Englishman Reacts to... Why do Poles call Italy WŁOCHY?

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Rob Reacts

Rob Reacts

2 ай бұрын

But why do Poles call Italy Włochy??
Original: • Dlaczego WŁOCHY, a nie...
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#Poland

Пікірлер: 172
@michastrobel2985
@michastrobel2985 2 ай бұрын
Fun fact: hungarian sz = polish s; hungarian s=polish sz
@x.adamski
@x.adamski 2 ай бұрын
We call Italy ”Włochy” from the same reason you call Cymru ”Wales”.
@HEN-Huzar
@HEN-Huzar 2 ай бұрын
13:26 "Głuchy telefon" (deaf Telephone) in Polish.
@martingorbush2944
@martingorbush2944 2 ай бұрын
And in English it is "Chinese whispers"?
@sexybrainful
@sexybrainful 2 ай бұрын
@@martingorbush2944 - precisely, the English "Chinese whispers" translates directly into the Polish "głuchy telefon"; funny, ain't it? 😎😂
@miwoj
@miwoj 2 ай бұрын
fascinating how a single word can carry over two thousand years of history along with it
@leno_o17
@leno_o17 2 ай бұрын
Another example of this is what Rob mentions at the beginning- that Celtic is sometimes pronounced with 'k'. This probably reflects the original latin pronounciation of the word- in latin every 'c' was pronounced as 'k'. We now mostly rely on italian pronounciation when reading latin but the og version still resurfaces from time to time.
@madzialena1977
@madzialena1977 2 ай бұрын
@@leno_o17 z greckiego "Keltoi"
@leno_o17
@leno_o17 2 ай бұрын
@@madzialena1977 racja. To przecież nie Rzymianie wymyślili tę nazwę. Ale łacińska pisownia adekwatnie oddawała brzmienie tego słowa, co potem trochę zatraciliśmy.
@baird5682
@baird5682 2 ай бұрын
FYI. Chinese whispers in polish is Głuchy Telefon (Deaf Phone)
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 2 ай бұрын
haha interesting
@blinski1
@blinski1 2 ай бұрын
I always known this game as simply 'telephone' in English, but maybe that's American English.
@dorotabarbowska2184
@dorotabarbowska2184 2 ай бұрын
Wow, what a fascinating video!!! Rob, watching your channel is like graduating from a good university.
@agnieszka7231
@agnieszka7231 2 ай бұрын
Interesting fact: in Polish, German ( Niemcy) comes from mute ( niemy), i.e. not speaking, as opposed to Slavs (Słowianie), i.e. people of words (słowa).
@publicminx
@publicminx 2 ай бұрын
I think Niemcy is not about 'not speaking/silent' but rather about a meaning like 'not intelligible' ....
@madzialena1977
@madzialena1977 2 ай бұрын
niektórzy twierdzą, że to pochodna od "nie mieć", czyli przychodzili z gołymi rękam i brali, co dawali lokalni mieszkańcy, lub też kradli
@paulinarapicka
@paulinarapicka 2 ай бұрын
Plus we have "włoszczyzna", which consists of portions of the following plants: carrot roots, parsley, celery, and leek (and sometimes savoy cabbage leaves). Onion and parsley are often added, and occasionally celery stalk and leaves are added. There is a common belief that these vegetables were brought to Poland from Italy by Queen Bona Sforza d'Aragona, which is where the name "włoszczyzna" came from.
@madzialena1977
@madzialena1977 2 ай бұрын
actually it's celeriac and it's leaves and not celery ;)
@maciekszymanski8340
@maciekszymanski8340 2 ай бұрын
By he way, guy is speaking Polish very clearly and pretty slowly, so anybody who want to learn Polish or currently is learning, can understand each word and phrase. It reminds me so called BBC English if I can compare both accents by the pronouciation. Another language curiosity in Polish is word for small horse breed - in every European language it sounds exactly the same as "pony" (even in Hungarian). In Polish "kuc" or "kucyk". But it''s rather short story - the word came from Turkish "küçük" means "small" or "tiny". Much longer story is about Polish connections with the Ottoman Empire and mutual linguistic influence.
