The language with the most sounds in the world - !Xóõ

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
  • Special thanks to UCLA Phonetics Lab!
    phonetics.linguistics.ucla.edu/
    Bibliography:
    Main studies:
    - Christfried Naumann. The phoneme inventory of Taa (West !Xoon dialect). Max-Planck-Institut für evolutionäre Anthropologie Leipzig & Universität Leipzig. 2013
    - Roland Kießling. Noun classification in !Xoon. Hamburg. 2008
    - Christfried Naumann. A preliminary classification of Taa dialects. 20th International Conference on Historical Linguistics (ICHLXX). Humboldt University Berlin; Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig.
    - Christfried Naumann. High and low tone in Taa (!Xóõ). 2008
    Other studies:
    - Lee J. Pratchett. Anthony Traill (edited by Hirosi Nakagawa and Andy Chebanne), A trilingual !Xóõ dictionary: !Xóõ - English - Setswana. 2018
    - Catherine T. Best, Anthony Traill, Allyson Carter, K. David Harrison, and Alice Faber. !Xóõ click perception by English, Isizulu, and Sesotho listeners. 2003
    - Alena Witzlack-Makarevich and Hirosi Nakagawa. Linguistic features and typologies in languages commonly referred to as ‘Khoisan’. 2017
    - Christfried Naumann. Vowels of Taa (West !Xoon) and their acoustic properties (Presentation). Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin. 2013
    Interesting articles/other stuff:
    - DOBES Documentation of Taa Language.
    dobes.mpi.nl/projects/taa/
    - Clicks and Voice Quality in !Xóõ samples. (LMU of Munich)
    www.phonetik.uni-muenchen.de/...
    - Xoa ke Taa ǂAan -!Xuun ǀa ǂxanya - A Primer for Writing Taa -West !Xoon version. 2015. Christfried Naumann & Many others. (Illustrations by Stefanus Kuwi Geinǂamseb and Johannes ǁXau Kundeb)
    - The Economist. We went in search of the world’s hardest language. 2016. medium.economist.com/we-went-...
    - Anthony Traill. A !Xóõ DICTIONARY. Köln. 1994.
    Videos:
    - (ILoveLanguages!) - TAA/ǃXÓÕ PEOPLE, CULTURE, & LANGUAGE
    • TAA/ǃXÓÕ PEOPLE, CULTU...
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:20 - Classification
    03:44 - People
    05:57 - Vowels
    08:45 - Consonants Types
    10:44 - Consonants (Clicks)
    12:24 - Consonants (Other Properties)
    13:44 - Consonant IPA Chart
    15:10 - Consonant Clusters
    17:23 - Consonants Summary & Thoughts
    18:46 - Grammar (Word Order, Gender & Examples)
    25:20 - Anthony Traill - The GOAT Researcher
    28:10 - Conclusion
    28:51 - Shawn reads in !Xóõ
    #!xoo #language #languages #namibia #botswana #click
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 221

  • @volodymyrkilchenko
    @volodymyrkilchenko Před 3 měsíci +51

    19:31 something is wrong, SOV or SVO?

    • @reformational
      @reformational Před 3 měsíci +8

      @imshawngetoffmylawn I was also going to note this. You said SVO, but had written SOV.

    • @roymarsh8077
      @roymarsh8077 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Just a mistake. Should be SVO

    • @imshawngetoffmylawn
      @imshawngetoffmylawn  Před 3 měsíci +33

      Yeah, that’s my mistake! It should be SVO, I messed up the letters bigtime. Apologies, everyone!

  • @deweypatch
    @deweypatch Před 3 měsíci +181

    I imagine if you asked a !Xóõ speaker what the most difficult language was, he would say Rotokas. "How could you possibly say all you wanted to say with only eleven sounds?"

  • @psychopathmedia
    @psychopathmedia Před 3 měsíci +61

    !Xóõ sounds like if encryption were a language

  • @norielgames4765
    @norielgames4765 Před 3 měsíci +157

    The amount of respect you have for a group of people who most likely will never watch this video is amazing. It really is heartwarming. Thank you.

