What "Ancient" Chinese Sounded Like - and how we know

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  • čas přidán 27. 02. 2018
  • How China's scholars uncovered its ancient imperial language and founded a linguistic tradition that's uniquely separate from the West.
    Subscribe for language: czcams.com/users/subscription_...
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    ~ Briefly ~ (spoilers!)
    What Chinese once sounded like and how that was discovered throughout the ages... to be explained, not through the eyes of European linguistics, but in the old and venerable tradition of Chinese linguistics!
    Since ancient times Chinese scholars have been arguing about the right way to pronounce classic poetry and literature. Here's how they dug into the past and reconstructed the earlier sounds behind the characters.
    After a note about my struggles with Chinese phonology, our tale begins in 1842 with Chen Li's attempt to piece together older Chinese pronunciation. He's working from a fanqie dictionary put together more than 1200 years earlier by Lu Fayan after a party at his house turned into an argument about the exact pronunciation of ancient rhymes.
    We'll look at an example of fanqie, then wander hundreds of years later to see how rime tables presented Chinese phonology in a more systematic way. With these resources in hand, scholars spent centuries convincing everyone that they could reconstruct any syllable and that Chinese had exactly 36 initial consonants.
    We return to Chen Li's time to watch him dissect the fanqie and prove that Chinese phonology was more complicated and less understood than previously thought. Then, a Swede named Karlgren will visit China and use information from modern "dialects", including Sino-Xenic pronunciations, to fill in the fanqie and rime table categories with real sounds.
    After considering how scholars have built on this work, we end up with tiny snapshots of historical Chinese pronunciation but a good overview of the framework used to investigate it. With one important adjustment: what's being reconstructed turns out not to be a single language called "Ancient" Chinese. It's a period and a categorical system now known as "Middle Chinese". "Middle" because there's an "Old" Chinese, which is even older, has its own (connected) stories and could be worth a visit.
    ~ Credits ~
    Art, animation, narration and outro music by Josh from NativLang
    Doc full of sources for claims made and images, music, sfx, fonts used:
    docs.google.com/document/d/1u...
    Music:
    Dragons and Fireworks by Darren Curtis - www.darrencurtismusic.com
    Asian Graveyard by Darren Curtis - www.darrencurtismusic.com
    All The Tea In China by Shane Ivers - www.silvermansound.com
    Shenyang by Kevin MacLeod - www.incompetech.com
    Eastern Thought by Kevin MacLeod - www.incompetech.com
    Silver Flame by Kevin MacLeod - www.incompetech.com
    Opium by Kevin MacLeod - www.incompetech.com
    Crazy Glue by Josh Woodward - www.joshwoodward.com
    Sneaky Snooper by Jason Shaw - www.audionautix.com
    Great Unknown by Jason Shaw - www.audionautix.com

Komentáře • 6K

  • @nolongerusedaccount7695
    @nolongerusedaccount7695 Před 5 lety +5915

    That feeling when you're at a sleep over and one of your boys starts writing the Qieyun

    • @MC-qc9iz
      @MC-qc9iz Před 5 lety +45

      OMG 💀😂

    • @megha5176
      @megha5176 Před 4 lety +14

      😂😂

    • @whitealliance9540
      @whitealliance9540 Před 4 lety +32

      The style of this comment is offensive bro. You not about that hood life, you aint in the ghetto hustling rocks bro

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole Před 4 lety +143

      White Alliance huh?

    • @whitealliance9540
      @whitealliance9540 Před 4 lety +15

      @@LittleWhole the style of his comment is "youth black negroid" which clearly he is not

  • @lokwong2743
    @lokwong2743 Před 4 lety +9575

    I’m almost 100% sure the ancient Chinese language didn’t sound like the current Mandarin AT ALL.

    • @SachaCubesLatino
      @SachaCubesLatino Před 4 lety +1135

      If you see the reconstructions, it sounded more like Russian or Georgian than modern Chinese languages lmao

    • @jiang8692
      @jiang8692 Před 4 lety +257

      time traveler?

    • @imorichwu4797
      @imorichwu4797 Před 4 lety +199

      crap, does the West Germanic languages
      have "resemble" with the current English?

    • @SachaCubesLatino
      @SachaCubesLatino Před 4 lety +576

      @@imorichwu4797 actually, yes. The west Germanic languages haven't changed as dramatically as Ancient Chinese. At least they preserve many key sounds, and their syllable structure is pretty much the same (whereas in the Chinese languages it was heavily reduced).

    • @imorichwu4797
      @imorichwu4797 Před 4 lety +138

      ​@@SachaCubesLatino In certain extent, the Chinese character and ancient Chinese are pretty much the same by the font. we just more simplified.

  • @PC_Simo
    @PC_Simo Před 3 lety +471

    ”I struggle with Chinese pronunciation.”
    Who doesn’t?

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před 3 lety +9

      @july Obviously.

    • @daieast6305
      @daieast6305 Před 3 lety +7

      google translate app does a fair job of it

    • @Killerbee4712
      @Killerbee4712 Před 3 lety +40

      Lol even us chinese have trouble

    • @josiehan5430
      @josiehan5430 Před 3 lety +3

      hahahah all my local relatives.

    • @cueiyo6906
      @cueiyo6906 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Killerbee4712 not me :T

  • @sowhanQ
    @sowhanQ Před 3 lety +1055

    The Ancient Chinese Unified Written Words, but not speaking tones.

    • @typemy9381
      @typemy9381 Před 3 lety +22

      It is said that there are nearly 130 dialects in China

    • @gamaxgbg
      @gamaxgbg Před 3 lety +163

      Not dialects, but actual languages. They are languages by definition, they are only called dialects because of political reasons, not linguistical.

    • @peaceleague6514
      @peaceleague6514 Před 3 lety +33

      @@gamaxgbg your definition of language is weird.

    • @gamaxgbg
      @gamaxgbg Před 3 lety +89

      @@peaceleague6514 They are different languages that were unified by a writing system. Having the same writing system post divergence doesn't make them "dialects".

    • @peaceleague6514
      @peaceleague6514 Před 3 lety +67

      ​they are dialects as they have no separate grammar or sentence structure. Some even sound similar to other dialects. However, they are not dialects of Mandarin, e.g. Cantonese is a language which is independent of mandarin and a subordinative dialect of Chinese(Sinitic languages)

  • @guerra_dos_bichos
    @guerra_dos_bichos Před 4 lety +2999

    I feel like I entered the wrong classroom and sit through an advanced class that is fascinating but i'm totally unprepared for

    • @director-of-the-BSF
      @director-of-the-BSF Před 3 lety +128

      Don't worry, even if my mother tongue is Chinese, I am confused about the video.

    • @polarbear9131
      @polarbear9131 Před 3 lety +9

      @@director-of-the-BSF Singaporean¿

    • @zwang3909
      @zwang3909 Před 3 lety +13

      @@polarbear9131 恐怕是义务教育漏网之鱼

    • @onlyhuman8496
      @onlyhuman8496 Před 3 lety +5

      @@director-of-the-BSF learning Chinese dialects is incomplete without discussing the Languages or dialects spoken in Nagaland by the Naga tribes

    • @stephanier4635
      @stephanier4635 Před 2 lety +13

      😂😂😂 having basic Chinese language knowledge could be helpful yo.. this comment is so funny to me because I feel the same 😂

  • @NgKKh
    @NgKKh Před 5 lety +6433

    Having spent four years in college studying the history of the Chinese language, I am impressed by the accuracy and clarity of this video, and admire the time and effort the team have put into producing this video about a topic known by few people, including even the native speakers. Bravo!

