Similarities Between Turkish and Mongolian

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  • čas přidán 7. 04. 2023
  • In this video, we compare some of the common words between Mongolian (монгол) and Turkish (Türkçe) with Nyambaatar, representing Mongolian, and Bilge, as the Turkish speaker.
    If you would like to participate in a future video, please be sure to follow me on Instagram: / bahadoralast
    The Turkish language, which is also referred to as Istanbul Turkish, is the official language of Turkey (Türkiye) and is the most widely spoken of the Turkic languages, with most of its native speakers living in Western Asia, and significant group of speakers in Germany, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Northern Cyprus, Greece, the Caucasus, and other parts of Europe and Central Asia. Ottoman Turkish, which was a variation of the Turkish spoken today, influenced many parts of Europe during the time that the Ottoman Empire expanded. When the modern Turkish republic was established, one of Atatürk's Reforms consisted of changing the Ottoman Turkish alphabet with a Latin alphabet. Today, Turkish is recognized as a minority language in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Iraq, Macedonia, and Romania.
    Mongolian is the official language of Mongolia and is part of the Mongolic language family. In addition to Mongolia, it is also spoken in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China.
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  • @Nomadicenjoyer31
    @Nomadicenjoyer31 Před rokem +646

    The word Sakal is also existing in Hungarian

    • @barikat38
      @barikat38 Před rokem +38

      and elma and aslan i guess ?

    • @David-ru8xf
      @David-ru8xf Před rokem +94

      @@barikat38 Alma and Oroszlàn

    • @Dilus116
      @Dilus116 Před rokem +29

      Balta, arpa

    • @bohinszky74
      @bohinszky74 Před rokem +36

      Yes, and also:
      Alma = apple
      Sárga = yellow
      Bátor = brave (not hero, but almost)
      We share some words, but the sentences would be totally different.

    • @javidanben-murad
      @javidanben-murad Před rokem +7

      Also in Azeri/Azerbaijani

  • @RandomGuy-rc6vd
    @RandomGuy-rc6vd Před rokem +1017

    We also have most of these words in Kazakh as well! Which is not surprising considering we are exactly in between Turkey and Mongolia (both geographically and culturally). Greetings from Kazakhstan 🇰🇿🇲🇳🇹🇷

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před rokem +40

      C2b1a2a M77 Typical of Northern Tungusic peoples, Kazakhs, Mongolians, Yukaghirs, Nivkhs, Paleosiberian
      C2b1a3a M401 Kazakhs (especially tribes of the Senior Jüz and the Kereys), Hazaras,Dungans..
      Genetically Kazakhs are most close people to Mongols.
      According to a large-scale Kazakhstan study published in 2017. 1294 Kazakh males belong to Y-DNA haplogroups:
      C2 (50.85%), O2 (10.82%), N (5.33%), Q (3.17%), D (0.46%)
      East Asian DNA includes haplogroups CNO . These are the same haplogroups shared with Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, Mongols, Tungusic etc.
      Q dominates Native American,Inuit people, Yenisei people
      N dominates Urals and Siberian Turks
      O dominate Japanese Korean Chinese
      C2 dominates Mongolian Kazakh Tungusic

    • @championgundyr1092
      @championgundyr1092 Před rokem

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e no one cares stfu

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem +19

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e human beings cannot be divided into races...because they're not dogs.

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem +8

      The language of the 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 people
      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv’up =liquefied
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards/ upwards >suvamak
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something (sürdürmek/sürtmek/sürünmek/sürülmek)
      Su-arpa>Surappa(chorba)=soup /Surup(şurup)=syrup /Suruppat(şerbet)=sorbet /Surab(şarap)=wine /Surah(şıra)=juice
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards / (Süp-ğur-mek)>süpürmek=to sweep
      -mak/mek>(umak/emek)=process/ exertion (machine/ mechanism)
      -al =~obtain through
      -et =~ do / make
      -der = ~set /provide
      -kur=~ set up
      -en=own diameter /about oneself
      -eş=each mate (each other/together or altogether)
      -la/le = ~make this by it /do it this way
      Say-mak= to make it flow drop by drop /one by one from the mind = ~ to count ~ to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söy-mek= to make it flow through > Söy-le-mek= make the sentences flow through the mind = ~to say, ~to tell
      Sev-mek= to make it flow/pour from the mind to the heart = to love
      Söv-mek=to say whatever's on own mind=swearing
      Süy-mek= to make it flow thinly (Süÿt> süt= milk/ दूध)
      Soy-mak= to make it flow over it/him/her ( to peel, ~to strip, ~to rob )(soygan>soğan=onion)
      (Soy-en-mak)>soyunmak=to undress (Suy-ğur-mak)>sıyırmak= ~skinning , ~skimming
      Siy-mek= to make it flow downwards / to pee Siÿtik>sidik= urine
      Say-en-mak>sanmak= ~to pour from thought to the idea (to arrive at a guess)
      Sav-mak= ~to make it pour outward /put forward / set forth in >sav=~assertion
      (Sav-en-mak)>savunmak=to defend (Sav-ğur-mak)>savurmak=to strew it outward (into the void)
      (Sav-eş-mak)>savaşmak=to shed each other's blood >savaş= war
      savuşmak=to get scattered altogether outright > sıvışmak=~run away in fear
      Sağ-mak= to make it pour tight >Sağanak=downpour > Sahan=the container to pour water
      Sağ-en-mak>sağınmak= ~to spill from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sek-mek= to go (by forcing /hardly) forward /over
      Sak-mak =to keep/ hold-back (by forcing /hardly) (sakar=clumsy)
      Sak-en-mak>sakınmak =~to ponder hard/hold oneself back/beware
      Soğ-mak=to penetrate (by force)> Soğurmak=~ make it penetrate inward /~to suck
      Sok-mak=to take/ put (by forcing) inward
      Sök-mek= to take/ put (by forcing) from the inside out (~unstitch/rip out)
      Sık-mak = to press (by forcing) inward > squeeze (Sıkı=tight)
      Sığ-mak= fit inside (Sığ-en-mak>sığınmak= ~to take shelter
      Süz-mek=~to make it lightly flow from top to bottom /~to filter
      Sez-mek=~to keep it mentally flowing gently /~to perceive, to intuit
      Sız-mak=~to get flowed slightly /~to infiltrate
      Suŋ-mak=to extend it forward /to put before, to present
      Süŋ-mek=to get expanded outwards (sünger=sponge)
      Sıŋ-mak=to reach by stretching upward / forward
      Siŋ-mek=to shrink (oneself) by getting down or back (to lurk, to hide out)
      Söŋ-mek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to fade out)
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to recognize (~to get the differences of)
      Tanınmak= tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak= tanı-et-mak=to make known /to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =(to meet for the first time)
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose /to identify
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally >Tınlamak=responding /~to take heed of
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to get quiescent
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >Dinlemek= to listen / 听
      Theng> Denk = Sync/~equal / 登克 Denge =balance
      Tenğ-mek>Değmek=to touch each other (at the same point-position-level)/ ~to be of equal-level/ being worth)
      (tenger> değer=sync level) / teğet= tangent / teng-yüz>deŋiz=sea
      eş değer=equivalent > eş diğer= equal to (each other)
      Deng-en-mek>değinmek = to mention / touch upon
      Deng-eş-mek>değişmek =to turn into something else equivalent /to get altogether a change
      Deng-eş-der-mek>değiştirmek =to change it /~exchange
      Çığ (chuw) = snowslide / 雪崩
      Çığ-ğur-mak =çığırmak= ~to scream /~read by shouting
      Çağır-mak= calling / inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çığırı > Jigir > Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cığır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal /~shout with a shrill voice
      Çığırgı >Jırgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çiğ (chee)= uncooked, raw / 生
      Çiğne-mek =to chew / 咀嚼
      (Çiğnek) Çene =chin / 下巴
      Çiğ (chie)= vapor drop, dew / 汽 , 露 (çi’çek=flower/ çi’se=drizzle)
      Taş = the stone (portable rock)/大石头
      Taşı-mak = to take (by moving) it / to carry
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to have it transported
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak> to move oneself to a different place
      Kak-mak=to give direction (Kakğan=which one's directing>Hakan>Kağan>Han =leader) (Baş-khan>Başkan=president)
      Kak-der-mak>kaktırmak= ~to set aside
      Kak-al-mak>kağılmak =to be oriented via/ to get fixed anywhere >kalmak= to stay
      Kağıluk-mak=to tend upward >kalkmak =to stand up / to get up
      Kak-al-der-mak>kağıldırmak>to make it being steered away> kaldırmak = to remove
      Kak-en-mak> kağınmak=~to be canted> kanmak / ikna olmak= to ac-know-ledge it's so, to be convinced
      Kak-en-der-mak> kağındırmak= kandırmak (ikna etmek) = ~ to trick , (to persuade)
      Der-mek=(~to provide) to set a layout by bringing together (der-le-mek= to compile)
      (deri= derm)
      Dar-mak= to bring into a different order by disrupting the old (tarkan=conqueror)
      (tarım= agriculture / tarla= arable field) ( taramak= to comb)
      Dar-al-mak>darılmak=getting into a disrubted mood toward someone
      Dur-mak= to keep being present (~to remain/~to survive/~to halt on)
      (thoru>diri= alive) durabilir=durable (boğa-thor>bahadır=冒頓=survivor-victim>victor hero)
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak= ~to stop
      Diremek=to make it stand on (feet) direnmek=resist diretmek=insist
      Dür-mek= to roll it up (to make it become a roll) (dürüm=roll of bread)
      Dör-mek= to rotate on its axis >thörmek = to mix/ blend (döngü/ törüv=tour) (törüv-giş=tourist) (dörük=blended)
      (Thörü-mek)>türemek= to become a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      (Thörük =created order/form by coming together) >Türk
      Töre=order established over time= custom/tradition > (torah=sacred order) (tarih=history)
      Thör-et-mek>türetmek= to create a new layout combining= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>dörünmek= to rotate oneself / to turn by oneself
      Thörünmek>Törnmek>Dönmek= to turn oneself (döner=rotary dün=yesterday dünya=world)
      (Dön-der-mek)>döndürmek= to turn something
      (Dön-eş-mek)>dönüşmek= to turn (altogether) to something
      (Dön-eş-der-mek)>dönüştürmek= to convert/ transform
      (Edg) Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> eğmek= to tilt/ to bend
      eğim =inclination
      Eğ-al-mek>Eğilmek=to get being inclined/ be bent
      Eğ-et-mek>Eğitmek=to educate
      Eğir-mek= to make it rotate around itself or turn to another way within a specified time =~ to spin (eğri =curve /awry)
      Evir-mek=to make spin around itself or turn it another form in a specified time =~to invert
      Devir-mek = to make it overturn (devir=~circuit)
      Eğir-al-mek>Eğrilmek= to become a skew / become twisted
      Evir-al-mek>Evrilmek= to get a conversion/transformation over time
      (evrim=evolution, devrim=revolution, evren=universe,)
      Uğra-mak= to get (at) a place or a situation for a specified time> uğramak= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak=to stop by (altogether) into each other for a specified time> uğraşmak=to strive/ to deal with
      Uğra-et-mak> uğratmak = to put in a situation for a specific time
      Öğre-mek=to get (at) a status or a level / to get an accumulation within a certain time
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or info level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to have somebody get (at) a knowledge /info level (at a certain time)= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I am teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun = You are learning english
      Öğreniyorsun = You are learning > Öğren-i-yor-u-sen (You’ try to learn)
      Öğreniyorum = I am learning
      Öğreniyordum = I was learning
      Öğreniyormuşum=I heard/realized that I was learning
      Öğrenmekteyim=I have been learning / I am in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteydim=I had been learning / I was in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteymişim=I heard/noticed that I had been learning
      Öğrenirim =~ I learn (then) > Öğren-e-er-im (I get to learn)
      Öğrenirdim= ~I used to learn / I would learn (~I‘d get (a chance) to learn )
      Öğrenirmişim=I heard/noticed I would be learning ( I realized I’ve got (a chance) to learn)
      Öğreneceğim= I will learn
      Öğrenecektim= I would gonna learn (I would learn)
      Öğrenecekmişim=I heard/realized that I would have to learn
      Öğrendim = I learned
      Öğrenmiştim= I had learned
      Öğrenmiş oldum (öğrenmiş durumdayım)= I have learned
      Öğrendiydim= I remember having learned /I remember such that I've learned
      Öğrenmişim =I realized that I've learned
      Öğrendiymişim=I heard that I’ve learned -but if what I heard is true
      Öğrenmişmişim=I heard that I've learned -but what I heard didn't sound very convincing
      Öğreniyorumdur =I guess/likely I am learning
      Öğreniyordurum =I think/likely I was trying to learn
      Öğreniyormuşumdur=As if I was probably learning
      Öğreneceğimdir= I think that I will probably learn
      Öğrenecektirim=I guess/likely I would gonna learn
      Öğrenecekmişimdir=As if I probably would have to learn
      Öğrenecekmiştirim=Looks like I probably would have learned
      Öğrenmişimdir = I think that I have probably learned
      Öğrenmiştirim= I guess/likely I had learned