    • @limitess9539
      @limitess9539 Před 3 měsíci +2

      as a non-linguist who doesn't even understand many of these linguistic concepts, I experienced brain rot, but listening to him read in this weirdo language was satisfying, it sounds weird but cool

  • @AlexanderDumb
    @AlexanderDumb Před 3 měsíci +186

    Why are you on my lawn?

  • @krening
    @krening Před 3 měsíci +93

    I love your videos dude, and the fact that you focus mainly on the more obscure languages with so many cool quirks, your channel is a hidden gem

    • @MoonshineH
      @MoonshineH Před 3 měsíci +2

      Been watching this dude for 2 or 3 years 😎

  • @DavidStDenis-qi2yp
    @DavidStDenis-qi2yp Před 3 měsíci +27

    I’m honestly amazed how humans can make these sounds, I had no idea that clicks could be ejective and voiced, love your videos

  • @costernocht
    @costernocht Před 3 měsíci +38

    Holy Mackerel. !Xóõ makes Navajo seem ... well, easier!

    • @irmafoster3933
      @irmafoster3933 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Not for certain. The sound structure, organization of sounds, and tonal presentation are only a small part of the equation.
      How you think on a subject, object, relational idea affects a language. Hard, difficult or easy are simply relative.

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Před 3 měsíci +15

    Incredible video. Just so respectful, non-political, thorough and easy to understand. Your skill at language education is incredible.

  • @jagmeemees
    @jagmeemees Před 3 měsíci +18

    Spent the entire video trying to figure out how the hell you pronounce the alveolar click/uvular fricative cluster

  • @OFNSO8WBRIC8S82U
    @OFNSO8WBRIC8S82U Před 3 měsíci +47

    Literally 🏓🏓🏓 language.

    • @greengrey-yt
      @greengrey-yt Před 3 měsíci

      ???

    • @schwinkle716
      @schwinkle716 Před 3 měsíci

      @@greengrey-yt It's a joke about how the language's clicks sound like Ping-Pong hits.

    • @greengrey-yt
      @greengrey-yt Před 3 měsíci

      @@schwinkle716 ohhhh

    • @Scrufflord
      @Scrufflord Před 2 měsíci +3

      to a filthy monolingual like me it sounds to me like a southeast asian language being spoken while simultaneously playing ping pong and getting punched in the stomach

  • @atlasaltera
    @atlasaltera Před 3 měsíci +32

    Amazing job in pronouncing the Taa endonyms effortlessly! I love your language videos! They are a great resource for some of the lesser known languages in our amazingly diverse world.

  • @disekjoumoer
    @disekjoumoer Před 3 měsíci +18

    The noun classes remind me a bit of other local Bantu languages like Zulu, Xhosa, Tswana etc. They also all have clicks, some have tones and between 11 to 18 classes or something like that. The weird thing is that classes re prefixes in all of them, and the verbal agreement is with both the subject and object. You should do a video on Zulu for fun.

  • @finnfox6761
    @finnfox6761 Před 3 měsíci +17

    Спасибо вам за это невероятное, мудрое погружение в этот язык, целую лингвистическую параллельную вселенную, тот опыт, которым вы поделились с нами воодушевляет ум и сердце :)

    • @imshawngetoffmylawn
      @imshawngetoffmylawn  Před 3 měsíci +4

      Спасибо огромное за комментарий! Желаю вам всего лучшего!

  • @Roman-bg2lh
    @Roman-bg2lh Před 3 měsíci +10

    16:11 издаёт звуки как будто кот шерстью подавился

  • @carlborneke8641
    @carlborneke8641 Před měsícem +1

    I recently became interested in the Taa language and this is without a doubt the absolute best video about it. Especially the part where you describe the clicks.

  • @JohnSmith-of2gu
    @JohnSmith-of2gu Před měsícem +2

    I utterly LOVE this video: It summarizes the fascinating features of this language without sensationalizing, while also giving a concise summary of linguistic concepts to the layman. Very nice job, you have both skill and integrity as a presenter!

