How to pronounce Ukrainian cities in English 🇺🇦

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • How should we pronounce Ukrainian place names in English? How do you pronounce Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson in Ukrainian, and how do we render these into normal English phonetics? This video will teach you the Ukrainian and English pronunciations of several Ukrainian regions and cities, and also train you to figure out the pronunciation of any other Ukrainian name.
    Мої українські друзі, якщо я зробив помилку у вимові чи написанні, залиште коментар нижче! Велике спасибі. Слава Україні. 🔱
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    Intro and outro music: Overture of Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) by Mozart
    Other music: Five Ukrainian Folk Songs arranged for piano by Rafał Bienias - Ой у лузі червона калина (Oy u luzi chervona kalyna), Червона рута (Chervona Ruta), Ой ти місяцю (Oy Ty Misyatsyu) Oh You Dear Moon, Ой, ти Галю (Woe to You, Halya), Чорнії брови, карії очі Dark Brows, Brown Eyes.
    00:00 Intro
    00:17 Crimea
    01:27 Sevastopol, Melitopol, Mariupol
    02:52 Kherson
    05:14 oblast
    06:01 Dnipro
    06:41 Kakhovka
    07:35 Zaporizhzhia
    08:36 Donetsk
    08:47 Luhansk
    09:03 Donbas
    09:24 Bakhmut
    09:55 Lyman
    10:09 Berdyansk
    10:33 Sumy
    10:52 Rivne
    11:26 Kharkiv
    11:38 Izyum
    11:55 Lviv
    12:04 Mykolaiv
    12:22 Odesa
    12:34 Odessa & Kiev or Odesa & Kyiv?
    15:47 How to figure out any Ukrainian pronunciation
    17:57 Lviv Opera House

Komentáře • 591

  • @polyMATHY_Luke
    @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +97

    CORRECTIONS
    In Ukrainian Дніпро [dn⁽ʲ⁾iˈprɔ] has the stress accent on the FINAL syllable, not the first. If we follow the same principle I applied to Sevastopol, Kherson, and Bakhmut, where we maintain the same accented syllable as in Ukrainian we should say "nee-PRO" in English.

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 Před rokem +3

      I say the D. /dni.ˈpɹʌw/. A lot of other English speakers probably want to add a schwa but for me its not that hard cause you just nasalize the /d/ midway before you release.

    • @beepboop204
      @beepboop204 Před rokem

      fun stuff!

    • @TonyVarious
      @TonyVarious Před rokem +5

      Absolutely nailing it! Very good pronuciation even in difficult cases, like Запоріжжя (with double "ж" and release to "я"), Львів (with "ь" between consonants) and Миколаїв.
      Also Київ is pretty close, but "-їв" part should be closer to how you pronounced Миколаїв.
      And huge thanks for the video!

    • @shwabb1
      @shwabb1 Před rokem

      Also you pronounced Рівне as Ривне, and didn't palatalize the zhzh in Zaporizhzhia.
      Besides that, the pronunciations where perfect. Great job!

    • @deemuss
      @deemuss Před rokem

      Yup. Dnee-Pro, like Mac Pro

  • @user-pq3pv4hp2e
    @user-pq3pv4hp2e Před rokem +181

    Amazing pronunciation in ukrainian, even sometimes sounds as native

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +43

      That’s very nice of you to say. I have a lot to learn, but hopefully I’ll keep improving.

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před 6 měsíci

      Unlike certain other ”polyglot, pronunciation teacher”, who should have remained as a wine expert 😅.

  • @OlehKushnjr
    @OlehKushnjr Před rokem +53

    Being Ukrainian myself, I tip the hat for the correctness and pronunciation 🎩
    And yes, please, Kyiv and Odesa! 🫶🏻 We’ll greatly appreciate 🤝🏻

  • @The0Stroy
    @The0Stroy Před rokem +40

    Zaporizhzhia means "Land/Place/Island Beyond Rapids" - in reference to rapids on the Dnipro River. It was the capital of the Ukrainian Cossacks Host - thus they were called "Zaporizhzhian Cossacks".

  • @annafirnen4815
    @annafirnen4815 Před rokem +46

    Now I finally know why Milan is "Mediolan" in Polish, should have figured we took those names from Latin. Although Venice we call "Wenecja", which is closer to "Venezia" in Italian I reckon. And Florence became "Florencja".

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +16

      Both of those are also from the Mediaeval Latin.

    • @ArturoSubutex
      @ArturoSubutex Před rokem +5

      Medieval Latin pronounced -tia essentially as Italian -zia and Polish -cja so Wenecja could just as well come directly from Latin Venetia

    • @herman-mossur
      @herman-mossur Před rokem +1

      As for me, Włochy is more interesting word to define Italy)))

    • @erichamilton3373
      @erichamilton3373 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Włochy comes from the same root as "Wales"...Germanic name for Romance or Celtic areas.

    • @rdrrr
      @rdrrr Před 2 měsíci

      @@erichamilton3373 This is the source of "Wallachia" and "Vlach" as well, right?

  • @Hadrianus01
    @Hadrianus01 Před rokem +35

    Interesting video! I noticed that the media and people in general started saying "Kyiv" instead of "Kiev" when the Ukraine War broke out in 2022 (growing up in the 90s, the Ukrainian capital was always "Kiev" to me). I don't recall any explanation for this shift being explicitly provided. I assumed it was an sign of solidarity and support for Ukraine.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +16

      Thanks! You have it right; that’s exactly what it is. Like I said in the video, it’s an optional change that I happen to support.

    • @johnridout6540
      @johnridout6540 Před rokem +10

      @@polyMATHY_Luke The problem is that when English speakers see "Kyiv" they often say something more like "Keef"

    • @johnridout6540
      @johnridout6540 Před rokem +2

      @@servantofaeie1569 I say /'ki:ev/ in English, but I think /'ki:f/ is taking over, because people are trying to pronounce "Kyiv".
      I say [ˈkɪjiu̯] in Ukrainian. That last sound is much closer to a "w" in English than a "v" or an "f".

    • @phil3924
      @phil3924 Před rokem

      They were priming the pump for war and trying to get people to buy in. This propaganda machine pushing the war is next level.

