Papiamento (IS THIS PORTUGUESE?!)

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  • čas přidán 10. 12. 2021
  • This video is all about Papiamento, which is spoken on the ABC islands: Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao.
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    Special thanks to George and Nadine Jonkhout for their Papiamento audio samples, as well as Edu Tudela for his Spanish samples, and Carlos Costa for his Portuguese samples.
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    Commercial images licensed from iStock.com, Depositphotos.com, and Shutterstock.com
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    The following images were used under Creative Commons license:
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    **Music**
    Main: "Brunch For Two" by JCSD, licensed from Storyblocks.com
    Outro: "Fly Forward", licensed from Storyblocks.com

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +83

    Hi, everyone! I hope you like the video.
    If you're learning a new language, try the world-famous *Pimsleur method* in its new-and-improved subscription format: ► imp.i271380.net/langfocus ► *Free trial - Use my link to gain access*
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    • @gabrielpt1171
      @gabrielpt1171 Před 2 lety +2

      Hey man i have one question which language is most close to latin?

    • @risyanthbalaji805
      @risyanthbalaji805 Před 2 lety

      @@gabrielpt1171 Italian maybe

    • @gabrielpt1171
      @gabrielpt1171 Před 2 lety +1

      @AUTOS & OUTROS thanks

    • @stephanynoguera4723
      @stephanynoguera4723 Před 2 lety +2

      @_Langfocus_ Native Papiamento speaker here, so to answer your question
      1 Papiamento is from Aruba and Papiamentu is from Curaçao and Bonaire.
      2. Arubans would say that Curaçaones? Speaker rough and in vise versa they would say we speak like we're singing and dramatic.
      3. Papiamento uses stress to differentiate words that are spelled the same, but have different meaning depending on context. That why we rarely, if at all, use accents. E.x ;
      Cacho ( could meaning dog or horns (like goat horns) so to say horns you would pronounce it like cāchonan di cabrito

    • @mahatmamartinus
      @mahatmamartinus Před 2 lety

      Papiamentu*

  • @henriquekatahira1653
    @henriquekatahira1653 Před 2 lety +1470

    As a Brazilian Portuguese speaker that also speaks Spanish I could understand many frases without having previous contact with Papiamento. It’s a fascinating language.

    • @rmdodsonbills
      @rmdodsonbills Před 2 lety +44

      I'm an American English speaker with a degree in Spanish and I was very comfortable understanding Papiamento. All the vocabulary comes from familiar sources!

    • @LuisFelipeBaquedano
      @LuisFelipeBaquedano Před 2 lety +33

      @MICHAEL DARIO LOPEZ CASTRO exatamente. Acho que é a influência africana. Nós falamos pretoguês, o que é maravilhoso. Fiquei fascinado com as semelhanças entre papiamento e brasileiro.

    • @AWSMcube
      @AWSMcube Před 2 lety +22

      as an english speaker who is learning brazilian portuguese and spanish, i can relate to you

    • @RingsOfSolace
      @RingsOfSolace Před 2 lety +23

      As a gringo who knows Spanish, I don't have a degree or nothin', but my SO is Venezuelan and we watch a lot of Brazilian stuff, I was able to infer most of them.
      And as an English native that's really weird, because we have like no languages where we can guess meaning other than our own, but once I learned Spanish, it really messed with me when I realized I could somewhat understand languages I never studied before, like Italian or written Portuguese.

    • @TheHoonJin
      @TheHoonJin Před 2 lety +21

      @@LuisFelipeBaquedano militou erradíssimo . Affs

  • @randyyy2609
    @randyyy2609 Před 2 lety +1091

    Here in the Netherlands, there's quite a big community of people originating in the Dutch Caribbean. And I find Papiamento so interesting. I have never learned Papiamento or Portuguese, but I am fluent in Spanish. And therefore I feel like I can understand a lot of Papiamento, when I read a text out loud or when I hear someone speak it.

    • @flavioxy
      @flavioxy Před 2 lety +7

      I can confirm 😄

    • @teenh7746
      @teenh7746 Před 2 lety +1

      IRAN

    • @teenh7746
      @teenh7746 Před 2 lety

      @Eastern fence Lizard lRAN

    • @teenh7746
      @teenh7746 Před 2 lety

      @@flavioxy lRAN

    • @SPARTAN123XD
      @SPARTAN123XD Před 2 lety +35

      Same here, I went to Curacao a few years ago, I speak German, Spanish, Portuguese and English so papiamento wasn't really hard to understand

  • @andreckelly6741
    @andreckelly6741 Před 2 lety +1054

    I’m an Aruban Native. Nice video. There is difference in how Papiamento is spoken between the three island and also in how it is written. Like in Curacao and Bonaire writting is based phonology while in Aruba is base on the origin of the word which determines how it is spelled. Nice video to see how my native language gets exposure
    In addition we have our unique expression that is not understood quickly. Or words for objects like for instance a Bus….. we write or say bus from the origating work in dutch and english. While in Curacao they will use konvoi. Or like even for the weather when there is thunder and lightning…we use/say lamper cu strena while in curacao they will say bos (for thunder) and weerlicht (for lightning from the dutch). The color purple is also different as we say biña while they say lila. In writting like the word for car we write auto while they outu. Spoken we get a long pretty smooth but reading eachothers text may take a while to know what is meant haha
    In addition as most residents of the island are able to speak Spanish, Dutch, and English fluently it also influences how its spoken. As Aruba gets a lot of US visitors our Papiamento is more heavily influenced nowadays by English where English words are used in spoken Papiamento replacing older used Papiamento words.
    Now a sentence in Papiamento
    Danki pa a comparti informacion tocante mi idioma Papiamento. E ta un idioma cu ta mane un sopi caminda ta combina diferente ingrediente di otro lenguahe cual a hacie uno cu hopi sabor. (Thank you for sharing information about my language. It is a language which is like a soup where ingredients of different languages are combined that gives it tasty. )
    There is also a general rule for the use of C and K. This was pointed put during spelling difference. The rule is before the vowel A O U you have to use C while before I E its a K
    Examples
    Cu Cas Core Come Cora cabez
    Kier Kima Kere
    We also have a website to the language in Aruba where you can do word search
    www.papiamento.aw

    • @d0minarix
      @d0minarix Před 2 lety +40

      Thanks for the information, it's very informative.
      The word 'Weerlicht' (Weer= Weather Licht= Light) is used in modern Dutch for a weather condition where there is lightning but no audible thunder ('Donder' in Dutch) . Lightning itself is called 'Bliksem' in Dutch.

    • @elenna_alexia
      @elenna_alexia Před 2 lety +38

      I met a young woman from Curaçao while studying in the Netherlands and she spoke absolutely perfect Dutch and English along with her native Papiamento, so when you say people are fluent in multiple languages, I believe it.

    • @cocofox7683
      @cocofox7683 Před 2 lety +24

      I guess I just fell in love with your native language :) I‘ve studied Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch and it‘s simply amazing to kinda see them all together 😊 can you suggest some songs or books written in Papiamento?

    • @tedgovostis7351
      @tedgovostis7351 Před 2 lety +19

      Can confirm. My mother is from there, and as a kid spoke Dutch in school, English at home (her mother was from St Martin, and her father was Guyanese and he only spoke English), and Papiamento with other locals. She ended up also learning Spanish, French, German, and an Afrikaans dialect. When I was in high school (in New York, they moved there after the Esso refinery shutdown) I mentioned to a friend that my mom spoke Papiamento and he was surprised because his father used to be the head Rabbi of Curacao and I was the first person he met outside of his family who even knew of the language, much less knew anyone who spoke it.

    • @arturrosa3166
      @arturrosa3166 Před 2 lety +17

      "Konvoi" is very similar to the portuguese "comboio", which means "train". "Lila" is very similar to the portuguese "lilás", which means "purple". It's really a mix of words from here and there. Very interesting.

