Can Turks Understand Khorasani Turkish (خوراسان تورکجه‌سی)?

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  • čas přidán 18. 09. 2023
  • In this video, we take a look at the Khorasani Turkic language, also known as Khorasani Turkish, which is an endangered language classified as "vulnerable" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. Khorasani Turkic is primarily spoken in the North Khorasan and the Razavi Khorasan Provinces in Iran.
    In this video, we take a look at how well Turkish speakers can understand Khorasani Turkic.

Komentáře • 317

  • @noname-us3ci
    @noname-us3ci Před 6 měsíci +21

    As an Azerbaijani speaker it was so easily to understand. I would say only difference was pronunciation, vocabulary vise I didn't have problem. For me it sounds like Uzbek is speaking in Azerbaijani 😊

  • @khushnudolimov8705
    @khushnudolimov8705 Před 5 měsíci +5

    As an Uzbek, I can say that Khorasan Turkish is more like Uzbek than Anatolian Turkish.

  • @gwgos4
    @gwgos4 Před 8 měsíci +40

    I am greek . My origins are from a turkophone region of Georgia (Tsalka). In this region were living Greek people who left from Οttoman Empire in 19 century. Anyway, our turkish dialect in very close to Erzurum dialect and has lots similarities with azeri and now I learned that that we have similiraties with Khorasani Turkic. In some sentences because of the pecularity of "our language" (that's how we call it "Bizim Dil" or Urum language ) I could understand better/faster Khorasani. Keep making this kind of videos. Helps us understand better our language. Thank you!
    p.s recently I found out that our Urum language has lots of similarities, more than 95% with Ahiskan turkish.

    • @Kaan_is_myname97
      @Kaan_is_myname97 Před 8 měsíci +4

      My brother you are Turks ethnically then

    • @gwgos4
      @gwgos4 Před 8 měsíci +14

      @@Kaan_is_myname97 No we are not. We are greek origin, my grand parents were talking both languages. We were part of rum millet greek orthodox in Ottoman empire.

    • @Kaan_is_myname97
      @Kaan_is_myname97 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Oh Rums I see (Anatolian, Greek speaking orthodox people essentially). ı thought you were Karamani Turkish person. Some 100.000-400.000 Karamani Turkish people, which were Orthodox christians, were sent to Greece in 1923 because of the population exchange. Only some couple of thousands of them and their religious leader stayed in Turkey and they still live here.@@gwgos4

    • @fikriozgunes4253
      @fikriozgunes4253 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Kaan_is_myname97 czcams.com/video/uoaL6H_x1-Q/video.htmlsi=2eKoBfAtkJIovwX1

    • @fikriozgunes4253
      @fikriozgunes4253 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@Kaan_is_myname97 urumlar diye aratırsan daha fazla bilgi edinebilirsin

  • @CaspianKhazar
    @CaspianKhazar Před 6 měsíci +8

    Khorasani Turkish seems to be an intermediate language between Azerbaijani and Turkmen, also sounds somewhat similar to the Khiva dialect of Uzbek which is Oghuz influenced.

  • @madameenmamadaliyev1727
    @madameenmamadaliyev1727 Před 8 měsíci +28

    Wow,I know Khoroson Turks for almost a year and it's always interesting that it's more understandable for Uzbek 🇺🇿speakers.
    Nice video, thank you for letting us know the similarities 🙏

    • @zagrowth8260
      @zagrowth8260 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Their language is from the Chagatai language like Uzbek 🇺🇿

    • @frs-vr3mg
      @frs-vr3mg Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@zagrowth8260no it’s definitely not Uzbek

  • @edwardkrall3335
    @edwardkrall3335 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Bahador, you did it again. Great job.

  • @Kaan_is_myname97
    @Kaan_is_myname97 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thank you so much for this beatiful video Bahador and introducing Khorosani Turk people with their languages. Greetings and love from Turkey

  • @SamKhan-kb3kg
    @SamKhan-kb3kg Před 8 měsíci +1

    I love your videos, Bahador. There’s so much to learn here. Thanks, from a fellow history buff

  • @AhsanNadeem00
    @AhsanNadeem00 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks a lot for this video, Bahador!! I really enjoyed it :)

  • @burqut
    @burqut Před 7 měsíci +1

    Wonderful video as usual Bahador! ❤🌹

  • @VictorLionsTV
    @VictorLionsTV Před 8 měsíci +1

    Keep it going Bahador, great video as always.

  • @danielyasin5054
    @danielyasin5054 Před 8 měsíci +16

    Great video Bahador! I really enjoy listening to these Turkic languages. Would love to see you cover some more Uyghur speakers, perhaps in a future video you could include Azeri and Uyghur speakers and how well they understand each other. I heard they are quite similar despite their geographic distance.

  • @mesutkeskin
    @mesutkeskin Před 8 měsíci +8

    Hi, a nice challenge. Some of the Turkish Khorasani words we also find in the vernacular of Malatya, like "tommuz" 'summer' , "çağa" 'child', "çe" 'until'

  • @kahvegoz
    @kahvegoz Před 4 měsíci +1

    I enjoyed this video a lot!

  • @Nafosat_Toshtemirova
    @Nafosat_Toshtemirova Před 8 měsíci +9

    Waw, I could understand almost 100 percent being Uzbek. I would like to participate in this.