    • @yubaa
      @yubaa Před 5 lety +187

      @whachusay He's Chinese, not American

    • @TranTek
      @TranTek Před 5 lety +42

      i would think Cantonese has a longer history than Mandarin by quite a bit
      the original Vietnamese is nothing like we know them as it, current Vietnamese had changed and based from French

    • @kevinliu7780
      @kevinliu7780 Před 5 lety +98

      Hung Tran I’m a cantonese native speaker and i also master mandarin chinese and taiwanese hokkien so i can tell you that southern dialects like cantonese hokkien and hakka etc definitely have longer history. If you read the poems written in tang dynasty (which has the most number of rules of rhyming and the tone of every word) you’ll see that southern dialects abide by the rules much more than mandarin chinese (which is a northern dialect). Actually we people living here in the south were originated from Zhongyuan (the politically central part of china for over 2000 years) that’s why our dialects are more similar to the so called middle chinese mentioned in this video.

    • @johnathontang7237
      @johnathontang7237 Před 5 lety +8

      France 2018 Champions du monde you are right. Southern dialects have longer history than northern.

    • @cartonet8186
      @cartonet8186 Před 5 lety +3

      So, do you agree that we actually know how it sounded like?

  • @lolhcd
    @lolhcd Před 4 lety +467

    1:09 Fun fact: the Chinesecharacter "Chen" is also my last name "Tran", which is Vietnamese. Kinda like Müller/Schmied in German vs Miller/Smith in English.

    • @daieast6305
      @daieast6305 Před 3 lety +3

      sorry, where is the fun part?

    • @lolhcd
      @lolhcd Před 3 lety +121

      dai east „fun fact“ can also be understood as an interesting information that doesn’t necessarily relate to the context. It‘s an additional information that can make people laugh but doesn‘t have to.

    • @lolhcd
      @lolhcd Před 3 lety +8

      edukid1984 Wow thanks! I didn‘t know about the title aspect and the Hokkien pronunciation! Yes, there was a Tran-Dynasty prior to the well known Dynasty led by the Nguyens.
      The Tran Dynasty also introduced the colloquial Vietnamese language into the court, alongside Chinese which also solidified Vietnamese as a language.

    • @turin2488
      @turin2488 Před 3 lety +39

      well i think this is fun. as a chinese its good to know chinese language also has “cousins “ like european language

    • @leeyee9325
      @leeyee9325 Před 3 lety +21

      Pronouncing Chinese origin terms in Vietnamese is more similar to Cantonese than Mandarin. In Cantonese "Chan" is 95% sounds like "Tran"

  • @bbutterlovers
    @bbutterlovers Před 3 lety +1048

    I am from Singapore and I speak Teochew, Hakka, Cantonese and Mandarin. As my daughter is learning Japanese, I realised that many of the imported Kanji words are very similar to Teochew, Hokkien or Cantonese. I could also identify many words in Korean with similar pronunciations with Chinese dialects. Some Korean surnames sound the same as Chinese surnames in certain Chinese dialects. My surname 'Lim' is a case in point. It is also a Korean surname. 'Lim' is in Teochew as my father's a Teochew. In Putonghua /Mandarin, it would be 'Lin'. In Cantonese it would be 'Lum'. It's really fascinating.
    Btw, i feel the pronunciation of all languages evolve to some extent. English definitely did not sound like how it sounds like now. Middle English (1300s) is almost incomprehensible to an English speaker in the 21st century. I've done Geoffrey Chaucer so I know! 😅

    • @emhgarlyyeung
      @emhgarlyyeung Před 3 lety +26

      Hakka also pronounce your surname as Lim.

    • @shashwatsinha2704
      @shashwatsinha2704 Před 3 lety +9

      Which language do ethnic Chinese in Singapore use amongst themselves?

    • @emhgarlyyeung
      @emhgarlyyeung Před 3 lety +28

      @@shashwatsinha2704 It's Hokkian (Fu Jian / Min Nan)

    • @shashwatsinha2704
      @shashwatsinha2704 Před 3 lety +7

      @@emhgarlyyeung Ok. But they learn Mandarin at school right?(in addition to English of course)

    • @emhgarlyyeung
      @emhgarlyyeung Před 3 lety +19

      @@shashwatsinha2704 Yes, Mandarin at school

  • @JamesOfTheYear
    @JamesOfTheYear Před 5 lety +2176

    -What Ancient Chinese Sounded Like- - and how we know
    I still don't know what it sounds like

    • @Carnifindion
      @Carnifindion Před 5 lety +59

      Nor was it ancient chinese

    • @simonlow0210
      @simonlow0210 Před 4 lety +82

      You can take a glimpse of what Ancient Chinese would've sounded like if you listen to Cantonese, Hakka and the Hokkien languages.

    • @socialwizardry3700
      @socialwizardry3700 Před 4 lety +68

      Exactly. Watched the video and didn't even give a sample.

    • @everexpress28
      @everexpress28 Před 4 lety +39

      @@simonlow0210 sorry, no, it's not like what you said. Those three language is the successor of ancient chinese as well as the mandarin. Different chinese spoken language are in fact succeeded some characteristics or properties from the ancient chinese. So, in a much more serious approach, even if we listen to Cantonese, Hakka and the Hokkien, how ancient chinese sounded is still a mystery .

    • @firefly4784
      @firefly4784 Před 4 lety +7

      Here are examples along the time line
      czcams.com/video/KUIEuG5Ox6A/video.html

  • @sooniyee
    @sooniyee Před 5 lety +2778

    Imaging combine all European languages into one language. This is what ancient Chinese done.

    • @griml0gic420
      @griml0gic420 Před 5 lety +196

      Maybe all of the Romance languages. I doubt Basque would be a proper example.

    • @mithrasenkidu9423
      @mithrasenkidu9423 Před 5 lety +57

      Latin...

    • @natsuhalu6213
      @natsuhalu6213 Před 5 lety +74

      Not only European but Indo-European language

    • @andersonluna7551
      @andersonluna7551 Před 5 lety +59

      @@mithrasenkidu9423 no. Only romance languages are descendants of the latin.

    • @FloresRain
      @FloresRain Před 5 lety +6

      @@wish-keeper how many did you speak there?

  • @Foiiiii1
    @Foiiiii1 Před 11 měsíci +34

    As a Japanese speaker, some ancient Chinese phonetics have been preserved in Japanese Kanji as well.

  • @Vongola10Cd
    @Vongola10Cd Před 4 lety +122

    As a native mandarin speaker, I always knew the pronunciation of Chinese language kept evolving and sounded very different in history. I just never knew HOW different they sounded. And earlier today I discovered a few rhyme attempts that blew me away. This topic is simply amusing. Thank you for the clear narrative!

  • @mywholelifeisruined9692
    @mywholelifeisruined9692 Před 4 lety +3346

    i am a Chinese and i don't even know what is he saying lol

    • @Itserikaale
      @Itserikaale Před 4 lety +26

      Lmaooo

    • @ferdikadatu687
      @ferdikadatu687 Před 4 lety +12

      yeah it's so confused even it's a tradition I dislike it because it's not simple

    • @aycc-nbh7289
      @aycc-nbh7289 Před 4 lety +18

      Siu Yin YAU So would Cantonese and Sino-Japanese pronunciations of characters sound closer to Classical Chinese? Could I go to China, Taiwan, or Singapore and speak using either of those pronunciations?

    • @BicyclesMayUseFullLane
      @BicyclesMayUseFullLane Před 4 lety +63

      ​@@aycc-nbh7289 Cantonese, sure, why not... Except you better hope that the person you are talking to also speaks Cantonese.
      Japanese on-yomi... nah, you would get weird looks. Remember, modern Mandarin sounds nothing like middle Chinese, of which Japanese on-yomi draws pronunciations from. Also on-yomi don't have tonal information. Also it would be patently obvious that you are speaking Japanese in a weird fashion.
      TL;DR: no.

