American was Shocked by Word Differences of Slavic Languages!! (Poland, Ukraine, Serbia, Slovenia)

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World Friends

World Friends

9 ай бұрын

World Friends Facebook
👉 / 100090310914821
Slavic Language words are similar?
Today, we invited 4 pannels from Poland, Ukraine, Serbia and Slovenia
and they compare the words they use with an American
Also, please follow our pannels!
🇺🇸 Shannon @shannon.harperrr
🇺🇦 Rosina @rosina_0313
🇵🇱 Ayliee @ayliee_k
🇷🇸 Draga @draga__
🇸🇮 Eva @evakotnikk

Пікірлер: 5 200
@MrXs12
@MrXs12 9 ай бұрын
I'm sooooo proud of Ania defending our Polish "Truskawka" 😂🥰
@enolaholmes5968
@enolaholmes5968 9 ай бұрын
We also have truskaūka in Belarusian
@finmonster5827
@finmonster5827 9 ай бұрын
I'm from a village in the north west of Ukraine and we always say "truskawki" instead of "polunytsi"
@pasza_dem
@pasza_dem 9 ай бұрын
Truskawka muszę przyznać jest trochę dziwna:) nigdy się nad tym nie zastanawiałem, ale gdy teraz wygooglowałem pochodzenie tego słowa to jestem rozczarowany XD
@juontm2131
@juontm2131 9 ай бұрын
@@pasza_dem dlaczego?
@pasza_dem
@pasza_dem 9 ай бұрын
@@juontm2131 bo według internetów ta nazwa pochodzi od dźwięku "truskania" gdy zrywasz truskawki, myślałem że ma to więcej sensu, serio? TRUSK? Już bym wolał żeby to się nazywało mega-poziomka, czy coś XD
@KrzysiuxD
@KrzysiuxD 9 ай бұрын
Well, map in Polish is 'mapa', but 'karta' is also a synonym that is no longer used today. However the science of creating maps in Polish is... Kartografia!
@pasza_dem
@pasza_dem 9 ай бұрын
Exactly, but you need to be little bit more educated than average to know that:)
@HeroManNick132
@HeroManNick132 9 ай бұрын
Bulgarian still uses both ''karta'' for map and card.
@BlackHoleSpain
@BlackHoleSpain 9 ай бұрын
Also in Spanish and other romance languages, we use "cartografía", however it has 2 greek roots there, not direct from Latin.
@Anton_Danylchenko
@Anton_Danylchenko 9 ай бұрын
Exactly the same in Ukraine. We have Kartografia and mapa. But we borrowed karta from Russian (they do not have mapa) and it is used now more and more often than mapa - e.g. Google maps are written as Karty Gugl
@ivannaromanchuk3320
@ivannaromanchuk3320 9 ай бұрын
​@@Anton_Danylchenkowe didn't borrow "karta" from russian language. Its a latin word 🙂
@dezo6508
@dezo6508 6 ай бұрын
As a polish I find "morski pes" totally funny and cute 😂❤
@therealfingolfin
@therealfingolfin 5 ай бұрын
🇸🇮❤️🇵🇱
@777mazzy
@777mazzy 5 ай бұрын
Nie zapominaj o morskim lwie...
@caddle58
@caddle58 5 ай бұрын
Morski pas totally killed me 😂😂😂❤
@POLSKAdoBOJU
@POLSKAdoBOJU 5 ай бұрын
A świnka morska???
@caddle58
@caddle58 5 ай бұрын
@@POLSKAdoBOJU to máme tiež! Ani morská, ani sviňa 😂
@learnpolisheasily
@learnpolisheasily 3 ай бұрын
All Slavic languages are uniquely beautiful!
@seijitatsuguro4923
@seijitatsuguro4923 2 ай бұрын
Особенно русский
@Asgardt13
@Asgardt13 2 ай бұрын
Българския е оригинала. :p
@sergeyklimenkov
@sergeyklimenkov 2 ай бұрын
А женщины ещё лучше
@dzap4815
@dzap4815 2 ай бұрын
​@@Asgardt13dreams turkomongol 😂
@Asgardt13
@Asgardt13 2 ай бұрын
Тъп македонец ли си?
@HaoAqua
@HaoAqua 9 ай бұрын
You should take somebody from Czech republic it would be very funny with Poland :D
@jankowalski6338
@jankowalski6338 9 ай бұрын
już ją szukają
@redminute6605
@redminute6605 9 ай бұрын
I'd like to see a comparison of ALL the western slavic languages. That'd be interesting
@Pavlo_Balashkevych
@Pavlo_Balashkevych 9 ай бұрын
​@@jankowalski6338why so rough?
@drquartermaine9758
@drquartermaine9758 9 ай бұрын
Jagoda, szukać, odchod... :D
@maxalbon9557
@maxalbon9557 9 ай бұрын
Exactly! Czech + Polish will be ultimate combo :D
@dmytrodanilov9334
@dmytrodanilov9334 9 ай бұрын
Ukrainians also say "mapa" (мапа). Not only "karta" (карта). I prefer to say "mapa" to avoid meaning complications. Because "karta" (or "kartka" (картка)) also means "a playing card", "a bonus card", "a SIM-card" and "a credit card". But "mapa" is only "a map".
@mateushigino3387
@mateushigino3387 9 ай бұрын
In portuguese map is mapa also
@dmytrodanilov9334
@dmytrodanilov9334 9 ай бұрын
@@mateushigino3387 cool coincidence!
@slavzahariev3901
@slavzahariev3901 9 ай бұрын
Mapa comes form the latin. Karta comes from slavic. I'm Bulgarian and we use karta only.
@dmytrodanilov9334
@dmytrodanilov9334 9 ай бұрын
@@slavzahariev3901 the word "karta" also comes from Latin. "Carta" (or "Charta") means "paper".
@anatoliypavliuk6432
@anatoliypavliuk6432 9 ай бұрын
Carta came from Greek language trough Latin into many indoeuropean languages with different meanings. In Italian it means paper, in Spanish - letter, in German and French means map
@mos2ful
@mos2ful 4 ай бұрын
Respect to Slovenian ˝Zemljevid˝ - it describes the meaning of the map- Zemlje -Earth, Vid - view.
@goranbras4767
@goranbras4767 3 ай бұрын
Staro-srpski je isto zemljovid
@zmnks
@zmnks 3 ай бұрын
​@@goranbras4767...довука караџића, доситеја обрадовића, стојана новаковића... (намерно малим словима)
@chabalco
@chabalco 2 ай бұрын
Bulgarian is the same Zemlya - Earth, Vidya - View. but we also call it a Карта
@mos2ful
@mos2ful 2 ай бұрын
@@chabalco In russian the same. Карта
@drgoodfeel9704
@drgoodfeel9704 Ай бұрын
Croatian is zemljovid too
@lauraklaric6029
@lauraklaric6029 4 ай бұрын
It's so nice to see Slovenian in these videos too =) we so small we usually forgotten
@miapocol100
@miapocol100 4 ай бұрын
i know right like wat abaut us ka smo lahko tut kje
@videojunkie35007
@videojunkie35007 3 ай бұрын
wouldnt say you are forgotten, you are too different from Croatian, Serbian and Bosnian. I literally cant talk to you guys, you have to switch to my language (Croatian) :D Now, Bosnian language, they are often forgotten, even though "Bosanski jezik" is the first one mentioned in historical record.
@ACCN45
@ACCN45 Ай бұрын
Bravo Slovenija morski pas and zrak❤
@anastasiabila9504
@anastasiabila9504 2 күн бұрын
My husband works remotely for a Slovenian company that was founded by a Ukrainian guy.
@ISupportGenoZidrusni
@ISupportGenoZidrusni 9 ай бұрын
Also, in ukrainian we have word "Ягода", sounds like "jagoda", but its like hypernym for many things like strawberries, cherry, tomato, grape, blueberry, etc. All of them are "ягоди"
@Ivan-fm4eh
@Ivan-fm4eh 9 ай бұрын
Same in Polish. "jagoda" means "berry"
@ISupportGenoZidrusni
@ISupportGenoZidrusni 9 ай бұрын
​@@Ivan-fm4eh lol, but in video girl from Poland said, that blueberries are called jagoda in polish So, she mistakes?
@PiotrPilinko
@PiotrPilinko 9 ай бұрын
@@ISupportGenoZidrusni Nope, she was right. Jagoda has two meanings: a generic berry (in biology, so banana and tomato is included) and a blueberry.
@ISupportGenoZidrusni
@ISupportGenoZidrusni 9 ай бұрын
@@PiotrPilinko ohh, it's very interesting In our country jagoda have only one meaning - berry But people by mistake use it very often, when they are talking about strawberry. So, if you will say jagoda in meaning strawberry then ukrainians will understand you
@ukr009
@ukr009 9 ай бұрын
@@ISupportGenoZidrusni They will not and ask you to specify which one do you mean.
