Saving Languages From Extinction

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 507

  • @couragethecheems5877
    @couragethecheems5877 Před 5 lety +939

    Someday I hope someone would create a Museum or Library of Languages and declare it a UN Heritage Site

    • @aufak-live101
      @aufak-live101 Před 5 lety +20

      Agree These Language Deserve Unesco World Heritage

    • @anandhrajan99
      @anandhrajan99 Před 5 lety +10

      Languages aren't distinct. How would you differentiate between similar dialects? When does it become a new language?

    • @snailevangelist
      @snailevangelist Před 5 lety +18

      Berder King Very cool, still naïve. Ignoring the fact that you’d wanna throw away potentially thousands of years of development, what language do we make universal?

    • @missrobinhoodie
      @missrobinhoodie Před 5 lety +23

      Berder King yes human thought is important. But how you communicate thoughts - by language. And every language has its own way of putting things, its way of flexing words and structure sentences, its way of thinking really! That’s why we need the individual beauty of different languages.
      An example: my mothertongue is swiss german. Sometimes I come across something I can’t find words for but I know the perfect expression in german or english. „Get your shit together“ is an amazing expression that is hardly translateable 😉

    • @pablolostum
      @pablolostum Před 5 lety +9

      @@batboy3746 I won't give up on my language just to be 'unified'. That doesn't make sense. Koreans speak the same language in North and South and they're the opposite of unified, same for India and Pakistan. Not to mention all countries with the same language that are divided (English, Spanish, Arabic, German, French...). As people said, there is different ways of thinking within each language, and different ways of perceiving the world. And as we don't want to demolish historic old buildings, or destroy reliques from the past, we don't want to lose more languages.

  • @kaluadog
    @kaluadog Před 5 lety +198

    Forty years ago, there was a great movement here in Hawai'i nei, to save our Olelo, the Hawai'ian language. There were less then five hundred native speakers spread over seven islands. A grassroots movement to start Charter Schools, Hawai'ian only spoken. Now there are thousands of young speakers, the language is ALIVE!!

  • @coolguybrian
    @coolguybrian Před 5 lety +439

    I'm glad Ireland is trying to save Gaeilge, maybe all Celtic nations can try. (Scotland, Isle of Man, Cornwall, Brittany etc.)

    • @Aqua750
      @Aqua750 Před 5 lety +19

      Yeah but there's people like me that can only ask to go to the toilet, say the colours and count to ninety

    • @Aqua750
      @Aqua750 Před 5 lety +2

      D-Duit a huh

    • @Aqua750
      @Aqua750 Před 5 lety +2

      Um, is maight liom ... Buí.

    • @jpaviation3509
      @jpaviation3509 Před 5 lety +1

      johnny torres Tá mé trí bhliain deág daois.

    • @chi1310
      @chi1310 Před 5 lety +1

      I kinda feel bad because I hate Irish and complain about not being able to drop Irish for Jc/Lc

  • @mitch7890
    @mitch7890 Před 5 lety +85

    Ireland: **Speaks Irish**
    The Brits during 1167-1937: “We don’t do that here”

    • @adamender9092
      @adamender9092 Před 4 lety +5

      @MemeulousWithEyes England killed them all down to a very small amount of speakers

    • @pampelmouse
      @pampelmouse Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@adamender9092no they outlawed speaking it then accidentally caused a famine

  • @arcticpolyglots
    @arcticpolyglots Před 4 lety +31

    “Each time a language dies, another flame goes out, another sound goes silent.” ― Ariel Sabar

  • @elineshappyplace2562
    @elineshappyplace2562 Před 5 lety +198

    This is so interesting! I absolutely adore that man for making all this effort to preserve so many languages!

  • @amgaming3369
    @amgaming3369 Před 5 lety +129

    People like this are saving culture from all around the world, salute to them

  • @isaac_aren
    @isaac_aren Před 5 lety +20

    In Ireland, the major problem I see as a student is other students don't respect the Irish language and have no desire to preserve it. The way it is taught in schools focuses too much on poetry and story writing rather than conversation and culture. This has made many students hate learning Irish and prefer that it went extinct. It really is a shame that the education system was designed in such a way that all it does is discourage speaking Irish. Irish is a very unique language when you examine it with features like mutations, simple and consistent verb rules, and a nice proposition system. It would be a tragedy to see it go.
    In Éire, an fadhb is mó a fheicim mar dalta is ea nach bhfuil aon meas ag daltaí eile don Ghaeilinn agus níl aon dúil acu chun é a chaomhnú. Díríonn an slí ina bhfuil sé múinte sna scoileanna an iomarcha ar filíocht agus ag scríobh scéalta, in áit chómhrá agus cultúr. Dá bhrí seo, is fuath le a lán daltaí Ghaeilge a fhoghlaim agus is fearr leo go rachadh an teanga imithe in éag. Is trua é go raibh an córas oideachais deartha sa chaoi is go dhíspreagainn sé Ghaeilinn a labhairt. Ghaeilge is ea teanga saor uathúil nuair a scrúdaíonn tú é, le gnéithe mar sócháin, riallacha briathara éasca agus comhsheasmhach, agus córas réamhfhocail deas. Bheadh sé trua mór chun a fheicáil imithe.

