue" or else "speech", two words that are standing by in nowtime daily English … . (N. b.: I am Italian)

    • @user-mq1vt3ou1v
      @user-mq1vt3ou1v Před 4 lety +77

      In Old English was word "sprug" or "sproug" i think

    • @lorenzoterribile3953
      @lorenzoterribile3953 Před 4 lety +94

      German uses "Sprache" which is related to the verb "sprechen" to speak, so you could use either speech or even speak, even though I think that "tounge" would be the best solution

    • @Friek555
      @Friek555 Před 4 lety +66

      Dutch and German are probably the most closely related to English, and they both use a version of "to speak". So "speech" is my candidate.

    • @DjSpaceman
      @DjSpaceman Před 4 lety +12

      In Dutch it would be spraak or spreuk. (dialect)spreken, gesproken. (sprachen, gesprochen, und sprichen).

  • @robjohnson1189
    @robjohnson1189 Před rokem +7

    One thing even more specific is the battle between North germanic and west germanic influence. There's plenty of ON still on common use

  • @celinreyes1983
    @celinreyes1983 Před 2 lety +28

    I believe the first step to try this approach on the English language is to learn Old English. Second step would be fusing both modern and old English. And finally promote the result in extracurricular activities in highschools and universities.

    • @fredjimbob2962
      @fredjimbob2962 Před rokem +3

      Why on earth would you want to do that? There's a reason that old english is old english - because loan words from other languages has made modern english arguably the most expressive language in the world.

    • @celinreyes1983
      @celinreyes1983 Před rokem +1

      @fred jimbob I wouldn't
      But there are people interested in reviving the pure English.
      I merely described what I would do if I were one of those people trying to get rid of foreign loans as much as possible.
      It's mere talking, a hypothetical scenario, you shouldn't take my comment too seriously.

    • @artifactU
      @artifactU Před 6 měsíci

      didnt old english already have some latin loans?

  • @gospelfilms7942
    @gospelfilms7942 Před 3 lety +641

    Speaking Afrikaans, English, while learning German, many of these Anglish words make total sense to me.

    • @mobinmirshekari4884
      @mobinmirshekari4884 Před 2 lety +38

      How about the following words ?
      Chimney : Housepipe
      Combustion : Powerburning
      Parliament : Speechroom
      Dictionary : Wordbook
      Vocabulary : Wordkraft
      Bus : Longpassengertransporter
      Nitrogen : Airstuff
      Calorie : Heatstuff
      Diagram : Situationdisplayer
      Bicycle : Twowheel
      Composition : Partkraft
      Volcano : Earthlyrockmelter
      Profession : Jobkraft
      Music : Soundstuff
      Boulevard : Twowayroad
      Matter : Firststuff
      Anti-matter : Negativefirststuff
      Temperature : Heatkraft
      Polyhedron : Manyface
      Triangle : Threeside
      Pentagon : Fiveside
      Hexagon : Sixside
      Forest : Treeland
      Composite : Manypartstuff
      Thermometer : Heatkraftfinder
      Intellect : Mindkraft
      Intellectual : Mindkraftly
      Professional : Jobkraftly
      Orientation : Waykraft
      Military : Warkraftly
      Communication : Speechkraft
      Science : Knowledgekraft
      Scientific : Knowledgekraftly
      Opinion : Thoughtkraft
      Industry : Buildbuilding
      Plant : Groundthing
      Ventilator : Coolairpusher
      Family : Housepeople
      Rotation : Spinkraft
      Contraction : Shrinkkraft
      Supersonic : Oversound
      Production : Buildkraft
      Productive : Buildkrafty
      Productivity : Buildkraftness
      Calendar : Monthdisplayer
      Vision : Seekraft
      Theology : Godknowledgekraft
      Theological : Godknowledgekraftly
      Conclusion : Endkraft
      Introduction : Beginningkraft
      Conclusive : Endkraftly
      Introductory : Beginningkraftly

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 2 lety +16

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 wow I just realize how much this sounds like new speak from 1984

    • @user-xb9yv2ci4c
      @user-xb9yv2ci4c Před 2 lety +1

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 Transport and negative is romance