@edmundtheironside4282
@edmundtheironside4282 9 ай бұрын
It is extremely confusing why Draga is so surprised by the term ''morski pes'', because we also say ''morski pas'' in Serbian. Also, the term ''mapa'' is very common in Serbian.
@jandex4838
@jandex4838 9 ай бұрын
@@minagrujic no, it is just a specific kind of shark.
@amarillorose7810
@amarillorose7810 9 ай бұрын
@@jandex4838 It is not a specific shark but a synonym for "ajkula". You have both words as synonyms in every dictionary, including electronic ones like google translate, as well as in books, literature, news, newspapers, etc.
@holdmybeer5165
@holdmybeer5165 9 ай бұрын
@@jandex4838 True. And she said it in video, it whale shark (morski pes) and shark is (ajkula). People arent educated and never heard of whale shark. Draga is well educated.
@amarillorose7810
@amarillorose7810 9 ай бұрын
@@holdmybeer5165 Whale shark is "Kit ajkula", "kit morski pas" or "kitopsina".
@holdmybeer5165
@holdmybeer5165 9 ай бұрын
@@amarillorose7810 Kit ajkula is directly translated from english and its not a Serbian word. Whale shark is morski pas you can check it.
@MaCherie92
@MaCherie92 4 ай бұрын
The Serbian girl is clearly unfamiliar with it, but we do also say "morski pas" (water dog) for shark. Ajkula is the most common, but in the scientific community or like school books you can also see morski pas.
@RM-qi3ls
@RM-qi3ls Ай бұрын
"Morski Pas" does grow about 1.5m- 2m in length. "Ajkula" could grow 5-6m
@bosniangamesms8957
@bosniangamesms8957 28 күн бұрын
to su sinonimi@@RM-qi3ls
@mnemonija
@mnemonija 24 күн бұрын
​@@RM-qi3ls So that would mean morski pas is local Mediterranean "domesticated" species as opposed to sharks living in the ocean?
@RM-qi3ls
@RM-qi3ls 24 күн бұрын
@@mnemonija No
@cetterus
@cetterus 20 күн бұрын
@@mnemonija Serbia has nothing to do with Mediterranean. They are land locked.
@olgavarnava7137
@olgavarnava7137 2 ай бұрын
I would like to add that in Ukrainian we use Jagoda for the “berry” in general. Different berries are “jagody”. Strawberry is polunytsia, blueberry is lokhyna, blackberry is chornytsia and bunch of others. Berry (jagoda) is a name of a class.
@pinkeypromises
@pinkeypromises Ай бұрын
THIS!!! I WAS THINKING THIS THE ENTIRE TIME!😂
@joannacrisantos236
@joannacrisantos236 28 күн бұрын
@@pinkeypromisesin Polish, we also refer differently to different types of berries.
@menofwar1155
@menofwar1155 9 ай бұрын
˝Karta˝ and ˝Mapa˝ are not words with Slavic roots, they came from other languages. Slovenian ˝Zemljevid˝ is of Slavic root, combining words ˝Zemlja˝ and ˝Vid˝, so anyone speaking a Slavic language even if not knowing what it means at first could understand why that word is used when he learn what its stand for. Greetings from Serbia!
@worldoftancraft
@worldoftancraft 9 ай бұрын
Подтверждаю. Сразу понятно для чего, безусловно звучит странно. Всем мирного неба над головой в сиё неспокойное время.
@arturdabrowski3671
@arturdabrowski3671 9 ай бұрын
Masz rację. Mimo że nie mówię po słoweńsku od razu to skojarzyłem.
@darius1293
@darius1293 9 ай бұрын
​@@arturdabrowski3671i u Hrvatskoj je zemljivid
@darius1293
@darius1293 9 ай бұрын
​@@arturdabrowski3671 u 19 st.Hrvati i Slovenci su išli u standardizaciju svog jezika. Tako da izbace što više stranih riječi a da ih uklope u slavenski jezik
@blueice011
@blueice011 8 ай бұрын
@@darius1293 U Sribiji se nekada koristio zemljopis koji je zamenjen imenicom geografija. Nakon vekova turske i austro-ugarske dominacije, uprkos brojnim strancizmima koji ne treba a iznenadjuju, ipak je sacuvano jezgro jezika, sa posebnim akcentom na Vukovu azbuku.
@oliverfa08
@oliverfa08 9 ай бұрын
Don't stop the videos with the slavic team right now , they are so beautiful , likable and interesting to watch , just like the video with members from Latin Countries, even though i'm from a slavic country , ah and Shannon too , she is great
@PROVOCATEURSK
@PROVOCATEURSK 9 ай бұрын
Čau.
@nebitno6955
@nebitno6955 9 ай бұрын
Serbian girl doesn't even know Serbian fully, she was surprised at Slovenian "morski pas" for shark but we also use that word for sharks, or "ajkulas". She had more moments like this, so definitely change her and bring actual Serbian person lol
@Peter1999Videos
@Peter1999Videos 9 ай бұрын
Mapa is the same in spanish, and Carta is the same could be ¨cards¨ like Poker or ¨Letter¨
@maxkho00
@maxkho00 9 ай бұрын
The Ukrainian girl has no personality lol. She literally says nothing other than the exact translation of the word; she doesn't even mention synonyms that sound like the words the other girls listed, such as ягода meaning berry.
@Vkusniashka1234
@Vkusniashka1234 9 ай бұрын
Russian, as the most common language of all Slavic languages has left the chat room.
@RichieLarpa
@RichieLarpa 5 ай бұрын
Not too much related, but I will share the words in Lithuanian, which can sometimes show interesting resemblance to other Slavic languages: meat = mėsa map = žemėlapis name = vardas strawberry = braškė ice = ledas knife = peilis air = oras snow = sniegas shark = ryklys So obviously, not all words are the same, but few words are really close to their Slavic counterparts, so that is interesting to mention I think.
@GoranAmadeus1337
@GoranAmadeus1337 4 ай бұрын
mesa (meso), ledas (led), sniegas (snijeg (croatian) or sneg (serbian) can be understood, but other words = not at all :)
@RichieLarpa
@RichieLarpa 4 ай бұрын
@@GoranAmadeus1337 What about "žemėlapis"? I thought you Croatians have "zemljovid" or such word does not exists?
@TheStrategyChannel
@TheStrategyChannel 3 ай бұрын
​@@RichieLarpa Zemlevid - earth-to-see Žemėlapis - earth-card
@RichieLarpa
@RichieLarpa 2 ай бұрын
@@TheStrategyChannel Thank you for explanation, but I speak both of those languages and I understand, how their words are formed.
@kozodoev
@kozodoev 2 ай бұрын
Baltic languages ARE related to the Slavic ones and share a common ancestor with them and form a distinct branch (Balto-Slavic)
@radule987
@radule987 6 ай бұрын
Slovenian girl: morski pes Serbian girl: ...its different in Serbia... Also Serbia: morski pas
@karolinabasaric770
@karolinabasaric770 6 сағат бұрын
😂 Of corse. That is all becosse of song.. Da sam morski pas😂😂😂.....
@minnke
@minnke 9 ай бұрын
Zemljevid makes perfect sense to me as a Serbian. I understand the literal meaning "to see Earth/ground/country".
@pasza_dem
@pasza_dem 9 ай бұрын
Yes it's understandable for all Slavs:)
@larysacherner312
@larysacherner312 9 ай бұрын
@@pasza_dem Absolutely.
@filip_milojkovic
@filip_milojkovic 9 ай бұрын
Yes. And not so long ago geography was called zemljopis in Serbia/ex Yugoslavia.
@faolritana
@faolritana 9 ай бұрын
@@filip_milojkovic oh, in Ukraine too, if we translate word geography (географія) from Greek (its origin language) then: гео - земля, графія - опис; so землеопис
@MajedSalih
@MajedSalih 9 ай бұрын
Zemljavid is the most Slavic word that can describe a map (Zemlja - earth , Vid - view )
@Noa_h19
@Noa_h19 9 ай бұрын
"We have a lot of freaking sounds" lol , for me the slavic most difficult is polish , I mean even the other girls slavic agree 😂
@linelthekn
@linelthekn 9 ай бұрын
the congugation of words in ukrainian is kinda annoying if you study this language
@user-jf7iv4mk7o
@user-jf7iv4mk7o 9 ай бұрын
​But conjugation is present in other slavic languages as well (i'd say all of them but i don't know for sure, maybe there are 1 or max 2 exceptions) and they aren't harder or easier, just using different group of sounds.
@ewerest9914
@ewerest9914 9 ай бұрын
Ukraine language is difficult too. Many people can't make the skill of true ukr pronunciation for all his life. It is pretty different from english or russian pronunciation where could happen small fonetic mistake. Ukraine language dont allow mistakes in volve sounds...