  • @muhammadyaqubkhan7662
    @muhammadyaqubkhan7662 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Zabrdaast❤ I am Mohsen an 14 year old from UAE... My both parents are Pashtun from Pakistan.but my family migrated 54 years ago (my gramps)
    Our Pashtun roots come from Persians... So I am into Learning Turkic and Persian Languages...❤
    I currently Speak 6

    • @KoroushRP
      @KoroushRP Před 4 měsíci +1

      Some Pashtuns do have sistani Persian background. Depends on tribe

    • @muhammadyaqubkhan7662
      @muhammadyaqubkhan7662 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@KoroushRP Yep my tribe Orakzai means The Lost son was a Persian exiled Prince who later got adopted by Our Ancestors Karlan...

  • @siavashatashgahi4006
    @siavashatashgahi4006 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Well done Bahador and all participating in this fun video. I think it was a piece of a poetry that Arya read. I wish he also mentioned the source of it.

  • @user-nt2ms2ds9e
    @user-nt2ms2ds9e Před 8 měsíci +12

    NICEEEEE ❤❤❤❤❤
    Im Indonesian who love to hear turkic language (but cant speak it😂 except only few words in Turkish and Uzbek language ) really2 enjoy this video.
    Such as really good vibes and the gold thing is the Khorasani brother lead this game in amazing way. To be honest he can attract people's attention.
    And as Indonesian who not speaking any turkic lang, i do extremely happy when i can guess one word before anyone else did 😂😂 that is "yaxci" its bcuz i know in Uzbek lang "yaxshi" is mean "good". I feel im clever for that , loll 😂😂😂😂😂
    And i do know other words : men,bigin,o,. But the 4 Player guess it faster than me. 😊

    • @asian6216
      @asian6216 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Im Indonesian too and interested in Turkic languages. In my opinion, Khorasani is closer to Uzbek and Azeri.👍

    • @madameenmamadaliyev1727
      @madameenmamadaliyev1727 Před 8 měsíci

      Thank you for your amazing comments 🙏

    • @madameenmamadaliyev1727
      @madameenmamadaliyev1727 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@asian6216 yes,it's very close to Uzbek when they say Yaxshi,ko'p and such Qarluq words .

  • @hassanalast6670
    @hassanalast6670 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wonderful and good to know

  • @manoochehrmilaniturkish
    @manoochehrmilaniturkish Před 6 měsíci +2

    that reminded me marvelous memories of my childhood ❤

  • @lambert801
    @lambert801 Před 8 měsíci +37

    Persian has influenced Khorasani Turkish to a great deal, even more so than Azeri Turkish (my native language). Also, there are many Turkic words in Khorasani Turkish that we don't use anymore.

    • @siavashatashgahi4006
      @siavashatashgahi4006 Před 8 měsíci +5

      My mother tongue is aso Azari and I could understand most of it expect a few words.

    • @jamjar1948
      @jamjar1948 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Actually Turkish means from Turkeye. We should say Khorasani Turkic language.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@jamjar1948 That's by no means a _must._ We can also, as I prefer, make the distinction by calling the two languages "Anatolian Turkish" and "Khorasani Turkish."

    • @jamjar1948
      @jamjar1948 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@lambert801 Bro Turkish is an English words, meaning from Turkeye. Khorasani Turkic people came did not come from Turkeye! I saw when English people and other European heard Turkish instead of Turkic, they think the person is from Turkeye.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Před 6 měsíci +8

      @@jamjar1948 Turkic is not a language, my friend, it's a _language family._ Since Azeris, Uzbeks, Kazakhs, and all other Turkic peoples are called _Turk,_ their language can also be called _Turkish._ Anatolian Turks aren't the only Turks, despite what 17th century Europeans may have thought. What anyone else thinks is their problem.

  • @aileen0711
    @aileen0711 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I am a Turkish speaker - this is so interesting! One advice for the future maybe: when you‘re doing these kinds of videos where you‘re comparing certain languages with each other it‘d be cool if you also were able to provide a written form of the sentences in the other languages, too. It‘s interesting for speakers of the same language family to see how much we can pick up written wise :)

  • @ivvrr1
    @ivvrr1 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Can you create a video of the difference between the Persian dialect of Tajik people from Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan?

  • @SamKhan-kb3kg
    @SamKhan-kb3kg Před 8 měsíci

    Very interesting. Kali (presumably the same root as kala) = village in Pashto

  • @hosseintalebi4356
    @hosseintalebi4356 Před 8 měsíci +11

    I am khorasan Turkish🥰❤️ From Neyshabur sarvelayat chakane

    • @jamjar1948
      @jamjar1948 Před 6 měsíci +1

      سلام بر شما برادر عزیز. البته نباید بگی ترکیش، چون ترکیش کلمه انگلیسی هست و به معنی اهل ترکیه هست. باید بگویید در انگلیسی خراسانی ترکیک
      Turkic not turkish

  • @pejvuck0513
    @pejvuck0513 Před 4 měsíci +2

    We have lots of Turkic dialects in khorasan. Each city and village that speak Turkish has their own dialect

  • @letsTAKObout_it
    @letsTAKObout_it Před 8 měsíci +1

    So cool❤

  • @Sultan_Alparslan_HAN
    @Sultan_Alparslan_HAN Před 8 měsíci +5

    13:10 Samsun ilinde (Türkiye) yaşlılar çocuklara hala çağ der. Mesela; "çağlar sokakta oynuyor" gibi.. (Çaa veya Çağ diye telaffuz ediyorlar)

  • @alibalibekbaykal
    @alibalibekbaykal Před 8 měsíci +3

    Bahadir,
    👏👏👏👏

  • @oumaima353
    @oumaima353 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I LOVED this video! I played the game as well with my arabic background and turkish knowledge and I managed to understand a lot of what he said!