    • @alfonsstekebrugge8049
      @alfonsstekebrugge8049 Před 2 lety +16

      Dutchie here, Germanic legends since time itself started.
      Chimney : Housepipe
      Usually the discriptor refers to what is special about it, why is this used? So I would suggest 'smokepipe' or just 'smokestone' like in Dutch.
      Combustion : Powerburning
      If you want a special case for combustion (which is just burning) that is fine, but power is not a German word. Since English changed the meaning of the original Germanic word (kracht/kravt/kraft) we can perhaps invent a new one based on how such words have generally fared in English. Kracht would now be 'kright' in English, so I suggest 'krightburning'.
      Parliament : Speechroom
      This is fine.
      Dictionary : Wordbook
      Literally what it is in Dutch, is fine.
      Vocabulary : Wordkraft
      A craft refers to the production of things. A vocabulary is a list of possible words. As such 'wordlist' would be more apt I would say.
      Bus : Longpassengertransporter
      None of this is Germanic except long. The name for a four-wheeled vehicle in Germanic languages is generally 'wagen', which English has as 'wagon'. As such a 'folkslongwagon' or something along those lines would be better.
      Nitrogen : Airstuff
      I am not fond of the usage of 'stuff' here, even though Dutch and German do the same thing. The root for stuff provides a very direct link to what is actually meant, but English has a long tradition of using the word 'dust' for this instead. Nitrogen then I would say should indeed be 'airdust'. But what about air? That is not Germanic. If I trace how similar words like the Dutch 'lucht' now sound in English it would have ended up like 'lought' where 'gh' is pronounced as f. So yeah, we have this word 'loft' in English. Bingo. So yeah I would still say 'airdust' here, but 'loftdust' is not unreasonable.
      Calorie : Heatstuff
      Calorie is a very modern invented word that has never been translated in any Germanic language anyway. It can stand as is.
      Diagram : Situationdisplayer
      Situation and displayer are both not Germanic at all. In Dutch anything -gram is generally referred to as a 'kaart', which exists in English as card, but what is meant is a map. All of this comes from Latin. What a diagram does is offer an overview of what is explained in a text. As such it functions as a text you can see instead of hear. I would propose 'sightcard'. Indeed in Dutch a diagram will sometimes be called an 'overzichtskaart'.
      Bicycle : Twowheel
      Yeah, works. Maybe 'twowheeler'.
      Composition : Partkraft
      In Dutch (and German is similar) the word 'samenstelling' is used. Samen means together, stelling means a construction. Referring to part is fine, but that's not a Germanic word. I don't think I'm out of line when I say 'togethering' would already work for this.
      Volcano : Earthlyrockmelter
      As there are nu volcanoes in Northern Europe (sans Iceland) this word doesn't really exist in Germanic languages. If we were to invent something the most visually astonishing part of a volcano is that it ejects fire, as such I would suggest a 'firespit'
      Profession : Jobkraft
      Job isn't Germanic, the word here is just 'work' and that already functions as a synonym for a profession.
      Music : Soundstuff
      Sound does not work as something made of particles. As such stuff would never be used. Now, as music has become the universal word for this in Germanic languages way must go way back to find the original word for it and it thought to be 'draum' which has invariably turned into words we now use to mean dream. I would just keep 'music' here.
      Boulevard : Twowayroad
      Boulevard comes from the Germanic word known in English as bulwark so that will go nowhere as the meaning has changed. Generally a boulevard is a big road that is quite fancy and important. One Germanic word that seems apt here is one that has kept it's original meaning of being particularly resplendant, but also means pretty and clear in German and Dutch. So I propose 'shineway'.
      Matter : Firststuff
      Usually when things are deemed elementary or old the root used is that of 'old'. I explained my preference for dust before. Now, the word 'old' has kept it's older pronunciation with a deeper consonent in some English words like elder, as such I propose 'eldust'.
      Anti-matter : Negativefirststuff
      The Germanic word of opposition is 'tegen' in Dutch or 'gegen' in German and we can find this in English in the word 'against'. So yeah, I would go for 'gaigeldust'.
      Temperature : Heatkraft
      No need to be fancy, simply 'heatness' or even just 'warmth' already works.
      Polyhedron : Manyface
      Face is not Germanic, we have 'vlak' in Dutch for this, but I don't see any of that in English. There is also 'plat' though, which means flat and has plenty of other examples in Germanic languages. Many is Germanic and works, so I would propose 'maniflat' borrowing a little spelling trick from manifold.
      Triangle : Threeside
      These shapes are defined by their number of corners, not their number of sides. As such you will find that the Dutch 'driehoek' or German 'Dreieck' translate directly to 'threecorner', but corner is obviously not Germanic. The word survived in English only as 'hook', but I don't see why this would not be used as a corner. So: 'threehook'. For pentagon and hexagon same arguments.
      Forest : Treeland
      There's just 'woods' for this.
      Composite : Manypartstuff
      Based on earlier arguments I would propose 'manidustly'.
      Thermometer : Heatkraftfinder
      Germanic word for arithmetic (counting) is tell, but this has two meanings so might seem confusing, but yeah a 'heatteller' or 'warmteller' would work here.
      Intellect : Mindkraft
      Not fond of the k for the c, 'mindcraft' does seem like a good option.
      Intellectual : Mindkraftly
      Matter of taste, but 'mindcrafty' seems viable yes.
      Professional : Jobkraftly
      Overly laborious, why not 'goodworking'?
      Orientation : Waykraft
      This seems nonsensical to me, like this would mean road engineering to me. English already has a Germanic word that is a close friend to this, which is 'heading'.
      Military : Warkraftly
      For military science 'warcraft' is totally decent, for an actual army the issue gets quite hard, because Dutch and German use a root for staying put in a place. The word exists in English now as 'lair' but it is too distinct from what an army means to be usable. As such I would use something descriptive like 'fightfolk'.
      Communication : Speechkraft
      Seems fine.
      Science : Knowledgekraft
      The -ledge should be dropped. Know is already fine. The issue here is that English doesn't really use 'know' in the right way. In other Germanic languages the root for know is used when someone has a passing knowledge of something, whereas something like 'weten' in Dutch or 'wissen' in German is used for actual understanding. English has this word, it is 'wit'. As such 'witcraft' for science is fine, but it refers to production and not a state of being. English has such a suffix and it's essentially the same as in Dutch and German. So, Dutch 'wetenschap' and German 'wissenschaft' should mean that in English science should be 'witship'. Scientific should be 'witshiply'.
      Opinion : Thoughtkraft
      There's a word 'meaning' that works for this already.
      Industry : Buildbuilding
      Interesting. I think you refer to a factory. Both Dutch and German use words that are imported. A 'crafthall' for a factory would work and for a part of the economy (like movie industry etc) something a 'trade' has always sufficed.
      Plant : Groundthing
      Very hard as plant is just the general word for this, but is not Germanic, much like music. I am very unsure, but there is an old root that was used for growing plants which still exists in English as 'wax'. As such a plant could be a 'waxing'. Should just keep it at 'plant'.
      Ventilator : Coolairpusher
      A ventilator is not necessarily for cool air, it's just for moving air about in any way. Before I argued that air should sort of be loft in English. Furthermore, just simplify. We are already there at 'airer' or 'lofter'.
      Family : Housepeople
      There's 'kin' for this.
      Rotation : Spinkraft
      There's no need, 'spin' already describes a state of rotation.
      Contraction : Shrinkkraft
      There's already 'shrinkage'.
      Supersonic : Oversound
      Sound is not Germanic in this meaning. Over is fine. We want to describe something that is faster than the sound barrier, so we need over-, then the sound barrier and then -fast for the speed aspect. Sound in Germanic is almost invariably linked to the current English word 'loud', which in English implies a high volume for sound which is quite apt here. It is usable. A barrier is simple, that is a 'wall'. So: 'overloudwallfast'. This is an overly complex word, would be shortened to 'overloud'.
      Production : Buildkraft
      Just 'craft'.
      Productive : Buildkrafty
      Just 'crafty'.
      Productivity : Buildkraftness
      Just 'craftiness'.
      Calendar : Monthdisplayer
      A calender can do much more than just display months. It is a tool to chop up the year in predictable parts that can be counted up or down so as to predict certain events. It used to be very much a tool for preciting the coming and going of seasons. This process has a very nice word word in Germanic languages which survives in English: a 'tide' and indeed in Old English we find 'yeartide' like the Dutch would have 'jaargetijde'. So for calendar I propose 'yeartidal'.
      Vision : Seekraft
      There is just 'sight'.
      Theology : Godknowledgekraft
      Yeah ok so in Dutch this is 'geloofswetenschap', but 'geloof' in English was wiped out in favor of 'faith', but the verb is still there in the word 'believe'. So there you go, I propose: 'beliefwitship'.
      Theological : Godknowledgekraftly
      See above, 'beliefwitshiply'.
      Conclusion : Endkraft
      Just 'end' or 'ending' exists and works end the final three are more of this sort of nonsense.

    • @druid139
      @druid139 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 Very krafty. 😆

  • @Alxoholiker
    @Alxoholiker Před 4 lety +555

    Actually "anglish" is kinda like i imagined english when i was a kid ( i am from germany) i first heared the word "waterfall" and i translated it to "wasserfall" german for waterfall.. so i actually took german words and translated it like that 11... funny how this could have been a real language.

    • @docinabox258
      @docinabox258 Před 4 lety +25

      @Александр U can get by with only germanic words. As an english speaker with some yiddish influence, I was able to read and understand a little bit of german.

    • @danceswithmetroids162
      @danceswithmetroids162 Před 3 lety +23

      Would have been too if a certain baguette eating people hadn't invaded

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Před 3 lety +40

      About 30 years ago, i started to work in a small german company. There was an english worker. Some months later a new cowoker came, who could speak the Mecklenburg version of Low german. One day, just for fun, this man spoke in Low german to the english man, who was surprised, but could understand Low german. One sentence was: Und dann bin ik fallen in de kold Water ( Und dann bin ich ins kalte Wasser gefallen/ And then i am fallen into the cold water). A turkish coworker, who had never heared low german before, asked: Why do you speak english to Robert, he speaks german?

    • @rathersane
      @rathersane Před 3 lety +12

      I’m an American who has never learned to speak German.
      Anyway, I have always found it interesting/amusing that German people speaking German amongst themselves often sound like they’re speaking English, except in a certain way that I cannot understand.