    • @avy951
      @avy951 Před 4 lety +9

      aycc-nbh72 well, the mentioned countries speak Mandarin, so I’d say no to that. I can’t 100% assure you that Cantonese and Sino-Japanese sound closer to ancient Chinese. Just common sayings, which could be wrong

  • @chase_the_dragon
    @chase_the_dragon Před 5 lety +2661

    I am a native speaker of Chinese, and I found this video very fascinating and profound to watch. Great work! Thank you!
    中文真的博大精深

    • @EzraMerr
      @EzraMerr Před 4 lety +5

      啊河

    • @aycc-nbh7289
      @aycc-nbh7289 Před 4 lety +124

      Apna Anime Not all native Chinese speakers live in China. Many live in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and Singapore, where the Internet can be accessed freely.

    • @joytan5048
      @joytan5048 Před 4 lety +42

      @Apna Anime um bruh? So you think they live under a rock?

    • @CC-il3hw
      @CC-il3hw Před 4 lety +20

      @@joytan5048 I think he means that CZcams is blocked in China

    • @joytan5048
      @joytan5048 Před 4 lety +3

      C C he used the word internet? Could’ve used CZcams 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @a_kholdun
    @a_kholdun Před 3 lety +32

    Me: Please... I just need to sleep
    My Brain: How dare you! Don't you wonder how ancient chinese sounds like?

  • @Fion330
    @Fion330 Před 3 lety +340

    2020 now. Here’s just a rough timeline.
    Mandarin(北京官话), from Beijing area. formed in yuan dynasty, around 652 years ago.
    Hakka dialect(客家话), originated in Henan area, formed during northern and southern dynasties to southern Song Dynasty, around 741 to 1800 years ago.
    Cantonese(粤语), originated in northern China and formed during Qin dynasty, spread to Guangdong and Guangxi areas, around 2200 years ago.
    Chu dialect (古楚语 distinguished), from Chu State, formed in Zhou dynasty, developed during warring states period, around 2230 to 3000 years ago.
    Wu dialect(吴语), Jiangnan area. Formed in Shang dynasty, around 4000 years ago, still the second most spoken dialect in China.
    There are even many older languages, but I’m no expert, my point is, for the length of Chinese history, Cantonese CANNOT be the single one language to represent how ancient Chinese sounds like.

    • @ktjfssblock2
      @ktjfssblock2 Před 3 lety +20

      No one say Cantonese is the only ancient language. However, canto is way befor qin dynasty. While 潮州話is even older

    • @blktauna
      @blktauna Před 3 lety +3

      Its the most familiar to non speakers and noticeably different from mandarin so it gives the right type of contrast example. Now I must hear Wu (Ng?) dialect!

    • @xmvziron
      @xmvziron Před 3 lety +10

      No. All Chinese languages (with the exception of Min) descend from Middle Chinese, spoken over 1500 years ago. Min descended from Old Chinese, spoken around 2200 years ago.

    • @amwzheng1
      @amwzheng1 Před 3 lety +5

      XMV Ziron min 闽 is really old, they still use the word ding 鼎 bronze cookware used more than two thousand years ago.

    • @xmvziron
      @xmvziron Před 3 lety

      @@amwzheng1 Yeah, that's what I said.

  • @ncw8681
    @ncw8681 Před 5 lety +889

    I am Chinese and I majored in Chinese language , so your video literally reminds of me what I have learned about the history of Chinese language in college . This video totally impresses me that you explain these really detail things in a simple way ! I also feel your respect for the Chinese language 😆 thank you for making this video so a lot people from different cultures will understand more about us and our language 😊

  • @user-nt9nq5wm1u
    @user-nt9nq5wm1u Před 5 lety +793

    As a Chinese, I don’t know this! Thanks for telling me!

    • @usagiprincess4387
      @usagiprincess4387 Před 5 lety +15

      Nonsense Manjaro *didn’t know

    • @logan8638
      @logan8638 Před 5 lety +61

      @ixervert you can correct someone and not be a dick. He's probably just trying to help him speak better English

    • @user-zk1oq6ol6u
      @user-zk1oq6ol6u Před 4 lety +43

      @Özer Malkoç i know you are son of bitch!

    • @Xnoob545
      @Xnoob545 Před 4 lety +11

      *A S A C H I N E S E*

    • @circleofdao3556
      @circleofdao3556 Před 4 lety

      and another as i comment

  • @uuuuuuuuiiiiiii
    @uuuuuuuuiiiiiii Před 7 měsíci

    This was fascinating, I’d love to hear you do an ever deeper dive. Thanks!

  • @RichardKFLIU-gb9mj
    @RichardKFLIU-gb9mj Před 3 lety +1

    You've done a GREAT job to introduce to everyone our ancient knowledge even little known nowadays. Thank you a lot!!!!

  • @dekukunv.8594
    @dekukunv.8594 Před 5 lety +761

    I just clicked on something I don't even know anything about..

    • @CertifiedFresh7
      @CertifiedFresh7 Před 5 lety +31

      The more you know 🌈⭐️

    • @GY-bd9bo
      @GY-bd9bo Před 5 lety +12

      What other reason is there to click on an informative video?

    • @malster1239
      @malster1239 Před 4 lety +3

      But you are learning something

    • @bonniewood5157
      @bonniewood5157 Před 4 lety

      Same here!

    • @territ.5357
      @territ.5357 Před 4 lety

      @@CertifiedFresh7 😂🤣😂 that rainbow and star (the logo) has me laughing! So indicative of the public service announcements, of my childhood. Lol

  • @mickymousejuju
    @mickymousejuju Před 5 lety +1328

    My head hurts

    • @selenachen7091
      @selenachen7091 Před 5 lety +44

      Me too😂😂😂 and I'm Chinese... Although I have broken Chinese

    • @kevinliu7780
      @kevinliu7780 Před 5 lety +14

      Selena C 你中文不好那你的母語是什麼

    • @user-qg2gb9tu7l
      @user-qg2gb9tu7l Před 5 lety +30

      @@kevinliu7780 很多人的母语都不是很好,很多书和很多话他们是听不懂的,这是客观事实,在各个地区都有

    • @asdfghjkl92213
      @asdfghjkl92213 Před 5 lety +6

      As it should.

    • @permanentstateofawe6544
      @permanentstateofawe6544 Před 5 lety +6

      @@kevinliu7780 I personally consider English my main language because I don't consider China my mother land (even if I was born there).

  • @daniellaNicole0
    @daniellaNicole0 Před 3 lety +4

    This is fascinating. I would love to learn more hahaha I love learning Chinese and especially learning Vietnamese. There are so many things that make them similar and different and when you are involved in it you start unlocking a lot more understanding and I just absolutely love it!!!!!!

  • @weibinsong3140
    @weibinsong3140 Před rokem +1

    Very productive and very inspiring, thanks for sharing! 👍

  • @zanewong2005
    @zanewong2005 Před 5 lety +1804

    Thanks for the video. I personally speak three Chinese: Teochew (a dialect of the Southern Min Chinese) which is my mother tongue, Cantonese, and Mandarin. All three have different pronunciations of some same characters, have different numbers of tones. And my mother tongue Teochew uses some very old words like 箸 (chopstick, same as in Japanese Kanji, instead of 筷), 糜 (rice porridge, instead of 粥), 鼎 (wok, instead of Cantonese 鑊 or modern Mandarin 炒鍋), 伊 (third-person pronoun, same as in many medieval Chinese poems, instead of modern Mandarin 他). And many Japanese/Korean imported Chinese words actually sounds very similar or almost identical with the pronunciations in my mother tongue. A good example is the Korean **Hunminjeongeum** (訓民正音 훈민정음) , as in Teochew it would be 訓 hun 民 min 正 je'an 音 yim with the correct intonations (Korean doesn't have intonations). Cantonese also uses characters or words that are not used in Mandarin as the modern Chinese. I personally am very fascinated by the varieties of Han Chinese, but sadly most people in China and the world only know about Mandarin, and quite often refer to Mandarin as Chinese, sometimes better with Cantonese but nothing more.

