Is Olly Richard's Video on 17 Italian Accent Correct? Response

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  • čas přidán 3. 01. 2024
  • On this video we are watching together this video made by fellow youtuber Olly Richard. Please check out his original video at this link • The Secret World of It...
    And subscribe to him.
    Check out my video where I speak fluent Sicilian
    • Italian VS Sicilian: I...
    Check out my video on the difference between standard Italian and Florentine
    • Tuscan VS Standard Ita...
    The languages of Italy include Italian, which serves as the country's national language, in its standard and regional forms, as well as numerous local and regional languages, most of which, like Italian, belong to the broader Romance group. The majority of languages often labeled as regional are distributed in a continuum across the regions' administrative boundaries, with speakers from one locale within a single region being typically aware of the features distinguishing their own variety from one of the other places nearby.[6]
    The official and most widely spoken language across the country is Italian, which started off as the medieval Tuscan of Florence. In parallel, many Italians also communicate in one of the local languages, most of which, like Tuscan, are indigenous evolutions of Vulgar Latin. Some local languages do not stem from Latin, however, but belong to other Indo-European branches, such as Cimbrian (Germanic), Arbëresh (Albanian), Slavomolisano (Slavic) and Griko (Greek). Other non-indigenous languages are spoken by a substantial percentage of the population due to immigration.
    Of the indigenous languages, twelve are officially recognized as spoken by linguistic minorities: Albanian, Catalan, German, Greek, Slovene, Croatian, French, Franco-Provençal, Friulian, Ladin, Occitan and Sardinian;[7] at the present moment, Sardinian is regarded as the largest of such groups, with approximately one million speakers, even though the Sardophone community is overall declining.[8][9][10][11][12][13] However, full bilingualism (bilinguismo perfetto) is legally granted only to the three national minorities whose mother tongue is German, Slovene or French, and enacted in the regions of Trentino-Alto Adige, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and the Aosta Valley, respectively.
    #realitycheck #metatron #italian

Komentáře • 176

  • @MrRabiddogg
    @MrRabiddogg Před 5 měsíci +19

    You and Olly might be an interesting conversation to listen to.

  • @amos_comedies742
    @amos_comedies742 Před 5 měsíci +36

    'Venice is where I proposed to my wife by the way... Because I'm a man...with class'😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @tizgerard_9816
    @tizgerard_9816 Před 5 měsíci +30

    I'm Neapolitan and I can definitely tell you Raf, that Olly was very accurate on the Neapolitan language haha you should check out his other videos, some of them are actually pretty interesting!

    • @Nome_e_Cognome
      @Nome_e_Cognome Před 5 měsíci +1

      It's a dialect. And there is nothing wrong with that

    • @Justanitalianguy4
      @Justanitalianguy4 Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@Nome_e_Cognome it'a language with its own rules and grammar.

  • @corinna007
    @corinna007 Před 5 měsíci +26

    Not related to Romance languages, but most of my family speaks Mennonite Low German, or Plautdietsch as we call it. When I was younger I thought of it as a dialect of Standard/ High German, until I actually started learning Standard German, and realized that it is really its own language. I actually was part of a video last year on another channel where I spoke it to a German and a Dutchman to see how easily they could understand it. It was a lot of fun.

    • @justaguy9224
      @justaguy9224 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Although it should be noted that standard German (what is commonly called Hochdeutsch) was originally a literary language made specifically in a way to be understood by speakers of most German dialects. People could understand what they read, but they spoke only in their local dialect. There was no standard way of pronouncing standard German until the late nineteenth century.
      A similar situation exists nowadays in German-speaking parts of Switzerland. Swiss German is very different from standard German and there are very different dialects by cantons, yet they never write in Swiss German, instead they use standard German for writing.

    • @Bronte866
      @Bronte866 Před 4 měsíci

      PA?

    • @Bronte866
      @Bronte866 Před 4 měsíci

      Astounding! 💕🇺🇸

    • @corinna007
      @corinna007 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Bronte866British Columbia, Canada, actually! You're probably thinking of the Amish; my heritage is Mennonite, specifically Russian Mennonite (as my ancestors fled the Netherlands and Germany and ended up in the Russian Empire before coming here). We are a bit different from the Amish, but we do have shared origins and some shared cultural similarities. 😊

    • @WGGplant
      @WGGplant Před 2 měsíci

      I wish there were more easily available sources for learning the lesser known North Sea Germanic languages like Low German and Frisian. There are ofc from German and Dutch prospectives but not many for English.
      I just really like some of the sound shifts more from those languages more than I do German or the Scandinavian languages.

  • @alb91878
    @alb91878 Před 5 měsíci +26

    I am so excited that you found his channel! For some reason I just assumed you knew about his channel. I absolutely adore his channel and yes you are correct that he is from england. I really love that you were able to just watch and critique him and then even admit you learned something! Absolutely adore both of your channels!!!

  • @andersgjersoe4852
    @andersgjersoe4852 Před 5 měsíci +23

    So, trying to learn Italian as we’ve bought a house in Imperia, now I need to learn Ligurian as well… oh dear!

    • @michelefrau6072
      @michelefrau6072 Před 5 měsíci +5

      in Italy the use of "dialects" has a diglossia character, that is, it is used only in a certain context of familiarity, with people who know each other, the local language can hardly be used with strangers and foreigners (only d+++heads would, as a hidden language to say things that shouldn't be understood)

    • @thebenis3157
      @thebenis3157 Před 5 měsíci +10

      As someone who lives in that same area... you really don't need Ligurian at all, you'll probably have trouble finding anyone who speaks Ligurian there below the age of 60

    • @joebar52
      @joebar52 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Just put some random “Belin” in the middle of the sentences and you’ll be fine!