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Před 3 lety +4

      @@rathersane : What do you mean? Do you mean you understand the many english ( and often wrong used) words , which entered german language? Today english is international language/ lingua franca, so many idiots think they must use as much english words as possible, when french was the international language ,,up to about 1920, many french words entered german language and the idiots used as much french words as possible. Also in northern Germany, the areas, where the Anglo- Saxons once came from, the inhabitants speak , Low German' which has still similarities to english ( english: fork/ low german: Forke/ standard german: Gabel, english : little/ low german: lütt/ standard german: klein, english: rope/ low german: Reep/ standard german: Seil etc.).
      Also ununderstandale (?) words ;-) : Stein/stone, Wasser/water, Feuer/ fire, Erde / earth, Wind/wind, Sturm/ storm, Flut/ flood, Deich/ dyke, Stock/stick, Sattel/ saddle, Bier/beer, Wein/ wine, Hand/ hand, Finger/ finger, Nase/ nose, Fuss/ foot, Hammer/ hammer, Axt/ ax, Schaufel/ showel, Spaten/ spade, Leiter/ ladder, Speer/spear, Lanze/ lance, Schild/ shield, Helm/ helmet, Schwert/ sword, Säbel/ saber, Messer/ knife ( in some german regions Kniep is s small knife), Hut/hat, Kappe ( Mütze)/ cap, Pferd ( Ross)/ horse, Katze/ cat, Hund/ dog ( but Dogge in german and hound in english), Bär/ bear, Fisch/ fish, Wal/whale, Kuh/cow, Kalb/calf, Bulle/ Bull, Stier/ steer, Sau/ sow, Schwein/ swine, Wiesel/ weazle, Schaf/ sheep, Ziege ( Geis)/goat, Hase/ hare, Henne/ hen, Ehefrau ( Weib)/ wife, Boot/ boat, Schiff/ship, Flagge/flag, Schuh/shoe , schauen ( lugen) / to look, rennen/ to run, Fleisch/ meat ( but Mett is fine minced raw meat, but in english flesh exists). So when you would learn german, you perhaps would be surprised.

  • @smvwees
    @smvwees Před 2 lety +8

    I am Dutch and i play with words a lot and i often babble in some dunglish, but it is almost exactly like you do today. For elements we also say Waterstuff, Sourstuff and Suffocatestuff lol .

  • @francescocamplani1361
    @francescocamplani1361 Před 2 lety +1

    Very very nice, Mr Lang. As a (foreign) speaker of both English and German, I really appreciated this focus. Also "showplayer" sounds like a 1:1 translation of "Schauspieler".
    Just let me say: the Italian word for "umbrella" is "ombrellO", masculin.

  • @versatilemind9130
    @versatilemind9130 Před 5 lety +1448

    That sounds quite unusual, but as a native German speaker, I could guess most of the Anglish words.

    • @goranomarbockman806
      @goranomarbockman806 Před 5 lety +107

      Same here, being native Swedish. 😳

    • @98raoul
      @98raoul Před 4 lety +196

      I am Italian and the change made the language almost incomprehensible to me :(

    • @ericgonzalez3641
      @ericgonzalez3641 Před 4 lety +101

      I speak Spanish and for me it got more difficult to understand

    • @dylanescoo
      @dylanescoo Před 4 lety +79

      I speak Portuguese and these changes almost turned the language incomprehensible for me.

    • @AndreaAlison
      @AndreaAlison Před 4 lety +77

      Go away Latina bitcheees

  • @greaseballjones7705
    @greaseballjones7705 Před 6 lety +2816

    bookcraft sounds boss af

    • @xmaverickhunterkx
      @xmaverickhunterkx Před 6 lety +139

      Proper English word. No reason not to use it.
      I love using old forms in all languages I speak lol.

    • @AngryGrape1337
      @AngryGrape1337 Před 6 lety +399

      Virgin Literature Expert vs. Chad Bookcraft Wizard

    • @xmaverickhunterkx
      @xmaverickhunterkx Před 6 lety +36

      If it's a Chad, it wouldn't be a virgin wizard, it'd be a Warlock.

    • @AngryGrape1337
      @AngryGrape1337 Před 6 lety +13

      I think Bookcraftist as a noun would work.

    • @xmaverickhunterkx
      @xmaverickhunterkx Před 6 lety +22

      I'm not sure which is more latin or germanic. -ist or -er. But perhaps bookcrafter is better(?)

  • @bathysphere1070
    @bathysphere1070 Před 2 lety +3

    This is delightfully whimsical. I will adopt it at once.

  • @abrahemsamander3967
    @abrahemsamander3967 Před 2 lety +17

    This actually looks kinda fun! I wanna try writing alliterative old English style poetry with it.

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE Před 2 lety +2

      some basic, comonly used angli saxon words were replaced by superfluous "high class" latin french vocabulary, as in air for LOFT, Language for SPEECH, animal for DEER......

  • @adamender9092
    @adamender9092 Před 3 lety +688

    Romance: Sorcery
    Germanic: Witchcraft
    Celtic: *Druidism*

    • @joriankell1983
      @joriankell1983 Před 2 lety +13

      I've always wanted to learn Irish

    • @beneathpavement1
      @beneathpavement1 Před 2 lety +74

      Druidry better - ism is Greek. ;-)

    • @mobinmirshekari4884
      @mobinmirshekari4884 Před 2 lety +15

      How about the following words ?
      Chimney : Housepipe
      Combustion : Powerburning
      Parliament : Speechroom
      Dictionary : Wordbook
      Vocabulary : Wordkraft
      Bus : Longpassengertransporter
      Nitrogen : Airstuff
      Calorie : Heatstuff
      Diagram : Situationdisplayer
      Bicycle : Twowheel
      Composition : Partkraft
      Volcano : Earthlyrockmelter
      Profession : Jobkraft
      Music : Soundstuff
      Boulevard : Twowayroad
      Matter : Firststuff
      Anti-matter : Negativefirststuff
      Temperature : Heatkraft
      Polyhedron : Manyface
      Triangle : Threeside
      Pentagon : Fiveside
      Hexagon : Sixside
      Forest : Treeland
      Composite : Manypartstuff
      Thermometer : Heatkraftfinder
      Intellect : Mindkraft
      Intellectual : Mindkraftly
      Professional : Jobkraftly
      Orientation : Waykraft
      Military : Warkraftly
      Communication : Speechkraft
      Science : Knowledgekraft
      Scientific : Knowledgekraftly
      Opinion : Thoughtkraft
      Industry : Buildbuilding
      Plant : Groundthing
      Ventilator : Coolairpusher
      Family : Housepeople
      Rotation : Spinkraft
      Contraction : Shrinkkraft
      Supersonic : Oversound
      Production : Buildkraft
      Productive : Buildkrafty
      Productivity : Buildkraftness
      Calendar : Monthdisplayer
      Vision : Seekraft
      Theology : Godknowledgekraft
      Theological : Godknowledgekraftly
      Conclusion : Endkraft
      Introduction : Beginningkraft
      Conclusive : Endkraftly
      Introductory : Beginningkraftly

    • @ani4787
      @ani4787 Před 2 lety +8

      @@mobinmirshekari4884 I can still see some romance influence - in words such as situation, display, negative etc.