    • @tessadu4275
      @tessadu4275 Před 5 lety +42

      during learning Japanese, I notice that many pronouncation are quite similer to Cantonese , So I think they borrowed the Kanji from Cantonese. BTW, I used to stay in GuangDong for 7 years, however I'm failed to learn Cantonese, when I always made mistake between 你吃了吗? vs 你起了吗? ,我头恶(我肚子饿vs我拉肚子) I ended this study trip.
      I think why we choose north dialect as official languagee but not Contonese, because it's too hard to learn.according my learning experience, even Japanese is more easier than contonese.

    • @zanewong2005
      @zanewong2005 Před 5 lety +75

      @@tessadu4275 Japanese has its own set of rules of pronouncing Kanji, and for the pronunciation 'borrowed' from China, there are three. The similarity with Cantonese is probably more due to the similarity of pronunciation between Cantonese and other Chineses.
      Kindly notice that the examples you give have very different pronunciations in Cantonese, e.g. eat 食 = sik vs get up 起 = hei.
      Choosing Mandarin based on Beijing Accent is simply a political decision due to historical reasons that political and economic centers were in the north; Cantonese has its status in Guangdong also due to the economic and cultural influences of Guangzhou and Hong Kong. There is nothing to do with simple or difficult, otherwise the EU should have made language as its official language, and UN shouldn't have 6 official languages, including Chinese.
      Mandarin pronunciation is a simplification of Cantonese and other southern Chinese pronunciations. There's no such thing as which language is simpler than the other, what matters are the effort and openness to new things. Cantonese is not my mother tongue (Teochew, a dialect of Southern Min), but I speak three Chineses fluently, and I got to fluently speaking Cantonese by simply watching TV from 4 years old, never taught by anyone.

    • @nicoleleao9585
      @nicoleleao9585 Před 5 lety +26

      Chopsticks, Rice porridge, and Book in 閩南語 Minnan Chinese, this language use old words 著,糜,冊. Chinese is a interesting language.

    • @singsai
      @singsai Před 4 lety +6

      Zane Wong Check out Gaginang.org. We have a website but currently are more active in our Facebook group.

    • @efcodpalama
      @efcodpalama Před 4 lety +11

      훈민정음 할 줄 알아요?
      I ask because I just started learning Korean hanja and I am fascinated by their connection to Chinese dialects. I certainly noticed more similarities between Korean and Japanese pronunciation, but the written hanja seems more similar to old fashioned Chinese.

  • @TechZG
    @TechZG Před 5 lety +582

    Learning Chinese for three years... this is really interesting video!! Languages in China are so varied and different and more of them than I ever imagined before coming here

    • @hangzhao8060
      @hangzhao8060 Před 5 lety +28

      well that's because China is nearly the size of europe and geographically seperated by rivers and mountains

    • @SereneGuan
      @SereneGuan Před 5 lety +4

      TechZG why did you pick Chinese to learn? Just curious ^_^

    • @TechZG
      @TechZG Před 5 lety +11

      @@SereneGuan i live in china.. :-)

    • @elohime
      @elohime Před 5 lety

      @木不氵酉氵車斤氵農 豺狼自遠方來,不亦斃乎

    • @hanma3291
      @hanma3291 Před 5 lety

      挂老外

  • @jackzhu69
    @jackzhu69 Před 3 lety +1

    This is really helpful to discuss this topic from different angle , 谢谢

  • @zhangjingw
    @zhangjingw Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your effort in resolving the Chinese pronunciation! It is really difficult, but there must be something interesting behind it.

  • @user-kz2nx7vk1z
    @user-kz2nx7vk1z Před 6 lety +135

    I am Chinese. I'm learning Chinese here.

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott Před 6 lety +1374

    That is just amazing. The age of the Chinese, well Chinese everything never ceases to astound me.

  • @ksc888
    @ksc888 Před 11 měsíci

    Awesum video, so detailed, well researched and interesting, thanks!

  • @yutinglinpipa
    @yutinglinpipa Před měsícem

    THIS IS STUNNING! Such an impressive video. The traditional phonology system is one of the most difficult subjects for students majoring Chinese literature in a University. My experience was I as a native speaker struggled so much when studying those charts and reconstructive methods shown in the stories.

  • @bbch4
    @bbch4 Před 5 lety +1248

    我居然在外国的影片里学中文 。。

    • @mannytgfp8300
      @mannytgfp8300 Před 5 lety +72

      中文是一种美丽的语言

    • @applemauzel
      @applemauzel Před 5 lety +35

      @Strider 1 Harry Potter (IN CHINESE) Seriously, for a westerner, any dubbed english movie is a good goto, since you can always compare it against the original english version.

    • @applemauzel
      @applemauzel Před 5 lety +10

      最重要的是,苏轼用的是哪儿一套~

    • @applemauzel
      @applemauzel Před 5 lety +3

      @Strider 1 The caveat is... not every movie have dubs in both languages. Some less-well-performing movies just give you subs.

    • @rodrigoadrianrodriguezaedo4477
      @rodrigoadrianrodriguezaedo4477 Před 5 lety

      Translation: I actually learn Chinese in foreign films . .

  • @rain2269
    @rain2269 Před 4 lety +269

    I think i read a meme somewhere:
    Kong kong kong,
    Kong kong kong kong.
    公公说,桶敲公公。
    Translation:
    Grandpa said, the bucket hit him.
    Or somewhere along those lines.

    • @gracechia2673
      @gracechia2673 Před 4 lety +61

      Oh yes! My linguistics professor used that meme to tell us the importance of tones. Even though the words sound the same, they're different because of the varying tones!

    • @justinque9382
      @justinque9382 Před 4 lety +32

      It might be Hokkien too : )

    • @williamkanayama1697
      @williamkanayama1697 Před 4 lety +36

      Definitely Hokkien, as a Hokkien speaker I can confirm it

    • @amaris5141
      @amaris5141 Před 4 lety +11

      it’s Hokkien

    • @wongpuisan685
      @wongpuisan685 Před 4 lety +2

      I thought is mandarin or Cantonese. Come out is hokkien.

  • @Fion330
    @Fion330 Před 3 lety +281

    For those saying Cantonese is how ancient Chinese sounds like, my response is, yes and no. Yes Cantonese is closer to ancient Chinese than mandarin by grammar, but both languages exist during ancient time. You have to admit there are huge part of China never spoke Cantonese or mandarin during ancient time. For example, there is a Wuyu dialect which is spoken in Shanghai, Wuxi and many other areas, mostly spoken around jiangnan area. Wuyu dialect hasn’t changed much since ancient China and is one of the oldest(4000 years) languages in the world, it can be traced all the way back to “Laing Zhu” civilization. It definitely hasn’t changed more than mandarin or Cantonese.

    • @dimelo3027
      @dimelo3027 Před 3 lety +7

      My response would be so the f**k what? Cantonese pronunciation is almost impossible to master for non-native Cantonese and not suitable to be an official language for China. Mandarin is much more accessible for any non-Cantonese speakers including foreigners so it is more suitable to be an official language.

    • @maggiechan33
      @maggiechan33 Před 3 lety +67

      @@dimelo3027
      Just because Mandarin Chinese is "more accessible" to people like you, IS NOT A REASON, for it, to be the official language.
      An official language SHOULD BEST REPRESENT, a nation + its people.
      Mandarin Chinese contains lots of "barbaric", NON-HAN, Mongol + Manchu Words.

    • @dimelo3027
      @dimelo3027 Před 3 lety +11

      @@maggiechan33 Whatever you say Hong Kongie. Don't learn Mandarin pls.

    • @maggiechan33
      @maggiechan33 Před 3 lety +6

      @@phsamuelwork
      THANK YOU !

