Basque Is A Wild Language

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  Před 9 měsíci +492

    Do you speak Basque?

  • @Quantum-yz9fc
    @Quantum-yz9fc Před 9 měsíci +1284

    My parents had a basque children's book that they "read" to me when I was a kid. Turns out they just made up a new story each time based on the pictures.

  • @Yoghurtmale8
    @Yoghurtmale8 Před 9 měsíci +1257

    Fun fact, the city Boise Idaho where i used to live has the largest Basque population outside of Spain. There’s a Basque Quarter near downtown and plenty of Basque restaurants and flags.

    • @giuseppelogiurato5718
      @giuseppelogiurato5718 Před 9 měsíci +105

      I'm in northern Nevada... Lots of Bascos here too; you can actually study Euskara at UNR!

    • @markbollinger1343
      @markbollinger1343 Před 9 měsíci +14

      Came here to say this!

    • @ItaloAlbanian
      @ItaloAlbanian Před 9 měsíci +65

      I think france has the biggest basque population after spain

    • @giuseppelogiurato5718
      @giuseppelogiurato5718 Před 9 měsíci +65

      @@ItaloAlbanianhaha, smarty-pants! 😝... I'm sure they meant, "outside of Euskal Herria" ("País de Vasco"/"Pays du Basque"), not just Spain.
      I can affirm, there are a lot of Basque folks in Idaho and Nevada, and that's a fact! They have bumps on the backs of their heads, and many of them have a rare blood type (I forget what kind)... They love garlic and Jai Alai and wine and Baby Jesus, and the women are especially strong; I swear, they have thicker skulls and bones then other Europeans, and they live to be REALLY old.

    • @ItaloAlbanian
      @ItaloAlbanian Před 9 měsíci

      @@giuseppelogiurato5718 he said outside of spain, coglione

  • @ZeRo-bx7lp
    @ZeRo-bx7lp Před 9 měsíci +1968

    The fun thing about Basque is that it's making a come back. There are more basque speakers today than there were 50 years ago as recent reforms have standardized the language to make it easier for young people to learn it. In the past, it wasn't a single unified language, but a collection of dialects not unlike other minority languages.

    • @jonC1208
      @jonC1208 Před 9 měsíci +120

      In the past it was ilegalizated by franco, when he died the lenguage slowly came back

    • @TheKalihiMan
      @TheKalihiMan Před 9 měsíci +170

      Also worth mentioning that those 50 years roughly coincide with the end of fascist rule in Spain that saw the violent suppression of not only political opposition but regional cultures and languages. Let’s not forget that it was Basque separatists who singlehandedly ended Franco’s line of succession.

    • @solar0wind
      @solar0wind Před 9 měsíci +23

      Oh, so they finally managed to unify the language? The last update I had was that they're trying, but just can't come to a solution because Basque dialects are so different that every standard would be vastly different to some dialects, meaning that some people were always angry about every suggestion.

    • @pauvermelho
      @pauvermelho Před 9 měsíci

      On the other hand Native Galician speakers are decreasing tremendously

    • @solar0wind
      @solar0wind Před 9 měsíci +29

      @@Besthinktwice Wikipedia says the opposite. The article "Standard Basque" says:
      Research by the Euskaltzaindia shows that Basque is growing most in the areas where euskara batua has been introduced and taught in preference of local dialects.

  • @peabody1976
    @peabody1976 Před 9 měsíci +807

    Basque isn't just difficult because it's not related to French or Spanish (or any Indo-European language), but because of its grammar: nouns don't have gender, but the second person has masculine/feminine distinctions (for informal speech); it uses auxiliary verbs which mark one or two or three arguments, and few verbs conjugate synthetically; its noun case system is as detailed as Hungarian (an unrelated language with 25+ cases); it has a feature called "ergativity" which means that it marks the subject of direct object verbs differently from the subject of indirect object or no object verbs.
    At least if you can pronounce Castillian Spanish or Aranés or Catalan, you can do okay pronouncing Basque as their sounds are similar.
    But it's truly a wonderful and intriguing language, and I'm glad it's survived and is starting to be resurgent.

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad Před 9 měsíci +28

      ​@@explorationstlTrue, it has eighteen (I counted them.)

    • @egbront1506
      @egbront1506 Před 9 měsíci +13

      @@Desmaad It doesn't even have eighteen. Something like four genuine cases and the rest are just postpositions with vowel harmony.

    • @giuliaanichini7667
      @giuliaanichini7667 Před 9 měsíci +19

      One thing I'd like to know is why the pronunciation is so similar to Spanish. Has it always been this way? I went to Guernica and in the museum I saw a video of this amazing 100 year old lady who spoke a basque dialect. It sounded a little bit like Spanish, but not as much as when the younger generations speak it. Has the standardization process involved the pronunciation as well? Was it just my impression?

    • @egbront1506
      @egbront1506 Před 9 měsíci +35

      @@giuliaanichini7667 There have been hypotheses about how Basque may have influenced the pronunciation of Spanish rather than the other way around.

    • @gorka9020
      @gorka9020 Před 9 měsíci +27

      Basque it is not odd at all because of its structure.
      It is just an agglutinative language, such as the unrelated Japanese, Suomi or Hungarian.
      What makes it special is that it is among the few non indoeuropean languages within europe, and the presumed aged of its ancestor, which is believed to predate all living European languages.
      Regarding the Ergative, Navajo also posses it, and many other interesting features absent on Basque.
      The vowel ser is just the same as in Spanish, so pretty reduced and easy to master.
      Hungarian is way more challenging with so many phonemes.
      Verb conjugation could be considered infinite, as there are so many different variants among dialects or even particle placement alteration, which also occurs with nouns.

  • @arnulfo267
    @arnulfo267 Před 9 měsíci +2027

    If middle aged Americans get angry when they hear Hispanics speaking Spanish imagine how angry they would get at hearing Basque?

    • @davydatwood3158
      @davydatwood3158 Před 9 měsíci +364

      Honestly, I doubt they'd have any idea what they were hearing, and so wouldn't care unless they were anti-immigrant in general. The anti-Spanish thing has more to do with Americans not wanting to admit that their country is heavily influenced by Hispanic languages and culture and less to do with not understanding the language.
      Although now that I've typed that - the number of stories about people overhearing Deneh and demanding the "mexican" go "back where they came from" makes me suspect our hypothetical angry American would just assume Basque was Spanish...

    • @GenericUsername1388
      @GenericUsername1388 Před 9 měsíci +133

      Bring back Basque-Icelandic Pidgin

    • @Kire1120
      @Kire1120 Před 9 měsíci +43

      Americans would be interested in hearing Basque not angered by it.

    • @perceivedvelocity9914
      @perceivedvelocity9914 Před 9 měsíci +120

      Americans do not hate hearing people speak Spanish. Stop repeating negative stereotypes that are "trust me bro" internet wisdom.

    • @davydatwood3158
      @davydatwood3158 Před 9 měsíci +86

      @@perceivedvelocity9914 Not speaking for the OP, but for my part I didn't mean to imply that *all* or even *most* Americans have an issue with Spanish. That said, I have personal experience with the fact that *some* Americans are in denial about how their country is functionally bilingual, and lash out angrily when confronted with that fact.

  • @GenericUsername1388
    @GenericUsername1388 Před 9 měsíci +560

    Make Basque-Icelandic pidgin great again!

    • @jamespyle777
      @jamespyle777 Před 9 měsíci +81

      Also Basque-Algonquian

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday Před 9 měsíci +63

      @@jamespyle777Basque-Iroquois will rise again

    • @lagomoof
      @lagomoof Před 9 měsíci +12

      Ís-kara?

    • @crnel
      @crnel Před 6 měsíci +4

      Is that a pidgin spoken by cod fishers in the north Atlantic sea? I never knew they liked each other enough to share fishing boats...

    • @semi_xirika
      @semi_xirika Před měsícem

      @crnel maybe like is not the best word. There was a law in iceland until few months ago that allow you to kill a basque if you wanted to

  • @jonathanf.9395
    @jonathanf.9395 Před 9 měsíci +266

    Fun fact: Basque is so old that the names of several tools derive from the word for STONE/ROCK. Think about that for a moment.

    • @ImperialAtlantis
      @ImperialAtlantis Před 9 měsíci +46

      I always thought it would be awesome to discover that Basque was actually a surviving Neanderthal language but that seems extremely unlikely 😞

    • @panzrok8701
      @panzrok8701 Před 9 měsíci +8

      ​@@ImperialAtlantisI have heard that Neanderthals couldnt really speak.