@user-jf7iv4mk7o
@user-jf7iv4mk7o 9 ай бұрын
@@ewerest9914 i won't say Ukrainian isn't a difficult language to study but thing about volwe sounds just isn't true. "Not allowed" is exactly the same as in russian or English. Officially it isn't correct but you can still anderstand what was said. While in all 3 languages there can be words where different volwe sound will just make different word. It's no different at all from English nor russian. I'm telling you this as a person whose main language is Ukrainian. General pronunciation is a different thing i got what you mean. But how many people who use English have "right" pronunciation. For example letter "w" alone, many don't know difference between "v" sound. So i wouldn't say it's that strict if compare to others. It is as strict as there. I think there are lots of difficult things in every language but we notice them mostly when we just study them. While in the other hand, we don't think how difficult to study those languages we already know can be for others.
@pawegoik3322
@pawegoik3322 9 ай бұрын
Yeah, you know that your language is hard to learn, when most of its native speakers can't learn it properly 😅. We are making a lot of errors, no matter if we write or talk 🙂.
@vladimirglibusic1511
@vladimirglibusic1511 5 ай бұрын
In standard croatian: Meat: meso 🥩 Map: zemljovid (karta) 🗺 Name: ime Strawberry: jagoda 🍓 Ice: led 🧊 Knife: nož 🔪 Air: zrak 🌬 Snow: snijeg 🌨 Shark: morski pas 🦈 As you can see very similar to serbian because serbian, bosnian, croatian and montenegrin are actually dialects but due to political reason they ended up as different language officially.
@PyroSlakkie666
@PyroSlakkie666 7 ай бұрын
in dutch, "map" is the same meaning as in Slovenian, we also say "map" but the meaning is "folder". And when we mean a road map, then we would say kaart, but you need to specify "land kaart' (country map) or "wereld kaart" (world map)
@matof1428
@matof1428 9 ай бұрын
In Slavic languages there are many so-called "false friends" - the same or very similar words with different meanings, which is often confusing even for other Slavic speakers. For example, the word "otrok". In the Slovak language it is a slave, an enslaved person, but in the Slovenian language it means a child.
@rodroad9624
@rodroad9624 9 ай бұрын
Це дійсно так, особливо коли в Чехії увага то є позор
@louisiyanaa
@louisiyanaa 6 ай бұрын
Yes, also in Ukrainian “ovochi” are vegetables and in Polish “owoce” are fruits🫣
@TheGregor312
@TheGregor312 6 ай бұрын
W dawnym polskim też się na dziecko mówiło otrok, ale kojarzę, też że można było otroczyć konia, czyli założyć mu homonto/uzdę. Wydaje mi się, że słowo otrok może mieć źródło w znaczeniu podporządkować.
@llauoykcuftube
@llauoykcuftube 5 ай бұрын
Try saying szukam děti ve sklepě in Czech republic 😂
@mitchyoung93
@mitchyoung93 5 ай бұрын
@mato1428 Yes, but you can still see a connection in that a child is a dependent of the family as is a slave. Similarly I guess rik is year in Ukrainian, but rok in Serbian and Croatia is a period of time (undetermined) as is srok in Russian. So while it is a false friend you can still see the connection.
@millionel6578
@millionel6578 9 ай бұрын
Eva are so beautiful and the language too and why I don't heard the Slovenian🇸🇮 language before?! I'm wanna know about Slovenia. Hi from Ukraine 🇺🇦
@IleBudic
@IleBudic 7 ай бұрын
I am serbian and when I was a kid I was told that the Morski Pas is really Ajkula. There's also a song by Riblja Corba - probably the most popular band, and Bora calls it Morski Pas. Iz mora "laju morski psi, na plazi lezimo ja i ti... " There was a woman that was bitten by Morski Pas when I was a kid and that's what I heard. I am surprised she never heard it. Further I really like the Slovenian and how they say "WorldSee" makes more sense than the borrowed words of karta or mapa. Too bad Russian speaker isn't there.
@instrumentalmusic241
@instrumentalmusic241 5 ай бұрын
Тоже хотелось бы увидеть русскоговорящую
@bomarley5024
@bomarley5024 Ай бұрын
@@fleurnoire4650 what an idiotic propaganda, educate yourself, lol
@poki580
@poki580 21 күн бұрын
​@@fleurnoire4650 oh shut up
@margital941
@margital941 2 ай бұрын
In Slovak language 🇸🇰: 1. mäso 2. mapa 3. meno 4. jahoda 5. ľad 6. nôž 7. vzduch 8. sneh 9. žralok
@LisaGrayrock
@LisaGrayrock 9 ай бұрын
In Sweden we say: Meat: Kött 🥩 Map: Karta 🗺 Name: Namn Strawberry: Jordgubb 🍓 Ice: Is 🧊 Knife: Kniv 🔪 Air: Luft 🌬 Snow: Snö 🌨 Shark: Haj 🦈
@darynagorska655
@darynagorska655 5 ай бұрын
Swedish is not a Slavic language, but thanks anyway
@LisaGrayrock
@LisaGrayrock 5 ай бұрын
I know! @@darynagorska655
@stanislavbandur7355
@stanislavbandur7355 5 ай бұрын
@@darynagorska655 technically group of indoeuropean languages which are somehow related to/with sanskrt. There is many words around Europe with same roots and, of course, myrriads of different words describing developments/inventios made after split of that past root group
@darynagorska655
@darynagorska655 5 ай бұрын
@@stanislavbandur7355 I get your point. In any case, Swedish is still not a Slavic language. Facts. I studied linguistics at the best university of Ukraine (that's what they say) and our linguistics professor taught me that.
@stanislavbandur7355
@stanislavbandur7355 5 ай бұрын
@@darynagorska655 I did not say that it is. I wanted to point to wider perspective. They use gratis as we and Czechs use (taken from Romans), words like salt or snow and so ... Yes, we can separate general group into smaller groups and smaller families and dialects to ad absurdum. From scientific perspective it is ok, but from other "european" perspective is good to point, that we are at least somehow related. Some slavic languages have i.e. month from latin, It does not make them less slavic than Czech or Polish. I rather find joining points.
@henri_ol
@henri_ol 9 ай бұрын
The word "Zrak" is also present in Slovenian brother with similar name Slovakia 🇸🇰 , but it means something like "vision , sight"
@stefangligoric1901
@stefangligoric1901 9 ай бұрын
When it comes to us Serbs, people in Bosnia would mostly use the word zrak, while Serbs in Serbia and Montenegro use vazduh predominantly. Nominally both are understood as common words in Serbian just used in different regions.
@elemelekpl5710
@elemelekpl5710 9 ай бұрын
in Polish it would be wzrok for sight
@SRB.4S
@SRB.4S 9 ай бұрын
In most Slavic languages, "vazduh" is the word for air, and so is the Serbian language... In Serbian, the word "zrak" exists, but it means something completely different, which has nothing to do with air, such as the sun's rays, for example , or the word "zracenje" means that something radiates... The word for air "zrak" is used by Muslims from Bosnia and not all, Croats and Slovenians. As well as "morski pas " literally translated "sea dog" for a shark?! None of this makes any sense, but they use those words.
@iamfromukraine
@iamfromukraine 9 ай бұрын
In ukrainian the closest one is zir it is also for sight and vision.
@tongobong1
@tongobong1 9 ай бұрын
This is another clue why Slovenian language is regarded as the most advanced language in Europe.
@Miodowy
@Miodowy 7 ай бұрын
If in three languages the letter "o" is in the word and in the Polish equivalent it is replaced by "ó" (u), you need to mark one thing. This applies to the singular. The plural is usually "o". Example: 1 knife - 1 nóż . 2 knives - 2 noże. In the plural, such words sound similar to those of other languages.
@ASMR_StanTee
@ASMR_StanTee 6 ай бұрын
In Slovakian we say: 1.Mäso,2.Mapa,3.Meno,4.Jahoda,5.Ľad,6.Nôž,7.Vzduch,8.Sneh,9.Žralok 🙂
@100km_ot_MKAD
@100km_ot_MKAD 26 күн бұрын
Жралок... 😁 In Russian we have the word "dzrat' " (2 eat quick and a lot, with bad demeanor) Zralok sounds like someone eating quick, a lot and with bad demeanor... 😁
@user-zv9zc9bc2y
@user-zv9zc9bc2y 2 күн бұрын
​@@100km_ot_MKADне dzrat a žrať.
@100km_ot_MKAD
@100km_ot_MKAD 2 күн бұрын
@@user-zv9zc9bc2y я русскоязычная, пишу транскрипцию латинскими буквами. Не припомню там буквы ž.
@user-zv9zc9bc2y
@user-zv9zc9bc2y 2 күн бұрын
@@100km_ot_MKAD учитывая,что ж это одна буква,лучше для неё использовать ž,с тем де звучанием.Но в транскрипции будет zhrat'
@100km_ot_MKAD
@100km_ot_MKAD 2 күн бұрын
@@user-zv9zc9bc2y для меня ž не звучит, как "ж". Как и для миллионов других. Я вообще этих (ž/ż/ź) букв не знаю.