  • @emirsmsk
    @emirsmsk Před 8 měsíci +2

    Please make a video about similarities between Korean and Mongolian

  • @rehanmohammed2798
    @rehanmohammed2798 Před 8 měsíci +3

    It was exciting for me and I was smiling through the whole video as I was able to understand most of the part (not from the speech though) since I speak Urdu and I learned Turkish
    I can identify common words from each to understand easily

    • @user-vz1wk1oi4s
      @user-vz1wk1oi4s Před 6 měsíci

      How long have you learned Turkish I started 3 years ago and I’m not a full speaker

    • @rehanmohammed2798
      @rehanmohammed2798 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-vz1wk1oi4s around 3 years now

  • @dragasan
    @dragasan Před 8 měsíci +3

    So cool! I am currently researching the Zazaki language, as my girlfriend's family speaks it.

  • @sajda2766
    @sajda2766 Před 6 měsíci +1

    That really sounded like azerbaijani turkish to me (I am from Turkey, too). But it is very beautiful. I loved it.

  • @pinkcloud8182
    @pinkcloud8182 Před 5 měsíci

    my parents are from afghanistan and i understood many words he used.. it gave me a headache though because i felt like all of it sounded familiar but i don't know many of the more turkish words. something about even the lilt of his voice sounded familiar when he spoke. super cool.

  • @ilhomx
    @ilhomx Před 8 měsíci +8

    Xuroson turkchasi o‘zbek tiliga yaqin ekan

  • @tangocash342
    @tangocash342 Před 8 měsíci

    Usually, I can pick up a lot of Turcic words, but spelling is a bit unusual, for example, vaxci does not look like vakat (time)

  • @infinite5795
    @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci +3

    As a non-native Hindi speaker, i could get a lot of words, which would not have been possible by the only knowledge of my native tongue Odia, the language which is the least influenced from Persian or Arabic languages. Here are their Odia equivalents.
    Taaza(Fresh)-Sawjaw
    Paneer(Cottage cheese)-Chhena
    Morabba( fruit Jam)- Khawtei
    Maska (Butter)-Lahuni
    Shahar(City)- Nagaraw
    Waqt(Time)-Samayaw
    Mehrbani(Kindness)-Karunamayaw
    Hmesha(Always)-Chirantabelaw
    Yaad(Memory)-Mawti
    Shaayari(couplets)-Chhandaw
    Sanam(Lover)-Maandu
    Zuban(language)-Bolaana/Bhasa

    • @teoo8816
      @teoo8816 Před 8 měsíci +2

      These sound nothing in common

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci

      @@teoo8816 Hindi does have commonalities with Turkic languages in this matter, Urdu more so, since it is a dialect of Hindi with 70-80% Persian, Turkic and Arab vocab.

    • @yimveerasak3543
      @yimveerasak3543 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@teoo8816the equivalents that he gave are words forming Urdu language which was created by the Moghul in Indian subcontinent. I think the Moghul came from somewhere in Uzbekistan today

  • @manny_k2988
    @manny_k2988 Před měsícem +1

    With the exception of a few words I understood a lot of this as an Iraqi Turkmen!

  • @suhasgowda6796
    @suhasgowda6796 Před 8 měsíci

    Hey..great work, big fan.....can you do something with African languages and south Indian languages, as they should be related but there is 0 evidence.

  • @yasinkala2125
    @yasinkala2125 Před 6 měsíci

    Burada geçen geleddreng ne demek?

  • @Jalayir
    @Jalayir Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thx for making this video. Can you find any Khalaj or Qashqai speakers as well? Especially KHALAJ

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 8 měsíci +3

      I'll try my best. But to be honest, I don't search for participants, I aim to involve those who contact me since there are so many people.

    • @suleymanaghamoglanli4439
      @suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@BahadorAlast Hey Bahador, how can we contact you for participation?

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 8 měsíci

      @@suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Hey, the best way is on Instagram @BahadorAlast

  • @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386
    @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386 Před 3 měsíci

    Hey Guys I a from Central Asia i will b interpreting n writing what i have understood from his sentences
    Today early mornig i ate corey i don't know could be soup corba shorva n cheese and jam meske i dunno wha tit is

  • @boboshersharipov5750
    @boboshersharipov5750 Před 2 měsíci

    As an Uzbek who also speaks Turkish, everything was clear to me. It is amazing how Khorasani Turkic is basically bang in the middle of Uzbek and Turkish.
    Would love to participate in one of these episodes with Khorasani Turkic, Azeri and Uygur to see if I get all of them.

  • @Lost7one
    @Lost7one Před 8 měsíci +2

    I am guessing Zat is not only stuff right? in Iraqi Arabic there is "Zad" and is used for "Food", it is originally an Iranian word if I am not mistaken, in Kurdish Kurmanci it is also Zad (but here it would mean Cereal), exactly the same as the swedish word Säd, cognate with English Seed. You can probably find cognates in all indo-european languages for this word.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's totally different from the Sanskrit one, it's Bija in Sanskrit.