@peterc4082
@peterc4082 2 ай бұрын
There is a UK comedian who speaks clear Queen's English. One of his gags for fellow UK audiences goes as follows: "Some of you may not recognise my accent. It's educated". On the subject of that, in the olden days, Mabel and Ethel had their picture taken by a photographer. The man disappeared under the hood and so Ethel asks Maybel: Oy, what's he doin? Ethel responds, "He's going to focus" (said FOKK-s). Maybel: "What, both of us?"
@studioanto4634
@studioanto4634 2 ай бұрын
There is a italian word to traslate Wlochy, it is Valacchia, and there is also a common italian surname, it is Valacchi
@therzook
@therzook 2 ай бұрын
Pracuję z walijka i po obejrzeniu tego zrodlowego filmu zlecialem z krzesła...
@m0riss
@m0riss 2 ай бұрын
The polish did adopt the Latin alphabet as the written language but the core language remained slavic
@Becisz
@Becisz 2 ай бұрын
@@sebm8511en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glagolitic_script
@m0riss
@m0riss 2 ай бұрын
@@sebm8511dude you are making my point for me - and right now we are using Latin alphabet to write those messages ę ą ś ć ź dz dź dż rz ch and others are prove that originally latin did not have enough sounds to accommodate polish - this is the best proof. And yes there was The galotic script used by some there were runes but eventually Latin alphabet was adopted - and this is what we are using now
@m0riss
@m0riss 2 ай бұрын
@@sebm8511 the sounds that the Latin language had and it corresponding letters were not enough to accurately depict the sounds in for instance Polish this is why additional letters were added and "ę" is a different sound rom "e" and it does not exist in original Latin
@tic-tacdrin-drinn1505
@tic-tacdrin-drinn1505 2 ай бұрын
Actually the Latin alphabet doesn't even have enough letters to accommodate all the Italian sounds... Some sounds have to be written from several letters together @@m0riss
@livedandletdie
@livedandletdie 2 ай бұрын
@@m0riss It's not that the Latin Alphabet didn't have enough symbols to accomodate Polish, it's that Polish has changed a lot over the years as well, ł wasn't always w it was originally the same as l, Polish sounds a lot different today than it did even 100 years ago, because there was still a distinction 100 years ago between w and ł. The letter ł was a thick l sound So Złoty was zloty it was originally zolta and is cognate with English word Yellow, imagine that, It has the same origin as Gold, Or Arsenic or Chlorine. Among them Arsenic is the most complicated to explain... Złoty is easy zalta →ghalta → ghela → ǵʰelh₃-... Let's go for the horror that is arsenic... ǵʰelh₃- → ǵʰer- →cʰer- → zʰer- → zhar → zar(old persian) → har → haranniya(sanskrit) → daranniya(old persian) → zaranniya(old iranian) → zarnika(aramaic) → arsenikon(greek) → arsenicum(latin) → arsenic(Old French) → arsenik(Middle English) → arsenic(modern English spelling reforms.) etymology is hard to study, because it can take you across the globe in a fraction of a second.
@crimson5664
@crimson5664 2 ай бұрын
BTW Wallachians also bringed to Poland great cavalriers and later they become part of Hussars units. Also fun facts is the most famous Wallachian is one and only... Vlad "Dracula" Tepes, Prince of Wallachia xD
@user-eb6id4bi9r
@user-eb6id4bi9r 2 ай бұрын
I had no idea and it was very interesting :)
@elakowalczyk9382
@elakowalczyk9382 2 ай бұрын
13:25 we also have that game in Poland, but it's called "deaf telephone"
@przemysawdata6246
@przemysawdata6246 2 ай бұрын
In this video (by Kamil) there isn't explained the name of a cabbage (pol. kapusta włoska) and a fennel (pol. koper włoski) - a special variety of a dill but probably this names also come from Vlachs.
@Kapsel8
@Kapsel8 2 ай бұрын
Bona Sforza była Włoszką i przywiozła między innymi to co wymieniłeś. Ogólnie nazywa się to Włoszczyzna.