    • @pirukiddingme1908
      @pirukiddingme1908 Před rokem +2

      I grew up with “Kiev” too, I think the best way to say its true Ukrainian name in my accent would be /kjiːv/, not sure if removing the second s in Odes(s)a is going to catch on so easily though

  • @alexkent998
    @alexkent998 Před rokem +22

    I'm from Ukraine and haven't yet learned all the names of the cities of my own country in English) So, I'm very grateful! 🔥
    And by the way, your pronunciation is awesome 👍🏻 maybe even better than ours sometimes 😂

  • @malter87
    @malter87 Před rokem +48

    your pronunciations are incredibly good... of all kinds of languages!
    I'm really jealous of how well you pronounce words in both english as well as other languages!
    it's super impressive!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +7

      Very kind! I have lots to improve upon.

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před 10 měsíci

      Yea and on top of that he sounds so nicely, especially in Latin.

  • @MelnFamily
    @MelnFamily Před rokem +67

    As a Ukrainian, I didn’t knew even a half of this information 😅 thanks for amazing video! Watching your videos starting from speaking Latin in Rome

  • @deemuss
    @deemuss Před rokem +14

    OMG. I am Ukrainian, and I think this guide is perfect. Speaking about the 'historic' vs. 'modern' city names, I always try to learn the way the locals call them: this both shows respect and makes it easier to read departure boards in the airports or at the stations. That is why I was happy to visit Köln (while some may say it is Cologne), Antwerpen (I did not know it is Antwerp) and İzmir (not Smyrna). Thank you for the video!

    • @askarufus7939
      @askarufus7939 Před 9 měsíci

      In polish Köln is Kolonia which is funny because in Poland Kolonia is a popular name of village "suburbs", near the border of a village, so called middle of nowhere. If a village is named Wólka then it's sort of a "center", but Wólka-Kolonia is a victim of jokes.

  • @nonameuserua
    @nonameuserua Před rokem +30

    As a proud Zaporižžian, I thank you, polýMathy, for your excellent work and hope it’ll help many stop mispronouncing my city & region’s names 😅
    Slava Ukrajini 💙💛 vse bude dobre

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +13

      Героям слава! 🔱
      Yes, haha, I got really tired of hearing people pronounce it zapper-neetsa. 😆 As English speakers we’re normally quite confused by something like zhzh in writing, but it’s not that hard to deal with once you get past the orthography. Дякую!

    • @nonameuserua
      @nonameuserua Před rokem +10

      @@polyMATHY_Luke Нема за що, це Вам подяка! Was incredibly pleasant to hear you speaking this Ukrainianly!
      As for the zh and other such digraphs (sometimes tetragraphs, like shch), hope it would be slightly easier if some new official “desovietised” romanisation was introduced, with diacritics instead of letter combinations

    • @nonameuserua
      @nonameuserua Před rokem +5

      @Работаем, брат! source: trust me bro
      this bot graduated from the finest shawarma stand in all of St Petersburg

    • @STikER326
      @STikER326 Před rokem +2

      ​@Работаем, брат! You have no saying in the matter while your country is killing our people. Crawl back to your swamp.

    • @phil3924
      @phil3924 Před rokem

      What is the nickname of the car the Soviets made there?

  • @kirillkrasnobayev8681
    @kirillkrasnobayev8681 Před rokem +64

    Fun fact, most western Ukrainian oblast capitals have their separate names in German and/or Polish/Hungarian/Romainan. For example Lviv is also Lemberg and Lwów, while Chernivtsi is also Czernowitz or Cernăuți. And those toponyms are often used within those countries instead of universally accepted versions.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +14

      Very cool

    • @spooderman9122
      @spooderman9122 Před rokem +14

      ​​@@polyMATHY_Luke Actually there are even more names in yiddish slovakian latin and in almost every language in Europe. The yiddish is לעמבעריק (Lèmberik), slovakian Ľvov and latin Leopolis.

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +2

      I'm a bit disappointed that German has stopped using many of them.

    • @adrianokury
      @adrianokury Před rokem +3

      Exonyms.

    • @francisdec1615
      @francisdec1615 Před rokem +6

      It used to be Lemberg in Swedish too. Swedes used to use the same names for cities and regions in central and eastern Europe as the Germans did, at least until the end of WWI. In some cases we still use those names. The region where Lviv/Lwow/Lemberg is situated is still Galizien in Swedish. Moldova is Moldavien (Moldawien in German). Bratislava used to be Pressburg. Warsaw Warschau. Poznan Posen. Etc etc etc.

  • @user-cr3pj2nr4e
    @user-cr3pj2nr4e Před rokem +21

    There is another city with a "polis" part Nikopol. Enki Bilal named his comic book character after him. Thank you for your work.

  • @jsaysyay
    @jsaysyay Před rokem +10

    love to see you do a video on this, i've spent a bit now trying to learn how to say places and words in Ukrainian since it's what my not-too-distant ancestors spoke, also so i can say their names correctly. Ideally i can actually speak it when i visit one day. one thing that ends up being a convenience for me is that due to me becoming aware of the outer world in the 2010s is that i didn't have to learn any new names/switch any

  • @user-um7cf8nt1q
    @user-um7cf8nt1q Před 3 měsíci +2

    Дуже цікаве та актуальне відео, дякую!

  • @MenelionFR
    @MenelionFR Před rokem +6

    Luke, I… lack for words. That's just incredible, your pronunciation is extremely good, and I'm super grateful for your effort! It's always great to know that a person whose videos I appreciate so much is a true human with a big heart. Thank you so much, hugs to you and greetings to your dearest ones, be blessed and happy! Дуже дякую за це відео!

  • @martinbenca9863
    @martinbenca9863 Před 11 měsíci +3

    As a linguistics student, enthusiast of phonetics and native speaker of Slovak, I'm very happy to see this profound and awesome phonetic adaptation of the names. This video just soothes my heart 😂 Thank you! 😁

  • @TheOlgaSasha
    @TheOlgaSasha Před 11 měsíci +7

    Thanks a lot for my native city Cernihiv - one of the oldest cities of ancient Rus and modern Ukraine (we will celebrate 1320 y.o. in 2024). Only Kyiv is older (celebrated 1541 y.o. this year) if not to mention the former Greek polices in the south). We pronounce the name of city in Ukrainian more like: Cher'nihif. And even in Russian we say Chyer'nihaf, because Ukrainians do not say hard "g" like Russians (as well as southern Russians also say "h" instead of "g"). Also Chernihiv is near Belarus border so here you can hear some mix of Ukrainian and Belarusian language, which is close to Polessian dialects of Ukrainian and Belarusian languages. That is why Chernihiv is also often pronounced as Cher'nihaw ("w" is pronounced close to English "w"), especially in northern parts of the oblast (close to Belarusian pronunciation "Tshar'nihau"). Belaruses pronounce "Ch" as hard sound like CZ in Polish, while in standard Ukrainian "Ch" is much more milder, and in Russian "ch" is always mild (like ć in Polish).