  • @teucer915
    @teucer915 Před 3 měsíci +38

    There's one more language outside of the "Khoisan" and a Bantu families which, according to some researchers, is developing a click out of certain consonant clusters (mostly /tk/) that occur only at morpheme boundaries. It's not presently a phonemic click, nor is it universal among speakers, so it's not false to leave it off the list of click languages, but I think bringing it up can help us think of these sounds as fitting within ordinary phonology (which they do) rather than being a world apart (as many people who don't know much linguistics think of them), since it's a language people don't exoticize the way we often do languages from the global south. I'm referring, of course, to German.

    • @caoilfhionndunbar
      @caoilfhionndunbar Před 3 měsíci +1

      hwat

    • @teucer915
      @teucer915 Před 3 měsíci +16

      @@caoilfhionndunbar many German speakers, especially young ones, are pronouncing /tk/ as [k!] and that's very unexpected but IMO very cool. German does not have any click phonemes, but a hundred years from now it might!

    • @abcde2325
      @abcde2325 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@teucer915 i'm gonna reject it

    • @arvohyvarinen4975
      @arvohyvarinen4975 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@teucer915this is fascinating! do you happen to know or have any videos showcasing this?

    • @troelspeterroland6998
      @troelspeterroland6998 Před 3 měsíci +3

      So in words like 'Sandkasten' or 'Mundkorb'?

  • @gargamel3478
    @gargamel3478 Před 3 měsíci +37

    We need to make this the international language!

    • @KindlyKalen
      @KindlyKalen Před 3 měsíci +1

      *NO*

    • @gargamel3478
      @gargamel3478 Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@KindlyKalen *YES*

    • @KindlyKalen
      @KindlyKalen Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@gargamel3478 I struggle to pronounce clicks, please, spare me.

    • @gargamel3478
      @gargamel3478 Před 3 měsíci

      @@KindlyKalen It'd be like you can't speak english, so no one can be spared

    • @LambdaCreates
      @LambdaCreates Před 3 měsíci

      @@gargamel3478What I just DON'T speak !Xóõ?

  • @bloodystatic4156
    @bloodystatic4156 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This language has a morphology that is sort of, though not too similar to the Ojibwe language that is spoken in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana. Though the language bares more of a resemblance to the calls and songs of birds, except the phonemes are made with the tongue rather than a beak or special air sacks.

  • @joemiller947
    @joemiller947 Před 3 měsíci +1

    So happy to see you again!

  • @zupa420
    @zupa420 Před 16 dny

    Oh my. I stumbled across a mention of !Xóõ on Facebook and it blew my mind, so I decided to research a little out of curiosity. I’m so glad that you made this video. It was so informative and I’m particularly happy about the opportunity to hear some of it! You are a brilliant person, I really like your attitude towards languages and listening to you is entertaining, love the way you explain certain aspects. Definitely will stay here for longer, you’re such a nice person!

  • @sondreheh5116
    @sondreheh5116 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm always happy to see a new vid by shawn!

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy Před 3 měsíci +1

    Your videos astonish and humble me.

  • @believeinpeace
    @believeinpeace Před 3 měsíci +1

    Me encanta mucho tu vídeo.
    Muchas gracias 🙂

  • @Hellinophilos
    @Hellinophilos Před 3 měsíci +1

    A truly outstanding video.

  • @beadingbusily
    @beadingbusily Před 17 dny

    I had a teacher in high school, perhaps two, who spoke languages with those characteristics. Those countries make sense. It was an exchange program.

  • @lumi2030
    @lumi2030 Před 3 měsíci

    your narration is very entertaining, it makes me wanna keep watching. it's not common. good job

  • @MoonshineH
    @MoonshineH Před 3 měsíci +5

    HE’S BACK

  • @jriceblue
    @jriceblue Před 2 měsíci

    It's really nice to see a linguistically technical video on the language, thanks!

  • @petzo57
    @petzo57 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Tolles Video! Ein Hammer diese Sprache und wie du diese absolut verrückten Laute zustandebringst!!

  • @2906nico
    @2906nico Před 3 měsíci +2

    This was a total joy to watch. I can't begin to say how incredibly clever this man is.

