About the Estonian language

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  • čas přidán 3. 10. 2020
  • Want to learn Estonian? Check out the link for 20% off uTalk - a language learning platform with more than 150 languages available: uta.lk/julingo
    *So sorry for the bad audio, something went wrong 😰
    Today we're back to Baltics! We've seen Latvian before but today we're looking at its neighbour - Estonian language. These two languages have nothing in common, in fact Estonian has nothing in common with almost any other European language (except for Finnish and Hungarian). For sure it's a very unique language and very fun to learn about!
    Link to my Patreon account: / julingo
    Music used:
    Forest Myths by Deskant
    Shapes of the Wind by Deskant
    The Wedding Feast by Bonnie Grace
    Videos used:
    Suvestuudio - Grete Paia intervjuu
    • Suvestuudio - Grete Pa...
    EFTA 2019: Tõnis Niinemetsa intervjuu Priit Piusiga (Kait Kalliga) HD
    • EFTA 2019: Tõnis Niine...
    Urban Symphony - Rändajad (Estonia) Live 2009 Eurovision Song Contest
    • Urban Symphony - Rända...
    #estonian #language #baltics

Komentáře • 895

  • @pedroclavijo8043
    @pedroclavijo8043 Před 3 lety +469

    I learned Estonian as an exchange student, Estonians get really proud when foreigners learn it. Even though I always make some grammatical errors, I still love speaking it and speak it everyday

    • @rist998
      @rist998 Před 3 lety +33

      Can confirm,at work everytime foreigners speak it i feel proud

    • @raapyna8544
      @raapyna8544 Před 3 lety +23

      An excellent reason to learn any small language!

    • @moon7239
      @moon7239 Před 3 lety +23

      Hi! I'm also exchange student and am on my exchange year in Estonia right now :) I can confirm that! Even in the first two months here when I barely spoke any Estonian, people would be still impressed and just happy that someone wants to learn their language.

    • @alisonmoora7778
      @alisonmoora7778 Před 3 lety +34

      As an estonian i can say that my heart melts when i hear that someone is trying to learn our impossible language. Seeing this comment made my day. :')

    • @ruthenianthruth
      @ruthenianthruth Před 3 lety +10

      I would rather say: Estonians like it when you try to learn and speak this language, but get very suspicious and cold when you really start to speak it. People start to think that you want to stay here forever and take their land from them.

  • @Gaming4Justice
    @Gaming4Justice Před 3 lety +710

    I always get triggered when over 800 years of our history gets ignored and the Soviet Union is the only thing that matters.

    • @richardkeler9170
      @richardkeler9170 Před 3 lety +18

      Viking time yes. But soviet union and nazi shet was a big event and a lot happend . In vikings time or idk there was nothing happening.

    • @richardkeler9170
      @richardkeler9170 Před 3 lety +10

      It's not only soviet union It's other countries as well

    • @raapyna8544
      @raapyna8544 Před 3 lety +68

      @@richardkeler9170 "There was nothing happening" is another way to say that it was ignored in history lessons. If we do that we are basically erasing history.

    • @raapyna8544
      @raapyna8544 Před 3 lety +18

      @dota vinkz I want to let you know that 'mongoloid' and 'caucasoid' are outdated nowadays. Scientists don't want to use race classifications for people because they are always abused for hierarchical comparisons and racist ideologies. Indeed people are different, but we are all equal (worth and potential). If language can help with our equality, it's good.
      But that's very interesting information you share about the origin history of Estonian people. 11 000 years ago European people would not have looked like they do today. There's been research that shows that a man in the British islands 10 000 years ago was very dark-skinned with blue eyes. Information like this challenges our understanding of 'races' and their justification.

    • @MRRED7777
      @MRRED7777 Před 3 lety

      well welcome to ENSV

  • @Joonaskaa
    @Joonaskaa Před 3 lety +550

    It took me 11 years of schooling... in Estonia... as an Estonian... to get my grammar correct - after my finals I really stopped trying :D

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +76

      what a language 🤣

    • @thescarytransperson
      @thescarytransperson Před 3 lety +35

      thats the magic of uralic languages

    • @coobalt
      @coobalt Před 3 lety +50

      I agree. I myself am an estonian too ....and estonian is my mother tongue .......and I am probably not a stupidest person on earth .....I am studying at masters degree in university ....BUT still ....even I sometimes have doubts whether something I say or write is grammatically correct. Estonian language is abnormally and hysterically difficult ;) ............

    • @p2seline
      @p2seline Před 3 lety +22

      I know...so many rules, then exceptions, and exceptions have exceptions :)

    • @stanislavfilippov9864
      @stanislavfilippov9864 Před 3 lety +5

      @@JuLingo I've been born in Tartu and still to this day don't know it greatly

  • @a.balazs4413
    @a.balazs4413 Před 3 lety +102

    I am just a simple Hungarian, if I see Estonian or Finnish. I like.

    • @sagirozzo720
      @sagirozzo720 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Mi like, that, anshwa

    • @gato-junino
      @gato-junino Před měsícem +2

      You speak one of the hardest languages on Earth. You can master as many as you want because the rest will be easier than yours.

  • @WMfin
    @WMfin Před 2 lety +70

    Love from Finland. Estonia and Finland are brothers both historically and by language.
    Speaking of Finland and languages, Tolkien based his Quenya, language of the High Elves in Finnish :) As a huge Tolkien nerd I just love that!
    He loved Kalevala and read it IN FINNISH by using dictionary. He said that Finnish is like a good wine for him...
    Sorry, got carried away!