@Arii_ski
@Arii_ski 8 ай бұрын
Slav are one big family ♥️ Zdrovia my brother and sisters
@user-jg2kc8po3d
@user-jg2kc8po3d 4 ай бұрын
Вам тоже здоровья и долгой жизни, ребята!
@jaszczurtd
@jaszczurtd 4 ай бұрын
yeah, one, big, but deeply dysfunctional family.
@yurem588
@yurem588 3 ай бұрын
Motherless family😁🇷🇺
@jaszczurtd
@jaszczurtd 3 ай бұрын
@@yurem588 I would rather kill myself than acknowledge Russia as my motherland.
@departamentedc564
@departamentedc564 3 ай бұрын
​@@yurem588 my motherland is Poland. I don't need another one. Just take care of yourself before you start caring for others
@raizer2810
@raizer2810 9 ай бұрын
Actually, morski pas really is the official name for the shark in Serbian, even though we all primarily use ajkula, in the books it still says morski pas, as well as zrak meaning beam in Serbian. Still, she's obviously so intelligent and eloquent, she makes for an excellent representative.
@axelpalfy7597
@axelpalfy7597 7 ай бұрын
it is like italian pesce cane
@serb1234
@serb1234 5 ай бұрын
Al moze se razumeti ako na primer kazes. Odo napolje na zraku
@llauoykcuftube
@llauoykcuftube 5 ай бұрын
zrak is eyesight in slovak and czech 😃
@m1lst3r89
@m1lst3r89 5 ай бұрын
Da budem iskren ne secam se da sam skoro video morski pas da pise negde, cak i u biologiji sa m video da stoji ajkula.
@user-by6ri3cu4y
@user-by6ri3cu4y 5 ай бұрын
Ko je odrastao na srpsko-hrvatskom (ili hrvatsko-srpskom) zna da je ajkula morski pas a zrak, u zavisnosti od konteksta, ili vazduh ili usmereno elektromagnetno zračenje (laserski zrak, zrak Sunca).
@pinkeypromises
@pinkeypromises Ай бұрын
I love that because of knowing the root words, I as a Ukrainian can understand that zemlevid means "to see land", so I my brain makes sense of it and feels happy because brains looove to see connections :)
@zeljkodjuric91
@zeljkodjuric91 4 ай бұрын
Morski pas is also used in Serbia to designate shark
@twoofeleven
@twoofeleven 9 ай бұрын
Ah, berries, the first big source of my childhood disappointment. Buying what I thought was blueberry ice cream in Czech only to get a strawberry one 😂 #teamtruskawka
@teer7461
@teer7461 9 ай бұрын
In Polish about 74% of words are of native origin. The remaining 26% are loanwords from other languages. Of all borrowed words, 36% come from Latin, 20% from German, 16% from French, 7% from Czech, 3% from English and from Italian, 2% from Ukrainian and Belarusian, 1% from Russian. In addition, it is also worth mentioning borrowings from Greek, Turkish, Spanish or Portuguese...
@Kislotikas
@Kislotikas 8 ай бұрын
i think your % is way of knowing rus + pl i can understand ukrainian pretty good. knowing pl already can get a lot of chech and slovakian words, so its all related much more then you put i think UA Pl !10-15% not 2
@Ahmeni
@Ahmeni 8 ай бұрын
@@KislotikasI'm not familiar with actual percentages but it's entirely possible that while Polish borrowed only 2% from Ukrainian, Ukrainian borrowed much more from Polish. Or both adopted the same loanwords.
@chrislorentz2911
@chrislorentz2911 8 ай бұрын
@@Ahmeni The 74% words of native origin stems from common Slavic roots so here you go with so many similarities between these two lingos.
@ladynatala4405
@ladynatala4405 8 ай бұрын
@@Kislotikas meh. I never understand ukrainian spoke and they same too.
@martindworak
@martindworak 8 ай бұрын
One example I know of the top of my head, in Polish we call socks, “skarpeta” which is borrowed from Italian, “la skarpetta” which means “little shoe”. Polish is my native language, I can confirm, it’s damn hard to remember, let alone learn!!
@mashakakusaka
@mashakakusaka 7 ай бұрын
Ukrainian girl is cute. I she is too shay. I wish she would be more opened to be able to show the potensial of our language to other girls.
@arsic094
@arsic094 5 ай бұрын
Morski pas is also used in Serbian, but for a specific type of shark present in the Adriatic. Zrak means "ray" in Serbian, not sunlight. So a "ray of sunlight" would be "zrak sunca". But everybody would understand zrak as air because that's how it's used in many subdialects. Its just that the girl seems to be a Belgrade urbanite without much general knowledge.
@YOSHI2003
@YOSHI2003 9 ай бұрын
The Slavic languages all seem so beautiful to me.
@PROVOCATEURSK
@PROVOCATEURSK 9 ай бұрын
Learn one slavic language(the Slovak one is considered the esperanto of slavic languages) and you can speak to so many people from different countries.
@rodamaal9220
@rodamaal9220 8 ай бұрын
​@@PROVOCATEURSKnot really
@stanislavbandur7355
@stanislavbandur7355 5 ай бұрын
@@PROVOCATEURSK maybe the best way will be something around the clock - from Center Slovak, you can go to Czech (Almost same), then Polish, good will be Ukrainian and then south region. But in reality, it is in some cases quite hard to adapt to differences, because words are not related. Czech/Polish months vs. Russian, Slovak, Ukrainian. We were laughing with Croatians about "false friends" Ubiť (HR), Ubiť(SK), Zbít(CZ), Zbiť(SK), Zabít(CZ),Zabiť(SK),Zabyť(UA,RF),Zabudnúť(SK),Zapomniť(UA,RF),Zapomenout(CZ) whole bunch of very similar words with sometimes opposite meaning. We as Slavs, (and many other groups) have adopted words from Greek and Roman Language, but differently. When I was in Slovenia, I did not get a word in half of conversation of two guys next to me, but second half was for me quite clear. Similarities are cris-crossed through the languages and one recipe will be not enough for all differences
@milanrakonjac3812
@milanrakonjac3812 4 ай бұрын
...you mean...these girls...!!!
@FREEONION
@FREEONION 9 ай бұрын
In Ukrainian we say "Mapa" also
@ss181292
@ss181292 7 ай бұрын
Zemljevid is quite obvious, "zemlja" is "ziemia" in PL (Earth), "vid" is about seing ("widzieć" in PL, "video" in Latin). So it means to see the earth.
@Valius_V
@Valius_V 2 күн бұрын
Po polsku to byłoby coś jak "ziemiowidz" xD
@Serjio6406
@Serjio6406 3 ай бұрын
Какие же девчонки красавицы, глаз нельзя оторвать!)
@tay_s27
@tay_s27 9 ай бұрын
But "morski pas" also means shark in Serbian. It's just that we almost always use the word "ajkula" for it.
@amarillorose7810
@amarillorose7810 9 ай бұрын
Yes, "ajkula" and "morski pas" are regular words in the Serbian language. The first word is used a little more than the second, but the second is also used quite a lot and can be seen many times in books and literature. Morski pas is slavic origin word, ajkula has a Scandinavian origin.
@finmonster5827
@finmonster5827 9 ай бұрын
@@amarillorose7810 why then the Serbian girl was so surprised?
@collared
@collared 9 ай бұрын
@@finmonster5827 maybe she's not FROM serbia but a serbian girl. if you're not living in a country you forget words sometimes
@finmonster5827
@finmonster5827 9 ай бұрын
​@@collared r u sure?
@collared
@collared 9 ай бұрын
@@finmonster5827 pretty sure since im a serbia born serb, and serbian is my native language. although ajkula is way more common, no one would be confused with morski pas either. but it's probably possible to forget worlds/meanings or don't know them at all if you grew up abroad and wasn't constantly surrounded by the language
@worldclassyoutuber2085
@worldclassyoutuber2085 9 ай бұрын
Slovenian word for map - "zemljevid" it's like combined two words "zemlje" - earth(ziemia) "vid" - to see(widzieć) so zemljevid - looking on earth/ground
@ineshvaladolenc6559
@ineshvaladolenc6559 3 ай бұрын
Yes but we also use the word "karta" for map, I'm not sure why she didn't mention that.
@SatrapaWr
@SatrapaWr 7 ай бұрын
In Polish there is a less known term (usually used by farmers and biologists) "owoce jagodowe" (which would have direct translation as "blackbery like fruits") which is afaik equivalent of berries (general, all kinds of them).
@Fafnirych
@Fafnirych 9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for the participation of the Ukrainian language in this show and greetings from Kyiv! 🇺🇦❤
@olig6339
@olig6339 9 ай бұрын
Are you okay? Be safe❤
@adamwnt
@adamwnt 9 ай бұрын
greetings to you my friend from Poland, stay safe
@YWNWA-ZXC
@YWNWA-ZXC 9 ай бұрын
@@olig6339 We Okay, russian bridge to Crimea was destroyed today 😍
@Fafnirych
@Fafnirych 9 ай бұрын
​@@olig6339Air raids are daily in Kyiv, in some places the air defense is unable to cope and, accordingly, there are attacks on civilian objects, inflation is rampant in the state, but we are holding on. Everything will be fine! ❤
@dmytrodanilov9334
@dmytrodanilov9334 9 ай бұрын
@@Fafnirych I'm from Kyiv too. Here are air raids but in May and June situation was even harder.