    • @StamfordBridge
      @StamfordBridge Před 5 měsíci

      Wow. If I heard that kid speaking Ladin, I’d have no idea where he’s from, and if I started guessing countries, Italy would not have been my first or second guess. Or maybe even my third. Wow.

    • @Nissardpertugiu
      @Nissardpertugiu Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@michelefrau6072 Cuma Nissard, ana en piemunt aja don ai passat la mieu enfansa e tamben ana en antic luec dòu cuntea de Nissa cuma Dusaiga es don podi parla en interassion inter dialet.
      Jeu parli italian ma es buòn dialet.

  • @ChristinaDiCali
    @ChristinaDiCali Před 5 měsíci +7

    Yesterday on the radio, I heard US indigenous people talking about how many of their languages have disappeared, and of those that they're trying to keep alive.
    Then my ears perked up when Italy was mentioned, and how before the country existed, 34 languages were spoken.

  • @tonyraph4938
    @tonyraph4938 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Olly is really good. I have read 3 of his books for learning Spanish and was able to go from A1 to B2 in my Spanish by the time I was done.

    • @chepman08
      @chepman08 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Muy bien amigo.

    • @thelightningwave
      @thelightningwave Před 4 dny

      I read 2 of his books, and they barely improved my Spanish and the stories themselves were boring and it's quite insane that he advertised his method as the ultimate method to learn languages.

  • @ravenite-void
    @ravenite-void Před 5 měsíci +10

    Oh dear, I subscribed like fifteen minutes ago and already a new vid. Sweet!

  • @TheLTG
    @TheLTG Před 5 měsíci +9

    I love Veneto, because the regional dialect i speak(talian, from southern Brazil) is quite strongly based on it, so it feels like home!

    • @Alby_Torino
      @Alby_Torino Před 5 měsíci +1

      Well, both Veneto and Talian are languages, not dialects.

    • @kinghoodofmousekind2906
      @kinghoodofmousekind2906 Před 5 měsíci +1

      If I recall correctly, there have been researchers who went to Brazil and especially Argentina to find isolated Italian communities who kept their dialect from being further influenced by standardised Italian. I'll have to double check, I could be wrong!

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@Alby_Torinothey are dialects of VENETO language
      Talian is simply a most conservartive one which branched off from the venetian diaspora.

  • @skipinkoreaable
    @skipinkoreaable Před 5 měsíci +5

    Olly Richards is an amazing creator. I have been a fan of both of you for a number of years now. I haven't been following him recently but he is a phenomenal polyglot and educator. I hope one day you will have pizza and coffee and even some spaghetti with him. No doubt you would get on with each other and if you collaborate it might be very interesting.

  • @dima_keller
    @dima_keller Před 5 měsíci +12

    I really like this guy. Some of his deep dives in language specifics are just incredible. Also fun trick you can watch his video on your first language to see what mistakes you might be making in English. I watched his video on Russian and listening about my language habits helped me with avoiding them in English

  • @icaroviera8257
    @icaroviera8257 Před 5 měsíci +17

    It’s really nice seeing some positive content! We don’t see that all that much on CZcams nowadays haha. Keep up the great work!

  • @igor-d.6008
    @igor-d.6008 Před 5 měsíci +3

    In Veneto young people, especially in rural areas, definitely use dialect. In the towns maybe they only use words and some grammar constructions, but almost everyone understands it.
    The difference between rural and urban areas is huge.

  • @user-vr1mp2ef7d
    @user-vr1mp2ef7d Před 5 měsíci +6

    Very interesting and instructive, particularly your constructive comments on Olly Richard. Where I live, in the Province of Bergamo, the local dialects are still alive, but the young people tend to speak in Standard Italian. This is even more true in the neighbouring Province of Milan. The relationship between Eastern and Western Lombard dialects is similar to that between Portuguese and Spanish, i.e. native speakers of the local dialects of Bergamo, Brescia and Crema can understand speakers of the dialects of Milan and Cremona, better than in the opposite direction. For speakers of Standard Italian, if genuine Milanese is difficult to understand, Bergamasque is impossible.

  • @r1madbrit
    @r1madbrit Před 5 měsíci +6

    I am so jealous. I have a house 1 mile from Tuscany in Emilia Romagna between Bologna and Firenza. I bought it to learn Italian. No luck. I find the latin languages impossible yet I managed German no problem and even some Bavarian dialect. But Italian is the most beautiful language in the world yet spoken so fast I understand why they build Ferraris and Lamborghinis!

    • @ChristinaDiCali
      @ChristinaDiCali Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, Italian is the most beautiful language--but when spoken at a slow or medium speed, because it's then you can hear how melodic it is.
      At the fast car speed, it looses it's Pavarotti!

    • @thebusinessfirm9862
      @thebusinessfirm9862 Před 5 měsíci

      Drink more espresso, you’ll then have no problem with Italian. 🇮🇹

    • @ChristinaDiCali
      @ChristinaDiCali Před 5 měsíci

      For a beginner, I suggest eating Italian slow foods--like twirling spaghetti or other elongated pasta with a fork, or pulling one leaf at a time off an artichoke then dipping it into melted butter, mayonnaise, etc.

