Similarities Between Romanian and Ukrainian

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • In this week’s episode, Andrei (Romanian speaker) and Kristina (Ukrainian speaker) compete with a list of words that are shared between their languages. As mentioned in the video, Andrei has his own CZcams channel where he talks to travellers and residents of Toronto about their experiences in our lovely city and as well as other travel stories. This is the link to his channel, make sure to check it out and subscribe for upcoming videos: / iportgreen
    If you have any questions or feedback for us, please contact us on Instagram or Facebook, it’s very tough to respond to all CZcams comments, especially since many of them go unnoticed.
    The Romanian language (Românește) is an East Romance language primarily spoken in Romania and Moldova, having an official status in both countries, as well as being one of the official languages of the European Union. It is recognized as a minority language in Bulgaria, Hungary, Serbia, and Ukraine. Romanian belongs to the Italic branch of the Indo-European language family, sharing a lot in common with French, Italian, Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese, however, it is not mutually intelligible with them. Ukrainian is an East Slavic language primarily spoken in the Ukraine where it has official status, while also recognized as a minority language in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Serbia, and Slovakia.
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +59

    Enjoy this week’s episode and as mentioned in the video, make sure to check out Andrei’s channel where he talks to people from different backgrounds about their experiences in our lovely city of Toronto, and as well as other travel stories. This is the link to his channel: czcams.com/users/iPortgreen
    If you have any questions or feedback for us, please contact us on Instagram or Facebook, it’s very tough to respond to all CZcams comments, especially since many of them go unnoticed.
    Shahrzad (@shahrzad.pe): instagram.com/shahrzad.pe
    Myself (@BahadorAlast): instagram.com/BahadorAlast

    • @AmirYazdanian
      @AmirYazdanian Před 6 lety +3

      Bahador Alast
      دمتون گرم!
      Bravo Andrei! 👍🏻

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 5 lety +1

      Here's an idea: expansion. Go from 2 speakers to 3 or 4. You can have an interesting web of connections. 20% of romanian is of slavic origin but in addition to add ukrainain and romanian can be similar due to ottoman influences. Many turkish influences on language are specifically in culinary fields and many unrelated languages in the balkans have commono words related to food because of that. So you can have like french and romania- connection due to latin roots, then romanian-turkish and turkish and language from some other muslim country, obviously being influenced by the koran, the arabic empires etc. So imagine having french, romanian, turkish and persian.... all in one video. And you can have coomon words, culinary words and .... whatever words are similar between turkish and persian. It would beinteresting to see how the similarities fluctuate based on geography AND specific lexical field.

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 5 lety +1

      of course french-romanian-turkish-persian is just an example. The point is to have 3 or 4 speakers instead of 2 and to vary the seakers based on: 2 languages related by language faimily, one of those related to the next by geography and the last 2 related by something else. Here's another example like that: polish-bulgarian-turkish-swahili. Polish-bulgarian both slavic, bulgarian also heavily influenced by turkish and turkish and swahili both influenced by arabic. You get the idea.

    • @OneTireFire
      @OneTireFire Před 5 lety +2

      You need a new and better speaker of Romanian.

    • @decebal16
      @decebal16 Před 4 lety +1

      I want Romanian-Arabic!.Thank you!

  • @coolvader8
    @coolvader8 Před 4 lety +244

    My mom is Ukrainian and dad is romanian and knowing both languages made me LOOL watching this 🚫 🧢

    • @denismaftei691
      @denismaftei691 Před 4 lety +6

      if your father gort a ukrainean girl its lacky :D i want one to :D:DD:

    • @linguistfanatic1895
      @linguistfanatic1895 Před 3 lety +17

      Romkranian

    • @ceplm3366
      @ceplm3366 Před 3 lety +1

      Limbile se aseamănă pt că românii sunt și slavi

    • @elenabibescu1848
      @elenabibescu1848 Před 3 lety +16

      @@ceplm3366 Nu avem treaba cu slavii, doar ca dupa cum vedeti au fost casatorii mixte.

    • @ceplm3366
      @ceplm3366 Před 3 lety +5

      @@elenabibescu1848 Poporul român s-a format din dacoromani + slavi
      Asta e etnogeneza poporului român

  • @abelbenzo
    @abelbenzo Před 6 lety +516

    Andrei must not have grown up religious.. Slava domnului and milostiv are words I've heard since I was a baby

    • @sv.intruslavaneamului3702
      @sv.intruslavaneamului3702 Před 6 lety +11

      Abel Bolog Sau nu a văzut mausoleul de la Mărășești.

    • @Cris-hd1wb
      @Cris-hd1wb Před 6 lety +16

      Who cares? Maybe he just didn't catch them up

    • @sv.intruslavaneamului3702
      @sv.intruslavaneamului3702 Před 6 lety +13

      gicigumi sunset În viaţa de zi cu zi folosești o mulţime de cuvinte și nume proprii (localităţi și oameni) provenite din slavă. Dacă ai impresia că folosești cuvinte latinești, ține cont de faptul că majoritatea sunt importante din franceză în sec.19, astfel pierzând multe cuvinte dacice pe care încă le mai foloseam.
      Așa că dute tu dracului cu francezii tăi, bine? Măcar e nu am nume de anime-uri la profil.

    • @sv.intruslavaneamului3702
      @sv.intruslavaneamului3702 Před 6 lety +11

      gicigumi sunset Ce prost ești prietene. Habar nu ai despre ce vorbești, mai bine taci din gură.

    • @sv.intruslavaneamului3702
      @sv.intruslavaneamului3702 Před 6 lety +1

      Oricand întradevăr.

  • @e.n.7479
    @e.n.7479 Před 6 lety +102

    I'm Ukrainian, and my Romanian friend gave me a link to this. Thanks, it was fun to watch :)

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +10

      Thank you for watching:)

    • @alexandrumihai7126
      @alexandrumihai7126 Před 4 lety +1

      Wow you are Ukrainian and you dont hate as thank you. Ever ukrainian I saw they was pro-russian.

    • @aleksdamo4178
      @aleksdamo4178 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexandrumihai7126 trăiască Căpitanul!

    • @kungfu3299
      @kungfu3299 Před rokem

      @@aleksdamo4178 Ia iute-l... sa trezit micul fascist, a iesit din pestera, a conectat antena de internet, si s-a intors in pestera la PC sa comenteze aici... Duceti-va ambii inapoi la 1941 si vedeti ce masuri au luat legionarii in tara, ce sa traiasca ma?

    • @aleksdamo4178
      @aleksdamo4178 Před rokem

      @@kungfu3299 TLC, au luat măsuri foarte bune, au luat decizii radicale când alții nu le-ar fi putut lua, asta înseamnă să fi un lider bun și puternic, și nu numai asta dar au unit poporul, românii se iubeau unul pe altul ca o mare familie

  • @firstnamelastname4249
    @firstnamelastname4249 Před 6 lety +200

    Romania is Latin Island in the middle of Slavic sea

    • @davidfinichiu596
      @davidfinichiu596 Před 6 lety +1

      Al-Mohammed Bin Shekel Ãl-Mardachai exactly. InshaAllah Romania will become a Muslim majority soon

    • @michaelmatthews867
      @michaelmatthews867 Před 6 lety +53

      David Finichiu That will never happen, keep on deaming child of Satan.

    • @firstnamelastname4249
      @firstnamelastname4249 Před 6 lety +29

      David Finichiu
      Can keep religion away ?

    • @davidfinichiu596
      @davidfinichiu596 Před 6 lety +2

      I was born in Ploeisti next to Bucaresti and I bear witness that there is none worth of worship except Allah, and Muhammad (pbuh) is the final messenger.

    • @davidfinichiu596
      @davidfinichiu596 Před 6 lety +5

      Vladimir fuck you vladimir you have a Russian name you are NOT a Romanian. I am born and raised in Romania with pure Romanian blood and am 100% Muslim. Your so ignorant that you don’t even realize that Jews Christians and Muslims all believe in the same God.