@Shinobi560
@Shinobi560 2 ай бұрын
Wow, Rob. Te nazwy krajów były takie CLEAN. Gratulacje ❤😊
@wojtekg9315
@wojtekg9315 2 ай бұрын
I also love videos of this guy about relations between words in many countries. You can check other videos. In one of them You can see that word "apple" has common ancestor with Polish "jabłko" (which means the same).
@aleksandrawolinska1689
@aleksandrawolinska1689 2 ай бұрын
And żona (wife) with queen (kings wife).
@danielmarkiewicz8489
@danielmarkiewicz8489 2 ай бұрын
13:26 chinese whispers? i hear it for first time, in poland it is głuchy telefon meaning: deaf telephone :)
@publicminx
@publicminx 2 ай бұрын
in German its 'Stille Post' (Silent Post)
@peter_oso
@peter_oso 2 ай бұрын
Dzięki za umieszcenie tego wyjaśnienia, to jest niby częsty przykład ale tak pełnego wywodu jeszcze nie widziałem, bardzo szczegółowy lecz ciekawy.
@aviadilo
@aviadilo 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Amazing how "val" / "vol" / "vlo" / "vla" spread around Europe - from Wales to Wallachia to Wlochy (Italy).
@elrondzik
@elrondzik 2 ай бұрын
That's the best one for me so far! Thanks!
@HEN-Huzar
@HEN-Huzar 2 ай бұрын
Uwielbiam takie filmy, z których się uczysz ciekawych rzeczy o świecie i historii.👍👍👍 Piszę po Polsku🇵🇱, żebyś trochę potrenował.Drogi Robercie.😁❤️
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 2 ай бұрын
I understood... takie filmy, z, się uczysz, o, i historii, Polsku :D
@HEN-Huzar
@HEN-Huzar 2 ай бұрын
@@RobReacts1 Not very correct, but I understand everything. Well done Rob 👏❤️❤️❤️
@fiona9047
@fiona9047 2 ай бұрын
*Po polsku - piszemy przymiotniki małą literą. 😊buziaki Panowie ❤ 😘 fajny filmik Rob
@HEN-Huzar
@HEN-Huzar 2 ай бұрын
@@fiona9047 Myśli Pani , że nie wiem.🤦Podkreślam jak bardzo kocham swój kraj🇵🇱. A innych "nie bardzo" np. ruscy, rosja, putin, łukaszenka, moskwa itd.
@fiona9047
@fiona9047 2 ай бұрын
To cudownie, że mamy takich patriotów ;)
@radsec
@radsec 2 ай бұрын
Excellent video!
@danielchudini77
@danielchudini77 2 ай бұрын
The fork was once considered a tool of the devil by the French, who preferred to eat with their hands or a knife. It wasn't until they observed Polish nobility using forks at the table that they began to see the benefits of this strange new utensil. The French gradually adopted the fork into their dining etiquette, learning from the Polish "how to use the devil's tool" with grace and elegance. And so, the fork became a staple of French dining culture, thanks to the influence of their Polish neighbors.😊😊😊😊😊
@waldemarusmc3191
@waldemarusmc3191 2 ай бұрын
In late medieval times and the Renesance Poles went to northern Italy to study, and there was not single Italy but many city states there; like Vallaccia, which Poles Polonizdd; Wallachy, Wlochy and voilla! 😊
@charonboat6394
@charonboat6394 2 ай бұрын
In London under British rule there were many cockney slangs depending of the quarter. One could figure out who was raised in which part of tye capital.
@franz9573
@franz9573 2 ай бұрын
Trentino in northern Italy, south of South Tyrol, used to be called Welschtirol or Welschland by the German or Austrian population. In other words, inhabitants who speak a romance language (Walsch, Walschen). But also german speaking settlers in northwestern Italy (Aosta Valley, Piedmont) and who adapted a romance language were later called Walser.
@dzejrid
@dzejrid 2 ай бұрын
"Chinese whispers"? I've been using English for 30+ years now as a foreign language and I had no idea. Today I learned something new. In Polish we call it "playing telephone" (zabawa w telefon).
@andrzejkrasnicki
@andrzejkrasnicki Ай бұрын
In Poland we call it DEAF telephone!