  • @narsplace
    @narsplace Před 5 měsíci +3

    good to see you're back, hope you're feeling better.

  • @lunalui
    @lunalui Před 5 měsíci +6

    I'm originally from Friuli and I speak the language (well, some variant of it). Actually, I always spoke it at home, even when we were living elsewhere in Italy. I can read it, but writing is hard for me because when I was a student Friulian was not taught at school and, to be honest, at that time written Friulian wasn't even really standardised, I believe. Mandi!

  • @nightsazrael
    @nightsazrael Před 5 měsíci +2

    He is good and interesting, but I watch more of your videos. I also have been subscribed to you longer.😎

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Před 5 měsíci +7

    Talking about languages and dialects, there is Rusyn language that is considered dialect of Ukrainian and Belarusian, that is considered a separate language. Well, I personally understand Belarusian better than Rusyn. I would even say I have no difficulty understanding Belarusian whilst Rusyn feels foreign to me. Even though officially, at least in Ukraine, it is considered to be a dialect

  • @glaucofavot9904
    @glaucofavot9904 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I'm from Pordenone, and we speak a variant of Venician. We sound a lot like a Spanish speaker, and some vocabulary is related to the Spanish idiom. My wife is from Venezuela and sometimes we are surprised when we find that my dialect and her language have some words in common. Fun fact, my Granma is from Miniervino (Puglia) she created her own Creole language melting Venician and Pugliese. Just for fun, I started to have a look at Romanian and it sounds like Friulano. Wish a great year Sir.

  • @huguesdepayens807
    @huguesdepayens807 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Yay another language video. Olly Richards and Days and words are my favorite language youtubers. Along with this channel of course.

  • @marcotasinato9768
    @marcotasinato9768 Před 4 měsíci +1

    In lombardy we have many dialect: milanese (with a subdialect brianzolo), bergamasco, bresciano, etc.
    I think also in the others region there are many more dialects...
    It's a semplification to say 1 region 1 dialect

  • @legueu
    @legueu Před 2 měsíci

    Both, the base video, and your reaction were gold.

  • @elsacruz1661
    @elsacruz1661 Před 5 měsíci

    Two of my favorite language related CZcams, you should do a video talking to each other about languages @storylearning.

  • @silvio4386
    @silvio4386 Před 5 měsíci +2

    To clarify Metatron's point on this, Vulgar Latin and Classical Latin are all part of Latin; they just distinguish between the degree of diaglossia within Roman civilization and shouldn't be taken to mean 2 separate languages or dialects.

  • @dabieyo
    @dabieyo Před 5 měsíci +8

    Olly deserves all the love, truly, and he actually does speak Italian as well as other languages, hence his great pronunciation 👌

    • @Kinotaurus
      @Kinotaurus Před 5 měsíci +1

      I dunno, there is too much HARD sell in his videos. And that smug facial expression grates after a while.

    • @metatronyt
      @metatronyt Před 5 měsíci +4

      I am fully trained to assess people’s level. His pronunciation of Italian words isn’t just the pronunciation of someone who speaks Italian, it’s very impressive and I’d say almost native like. He mastered the 7 vowels which is a very rare thing to see even with people who speak Italian fluently

  • @tohaason
    @tohaason Před 5 měsíci +3

    I remember meeting a group of Venetian tourists and Roman locals at the top of the Spanish steps in Rome once, somewhen around midnight (a great many years ago).. there was a lot of laughs and joking around because the Romans and the Venetians had a hard time understanding each other from time to time!
    (As for myself, with my limited Italian I always find that when I suddenly understand Italian tourists it's when they're actually from Rome. But of course that's where I spent most of my time back then)

  • @OJdidit
    @OJdidit Před 5 měsíci

    Nice to see one of my favorite CZcamsrs react to another of my favorite CZcamsr haha

  • @diegodessy9700
    @diegodessy9700 Před 5 měsíci +2

    you should check out his channel, he is a true polyglot and he actually made a series in his channel a few years ago about his journey learning Italian. Also all the other contents on other languages are very interesting.
    Oh and my spanish cousin and other italian speaking spanish acquaintances I know, say that the Italian accent (not dialect) that resembles the most Castellano is the Veneto one, especially for the intonation of the sentences.

  • @seustaceRotterdam
    @seustaceRotterdam Před 5 měsíci +1

    Your dad is from Udine! I have been there twice, stayed with a friend and the mother kept speaking Friulano instead of Italian and Riccardo had to keep telling her “mamma parla l’italiano!!”.
    Olly Richards is well known in the polyglot community, I pretty sure we met.
    The two guys are Irish and Italian, I follow them on social media Alan and Marco.
    Spero che vada bene con tua madre. Abbraccio 🤗

  • @teresamerkel7161
    @teresamerkel7161 Před 5 měsíci +4

    The division between languages and dialects are on a spectrum not a clean division aren't they? Watching your channel I'm struck with how much this is true of the family of Romance languages in general. Of course the standard of "a language has an army and a navy" is quite clear. But when it comes to pronunciation, vocabulary and such videos like this cause me to see a spectrum in languages. So cool Metatron. I enjoy your content and learn so much.

    • @tonydai782
      @tonydai782 Před 5 měsíci

      Here’s something I’d like to add too, mutual intelligibility isn’t necessarily symmetrical. Depending on the sound changes that two languages differ by, one speaker can have an easier time understanding than the other.