    • @captaindestruction9332
      @captaindestruction9332 Před 9 měsíci

      A good sign is more apps are offering Irish in fun ways and for people all across the globe to learn! The Irish students sound alot like American students being taught Spanish. Its more of a chore because its not made fun and we already have a language we use everyday so the need and want isn’t there. If they made it more fun like field trips to historic sites, Irish Songs and simply showing how unique and fun the language could be(especially if traveling and wanting to speak without anyone understanding you) etc. I think more will want to learn it.

  • @abhinashdas2025
    @abhinashdas2025 Před 5 lety +21

    Proud to be a Wikitongues volunteer, I learnt to love and embrace the linguistic diversity which is cultural richness of this world. Lots of love and respect to you @danielbogreudell 💖🙏

  • @johnplockwood6113
    @johnplockwood6113 Před 5 lety +9

    This man is doing great things. I got super excited when I saw Bavarian in the video. That made it clear, Wikitongues is really doing a very comprehensive job.

  • @jadebrownbull4873
    @jadebrownbull4873 Před 3 lety +19

    Native Americans like me need to get more active in our beautiful diverse languages of North America. Preserved our languages means preserved our beautiful cultures.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Před 3 lety

      Is anyone trying to preserve Native language and culture in Latin America? How about saving ethno America from extraction?

    • @FieldLing639
      @FieldLing639 Před rokem

      I'm hoping to do documentation fieldwork in Paraguay at some point, it'll be a while though.

  • @tjredcorn7992
    @tjredcorn7992 Před 5 lety +8

    My mother’s parents spoke fluent Ponca, but only a handful of their children picked it up. Today, my oldest uncle is one of the last in my family to keep it going. His wife, who is Cheyenne/Arapaho, remembers being forced into the Concho Boarding school of Oklahoma. Where she remembers a young Cheyenne girl who was beat to death for merely speaking the language of her own people. This isn’t ancient history either.
    I meet with my uncle every weekend, while documenting and recording our visits. I’m slowly moving from vocabulary to phrases and sentences.

    • @karlmakhwa4182
      @karlmakhwa4182 Před 5 měsíci

      I was very inspired by your last sentence and I would love to know how the learning with your uncle is going, 4 years on!

  • @yachishairclips2250
    @yachishairclips2250 Před 5 lety +176

    I feel guilty of listening to this story right here... I am a Filipino from Mindanao and I usually speak in 3 languages and I speak as of today in combination of 2 different languages that I knew of...
    Hearing this story is a reminder for me and other Filipinos of speaking purely as we can because that is why our language is in decline because Filipinos love to learn the worldwide used language against their own language

    • @kaluadog
      @kaluadog Před 5 lety +3

      My Late best friend was from Mindanao and she spoke five languages. Amazing to myself who only speak English.

    • @yachishairclips2250
      @yachishairclips2250 Před 5 lety

      @@kaluadog what are those 5 languages that your friend could speak??
      I think 3 languages is pretty much the least amount of languages/dialects that a person from either Visayas or Mindanao could speak

    • @campkira
      @campkira Před 5 lety

      If it useless it not a language... It just baby talk....

    • @BluishHuntress
      @BluishHuntress Před 5 lety +1

      I think 90% of Mindanaoans can speak 3 languages (Bisaya or Illonggo or Maranaw + Tagalog & English).
      25% can speak/understand 4 languages, most of them are Illonggos & Muslims who spent some years in predominantly Bisaya areas in Mindanao.

    • @marlaimelintes5536
      @marlaimelintes5536 Před 5 lety +1

      Well, I can speak ilonggo,bisaya,and tagalog. So that's 3

  • @Suite_annamite
    @Suite_annamite Před 5 lety +46

    What we're glancing @0:13 is most likely *Sundanese* and NOT "Sudanese".

    • @MrJazzBond
      @MrJazzBond Před 5 lety +3

      That's Indonesian 2nd school uniform..