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem +11

      29+ tenses in turkish language
      Anatolian Turkish verb conjugations
      A= To (towards /~for) (for words with a thick vowel in the last syllable)
      E= To (towards /~for) (for words with a thin vowel in the last syllable)
      Okul=School
      U=(ou)=it’s that> I /U /i /ü=~it’s about
      Mak/Mek (ımak/emek)= process /exertion
      Git-mek=(verb)= to Go (the process of going> getmek =to get there)
      1 .present continuous tense (right now or soon, now or later, currently or nowadays)
      Used to describe the current actions or planned events /for designated times
      YOR-mak =to tire ( to try ,engage in) >Yor=~go (much) over it (yorgunum=I’m tired)
      A/E Yormak=(to arrive at any opinion over what it is)
      I/U Yormak=(to arrive utterly onto it)
      used as the suffix=” ı/u - i/ü + Yor"
      positive
      Okula gidiyorsun ( you are going to school)= Okul-a Git-i-Yor-u-Sen >School-to Go-to-Try that-You < (please read backwards)
      Evden geliyorum ( I'm coming from home) = Ev-de-en Gel-i-yor-u-Men >(from Home I’ try to Come) =Come-to-try that-Me Home-at-then<
      negative
      A)..Mã= Not B)Değil= it's not (the equivalent of)
      examples
      A: Okula gitmiyorsun ( you’re not going to school)= Okul-a Git-Mã-i-yor-u-Sen >You don't try to Go to school
      B: Okula gidiyor değilsin ( you aren’t going to school)=Okul-a Git-i-yor değil-sen >You aren't try..to Go to School
      Question sentence:
      Mã-u =Not-it> is not it?
      Used as the suffixes =" Mı / Mu / Mi / Mü “
      Okula mı gidiyorsun? ( Are you going to school )= Okul-a Mã-u Git-i-yor-u-sen (To-school/ Not-it / You-try-to-go)(Are you going to school or somewhere else?)
      Okula gidiyor musun? ( Do you go to school )= Okul-a Git-i-yor Mã-u-sen (To school /Try-to-go /Not-it-you)>~do You (try to) go to school (at specific times) or not ?
      Okula sen mi gidiyorsun ?= Are you the (only) one going to school?
      2 .simple extensive tense ( used to explain our own thoughts about the topic)
      (always, since long , for a long time, sometimes, currently, sooner or later/ inşallah)
      positive
      VAR-mak = to arrive -at (to attain)
      (var= ~being there) used as the suffixes >"Ar-ır-ur" (for thick vowel)
      ER-mek= to get -at (to reach)
      (er= ~achieve there) used as the suffixes >"Er-ir-ür" (for thin vowel)
      examples
      Okula gidersin (You get to go to school)= Okul-a Git-e-er-sen= You get (a chance) to go to school
      Kuşlar gökyüzünde uçarlar=(~ Birds fly in the sky )=Kuş-lar gökyüzü-n’de uç-a-var(u-lar)= Birds have likelihood to fly in the sky = ~ Birds arrive by flying in the sky
      Bunu görebilirler (They can see this) = Bu-n’u Gör-e-Bil-e-er-ler =~They get to be able to see what this is
      Question sentence:
      in interrogative sentences it means: isn't it so /what do you think about this topic?
      Okula gider misin? (Do you get to go to school) Okul-a Git-e-er Mã-u-Sen =You get to Go to School -is Not it?=~What about you getting to go to school?
      Okula mı gidersin? =Do you get to go to school or somewhere else?
      negative
      Mã= Not
      Bas-mak =to tread on/ dwell on/ stand on (bas git=get out of here > pas geç= pass by> vazgeç=give up
      Ez-mek = to crush/ to run over (ez geç= think nothing about > es geç= stop thinking about)
      Mã-bas=(No-pass/ Na pas) > (give up on/not to dwell on) >the suffix "MAZ" (for thick vowel)
      Mã-ez=(Don’t/ Doesn’t)> (to skip/ avoid) >the suffix "MEZ" (for thin vowel)
      for the 1st person singular and 1st plural is only used the suffix “Mã”
      examples
      Okula gitmezsin (you don't/won't go to school)= Okul-a Git-mã-ez-sen > You skip going to school
      Babam bunu yapmaz (my dad doesn't do this)= Baba-m bu-n’u yap-ma-bas > My dad doesn't dwell on doing this
      Bugün okula gitmem (I won't go to school today)> Okul-a Git-mã-men =I don't (have) to go to school
      Bugün okula gidemem (I can’t go to school today)= Okul-a Git-e-er-mã-men >I don't get (possibility) to go to school
      Bir bardak su almaz mısınız (Don't you get a glass of water)> Bir fincan çay al-ma-bas-sen-iz > Do you (really) give up on having a cup of tea?
      Kimse senden (daha) hızlı koşamaz (Nobody can run faster than you)=Kimse sen-den daha hızlı kaş-a-al-ma-bas
      3.simple future tense (soon or later)
      Used to describe events that we are aiming for or think are in the future
      Çak-mak =~to fasten ,~to tack ,~to keep in mind ,~to hit them together (for thick vowel)
      Çek-mek=~to pull, ~to take along, ~to feel inside, ~to attract , ~to will (for thin vowel)
      positive..
      Okula gideceksin ( you'll go to school)= Okul-a Git-e-çek-sen =~You fetch/take (into mind)-to-Go to school
      Ali bu kapıyı açacak ( Ali’s gonna open this door)= Ali Kapı-y-ı Aç-a-çak =~Ali (fixes in his mind) to open the door
      negative
      A. Okula gitmeyeceksin (you will not go to school)= Okul-a Git-mã-e-çek-sen =You don't keep (in mind) going to school
      B. Okula gidecek değilsin (you aren't gonna go to school)= Okul-a Git-e-çek değil-sen =~you won't go to school and nobody is demanding that you
      4 . simple past tense (currently or before)
      Used to explain the completed events we're sure about
      Di = now on / anymore Di-mek/demek= ~ to deem/ to mean/ to think like this
      Used as the suffixes= (Dı /Di /Du/ Dü - Tı /Ti /Tu /Tü)
      positive
      Okula gittin = You went to school = Okul-a Git-di-N
      Dün İstanbul'da kaldım= I stayed in Istanbul yesterday
      Okula mı gittin ? (Did you go to school)= Okul-a Mã-u Git-di-n> You went to school or somewhere else?
      Okula gittin mi ? (~Have you gone to school)= Okul-a Git-di-n Mã-u> You went to school or not?
      negative
      Okula gitmedin =You didn't go to school / Okul-a Git-mã-di-N
      Bugün pazara gitmediler mi? =Didn't they go to the (open public) market today?
      Dün çarşıya mı gittiniz? =Where did you go yesterday, to the (covered public) bazaar?
      Akşamleyin bakkala (markete) gittik mi?= Did we go to the grocery store in the evening?
      5 .narrative/reported past tense (just now or before)
      Used to describe the completed events that we're unsure of
      MUŞ-mak = ~ to inform (muşu=inform/notice> muşuş/mesaj=message> muştu=müjde=evangel)
      that means -I've been informed/ I heard or learnt that/ I saw and realized that/ I've noticed or it seems such (to me)
      used as the suffixes= (Mış/ Muş - Miş/ Müş)
      positive
      Okula gitmişsin= I heard that you went to school> Okul-a Git-muş-u-sen
      Yanlış birşey yapmışım=~I noticed I made something wrong >Yaŋlış Yap-muş-u-men
      negative
      A. Okula gitmemişsin (I’ve learned> you didn't go to school)= Okul-a Git-mã-miş-sen (I heard that you haven't gone to school)
      B. Okula gitmiş değilsin =I noticed (You haven't been to school) Okul-a Git--miş değil-sen
      In a question sentence it means: Do you have any inform about- have you heard- are you aware -does it look like it?
      İbrahim bugün okula gitmiş mi? =Have you heard / did Abraham go to school today?
      6.Okula varmak üzeresin =You're about to arrive at school
      7.Okula gitmektesin (You're in (process of) going to school)= ~you’ve been going to school
      8.Okula gitmekteydin =~You had been going to school =Okula gidiyor olmaktaydın
      9.Okula gitmekteymişsin =I heard >you've been going to school
      10.Okula gidiyordun (Okula git-i-yor er-di-n) = You were going to school
      11.Okula gidiyormuşsun (Okula git-i-yor er-miş-sen)= I heard that you're going to school / I learned you were going to school
      12.Okula gidiyor olacaksın (Okula git-i-yor ol-a-çak-sen)= You’ll be going to school
      13.Okula gitmekte olacaksın (Okula git-mek-de ol-a-çak-sen)= You’ll have been going to school
      14.Okula gitmiş olacaksın (Okula git-miş ol-a-çak-sen)= You’ll have gone to school
      15.Okula gidecektin (Okula git-e-çek er-di-n)=You were gonna go to school > I had thought you'd be going to school
      16.Okula gidecekmişsin (Okula git-e-çek ermişsen)=I learned you're gonna go to school>~I heard that you'd like to go to school
      17.Okula giderdin ( Okula git-e-er erdin)=You used to go to school >~You'd have had the chance to go to school
      18.Okula gidermişsin ( Okula git-e-er ermişsen)=I heard that you used to go to school> I realized that you’d get to go to school
      19.Okula gittiydin ( Okula git-di erdin)= I had seen you went to school >I remember you had gone to school
      20.Okula gittiymişsin = I heard you went to school -but if what I heard is true
      21.Okula gitmişmişsin = I heard you've been to school -but what I heard didn't sound very convincing
      22.Okula gitmiştin (Okula git-miş er-di-n)= you had gone to school
      23.Okula gitmiş oldun (Okula git-miş ol-du-n)= you have been to school
      Dur-mak=to keep to be present/there = ~to remain
      Durur=remains to exist / keeps to be / seems so
      used as the suffixes=(Dır- dir- dur- dür / Tır- tir-tur-tür)
      (in official speeches these suffixes are used only for the 3rd singular and 3rd plural person)
      its meaning in formal speeches> it has been and goes on like that
      Bu Bir Elma = This is an apple
      Bu bir elmadır= (bu bir elma-durur)= This is an apple (and remains so)
      Bu Bir Kitap = This is a book
      Bu bir kitaptır= (bu bir kitap-durur)= This is a book (and remains so)
      informal meaning in everyday speech>it seems/ likely that/ the remaining on my mind
      Bu bir elmadır= (bu bir elma-durur)=It seems like- this is an apple
      Bu bir kitaptır= (bu bir kitap-durur)=It's likely that -this is a book
      Bu bir elma gibi duruyor=(looks like an apple this is )>This looks like an apple
      Bu bir kitap gibi duruyor=This looks like a book
      24.Okula gidiyordursun =(guess>likely-You were going to school
      25.Okula gidiyorsundur =(I think> you are going to school
      26.Okula gidecektirsin =(guess>likely- You would (gonna) go to school
      27.Okula gideceksindir=(I think> You'll go to school
      28.Okula gitmiştirsin =(guess >likely- You had gone to school
      29.Okula gitmişsindir =(I think> You've been to school

  • @CM-dd1jm
    @CM-dd1jm Před rokem +481

    As a 🇲🇳 im happy that someone show similarities between Mongols And Turks.
    We are brothers from very very old ages.
    ❤️🇲🇳🇹🇷🐺

    • @Karaitar
      @Karaitar Před rokem +56

      We lived together for thousands of years and we separated from each other due to our nomadic lifestyle and being warriors. I wish to establish good relations with you again, my brothers 🇹🇷🐺🇲🇳 💙

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před rokem +23

      It is impossible for two Asian parents to have an white baby(Anatolians)!😅😅
      The Mongols= East Asians, Southeast asian, Altaic people (Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic speaking people), American Indians/Native Americans
      East Asians and Native Americans are Sinodont
      They carry the EDAR gene, found in ancient and modern East Asians, East Siberians and Native Americans but not common in African or European populations
      The EDAR gene causes the Sinodont tooth pattern, and also affects hair texture,jaw morphology,and perhaps the nutritional profile of breast milk
      A very small minority of people in Turkey carry genetic markers that are also found in Mongolia, Korean,Janpanese .
      Turkic peoples never became a majority in Anatolia, even up to the present day. The Turks of today are the historic Anatolians who have simply taken on a Turkish identity as they had previously taken on a Greek identity.