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Před 3 měsíci +10

    Re. grammar (genders) that may have been a thing in many languages in the past. For example Basque has not just distinctions for animate and inanimate (plants included) which is still functional but more strangely most body parts begin with "b-" (buru, begi, belarri, beso, bizkar, belaun, etc.) , which I've read occasionally to have been identified as some sort of fossil feature from a forgotten distant past. Now that you mentioned the massive diversity of "genders" in ǃxóõ, I recalled and made me think that may have happened in other languages before they evolved into some simplification.
    I realize it's a total chimera to reconstruct "proto-Human" but these obscure items may be leads and maybe, only maybe, with the help of properly trained artificial intelligence, we (i.e. someone else but in the same general category of human as myself) may some day make greater inroads in this issue.

  • @antarae
    @antarae Před 3 měsíci +2

    Well done, love the sigh at the end 😂

  • @ianalves1802
    @ianalves1802 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This videos make me know that languages are a passion

  • @frankiedomanico9701
    @frankiedomanico9701 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I always wanted to pronounce Khoisan words. Thanks for helping me by making this video!

  • @bneymanov
    @bneymanov Před 3 měsíci +6

    Verbal cross-reference is like ergagivity's evil twin.

  • @smergthedargon8974
    @smergthedargon8974 Před 3 měsíci +2

    9:50
    Most Vowel-Heavy Georgian Word:

  • @benvanzon3234
    @benvanzon3234 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Amazing video, also wondering if you're ever going to make a video about Navajo?

  • @bunk_foss
    @bunk_foss Před 3 měsíci

    I love this man SM.

  • @meowkni
    @meowkni Před 3 měsíci +6

    очень крутое видео как всегда, обожаю тебя смотреть

  • @okjhum
    @okjhum Před 2 měsíci

    Awesome video! Congratulations and thanks from this random phonetician, language nerd and wannabe polyglot in Sweden! I love your attitude to the !Xóõ language and other languages in general as well as to their speakers, particularly if they are endangered. Every language and every dialect is both perfect and optimal for those who speak it!

  • @fernaukas
    @fernaukas Před 3 měsíci +1

    Estoy sorprendido por su detallada explicación de la lengua !Xoo y he disfrutado con sus ejemplos en la pronunciación. Un fantástico vídeo

  • @Pingijno
    @Pingijno Před 2 měsíci +1

    The kind of classification you were talking about at the start can be referred to as a sprachbund, diffusion area, linguistic area or linguistic convergence

  • @MAELAET_
    @MAELAET_ Před 3 měsíci +3

    hey i was just wondering if you can do a video about Adyghe or Abkhaz i can look at it and think its awsome but i dont really understand when i read it also i love you videos keep it going

  • @Siguwiipi
    @Siguwiipi Před 2 měsíci

    On the Nǁng language, that last speaker, named Katrina Esau, has been trying to revitalize her language (the dialect Nǀuu) among her people for around two decades. I really hope she succeeds and her language won’t go extinct!

  • @LeoJaramaz
    @LeoJaramaz Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great work! It would be nice to do videos like this one about South American languages… such as Piraha or Yaghan, for example.

  • @timothytikker1147
    @timothytikker1147 Před 2 měsíci

    Years ago, I got a recording of a lecture in African languages, that mentioned one which had something like 50 clicks in it. So the title of your video caught my eye, as I've been wondering about this now for years. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Impasta_Tronic78
    @Impasta_Tronic78 Před 3 měsíci +19

    wow. mi lukin e sitelen tawa ni. ni li pini la, mi lawa li nasa😵

  • @sindisodube6257
    @sindisodube6257 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I speak a click language and I am thoroughly impressed by your pronunciation!

  • @Punyulada
    @Punyulada Před 3 měsíci

    As a non-linguistics major who lived in Southern Africa for a time and STRUGGLED with the difference between ! (alveolar clicks) and palatal clicks, I can articulate them distinctly for the first time ever... and I'm not even living in the African continent anymore. Thank you for demonstrating them in such an easy to understand way.
    I've also been personally fascinated with !Xóõ even never having heard anyone use the language, being surrounded by Zulu and Xhosa speakers for a while.
    EDIT: I also have to bring up that I appreciate the respect you have for these people! I find very few non-South Africans who afford the time and care you took with discussing their identities as people groups!