    • @bauhiniafolia9673
      @bauhiniafolia9673 Před 5 lety

      Ah, i thought I was the only one noticing it, and re-watch it several times, but i'm not really sure since i can't really hear what he's saying so i just continued to watch
      Ah iya tu seragam gw pake semasa SMA

    • @angelasilvana1
      @angelasilvana1 Před 5 lety +2

      Wah kiriain bahasa Sunda masih 'aman' karena masuk bahasa paling banyak penuturnya di Indonesia setelah :( di Indonesia banyak bahasa yg hampir punah terutama yg di luar P. Sumatera dan P. Jawa

    • @MDzaki-uk2ll
      @MDzaki-uk2ll Před 5 lety

      @@MrJazzBond *high school uniform

  • @xXxSkyViperxXx
    @xXxSkyViperxXx Před 5 lety +7

    i hope this project covers most especially the very very rare ones on the verge of extinction with only a handful of speakers

  • @yachishairclips2250
    @yachishairclips2250 Před 5 lety +63

    The first person this language preservist is engaging speaks Ilocano!! Is Ilocano language going to die?? I saw an interview a long time ago in KMJS about a Foreigner professor teaching in Ilocos and he did mention that Ilocano native speakers are declining in time...
    ILOCANOS!! WAKE UP!! You need to save your language and heritage!!

    • @marvinuhilarious
      @marvinuhilarious Před 5 lety +10

      Kumusta, kabsat! Fluent/Native Ilokano speaker here, I grew up speaking Ilokano with my family and lived a huge part of my life going back and forth from the states and Cagayan Valley (Piat, to he precise) so the Ilokano language is a big part of my life.
      In my own personal opinion, use of Ilokano is actually growing both here in the Philippines and even internationally. It is being used more northern Luzon and in place of the more exotic and regional dialects (Kankanaey, Ifugao, Ibanag, Itawit, Malaueg, etc) so the languages really in risk of becoming extinct are the ones I just listed.
      As for internationally, the majority of the Filipino population living outside of the Philippines speak Ilokano the most rather than any other Filipino language. It is actually a really prelevant household language in four states (Hawaii, California, Washington and New York).
      So, if anything. Ilokano isn't really such a big concern in terms of extinction but it is still crucial for our youths to learn our language for its preservation as Tagalog can one day also replace Ilokano in northern Luzon. Just wanted to give my incite on the subject.....

    • @yachishairclips2250
      @yachishairclips2250 Před 5 lety +1

      @@marvinuhilarious Thank you for responding.. I am happy to hear your statement about the matter.... It really depends on our youth now to preserve and cultivate with the language.
      About the native languages/dialects you have mentioned above... I hope those will not go extinct

    • @seerendipitea
      @seerendipitea Před 5 lety

      Yung tita at mga pinsan ko eh mga Ilocano. Si tita sanay mag Ilokano pero yung mga pinsan ko hindi na, buti na lang maraming kapatid si tita na nakatira pa sa Ilocos kaya may nagsasalita pa ng Ilokano. Nakakalungkot lang kasi parang ayaw at hindi na natututo yung mga pinsan ko kase sa Bulacan na sila nakatira.....

    • @yachishairclips2250
      @yachishairclips2250 Před 5 lety +2

      @@seerendipitea ... Geographic location talaga could affect the interest of person to learn a language... sana man lng may reinforcement from the parents ng mga pinsan mo na matuto silang magIlocano

    • @BluishHuntress
      @BluishHuntress Před 5 lety

      Ilocanos have native speakers here in Mindanao (Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat and Valencia City, Bukidnon). But a lot of kids no longer speak the language in favor of the more predominant Bisaya/Tagalog.

  • @mutiyangpilingbabae9207
    @mutiyangpilingbabae9207 Před 4 lety +4

    Maraming Salamat (Thank you very much)
    For doing this I appreciate your effort to preserve the languages. I hope more young generations in every country would take an interest to their language because it's culture. My heart breaks whenever I hear that a language was about to die and only a few people especially the old ones knew it.

  • @trinitybair7516
    @trinitybair7516 Před 5 lety +4

    Yes! I've been waiting for an episode like this! I love language and I'm so glad that there are people out there who share that love and are able to do something about it. Also I'm low-key gonna cry thank you sir for doing this

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi4743 Před 2 lety +3

    Goodluck bro. I hope you’re able to save and maintain all of these languages. Regardless, what language you’re speaking they all have something unique about them.

  • @eyjzdrkxjqzfuhqyzybf
    @eyjzdrkxjqzfuhqyzybf Před 5 lety +3

    For those interested, they got a CZcams channel called "Wikitongues".

  • @OrphanSolid
    @OrphanSolid Před 5 lety +5

    I speak Tarifit, one of the language in the video. It's such an important work and I'm grateful there are people doing this timeless job

  • @TheLovemilife
    @TheLovemilife Před 5 lety +3

    Your work should be stored in every public archive in the world. And hard drives stored in the seed vault or some other perpetual storage center. Thank you for your work. Every thing you do is helping out future world to better understand its past. Teddy quote ignored I do thank you, keep thought alive.

  • @SomeDudeQC
    @SomeDudeQC Před 5 lety +5

    Love Wikitongues. One of the first CZcams channels I subscribed to.

  • @monke6669
    @monke6669 Před 5 lety +5

    My mother tongue is TAMIL(native to tamil nadu,a state in south india),native speakers are around 68million. Definitely this language is in safe zone and it has got very old and beautiful cultural heritage and literature.
    For ex:
    In English: how are you?
    In tamil : நல்லா இருக்கீங்களா?(pronounced as: Nalla irukeengala?)

