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@MarkIsAwesome5 ай бұрын
It’s Not Mongolic It’s Mongolian
@usernames_this5 ай бұрын
@@MarkIsAwesomeMongolian only refers to the main language in Mongolia. Mongolic is the language family encompassing all languages that are descendants of Proto-Mongolic. So yes, he’s right.
@purevjargalpuujee48454 ай бұрын
Khalkha = Buryad
@nikot44105 ай бұрын
Yo I’m a Buriad Mongolian originally from Buryatia but I consider myself as a part of Mongolian nation. After all Buryat people are just a part of Mongolia 🇲🇳 and we’re basically same people with sand origin. I really have a huge respect for Mongolia 🇲🇳. Thank you so much for making this video about our culture and language. Bayarla 🇲🇳🔥❤️
@KenzotopianAirlines5 ай бұрын
Although I do support the independence of Russian republics, I do believe buryatia would most likely join Mongolia. Nice, and don’t take this as a rude gesture.
@xbizydown5 ай бұрын
Красавчик)
@AlexejSvirid5 ай бұрын
God made all people from one man, Adam. All people are brothers. Unfortunately, the lying and corrupt clergy is silent about this. They even bless racists and nazis in the name of God. Then deceived people hate and kill their brothers. The problem is that the Devil rules the world. He is a liar and a murderer. This is why deception and violence are everywhere. This is the reason why people cry over stray cats and hate their brothers. This is the reason why Hitler got the power, but Christ was executed as "blasphemer" and "rioter" by denunciation of clergy. This is the reason why the whole world is Sodom. That's why we have the Gospel about the Kingdom of God. Jehovah will put everything in order. He has anointed the king, Jesus Christ. The dead will rise and we will meet our loved ones again! :-)
@thebeginfry4425 ай бұрын
I'm from Buryatia with absolutely different opinions which is i believe is most popular, we're not mongols, brothers yes, not the same, Russians trying to put in our minds that we're just mongols but it's bot true, our tribes were divided from Mongolia, pur lore though as close as it can be still differs, so i believe we're npt the same but brothers to eachother
@ZoveRen5 ай бұрын
Поосторожней будь там
@grandon45075 ай бұрын
Really appreciate the deep dive into Mongolic languages. Despite being Mongolian myself, I have heard quite a number of these for the first time today. Can’t thank you enough for what I have learned about this beautiful language, and all of her cousins.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Very glad to hear it :) Баярлалаа!
@Amarsanaa1195 ай бұрын
I am an Oirat Mongol from Xinjiang. We speak Oirat Mongolian and it will take us some times to adjust to Khalkha and various Mongolian dialects spoken in Inner Mongolia. Our vowels ö and ü are the same as Turkic languages, and in colloquial languages we have more Turkic and Russian loanwords borrowed from Uyghur and Kazakh. Oirat Mongols in Xinjiang usually can speak at least one Turkic language (but younger generations usually tend to speak Chinese more since we don’t have Mongolian schools anymore, they all got shut down). We can understand Kalmyk language perfectly because it is almost the same, but we really need time to understand Khalkha and Chahar Mongolian, for Khorchin it is even more difficult
@Temuulen.J5 ай бұрын
I am Oirat Mongol from Mongolia. In mongolia we don’t think of these as separate languages but dialects or accents. The older generation still use the accent but younger generations adopt the khalkha accent due to 90% of the nation being khalkha mongol.
@doall71465 ай бұрын
Proud to see you keeping the language alive
@sanaltserenov5 ай бұрын
@@Temuulen.J I am Oirat Mongol from Kalmykia and your comment made me sad. Khalkh dialect sounds like an absolutely foreign language most of the time. And it is sad we three guys of the same blood and bone write here in English to communicate better in writing. Сән бәәтн, мини өөрднр.
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@@sanaltserenovtrue. Just few days ago I asked a oriat guy if he can understand khorcin mongolian and he said almost not .😢
@刘卫皇-v2j5 ай бұрын
@@doall7146More and more new generations don't speak their own languages or dialects.I think that's not a problem only in China.