    • @mobinmirshekari4884
      @mobinmirshekari4884 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ani4787 Display is a romance/latin word ?

  • @jonvancil4431
    @jonvancil4431 Před 6 lety +5299

    I have found a new way to annoy my wife!

    • @owlblocksdavid4955
      @owlblocksdavid4955 Před 6 lety +89

      Only not too much (I only wrote Germanish words).

    • @Lulubelgique
      @Lulubelgique Před 6 lety +292

      You meant to write "to bother" maybe? :D

    • @maximeschmitt6589
      @maximeschmitt6589 Před 6 lety +176

      The word 'annoy' comes from French...

    • @Kettvnen
      @Kettvnen Před 6 lety +8

      Luca Frère yes

    • @SuburbanNinja-yr1mc
      @SuburbanNinja-yr1mc Před 6 lety +27

      yep for sure, I need to use more Germanic words just to Annoy her. Afther all Am white and she isn;t.

  • @flutschfischi123
    @flutschfischi123 Před 2 lety +1

    I like it, when a language has not to "depend" on foreign words, like czech, but on the other hand, the influences tell really much about the history of the region the language is/was spoke in.

  • @beldarslament
    @beldarslament Před 2 lety +6

    I would love to see a similar thought experiment that keeps the roots of English words intact, but changes the word order to German.

  • @rebeccalinnea4156
    @rebeccalinnea4156 Před 4 lety +418

    Why did I spend 10 years of my life studying english when I can basically already speak anglish?

  • @theshamanite
    @theshamanite Před 4 lety +558

    I like how Anglish is an example of linguistic purism, something we use Romance-derived words to describe.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Před 4 lety +79

      A clean tongue?

    • @metallica708
      @metallica708 Před 4 lety +50

      Wordly cleanliness?

    • @dorthusiast
      @dorthusiast Před 4 lety +88

      mothertongue uncleftishness

    • @annahimmel
      @annahimmel Před 4 lety +10

      @@dorthusiast oh lmao

    • @leojlg9147
      @leojlg9147 Před 4 lety +11

      @Touchy Torchy almost there, “mother” comes from Latin’s “mater”

  • @italoman9
    @italoman9 Před rokem +2

    This was another very cool installment! Although I learned that the pro-Anglish movement doesn’t seem to promote also adopting Germanic sentence syntax structure (eg adopting noun cases, verb-final positioning in certain statement clause situations, etc.), I can understand how the subbing of new or old German-based words for more familiar Romance-based ones would really give our contemporary English tongue a more “Teutonic” sense and sound.

    • @artifactU
      @artifactU Před 6 měsíci

      making english speakers learn how non english grammer work would be impossible

  • @folvenson
    @folvenson Před 2 lety +9

    I love how languages change as they interact with other languages.

  • @syntheticdawn4992
    @syntheticdawn4992 Před 4 lety +486

    Bookcraft sounds like a new blizzard game

    • @hugobourgon198
      @hugobourgon198 Před 4 lety +23

      World of Bookcraft.

    • @CatMC_1
      @CatMC_1 Před 4 lety +3

      Rather like a new Minecraft Fake from Play Store

    • @linkskywalker5417
      @linkskywalker5417 Před 4 lety +1

      @@hugobourgon198 World of Speechcraft

    • @clontstable1
      @clontstable1 Před 4 lety +1

      Bookcraft is actually the name for an LDS (Mormon) book publishing company.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 4 lety

      Black divas be like Hogwarts School of Bitchcraft and Wiggatry.

  • @Sam-lm8gi
    @Sam-lm8gi Před 3 lety +1052

    I laughed so hard, I need someone to farspeak a sickwagon.

  • @CoolbreezeFromSteam
    @CoolbreezeFromSteam Před 2 lety +4

    Compared to a lot of words, I think a ton of Anglish is instantly decipherable without having to actually look up a definition. Big benefit.

  • @robthesaxon1116
    @robthesaxon1116 Před rokem +2

    I liked how you demonstrated Anglish. I am open to using only Germanic words. I think its worth a shot to experience it and have a better understanding of both sides of English. Both sides means modern and the original.

  • @kallelellacevej2234
    @kallelellacevej2234 Před 5 lety +356

    I went a week without saying the word "because" & replaced it with "for" or "since". Only my bf noticed. 😄

    • @quirkyhill
      @quirkyhill Před 5 lety +3

      i should try this :X haha

    • @alionago2187
      @alionago2187 Před 4 lety

      Kalle Lellacévej you could also say forwhy. This word should be input into the English wordbook.

    • @alionago2187
      @alionago2187 Před 4 lety +10

      I bestand and my beinghood can never be spurned or belittled. this is English cleanliness at his highest mark and it should be forguessed that English would be better off without the Outland words that don’t belong to it and it would be more truthful and inborn to its first and heart roots which are theedish and not latinish. Edmind that this is mightly but most smoothspoken English speakers worldwide are lazy and don’t care about cleansing English forwhy they don’t give a shit, so those who do should be the beginners of this shift towards making English the spoken tongue that it would’ve been had the normanish takeover never taken stead.

    • @alionago2187
      @alionago2187 Před 4 lety +2

      Böðvarr Bjarki indeed. The normans did spow at befouling the English tongue, therefore we must come to the seeing that the cleansing is more than sheerly understandsome or fathomsome it is needful. However I must own up to the deedsake that I didn’t understand half of the words you wielded. I think you’re going way too far back with your wordstock. I like the speechcraft and wordstock you wielded but we must only rid English of its Outland words not go so far back as to not be bear to understand each other whatsoever. Wordstock is pithy when it comes to a tongue. I don’t think we should fordo English’s Latin letters. I wrote letters here forwhy I don’t know the English samewise word. We need to only speak English as it would be had it not been befouled by Frankish (French) and Latin altogether. The English tongue bestanding on its own two feet is enoughsome and it doesn’t need to be berightened by outsiders.

    • @alionago2187
      @alionago2187 Před 4 lety +4

      Böðvarr Bjarki I don’t understand why folks don’t thware with this shift. Fordo sounds better than remove. Rainshade is awesome too and it should overtake umbrella. I hate teachers who give learners low grades for wielding only theedish words so to hell with them wholly. They don’t care about the one of a kindness and besunderhood of the English tongue therefore they shouldn’t be teaching to begin with. What will belive after English has been needheemed. A befouled speechcraft and tongue that doesn’t look like its foreleder from one thousand years ago and beforehand.

  • @capivara6094
    @capivara6094 Před 3 lety +1470

    As a romance language speaker, if it wasn't for the Latin and French words present in English, it would have taken a lot longer for me to master this language

    • @viddl8267
      @viddl8267 Před 2 lety +120

      as a swisse, i would have learned it in just one day without nordmann-french influence 😂

    • @dr.coomer789
      @dr.coomer789 Před 2 lety +67

      @@viddl8267 depends on if youre a swiss who speaks french or german

    • @viddl8267
      @viddl8267 Před 2 lety +45

      @@dr.coomer789 or italian or rumantsch. I speak a dialect of Alemanic. Wich meany call swissgerman 😃

    • @notaspider4084
      @notaspider4084 Před 2 lety +4

      no shit

    • @SeasideDetective2
      @SeasideDetective2 Před 2 lety +25

      I'll bet the letter "v" is what REALLY throws you off. It's really confusing because not only does English use the Latin spelling to represent the same sound as the German "w," but we also use it interchangeably with "f," just as German does ("loaf"/"loaves", etc.).