    • @kabileshs6910
      @kabileshs6910 Před 4 lety +1

      Enna sago namma mozhi safe zone la irukkunu solreenga intha kalathu pasanga english kalanthu than tamil pesuranga

  • @cappyjones
    @cappyjones Před 5 lety +5

    "Quiet Storm" is quite lovely! 😍

  • @pigs18
    @pigs18 Před 5 lety +4

    This is why I chuckle everytime some fool on social media (or traditional media) rants about English being "taken over." At a loss of about one language every few weeks, English is one of the "predator" languages that are taking over the world. By the end of this century there very well could be less than a hundred languages spoken on the planet. (And I leave it up to each individual to determine whether that's a good thing or bad.)

    • @the-engneer
      @the-engneer Před 5 lety +3

      Personally I think it could be a good thing, but I believe English is a terrible choice for any kind of universal language

    • @pigs18
      @pigs18 Před 5 lety +3

      @@the-engneer It is and it isn't. It's extremely fluid and adaptive so it can more easily incorporate foreign words and claim them as its own. But that's it's biggest weakness as well; it's not really big on following any one set of rules.

  • @greywolf845
    @greywolf845 Před 5 lety +25

    Anything concerning Iroquoian languages? If not, you should seriously go to Upstate New York and visit some natives there.

  • @tasyasyafira5406
    @tasyasyafira5406 Před 5 lety +29

    i believe its "Sundanese" not Sudanese on the first clip

    • @johnc916
      @johnc916 Před 5 lety

      No it’s sudanese

    • @tasyasyafira5406
      @tasyasyafira5406 Před 5 lety +8

      @@johnc916 its sundanese, he wore Indonesian highschool uniform and I speak Sundanese aswell

    • @tasyasyafira5406
      @tasyasyafira5406 Před 5 lety +7

      Sundanese is spoken mostly in West Java, Indonesia. I knew it is not Sudanese bcs I recognise the uniform based from the tie, and the uniform batch on his left and right shoulder. On his upper left, there is a batch that contains his school name. And the right side is the school logo.

    • @CrazyReese
      @CrazyReese Před 5 lety +1

      Does Sundanese language could be considered rare, though? As far as I know it's still widely used in West Java to Banten, and it has a lot of dialects.

    • @timothypane7767
      @timothypane7767 Před 4 lety

      It’s John C no it’s sundanese

  • @vulpesinculta76
    @vulpesinculta76 Před 5 lety +9

    "Marsha dohi' la"
    It's like a "hello" in my language. It's Chechenia language (Noxchi Mott)
    It means "come freely" 😊

  • @anthonyync6796
    @anthonyync6796 Před 2 lety +1

    I am a videographer who is working with our Tribal College here in Montana. I am part of the tribe and i am now recording our Language. Salute and Great Work Guys! #NorthernCheyenne #ChiefDullknifeCollege

  • @Summer-xe6in
    @Summer-xe6in Před 5 lety +1

    What a beautiful video. Thank you for creating this video, GBS. :) As a person who's native language is Spanish but speaks, writes, and comprehends Spanish and English, professionally and personally, I think what this person is doing is incredibly important. To have more than one language spoken, written, to comprehend... ahhhh... is a beautiful gift. There are so many nuances and paradigms that make language one of the most important and fundamental parts of our species. There are many words/phrases that we can "translate" but would lose the meaning of the word/phrase if we tried to unify. The meaning of the word/phrase is what is significant. Truly significant. All of the languages described in this video I have never heard of, so, I had a big smile on my face as I watched this video because as a person who is fascinated by language, meaning of words (and the changes of the meaning throughout our species' history) and pneumonics.. I mean.. I am just a nerd.... okay there I said... :P Thank you Great Big Story :)

  • @wankyfella2743
    @wankyfella2743 Před 5 lety +6

    just feeling so so proudful after watching this!

  • @yasmine693
    @yasmine693 Před 4 lety +3

    Tamazight is a big part of North Africa which is always overlooked !!

  • @thomasruhm1677
    @thomasruhm1677 Před 4 lety +4

    I learnt a Dutch creole language called Negerhollands. And I participate in its revival.

  • @thy-fodder1351
    @thy-fodder1351 Před 5 lety +4

    Oh I want to volunteer, I want to preserve my native language Pangasinan. Because most of the younger children speaks Tagalog.

    • @Mia-ki3jx
      @Mia-ki3jx Před 5 lety +1

      Pangalatok po ba yung tawag sa language sa Pangasinan?

    • @Wikitongues
      @Wikitongues Před 4 lety +1

      We would love for you to submit a video and feature you on our channel :) you can read instructions at www.wikitongues.org/submit-a-video, or send us an email at hello@wikitongues.org.

  • @shamilarifeen380
    @shamilarifeen380 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you very much for your service. Great work!