@tuvshinbayrlhagvasuren10835 ай бұрын
Hello. I am from Mongolia. Now i study Korean language in Seoul. In my opinion 2025 old Mongol Script is State level we are use both Cyrillic and Mongol script. I am Gen Z and in our generation we are can speak english not fluent but kind of good, russian language is minoraty and after RUS-UKR flashmob maybe hate russian language so russian is 0% so. We are received many loan words from neighbors and foreign countries. And we share some words with central asians like: Дэвтэр-Давтар-Notebook, Цай-Чай-Tea, Алтан-Алтын-Golden etc. So I am not language expert but kind of like that. Good content.
@AidenKimRagtime5 ай бұрын
Amazing video, my eyes were glued to the screen for the whole time. Keep up the great work!!
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you ❤️
@DaRkNeSS88925 ай бұрын
I am Mongolian, from Mongolia. Your channel is quite interesting, bro. I've subscribed. Keep it up!
@whyamihere22505 ай бұрын
love from tibet we are brothers we also got allota oirat speakers over here ... 😄
@Mamma_di_Asami5 ай бұрын
Excellent research and presentation!! Here i thought i know enough about my language, i was wrong. Must’ve been a lot of work to collect all this data from the original languages. Thank you very much for this information! Keep up the good work 😊
@aliaghaafzali79255 ай бұрын
I am from Afghanistan and I am Hazara tribes our populations is between 9-10 million we are mongol people please do a research about us. I am currently living in Canada love your video.
@KomaD1094 ай бұрын
Hazaras are Turco-mongol. They are actually more Turkic in origin than Mongolic.
@hank49204 ай бұрын
@@KomaD109 same as Uyghurs?
@KomaD1094 ай бұрын
@@hank4920 They are close to Uyghurs but Uyghurs usually have no Mongolian root 🤔
@TURUKKİTURAN3 ай бұрын
Turkic.
@kamrankhan-lj1ng2 ай бұрын
Hazaras are Mongolic. Not Turkic. If Turkic they could only have descended from Yakuts. And it is a far fetched possibility.
@albertosodre57185 ай бұрын
As always, another excellent video, with a great explanation! Keep it up, the channel is on the right track!
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much my friend! 😀
@mr_bluesky94365 ай бұрын
Thank you for your video! Especially for mentioning Kalmyks
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thanks :)
@Ganaa235 ай бұрын
I was born in Khovd provice, west side of Mongolia Oirat family, and I grew up listening to Okna Volodya (Tsagaanzam) and actually get to meet him in person. I could not really get 100% of his speech but kind of understood the idea, and in some parts his accent sounded exactly like my grandpa who was also Oirat. For me oirat accent comes in very pleasing and soft as silk to the ears, comparing to khalkha. Also, Kalmyk people are the most far isolated group but feels the closest
@justsomerandomuser.58665 ай бұрын
Inner Mongolian that is Barag Buryad and Tsahar here. The Barag Buriad is 85,000 while there is 10,000 Buryads in China. The language of the Buryads in China is very alive and well. All Buryad Chinese I met spoke Buryad and we had good conversations. However, The thumbnail shows the Southern Mongolian independence flag (dont worry i support it too) you should also include Horchin Mongolian or Harchin because they are far more different from Mongolian too! But this has been very useful because I learned about the Moghol people! Bayarlalaa. 謝謝!
@liberal80834 ай бұрын
很可惜,你的支持没什么用
@justsomerandomuser.58663 ай бұрын
@@liberal8083 Ah, I love arguments with the barking Chinese
@battogtokhbyambaa185 ай бұрын
Овоо гайгүй л тайлбарлаад байх шиг_🎉
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Баярлалаа!
@mongolica5485 ай бұрын
Харин тийм
@gargamel34785 ай бұрын
Сайн байна уу? The Mongolian language is pretty cool. The best part is the Өө, probably my favourite vowel sound.