@robeq303
@robeq303 2 ай бұрын
Chineese whisper in polish is deaf phone.
@CermyAndroidGameplay
@CermyAndroidGameplay 2 ай бұрын
Lol, when I heard Wołoszczyzna, I had major flashbacks from history lessons 🤣
@robertkukuczka9469
@robertkukuczka9469 2 ай бұрын
In Hungarian: Italy (Olaszország) Russia (Oroszország) Poland (Lengyelország) ...
@Evelyn_Victoria_B.
@Evelyn_Victoria_B. 2 ай бұрын
Buuhahaha
@aviadilo
@aviadilo 2 ай бұрын
And Hungary in Hungarian: Magyarország
@TomaszB
@TomaszB 2 ай бұрын
Polska - POLAND Magyarország - HUNGARY Shqipëria - ALBANIA Suomi - Finland Crna Gora - MONTENEGRO Al-Mamlaka al-Maghribijja - MOROCCO Sakartwelo - GEORGIA WHY ?! 😉😜
@Paolo-gj7ip
@Paolo-gj7ip 2 ай бұрын
Why not?
@TomaszB
@TomaszB 2 ай бұрын
@@Paolo-gj7ip Because Włochy
@bmac195
@bmac195 2 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Looking good Rob, greetings 🤘
@Baba_Jyaga
@Baba_Jyaga 2 ай бұрын
epic reaction and legendary source :D
@DragonixaHome
@DragonixaHome 2 ай бұрын
What you call "Chinese whispers" we call "głuchy telefon", which means "deaf telephone" :) I remember this sort of play from kindergarden and early elementary school, it was always a funny game for us when we were kids~
@alcomatt
@alcomatt 2 ай бұрын
@Rob You should watch James Burke's "Connections" series - if you havent's already seen it - it's a classic BBC show from long time ago. It uses this "chinese whispers" kind of investigation, but in the scope of human progress - all with a good dose of British sarcasm and a tongue-in-the-cheek attitude.
@eivindkaisen6838
@eivindkaisen6838 2 ай бұрын
Most languages have NOT derived from Latin. The languages derived from Latin are called the Romance languges: Portugese, Spanish, French, Romansch (in Switzerland), Italian, and Romanian. The other languages are Germanic (including English), Slavic (most of Eastern Europe, including Polish), Celtic, Albanian, Greek, Finno-Ugric, Turkish, Basque, and Maltese. They may have been (heavily) influenced by LatinRomance languages (e.g., English) but grammar, vocabulary, sound systems show they are not Romance. Names of countries tends towards sounding like what the natives call themselves (this is by no means to say it's a rule: Germany's own name, Deutschland, seems to be limited to Dutch and - by derivation, the Scandinavian languages; other names differ a lot). Italia is such a short and easily pronounced name that it apparently varies little: the last syllable varies a bit, tha'r all. Except in Polish. The Romans never called England England.
@pje_
@pje_ 2 ай бұрын
In Polish, we call Chinese whisper, a "głuchy telefon" (literal translation: deaf telephone).