  • @pitpatify
    @pitpatify Před rokem +2

    Some background on the "Cleftish beholding".
    In physics, work and energy are actually equivalent, meaning, the have the same dimension, power applied over a distance [N*m]
    Stuff seems to be the taken over from German, where "stoff" is mostly used for "textile" or "fabric", but also, again in physics, means "condensed" or "solid state" matter.

  • @freemind90s
    @freemind90s Před rokem +6

    I am totally surprised how German word structure and Hindi word structure is exactly same. In Hindi, most of the new words are formed by adding two words. We call this addition Sandhi and Samas which is literally translated to Add and Join.

  • @johannesweber3403
    @johannesweber3403 Před 5 lety +416

    This is hilarious! In Germany, we tend to do the same „just for fun“ - like using fake English words that are created by literally translating German compound words. The word „showplayer“ mentioned in the video is a typical example. It is a direct translation of the German compound word „Schauspieler“. Other examples include words like „dust sucker“ (lit. translation of German „Staubsauger“ for vacuum cleaner) or „glow pear“ (lit. translation of German „Glühbirne“ for light bulb). This has been done in comedy shows for decades.

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb Před 5 lety +43

      I'm so interested in german now

    • @toosiyabrandt8676
      @toosiyabrandt8676 Před 5 lety +31

      HI
      How about 'Coldcupboard' like the German ' Kuhlschrank' [ Instead of Refrigerator ]

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 5 lety +9

      @@toosiyabrandt8676 Or just "coolscape or "coolship" ? 😉
      Danish: køleskab
      Swedish: kylskåp ( "kylskap" )
      skab / skåp = cupboard / closet
      But also "region" / "area"
      For instance
      landskab / landskap = landscape

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 5 lety +6

      @cat moth Another One Bites the Dust 😁

    • @mcol4644
      @mcol4644 Před 5 lety +6

      I am English and I agree with this comment. People dont realise that we have similar words and them words would of changed overtime in England. If you dont understand German just listen carefully and you will pick up on words

  • @sowon5030
    @sowon5030 Před 5 lety +403

    This video is going to help me when I want to explain to people how North Korean language sounds to South Koreans. Thanks a lot !

    • @Bakuninite
      @Bakuninite Před 5 lety +37

      I'm sure that Konglish words must sound so strange to North Koreans. Pretty apt comparison, as South Korea has so many loanwords that simply do not exist in North Korea.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 5 lety +53

      I find North Korean quite charming actually. For example, the word for Ice Cream in South Korea literally comes from the English word Ice Cream (아이스크림). But in North Korean, the word for Ice Cream retains its Korean roots, calling Ice Cream 얼음과자, which literally translates to Ice Cookie.

    • @kk8490
      @kk8490 Před 5 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🔥

    • @dj3us
      @dj3us Před 5 lety +4

      @@lissandrafreljord7913
      “Cookie”? Why?

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Před 5 lety +6

      North Korean language is extremely traditional in dialect and loan words, its all as true to the Korean roots as possible while South Korean had the same treatment as modern Japanese, it was "Americanised" while in Japan this trend has reversed because of the kawaii culture in big cities in the country side older Japanese is mostly still retained.
      South Korea however never attempted to stop this mutation of their language.

  • @MasiukA
    @MasiukA Před rokem +4

    Showplayer is a literal translation of the German word for actor: Schauspieler

  • @Thot_Patrol_USA
    @Thot_Patrol_USA Před 2 lety +1

    You know what? This actually sounds like a good idea. Honestly, I would love if it were this way! There’s something about the simpler way of speech Anglish has (stuffs, firststuffs, waterstuffs, YMIRSTUFFS) that I like. Makes it easier for fo-I mean the outkind.

  • @jasonng04
    @jasonng04 Před 7 lety +1985

    Ðe Ænglish Tongue is good. And I still þink we should scribe wiþ ðese runes.

    • @jasonng04
      @jasonng04 Před 7 lety +230

      'Tis bewildering 'tisn't it? But 'tis hard þinking of words ðat aren't of Roman tongue.

    • @jasonng04
      @jasonng04 Před 7 lety +155

      I love ðe rune for 'th' which is 'ð' as in 'ðe'. And how ðere is also a rune for 'þ' as in 'þink'.

    • @jasonng04
      @jasonng04 Před 7 lety +107

      Ðough I don't like ðe capital 'þ' which is 'Þ'.

    • @ChaoticAphrodite
      @ChaoticAphrodite Před 7 lety +147

      It would be good for Ænglish to reintroduce ðe þorn and eð.

    • @ChaoticAphrodite
      @ChaoticAphrodite Před 7 lety +50

      Sophie Ng (ソフィ) as a friend of the Icelandic Pirate Party I love Þ.

  • @hayleymae4368
    @hayleymae4368 Před 2 lety +614

    There is now an Anglish newspaper: 𝕿𝖍𝖊 𝕬𝖓𝖌𝖑𝖎𝖘𝖍 𝕿𝖎𝖒𝖊𝖘

    • @Someone111ify
      @Someone111ify Před rokem +4

      The plural s is from Romance speak, and thus you should switch it into something else.

    • @Galaxy-tm5ev
      @Galaxy-tm5ev Před rokem +1

      @@Someone111ify Timen?

  • @coopierre7899
    @coopierre7899 Před 3 lety +781

    I feel like Anglish would catch my attention more if it used the archaic letters eth (Ð, ð), ash (Æ, æ), or thorn (Þ, þ)

    • @Connie_TinuityError
      @Connie_TinuityError Před 3 lety +69

      X Æ A-Xii

    • @ThisIsAlmondz
      @ThisIsAlmondz Před 3 lety +1

      It does

    • @notimportant221
      @notimportant221 Před 3 lety +146

      I þink ðat's a græt idea!

    • @duncanwalduck7715
      @duncanwalduck7715 Před 3 lety +14

      @@notimportant221 I learnt some Welsh really briefly - rather to pronounce than to understand - and I really respected the fact that they have 'ð', it goes down as 'dd' in Welsh, e.g. Gwynedd (county / former kingdom). I find it difficult to see how you replace that with generic thorn 'þ', in all honesty [though this from someone who doesn't really get *THAT* far distinguishing 'thief' from 'fief' - hey, man, fiefdom is theft!]
      I heard some Scandinavian guy pronounce 'eight' with a proper consonantal yogh in it (it typically becomes a 'y', as in niyt [I mean 'night']) and I thought, I want some of that.

    • @hailredlamp
      @hailredlamp Před 2 lety +1

      Although it's cool, weren't thorn and eth sounds allophones?

  • @christopherstein2024
    @christopherstein2024 Před 2 lety +4

    2:18 In German the noun "Ansehen" (literally onlook/onseeing) means prestige. I don't know any verb of that direct kind. There is "hoch angesehen sein" "ein hohes Ansehen haben" "to be looked on highly" "to have a high onlook". When ever the verb is used it always comes with "hoch" "high" to my knowledge.
    2:58 "nameknow" can also be translated to the very old "namenhaft" which refers to something "of name"
    Showplayer like farseeer is a direct translation of "Schauspieler". Btw the pronuciation in the video was for "fernsehen" (to watch the telly) not "Fernseher".
    3:05 "Witship" is reminds of "Wissenschaft" but "Wissen" (knowledge) is not the German word for "wit". That would be "Witz" and it has almost completely gone from clever to funny.
    Outland is a direct translation of "Ausland". Basically there are many words wich just sound German. For the replacements of modern words like Physics this is typically not the case. But still it's feels more natural to a German speaker in many cases wich is the point I guess.