@aalytoks97555 ай бұрын
It is also in French, eg the "o" in automne
@gargamel34785 ай бұрын
@@aalytoks9755 Maybe, I don't know french.
@brownnutter5 ай бұрын
Ө = Ü
@_qwertz5 ай бұрын
@@brownnutternein das ist Ү=ü
@gargamel34785 ай бұрын
@@brownnutter No. Ө is a retracted and centralized O. I like this sound very much.
@Rhythm4125 ай бұрын
Woah! Such a good video!!! Please make videos on other lesser known language families!👍 10:03 bruh🤣🤣🤣
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad that to hear that you liked it. Yes, more language families are on the way :)
@AgarHero5 ай бұрын
Can you pls make the north caucasian languages or the nakho-dagestani languages
@HMFOG4 ай бұрын
W vid, W Channel. Super underrated and I wish there were more channels like yours
@turkchap3 ай бұрын
I appreciate that!
@wan1edguy3825 ай бұрын
Wow I didn't realize how many Mongolians don't live in Mongolia. Nice video!
@KenzotopianAirlines5 ай бұрын
@RRcsist_FamilyFriendly123how
@ed_10_425 ай бұрын
@RRcsist_FamilyFriendly123 What's so rude bout it
@Shintu-m1s5 ай бұрын
@RRcsist_FamilyFriendly123huh?
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
The majority of Mongolians, along with all other Mongolic groups (except Monghul), lives in China.
@UchralAltanOvoo5 ай бұрын
They probably want to go to Mongolia as always😢
@ganboldsodbileg43145 ай бұрын
i guess there are more than 10 million Mongolian people around the world. Thank you for your video, and wanted to say Hi from Mongolia to the Mongol people around the world. 🇲🇳 ❤
@tasos.k5 ай бұрын
You delivered again so interesting content paired with an excellent presentation. Cok iyi. Thank you for your work you put on these videos.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Ευχαριστώ komşu! ❤
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
Two most popular singers in China, Sainbayar Tenger(腾格尔) and Yang Uulenhuar(玲花), are both Ordos.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Pretty cool info! I will check them out
@Amarsanaa1195 ай бұрын
@@giorozaitien646 I honestly don’t understand why Inner Mongolian would borrow “huar” from Chinese, like it’s a such basic word just use Tsetseg gosh
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
@@Amarsanaa119 Outer Mongolian use it too: Duujin huar: kzbin.info/www/bejne/pYCwaYyvoMhqZs0 Yanlin huar: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qGK3goSNpdhggtE Also in this song:kzbin.info/www/bejne/qIDLZYCajMedaas, first sentence is: ‘zuiil zuiil in tsetseg huaren n hoi’ Tsetseg is not a native Mongolian word either. It's Turkic "Chichek" as çiçek in Turkish. Maybe there's no real native word for flower in Mongolian.
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
In China, Buryats speaker are counted together with Barga (another dialect) speaker togeter. 70K is the total population of Buryat-Barga speakers (布里亚特-巴尔虎方言)
@purevjargalpuujee48454 ай бұрын
After Xinhai Revolution and Cultural Revolution ??? Are they real ??
@raestera5 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a video about the Tungusic languages! You'd be the first person on KZbin to make such a video
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
thanks for mentioned the language of my homeland. Manchuria. ❤
@raestera5 ай бұрын
@@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala I'm also Manchurian :) bi manju gurun be hairambi ❤️ "I love Manchuria ❤️"
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@@raestera bi manju gurun be jai buyembi 😄
@raestera5 ай бұрын
@@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala I'm very new to manju gisun and I only know a little bit 😅 (I understand what you said: "I also love Manchuria"). It's a very cool language!
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@@raestera I'm also learning it too. just started 5 months ago. 😅 there are a lot of manchurian songs and writing lessons in my channel that you might want to have a look. 😁
@S0d00Bat114 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. I’m one of Mongolian speakers in Australia.