  • @bumpty9830
    @bumpty9830 Před 9 dny

    Clicks/ingressives are _slightly_ easier than you described. You don't _breathe_ in to pronounce them, pulling air into the lungs, but rather pull air into the mouth the same way air is ejected from the mouth in "glottal egressives", or "ejectives" as they're sometimes known.
    But... ejective ingressives?

  • @atlasaltera
    @atlasaltera Před 3 měsíci +3

    Also what is that map in your backdrop!? It looks really cool!

  • @Kalculatedpanik
    @Kalculatedpanik Před 3 měsíci

    Wild.

  • @palmermcmath5822
    @palmermcmath5822 Před 3 měsíci +1

    You know you gotta do a vid on Damin next!

  • @jinyoungmysteria193
    @jinyoungmysteria193 Před 2 měsíci

    Hey shawn! Seeing how much you enjoyed how crazy the phonetics and phonology of !Xóõ are, I believe you'll also enjoy how many consonants and tones the Hmong language has! There are 8 tones in total along with 13 vowel sounds. And, depending on the dialect, there can be up 60 consonants in total and +1 additional vowel sound. A language review video of the Hmong language would be amazing to see!

  • @ksiistoyiiwa
    @ksiistoyiiwa Před měsícem

    Before I enrolled for a bachelor's degree at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg,where Professor Traill was the head of the Department of Linguistics, I had the pleasure of sitting in as a guest in one of his lectures. To this day, 40 plus years later, I regret that I wasn't able to register for Linguistics as a sub-major (my majors were French and English) because of timetable clashes. I would describe myself as a language geek, and as a Linguistics wannabe geek. "Wannabe", because I couldn't register for French and Linguistics in the same year at the same time, and missed out on the opportunity to get a thorough grounding in the subject.
    I am very impressed by your reading of that text, even though I have no right to judge it at all!

  • @HikidyMapping
    @HikidyMapping Před 3 měsíci

    so easy to learn.

  • @williamkeitaro8910
    @williamkeitaro8910 Před 3 měsíci

    Languages like this is what made me interested in Linguistics in the first place, i can't imagine what it feels like to be able to literally beatbox or sound like a really cool badass alien when having a casual conversation or reading a text, because right now i cant even whistle or make the ''TH'' sound properly

  • @user-pr2yx8mr1b
    @user-pr2yx8mr1b Před 3 měsíci

    Should do a video on dhivehi and its dialects.

  • @yglyglya
    @yglyglya Před 3 měsíci +1

    Can you make a video about the karachay-circassian language?

  • @bunk_foss
    @bunk_foss Před 3 měsíci +3

    As a native speaker of !Xóõ,
    Nah I'm just kidding I can't imagine any know English and will see this video sadly. 😔

  • @bumpty9830
    @bumpty9830 Před 9 dny

    Verbs agreeing with objects isn't so strange in the context of nearby Bantu languages. Xhosa, for example (which apparently borrowed clicks from "Khoi San" languages), marks verbs both for the subject and for the object as is typical for Bantu languages. Depending on who's doing the writing and when, the markers have been written as separate words or as part of the "conjugated" verb. Now in Bantu languages the subject marker is first, followed by a tense/aspect marker and then the object, followed by the verb root (and sometimes suffixes). But it's not hard to imagine that if the object happened to come at the end instead, this grammar would look very similar to !Xoo example you gave where the verb seems to be marked only for the object "sheep." I would even find it unsurprising if this feature turned out to be borrowed from Bantu while Bantu people were borrowing click consonants. (The noun class system also somewhat resembles Bantu at least superficially, although Bantu languages tend to mark noun class with prefixes.)