    • @HeidenLam
      @HeidenLam Před 3 lety +6

      @@phsamuelwork finally

  • @vercingetorixbretwalda1325
    @vercingetorixbretwalda1325 Před 3 lety +10

    if anyone is interested in work done on Old Chinese, which came before what is described in this video, I'd recommend reading 上古音系 by Zhengzhang Shangfang, Old Chinese by William Baxter and Laurent Sagart, or the Sino Tibetan Etymological Dictionary by James Matisoff and others at Berkeley.

  • @tardistardis8
    @tardistardis8 Před 6 lety +629

    Please do a video on Old Chinese!!
    Edit: That's a lot of likes! Thanks everyone.

    • @thekidfromiowa
      @thekidfromiowa Před 6 lety +10

      tardistardis8 I think he gave us a wink wink that he's working on it as we speak if not planning on it some day.

    • @namingisdifficult408
      @namingisdifficult408 Před 6 lety +2

      tardistardis8 interesting

    • @LeoxandarMagnus
      @LeoxandarMagnus Před 6 lety +1

      tardistardis8 yes please. This would be very interesting.

    • @frankharr9466
      @frankharr9466 Před 6 lety +1

      That's an automatic process. They won't know what they're doing or why. It just happens.

    • @yourmother8775
      @yourmother8775 Před 6 lety +1

      Would love to watch it

  • @dorawang5451
    @dorawang5451 Před 6 lety +333

    You can still read old Chinese today and understand the meaning. That's the beauty when a language not based​ on the pronunciation.

    • @azncandypie9277
      @azncandypie9277 Před 6 lety +21

      and why Chinese media like drama and stuff are always subbed

    • @dorawang5451
      @dorawang5451 Před 6 lety +40

      96% people in China can read, even someone speaks a local dialogue, he can understand the show by reading the sub.

    • @azncandypie9277
      @azncandypie9277 Před 6 lety +18

      oh I wasn't asking a question, I was adding that the shared written system is also why dramas are subbed - for people who speak different dialects lol

    • @kekeke8988
      @kekeke8988 Před 6 lety +11

      But only because they learned written standard Chinese as a separate language, as a 2nd language, right?
      I've heard, for example, that written Cantonse is substantially different than the standard language, often using different characters in the situation.

    • @dorawang5451
      @dorawang5451 Před 6 lety +30

      No, written Chinese is not a separate language, it's the root of all Chinese language. In China, even the poor mountain village will get a school before they get power or road. That's why China has 96%
      literacy rate that's higher than the US. Any Chinese dialog can fit into written Chinese.

  • @SophiaChen222
    @SophiaChen222 Před 3 lety

    I was totally amazed! Thanks

  • @Nuhuhhehehe
    @Nuhuhhehehe Před 3 lety +11

    remember guys, never mess with smart people.
    it only took a cat fight in a slumber part that Mr. Lu hosts and it motivated him to write those scrolls

  • @PragmaticCulture
    @PragmaticCulture Před 6 lety +191

    An excellent video as always! Linguistic history is under appreciated in general, but especially for Eastern languages. Thanks for doing the work.

  • @kchiu9080
    @kchiu9080 Před 4 lety +658

    Cantonese still holds a certain rhythm when reading the older chinese script, you can probably start from there

    • @artemisia5663
      @artemisia5663 Před 4 lety +100

      @@s-asw1360 Wtf are you talking? Nobody here is arrogant or have any kind of disapproving attitude towards Mandarin. This person here simply stated that reading ancient poems with Cantonese rhymes more.
      You know what? I am sick of you. As you speak, I suspect that you are a mainlander. Are you arrogant enough to not know that the Guangdong province, Hong Kong and Macau all speaks cantonese? You here directed your undefined anger in your heart towards HongKongers without any reasoning. Honestly your existence brought disgrace to us all- dimwit.

    • @yurusan721
      @yurusan721 Před 4 lety +67

      @@s-asw1360 You don't have to be defensive for this. He was just stating the fact that Cantonese more closely resembles Middle-Chinese. This property doesn't necessarily make one language better or worse than the other.

    • @victordesabata
      @victordesabata Před 4 lety +42

      @@s-asw1360 玻璃心真易碎hahahahahahaha

    • @s-asw1360
      @s-asw1360 Před 4 lety +3

      @@victordesabata滚吧。。。香港人什么傻逼样你以为大陆人不知道吗???一群傻雕,,你知道悯农吗?哈哈哈你们粤语念悯农顺口吗?押韵吗???装什么B呢

    • @s-asw1360
      @s-asw1360 Před 4 lety +3

      🤮造谣 有本事拿出实际的证明来好吗???自古以来你们就是南蛮 还骄傲了无语

  • @guoping2u
    @guoping2u Před 3 lety

    Wow, such an impressive approach to classical stuff!

  • @eunnie1235
    @eunnie1235 Před 3 lety +15

    In my family, our first language has always been Ancient Chinese. We have always been spoken to by our parents in Ancient Chinese and this started hundreds of years ago. People get confused when we speak to each other in it. I find it fun, actually

    • @avril6922
      @avril6922 Před 3 lety

      Where is your family from?

    • @eunnie1235
      @eunnie1235 Před 3 lety +2

      @@avril6922 we're a mixed family but that part of the family is from Europe and East Asia, specifically China Japan Mongolia and South Korea in East Asia

    • @noone-lf5vj
      @noone-lf5vj Před 3 lety

      Cool

    • @ericjohnson6634
      @ericjohnson6634 Před 2 lety

      Neat. In my family the language of choice is Sumerian. In fact, I came very close to being named Enkidu 🙃

    • @RadkeMaiden
      @RadkeMaiden Před 2 lety

      汝曰家人言語然乎

  • @ptptpt123
    @ptptpt123 Před 6 lety +28

    Your art of storytelling the whole video, even in subjects so serious. Just marvellous.
    Oh how I cherish your videos!

  • @dimserene
    @dimserene Před 6 lety +108

    It's fascinating even for us native Mandarin speaker.
    Btw just rediscovered your channel and there's new video! So lucky

    • @Lyserus
      @Lyserus Před 6 lety +7

      程皓 这个真是长知识了

    • @simonlow0210
      @simonlow0210 Před 6 lety +3

      Just wanting to share this somewhere. These ancient reading can also be found even in English. For example, the Peking Duck. The word 北京 (Pek Kin) is the older reading of modern Mandarin pronunciation of "Bei Jing"

    • @starsantasta4351
      @starsantasta4351 Před 5 lety +1

      程皓 how about you stop treating uygurs like shit?

    • @siddhiratana
      @siddhiratana Před 5 lety +1

      +Simon Low probably from late cantonese immigrants?

    • @Pompom-xy3uu
      @Pompom-xy3uu Před 5 lety

      @Pat z I doubt it...

  • @TheAstralPlain24
    @TheAstralPlain24 Před rokem

    This was a very interesting video!

  • @yakunhu7759
    @yakunhu7759 Před 3 lety

    Very fascinating, thanks!

  • @StormKidification
    @StormKidification Před 6 lety +7

    Woah, I was wondering if I missed any new NativLang videos, checked your channel and you just uploaded a new one! Proud of my sixth sense!

  • @chauchau0825
    @chauchau0825 Před 4 lety +842

    We should stop calling "Mandarin" as "Chinese". That is way too ambiguous

    • @tsubasa855
      @tsubasa855 Před 3 lety +114

      Mandarin is a spoken dialect.. a subset of Chinese.. Chinese can be either the people, spoken language, the writing, or even the culture

    • @felicvik9456
      @felicvik9456 Před 3 lety +48

      @@tsubasa855 Ask someone who only speaks Mandarin to make an impression of Cantonese

    • @KennysLeftEyelash
      @KennysLeftEyelash Před 3 lety +27

      @@felicvik9456 I've heard everywhere in Hong Kong(since a lot of mainlanders come to Hong Kong to travel), it is not that good. btw Im Cantonese from Hong Kong.