    • @liudmylab2328
      @liudmylab2328 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Ghernihiv is not only one of the oldest cities but also one of the most beautiful🥰

    • @TheOlgaSasha
      @TheOlgaSasha Před 10 měsíci

      @@liudmylab2328 1320%😉

  • @Tentacius
    @Tentacius Před rokem +6

    I think it often boils down to this: spelling vs pronunciation. Either you keep the ‘proper’ spelling (the endonym) and absolutely butcher the pronunciation (because your own language operates on a different phonological rulebook) or you butcher the spelling in order to most closely approximate the ‘proper’ pronunciation. Some languages are more phonetically analogous and thus require less tweaking, some require great compromise by disregarding either spelling or pronunciation (or by giving up on both and savouring creative ignorance)
    And then, as you’ve shown, there’s etymology. Very often, foreign versions of a name retain some older spelling feature that was present in the original spelling but was lost in the language of the home country. ‘Florence’ retains the and of Latin ‘Florentia‘ that Italian has lost, ‘Odessa’ keeps the of the Greek root. It’s not all too different for Kiev/Kyiv and its old Ruthenian ancestor.
    I, for one, admit to having somewhat of a soft spot for maintaining an older and etymologically more faithful orthography whenever possible. But, of course, language adapts to new realities and it serves the people speaking it, not vice versa. In the end, it’s all merely a balancing act between written language, spoken language, history, culture, politics and - most important of all - the great duality of fervour and laziness present in every single one of us.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the comment. Those are important points to consider.

  • @dymytryruban4324
    @dymytryruban4324 Před rokem +6

    The largest Ukrainian port city has a Greek name: Οδησσός. It is Odessos in Ancient Greek and Odissos in Modern.

  • @zc32-official
    @zc32-official Před rokem +18

    In my native language (Greek for anyone wondering) we use the names derived from Russian, via other European languages. (Κίεβο for Kyiv, Δνείπερος for Dnipro). We never really changed it to support Ukraine, it’s just that the names have been used for a long time that we never really decided to change it, I guess.

    • @dymytryruban4324
      @dymytryruban4324 Před 11 měsíci +4

      In Croatia there is a region Kninska Krajina where a village Kijevo is located.

    • @Zaporizhzhian
      @Zaporizhzhian Před 5 měsíci +1

      It's sad, bc 1000 years ago, here were: Kyiv Chernihiv, Dnipro, and Pereiaslav. Old "Russian" is a rightfully old version of Ukrainian.

  • @mektheblack
    @mektheblack Před rokem +4

    I didn't quite get why English speakers say "k" for "х". I may be butchering, Russian/Ukrainian but I just say it as I'd pronounce "ch/h" in Polish and it seems far from "k". That combined with "zh" transliteration makes my head explode when I see transliterated Ukrainian/Russian cities or names haha

  • @Djadja_Valera
    @Djadja_Valera Před rokem +8

    A nice and interesting video,it is going to be helpful to English speaking people! And by the way my place of birth is Lugans’k, I lived there until 2014.

  • @alexeyleontyev1249
    @alexeyleontyev1249 Před rokem +4

    Thank you for the great video Luke! And I really appreciate your choice for the soundtrack!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +3

      Thanks, Alexey! I’m not familiar with many Ukrainian folk songs, but I was hopeful that they would sound familiar and appropriate to my Ukrainian audience, while simultaneously acquainting non-Ukrainians with your musical tradition.

  • @TarikBest10
    @TarikBest10 Před rokem +1

    Amazing job you did! Thanks for this video!

  • @CreidaChalk
    @CreidaChalk Před 7 měsíci +3

    Wow, a huge and amazing work was done in this video. And your Ukrainian prononciation is wonderful. Thank you!

  • @PCH12r
    @PCH12r Před rokem +1

    This is great video thanks. Lukius!

  • @ninokarazovic9131
    @ninokarazovic9131 Před 11 měsíci +5

    There's also a thing that used to happen in (some) South Slavic languages. In historical sources you can find -pol replaced with -polje (in many cases but not all). Polje literally means a field if translated to English. So you can find Galipolje (Gelibolu, Gallipoli, a city in Turkey today), Sebastopolje (Sevastopol), Melitopolje (Melitopol), Nikopolje (Nikopol, a town in Bulgaria, also a town in Ukraine) and so on. Not sure if it happened purely out of similarity between -pol and -polje or why it did at all, but ye, it happened. In recent times and in modern speech i haven't heard anyone using -polje versions (apart from Galipolje but rarely).
    Great video as allways,
    Cheers!
    P.s. Constantinople (Konstantinopol, Istanbul) was weirdly enough never called Konstantinopolje but there is another (South) Slavic name for it, Carigrad (Car/Tzar - Emperor, Grad - City).

  • @alicehu0
    @alicehu0 Před rokem +7

    The latter half of "Singapore" also happens to be related to the "-pol" suffix!

  • @user-xo1hl9oj4m
    @user-xo1hl9oj4m Před 11 měsíci +1

    Beautiful video!!! Thank you!

  • @gwawd
    @gwawd Před rokem +1

    Thank you for your work!

  • @bakerzermatt
    @bakerzermatt Před rokem +4

    Great video!
    Well explained about Kiev/Kyiv!
    The one sound that people can't seem to get right is 'zh', despite it being an English sound (treaSure).

  • @mollof7893
    @mollof7893 Před rokem +2

    Most news I hear is in Swedish, so it sounds so unusual when /x/ is pronounced /k/. When romanising Cyrilic, we typicaly write /x/ as .

  • @ingvarjensen1088
    @ingvarjensen1088 Před měsícem

    I could listen to your soothing voice for hours. Besides that, you're such a pronunciation genius 🤗

  • @tariver1693
    @tariver1693 Před rokem +5

    9:58 I'm surprised that you didn't mention that Lyman also comes from Greek.
    λιμένας - port, dock, harbor.

    • @dymytryruban4324
      @dymytryruban4324 Před 11 měsíci +1

      From Greek through Turkic languages. In Turkish "havalimanı" is an airport.

  • @BogdanYNews
    @BogdanYNews Před rokem +4

    Thx Luke, all your pronunciation is perfect! with the only minor error in Berdyansk, Y in this case makes previous D softer like Dʲ.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +5

      Thanks, Bogdan! Hopefully I’ll learn Ukrainian fluently one day.