  • @princesadepresa5396
    @princesadepresa5396 Před 5 lety +8

    I don’t get how none of their videos get to trending

  • @Blipblorpus
    @Blipblorpus Před 5 lety +1

    This is the best CZcams channel hands down

  • @CuriousBiscuit
    @CuriousBiscuit Před 5 lety +4

    This is very interesting. Thank you for showing me this!

  • @FDavid-yq5jz
    @FDavid-yq5jz Před 5 lety +3

    I hope Croatia will preserve the languange of my cousin Istro-Romani by the way im from România and dont forget Aromania and Meglero-Romania from greck republic who they think we are some latinize greek

  • @cams.3287
    @cams.3287 Před 5 lety +4

    English shouldn’t be the dominant language. Diversity is beautiful, imagine if we could all speak several languages.

    • @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490
      @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490 Před 5 lety

      Oh Gosh... Considering That 1/3rd Of Millennials Believe That The Earth Is Flat, And That People Brainwash Themselves To PewDiePies Facist Propaganda To Go Against Jews And Indians, And Anti-Vaxxers, That’s Not Possible

    • @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490
      @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490 Před 5 lety

      Truth The Name Of Your Account Also Highlights Your Greatest Lie

  • @School_of_DejaVu
    @School_of_DejaVu Před 4 lety +3

    I’m currently looking foreword to meaning the language Chahta which is spoken by the Choctaw in America although a closely related language spoken by the Chickasaw, Chikashshanompa', has only 50 or so speakers, and is declining quite rapidly. It’s almost hart wrenching to see it.

  • @AdhiHargo
    @AdhiHargo Před 5 lety +43

    0:13 I'm probably wrong, but he looks like an Indonesian, wearing what looks like an Indonesian highschool uniform. So you might mean Sundanese (language of Sunda tribe of West Java), not Sudanese.

  • @flingflong5853
    @flingflong5853 Před 5 lety +6

    Good job! Keep up the great work

  • @jelt110
    @jelt110 Před rokem

    You may not be appreciated yet, perhaps not even in your life, but as we become a global community, this is a necessary history to see how we change for the future. Good, good job.

  • @ranggiarohmansani
    @ranggiarohmansani Před 5 lety +12

    The guy who introduced Aru language is not speak Malay but Indonesian, and Aru only one from more than 500 language who does that exist in Indonesia.

    • @fadil_sube
      @fadil_sube Před 5 lety

      when he spoke i quite suprised tho that i understand

    • @saisamsuri
      @saisamsuri Před 5 lety +3

      I think you're seriously confusing Malay with Malaysian

    • @ranggiarohmansani
      @ranggiarohmansani Před 5 lety +1

      @@saisamsuri No I'm not, Malay is used in some parts of Sumatra in Indonesia, but Bahasa Indonesia is basically invented from a lot of influence, that's why it doesn't have accent, completely different word and structure, and it sounds very different.

    • @MalaysianTropikfusion
      @MalaysianTropikfusion Před 5 lety +1

      You need to watch the vid again.
      There have been many issues throughout the years between the people of Indonesia and Malaysia, instigated by people like you who do not read properly.
      The caption indicates that the woman is to be speaking in the Aru dialect of the Malay language, and not that the man is speaking it.

    • @MalaysianTropikfusion
      @MalaysianTropikfusion Před 5 lety

      In Indonesia, Malay is not only spoken in 'some parts of Sumatra' as you allege (Unless, of course, your maps show Aru to be situated off of Sumatra).
      Bahasa Indonesia itself is one of the standards of the Malay language. It's spoken everywhere.
      It is even more ridiculous to suggest that a language--or rather, its speakers--do not have accents. Everybody has an accent.

  • @ThundermanDeadEndScribes
    @ThundermanDeadEndScribes Před 5 lety +3

    I LOVE, I MEAN LOVE, WATCHING WIKITONGUES!

    • @Wikitongues
      @Wikitongues Před 4 lety

      We love having you!! Thanks for the support :)

  • @mrsmamalove
    @mrsmamalove Před 5 lety +1

    I’ve tried and tried to learn new languages and hopefully one day I will. Until then, I will know enough to say a couple things, forget all of that, and try again. I’m really trying now, and I find my own language fascinating up against other languages. Language is such a funny thing. It moves and molds around but everyone really says the same thing, just time and place make things different. Truly a magnificent thing.
    Salam! Mən ingilis dilini danışıram, amma Google Translate-dan istifadə edirəm. 😂 Sizin diliniz gözəldir və mən səni Azərbaycan dilində öyrədim

    • @dan74695
      @dan74695 Před 3 lety

      I also find my own language very interesting. Norwegian has hundreds of dialects, and they can be very different from each other.