@user-ns5sf2nm5p
@user-ns5sf2nm5p 2 ай бұрын
Ciekawy filmik. Najbardziej podobało mi się, że nawiązywał także do innych kultur - świetnie, że znalazły się wzmianki o sąsiadach Polski i temat objął Wielką Brytanię🇬🇧. Jako ciekawostka wspomnę, że w telewizji w Polsce aktualnie leci brytyjski historyczny serial 'Upadek krolestwa' = 'The Last Kingdom' (nakręcony na podstawie serii powieści 'The Saxon Stories'), który nawiązuje akcją także do dawnego Wessex - u (i ten przystojny Alexander Dreymon w roli Uhtred'a😄🤩). Jedyne co mi się właściwie nie spodobało to wiadomość w komentarzach, że ten kanał na YT o ciekawostkach językowych już nie jest rozwijany - smuteczek😕. I w tym miejscu wyrażę jeszcze swoją sympatię do Federico Fellini'ego, Canaletta, Maneskin, pizzy, mozzarelli i lodów włoskich👍😄🇮🇹. I z racji tego, że dziś w Polsce obchodzony jest Dzień Mężczyzn wszystkiego dobrego wszystkim Panom!😘 I trzymajmy jeszcze kciuki za brytyjsko - polski film 'Strefa interesów' - może jakiś Oscar się trafi😄
@user-ns5sf2nm5p
@user-ns5sf2nm5p 2 ай бұрын
Żeby nie zostać posądzona o rozpowszechnianie półprawd na temat twórców dzieła, jeszcze doprecyzuje, że 'Strefa interesów' to brytyjsko - polsko - amerykańska koprodukcja 🇬🇧🇵🇱🇺🇸. Znalazłam nawet nawiązanie w tym filmie do Włoch - bohaterowie: komendant obozu koncentracyjnego wraz z żoną marzą o wakacjach w ukochanych Włoszech🇮🇹. A tak wogóle Włochy to też... jedna z dzielnic Warszawy (prawdopodobnie nazwa pochodzi od Jana Włocha, który kiedyś kupił część terenu). Włochy to południowo-zachodnia część Warszawy z lotniskiem Chopena (zwyczajowa nazwa lotniska to Okęcie) czyli największym portem lotniczym w Polsce.
@agnieszkazuk
@agnieszkazuk 2 ай бұрын
Great and interesting analysis! Thanks a lot! People usually laught at sth like this (Polish is different than other lgs) but they don't know everything here is logic and historical.
@user-lf2jh2ru9f
@user-lf2jh2ru9f 2 ай бұрын
One interesting remark. The Serbs called that part of Italy around Venice Mlechichi, which in Medieval Serbian would mean those who changed their faith. Even today, Serbian surnames are observed in the north of Italy, for example, the famous Medici family obviously derives its origin from the very common Serbian surname Medich.The surname Medich has as its root the word MED (honey) and they were probably involved in the production or trade of honey.
@el_es
@el_es 2 ай бұрын
It also kinda shows which tribes had put /some/ thought/muscle into education to carry the 'common [their] speech' over to the next generation(s) right? Not just relying on the 'chinese whispers' (or, old homless blind geezers lead around by some orphans, going from village to village, singing / telling stories, which is probably what one could imagine could have happened, among other processes [it is kind of a slavic story theme too that way])
@jjaybee5484
@jjaybee5484 2 ай бұрын
Rob, with all the respect to you, the lecture you are reacting to is probably the most challenging one in your youtube history.... hehe... Am I right?.😂
@bobeczek01
@bobeczek01 2 ай бұрын
Rob what is interesting that the stereotypical naming also depends on where you are in Europe , because for example only ehen I cam to England I notice that Pakistani/Indian /Bangladeshi people are called Asian here, whente back in Poland Asians would be the name for Chinese, Jaapnese, Koreans so even dough looking on map all those people inhabit Asia for us the steorytipically conotate diffetent features than for Brits.
@Dubik84
@Dubik84 2 ай бұрын
I'm surprised what interesting facts you can dig up about our country. I hope that each visit will be a surprise for you and will bring you a lot of joy
@danielchudini77
@danielchudini77 2 ай бұрын
Interesting histry - Wolf
@qwertzaq89
@qwertzaq89 2 ай бұрын
Great video.
@adamgrabowski7434
@adamgrabowski7434 2 ай бұрын
Świetny odcinek bardzo pouczający
@arthi8619
@arthi8619 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting materiał! Great video!
@danielchudini77
@danielchudini77 2 ай бұрын
Ah Rob ❤ listen ... Spaghetti bolognese - a Polish dish that doesn't exist in Italy - except maybe in Napoli but Pizza! I love it!
@marcinrafalski
@marcinrafalski 2 ай бұрын
Wow 😲😲😲❤❤❤ It was really interesting
@ruawhitepaw
@ruawhitepaw 2 ай бұрын
The changes don't really happen like a game of Chinese whispers, but it's good as a first approximation. What happens is that the languages spread to new territories first. At that time, everyone still speaks pretty much the same way. But changes happen naturally, no matter what the size of the population is. So at some point, people in different areas start speaking a little differently. Now, because the territory is so vast, those changes don't necessarily spread to every area; changes might be limited to a certain region. Over time, various changes in different regions build up and compound together. In a small region, the process is still the same, but it's easier for changes to spread to the whole population and so you don't get dialectal differences as easily. This pattern, where your local dialect tends to be influenced more by changes happening closer by than changes further away, eventually creates what's known as a "dialect continuum". The languages that are further apart are more different from each other than languages that are nearby, but there is no sudden change in language between nearby languages. In other words, everyone can understand their neighbours, but not their distant relatives.