  • @RhiannonSenpai
    @RhiannonSenpai Před 3 lety +30

    I'm really shocked he didn't know the word "slava" si "milostiv".

  • @ijnfrt
    @ijnfrt Před 6 lety +215

    A Ukrainian here, "топор" (topor) is a Russian word for an axe, it's "сокира" (sokyra) in Ukrainian, other than that great video!

    • @Zdamaneta
      @Zdamaneta Před 6 lety +52

      In romanian we use both topor (топор) and secure (сокира).

    • @Featheroid
      @Featheroid Před 6 lety +18

      Proper similar word in ukrainian is "топір" - which means a battle axe or a simple axe in some dialects.

    • @simplychannel6557
      @simplychannel6557 Před 6 lety +24

      in russian we also have this word- sekira, but sekira is not just an axe, it is just a type of axe

    • @ijnfrt
      @ijnfrt Před 6 lety +20

      Perhaps, I'm from Rivne Region and to our ears "топор" (topor) sounds Russian (I've heard "топір" (topir) being used here, but in my mind it's some kind of weapon). But you're right there ar a lot of variations in Ukrainian, though I still tend to think that "сокира" is widely accepted to be a "standard Ukrainian" (meaning that most dicitonaries will have "сокира" as opposed to "топор")

    • @TarebossT
      @TarebossT Před 6 lety +3

      "secure" is a latin word

  • @stannicolae4623
    @stannicolae4623 Před 6 lety +338

    romanian words such as "slava" or "milostiv" are mainly used by the church, thats why he didnt know them

    • @TheMelopeus
      @TheMelopeus Před 6 lety +36

      Yes, whoever doesn't go to church will not know the slavic influence on the vocabulary that much.

    • @illllllllll8287
      @illllllllll8287 Před 6 lety +30

      In Kurdish 'Slava' means 'Salutations' and Slav = Salute

    • @stannicolae4623
      @stannicolae4623 Před 6 lety +11

      TheMelopeus i wouldnt say that. Older books, and even older people use them. There isnt even a non slavic word for mercy actually

    • @rdtgr8
      @rdtgr8 Před 6 lety +6

      Zagros Kurdi In Kurdish rabun (literally "to be RA" where RA = Persian RU "over, up") means "to get up" and in Ukrainian robyty (literally "to be RO") means "to do, to make, to work, to produce". It seems these 2 are connected in meaning "to pile up, to build, to rise something". A worker is a person who builds houses, or rises grains and cattle. So Ukrainian verb origin may be understood from Kurdish

    • @illllllllll8287
      @illllllllll8287 Před 6 lety +5

      rdtgr8
      , In Persian 'to rise' or 'going up, rising up' is "Bala Raftan"... "Raftan" = going and "Bala" = up.. 'to get up' or 'to rise up'...
      Kurdish - - > Rabun
      Ukrainian - - > Robyty
      Persian - - > Bala Raftan

  • @ytmB4HyU4kUq
    @ytmB4HyU4kUq Před 5 lety +40

    Rude means relatives in Romanian. I'm American and can say that some of my relatives are rude af lol. Funny how rude can mean something else in a different language.

    • @lucabrazzi5755
      @lucabrazzi5755 Před 4 lety +4

      Curve means hookers or sluts in Romanian

    • @maryamdesu
      @maryamdesu Před 3 lety +1

      Yaas, also rude in Persian means intestine =)))

    • @TheExtremeCube
      @TheExtremeCube Před 3 lety

      I believe it comes from slavic rod, which means family/kin

    • @mihaelacozma7921
      @mihaelacozma7921 Před 3 lety

      😂😂😂😂

    • @simd5776
      @simd5776 Před 3 lety

      @@TheExtremeCube In some regions of Romania, the meaning of "rod" is descendant, successor. The modern sense of "rod" is the capacity of reproduction and it is manly used in agriculture.

  • @mvdlele29
    @mvdlele29 Před 6 lety +97

    cum sa nu stii 'slava' frate?

    • @darknomad5600
      @darknomad5600 Před 6 lety +7

      I only understood frate. It means brother. It comes from the latin word frat. The same root as the word fraternaty in English. This word means brotherhood.

    • @euAndrei
      @euAndrei Před 5 lety +8

      Cand cresti in alta tara de mic si persoanele in jurul tau nu folosesc acest cuvant, il uiti, sau posibil nu il inveti. Intleg ca multi Romani in alte tari isi retin cuvintele religioase, iara altii nu au nici-un folos de cuvinte care nu sunt necesare. Am impresia ca persoanele cu multe cuvinte religioase in vocabular se trag de la tara pentru ca avocatii si inginerii pe care iam cunoscut, nu au parut religioasi sa strige slava si milostiv. Iarasi nimeni nu ma certat vreo data ca nu am folosit aceste cuvinte intr-o conversatie.

    • @mvdlele29
      @mvdlele29 Před 5 lety +4

      eu unu cand aud slava nu ma gandesc neaparat la religie. eu un cuvant din limba romana care sunt sigur ca toti ingineri, doctori samd il cunosc chiar daca nu il folosesc..daca nu a trait in romania si nu cunoaste bine limba nu are ce cauta acolo

    • @ioneldnc
      @ioneldnc Před 4 lety +3

      Pentru ca este roman si nu slav...comprendi?

    • @ioneldnc
      @ioneldnc Před 4 lety +2

      @Oricand ....asta inseamna ca este roman si nu slav... tu traiesti in romania dar vorbesti cuvinte slave... deci roman si slav nu este acelasi lucru... mai documenteazate daca nu sti ce neam esti...

  • @thatboiryqn
    @thatboiryqn Před 6 lety +65

    Milostiv and Slavă are a bit archaic and mainly used by the church. I didn’t know those and I had to ask my grandpa what they were before you guys said the definition. But I was born and raised in America so my Romanian is fairly informal.

    • @uber1ns4n1ty8
      @uber1ns4n1ty8 Před 6 lety +9

      MrRMeli Milostiv in Serbian means merciful, Slava means glory/fame/celebrations.

    • @capitanulcacaoernesto8215
      @capitanulcacaoernesto8215 Před 6 lety

      Totaly romanian words used by church people i dont know how arab is relevand with slava and milostiv here

    • @sv.intruslavaneamului3702
      @sv.intruslavaneamului3702 Před 6 lety +10

      The word slavă is used a lot. In the church and in patriotic speach

    • @3wL7
      @3wL7 Před 5 lety +3

      Imi cer scuze. Daca n-ati studiat in Romania, ci doar ati invatat de la parinti, atunci limba romana pe care o vorbiti e surprinzator de buna si va face cinste si dumneavoastra, si parintilor dumneavoastra. Felicitari! Imi cer scuze din nou.

    • @thatboiryqn
      @thatboiryqn Před 5 lety

      3wL7 Nu e nicio problemă. Vă iert, și sper că aveți o zi minunată.

  • @anamaria-se1yw
    @anamaria-se1yw Před 6 lety +70

    Cineva din romania aici?:)))

  • @joecorne5361
    @joecorne5361 Před 6 lety +40

    Their words for "waist" possibly originated from the French word "taille", which is also used in German and Dutch. A very similar word is used in Danish, Polish, Russian, Estonian and Esperanto as well.

    • @darthghitza8037
      @darthghitza8037 Před 5 lety +4

      yeah or it just came straight up from indo-european and all these languages just kept it :p

    • @kilipaki87oritahiti
      @kilipaki87oritahiti Před 2 lety

      Ukrainian has probably borrowed it from Polish which has German and French loanwords. Mostly German. Surprisingly Russia has many French loanwords.

  • @DanielaShiga
    @DanielaShiga Před 5 lety +25

    Andrei was a gentleman and wanted to lose so he would score with the girl he obviously likes! I don't believe he does not understand slava and milostiv....no way!

