Norway Bjørvika 4K HDR Walking Tour, 2024

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  • čas přidán 10. 04. 2024
  • Norway Bjørvika 4K HDR Walking Tour, 2024

Komentáře • 3

  • @CambodiaLifeTV
    @CambodiaLifeTV Před 17 dny +1

    Thank for sharing ❤

  • @AugustusRex-nk8ze
    @AugustusRex-nk8ze Před 29 dny +1

    Nice walk but a shame with all that advertising.

  • @KenanTurkiye
    @KenanTurkiye Před měsícem +3

    Heres something you may find interesting. :)
    The name of my country has nothing to do with the interesting and delicious bird 'turkey'......
    .....but the name of the bird does have a connection with the name of my country, let me explain. :)
    In the past 40 years 37 countries have changed their name.
    Obviously one can not change the name of an apple or an orange etc in other languages,
    but country names are like peoples' individual names, so if you're named John we don't call you Karen. :)
    Name of my country has always been Türkiye, it's been known as such since around the 1200's.
    The name it self has a suffix, '-iye', that is Turk-iye, where the -iye suffix means 'land of/belonging to',
    just like the Latin suffix of '-ia', which exists in such country names like
    Austr-ia, Austral-ia, Indones-ia etc.
    Basically, the use of '-iye/-ia' is the same as the the use of '-land' suffix in country names like
    Ire(Eire)-land, Po(le)-land, Eng(Anglo)-land and so on and so on.
    Many would remember the country Czechoslovak-ia which changed it's name to Czech Republic and a few years ago changed that to Czechia (that is Czech-ia).
    The Latin suffix -ia probably originates from Turkish -iye as Turkish been over 10,000 years is much older than Latin which is around 1300 years old.
    Spelled in different languages in different ways to phonetically resemble (to sound like) 'Türkiye'
    we got various spellings like;
    Turq-uía (in Spanish),
    Turch-ia (in Italian),
    Turq-uie (in French)
    Turk-ei (in German)
    Turk-ey (in English)
    Mind you this was way before the animal we currently know as turkey was found by the europeans when they explored the north americas. The bird was first sent to europe from north americas in the year 1519, so up until that point there was no bird named turkey....
    ...they came across the bird and thought it was a specie of the fowl/chicken they had been buying from the country of Turkiye at the time, so they named the bird 'Turkey Fowl' to define 'Turkish Chicken'...
    ....just like how a dog breed is known as German Shepherd (because it's from Germany), American Bulldog, British Terrier, Greek Harehound etc etc.
    In time you don't get to call the harehound simply as Greek or you don't call the terrier Britirsh, or shepherd as simply German,
    but in time the Turkish Fowl started to be called just 'Turkey' and later 'turkey', and this went on for hundreds of years.
    Now in modern times, this caused confusion, especially when we have people across the world unable to point to their own country on an atlas.
    Basically we didn't change the name of our country, we changed the mistake made in the English language. : )
    So, there's some tid bit information for you to have a great day, if you read upto this point you have a great night too, ohh just have a wonderfull life. : )
    Best wishes. ;)