  • @FrithonaHrududu02127
    @FrithonaHrududu02127 Před 3 měsíci

    Why do I always think of your channel's name to the tune of get off My cloud by The rolling Stones

  • @ZoveRen
    @ZoveRen Před 2 měsíci +1

    There's also a theory that Khoisan languages are related to languages of native Australians

  • @HenryLeslieGraham
    @HenryLeslieGraham Před 3 měsíci

    i have a bible in Nama. it is quite the thing to read since it like !Xóõ makes use of an eclectic alphabet/orthography.

  • @mrSeagull120
    @mrSeagull120 Před 19 dny

    i just learned that shawn is a very very good ping pong ball

  • @isaacbruner65
    @isaacbruner65 Před 3 měsíci

    Fascinating, for some reason I didn't even think voiced aspirated and ejective consonants were possible! Unless maybe they're actually breathy voiced like Hindi.

  • @tomaszgarbino2774
    @tomaszgarbino2774 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Your acting toolbox really grows over time. 👍
    And yea, I think counting consonant clusters as consonants IS cheating, too. If you did it for some Slavic languages or for Georgian they'd be serious contenders for the title.

  • @okjhum
    @okjhum Před 2 měsíci

    @17:40 "As click-baity as possible" - Well said! :-D

  • @battyboio
    @battyboio Před 3 měsíci +1

    Learn this and every other language will be childs play in comparison

  • @keithle_
    @keithle_ Před 3 měsíci

    Nice video about language in speaking, what about the writing? Pretty sure it isnt written in latin or ipa.

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Před 3 měsíci +5

    What all the "Khoisan" languages have in common is that they derive from the first branch breaking apart from ancestral humanity, maybe 170,000 years ago (!!!), when they migrated first to East Africa and then to Southern Africa. It's an extremely old group but does have a common distinct root anyhow. Before the Bantu migration there was only one other flow into Southern Africa but by people of the same broader branch, who adopted herding and difussed it to other populations (Khoikhoi most famously) and may be original from East Africa.

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Khoisan peoples, not languages.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 3 měsíci

      @@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 - Languages are also treated as a pseudo-family because of some affinities like the use of clicks, much as Papuan languages are even if nobody can actually prove they're a true family.

  • @Kurkulevich
    @Kurkulevich Před 2 měsíci

    0:16 Bro for real said ll🗣

  • @csolisr
    @csolisr Před 2 měsíci

    Still trying to wrap my head around the social and political context that caused a language to wind up with such an extensive phonetic and grammatical inventory.

  • @Squirrelmind66
    @Squirrelmind66 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I find it interesting that the languages closest (presumably) to the lands of human origins has the most sounds, while the furthest reach of human settlement - the pacific islands - has the fewest.

    • @ikengaspirit3063
      @ikengaspirit3063 Před 3 měsíci

      Eh, Khoi and hazda are probably closer to the point of origin and have less but many sounds.

    • @Squirrelmind66
      @Squirrelmind66 Před 3 měsíci

      But still more then Hawaiian, which is the farthest human settlement before the age of colonialism.

  • @Lo0orak
    @Lo0orak Před 2 měsíci

    Спустя неделю решил зайти,а видео нету! очень грустно(((

  • @sdfjsd
    @sdfjsd Před 2 měsíci

    Hey you were actually pretty good at reading that story

  • @ankokunokayoubi
    @ankokunokayoubi Před 3 měsíci

    Preserve it at all cost.

  • @norielgames4765
    @norielgames4765 Před 3 měsíci +2

    How did the story continue?

  • @happybee2701
    @happybee2701 Před 3 měsíci

    I can't stop rofling when you say kho and click with your tongue at the same time 😆

  • @bumpty9830
    @bumpty9830 Před 9 dny

    Do you have any insight into the reason Khoi-San languages (probably under a different name) aren't discussed as a "Language Area"/Sprachbund? As you pointed out, shared features don't indicate a genetic relationship between the languages, but otherwise rare features shared by neighboring languages probably DO indicate the effects of areal linguistics if there is no genetic relationship. There are features shared back and forth with Bantu languages as well, so it may be a complex situation with much time depth, but nevertheless it seems like a modern treatment of this somehow-related group of languages is due.