    • @SudhirDudeja
      @SudhirDudeja Před 8 měsíci

      In Hindi we call ‘dal’, for cereals which sounds similar to word zad

    • @Lost7one
      @Lost7one Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@infinite5795 Other cognates are = West Frisian sied (“seed”), Dutch zaad (“seed”), Low German Saad (“seed”), German Saat (“sowing; seed”), Icelandic sæði (“seed”), Danish sæd (“seed”), Latin satiō (“seeding, time of sowing, season” ). Latvian: sēt, Lithuanian: sė́ti,
      Hittite: (sai-, “press in, sow”). The Hittite word can give us a hint to how we can find the cognate in Sanskrit.
      For Sanskrit it seems like: सायक (sā́yaka, “intended or fitted to be discharged or hurled”) is supposed to be possible cognate of Seed. What do you think?

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Lost7oneJata is "born" in Sanskrit, Persians say Nouzad, we Hindus say Navajata for newborns, from Sanskrit. It has PIE roots. Sayaka is not used in the same sense, as seed in any Indo-aryan language.
      We don't have z,q and f sounds in Sanskrit like Persian, the closest equivalents in Sanskrit would be j, k and pha( aspirated p) sound. We have atleast 11-12 aspirated sounds in Sanskrit.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Lost7one Hittite has no possible connections with Sanskrit, except being from the same family. It's just that, both Hittite and Sanskrit is from the oldest branches of PIE.

  • @Simferero
    @Simferero Před 8 měsíci +20

    I always considered Khorasani Turkish a dialect of Azeri/Azerbaijani. I think Azeris would've understood him much better that the Turkish speakers.

    • @suleymanaghamoglanli4439
      @suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Yeah, I am Azeri and I don't know if it's considered dialect of Azerbaijani or not but some of the senteces Khorosani guy say would be almost same if I said it in Azeri.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Před 8 měsíci +6

      You're wrong. Azeri Turkish is a sister of Khorasani Turkish, not its mother.

    • @suleymanaghamoglanli4439
      @suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@lambert801 You clearly have no idea about history of Turkic people of Iran. Many Khorosani Turks are descendants of Khizilbash Azeris who were deported during the reign of Shah Abbas. Thus, it is natural that Azeri Turkish is indeed mother of Khorosani Turkish. Even, Nader Shah, despite being born in Khorosan, was one these deported Azeri Khizilbash Turks. Just read a simple article about Turks of Iran. Not a big fan of him, but Vladimir Minorsky would be a good start.
      Also from Wikipedia:
      Nader's native tongue was a southern Oghuz dialect, i.e. "Turkish of Azerbaijan".[28] Although he later learned Persian, he always preferred using Turkic in everyday speech. He learned to read and write as an adult.

    • @suleymanaghamoglanli4439
      @suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@lambert801 Dude, like literally I as an Azeri would say the first sentence in same way in my native tongue: "Mən bugün ertə, təzə çörəy, pendir və mürəbbə yedim".

    • @brainblox5629
      @brainblox5629 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Thats because its Turkmen, not Azeri. Turks were Turkmen back then, Azeri, Khorasani etc. were names that were given later after the region the people lived in.

  • @sayidolimikromov7670
    @sayidolimikromov7670 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I could understand him 60 percent. Men bu odamni / kishini 60 -70 foiz tushundim. O'zbekistondan salomlar.

    • @mohammadqavidell6917
      @mohammadqavidell6917 Před 2 měsíci

      Mən Xorasan Türklərın dən mən , bizim ləhcələrimiz çox farqlı dılar , bu Bojnurd ləhcəsı di , O qat ləhcələr fərq edərdılər bəzən bir biri düşünmeymız(:

  • @amirkhasanboev
    @amirkhasanboev Před 3 měsíci +1

    Equivalents of these sentences in Uzbek:
    1.) Man bugun erta, toza(yangi) ...-u ...-u murabbo-yu sariyogʻ yedim
    2.) Mening buyuk onam(buvim) qal'ada(qishloqda) oʻtiradi (yashaydi), uning uyida it-u ot-u bir olam ...(hayvonlari) bordir
    3.) Men ...(yozning) ta'til vaqti buyuk onamning(buvimning) uyini koʻp(juda) yaxshi koʻraman
    4.) U mehribondir, hamisha chaqalarga(bolalarga) ma'zali ...(narsalar) pishiradi
    5.) Yoʻq eding endigacha? (Yoʻqmiding hozirgacha)
    Yo sani koʻrmasdim man?
    Endiki keladirsan boq ki na ...(xursand) man
    (this is very irregular grammar and literary words but I still understood)
    "Endi kelganganingga qara naqadar xursandman man"
    6.) this one is like a poem
    Tanishtirayin men sen uchun qoʻshnimizning xotirasi
    Kichiklikdan bor edi yodimda bir shoirasi
    7.) Ammo istardim sanga deyishni - xush kelding sanam. Shuni bil; biri ulardanki sani istasa bu men
    (I tried my best😭)

  • @Mala272
    @Mala272 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Oh Gosh i under every word because in urdu we also use moraba for jam (مربع)
    We also use paneer for cheez (پنیر)
    Taza means fresh in urdu (تازہ ) 😊 and maska for butter مسکا

    • @user-vz1wk1oi4s
      @user-vz1wk1oi4s Před 6 měsíci +1

      I think it’s spelled as مربى or is that how it’s spelled in Urdu cause muraba3 means square

    • @Mala272
      @Mala272 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-vz1wk1oi4s no muraba mean jam in urdu

  • @safi-sultanbeyli7761
    @safi-sultanbeyli7761 Před 5 měsíci

    16:52 like indiyəcən in Azerbaijani :) But it's not so common

  • @user-xb5eo2bm1n
    @user-xb5eo2bm1n Před 8 měsíci +8

    As an Indian who knows Hindi-Urdu I could identify several words in Khorasani Turkic words of Persian or Arabic origins. I cannot normally identify that many similar words so easily in other Turkic languages. I'm guessing that's because Khorasani Turkic has been directly influenced by Persian to a much greater extent in both vocabulary and accent. Hindustani (Hindi-Urdu) has a similarly strong Persian influence on it but it's also directly related to Persian because both are Indo-Iranian languages.