  • @victorvictor369
    @victorvictor369 Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome! Top notch Pronunciation👍👍

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier Před rokem +6

    "Crimea" in Norwegian is just "Krimhalvøya".
    "Krim" is the name, "halv" means half, "øy" means "island" and the "a" at the end means "the", so "The Krim halfisland"
    "Halvøya" (half-island) is our word for "peninsula".
    The word "krim" is also a word we use for crime, as in doing something illegal, although I've honestly only seen it in the context of police investigations and crime stories etc.
    11:18
    English speakers insistence on treating the "e" at the end of words as silent really is a pet peeve of mine...

    • @Kitulous
      @Kitulous Před rokem +2

      Ukrainian and Russian also say "half-island"
      pivostriv (piv - half, ostriv - island) and poluostrov (polu - half, ostrov - island) respectively

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před 10 měsíci +2

      I hate the English insisting of silent "e" at the end of words too, especially if they do it on foreign words!!

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Před 10 měsíci

      @@Kitulous Thank you for telling me that.

    • @Luredreier
      @Luredreier Před 10 měsíci

      @@Delibro May I ask what your native language is?

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před 10 měsíci

      @@Luredreier My native language is German.
      The American pronunciation of "Porsche" ...

  • @user-es4iw7bx8i
    @user-es4iw7bx8i Před rokem +3

    We in Ukraine often get confused whether Bakhmut should be stressed on the first or on the second syllable in Ukrainian. Actually, it is a historical name of the city which was renamed back not so long ago. Previously, it was called Artyomovsk after soviet tradition. Nice to see our cities in modern Ukrainianized spelling in English.

  • @diarmaiddillon1568
    @diarmaiddillon1568 Před 11 měsíci +1

    As usual a superbly conceived and delivered lesson from Polymathy. I love this channel

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 11 měsíci

      That’s very kind! I’m glad and I hope you like the future videos too

  • @JacobOvergaardMadsen
    @JacobOvergaardMadsen Před rokem +2

    Extremely useful for a Ukrainian learner. Thanks!

  • @arekusei2
    @arekusei2 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for the video

  • @DmytroNikolenko
    @DmytroNikolenko Před rokem +4

    Thanks for this video! Дуже велика робота! Дякую!

  • @armstrongmelm
    @armstrongmelm Před rokem +2

    Odessa is from Greek Odessos with double 's'. Catherine the Great gave quite a few new-founded cities Greek names through her 'Greek project' on the newly conquered land from the Turks.

  • @stevenwillard8436
    @stevenwillard8436 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Good video.
    Enlightening, for sure.

  • @mykytafil7160
    @mykytafil7160 Před rokem +3

    I'd also add that you can often see + shchyna as a name of region instead of oblast

  • @yaroslavbabych5427
    @yaroslavbabych5427 Před rokem +1

    Дуже дякую! Amazing video

  • @TheEnderknight
    @TheEnderknight Před 11 měsíci +3

    I tend to prefer to use an h like sound for X, instead of a k like sound. Probably from growing up with relatives from Ukraine who use the original local pronunciations. Note: that place name pronunciations can vary regionally in Ukraine and official spellings are based on pronunciation in Kyiv.

  • @reve_ta_stogne
    @reve_ta_stogne Před rokem +2

    Very interesting, thanks.

  • @xshwei
    @xshwei Před rokem

    I am very unsure about using voiced palatal plosive for in Ukrainian. This much palatalisation is a characteristic of Czech and Slovak languages for sure. Pointing the nasal release may be your preference, I don't mind that. But palatalised palatal consonant (as you have shown on 6:39) makes zero sense to me

  • @hiberniancaveman8970
    @hiberniancaveman8970 Před rokem +2

    One thing about being a Celt, I do not have a problem with the Cyrillic letter ‘х’, either in hearing or speaking.
    One interesting thing though, in the orthography of the Ewe language of West Africa, the letters h and x correspond to the same symbols in IPA. However, at least one second generation descendant brought up in the USA has grown up with “Anglo Ears” and wonders why her parents’ languages has to use the two different letters.

  • @iopqu
    @iopqu Před rokem +4

    As a Ukrainian speaker, I would pronounce Sumy the same as summa con laude, with an unstressed schwa at the end

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +2

      Thanks for the suggestion! What about for Rivne etc?

    • @iopqu
      @iopqu Před rokem

      @@polyMATHY_Luke reeve-nay since we want to distinguish final -y and final -e

  • @erichamilton3373
    @erichamilton3373 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I like your explanation of exonyms such as Odessa, Kiev or Milan. For that matter English Paris is in the same category as it's not the same as French Paris...nor should it be. Use of exonyms grounds us in historicity and helps guard against linguistic/geography chaos, which is caused by constant attempts at name changing. Use of exonyms has nothing to do with political leanings (it certainly shouldn't), and is the way to go for all languages. I'd expect Ukrainians to use their own names for London, New York or Rome.

  • @raxit1337
    @raxit1337 Před rokem +26

    A point about the names. The existance of different names in different languages shows that that place has existed in the minds and mouths of people who speak that language. For example, most large FInnish cities have a Finnish and a Swedish name. The Swedish names are testament to the closeness of the two cultures and the presence of these cities in the mind of Swedish-speakers (and it goes both ways, many cities in Sweden have a different name in Finnish). Finland and Sweden were united in the past. Similarly, Ukrainian cities have their own names in FInnish, Kiev is Kiova, Kharkov is Harkova. Finland and Ukraine both belonged to the Russian empire at the same time.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +6

      Indeed.

    • @igorvoloshin3406
      @igorvoloshin3406 Před rokem +9

      At that some names in Ukraine are really ancient. For example, a small town in Kharkiv region bears name Meréfa, which is Scythian for "Dead Snake"; also name of a village in Cherkasy region - Irklíyiv comes from Scythian "Curvy Stream". The name of my native city Chilia in Odesa region comes from the Greek name Achillea. That's right, this is the native land of the Troyan War hero Achilles, and the remains of his tomb and sanctuary still are at the Snakes Island in the Black Sea nearby the city, where fierce fights against Russian occupants were fought last spring, and we won! 🇺🇦

    • @Jugulator31
      @Jugulator31 Před rokem +3

      Thank you Igor Voloshin; this is fantastic info. Really appreciate sharing. Wikipedia awaits me.