    • @dreamerqueennotunderthemachine
      @dreamerqueennotunderthemachine Před 2 lety +3

      That is so cool. Finnish is such a cool language ... It is definitely a language of the elves. I went to Finland when I was 10, as a Christmas tour with my family in order to celebrate the land of Santa Claus, and I remember the pride in that. I crafted these two elf dolls modeled after Nimble and Quick, and I left them in a doll museum there I wonder if they're still there. I also remember eating really yummy and interesting food especially the cloud berries and the reindeer 😁

    • @rondormees4608
      @rondormees4608 Před rokem +3

      Hey Finland, thanks for helping us during the war😃

  • @derhamcohomology
    @derhamcohomology Před 3 lety +233

    My favourite Estonian word is "öö".

  • @ihuliige6776
    @ihuliige6776 Před 3 lety +257

    What makes the Estonian language even more melodic is that, being an agglutinative language, the word order in a sentence can be nearly random. The normal sentence structure is S-V-O, but it can be easily switched around for different emphasis or poetic purposes.
    For example, a sentence like "ma läksin sõbraga poodi" ("I went to the store with a friend") could just as well be written "poodi läksin ma sõbraga" or "sõbraga ma läksin poodi" or "läksin sõbraga poodi ma", and because it's clear from the conjugation what the subject, object and other sentence parts are, it would only be slightly strange.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +51

      Ihu Liige that’s an awesome remark! How come I didn’t include it in the video??? 🙉 thank you!

    • @kittennoodlesyar8490
      @kittennoodlesyar8490 Před 3 lety +24

      m8, Estonian native here, the word order is only flexible because the case system removes some need for grammar, but you will still need grammar in a sentence like "karud tapsid mehed". Something like German's case system actually removes much need for grammar in many cases because it marks for subject, object, environment, etc.

    • @bobertjones2300
      @bobertjones2300 Před 3 lety +5

      @Dylan Daley Ancient migration of people from Central Asia. Estonian DNA must be interesting.

    • @AmareshJoshi
      @AmareshJoshi Před 3 lety +4

      cool. is "läksin" the verb (go/went)? can you put it at the end? like "sõbraga poodi ma läksin". and does the subject ("ma"?) always have to be next to the verb ("ma läksin" or "läksin ma")?

    • @kittennoodlesyar8490
      @kittennoodlesyar8490 Před 3 lety +15

      @@AmareshJoshi You can the verb anywhere, BUT the subject work "ma" will sound clunky if it is placed at the end. People will still totally understand you if you say "läksin poodi sõbraga ma", it just sounds strange, but something like "sõbraga ma poodi läksin" is fine.

  • @SionTJobbins
    @SionTJobbins Před 3 lety +76

    Estonian (and Finnish) is such a beautiful sounding language. Sounds so light and clear, like tip-toeing across the speech.

    • @oferzilberman5049
      @oferzilberman5049 Před 3 lety +3

      But reading it is a nightmare above all earth

    • @ivanmonahhov2314
      @ivanmonahhov2314 Před 3 lety +3

      And then mitmene osastav rolls in.

    • @-nvmanyhow1436
      @-nvmanyhow1436 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ivanmonahhov2314 *mitmuse osastav. Don't worry, even we Estonians sometimes get confused by our own grammar

    • @pjp7316
      @pjp7316 Před 2 lety

      @@ivanmonahhov2314 miks see raske on? Lihtsalt mõtle küsisõnade peale (mida? keda?), kerge.

  • @markopalikko6986
    @markopalikko6986 Před 3 lety +85

    Born in Finland, now Canadian, the first time I heard Estonian i was blown away. I thought it was Finnish. It sounds so much like I remember Finnish was in the 70's. Finnish is so much harder (sounding) than the Finnish i grew up with, maybe i just grew up with the Helsinki dialect.

    • @mikahamari5994
      @mikahamari5994 Před 3 lety +12

      I think that Finnish language has not changed so much, but your perception of it has. But the atmosphere in Finland has become much colder. People here are made of stone, and it is reflected in the way how they speak. I hope that our beloved brothers and sisters in Estonia will retain their warmth and love of culture.
      PS. It is interesting perception, that people in Helsinki have spoken softly. I am native speaker of Oulu dialect, and for my ear Savo dialects are softer than Western dialects. It is partly because of intonation and partly because, as in Oulu dialect, there are "added" consonants and vowels (tullee talavi) and not "shortened" forms (täs talos).

    • @axxa42069
      @axxa42069 Před 3 lety +2

      People always say i speak finnish its annoying

    • @peterl5804
      @peterl5804 Před 3 lety +4

      Finnish derived out of Estonian

    • @lacciful
      @lacciful Před 3 lety +5

      @@peterl5804 Nope.

    • @findorbed
      @findorbed Před 3 lety +2

      @@peterl5804 Other way around

  • @raavieu
    @raavieu Před 3 lety +153

    I'm a proud learner of this beautiful language. Armastan Eesti !
    Love from Punjab, India !

    • @saapatald
      @saapatald Před 3 lety +14

      Awhhh🥺! (Though it would be more correct to say "Armastan Eestit" or "Armastan sind, Eesti" (love you, Estonia!)) And good luck with learining!❤️🥰

    • @gabrielverilaskja9316
      @gabrielverilaskja9316 Před 3 lety +5

      Hi. I Love India! I , am proud learner Tabla drums and Sikhi. Waheguru. ... Aga elan eestis ja armastan seda maad :)

    • @raavieu
      @raavieu Před 3 lety +10

      Olen Sikh, elan eestis aga praegu ma olen Punjabis. Ilm on nii hea !!