    • @masterc2091
      @masterc2091 Před rokem

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e Well, as long as the Turks don't have Chinese DNA or anything in common, it's okay.

    • @bilgeolca8862
      @bilgeolca8862 Před 11 měsíci +16

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e first of all we are not white. we are blue. Turks born with Mongolian blue spot. Other nation around side of us, they don't have it. So how do you explain our mongolian blue spot? I know you afraid but soon we will come to meet you again. Also do you know Turks and Mongolians can be diffirent it does not matter. We still have a common hate xD

    • @fatfeu
      @fatfeu Před 11 měsíci

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e Yeah and?

  • @BobIsoyev
    @BobIsoyev Před 10 měsíci +109

    Bal, asal - honey
    Sokhal, soqol - beard
    Altan, oltin - gold
    Tul, chul - desert
    Chichak, chechak, gul - flower
    Alim, alma, olma - apple
    Elchi, elchi - embassador
    Zarim, yarim - half
    Aslan, arslon - lion
    I am Uzbek. I understand all those words Wow, unbelievable. How much Turkic people and Mongolian languages are close ❤️

    • @samkami9472
      @samkami9472 Před 7 měsíci +4

      It's proven again that Uzbeks are Mongolians. The guy looks like Uzbek

    • @giyosbekashirboyev7123
      @giyosbekashirboyev7123 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Asal is persian word not turic

    • @aslam2493
      @aslam2493 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Kalian sepertinya masih satu bangsa, saya sebagai orang Indonesia suka mempelajari rumpun bangsa Turki dengan sejarah mereka yang luar biasa sampai di masa Turki Usmani 😊

    • @daninick8145
      @daninick8145 Před 6 měsíci +3

      They all are the same in Azerbaijani Turkish, I am from Tabriz located in Iran , our mother language is Turkish , we say Sarmisax, Saggal, Alma , Chol , Chichak, Elchi, Yarim , Aslan ...Ilove my mother tongue , it's amazing ❣❣❣❣❣
      I belive if I travel to Uzbekistan , Mongolia , Kazakhistan , Turkmenistan , Kirkizistan , Turkiye , Hungary , Russia , Yakutsk , Uyghur China , I do not have to speak English ,,,,,,omg it is wonderful Yashasinnnnnnnnnnnn dilimiz 💜💜💜💜💞💞💞

    • @anitapl831
      @anitapl831 Před 6 měsíci

      Just check this video that provides science-based evidence that Mongolian and Turkish are not related! czcams.com/video/Wp5Ycj1vGjU/video.html

  • @AllanLimosin
    @AllanLimosin Před rokem +386

    As a Turkish language learner and familiar with Turkic languages correspondence, I managed to find meanings and words in Turkish. That's a very impressive experience!

    • @knyghtryder3599
      @knyghtryder3599 Před rokem +11

      Çok güzel !!

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo Před rokem +1

      I did the Turkish course on Duolingo, but I actually found this video because I think I'd rather switch over to Mongolian, as Mongolia seems to be a beautiful country (no disrespect to Turkey, but being a member of NATO is a deal-breaker; that's even more the case with Germany, though German is the foreign language I've spent the most time studying).

    • @reconquer5176
      @reconquer5176 Před rokem +4

      @@ghenulo why is being a member of NATO is a dealbreaker lol?

    • @muhammadjalal2335
      @muhammadjalal2335 Před rokem

      Nice

    • @dakotamiller6274
      @dakotamiller6274 Před rokem

      @@reconquer5176 I guess nobody in this world likes those all-conquering NATO-Nations that bomb other countries at will (Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, etc etc etc) and go unpunished. They should be tried at The Hague and get prison for life for their war-crimes.

  • @gaborbakonyi6552
    @gaborbakonyi6552 Před 8 měsíci +175

    I am Hungarian, and I found only a few similar words among these:
    szakáll (beard) shakhal, sakal,
    arany (gold), altan, altın,
    alma ( apple) alim, elma,
    oroszlán (lion) arslan, aslan,
    hombár (barn) ambar, ambar
    sárga (yellow) sar, sarı
    bátor (brave).

    • @eri_e
      @eri_e Před 7 měsíci +17

      Because we have the same roots Hungarians are also Turkic

    • @miklosszabo6950
      @miklosszabo6950 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Kölyök (Hun) Kölök (Mong.)

    • @alphacraft2370
      @alphacraft2370 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@eri_e yes we are all at the same family altai uralic but thats not the case they are not turkic at all so shut ur kebab ataturk çok guzel ass up

    • @gaborbakonyi6552
      @gaborbakonyi6552 Před 7 měsíci +4

      I found it in the dictionary: "ГӨЛӨГ" "gölög"
      It is interesting, it is similar to the Hungarian "kölyök" and the "gyerek" words too. I suspect, that probably the Hungarian number three "három" also has common roots with the Mongol "гурван" "gurvan" words, due to the Kalmyk "һурвн" "һurvn" seems to be more similar, and the Kalmyk is a Mongolic language.

    • @nazokatsaidakbarova7050
      @nazokatsaidakbarova7050 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Ajoyib! Bu sòzlar bari turkiydir. Vengriyada ham turkiylar bormi?

  • @viviennekim6861
    @viviennekim6861 Před 5 měsíci +24

    It’s interesting, I have found some words that are connected to Korean.
    Elma(Apple ) - Yelmae 열매 (fruit)
    Aslan (Lion) -Auslang 어슬렁 ( lion or tiger walking movement)
    Sari (Yellow) - Sarl sag 살색( skin colour, or Tan earth yellow)
    Ambar (Barn) - Ummak 움막

    • @GreatTurkicKhagnate
      @GreatTurkicKhagnate Před 5 měsíci +1

      🇹🇷🇰🇷🇲🇳

    • @abidinozturk4471
      @abidinozturk4471 Před 4 měsíci

      Türkçe Korece ve Moğolca köken olarak akraba diller. :)

    • @kadircanyldran1849
      @kadircanyldran1849 Před 4 měsíci

      wtf man i can only explain ok maybe not :D but the thing is romans when they got apple first though its soo good resist long feeds sweet the tree is perfect fast growin than they call from hun-türkish language alma as fruit they wanted to call like father of fruits than it was inside of many things include religions..hmm but we türks must know koreans before the romans i am confused now

    • @ImFreemanKZ
      @ImFreemanKZ Před 7 dny

      I heard korë (korean) langauge refer to altaic language group because have closely related to tungus language.

  • @ItsJoshMaBro
    @ItsJoshMaBro Před rokem +735

    wow I'm Mongolian and this suprise's me very much of the word similarity's because the bilge name is also too similar to our Mongolian names like bilgee or bilguun. Wish the Türkiye and Mongolia be brothers forever. Even if the world is ending love turkey from Mongolia!!!

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před rokem +1

      It is impossible for two Asian parents to have an white baby(Anatolians)!🤣🤣
      The Mongols= East Asians, Southeast asian, Altaic people (Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic speaking people), American Indians/Native Americans
      East Asians and Native Americans are Sinodont
      They carry the EDAR gene, found in ancient and modern East Asians, East Siberians and Native Americans but not common in African or European populations
      The EDAR gene causes the Sinodont tooth pattern, and also affects hair texture,jaw morphology,and perhaps the nutritional profile of breast milk
      A very small minority of people in Turkey carry genetic markers that are also found in Mongolia, Korean,Janpanese .
      Turkic peoples never became a majority in Anatolia, even up to the present day. The Turks of today are the historic Anatolians who have simply taken on a Turkish identity as they had previously taken on a Greek identity.

    • @Buyanjagal.B
      @Buyanjagal.B Před rokem +41

      All these words are Turkisms(from turkic languages) in the Mongolian language.

    • @KarapapakOguzTurku
      @KarapapakOguzTurku Před rokem

      @@user-rn6nb2ey7e 土耳其人仇恨的根源是因为我们杀了你们的人,绑架了你们的母亲、女儿和祖母,让他们成为我们的奴隶吗?

    • @user_57900
      @user_57900 Před rokem

      ​​@@user-rn6nb2ey7e i saw your comments against Turks maybe 100 times. Are you armenian, greek or kurdish? You're a little bit i*iot. İ think you should spend your time to better things.

    • @orkunyucel3095
      @orkunyucel3095 Před rokem +41

      As a Turk from Turkey, I had researched a few sentences and words in Mongolian and felt common etymological roots with Turkish. However, I thought the two languages ​​were very differentiated. Just like Spanish and English are two very, very different languages, even if they belong to the same family. However, it is interesting to have such a common word. Love to Mongolia

  • @sorykim3039
    @sorykim3039 Před 8 měsíci +62

    We, korean, think that our ancesters came from the eastern-northen part of current mongolia. So Korean language is Altai. But current korean word and prononciation is totally different from Mongolian. This is because Koreans started using chinese characters and thus Koreans took chinese words and sounds and discarded most korean words and sounds. This is why korean words and sounds are different from monglolian

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před 8 měsíci +6

      All East Asian lineages (East-Eurasians,such as Chinese, Koreans, or Japanese, but also Northeast Asians, Siberians as well as Southeast Asians, Pacific Islanders and Native Americans) ultimately descended from a source population in Mainland Southeast Asia at 50,000BC.(Ydna CDNOP)
      They entered East Asia 30,000 years ago
      They separated from the China 20,000 years ago and entered Central Asia,Siberia and American continent(PQR)
      Trans-Eurasian languages formed 10,000 years ago in Northeast Asia
      Koreans were the same people as Japanese:
      1,Jōmon period people (various hunter gatherers and early agriculturalists which diverged from other East Asians 20-15,000 years ago) Ydna D
      2,Agriculturalists from Northeast Asia via Korea (Yayoi) Ydna C
      3,Agriculturalists from East Asia (China) via Korea (Kofun) Ydna O
      Jōmon people descended from an Basal-East Asian source population near the Himalayan region.
      They split from other East Asian-related groups about 22,000BC years ago and migrated to Japan, were they got isolated at 15,000BC. They are closest to the ancestors of the modern Kusunda and Sherpa (Ancient Himalayans). Thus the Kusunda share the most genetic drift with the Jōmon.
      Since the Yayoi period, two groups, notable Northeast Asians from the Amur, and Han-related groups, migrated into Japan and merged with the local Jōmon.
      Koreans are an ethnic group of admixed northern and southern lineages.
      The Northern East Asian(N1a+O2a+C2) + Southern East Asian(O1b2+C1a1+D1a2)
      1,N1a ,West - Liaohe people
      Haplogroup N1a is most common in Finland, the Baltic states, and among northern Siberian ethnicities, such as the Yakuts.
      Most Koreans believe that the Dangun Joseon is associated with the Hongshan culture
      2,The O2a replaced N1a, these Dongyi people established the Gojoseon
      A 2020 study discovered substantial genetic changes in the West Liao River region over time. An increase in the reliance on millet farming between the Middle-to-Late Neolithic is associated with higher genetic affinity to the Yellow River basin (generally associated with speakers of the Sino-Tibetan languages), while a partial switch to pastoralism in the Bronze Age Upper Xiajiadian culture is associated with a decrease in this genetic affinity.
      The Haplogroup O-M122 that was observed among Liao individuals is believed to have spread to the Liao civilization from the Yellow River civilization in the southwest. This lineage is most commonly associated with speakers of Sino-Tibetan languages (such as the Han Chinese)
      3,After the Late Neolithic, there was a sharp transition from Yellow River to Amur River-related genetic profiles (associated with speakers of Tungusic languages/Ydna C2) around the West Liao River. This increase in Amur River affinity corresponds with the transition to a pastoral economy during the Bronze Age.
      These people who speak Altaic language + use Chinese characters,they established the Goguryeo kindom(O2a+C2)
      They replaced the Samhan people(South Korean Natives,Wa/Janpanese -O1b2+C1+D1)
      The genetic connection between Turkic and Mongolic peoples (and the historical Xiongnus) is a shared root from the Northeast Asian genepool, specifically Baikal hunter-gatherers(Ydna Q+R1a), Amur hunter-gatherers(Ydna C2) and Liao river farmers(Ydna N1a).