    • @jabrilbalakrishna
      @jabrilbalakrishna Před rokem

      @@igorvoloshin3406 I'm just curious what goes through the mind of someone like you. You do use the word "occupiers" with a pejorative connotation, right? And you are obviously cheering as an expression of the nationalistic/patriotic feelings you have. But it seems like you glorify or at least are proud of the fact that your place of birth was also a Greek colony. Were they occupiers too, and were they "good" occupiers in that case? And since we are at that, how did that part of the country become Ukraine in the first place and since when? What's the history behind it exactly? All these questions might be hard and even triggering I realize that.

    • @igorvoloshin3406
      @igorvoloshin3406 Před rokem +4

      @@jabrilbalakrishna err... it seems you're not very much acquainted in ancient history of Ukraine. In fact, the lands of Southern Ukraine were part of the cradle of the Greek nation, including those vast territories which are under waves now - Ghilea, the green and plentiful land to the south of Odesa and Meothia Swamps which are now at the bottom of Azov sea. It was in Ghilea where hunter Acteon angered goddes Arthemida, and was turned by her into deer to be hunted by his own dogs. And in the middle of Meothian Swamps there was the cave entrance to the realm of Aid, where poet Orpheus descended trying to bring his beloved Euridica back to the realm of alive. Greeks were not colonists here, they were local natives, and our land is the land where legendary heroes walked and myths were born. The Greeks lived here in Southern Ukraine for millenia... and were oppressed by Russian Empire / Soviet Russia just the same as Ukrainians and other nations of these lands.
      So may it seem, Greeks lived in Ukraine long before Ukrainians or any other Slavic tribes even formed? Not so simple. As recent paleogenetic studies prove, modern Ukrainians still bear the genes of the ancient local peoples beginning from the very first Indo-Europeans of the Yamna culture, which inhabited South-East of Ukraine as long ago as in 4th millenium BC. So we Ukrainians also have the firm right to live at our ancient lands.
      But current invaders are definitely out of any right to raid our lands. They'we unlawfully broken treaties and borders signed and approved by them. How can you or anyone even try to excuse them?

  • @taimunozhan
    @taimunozhan Před rokem +2

    Not Ukrainian, but I just wanted to point out that "Kiev" is not really a historical English toponym like Milan and Naples but rather a direct Russian loanword. There is, in fact, a historical English name for Kyiv which is Kyow (borrowed through Polish and German) but, of course, no one has used that one for over a century and there's nothing to be gained by reinstating it.
    Lviv (often referred to by its Russian name Lvov in the past) also had a couple of interesting historical toponyms that are no longer in use including the German-based Lemberg (which was probably the name an English-speaker would have used in the 19th century) and, more interestingly enough, the Latin-based name Leopolis. While neither of those names are in use (in English at least), people from Lviv are still known as "Leapolitans" in English, much in the same way English keeps the more conservative and Latinate adjectival forms for Venetians and Neapolitans.

  • @MrMaxlines
    @MrMaxlines Před rokem +2

    Thank you Luke! Great content as always. Greetings from Ukraine!

  • @oleksandrlevchuk
    @oleksandrlevchuk Před rokem +3

    I see what you did there with the order of cities. Appreciated

  • @Istoria-Movy
    @Istoria-Movy Před rokem +2

    Perfect pronunciation! Bravissimo! As a translator in Ukraine, I always struggle with how to render our Ukrainian place names in English. Especially small localities, villages etc. I also hate the official Ukrainian latinization bringing us the monstrous Zaprorizhzhia or Chernivtsi, which look intimidating, so I usually write Zaporizhia, although I don't like rendering Ж as ZH altogether. Latinization of Ukrainian is another hot topic in Ukrainian, and I personally favor the Central European approach, that is Zaporižžia, Čerkasy and Černiwci.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +1

      Very kind of you to say so! Indeed, I hope there will be some sort of reform to these spellings as well.
      I don’t favor the Ukrainians switching to the Latin alphabet, as the Ukrainian Cyrillic alphabet is very efficient and clear, in my opinion. But I heard some Ukrainians mention this idea in order to become more Westernized. What do you think?

    • @Istoria-Movy
      @Istoria-Movy Před rokem +1

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I þanke þe for þyne answere, my lefe freend! The Cyrillic alphabet definitely should be preserved for the Ukrainian language. Truth be told, all those discussions about Ukrainians switching to the Latin alphabet don't hold water. Moreover, most Ukrainian will never agree to that. However, the transliteration of Ukrainian for the outside world should be improved bc things like ZH, SHCH, DZH or YY (for Ж, Щ, ДЖ, ИЙ) are too clumsy. In fact, they are just remnants of the awkward Soviet quick fix.

  • @Max-UA
    @Max-UA Před rokem

    Найкраща вимова з усіх англомовних, кого я чув.

  • @Pryvyd9
    @Pryvyd9 Před rokem +4

    There's a nice town of Rzhyshchiv in Kyiv oblast which is good for pronunciation training.

  • @ArtemDowgaluk-Kowalski
    @ArtemDowgaluk-Kowalski Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the video. I just want to point out one thing: in Ukrainian е and и get heavily reduced in unstressed positions and, because of that, the better (just in my opinion) way to pronounce Суми is to end it with a schwa sound (or with a closed e if English phonotactics allow it). You can at least consider it to be a plausible alternative to your suggestion. We just don't distinguish between е and и in unstressed positions and children constantly mix them up in writing

  • @nenben8759
    @nenben8759 Před rokem

    Dont forget about how in some dialects has that [x] like [lɔx]
    And this is the first time ive ever heard pronounced with a [ʒ]

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +1

      Indeed! I certainly didn’t forget, as I adore Scots and Scottish English.

  • @kelwwi
    @kelwwi Před 8 měsíci +1

    Duzhe tobi dyakuyu druzhe. Thanks you so much. Video is made well

  • @a.n.6374
    @a.n.6374 Před rokem +2

    This gets even more confusing for other cyrillic users. In Bulgarian, historically we've taken mostly the russian names and for most of them, their spelling in russian as well, because our alphabet fits closer to the russian version of cyrillic. Pronounciation is balkanized a lot, as we lack many of the vowels and palatalizations they both have. We don't have i and ї for example and ь is extremly rare. We are writing Киев, but pronouncing it is closer to what an english speaker would say as Kiev. If i get the orthography correct - we say it as Кiев in urkainian/Киэв in russian. But same as in english, we are lately aiming at adopting more ukraninan names so we have things like Харкив, Днипро, Чернихив comming through which don't look either ukranian nor russian, but that's just our best approximation of spelling to pronounce it more as ukranian rather then russian.

  • @Misanthrope-
    @Misanthrope- Před 10 měsíci +2

    Duzhe dyakuyu for video. Nineteen minutes of the pleasure.