    • @borginburkes1819
      @borginburkes1819 Před 9 měsíci +43

      @@panzrok8701homo erectus was able to talk. Neanderthals we’re smarter than modern humans so they definitely could speak

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 9 měsíci +63

      @@panzrok8701Neanderthals almost certainly could speak. They just couldn’t pronounce every vowel modern humans can.

    • @ImperialAtlantis
      @ImperialAtlantis Před 9 měsíci +11

      @@kellydalstok8900 I don't suppose there's any suspiciously missing vowels in Basque

  • @Jan_Koopman
    @Jan_Koopman Před 9 měsíci +344

    It would've been amazing if the story about the Devil learning Basque had been featured in "Lucifer": Lucifer explivitly states that he speaks every language (bc obviously, bc he's the Devil), so it would've been amazing if he'd said: "Well, except for Basque, that is."

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 8 měsíci +4

      why would he speak every language?
      why even needing to know languages not just read raw thoughts?

    • @Jan_Koopman
      @Jan_Koopman Před 8 měsíci +39

      @@szymonbaranowski8184, because he's the Devil. The Devil whispers in everyone's ear to make them sin. Also, in the show, being the warden of Hell, he has to be able to understand and talk to all his prisoners.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před 7 měsíci +3

      I wonder if the dark lord ever took the time to learn Elamite.

    • @JaRule6
      @JaRule6 Před 6 měsíci +2

      😂😂😂😂 that's funny 😂😂😂

  • @ramonsaiz2001
    @ramonsaiz2001 Před 6 měsíci +101

    The fact we are able to speak our language in any place of the world and be sure of nobody understanding it is priceless!

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci

      Egia da hori, behin joan ginen lagun batzuekin Dinamarkara oporrak igarotzera eta ez genuen nahi beste Espaniatarrekin topo egitea, horregatik Euskeraz hasi ginen hitzegiten (Euskara zatar bat, 3 urte edo daramagulako erabili gabe, batxilleratoa eta ikastola izanda Euskara hitzegiteko lekua eta) eta beste bikote batekin topo egin genuen, Gipuzkoakoak ziren. Vascos por el mundo-tan bezala sentitu ginen jsjsjs

  • @mikeg2306
    @mikeg2306 Před 9 měsíci +309

    Basque languages use to be much more widely spoken. In Roman times a large area of South-Western France was Basque. The Romans called the people Vascones from which we get the name Basque and also the name of the region Gascony.

    • @framegrace1
      @framegrace1 Před 9 měsíci +32

      Romans didn't invented that name. As they did with a lot of other tribes, they just latinized the name the locals named those people. They wer called basques way before the Romans, and yes basque or basque-like languages were most probably spoken on all the pyrenees, and Iberian or proto-iberian south from there, both languages may have been related.

    • @samuelsz1422
      @samuelsz1422 Před 9 měsíci +31

      The name was invented by the Celts, they call them "barscunes", that means "mountain people". The Romans came and latinized it, creating the word "vascones".

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před 7 měsíci +4

      The Romans called the whole region "Aquitania" and understood that they did not speak any Gaulish there.

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor Před 6 měsíci +6

      _Vascones_ were the inhabitants of present day Navarre (Spain), and that's where the term "Basque" comes from; meanwhile the area in the south of France were some Proto-Basque variant was spoken belonged to the _Aquitani,_ according to Roman descriptions. That's where the current French region of Aquitaine got its name from.
      Finally, the area of the Basque Country autonomous community in Spain was the territory of the _Varduli, Caristii_ and _Autrigones._ None of these names has been preserved until today but it is assumed that they were also speakers of Proto-Basque.

  • @novedad4468
    @novedad4468 Před 9 měsíci +253

    One thing to note is that Basque used to be more widespread thousands of years ago. There's a lot of place names and documents that prove the presence of Basque in La Rioja and the Aragonese Pyrenees in the middle ages, and the name Val d'Aran, the occitan speaking, Northwestern region of Catalonia, is thought to come from the basque word Aran, meaning valley.
    Even more interesting, the Gascon dialect of occitan, spoken in the region south of the Garonne river (except from the places where Basque is still spoken), is the most divergent of all, and us thought to be so due to a previous Basque substrate, since many of their characteristics are explained from a basque influence and shared with other neighbors of basque, most proto basque lithic engravings have been found there, and the romans noted that the ppls inhabiting the region where different from their Celtic neighbours

    • @Svnfold
      @Svnfold Před 9 měsíci +10

      Aranese and Castilian (Spanish) both share the loss of Latin F in many (not all) words....replacing F with H. Something that is theorized to be from Basque influences
      Filius
      Hilh
      Hijo

    • @jaumejoseoranies7948
      @jaumejoseoranies7948 Před 9 měsíci +6

      ​@@SvnfoldAll of the Gascon (Aranese included) dialect changed F for H. Related with Bask/Wask/Guask? Perhaps? Castilian related to latinized basque/euskera? Sure! (Specially for birthplace).

    • @Svnfold
      @Svnfold Před 9 měsíci

      @@jaumejoseoranies7948 interesting.....just listed Aranese as that's the only Gascon sub-dialect I have any knowledge of lol
      I know the other Occitan varieties use F though.
      🤔🤔🤔

    • @unanec
      @unanec Před 9 měsíci +8

      Even more to the east, we can finde the cerdanya comarca with plenty of basque placenames like Ur, Llo, Eina or even further east Nyer and Soanyes or even more to the east Bassegoda. We even can sustain coastal names like Estrac. Toponomy is enough to prove that basque and Iberian were the same language or very related so we can extend Basque into half of Spain and Gasconha

    • @jsgoyburu
      @jsgoyburu Před 9 měsíci +4

      Wait... So it's the "Valley of Valley"?

  • @JurassicLion2049
    @JurassicLion2049 Před 9 měsíci +458

    I love to use Basque and Finnish as examples of language isolates & how to explain language families. Basque has influences on Spanish too like the surname Salazar.

    • @iml_mistikk2592
      @iml_mistikk2592 Před 9 měsíci +51

      So all Slytherins are Basque?

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Před 9 měsíci +65

      Sancho/Sanchez is an originally Basque name, too

    • @georgedoty-williams2085
      @georgedoty-williams2085 Před 9 měsíci +52

      And all those names like Echeverría/Etxeverría, Jáuregui and Aristegui

    • @FoggyD
      @FoggyD Před 9 měsíci +105

      As Patrick mentioned, Finnish is related to Estonian (and much more distantly, Hungarian). Basque is more of a true isolate.

    • @100percent12
      @100percent12 Před 9 měsíci +85

      Finnish is not an isolate

  • @Egemony
    @Egemony Před 8 měsíci +83

    I tried learning Basque once. The thing I found the most challenging was this unique gimmick that is language possesses, which is the copular verb at the end of the sentence. Although copular verb exist in various Indian languages as well, the Basque copular verb is a lot more dense. A tiny word alone can carry the tense, the subject, the object, and yet, there's no simple formula for learning it. A sentence like "eman nion" means I have given it to him, where "eman" literally means to give, and "nion" denotes all the rest. I asked my Basque friends for help, and they have given me what they call the "Almighty chart" where all verb inflections are stored in a gargantuan chart 😂

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci +11

      Omg yes, conjugations are a nightmare and you always need the god chart or get used to hearing the verbs "right". Aditz taula is the nightmare of many Basque children xD

    • @___._
      @___._ Před 6 měsíci +9

      The DREADED Nor-Nori-Nork table!

    • @axular8130
      @axular8130 Před 6 měsíci +3

      That's actually a very good explanation of Basque conjugation system.

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor Před 6 měsíci +6

      Hahaha native Basque here, I can confirm that the infamous verb table at the end of every Basque school textbook was a scary sight, but it was very helpful once you learnt to read it properly.

    • @yunoraphael1413
      @yunoraphael1413 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Periodic table of verbs

  • @thegoat9219
    @thegoat9219 Před 6 měsíci +29

    I speak Basque and it is my native language. The fun thing about basque and a reason why it is so hard to learn is that cities that are even 5km apart have different words for the same things. And before Basque was unified (relatively lately) basque were around 7 versions of the same language in a very small space. This is part of the reason I have labeled it the freestyle language.