    • @teovu5557
      @teovu5557 Před 5 měsíci

      Korean Tangun(founder/deity)
      Mongolian Tenger(God)

    • @user-me6lm5lw8m
      @user-me6lm5lw8m Před 4 měsíci

      Asian baby's have the typical so called Mongolian Blue Spot as was mentioned by another YTperson, I still have this blue spot while I am a European? My friends are telling me that is because I'm still very naughty.

    • @teovu5557
      @teovu5557 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@user-me6lm5lw8m pls do more research before commenting Mongolian blue spot has nothing to do with Mongolian DNA.....it is just a term Europeans came up with for the mark.
      All east Asians,south east Asians,central Asia d,native Americans and Pacific Islanders generally have the mark.
      Just like the term mongoloid for down syndrome doesn't mean it's a Mongolian disorder. Lol

    • @user-me6lm5lw8m
      @user-me6lm5lw8m Před 4 měsíci

      @@teovu5557. Pls try to understand. We didn't talk about the Mongolian DNA at all. We don't mind if your'e a Mongolian or not. Even if you have the so called a mongolian disorder - that's fine with us too.

  • @khyberw
    @khyberw Před 11 měsíci +55

    Turkish is my second language and it was so fun trying to guess along. Mongolia and Turkey have close histories so it makes sense so many words are in common.

  • @Odbayar007
    @Odbayar007 Před rokem +418

    As a mongolian, it was very interesting to know that we have so many common words.

    • @boranboreas
      @boranboreas Před rokem +61

      We have many similarities with the Mongols. Because we have been a brother nation since the Huns.

    • @bayalp61
      @bayalp61 Před rokem +40

      We have many many many common words and names. Forexample my brother's name is Oktay which is a version of Ogedai . Even the channel name Bahadır and Baatır(Bator) is same. 🇹🇷🇲🇳

    • @Odbayar007
      @Odbayar007 Před rokem +14

      @@bayalp61 Yes, we have many landmarks named by turkic words. By the way, the name Altai has any turkish meaning?

    • @bayalp61
      @bayalp61 Před rokem +18

      @@Odbayar007 Altay Mountain is one of the sacred places like Tengri Khan Mountain or Baikal Lake as I know. Al may be " Reddish" and Tai may be Tag( Dağ) so it may be Reddish Mountain.

    • @Odbayar007
      @Odbayar007 Před rokem +2

      @@bayalp61 and your name seems to be Chingis Khaans fathers name.

  • @nocturnus8666
    @nocturnus8666 Před 11 měsíci +32

    Amazing video. It shows that history never vanishes completely. A lady who lives in thr eastern part of the Mediterranean world still have some words in common with a Mongolian man who lives in east Asia. Fantastic.

  • @mousamoradi3038
    @mousamoradi3038 Před rokem +372

    As an Azerbaijani Turk, I was able to understand almost all of them. Super nice and interesting video 👌

    • @persianguy1524
      @persianguy1524 Před rokem

      Bro you need to go back to mongolia.

    • @Nomadicenjoyer31
      @Nomadicenjoyer31 Před rokem +21

      @@persianguy1524 ok Elamite guy, bro will go back 🌝

    • @IranAzadLoading
      @IranAzadLoading Před rokem +21

      @@Nomadicenjoyer31 elamites were the first civilization with Sumerians hardly a diss.
      Azeris are native Iranians. Saying this as an Azeri.

    • @pomparustem599
      @pomparustem599 Před rokem

      ​@@IranAzadLoading Why do Azeris have East Asian Siberian heritage?

    • @IranAzadLoading
      @IranAzadLoading Před rokem +3

      @@pomparustem599
      Who said they do? Look at Mousa or my pfp, does this look east Asian to you?

  • @s.p9638
    @s.p9638 Před rokem +287

    I really would like to see a video with chuvash and turkish, it is the only turkic language that has separated a long time ago from others and it would be nice to see how it has evolved since then. Thank you btw great work :)

    • @papazataklaattiranimam
      @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem +16

      Based

    • @zaboybagoi8636
      @zaboybagoi8636 Před rokem +15

      There are no Chuvash who speak their mother tongue except grandpas ans grandmas over 80 years old.All speak Russian.

    • @DatBowlingGuy
      @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem

      @@zaboybagoi8636 Uploader of video can go to Russia and knock elderly Chuvash peoples door then.

    • @s.p9638
      @s.p9638 Před rokem +5

      @@zaboybagoi8636 so it basically evolved into russian :D

    • @zaboybagoi8636
      @zaboybagoi8636 Před rokem +1

      @@s.p9638 kinda :)

  • @ChrisOrban79
    @ChrisOrban79 Před rokem +154

    Im hungarian my language SAKAL = BEARD and in hungarian ALMA = APPLE and in hungarian OROSLAN = LION and SHARGA = YELLOW in my language and BATOR = HERO also in hungarian. and there are a lot mor words common in hungarian with mongol.

    • @beregu
      @beregu Před rokem +6

      Sharga means is lighter yellow color in Mongolian 👍

    • @laszlogobolos402
      @laszlogobolos402 Před rokem +6

      There are even more common words but they were not picked. It is interesting that some Hungarian ancient words match even Japanese and Korean, so the original connection is present, namely the Hunnic language.

    • @laszlogobolos402
      @laszlogobolos402 Před rokem

      @wratch Huns were not the the federation of Turkic and Mongol tribes, although the modern Turkish nationalism wants to project it in that way. There are minimal Hunnic names in Turkish, numerous in Hungarian. Western, Arab, Byzanthian and Iranian chronicles identified Hungarians as the successors of the Hunnic Empire, and old Hungarian chronicles do as well. Even the Ottomans have reinforced this in Tarih-i Üngürüs. When Huns were the representative of devil in Europe, Hungarians were accepting the heritage without any hesitation. Who would that without a valid base? Far away from Ural, in South-West of Kazakhstan and in Kyrgyzstan there are still some places showing Hungarian ethnology, and also Hunnic scripts, not Gökhtürks were found there. This script was still in usage in rural areas in Hungary in the 19th century. Huns-Avars-Magyars settled in several waves in the Carpathian basin, following the old Hunnic way of Western and Eastern settlements, which was also copied later by the Gökhtürks and Mongols. If the Gökhtürks had the heritage, why didn't the move to Pannonia? Didn't they just simply want to avoid the conflicts with the westwards spread Hunnic countries that even in the 13th century existed way much East from the Ural and Hungarian monks could talk to them in Hungarian? Are you sure about Japanese and Korean? I know way much more common meaning or at least common route wirds between Hungarian and Japanese than between Hungarian and Finnish. Japanese say that they originally come from nowadays Mongolia, although they have more common linguistic heritage and legends with Hungarians than Mongolians. Interesting, isn't it. The Gökhtürk Khaganate was a short lived Empire between 570 and 600, and the two remnants fallen apart in 630. Nevertheless, they had the last major linguistic impact on the region, although archaic words of Altai languages are Hunnic, not Turkic. It is better to follow archeological and archeogenetical developments instead of political nursery rhymes.

    • @laszlogobolos402
      @laszlogobolos402 Před rokem +1

      @wratch Thank you for quoting Comrade Szűcs, who's best studies came from the 1950s, the Stalinistic era of Communist Hungary under Russian military occupation, heavily criticising the Kingdom of Hungary and it's heritage, as was required by the socialist system. For these fantastic works, proving that Hungarians are just one of the small, irrelevant nations originating from the great later Russia, he quickly was promoted to significant academic positions. By the way, he died in 1988, could not have had a quote from 1999. So one of these irrelevant, small nations could control a big chunk of Europe for an extensive period, and the Roman Catholic masses included the following: "Sagittis Hungarorum Libera nos, Domine!". Furthermore, this small, irrelevant nation built up one of the biggest countries of Europe that exists over 1100 years, that only another 3 can state on the continent. That is all about Szűcs' relevance in the topic.

    • @laszlogobolos402
      @laszlogobolos402 Před rokem

      @wratch None of the Germanic and Slavic states are the successors if the Huns. No archeological, genetic or linguistic link is present. The Ugric theory comes from two German speaking "scientists" paid buy the Habsburg court, in the 1850s, as a reaction of the disagreement and civil war initiated by the Hungarian nobility against the young, illegitimate Franz Josef, who was put in the throne by Metternich after a coup against the lawful king, Ferdinand. The political settlement commenced only in 1867. Which book did you read about Japan? Have you been to Japan or Korea at all? Do you understand Japanese? Do you know the ancient Japanese myths? Have you been to some of the ancient sacred shrines and spots? Have you seen Yayoi culture artefacts in real life? I am more and more curious 🤨

  • @user-gh1ml6yf4g
    @user-gh1ml6yf4g Před 9 měsíci +54

    I am from Hungary. I enjoyed it. I don't speak either languages, but Persian, and also in my language, we have a lot of Turnish loan words. I could recognise some of them: sakal -szakáll, elma - alma, aslan - oroszlán, ambar - hombár. We also have bátor, which means brave and also a name for man, but not very common nowdays. For the word yellow in mongolian I also thought city from Persian. It is actually similar : sárga (s is pronounced as sh in Hungarian).

    • @koordrozita7236
      @koordrozita7236 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Amber and Arslan are not loan words from Mongolian, you just don’t know about it’s etymology

    • @youlikewewill7596
      @youlikewewill7596 Před 7 měsíci

      Egitim is Hungary Turkish word. I could read it in Budapest on an entry of a university

    • @meditarhythm
      @meditarhythm Před 7 měsíci +1

      Batur ismini Türkiyede kullanıyoruz. Bahadır ismini de. İkisi de aynı kökten aynı anlamda sözcüklerdir. Macarca ile üç yüzden fazla ortak kelime var. Kapı, balta gibi bir çok sözcük.

    • @steladumitru79
      @steladumitru79 Před 7 měsíci

      IT is not amazing at all..the similarites between Hungarian language and Mongolia , Finnish language because all this languages belong to the branch Fino - ugric language having the same origin Find youself the origin of Hungarian language on Wikipedia...

    • @YouLikeWeWill
      @YouLikeWeWill Před 7 měsíci

      Don't trust Wikipedia! @@steladumitru79

  • @OchitosBuritos
    @OchitosBuritos Před 11 měsíci +21

    as a Mongolian, this video was awesome thank you

  • @Realite58
    @Realite58 Před rokem +130

    I am from Türkmenistan, greetings salamlar to all Turks 🇹🇲🇦🇿🇹🇷🇰🇿🇺🇿🇰🇬

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před rokem +1

      Most Turkish people don’t have Mongolian or Turkic ancestry
      "Turkic people" conquered, killed some of the Anatolia males .. Made children with the women. If I remember it correctly, nowadays Anatolians carry about 5-10% of those Asian genes and the rest is Middle East or Southern Europe.
      The Anatolians need a new identity after losing out the Ottoman Empire. They wanted to steal the whole steppe heritage of Eurasia created by Xiongnu, Rouran, Mongols and GokTurks to make them feel great again.
      You're just Turkified Anatolians( Armenian, Greek, Iranian)

    • @kadirkaplanoglu8692
      @kadirkaplanoglu8692 Před rokem +5

      Aleyküm Selam Gardaş

    • @user-lq3th1mi4l
      @user-lq3th1mi4l Před 11 měsíci

      Алейкум Салам бауырым .
      Службу проходил в Ашхабаде 1990-1991 г.

    • @daninick8145
      @daninick8145 Před 6 měsíci

      Sevgi Saygilar kardeshim Tabrizdan

    • @Vildann_krtl
      @Vildann_krtl Před 5 měsíci

      Selamlar kardeşim❤

  • @samwon1
    @samwon1 Před rokem +18

    Super programme. This one was particularly interesting because both sides were very clever and were good enough to find the meanings from the first go, almost every time.

  • @buryadmongol11
    @buryadmongol11 Před 11 měsíci +75

    I'm buryat-mongol and it's intersting to hear similar turkish words in our languages) It's more clear to believe to the one of the facts that ancient hunnus was the unity of nomad Mongol and Turkic tribes. And of cause the infuence from Great Mongol Empire. Amazing world, Amazing People!

    • @sinasikicioglu
      @sinasikicioglu Před 10 měsíci +6

      In ancient times, nomadic Turkish cavalry could not distinguish between Mongol and Turkish settlements. And sometimes they mistakenly went to Mongol homelands instead of their own. There was a lot of resemblance. They generally distinguished the Mongols by the way they rode horses.