    • @lani6647
      @lani6647 Před 8 měsíci

      Hindi is not an “Indo-Iranian language”.

    • @user-xb5eo2bm1n
      @user-xb5eo2bm1n Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@lani6647 If you don't know about language families then let me tell you that Hindi and all other languages derived from Sanskrit are classified as Indo-Aryan languages which is a sub-branch of Indo-Iranian languages while Iranian languages like Persian, Kurdish, Pashto, Balochi, etc form the other sub-branch. Indo-Iranian languages are also part of the wider Indo-European family which also includes most languages of Europe. If you don't know this Hindi and Persian are closely related languages and their respective ancestors Sanskrit and Old Persian were even more closely related. And it's not at all surprising considering that ancient India and Iran were neighboring civilizations.

    • @jamjar1948
      @jamjar1948 Před 8 měsíci +1

      You can also pick up alot of Uzbek words, also. Because of a lot of Persian words in Uzbek.

    • @user-xb5eo2bm1n
      @user-xb5eo2bm1n Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@jamjar1948 True. Uzbek is also quite strongly influenced by Persian but it has a different accent and structure so that makes it hard to identify common words.
      Also in Hindi-Urdu and Persian there are also some words that are not borrowings but rather shared Indo-Iranian vocabulary. Some examples are नाम/نام/naam meaning name and दूर/دور/dur meaning far.

    • @qazwerty123451
      @qazwerty123451 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@user-xb5eo2bm1nyeah after taking a year of Sanskrit, I was surprised how familiar old Persian looked. Hindi is definitely indo-aryan just as you said.

  • @piribaba
    @piribaba Před 8 měsíci +1

    Bahadoor, I respect you and your work, but I was very surprised that only 4 highly educated Turks did not understand the words used in Turkey. Taze / taze , Çoray/ çörek, peynir/ peynir, beher anam/ büyük annem Many words such as are either the same or almost the same phonetics. I think the participants' Turkish proficiency is slightly below average. A townsperson in Anatolia with an average level of Turkish can easily understand the Khorasan dialect.

    • @brainblox5629
      @brainblox5629 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Thats because you can see the text. The live video is done without text. The participants dont see çöray, they hear "shurey" and expect it to be some Persian loanword. Probably everyone on there was highly educated, but that has nothing to do with the matter since çörek and peynir are from medieval peasant Turkic and Persian. "Beher" is also nothing like "büyük", its closer to "bahar" phonetically.

  • @birileri4662
    @birileri4662 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Gayet anlaşılır ve kolaydı sanırım horasan ve Türkiye türklerinin İran'la olan etkileşiminden ötürü ortak kalıpları almışısız Farsça'dan. Mesela Türkmenleri yada Özbekleri bu kadar kolay anlayamam. Neredeyse tüm diyaloğun yüzde seksenini anladımve çok ilginç geldi. Gerçekten. Azerbaycan dan sonra sanırım bizim Türkçemize en yakın olan horasan Türkçesi

  • @barnoquriyazova9010
    @barnoquriyazova9010 Před 7 měsíci

    Mr Bahador plz invite Gurlan turks they also speak the same language it will be great

  • @fratland8454
    @fratland8454 Před měsícem

    Greetings from Turkiye 🇹🇷 All Turks are brothers

  • @johongirmirsoatov3719
    @johongirmirsoatov3719 Před 3 měsíci

    As a native uzbek speaker I understan him easily, to me it seems like my compatriot trying to speal turkish maybe. However I feel connected to those people

  • @DigoronKavkaz
    @DigoronKavkaz Před 8 měsíci +3

    Afghans also say maska for butter whereas Iranians say kare

  • @wg611
    @wg611 Před 3 měsíci

    It’s like transitioning, crisscrossing hybrid form of Karluk / Uzbek and Oğuz / Türkmen - Azeri metaphorphism

  • @Krim-zp8km
    @Krim-zp8km Před 8 měsíci +1

    It would be good if you brought in Turkmen of kerkuk Iraq.

  • @guruprasad_manjunatha
    @guruprasad_manjunatha Před 8 měsíci +5

    I'm a non-native speaker of Hindi from South India. Here are the words I was able to figure out:
    Taaza - Fresh
    Paneer - Cottage cheese
    Morabba - Jam
    Maska - Butter
    Shahar/Shehar - City
    Waqt - Time
    Meharbani - Kindness
    Hamesha - Always
    Yaad - Memory/Thought or To remember
    Shaayari - Poetry
    Sanam - Sweetheart/Lover
    I may be wrong, but to my untrained ear, it sounds like the Khorasani Turkic speaker had a hint of a Persian accent, especially in the sing-song melody of his speech.
    Greetings from Bangalore :)

    • @SamKhan-kb3kg
      @SamKhan-kb3kg Před 8 měsíci

      Very nice, seems like you have been paying attention

    • @mihanich
      @mihanich Před 8 měsíci

      Maska reminds me low key of Russian "maslo" which comes from the root "maz-" meaning "smear"