  • @andrew07865
    @andrew07865 Před rokem +7

    Thank you for this video from a viewer from Zaporizhzhia ❤

  • @eternakrokodilanto5263
    @eternakrokodilanto5263 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Actually the Ukrainian v should be pronounced as w after the constants so Kakhovka would be Kakhowka as well

  • @alanjmcc
    @alanjmcc Před rokem +5

    That was well done. Love the respect you show for the Ukrainian language. You do us all a service when you explain how European (and other) cities' names arrived in English via French and that no insult is intended when people pronounce foreign words using their own phonological rules.

  • @axisboss1654
    @axisboss1654 Před rokem +1

    I have Ukrainian heritage and I still call it Kiev in English even though I know it is Kiiv in actual Ukrainian. Both are technically correct.

  • @gpodkolzin
    @gpodkolzin Před 11 měsíci +2

    Thank you very much for the video! As a Ukrainian from Crimea, I was incredibly moved when I saw my tiny hometown Partenit (which is an Ancient Greek toponym) at 0:44!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Very glad Partenit was represented! May Crimea safely return to Ukrainian control as swiftly as possible.

    • @gpodkolzin
      @gpodkolzin Před 11 měsíci

      @@polyMATHY_Luke Thank you!

    • @user-fu3pp8ol7i
      @user-fu3pp8ol7i Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@polyMATHY_Lukeit's absolutely impossible process, because most of people here are 70% ethnic Russian and about 15% crimean tatars. Most of them are support or neutral for Russian Federation. Also, all business are very integrated to Russian economy.
      And you are welcome to Crimea.

  • @user-cg1is8jr8g
    @user-cg1is8jr8g Před 10 měsíci +2

    There were some old names of cities
    Херсон - Белиховичі
    Kherson - Belykhovychi
    Нікополь - Микитин ріг
    Nikopol - Mykytyn rih
    Одеса - Хаджибей - Коцюбіїв
    Odesa - Khadzhybei - Kotsiubiiv
    Маріуполь - Домаха
    Mariupol - Domakha

  • @magnekalinsen1185
    @magnekalinsen1185 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for covering this topic ✨
    It is extremely important for us to teach the world to recognise our Ukrainian ways to pronounce those names.
    Your pronunciation is amazingly accurate, which is not a surprise for me since I hear how flawlessly you pronounce Latin words (always a pleasure for any ear).
    Just a little correction: your [l] sound is a little bit off in Ukrainian. Through some experimentation I can draw a conclusion that you articulate it a bit too far from the teeth. In Ukrainian, as in other Slavic languages, it's a bit closer to the upper teeth, both the regular and the palatalised one. Hope it helps :)
    Thank you again for the video!

  • @Damian.99
    @Damian.99 Před rokem +7

    Amazing video, thank you so much. I'm so happy people are interested in Ukraine.

  • @egric6384
    @egric6384 Před 7 měsíci +1

    As a ukrainian, i have to say, when our "x" is transcribed as "kh", pronouncing it as "k" sounds really weird. Like when you called Bakhmut "Bakmut". It just doesn't feel right lol

  • @stsglnt
    @stsglnt Před rokem +6

    It is always so confusing for me to hear "X" sound as "Kh". I mean I get it but it takes me a moment to understand which city foreigner is referring to

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +2

      That’s an interesting point. Since an /h/ sound already exists as г, should we nevertheless make both г and х /h/ in English? My feeling is that was the more confusing, but I’m eager to hear from Ukrainians on this issue.

    • @andreitopala8502
      @andreitopala8502 Před rokem +3

      @@polyMATHY_Luke for me as a speaker of Ukrainian (not native), the Ukrainian г sounds closer to the modern Greek gamma, but not so hard. I mean, like a voiced English h, if my explanation makes any sense.

    • @stsglnt
      @stsglnt Před rokem +5

      ​@@polyMATHY_Luke If it were up to me I'd keep /h/ sound for both г and х. But yeah I can see possible confusion here

    • @stsglnt
      @stsglnt Před rokem +3

      I'd say that in 'Aha' /h/ sounds almost like (if not identical) Ukrainian г

    • @volkhen0
      @volkhen0 Před rokem +4

      @@stsglntin Polish it used to be “Ch” and “H” which were voiced and unvoiced versions of this sound (or the other way around). Today they have exactly the same sound. It’s confusing when spelling because you have to remember which one to use. That’s why Polish name for Kherson is Chersoń.

  • @farynnyk
    @farynnyk Před 9 měsíci +1

    As a native Ukrainian speaker, I can say - your pronunciation is almost perfect :)

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Very kind! Слава Україні

    • @farynnyk
      @farynnyk Před 9 měsíci

      @@polyMATHY_Luke Героям слава!
      Your channel is extremely interesting, I subscribed with great pleasure :)

  • @axisboss1654
    @axisboss1654 Před rokem

    You can also use accent marks to romanize it like š, ž, like how Slavic languages that use the Latin Alphabet do

  • @MuscovitesNightmare
    @MuscovitesNightmare Před 9 měsíci

    Heroyam Slava! Thank you so much for caring! While it`s ultimately the business of the native speaker of how to pronounce/write names of our cities, i sometimes can`t help myself but to correct someone on the internet, especially when the name of our capital, Kyiv, is miswritten. But to always be mutually respectful in the matters like this is definitely the key.

  • @mootagen1
    @mootagen1 Před 4 měsíci

    Absolutely astonishing! You've aced the pronunciation of most cities so that it's hard to discern whether Ukrainian is your first language or not. That's the power of linguistics, I guess.
    One thing I would point out, as a native Ukrainian speaker, is that somehow "proper English" pronunciation of Kyiv in the video sounded more natural than "your" variant (13:38). I would assess that it sounded more like "Кив" than "Київ". In fact, simply saying "Kiiv" would be perceived better by an Ukrainian eye. No offense meant by that, it's just an observation.

  • @staskos25
    @staskos25 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Nice pronunciation

  • @lifigrugru6396
    @lifigrugru6396 Před rokem +1

    Speaking a languige like english (before greek, latin, french, spain, russian in europe, hindi, han, or mandarin) made not excuse to being lazy or sniffy to try to learn other's tone's and culture. Just like you teach it. I woulde give the benefit of good will. :)

  • @elenna_alexia
    @elenna_alexia Před rokem +1

    Ever since I learned how to say it, Zaporizhzhia has been one of my favorite words.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem

      Mine too

    • @medeology4660
      @medeology4660 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It is a great word. It's smooth, pops in your mouth like filled candy and slips away with a delicious hint of a diphtong.