@MalaPilusa
@MalaPilusa 7 ай бұрын
"Morski pes" (or "morski pas" in Croatian) is literal translation of sea shark - in the past dogs very fierceful protectors of villages and homes. Often strong and blood thirsty as sharks are. In English language there is even construction "lap shark" for small dogs who are very protective of their owner.
@nostra7523
@nostra7523 29 күн бұрын
also shark means pas in croatian.... so your chiwawa name is sharki kurwa jebayie
@mnemonija
@mnemonija 24 күн бұрын
​@@nostra7523Putain.... As an expression of surprise in French.
@stellastenkova1082
@stellastenkova1082 Ай бұрын
Love how the slavic girls vibed together like sisters. 🥰 So cute! I'll use the unique 'morski pes' 😄 Never gonna say 'akula' ever again!
@user-ln2kh9lj8f
@user-ln2kh9lj8f 4 ай бұрын
Словенка и полька, самые красивые
@Dariusz-cg5on
@Dariusz-cg5on 2 ай бұрын
True❤
@KolonE
@KolonE 9 ай бұрын
the ukrainian girl is so relatable probably because we in finland dont say anything unless you ask for something or we are engaged with the conversation
@irynakalychak6821
@irynakalychak6821 9 ай бұрын
I think she's just shy. And she's just 19)
@user-cn5po4cn4j
@user-cn5po4cn4j 9 ай бұрын
@@irynakalychak6821 да, так, only shy. I agree!
@Anton_Danylchenko
@Anton_Danylchenko 9 ай бұрын
She is shy. She could have said e.g. that in Ukrainian we also have a word jahoda.
@kdramaokofficial
@kdramaokofficial 9 ай бұрын
@@Anton_Danylchenko NAZI
@yeva.h
@yeva.h 9 ай бұрын
there are many introverts among Ukrainians
@j.a.r2248
@j.a.r2248 9 ай бұрын
I'm from Poland and my name's Jagoda I love how it can mean other things in different languages
@swetoniuszkorda5737
@swetoniuszkorda5737 9 ай бұрын
Hi! In Polish too;)
@uceee1
@uceee1 9 ай бұрын
Siema Truskawka!
@PUARockstar
@PUARockstar 9 ай бұрын
In Ukrainian it means any berry, berries in general
@jesenzima2012
@jesenzima2012 7 ай бұрын
I like to eat jagode. .. Pozdrav iz Srbije
@fox_foxivich
@fox_foxivich 5 ай бұрын
-Are your parents gardeners? -Yes -Oh, that explains then where they got such a Jagoda
@psn9086
@psn9086 4 ай бұрын
May be it would be interesting for you guys to look at Swadesh lists - for Slavic languages in this case. The lists contain words which are rarely change or borrowed, representing relatively ancient / most archaic ones. For example, "name" is "*jьmę" in Proto-slavic, "imię" in Poland, and "ime" in Slovene.
@isais207
@isais207 7 ай бұрын
Just from the title and thumbnail alone I'd imagine it went like - "omg, you people have different words in your language than we do?! That's cray, cray!"
@vidopliasov
@vidopliasov 9 ай бұрын
In Ukrainian jagoda means the English word berry.
@PiotrPilinko
@PiotrPilinko 9 ай бұрын
What about blackberry?
@oles_bohdan
@oles_bohdan 9 ай бұрын
@@PiotrPilinko Ожина / Ozhyna
@vidopliasov
@vidopliasov 9 ай бұрын
@@PiotrPilinko Ожина.
@twoofeleven
@twoofeleven 9 ай бұрын
In Polish as well, it is both blueberry and berry in general 👍
@irenainverse7347
@irenainverse7347 5 ай бұрын
Jagoda - Ягода - It's a Russian word
@anj000
@anj000 9 ай бұрын
In Polish a person who makes maps is called "kartograf" or a field of study is "kartografia". So it is very similar to English "cartograph" and "cartography". And this word has a base "karta" which is a word for map in some Slavic languages. So actually Polish and English is very similar in that regard, that they use similar words both for "map" and "cartograph", and both of them have it's roots in "karta".
@Gellaini
@Gellaini 9 ай бұрын
polish have tons of words that got borrowed from english
@user-de4mr7uk8d
@user-de4mr7uk8d 9 ай бұрын
as far as I know, germanic, roman and slavic languages particularly have the same "ancestor" (Indo-European or something like that). You can compare words like mother, brother, sister, snow, brow, nose, wolf with polish versions
@TaanStari
@TaanStari 9 ай бұрын
@@Gellaini I think its because Poles want to be as western as possible - as a way to distance themselves from their greatest historical enemy, which is Russia.
@wiktorhood8475
@wiktorhood8475 9 ай бұрын
@@Gellaini this word actually comes from latin word "charta" and 'graphy' come from greek meaning 'writing', same with polish word for map - 'mapa' in latin it'd be 'mappa'. Polish has been widely influenced by latin as for centuries it'd be the only language in polish kingdom to be written and read from. Same rules apply for english, so no it's not like everone wants to be more western or distance from anyone it's just common root for languages spoken in the european continent.
@dawid12301d
@dawid12301d 9 ай бұрын
@@TaanStari I's partially true. Many modern words in Polish come from Germanic Languages or French, as we had a ton of people that emigrated to those regions during the partitions and later periods.
@violetindigo8514
@violetindigo8514 2 ай бұрын
"Take from other language, mix it, make it harder and this is how Polish was made" 😂😂😂 Dokładnie! Kurde to było genialne! 😂😂😂
@Aikoproject663
@Aikoproject663 3 ай бұрын
Jest ljepo ime Draga ❤
@altergreenhorn
@altergreenhorn 9 ай бұрын
Weird Slovenian word for a map zemlje vid is just a combination of two words: earth + see/look
@TheEmaxya
@TheEmaxya 9 ай бұрын
it's not Earth it's land: zemlje=land, vid=view
@hudy2735
@hudy2735 9 ай бұрын
@@TheEmaxya Zemlja has many meanings, as in Earth, soil, ground, land,... and vid is more of vision or sight. View would be more razgled.
@rafalkarczewski6253
@rafalkarczewski6253 9 ай бұрын
In polish language we can say “ziemie widze” so it mean I see the land
@zz22HD
@zz22HD 9 ай бұрын
The very same logic is applied in Croatian as well ("zemljovid"). It is one of 3 words we can use for "map", arguably the least one used. The other 2 words much more often used are "karta" and "mapa" (we use them interchangeably).
@irynakalychak6821
@irynakalychak6821 9 ай бұрын
It's not weird. To me as a native Ukrainian speaker it actually makes a lot of sense when I think about it. We have those two words of which it is composed in Ukrainian too.
@Ida-zv8nu
@Ida-zv8nu 9 ай бұрын
I'm so happy we are getting noticed as slavs !!!!
@fox_foxivich
@fox_foxivich 5 ай бұрын
Kurwa Suka Blat!!!!
@jaksap
@jaksap 5 ай бұрын
Strange that Serbian girl was surprised with morski pas. It is a synonym of ajkula. Mapa and (geografska) karta are synonyms too. Mapa also has meaning Slovenian girl mentioned: a portfolio. Our languages share most of vocabulary.
@MrOdrzut
@MrOdrzut 9 ай бұрын
Between Ukrainian and Polish the changes are very regular, after you listen to the other language for a few weeks you can guess how the words that have the same roots would sound in the other language most of the time :)
@pasza_dem
@pasza_dem 9 ай бұрын
Yep, you can try to speak Ukrainian, but rather sooner than later you will hit something that is kinda unimaginably different, or even with opposite meaning:)
@lothariobazaroff3333
@lothariobazaroff3333 9 ай бұрын
The most obvious difference is the use of the vowel "i" in Ukrainian where there is "o" in Polish. And unlike in Polish, Russian, or actually most of the Slavic languages, there's no final-obstruent devoicing in Ukrainian, e.g. ніж is pronounced [nizh], whereas Polish "nóż" is actually pronounced [noosh], not [noozh].
@vexillonerd
@vexillonerd 9 ай бұрын
We have devoicing in western Ukraine. Its neesh here.
@mitchyoung93
@mitchyoung93 5 ай бұрын
@@lothariobazaroff3333 Exactly, even as a Anglo-Saxon intermediate Russian speaker makes it seem a bit comical. Skolko to Skilki for example.
@vitall789
@vitall789 4 ай бұрын
Polish influence on the Ukraine... native lang. there must be Russian!