  • @moneyhafimek
    @moneyhafimek Před 2 lety +1

    One of the most interesting videos yet

  • @sheheryardanish546
    @sheheryardanish546 Před 3 lety +746

    I very *onlook* the way you grow our *knowings* About the *speechship* :)

  • @Outdoors49Man
    @Outdoors49Man Před 4 lety +164

    I went through a period of trying to speak that way when I was a senior in high school (1966-1967). We had two foreign exchange students one Italian and the other German. We had a lot of fun with this.

    • @vanderdole02
      @vanderdole02 Před 4 lety +5

      the german probably though "you can me what" , and the dutch student thought "you can me the tree in" ...lol

    • @Squirrelanditsnutz
      @Squirrelanditsnutz Před 4 lety +2

      Wasn’t there not a fade in that period when people said Grok a lot?

    • @guesswho5790
      @guesswho5790 Před 3 lety

      @@Squirrelanditsnutz not that the phrasing is completely wrong, but I think you meant to say "wasn't there a fad.../was there not a fad...?"

    • @Squirrelanditsnutz
      @Squirrelanditsnutz Před 3 lety

      guess who my grammar was spot on, seeing as you understood me.

  • @heikegoshen2393
    @heikegoshen2393 Před 2 lety +6

    Fascinating. Thought about this before, a lot of times. Today´s English is, indeed, a patchwork language. And most English-speakers are not aware that they are speaking some sort or other of Latin, every day.

    • @volebonin
      @volebonin Před 3 měsíci

      So many Serbian words are,in english language. The whole of Europe spoke Serbian many centuries ago.

  • @darcyellis54
    @darcyellis54 Před 2 lety +6

    2:30 As a Brit “since” is still used alternately as “because” where I’m from anyway.

    • @lorenzo2780
      @lorenzo2780 Před 2 lety +2

      I think that applies to all the english-speaking world.

  • @tuxedofunk.
    @tuxedofunk. Před 7 lety +411

    Holy shit, I know English and German and reading these sentences sounds like if I were to translate literal German words into English

    • @lukasu8525
      @lukasu8525 Před 7 lety +22

      *germanic* not german.
      important difference there.

    • @gayvideos3808
      @gayvideos3808 Před 7 lety +94

      Helicobacter Pylori They never said there wasn't. I think they mean that since they speak German, which is Germanic, English with foreign words removed seems more similar to German.

    • @abeedhal6519
      @abeedhal6519 Před 6 lety

      read again

    • @Sentariana
      @Sentariana Před 6 lety +17

      Same! Bookcraft was the one that made the most sense to me but all the others confused my bilingual brain.

    • @csscszcsgv
      @csscszcsgv Před 6 lety +21

      C'mon, man, have some decency. Don't say holy shit... Say heilige Scheiße!

  • @DavidB5501
    @DavidB5501 Před 6 lety +229

    'Forebears' is an existing Anglo-Saxon word for 'ancestors', so there is no need for 'forekind'.

  • @philosophyofiron9686
    @philosophyofiron9686 Před 8 měsíci

    I'm a fan of Anglish - I was on a path of half-consciously drifting toward my own version of it in my own writing for years without having known such a movement actually existed until recently. Modern English is an extremely interestingly language, but it does feel a shame that so much has been lost from its Old English roots. There's something pleasing and perhaps beautiful to me in the achievement of a fairly committed aesthetic in a language, by remaining faithful to its phonetic quirks and the approach it takes to communicate certain meanings (ex. Old English leaning toward piling on nouns used as metaphors and similes instead of using adjectives, or the way in Japanese things that are in other languages conceived of as states of being described with an adjective are instead conceived of as actions and communicated through verbs).
    Strangely enough, I sort of feel like the loan words and borrowed constructions in English would enhance and enrich it more if we retained them but pushed them further out to the boundary, around a more solidly Germanic skeletal core. Then, it would feel more like they're adding to the language and making it more complex and rich, rather than standing in for otherwise missing elements in a hollowed-out core.

  • @wesfoster1178
    @wesfoster1178 Před 2 lety

    I love the way it sounds. I'm going to do more reading and research on Anglish.

  • @stefanwalicord2512
    @stefanwalicord2512 Před 4 lety +318

    I like modern English a lot, but Anglish is super cool. As a German speaker, I really appreciate it.

    • @user-xi5sk5bt2x
      @user-xi5sk5bt2x Před 4 lety +8

      What does Apprecicate word mean ?

    • @davigurgel2040
      @davigurgel2040 Před 4 lety +17

      *I like new english a lot, but Anglish is very cool. As an east-landish speaker ( i guess "german" is a latin word, the old english word for german is "estmere" meaning "east of the sea"), i truly like it*

    • @davigurgel2040
      @davigurgel2040 Před 3 lety

      @@docpossum2460 I just threw it in an internet dictionary at the time. Unfortunately I can't find the one I used, this one uses "Þēodisc" instead glosbe.com/en/ang/German

    • @user-et8vm9cc3t
      @user-et8vm9cc3t Před 3 lety +1

      Weil es "einfächer" ist, nicht wahr?

    • @DougWinfield
      @DougWinfield Před 3 lety +1

      @@docpossum2460 and @Davi Gurgel proper older Shakespearean term for Germans was Alman or Almain

  • @yuichiwatanabe421
    @yuichiwatanabe421 Před 3 lety +155

    Thanks for a very interesting video. I am Japanese, and Japanese language is heavily influenced by Chinese since 5th-6th century. Now my gut feeling is that 70% of our vocabulary is from Chinese (of course, as you know well, phonetically changed to Japanese phonetic system). Also by American influence in the past several decades added 10-15% of our vocabulary. As a result, it is totally impossible for us to speak without non-Japanese originated words.

    • @pentelegomenon1175
      @pentelegomenon1175 Před 3 lety +4

      You could believe one of those crazy theories that Japanese is related to Korean, Mongolian, or Manchu. Or, just make up new words.

    • @_rami_745
      @_rami_745 Před 3 lety +23

      Around 60% of Japanese words are of Chinese origin in the dictionary, but only about 20% of the words spoken in everyday speech is of Chinese origin.

    • @aaronwilson8632
      @aaronwilson8632 Před 3 lety +6

      @Yuichi Watanabe I was curious if there was an equivalent online movement to eliminate katakana based linguistic influences from the Japanese language. I know Motoori Norinaga advocated for something similar to this, but he was writing in the Edo period against the context of China. As someone who studies Shodo, I find katakana to be aesthetically unappealing and would find a modern form of Japanese using only Kanji and Hiragana interesting

    • @Gadottinho
      @Gadottinho Před 3 lety +2

      You could just create a kanji and a way to pronounce it, maybe based in other japanese words or maybe not.

    • @Koutouhara
      @Koutouhara Před 3 lety

      You can speak Japanese only, it's just not the standard anymore, it sounds outdated as foreign words have replaced common ones. There are videos on it.