    • @KarelKannel
      @KarelKannel Před 3 lety +3

      @@raavieu Just praegu läks ilm Eestis väga külmaks, -20 kraadi külma...

    • @raavieu
      @raavieu Před 3 lety +3

      @@KarelKannel jah ! Nägin pilte . Winter wonderland ! Väga ilus !

  • @stephenmorley1991
    @stephenmorley1991 Před 3 lety +129

    It is beautiful to listen to in spoken and song form. It's also impressive how easily Estonians pick up and speak other languages.

    • @takuan71
      @takuan71 Před 3 lety +45

      Well, after you master Estonian any other language is a breeze (colloquially: kökimöki)))

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +6

      @@takuan71 Haahhhaaaa 😂

    • @you-know-who9023
      @you-know-who9023 Před 2 lety

      Could not agree more 😀

    • @schotsevlaanderen
      @schotsevlaanderen Před rokem +1

      I met a beautiful Estonian lady who spoke not a word of English. She came to visit me twice and by the end of her second visit she could converse very acceptably in English.

  • @nikolaikorobeinik119
    @nikolaikorobeinik119 Před 2 lety +22

    Hi, Estonian here. Aavik's legacy is unprecedented in the world. Imagine one smart guy starts spewing out words that the whole nation ends up using years later. These are really common words that are used in everyday conversation and they have the impression that they have always been there. I think this is crazy.

    • @dmitrykazakov2829
      @dmitrykazakov2829 Před rokem

      Reviving a language takes efforts of some few great people. History always finds them when necessary. There were other examples like in the case of the Hebrew language.
      (It is sad that other Uralic languages from there region are becoming extinct. Russia does nothing to support them)

    • @argentumcitizen
      @argentumcitizen Před 7 měsíci

      We have coscu in Argentina few years ago started modifying words of Spanish and now all youngsters are speaking like that 🫠

  • @mazettas
    @mazettas Před 3 lety +30

    Thank you for creating this lovely video.
    I found a great amount of new information.
    Love, from a Greek in Estonia. 🇬🇷 ♥️🇪🇪

  • @endouceurendouceur318
    @endouceurendouceur318 Před 2 lety +13

    Our group of Moldavian students traveled to Tartu by tourist bus from Tallinn during winter vacations in February 1974.
    I will never forget an old guide/professor Leesment so friendly, showing us proudly the famous University of Tartu.
    And the lunch somewhere - a Swedish table - was delicious ! Now I like also Saku beer !Unforgettable life lasting
    memories/trip to Estonia ! And I read the book -"Bye, yellow cat" by Mati Unt.Warm Greetings from Kishinău/Moldavia

  • @imanofaction
    @imanofaction Před 3 lety +42

    My favourite odd word is "jäääär" consisting of words "jää" - meaning ice and "äär" - meaning edge... so edge of ice

    • @raapyna8544
      @raapyna8544 Před 3 lety +7

      In Finnish we would write that 'jää-ääri' for clarity, though we don't use such a word - it's very poetic though!

    • @kekko4710
      @kekko4710 Před 3 lety

      Kuuuuria lol

    • @nel2670
      @nel2670 Před 3 lety +18

      'asjaajaja' is fun too, looks like keyboard smashing

    • @imanofaction
      @imanofaction Před 3 lety +5

      @@nel2670 like spanish laugh of some kind

    • @kekko4710
      @kekko4710 Před 3 lety

      @@nel2670 me when I agree on something funny

  • @ralphbaier7793
    @ralphbaier7793 Před 2 lety +3

    Julie, you and your channel are my early Sunday morning comfort. Thank you, again. Love, peace, and harmony for all!

  • @NightBane345
    @NightBane345 Před 3 lety +21

    Have a very good friend in Estonia, and did visit 2 times Eesti, first time it sounded like a mixture of Finnish and Russian to me, but when I went on second visit. I stayed at her families home, and heard it spoken longer and more proper, not just on ordering food or taxi.
    And I could hear the difference in it, still hard to notice massive difference but it was there, and Estonian is actually a very good sounding language in my opinion/thoughts, it deserves to be more recognised, as a language, but also as its own country, not be linked to Russia. For me, Eesti and all its people are Scandinavian brethren, and would love for them to be viewed as such, among the bigger countries

  • @lroke2947
    @lroke2947 Před 3 lety +6

    This was one of the best briefs on Estonian that I've come across. Thank you.

  • @bergitakogermann2015
    @bergitakogermann2015 Před 3 lety +122

    I’m estonian and wanted to correct that the word “karbisse” is incorrect, we say “karpi” It’s one of the exception words so it is a bad example.

    • @tulilind2783
      @tulilind2783 Před 3 lety +24

      "Karbisse" is not incorrect, it is just never used - "karpi" is the preferred form. The word falls under type 21: www.eki.ee/dict/ekss/tyypsonad.html#tp21

    • @PsychoCalamander
      @PsychoCalamander Před 3 lety +5

      @@tulilind2783 Eh? Esimest korda kuulen :D

    • @mihkel86
      @mihkel86 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, its not Hip-Hoppariks, its Hippariks-Hoppariks.

    • @hipe8987
      @hipe8987 Před 3 lety +5

      @@tulilind2783 yeah you're right, theyre both correct but karpi is a lot more common and more comfortable to say

    • @EstoniaANTICOMMUNIST
      @EstoniaANTICOMMUNIST Před 3 lety +4

      Või nagu majja või majasse. Inimestel on loogiliselt omadus kasutada lühemaid variante.