@purevsukhpurvee91745 ай бұрын
very decent content! Worth subscription!
@bltsevdallarfanclub6414 ай бұрын
Patron yeni gördüm kanalını, mükemmelsin umarım daha da sevilirisin.
@turkchap4 ай бұрын
Çok teşekkür ederim ❤️
@theguybehindyou74185 ай бұрын
I enjoy watching your linguistically educational videos like this! Could you also do one about Uralic and Tungusic languages as well, please? They barely get attention in the world.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Awesome, great to hear 😀 I am planning to work on the Tungustic languages for the next video
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
thanks for mentioned the language of my homeland. Manchuria. ❤
@Burgan1763 ай бұрын
Hi, first of all, thank you for your interesting videos.My area of expertise is actually philosophy but I am interested in languages as a hobby. My main interests when it comes to languages are the turkic languages and actually I would like to study the northern Altai language among others. The problem is that I do not really know where I can find material for this language which is not in Russian.. I already planned to talk with a Turcologist but in the meantime I want to read a bit of the literature on northern Altai. Do you maybe know resources (which are not in Russian) for the Northern Altai language? Greetings and have a nice day
@shiinamashiro99174 ай бұрын
I was born on june 14th 2015 and english is my second language and i learned it very good i learned it from youtube
@nenenindonu5 ай бұрын
I wish Para-Mongolic languages such as Khitan were still extant, they are much more archaic compared to the languages derived from Proto-Mongolic
@embracenihility27215 ай бұрын
It‘s still exist,The Daur people are descendants of the Khitan people
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
@@embracenihility2721 maybe
@shindavid64845 ай бұрын
@@embracenihility2721 That's not confirmed yet
@GL-iv4rw5 ай бұрын
The word Russians use to call China?
@eugenic125 ай бұрын
You don’t call Germanic languages as Para Germanic or Proto Germanic, the same you should not use Para Mongolic as well as Proto Mongolic, all are just Mongolic
@beregu5 ай бұрын
Very good content with thorough research. I have a few suggestions for further studies: 1. Ordos speakers use Mongolian script. To me, their speech lies between the Oirat and Khalkha dialects. 2. If you segregate Oirat, Kalmyk, and Buryat from Mongolian, the ‘Mongolian’ on the map should be further divided into Khalkha, Tsakhar (Chakhar), Uzemjin, Khorchin, Khamnigan, etc. This way, you would identify dozens of Mongolic languages, most of which are recognized as dialects of Mongolian or those dialect speakers. 3. Typical Mongolians, including Oirats, Kalmyks, and Buryats, would only recognize Bonan, Santa, Monguor, Yogor, and Daur as separate Mongolic languages. The rest would be considered Mongolian language dialects, as they are fully mutually intelligible despite sounding slightly different, much like how English is spoken in various areas of the US, UK, and Australia.
@MisticMan-yk7gn5 ай бұрын
Im Kalmyk hello people ! ( Би Хальмг Халун менд Улс )
@tserendolgorts75365 ай бұрын
Very informative video with a nice structure. Thanks a lot for the research, I learned a lot 😊
@guney28115 ай бұрын
fun fact: the Mongolian capital, Ulaanbataar, has almost the same amount of people as the rest of Mongolia
@grandon45075 ай бұрын
Not very true. Half of the entire population is a huge portion, but it’s far from “the same amount.”
@feanorasia04145 ай бұрын
@@grandon4507 no, the rest of the population is half the population, therefore ulaanbataar population=rest of mongolia in terms of population
@fra6045 ай бұрын
@@grandon4507...That's what "the same amount of people as the rest of Mongolia" means...