@robertkukuczka9469
@robertkukuczka9469 2 ай бұрын
Mój sąsiad ma nazwisko Wałach.
@Evelyn_Victoria_B.
@Evelyn_Victoria_B. 2 ай бұрын
hahahahha u made my night
@frofrofrofro900
@frofrofrofro900 2 ай бұрын
Interesting video
@publicminx
@publicminx 2 ай бұрын
in German this 'Chinese Whispers' is called 'Stille Post' (Silent Post - English also still has sometimes the 'still = silent' meaning btw. but its more depending on the context). 'Walachei' is the German word for that region ('Walachen' for the ppl and those horses) the video referred to.... btw., Essex = EastSaxony, Wessex = WestSaxony ....
@JaFupy
@JaFupy 2 ай бұрын
tl;dr: włochy omes from slavic protolanguage while the rest comes from germanic protlangs.
@magorzatacharczynska5656
@magorzatacharczynska5656 2 ай бұрын
Językoznawca sama się pogubiłam 😂😂😂.Ale było to ciekawe
@Wojciech_Zielinski
@Wojciech_Zielinski 2 ай бұрын
Hi Rob, just a quick question, what about films from your last visit to Warszawa? I am just very curious about your impression from the Legia-Pogoń match but also other places.
@Evelyn_Victoria_B.
@Evelyn_Victoria_B. 2 ай бұрын
lepiej nie pytaj,mecz był dupny
@mistymoonshine897
@mistymoonshine897 2 ай бұрын
in Britain, every ten miles you encounter a different dialect of arabic or whatever passes for language in Pakistan.
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 2 ай бұрын
Dont be stupid
@mistymoonshine897
@mistymoonshine897 2 ай бұрын
@@RobReacts1 don't be a coward.
@Pawlo370
@Pawlo370 2 ай бұрын
I'm going to Italy 18.03!
@karolinalaskowska2209
@karolinalaskowska2209 2 ай бұрын
Maybe you could react to performance of the song Nice by band called lemON. And maybe something by polish DJ Gromee?
@danielchudini77
@danielchudini77 2 ай бұрын
O my gosh...got ❤
@WKogut
@WKogut 2 ай бұрын
Only Romance languages are the descendants of Latin (Spanish, Italian, French, Portuguese, Catalan and Romanian), other languages were influenced in various ways, mostly due to ecclesiatical latin being the language of the catholic church since late antiquity (Polish as well, we do in fact have quite a few words of latin origin) and indirectly through other Romance languages - like English having a substantial amount of French vocabularity thanks to the Norman invasion (who were Vikings assimilated into France after they conquered the land now called Normandy)
@JanKowalski-kt7fz
@JanKowalski-kt7fz 2 ай бұрын
te ludy w przeszłości tak zapierniczały po Europie wte i wewte że w zasadzie wniosek jest jeden: wszyscy jesteśmy krewnymi.
@BykuSwinioMordo
@BykuSwinioMordo 2 ай бұрын
It couldn't be easy, linguistics is complicated but very fascinating! Although it's true that it's very detailed, my professor on university shortened this story a lot 😅
@greggreg3373
@greggreg3373 2 ай бұрын
The cinese whispers we called in my nursery deaf thelephone
@peterc4082
@peterc4082 2 ай бұрын
You can however also say Italia or Itali- as for example, where are you going to, I'm going to Italy... Jade do Itali.
@frofrofrofro900
@frofrofrofro900 2 ай бұрын
Polish and english history meantime
@humandisorder3962
@humandisorder3962 2 ай бұрын
Nazwa Włochy wzięła się od prapra przodka Pana Walaszka ojca Kapitana Bomby.