    • @thegoat9219
      @thegoat9219 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@AlazarWanderer I don't really know the meaning of Eusk but I have a theory. We call our language Euskera where "era" means "the way to do" it makes sense for Eusk to mean something because Euskal Herria is what we call the basque country. With this though, I could have found a pattern.
      For Spanish we use Gaztelera where the "era" is visible here as well but the begining is for how we call the Spanish language which comes from the name of the Spanish region castilla and maybe the word castellano (another Spanish word for referring to the language Spanish).
      By this logic if we follow the pattern maybe Eusk is just the name our ancestors used to call the place they lived in. It must have a meaning as well as castilla has in Spanish (similar to the word Castillo which means castle) but I couldn't find one and I wasn't taught about it.

    • @thegoat9219
      @thegoat9219 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@AlazarWanderer Yes I am. Era can be used alone as well. For example saying "Era honetara egingo dut" whch means "I'm going to do it this way" is correct. There are other ways to say this as well like "Horrela egingo dut" but both are correct to say or at least I've heard both of them being used.
      Btw, if you are curious and want to look up words in Euskera you can in elhuyar hiztegia and if you want to translate sentences the best translator is the neuronal translator in the page Euskadi .eus

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT Před 4 měsíci

      That's the sort of thing that happened with Native American languages, & is mostly because the speakers of so many different dialects across a wide region got shoved together in one, little, tiny area.

  • @Eriorguez
    @Eriorguez Před 6 měsíci +31

    The funny thing about Euskera, is that Castillian is throughly influenced by it. So, the ancient language not only managed to not be overran by Latin, but also managed to shape the most widely spoken modern descendant of Latin.

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor Před 6 měsíci +2

      Exactly! Modern Castilian phonology is believed to be an influence of Basque. Castilian evolved from Latin in the areas bordering the Basque speaking territories, and has a very similar phonetic inventory, especially regarding vowels.

    • @thatguyfromthere1168
      @thatguyfromthere1168 Před 4 měsíci

      any examples?

    • @HelderGriff
      @HelderGriff Před měsícem +1

      ​@@thatguyfromthere1168 izquierda, chamarra, mochila, and so many surnames like Echeverría, García, Ochoa

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl Před 9 měsíci +356

    France officially doesn't recognise Euskara, or any other indigenous language except French. It's the only country in Europe which refuses to recognise any minority language.

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Před 9 měsíci +36

      Not true. French is the sole official language, but regional languages are recognized.

    • @fritoss3437
      @fritoss3437 Před 9 měsíci +34

      Euskara school litteraly exist in France

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +94

      @@fritoss3437 Ikastolak do exist in France, but they do _not_ get any state support. There is more financial support coming from the Euskadi (the Basque Autonomous Region) government across the border, as well as funding provided by local organizations and communities themselves.

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 8 měsíci

      Germany is equally racist not admitting any minorities existing there

    • @tarniabook3076
      @tarniabook3076 Před 8 měsíci +32

      Ah, one more reason for us to resent the french, I see. I'd add it to the list, but we ran out of paper a few decades ago. /j

  • @cairneoleander8130
    @cairneoleander8130 Před 9 měsíci +76

    I am still floored by how many people never put together that the surname Vasquez is OBVIOUSLY coming from Basquez

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +15

      Actually the last name is extremely common and is the same with Gonzales which is one of the most common last name in Spain both have Basque roots .

    • @panterauntera77771
      @panterauntera77771 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Vásquez is Galician.

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@panterauntera77771 interest it i didn’t know that , I have met many people with the last name and one of them told me it a Basque last name , I don’t know since all my Basque last names on my family tree are extremely rare and I don’t have any Vasquez on my family tree there’s only one is by marriage not blood related. Thanks for the info , you always learn new things .

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Garcia is also a Spanish last name with Basque roots. Now the most common Spanish surname. Comes from Gaztea (the young man/youth)

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci

      @@christopheroates5674 you are correct I mistook Garcia with Gonzales .

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Před 9 měsíci +122

    I've long used "Lurra" as the name for the alternate-Earth that forms the background for some of my characters. It's the Basque word for "Earth." I chose it because it sounded a bit like "Terra" without actually being that. Was neat finding out why the language is such an outlier!

    • @maozedong8370
      @maozedong8370 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Writing a story huh? Sounds interesting already.

    • @Ggdivhjkjl
      @Ggdivhjkjl Před 9 měsíci +2

      It also sounds like Luna.

    • @joxemikeo7903
      @joxemikeo7903 Před 9 měsíci

      Does how I named my dog, he's brown

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +14

      @@Ggdivhjkjl What is interesting about the moon, in Basque, the word is "Ilargi" which means "death+light" (Il+argi) , the ancient Basques knew that the moon was not a _source_ of light, but _reflecting_ the Sun's light. The modern word for "photo" is "Argazkia" which means "with light", just like the greek meaning (photos + graphé = drawing with light)

    • @HayTatsuko
      @HayTatsuko Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@maozedong8370 Thanks. My story-writing times are a bit behind me, alas, but they were fun back in the days of the collaborative-fiction website The Nice and The Master Zen-Dao Meow forums and webcomic in particular. Sadly, both are long out of service.

  • @isaacbruner65
    @isaacbruner65 Před 9 měsíci +165

    The word for right in Spanish "derecha" comes from Latin, but the word for left "izquierda" comes from Basque. I remember reading that the original Latin-derived word for left might have fallen out of use due to taboos about left-handedness.

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 8 měsíci

      do they still use number 13 or is it different from others?

    • @guillep6639
      @guillep6639 Před 8 měsíci +26

      The original word for left in spanish was siniestra. Its Not used to mean left anymore but its still used for Other meanings

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 Před 8 měsíci +10

      @@szymonbaranowski8184 13 in Spanish is trece, which still comes from the Latin word for 13, tredecim.

    • @marcoroberts9462
      @marcoroberts9462 Před 8 měsíci +6

      like italian sinistra@@guillep6639

    • @Robert1991acosta
      @Robert1991acosta Před 8 měsíci

      a diestra y siniestra@@guillep6639

  • @Zestieee
    @Zestieee Před 8 měsíci +21

    I've heard someone say: "The mystery about Basque is not its origins, but its survival."

  • @unanec
    @unanec Před 9 měsíci +61

    I am a toponomyst in my free time. The basque language once extended from the entire pyrinees. There are areas of catalonia entirely settled with basque named towns. Even the country of Andorra comes from basque: composed by Andi- (flourishing, fulfilling, expanding) and -iturria (source of water, fountain), so basically named after thermal waters. There is a constant fashion to deny that iberian oanguage and basque were the same or very related, maybe they want to avoid certain ideas like basque being the foundation of spain. But there are just too mqny evidences. The greeks named iberia after the Ebrus river, a name that heard in its delta by the locals, the iberians. In basque the word for rives is "ibai". Even the tartessos were probably very closely related, or at least they coexisted with basco-iberian colonies (impossible as the iberians lived with a tribal lifestyle)

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před 9 měsíci +2

      "ibai"
      Yeah. I don't think it has any connection to Indo-European languages. It must have been a hold-over from earlier migrations into Europe.

    • @TheJollyJokerDancer
      @TheJollyJokerDancer Před 6 měsíci

      This need to be better known. And from my time in history (although I moved to philosophy as an academic), basque being the foundation of Spain is not as far fetched as it seems, for a lot more reasons than "just" linguistics and toponyms.

    • @unanec
      @unanec Před 5 měsíci

      @@AlazarWanderer can't tell if that's trolling or just dumb and confusing caucasian iberian from hispanic iberians

  • @paulmarynissen
    @paulmarynissen Před 9 měsíci +64

    For those wanting to do a bit more of a deep dive, the book “The basque history of the world” by Mark Kurlansky is a great read.

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@DeReAntiquait actually list accomplishments by Basques , history and even food recipes. Did you know two of the ships that were used by Colombo to “discover “ America were actually built by Basques , they also haunted whales almost to extinction and many of the people who started the Independence movement in Latin American from Spain were of Basque decent.

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@DeReAntiqua I read you other comments , you called this video nonsense when he stated many things that been researched . Just because you weren’t aware or didn’t know many things about Basques doesn’t make them nonsense or untrue, I have met many people who don’t even know what a Basque is or where is located when in reality if you think about they were the original Iberians . Many historians believe they the Basques been in the Iberian peninsula for more than 9000 years .