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 Před 3 lety +19

    I *love* your language videos! And, by the way, I used to teach English in Finland, and my students once debated whether Finnish had 16 or "only" 15 grammatical cases!

  • @renatomorello4318
    @renatomorello4318 Před 3 lety +6

    As always, an excellent video! You are the best! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻❤️❤️

  • @PretzelSurvival
    @PretzelSurvival Před 3 lety +17

    So interesting! This is what I live for! Thank you for making this video! 😄

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +10

      Haha, I know, language addiction is not curable 😁

    • @spidermukk5223
      @spidermukk5223 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JuLingo thank you for making this video about our country estonia and most Estonians know English very well idk why but we are pretty good at English

  • @thomashattey8037
    @thomashattey8037 Před 23 dny

    Very interesting. Learned a lot about this cryptic language. Love the sampling - you can really hear the vocalic sound of the language.

  • @dimascherbak3173
    @dimascherbak3173 Před 3 lety +11

    I’ve been waiting for the video about the Estonian language!

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +5

      You're welcome 😉

  • @Raventooth
    @Raventooth Před 3 lety +3

    Informative as usual! Thank you

  • @SilverSpur1
    @SilverSpur1 Před 2 lety +17

    I am Hungarian, I didn't knew we have 18 cases, we just learned 5. We also have Ö, ö, Ő, ő, and Ü, ü letters, it's so easy for me to pronounce them. Our "closest relative" mansi sounds perfectly intelligible, i can understand it, after more than 1200 years separate from us. So mansi are the other Hungarians on the eastern Urals, they just stayed home, did not wander to west.

  • @SatumainenOlento
    @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +10

    This was extremely well made video! Proper background research made! WOW! I wish your channel all the best!!! And thank you!!! 💗💗💗
    (Also, as a Finn it was cool to see how ancient Estonian's called themselves as Maarahvas = Earth folk (roughly in English), because that is a Finnish word and totally understable. Beautiful too see so literal evidence of our common roots!)

    • @taekatanahu635
      @taekatanahu635 Před 3 lety +2

      I mean Finnish and Estonian are nearly mutually intelligible and grammatically almost the same. I don't think there is need for any more 'proof' than that.

    • @jyrkilehtinen9886
      @jyrkilehtinen9886 Před 3 lety

      Actually "maarahvas" is "country people". I would guess

    • @chaoscontrolsok
      @chaoscontrolsok Před 2 lety

      Strange! Hungarians still call them selfs "Magyar", and Hungary is "Magyarország"...

    • @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112
      @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112 Před 2 lety

      @@taekatanahu635 "I mean Finnish and Estonian are nearly mutually intelligible and grammatically almost the same. I don't think there is need for any more 'proof' than that." - only the basics. More elaborate texts: in no way. For example Dutch and German are way closer to each other.

    • @taekatanahu635
      @taekatanahu635 Před 2 lety

      @@iStrong113 Depends on the person. If it is written and there is enough context I can understand Estonian fairly well with some effort. When spoken not so much simply because there is not enough time to figure out the meaning if you don't immediately understand something.
      But honestly some Finns are just dense and can't even understand non-standard Finnish. However here in Savonian region most of my friends seem to understand Estonian to about the same extent as I do, but that might be because people are more accustomed to read between the lines and have more intuitive understanding of sound changes that may occur in languages.
      Also the richer your vocabulary the more you have to work with. Not only Finnish but Indo-European languages such as Swedish, German or even English.

  • @henri372
    @henri372 Před 3 lety +49

    I watched both the Estonian and Latvian language video and it's Intresting that the historic facts about Latvia are more correct than in the Estonian case - which is funny because the facts are basically the same as for Latvia. For example - the estonian and latvian regions were ruled by baltic germans for 700 years which left its imprint on the language and psyche (Lutheran church, work ethic, grammar, etc). They were both under Danish, Swedish, Russian, Polish and German control in various periods until 1918 when both republics were created. Were both annexed by Soviet Union at the same time in 1940. They are both called the singing nations, have big singing festivals with thousands of singers (designed after the Baltic German choral tradition) and poetry archives collected from 18th-19th century.

  • @rahuldhargalkar
    @rahuldhargalkar Před 3 lety +42

    Estonian is so cool! Heard they're really lovely people :)

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +11

      yeah super interesting 👍

    • @kittennoodlesyar8490
      @kittennoodlesyar8490 Před 3 lety +14

      Don't come here, you have been warned

    • @steveboy7302
      @steveboy7302 Před 3 lety

      Yes but Indians won't listen they want to migrate to every single country and build up there own communities

    • @martinantonov9380
      @martinantonov9380 Před rokem

      @@kittennoodlesyar8490 but what if I’m already here ?

    • @kittennoodlesyar8490
      @kittennoodlesyar8490 Před rokem

      @@martinantonov9380 juba liiga hilja

  • @xosga1968
    @xosga1968 Před 2 lety

    All your videos are great, thank u !!!

  • @mdlunasofficial7478
    @mdlunasofficial7478 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for your hard work 💐

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you for your support!

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 3 lety +44

    I remember a Finn jokingly describing Estonian as Finnish with tonsillitis.