  • @jolantachernikov7632
    @jolantachernikov7632 Před 3 lety +2

    what a great project

  • @captaindestruction9332
    @captaindestruction9332 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think its normal for languages to go extinct especially in areas were they experience a huge explosion in growth very quickly and core international languages take focus. That doesn’t make it acceptable to sit and allow no record of them to happen so im grateful for what your doing.

  • @IongliveIsrael
    @IongliveIsrael Před 2 lety +2

    NEVER STOP!!!!!!!!

  • @chaseholt7037
    @chaseholt7037 Před 5 lety +7

    oof i would love to be apart of this, i’m one of 300 people left that speak South Sami, but I live in Seattle

    • @Iscore4
      @Iscore4 Před 5 lety

      Try sending them an email or something and then you can just send them a video of you speaking I guess.

    • @Iscore4
      @Iscore4 Před 5 lety +1

      Chase Holt I just looked it up and you don’t have to live in nyc

    • @Wikitongues
      @Wikitongues Před 4 lety

      Hey Chase! We would love for you to contribute! You can read instructions at wikitongues.org/submit-a-video, or send us an email at hello@wikitongues.org :)

    • @vvalencia10yearsago31
      @vvalencia10yearsago31 Před 3 lety

      Hi, Maybe you can make a video of yourself speaking it at home, and share it with A popular Language Media..

  • @bronaghmccabe
    @bronaghmccabe Před 5 lety +6

    I'm a bad Irish person as I "learnt" the language for 14 years in school but still can't speak it

  • @don_chanGD
    @don_chanGD Před 5 lety +5

    i hope one day ireland will have irish as its main language

  • @africaRBG
    @africaRBG Před 3 lety +2

    Righteous work!

  • @kainaqcopo7
    @kainaqcopo7 Před 5 lety +2

    i'm sundanese ,in Indonesian there is over than 700 language, and its impossible to extinction cause the peoples very proud to use local language,

  • @mitigiant5328
    @mitigiant5328 Před 5 lety +1

    Much respect to you!

  • @PaulMaglaya
    @PaulMaglaya Před 5 lety +4

    1:38 Yay!!! That was Iloko/Ilokano, the language of Ilocandia (Ilocos Region [Region 1] and Cagayan Valley Region [Region 2]) and lingua franca of northern Luzon (and my native tongue) in the Republic of the Philippines!
    Just additional information ... Tagalog is the lingua franca of the whole country ... The vast majority of Filipinos speak it as our second and third (or fourth in some cases) language.

    • @marvinuhilarious
      @marvinuhilarious Před 5 lety

      Made in Tuguegarao!!!!!

    • @erinlee5936
      @erinlee5936 Před 5 lety

      Not just lingua franca but Tagalog is the actual national language, as stated in the constitution.

  • @Coelacantha
    @Coelacantha Před 5 lety +2

    They should record the bribri language from indigenous Costa Rica!

  • @patriot4786
    @patriot4786 Před 5 lety +2

    Come to Indonesia, there are thousands of different languages here.

  • @a.a.r4054
    @a.a.r4054 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow I didn't know that Aru (Ambonese) language is almost gone. I have a friend from Ambon and she can speak this language fluently, and she told me a lot of people from her hometown still using this language a lot.

  • @egikasyiarohmana494
    @egikasyiarohmana494 Před 5 lety +1

    Bless to the man

  • @eder7468
    @eder7468 Před 5 lety +1

    Im currently trying to learn zapoteco since my grandmother was a full blood zapotec.

  • @C6lter
    @C6lter Před 5 lety +5

    How are you doing good high quility videos so fast, Great big story?!

  • @patriot4786
    @patriot4786 Před 5 lety +4

    0:12 thats supposed to be "Sundanese" a language spoken in West Java, Indonesia not "Sudanese" in africa

  • @percytheparkkeeper7826
    @percytheparkkeeper7826 Před 5 lety +2

    When the Irish are complaining but your here being forced to learn French, Spanish and Latin even though Latin is pretty dead and it isn't coming back. Any fellow Celts who speak Gaelic? Also how is it dying it is still very obvious, I mean in Scotland it's slightly less obvious because laziness though.

  • @juliansenfr
    @juliansenfr Před 5 lety +2

    How do I support him & his cause? Whenever I see people doing this as pioneering effort towards something that most people overlook, I'm just afraid they might get brushed aside by societal pressures like rent, utilities, budget etc, and I really want to at least contribute to support their cause.

    • @Wikitongues
      @Wikitongues Před 4 lety +1

      Hey Julian! Kristen here from Wikitongues. Thanks for your interest in helping out - you're totally right, it's been quite a challenge :) until this year, we worked full-time as volunteers and recently started putting together an operational budget. You can check out our Patreon account: czcams.com/video/WcMkmEzUE18/video.html.

  • @omarnoor767
    @omarnoor767 Před 5 lety +1

    At my university, people who major in literature study those languages and its background and things related to it.

  • @rirzmetz188
    @rirzmetz188 Před 3 lety +1

    This is amazing.