@delly20885 ай бұрын
Mongolia is the world's largest city-state
@HistoryLover085 ай бұрын
We know
@readingdino7115 ай бұрын
Now I want to learn more languages than before, help I'll never get done with language learning at this pace! Anyways, loved the video, it helped me learn more about languages and gave me inspiration for my fantasy world. Just on e tip, turn down the background music slightly. That would make it easier to understand for people who are easily distracted like me.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you, very happy to hear that you liked the video :) Also thank you for the tip 🙏
@WildPotaot25 ай бұрын
Its nice to see a good historic video of our history
@francescocaiaffa53895 ай бұрын
Many greetings to all mongolic people and mongolic speaker.... I love mongolic languages.... Respect to you from italy
@francheeze15 ай бұрын
Wow! So underrated
@mujitogo4704 ай бұрын
I hope one day we will be reunited... the language and culture must always be passed on to us children. Never forget who we are, where we come from.
@LingkunganSekitarKuАй бұрын
Where is that Moghol? 19:12
@turkchapАй бұрын
In Afghanistan. I explained in the video
@yougottamove5 ай бұрын
Great video! Can you now make one about Tungusic peoples?
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Yes, I am planning to make the same content for Tungustic languages as well :)
@yougottamove5 ай бұрын
@@turkchap I can provide some flags for some ethnic groups, it's hard to find them usually. I've seen the problem with those you showed.
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@yougottamove thanks for interested in our language. Hello from manchuria.
@yougottamove5 ай бұрын
@@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala I hope you doing good. Bless you
@TurkishFunAccount5 ай бұрын
Dostum videoların gerçekten çok fazla araştırma ve emek içeriyor. Belgesel izler gibi büyük bir keyifle izliyorum. Umarım kanalın daha çok büyür. Başarılar.
@turkchap4 ай бұрын
Çok teşekkür ederim 🙏
@globalinvestor46755 ай бұрын
Amazing video thank you for the quality 🙏 Have you think about making videos about Caucasus (language/people), Uralic and tungusic languages and peoples ?
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you! 😀 I am planning to make the same content for the Tungustic and Causasus languages.
@Karatel1235 ай бұрын
4:07 This region is not called Southern Russia, while 10:49 this region is Southern Russia and not Northern Caucasus. I live in actual Southern Russia(more specifically Kuban), which is specifically the south of European Russia(without the Caucasus). We don'h have a specific name for the region where Buryatia is located(probably due to it not being densely populated), but it could be considered as a part of either Far East or Siberia/Central Siberia. You can look up Federal districts of Russia since they are all based on geographical regions
@yorgunsamuray5 ай бұрын
Interestingly, many sumo wrestlers, including some yokozunas (grand champions) are originally Mongolian.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
I heard the same. Pretty cool
@Susamcocuk5 ай бұрын
Tunguz Dilleri içinde aynı videoyu bekliyorum
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Sonraki dil videosu için planım o 😀
@earthball695 ай бұрын
thanks for making this video i am mongolian . and i just went to buryat republic. also buryat and oirat are accents also oirat is called uvs aylaga
@kingoftheworld225 ай бұрын
i am from the mughals of afghanistan and i don’t think there’s any speakers left we speak farsi or turkic now.
@naigallham4 ай бұрын
I found it very interesting, Thank you . Yugur this Уйгар?
@BaconatorV4205 ай бұрын
santa language🗣🗣🔥🔥
@Cetnikmapping5 ай бұрын
Best language
@ikhbayarbaldorj934 ай бұрын
???
@BaconatorV4204 ай бұрын
@@ikhbayarbaldorj93 theres a language called santa if u watch the entire vid
@Grf.ithBrsk5 ай бұрын
Idk why but i feel sad when i discover a language I never have heard before is dying or already extinct. Loved the video though! ❤
@greekmanjason4495 ай бұрын
I have a question and i'd be glad if you could answer it are the mongolic languages and more generally the mongolic people similar to the turkic peoples and languages?
@CyberAnarchist207721 күн бұрын
4:47 I have two buryad friends and I can say that high percentage of native speakers is because they count as speaker if they just can read it and audibly distinguish from Mongolian, in fact they consider Russian as their native and buryat as secondary or "foreign" as you can say, pretty much the same situation as with almost every ethnicity in Russia. One my friend told me that he is actually more fluent in English than buryad.