    • @zank2068
      @zank2068 Před 3 lety +44

      and Finnish is just drunk Estonian

    • @dvlrnr
      @dvlrnr Před 3 lety +10

      Estonian is Hobbit Finnish

    • @Joonaskaa
      @Joonaskaa Před 3 lety +49

      and when we get drunk together we speak Finstonian - everybody understands and it has no rules

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento Před 3 lety +8

      @@Joonaskaa Hahahhaa The Best! 😁

    • @kirkkek
      @kirkkek Před 3 lety +1

      @@Joonaskaa I like this description best lol

  • @leaturk11
    @leaturk11 Před 3 lety +9

    I'm from the UK and married to an Estonian girl for over 10 years, I must admit I struggle a little learning the language (the problem is that everyone in Est speaks English so you get lazy), I know 100's of Estonian words but cant put them together to make a sentence, that being said I've come to love Estonia and I truly consider it my joint home.

    • @phantomendgamer
      @phantomendgamer Před rokem

      That's really cool!! I'm from the UK too and trying to learn Estonian but struggling really hard xD
      Love Estonia though!

  • @juliesettle3443
    @juliesettle3443 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you - clear and friendly teaching approach.

  • @georgiancrossroads
    @georgiancrossroads Před 3 lety +16

    It seems to be the opposite of Georgian with it's nightmarish vowel clusters. And I hear what to my ears sounds like a bit of a Scandinavian lilt in the speech rhythms. Thanks again Julie.
    You only have a few languages left to go... before you get to .01% of the total. Keep going.
    (Technical note: I'm sure you realize that your voice was scratchy sounding. That's because the record volume was too high. Sometimes these things get accidentally changed without us being aware of it. A good practice is to always check the record levels before beginning.)

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +6

      Haha yeah that's an endless source for language ideas 😄 sound quality is a catastrophe 🙈 for this video I travelled abroad and I forgot my microphone adaptor so I had to make it with what I had and... yeah, something went wrong 😅

  • @KingPaulW
    @KingPaulW Před 3 lety

    Like all your videos! Keep up the great work!

  • @thomaskember4628
    @thomaskember4628 Před 3 lety +20

    "No sex and no future" could be said about English which long ago lost gender for nouns and uses auxiliary verbs, will or shall, to indicate the future tense and not inflections like others languages.

    • @raapyna8544
      @raapyna8544 Před 3 lety +1

      Latin languages are the only ones that I know to do this.

    • @musematt
      @musematt Před 3 lety +1

      Estonian uses neither, so it's more accurate for Estonian rather than English.

    • @lroke2947
      @lroke2947 Před 3 lety +3

      Then again, Estonian makes no distinction between he and she and has no equivalent to will or shall.

  • @davidbates8295
    @davidbates8295 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this informative video. It brought back many good memories from my trip there with little knowledge of the language.

  • @traphex
    @traphex Před rokem

    Just discovered your channel, it's fantastic.

  • @Timurlane100
    @Timurlane100 Před 3 lety +1

    I really love the way you approach other languages. You are the best!!!!!

  • @tashuntka
    @tashuntka Před 5 měsíci +1

    As always, a great video...👍🏻🫶👍🏻

  • @monstrositizen
    @monstrositizen Před rokem

    Thank u for uploading this video....I really need it

  • @mishasimons702
    @mishasimons702 Před měsícem

    this is really cool!! thank you :-)

  • @corinna007
    @corinna007 Před 3 lety +13

    Now you should do one on Finnish. 😁 I've been learning it for the past 5 1/2 years and it's fascinating.

  • @pmarker
    @pmarker Před rokem

    Thank you. Very informative.

  • @akostarkanyi825
    @akostarkanyi825 Před 3 lety +5

    I am Hungarian. Years ago I was a participant of a scientific conference in Helsinki, Finland. I got acquainted with another researcher there, an Estonian woman. I have heard about our languages - Hungarian and Estonian - having some ancient relationship. So I asked her what "eye" is in Estonian. It is 'silm' she said. In Hungarian it is 'szem' pronounced as sem. Silm - sem. And what is "mouth"? It is 'suu' she said. In Hungarian it is 'száj' pronounced as suy. Suu - suy. Well, we have some quite similar words inspite of the long time the two languages have been departed.
    And I don't suggest that anyone bother grammatical "cases" if he or she wants to learn Hungarian - or Estonian. For example "in the fish" is "a halban" in Hungarian where the = a , fish = hal and in = -ban. Yes, we put prepositons at the end of the word and "glue" to it. That is how we say it and that is all that simple. You cannot get anything plus by learning the name of this "grammatical case" - you just feel overburdened by unnecessarily learning that and then believing "how difficult a language is this".

    • @059metafrast
      @059metafrast Před rokem +1

      It is good to call them cases and case endings, because we have also postpositions, those 'prepositions' coming after the word, written separately.
      Good example of ancient relations between Hungarian and Estonian is proverb Kéz kezet mos. In Southern Estonian it would be Käsi kätt mõseb. Roots of the words are recognizable.

  • @doc032848
    @doc032848 Před rokem +2

    This presentation was very enjoyable. I have known Estonians and found them to be very pleasant. So Juli's video is very accurate. Estonian is not easy. But anything worth knowing is never easy anyway. I like her own enjoyment of what she is teaching. It all gives her videos a charm that makes me want to learn.

  • @oferzilberman5049
    @oferzilberman5049 Před 3 lety +8

    When my dad downloads subtitles for a movie or a tv series before he compiles it, It always comes out with weird letters and it looks like gibberish. Now I understand it's just estonian.