    • @olalamalo
      @olalamalo Před 10 měsíci +1

      ❤❤❤

    • @xdd87
      @xdd87 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Seljuks were %25-%45 Asian and were between Uzbeks and Turkmens. Modern Anatolian Turks are %6-%22 except eastern black sea.

    • @Nenet-rj9yr
      @Nenet-rj9yr Před 6 měsíci

      Buryats are mongolised ancient turks

    • @buryadmongol11
      @buryadmongol11 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Nenet-rj9yr you should read Okladnikov’s research of his archeological work. Buryats is Mongol tribes, never been Turks.

  • @patrykgorczynski419
    @patrykgorczynski419 Před rokem +12

    Thank you guys. Congrats on a great video 🥳

  • @petertaller3019
    @petertaller3019 Před 11 měsíci +65

    It would be great to see a Hungarian-Mongolian comparison too. (There was already a Turkish-Hungarian one.) I am from Hungary and speak Turkish but I could have understood some of the words (like Batur) without it too.

    • @hakanbilge6091
      @hakanbilge6091 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Hungarian people are our brothers.
      Turkish people and Hungarian people historian brothers.
      I love Hungarian brother's.

    • @TurquazCannabiz
      @TurquazCannabiz Před 10 měsíci +1

      That's awesome bro, how did you learn Turkish?

    • @kasmylmaz5852
      @kasmylmaz5852 Před 6 měsíci

      As a Turk, I know that we come from the same lineage as my Hungarian brothers and I love them very much. One day, all brothers will definitely rule the world in unity.

  • @ogz90
    @ogz90 Před rokem +39

    "Bataar" is a common name is Turkish. We use "Batur". Also Mongolia capital Ulaanbaatar is "Ulanbatur" in Turkish.

    • @ukaloca
      @ukaloca Před 8 měsíci +4

      Ulaanbaatar= red hero, a name given during communism

    • @teovu5557
      @teovu5557 Před 6 měsíci

      Ulan Bator in Turkish would be Kizil Bagatur

    • @zera_61
      @zera_61 Před 5 měsíci

      Yes. One of my turkish classmates name was "Batur"

  • @Gmeli
    @Gmeli Před rokem +51

    I like you videos very much, many thanks for these. I could spot some common things between Mongolian, Turkish and Hungarian. Baatar means bátor (brave), sakhal/sakal equals szakáll (beard) and ambar is hombár (storage place made of wood for grain storage in the villages in the old times).

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem +2

      They didn't select random words. They selected the loaned words due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. Otherwise Mongolian language is not related to Turkish!!!!

    • @Buyanjagal.B
      @Buyanjagal.B Před rokem +3

      All these words are Turkisms in the Mongolian language.

    • @orkunyucel3095
      @orkunyucel3095 Před rokem +1

      As a Turk from Turkey, I had researched a few sentences and words in Mongolian and felt common etymological roots with Turkish. However, I thought the two languages ​​were very differentiated. Just like Spanish and English are two very, very different languages, even if they belong to the same family. However, it is interesting to have such a common word.

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      @@orkunyucel3095 Turkish and Mongolian DO NOT belong to the same family. There was a such a hypothesis but the Altaic family group theory has been widely debunked by linguists and scientists.

    • @laszlovondracsek
      @laszlovondracsek Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yes.I must recognize that our language (Hungarian) has many Asian influences (Turkish, Mongolian even Korean)...."Ez a helyzet!"

  • @TheLightlessMoon
    @TheLightlessMoon Před rokem +73

    Wow this was really challenging and both of the participants were really great at guessing the words. I am amazed actually.

    • @strategicfooyouagencyfirst8197
      @strategicfooyouagencyfirst8197 Před rokem

      The current Mongolian language, in fact, can be considered a mixture of Rouran + Turkic in terms of vocabulary

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem +1

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

    • @TheLightlessMoon
      @TheLightlessMoon Před rokem

      @@kts437 it's not a scientific video but just for fun. I don't really care about if Mongolian is related with Turkic languages. But Kazakh, Kyrgyz and other minor Siberian Turkic people are mostly Turkified Mongolians. So they have more common words with Mongols. If you talk about the origins of Turkics and Mongolians, it's more complicated. I also don't care about that. So you should take it easy and try to have fun.

    • @korhandemir-tf2hp
      @korhandemir-tf2hp Před 10 měsíci

      *Bilim: İnsanlığın Atası TÜRK....*
      lütfen resmimi açın

  • @kwooo9270
    @kwooo9270 Před rokem +5

    I loved this! It was really interesting. Your guests also speak English beautifully.

  • @jordangarcia91
    @jordangarcia91 Před rokem +106

    I am brazilian and is awesome how these languages have such similar words, i love to study languages, i speak english , spanish , portuguese, almost 6 years of chinese mandarim (HSK IV), and running for my JLPT N5(Japanese), and TOPIK I (Korean). I hope to someday study Mongolian and Vietnamese as well.

  • @huseyinarguc7141
    @huseyinarguc7141 Před rokem +12

    Your work is amazing Bahador. Ellerine sağlık 🎉

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. Such a faulty hypothesis is extremely dangerous for indigenous peoples like Mongols. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

  • @bujorel
    @bujorel Před rokem +22

    that was really cool! interesting to see so many common words/roots in turkish and mongolian. and they were both very good and guessing/inferring what the words might be

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. Such a faulty hypothesis is extremely dangerous for indigenous peoples like Mongols. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

  • @koseku3
    @koseku3 Před rokem +20

    i missed turkish related videos. thank you

  • @metehangokturk9696
    @metehangokturk9696 Před rokem +5

    ... this platform is a good basis between people who have cultural similarities to get to know each other better. greetings from Berlin

  • @ilxamabagirova7128
    @ilxamabagirova7128 Před rokem +22

    Türk dünyasını bölün hərəmizə bir ad qoydular-Mongol, Azərbaycanlı, Özbək, Gazax, Türkmən. Əslində hamımız eyni kökdən, eyni soydan gəlirik!

    • @i_luv_animals
      @i_luv_animals Před 10 měsíci +3

      doğru söyledin ... özellikle Türkçe konuşan toplulukları bilerek bölmüşler... bu yüzden İngilizce bu kadar ün saldı.. yoksa Türkçe dünyanın bir numaralı dili olurdu ... niye İngilizceyle anlaşıyoruz ki ... çok utanç verici .... Türkler kendi aralarında asla Avrupa dilleri ya da Arapça-Farsça gibi dillerle anlaşmamalı ... aynı şey Moğollar, Koreliler ve Japonlarla olan konuşmalarımız için de geçerli ... onlarla İngilizce ya da başka bir dille anlaşmak doğru değil ...

    • @user-ih8lx5qs7g
      @user-ih8lx5qs7g Před měsícem

      Вот те же мысли про славянский мир у меня возникли, когда славянские народы так же разговаривали и понимали друг друга)
      Чехи, словаки,поляки, русские, белорусы, украинцы, хорваты, болгары, сербы и т.д.
      Одного корня народы))

  • @theturquoiseball1255
    @theturquoiseball1255 Před rokem +183

    Hi Bahador, We would love to have Finnish vs Estonian or Hungarian!☺️🇫🇮🇪🇪🇭🇺

    • @gerald4013
      @gerald4013 Před rokem +1

      good luck to find words that look or sound alike between Hungarian and Fennic languages :-p

    • @theturquoiseball1255
      @theturquoiseball1255 Před rokem +12

      @@gerald4013 They are both Uralic languages and have many similar words

    • @omkarjadhav8664
      @omkarjadhav8664 Před rokem +3

      He has i think so done, Finnish vs Hungarian and Estonian vs Hungarian

    • @theturquoiseball1255
      @theturquoiseball1255 Před rokem +4

      @@omkarjadhav8664 He did Estonian vs Hungarian only

    • @omkarjadhav8664
      @omkarjadhav8664 Před rokem +4

      @@theturquoiseball1255 Oh okay! I'd love to see a finnish vs hungarian

  • @DavidJokhadze
    @DavidJokhadze Před rokem +4

    A very great content you have Bahador👍 I myself speak my native Georgian and 4 other languages and i always find your channel extremely interesting. 👍 Thank you for creating and sharing such a great content.

  • @jmudikun
    @jmudikun Před rokem +1

    Thank you again for showing how amazing the spread of languages is

  • @burqut
    @burqut Před rokem +8

    Thank you Bahador, as usual, this was a great and very interesting video. A video about Sanskrit and Latin will be great.

    • @Yasa5na
      @Yasa5na Před rokem

      Sanskrit is likely more related to Baltic and Slavic languages of Europe in terms of sound and sentence or word structure. like Kartavyanishta ( responsible) this kind of long sentence like words aren't present in Latin other than Slavic or Baltic.

    • @arifinsan5800
      @arifinsan5800 Před 10 měsíci

      Elə ona qörə kosa sakkal farslar deyillərki biz Monqoliyadan qəlmişik😃

  • @vengovoy4606
    @vengovoy4606 Před rokem +34

    in turkey we still use "arslan(lion)" and "alma(apple)" in the countryside actually but "aslan" and "elma" is only in the Istanbul dialect, that is, in the official language.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 10 měsíci

      lion is probably not a good word for this kind of language comparison, since Lion is not native to where Turks and Mongols originated.
      for example, all Europeans have words starting with L- for Lion, where as most Asians have S- words for Lion.
      because for most Europeans and Asians, Lions were not native to their land, and name for lion was foreign imported word.
      Where as Africans have all sorts of different words for Lion, because lions are native to Africa.

    • @luoravetlan1866
      @luoravetlan1866 Před 8 měsíci

      @@davidjacobs8558 Arislan is a proto-turkic word for lion, native to Turkic languages, not imported. Aris- is an imitation of how a lion roars and -lan is a suffix indicating it's a wild animal.

    • @luoravetlan1866
      @luoravetlan1866 Před 8 měsíci

      @@davidjacobs8558 this word in the form of Arsalan even exists in Tungusic languages.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 8 měsíci

      @@luoravetlan1866 just as everybody call a computer, "computer". because it's foreign loan word. not because they share same ancestors.

    • @luoravetlan1866
      @luoravetlan1866 Před 8 měsíci

      @@davidjacobs8558 what are you trying to say dude? Be more specific.

  • @hassanalast6670
    @hassanalast6670 Před rokem +25

    Good to know about Mongolian and Turkish similarity.

  • @robrecht1917
    @robrecht1917 Před rokem +6

    This is most fascinating! Congratulations to both ' contestants '! 🙂

  • @alibalibekbaykal
    @alibalibekbaykal Před rokem +2

    Nice to hear our cousin.
    Thank you Bahadir!
    👏👏👏👏👏

  • @esesci
    @esesci Před rokem +48

    Another thing to note is that Nyambaatar can pronounce the Turkish I (as in "yıl") perfectly. Many non-Turkish speakers from other cultures would have a hard time pronouncing it correctly. He nails it. Mongolian doesn't seem to have that sound but have schwa ("ə") which might be close enough. Also interesting that how conincidentally similar "songino" and "onion" are :)

    • @greategg7159
      @greategg7159 Před rokem +7

      Abi ekşi sözlük kapanınca buraya mı geldin

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem +4

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. Such a faulty hypothesis is extremely dangerous for indigenous peoples like Mongols. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

    • @esesci
      @esesci Před rokem +19

      @@kts437 Dude you need to CHILL, nobody (including Bahador) claims that Mongolian and Turkish languages are related or in the same family at all. It's intentionally biased to show the similarities. Otherwise the video wouldn't be interesting or surprising. You need to watch more videos of Bahador's, and go easy on caffeine :)

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      @@esesci This is a pre-prepared video. Both speakers or one of them was given the words to choose. It is very obvious. Turkish and this Middle Eastern guy named Bahador are unethical and rude!!!! They don't have the culture to respect indigenous people's identity and heritage. Bahador or what ever he calls his name is giving misinformation and misconception to his viewers.