@stipe3124
@stipe3124 9 ай бұрын
In Croatian is also Morski Pas, funny but in some words Slovenian has more similarities to Croatian than Serbian but in other words Serbian is more simillar. Ps Polish Girl is so simpatic
@malarija83
@malarija83 9 ай бұрын
in Serbian it's also morski pas or ajkula. If Draga didn't grow up in Serbia, maybe she didn't know
@lenarteler4453
@lenarteler4453 9 ай бұрын
Kruh, otok and zrak for example are common words in Croatian and Slovene
@stipe3124
@stipe3124 9 ай бұрын
@@lenarteler4453 Mislim da je i Nogomet isto između ostalog. I think that Nogomet is also common word
@HeroManNick132
@HeroManNick132 9 ай бұрын
@@stipe3124 ''Морски пес'' ми напомня как в някои диалекти употребяваме ''коруба жаба'' или ''костена жаба'' за костенурка! 🤣
@lenarteler4453
@lenarteler4453 9 ай бұрын
@@stipe3124 in Slovenija nogomet is the official word but most people say Fussball
@MatKa72
@MatKa72 4 ай бұрын
Try bread, house, trousers, painting, some verbs, dual (yes, we have it), and you will see how Slovene can be different from other Slavic languages. On the other hand, speaking Slovene helped me a lot when learning Slovak. 🙂
@Zardoz0709
@Zardoz0709 3 ай бұрын
Полька ну очень красивая! :)
@VeryClearLanguages
@VeryClearLanguages 9 ай бұрын
Very accurate comparison. I would have liked to hear a Czech participant too.
@Lola_in_the_Black
@Lola_in_the_Black 9 ай бұрын
Fun fact: morski pies in Polish is another name for foka (seal) :D
@nightblue6242
@nightblue6242 9 ай бұрын
Lol.. "foka" is name for seal in serbia too 🤣
@pitlordmike6127
@pitlordmike6127 9 ай бұрын
Pierwsze słyszę
@MarcinKralka
@MarcinKralka 9 ай бұрын
I have never heard of it and I am Polish.
@doriansokoowski9777
@doriansokoowski9777 9 ай бұрын
@@pitlordmike6127 Encyklopedia PWN pies morski, zool. → foka pospolita.
@doriansokoowski9777
@doriansokoowski9777 9 ай бұрын
@@MarcinKralka Encyklopedia PWN pies morski, zool. → foka pospolita.
@AnnaRadecka-mj8uh
@AnnaRadecka-mj8uh 8 күн бұрын
As a Pole, I am glad that so much is mentioned about our homeland
@adissabovic
@adissabovic 2 күн бұрын
"American was Shocked", I'm shocked! 😆
@tzimisce1753
@tzimisce1753 7 ай бұрын
In Bosnian we say "morski pas" and "ajkula" and they both mean "shark". And we say "zrak" and "vazduh" and they both mean "air". "Zrak" is more about the substance i.e. the material called air, but we use "zrak" for all meanings usually anyway. And we say "snijeg" for "snow".
@kreciryjzatracony
@kreciryjzatracony 2 ай бұрын
In Polish similar sounding word "wzrok" means wision, "wiatr" wind... "Zaduch"- bad air in closed room, where are a lot of people i side. Or window was closed for too long😊
@RM-qi3ls
@RM-qi3ls Ай бұрын
In Šumadian we also say like that. 😅
@adriano8679
@adriano8679 Ай бұрын
and in Hercegovinian?
@tzimisce1753
@tzimisce1753 Ай бұрын
@@adriano8679Herzegovinians are Bosnians, they speak Bosnian.
@adriano8679
@adriano8679 Ай бұрын
@@tzimisce1753 malo morgen!! And Mostarians are Tuzlaks?
@olgatrotsenko2153
@olgatrotsenko2153 9 ай бұрын
There's a thing in Ukrainian language called "ikavizm" which is close to what the girls were talking about. Basically, if you say the simple word in any slavic language there's high chance that Ukrainian word would sound practically the same, but with an "i" vowel. Many linguists call that the the most typical feature of the Ukrainian language.
@rodroad9624
@rodroad9624 9 ай бұрын
Але ікавізм зникає в похідних словах. Для прикладу: Кінь (horse) - коні (horses)
@vericulum6810
@vericulum6810 9 ай бұрын
I've noticed that Ukrainians put i in places where we Poles put ó. Very noticably with the city names. Kraków-Краків Lwów-Львів Charków-Харків. Though I've noticed that Lwów and Львів are prounanced almost the same so i wonder why is there "i" in writing when it's not even prounanced(maybe it's a dialect things but both ukrainan wikipedia and from Ukrainians living in the city i've heard ó/u in proununciation but no i).
@olgatrotsenko2153
@olgatrotsenko2153 9 ай бұрын
@vericulum6810 I don't understand. Isn't ó sounds like [u] in Polish? Cause I heard is like Lw[u]w while in Ukrainian it's always Lviv. And no, in Ukrainian language if you see i, you say i. The only time it changes is during declension: Львів - Львова - Львову - у Львові
@vericulum6810
@vericulum6810 9 ай бұрын
@@olgatrotsenko2153 yes it's like "oo" in book. Maybe it's a dialect thing but i swear I've heard Ukrainians from that city and they were prounancing it like L'viu or L'viuv and it's the same pronunciation on Ukrainan wikipedia when you click the voice clip next to the city name in the article about the city.
@olgatrotsenko2153
@olgatrotsenko2153 9 ай бұрын
@@vericulum6810 I've just listened to that pronunciation. It probably sounds like Lwiuv because he's pronouncing the last v like Polish ł, which is common to Ukrainian.
@NobileBestie
@NobileBestie 4 күн бұрын
Славянские девушки - самые прекрасные❤
@nemanja8588
@nemanja8588 4 ай бұрын
In serbian we also say morski pas, not only ajkula.
@RobertPodwika
@RobertPodwika 9 ай бұрын
Jagoda has different meanings depending on a part of Poland. So blueberries in south is called "borówki" and in Warsaw they call it "Jagody" but "Jagoda" is actually a fruit of "borówka" or any other berry :) it's pretty funny, what they call jagoda is "borówka czarna" and they call "borówka" "borówka amerykańska".
@why-qi6xu
@why-qi6xu 9 ай бұрын
jestem z wawy, ale nigdy nie słyszałam, żeby ktoś mówił "borówka czarna", tylko "borówka amerykańska", ale normalnie przecież w wawie mówimy na blueberries borówki
@0plp0
@0plp0 9 ай бұрын
@@why-qi6xu Jak byłem młody to nie było dostępnych borówek amerykańskich, a się chodziło do lasu na jagody czyli Borówkę czarną naturalnie spotykaną w Polskich lasach. Borówka amerykańska jak nazwa wskazuje pochodzi z Ameryki i jest kuzynką borówki czarnej ale o większych owocach. W Polsce hodowana na plantacjach.
@RobertPodwika
@RobertPodwika 9 ай бұрын
@@why-qi6xu ja mieszkam w Warszawie, a pochodzę z południa. Na Mazowszu mówi się jagody na coś na co my na południu mówimy bórówki ;) czyli to co rośnie w lesie. Dużo jest takich przykładłów, a ten który mnie najbardziej rozwalił to "pantofle", które mają kompletnie inne znaczenie w różnych częściach Polski. Jak Pani w galerii zapytała mnie czy mam pantofle do garnituru to mało co się nie oplułem ze śmiechu :D
@kasiawolak613
@kasiawolak613 9 ай бұрын
Ja sie nauczyłam mówić borowka na te z lasu a jagoda na te z miasta czyli amerykańska sprzedawaną obecnie wszędzie i niemal wyłącznie :)
@pawelzielinski1398
@pawelzielinski1398 8 ай бұрын
@@RobertPodwika no i wychodzenie na pole/na dwór 🙂
@JohnDoe-jk9qn
@JohnDoe-jk9qn 2 күн бұрын
The reason why South Slavs have most in common with other languages is that we kept most of our words from old Church Slavonic, while western and eastern Slavic cousins has changed it a lot through the ages
@V1ENYA
@V1ENYA 4 ай бұрын
Is it without Bulgarian, Serbian or Russian? 😂😂😂
@Shotrevival
@Shotrevival 4 ай бұрын
Moron, there is Serbian here
@nonperson22
@nonperson22 9 ай бұрын
In Polish we also have an animal called sea dog. This is the unofficial name of the "foka" (seal) but this term is rarely used. We also have an animal called a sea lion (uchatka kalifornijska) - a California sea lion.
@Tou24601
@Tou24601 9 ай бұрын
In Polish we also have "morświn" (phocoena), which basically means a sea pig (morski - from a sea, świnia - a pig).
@nonperson22
@nonperson22 9 ай бұрын
@@Tou24601 Ryb jest mało w Polsce a świń dużo dlatego "wysłaliśmy" świnie do morza 🤗🤭
@actionman228
@actionman228 9 ай бұрын
@@Tou24601 and SEA COW, for Manatees
@artcory6224
@artcory6224 9 ай бұрын
We in Ukrainian also use word "sea" with word to create new animal's name, same as you sea lion, and also "морська свинка", which literally means sea pig(even small piggy, because we use soft version of the word ), and it's guinea pig
@karczameczka
@karczameczka 9 ай бұрын
@@artcory6224Haha, in polish it is „świnka morska” 😂 Just different order.