@izabelavaszarine6802
@izabelavaszarine6802 2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@robertwisniewski2029
@robertwisniewski2029 2 ай бұрын
what also seems interesting to me is that the Polish "Galicia", unlike the Spanish and Turkish ones, has nothing to do with the Celts - it is a name coming from the city of "Halicz" given by the Austrian occupiers based on the similarity of sound
@patrickb1811
@patrickb1811 2 ай бұрын
Ye it comes from Ruthenian Halychyna, Austrians renamed it Galizien and later Poles polonized it into Galicja.
@pl-hq5hr
@pl-hq5hr 2 ай бұрын
I was learning this in high-school. The system of language history 😊 not this particular example.
@naujadiena
@naujadiena 2 ай бұрын
11:44 lenkai nebūt lenkais jei nepripaišyt daugumos senovės lietuvių žemių sau. Ištikrųjų jokių "proto-slavų" Europoje niekad nėra buvę.
@weeges23
@weeges23 2 ай бұрын
Historically ,when Italian princess Bona was married to king of Poland Zygmunt the Old, she bought a servants and all stuff she needed to Poland including. A fashion,and food (włoszczyzna -italian veg:green cabbage,c eler AC ,carrot ,potatoes,leek ,onion ) .Italian men men were described as people with long curly hair. (Hair - włosy ). I is a reason why itians ate called Włosi (man with long hairs ) . Similar procces occured when Russian described a chines -,they call them kitaj (kita-pony tail ).Columbus thought he sailed to indian and he called American as Indians (indians live in America ,but man in India is called Hindus -as name of river Hindu, )
@JerryRiva
@JerryRiva 2 ай бұрын
I live in UK almost 20 yrs and never heard brits to call Celtic, 'Ketlic'.
@Wojciech_Zielinski
@Wojciech_Zielinski 2 ай бұрын
Many greetings to the person who did the translation :)
@longinzaczek5857
@longinzaczek5857 2 ай бұрын
Julius Caesar - actaualy means Julius Hairy. In Polish this could be Juliusz Włochaty and threfore the Land of Caesars is the Land (Kraj) Włochatych = Włochy. Of course this is a joke. True ethumology comes from German name of poeple of Imperium Romanum (take from the name of Celtic tribe as described here).
@RefreshThisPage
@RefreshThisPage 2 ай бұрын
Celts have "German" origins? This is my the biggest mindfuck in last years
@ARBAS2000
@ARBAS2000 2 ай бұрын
Dobrze podejrzewałem iż te orzech nie pochodzą z ziem etrusków.
@jestdobre
@jestdobre 2 ай бұрын
Z ziemi włoskiej do polskiej - nie no zawsze myślałem że chodzi o ziemię porośniętą włoskami. Wstyd taki... .. mieć ale może tylko na taki zasłużyliśmy. :[
@MT-07-Rookie
@MT-07-Rookie 2 ай бұрын
o bro, this guy is amazing, please watch more of his videos about language and wrods
@jacekwidor3306
@jacekwidor3306 2 ай бұрын
In hungarian language Italy = Olaszország (olasz = Italian, ország = the land : Land of the Italians).
@peblatki4272
@peblatki4272 2 ай бұрын
to wielki sekret
@kikolandzik
@kikolandzik 2 ай бұрын
w języku polskim istnieje termin Italia, ale to region włoch - Półwyspu Apenińskiego.
@livedandletdie
@livedandletdie 2 ай бұрын
English for, Angles and Saxons and Jutes.. British for Welsh, Manx, Picts, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Scottish tribes, even for the Irish who are still technically British, Because Ireland is the second largest of the British Isles. That's tribes for you. I'd even say Scandinavian, for a whole slew of tribes. Norwegians, Swedes, Danes, Geats, Jutes, Gutnish, Bothnians... that list is way long I'm cutting it short.
@swedishmetalbear
@swedishmetalbear 2 ай бұрын
the team was originally pronounced Keltic but because of ignorance later mispronounced and the name has been ruined with time.
@sirrathersplendid4825
@sirrathersplendid4825 2 ай бұрын
Not necessarily ignorance, the early English had a very different way of spelling and pronouncing words, and it changed during the Great Vowel Shift of around 1300-1500.