@yolo19435 ай бұрын
dang as a mongolian who grew up in mongolia, i didn't know any of the other languages even existed other than buryat lmao
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@yolo1943 there are a lot of mongolian speaking tribes in China. for example, barga chkhar khorchin eccetera...
@ДмитрийЛысенко-ю7о5 ай бұрын
Do the same with Uralic and Caucasian languages.
@HotZetiGer5 ай бұрын
Cyrillic is C+Yrillik = is almost- Yarlik = (meaning speaking-part) label, sign, area containing writing on an object
@Temuulen.J5 ай бұрын
I think we should differentiate between language and dialect or accent. Most of what you identify as language is mutually understandable to 90%. I would even argue that it is close as how british london accent is to american general accent. Also all of these “languages” the words are written the same way in classical mongolian but pronounced differently.
@miiiiiiiiiiii5 ай бұрын
What a great video
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you :)
@Gulitize2 ай бұрын
One thing to note about the members of recognized minorities in China that it has/had special privileges to keep them calm, for example they where bound to the one child policy, so the number is very likely inflated by people who where completely assimilated into Han culture.
@Nyiterow15 ай бұрын
Easter yugur photo is of Amdo tibetan man btw
@Swimmiki5 ай бұрын
Your voice is clean
@PerfectBrEAThER5 ай бұрын
Dotanamni dog baina Hawoi ukini aimag baina Nesoni ugunambi agar toni baiji Mota giri qara qurgani baina. Ekimni dard kina halmini geibe Bemoor boljambi kam khormini geibe Bemoor boljambi kam khormini khodai jaan Ena bemoreztu parwoimini geibe.
Nice video, tho the pronounced of Kyrgyzstan is a bit funny, makes it entertaining /kɪrɡizistɑn/
@moomullermoothomas63365 ай бұрын
there are many ethnic mongolians among tibetans in amdo region of qinghai and most of them dont speak Mongolian.
@namuumng36335 ай бұрын
I think buryat people need to speak more their buryat language because I saw many buryatas who cannot speak their own language. Most of them speak russian and forgot their buryata language. But inner mongolians are becoming more and more fluent in mongolian language in recent years and their speaking is becoming more like khalkh dialect. Even me, khalkh mongol, maybe can not thell he/she is inner mongolian when I meet with inner mongolian in UB.
@Mr.Vercetti-74 ай бұрын
Very interesting
@eugenic125 ай бұрын
The map is a bit incorrect as Mongolic speaking people live also up to the Yellow sea in the Liaoning and Hebei provinces. Buriads also live not sporadically as shown on the map but the whole area surrounding Lake Baikal, from Enisei river to Amur river and from Yakutia in the north to Mongolia to the south
@fazliddinerkaboyev65685 ай бұрын
Background music: Bach Air in G minor
@zhanrahat26225 ай бұрын
Please make all Indo-Iranian languages It will be interesting
@giorozaitien6465 ай бұрын
Considering Daur might descend from Kitan, so it's not accurate to say all Mongolic languages were derived from Middle Mongolian of the age of Chingis Khan.
@Ganaa235 ай бұрын
is "Moghol" here referring the Khazara Mongol?
@PoPo_2475 ай бұрын
Thank you Buriad people who know their ethnicity. Mongolian and Buriats are inseparable and blood brothers.
@cabbagepult42365 ай бұрын
Man the moghol part was slightly depressing. I hope they see better future wether language and society
@zariaalhajmoustafa25735 ай бұрын
The most one surprise me is Santa language because they use the Arabic script and is the only manual language you use it and is in the heart of China that is not closer to the central Asian country who before the Russian Conquest of central Asia they used the Arabic script
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Yes very interesting. It must be the effect of Islam.
@boldbayr77325 ай бұрын
Wait our script is similar to arabic? Holy shit it is kind a similar. Well damn
@zariaalhajmoustafa25735 ай бұрын
@@boldbayr7732 why the sarcasm
@traff1k3145 ай бұрын
underrated.