@serdarservet
@serdarservet 9 ай бұрын
"Morski pes" of Slovenian is really similar to the Turkish word "köpek balığı", which means something close to "a dogfish"
@itsmealekspetrovic4569
@itsmealekspetrovic4569 7 ай бұрын
5:00 Ice. In Ukrainian we say "kryha" also (крига)
@user-ug7pw7sr2o
@user-ug7pw7sr2o 2 ай бұрын
Как хорошо все говорят по-русски))) 😂😂😂
@Illyayakyys
@Illyayakyys Ай бұрын
Ще одне божевільне м'ясо угромордвін із московії вийшло 🤡
@sellymoon9344
@sellymoon9344 9 ай бұрын
I feel you, Slovinian girl!!😂 In Italian (so Latin root) we both use the words "squalo" and "pescecane" (fish dog) to indicate the shark 😅🤷🏻‍♀️
@evakotnik
@evakotnik 9 ай бұрын
😂🇸🇮🫱🏻‍🫲🏼🇮🇹
@banevucurovic8631
@banevucurovic8631 7 ай бұрын
Pešikan, ne samo vrsta male ajkule ili morskog psa ("Da mi je biti morski pas", pesma iz ranih '80. izguglajte ), već i prezime u Crnoj Gori. Čuveni lingvista dr Mitar Pešikan bi imao šta da kaže, da je živ. Kit--ajkula je preveden naziv, nije to zalazilo u Jadran. O negiranju ijekavice u Srbalja, šta reći. Objasniti slepom boje je mnogo lakši posao. Lingvistika je ozbiqna nauka, a na Filološkom slavisti mlađani uče i polažu uporednu gramatiku slovenskih jezika, pa istoriju jezika, dijalekte, akcente...
@goranjovic3174
@goranjovic3174 9 ай бұрын
All similarities between Slavic and non Slavic European languages are mostly from the same Proto Indo-European root! It was longgggg time ago the same language. :)
@tyhaas3w
@tyhaas3w 9 ай бұрын
Dont get wrong the history of languages. Similarities could comes from trade between tribes, not because they were the same language onece upon a time.
@goranjovic3174
@goranjovic3174 9 ай бұрын
@@tyhaas3w "nije šija nego vrat", serbian sentence. They cannot communicate, especially in the veryyy old time, if they weren't very close to each other. It is bigg possibility that they are from the same rooth. More than they aren't.
@sehrlimagic2689
@sehrlimagic2689 7 ай бұрын
Yes and no. Some things come from old indo european common roots, other just became borrowed from other languages around/on contact especially of whatever language was considered the main intellectual one at the time. Like today english is most universal but some time ago all intellectuals learnt french...so these languages influence us when they are popular/important. And when other use borrowed words (like karta or mapa, traced back to latin language that is not slavic ;) ) but someone uses very slavic one (like zemljevid, both zemlja and vid being completely slavic) it might seem like that one is the odd one out and that karta/mapa is what is common slavic word but again, it is not actuall, slavic on origin😅 just happens to be adopted by many slavs
@goranjovic3174
@goranjovic3174 7 ай бұрын
@@sehrlimagic2689 Agree . ;) :D
@tomaszstefaniuk9449
@tomaszstefaniuk9449 6 ай бұрын
Polka najlepsza 😊😊😊
@Kthulh
@Kthulh 3 ай бұрын
Etymology of snow: from Middle English snow, snaw, from Old English snāw, from Proto-West Germanic snaiw, from Proto-Germanic snaiwaz, from Proto-Indo-European snóygʷʰos, from the root sneygʷʰ-.
@Sopherl146
@Sopherl146 13 күн бұрын
Oh thank you I had the guess that there must be a connectiln with germanic languages. My first language is German. Greetings to you wherever you are!🤗🫂
@Kthulh
@Kthulh 13 күн бұрын
@@Sopherl146 Greetings from Hungary! :)
@user-vz3nq8kt9t
@user-vz3nq8kt9t 13 күн бұрын
​@@Kthulh Szia на русском будет просто снег oroszul csak lesz szneg németül az e-T e-ként olvassák, bár nem mindig A szokásos hangok, mint uh
@user-ne6tq6vu8y
@user-ne6tq6vu8y 9 ай бұрын
4:09 I want to say, that on the west of Ukraine we also say ,,truskavka", but ,,jagoda" (in all Ukraine) mean just berry
@Protey10
@Protey10 9 ай бұрын
Забавно, что мне, как носителю одного из славянских языков (русского), многие слова интуитивно понятны. Вроде словенского "землевид" (карта). Ну да, "земля" и "вид", "вид земли". Это не считая тех, что у нас просто звучат так же. А вот что "морской пёс" это "акула", я бы, наверное, не догадался)
@crutcch9517
@crutcch9517 8 ай бұрын
а какое отношение русский язык имеет к славянским ?
@vlt8030
@vlt8030 8 ай бұрын
@@crutcch9517 уже не имеет, да? :DDDD
@galinablanka8303
@galinablanka8303 8 ай бұрын
​@@crutcch9517🤡🐷
@zakzelman
@zakzelman 7 ай бұрын
@@crutcch9517 Славянские носители, которые заселялись на территории восточно-славянских народов, какой же это может быть язык, даже не знаю. Само слово язык ни на что не намекает не? Во многих славянских языках именно что язык и только в белорусском и украинском - это мова :) На самом деле все языки прекрасны, просто когда такое пишут, то это как минимум невежество.
@irenainverse7347
@irenainverse7347 5 ай бұрын
Русский язык - прародитель всех славянских языков.
@ko_tech
@ko_tech 5 ай бұрын
I'm from Czechia and surprisingly I think most of the words that were the easiest to recognize for me was Serbian (for example ice - led - led; strawberry - jagoda - jahoda; air - vazduch - vzduch) but Polish was a close second. The rest of the words were kinda similar across all the languages and these words are also similar in Czech (meat - maso; snow - sníh) except for a name (jméno) and a shark (žralok). Slovenian word for a shark (morski pes) was kind funny though.
@Gosh100
@Gosh100 3 ай бұрын
zralok is funny too - zhrat in russian "eat too much"
@user-xm9sh6pp6r
@user-xm9sh6pp6r 3 ай бұрын
Жралок тоже интересно. Тот кто жрёт))
@mikimuzika
@mikimuzika Ай бұрын
​@@Gosh100 in Serbian that is "žderat" - eat too much
@johnnyxd6065
@johnnyxd6065 29 күн бұрын
@@Gosh100 we have the same word for eat too much - "žrát" - it actually comes from indian word, and the meaning of žralok is actually combination of two word eating too much(žrát) and drinking too much (lok)
@morlnsk
@morlnsk 4 ай бұрын
im from western ukraine and everything the polish girl said made complete sense to me ahaa
@OlegN.
@OlegN. 6 ай бұрын
Славянские языки без самого распространённого славянского языка на земле?) без русского?) это как пельмень без мяса🤣
@user-mq8zp9ws4s
@user-mq8zp9ws4s 5 ай бұрын
russia is not Slavic. Use your brain dude
@pidbul530
@pidbul530 9 ай бұрын
Hi there, Pole here. About berries, cause this is kinda funny: - Strawberries [truskawki], blueberries [jagody] and similar, such as raspberries [maliny] or blackberries [jerzyny] (not to confuse with [jarzyny], which is a group of root vegetables like potatoes, parsley or selery) belong to a group called berries [jagody]. - Blueberries are commonly split into 2 group. Small typically forest-found type [jagody] and big, more commonly plantation-found type [borówki amerykańskie] or [borówki] for short. - Blackberries are called after hedgehoges [Jeż] and/or act of becoming more defensive (typically with use of thorn/spikes) or standing out. This one isn't about berries, but as some other people did point out, what I've forgot is a thing, is that person making maps is called cartographer [kartograf], just like study of maps (cartography) [kartografia]. One more thing about the letters. It was mentioned that Ó is just a different way of writhing U, which nowadays might be true, but from what I've heard, there used to be a different way of spelling it too. H and CH DOES have different ways of spelling them, but it's barely noticable nowadays and slowly disappearing too. H alone is spelled more roughtly, while CH is softer just like with rough Ż and softer RZ. RZ sometimes get so soft you can't distinguish it from SZ. Ą goes like something between OU/OW/OUW, but not exactly like any of these lol. Similarly Ę makes a sound, that's more EU/EW/EUW or even EUN/EUWN but it's almost entirely just a single sound that doesn't change. Just like with every other letter. Each letter has only 1 single sound bound to it. You won't find paCifiC oCean in here, where one letter have 3 different sounds for C. Once you remember what makes what sound, you know how to speak (not what to speak, I'm only talking about the sounds)
@user-cr5tr8zt8e
@user-cr5tr8zt8e 8 ай бұрын
Был проект по переводу польского языка на кириллицу. В таком написании польские тексты очень понятны русскому. На мой взгляд кириллица более удобна для любых славянских языков. Один звук - одна буква.