  • @caspartromp1017
    @caspartromp1017 Před 2 lety +240

    Btw, as an Aruban descendent having lived in Brazil for a while and being fluent in Portuguese, I visited the Cape Verde islands a few months ago and saw myself almost speaking Capeverdean creole by mixing papiamento with Portuguese. That was an interesting experience.

    • @VideoDepot999
      @VideoDepot999 Před 2 lety +14

      I know some Cape Verdean Creole. For example was impressed at 08:35 with "ta bai". Same meaning in Cape Verdean Creole and Papiamento

    • @InspireMatrixx
      @InspireMatrixx Před 2 lety +2

      Hopi nice pa tende esey!

    • @mulato26
      @mulato26 Před 2 lety +11

      Very surprised by this I'm from Cape Verde and I could understand almost everything to me it sounded like when an emigrant is trying to learn my language.
      N fika kontente de odja kel video li.
      I'm happy for have watched this video.

    • @madusutra2375
      @madusutra2375 Před rokem +5

      @@mulato26 Pamodi ses lingua e descendent di di nos

    • @ricebeansent7247
      @ricebeansent7247 Před rokem

      That’s because of the African slave trade

  • @timvlaar
    @timvlaar Před 2 lety +459

    For people wondering, the reason Papiamento is an official language in Aruba and Curacao, but not in Bonaire, is because Aruba and Curacao (alongside Sint Maarten) are constituent countries in the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Bonaire (alongside Sint Eustatius and Saba) are special municipalities in the country of the Netherlands.

  • @djmeechymeech
    @djmeechymeech Před 2 lety +404

    I'm born and raised in America but when I visited the ABC islands, the local people blew me away with their ability to speak so many languages. Every local person will try to teach you their language. Its so fascinating.

    • @jltcuba
      @jltcuba Před 2 lety +20

      Why „but“? Isn’t the fact that you’re from the US the reason why you’re fascinated by the fact that these people speak more than one language?

    • @mattiasvaningen9996
      @mattiasvaningen9996 Před 2 lety +18

      I've been told that there are four native languages on Bonaire: Dutch, Spanish, English and Papiamento. When you already speak so much languages, it is not hard to learn new ones.

    • @amosamwig8394
      @amosamwig8394 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jltcuba imagen him coming to europe :P

    • @AspireGMD
      @AspireGMD Před 2 lety +25

      @@jltcuba It's not because he's from the U.S lmao, it's because he speaks english, when you speak english as a native language in an english speaking country you're already set so you don't need to learn other languages unless under very certain circumstances. People from canada, the U.K, or australia would be intrigued as well since 90% of people from there speak only english.

    • @marcels9658
      @marcels9658 Před 2 lety +11

      I grew up in Curaçao, Papiamentu is our main language, but as soon as you start school, you'll also learn Dutch. In the 5th grade you start with Spanish classes and 6th grade with English classes. At the majority of schools teachers speak Papiamentu (this is how we say it in Curaçao unlike Aruba where the say Papiamento). At a couple of schools teachers speak Dutch. This used to be a bit different in the past. So yes, people on the ABC Islands can talk 4 languages.

  • @pavese1379
    @pavese1379 Před 2 lety +450

    I never realized how much the portuguese sailed through the world, in Brazil we only learn about, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, São Tomé, and well... Brazil

    • @mfC0RD
      @mfC0RD Před 2 lety +131

      There's even an administrative region in China that speaks Portuguese, called Macau. These guys went everywhere!

    • @enderdrow8844
      @enderdrow8844 Před 2 lety +62

      Also Goa, in India, and other cities in Southeast Asia

    • @teriod100
      @teriod100 Před 2 lety +85

      And both of you are forgetting another one, Timer Leste next to Indonesia and also Goa in South India but in this last one very few people actually speak it

    • @mikaelsza
      @mikaelsza Před 2 lety +74

      They went into Japan too, but were expelled by a conservative shogun who persecuted christians there.

    • @abandonedfragmentofhope5415
      @abandonedfragmentofhope5415 Před 2 lety +34

      East Timor.

  • @maldito_sudaka
    @maldito_sudaka Před 2 lety +42

    7:50 tá is from Portuguese too. The word "está" but cut short to 'tá is also used here in Brasil.
    9:45 huh, and "tabata" probably comes from the shorter form "tava" that comes from "estava", Spanish "estaba".
    I like the language very much!

    • @jacoboarca8516
      @jacoboarca8516 Před 2 lety +6

      Ta tamén é empregado en galego, lingua nai do portugués e mais en Español, na linguaxe coloquial.

    • @MrFro89
      @MrFro89 Před 8 měsíci

      I was gonna point out the exact same lol also, 12:27 piská looks a lot like "pescado", which is just fish meat.

  • @degianiwilson4241
    @degianiwilson4241 Před 2 lety +57

    🇨🇼 As an Native of Curaçao I would like to thank you for making this video about the ABC Islands. Masha danki pa traha e video di nos dushi kòrsou.

  • @dinabah4813
    @dinabah4813 Před 2 lety +149

    As a French - Senegalese, I have been exposed my whole Life to Cape verdean Creole. I also learnt Dutch, Spanish and Portuguese. Papamiento is like a big soup to me. I can understand most phrases quite easily !!! Amazing language !

    • @DustyRogerGaming
      @DustyRogerGaming Před 2 lety +10

      bo ta kompronde e frase aki?

    • @dinabah4813
      @dinabah4813 Před 2 lety +6

      @@DustyRogerGaming yessss I do! (if I can understand your sentence)

    • @isaac4273
      @isaac4273 Před 2 lety +4

      @@DustyRogerGaming eu também!

    • @alfredop.escoval7619
      @alfredop.escoval7619 Před 2 lety +3

      As a Portuguese I have been to Casamance. And the portuguese creole there is very close indeed to the Papiamento

    • @dinabah4813
      @dinabah4813 Před 2 lety

      @@alfredop.escoval7619 Yes that’s so true !!!!

  • @osvaldoantompietri4458
    @osvaldoantompietri4458 Před 2 lety +211

    Here in Puerto Rico, where we speak spanish, we used the verb "arrodillar" that means "to kneel"; but we also use the verb "eñangotar" in the sense of "to kneel" too. "Eñagotar" and "yongotá" sounds so similar to me that seems no surprise if it comes from that african word "djongotó". Under the spanish rule many enslaved africans came to Puerto Rico as in many other countries and many words of the diferent african dialects became part of the portuguese and the spanish languages.

    • @jorgeharrisonn8325
      @jorgeharrisonn8325 Před 2 lety +4

      So if Puerto Rico received a lot of enslaved africans then maybe "eñagotá" where derived from "djongotó" too. I don't know if this word came from Spain Spanish.
      I'm not from Puerto Rico, i'm from Brazil

    • @elisaarevalo6810
      @elisaarevalo6810 Před 2 lety +7

      Wow. No lo había pensado. Entonces incluso el idioma africano tuvo influencia del español

    • @diegolopezburgos7854
      @diegolopezburgos7854 Před 2 lety +6

      ¡Tan pronto escuché la palabra, pensé lo mismo!

    • @hkrohn
      @hkrohn Před 2 lety +1

      ¡Muy interesante!

    • @osvaldoantompietri4458
      @osvaldoantompietri4458 Před 2 lety +3

      @@elisaarevalo6810 , no que tuvo "influencia del español", pero sí, al igual que las lenguas indígenas, influenció al español. Aunque no soy experto en ese campo, sé que hay muchas palabras. Por ejemplo: chévere, mofongo, monga y fufú (ésta casi ni se usa hoy día y tiene que ver con asuntos de superstición; antes, cuando a una persona le salía todo mal, decían que le habían echado un fufú). Mayormente se hallan relacionadas con el aspecto culinario.