  • @sdfjsd
    @sdfjsd Před 2 měsíci

    I'm practicing. I think I'm getting better.

  • @LucyInTheSkyWithDiamonds69
    @LucyInTheSkyWithDiamonds69 Před 3 měsíci

    19:20 SAME

  • @seneca983
    @seneca983 Před 2 měsíci

    21:00 This doesn't sound that weird to me. The only foreign languages besides English that I have studied are German and Swedish. I think you usually can't deduce the grammatical gender of a noun from its meaning or spelling/pronunciation with some exceptions. Of course, they only have 3 and 2 grammatical genders so in that sense it's easier than 9 noun classes.

  • @HenryLeslieGraham
    @HenryLeslieGraham Před 3 měsíci

    id offer to share examples of !Xóõ in written form, but its mostly a spoken language. as you know when oral languages start to be written down - a standardised orthography is developed - which I'm not sure has been finalised for !Xóõ yet, or has been recently standardised for one dialect. not sure. the next step is often to begin a bible translation (as much of the work of recording and standardising languages like !Xóõ has historically been done by bible societies/mission organisations. as far as I know no bible translation into !Xóõ has been published. so I don't know if there are any texts out there of significant length in !Xóõ. but I could be wrong.

  • @sirrathersplendid4825
    @sirrathersplendid4825 Před 3 měsíci

    At one or two points in the vid, honestly thought I was watching a Monty Python sketch!

  • @siarhian10
    @siarhian10 Před 3 měsíci +1

    i wonder what the chances of a native speaker finding this video and giving feedback would be. certainly small, but I doubt impossible

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface Před 3 měsíci

    An interesting observation: if you go farther away from the !Xóõ language, the native tongues have less and less phonemes, until you arrive at the opposite side of the globe in Polynesia, where languages sometimes have less than 20 phonemes in total, with Hawaiian having only 13 phonemes.

  • @akkyttue
    @akkyttue Před 3 měsíci +2

    Botswana lorato la pelo yame ❤🇧🇼

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface Před 3 měsíci

    Just as a side note: Grown up with my native German and knowing Dutch, I never understood the appeal of the SVO-SOV-VSO-VOS-OSV-OVS-classification, as neither German nor Dutch fall in any of the categories any better than a square peg fits through a round hole. Yes, you can force them in, but you miss the very core of both languages's word order system, which is centered around the verbal frame, the idea, that you split the verb of the sentence into two parts and use them as a structural bracket around your sentence, while you pull the most important part in the sentence out and put it in front.
    I can create you sentences in both languages, which are grammarly correct, which can be used in daily language without standing out as strange, and which can have any of the word orders above.

  • @blofyjo4595
    @blofyjo4595 Před 2 měsíci

    Could you one day make a video about the broken plural in arabic. It just break my mind

  • @M.athematech
    @M.athematech Před 3 měsíci

    In the Biblical Hebrew of say the books of Chronicles, the verb changes accoring to both subject and object.

  • @protolingus
    @protolingus Před 3 měsíci

    Listening to the recording of the native speaker, there's seems to be something interesting going on with stops too. Is that just an artifact of being a click language and my brain is interpreting it weird, or is there actually something going on that I'm picking up on?

  • @zw2al
    @zw2al Před 3 měsíci +1

    I heard about this language last year in class and always wanted to learn more things about it thanks :)

  • @Imita0903
    @Imita0903 Před 3 měsíci

    This language make ubykh (not sure if its spell like that) looks easy, they have "only" 80 consonants and 3 vowels.

  • @faridgainutdinov6082
    @faridgainutdinov6082 Před 3 měsíci

    At least this incredible language doesn't contain different vowel tones...

  • @dilgeatakan9366
    @dilgeatakan9366 Před 3 měsíci

    Imagine this as an IAL

  • @kissmysoup
    @kissmysoup Před 3 měsíci

    Shawn, I'm on your lawn.

  • @LucyInTheSkyWithDiamonds69
    @LucyInTheSkyWithDiamonds69 Před 3 měsíci

    8:33 real af