  • @billofiore
    @billofiore Před 6 lety +341

    Andrei nu prea știe românește...

    • @filipstan7339
      @filipstan7339 Před 5 lety +16

      De acord :)))

    • @mihai5456
      @mihai5456 Před 5 lety +38

      Desigur nu merge la biserica :)

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 5 lety +41

      A specificat ca de 20 de ani locuieste in Caanda si nu Romania. Ce mi se pare mie ciudat e ca inca are accent romanesc in conditiile astea.... mai repede uiti cuvinte decat accent?!

    • @ivaeugen
      @ivaeugen Před 5 lety +13

      @@RoScFan mda, eram pe cale sa devin agresiv si sa spun ca a citit doar gazeta sporturilor dar asa se explica, romana e practic limba straina invatata caz in care vorbeste f bine, m-ar fi putut pacali ca a trait in romania... slava si milostiv e cumva normal sa nu le stie daca-i limba invatata, sant un fel de arhaisme folosite doar in religie, expresii si formulari artistice, nu sant folosite in vorbirea curenta deci nu prea avea de ce sa le invete.

    • @prahoveanussr
      @prahoveanussr Před 5 lety +4

      Nu conteaza ca sta in Canada, poate sta in Quebec unde se vorbeste Franceza.

  • @simd5776
    @simd5776 Před 3 lety +13

    Romanian language is very rich. So, there are many romanian words that express the same thing. For example, for axe we have: topor, toporisca, secure/sacure/sacura, baltag/baltac ,barda, toaipa (in Moldova), or satar (used by butcher). Some words, as baltag, are archaic, but they are still used at countryside, in some regions of Romania.

    • @GholaTleilaxu
      @GholaTleilaxu Před rokem

      Topor is the general word for any axe, but usually used to refer to the tool one uses to cut wood with, or the heads of hens and cocks (to turn them into soup and roast). A toporișcă = a small axe. Secure (decrepit) was used to refer to a small-handled axe one used to kill or maim people with in battle or out of battle (see securizat, security, etc.) Baltag is an archaism/Turkish borrowing for a long-handled axe or a secure, used in Romanian literature mostly for life-ending purposes. Bardă some claim to be an old Magyar word for small battle-axe but the word seems to be rather pre-Indo-European (see bard in English, Latin bardus). Satâr (borrowed from Turkish) = cleaver, the butcher's tool. I've never heard of toaipă/țoaipă (perhaps from a Daco-Sarmatian or Gothic origin or even older)

    • @Hardcore_Remixer
      @Hardcore_Remixer Před rokem

      Toporisca este clar mai mai mica decat un topor si se traduce "hatchet" in engleza.

    • @roxanam482
      @roxanam482 Před rokem

      ​​@@GholaTleilaxu la mine în zonă se folosește mai mult securea decât toporul iar despre Baltag nu am auzit niciodată până ce am citit și eu prin clasa a 6 7 📖 Baltagul.. de la sora mai mare care avea capacitate 😂 😂 care totuși mi-l imaginam la început ca fiind altceva decât secure... Clar Topor e din limba slavă iar Secure provine din Latină.

    • @GholaTleilaxu
      @GholaTleilaxu Před rokem

      @@roxanam482 Trivia: Vitoria Lipan, that is _Vitoria_ as in Vitoria-Gasteiz, was played in the 1969 film "Baltagul" by the Spanish actress Margarita Lozano. Sadoveanu would be proud.

  • @dorinpopa6962
    @dorinpopa6962 Před 6 lety +65

    That moment when you are from Moldova and you understand nearly everything from both sides. To be fair it's not the case for everybody from Moldova but because of the heavier Slavic influence and knowledge of Russian I get what the Ukrainian girl was saying

  • @diegovaldes9916
    @diegovaldes9916 Před 6 lety +64

    She's so beautiful 😍

  • @singingcovers6402
    @singingcovers6402 Před rokem +5

    Can you guys pls make a video with the similarities between 🇷🇴 and 🇸🇰

  • @shadesofemotions4007
    @shadesofemotions4007 Před 6 lety +120

    tutun / tütün is a turkish words :) Love ukranian /romanian language .

    • @mehrdad5767
      @mehrdad5767 Před 6 lety +6

      Electra Heart god is turk too

    • @shadesofemotions4007
      @shadesofemotions4007 Před 6 lety +8

      -_-

    • @hasimahmetabdulbakibugrauc6268
      @hasimahmetabdulbakibugrauc6268 Před 6 lety +2

      parni iranin and proud you are everywhere.

    • @ijnfrt
      @ijnfrt Před 6 lety +15

      Ukrainian has a few turkish words in it such as килим(kylym) -"kilim", туман (tuman) - "duman", гарбуз (harbuz) - "karpuz" (it means a "pumpkin" here) etc.

    • @Yarkanlaki
      @Yarkanlaki Před 6 lety +1

      It is perso-Kurdish 'du' mean smoke 💨

  • @ksyushakostyuk8449
    @ksyushakostyuk8449 Před 6 lety +75

    Do French and Romanian pleaseee

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +11

      Thank you! I'll try to organize it for a future video :)

    • @tomyjunyor
      @tomyjunyor Před 3 lety

      I am Romanian I know 6 languages! you are like french, that is pusy

  • @hisham1101
    @hisham1101 Před 6 lety +101

    you should do one comparing Maltese​ and Arabic

    • @bfhan4959
      @bfhan4959 Před 6 lety +20

      Adolph Lenin no Maltese is a seperate language

    • @ajoajoajoaj
      @ajoajoajoaj Před 6 lety +3

      Zain Mossa
      You're both right. Practically speaking, any Arabic dialect could be considered a separate language as distinct as Slavic ones from one another. However, sibce they are all deriviatives of a language which is comsidered the literal Word of God in Islamic culture, it would approach sacrilege to consider them independemt of it. Since Maltese are Catholic on the other hand, their language is completely divorced from their respective sacred and prestigious benchmarks of Latin and Italian, and thus recognized as a language in its own right.

    • @ajoajoajoaj
      @ajoajoajoaj Před 6 lety +3

      DatOneEgyptian -
      Toronto has a huge Maltese community. Trust me, they would have little trouble finding volunteers.

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +14

      I will definitely try to organize it!

    • @zareengulabi9569
      @zareengulabi9569 Před 6 lety +3

      ajoajoajoaj Langauge has notin to do with religion Not all Maltese r catholics nd not all Arabs r Muslims

  • @teodora7219
    @teodora7219 Před 2 lety +5

    The romanian guy did not go to church, both “slavă” and “milostiv” are used in romanian

  • @MarinaandAfshinTravel
    @MarinaandAfshinTravel Před 6 lety +26

    Great one bahador keep doing man, i cant wait to come there 😁😁👍🏻👍🏻

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety

      Thank you Afshin!! Lots of love!! Can't wait, that'd be awesome! 👍🏻

  • @bloodaxe5028
    @bloodaxe5028 Před 6 lety +30

    Cristina got the best posture ! Look at that 90° angle sitting position

  • @franzaepinus2498
    @franzaepinus2498 Před 6 lety +5

    Nice work and really fun to watch! I think some of the words were a bit tough, but that makes it even more interesting I think, a bit more challenging. Both sides did really well!

  • @cesmisiyah7722
    @cesmisiyah7722 Před 6 lety +9

    Bahador i really love your videos ,keep going.Lots of love from neighbour country Turkey!! You are doing good job 😊😊

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +1

      Ahmet Sarıkaya
      Thank you so much nieghbour!! Appreciate that a lot! I hope you enjoy our future videos as well. Much love for Turkey :)

  • @MrBegliocchi
    @MrBegliocchi Před 6 lety +20

    In italian, eyes = occhi (oh-kee)

  • @Andrij_Kozak
    @Andrij_Kozak Před 6 lety +36

    Can you make comparison between Hungarian and Finnish + Persian and Ossetian ?