@Rontok737
@Rontok737 2 ай бұрын
Come!Come here! We dont bayyyy.....t
@jell_pl
@jell_pl 2 ай бұрын
it's interesting that you are teaching (as we) about history of language changes/adaptation during the time. most of which was done during "dark times" because of christianic church :/
@Drzedan272
@Drzedan272 2 ай бұрын
A jak się ten orzech nazywa po włosku ?
@adamlubieniecki9074
@adamlubieniecki9074 2 ай бұрын
Noce czyli poprostu orzech Wiemy także, że we Włoszech nazywano go drzewem orzechowym, a jego owoce to były żołędzie Jowisza. Z czasem zmieniono na orzech królewski - i do dziś dzień taką ma nazwę łacińską.
@karmacharger1370
@karmacharger1370 2 ай бұрын
Next time why Poles call German Niemcy
@jacekkubis
@jacekkubis 2 ай бұрын
Nothing special.
@anuskas9244
@anuskas9244 2 ай бұрын
Germany - Niemcy Hungary - Węgry Not only Poles have a strange way of naming countries. The Czechs call Austria Rakousko, and the Spanish and French call the Germans Allemagne or Alemania
@MikrySoft
@MikrySoft 2 ай бұрын
Niemcy od niemi, niemowy, ci którzy nie potrafią mówić - bo germański język był dla przeciętnego słowianina niezrozumiałym bełkotem. Niemcy comes from niemi (mute), those who don't know how to speak - because germanic languages to an average (proto)slav is just random gibberish.
@anuskas9244
@anuskas9244 2 ай бұрын
@@MikrySoft Yes, I know that, but for foreigners the names of these countries may seem strange 😉🙂
@sirrathersplendid4825
@sirrathersplendid4825 2 ай бұрын
Węgry = Hungary => Slav “ągrin” from the Uralic tribal name Onogur or Ongur. Meanwhile Hungary is traditionally thought to be from the Huns who settled there in the 4th/5th century. But surely it makes more linguistic sense as also derived from Ongur, with the addition of a H (cf French “Hongrie”)?
@charlesdarkon
@charlesdarkon 2 ай бұрын
🤓🥳👍👍👍
@Richus1979
@Richus1979 2 ай бұрын
04:02: Not actually. Romanic languages are Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian (different story). Most European languages are actually Germanic (on the north and west) and Slavic. Why didn't we get Romans influence? The reason was as simple as this: Romans never was here. Not that they didn't want to. Dense woods made this area easy to defend, hard to conquer and keep. Especially for a big army and strategy based on speed and power. Horses, war machines, roads, advanced engineering... All that made Rome so powerful was useless here. Huge cost, low reward, no wonder, they much preferred to go elsewhere.
@maurycyzych3129
@maurycyzych3129 2 ай бұрын
Make Britain great again!
@sawomirmarnotrawny1694
@sawomirmarnotrawny1694 2 ай бұрын
no ładnie zapodajesz po naszemu.... wlof...... wilk... welsh....
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 2 ай бұрын
I'm getting there!
@annmal5289
@annmal5289 2 ай бұрын
Wait till you find out why we call Germans Niemcy 😂
@danielpiesto532
@danielpiesto532 2 ай бұрын
Szkoda ze ten Pan językoznawca przestał nadawać.
@prometeusz1000
@prometeusz1000 2 ай бұрын
od kiedy
@HALBiSSGames
@HALBiSSGames 2 ай бұрын
hi please react to ,,grzegorz brzęczyszczykiewicz,, (name and surname :D) its 1 minute but THE BEST 1 IN ALL POLISH COMEDY MOVIES. its about nazi :p but of corse every polish guy here will give me a
@dorotabarbowska2184
@dorotabarbowska2184 2 ай бұрын
już było, sprawdź starsze filmy Roba
@mieczysawpastafarianski8901
@mieczysawpastafarianski8901 2 ай бұрын
4:03 Your speculations illustrate the low level of history teaching in the UK. And the fact that you don't play strategy games also. I'm not criticizing, I'm stating a fact.
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