  • @andreorysdyk4044
    @andreorysdyk4044 Před 2 lety +31

    And probably "lesando" (6:12) comes from Dutch "lezen" but with Spanish/Portuguese conjugation for the gerund (-ando). Fascinating!

    • @lepeangel3700
      @lepeangel3700 Před 2 lety

      I learned some Dutch I realized that too

    • @joaonunes1086
      @joaonunes1086 Před 2 lety +8

      Funnily "Lesar" or "Lesando"( present continuity conjugation) in portuguese means to harm physically or morally depends on the context

    • @andreckelly6741
      @andreckelly6741 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes adding ando to the word indicates an action is taking place.

    • @arrowackskorsou8194
      @arrowackskorsou8194 Před 2 lety

      Or even from Sp. leer? Cf. Tu lees.

    • @alexishansen1333
      @alexishansen1333 Před 2 lety +2

      The verb "lesa'' comes from Dutch "lezen"

  • @ElsondeMadrid
    @ElsondeMadrid Před 2 lety +88

    I'm a native capeverdean speaker and live in Holland. So I understand basically 90% of papiamentu without ever having 'learned' the language. It's very similar to Capeverdean Creole. Especially the variant from Santiago.

    • @salomaogabrielgomesresende8077
      @salomaogabrielgomesresende8077 Před 2 lety +9

      Fogo Island Creole too, they even use papiar and no fla to refer to "speaking".
      Me too, I can understand 90% of Papiamantu 😁

    • @djonymorais
      @djonymorais Před 2 lety +1

      Um vez nh bai pa Curaçao, hora q ês começá ta falá papiamento ma mi, e nh tava ta entendê quás tud, un espantá.

    • @ElsondeMadrid
      @ElsondeMadrid Před 2 lety +5

      @@djonymorais Kond um tava la es dzem 'ah bo ê dakel país na Africa ek ta fala Papiamentu tambem'. Um dze: 'não ê a contrario. Bzot ê kel pais na caraibas ek ta fala Kriol' :D

    • @djonymorais
      @djonymorais Před 2 lety +2

      @@ElsondeMadrid haha, bom resposta!!!

    • @joaopedroramos3196
      @joaopedroramos3196 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ElsondeMadrid ê propi si! Alguns anos atras bem um grupo musical, Kuenta I Tambu, na kriolu seria Kontu (storia) e Tamboru, foi incrivel pamodi musica ki ess toca era parcido ku dinos e tudu kel kess papia povo na rua percebi, badja e canta! Foi di kes midjor atuason na AME, Atlantic Music Expo! 🙂

  • @Jothamvvw
    @Jothamvvw Před 2 lety +129

    I've wanted a video on Papiamento for a long time! Finally I can truly understand why a language spoken in my country is so different from Dutch itself!

    • @Enceladus2106
      @Enceladus2106 Před 2 lety +4

      Gelderland!

    • @dinabah4813
      @dinabah4813 Před 2 lety +1

      Same for me! 😁

    • @lfmsimoes1
      @lfmsimoes1 Před 2 lety +6

      Hi, I am Portuguese. This video has just sparkled my interest in knowing more about your islands...
      And maybe visit them one day (if they are safe).

  • @benderbrasil
    @benderbrasil Před 2 lety +111

    I think it's interesting to point out that "The name of the language itself originates from papia, from Portuguese and Cape Verdean Creole papear ("to chat, say, speak, talk"), added by the noun-forming suffix -mento." (Oxford Languages). In Brazil, "papear" /papiar/ means to chat, to chatter.

    • @TheZenytram
      @TheZenytram Před 2 lety +14

      wwhhooooaaaaaa, i didnt saw that maks a lot of sense now.
      vem de papo, bater papo, lol.

    • @Andra9218
      @Andra9218 Před 2 lety +13

      Yes indeed! The name actually means “the act of talking/speaking”. “Mentu” is what we add to verbs to make them nouns. For example to dance - baila, becomes “bailamentu”. Dancing. Tabatin hopi bailamentu - there was a lot of dancing. Hopi meaning a lot.

    • @chrislopes
      @chrislopes Před 2 lety +11

      Just a little correction: in Capeverdean Kriolu is papia, not papear.
      I'm Capeverdean.

    • @brx86
      @brx86 Před 2 lety +4

      En España Papear es una manera vulgar/informal de decir Comer, la comida sería el Papeo. Creo que puede estar relacionado.

    • @benderbrasil
      @benderbrasil Před 2 lety +5

      @@brx86 A eso en portugués se dice "papar" y la comida es papa o papá.

  • @christopherantonio3612
    @christopherantonio3612 Před 2 lety +77

    Papiamento makes total sense. It's like Spanish/Portuguese without verb conjugation and some agglutination / tense markers. Truly a treat to watch this video and learn about this creole / language

  • @oatmilkgames
    @oatmilkgames Před 2 lety +57

    Hey, Langfocus I’m from Aruba and I must let you know that I love this video! It’s very polished and well researched. Now to your question about how we perceive papiamento/u on the islands. The differences are usually very subtle and are mainly down to accentuation and and how “melodic” you speak. Although, might I add. I feel as if the papiamento spoken on Aruba is changing rather rapidly due to some cultural and socio-political factors. Meanwhile Curaçao was busy trying to market towards a Dutch audience for their tourism, the Dutch who aren’t very liked down here due to colonial history & racial tensions. Papiamentu on Curaçao tried to preserve itself a bit more, specifically because we are culturally more averse to the Dutch than anyone else, but we can’t live without them. Aruba went the other route. Marketing mainly towards middle class North-Americans (USA & Canada) & wealthy South-Americans. Therefore the papiamento on Aruba was much more open to changes specifically because English or Spanish were seen as more useful than Dutch in a sense. A lot of people tend to YOLO their papiamento without much concern to if their vocabulary was adequate (or even Papiamento for that matter) it’s very common to see how the youth is more willing to throw random English words into their sentences and it works because ding-dong the vast majority of the inhabitants of the islands are well versed in 4 languages. Mainly English, Spanish, Dutch & our own tongue Papiamento/u.

    • @caribbeanspice19
      @caribbeanspice19 Před 2 lety +7

      "YOLO their papiamentu" 😂😂 you hit the nail on the head

  • @LtNduati
    @LtNduati Před 2 lety +29

    Back to Back Langfocus video weekends! All is right in the world now.

    • @seid3366
      @seid3366 Před 2 lety

      He also wanted to satiate the other viewers, not only his Patreons

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +10

      If you like the GEOfocus Channel, you're about to start getting that all the time. :)

    • @Jellygamer0
      @Jellygamer0 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Langfocus GEOfocus is rising from the dead to fanscinate us again? Let's go!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety

      @
      effawefweafawefwefwfqwWQEWEFEYHTYKJYUKUT Yep, the first new video is now public. :)

    • @pedroluis758
      @pedroluis758 Před 2 lety

      @@Langfocusthe word "Papiamento" comes from the old Portuguese verb papiar, which means: to speak. In Cape Verde and parts of Brazil it's still in use.

  • @fiquitoyunque
    @fiquitoyunque Před 2 lety +53

    Native Spanish speaker. High school trip to Curazao. Pre-cellphone times. I went shopping with some classmates, but most went to rent motor scooters and sightsee around the island. One of them and me stayed behind. One of those in the motor scooters comes back: they’re going in circles and are lost. I hitchhike a ride, and, indeed, the bunch is running on some loop in the road and don’t know the way back to the rental store. I suggest we stop at a gas station. We speak to everyone there, they all speak Papiamento. We understand each other perfectly. I suggest looking for the address of the motorbike rental place… and the stupid phone book is in Dutch… 😭 Fortunately some of the attendants in the gas station could translate for us when we made the phone call…

    • @lepeangel3700
      @lepeangel3700 Před 2 lety

      Quite a story

    • @AliAli-uk9nh
      @AliAli-uk9nh Před 2 lety +2

      Typical issue for us Spanish speakers here in the ABC

    • @rmoises8
      @rmoises8 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AliAli-uk9nh Como es la vida alla y como esta la situacion inmigratoria?