  • @elliottgyll8453
    @elliottgyll8453 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm interested in working to revitalize endangered languages, does anybody have any suggestions for opportunities to pursue?

    • @FieldLing639
      @FieldLing639 Před rokem

      A degree in linguistics or language documentation is a good chance to do fieldwork during your thesis, and you can continue after that. Fieldwork is possible without university affiliation too of course, just more of the logistics will be on you. If you learn how to do linguistic ellicitation to get recordings, then you'd be suprised how many languages are close to you, no matter where you live.
      There are also charities and funds for language documentation

  • @sunilrani1991
    @sunilrani1991 Před 5 lety +2

    Sanskrit is also spoken in some parts of India (so it is also endangered)

  • @notdon245
    @notdon245 Před 5 lety +1

    Ilocano is still the lingua franca of the north of the Philippines. I hope they have recorded people who can atleast still speak Gaddang because the number of speakers here are decreasing.

  •  Před 5 lety +1

    00:13 this might be Sundanese, a language native to the western part of Java Island in Indonesia, instead of Sudanese in Africa. Sundanese has nearly 40 million native speakers, far from being an endangered language.

  • @BargSlarg
    @BargSlarg Před rokem +1

    It’s so impractical utilize multiple languages in a given area

  • @herlanwijaya3566
    @herlanwijaya3566 Před 5 lety +1

    The Asian lady who speaks Aru language, never knew it is the same with Ambonesse, as i understand everything. It is so weird to know that there are people in New York who speaks my native language 😅

    • @MalaysianTropikfusion
      @MalaysianTropikfusion Před 5 lety

      Malay creoles in Maluku/East Indonesia are all/mostly related.
      Try to look up Ambonese Malay on Wikipedia.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Před 5 lety +1

    They can still be preserved even if people are not speaking them in a daily basis.

  • @adityapanigrahi2818
    @adityapanigrahi2818 Před 23 dny

    He’s doing gods work.

  • @wwitheredpetals
    @wwitheredpetals Před 5 lety +63

    Where my Irish gang at

    • @daphnemccann9291
      @daphnemccann9291 Před 5 lety +1

      A IRISH KPOP FAN HEAR

    • @michaelmcinerney7541
      @michaelmcinerney7541 Před 5 lety

      Anseo

    • @willow1691
      @willow1691 Před 5 lety

      Anseo

    • @LiamKeary
      @LiamKeary Před 5 lety +1

      Táim anseo mo chara

    • @padraigquinn7105
      @padraigquinn7105 Před 5 lety +3

      Cáca Milis sa Seomra Spraoi Mise freisin cé go bhfuil cónaí orm sa tuaisceart. Tá sé níos nádúrtha dom Gaeilge in áit an Bhéarla a úsáid lasmuigh den scoil de gnáth anois.

  • @mufidazuhra5227
    @mufidazuhra5227 Před 5 lety +11

    2:05 umm it's not malay language. It's aru language, one of the many regional languages in Indonesia.

    • @syabilazri
      @syabilazri Před 5 lety +2

      He did say it was "Aru Malay" which is somewhat correct. Aru is part of the Malay Archipelago languages aka Nusantara and sounds a lot like the "royal" Malay I learned (using "beta" instead of "saya" as first person pronoun)

    • @MrKholishUmar
      @MrKholishUmar Před 5 lety +1

      Bahasa Indonesia itself is a Malay language of the Austronesian language family

  • @Jironi87
    @Jironi87 Před 4 lety

    French CNRS is working too, around occitan-marchois, making recording, writing books and methodes... For this dialect, for exemple, in 15 years, maybe 20, it will be finish (to hear it of course)... I record my grd-mother, she speeks "naut-lemosin" occitan (haut-limousin, in Fr.), sue is 88 y. old.

  • @Sandwich4321
    @Sandwich4321 Před 5 lety +8

    A yes Irish, my favourite language to learn

    • @coolguybrian
      @coolguybrian Před 5 lety +1

      this sounds very sarcastic sksksksk

    • @lukelee8332
      @lukelee8332 Před 5 lety

      As someone who's been speaking it my whole life it's hard to believe the grammar tenses and urú's make it fustrating

    • @Sandwich4321
      @Sandwich4321 Před 5 lety

      @@coolguybrian sksksksksk

    • @Sandwich4321
      @Sandwich4321 Před 5 lety +1

      @@lukelee8332 I just don't like learning any languages in general

    • @lukelee8332
      @lukelee8332 Před 5 lety

      @@Sandwich4321 fair enough but Irish is just harder than it needs to be

  • @alexfriedman2047
    @alexfriedman2047 Před 3 lety +3

    Cantonese (광동어, 廣東語) is a really good example. The Commie Chinese party is already forcing all the people in Guangdong (in the mainland) to switch over to Mandarin, or at least learn Mandarin as a second language. Now in HongKong, which is the last full City in the world to speak Cantonese is under the same threat. They are forced to learn Mandarin as a 2nd language and soon when China takes over they will be forced to speak only Mandarin. Then Cantonese will be completely DEAD.