    • @KennysLeftEyelash
      @KennysLeftEyelash Před 3 lety +25

      I think it's still Chinese but I wouldnt just call 'Mandarin' as Chinese. I think Chinese is actually kind of a conclustion(I dont know how to word this sry) of different kinds of Chinese. In different places e.g. Shanghai and Sichuan, they have Shanghaiese and Sichuanese. Cantonese is now spoken in Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Macau. There's even more but I dont konw how to type it since Im bad at Pinyin.

    • @tsubasa855
      @tsubasa855 Před 3 lety +11

      Yes Mandarin is being an official and main Chinese dialect. When we talk about the most spoken language in the world it will be Chinese and definitely it is referring to Mandarin (spoken dialect). There are many dialects in Chinese spoken by people in different regions in china as well as the Chinese population in the rest of world thus their accent could not be same afterall

  • @ItzRetz
    @ItzRetz Před 4 lety +72

    I wish I had the ability to be able to read every single language. I'd love to go back and see what people were writing about thousands of years ago. I wonder if any of these ancient humans wrote something for future humans. There had to be at least one of them who thought about doing that.

    • @cz5836
      @cz5836 Před rokem +1

      I know this is an old comment but I'd like to answer. Ancient people wrote history (and even mythologies) for future people.

    • @ItzRetz
      @ItzRetz Před rokem

      @@cz5836 True I guess, but they were probably thinking people in a couple generations, not people 1000s of years later.

    • @cz5836
      @cz5836 Před rokem

      @@ItzRetz I think it depends. Like ancient kings had really big egos and would often have their battles and exploits etc recorded for the purpose of "immortalizing" their names.

    • @Rajagukguk378
      @Rajagukguk378 Před 11 měsíci

      cong cang cing cong cong ngoahhh 🤣😂

  • @tiga2001
    @tiga2001 Před 3 lety

    thank you for this informative video! I think it serves to highlight the importance of keeping good records :D. I've read on wikipedia that Taiwanese (Southern Min) is generally considered one of the oldest dialects that can have their sounds traced directly to Ancient Chinese, as opposed to Cantonese, which is more similar-sounding to Middle Chinese, and Mandarin, which has the sounds of Modern Chinese.

  • @manuelalistkiewska842
    @manuelalistkiewska842 Před 6 lety +14

    It's good to have another high quality video in this channel, I salute you!

  • @hellonyancat666
    @hellonyancat666 Před 4 lety +13

    I really enjoyed this. I’m a vietnamese speaker and learning Japanese and I saw connections and that sparked my interest in just knowing a little bit of chinese to see how they’re connected. it’s great to see how the pronunciations from Sino vietnamese and sino japanese and sino korean helped uncover middle chinese pronunciation and the differences is what I uncovered while learning chu nom and han việt as well

  • @ggbyron7082
    @ggbyron7082 Před 11 měsíci

    Wow, you taught me something even I don't know about my culture, really appreciated.

  • @caltechharvard
    @caltechharvard Před rokem

    Fascinating. Thank you.

  • @alvinchan5934
    @alvinchan5934 Před 4 lety +74

    The southern dialect (min, Cantonese) all have the ancient tone that you pointed out, if you use the example of the word for "country"

    • @maxverner2341
      @maxverner2341 Před 4 lety

      Even Wu dialects have some level of this but it is much more subtle in terms of the word country.

    • @whitealliance9540
      @whitealliance9540 Před 4 lety

      @@maxverner2341 你也不敢苟同步骤雨天下第一天一天的很有❤的吗? have fun and also click me. Watch the dark masters videos.

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx Před 4 lety

      kok and kwok

    • @vercingetorixbretwalda1325
      @vercingetorixbretwalda1325 Před 3 lety +1

      thanks for mentioning this. Min is probably the most conservative of living Chinese languages, having split off from Old Chinese before Middle/Ancient Chinese was developed.

  • @ebehrens
    @ebehrens Před 5 lety +17

    This is so interesting! I'm just recently starting to teach my daughter to recognize Zhu yin symbols since that's how I learned how to spell words growing up in Taiwan. I didn't realize it was a relatively "new" system in spelling Chinese!! This is so cool to know that I went back to read more about before my 4yo start asking questions that I couldn't answer.

  • @ianlai5604
    @ianlai5604 Před 3 lety +14

    I am an overseas Chinese. I grew up speaking Cantonese, tried to learn Mandarin during my childhood and eventually gave up because I found it too hard. Being older now, I realise how rich the Chinese languages are, and I really would like to learn as many of them as I can. Starting with Hakka, which is what my dad's side spoke. Also I wish I kept at learning Mandarin when I was younger 😂

    • @tsubasa855
      @tsubasa855 Před 3 lety +1

      加油

    • @ianlai5604
      @ianlai5604 Před 3 lety

      @@tsubasa855 谢谢!

    • @45876
      @45876 Před rokem +1

      I learned Cantonese by binge watching TVB for 3 months. I started with reading the subtitles and I understood everything they were saying before I knew it. Speaking is rather easy because I can tell if my pronunciation is not correct.

    • @waiselei
      @waiselei Před 8 měsíci +3

      多謝你

    • @waiselei
      @waiselei Před 8 měsíci

      Help me with Cantonese bro

  • @gateetafeliz4483
    @gateetafeliz4483 Před 4 lety

    Wow 😯. My mind is completely blown! I want to learn so much more!

  • @ludiprice
    @ludiprice Před 5 lety +50

    You can tell Cantonese and other Southern dialects are closer to Middle Chinese, because ancient Chinese poetry rhymes better when it's read in them ;) I remember in class, my Chinese poetry teacher sang an ancient poem by Li Bai in the Min dialect. Our jaws just dropped. It was amazing.

    • @waiselei
      @waiselei Před 8 měsíci +5

      yes because southern Chinese language are the soul of ancient Chinese

  • @yibinchen5597
    @yibinchen5597 Před 5 lety +91

    I am Chinese, but very ashamed that I don't know any of this! This is eye-opening!

    • @hamzahaytham3940
      @hamzahaytham3940 Před 4 lety +2

      Yibin Chen
      Arabic is much easier, and yet there’re things I still don’t know/understand...

    • @ivy9142
      @ivy9142 Před 4 lety +1

      "eye-opening" I can tell you're a Chinese

    • @yibinchen5597
      @yibinchen5597 Před 4 lety +13

      ImperfectGirl you can tell I’m a Chinese by my name. Also this word, “eye-opening”, is very commonly used. :)

    • @daieast6305
      @daieast6305 Před 3 lety

      ya, next let us move on to history...bet ya do not feel any better!

    • @vamppanic
      @vamppanic Před 3 lety +8

      Yibin Chen she was making a racist joke unfortunately

  • @neuron_star
    @neuron_star Před 3 lety

    Awesome video!!!

  • @BennieGoh
    @BennieGoh Před 4 lety

    could not have explained it better than this,well done

  • @rx1589
    @rx1589 Před 6 lety +60

    I thought you were going to talk about Old Chinese (the one with lots of uncomfortable consonant clusters) instead of Middle Chinese when I saw the title. Godd video nevertheless.
    Will you do a video on old Chinese?

  • @jonathanmcculley3728
    @jonathanmcculley3728 Před 4 lety +166

    Looked up 反切 in my Chinese dictionary, I got tomatoes instead lol 番茄🍅 gotta love tonal languages.

    • @taowang9735
      @taowang9735 Před 4 lety +3

      I used to hate dictionary util I start to learn English

    • @stuart4341
      @stuart4341 Před 4 lety +3

      I speak Chinese as a foreign language and as soon as I saw that I was like wtf tomatoes

    • @clarim.5949
      @clarim.5949 Před 4 lety

      @Person Hello Tibetan probably

    • @peirong
      @peirong Před 4 lety

      lol the pin yin s is the same but the tones are different lmao

    • @Bangy
      @Bangy Před 4 lety

      Just make sure to never say "tomato knee" to a Chinese person.