  • @mirjamleesalu5188
    @mirjamleesalu5188 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you so much for making a video about Estonian! It was well-made and very aesthetic, but as a linguistics nerd I do want to point out a couple things.
    2:53 that's not what õ sounds like, but I understand you're not a native speaker, so it's hard to demonstrate it authentically. Similar vowels exist in Russian "ы", Korean "으" and definitely some more languages that I haven't learnt about.
    5:28 the actual case endings are -sse and -ni. We add everything to the end of the second case "karp: karbi -> karbi+sse". In the word "jõuludeni" the -de in front of -ni signifies plural so "jõulu+d: jõulu+de -> jõulude+ni". Christmas is plural in Estonian, but if you'd use singular "jõuluni" then people would still understand you, it would just sound more like conversational / spoken language.

  • @caylandia
    @caylandia Před rokem

    Nice and informative video! Just got acquainted with this channel and love it already

  • @ahscreation4787
    @ahscreation4787 Před 3 lety +4

    Knowledgeable video
    Keep going ❤

  • @eksiarvamus
    @eksiarvamus Před 3 lety +13

    Cool video.
    Nice to find the Estonian dialect map and the word root pie chart that I have made. ;)

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +4

      You made it? These are awesome 👏🏻 Thank you for your work!

    • @eksiarvamus
      @eksiarvamus Před 3 lety +2

      @@JuLingo Yep, I did, a few years ago.

  • @markcarey8426
    @markcarey8426 Před 3 lety +5

    Brilliant. It would be nice to hear more people speaking the language. Maybe a sentence which we understand and then someone saying it. The little bit in this vid was great, that girl with the sunglasses, an insight (aurally) into the language. Great vids. Well done. Impressive research and succinct delivery.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      I noted your suggestion ☺️ And thank you!

    • @coobalt
      @coobalt Před 3 lety

      if you just want to listen how estonian sounds ....then i would suggest that you listen estonian songs .....
      for example .... (i just randomly picked some estonian songs i personally love) ....
      czcams.com/video/OBR0ftuplNE/video.html&ab_channel=eestimusafann
      czcams.com/video/vFlUhVyp0cA/video.html&ab_channel=0ferda0
      czcams.com/video/Kv_xZp2_iCM/video.html&ab_channel=NaisedK%C3%B6%C3%B6gis
      czcams.com/video/8PilONE2FjA/video.html&ab_channel=drg8
      czcams.com/video/BNHZce1TCa8/video.html&ab_channel=AnsambelGreip
      czcams.com/video/Zsyxl1Z9DaE/video.html&ab_channel=HelenAdamson
      i know .......it's a pretty feminine list ;) ....
      if you want something more masculine then maybe ........ czcams.com/video/PSQdnvzV8CE/video.html&ab_channel=EurovisionSongContest
      but if you want to understand what is said ....i suggest estonian comedy show "tujurikkuja" (just search for "tujurikkuja") ....i believe most of the clips have subtitles and also ....it's just an incredibly funny show :) ....
      AND by the way ....i think i found a video that you might be interested in (especially the second part of the video ..........maybe a bit too religious approach but still ....it gives the idea) czcams.com/video/nFK7osEHB5Q/video.html&ab_channel=ILoveLanguages%21

    • @markcarey8426
      @markcarey8426 Před 3 lety +2

      @@coobalt Oh yeah, thanks. Happy new year

    • @coobalt
      @coobalt Před 3 lety +1

      @@markcarey8426 happy new year to you also :) ....

    • @coobalt
      @coobalt Před 3 lety

      one more suggestion ....that jumped to my mind right now. czcams.com/video/u25PQKYtZaU/video.html&ab_channel=juulip6rnikas
      estonian (language) is often described as sounding elvish or/and shamanistic ......i think that song has both ....
      whether it is or not ....i still totally love this song ....it is just so hypnotic :) ....

  • @mikkataas8989
    @mikkataas8989 Před 3 lety +19

    Eesti! Eesti! Eesti!

  • @matrixmSuhail
    @matrixmSuhail Před 10 měsíci

    Very nice and well summarized video about language

  • @desertfalcon6459
    @desertfalcon6459 Před 2 lety

    Nice work , as always
    спасибо

  • @maverickangel-iq5xd
    @maverickangel-iq5xd Před rokem +2

    I just opened a box I can’t close . Started learning language. I always loved language and how it expresses through spirit . I’m Hungarian n Italian American born but grew up around a lot of Puerto Rican , Italian or latin flavor . Growing up in Nj Essex county . It was very multi cultural. Witnessing how language expresses thru spirit n mind is fascinating to me. Great video appreciate ya

  • @lamissdanyopp5136
    @lamissdanyopp5136 Před 3 lety +3

    I love your channel!

  • @omenoid
    @omenoid Před 3 lety +9

    Knowing Finnish gives indeed a pretty good head start, as we can understand 40-70% without prior knowledge.

    • @andrej.mentel
      @andrej.mentel Před 3 lety

      This is exactly what I wanted to ask - whether the Finns understand Estonian without learning. Because phonetically, it seems me to be VERY similar; however, I don't speak any of these languages, so it could be just on the surface level.

    • @omenoid
      @omenoid Před 3 lety +6

      @@andrej.mentel It's not possible to understand very well without learning, save very simple constructions. When I first went to Estonia (I was 13 years old), we were however able to communicate with our host family in a very basic level. Now that I've had some more exposure with Estonian, I'm able to read e.g. Estonian wikipedia quite easily - so it's possible to learn the other language without formal studying but with just being exposed to it. The same process happened in the 80's, when Estonians watched to the Finnish TV, they just learned by watching and listening.

    • @andrej.mentel
      @andrej.mentel Před 3 lety +1

      @@omenoid thanks, well, so it is pretty similar to the relations between Slovak (my own language) and Polish. There are many people in the North Slovakia who understand Polish quite well simply because of the exposition - TV, shopping, personal contacts, etc. - but without this experience, it can be rather difficult.