    • @AliAli-uk9nh
      @AliAli-uk9nh Před 2 lety

      @@rmoises8 hola amigo, pues sinceramente bastante tranquila, muy segura y depende de cual isla sea. Para migrar piden mil y una cosa no es fácil pero tampoco imposible. Para Los estudios superiores los jóvenes deben ir a Holanda. La Sanidad es muy buena.

    • @davidacosta9158
      @davidacosta9158 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AliAli-uk9nh No hablas castellano, eso está traducido

  • @IrAmEtNaHc
    @IrAmEtNaHc Před 2 lety +18

    As a cape verdean creole speaker, I found this very interesting, as I was able to understand the sentences used in the examples.
    Very good video 👍🏽

  • @baldwinmaduro1280
    @baldwinmaduro1280 Před 2 lety +8

    Papiamento/u speaker here from Curaçao. In Curaçao we use more ‘k’ and ú. In Aruba more ‘c’ and 'o'.
    Here are also some examples of different words used by the people of Curaçao and Aruba when speaking Papiamento/u:
    The word uncle
    -Curaçao: tio (from the spanish word tío)
    - Aruba: omo (from the Dutch word oom)
    The word grasshopper
    - Curaçao: Dalakochi.
    - Aruba: Tirakochi.
    The word owl
    -Curaçao: Palabrua,
    - Aruba : Buho. Just like in spanish (búho)
    In Curaçao we say that Arubians ‘sing’ when they speak Papiamento/u but some Arubians say that the Yunan di Kòrsou (the child of Curaçao) are the ones who ‘sing’. It is all about perspective,
    Thanks for his great and comprehensive video Paul. It is great to let people learn about this special language. Keep up the good work!

    • @crystalfates101
      @crystalfates101 Před 2 lety

      Ma heri tende ku rubianonan a bisa ku nos yunan di Kòrsou ta papia lihé i mas kibrá kompara ku nan, lokual ku ami ta haña ta interesante

    • @sheldonpon9141
      @sheldonpon9141 Před 2 lety +1

      My partner and I are going to Curaçao for our honeymoon in January, can't wait!

    • @scarletw0lf
      @scarletw0lf Před 2 lety

      Na Aruba nos ta bisa shoko. Masha poco bo lo tende un hende bisa buho pero esey no kiermen cu e ta fout. (English translation: On Aruba we say "shoko". It's rare to hear someone say buho but that doesn't mean it's incorrect)

    • @chrisrm18
      @chrisrm18 Před 2 lety +1

      As an Aruban, this is the first time I heard of the word "buho", di unda esey a bin? 😂 Shoko so mi conoce.

    • @kimbald
      @kimbald Před 2 lety

      @@chrisrm18 ta shoko berdat. Un amiga di Aruba tabata husa buho tambe....🤷🏾‍♂️

  • @antoniopereira3938
    @antoniopereira3938 Před 2 lety +327

    Obrigado por este vídeo. É incrível constatar que a antiga influência portuguesa é maior no idioma do que a recente influência holandesa. Por que isso ocorre? Pelos séculos que se passaram seria mais natural essa influência ter diminuído, mas não foi o que aconteceu.

    • @arrowackskorsou8194
      @arrowackskorsou8194 Před 2 lety +66

      The reason for that is that the Dutch originally only cared about trade. Only a hundred years ago did the missionaries actually attempt to force the Dutch language onto the pupils right after having studied the language themselves to aid in converting the Afro-Caribbean population!

    • @57Javier747
      @57Javier747 Před 2 lety +20

      Venezuela is allocated to close. Probably Spanish words is still introducing to Papiamento.

    • @bumble.bee22
      @bumble.bee22 Před 2 lety

      upo

    • @gladiumcaeli
      @gladiumcaeli Před 2 lety +29

      @@arrowackskorsou8194 Segun mi comprendemento di e historia ta cu e hulandes nan no tabata kier pa e esclavo nan ni e nativo nan sinja hulandes. E motibo tabata cu pa nan, e idioma hulandes ta pa e clase halto nan so ( E hulandes nan). Tambe mester tene cuenta cu e misa/iglesia Catholico tabata duna serbishi na Papiamento y esey lo a pone cu e Papiamento a keda mas cerca di e idioma Portuges.

    • @xibokamania
      @xibokamania Před 2 lety +20

      @@gladiumcaeli lindo que consigo ler papiamento sendo portugues! abraço

  • @phzitos_
    @phzitos_ Před 2 lety +18

    Papiamento sounds like papeamento, a word that can be a neologism for the verb papear in portuguese, which means "to talk".

  • @mashiah1
    @mashiah1 Před 2 lety +19

    First time I heard about this language was in Narcos, season 3, episode 6. The agent discovered that the location is on Curaçao, because of the phrase in Papiamento he heard on the phone

    • @Gameflyer001
      @Gameflyer001 Před 2 lety +1

      I remember that scene. The wrong island was pinpointed for Curacao though during the brief map segment.

  • @chrisrosinda4725
    @chrisrosinda4725 Před 2 lety +21

    Hi, I am studying my own language 'papiamentu' at the University of Curaçao' and your video got me a bit emotional. I couldn't imagine you doing a video on my language thank you for your interest in my language it means a lot. In Curaçao we say 'baiskel' meaning bike and in Aruba they say 'bais' meaning the same, in Bonaire the say 'lembe lembe' for a type of insect that bites when your close to the beach, and we call it 'pika pika' and one word we all love and use is 'Dushi' meaning sweet, honey, my love, or if something tastes good etc. Thank you.

    • @Nate_el_supremo
      @Nate_el_supremo Před 2 lety +2

      Portfin mi a haña un antiano, masha ora mi tabata buska unu.

    • @mosesmendez1046
      @mosesmendez1046 Před 2 lety

      I'm curious to know... where does the word "Dushi" derives from?

    • @raionshishi8290
      @raionshishi8290 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mosesmendez1046 I am a native from Curacao, and the word "Dushi" is said to likely come from the word "Dulce" in Spanish as both of the words have a similar meaning depending on context.

    • @ejmobiel
      @ejmobiel Před 2 lety

      @@mosesmendez1046 dushi derrives from Dolce in Portuguese

    • @bryanzimmer6850
      @bryanzimmer6850 Před rokem

      @@mosesmendez1046 Dushi looks like it evolved from Spanish "dulce" (sweet) but it could also have been influenced by the Portuguese cognate "doce." Where in Brazil, the vowel "o" tends to drift toward "u" in a lot of words, and "e" often sounds like "ee" as in "sweet" rather than the nominal sound like ser ("to be", in both Sp. and Pt.)

  • @LuisFelipeBaquedano
    @LuisFelipeBaquedano Před 2 lety +98

    I am brazilian and Papiamento sounds to me like the evolution of Portuguese. It's more straight forward, simpler to understand because there aren't confusing verb conjugations and the spelling is phonetic, which makes it more intuitive to write. It's amazing.

    • @mustavogaia2655
      @mustavogaia2655 Před 2 lety +11

      Sounds like Portuguese created for a scifi story .

    • @lfmsimoes1
      @lfmsimoes1 Před 2 lety +19

      That is a characteristic of all/many Pidgin/Creole languages. They are simpler than the original language because they evolved in a community of mixed backgrounds and normally, without schools...
      The evolution of "Pure Latin", to the many "flavours of Vulgar Latin", then to Portuguese/Spanish/Italian/French/Romanian followed that process...

    • @thesmithii6014
      @thesmithii6014 Před 2 lety +2

      Brazilian is becaming more and more a creole language too...