  • @yimveerasak3543
    @yimveerasak3543 Před rokem

    I learned a lot from this channel than in my schools. I have to thank the channel owner for his great ideas

  • @user-wc3ve5wp6v
    @user-wc3ve5wp6v Před 5 hodinami

    感谢你的视频,即使在发布六年后再看我也收获良多,解答了我长久以来的一些疑惑,尤其是“重纽”这个概念

  • @seankim2743
    @seankim2743 Před 4 lety +18

    Awesome video. You shocked me on kuk (country). As a native Korean speaker, this is such a fascinating finding. As I ponder and dig deeper into my own roots, I cannot help but mesmerized by the vastness of Asian history and the way how things are so intertwined. Thanks again.

  • @chrisc4067
    @chrisc4067 Před 5 lety +6

    Thank you!! This video tells me there are way too many things I don't know about my mother tongue... really eye-opening !! I love our culture even more...

  • @M3Power666
    @M3Power666 Před 3 lety +2

    Hello. Great videos. Thanks for sharing and keep up the good work. Have you ever thought about looking into the many languages of the indigenous peoples of North America, the American Indian. I know some of their Navajo language was used to send messages during world war 2 that were impossible for the Axis to decode and were transmitted much faster than the standard way of US military communications. You have a large selection of languages to pick from. People are still alive that speak, read, write and understand some of the original native languages. Thanks friend!

  • @smochstone
    @smochstone Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you brother, I have always been proud of my country’s cultural heritage

  • @mng3941
    @mng3941 Před 4 lety +6

    I understand two of the Chinese languages (Cantonese as 1st lang, Mandarin as 3rd lang) and your pronunciation is pretty good! I have done research on the many Chinese languages (as a budding writer) and believe that if we want to trace back to Old Chinese, we need to uncover the Min (Fujianese) dialects/languages, because many of those seem to derive from Old Chinese!

  • @sy422326
    @sy422326 Před 5 lety +12

    I'm Chinese and that's the first time I saw a video talking about Chinese ancient pronunciation, you have a clear mind and make me have a basic understanding of linguistics, thanks a lot! Nowadays Chinese use '清' and '浊' (which mean 'clear' and 'dirty' ) to describe English consonants, previously I thought they may be translated from English or Japanese after the 1840s, now I know they have been used for 800 years, that's amazing!

  • @oopshihi1613
    @oopshihi1613 Před 3 lety

    I’m a Chinese and I learned these from you. Thanks, good on ya!

  • @user-up9hq7bn5e
    @user-up9hq7bn5e Před 3 lety +1

    感謝上傳 ❤️

  • @jzaar7483
    @jzaar7483 Před 6 lety +198

    A new video to watch about 6 times in a row!!! :3
    ...I do actually do that...
    I watched your Etruscan video like 4 times when it was uploaded :3

    • @mojeo522
      @mojeo522 Před 6 lety +5

      Only four??

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před 6 lety +4

      lol. In a row? I do watch his videos multiple times, but usually after at least a week of my last viewing.

    • @musicbox2466
      @musicbox2466 Před 6 lety +6

      King Keegster Don't be surprised, it is that good, people love this that much. sometimes I watch them again right away, sometimes I do it later, but, I always watch them again multiple times, in a row too. Let's face it, this is the only material that ever gave me the same type of excitement and an even greater amount of anticipation since I was told bedtime stories as a kid. This channel feels like home to me, because language is my greatest passion and others here share it..

    • @ranro7371
      @ranro7371 Před 6 lety

      he's just bad at explaining and has a muffled voice.

    • @tpptrumpet5986
      @tpptrumpet5986 Před 6 lety +1

      i watched the rare phonemes one like 20 times

  • @chunchun9080
    @chunchun9080 Před 5 lety +83

    4:38
    But Chen Li's not convinced. He's combing through old 犯贱, meticulously chaining initials of initials and finals of finals.

    • @meow-os6rf
      @meow-os6rf Před 4 lety +6

      反切读成了犯贱,哈哈哈

  • @dolph99
    @dolph99 Před 2 lety +11

    If you read ancient Chinese poems in Taiwanese (Min language), you will find poems actually rhythms and sounds so much natural and smooth.

    • @mhkxixi1405
      @mhkxixi1405 Před rokem

      If you read these poems in Cantonese (or even Hokkienese), you will find poems actually rhythms correctly and sounds much more attractive. This is because Mandarin were just the language spoken around the Beijing areas under the influence of the Nomad conquerers. Because these poems were written when Mandarin did not even exist.

  • @songmlg
    @songmlg Před 3 lety

    Wow, it's a great research that I can't imagine.

  • @keyo3316
    @keyo3316 Před 4 lety +48

    The way he pronounces Chen Li (Chun Li). All I can think of is "spinning bird kick". :)

    • @dublinerin
      @dublinerin Před 4 lety +9

      He pronounces it correctly. It's the English pronunciation of "Chun Li" that is mangled compared to the original Mandarin :)

    • @keyo3316
      @keyo3316 Před 4 lety +2

      @@dublinerin I never said he pronounced it wrong. My comment was inferring that it reminded me of the Street Fighter Character. (This is what I was trying to refer to in a joking manner to anyone who knows what I am talking about). Thanks anyway for clarifying it though (I won't pretend like I know anything about Mandarin because I don't). :D Hope you're staying safe.

    • @sabishiihito
      @sabishiihito Před 4 lety

      @@dublinerin Her name is almost always pronounced like "Chewn" in the games (which is from the Japanese). Not 100% sure how 春麗 would sound in Mandarin.

  • @Darryl_Francis
    @Darryl_Francis Před 5 lety +64

    Dude can you do sections of your videos of you reading a small sample of the language featured? Maybe at the start or end?

    • @InvincibleAkuma
      @InvincibleAkuma Před 4 lety +2

      O don't think he is able to do that for u. Search up Cantonese u will find wat u need to know.

    • @sokyu7723
      @sokyu7723 Před 4 lety

      He did say he struggled with pronunciation.

  • @Lily-zx8en
    @Lily-zx8en Před 3 lety

    Wow! Interesting, thanks!

  • @tintinqueen
    @tintinqueen Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you for making this video. My daughter is linguistics major and we speak both Mandarin and Cantonese. So this video is very related to what she learnt. I have Malaysia Chinese friends and they use many old words in their Cantonese compare to the words we use in Hong Kong, like 返學,they say 返書館。 So they kept some older words from their great great grandparents when they moved from China to Malaysia 200 hundred years ago. After 4000 years, Chinese language has been changed so much and fortunately the writing was unified in Qin Dynasty.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před 5 měsíci

      Also saw that some Malay words have been mistaken as Malaysian versions of Cantonese e.g. _pandai_ ('smart')

  • @billyk8397
    @billyk8397 Před 6 lety +1588

    This has to be one of the strangest languages in the world
    Still one of the coolest though

    • @conho4898
      @conho4898 Před 6 lety +226

      The language is spoken by about a quarter of the population lol. it's not really that strange.

    • @Zee-to3wo
      @Zee-to3wo Před 6 lety +166

      In fact, I find Chinese and English are quite similar because they have the same word order, i.e. Subject + verb + object, this order looks natural, but is quite uncommon

    • @lecobra418
      @lecobra418 Před 6 lety +66

      It's not uncommon.

    • @oc3607
      @oc3607 Před 6 lety +38

      Ziqi Gao All romance languages have that word order

    • @juch3
      @juch3 Před 6 lety +33

      Not that uncommon, the Malay language family also uses that grammatical order.