  • @bhami
    @bhami Před rokem +2

    Thanks for this detailed video! The only thing I might take issue with is that at some point, for maximum comprehensibility you just need to "go with the flow", and I think "seVAStopol" is much more common in American English than is "sevasTOpol".

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem

      That’s fair. Eventually as the Ukrainian names become part of English for some generations, new traditional pronunciations will arise, and what you suggest may indeed be what comes about.

    • @tompeled6193
      @tompeled6193 Před rokem +1

      ​@@polyMATHY_Luke The stress is on the penultimate syllable in Russian too.

  • @malter87
    @malter87 Před rokem +3

    (sorry for double comment but I just noticed something)
    Wikipedia may be a good source for pronunciation of names of cities or rivers but I think it's absolutely terrible for personal names (like members of the government or military commanders)
    Which makes it *extremely* confusing how to correctly pronounce the names of Ukranian people.
    for example: it somehow lists 3 different spellings for Zelensky's name: Zelensky, Zelenskiy and Zelenskyy (with double Y at the end!)
    in addition to that we also have the military commander-in-chief spelled as Valerii Zaluzhnyi (first name spelled with double "i" at the end and last name spelled with 'yi')
    It's obvious that the transcription of personal names with the roman alphabet is a total mess!
    In just two examples above Wikipedia manages to exhaust ALL mathematically possible combinations of the letters "i" and "y" and the end of names!!
    We have "ii", "yy", "iy" and "yi" in the names of just two people!!
    This has to be some kind of a record, lmao 🤣🤣

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +2

      Haha thanks for the comment, double or otherwise! That’s hilarious. Also an important note. Since Wikipedia can be corrected, if you’re confident about the change, you should suggest it.

  • @bogdan.801
    @bogdan.801 Před rokem +7

    Great video, you explained everything very well.
    As a Ukrainian, I appreciate your work.
    I am happy that the world finally started seeing us as a separate nation and not a part of russia

  • @volkhen0
    @volkhen0 Před rokem +5

    I hate Cyrillic transcription using English alphabet. I guess using any European language alphabet other then English would be better. I think we should use something similar to transcription which is used in Serbia.

    • @stepanfedorov561
      @stepanfedorov561 Před rokem

      Indeed.

    • @rengg1441
      @rengg1441 Před rokem +1

      czech latin would be pretty good for this language.
      just need one more letter for щ which probably be ś just like in polish

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 Před rokem

      As an English speaker, I agree. I hate seeing Ys for /j/s, CHs for /tʃ/s and SHs for /ʃ/s everywhere.

  • @indgeus
    @indgeus Před rokem +51

    All Greek-like names in Southern Ukraine, including Mariupol, Sevastopol, Simferopol, Odesa, Kherson, Melitopol and also cities in Russia such as Stavropol, it was a policy of Russian Empire that had many goals, main ones being
    1. Trying to eradicate names that already existed here, especially Crimean names, for example Kefe was renamed to Feodosia and Kezlev was renamed to Jevpatoria
    2. Establishing connection to Ancient Greece to cement Russian claims to Constantinople and title of the "Third Rome"
    I didn't quite understand some of those transcriptions, espessialy that prenasalized palatal /ɟⁿʲi 'prɔ/. It supposed to be /dʲnʲi 'prɔ/, but i guess that was a graphic mistake.
    As for Rivne, "e" vowel is quite higher than /ɛ/ for absolute majority of speakers, aproaching cardinal /e/ quality as it's unstressed. All vowels in Ukrainian tend to have their quality moving a bit to the centre while not losing distinct quality. Although here's the fun thing - there's ongoing merger of unstressed /e/ and /ɪ/ in unstessed syllables so менé (genative of я "І" unless before a preposition due to stress shift) and минé (third person singular future of минути "to pass, to pass by") are complete homophones /meˈnɛ/.
    Ukrainians being mad at Kyiv and Odesa has more to do with existing threat from Russia and it's colonization policies then and today to. As oposed to names like Milan and Rome for Milano and Roma there were no active effort from France to destroy Roman and Milanese identities and shut their voices, while here enormous Russification project was happening from 1627 at least, when for the first time Ukrainian books were burn and first print bans were imposed.
    As to end this here are some Ukrainian place names just to break English speakers minds and tongues in form of fun exersize trying to actually pronounce them: Неветленфолу, Петропавлівська Борщагівка, Зноб-Новгородське, Щекавиця, Ржищів, Монастирище, Фертешолмаш, Тячів

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem +14

      Privit, Anton, thanks very much. Indeed, I'm aware of that tragic history with the "Greek" names - I didn't want to get too much into the politics in this video, as you see.
      As for, [ɟⁿʲi 'prɔ], I copied and pasted that IPA (and all of the IPA transcriptions of toponyms in this video) directly from Wikipedia or Wiktionary so as not to make a mistake. I can see that since publishing this video someone has changed it to [dʲnʲiˈprɔ] on both:
      en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Дніпро#Ukrainian
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dnipro
      I assume someone saw this video, and corrected the Wiki pages. Was it you? Good job if so. Although, the audio sample does sound like [ɟⁿʲi 'prɔ], so maybe it was an attempt at a narrow transcription of that man's way of saying it.
      Really great point about unstressed e and the mergers there, which I had read about and noticed in speech. Do you think /ei̯/ is an acceptable way to render this in English?
      As for Kyiv and Odesa, the current political situation is what informs my recommendation to my Anglophone audience to embrace the transliterations from Ukrainian. But I don't make this recommendation from an abstract linguistic point of view, which is the purpose of the discussion in the video.
      Those are beautiful Ukrainian names.
      Thanks for the comment.

    • @insertusernameheresvp
      @insertusernameheresvp Před rokem +4

      Would recommend Vlad Vexler's video on Crimea for anyone who wants to know more about the Greek connection!

    • @bartoszwojciechowski2270
      @bartoszwojciechowski2270 Před rokem +3

      Ok, but being that butthurt over FOREIGN (not Russian) people using traditional exonyms in their own languages without any undertones and with no intention to make a political statement is rather exaggerated. For example I support Ukraine and I still use the names that I'm used to in English because they're natural to me and most native speakers still use them without any intention of offending anyone.

    • @EnigmaticLucas
      @EnigmaticLucas Před rokem

      @@bartoszwojciechowski2270 Guess where those “English” exonyms come from? That’s right, Russian.