    • @baumgrt
      @baumgrt Před 5 měsíci

      @@tonydai782 a well-known example of this is probably (European) Portuguese and Spanish, where most Spanish speakers will have a much harder time understanding Portuguese speakers than vice versa, simply because of how different Portuguese phonology is. This also happens between what’s commonly considered dialects of the same (standard) language, where people have both their own dialect as well as the standard language as a reference point, resulting in an asymmetry if one dialect is close to the standard language and the other one isn’t. Exposure to dialects and frequency of dialect use (both often linked to the social status of dialects) play an important role as well. For example, as a speaker of a Swiss-German dialect, I can very likely understand many more German speakers than there are German speakers who could understand me.

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci

      dialects are shades of languages.
      You are thinking about the social status
      PS: enough with tha lt."army and navy" nonsense (where is American? and is Icelandic a dialect?) the real power is projected with schools, novels and TV.

    • @tonydai782
      @tonydai782 Před 5 měsíci

      @@FlagAnthem That quote is less about literally having an army and navy, and more about having the capacity to define your own dialect as a language. There’s no larger government stopping Iceland from defining Icelandic as a language, and on the other side, there’s no political will for the US to change the official name to Standard American rather than Standard American English.
      Obviously the army and navy quote is an over generalization, but that doesn’t mean that there isn’t truth to it.

  • @bambamba
    @bambamba Před 5 měsíci +5

    As a Brianzolo I never understood the eastern Lombard languages like Bresciano or Bergamasco

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 Před 5 měsíci +4

      They're notoriously Ugro-Finnic dialects 😂😂😂

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@stefanodadamo6809 insert altai joke here

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Před 5 měsíci

    Happy to see you on CZcams

  • @lugo_9969
    @lugo_9969 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Cmon Metatron, give us a comparison of North Catalan ( cadaques, figueras ) ...compared to south Catalan ( alicante ) ...please ❤ which one is easier for an italian to understand.

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Wow, a video on another channel? Wait, I haven't finished this one 😂😅

  • @jonC1208
    @jonC1208 Před 5 měsíci +3

    In spanish street is calle like venetian so there are also northen conection, for example milan was part of the spanish crown so there was also influence there

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Před 5 měsíci +2

    As far as I know, historical linguists consider the three Rhaetic languages (Romansh in Switzerland; Ladin and Friulian in Italy) to not being Italian dialects, but in a family of their own. They separated from Latin speech very early and in considerable isolation. In other words, they are no more forms of Italian than Provencal or Romanian are. Sometimes this can be blurred by modern influences and vocabulary borrowing from Italian, but they are essentially on their own. This is probably more obvious with Romansh, since contact with Italian speakers has always been minimal in eastern interior Switzerland, where Romansh is spoken. I have a neighbour here in Toronto (quite elderly) who grew up in a village in Graubünden with Romansh as her first language. She said she could not speak a word of Italian, even though she was extremely fluent in Swiss German, spoke French well by my estimate, and her English was excellent. I suppose that even if she had some exposure to Italian, it would have done her little good in Toronto, since by far the largest group of Italians in our city originate from Reggio-Calabria.

  • @whiskeysk
    @whiskeysk Před 5 měsíci +1

    been following Olly since he was at under 10k subs, now he's over 400k, I haven't even noticed!

    • @whiskeysk
      @whiskeysk Před 5 měsíci

      @@jimihendrix991 funny that you mention Specsavers, my youtube says (as of right now) The Secret World of Italian Dialects
      Olly Richards
      418K subscribers

  • @karenblohm3279
    @karenblohm3279 Před 5 měsíci

    Oooo, Venice ❤. That is romantic. I've read so much about it and seen documentaries I wish I could go there.

  • @BryanAJParry
    @BryanAJParry Před 5 měsíci

    Great video, man!

  • @PamelaContiGlass
    @PamelaContiGlass Před 26 dny

    When I showed up to a base north of Venice as a fresh faced Army "SottoTenente" (2nd Lieutenant), my first experience was a tobacconist that told me my cigarettes were "Venticinquemila Franchi" (2500 Franks). Italy used "Liras" as a currency.
    I panicked because we were not far from the border and there was a better than even chance that I might have missed an exit and I crossed a border. As a military officer, that would have been an absolute, court martial worthy disaster. Instead I learned that they called "Liras" with the French name "Franchi". No reason. It's just their dialect.

  • @Lindalindali
    @Lindalindali Před 5 měsíci +2

    About Ligurian sounding like Portuguese: I met a Brasilian woman in Rome who told me she was asked several times if she was from Genova because of her accent.

  • @Kinotaurus
    @Kinotaurus Před 5 měsíci +2

    At 23:00 he says "Here's a few expressions from Bari... I love these expressions from Salentino". Actually, Bari and the north of Puglia speak a dialect of Napolitano, whereas Salentino (and southern Calabrese) are closely related to Sicilian. Even in the example he uses, "ientu" is not the word for "wind" in Salentino - that would be "ventu".

    • @Nome_e_Cognome
      @Nome_e_Cognome Před 5 měsíci

      From what I understand in the early Middle Ages, while the entire Italian peninsula remained "Latinized", the "tips" where there were ports were Greek Byzantine. in those places a similar accent has developed (Messina, Reggio, Crotone, Lecce)

  • @vinceblasco
    @vinceblasco Před 5 měsíci +5

    "A language is just a dialect with an army and a navy."
    Well Venetian, Sicilian, Neapolitan and others certainly used to...