    • @rdtgr8
      @rdtgr8 Před 6 lety +3

      Better Persian-Ukrainian, Kurdish-Ukrainian, Balochi-Ukrainian, maybe even Pashto-Ukrainian (despite I only know Pashto sterga "an eye" vs. Ukrainian dzerkalo "mirror", and Pashto xwela "mouth" = Ukrainian (vulgar) xavalo "mouth", Pashto kela "when" = Ukrainian koly "when", but my Pashto knowledge is zero-level, who knows ;)

    • @ajoajoajoaj
      @ajoajoajoaj Před 6 lety +2

      Hungarian and Ossetic would work too, since medieval Magyars did had a lot of contact with the Alans, ancestors of Ossetes, as both were pullaging Europe in the Dark Ages. Alans even established a kingdom on the Iberian peninsula.

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +2

      I'd love to do that Andrij! I would just need to find fluent speakers of those languages in Toronto who would be interested in participating. I know people of Hungarian and Finnish descent, but they don't speak it well. I don't know any fluent Ossetian speakers. If you happen to know anyone, please contact me on Instagram :)

    • @Andrij_Kozak
      @Andrij_Kozak Před 6 lety +1

      @Bahador Alast sadly I don't know anyone who speaks Ossetian.

    • @leah2308
      @leah2308 Před 5 lety +1

      OMG Ossetian YES!!!

  • @nikolajs.5353
    @nikolajs.5353 Před 6 lety +10

    Hi Bahador. Do you have any danish friends, and if so can you compare danish with some other germanic languages. Or languages from other language groups for that matter?

    • @grobarcina9464
      @grobarcina9464 Před 6 lety +1

      Nikolaj S. Nobody would understand the Danish guy, not even another Dane lol.
      I believe Danish children learn to understand their parents last in the world. It's an extremely groggy language.

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +2

      Nikolaj S.
      That would be great. I know people of Danish descent in Toronto, but they don't speak the language too well. I will definitely try to find someone who does for a future video!

    • @nikolajs.5353
      @nikolajs.5353 Před 6 lety +1

      Bahador Alast cool, keep up the great videos as usual :)

  • @serbanmihail481
    @serbanmihail481 Před 5 lety +8

    The tabar (also called tabarzin, which means "saddle axe" [in persian]) is a type of battle axe. The term tabar is used for axes originating from the Ottoman Empire, Persia, Armenia,[1] India and surrounding countries and cultures. As a loanword taken through Iranian Scythian, the word tabar is also used in most Slavic languages as the word for axe[2] (e.g. Russian: топор). Concluzie, cuvinte venite pe filiere diferite numind acelasi lucru

  • @cedavelickovic9501
    @cedavelickovic9501 Před 6 lety +87

    Again most of these words are understandable in Serbo-Croatian too.

    • @mrsecify
      @mrsecify Před 6 lety +1

      Čeda Veličković In Serbian as well (I take it that Serbo-Croatian is quite similar to Serbian so that's probably why).

    • @cedavelickovic9501
      @cedavelickovic9501 Před 6 lety +4

      Sorben `Ilya` Erikson well Serbian is Serbo-Croatian lol

    • @princeofrossiya1694
      @princeofrossiya1694 Před 6 lety +9

      Čeda Veličković, as a native russian speaker learned basics of romanian, ukrainian and turkish I'd say - that the vast majority of romanians do not even suspect about how much in common have our languages.
      Romanian speaker would find huge amount of similarities in slavonic (not only south slav languages like serbian) and turkish languages. Really a lot.
      Don't understand why a lot of romanians so sure that romanian language has common roots only with Latin group of languages like french.
      Old romanian language was even much more similar with slavonic languages than these days, but romanian language reforms made this language more Western like and particularly more French like.

    • @IonComan9019
      @IonComan9019 Před 6 lety +4

      Ofc they are, we are brothers! Serbia-Croatia-Greece-Romania-Bulgaria-Moldova ofc:) also Slovacia

    • @user-kp6on5ui1u
      @user-kp6on5ui1u Před 5 lety

      Roman Zacharchenko originally there were military colonists speaking vulgar latin, strongly changed to compare with the classic one. For lots of them this was not their native, and they contacted often with other languages. And, oh yeah, there were Dacians before, speaking language(s) similar both to pre-slavic and latin, also to iranian and different balkanian languages.

  • @catalincatalin4512
    @catalincatalin4512 Před 2 lety +5

    Wow, not knowing SLAVA and MILOSTIV? really? They are indeed mostly used in religious language, but not only.

  • @guillermorivas7819
    @guillermorivas7819 Před 6 lety +11

    "slava" or "milostiv" derive from Old Church Slavonic. The Romanian language up until the 19th century used to have like 50-60% of their words derived from Old Church Slavonic. They began to not use them anymore, instead chose to replace them with Latin/French words. In addition, there are various variants of Romanian with their own choice in vocabulary words with a preference in using a Latin-based word or a Slavic-based word.

    • @saebica
      @saebica Před 6 lety +1

      Guillermo Rivas And it's hard but I kinda can choose which one to use..
      But it's hard 'cause you always analyze all the words.
      I'm sure of one thing: I recognize any word and I correctly feel its origins.
      Love

    • @roromil2441
      @roromil2441 Před 6 lety +4

      Nope, Church Slavonic had little to do with what the people were speaking. The Cyrillic alphabet was in use but not Church Slavonic, Church Slavonic was a dead Church-only language. Also the way the elite started to use French words had little impact on the people's language, since even by the 1930s 70% of Romanians were illiterate. The fact that a small elite borrowed French words had little impact on the language's Latin roots.

    • @saebica
      @saebica Před 6 lety

      We're still illiterate, lol :D

    • @guillermorivas7819
      @guillermorivas7819 Před 6 lety +3

      @Roro Mil, That's another thing. Romanian used to use the Cyrillic Alphabet. Romanian from the 19th century used plenty of Slavic words derived from Old Church Slavonic. A campaign in the 19th century was established by the intelligentsia in Romania to revitalized the language with Latin/French words. Obviously, it took time to have people use Latin/French derived words over Slavic words but it happened. This is not to say that Romanian did not have Latin based words prior to the loan word (neologisms) effort. Again, even to this day, there are variants of Romanian that prefer using some words in Slavic while others in Latin/French. There are still some words from Slavic that only can be said in Slavic, not Latin/French.

    • @roromil2441
      @roromil2441 Před 6 lety +3

      @Guillermo Rivas
      It wasn't a campaign, it was a current among some members of the intelligentsia. It ended in failure during the 1870s, after only a few decades of existence. Its promoters were ridiculed and sidelined for attempting to create an artificial language. Their effort was also too weak to impact the language spoken by the large masses of illiterate peasants. You should not confuse this current/campaign with the process that saw Romania's multilingual (but mainly French-speaking) elites starting using neologisms on a wide scale. This was a natural process. Today, since many Romanians speak English, neologisms are entering the language from English.

  • @ivanamilic5269
    @ivanamilic5269 Před 6 lety +7

    In Serbia, we say duvan for tobacco. I never heard of tutun, but I asked my friend from south of Serbia, and he knows for tutun.

    • @pezos5
      @pezos5 Před 6 lety +4

      Duvan je došao iz arapskog preko turskog, a tutun/тютюн je direktno iz turskog.

  • @valiyamammad-zada1851
    @valiyamammad-zada1851 Před 6 lety +12

    I like your channel too much. Greetings from Azerbaijan ;)

  • @dj3us
    @dj3us Před 6 lety +7

    7:06
    It’s “сокира”/“sokıra”, not “топор”/“topor”
    But there’s also “топір”/“topir”, a battle axe.