@2mek99
@2mek99 8 ай бұрын
Jeżyny a nie jerzyny 🙂
@kubas610
@kubas610 8 ай бұрын
Zapomniałxś o tym, że jeśli mówimy o granatowych kulistych owocach z rodzaju Vaccinium, to język polski uznaje dwie formy: jagoda (dominująca) oraz borówka (dialekt małopolski oraz część śląskiego). Nazwa botaniczna dla Vaccinium myrtillus to w języku polskim "borówka czarna" - prawdopodobnie dzięki akademikom z Krakowa 🙂
@pidbul530
@pidbul530 8 ай бұрын
@@kubas610 nie tyle zapomniałem, co nie koniecznie nawet wiedziałem. Powiedziałem tyle ile w głowie było, ale jeśli znajdzie się ktoś inny, kto będzie wiedział więcej/coś innego i też tym się podzieli, to zawsze fajnie :)
@ootsustukikaguya
@ootsustukikaguya 9 ай бұрын
I think you should definitely make a video where you include people from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Slovenia and Serbia. We understand each other pretty well, especially Croats, Bosnians and Serbs. Greetings from Croatia 🇭🇷
@lilym768
@lilym768 8 ай бұрын
Maybe it would be interesting to add Bulgaria too, I am from Serbia and I wonder whether I'd be able to understand them.
@BoboSLO1
@BoboSLO1 8 ай бұрын
WW 3 😂🎉
@pedrocordova8623
@pedrocordova8623 7 ай бұрын
Makes no sense cause we all speak same language. Differences are so minor that non, except native speakers, would make sense.
@Jan.jan2024
@Jan.jan2024 7 ай бұрын
what is point to bring 3 people who speak same language wth diferent dialect ? :D
@ootsustukikaguya
@ootsustukikaguya 7 ай бұрын
@@Jan.jan2024 The first point is... I want to see it and I expressed my wish to see that type of video????? Is that hard to conclude lol + it is necessary to educate people like you about this topic since you think they are all the same language🤣
@X3ABnew
@X3ABnew 5 ай бұрын
6:00 please found that in Polish we have "u" and "ó" for the same sound but previously there was the difference between them: the "ó" was pronounced like long "o". We can hear it in some regions of Poland even today: in Cieszyn region, in Podhale.
@richardboboli7076
@richardboboli7076 2 ай бұрын
Sooooo true! Then everyone knew which letter to use. Nowadays some words have to be learnt by heart to know if there's "u" or "ó".
@AnnaRadecka-mj8uh
@AnnaRadecka-mj8uh 8 күн бұрын
This is very funny, considering that Polish and Slovak are very similar, but this "rekin" and "morski pes" cracked me up so much that I literally cried with laughter.
@CRAZY_BUT_POSITIVE
@CRAZY_BUT_POSITIVE 9 ай бұрын
W Polskim języku występuje dużo naturalnych dźwięków.. Szeleszcząco trzeszcząco brzęczący język ; D Pozdrawiam wszystkie narody słowiańskie!!
@Rakaszta
@Rakaszta 8 ай бұрын
dlatego lubię określać nasz język jako "haRSH". To chyba jedyne słowo w angielskim które mogło by brzmieć polsko :D
@baziranko
@baziranko 5 ай бұрын
​@@Rakasztamisliš "harzsz"?
@Rakaszta
@Rakaszta 5 ай бұрын
@@baziranko angielskie "harsh" brzmi jak polskie "farsz" i myślę że jest doskonałym przymiotnikiem jeśli chodzi o trudność obcokrajowców w uczeniu się polskiego XD
@vlastimil-furst-gc
@vlastimil-furst-gc 3 ай бұрын
Interesting words indeed, CRAZY_BUT_POSITIVE. I bet the real name behind the nickname is something like ... Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz? :D
@claudia_ruda4102
@claudia_ruda4102 9 ай бұрын
I love slavic languages
@Dariusz-cg5on
@Dariusz-cg5on 2 ай бұрын
​@@xohyuuno
@ldfnhblwfnm
@ldfnhblwfnm 3 ай бұрын
Две девушки по-моему никогда не видели клубнику и поэтому обозвали её просто ягодой.
@aleksei_zubtsov
@aleksei_zubtsov 2 ай бұрын
В сербском клубника действительно "jагода". А ягода будет "бобица".
@Mariolenna92
@Mariolenna92 7 ай бұрын
but blueberry in Polish is also' borówka' , not only jagoda, depends on the region or how you were taught I guess
@Taketheredpill891
@Taketheredpill891 9 ай бұрын
In Polish word truskawka came from the sound of eating a strawberry "trusk! trusk!" because strawberries are a bit crunchy :) Jagoda - blueberry (smaller) Borówka - blueberry (bigger)
@collared
@collared 9 ай бұрын
in serbian blieberry is borovnica
@HeroManNick132
@HeroManNick132 9 ай бұрын
ягода - strawberry боровинка - blueberry
@collared
@collared 9 ай бұрын
@@HeroManNick132 same in serbian but ya are two letters
@Anton_Danylchenko
@Anton_Danylchenko 9 ай бұрын
In Ukrainian Jahoda - berry Polunytsia - strawberry Sunytsia - Fragária (small strawberry) Lokhyna - big blueberry Chornytsia - small blueberry Ozhyna - blackberry Malyna - raspberry Agrus - gooseberry
@Pavlo_Balashkevych
@Pavlo_Balashkevych 9 ай бұрын
​​​​​​@@Anton_Danylchenko and also chornytsia - bilberry 🫐
@Hosigie
@Hosigie 9 ай бұрын
Yeah it's morski pas in Croatian too. I didn't know they say ajkula in Serbia. I thought most Slavic languages would say a version of morski pas hah
@goranjovic3174
@goranjovic3174 9 ай бұрын
In Serbia we said morski pas too and ajkula . Wondering how Draga didn't know that , for me it is unbelievable :O
@kotkotlecik7310
@kotkotlecik7310 6 ай бұрын
It's great fun to read the description of a product in other Slavic languages. My favourite has to Czech and Slovak names for potato chips: lupi(e)nki, which suggest to a Pole that our neighbours eat potato peels. In Polish, we say chipsy, with a double plural. And jagody in Polish means all berries, owoce jagodowe. Blueberry is czarna jagoda, a black berry. Blackberries are called jeżyny.
@dmitriysmirnov9084
@dmitriysmirnov9084 6 ай бұрын
Podobno w Ruskom. Jagoda tež znače vseky nadgruntny pozemny plod, samo ovoč v ruskom znače inoje. I naziwy za jagody mnogo podobny - černika i ježevika😂 I čipsy tež samo v ruskom - slavànsky sinonimy ne aplikuju'se😅.
@robertmifkovic6325
@robertmifkovic6325 5 ай бұрын
Lupienky means petals (as a small flower petals) in Slovak. And lupat means " to peel".
@ohjelmistokehittaja4446
@ohjelmistokehittaja4446 2 ай бұрын
Полячка огонь 😍😍
@bazylizygan6398
@bazylizygan6398 7 ай бұрын
Polish "truskawka" has a quite interesting origin. It comes from the place it was mostly grown in - currently Ukrainian (then Polish) city Truskawiec.
@mikewidyk4186
@mikewidyk4186 5 ай бұрын
@bazylizygan6398 I’m sure there are several terms that derive from modern day Ukraine regions since most of it was part of Poland for many centuries.
@marekzaun4814
@marekzaun4814 5 ай бұрын
oczywiscie polska byla imperium kulturalnym@@mikewidyk4186
@vitall789
@vitall789 4 ай бұрын
@@mikewidyk4186 Yes, Ukr lang. is dialect of Polish and Rusian!
@girska_rika
@girska_rika 4 ай бұрын
What a shame, you are so wrong 😕 The sourse of your knolledge is just a worthless pro-occupation propaganda. Ukrainian language has a thousand year history and was described in ancient chronicles. Also, it's officially the second most melodic language in the world after Italian.
@heaven-earth108
@heaven-earth108 3 ай бұрын
​​@girska_rika ​ 😂😂😂 No friend .... what you call 'ukranian' was always called 'rus' ....Ukrainian is just a term to desscribe a region, not the ethnicity nor a linguistic name (technically and scientifically of course...politically it looks different) Ukrainian is indeed a blend of (old) russian and polish due to modern day 'Ukraine' being partly constant of polish empire as well as ancient rus heritage ...... Лапшу тут на уши не вешай 😂😂😂
@manganoid7426
@manganoid7426 8 ай бұрын
Cute video :) You should add more Slavic languages representatives but ask very basic words (like directions 'left ight..., adjectives etc.) It will show very many differences of one word from one language meaning something totally different in another :D
ВИРУСНЫЕ ВИДЕО / Мусорка 😂
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