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci

      never
      all administrations spoke LATIN first and ITALIAN (heavily regionalized but still italian) next.
      the "army and navy" is nonsense
      schools and media are the true powers

  • @keithkannenberg7414
    @keithkannenberg7414 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I find it funny that you hadn't come across Olly before. He makes really interesting vids. Sure, he promotes his Story Learning business a little bit in every one but the videos stand on their own.

  • @lolychan1
    @lolychan1 Před 4 měsíci

    Can you do a video about the difference Siciliano dialects? I wish to know how people from
    Lipari sound like 😊

  • @PamelaContiGlass
    @PamelaContiGlass Před 26 dny

    When I was in the military I was exposed to all the dialects I could have imagined. Being from Rome, (and being the only officer from Rome), I often had to translate between northerners and southerners.
    Mind you, some dialects are easier than others and we are talking about 1980. Naturally, I know my own dialect, but since my grandfatehr was a purist of the Romanesco dialect, he had all sort of books by Gioacchino Belli, Trilussa and others and he taught me the dialect as it was spoken in his youth. Even by the time I was around, Romanesco was basically an accent and a few slang words scattered here and there and with the exposure the Roman accent gets from TV (all the studios were in Rome), everyone in italy can understand it quite well.
    However, as a musician, I knew a lot of "Canzoni Napoletane". While my pronunciation probably would have earned me a beat up if I tried speaking neapolitan in Naples, it did sort of open me to understanding some of the more obscure dialects from the south.
    The northern dialects I learned by being there and having to function, my own I was born with, hence I was the official translator.
    Frankly, there were some dialects from the deep south I had no idea what they were saying either, and the soldiers that spoke those dialects, by and large, had no TV, didn't read or write (I'll never forget telling a soldier "What's the matter? Can't you read?" only for the soldier to respond "No lieutenant, I can't". Broke my heart.)
    However, between my exposure to Neapolitan songs, my own dialect and a lot of effort from all involved, we mostly resolved these issues without ending up shooting each other, which is always a win in my book.
    Other people did shoot at each other. A couple of soldiers from the same god forsaken town that had a fight about a girl. We waited until they emptied their magazines on each other's fortified guard towers, then we moved in, hoping our counting skills good enough that none of them would be waiting for us with a 7.62 NATO in the pipe.

  • @lambdacode1503
    @lambdacode1503 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Una piccola precisazione riguardo al tuo uso di "mandi": io l'ho sempre usato e sentito usare come formula di commiato, un po' come arrivederci, quindi sentirlo a metà video mi ha fatto sorridere.

  • @tavuzzipust7887
    @tavuzzipust7887 Před 5 měsíci +1

    "pota" (instead of something rude...) is what the friars say when they scald themselves

  • @angreagach
    @angreagach Před 5 měsíci +2

    A "rolled" r is often used to mean a double r, the single r being referred to as being "flapped." That might be what Olly means when he says that the r isn't "rolled" in the Romanesco dialect.

    • @metatronyt
      @metatronyt Před 5 měsíci +4

      I personally would consider Japanese R flapped, but Italian single is still rolled

  • @jonC1208
    @jonC1208 Před 5 měsíci +8

    Also about the dialect being a lenguage without an army, just check basque dialects or "euskalkis" every town has one and going 5 towns in one direction you might fail to comunicate with them so they had create basically a estandard basque in the 20th cebtury to understand each other. So sometimes you have to make defacto diferent lenguages into dialects to actually have the main function of the lenguage, comunication

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Olly Richards is a legend in lingvo CZcams. And creater of a system to learn languages through storiea

  • @SupremeDP
    @SupremeDP Před 21 dnem

    Olly is fantastic. Ask him for a collab!

  • @estrafalario5612
    @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci

    18:00 Camocha is also said in Spain for Head. But it isn't common and the origin isn't clear, so some people thinks it's slang, what probably isn't because we have the "valid RAE dictionary" term camochar, escamochar and desmochar wich means "to cut the upper tip of something, specially for trees. Like beheading the tree

  • @axisboss1654
    @axisboss1654 Před 4 měsíci

    Okay so I’m not the only one that hears Portuguese when I heard Northern Italian.

  • @SolurVoludun
    @SolurVoludun Před 2 měsíci

    I’m wondering, how different is the Italian of the Renaissance or a bit earlier like Dante or Petrarca fron Modern Italian?

  • @DarkSamus100
    @DarkSamus100 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for the reaction and commentary Metatron, and thanks to Olly Richard for the orignal video. It's quite interesting and funny, that comedian says nothing, while doing the various dialects. Thankfully, we have you to help and guide, people like me, untrained in Italian.
    Thanks again for the video. The best to you, everyone, your family and friends. Have a good day.

  • @lucazeppegno8256
    @lucazeppegno8256 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Probably bolognese is the most well known for us italians, while the romagnolo accent (and maybe dialect) is the most reknown by the tourists. I suppose.

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci

      Bologna is that special kid who just could not make up his mind 😅

  • @Matteo_Marini666
    @Matteo_Marini666 Před 4 měsíci

    Even northern dialects can sound quite Spanish... Especially the Veronese dialect... To give a specific example, my parents went on a trip after the wedding with 2 other couples, one from Milan, the other from La Spezia (Liguria) to Tenerife. Speaking in my parents' dialect they could easily "speak" (or rather, make their requests understandable) and act as translators for the group

  • @wi42
    @wi42 Před měsícem

    Interesting, for me (a swiss german with no knowledge of italian) Ladin sounds close to romansh, are actually close in pronunciation or is this just imagination on my part?