    • @omenoid
      @omenoid Před 3 lety +3

      @@andrej.mentel Yes, it's basically the same.

    • @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112
      @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112 Před 3 lety

      @@omenoid BTW, I’ve just found this page: cooljugator.com/ee Of the common Estonian verbs, I can understand (without explicitly/formally learning them) probably 60% of them. Of course, there are completely “false friends” (words that mean something completely different or at least can’t be meaningfully used in the other language) even in this small basic list - for example, I thought “tarvitama” is “to need” (“tarvita” in Finnish), but it’s “to eat” in Estonian.

  • @nikoladd
    @nikoladd Před 3 lety +19

    JuLingo: "Vowels do have a place in the Estonian language"
    Polish: WTF are vowels?

  • @francescopiana9375
    @francescopiana9375 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent explanation, thanks.

  • @sallehmohamad8271
    @sallehmohamad8271 Před 3 lety +19

    ME From 🇲🇾 MALAYSiA... Likes Your Language... Hopefully To Visit ESTONiA Year 2021..💏

    • @mihkel86
      @mihkel86 Před 3 lety +1

      Welcome - teretulemast

  • @titicoqui
    @titicoqui Před 3 lety

    so so well done !!

  • @expreserge1
    @expreserge1 Před 3 lety

    Another great video!

  • @jjadriottt9073
    @jjadriottt9073 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the explanations! 👏👏👏

  • @xarastewartmusic
    @xarastewartmusic Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you Julie! :)

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      You are so welcome!

  • @raksotovar7885
    @raksotovar7885 Před rokem

    Thanks for this video

  • @glenmartin2437
    @glenmartin2437 Před 3 lety +8

    Thank you. I have Hungarian, Latvian and Polish relatives. An interesting language.

  • @maricostafernandez
    @maricostafernandez Před 7 měsíci

    Great video! Very informative. Thank you! Greetings from 🇺🇸

  • @kristinabrinkman1022
    @kristinabrinkman1022 Před 2 lety

    Very informative thank you so much for the tutorial

  • @watchyourowndreams
    @watchyourowndreams Před 2 lety

    Thanks for that video!

  • @Balintrebeka
    @Balintrebeka Před 2 lety +1

    Love these videos!! Can't wait for the Hungarian one :)

  • @jakubkundzik3367
    @jakubkundzik3367 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video, one of many videos of yours I enjoy.
    Just to add a little more details: not only Germans and Russians ruled over Estonia, but Swedes too. Southern parts of modern day Estonia were briefly conquered by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth as well.
    Best wishes!

  • @jaanushiiemae2164
    @jaanushiiemae2164 Před 3 lety +5

    Estonia was under more foreign rulers. Sometimes northern half was under one ruler and the southern under another. To mentioned German(several Ordens and Baltic Barons) and the Russian Empire, you could add also Danmark (The first foreign ruler of Northern Estonia), Sweden, and Poland or Rzeczpospolita (ruled southern half of Estonia). To preserve the language when being 750 years under foreign occupation was a task that seems impossible especially when the number of Estonians was dramatically reduced after the Livonian war and the Great Northern War and many plagues in 16-18 century.

  • @13Done
    @13Done Před rokem

    Nice work😘

  • @user-mw5qw7xg1s
    @user-mw5qw7xg1s Před 5 měsíci +2

    These are the flags of the languages that I would like to learn or study. 🇷🇺🇺🇦🇩🇪🇮🇹🇷🇴🇫🇷🇪🇸🇵🇹🇫🇮🇬🇷🇪🇪🇦🇱🇳🇱🇭🇺🇵🇱🇨🇿🇧🇬🇸🇪🇮🇪🇷🇸🇱🇻🇱🇹🇳🇴🇮🇸🇪🇸. Russian, Ukrainian, German, Italian, Romanian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Finnish, Greek, Estonian, Albanian, Dutch, Hungarian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian, Swedish, Irish Gaelic, Serbian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Icelandic, Catalan.

    • @Nehauon
      @Nehauon Před měsícem +1

      Learn the ones that are related to others first, then tackle those later and it will be easier

  • @everreyes4571
    @everreyes4571 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video! Thanks for sharing!
    😃 greetings from Mexico City 🇲🇽

  • @arvoluik5775
    @arvoluik5775 Před rokem +1

    I came to CANADA as a refugee in 1948 , only 8 years old and could only speak Estonian , German and the words learned from the American soldiers. Chocolate, thank you and #### off. Thank you for a better understanding of my mother language , even though our family uses English exclusively. A superb video. ❤🇪🇪

    • @kulnokaiklem
      @kulnokaiklem Před rokem

      Estonia the Baltic Tiger , Bald and Bankrupt Eastonia , Daily Bald The trip to the Lighthouse Paldiski , Offseason The islands of Estonia Vladimir Gavrilov - these are good documentaries about Estonia in YuuTuube.

  • @NachtmahrNebenan
    @NachtmahrNebenan Před 2 lety

    Your videos are the only ones I'd like to play at half speed 🤣

  • @Nelson_504
    @Nelson_504 Před měsícem

    4:18 OMG. Urban Symphony 👏 I love "Rändajad". I still know (and still try to sing along to😅❤) the Estonian lyrics of that song to this day!!!!!!! I'm from Honduras 🇭🇳 (Central America) but I grew up watching Eurovision on Spanish cable TV channels. Estonian is such a different language compared to mine, Spanish and English, but I find it so exotic and intriguing. It suits perfectly with the mystical vibe that the music arrangement in Urban Symphony's "Rändajad" tries to create. I watch Eesti Laul every year, and I'm always amazed by the amazing creativity in Estonia🇪🇪 👏.