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@DeReAntiquayou are impolite and overbearing
      if I would see you in person you would be slapped immediately to teach you some culture

  • @weifan9533
    @weifan9533 Před 9 měsíci +53

    Handia actually still sounds somewhat like Grand or Grande.

    • @jonathanf.9395
      @jonathanf.9395 Před 9 měsíci +13

      Yeah more than sounds like it, it shares the AND in the middle, but there are definitely better examples he could've used.

    • @mikttenby8118
      @mikttenby8118 Před 9 měsíci +13

      He could've used the word for small which is very different to words like petit or pequeño, since the word is txikia

    • @angelcosta4383
      @angelcosta4383 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Txikia sounds somewhat like spanish ''chico" which means ''lil boy, guy, small, tiny, not woth very much..." So i is not the best example either

    • @alpacamale2909
      @alpacamale2909 Před 9 měsíci

      yeah I was thinking that, it even has the ND

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +4

      "Handi" is actually "big" , Handia is "the big" the -a at the end represents "the". "mutil" = boy , "mutila" = the boy; "argi" = light , "argia" = the light, etc. Just one of the errors the video producer has made.

  • @hallobre
    @hallobre Před 9 měsíci +11

    Fun fact: the Basque people have one of the biggest populations with RH negative blood, together with the northern African Amazigh and Irish people.

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +5

      You are forgetting the Japanese people, they also have a high percentage of O negative blood . I believe they are second and Basques are number 1.

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Another fun fact: Spain is one of the countries with most blood donors in the world, and the Basque Country's public healthcare is one of the best among the autonomous communities

  • @josh0g
    @josh0g Před 9 měsíci +22

    I like that story about the devil which also implies that the Basque people have not been corrupted as other people. Funny to have a folk-tale that is a joke about how difficult your language is, but also implies you are an exceptionally good people.

    • @TriviRocks
      @TriviRocks Před 4 měsíci

      i happen to know many people of Basque origin, and I can tell they're loyal, stoic, hard-working, good-humoured, resilient, and a lot more... Maybe the legend's right ; D

  • @JoeSmith-bs1kt
    @JoeSmith-bs1kt Před 9 měsíci +56

    I went on exchange in Donostia (San Sebastián), and my host father primarily spoke Basque. He and I spoke about the same amount of Spanish, and had a really fun time because of it - sometimes we could have conversations in incoherent Spanish that the two of us understood but completely confused his wife.

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 8 měsíci

      why his wife didn't learn own husband's tongue lol

    • @JoeSmith-bs1kt
      @JoeSmith-bs1kt Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@szymonbaranowski8184 she spoke basque. She didn’t understand his Spanish.

    • @irdcs
      @irdcs Před 8 měsíci +14

      Really hard to believe that someone from Donostia didn't speak Spanish well.

  • @Nick-us8qh
    @Nick-us8qh Před 9 měsíci +62

    According to Antonio Tovar, the name could have been from an exonym of entirely Proto-Indo-European origin given to the Basques by earlier Indo-Europeans inhabiting Basque country, based on the name "ba(r)scunes" found inscribed on coins matching the territory and period. The name would have been comprised of:
    - the root Proto-Indo-European *bʰers- (“tip, point, top”)
    - the suffix *kon-
    - the consonant stem suffix *-es indicating the name as a nominative plural
    Thus, the name would have meant something like "the high (proud) people."

    • @unanec
      @unanec Před 9 měsíci +6

      As an afficionate i dislike the theory. Not only because it is using reverse analysis which very rarely will give a correct origin but also because it casually brings up the sentimental component.
      In fact, Vasco and Eusko are not that different, this is a popular theory. But the thing is that the original form of the castilian word Vasco is Vascón, visibly the same name as the Gascon people of Occitania.
      In my opinion Vascón and Gascon names must come from the bame of a city because of that -o(n) ending, same as Tarraco(n), Barkeno(n), Baetulo(n), Ieso(n), Berdun, Irurtzun, Irun, Baio(n) or even we could incloude Cascasso(n) and Narbo(n).
      Just like Armenia was naned after Armanvir.
      Another theory i like is thinking that Basque is an exonym a nearby tribe gave them. Basque can be related to the word Baso- meaning precipice, steep, but also forestry. It might come from a navarrese or aquitanian tribe (both basque) to the tribe thay inhabitated in the boarther of theese two, in foresty steeps

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před 9 měsíci +1

      The mountains * people 🤦‍♂️

    • @thequantumcat184
      @thequantumcat184 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@unanecin fact, "The ones from the forest" in modern Basque would be "Basokoak" which sounds quite similar to "Basque" even though the older version of both words would certainly sound quite different to their modern counterparts.

    • @nicktallfox5266
      @nicktallfox5266 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The Highlanders?

    • @unanec
      @unanec Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@thequantumcat184 baso has been attested as unaltered for at least a couple millenia. Basque is a very stable language. Basque used to reduce many vowels when combining words, Baso would probably be reduced as Bas-, and Baskoak is a great word to start with. Still i don't know what the component -koak means (?)

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Před 9 měsíci +58

    I'm an admirer of the amazing Mondragon workers' cooperative in Basque county. It is the largest successful workers' cooperative in the world.
    -Dave from Chicago, USA

  • @loganslavens6436
    @loganslavens6436 Před 6 měsíci +4

    My wife is Basque and grew up in Vitoria, the capital of the Basque Country, her grandfather is one of those monoglots. I can speak Spanish and English but don't understand or even attempt to understand Euskara. Such a unique and amazing culture. I loved spending many months there! Gora Euskal Herria Askatuta!

  • @gerardosalazar161
    @gerardosalazar161 Před 8 měsíci +12

    As a child my grandmother and my dad used to speak to me in Euskera but unfortunately they both passed away when I was very young and my mother never used the language so I forgot all I knew. A few months ago I went to my ancestral village in Tuyo, Álava, and what a treat it was; I met some family members and the most emotive moment when I went to the small cemetery i and could read on the stones names long forgotten. I found my grandpa and an uncle who carried my same name. I stayed therefor a while taking to them and feeling them around me. A beautiful memory that will stay with me forever.

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci

      Ahora me entero de que Álava tiene un pueblo llamado Tuyo. Que pena que estemos todos centralizados en Vitoria...

  • @Roonayy
    @Roonayy Před 9 měsíci +18

    Ending every sentence with "-uh" is pretty wild too

    • @alpakapucuf3394
      @alpakapucuf3394 Před 6 měsíci +2

      The pronunciation of "." is now just a schwa

  • @MG-dy2si
    @MG-dy2si Před 9 měsíci +88

    Ah, the lonely language isolates. It’s interesting to see language isolates that aren’t Japanese or Korean

    • @rvat2003
      @rvat2003 Před 9 měsíci +28

      Japanese isn't. It has several sisters. Koreanic arguably has Jeju as well.

    • @baku_m_salti3128
      @baku_m_salti3128 Před 9 měsíci +22

      ​@@rvat2003What relatives does Japonic have other than Ryukyuan? Ainu is an isolate, as is the nearby Nivkh. Genuinely curious

    • @rvat2003
      @rvat2003 Před 9 měsíci +20

      @@baku_m_salti3128 "Ryukyuan" isn't one language. The term denotes about 10 Japonic languages.

    • @s4yum1
      @s4yum1 Před 9 měsíci

      ⁠​⁠@@rvat2003interesting view about koreanic and Jeju-eo

    • @silverbackag9790
      @silverbackag9790 Před 9 měsíci

      I thought Mongolian, Korean, and Japanese are thought to have common roots? I can say that Mongolian has the same sounds and tempo of Korean to a non linguist. Obviously different words (other than Mandarin loan words common to both). No idea about the structure. Japanese and Korean also share many similar “sounds.”

  • @hijodelsoldeoriente
    @hijodelsoldeoriente Před 9 měsíci +74

    I came to know about the Basque people and Euskera when I'm researching Filipino Geneology and migration.
    I found out that there are prominent Filipinos of Basque origin here in The Philippines, what made them stand out for me is their names: Ayala, Aboitiz, Elizalde, Ynchausti, Aranetas, etc.
    These folks speaks in Filipino, English, and Spanish, not sure if they still speak Euskera though. And still are, of course, Filipinos despite their origin. However, some of these clans, specifically the Ynchausti became a bridge between Filipinos and the Basque People encouraging cultural exchanges and promoting the teaching of Basque History and university exchanges in The Philippines.
    Jai-alai, a basque sport was also once played in The Philippines. I don't know if there are still players of Jai-alai in The Philippines though as it's not that famous.
    It's just interesting as I suppose most Basque immigrants came to the Americas and not in Asia. And that most Filipinos probably don't know about them because most people here just clump everyone into one, Spaniards.