    • @orkunyucel3095
      @orkunyucel3095 Před rokem +2

      Soğan ve Onion da bağlantılı olabilir. Sankritçe ve Orta Farsça kökenleri de Sukanda ve Sox. Muhtemelen bir çok sebze gibi Soğd'lardan alınmış olabilir

  • @RichieLarpa
    @RichieLarpa Před rokem +66

    My observations:
    Word "szakáll" in Hungarian is also beard, I was surprised to learn that Turkish and Mongolian people also recognize those words.
    Hungarian also has "alma" as an apple, which seems to be closer to Turkish "elma", yet Mongolian is not that far from it.
    Another Hungarian similarity could be "oroszlán", which is lion. I was confused firstly, as "orosz" means "Russian", but then I have learned about the real etymology of that word.
    Word yellow also surprised me, as I knew about Mongolian "шар" before, in Hungarian, it is "sárga". But other colours are not that similar.
    Last word that reminded me of another non-direct resemblance is Mongolian "баатар", Hungarians use "bátor", but that means "fearless", however there is a little connection I suppose.
    Magyarok, ha megcsináltam hibákat abban a szövegben, megjavíthatjátok azokat, örülni fogok. Magyar nyelv nem az anyanyelvem, sajnos.

    • @CyberSpaceRoot
      @CyberSpaceRoot Před rokem +3

      Yes the "bátor" word means "fearless" but also had a "hero" meaning in the old Hungarian language.
      The Hungarian use the "Hős" word for "hero" now but originaly it had a "hard-worker" meaning, so possibly it is related with the Turkish "işçi" word.

    • @jonam7589
      @jonam7589 Před rokem +6

      Hungarian has a lot of historical Turkish infulence. Prior to turks entering into Hungary, the Scytians and Alans who are Iranian tribes from Caspian sea and the Caucasus entered Hungary and mixed with the locals. Therefore, you have many old Persian words in Hungarian such as the horse ...etc.

    • @CyberSpaceRoot
      @CyberSpaceRoot Před rokem +3

      @@jonam7589 The Hungarian seems a heavily mixed langauage. The vocabulary and the grammar also contains similarities with every languages which were spoken in the territory of the Hunnic empire. Uralic, Turkic, Germanic, Slavic, Latin, Iranian, Greek, Mongolian and some Sanskrit influence too. And I am a Hungarian who live in Nepal, my wife is a native Tamang speaker, she speak fluently Nepali and Hindi too. There are old Hungarian words wich are similar in Tamang, Nepali and Hindi. The Hungarian seems a litle bit a mixture of them. For example in Hungarian the "mother" is "anya", in Nepali "ama". In Hungarian the "father" is "apa", in Tamang it is also "apa". In Hungarian the "dog" is "kutya", in Hindi it is "kutta".

    • @richcrown1176
      @richcrown1176 Před rokem

      Wow I'm surprised Hungarian language share lots of words with turkic languages. Now I started getting why old turkic people were called Hunns. Does that mean that Hungarian people descended from the Huns and we have one root? Because Huns are our ancestors.

    • @CyberSpaceRoot
      @CyberSpaceRoot Před rokem

      @@richcrown1176 In the Hunnic tribe alliance there were several different origin tribes, including Turks too, and maybe the Turkic tribes were the majority. The Hungarian language itself exactly seems a mixture of those languages which were spoken in the Hunnic Empire.

  • @tengiz
    @tengiz Před rokem +3

    I have been waiting for this for so long

  • @huselmaa
    @huselmaa Před rokem +62

    Her name Bilge is very common name in Mongolia too.

    • @xdd87
      @xdd87 Před rokem +7

      Does it mean wise?

    • @huselmaa
      @huselmaa Před rokem +31

      @@xdd87 yes,
      inteligence, smart, sage or wise

    • @xdd87
      @xdd87 Před rokem +34

      @@huselmaa Same meaning in Turkish.

    • @cernkoc
      @cernkoc Před rokem

      @wratch-gd2jq üfff aşağılık kompleksi gibi sürekli şunu moğolların olduğu yerlere yazmanız :D sonra moğollar niye kardeşim diyince kızıyor diye ağlıyorsunuz.

    • @huselmaa
      @huselmaa Před rokem +1

      spelling variations of the word are Bileg, bilgee, bilge

  • @VictoriaToumit
    @VictoriaToumit Před rokem +90

    Turkish and Mongolian, which are in the Altaic Language family, are also related to other languages in this language family, Manchu-Tungus, Korean and Japanese.

    • @souutu
      @souutu Před 10 měsíci +4

      no. japanese is not related to mongolian nor turkish at all. the altaic language family is a theory, a very shitty one

    • @siyah3113
      @siyah3113 Před 10 měsíci +13

      @@souututhis is western denial. altaic is real turks, japanese, koreans learning too easy each other languages.

    • @user-gh6ly4pr8l
      @user-gh6ly4pr8l Před 10 měsíci

      it is arabic language but nomadic type

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@souutu Japanese language has very similar grammatic structure as Korean language, yet Japanese insist Japanese and Korean language are not related.
      however, it is true that Korean language don't share much words with any potentially related languages for some odd reason (imported Chinese words need to be excluded and only native words must be compared, of course).
      not many cognates between Korean and other altaic languages, not even with Manchu language.

    • @honsuaman8743
      @honsuaman8743 Před 10 měsíci +4

      No. Korean and Japanese languages are isolated languages. They are not even Altaic

  • @sedanursahin3528
    @sedanursahin3528 Před rokem +6

    Bu kanalı çok seviyorum ya!💜

  • @suhv-fs2kq
    @suhv-fs2kq Před 11 měsíci +3

    çok iyi video olmuş teşekkürler 💙

  • @yusufdehazini5471
    @yusufdehazini5471 Před rokem +18

    Ne güzel bir video hazırlamışsınız. Tebrikler. Nefesimi tutarak izledim ve coğrafyamız hakkında bir kez daha düşünmeye beni sevk ettiniz; teşekkürler

  • @Genso326
    @Genso326 Před 11 měsíci +26

    in Mongolian gold is alt, and golden is altan. probably the adjective spread to Turkic languages because we called golden coins for shortening as just Altan. I always liked how the Turkish language sound from Turkish movies and series from my childhood and it’s nice to know that we have so much in common between our languages.

    • @user-rn6nb2ey7e
      @user-rn6nb2ey7e Před 11 měsíci +1

      It is impossible for two Asian parents to have an white baby(Anatolians)!😅😅
      The root of East Asians, such as Chinese, Koreans, or Japanese, but also Northeast Asians, Siberians as well as Southeast Asians, Pacific Islanders and Native Americans, can be traced back to the “Ancestral East Asians” (also known as Basal-East Asians or basal East-Eurasians “bEE”).
      They carry the EDAR gene, found in ancient and modern East Asians, East Siberians and Native Americans but not common in African or European populations
      The EDAR gene causes the Sinodont tooth pattern, and also affects hair texture,jaw morphology,and perhaps the nutritional profile of breast milk
      A very small minority of people in Turkey carry genetic markers that are also found in Mongolia, Korean, Janpanese .
      Turkic peoples never became a majority in Anatolia, even up to the present day. The Turks of today are the historic Anatolians who have simply taken on a Turkish identity as they had previously taken on a Greek identity.

    • @bariskurt463
      @bariskurt463 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@cenktuneygok8986 Türkler hintavrupali değildir. Türkler Altay haklarından dır. Ve koreli Japon Moğol Tunguz gibi Altay haklarıyla kardeştirler

  • @AC_KaanMC
    @AC_KaanMC Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the video :)!

  • @naomus
    @naomus Před 5 měsíci +2

    Finally!!) I was waiting for it for a 3 years. Made video with Mongolian and Chuvash plsss

  • @keithtrumaine-ml8xr
    @keithtrumaine-ml8xr Před rokem +6

    They both have very pleasant smiles and are so willing to learn and talk!

  • @zhandosiskakov2439
    @zhandosiskakov2439 Před rokem +18

    Its great. Everything was familiar to me. I speak Kazakh (native), Turkish, English, Russian, German, French and Spanish.

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo Před rokem

      Impressive! Meanwhile, I struggle with my native English.

    • @Buyanjagal.B
      @Buyanjagal.B Před rokem +2

      All these words are Turkisms(from turkic languages) in the Mongolian language.

  • @sujaatvaliyev1340
    @sujaatvaliyev1340 Před rokem +177

    As an Azerbaijani Turk, it was a surprise to me that we have so many words in common with Mongolians.

    • @lahm.verlassener
      @lahm.verlassener Před rokem +15

      Yes ,even the europoid-looking Turks ,as Azeris ,who are mainly of iranian blood have some mongolian genes and linguistic traces in them. Turkic means a blend of Iranians and Mongolians and the eastern Turks are mostly mongoloids and trhe western Turks like you are mostly Iranoids.

    • @DatBowlingGuy
      @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem +17

      @@lahm.verlassener As a Turk I must agree with your statement. The original Turks that appeared for the first time in history, were (even if not completely) almost predominantly Mongoloid looking in appearance but once they started to migrate westwards from their Siberian lands and settle in present day Central Asia (which was already inhabited by old Iranic tribes before Turks) These Turks began to intermingle with the local caucasoid populations and assimilate their languages. This is why most Turkic people living in central asia today (especially Uzbeks and Turkmens) share physical traits of both Iranic and Mongoloid.

    • @halilarcan7079
      @halilarcan7079 Před rokem +9

      Şaşırmayın çünkü Moğollar ile Türkler akraba atalarımız akraba

    • @DatBowlingGuy
      @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem +15

      @@halilarcan7079 Bizler ile Moğollar arasında herhangi bir akrabalık bağı söz konusu değildir. Sadece, asırlar önce, atalarımız, kendileriyle aynı coğrafi bölgede yaşamış olan Moğol komşuları ile aynı yaşam tarzını, aynı gök tanrı inancını paylaşmış ve epey uzun bir süre beraberlik içinde kalmış o kadar. Bu süre zarfında her iki toplum arasında pek çok alışverişler olmuş, videoda gördüğünüz ortak kelimelerin neredeyse hepsi de o dönemin Moğolları tarafından ödünç alınmıştı. Bu benzerliklerin aynı soydan gelmekle bir alakası yok.

    • @lahm.verlassener
      @lahm.verlassener Před rokem +7

      @@DatBowlingGuy I am glad that a true today's europoid Turk like you fully undestands the main truth about the ethnic birth of the Turkic peoples. Yes ,this is why most of europoid -looking Turks looks so alike the Iranians. Yes however ,in Asia Minor,today;s Turkey some of the today's Turks are in truth linguistically turcized Minor Asian peoples as Luwians ,Lydians ,Phrygians ,Hetites,even some Galatians (Celts) and so on , other small Minor Asian peoples ,who were found by the Turks who came to settle down forever there ,who came from what is now Northern Iran and Turkmenistan and who there were already well-blended genetically (iranian and mongolian genes ,with a higher percent of iranian genes ,as they went more far away Central Asia towards Asia Minor and Caucasus). However ,I never will understand fully ,how it became so that alll these iranian central asian peoples as Skythes ,Medes ,Partes ,Sakas ,Horesmians ,Tocharians left willingly there iranian tongues and came to speak the altaic tongue of the proto-mongoloid Turks. But many historians and turcologists say that the altaic tongue of the proto-Turks was so lovely to the ears that all these iranian peoples willingly adopted it and with the time began to call themselves Turks and to adopt the proto-turick altaic gods and to worship them and some of the living habits of the altaic Proto-Turks. This is why the today's Turlish tongue is a mix of old iranian and old mongolian words ,but pronounced in an iranian way. In fact ,all Turkic people have both ,the Iranians and the Mongolians as their cousins to some extent.

  • @mustafay.yalcnkaya2629

    Tebrik ederim. Güzel bir çalışma olmuş

  • @Lost7one
    @Lost7one Před rokem +16

    Both of them are very smart, bravo!

  • @Kul-tegin
    @Kul-tegin Před rokem +14

    In Hun and Turk times (Gokturk) both Mongolic-speaking and Turkic-speaking tribes were one nation/tribal union.

    • @Nickname1001
      @Nickname1001 Před 5 měsíci

      False, these words are turkic words which mongolians borrowed, modern mongolians formed after fall of mongol empire and even they have nothing to do with genghis khan, modern mongolians are khalkha people who always lived next to turks and took a lot of stuff from them

    • @Kul-tegin
      @Kul-tegin Před 5 měsíci

      What words?@@Nickname1001

    • @Nickname1001
      @Nickname1001 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Kul-tegin the ones in the video

  • @paistefever
    @paistefever Před 11 měsíci +12

    Thanks for a great episode! Oirat Mongolian (Kalmyk) sounds even more Turkish by phonetics :).