  • @CoolMan-ig1ol
    @CoolMan-ig1ol Před 2 lety +1

    I think this makes sense. Sure, it involves a complete overhaul of the language, but constructing new words from pre-existing germanic words is easier and thus in the long run will have a better grammar, pronounciation and defined vocabulary.

  • @izakgodsservant
    @izakgodsservant Před 2 lety

    Wow mind-blowing and informative thank you

  • @t3cthecrosscountrycat104
    @t3cthecrosscountrycat104 Před 4 lety +551

    Deutsch: Sprache
    Nederlands: Spraak
    Frysk: Taspraak
    English: Speech

    • @Afonso2001br
      @Afonso2001br Před 4 lety +49

      Language in dutch is taal. Spraak means speech.

    • @t3cthecrosscountrycat104
      @t3cthecrosscountrycat104 Před 4 lety +38

      @@Afonso2001br OK. Dankjewel, voor dat heeft ik niet gekonnt. Ook, ben ik sorry over mijn Nederlands. Ik weet me heel goed dat het niet zo mooie is, maar ik leze zo oft in Duits, dat het niet zo simpel om tot schieden is.
      Also, naja hast du Recht. Aber für die Gründe, Leute die Erkenntnis vom Verhältnis zwischen diese Sprachen zu realisieren, ist 'Spraak' zum Beispiel ebenso gut. Manchmal vergessen wir genau wie nähe zueinander sind aller diese Sprachen. Alle, sogar Deutsch und Englisch, sind Geschwistern. Dankeschön.

    • @linyung268
      @linyung268 Před 3 lety +11

      Swedish: Språk

    • @gastonbouchard9330
      @gastonbouchard9330 Před 3 lety +17

      Originally, it was spReech, not speech. Just as speak should actually be spReak. The R fell by the wayside at some point down the line.

    • @DougWinfield
      @DougWinfield Před 3 lety +16

      I would go with the Danish "Sprog". It just sounds cool.

  • @bryceirwin9919
    @bryceirwin9919 Před 4 lety +755

    You, an idiot: Television
    Me, an Anglo-Saxon: FAR SEER

    • @KarmasAB123
      @KarmasAB123 Před 4 lety +82

      Eye-box

    • @holidayspirit-
      @holidayspirit- Před 4 lety +31

      @@KarmasAB123 The best word I've seen in a while.

    • @asator0505
      @asator0505 Před 4 lety +32

      or you could go with icelandic "sjónvarp" ... which would be something like "sightcast"

    • @alanthomas2064
      @alanthomas2064 Před 4 lety

      Now we use both Latin and Greek for the TV Greek TELE to transmit! and Latin vision to see! ....what a mish mash! far seer much better! as children we learn .... perjury? .........OATH BREECH! no translation needed eh?

    • @boeloevanboeloefontein
      @boeloevanboeloefontein Před 4 lety +19

      @@asator0505 Sightwarp

  • @MichaelTavares
    @MichaelTavares Před 2 lety +4

    On the example: “the man forgot his rainshade” on the forgot. I e noticed Americans have started forgetting items rather than leaving an item behind. I’d never forget my umbrella, I’d forget to take/bring an umbrella. Forgetting an umbrella means losing awareness of it. Like not knowing it exists. This battle may have been long lost but forgetting all items (wallet and keys seem acceptable but others not) instead of forgetting to bring/take them still sounds wrong

    • @markussokk2847
      @markussokk2847 Před 2 lety

      You know, you are absolutely, totally and incontrovertibly correct.

  • @MrPrmdfk
    @MrPrmdfk Před 2 lety +1

    2.59.,we can say that word Showplayer has roots in German language as well.''Schauschpieler'' is an actor in German.

  • @nobbel65
    @nobbel65 Před 6 lety +85

    In fact "showplayer" is a direct translation of the German "Schauspieler". And "underwarp" seems to be related to the Dutch "onderwerp". Since I speak German, English and Dutch, "Anglish" is very interesting for me.

    • @vaendryl
      @vaendryl Před 5 lety +2

      "waterstuff" was very funny to me. it seemed so silly until i realized that's exactly what it's called in dutch.

    • @vessy9927
      @vessy9927 Před 5 lety

      also hydrogen basically means waterstuff

    • @jacquelineliu2641
      @jacquelineliu2641 Před 5 lety

      waterstuff reminded me of Japanese 水素

  • @rogerwilco2
    @rogerwilco2 Před 7 lety +236

    What I find interesting as a Dutch speaker, is that English speakers become more Latin and less Germanic when they try to sound educated and posh.
    I believe this is because the French/Norman words originate from the ruling class.
    I usually easily recognize the difference.
    Things are blended a bit more in the colonies than in Britain where parts of the class society still show in things like this.
    I can often find ways to say things in largely Germanic English without sounding as forced as some of your Anglish examples, at least to my own ears, as I would tend to pick Dutch, German or Swedish equivalents that might be a slightly less exact translation but still in actual use in those languages.

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Před 7 lety +18

      What I find fun as a Dutch speaker, is that in English speakers become more Latin and less Germanic when they try to sound schooled* and high.
      I believe this is since the French/Norman words come from the leading group.
      I often easily see both sides.
      Things are blended a bit more in the new lands than in the old islands where there are more bits of the ranked life still showing.
      I can often find ways to say things in largely Germanic English without sounding as made-up as some of your Anglish forbild, at least to my own ears, as I would like to pick Dutch, German or Swedish alike words that might be a slightly less well oversetting but still being wielded in those speaks.
      *) yes it's from Latin as well

    • @TypicalRussianGuy
      @TypicalRussianGuy Před 7 lety +27

      Latin was an official language in medieval British universities. And when some people from the general folk tried to sound smarter, they used the words that they heard educated people say. And since the education was in Latin, you can already guess what happened.
      Also Russian tended to do the same thing in the 18th century. For example, we can use both ''materiya'' and ''veshestvo'' to describe matter and in the 18th century the majority of scientists used the word ''materiya'' in both chemistry and physics. But now only physicists use that word and chemists always use ''veshestvo''.

    • @graememark1116
      @graememark1116 Před 7 lety +15

      It's interesting that there are exceptions to the "latin smart german dumb" rule. Like tolerate vs. Forbear... I guess the smart word is just the one that's less common...

    • @1948DESMOND
      @1948DESMOND Před 7 lety

      british or english?

    • @BrettonFerguson
      @BrettonFerguson Před 7 lety +8

      I think it does go back to Germanic language being barbarians and Latin being educated. More recently after the Norman invasion of England it was like that too. Americans particularly like to use big words when they want to sound smart. Magnificent sounds more intellectual an educated than saying Very Good. Intelligent vs. Smart. Ambiguous vs. Inexact.
      They can make a sentence out of big words and not say anything of substance. Here is my favorite example of a bunch of large words saying a lot of Bullshit.
      twitter.com/RealPeerReview/status/849318153356267523

  • @JeremiaszCzeresniowiecki
    @JeremiaszCzeresniowiecki Před 2 lety +2

    Could you make a presentation about other languages' influence on English? It would be interesting because people use English worldwide so not only the history of the UK, US and other Anglosphere countries shaped this language but also immigrants and internet culture. I'm interested in the influence of Slavic languages - if it exists, because I'm from Poland ;) so it will surprise me because I don't know about similarities in these both languages.