  • @diaskeaus
    @diaskeaus Před 6 lety +5

    Great video! The title is a little misleading as you don't spend much time actually speaking in Ancient Chinese (one word doesn't really count), but it's a great breakdown for us sinophiles interested in how the Qieyun works.

  • @aljoschalong625
    @aljoschalong625 Před 3 lety

    Not only the video, but also the illustrations are great! I only wish I could hear an example of Old or Middle Chinese

  • @davidlf1492
    @davidlf1492 Před rokem

    Very well done!

  • @conho4898
    @conho4898 Před 6 lety +47

    YESSS THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO. I'm extremely interested and invested in Sino-Xenic languages and their relationship with Chinese, historical and modern. I hope you can talk more about Sino-Xenic languages, especially Vietnamese.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Před 6 lety +3

      With such a description is like calling English a _Romance-Xenic_ language, because of its high Latin and French influence!

    • @conho4898
      @conho4898 Před 6 lety +10

      Actually, Sino-Xenic has evolved into not just meaning "originating from China." The borrowing has to be large-scaled and systematic. Vietnamese, Japanese, and Korean all borrowed Chinese in a very systematic way, aka bringing the entire vocabulary into their language with designated and systematic readings.
      This isn't the case with English, which borrows from Latin and French throughout a long period of time without being systematic.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Před 6 lety +1

      +Tim Tran
      Have you actually seen English? There was a time some linguists thought it could be a Romance language with heavy Germanic influence! That view, of course, is nonsense, but my point might not work so much as I barely know about Japanese, Vietnamese, and Korean, besides the surface level stuff.

    • @conho4898
      @conho4898 Před 6 lety +6

      Yes I know English lol. I speak it. And again, it's not systematic. You need to understand the "systematic" part of Sino-Xenic readings to understand the difference between JKV Sinitic borrowings and Latin borrowings from English.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Před 6 lety +1

      +Tim Tran
      I guess I should.

  • @fujitafunk
    @fujitafunk Před 6 lety +393

    If you want to further understand Middle Chinese, you're going to have to dig into Chinese "dialects." This really opens an entirely different can of worms, but languages like Cantonese, Hokkien, Wu, Hakka...etc., have existed long before Mandarin. Sure they are dying out but they do hold some prominent steps toward understanding how Chinese "used to be/sound."
    Cantonese is actually quite close to middle Chinese by linguistic standards. What you will start to notice though, is that a lot of these old "dialects" share are many more tones than Mandarin's four.

    • @NativLang
      @NativLang  Před 6 lety +73

      Insightful! Discussing Min varieties will be particularly important if we ever get to a lookback on Old Chinese.

    • @voidvector
      @voidvector Před 6 lety +42

      Min Chinese and a bunch of other southern Chinese varieties actually have non-Chinese substrates, which makes it quite interesting from a historical linguistics standpoint.

    • @thekidfromiowa
      @thekidfromiowa Před 6 lety +10

      Four tones is hard enough for me.

    • @kyoumalee2675
      @kyoumalee2675 Před 6 lety +14

      Cheung Geng Lok 张嘴进来“实际上”是不好的。当前的任何方言都不能保持切韵体系。切韵体系大概有3800个音,而当前普通话只有1200多,粤语也是1000多。你接近究竟是什么方面。“锄禾日当午,汗滴禾下土。谁知盘中餐,粒粒粒皆辛苦。”粤语并不押韵。

    • @khongchothongtintao169
      @khongchothongtintao169 Před 6 lety +1

      Adam Vanderpluym FYI Vietnamese have 6 tones

  • @hyteenju304
    @hyteenju304 Před 4 lety

    Only know 30% of these as a Chinese, thank you very much for sharing, your work is professional!

  • @channnwarren3244
    @channnwarren3244 Před 3 lety

    nice video ! thx

  • @tonysmith3701
    @tonysmith3701 Před 6 lety +16

    I'm a Chinese native and your knowledge impresses me every single time.. Good job!!

  • @Zuaachen
    @Zuaachen Před 6 lety +278

    Another interesting way for the non academics to explorer how ancient Chinese sounded like is to look at country names.
    A good one is Greece, an ancient country with an ancient history. Greece was known as Hellas. The Chinese characters are 希臘。 Mandarin pronunciation would be closer to She-La (xila, if you know ping ying). You can tell something is off here. Now, let’s try Cantonese. It’s Hey-Laap. P is soft. Much closer. And in Minan (Fukien dialect), it’s He-La. In Cantonese, that’s a short e. In Minan, that’s the long e. So I guess it’s Cantonese at the time the Greeks met the Chinese.

    • @sagonk7355
      @sagonk7355 Před 5 lety +8

      Dialect is fuuny

    • @tigoid
      @tigoid Před 5 lety +54

      You're right but also wrong. Just because the Cantonese word for it is the closest to how it sounded originally, it does not mean people spoke Cantonese during then.

    • @astroboy2345
      @astroboy2345 Před 5 lety +25

      I don't think the ancient Chinese and the Greeks met in the ancient time. But they may have learned about Greeks from India through import of Buddhism, culture, and trade.

    • @monky3997
      @monky3997 Před 5 lety +38

      @@astroboy2345 The Greco-Bactrian kingdom, which was the easternmost part of the Hellenistic world, had some contact with the Chinese during the rule of the Han dynasty.

    • @astroboy2345
      @astroboy2345 Před 5 lety +10

      @@monky3997 There is no Chinese record or culture relics coming from such encounter in Chinese history that I've seen. At least from the perspective of direct contact between the Ethnic Han and the Greek. I mean they know of each other. (Similar to the Romans and the middle Chinese are aware of each other's existence, but never got into direct contact.) It is possible it could be non-ethnic Han subjects of the Han Dynasty, such as the Turks or Persians settled at the western most reaches of the silk road who may have come into contact with the Greeks and brought items of the trade. But we know the Chinese had extensive culture exchanges with the Indians. And large portion of India had once been conquered by Alexander.

  • @leroyhorn7279
    @leroyhorn7279 Před 11 měsíci

    really impresive video

  • @bvsowle
    @bvsowle Před 3 lety

    😂😂 I was going to freak out at you because you were saying "ancient Chinese" until you changed it to "Middle" Chinese at the end.
    I took an amazing class at ASU all about this, Professor Young Oh is doing rad research with Old Chinese reconstruction!

  • @suk4honesty
    @suk4honesty Před 6 lety +42

    Yay you uploaded, my day just got better. I also got a little less stupid.

  • @kevinkim9929
    @kevinkim9929 Před 4 lety +46

    I’m a Korean, and I’m basically agree with you. There are a lots of vocabularies of Chinese dialects of South Chinese region sounds very familair to Korean, especially when I here Cantonese I can just tell some of the vocabularies since they sounds same.

    • @LinhieHuynhie
      @LinhieHuynhie Před 11 měsíci +3

      True. Cantonese sounds more similar to Korean/Japanese than I find with Mandarin. Like Hing/Hyung etc...
      I know your comment is very old 😂

    • @itsnotif.itswhen
      @itsnotif.itswhen Před 5 měsíci

      @@LinhieHuynhiewhaaat, in Vietnamese it would be “huynh”. Huynh is older brother. Đệ is younger brother.

    • @YorgosL1
      @YorgosL1 Před 5 měsíci

      @@itsnotif.itswhenin Vietnamese ? It’s closer to Cantonese if u refer to huynh đệ

  • @shuguo5882
    @shuguo5882 Před rokem +1

    What a great video! Well done! The key to Chinese is - Chinese characters. No matter how they pronounce in different areas, they share the same character. So in Chinese world, you can "read" a book, as well as "watch" a book. So don't stress if your Chinese pronunciation is not perfect.

  • @joshuaconnelly2415
    @joshuaconnelly2415 Před rokem

    Fascinating topic, but you didn't explain much. I was lost the whole time, but interested. Revisit the topic, and break down each step so that we can understand the developments and the logic of the reconstruction process.