  • @albertdesalvo7152
    @albertdesalvo7152 Před 9 měsíci +1

    this video was so immersive i subscribed 👊👊

  • @diaspo
    @diaspo Před rokem +25

    Mind blown! I had no idea so many words are shared

    • @bandarm4900
      @bandarm4900 Před rokem +3

      Mongol Empire

    • @ebuuuu2833
      @ebuuuu2833 Před rokem +16

      ​@@bandarm4900 sory but Turkic culture... These words are Turkic origin. There is not Mongolian origin word

    • @jarmilprdel6045
      @jarmilprdel6045 Před rokem +2

      @@ebuuuu2833 What do you mean, Turkic ppl were integral part of Mongol empire... turks and mongols have the same origin and until today it's not clear what came first, chicken or egg, in this case mongol or turk

  • @khongoroobatmunkh1884
    @khongoroobatmunkh1884 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It was very interesting to know how similarity our languages TY guys ❤

  • @ergenekon209
    @ergenekon209 Před rokem +1

    Very beautiful Video thank you 👏👏👏👍

  • @HeshigtenMongol
    @HeshigtenMongol Před rokem +108

    I feel like Turkish is very similar to Ancient Mongolian, I am from Inner Mongolia and the Turkish pronunciation is very similar to ours.
    I know Aral is island in both languages. Baltik in Turkish is mud and it is called Balchig in Inner Mongolia. We also call garlic Satimsag here. I also found so many examples and was shocked by that.

    • @user-bl6so2iw3y
      @user-bl6so2iw3y Před rokem +3

      Balchig/Balshig is mud in kazakh, Sarimsak is garlic, Nagashi/Nagachi - relatives from mother's side

    • @HeshigtenMongol
      @HeshigtenMongol Před rokem +3

      @@user-bl6so2iw3ySame, we also have the word Nagachu or Nagch means mother's side.

    • @user-bl6so2iw3y
      @user-bl6so2iw3y Před rokem +2

      @@HeshigtenMongol Strange. But Khalkha & Oirats pronounce it very different somehow: Nagac/Nahc - sounds like Nagats/Nahtz.
      Hazara & Inner Mongolian pronunciation is more similar to ours. Hazaras say 'Nagachi' LOL

    • @turuus5215
      @turuus5215 Před rokem +2

      In Mongolia country, we call garlic "sarims"

    • @HungryMagyar
      @HungryMagyar Před rokem +5

      ​@@turuus5215 In Turkey, we call garlic "Sarimsak".

  • @TurquazCannabiz
    @TurquazCannabiz Před 10 měsíci +10

    There are many more similar words!
    khar - kara (dark/black)
    tömör - demir (iron)
    ord - ordu (army)
    us - su (water)
    tenger - tanri (god)
    and there are a few more i can't remember

    • @gabor6259
      @gabor6259 Před 3 měsíci

      Tömör means iron, that's interesting because _tömör_ in Hungarian means solid or dense.

  • @zulaigaworth4401
    @zulaigaworth4401 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Very interesting. Thank you

  • @saranasser9642
    @saranasser9642 Před rokem +5

    Thank u Bahadour this video and the Turkish TAtar both episodes confirmed many things..thank u so much

  • @hassanalast6670
    @hassanalast6670 Před rokem +11

    I love this similarity ❤

  • @steelhd7843
    @steelhd7843 Před rokem +28

    Both are speakers are clever actually. it amazed me how they got the words.

    • @fatihce93
      @fatihce93 Před rokem

      Exactly. It was difficult to recognize the letters for me.

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. Such a faulty hypothesis is extremely dangerous for indigenous peoples like Mongols. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

    • @steelhd7843
      @steelhd7843 Před rokem +1

      @@kts437 hello. i think you got wrong feelings about this videos purpose. this video shows similarities yes but it doesnt say languages are relatives. loanwords makes the similarities. I do %100 agree with your words. Turks and Mongolians are different races but they were neighbour.

    • @xooos00
      @xooos00 Před 22 dny

      ​@@kts437Don't worry, you are Mongols, we are Turks. We have many cultural similarities such as "at, food, yurt, kımız" and some of our words. Even your country now is based on the land we are native to and we are different, but once upon a time we lived together

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před 22 dny

      @@xooos00 No, there aren't any cultural similarities between Turkish and Mongolian. But we have cultural similarities with Tuvans and Yakuts and they're paleo-Siberian indigenous people. The term "Turkic" refers to heterogeneous people with different genetic phenotype and culture with language diffusion only. The present-day Turkish people are descendants of various ethnic groups of Balkan, Caucasus, native Anatolian, Mediterranean, Levant, Iranian, and North African descent because Ottoman Empire was multi-ethnic and multi-lingual but they were Turkified by a few ruling elites of Turkomen from the central Asian Turkmenistan.

  • @vissarion3505
    @vissarion3505 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Баатыр (baatır) or боотур (bootur) in Sakha language (Sakha language is 65% Turkic, 30% Mongolian). We say сыл (sıl), дьыл (cıl) for year. And this year will be быйыл (bıyıl)

  • @jmich7
    @jmich7 Před rokem +1

    I have not seen it yet, but thumbs are already up.

  • @gregory7090
    @gregory7090 Před rokem +26

    It is kind of shocking for me as Sakha to not recognize 90% of words here. Because Sakha language is considered Turkic and it also have to be in some close relationship with Mongolian.

    • @barguttobed
      @barguttobed Před rokem +9

      Yes totally right, Sakha is Turkic language with 30% old Mongolian vocabulary. Btw I’m Buryat 👋🏼

    • @Kul-tegin
      @Kul-tegin Před rokem +5

      To be fair you're the most isolated Turks, deep in the taiga, it happens :P

    • @user-3aa6234fh
      @user-3aa6234fh Před rokem +5

      @@Kul-tegin nah, most isolated, different and interesting is Chuvash. Even though some are trying to say they aren't Turk

    • @Kul-tegin
      @Kul-tegin Před rokem +7

      @@user-3aa6234fh I mean geographically isolated. Linguistically isolated are the Chuvash yes, but next to the Chuvash are Volga Tatars. There are no Turks next to the Yakuts, only other Siberian peoples. I don't think Yakuts even remember the Turk El (Turk Nation) in Central Asia.

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@Kul-teginYakut are descendants of Real Turks. They are orginally from the Lake Baikal region.

  • @csikose
    @csikose Před rokem +65

    Alim - Elma - Alma (Hungarian)- Šar - Sari - Sárga. Did not know that many words as similar in Hungarian to Mongolian (for Turkish I knew)

    • @xox8256
      @xox8256 Před rokem +7

      Probably hungarians origin from middle asia like a Turks because this words very similar

    • @saj93i
      @saj93i Před rokem +3

      Hungary was part of the Ottoman Empire so they might have borrowed some Turkish words

    • @xox8256
      @xox8256 Před rokem +16

      @@saj93i yes, but the Ottomans did not care much about which language the people they took under their protection would use, and there were not many Turks settled in Hungary from Anatolia. Even if the Hungarians do not completely belong to the Altai mountains, it is clear that there is a language culture that comes from the Altai. this probably has to do with european huns seen as unidentified

    • @saj93i
      @saj93i Před rokem

      ​@@xox8256 I'm not saying Ottomans forced their language, I'm saying Hungarians might have borrowed Turkish words under the influence of the Ottoman Empire, regardless of Ottomans caring or not. The Ottoman Empire lasted for more than a hundred years in Hungary, which isn't a lot compared to other conquests but still enough to leave foreign loanwords.

    • @sickturret3587
      @sickturret3587 Před rokem +5

      @@saj93i hungary also had a small amount of pecheneg and cuman tribes when they were formed and later converted to christianity. it might as well got into their language long before there was an ottoman influence. and both magyars when they were living way north-east were living next to turkic tribes like proto-bulgars, khazars and the sabirs. they might've shared or even made the words up together.

  • @Anithink2do
    @Anithink2do Před 7 měsíci

    Wow, every word cracked me. It’s incredibly interesting and also amazing.

  • @diyorajafari9277
    @diyorajafari9277 Před rokem +3

    Amazing 🤩

  • @sbhatti534
    @sbhatti534 Před rokem +10

    Urdu has been one of the languages my parents, grandparents etc knew. I remember as a younster hearing the odd turkish word that I recognised from Urdu. Later when I've been to Uzbekistan and then to Mongolia I learned were some words that I could understand - far fewer than Turkish words though. I knew there was a great deal of influence from Farsi when the Urdu language developed under the Timurid dynasty. And also a little arabic perhaps via farsi, but less so.
    Additionally, in Uzbekistan there seems to be groups of people who speak more Uzbek and others Parsi/Tajik.
    It is great watching these videos and seeing how connected languages are.

    • @GamingStarslegends01
      @GamingStarslegends01 Před rokem

      Urdu is created by Turkish Persian armies of india

    • @Sekuler_Adam
      @Sekuler_Adam Před rokem +3

      Urdu Türkçe Ordu sözcüğünden türemiştir

    • @Ouzconqueror
      @Ouzconqueror Před rokem

      Urdu is Ordu = Army = Turkic - Turks used many language via religion/bussines JUST ONE fact never changed was Army language ALWAYS had been Turkic effect..Most of indian/paki muslims have Turkic root..There is reason some of you look diffrent more causcasid face..And the Farsi language also connected Turks like 4000 year - remember Farsians culture fathers SOGDS lived and melted under Turkic kaganates..(Sometimes persian trollol about we have many farsi words..they not calculate SOGDS or last 1000 year..RULED by only Turks till 1920 ish...

  • @silafuyang8675
    @silafuyang8675 Před rokem +81

    I am Bulgarian. Most of these words I know in both languages because I can understand a little Turkish and Mongolian. I spent more than a year in Ulanbataar, tried to learn some Mongolian but for me it is the hardest language I have ever studied. I speak fluent Mandarin Chinese, Cantonese, English, German, Russian. I have learned some Gaelic, French, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Bahasa, Hebrew and others. Anyway, Mongolian is just too hard.

    • @NightLife.
      @NightLife. Před rokem +19

      even i'm mongolian myself i fail exam lol😂

    • @yaxshibala
      @yaxshibala Před rokem +2

      @@NightLife. bruuuh😂

    • @zhumagul6476
      @zhumagul6476 Před rokem +1

      You are polyglot.

    • @silafuyang8675
      @silafuyang8675 Před rokem +9

      @@zhumagul6476 Nah, jusy happened to learn some stuff. By the way, Mongolians learn languages amazingly fast. At least judging by what I've seen.

    • @adru2933
      @adru2933 Před rokem

      Does bulgarian slavic or turkic?? I'm so confuse

  • @shevawnbasye7404
    @shevawnbasye7404 Před rokem +2

    Very interesting to see the similarities; and the progression of the turkic lang.

  • @talaydiberlino9641
    @talaydiberlino9641 Před 8 měsíci +1

    wow ! great video

  • @Mladjasmilic
    @Mladjasmilic Před 8 měsíci +8

    Serbian here:
    500 years under the Turks (both literally and figuratively) made me understand at least half of these words.

    • @dillinger445
      @dillinger445 Před 3 měsíci +1

      greek here.. about the same under ottoman empire.. i understand nothing😂

    • @taniadim.p.5305
      @taniadim.p.5305 Před 17 dny

      Same here, I'm Bulgarian, 500 years under turkiey rules , noting of this words, Turks or Mongolians correspond to Bulgarian language. Very informative video, thanks for making it.

  • @chrisbean
    @chrisbean Před rokem +3

    Wow!! Too Many similarities!!! So maybe sometime in a remote past there was a common prototurkic language. I mean there were some pronunciation switches but the two languages have a lot of similar words.