  • @user-pb2kg1ng4g
    @user-pb2kg1ng4g Před 3 lety +2

    A love of languages is a love of humanity. What a wonderful video by such a charming. lovely and beautiful woman.

  • @Artyom178
    @Artyom178 Před 11 dny

    Beautiful and kind Julie. 🌺🌺🌺

  • @carolynsilvers9999
    @carolynsilvers9999 Před 2 lety

    So informative.

  • @mehmetkurtkaya3106
    @mehmetkurtkaya3106 Před 3 lety +1

    İt sounds like a very nice language. Very melodic as you said. İ did not this language ör vowels can make a language melodic. Thank you Julie you make great videos.

  • @AshleyLebedev
    @AshleyLebedev Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic video.

  • @kullulillu
    @kullulillu Před 3 lety +6

    Love from Estonia! 🇪🇪

  • @indoorspecies
    @indoorspecies Před 3 lety +2

    Спасибо! Очень интересно!

  • @russellbanks5815
    @russellbanks5815 Před 2 lety

    loved the video...!!! from Australia

  • @louai009
    @louai009 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm Algerian and I'm trying to know more about this cool country (Algeria is your head's crown bro 🙂✋🏻)

  • @mihkel86
    @mihkel86 Před 3 lety +6

    There was a time in history when only 30000 estonian speaking human beings were alive. Think about that...
    "There is at least one estonian in every port in the world" - Hemingway

  • @wa_daxm162
    @wa_daxm162 Před 3 lety +6

    Good to know some people know us Estonias✨

  • @athulanand4902
    @athulanand4902 Před 3 lety +12

    Wow. That language sounds beautiful. Your vedios have great content👍

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you so much 🤗

  • @Monteverdiforever
    @Monteverdiforever Před 3 lety

    Interesting ! Thanks a lot !

  • @NinaFelwitch
    @NinaFelwitch Před 3 dny

    I love how Estonian sounds. I've been trying to learn it for a few years now, but because I'm also trying to learn Japanese, Spanish, Ukrainian, Swedish and Korean, I didn't make much progress yet. In neither of these languages, really, lol.

  • @anfisanechehova477
    @anfisanechehova477 Před 3 lety +11

    Jäääär, welcome to Estonia :)

  • @BagdagulMirzali
    @BagdagulMirzali Před 3 lety +5

    видео как всегда супер (:

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      спасибо большое! ☺️

  • @eddykohlmann471
    @eddykohlmann471 Před 3 lety +8

    Great that you mention the smaller Uralic languages. Not many people pay attention to that. They're very endangered.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +2

      agree 👍 smaller languages are always worth mentioning

    • @eddykohlmann471
      @eddykohlmann471 Před 3 lety +1

      @@JuLingo have you heard of Livonian? It was spoken in Latvia. There's still people interested in it. Though not many.

    • @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112
      @mostlyfinnishlifeeventsand5112 Před 3 lety

      @@eddykohlmann471 BTW, if you’re interested in more info on Livonian, I have a Livonian LP on my channel:
      czcams.com/video/6kDaAcfM68g/video.html, czcams.com/video/c1rF9MreErw/video.html
      (and those of three other “small” Finno-Ugric languages: Lappish, Ersa-Mordvinian, Votic-Izhorian )
      The cover of these LP’s have a LOT of info (in addition to Estonian and, with 3 LP’s, Russian, also in English) on these cultures / languages.

  • @titicoqui
    @titicoqui Před 3 lety

    so so well done

  • @SevenThunderful
    @SevenThunderful Před 3 lety +2

    My great grandmother came from the Baltics and she eventually ended up speaking 5 languages. Estonian, Russian, French, English and Danish. She probably knew some Chinese too due to her refugee status.

  • @foutocraite
    @foutocraite Před 3 lety +2

    Amazing video and very informative. As a basque, I have been interested to learn more about Hungarian, Sami and Finnish since they believe Euskara to be related to the languages from the Caucasus somehow. I had no idea Estonian was part of that family. What a beautiful language.
    The artificial origin of Estonian reminds me a lot of the efforts to consolidate grammar and vocabulary with batua.
    Any plans to make a video on Euskara?
    Keep up the good work!

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety +3

      Yes, I do plan a video on Euskara, it's one of the most curious languages out there 😄 but Hungarian, Sami and Finnish are not from the Caucasus 🤔

    • @foutocraite
      @foutocraite Před 3 lety

      Oops... I meant to write Uralic and said Caucasus! My bad. Thank you for setting me straight.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  Před 3 lety

      @@foutocraite happens 😅 but I thought you actually wanted to say languages from Caucasus, because there is this Sino-Caucasian language macro-family theory that links together Basque, languages of northern Caucasus, Sino-Tibetan and Na-Dene languages 😳

    • @foutocraite
      @foutocraite Před 3 lety

      @@JuLingo oh that is interesting. I had heard about the hypothesis that it was related to Hungarian but not from Caucasus roots. Fascinating. Thank you so much. Looking forward to your analysis even more now 😀.

    • @zalanemese
      @zalanemese Před rokem

      The origin of the Hungarian language may be the Danube basin, where the Finno-Ugric relatives who migrated to the north and the Minoan relatives who went to the south came from. Therefore, both groups are somehow related to the Hungarians.
      Uralic languages:
      czcams.com/video/jWi1vgG8-sI/video.html
      czcams.com/video/cHYR7vLVUmY/video.html