  • @JOKER-yj2ep
    @JOKER-yj2ep Před 5 lety +35

    In Ukrainian not Топор correct Сокира

    • @JOKER-yj2ep
      @JOKER-yj2ep Před 3 lety +1

      @Alexandru Dorosevici It's's really interesting that we have so many similar words)

    • @JOKER-yj2ep
      @JOKER-yj2ep Před 3 lety

      @Alexandru Dorosevici Yeah, absolutely agree with you! That's why it wasn't too hard for me to learn Polish language. I've spent just one year to learn it and use it well.
      Do you learn or already know some Slavic languages, of course apart from Romanian?

    • @JOKER-yj2ep
      @JOKER-yj2ep Před 3 lety

      @Alexandru Dorosevici Awesome! If you want to practice or improve your knowledge in those leanguages just let me know. Ukrainian and Russian are my native and I'm even good at Polish, but still trying to become better in it.

    • @ian72marian
      @ian72marian Před 3 lety

      In Romania topor is for wood cutting and secure was for war. secure is the bigger one.

  • @DigUrOwnHole
    @DigUrOwnHole Před 6 lety +45

    I really enjoyed it as I am a romanian and I was able to understand everything that (beautiful) girl said. All the best to my Ukrainian brothers. peace and love

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +2

      Thank you for watching:) we'll have many more Romanian videos in the future. I hope you enjoy them :)

    • @3wL7
      @3wL7 Před 6 lety +5

      Bahador Alast
      Maybe you could change the Romanian guy with another Romanian because he doesn't know a few basic Romanian words ("slava" and "milostiv") which is quite shocking. (I'm Romanian)

    • @darthghitza8037
      @darthghitza8037 Před 5 lety +2

      @@3wL7 I'm also Romanian born here and been living here for all 30 years of my life. While I agree with you that it was strange to see him not know "slava" and "milostiv"... let's not be so fast to judge. Yes, it is almost impossible to find anyone in Romania not know those words, but Andrei has been living in Canada for the last 20 years. What is he 30 something? That means he probably relocated to Canada when he was a child and might not know some words that are used primary in religious or archaic contexts. That does not make him any less native then you or I, he was just never exposed to these words. In his mind probably he has other words like "glorie" and "iertator".

    • @3wL7
      @3wL7 Před 5 lety +5

      @@darthghitza8037
      These words are not archaic, they are daily used words, so there's no reason not to know them. "Glorie" is used less than "slavă" and "milostiv", "milos" come from "milă" (mercy) , different meaning than "iertare" (forgiveness), but, of course, I understand your point. Thank you.
      P.S. I still hope there is at least one Romanian out there, in Toronto, who knows Romanian language better than this guy.

    • @darthghitza8037
      @darthghitza8037 Před 5 lety

      @@3wL7 fair enough, I agree with you on "mila", but not on "slava". Mila is indeed highly used and not the same as "iertare", but "slava" you rarely hear except in church or old literal poems. Maybe it is more used in expressions like "l-a ridicat in slavi". Rest assured, there is at least one Romanian in Toronto that know Romanian as well as you or I. He is my manager that has relocated in Canada a few years ago.

  • @Camel9991
    @Camel9991 Před 6 lety +9

    It might work also with Polish and Romanian comparision as Ukrainian and Polish are very similar and words used in this vid are almost the same in PL or very easy to associate. I'm Polish, I know Russian, English (and I'm aware of Latin influence in English), little of Ukrainian too (and I want to learn more!) and I was studying Latin and lived in Bucharest for 10 months and learing Romanian and I can see how this language is great mix of Romance and Slavic languages which is great in my opinion :)
    Btw. Word "slave, sclavus, slav" came to western langauges from the name of Slavic nations as in Medieval times lot's of slaves were Slavic

    • @anyakosta364
      @anyakosta364 Před 3 lety +1

      Ya exactly the strong captured people casualty of wars and raids
      And they were pricey.......to change a whole nation world into your own
      Your own word for slave
      Just cause its convenient
      I demand a compensation
      From who ever uses word Slave
      !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
      Now days its possible
      😊

  • @pyotralferov4602
    @pyotralferov4602 Před 6 lety +54

    Kristina is very beautiful!

  • @virginianovara3656
    @virginianovara3656 Před 6 lety +19

    Please do also "Italian" against "Russian"

    • @rdtgr8
      @rdtgr8 Před 6 lety +7

      Ukrainian - Italian: palats - palazzo, fortetsia - fortezza, tsybulia - cippolo, kolior - colore, pomydor - pomodoro, maie ratsiiu - ha raggione

  • @thedamntrain5481
    @thedamntrain5481 Před 6 lety +24

    Romanian isnt so similar to russian it is more similar to french italian porthoghese spain

    • @Dr.Sheikh.Al.Hikmah
      @Dr.Sheikh.Al.Hikmah Před 5 lety +5

      The Damn Train It isn‘t similar at all with russian

    • @specialworld5080
      @specialworld5080 Před 5 lety +2

      Oui tu est=tu esti its similar pattiserié=patiserie viva la France Viva la Rumania

    • @ERACLAB
      @ERACLAB Před 5 lety +2

      it is romanic language and based on latin, Romanians just have quite a bit of slavic words in the vocabulary. But the way it is spoken it is super close to Italian and Italian is not even close to Russian.

    • @TheSaltube
      @TheSaltube Před 5 lety +1

      Portuguese- Quanto custa ? Romanian- Cât costa ? Portuguese- Qual é teu nome ? Romanian- Care-i numele tãu ?

    • @stefantrandafir1099
      @stefantrandafir1099 Před 5 lety

      @@TheSaltube it's "Cât costă" not "Câte costă". Also we have "ă", different from the portuguese "ã".

  • @gabraham12
    @gabraham12 Před 6 lety +26

    And this man looks typical romanian with his Roman features.

    • @Cris-hd1wb
      @Cris-hd1wb Před 6 lety +3

      Do we have sort of some facial features? 😂😂😂

    • @alpbars6260
      @alpbars6260 Před 6 lety +6

      What is typical roman features?

    • @summerguy5360
      @summerguy5360 Před 5 lety +1

      @@alpbars6260 People from the Roman empire, he meant that he looks like that.

    • @ranjanbiswas3233
      @ranjanbiswas3233 Před 5 lety +2

      Romanians are Dacians not Romans lol

  • @l.u.7834
    @l.u.7834 Před 5 lety +6

    We don't have "topor" in Ukrainian. It is сокира ( sokyra ), but we use a word топірець ( topiretz ) , and it's another type of an axe with a long handle for fighting.

    • @nichiforalbu9035
      @nichiforalbu9035 Před rokem

      Actuale Sokyra is word of Romanian origin, in Romanian we use- Secure synonym to Topor / from latin .section *(to cut ) Secureni=Cокиряни

    • @emilbologa7493
      @emilbologa7493 Před měsícem

      ​@@nichiforalbu9035ai dreptate. În română se spune săcure sau secure literar. Toporul este o secure mică. Sau toporas.

  • @mr.bunnywabbit2048
    @mr.bunnywabbit2048 Před 6 lety +10

    Thats interesting how even the romanian words that come from Latin still are like the Ukrainian words

    • @anyakosta364
      @anyakosta364 Před 3 lety +1

      Its Latin people that told you they come from Latin but who knows
      Where they truly do?
      Etruscans .....they can't even figure out where they came from....
      But they were there before all those smart Latin people.......
      Sarcastically speaking excuse me
      Please 😊

    • @cristianpaulnitulescu9715
      @cristianpaulnitulescu9715 Před 2 lety

      Not everything in romanian is latin about 15 to 20 percent is slavic

  • @radubalan421
    @radubalan421 Před 3 lety +2

    I live în Moldova, on the border with Ukraine and I speak romanian and I understand ukrainean but i can't speak it ( because i saw a ukrainean tv). Similar Word
    Țap - цап
    Graniță - граница
    Cravată - краватка

  • @Kw881234
    @Kw881234 Před 6 lety +2

    Nice! And how do you find all the similar words from all languages. Do you speak them all? XD Oo

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +3

      Thank you. I don't speak them all, I just do a lot of research :)

  • @pasdenom1153
    @pasdenom1153 Před 6 lety +3

    Heyyy! I hope that you will see my comment😊Well I just wanted to know if you could do a video about the similarities between French and Farsi 😊 I hope it will be possible ! Thanks again and I really like your videos 😊

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety

      Louise Thank you so much! Luckily I did see your comment, but a lot of CZcams comments go unnoticed, so if possible contact us in Facebook or Instagram in the future. And thank you for the suggestion. I hope to be able to arrange to that soon! Stay tuned :)

  • @OsefKincaid
    @OsefKincaid Před 6 lety +21

    It's insane how much this girl looks Ukrainian. Like, if I were to picture the stereotype of a Ukrainian girl in my head, it would be exactly this girl.