  • @hayatnrenkleri777
    @hayatnrenkleri777 Před rokem

    Çok güzel teşekkürler 🌹

  • @Nedubov
    @Nedubov Před 6 měsíci +2

    They are so lovely to watch 😊

  • @michaelrespicio5683
    @michaelrespicio5683 Před rokem +22

    Bilge makes me want to try learning some Turkish now 😅

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem +74

    In the case of Early Pre-Proto-Mongolic, certain loanwords in the Mongolic languages point to early contact with Oghur (Pre-Proto-Bulgaric) Turkic, also known as r-Turkic. These loanwords precede Common Turkic (z-Turkic) loanwords and include:
    • Mongolic ikere (twins) from Pre-Proto-Bulgaric ikir (versus Common Turkic ekiz)
    • Mongolic hüker (ox) from Pre-Proto-Bulgaric hekür (Common Turkic öküz)
    • Mongolic jer (weapon) from Pre-Proto-Bulgaric jer (Common Turkic yäz)
    • Mongolic biragu (calf) versus Common Turkic buzagu
    • Mongolic siri- (to smelt ore) versus Common Turkic siz- (to melt)
    The above words are thought to have been borrowed from Oghur Turkic during the time of the Xiongnu.
    Later Turkic peoples in Mongolia all spoke forms of Common Turkic (z-Turkic) as opposed to Oghur (Bulgharic) Turkic, which withdrew to the west in the 4th century. The Chuvash language, spoken by 1 million people in European Russia, is the only living representative of Oghur Turkic which split from Proto Turkic around the 1st century AD.
    Words in Mongolic like dayir (brown, Common Turkic yagiz) and nidurga (fist, Common Turkic yudruk) with initial *d and *n versus Common Turkic *y are sufficiently archaic to indicate loans from an earlier stage of Oghur (Pre-Proto-Bulgaric). This is because Chuvash and Common Turkic do not differ in these features despite differing fundamentally in rhotacism-lambdacism (Janhunen 2006). Oghur tribes lived in the Mongolian borderlands before the 5th century, and provided Oghur loanwords to Early Pre-Proto-Mongolic before Common Turkic loanwords.
    Golden 2011, p. 31.
    Before the rise of Genghis Khan Mongolic was spreading at westward and absorbing Turkic speakers (Janhunen, 2008). During the Mongol expansion, Turkic speakers whose tribes and states had been incorporated into the Mongol empire were so much more numerous than Mongols that, although Mongolian was the language of command, it was Turkic rather than Mongolic speech that was chiefly spread across Central Asia and the central and western steppe.
    Antonio Benítez-Burraco, ‎Steven Moran 2018 p.92
    The period of Bulghar Turkic influence on Mongolic seems to have lasted until the fourth century, when the Bulghar Turks withdrew to the west. In Southern Siberia, a few cen- turies without Turkic speakers followed, but most of Mongolia was rapidly covered by a population speaking an early form of Common Turkic, the direct ancestor of Old Turkic and all the modern Turkic languages with the exception of Chuvash. Since the Turkic empires of the Türk and Uighur were for most of the time politically superior to the con- temporary linguistic ancestors of the Mongols, Mongolic (Pre-Proto-Mongolic) bor- rowed a layer of Common Turkic elements that can be distinguished by the absence of the specifically Bulgharic features characteristic of the earlier loanwords.
    The Mongolic Languages Juha Janhunen 2003

    • @tex3211
      @tex3211 Před rokem +4

      @Қазақ_Қыят卐قازاق_قيات Yep Russia is trying to asimilate Kipchaks. I'm glad you are someone who is aware spread the word of Pan-Turkism brother.

    • @temujin260
      @temujin260 Před 6 měsíci

      Similarities between Mongolian and Turkish is due to Turkish language was brought by Seljuks who later became Ottomans a branch of Seljuks who settled in modern day Anatolia
      The Seljuks affected many cultures and people their language became dominant the Seljuks affected Azeris, Anatolians
      The similarities between these languages is due to para-Mongolic speaking groups Kumoxi, Kumans, Magyars/Magars/Hungarians
      Para-Mongolic is descendant of Proto-Mongolic language the Manchus spoke similar language to Mongolians 800 years ago right after that the language became something else but Manchu and Mongolian have similarities
      Manchus say, Bi shimbe hayrambi
      Mongols say, bi chamd hayrtay
      Magyars say, bin sendi suyembin > men seni suyem > Seljuk Oghuz > men seni söýýärin > Ottoman Tatar > Ben seni seviyorum

  • @billyngetich1883
    @billyngetich1883 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Just subscribed and as a new member am impressed also consider ur african brethen in future instalments if possible. I love such videos they bring out the diversity that is the human family in a good light. Am african btw.

  • @lisasutherland-fraser4479

    So cool actually I didn’t think there would be so many similar words that were similar.

  • @jarosawwieczorek3684
    @jarosawwieczorek3684 Před rokem +10

    Taking into consideration both turkish and mongolian languages we have to remember about the ancient legacy and roots of the linguistic families which are seated in Central Asia and precisely contemporary Mongolia. It is enough to listen or read both old turkic and mongolian languages. They are very similar. Thus despite some linguistic differences into modern speaking of the both languages; there are still more similarities what proofs that turkish and mongolian ones belongs to one big altaic family. 🇹🇷🇲🇳

  • @mojtabaalimirzaee7104
    @mojtabaalimirzaee7104 Před 11 měsíci +125

    As a Turk from Iran, I fully understood the meaning of the words. Long live the Turks🇮🇷🇹🇷🇦🇿

    • @user-ij9eb7ln8k
      @user-ij9eb7ln8k Před 11 měsíci +11

      حالا فهمیدی که مغول تبارید

    • @mojtabaalimirzaee7104
      @mojtabaalimirzaee7104 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@user-ij9eb7ln8k احمق‌جان حتی اگر‌ما مغول تبار هم باشیم باعث کسر شان نیست.درضمن احمق قبل از حمله مغولان ترکان غزنوی ،سلجوقیان وخوارزمشاهیان در ایران حکومت می کردند فقط مغولان منشا ترکان ایران نیستند.

    • @ghanjadelic
      @ghanjadelic Před 11 měsíci +26

      @@user-ij9eb7ln8k Mongols are strong people and had the biggest empire in human history, much bigger that the Persian empire 💪 so being called mongolian is rather a compliment

    • @Persian1978
      @Persian1978 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Did you understand even the Mongolian words?

    • @mojtabaalimirzaee7104
      @mojtabaalimirzaee7104 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@Persian1978 I understood Turkish very well. The Mongolian words used were similar to Turkish, and this is how I understood it.

  • @d-simpleexplorer9943
    @d-simpleexplorer9943 Před rokem

    Keep posting bro

  • @johnz7239
    @johnz7239 Před rokem +1

    Amazing!

  • @junaidqadirb
    @junaidqadirb Před rokem +5

    We also use Ambar in Baluchi for storage room/ warehouse but also for heap of something. i'm not sure if it is a loanword. That's fascinating!

    • @WF2U
      @WF2U Před rokem +2

      There is an older Hungarian word for storage/warehouse: hombár. It must have come from the same source.

    • @kts437
      @kts437 Před rokem

      I am a native Mongolian speaker. For me, Turkish is a completely foreign language. This content creator did not select random words and random sentences. This video is biased. Soon, I will make a video about Mongolian language based on scientific studies and selecting random words and sentences to compare with Turkish. Mongolian language is the standard version of Mongolic languages spoken by Mongolic people in China, Russia and Kalmyk. The Mongolic languages have no convincingly established living relatives. Mongolian language has some loan words from Proto-Turkic language due to the intermingling with Turks during the Mongol Empire period. The Turkic language has some loan words from the Proto-Mongolic languages as well because Mongolian language served as a major language for diplomatic and political affairs during the Mongol Empire period. Please read the following book about the Mongolic languages by Juha Janhunen (2006). “The Mongolic Languages”. Routledge. p. 393. ISBN 978-1-135-79690-7. But the western scholars have artificially and forcefully hypothesized that Turkish people were originated from Mongolia or Turkish language is related to Mongolian language etc. Such a faulty hypothesis is extremely dangerous for indigenous peoples like Mongols. It is the same as how westerners initially hypothesized that the native Americans are Indians and until recently the native Americans were called as American Indians despite the fact that they have no genetic, linguistic, and cultural ties to South Asian Indians.

  • @sekoonthewatch
    @sekoonthewatch Před 11 měsíci +14

    Love mongolia from turkey 🇹🇷🇲🇳

  • @Qaiira
    @Qaiira Před rokem +2

    They’re both incredibly smart. Wow☺️👍🏽

  • @user-vi6wx5ec2j
    @user-vi6wx5ec2j Před rokem

    So interesting lesson!

  • @amirrezarahimi8655
    @amirrezarahimi8655 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Mongols and Turks have always been like brothers🇦🇿🇹🇷🇺🇿🇰🇬🇰🇿🇭🇺🇲🇳🤘🤘🐺🐺

  • @regularbahamian
    @regularbahamian Před rokem +36

    lovely how languages are related, the word for lion in Hungarian also is similar to Aslan 'oroszlán"

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před rokem +2

      (Turkish) çok keçim var.=sok kecském van (Hungarian=. (şok keçkim van =with Turkish letters of its Hungarian pronounce)

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před rokem +3

      Hungarian Turkish English
      szakállam van = sakalım var = i have beard
      szakállad van = sakalın var = you have beard
      szakálla van. =sakalı var = he has beard

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před rokem +3

      Q=K q=k same sound y=ı, i same sound just alphabet difference
      tall girl came=English translation of example sentence
      Öndör okhin irlee.= Mongolian (very different while all Turkic are same)
      Uzun kız geldi=Türkiye
      uzun qız gəldi= Azerbayjan
      uzun qız keldi= Kazakh
      uzun qız keldi= Kyrgyz
      uzun qiz keldi =Uzbek
      uzyn gyz geldi=Türkmenistan
      Uzun kiz geldi = Uyghur
      ozyn kyz kilde = Kypchak

    • @regularbahamian
      @regularbahamian Před rokem +1

      @@PimsleurTurkishLessons Mongolian looks the hardest 🥲

    • @adem0886
      @adem0886 Před rokem +1

      Aslan = Arslan . Aslan deriz arslan da deriz

  • @AydinProductionsLtd
    @AydinProductionsLtd Před 7 měsíci +1

    Awesome!

  • @volkanaydemir1440
    @volkanaydemir1440 Před rokem +4

    very good video ,thnk you bahadorr

  • @gmicg
    @gmicg Před rokem

    Good job Bahadar Effendi!

  • @DatBowlingGuy
    @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem +17

    I know it would be hard to find the second person for this video but the comparison between Turkish/Azerbaijani and Salar would be quite interesting to see. As all three languages derive from the same branch within their own language tree they share alot in common. Just some of the similarities below:
    emex - ekmek
    eşex - eşek
    yilan - yilan
    soğılcang - solucan
    -miş - -miş (suffix)
    quzı - kuzu
    at - at
    göl - göl
    balux - balık
    demir - demir
    pıçax - bıçak
    su - su
    uq - ok
    garınca - karınca
    donuz - domuz
    haywan/mal - hayvan
    et - et
    tirı - deri
    çiçex - çiçek
    qara - kara
    boyax - boya
    yel - yel
    yağmur - yağmur
    tüş - düş

    • @baybarssonmez6799
      @baybarssonmez6799 Před rokem +1

      AZERBAYCAN TURKS HAVE SAME ROOTHS WITH ANATOLIAN TURKS!!🤘🇹🇷🇦🇿

    • @faridakazvinova8391
      @faridakazvinova8391 Před rokem +3

      There’s no Azerbaijani, it is Turkish language spoken in Azerbaijan. The term Azerbaijani, Azeri are completely wrong

    • @DatBowlingGuy
      @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem

      @@faridakazvinova8391 Dear Farida, here you are mistakenly confusing the terms "Turkish" and "Turkic" with each other miss. Turkish only applies to the Turkic language spoken in Anatolia - Turkey while Turkic is a much broader term that includes all of the Turkic languages in itself. For instance, German is a germanic language, yet not every germanic language is german. You can actually think of it like that:)

    • @faridakazvinova8391
      @faridakazvinova8391 Před rokem +2

      @@DatBowlingGuy I know what you are talking about, but Turkic is the term, invented by British linguists, adopted in 20th century by Bolsheviks. Turkish language is divided in several groups, according to the tribes. Among them Seljuk/Oghuz Turkish- spoken by Azerbaijani Turks, Anatolian Turks and Turkmens, Kipchak group - Kazakhstan, Kirgizistan, Tatarstan, Bashkiria or Başkurdistan, Uzbekistan, Crimean Tatars
      speak the dialect of Cumans.

    • @DatBowlingGuy
      @DatBowlingGuy Před rokem

      @@faridakazvinova8391 Okay, I got what you mean. Personally till this day I have come across many comments written by Azerbaycan Turks in CZcams who would refuse to accept their language being referred to as Azerbaycan Turkish or simply Azerbaycan Türkçesi by Turkish and other foreign users. Most of them don't even seem to care about the fact of westerners creating the term "Turkic" that you mentioned about. So to be honest I think there is no point in still calling their language as Turkish let alone Azerbaijani Turkish and trust me, they themselves prefer the Azerbaijani word more instead of Turkish/Türkçe.