  • @FlagAnthem
    @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci

    He wad kind enough to show Emilian and Romagnol as closed yet distinct languages.
    This is not something you can take for granted, some "academics" act like we speak the same language from Piacenza to Rimini and even to Urbino (yeah... good luck! 😅)

  • @joseclima9519
    @joseclima9519 Před 5 měsíci +2

    What I learned from this video is
    in Italia no one speaks italian

    • @estrafalario5612
      @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci

      Sorry, but then you learnt nothing.
      Speaking Sicilian doesn't make you delete Italian (or English, etc) from your brain. They are always making that point clear, that every region has another dialect/language IN ADDITION.
      The proportion of people who (nearly) only speak dialect out of home is 5% in Italy, with most regions having

    • @joseclima9519
      @joseclima9519 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@estrafalario5612 its a joke man relax

  • @matteobodei8577
    @matteobodei8577 Před 4 měsíci

    8:10 la seconda frase è in lombardo orientale (bresciano/bergamasco) che essendo stato avamposto veneziano per 4 secoli separato da Milano risente molto della lingua veneta del Lago di Garda e si è sviluppato autonomamente
    P.s. la frase significa 《"pota" lo dice il frate quando si scotta》, ossia è l'imprecazione locale che dicono tutti, persino i frati

  • @UnoDisponibileGrazie
    @UnoDisponibileGrazie Před 5 měsíci

    Talking about Calabrese languages... He's half right: calabrian territory is split between "Dialetti meridionali medi" which can be related (in a way, just to cut it off) to Neapolitan, and "Dialetti meridionali estremi" which are of Sicilian ascendance. The cut line is on Crotone's latitude, if i'm not wrong. The same partition can be found in Puglia SE/NW the "Vallone dei Greci", an imaginary line which separates northern apulian dialects from Salentino
    (Edit: sorry... He speaks about it, after :) )

  • @GraupeLie
    @GraupeLie Před 5 měsíci

    As a linguist, I absolutely agree with you quoting that statement of a language being a dialect with a navy and an army. it's mostly a political thing, rather than anything else.

    • @retroftw4644
      @retroftw4644 Před 5 měsíci

      Using that saying how do you square the circle of klingon being a recognised language?

    • @GraupeLie
      @GraupeLie Před 5 měsíci

      @@retroftw4644 Well, outside of in-story lore, Klingon is what is commonly known as a conlang, a constructed language, same as Quenya or Sindarin, so that's a bit of a special case, since it's not a language and/or dialect that has developed here on Earth in a natural way. As for a view from within the specific world the languages are set in, I'm not that well-versed in Star Trek (and I don't know if there are dialects of Klingon or if there are languages related to it), but as for the elvish languages, it would certainly be interesting to try and discern when, if and where the one turned into the other and which role dialects would play there. I'm sure Professor Tolkien would have been thrilled to discuss this.

  • @estrafalario5612
    @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci

    One accent that sound extra funny to Spanish ears is from the North, from a specific province of...Emilia Romagna? (I can't remember anymore which province sorry).
    The words sound 100% Italian to the Spanish ear (both trained or untrained) BUT the intonation is like an exaggerated comedian impersonating a Spanish gypsy speaking.
    The funny thing it's that you won't expect that random combination.
    Also, if you're my age and remember Gomaespuma shows in the radio and/or the TV is extra fun, because it reminds you "Pelaez" arguing with the "Sita profesor" 😂😂😂😂
    The first time I listened to this, two ladies at Malpensa airport, I had to constraint my laughing. Only a few years later, watching a RAI3 report I could find out where it came, as all the people they were interviewing on the street were speaking like that.

  • @guyinvenice
    @guyinvenice Před 5 měsíci

    I think with the 'Venetian sounds like Spanish' thing it's a) certain words ('muger', 'calle', 'saria') and b) The Thing With The Lenition ('calle' does still become 'cae' sometimes!), plus the very sturdy unreduced vowels and the unvoiced s ('cosa c'è' = 'cossa ghe xe'). I believe Neapolitan etc do have more lexical similarity, for obvious reasons, but there are likenesses between Spanish and Venetian, albeit often coincidental ones.

  • @emanuela9653
    @emanuela9653 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I'm surprised he forgets Marche and Umbria. In Terni, for example, they have a very peculiar accent.

  • @martinashow1732
    @martinashow1732 Před 2 měsíci

    I really hate how quickly Olly glossed over Piemontese because it is one of the few 'dialects' that is recognized as a separate language and only italy classifies it as dialect for political reasons...

  • @StamfordBridge
    @StamfordBridge Před 5 měsíci

    Wow. If I heard that kid speaking Ladin, I’d have no idea where he’s from, and if I started guessing countries, Italy would not have been my first or second guess. Or maybe even my third. Wow.

  • @axisboss1654
    @axisboss1654 Před 4 měsíci

    This is very similar to how it is in the German speaking Sprachraum and throw the Low Countries in there because Dutch is basically the same as Low German dialects spoken on the border. It’s similar in areas close by but on either end it’s like a totally different language. Yeah dialect and language is a gray line.

  • @anta3612
    @anta3612 Před 5 měsíci

    Lombarda here.