    • @NoobHammer
      @NoobHammer Před 9 měsíci +1

      Interesting

    • @rottengal
      @rottengal Před 9 měsíci +8

      omg not trying to sound like a meddler, but something similar happened to me jajsjdj, but in my case i’m from the north side of México and i found out my accent, culture and vocabulary is heavily influenced by Euskera and Basque culture, i never thought filipino culture had basque influences as well considering the geographic distance, the more you know

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +8

      You also have Basque names in your geography such as Legazpi City , Urdaneta, Gonzaga, and other places. It was Elcano who completed Magellan's voyage , a Basque navigator. There is more Basque influence in the Philippines than meets the eye.

    • @hijodelsoldeoriente
      @hijodelsoldeoriente Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@rottengal no worries! That's very interesting! Post-colonial nations like Mexico and The Philippines have interesting culture. Basque influences is just one of them. And upon digging deeper, I found out more Basque influences. 😂
      And here's the interesting thing since you are Mexican, there are Filipinos of native american origin as well mostly from Mexican Tlaxcalan migrants brought by the conquistadores during the conquest of the islands. And vice versa, there are many Mexicans with filipino origin from Acapulco to Guerrero if I'm not mistaken due to the Galleon trade.
      Today, Mexican influence can be seen and heard here. We have so many Nahuatl loan words such as palenque, tiangue, sayote, atsuete and even our term for mother and father, "nanay" and "tatay" are from Nahuatl. We also eat Tamale but made with rice masa and covered with Banana leaves instead of corn husks and corn masa. In exchange, Filipinos brought mango, tuba, manton de manila, coconut distilling, etc.
      It's very interesting to say the least. 😂

    • @stripedpolkadots8692
      @stripedpolkadots8692 Před 8 měsíci

      @@hijodelsoldeoriente so that explains the native american i found in my ancestry report! (I’m filipino My family has lived in the philippines for like forever, and the only non filipino ancestry we know of are spanish and chinese). I was sooo confused, wondering how the heck that got there lol. Fascinating! Thanks for the info ☺️ My brother found out that his native american blood was specifically amazonian though, would you know anything about that?

  • @safebox36
    @safebox36 Před 9 měsíci +20

    I still find it fascinating / odd that Basque managed to survive extinction compared to other languages in Europe pre-PIE spread.
    Like, it shares some etymologies with other European languages, but that's more late-stage cross-influence than descendance.
    One thing it has on other minor languages is that, despite a smaller population of speakers in some cases, the resources to actually learn the language are far greater.
    Online translators are it or miss, but there's a dictionary and a grammar book to get start.

    • @freebozkurt9277
      @freebozkurt9277 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Although the video just barely mentions the Finn-Ugric languages but the same can be said about them too, like Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian and Saami (Lapp). Or even more so as they were in the epicentre of migration.

  • @ZetaPrime77
    @ZetaPrime77 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Basque is such a neat language, I wish there was a duolingo course for it or something

    • @jorge.urreta
      @jorge.urreta Před 6 měsíci +2

      Duolingo developers would actually end up killing themselves trying to do such a thing. Trust me, I'm Basque and also a dev

  • @montecorbit8280
    @montecorbit8280 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Been wanting to see this for a long time.... Thank you for finally getting around to making it!!

  • @hizukinozomi
    @hizukinozomi Před 6 měsíci +5

    basque here! even the language can be a bit “hard” for us sometimes, since there are a lot of “rules” and charts you have to learn to speak it correctly. you can search “nor-nori-nork taulak” ( I don’t even know how to translate it but imagine if you had to learn more than 30 different ways to say “x gave y to z” ) and soon you’ll see an enormous one and that there are more things ( nor-nori, nor-nork… ) that are also required to speak the language correctly

  • @emaarredondo-librarian
    @emaarredondo-librarian Před 6 měsíci +7

    In a library I worked in there was an old Spanish book, a Basque grammar, called "El impossible vencido. Arte de la lengua bascongada" (sic) by Manuel de Larramendi. The title means: "The impossible (thing) defeated. Art of the basque language."

  • @jotapeuy
    @jotapeuy Před 9 měsíci +14

    Vasco is one of the most common origins for uruguayans. There is a neighborhood in Montevideo called Euskalherria. “Porfiado como Vasco” and “aclarando dijo un Vasco mientras le echaba agua a la leche” are 2 common phrases en Uruguay.

  • @hoseja
    @hoseja Před 9 měsíci +34

    "handia" specifically DOES kinda sound like "grande". LMAO.

    • @Armiteus
      @Armiteus Před 9 měsíci +7

      Yeah, that wasn't a great example, but just a look at Basque grammar also shows us it's not related to any IE language (it's ergative-absolutive and agglutinative)

    • @volkhen0
      @volkhen0 Před 9 měsíci +4

      G and H often change over time. Perfect example Polish and Czech where our Gs are their Hs. Grande / Handia - dropping R is not uncommon and then you have “ND” which is identical in both words. The ending vowels can change like in Grande / Grand.

  • @jenniplease
    @jenniplease Před 7 měsíci +7

    Ending every sentence with the same tone is either the most irritating or most brilliant affectation. I can’t decide which.

  • @irdcs
    @irdcs Před 8 měsíci +10

    Fun fact: the letter h used to be pronounced like the h in "her" in all basque dialects but it only survives in the easternmost ones nowadays and has become mute in the others.

  • @Where_is_Waldo
    @Where_is_Waldo Před 9 měsíci +11

    It seems to me that the word "handia" could have evolved from a common parent word it could have shared with "grand" and "grande". Considering how letters can become silent or change sounds as language evolves, such a parent word could alternatively have evolved into "grandia" or "hande".

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Před 9 měsíci +1

      English has only about twelve words from Welsh but Welsh has plenty from English, including the famous Welsh term car parc for any Welsh people allergic to k. Welsh also has about a thousand words borrowed from Latin including the days of the week. These imbalances are about power.

    • @Where_is_Waldo
      @Where_is_Waldo Před 9 měsíci

      @@Joanna-il2ur I grew up with low german (or, as I like to call it, flat german... you'll get that if you know the language) and I've noticed that people who speak both low german and english invariably combine the two languages in varying degrees. Despite this, when low german speakers encountered electricity, they didn't come up with a new word for it or even borrow a word for it from another language. They just used their word for fire. My favorite low german version of an english term is shuck-ups for shocks (automotive suspension dampers).

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Where_is_Waldo Plattdeutsch

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci +2

      But there's also simple words like eguzkia or ilargia that are totally different from sol or luna

  • @te0nani
    @te0nani Před 6 měsíci +4

    Wouldn't be surprised if whatever the Neanderthals spoke evolved into Basque today.

  • @jajjaspson8001
    @jajjaspson8001 Před 9 měsíci +14

    You could have chosen a better example. Handia actually sounds a lot like Grande and Grand.

    • @alpacamale2909
      @alpacamale2909 Před 9 měsíci +5

      yeah I was thinking that, it even has the ND

    • @BionicPig95
      @BionicPig95 Před 9 měsíci

      Ah yes, because G=H. Genius comment. Or shall I say henius comment.
      A professional linguist, I assume?

    • @kensington1199
      @kensington1199 Před 9 měsíci

      I agree

    • @prof.reuniclus21
      @prof.reuniclus21 Před 8 měsíci

      @@BionicPig95Try saying G without using your tongue

    • @goodiesohhi
      @goodiesohhi Před 7 měsíci

      @@BionicPig95 You clearly don't know a lot about linguistics. Do a google search for Gheada why don't you.

  • @ghostlion8616
    @ghostlion8616 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Chloe: so you're the devil and knows many languages?
    Lucifer: yes, except Basque.. I spent 7 years for nothing

  • @Philip-du9uc
    @Philip-du9uc Před 9 měsíci +24

    i mainly ask myself about how difficult it was to manage to translate basque into other languages, if there are no relations betwenn any other language and basque it would be extremely difficult, ofcourse, you can still point at a rock or tree and say its name in your language, but it would be extremely difficult to translate and know the meaning more abstract concepts and words

    • @unanec
      @unanec Před 9 měsíci +4

      Just learn both language as a kid

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před 9 měsíci

      It really does remind me of how we see the Finnish or Hungarian Language.
      The terms they use are just completely different from what we're used to.