    • @faisalrehman8298
      @faisalrehman8298 Před 8 měsíci

      Bahadur I speak dari and urdu..someone like me can understand many words more than the Turkish people.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci +2

      As a non-native Hindi speaker, i could get a lot of words, which would not have been possible by the only knowledge of my native tongue Odia, the language which is the least influenced from Persian or Arabic languages. Here are their Odia equivalents.
      Taaza(Fresh)-Sawjaw
      Paneer(Cottage cheese)-Chhena
      Morabba( fruit Jam)- Khawtei
      Maska (Butter)-Lahuni
      Shahar(City)- Nagaraw
      Waqt(Time)-Samayaw
      Mehrbani(Kindness)-Karunamayaw
      Hmesha(Always)-Chirantabelaw
      Yaad(Memory)-Mawti
      Shaayari(couplets)-Chhandaw
      Sanam(Lover)-Maandu
      Zuban(language)-Bolaana/Bhasa

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's not just a hint, his accent's 110% Persian.

  • @Secular_Iran_GE
    @Secular_Iran_GE Před měsícem +1

    Its really similar to azeri dialects of tabriz and baku

  • @Mergan870
    @Mergan870 Před měsícem

    I am uzbek and understood all khorasani words.

  • @anarqasimov1835
    @anarqasimov1835 Před měsícem +1

    From Baku, 99% understanding ❤

  • @tton2335
    @tton2335 Před 6 měsíci +1

    The first sentence was more persian than turkish. Pamir, morabba, maska. This are persian words. Taza also and man means in persian me.

  • @Soap_bubbles591
    @Soap_bubbles591 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Interestingly, the population of the Khorasani Turkic peoples is estimated between 1-2 million in the entire world , most of them spread from Turkmenistan and Amu -darya to the Iranian borders with Turkmenistan .

    • @shayaanhasan8406
      @shayaanhasan8406 Před 8 měsíci

      Yh technically they exist in khorasan and across the border In Turkmenistan

    • @Soap_bubbles591
      @Soap_bubbles591 Před 8 měsíci

      They are closely related to the Turkmens and speak Oghuz , so that explains the native population in Amu-darya .

  • @Mergan870
    @Mergan870 Před měsícem

    I am uzbek and understood all khorasani words

  • @vusalamustafayeva6538
    @vusalamustafayeva6538 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Bizim dilə çox yaxındır

  • @SamKhan-kb3kg
    @SamKhan-kb3kg Před 8 měsíci +2

    Hamesha (same root as hamsha) = always in Urdu

  • @jturkmen777
    @jturkmen777 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I am Turkmen and actually found it very easy to understand Khorasani Turkish

  • @abc-nj5zy
    @abc-nj5zy Před 8 měsíci +4

    Though khorasan turkish is a turkic language it sounds like Persian, I mean the accent

    • @hamdoulaa
      @hamdoulaa Před 7 měsíci +1

      keep in mind modern day Khorasan Turks live their lives in school or at work only in Persian. The media they consume is mostly persian too. This affects greatly the accent of those people.

  • @multiverse-UFO
    @multiverse-UFO Před 8 měsíci

    Wow, the 1st guy literally looks like Reza Pahlavi 😄 Would believe he's an alter of HIM 😄

  • @Kulak-tr
    @Kulak-tr Před 6 měsíci +2

    Bahador Horasan Türkçesinden hiçbir şey anlamadım Türkler gibi dinledim, çok zormuş 😮

    • @birileri4662
      @birileri4662 Před 6 měsíci

      Yüzde seksenini çok rahat anladım. Bunun sebebi sanırım Türkçe krlime Haznemizle ilgili. Okumak önemli

  • @OtabekHakimov-fh2hh
    @OtabekHakimov-fh2hh Před 5 měsíci +1

    Surprisingly, Khorasani Turkish is strikingly similar to Uzbek.

  • @gamingdragon8907
    @gamingdragon8907 Před 8 měsíci

    1 st

  • @infinite5795
    @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thats a lot of influence of Persian on Khorasani Turkic or even Turkic languages in general, just like Sanskrit on South-east Asian languages. I speak the language which is the least influenced from Persian or Arabic, but i understood Persian words, via Hindi, just a change in intonation. Our indic scripts has a unique ability, we can distinguish which words are indigenous and which are not, by the spelling or phonemes used in the words itself.

    • @Jalayir
      @Jalayir Před 8 měsíci

      Hindustani has thousands of Persian and Arabic loanwords.

    • @infinite5795
      @infinite5795 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@Jalayiryeah it's literally 40% of the vocab, the most among Indo-aryan languages. The least is my mother tongue Odia, with only 1-2% of totally foreign words, its a product of history.
      But, all Persian and Arabic words have Sanskrit and Prakrit equivalents, which are almost always used in similar frequency to foreign Persian or Arabic words.
      Pehelwani in Hindustani is a Persian word, but even Malla yudha is used and understood equally.

  • @YU-mv3ku
    @YU-mv3ku Před 5 měsíci

    Im with serbian anddrstand some words ( wrbs) Raseni thats me...

  • @Paradis333
    @Paradis333 Před měsícem

    I think Khorasani Turks between Karluk and Oghuz Turks, as an Uzbek I can understand him but reminds me a little bit of Azerbaijani Turks.