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 5 lety +1

      Not really. Her make up is very western style.

    • @debora-jq7rc
      @debora-jq7rc Před 3 lety +1

      @Markian Ramchuk same

  • @teodorstefanov870
    @teodorstefanov870 Před 6 lety

    Nice video. When will you do a bulgarian vs other language challenge?

  • @rudytheskull
    @rudytheskull Před 6 lety +10

    5:35 a slăvi, the romanian dude doesn't know a few common words (and at 5:55 he says "slav witch is slave" "sclav" is slave "slav" is used for slavs like serbians russians etc.)8:11 milostiv in rromanian means a person who is kind, forgivingf f

    • @TheMelopeus
      @TheMelopeus Před 5 lety

      I know right?

    • @serbanmihail481
      @serbanmihail481 Před 5 lety

      Slabii cei blonzi cu tenul alb ce par livizi slavesc fiind slavitori din calea afara, unii dinte ei sunt ciudosi, la slab in unele limbi slave se mai spune si chudo .....daca nu gresesc

    • @TheLudwigWan
      @TheLudwigWan Před 3 lety

      @@serbanmihail481 Despre ce vorbesti?

  • @Killl963
    @Killl963 Před 5 lety +4

    In slovak:
    peniaze or platba - money , peniaze
    tabak - tobacco,
    čítať - read,
    oči - eyes,
    pás - waist,
    reťaze - chains,
    bohatý - rich,
    dar - gift,
    mrkva - carrot,
    šálka, čaša - cup,
    sláva - glory,
    sekera - axe,
    slabý - weak
    In Romanian language is a lot of slavic words ;)

  • @user-pl3zh8lu3i
    @user-pl3zh8lu3i Před 6 lety +13

    some similar words to serbian
    () is Serbian
    plata (plata,Плата)
    citit (čitat,Читат)
    oči (oči,Очи)
    Bogat (Bogat,Богат)
    Dar (Dar,Дар)
    Morkov (Mrkva,Мрква or Šargarepa,Шаргарепа)
    Rude (Rod,Род)
    Češka (Čaša,Чаша)
    Slava (Slava,Слава)
    Slab (Slab,Слаб)
    so meny similar words in Serbian :P

    • @ivanamilic5269
      @ivanamilic5269 Před 6 lety +3

      Variations of word mrkva is used for carrot in Slavic languages, but in Serbia we use Hungarian word sárgarépa which translates to yellow beet (žuta repa). We write it Šargarepa/Шаргарепа.

    • @user-pl3zh8lu3i
      @user-pl3zh8lu3i Před 6 lety +3

      Ivana Milic ja sam srbin :P ali možemo reći i mrkva!
      znam za šargarepu ali u nekim krajevima se kaže mrkva :P
      ili bar ja kažem hehe

    • @ivanamilic5269
      @ivanamilic5269 Před 6 lety +1

      kako ides zapadnije sargarepa postaje mrkva

    • @rdtgr8
      @rdtgr8 Před 6 lety +1

      In Ukrainian bagatyi = "rich", bagato = "many", bagattia = "bonfire". Same in Sanskrit: bahu / bahula = "many", bahula / bhujyu = "fire", bhujyu / bahudhana = "rich"

    • @wyqtor
      @wyqtor Před 2 lety

      We probably got those words more from Serbian and Bulgarian as the Slavs migrated southwards.

  • @zensation9
    @zensation9 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm Romanian and got them all. "Slava", "milostiv".

  • @ulianadubei1034
    @ulianadubei1034 Před 6 lety

    Great video🌸

  • @yungmolon
    @yungmolon Před 6 lety +4

    Wow good video!👍

  • @adamirfan6986
    @adamirfan6986 Před 6 lety +10

    You should do malay and japanese...malay also using same words as japanese...

    • @Abelion_Jayakerto
      @Abelion_Jayakerto Před 6 lety

      really?? like... ? i think it's just a same words but hav a different means... (kami,sore,kita,buta)

    • @darknomad5600
      @darknomad5600 Před 6 lety

      I am not aware the relationship Malay has with Japanese. I know we Malays borrowed a lot from Arabic. Like "fikir(think) and "Sabun"(soap) Also we are closely related to the natives of the Philippines. So, we share many words with the Philipinos
      - a malay person from Singapore.

  • @HansMartinHammer
    @HansMartinHammer Před 5 lety +1

    We also use the word talje or talja, for waist, in the north germanic languages.

  • @gyulgin8575
    @gyulgin8575 Před 6 lety +4

    I Love you Video soooooo much ♡

  • @AlejandroLV
    @AlejandroLV Před 5 lety +5

    Im spaniard and ive learnt romanian, very beautiful language and i love it, pure latin, i love romanian people very nice people and romanian girls the hottest in the world (no joke) ❤️❤️❤️
    Sunt spaniol și am învățat românește, foarte frumoasă limbă și îmi place foarte mult, românii sunt lume excelemtă

  • @lovejpopforever
    @lovejpopforever Před 6 lety +32

    Why do people keep fighting about who we romanians really are? Some saying we're latin, some saying we're slavic. WE'RE BOTH. That's why it's a unique country. We've been invaded by so many different ethnics and we're all a huge ass mix, more slavic or more latin depending on which part of the country you're from. People that have gotten their DNA tested got a lot of Greek and Italian as well as eastern european, and even middle eastern so, calm down and accept that we're a very mixed country.

    • @truck965
      @truck965 Před 5 lety +5

      Yeah but still we are from Dacians and even more Back then cucuteni people

    • @davidgreen5994
      @davidgreen5994 Před 5 lety +3

      +Enchanting Genetically we may be more Slavic that we expect. I mean, for example, our beautiful women is something we share in common with the whole East Europe. But we managed to remain more latin culturally and ethnically to some degree... That why in the past our Slavic neighbors didn't like us... actually they don't like us that much today either.

    • @wolfajacksantorujack2224
      @wolfajacksantorujack2224 Před 5 lety +1

      Wrong This Country was A Latin speaking Country

    • @irinaderevolkov8281
      @irinaderevolkov8281 Před 5 lety +1

      we are not a mixed country our language came from Latin roots and nu spuneți lucruri pe care nu le știți bun ? nu am altceva de spus.

    • @Emhyruhere
      @Emhyruhere Před 5 lety +3

      @@irinaderevolkov8281 Hahahaha cu nume slavon raspunsi in acest fel.

  • @KameraArkasiTV
    @KameraArkasiTV Před 6 lety +2

    Bahador you do amazing things. You bring cultures together.
    ..
    Go boi ;))

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +2

      Thank you 😊😊

    • @KameraArkasiTV
      @KameraArkasiTV Před 6 lety

      Bahador Alast if you visit Germany tell me. İ will show you and your wife around :)

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety +1

      Awesome!! We will for sure! Thank you so much :)

  • @mkost8635
    @mkost8635 Před 6 lety +2

    As i staeted watching all your videos i realised that a lot of languages are very simular to macedonian. Serbian, croatian, bulgarian,ukranian,russian,turkish and now even romanian.😊 Please do a video of macedonian and any of this languages...