    • @LuJoTu
      @LuJoTu Před 7 měsíci

      People grow up bilingual. It happens all the time.

    • @Philip-du9uc
      @Philip-du9uc Před 7 měsíci

      @@LuJoTu ofcourse people do that, but i am still impressed about how diffrent it is and how difficult it is to learn

  • @dking6021
    @dking6021 Před 9 měsíci +8

    okay the fact you said romance language and then kept italy out of it lmao

  • @worm8566
    @worm8566 Před 6 měsíci +3

    i think it's hilarious how every word that ends in -ed, you end like "unsolved(uh)"

  • @PipeDreamerJacques
    @PipeDreamerJacques Před 9 měsíci +13

    Is an AI voice reading this script? There are very odd inflections at the ends of phrases.

    • @cerdic6305
      @cerdic6305 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Pretty sure it’s a real person, he just has an extremely odd way of speaking

  • @_Diana_S
    @_Diana_S Před 6 měsíci +3

    What happened to a lot of research done about 30-40 years ago connecting Basque language to Georgian (Kartuli)? Georgia also used to be called Iberia (Eastern part of it, see the map of Roman empire just above Armenia at 6:47), so two Iberian languages were showing some semblance, some common words (roots), etc.

  • @BinglesP
    @BinglesP Před 6 měsíci +6

    I remember learning about the Basque culture one day in middle school World History class, sort of like a bonus lesson on top of the main one we were learning that week. I remember we watched a video about it, where they showcased them singing some folk songs in the Basque language, as part of showcasing how their community is unique and pridefully tied to their history despite not having a country of their own.
    I'm French, and find it interesting how there's several diverse cultures near us, even within our own borders. I guess that's just typical for Europe as a whole, though.

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor Před 6 měsíci +2

      There is a whole Basque community in the southwest of France, known as Pays Basque in French and just Iparralde "(the) North" in Basque.
      I encourage you to visit this region, it's a very beautiful and unique part of France that still fights to maintain its proud Basque culture in spite of the French centralist policies. Also, the most beautiful Basque dialect in my opinion is spoken in one of its deepest valleys, the Souletin (Xiberera in Basque) dialect.

  • @jeepmega629
    @jeepmega629 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Basque is like that cousin you barely talk to but when you do talk to him you have a lot of fun.

  • @WarLoqGamer
    @WarLoqGamer Před 9 měsíci +25

    Fun fact:
    There's a decently sized Basque population in La Plata, near Buenos Aires. They even have their own organization for promoting Basque culture and Euskara
    It still baffles me how it can be easier to find resources in Buenos Aires to learn freaking Euskara than other languages, either native from Argentina (Quichua, Tehuelche, Mapuche, Guarani), european (Hungarian, italian languages (keep in mind the big italian diaspora here), greek), or asian (if its not mandarin, korean, or japanse, all i can say is GOOD LUCK.)

    • @DrDoge-dn9mi
      @DrDoge-dn9mi Před 8 měsíci +6

      De hecho Quechua se estudia bastante casi al mismo nivel que Euskera. La diferencia es la reinvindicación que hacen los hablantes de euskera a nivel etnia/nacion es mucho mas diferente al del Quechua.
      El guarani no es bastante estudiado ya que todavia es muy hablado y palabras modernas de adoptan al diccionario. Es mas, el guaraní no tenia un abecedario moderno en si hasta hace unos cuantos años atras.
      Saludos

  • @edwelty
    @edwelty Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for the explanation

  • @timgraham4905
    @timgraham4905 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Even weirder and more perplexing than the Basque language are the speech patterns of this narrator - the identical descending cadence of every sentence, the divebombing last word with an extra vowel at the end thrown in for reasons unclear. Not sure I've heard the like of it before.

    • @eduardopupucon
      @eduardopupucon Před 9 měsíci +1

      He is British, ever heard of different accents?

    • @diego_villena
      @diego_villena Před 9 měsíci

      @@eduardopupuconthat’s not a British thing, that’s called extreme vocal fry and it is an affectation.

    • @diego_villena
      @diego_villena Před 9 měsíci

      8:14 is the clearest example of appended vowels. “An enemy of god-uh”.

    • @eduardopupucon
      @eduardopupucon Před 9 měsíci

      @@diego_villena there's no unified British accent, theres dozens of different English accents in Britain

    • @eduardopupucon
      @eduardopupucon Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@diego_villena it's an affectation? didn't knew about that, i guess every single Portuguese speaker has that, because in our language it's very rare to have words that don't end in a vowel, so we tend to add vowels to the end of words a lot when trying to speak English, for example we would say "speaki" instead of "speak" and "don'ti" instead of "don't".
      Which is also something noticed in the stereotypical Italian accent (provenient from south Italian immigrants to the USA)

  • @josuhuarte4452
    @josuhuarte4452 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Hello, just a note: The word fuero is spanish. In basque we say "Foru" or "Foruak" in plural.

  • @J11_boohoo
    @J11_boohoo Před 9 měsíci +20

    Ergativity is what makes basque different and diffucult from european languages
    It is the only language in europe with ergativity, with ergativity already being a rare feature in languages and it being a very difficult concept for non-native speakers to get their head around

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Georgian and Kurdish would be the closest geographical languages which also use the Ergative case.

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@christopheroates5674 You think so?
      I guess all we have to compare it to are the languages (and lineages) that didn't go extinct.

    • @romeocivilino6667
      @romeocivilino6667 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I think many Philippine Languages of the Philippines(for example Tagalog/Filipino)are also used partially/Fully an Ergative Cases in many of their Languages spread out through the Philippine Archipelago.
      Abstract:
      This dissertation explores the question of whether Tagalog, a language of the Philippines, is an ergative language. It is claimed that Tagalog is best characterized as neither accusative nor ergative but rather as a language that is a hybrid of these two language types. Tagalog's hybrid nature is neatly captured structurally within Principle and Parameters theory using VP internal subjects. In terms of Case, Tagalog not only has nominative-absolutive Case checking and ergative Case checking but it also makes extensive use of inherent accusative Case assignment. As a result, Tagalog has both a (NOM ACC) basic transitive sentence type, like accusative languages, and a (ERG ABS) basic transitive sentence type, like ergative languages. A specific structural analysis is given for these basic sentences under an Economy approach. This analysis is extended to account for complex sentences including sentences involving morphological causatives, conjunction reduction and raising.

    • @LuJoTu
      @LuJoTu Před 7 měsíci

      Ergativity is neither that difficult nor rare worldwide. It's the complete lack of lexical similarity, as well as the overall radically different grammatical structure, that make it hard for speakers of standard average European to learn. Fixating on the ergativity is not productive.

  • @Cutevampirebat
    @Cutevampirebat Před 9 měsíci

    One of my last names is basque, learning that made me really curious about the language! So cool that it comes from one so unique!!

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl Před 9 měsíci +5

    Euskara (i.e. the language spoken by the Basque people) has a noticeable lack of sounds which Neanderthals would have been unable to pronounce due to their anatomy.

  • @pisos95
    @pisos95 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I'm Basque and speak Basque yet I must say what this guy's stating about our origins are just theories and the ones most defended by academics nowadays is that Basque comes from the ancient Aquitanian language, not Iberian. That we were a nation spread between the Garonne and the Pyrenees until the Germanic invasions pushed us south to nowadays Basque Country.
    He didn't mention that so I must say half of what he said is inaccurate

  • @FailVines
    @FailVines Před 4 měsíci +2

    Hi! I was a basque monoglot until I started primary school where I was introduced to spanish,english and french as subjects, therefore learning them

    • @DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt
      @DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt Před měsícem

      You are fooling yourself. You didn't learn Spanish in a Basque school. It's impossible

    • @FailVines
      @FailVines Před měsícem

      @@DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt Why?

    • @DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt
      @DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt Před měsícem

      @@FailVines Because no children who knows nothing of Spanish could learn Spanish in a Basque school in which Spanish is taught just 3 hours per week. The primary concern of Basque schools is the transmission of the Basque language and the provision of a Basque immersive experience. How absurd and ironic the assertion that Spanish (!) is transmitted in Basque schools. If you have not learned Spanish with your family, then you have learned Spanish in the streets, with your friends, watching TV or whatever, but for sure it was not in a Basque school.