@Kantoman5 ай бұрын
You forgot about the Khatso tribe in Yunnan which are the link of Hmong and Mongol people.
@Stasik-0117 күн бұрын
Thank you from Buryatia(Russian Federation)
@turkchap3 күн бұрын
Thank you my friend!
@boilunmate9935 ай бұрын
Next all Tibetan burman language include Kuki language please.
@ppresidentElbegdorj5 ай бұрын
Tuvan mongol ? I am? Tuvan
@Khitbugha_Arigbukh5 ай бұрын
ur blood mongol but ur speak turkic so sad dude
@ujingono5 ай бұрын
Wow 🤩
@HeshigtenMongol5 ай бұрын
Lol, if ordos and Buryat is a different language than Mongolian, then Khorchin, Uzxemchin, Halha and many others should be different languages too.
@AustenFoo5 ай бұрын
Mongolia Santa at 0:17
@MartinOG7275 ай бұрын
Ih deedsees mine uyatai ih Mongol vndesten mine delhiin dayar tarsan bui bolowch deed owgoo sanah tun neg tsust ah dvvs mine negen odor bvgd butsan negdeh bolno.
@Junexz-r5z5 ай бұрын
The most sad thing is there is many Mongols in other countries than Mongolia have😢
@tasos.k5 ай бұрын
Antoine Mostaert mentioning turk chap hahahahhaa so funny
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
I am trying to get creative to ask for subscribers haha 😅
@tasos.k5 ай бұрын
@@turkchap I'm definitely sure Antoine would approve and say the same
@SQh75 ай бұрын
Good video
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Thank you :)
@TechnicallyT-555 ай бұрын
It was not Kublai Khan, it was Möngke Khan. Kublai Khan was the ruler of Yuan dynasty, far after the disintegration of the Mongol Empire.
@Вашевеличество-й8з5 ай бұрын
There are no Khalkha Mongols (orange) in Xinjiang, there are 200,000 Oirats, especially on the border with Kazakhstan...
kelesek trek u shu nas kalamay (we are all mongols) tengri menen biz тэнгэр биднийг ивээг !! Kazakh
@HurelochirChimid5 ай бұрын
I'M MONGOLIA 🇲🇳 монгол
@marcomongke31165 ай бұрын
Even though i like and want o use the Mongolian script, i doubt the old language will be easily restored or adapted widely. It will be like modern Americans start using old English language with different and new letters.
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
not easy at all . I have several mongolian friends who said the traditional script is way more hard than syrillc alfabets.
@turkchap5 ай бұрын
Switching to a different alphabet brings a lot of difficulties for sure. But the Mongolian script looks so cool :)
@marcomongke31165 ай бұрын
@turkchap I tried to learn it as a student. As a hobby later but still couldn't read, write properly even if i speak, write, and read contemporary Mongolian. It's hard for me to imagine foreigners trying to learn it easily. Perhaps AI development could help and make a difference. Anyway, language could be learnt better if they teach it systematically to the new generation with a lot of practice and coursebooks. Here in outer Mongolia, every other lesson, everyday entertainment, news, ads, daily prompts, and paperwork are all in cyrillic. There were pressures to make us learn the Mongolian script if we wanted to work in governmental positions, but that went too far. Nobody wanted to support the language adoption and risk losing their jobs for it. Unless many things are written in Mongolian script, i am doubtful about its spread. Also, as somewhat of rookie linguists, I like to believe language learning requires passion and motivation rather than brute force.
@fiyangga.yanggiri-hala5 ай бұрын
@marcomongke3116 true. I think they made the decision quite radically or maybe at least learn Cyrillic alfabets first. I'm just saying.
@topazbutterfly18535 ай бұрын
The 1274 map is exaggerated. I’m pretty sure Romanian territories have never been under Mongolian occupation, and I’m Romanian
@shaagaadarambazar46455 ай бұрын
I am Mongoli
@JawadazizogluАй бұрын
Actually it's called chagatai language not moghoul