  • @huguesdepayens807
    @huguesdepayens807 Před 5 měsíci

    When it comes to classifying languages as dialects or not I always look at it the same way I look at phylogeny.

  • @Sandalwoodrk
    @Sandalwoodrk Před 5 měsíci

    Olly actually documented himself learning Italian in a vlog series on his channel. you should check it out.

  • @lolychan1
    @lolychan1 Před 4 měsíci

    Is it the same Ladin spoken in Romania?

  • @riccardosebis5333
    @riccardosebis5333 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Yes but is not there is the "s" final for plural because grim Spanish, there are because like all Latin languages, and centu is a Italianization, would say xentu in campidanese (j), and the guy use a mixed Italian and Sardinian

  • @BryanAJParry
    @BryanAJParry Před 5 měsíci +6

    You had never heard of Olly Richards???

  • @burkmat
    @burkmat Před 2 měsíci

    He didn't mention Corsican right?
    Have you made a video when you try to understand Corsican? Otherwise that's a suggestion for next one.

  • @x_mau9355
    @x_mau9355 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Actually, it's Sicily, as a whole, which has no future... from the 1200 bC on 😁😉

  • @enzoyeungsikyuen9718
    @enzoyeungsikyuen9718 Před 5 měsíci

    if you want olly did a series of vlog where he learn italian in 3 month

  • @vulkanofnocturne
    @vulkanofnocturne Před 5 měsíci

    He spoke a lot about the many different influences from greek, latin, arabic etc are there any from english?

    • @tigris4247
      @tigris4247 Před 5 měsíci +3

      There are influences as loan words (eg, web, computer), but these are everywhere and don't form part of the origin of the languages. Obviously grammar has not been influenced by English

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci +2

      sadly yes...
      there are smugs who speaks a cringy "inglísc" to sound cool and up-to-the times but they just make speakers of both languages cringe

    • @estrafalario5612
      @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@FlagAnthemyes, they make anyone cringe. The wordt part is that they are extremely convinced that they speak English well to a point of "correcting" tjose who actually speak 😂😂😂😢😢😢
      100% Dunning-Krugger effect.

  • @galaplacidia4698
    @galaplacidia4698 Před 5 měsíci +1

    ¡Qué pelazo!

  • @littlemouse7066
    @littlemouse7066 Před 5 měsíci

    I was thinking the exact same way about the Genova language it sounds a lot like portuguese not spanish or french lol.

    • @languagemaus8083
      @languagemaus8083 Před 5 měsíci

      There are some sounds that remind of french but mostly it´s about vocabulary, some words are very different from standard italian but rather close to french. The intonation is totally like brazilian portuguese. Show a brazilian video to a genovese and they will have so much fun, since we often make fun of our own dialect and it´s just so weird to hear the similarities!

  • @seaofpines7
    @seaofpines7 Před 3 měsíci

    God save king Richard!

  • @estrafalario5612
    @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci

    Anyone knows which of his videos is the one explaining why "Vulgar Latin" didn't exist?
    He has many on Latin...

  • @mikkins85710
    @mikkins85710 Před 5 měsíci

    No two linguists or dialecticians ever agree about anything

  • @KPW2137
    @KPW2137 Před 5 měsíci

    Tbh THE language of Italy that surprised me the most and by far is Griko.

  • @Nome_e_Cognome
    @Nome_e_Cognome Před 5 měsíci

    there is an accent that does not follow geography, that of Messina, Reggio, Crotone and Lecce (port cities in 3 different regions of the far south) Here in the Middle Ages the ports remained Greek-Byzantine while the rest of the peninsula was "Latinized". in these places, where there are still communities speaking Grico, a variety of ancient Greek.

  • @waspjournals41
    @waspjournals41 Před 5 měsíci

    Calabrian here. I cannot understand neapolitan lol or much of sicilian for that matter. Our dialect is really its own thing.

  • @zariaalhajmoustafa2573
    @zariaalhajmoustafa2573 Před 4 měsíci

    ‏‪12:03‬ my definition as a dialect how many different speaker have a connection buy original language connect all the dialect when the connection is Faith away that when the dialect become an a language

  • @art3mide644
    @art3mide644 Před měsícem

    Lombard is a bit too generic, there is Milanese (and the very similar Varesino e Comasco) which is completely different from Bresciano and Bergamasco, which is different from Cremonese etc.

  • @albyjkl
    @albyjkl Před 4 měsíci

    Chissà perché noi Piemontesi veniamo liquidati con 4 parole in croce ! Il Piemontese ha profonde influenze celtiche, come d’atro canto tutti i dialetti del nord (Piemontese, Ligure, Lombardo, Veneto ed Emiliano) poi c’è una particolare zona dell’ovest Piemonte dove si parla l’Occitano lingua condivisa col Sud della Francia e la Catalogna.
    In realtà il dialetto è diffusissimo anche tra i giovani, è anche certo che se uno si basa sui dialetti parlati in una grande città come Torino scoprirà che tra i più parlati ci sono il Siciliano ed il Calabrese
    Bho ? Non saremo così affascinanti

  • @TheIamtheoneandonly1
    @TheIamtheoneandonly1 Před 5 měsíci

    Is it just me, or does Ladin sound very French / German influenced? Just saying.