  • @Krim-zp8km
    @Krim-zp8km Před 8 měsíci

    It would be good if you had called someone from Erzurum Turkey there dialect of Turkish is more like Azerbaijani Turkish and that of Tabriz Iran.

  • @serkankinden5150
    @serkankinden5150 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I think turkish and azerbaijani have many words from persian, because we have mixed too much. This may have happened in 11th century or much before reaching to sumerians. Maybe? What do you think?

    • @brainblox5629
      @brainblox5629 Před 8 měsíci +1

      In Turkic languages, there are three major influences from Iranic languages. The first time was when Turks invaded from Siberia into Central Asia and conquered and mixed with the Iranic nomads like Skythians etc. This was around Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Xinjiang. Then came the invasion of inner Central Asia and the sedentary Iranic people like the Sogdians and other Iranic settlers, mostly around modern Uzbekistan and further westwards. This was all before the 700s. Words from that time are words like "aş" (food), "hatun" (wife), "kent" (city) etc. Even the word "kaan"/"khan" is also found among the old Iranic titles.
      Then came a time where Persia invaded Central Asia, when words from Persian entered, like "can" (life, "öd" in old Turkic), "meze", "taze" (fresh), "peynir" (cheese), "pilav" (rice) etc. This was immediately followed by the counterinvasion of Turkmens into Persia starting with the Samanid rule (Persian dynasty). Turks have actually very old ties to Iranic and Indo-European people, probably even more than Persians. Sumerians were followed by Assyrians and Armenians, who are relatives of Persians, but their languages were actually suppressed by the Byzantine Greek rule, who tried to hellenize the then remaining Armenians. So its most likely the Turkmens and Ottomans that brought all the Iranic loanwords into west Anatolia, where they mostly concentrated during their flight from the Mongols. The Kurds might have also brought over lot of Persian loanwords since they are siblings of Persians.

    • @serkankinden5150
      @serkankinden5150 Před 8 měsíci

      @@brainblox5629 Yes I agree mostly but some words have been transfered from turkic to iranic languages like hatun, kaghan etc...

    • @serkankinden5150
      @serkankinden5150 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Actually, I think scythians were originally turkic as we can see that their genetics are more similar to altaian siberia and they have fighted against old persia. Persian king I. Darius calls scythians as foreign from central asia. Persians are west and southwest asian people, who have mixed with scythians tousands of years ago. This is why they have known as spoken iranic but some have spoken turkic like tsar scythians. Khazars, bashkirs, balkars, avars are their descendant as separated from soghdians, ossetians etc. There are also soyot, saka turkic people who are called similar. They and altaians are fully turkic and genetic ancestors of other euroasian and central asian turkic people.

    • @albus3710
      @albus3710 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@serkankinden5150 scythians were original iranians who, like other indoeuropeans, arose around the northern black sea area. they fought against the persians because they were different empires, but both were iranian. just like how brits and germans fought each other while being germanic. turks came from altai region and assimilated the scythians. the languages you mentioned were from the last period of the scythians

    • @WessauR
      @WessauR Před 6 měsíci

      ⁠@@albus3710😂😂😂

  • @mihanich
    @mihanich Před 8 měsíci +1

    Imagine if Bahador and Norbert collab... we will fall into the black hole

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 8 měsíci +2

      We have 😀
      czcams.com/video/o2Ch3Iobsag/video.html

    • @mihanich
      @mihanich Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@BahadorAlast I yeah I forgot about this one. The Russian guy was kinda struggling for some reason

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 8 měsíci

      @@mihanich I was also part of a video on his channel, but with a different format:
      czcams.com/video/AYPm04twm2M/video.htmlsi=H0WUnRKN36L3--vq

  • @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386
    @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386 Před 3 měsíci

    words like murabba erta yedim

  • @Krim-zp8km
    @Krim-zp8km Před 8 měsíci

    Turkic language are so smiliar its mutually intelligible if you spent a week with the perosn who speak another dialect.

  • @ferrokkkk7032
    @ferrokkkk7032 Před 6 měsíci

    Looks like they failed?

  • @4idiotsAiroli
    @4idiotsAiroli Před 8 měsíci

    Even in hindi and urdu Indian languages
    The word 'hamesh' which means every time. This word is a most common word in hindi and urdu both.

  • @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386
    @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386 Před 3 měsíci

    Khorasani dialect is very much like Uzbek

  • @Samoilov1966
    @Samoilov1966 Před 8 měsíci

    яваш яваш пендир лаваш :)

  • @zafertopak8898
    @zafertopak8898 Před 8 měsíci

    Khorasani Turkish

  • @dontmindmyenglish
    @dontmindmyenglish Před 6 měsíci +1

    It's my first time hearing Khorasani Turkcesi and as an Iranian Turkmen, I understand him perfectly. Interesting.

  • @Efendi-000
    @Efendi-000 Před 6 měsíci

    seems more Harzem than Horasan dialect.

  • @erenkur3832
    @erenkur3832 Před 3 měsíci

    Yes davar is small livestock, sheep and goat. Sığır is cattle.

  • @StevenHuynh203
    @StevenHuynh203 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I love the turkish language because, I listen to turkish series and ottoman tukish music.

    • @zubairmohammadyusuf942
      @zubairmohammadyusuf942 Před 8 měsíci

      Inshallah Ottoman Khalifah will be restored soon. We had believed by 2023 it will be but it is not yet.

    • @suleymanaghamoglanli4439
      @suleymanaghamoglanli4439 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@zubairmohammadyusuf942 not to make you feel sad, that ain't happening, bro.