    • @FailVines
      @FailVines Před měsícem

      @@DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt Well I can't speak in general but only in my experience. The truth is that I practically had no idea about it until I started the subject at school because my whole environment was not exposed to it. Since I was having a hard time I needed extra help at home after school but yeah, I guess it depends on how you interpret the comment

  • @swagmama408
    @swagmama408 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Met a basque speaker today and was shocked to learn there's less than 1 million speakers in the world! Definitely would love to check out the basque area in Boise, ID!

  • @luistoses
    @luistoses Před 9 měsíci +4

    Some examples:
    Good morning: Egun on
    Good night: Gabon
    Hello: Kaixo
    Goodbye: Agur
    Opened: Zabalik
    Closed: Itxita
    Thank you: Eskerrik asko
    Please: Mesedez
    Yes Bai
    No: Ez
    Good: Ona
    Bad: Txarra

  • @TheKuwaitiCountryball
    @TheKuwaitiCountryball Před 9 měsíci +3

    I love your video as a monoglot!

  • @collinmoeller1345
    @collinmoeller1345 Před 6 měsíci +4

    To be clear, Basque is usually classified into its own Vasconian language tree. Ancient Iberian is sadly completely gone having been replaced by Latin language by the 2nd century AD. There are similarities between the numeral system but the depth of this relationship is greatly contentious.

  • @xolang
    @xolang Před 9 měsíci +14

    Fortunately Basque language area is split between Spain and France.
    İf it were entirely within France, its fate would probably be like Breton and Occitan today.

    • @giuseppelogiurato5718
      @giuseppelogiurato5718 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Breton is still spoken, is it not?

    • @esmeraldagreen1992
      @esmeraldagreen1992 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@giuseppelogiurato5718
      Outside of France mainly

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I believe there’s still some Occitan speaker around very small minority but I’m glad the language still around is such a beautiful language.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 9 měsíci

      @@giuseppelogiurato5718 Yea but its in decline compared to basque.

  • @WikipediaLover94
    @WikipediaLover94 Před 9 měsíci +8

    I know it's just example and professional linguists are smarter than I, but I quickly thought well grande to handia is the gr- turning to gh- then h- and the e sound turning to dipthong

    • @Echo_-tx9ve
      @Echo_-tx9ve Před 9 měsíci +2

      H is silent in basque.

    • @jwolternova1051
      @jwolternova1051 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Echo_-tx9veNot quite. It is silent except for a few speakers in the french basque country, where 'hasperena' is used; the h is pronounced with an inhaling sound (I was taught that it was something like that). It is present because it was previously used in some form of literary basque previous to normalization (Labortine). Additionally, 'kh' also exists but not in modern written basque. (I'm writing all of this from memory I might be completely wrong on some of the details)

    • @Echo_-tx9ve
      @Echo_-tx9ve Před 9 měsíci

      @@jwolternova1051 I wouldn't know because I learnt my basque from the other corner of the country. Very interesting though.

  • @milk1fan552
    @milk1fan552 Před 6 měsíci +7

    As for the part of basque being difficult to learn, i wanted to say that as a person born in the basque country myself, basque is not only difficult to learn because of unsimilarities with other languajes, but also because most young people here aren't that interested in speaking it and we're used to hear and speak spanish. Most of the time we use random words (for example, instead of using "mamá" or "madre" which are ways to say mom in spanish i use "ama" which is mom in basque) or mix spanish and basque (the way this is done depends on the person). This is in my opinion pretty sad since the basque languaje is basically a treasure that should be kept alive.

    • @raleo7466
      @raleo7466 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yeah but it isn't often talked about how we learn the language forcefully since very little and without proper teachings, I know many friends who had trouble at school because they couldn't express themselves properly in Basque when writing exams or understand concepts properly. Many of them wrote their notes in Spanish to understand it better. It's pretty common for people around me to leave Euskera behind once you leave high school, the only thing about studying in Basque is the language title many jobs require

  • @desanipt
    @desanipt Před 9 měsíci +5

    Honestly, I'm disappointed about the part where you compare the age of Basque to other languages.
    If there's anything that learning about linguistics makes you realise is that languages have no age, and you can't really compare the age of modern languages to any other.
    All languages have older ancestors, and its form spoken at any single point in time is not the same as the spoken at any other point in time.
    In theory, modern Basque is just as different from the Proto Basque spoken 2000 years ago, as Spanish and Latin are. And Latin had a living ancestor at any point you can of in which Basque also had a living ancestor language.
    At best, you could say that some ancestor language of Basque has been spoken in western Europe, much, much before Latin or any ancestor of Latin.

    • @egbront1506
      @egbront1506 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DiotimaMantinea-ub6yr That sounds unexpected for an isolated language not seemingly much influenced by either French or Spanish surrounding it. Icelandic is sort of in the same boat and hasn't really changed all that much in a thousand years, even under Danish rule. Similarly, classical Arabic speakers can go back a fair bit before they really start having trouble understanding the meaning of texts. What made Basque so unstable - apart from the fact that it was only recently unified and has several dialects?

  • @Razaak666
    @Razaak666 Před 9 měsíci

    5:13 That shout-out had me chuckling :D

  • @davydatwood3158
    @davydatwood3158 Před 9 měsíci +18

    It amuses me no end that a channel all about words and languages has used "theory" when "hypothesis" would have been more correct. :)

    • @davydatwood3158
      @davydatwood3158 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@SamBeck6090 Well, yes, obviously, and the sentence is perfectly clear, but it's still funny as all get-out.

  • @av6728
    @av6728 Před 9 měsíci +5

    It's incredible what languages mythical characters can and can't learn

  • @grafinvonhohenembs
    @grafinvonhohenembs Před 9 měsíci +1

    "Big Book O' Basque" LOL I'm dying! XD

  • @domilontano
    @domilontano Před 8 měsíci +2

    Cool video! How much influence do pre-Indo-European languages have on the later languages of Europe? Probably mainly in place-names, I would assume.
    Also, you tend to add an unstressed shwa at the end of many words, but not consistently. What’s the linguistics behind that?

    • @LuJoTu
      @LuJoTu Před 7 měsíci

      I caught that too, didn't enjoy

  • @samthorne3765
    @samthorne3765 Před 9 měsíci +17

    Was grand/grande vs handia really the best example to use? The H and French GR sounds both come from just about the same place in the mouth with the only difference in the tongue so it would be extremely easy to draw a line between the two, and the rest of the word is essentially the same. Not presuming to say that linguists are wrong about Basque being unique (it very clearly is), just that I kinda question your choice to pick this one particular word that, by coincidence, could be demonstrating an exception to it (lmao)

    • @epender
      @epender Před 9 měsíci +2

      That's what I was thinking. I'm not really into linguistics, but even I could draw a few possible links between the words.

    • @S3Kglitches
      @S3Kglitches Před 8 měsíci +2

      the video is amateurish in many other was as well

    • @samthorne3765
      @samthorne3765 Před 8 měsíci

      @@S3Kglitches True... tbh, I'm not sure how much I really trust a video about linguistics when it's being made by someone who hasn't even heard of dental fricatives

  • @txikigetxo
    @txikigetxo Před 8 měsíci +4

    As native basque speaker, i must say that there are not monoglots nowadays... We all are bilingual or in Spanish or in French

  • @jeremiebernatchez5494
    @jeremiebernatchez5494 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Finally a video about the language of my ancestors ( my family name is basque) I’m so hyped

  • @cel2460
    @cel2460 Před 9 měsíci

    Oohhh the channel got blessed by yt algorithm!

  • @azerting
    @azerting Před 9 měsíci +3

    Fun fact, when you look a genetic history, Basque people all share Indo-European dna as much as any other people around. It's quite mysterious how it survived.
    Main theory says that during the Indo-European migration, the men died fighting and the women had children with the invaders. The mothers, taking care of their children, made them learn the language they spoke.

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That would almost impossible with Basque people before modern day medicine since Basques have the highest O negative blood population in the world and getting pregnant by non O negative would cause miscarriages there’s a reason before modern day medicine many Basques only married other Basques .

  • @Joanna-il2ur
    @Joanna-il2ur Před 9 měsíci +3

    The devil claim reminds me of the Anglo Saxon Life of St Guthlac. He was a prince who became a hermit. His Life says one night the farm he and his acolytes ran in the Fens of East Anglia was attacked by devils. They knew the attackers were devils because they spoke Welsh! The author was Felix of Burgundy, who may have heard the devil/basque comparison back home.