  • @COBRASPIN1
    @COBRASPIN1 Před 5 lety +3

    This guy from Romania doesn’t know anything about Romania. I’m Romanian and I don’t need to go to church to know the meaning of “milostiv” and “slava”. I’m wondering what he was doing in Romania.

  • @earthling1988
    @earthling1988 Před 6 lety +70

    albanian v.s romanian

  • @marcelbas
    @marcelbas Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting!
    Most similarities point to Slavic words that have been borrowed into Romanian.

  • @albertfarcas1533
    @albertfarcas1533 Před 3 lety

    btw 1 month ago i realised that dusman means enemy in romanian aswell as in arabic. I heard it in a Vice video talking about an attack on isis or some like that and while in the subtitles there was ''enemy mine'' i heard the word ''dusman'' from the guy talking.
    Does anyone have an idea on how did that word make it to romanian?

    • @destiaptah2197
      @destiaptah2197 Před rokem

      @@BahadorAlast Bahador, the word Dushman = Enemy comes from vedic sanscrit and not from persian or turkish.
      From vedic sanscrit also comes Romanian APA = water, Avestan AP = water and Farsi AAB = water or kurdish Av = water!
      Romanian Dushman = Enemy is a TRACO GETIC heritage and not turkish borrowing (we never ever lived together with turkish people) and its kind of stupid to say that Romanians never had the notion of enemy until the battles with Turks from 15 -16 century!
      The same is for Romanian APA = water which is not coming from latin AQUA!

  • @yasminhasanova8669
    @yasminhasanova8669 Před 5 lety +16

    Russian is my first language and I know about 90% of the words

    • @lordfrost3752
      @lordfrost3752 Před 5 lety +3

      From which country are you from ?

    • @yasminhasanova8669
      @yasminhasanova8669 Před 5 lety +3

      Lord Frost that’s a long story..

    • @lordfrost3752
      @lordfrost3752 Před 5 lety +2

      @@yasminhasanova8669 Give me the short one then. ^_^

    • @TheEroina
      @TheEroina Před 3 lety

      if you're from Ukraine then it would make since their people speak both Ukrainian and Russian very fluently.

  • @narcismihai9400
    @narcismihai9400 Před 5 lety +6

    You should choose a better Romanian speaker, Andrei doesn’t know Romanian!!!0️⃣

  • @colinafobe2152
    @colinafobe2152 Před 5 lety +2

    Romanian brothers, pronunciation of Serbian is more similar to neighboring Romanian but of course Ukrainian is Slavic language and therefore more generally understandable to Serbian

  • @Skywalker0021
    @Skywalker0021 Před 6 lety

    Nice One :) still i wait Bulgarian :P , amazing videos :)

  • @biancahotca3244
    @biancahotca3244 Před 4 lety +5

    Wow!! We really do have a lot of Slavic words, influences in our language, Romanian.

  • @IonComan9019
    @IonComan9019 Před 6 lety +7

    Hello! Slava=Slavă(a slăvii pe cineva) to "phrase somebody) he was emotioned; also Milostiv=humble(in religious way) in romanian hehe. But he is a gr8 person and she also:P Let's unite :) Ukraine+Romania=

    • @IonComan9019
      @IonComan9019 Před 6 lety

      Nu-ti perite sa vorbesti urat despre fratii nostrii sârbi:). Nu exista natie in afara celor din Republica Moldova care-s de fapt alipiti sau asa ar trebuii, care sa fie mai apropiati decat fostii Yugoslavi exceptand Macedonia Albania, Kosovo si Bosnia. Sarbii dar chiar si Slovacii si Bulgarii si Croatii sunt frati frati cu românii.

    • @merkelvanneinderman9562
      @merkelvanneinderman9562 Před 4 lety

      Ion Coman NU SUNTEM FRATI!

    • @IonComan9019
      @IonComan9019 Před 4 lety

      @@merkelvanneinderman9562 Părerea ta. Eu cred că România cu Yugoslavia sunt frați. Chiar dacă în ultimii 200 ani ne-am pierdut mult.. Dar istoric mai ales pre medieval, era o mare familie tracă.

    • @IonComan9019
      @IonComan9019 Před 4 lety

      Chiar ieri vorbeam cu un croat si ii spuneam sa lase ura daca are asa ceva fața de sârbi, pentru că sunt unul și același popor.

    • @merkelvanneinderman9562
      @merkelvanneinderman9562 Před 4 lety +1

      Ion Coman SUNT FRATE CU VLAHII. DAR NU CU SLAVII!

  • @petrisormarianion918
    @petrisormarianion918 Před 4 lety +1

    Super.very nice channel!

  • @nur-alijanqojayev329
    @nur-alijanqojayev329 Před 2 lety

    I'm from Qazaqstan and that's very interesting how yhose languageges(romanian and slavic) has turkic words. Such as tyutyun- Tütün wich is mean smonke in Qazaq language. We even have word Sirti bütün, ishi tütün. Means fine in outside but smoke(bad) in inside.

  • @ewawisniewski897
    @ewawisniewski897 Před 6 lety +4

    Andrei is hot! I'm gonna subscribe to his channel just for that.

  • @hom0faber
    @hom0faber Před 6 lety +35

    Georgian-Russian please.

    • @oleh3415
      @oleh3415 Před 4 lety

      @Parma zyxwvu thats not

  • @furkanseker1742
    @furkanseker1742 Před 6 lety +2

    Hello! I am from Turkey. I love watching your videos. Can you also take a video about ZAZAKİ. Thank you.

  • @darknomad5600
    @darknomad5600 Před 6 lety

    What is Andrei's channel name?

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před 6 lety

      czcams.com/channels/bYlR5DwTtMYBlBWvm4bsaA.html

  • @aviaxis6261
    @aviaxis6261 Před rokem +3

    the Romanian dude doesn't know the most common Romanian words

  • @maxkowalski4609
    @maxkowalski4609 Před 6 lety +4

    Topor is "Сокира" in ukrainian, the word "Топор" is russian

  • @heminh157
    @heminh157 Před 6 lety +4

    in Kurdish:
    tawr = axe
    tutin = tobacco
    same

    • @alonelymockbird3899
      @alonelymockbird3899 Před 3 lety

      Tutun is a turkish word bulgarians kurds romanians albanian borrowed it

  • @raduu1165
    @raduu1165 Před 6 lety +1

    Vreți să îmi vedeți ultimul video?Nu mă laud dar o să vă placă sigur

  • @andreidumitru6473
    @andreidumitru6473 Před 6 lety +6

    Probably in order to make it harder for the girl, most of the words the Romanian guy was given to say are not of slavic origin. "Plata, citire, ochi" are evidently Latin; "talie" is French, "dar" is Greek, while "topor and tutun" are Turkish words. Only bogat and "rude" are slavic.

    • @sylvarias
      @sylvarias Před 5 lety +4

      Except "plata" and "a citi" are Slavic :))

    • @ppn194
      @ppn194 Před 4 lety

      Dar is Latin, topor, slavonic, tutun is not Turkish but came thru Turkish, actual tiutiun. Dar este latin, dorois Greek, I-E common root.

  • @Dariush090909
    @Dariush090909 Před 6 lety +3

    Well done, Bahador-jan, as usual. Thank you so much😊.
    Please, do such languages similarities challenges:
    1. Romanian vs Moldovan
    2. Ukrainian vs Polish
    3. Ukrainian vs Moldovan
    4. Ukrainian vs Russian
    5. Polish vs Russian

    • @manuelab5593
      @manuelab5593 Před 6 lety +6

      Moldova is the part of Romania that Russia took after the second world war, separating families even for a half of century. Before that they were Romanian citizens and spoke Romanian, after the Russians wanted to brainwash them and told them your language is now called moldovian, but anyway, you MUST speak Russian. Therefore, Moldovian is Romanian just like some people in Belgium speak French. There is no language called Moldovian.