    • @bartoszwojciechowski2270
      @bartoszwojciechowski2270 Před rokem

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I think that [ɟⁿʲ] is a possible interpretation too. Nasalisation of stops before nasals actually occurs in a lot of languages allophonically, we just usually don't mark it except in very detailed phonetic transcriptions. In fast speech, the nasal may be entirely absorbed by the stop and realised as nasalisation of the former, i.e. they two are pronounced as single units (the same happens in fast speech in Polish, btw., and it also applies to stops followed by /l/ (but not in Ukrainian since it has a dark "l" while Polish has a clear one which has less auditory "power"), e.g. the stop+sonorant clusters in "dno" and "dla" may be pronounced as single units in fast speech, and in slower speech, the stops are still technically nasalised or lateralised but the sonorants are clearly pronounced). And I think it's entirely possible for the phoneme /dʲ/ to be realised as [ɟ] in many contexts as they're very similar sounds, and you only have to slightly move your tongue when making the latter. But still, it's just transcription, arguing over it is silly xd
      Btw., Luke, you're the first native English speaker I've ever heard who's able to correctly imitate the phonological systems of foreign languages :O I'm very impressed. I guess it's due to your ability to read IPA, right? I think we should teach IPA to kids because it really helps with learning pronunctiation. I've noticed that native speakers of English very often diphthongise monophthongal /o/ and /e/ in foreign languages because English only allows diphthongs in coda positions for these vowels. So maybe that's how you could pronounce Ukrainian names that end in these vowels to still sound natural in English?

  • @OBIDU13
    @OBIDU13 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you very much for the very interesting video !
    It seems that final v in Ukrainian words has a [u] realisation instead of a [v] one correct ?

  • @funki4896
    @funki4896 Před rokem +4

    It's simple!
    Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Kamianets-Podilskyi, Yuzhnoukrayinsk and Novhorod-Siverskyi:

    • @oleksandrlevchuk
      @oleksandrlevchuk Před rokem +1

      You forgot Khmelnytskiy!

    • @vaniayura
      @vaniayura Před rokem +2

      and Kryvyi Rih😅

    • @funki4896
      @funki4896 Před 9 měsíci

      @@user-re8rm6ys5j лишнехросомньıй тебя никто не спрашивал...

  • @baumstamp5989
    @baumstamp5989 Před rokem +2

    i am not familiar with phonetic script. but i would pronounce don-etsk more like a sloppily pronounced english "done"etsk or the german "dann"etsk. like simulating to say an "o" but keeping the mouth open as if saying an "a" and also keeping it short. ... an example came to mind: like dunn in ryan dunn.

  • @alexhousakos
    @alexhousakos Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent video!
    I should add: for historical purposes, pre-2022 battles, events, names, etc. will still retain their pre-Ukrainian spelling (for example Battle(s) of Kharkov). Historiography for events after the Invasion will have Ukrainianized names (Battle of Kharkiv). This will be to reduce confusion, not to demote the language.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Sounds like a reasonable convention

    • @alexhousakos
      @alexhousakos Před 11 měsíci

      @@polyMATHY_Luke Yeah because it will be extremely confusing (and wrong) to suddenly change historiography.
      In my above example (as a historian), the Battle of Kharkov refers to 4 Battles in WW2 whereas the Battle of Kharkiv refers to an operation in WW1 and the modern battles.

  • @xshwei
    @xshwei Před rokem +1

    9:53 regarding Bakhmut, there indeed are two ways of pronouncing the city name, the stress alters. Ultimately in comes from the river of Bakhmutka, which for sure has an accent on U, but it is not that clear for the city itself. Chances are it has always been BAkhmut, and BakhmUt is a hypercorrection which was promoted by journalists back in 2016, based on the river name

  • @alekseyd2900
    @alekseyd2900 Před 10 měsíci

    With letter В you overdone your investigation. All the variants are ok for every word. It depends on personal pronunciation, you can always pronounce it as W, or as V or anyhow, it will be ok to understand. In Zaporizhzha firstly you doubled ZH correctly, but then repeated the word several times without those double ZH, that was incorrectly. Rivne you pronounced perfectly 😊 Thanks for this video.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 10 měsíci

      Hi there, as for ZH not being doubled the other times, that’s because I then gave the English version, which doesn’t have doubling

  • @bacicinvatteneaca
    @bacicinvatteneaca Před rokem +1

    It's always best to use endonyms over exonyms, so I'll try to learn the Ukrainian names, but I haven't seen the same courtesy being applied to toponyms of countries being genocided by the US or its allies.

  • @xshwei
    @xshwei Před rokem +1

    Regarding how Ukrainian is pronounced today overall, the literary language is based on the Upper-Dnipro dialect, some of its features are lack of palatalisation in front of etymological i sounds (that's where Wiktionary got it wrong), for example the word "кіт", where i is formed from o in a closed syllable (кôт), formerly in such words the i would not soften the preceding consonant and it would be pronounced just ['kit]. But the word віра, where i comes from an etymologican yat sound (вѣра), the consonant would soften anyways, [ʋʲirɐ]. This was reflected in Kulishivka orthography which was widely used from 1850s all the way to 1920s by writing the palatalising /i/ as , and the for non-palatalising i. Today's tendency is to palatalise all consonants.
    Russian language also made changes to some people's speech, this regards devoicing consonants, word-finally and before unvoiced consonants, the most notable example is в, which should become [u̯] at the syllable coda, and not [f].
    Other minor things as using [ɨ] for the /ɪ/ phoneme, geminated [ɕː] for expected [ʃʧ], soft [tɕ] instead of [ʧ] and so on.

  • @darkdevil905
    @darkdevil905 Před rokem +1

    Ukrainian г is somewhere in between a g and an h, like gh, where g is weaker and the h is stronger

  • @xshwei
    @xshwei Před rokem +2

    Luke, thank you for making such strong points from the very start, you are truly the best!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem

      Thanks, Shwei! I’m still learning, trying my best.

  • @peter_oso
    @peter_oso Před rokem +1

    Excellent, especially pronunciation. I hope that TV journalists will see that video - they confuse Kh- with X- sometimes (temptation to read familiar character despite different alphabets).

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před rokem

      Thanks! How do you recommend we say Ukrainian letter х, г, к?

  • @nickwysoczanskyj785
    @nickwysoczanskyj785 Před rokem +2

    Молодець. 💙💛

  • @natmaren989
    @natmaren989 Před rokem

    I appreciate this video because in the last year a lot of military bloggers started talking about Ukraine. But their pronunciation often distorts the names of cities. If they at least looked at the transcription on the wiki it would be much better.