    • @papaiamericano5420
      @papaiamericano5420 Před 2 lety +1

      Criolo de Cabo Verde Papia significa falar, papiamento é mais utilizado pelo criolo na Guiné Bissau significa falando. eu percebi quase tudo desse Criolo das Antilhas é bem parecido com o de Cabo Verde

    • @papaiamericano5420
      @papaiamericano5420 Před 2 lety

      No Brasil é utilizado como: papo bater papo

  • @dannyhendy
    @dannyhendy Před 2 lety +80

    Fascinating. I'd never heard of that language/creole.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +17

      It is indeed fascinating!

    • @dannyhendy
      @dannyhendy Před 2 lety +3

      @@Langfocus great content. As a Scot living in Spain I have a real appreciation for dialects/creoles... Whatever you want to call them :)

    • @amosamwig8394
      @amosamwig8394 Před 2 lety

      I hear this almost everyday, yesterday was the last time lol

    • @SeymoreSparda
      @SeymoreSparda Před 2 lety +1

      @@Langfocus Haven't watched it yet, but what are similar between this, and Galician/Galego Spanish, considering that you've done a video about the latter? Obviously, forget that I even asked, if you have already explained it in the video.

    • @alexishansen1333
      @alexishansen1333 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Langfocus Thank you for making this very informative video about my native language. Masha danki, (thank you very much)

  • @VeraDonna
    @VeraDonna Před 2 lety +23

    I'm capeverdean portuguese and have a colleague from Curaçao (trivia: the island was likely named by the portuguese because it was the place to *cure* scurvy for its abundance of fruits). We occasionally text each other in creole / papiamento respectively and we manage to understand each other.

    • @VeraDonna
      @VeraDonna Před 2 lety

      @TY Jackson ♊️ I know very well who I am. You seem to not know that in this planet some people have dual citizenship or are born in a place and have roots in another. What rock have you been living under?

  • @PipeBelnavis
    @PipeBelnavis Před 2 lety +71

    soy colombiano y hablo español. y si bien académicamente se dice que el papiamento es de base portuguesa, lo cierto es que es compartido mayormente entre el portugués y el español. y aunque lo tengo un poco oxidado, llegué a aprender bastante del idioma por mi cuenta, en internet y viendo incluso televisión en el idioma, sobre todo de telecuracao. esperaba con muchas ansias un video de este idioma, y aunque quedó un poco corto, muy buen trabajo paul. y se echa de menos la típica introducción tuya a cada video. saludos.

    • @Ernest0M0lina
      @Ernest0M0lina Před 2 lety +2

      Me puedes decir por favor donde puedo aprender un poco de papiamento?

    • @PipeBelnavis
      @PipeBelnavis Před 2 lety +2

      @@Ernest0M0lina en la página de wikipedia, al final, hay una serie de enlaces con varias páginas. aunque para algunas toca usar el wayback machine. y tengo algunos PDF con info.

    • @Ernest0M0lina
      @Ernest0M0lina Před 2 lety +1

      @@PipeBelnavis gracias voy a buscar eso entonces 👍

    • @PipeBelnavis
      @PipeBelnavis Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ernest0M0lina de nada. 😁

    • @danielguerrero894
      @danielguerrero894 Před měsícem

      No es academicamente,sino que en la estructura fonetica como lexica se asemeja más al portugués,el español es por la influencia de los países vecinos.

  • @b79705051996
    @b79705051996 Před 2 lety +15

    As a Brazilian Portuguese speaker, I could understand some sentences. This came as a surprise to me because I've never heard Papiamento before watching this video. It's also interesting to highlight that "papear" means "to speak" or "to chat" in Portuguese, and in my region at least, some times it is used with a "to chat idly" conotation. "Papeamento" could be used as a noun that indicates this action. Really fascinating stuff!

  • @sabikikasuko6636
    @sabikikasuko6636 Před 2 lety +51

    Spanish speaker, from Argentina. It's an amazing language and it feels so familiar yet so different, clearly very important to their speakers! Truly a lovely language.

  • @crystalfates101
    @crystalfates101 Před 2 lety +10

    Yoo great to see a video about my language! There were some things here even I didn't know about! What makes being a resident of the islands special is that we are able to mix spanish, dutch, english and papiamentu all in one sentence and everyone is able to understand it perfectly :D! It's so fun!!

    • @tedgovostis7351
      @tedgovostis7351 Před 2 lety +2

      It's funny how that works in mixed language environments. Strangest one I had was a mix of English, Spanish and Russian, because the woman I was talking to and I spoke them with various degrees fluency, so if we didn't know the word in one language, we'd try another, until we hit a version of it we both knew.
      When I went to visit family in Aruba, I spoke some degree of Spanish, so I made it a personal challenge to try to read as much of the Papiamento signage as I could, and was surprised at how much I could make sense of.

  • @ricardocabral3184
    @ricardocabral3184 Před 2 lety +18

    You should do one video about the oldest creole: from Cape Verde. It's also from Portuguese lexical.

  • @tatidossantos935
    @tatidossantos935 Před 2 lety +12

    This was a fascinating vídeo, I heard about Papiamento years ago in School, so good to know more about it. I'm from Cape Verde, island of 'Sal', therefore I could understand most of the sentences from the video. We do use the Word 'Papia' (which means 'to speak).
    By hearing/reading the sentences I think that Papiamento is even more similar to our ' Badiu' Creole (the dialect spoken in the island of Santiago), which makes sense since it was one of the 1st islands to be inhabited. Congrats on the vídeo, and greetings to the People from the ABC islands!

  • @kensakiro
    @kensakiro Před 2 lety +10

    I am from Curaçao and currently Living in Aruba. I've also spent some time in Bonaire. The sound/accent/dialect changes from island to island. This video is overall very well organized and explained, however... I'm sorry to say that There are some errors in this video as well. They are either errors in defenition/meaning, or errors in the way the words are pronounced on each of the 3 islands (ABC). Overall, it's a very nice video to get introduced to Papiamento/u. Yes... it is Papiamento (on Aruba) and on Curaçao and Bonaire, it's called Papiamentu. ONE letter difference. Aruba uses etymological Papiamento whilst Curaçao and Bonaire use the Phonetic based version and thus call it Papiamentu. There is so much extra info and corrections to be added, but again, overall, the video serves it's purpose very well. Thank you for exposing the language out there and thank you Langfocus for the explanations as well.

    • @alexishansen1333
      @alexishansen1333 Před 2 lety +4

      We don't use the word "cuando" for "when" in Papiamentu, we use "ki dia" (what day) or "ki ora" (what hour/what time) depending of how specific you want the answer as to when something happened

    • @BonaireanAffair
      @BonaireanAffair Před 2 lety

      Yes differences there are but natives understand everything, accepting small differences from each other, very nice.

  • @Arubaanse
    @Arubaanse Před 2 lety +26

    I'm a proud Papiamento speaker & I really love everything about my language ❤
    Nos tin un idioma hopi dushi🇦🇼🇧🇶🇨🇼❤

  • @MrsSeo17
    @MrsSeo17 Před 2 lety +3

    First time i heard papiamento was from Ir-sais, that guy whose music went viral on tik tok because of a challenge!
    And i was so intrigued how was i able to understand everything that he was saying yet I didn't know what language was he singing. Im both creole from Guinea bissau and Cape Verde, raised in Portugal.
    Btw, in guinea bissau, we use the term "papiar" as a verb to say "to talk/speak".
    Nice video 👏🏾

  • @takenoLs
    @takenoLs Před 2 lety +6

    Bro you’re passionate as hell I love it

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! I’m glad to hear it.

  • @janicefurtado8302
    @janicefurtado8302 Před 2 lety +3

    I’m from 🇨🇻,I feel so connected with the ABC islands❤️

  • @ivorypolinet6318
    @ivorypolinet6318 Před 2 lety +1

    I've been waiting so long for this, since I started watching this channel.
    Thank you Paul.