  • @SMSimonGarcia
    @SMSimonGarcia Před 6 měsíci +1

    My mother's family spoke Euskara until franco came and they didn't teach her or my aunt, but I want to learn it so I can carry it on

  • @tessjuel
    @tessjuel Před 9 měsíci +12

    2:00 Maybe not the best example. It is actually conceivable how the Latin word "grandis" could evolve into "handia". I don't know if it did but the Basque language does include a few loan words from Latin/French/Spanish and this may be one of them.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před 7 měsíci

      Keep in mind also that before Spain was Roman, it had many Ibero-Celtic settlements.

  • @wariodude128
    @wariodude128 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Any chance you could add Basque subtitles to this video, on the off-chance a mono-Euskara speaker comes across it? Because THAT would be wild in itself.

    • @Non_gogoa_han_zangoa
      @Non_gogoa_han_zangoa Před 8 měsíci

      we have, automatically traduced, a little bit strange, but is okey

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Před 9 měsíci +32

    If Basque [Euskarian?] is a relic of very ancient times, it might be interesting to compare it to ancient and poorly known languages like Elamite, or more recent languages like those of the Mitani, Lurs, Kurds, etc.

    • @aaronsirkman8375
      @aaronsirkman8375 Před 9 měsíci +2

      IIRC, the autonym for the language is Euskadi?

    • @crystalp7242
      @crystalp7242 Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@aaronsirkman8375According to the Wikipedia article, the Basque name for their language is “euskara”.

    • @friedkeenan
      @friedkeenan Před 9 měsíci +9

      The translation for the language Basque is Euskara, a Basque speaker/person is Euskalduna, and the area "Basque Country" is Euskal Herria.

    • @friedkeenan
      @friedkeenan Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@aaronsirkman8375 I should also note that sometimes Euskadi is used as a name for the Basque Country, but usually it's by nationalists who wish to create a stronger, more unified Basque identity, and not used much by the average person.

    • @user-ol7bt4wp1j
      @user-ol7bt4wp1j Před 9 měsíci +11

      Kurds? Our language is part of the indo European branch. We are Iranian. Like persians, tajiks, Ossetians, pashtoo’s.

  • @Scarman-fm8tu
    @Scarman-fm8tu Před 6 měsíci +2

    "Basque is spoken by the Basque people in the Basque Country."
    Makes perfect sense.

  • @politonno2499
    @politonno2499 Před 8 měsíci +1

    5:50 the basque language was spoken in a larger area in the ancient times than it is today, around the are between the Ebro river and the cites of Bordeaux and Toulouse

  • @urizaririzar
    @urizaririzar Před 6 měsíci +3

    There's actually a way to see where the "euskara" or "euskera" word comes from. The old basque praised the Sun, which they called (and still call) Eguzki. Therefore, we add the "-era" (way of doing) part to it and we get Euskera, which is in some sense "the way of the Sun". "Euskadi" comes from the same root, meaning the land of the Sun ("-adi" meaning "land of" kinda).
    Greetings from San Sebastian ;)

  • @smaza2
    @smaza2 Před 9 měsíci +33

    people who call basque "old" are exoticising it a bit. sure it comes from a family that was once widely spoken but now doesn't have any other surviving members, and that's interesting in itself, but basque has changed as much as any other language over time. if we call basque "old" then we might as well also call spanish or english old because they are surviving lineages of proto indoeuropean

    • @Mendogology
      @Mendogology Před 9 měsíci +7

      Exactly. It would be closer to the truth say that all language in the world have the same age, than affirming that Basque language is the oldest Europe, simply because yes.

    • @alpacamale2909
      @alpacamale2909 Před 9 měsíci +3

      or maybe it's old because it's just older than spanish, english, german etc...

    • @UNKNOWN666studios
      @UNKNOWN666studios Před 9 měsíci +2

      Lol not all languages have the same age thus some are older than others 😂

    • @Mendogology
      @Mendogology Před 9 měsíci

      @@UNKNOWN666studios you are just repeating words you heard, but you don't think at all. Languages are like water, with time, they change, they mutate and flow, they are not static. When a language is static, it dies.
      Is very easy to say today, "oh look, this is the English language". But if you go back in time, was the English language 50 years ago the same as now? And 100 years ago? Was still the same English language? What about 500 years ago? Is it still the same language? And we can keep going back until we reach some kind of protoindoeuropean without ever finding the exact limit were our English language stops being English. That's because is the same language that mutated and changed with time.
      So take 5 minute and try to think for yourself instead of repeating the very dumb ideas most of the people repeat, like sheep. Beee beeee beeee beeee

    • @christopheroates5674
      @christopheroates5674 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Well, it has had much less of a shift in pronunciation than English. Go ahead and try reading some middle English, then try some Old English. It would be much easier for someone in modern times and someone from 1000 years ago to understand each other in Basque compared to English. Just like it would be easier for two people who spoke Greek a thousand years apart.. Some languages undergo a major shift, and others are much less resistant to change. The Hand of Irrulegui is just one example of how they are able to see that even when using an ancient Iberian script, they are still able to understand words that are commonly used in modern times (ie. Zoriontsu = Happy) (which itself comes from the good fortune of seeing birds...)

  • @believeinpeace
    @believeinpeace Před 18 dny

    Thanks!

  • @senor-achopijo3841
    @senor-achopijo3841 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Fun fact: Spanish doesn't have a /v/ sound due to Basque's influence. Also, the Spanish word for "left" (as opposed to right) is "izquierda", which comes from Basque "ezkerra".
    Another fun fact, albeit disconnected from the main topic: did you know that the Spanish word for "dog", which is "perro", has an unknown origin?

    • @LuJoTu
      @LuJoTu Před 7 měsíci +1

      I like how the somewhat common Spanish name Echevarria is Basque for "New House"

    • @TheJollyJokerDancer
      @TheJollyJokerDancer Před 6 měsíci +1

      As many things (and they are a lot) that are the case in Spanish by influence of basque, that's not one of them. Spanish does have a plosive /b/ and a fricative /v/. It's just very subtle and lost in some accents, but not all, and in any case very recent.

  • @jabohonu
    @jabohonu Před 7 měsíci +4

    Barkatu !

  • @gorka9020
    @gorka9020 Před 9 měsíci +2

    As a Basque, I never heard that lenged about the Devil.
    But i'll tell you this one, which was told for ages.
    When two basque speakers from different dialects met, they would try to ve as brief possible or speak in Spanish, since any strain of Basque sounding different from the own one was deemed the work of the Devil!
    ( True Story, BTW.
    Not a legend at all. )

    • @anaz5918
      @anaz5918 Před 9 měsíci

      I doubt you are a Basque since the legend is well know and is also been written on books unless you are illiterate.

    • @gorka9020
      @gorka9020 Před 9 měsíci

      @@anaz5918
      Getxotarra naiz.
      Euskeraz hitz egiten badakit, bai.
      Ea hau ulertzen baduzun:
      Oa txopatik hartzera.

  • @loiniksw
    @loiniksw Před 9 měsíci +1

    from a native euskara speaker, thank you for this wonderful video ☺

  • @XLseattle
    @XLseattle Před 9 měsíci +2

    What Franco sought to impose was Castilian - in Spain we have 4 languages: Castilian, Catalan, Gallego and Vasco

  • @l.matthewblancett8031
    @l.matthewblancett8031 Před 9 měsíci +3

    language is so amazing. Like how extreme amounts of vocal fry at the end of every sentence can migrate from the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles all the way to wherever the hell this guy is from in the British Isles.😂

    • @diego_villena
      @diego_villena Před 9 měsíci

      It’s so frustrating, because the fellow otherwise has a normal cadence. But as soon as he gets to the end of a clause or sentence, he fries sooooo bad.
      Like dude, listen to 8:14. “An enemy of Godehhhhh”.

  • @theparabola
    @theparabola Před 9 měsíci +4

    What language are you speaking-uh?

    • @kieranwinter6273
      @kieranwinter6273 Před 9 měsíci +4

      that question is a mystery that will remain unsolved-uh

    • @diego_villena
      @diego_villena Před 9 měsíci +1

      It’s called the most extreme vocal fry you’ve ever heard

  • @two-to-tango
    @two-to-tango Před 6 měsíci

    Love the portal reference

  • @TheJollyJokerDancer
    @TheJollyJokerDancer Před 6 měsíci

    I'm half amazed and half disturbed at how this video manages to bring a fascinating subject I'm passionate about to a greater public, and everything it says is mostly true, but also invariably innacurate somehow.