  • @alejandror.planas9802
    @alejandror.planas9802 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I always have an issue with how Sardinian, Sicilian and Neapolitan are said to have been influenced by Spanish. Sure, there has been a significant Spanish influence, nonetheless the language spoken by the people who conquered Sardinia and the Two Sicilies was Catalan, the people who supported the dominance of the Crown of Aragon over the region were called the "Catalan party", the official language of Sardinia until the 1700s was Catalan (being used to write their legal codexes), and the nobles who lived in Palermo, Cagliari, and Naples itself, or the teachers who taught in the main cities of the region were predominantly from Barcelona (and taught in Catalan even, in the universities).
    Spanish only started to replace Catalan in the 1500s, and that mainly occured in Naples, as it had no Catalan colonies. Sardinia however continued to have Catalan as the lingua franca, with even a saying being developed (non scidu di catalano) to say someone is rural, as in, they dont speak catalan, they are from the countryside. Sicily continued to have Catalan as a language of the elite into the 1600s (however, unlike how it was in Sardinia, the local language was always more important).
    It always feels as if people disregard our influence, or conflate it with Spanish.

    • @michelefrau6072
      @michelefrau6072 Před 5 měsíci +1

      When I tell the Catalans, who already know that a Catalan dialect is spoken in Sardinia in Alghero, that their language has had a huge influence throughout the whole Sardinia especially in the lexicon, they 🤯

    • @alejandror.planas9802
      @alejandror.planas9802 Před 5 měsíci

      @@michelefrau6072 When I first found out that Cagliari used to be predominantly Catalan speaking too and that because of that they use a lot of catalan words I was left dumbfounded. I do however always wonder if Sardinians remember Catalans fondly, or if we are seen as evil invaders who imposed our language on them, because reading through history, we weren't all that nice to the Sardinians

    • @michelefrau6072
      @michelefrau6072 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@alejandror.planas9802 I would say that the Savoys are rulers with a worse reputation and therefore they overshadowed their predecessors, furthermore the Catalan presence is now very distant in time, so except for some particular events, such as the battle of Sanluri (the place where it happened is still known as "s'ocidroxu", the slaughter), or the "ethnic replacement" of Alghero, there is no a particular memory of that period

    • @riccardosebis5333
      @riccardosebis5333 Před 5 měsíci

      Only in Sardinia is spoke Spanish and catalan by people, sardinian were subject of the crown, the judges decided of speak these languages, until the 1800, because is different this island, in Sicilies are reigned for elites and a different context

    • @estrafalario5612
      @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The similarity of Sicilian to both Spanish and Catalan is hugely overestimated.
      Of course you can always cherrypick the words very similar in sound or writing to either, forgetting the whole rest of the language, that it's equal or closer to Italian in 80-95% of the words...
      But, when you put a text (or dialogue) in both options (Italian and Sicilian) to a naive Spanish/Catalan speaker it's clear that Sicilian sounds like a very strong accent harder to guess...
      I had to suffer a few times those guys convinced that I SHOULD understand better Sicilian than Italian, so they preferred to "make me the courtesy" of speaking in Sicilian even though I was speaking fluent Italian to them asking to please speak Italian because I could barely understand 50% of their sentences (all those that were similar to Italian, none of the supposed "Spanish" words).
      The myth was so powerful that they couldn't believe me saying "scusa ma io non ti capisco se mi parli in siciliano".

  • @danielefabbro822
    @danielefabbro822 Před 5 měsíci

    Io sono Friulano e parlo Friulano.
    I'm Furlan and I speak Furlan.
    O i soy Furlan e i feveli par Furlan.
    😁👍

  • @IctusPordenone
    @IctusPordenone Před 5 měsíci

    Mandi si usa quasi esclusivamente quando ci si lascia e anche per il friulano il plurale si fa con s o is

  • @BenKenobi1999
    @BenKenobi1999 Před 5 měsíci

    Ladin does sounds german/latin.

  • @Lee-he2qp
    @Lee-he2qp Před 5 měsíci

    Should I even bother trying to learn standard Italian, if there are so many dialects in italy, does anyone actually speak standard Italian or do they just convert to standard Italian when they hear you are not Italian?

    • @atlantis4516
      @atlantis4516 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Everybody does speak Italian in Italy, or almost everyone, don't worry.

    • @thebenis3157
      @thebenis3157 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Here in Italy, not only everyone can speak Italian fluently, depending on the area it will also be a lot more spoken by locals even between each other compared to the local language

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem Před 5 měsíci +1

      oh c'mon this is Italy not Catalonia
      no one will scold you for speaking Italian (in fact the opposite would WAY be more sure to happen)
      I wish to say Italian is a national lingua franca, but I would betrat the actual status of local languages who are severely endangered

    • @om-qz7kp
      @om-qz7kp Před 5 měsíci

      Lee, what the f**k

    • @estrafalario5612
      @estrafalario5612 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Don't worry at all!
      Of course, if you stay for a long time (>1year) AFTER you master Italian, THEN learning the regional dialect/language basics is useful. And depending on the region it can be very useful to get deeper into the traditions, the idioms and so on, but don't hurry for it.
      Also, the dictionaries and manuals for the "dialects" that can be called complete are available mostly in Italian. In other languages you can only find slight introductions or things related to folklore or to outdated ways of speaking...not very useful.
      So, anyway learning regional dialects before Italian is more of a hypothesis than a real option

  • @thebusinessfirm9862
    @thebusinessfirm9862 Před 5 měsíci

    Calabrese da Caulonia Marina 👍🏼