  • @ElNegringoKreyolito
    @ElNegringoKreyolito Před 2 lety +9

    Caribbean creole languages are indeed similar. In this video I saw that Papiamento is very similar to Haitian Creole structurally, but with different lexifier languages. Thanks for the introduction Paul 🙂🇭🇹

  • @josepheml
    @josepheml Před 2 lety +39

    I have studied some features of Palenquero (Spanish-based Creole language of Colombia) and had read that it has some similarities with Papiamento tense markers and other grammatical features since it seems that both have a strong relationship with Afro-Portuguese Creoles (in the case of Palenquero with Sao Tome Creole). With this video, I could see some of them, as well as some differences such as the position of the possessive pronoun, and I thought it might be interesting to see a video on Palenquero and another on the similarities and differences of both languages (this because the texts I have read are not so recent and I really like the format of Paul's videos).

    • @micayahritchie7158
      @micayahritchie7158 Před 2 lety +4

      I think afto-[insert European lexifier here] creoles of the Caribbean share a lot of grammatical commonalities

    • @sergiovelasquez6567
      @sergiovelasquez6567 Před 2 lety +3

      @@micayahritchie7158 According to the Afro-Proto-Portuguese creole theory, all Atlantic Creole languages derive from one language: an Afro-Portuguese pidgin-creole. Depending on where the enslaved Africans were sold in the Americas, relexification occurred by replacing African- Portuguese vocabulary with English, Spanish, French, Dutch and other European vocabulary. That explains why the underlying grammar of, say, Jamaican Creole and Sranan Tongo or Papiamento/-tu are very similar, despite lexical differences. (See "The Kiss of a Slave", the doctoral thesis of Efraim Frank Martinus Arion, 1996)

  • @frafranildo
    @frafranildo Před 2 lety +11

    I have Portuguese as my native language and I didn't know about Papiamento's existance up until now, and this video was friggin' interesting!

  • @adlpn3077
    @adlpn3077 Před 2 lety +29

    "kon ta bai" sounds like a custom greeting in cebuano "kaon ta bai", roughly translates to "let's eat, mate". this context is like a greeting while the speaker (doer) is eating, but not necessarily having an intent to invite the "invitee" (listener) to eat together with the speaker

    • @arrowackskorsou8194
      @arrowackskorsou8194 Před 2 lety +2

      Funny sometimes how certain phrases sound similar even though they might have somewhat different meanings! 😉👍

    • @bramvs123
      @bramvs123 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah and ki ora (what time is it) in Maori kia ora is a greeting

    • @killersg.8290
      @killersg.8290 Před 2 lety

      Naa koy lechon, kaon ta bay

    • @SirCasticoo
      @SirCasticoo Před 2 lety +2

      Also sounds like creole from cape Verde, which is a portuguese speaking country

    • @content.deleted1
      @content.deleted1 Před 2 lety

      dako kag lagay bay HAHA

  • @fabigato
    @fabigato Před 2 lety +32

    I'm a native spanish speaker living in the Netherlands, so it is usual for me to find people speaking papiamento sometimes. My impressions of it go as follows:
    first 3 seconds: dunno what it is, but doesn't sound european
    next 3 seconds: this is spanish, but with very strong caribbean jargon
    afterwards: aah, papiamento

  • @ProximaCentauri88
    @ProximaCentauri88 Před 2 lety +6

    Bon dia hende. Mi ta de Filipinas. Mi ke ter amigonan de Aruba, Korsou, i Boneiru. Papiamento ta hopi dushi! Izaline Calister ta mi kantante faborito.

    • @gladiumcaeli
      @gladiumcaeli Před 2 lety +2

      Bon dia proxima, how did you find the artist Izaline Calister, that's very interesting seeing how we are almost a world apart.

    • @ProximaCentauri88
      @ProximaCentauri88 Před 2 lety +2

      @@gladiumcaeli I was listening to Brazil's Elis Regina and Moreno Veloso after watching videos about Curaçao and Aruba. CZcams then recommended "Kanta Hélele" by Izaline.

  • @rafaelzv99
    @rafaelzv99 Před 2 lety +1

    Its great that you are uploading so often! Love your vids, keep it up

  • @kennethdruckmann1171
    @kennethdruckmann1171 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this video Paul I’ve been wanting this vid for a long time

  • @diocab3734
    @diocab3734 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Well done Sr.! As a Bissau Guinean (from Guiné-Bissau) I really appreciate you taking the time to shine a light on a “well-hidden”corner of the world where a variation of Creole is spoken. I recently explained this very topic to my 13-year old daughter who was born and raised in the USA. So, this video will further enlighten her. Thank you!! ❤

  • @fernandoandres99
    @fernandoandres99 Před 2 lety +36

    There are a lot of similiraties with the Spanish-based creole language here in the Philippine, the Chavacano. For example: Ta is also present tense marker which is from está. All verbs in Chavacano are always conjugated in third-person singular.

  • @idraote
    @idraote Před 2 lety +27

    Having studied Spanish and being somewhat familiar with Portuguese, Papiamento appears fairly comprehensible. The grammar showed in the examples appeared very logical.
    Were I to live in one of the Islands I would probably learn Papiamento more easily than Dutch.
    Nice video, Paul, thank you.

    • @clintfalk
      @clintfalk Před 2 lety

      If you speak English, Dutch should be easy. It is the closest language to English and very cognative.

    • @idraote
      @idraote Před 2 lety +1

      @@clintfalk i am fluent in German, I am sure Dutch - phonetics aside - wouldn't be too much of a challenge if only I had time to study a fourth language 😅

    • @InspireMatrixx
      @InspireMatrixx Před 2 lety

      Well yeah you should be able to learn Papiamento very quick if you have a strong base in Spanish and portugese

  • @ericaciarlini7042
    @ericaciarlini7042 Před 2 lety +81

    Sou brasileira (falo português como língua nativa) e falo espanhol. Para mim o papiamento é uma língua muito interessante, mas apesar de ter um vocabulário muito similar ao das 2 línguas que domino, as uniões de palavras e pronomes, além da pronúncia, do meu ponto de vista tornam mais difícil a compreensão dela do que a compreensão do italiano "standard", por exemplo (língua que não falo, mas quando escuto tenho uma compreensão bastante boa, cerca de 90%). Foi muito interessante o vídeo, obrigada!

    • @andreckelly6741
      @andreckelly6741 Před 2 lety +20

      As Papiamento speaker i understood what you said

    • @ericaciarlini7042
      @ericaciarlini7042 Před 2 lety +15

      @@andreckelly6741 Wow! Cool! I imagine that the written language is perhaps easier to understand than the spoken language (as happens with Portuguese natives who read something in Spanish without knowing the language). But that's just an assumption. I am happy to know that even in Portuguese I might be able to communicate with people who speak Papiamento. Thanks for the info!

    • @davealbertcharrissalas650
      @davealbertcharrissalas650 Před 2 lety +11

      Eu tambem falo português e papiamento sou da Colômbia. Aqui temos 2 criolos base inglesa e portuguesa, espanhola e bantú. Posso ajudar pra maior informação.

    • @kkfoto
      @kkfoto Před 2 lety +3

      Se você passar algum tempo em Curaçao, irá se surpreender. Em pouco tempo aprenderá a se comunicar em Papiamento. "un bon dia e un sonrisa grandi" :)

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před 2 lety +2

      @@ericaciarlini7042 I think the reason why Papiamentu speakers can read Portuguese is that Papiamentu speakers who aren't fluent in Spanish are very rare.