  • @user-dm6vp5yn4w
    @user-dm6vp5yn4w Před 6 měsíci +1

    Wow! Bro Bring a Khorasani Turk, An Azerbaijani Turk and a Khorazmi Ozbek in one room and I swear they'll sound like cousins chatting!

  • @steelhd7843
    @steelhd7843 Před 6 měsíci

    Bahadır can you reach american indians? Sakha/ yakut Turks and american indians can have some common words.

  • @BenTRengFR
    @BenTRengFR Před 5 měsíci +1

    Cok guzel videolar...fakat neden aranizda ingilizce anlasiyorsunuz? Hepiniz Turkce konusup Turkce yapabilirisiniz bence bu videoyu.

  • @user-vz1wk1oi4s
    @user-vz1wk1oi4s Před 6 měsíci

    Morabbba I think is jam in Arabic damn

  • @nusratullaxojasadullaxojae442
    @nusratullaxojasadullaxojae442 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Ozbekchada bola - chaqa deyiladi

  • @hondacb750four
    @hondacb750four Před 5 měsíci

    Es gibt in Zentralasien und Südosten Russland über 40 verschiedene Türkvolker, im Nordwesten Irans und in der Mitte irans und ost iran 😂 und sogar 200 Kilometer von der Hauptstadt entfernt, sprechen alle türkisch 😂 aber jeder mit einem anderen Dialekt, die eine mit etwas zuviel persisch , die anderen ( Nordwesten) ziemlich reinen türkisch , dann haben wir auch noch Türkmenen , aber alle diese Menschen bis auf Türkmenen sind keine Türken, sondern sie sprechen nur türkisch , die Sprache hat mit der Herkunft nichts zutun, mein Sohn spricht deutsch , ist aber halb Italiener und halb Iraner.

    • @brainblox5629
      @brainblox5629 Před 4 měsíci

      Ich bin der ganz rechts und sehe buchstäblich wie ein Turkmene aus. Dies ist einfach nur sinnloser Rassismus.

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před 8 měsíci +11

    Khorasani Turkic is actually dialect of Turkmen and just like Turkmenistani it has many Karluk and Kipchak (such as köp) loanwords in it. Additionally, there are many Persian loanwords, which makes it difficult to understand the language. It's amazing that there is still mutual intelligibility with Turkish despite all of this.

    • @fuseydunae397
      @fuseydunae397 Před 8 měsíci +3

      ulan benim izledigim her videoyu niye izliyorsun

    • @Grungeuncle
      @Grungeuncle Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@fuseydunae397 Uyandığı gibi youtube'a giriyor, arama bölümüne büyük harflerle *TÜRK* yazıyor. Sonra en yeniden eskiye filtreliyor / sıralıyor, teker teker izleyip, kopyala yapıştır hazır yorum paylaşıyor. Bu defa özgün bir yorum yazmış, bu bir istisna, bu doğada ender bulunan bir durum.
      Pan-Türkçü olduğunu düşünüyorum, ama işini çok iyi yapıyor helal olsun. Anglo-Normanlar geri kalan dünyadan kopuk, tarih ve coğrafya bilmez bir milletler bütünüdür. İngiliççe içerik ile youtube'da bu insanları keklemek kolaydır. Bu arkadaş da, Türkler hakkında video yayınlayıp, 1 saatlik videonun 45 dakikasında Arap'ı ve Farsi'yi konuşup, 15 dakikasında Türklere şöyle bi değinen videoların altında video sahibine küsküyü veriyor. Ayrıca yine bu arkadaş pan-İrancı olup da, sağda solda, Sırplar, Bulgarlar, hatta Almanlar bile İran'dan çıkmadır, hepsi İrani millettir diye uçuk kafayla gezen yorumcuların anasının donunu pazara çıkarıyor. İşte bu nedenle seviyorum bu imamı.
      İmam, ck3 tarihi videoları çeken bir eleman var; Hazarlar ile ilgili video çekmiş, bir saat yahudi tarihi anlatmış, Türk kelimesinin T'si geçmiyor. Selçuklu tarihi videosu çekmiş, Muhammed ve İslam tarihi ile başlıyor, çekinmese Adem'den alacak konuyu, Selçuk bey'e gelene kadar video bitiyor zaten.
      Elemanın adı History in Bits, bi el atıver kardeşim.

    • @tugrulgudul5281
      @tugrulgudul5281 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​@@Grungeuncle Salıverdim dogi yi gibi bir şey olmuş moruk, senin de imamdan az kalır yanın yok. Araştırmacı ruhlarınıza hayran kaldım. Bordo klavyeli Türkleri internetin derinliklerinde görmek güzel
      Bu arada dünyada ciddi miktarda türkofobik kitle var onu fark ettim. Haydi imam tengri kuvvetini arttırsın.

    • @victorzsasz2874
      @victorzsasz2874 Před 4 měsíci

      They is not turkmen bro

  • @rohatalarengin1489
    @rohatalarengin1489 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Bro 50% of actual turkish is arabic and persian. Most of car and technology related words are in french.

    • @madonebo9249
      @madonebo9249 Před 8 měsíci +2

      85% of the words in Turkish are Turkic originated. It's not 50% persian and Arabic. Don't make up things from your ass

  • @CIHANOZEL-ij6vd
    @CIHANOZEL-ij6vd Před 3 měsíci

    Anadolu türkçesine yakın