    • @Dariush090909
      @Dariush090909 Před 6 lety

      May be you're right, bro, but trust me that around 2 years ago i saw by my own eyes some Moldovan language articles (Лимба Молдовеняскэ/Limba Moldovenească, Language code: mo) in Wikipedia. Now all those articles already disappeared actually or at least there're no links on them in other languages' articles in Wikipedia!

    • @Dariush090909
      @Dariush090909 Před 6 lety

      Ok, may be you're right, but what about that? Here --- czcams.com/video/jYdvSrH6Jxg/video.html

    • @manuelab5593
      @manuelab5593 Před 6 lety +3

      Dariush090909 it's a political thing. The Russification which to a certain level is still present. Moldovan historically was in both sides. Romania has half of the historical Moldova and they speak exactly the same language as the ones across the river, but no Moldovian from Romanian side think that's a separate language and would find the claims ridiculous

    • @manuelab5593
      @manuelab5593 Před 6 lety +2

      Dariush090909 it's like India split into India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka amd some Bengali speaking people remained in the Indian side and the rest are now in Bangladesh. They still speak the same language. The split only happened after World war 2, you can't have a different language by now. Those articles you saw were politically based. They are trying to distance the Moldovians from the Romanian identity as there is a strong belief that they should reunite with Romania in some parts of the population as they were forcefully split from us

  • @belaczako1102
    @belaczako1102 Před 3 lety

    Csitít is also used in hungarian but in a completly different meaning.

  • @cresomello7872
    @cresomello7872 Před 5 lety

    Amei esses relatos.

  • @msakov
    @msakov Před 6 lety +7

    Tütün(тютюн) is Turkish actually , it is interesting to hear from an east Slavic language

    • @deniz-qm1tu
      @deniz-qm1tu Před 6 lety +2

      There are hundreds of Turkish (Turkic actually) words in Ukrainian and Russian. But this word is a little bit different because Turkish Tütün was very famous in the past.

    • @grobarcina9464
      @grobarcina9464 Před 6 lety +2

      deniz the thing is, there is Alot of Serbian and generally Slavic words in Turkish also. But people tend to forget that, how do you say queen and king BTW? Not talking about sultan.
      Quite interesting.

    • @deniz-qm1tu
      @deniz-qm1tu Před 6 lety +1

      Yes, there are, but not a lot. I'm sure Balkan and Eastern Turks have more Slavic words in their languages. Because it's been a long time since Serbs, Bosniaks, Croats and Turkey Turks lived together.

    • @msakov
      @msakov Před 6 lety +1

      CrackScene 3DM "Kral" and" Kraliçe "

    • @grobarcina9464
      @grobarcina9464 Před 6 lety +1

      deniz ofc but there is, I think there is somewhere around a 5/1 8/1 ratio. Aka turkisk words in Serbian and Serbian or Slavic words in Turkish.
      Mostly military terms I belive as we were the core of the jannissarie.

  • @vikinglego4946
    @vikinglego4946 Před 4 lety +4

    Excuse me, but "topor" - is not correct in Ukrainan languge! Correct is a "сокира" (Sokyra).

    • @kriogen131
      @kriogen131 Před 4 lety

      But in Romania you can say at ,,topor"(axe) ,, săcure"...

    • @livics610
      @livics610 Před 4 lety +1

      We also have ,,secúre" in ro

  • @reeceb1259
    @reeceb1259 Před 6 lety +2

    I fucking love that painting

  • @andreinita1367
    @andreinita1367 Před 4 lety +1

    just 10 up to 15 % of Romanian words have slavic origins but in this video they used most of the words from that category

  • @sergeydrokin2820
    @sergeydrokin2820 Před 2 lety +4

    Румынский - это романский язык, украинский - восточнославянский. Хотя схожей лексики немало, наверное, ибо народы соседствующие и на оба языка оказывал влияние в свое время греческий, не говоря уже о латыни и других европейских языков

  • @cristinadamian9942
    @cristinadamian9942 Před 6 lety +3

    I always thought that the easiest language for us to understand is Italian , I didn't know Ukrainian is so similar to Romanian too.

    • @MsCristea
      @MsCristea Před rokem

      It's not similar at all. Even we, Romanians from Moldova can understand about 70% in the best case scenario even though we know Russian. They obviously cherrypicked Slavinisms in Romanian and Latinisms in Ukrainian.

    • @the-guesser
      @the-guesser Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@MsCristeayea like ochi it's definitely latin from oculus or ochio in italian barley similar while italian and romanian are like 80% similar prob more similar then french is and even above that romanian has word that are of latin origin but are a different synonym that don't still exist in other latin languages like strugure (grape) comes from strubulus because g and b often get confused and also r and l so at one point it prob was strubule

  • @yousufshah3342
    @yousufshah3342 Před 6 lety +1

    Do some videos with urdu i love that language it sounds very good...

  • @carlosdoriaespitia
    @carlosdoriaespitia Před 3 lety +1

    It's curious, in colloquial Colombian Spanish we call the money plata (silver) instead of dinero. You owe me money - me debes plata.

    • @destiaptah2197
      @destiaptah2197 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes and that is because PLATA = PAYMENT is not a slavic word but a Romanian word coming from latin PLATUM = TO GET EVEN.

  • @surrealsoul9120
    @surrealsoul9120 Před 6 lety +7

    Nice video!
    A few small corrections - "axe" in Ukrainian is "sokyra". There's also a dialectal word, but it's "topir" with an "i"; "topor" is Russian.
    And "weak" is "slabkyj/слабкий", as all male adjectives end with an "yj"/"ий".
    Also, "mylostyvyj" isn't really used that much in Ukrainian anymore, so no wonder both of them had a hard time with it :)

    • @rdtgr8
      @rdtgr8 Před 6 lety

      milost' actualy is OCL limited meaning, in Polish milosc is something else ;)

    • @angeltudorescu2410
      @angeltudorescu2410 Před 6 lety

      Surreal Soul But in Romanian we also use "săcure"(Sakure) for axe

  • @user-mp6cj5he1o
    @user-mp6cj5he1o Před 2 lety +26

    Vive l'Ukraine 🇺🇦🕊️🇷🇴
    I love Ukrainians and Romanians 🇺🇦💕🇷🇴

  • @Sandrabiancacccc
    @Sandrabiancacccc Před 2 lety +1

    Andrei” didint grew up religiously”, but it’s kinda funny though you can’t miss those words if you live in Romania, or have relatives from there, it’s strange he didn’t knew Those words milostivă and slavă….

  • @EM-wr9yy
    @EM-wr9yy Před 2 lety +2

    God, I can’t believe that there are so many comments criticizing Andrei for not knowing two words like slava and milosiv. Seriously? He lived almost all his life in Canada and some of you that grew up here don’t even know how to use the hyphen correctly.
    Îmi pare rău pentru asta, Andrei. ♥️

    • @destiaptah2197
      @destiaptah2197 Před 2 lety +1

      Da, Hombre, dar omul realizeaza videoclipuri despre LIMBA ROMANA...nu engleza/quebequase!
      Omul nu stie cuvinte sau sinonime pentru acele cuvinte de baza ale limbii Romane.
      Nu e vorba numai de Mila sau Slava (care oricum nu sunt cu adevarat cuvinte slavone sau autohtone ci LATINE...caci limba bisericii crestine primare era alcatuita din cuvinte latine, grecesti si ebraice...care au patruns si in limba romana si in limbile slave partial) este vorba si de multe alte cuvinte de baza ale limbii romane pe care nu le stie...am vazut mai multe videoclipuri cu el!
      Ori invata limba romana cu adevarat ori se ocupa de altceva ....sau suporta criticile!

    • @alexandra9944
      @alexandra9944 Před rokem

      @@destiaptah2197 Da, exact. Sa nu mai spun ca are dictia foarte proasta.

    • @alexandra9944
      @alexandra9944 Před rokem

      His Canadian English accent is really bad as well...