  •  Před 2 lety +16

    As a spanish speaker i can say that sometimes when people talk in an informal way you can heard things really similar to "ki ora" or " ki dia" it's feels like a way to pronunce the phrases rather than a phrase from a completly different languagge

    • @pedrojunior9158
      @pedrojunior9158 Před 2 lety +7

      Same in Brazil! I can't say for everybody here because we have a lot of accents in Brazil depending of the region, but, the most common way to pronounce words like "Que", "Está" or even "Ele/Ela" in my State, Minas Gerais, is like "Qui/Ki", "Tá" (Tô instead of Estou) and Ê, for ele and É for ela, in a fast speech.

    • @rociopaoloni5080
      @rociopaoloni5080 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah in informal we speech tend to discard some words and even sounds in order to get to the point faster.

  • @syasol
    @syasol Před 2 lety +6

    i would love to see a video on kristang (the malaccan portuguese creole spoken by the malaccan portuguese in malaysia and singapore)

  • @tomasrivera761
    @tomasrivera761 Před 2 lety

    Is great to see you uploading new videos Mr. Paul, always very informative as well as interesting and entertaining, thank you for that. Greetings from Texas.

  • @zalor10
    @zalor10 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! 2 videos seguidos que bien! Genio Langfocus!!!.

  • @Its_Neneka
    @Its_Neneka Před 2 lety +26

    It would be awesome for you to cover Cabo Verdean Kriolu which is said to be where Papiamento is originally rooted from.

  • @gongboom
    @gongboom Před 2 lety +4

    As a fan of the Langfocus channel I'm so happy Paul finally got around to doing a video on my Papiamentu.
    Danki Paul. B'a hasi un tremendo trabou.
    Thank you Paul. You did a great job.

  • @gardensail5354
    @gardensail5354 Před 2 lety

    this is a video I was hoping you would make for a while now, it was really interesting. Thanks!

  • @NunoFerreiraX
    @NunoFerreiraX Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome! 👏 You’re a legend. Your research is mind blowing. Congratulations for your interesting and educational videos. Thank you.

  • @A-ID-A-M
    @A-ID-A-M Před 2 lety +5

    I met a girl who spoke papiamentu/papiamento. We spoke together for a little while, with me using my own homemade portuñol (neutral Spanish accent and subbing certain words I heard her say for Portuguese ones). It worked pretty well and we understood each other. It was really fun and I understood almost everything. I really only consistently didn’t understand one word, and that was “hopi” which means very.

    • @arrowackskorsou8194
      @arrowackskorsou8194 Před 2 lety +2

      Hopi is from Dutch "een hoop" = a heap

    • @A-ID-A-M
      @A-ID-A-M Před 2 lety

      @@arrowackskorsou8194 Thats what I assumed. I asked her what it meant once it got in the way enough times ahahha.

  • @luisenriquewever1694
    @luisenriquewever1694 Před 2 lety +6

    Thanks a lot for this video! I thank you as a native speaker of the language of Papiamento. As an Aruban native or even an infant immigrant who is raised here will learn to speak 4 languages, being Papiamento, Spanish, Dutch and English (notice 2 Romance and 2 Germanic languages). Having had the blessing of learning Portuguese and Italian, flirting a lot with other Romance Languages as French and Catalan and the Germanic language of Germany, and having followed to levels of Comprehensive Arabic and Hebrew, I regard the content of this video of true research. One small correction brother, 'pisca/piská' comes from the Spanish (and maybe Portuguese) 'pescado' which means the fish already been caught. This differs from the word 'pez' in Spanish and Portuguese which refers to the living fish in the sea or river. The verb in Papiamento for 'to fish' is 'pisca' (without emphasis on the 'a' as the 1st meaning), which as you said comes from the Spanish and Portuguese of 'pescar'.
    Anyway, thank you once more for spending your resources to produce this video. I have also learned a few things and as a hobby linguist I am sure that many are those who will learn from this video.
    Feliz diadomingo y Dios Su paz y bendicion sea cu bo, ruman!

    • @chrislopes
      @chrislopes Před 2 lety

      Yes, pescado in Portuguese is an expression used to refer to fish in a generic way

  • @arturrosa3166
    @arturrosa3166 Před 2 lety +32

    I'm portuguese and I had never heard of this language before. Fascinating how something like this can be overlooked in schools. I can understand some sentences perfectly, and others not at all. For example, the last sentence. about the expensive house, it was really easy. But the previous one, about the book he bought, I couldn't understand at all. Very interesting. Overall, the accent of the language seems to be more spanish than portuguese, to my portuguese ears. But it sounds overall like a really a strange mix. Fascinating.

    • @crystalfates101
      @crystalfates101 Před 2 lety +4

      Native speaker here, in a similar regard, it's pretty awesome how we can perfectly understand Portuguese because of how similar the languages are!

    • @chrislopes
      @chrislopes Před 2 lety +6

      It's true Artur: me I'm Capeverdean, found out about this language pretty late and little people in Cape Verde doesn't know about the existence of a sister language in the Caribbeans. Same goes for ABC natives

    • @doodleydooo945
      @doodleydooo945 Před 2 lety

      Eu consegui entender a frase do livro bem (pelo menos a forma escrita). Acho que papiamento é mais fácil de ser compreendido por quem fala português do Brasil. Talvez seja porque o português daqui tem mais características arcaicas.

  • @daniels.
    @daniels. Před 2 lety +2

    Well done! I've always been impressed by Portuguese creoles and by Papiamento in special! Thanks, Paul!

  • @djonymorais
    @djonymorais Před 2 lety +7

    As a native capeverdean, who has been to Curaçao, I had the experience of speaking creole to papiamento speakers, and I was really surprised by the similarities of these 2 dialects. One other dialect that I’ve come across, that is also remarkably similar to capeverdean creole and papiamento is Kristang, spoken in The Malaysian region of Malacca.

  • @caspartromp1017
    @caspartromp1017 Před 2 lety +4

    This is the video I have been waiting for a long time for! Masha danki (many thanks)!
    As for indigenous vocabulary in Papiamento, there are some direct ones from the native arawak tribe before, and these words are often very similar to Wayuu language of the Wayuu tribe (also from the Arawaks) in northern Colombia, which is very closeby. Wordts like "tata" (father), "yu" (child [of...]), "mahos" (ugly), and many names related to common flora, fauna and toponyms. These are words like "cadushi" (a type of cactus), "dividivi" (a type of tree), "Hudishibana" (a place name in which the "bana" is related to the known "savana", meaning a flat land or plateau), etc...

  • @benjaminsmith6031
    @benjaminsmith6031 Před rokem +2

    Blown away once again by a well designed and executed video. My father grew up in Aruba and learned to speak Papiamento. It was the unique linguistic heritage of this language that inspired me to become a linguist myself.

  • @ostfabrorn2718
    @ostfabrorn2718 Před 2 lety

    As a person who lived on Aruba for 13 years this video holds such a special place in my heart. Thank you so much for making it Paul

  • @shibonotenshi
    @shibonotenshi Před 2 lety +9

    As an Argentinian, with some exposure to Brazilian Portuguese, I found Papiamento very understandable.
    I also noticed a similarity between the tense marker and the Spanish verb Estar (to be).
    Ta = está
    Taba = estaba

  • @fish.enjoyer
    @fish.enjoyer Před 2 lety +6

    No way, it's so crazy for you to make this video because I just met a customer the other day who speaks this language and I had never heard of it beforehand. So cool!

  • @OmegaTaishu
    @OmegaTaishu Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the hard work, as always!

  • @Aurelingua
    @Aurelingua Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing video, thanks for your excellent quality content 😍😍

  • @aleksalazar432
    @aleksalazar432 Před 2 lety +8

    I was surprised that Paul didn't mention the days of the week in Papiamento which may have been influenced by yet another Iberian language... Catalan...
    Days of the week Papiamento Spanish Portuguese Catalan
    Monday dia luna Lunes Segunda-feira dilluns
    Tuesday dia mars Martes Terça-feira dimarts
    Wednesday dia rason Miércoles Quarta-feira dimecres
    Thursday diaweps Jueves Quinta-feira dijous
    Friday diabierne Viernes Sexta-feira divendres
    Saturday diasabra Sábado Sábado dissabte
    Sunday dia domingu Domingo Domingo diumenge

  • @gugusalpha2411
    @gugusalpha2411 Před 2 lety +3

    Very pretty language. I love the tense forms as they are quite unique and very natural at the same time.