    • @alexfriedman2047
      @alexfriedman2047 Před 3 lety

      @Starscream91 I respectfully completely disagree!! Language is a huge part of culture, as there are many words that cannot be translated to other languages on a word to word basis. SO basically some languages have culture within them, and therefore should not be destroyed. 광동어 / 廣東語 is a perfectt example. That language should not be destroyed just because a communist dictatorship took over !!

  • @michaelmcinerney7541
    @michaelmcinerney7541 Před 5 lety +1

    An bhfuil aon daoine eile ábalta gaeilge a labhairt ann?

  • @opaulodetarso
    @opaulodetarso Před 5 lety +1

    Another great big story!

  • @healthbeautylifestyle1830

    *I know Navajo, the language this is only spoken in NavajO Nation*

  • @madiqs7615
    @madiqs7615 Před 5 lety +2

    Quechuan is a language in extinction! It originates in Peru from all the way when incans existed. Less that half of the population speaks it anymore :/

  • @liamhoogendoorn1652
    @liamhoogendoorn1652 Před 5 lety +1

    My grandfather speaks Frisian

  • @ocean165
    @ocean165 Před 5 lety +7

    I love you your the best

  • @Lut28
    @Lut28 Před 5 lety +1

    If you really want to preserve endangered languages in Indonesia, you have to work hard. It has 300+ languages. Many are vulnerable, around 60 are dying. Sundanese and Aru language shown in this video are still widely spoken and not even vulnerable. You can see a little part of the long list on wikipedia en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_endangered_languages_in_Indonesia

    • @Lut28
      @Lut28 Před 5 lety

      Was a bit triggered when i saw sundanese. Sundanese is very well preserved here in West Java as a language of one of the tribes with a large population. Some well-known universities here even provide sundanese literature degrees and have done many researches on the culture.

  • @somanith8372
    @somanith8372 Před 5 lety +2

    A hello in Khmer from Cambodia,
    សួស្តី! (Pronounciation : Sus'day)

    • @monke6669
      @monke6669 Před 5 lety

      Sus'day! anak​ sokhasabbay​ te?

  • @heater1237
    @heater1237 Před 5 lety +1

    Hebrew isn’t dead, I’m learning it.
    Also, this is great.

    • @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490
      @pewdiepieisstillabadyoutub4490 Před 5 lety +1

      They Said Thar Its Back Alive

    • @JustinG1057
      @JustinG1057 Před 2 lety

      Hebrew was previously a "dead language". It was classified this way because there were no speakers who used it as a primary language for some time, even though it continued to be used in religious practice. However, it has since revived, in part thanks to the documentation of the language that previous generations worked to make. In the video, Hebrew is used as one example of how documented, dead languages can come back to life to live on again if there is a dedicated community willing to learn them.

  • @jprobe
    @jprobe Před 3 lety

    The world is becoming so connected and we all need a lingua franca. 100 years from now, how many will be left?

  • @mamastay1712
    @mamastay1712 Před 5 lety

    You have the best job ever sir. Wado.

  • @jesseflores9087
    @jesseflores9087 Před 5 lety

    respect to you sir

  • @CardinalKaos
    @CardinalKaos Před 5 lety +1

    Doing the work of all the Gods my man
    How can I help?

  • @853Nynn
    @853Nynn Před 5 lety

    This reminds me of the play The Language Archive by Julia Cho

  • @DMC-ss4cm
    @DMC-ss4cm Před 6 měsíci

    Someone explain the material benefit of this time and resources expenditure

  • @asahel980
    @asahel980 Před rokem

    the one with the Pilipino Deli, its Ilokano ive seen the part of the interview and Ilokano isnt a dying language its the 3rd most spoken language in the Philippines.

  • @dreadpiraterobertsii4420
    @dreadpiraterobertsii4420 Před 5 lety +5

    cén fáth nach raibh aon Ghaeilge san fhíseán?

    • @newmono7341
      @newmono7341 Před 5 lety +3

      Yeah it's strange considering Ireland is in the thumbnail

    • @dreadpiraterobertsii4420
      @dreadpiraterobertsii4420 Před 5 lety

      Newmono I can only assume they had footage of the Irish language but they went woke cause surely a white nation can’t have issues so they cut it

    • @kellianetambe4001
      @kellianetambe4001 Před 5 lety +1

      @@dreadpiraterobertsii4420 Maybe its just because hundreds of thousands of teenagers and children are forced to learn the language rather than solely relying on small native families to keep it alive.

    • @haltdieklappe7972
      @haltdieklappe7972 Před 4 lety

      I’d learn Scottish Gaelic but the language is essentially gone

  • @marycherry7050
    @marycherry7050 Před 5 lety +3

    i see Ireland , I click