  • @MixerRenegade95
    @MixerRenegade95 Před 2 lety +1

    Love New/Modern English, it allows me to catch on to other languages quickly.

  • @CaratCutter
    @CaratCutter Před 5 lety +298

    I like this Anglish. I also feel it necessary to note that French is not entirely Romance as it developed in part from Frankish which is a Germanic language.

    • @prabhuthomas8770
      @prabhuthomas8770 Před 5 lety +58

      Exactly. While Modern English is very French/Latinate in its vocabulary, French is very Germanic in its structure and syntax. Thus, French is rightly classified as the most orphaned of the Romance languages. Portuguese has a very interesting history as well (a very ancient language). This is lost on so many people.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 5 lety +23

      What about Romansh? Is it more Germanized than French? When I heard Romansh, it sounded to me like a German trying to speak Italian.

    • @kennethdeitz4561
      @kennethdeitz4561 Před 5 lety +11

      I believe that Gaulic/Gaelic words are also part of French?

    • @JB-gy7ip
      @JB-gy7ip Před 5 lety

      Exact.

    • @wrestlingfan-yq1wh
      @wrestlingfan-yq1wh Před 5 lety +21

      CaratCutter French is wholly romance but the phonology is influenced by old Gaulish not Frankish.

  • @MGVA1982
    @MGVA1982 Před 4 lety +116

    Eh, English may be 58% Romance vocabulary, but if you're just looking at the common, everyday words in casual speech and writing - it's much less than 58%

    • @mauriciorv228
      @mauriciorv228 Před 4 lety +30

      And not all french words are romance. French is a romance language with some germanic influence, like the word “war”.It comes from french but its origin is germanic. If i am not wrong it’s frankish.

    • @PhilippeLarcher
      @PhilippeLarcher Před 3 lety

      50

    • @Impossiblegend
      @Impossiblegend Před 3 lety +8

      @@mauriciorv228 No, french originally didn't have W and K and it was only intoduced from English so it exists in very, very few words. The french for war is guerre.

    • @mauriciorv228
      @mauriciorv228 Před 3 lety +6

      Impossiblegend yea i know that’ s what i meant. Guerre comes from frankish.

    • @BrandonClaridge
      @BrandonClaridge Před 3 lety +7

      The Romance/French/Latin origin vocabulary is definitely less heavily used in "everyday" language aside from a word or two here and there. Not to mention what was already said about French... there's definitely some Germanic influence on vocabulary in the French language, considering that the French-speaking territory (northern France) juts northward into what was historically Germanic territory. I am actually learning French right now, and just by reading texts in French, I do pick up on A LOT of cognates that I already know from English (though this is obviously because of the French and Latin-origin vocabulary in English). Many of these words end in the suffixes of -tion, -sion, and -(i)té (-[i]ty in English), among others.
      I do think that the overuse of those foreign-origin roots does make English communication needlessly complicated, as it creates a disconnect between the "everyday" Germanic words and the "formal" Romance-origin words. Although meanings do shift with time, it is possible to misunderstand the actual meaning of a word (and misuse it) if you do not know the meaning of the roots used to construct that word; sometimes people do this in an effort to sound well-spoken. That said, the adoption of various foreign-origin roots and words does make learning a foreign language (especially one in the Romance family) quite a bit easier for English speakers, at least on the vocabulary front. However, this seems to come at the expense of taking a longer period of time to attain English fluency and literacy, either as a child or as a student learning English as a foreign language. Many native English speakers will never even use that potential of their vocabulary knowledge in facilitating the acquisition of a foreign language in the Romance or Germanic families.
      I do wonder if the situation with foreign borrowings in English (primarily from Romance/French/Latin) can be compared to that of Japanese (borrowings from Chinese). Not to mention the similarities in geography here: both English and Japanese evolved on islands separate from a larger continent.

  • @sriharshacv7760
    @sriharshacv7760 Před 8 měsíci +2

    When I think about it like that, German sounds weirdly cute and wholesome.

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329

    Interesting video. Where there are alternative vocabulary for a given word, I almost always prefer the Germanic option. I would like someone to publish a theosaurus which gives synonyms for non-Germanic words.

  • @KnightOfGaea
    @KnightOfGaea Před 4 lety +62

    This seems like it could be a fun language to use in some sort of fantasy setting.

  • @froggiedoggie1
    @froggiedoggie1 Před 4 lety +209

    work meaning energy is totally going to mess up your worldken

    • @vanderdole02
      @vanderdole02 Před 4 lety +21

      yeah they should have used craght in stead of work…, like as in dutch kracht...not very creative of them..

    • @boeloevanboeloefontein
      @boeloevanboeloefontein Před 4 lety +6

      @@vanderdole02 "Work" or "work done" is an actual term used in Ancwe worldken, actually.

    • @goodiesohhi
      @goodiesohhi Před 4 lety +9

      @@vanderdole02 No. They mean work as in the product of force and displacement, measured in joules.

    • @Treviisolion
      @Treviisolion Před 3 lety +3

      wim V the idea isn’t to be creative, but using English words of Germanic origin where they work, and creating new ones out of existing ones when an existing one does not. While work and energy are used to mean different things, they are measured in the same units, and it wouldn’t be the first time that a word was used to mean two different things in physics. Example: Temperature is both used to refer to the measurement of a system’s average kinetic energy of it’s constituent particles, and as a measure of Boltzmann entropy. In the first definition absolute temperature scales such as Kelvin will never not measure positive, in the second definition you can have negative temperatures. Also people will sometimes refer to something being lighter than something else when they mean less dense even if the object in question is far more massive than what it’d being compared to (like say Saturn to Earth) as English does not currently have a good word for that.
      On that note however, that’s partially why I’m not a big fan of linguistic purism in general, work and energy roughly mean the same thing, and it’s easy to believe that if the word energy wasn’t available, that we’d have used ‘work’ instead, but by using both we’re able to easily distinguish subtle differences. By adding and borrowing new words you can contrast subtle meanings by your vocabulary choice. That said I understand when people push back at using a new word when a word already exists, and the only difference semantically is that one is newer than the other.

    • @peterknutsen3070
      @peterknutsen3070 Před 3 lety

      goodiesohhi
      Yes. Poul Anderson was a science fiction writer, and he had a degree in physics, so it’s the kind of thing he’d always get right.

  • @BenjaminMankowski
    @BenjaminMankowski Před rokem +4

    This reminds me of when I was taking German in college, and was fascinated that the German word for refrigerator literally translated to "coldcloset."

    • @dangerboy4609
      @dangerboy4609 Před rokem +2

      In Afrikaans it literally translates to "ice cupboard" 🤣🤣

    • @dixonhill1108
      @dixonhill1108 Před rokem

      Ironically a lot of families in Canada traditionally had a "coldroom" that was basically a room full of pond ice, used to keep everything cool in the summer.

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Před rokem

      @@dixonhill1108 Not the same thing though.

    • @LG123ABC
      @LG123ABC Před rokem +2

      Older Americans still refer to a refrigerator as an "icebox" sometimes.

  • @PineappleSkip
    @PineappleSkip Před 2 lety +2

    Greetings from Andland. I am seriously bewondering if this video was published on 1 April.