  • @arlindodosreis7522
    @arlindodosreis7522 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thanks a lot for this video/lesson. I'm a Portuguese/Cape Verdean speaking who also speaks Spanish and I was amazed how my language background made it EASY for me to understand Papiamento. This video lesson was very instructive educationally and historically. Keep up with the great job

  • @AllanLimosin
    @AllanLimosin Před 2 lety

    I was waiting for this video!! 😍

  • @miguelsena1823
    @miguelsena1823 Před 2 lety +5

    As a Capeverdean Creole speaker, I am shocked as to the similarities in the language. It is basically the same thing. I am curious now to visit the ABC islands and meet some people to talk to.

  • @hctz1234
    @hctz1234 Před 2 lety +7

    Me dejas atónito el conocer de éste idioma. Nunca lo había escuchado y genuinamente me emociona aprender sobre Papiamento. Gracias por compartir sobre esta lengua. Me dejas con ganas de aprender más sobre el portugués y seguir cultivando mi español. De nuevo muchas gracias por toda ésta información. 🤓

  • @yesid17
    @yesid17 Před 2 lety

    great video as always!!! thank you!!

  • @Tt-vy2tj
    @Tt-vy2tj Před 2 lety

    Yay! You made a new video! I love them so much! You made me love languages!

  • @rapportbuildingfirst8695
    @rapportbuildingfirst8695 Před 2 lety +6

    As a group fitness instructor I often use what is known as Tabata training (20 seconds hard/10 seconds recovery * 8) in my sessions. Now, when I go to introduce and tell my patrons what it is I might just add in that it is a way of indicating past-tense in Papiamento. If nothing else it will get my patrons here in Australia dreaming of the Caribbean! :-)

    • @Antilli
      @Antilli Před 2 lety

      That's really funny. I actually just heard of Tabata training recently (a few weeks ago). As a native speaker of Papiamentu, I thought it was funny that there's a training exactly resembling a word from our language.

  • @michimacho73
    @michimacho73 Před 2 lety +5

    Wow Paul made me love Papiamento!😁 I am from the Andes, speak Spanish and Quechua. I also lived in China and speak chinese. So in my head I have different language patterns that allow me to see the "mecanics" of this kind of creoles. They are so wonderful. Also like chavacano in the Philippines. You understand between 70 - 80 % of those languages, depending on the topic, even if you listen to them the first time.
    Thank you so much for this video! 🙏

  • @rtleitao78
    @rtleitao78 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm originally from Brazil, but lived in the Netherlands for 10 years. It was always amazing to me how easy it was for me to understand papiamento. There was always a colleague at work who spoke it and when spoken it was always a delight

  • @MaximilianoHerrera72
    @MaximilianoHerrera72 Před 2 lety +6

    I am a spanish speaker and i can read almost 100% of Papiamento ! But of course i don t have an idea how to speak it and i don't understand it so much while it's spoken, but about reading, it's intuitive !

  • @thalesrodriguessss
    @thalesrodriguessss Před 2 lety +13

    Muito interessante! Pensava que papiamento era muito mais holandês do que ibérico. Deu vontade de aprender e viajar pras ABC islands.

  • @Lets_Talk_About_it_Luv
    @Lets_Talk_About_it_Luv Před 2 lety +6

    It’s like the best of both Spanish and Portuguese… absolutely beautiful!

  • @girlsquad224
    @girlsquad224 Před 2 lety +1

    I love it! I've been learning spanish and a little bit of Portuguese for a while, and it is quite easy to understand. I find it fascinating!

  • @Brian-vn4xb
    @Brian-vn4xb Před 2 lety +6

    LangFocus? I didn’t expect another video from you this soon

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety

      I only released videos on Patreon for three months, so I had a few videos saved up.

  • @andretenente1073
    @andretenente1073 Před 2 lety +11

    As a portuguese, I'm impressed by how easily I understood these simple phrases. Definitily adding the ABC Islands to my travel list

  • @galileor.cuevas9739
    @galileor.cuevas9739 Před 2 lety +4

    Looking at the word "Papiamento" makes me so happy. One of my favourite visual artists is an Aruban girl and she would sometimes write on it in DeviantArt, so, a while ago I made somo research on the language and, as I speak both, Spanish and Portuguese, I found it's analytical syntax fascinating.

  • @amerie1987
    @amerie1987 Před 2 lety

    This is the best video on the technical breakdown of my native language I have ever come across. And to answer your last question. The differences are in idiom, although the islands share many similarities, the historical differences of each of ABC islands also has a unique spin on the Papiamento/Papiamentu language. For instance; in Aruba we say bombillo (which is a lexical borrowing from Spanish) for the word lightbulb and in Curacao/Bonaire pera di lus (which is a literal translation of the word lightbulb). And so there are many more examples.

  • @kurlec6485
    @kurlec6485 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video. I’ve been following the channel for a few years now. I’m from Curaçao, so it’s cool to see a video on papiamentu

    • @kurlec6485
      @kurlec6485 Před 2 lety

      The main difference I notice from the different islands is that in Curaçao we use a lot of the “u” sound at the end of a sentence and in Aruba they use the “o” sound. Also they way we sound is different. I feel like in Aruba they have more of a Spanish influence and in Curaçao we have more of a Portuguese influence.

  • @gombiloto
    @gombiloto Před 2 lety +7

    Great video as usual. I strongly believe that ''Mi'' as in ''I'' doesn't have an iberic or Anglo-Saxon origin but a West African one (Twi and Igbo language...) The same word can be found in Patwa : "Mi a talk"

  • @paulapelayo607
    @paulapelayo607 Před 2 lety +9

    This is the coolest Creole I've ever encountered (Native Spanish speaker)

    • @chrislopes
      @chrislopes Před 2 lety

      Mee too! It's the Creoule with the most delicious mix that I ever came across: portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, a sprinkle of English, plus the African and Arawak subtracts.
      It's musical to the ears and to me it's even more special, being a sister language of my mother tongue: Capeverdean Kriolu.

  • @anaramos2802
    @anaramos2802 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this video. It's always rewarding to see how far the Portuguese have gone. At some point in the past it was the lingua franca in many places of the world!

  • @madmasseur6422
    @madmasseur6422 Před 2 lety +2

    Two years ago a friend from Aruba offered to teach me some Papiamento and I accepted. I quickly fell in love with the language both due to its simplicity and how exotic it sounds. Sadly I stopped learning it because at that time I was switching universities and the whole covid sh!t show started. I learned the basics of papiamento grammar quickly but my biggest problem was my lack of vocabulary, my lack of sources to read papiamento texts from and the fact that I live in Serbia so I have no contact with any papiamento speakers. But I still had a lot of fun learning the basics and I'd love to continue learning it again.
    If any Papiamento speaker knows of any sites with a dictionary or a lot of words with English translations please do send the link to it here, I'd appreciate it very much. Greetings from the Balkans, поз 😊

  • @michaelk4896
    @michaelk4896 Před 2 lety +5

    I spent most of my teens there so it's cool to see papiamentu getting recognised haha. Going back there after uni exams for a couple weeks, dushi hom 😎

  • @dustgreylynx
    @dustgreylynx Před 2 lety +2

    It actually sounds really beautiful and I can understand/guess those simple sentences surprisingly well

  • @rir75
    @rir75 Před 2 lety +1

    Portuguese lady here, just wanted to thank you for the quality of the information on these videos…