Saturday is sauna day. Some traditions refuse to change.
@kimmosaarinen27806 ай бұрын
Is life even worth living if you can't go to the sauna at saturday (and wednesday too)?
@akegan6 ай бұрын
@@kimmosaarinen2780 nope
@rtmjussi4 ай бұрын
Aamen
@YTMMS-hy6mz4 ай бұрын
@@kimmosaarinen2780 i go every day
@paulacoyle56853 күн бұрын
As a beginner learning Finnish (because it’s my heritage) I was actually able to understand that little exchange. I wish there were more captions though!
@MS-Fin19172 жыл бұрын
This sounds like Finnish with Estonian traits. As a Finn I can understand most of their speech, and some words are familiar from my childhood when my grand- and great grand parents from Karelian isthmus were alive.
@taara697 ай бұрын
I agree, this sounds like a mix of Estonian and Finnish and it's surprising how much I understood, as an Estonian. We have finally found the key to understand each other :D
@jussikankinen94096 ай бұрын
Eesti is funny suomi, yy kaa Koli neli
@raapyna85446 ай бұрын
Kuulostaa turunmurteelta ja karjalalta minun mielestä. Tosin virolla on kyllä sama aksentti, kuin turunmurteella.
@sateentuoksu6 ай бұрын
@@jussikankinen9409 yes but no - Üks kaks kolm neli.
@NemohHoes6 ай бұрын
Sounds much more like Estonian with Finnish traits. As an Estonian I can't understand Finnish, but I think I understood like 60% of this 😀
@missealvaheton2412 жыл бұрын
This is so interesting! I am Estonian, and when I listen to standard spoken Finnish I can understand very little, but here I largely understood what the people were talking about. And then the narrator started talking in standard Finnish and I went back to understanding almost nothing haha.
@wwondertwin2 жыл бұрын
It's almost completely understandable to me, a native Finnish speaker. I can't understand Estonian beyond a few words and the feeling that it sounds like I should understand it because it sounds like funny Finnish to me. Very interesting!
@rasmusvainio37742 жыл бұрын
That's actually really interesting that speakers of both languages can understand this! And yes to me it just sounds like a weird version of Finnish where some words are not understandable.
@abeonthehill1662 жыл бұрын
So the Estonian and Finnish language is very similar ? This would suggest the Finnish language is very ancient and this is why these Siberian Finns and Estonians have many words in common . Thanks for your insights .
@eddyc89002 жыл бұрын
@@abeonthehill166 2000 years ago they were pretty much the same language. Apparently. Nobody can say for sure. There's a lot of similarities. The meaning of certain words can be a bit different though. Modern Estonian tends to have more words of European origin. Karelian, Ingrian, Veps and Livonian are also closely related languages, but they're not widely spoken nowadays.
@DoktorKouts2 жыл бұрын
Täpselt! [That's Estonian.] Exactly! They lived with many Estonians, they say. Their Finnish is very understandable to me, & yes, today's Finnish is hit & miss with us, but this sounds very familiar. Huvitav! Interesting!
@mikahamari64203 жыл бұрын
This is a linguistical treasure. What is left of the heritage of these people, my heart is with that. As expected, their speech is a combination of Finnic features I haven't ever heard anywhere else. The main component comes from different dialects of Finnish, but some speakers have very strong resemblance to Karelian (or Eastern component). There are also elements that have origin in Estonian. It can be heard that they have lived in an area in which different Finnic languages have had mutual influences.
@ristuksenvittu2 жыл бұрын
voisin väittää että ukuritsat ja malinat on ainakin venäläistä alkuperää, voisin väittää että perunasta puhuvat kartoskana
@user-ce6iy2nw5o2 жыл бұрын
almost like they speak in an estonian accent
@KibyNykraft Жыл бұрын
@@user-ce6iy2nw5o No... Hehh... Maybe one could say inkeri or old Petsamo /Salla dialects.
@KibyNykraft Жыл бұрын
@@ristuksenvittu Malinen is a surname in north-eastern Norway , but there pronounced "Mallinen".
@reinokarvinen8845 Жыл бұрын
I got no troubles understanding
@anterotimonen64426 ай бұрын
Kivoja aitoja ihmisiä.. iloisia onnellisia... ei kaupungin ulkokultaisia kivisydämiä.. Herra siunatkoon heitä .. Amen
@Resident-cb3yz4 ай бұрын
Kyllä ymmärrän suurimman osan mitä mummot ja papat puhuvat. I can understand these old people. I am at age 45 person from Finland.
@kallekas85519 ай бұрын
Nuts! As a Finn who has lived in Australian for 45 years ( came here as a child) I can actually understand this!!
@dntskdnttll6 ай бұрын
Good that you have kept the ability! If you have kids please please pass it on to them... the world gives too much pressure not to
@MarkoKoivisto-v9v5 ай бұрын
Jännä. Kun suomlisena ymmärtää suomea, ni ei se täälläkään enää ole itsestäänselvyys
@kallekas85515 ай бұрын
@@MarkoKoivisto-v9vHei kuule…tulin tänne 8 vuotiaana ja kyllä kieli sujuu ihan okei. Siihen on nyt kulunut 46 vuotta.
@kallekas85515 ай бұрын
@@dntskdnttllCheers! Still got it but it’s hard to teach my dog to speak Finnish, even though he understands English/Finnish.🤣No human kids thanks.🤫
@kallekas85515 ай бұрын
@@dntskdnttllun😊
@MissMillieEllie6 ай бұрын
btw, this was shot in June 1992. In case anyone else is interested to know that 😁 Source: original documentary
@lbanepa6 ай бұрын
Bro i was literally born in tjt year and month
@elishh81738 ай бұрын
I love these people!!! They're beautiful!!! Im Finnish! These are my sisters and brothers 💖💖💖💖
@hippi11306 ай бұрын
incest is such a beautiful thing 😊💖
@kulukala55122 жыл бұрын
Mielenkiintoinen video!! Kiitos paljon! Toivon tällaisia haastatteluja lisää.
@endrebaracska5583 Жыл бұрын
Iam hungarian,your text not similar. In hungarian language this " Érdekes videó!! Nagyon köszönöm! Remélem még lesz ilyen interjú.
@moonchant5 ай бұрын
@@endrebaracska5583 I don't understand any Hungarian but I have a friend who has Hungarian mother (and karelian father) and when I hear them speak Hungarian and the pronunciation and rhythm of the speech is very resembling to spoken Finnish.
@endrebaracska55835 ай бұрын
@@moonchant Well, I heard once again, but I little less certain of myself. We were together, but it was a long time ago. Fact, the Finns and Hungarians overlived the " history " in pressure Slav-Teuton
@endrebaracska55834 ай бұрын
@@moonchant There is some words which similar in Finnish and in Hungarian too: Käsi=kéz, Silma=szem, Veri=vér, Vesi=víz, Mesi=méz, Sarvi=szarv, !! Eleve=eleven!!! A sentence- Jaan alla talvella elevat kalat uiskentelevat= Jég alatt télen eleven halak úszkálnak. How interesting.
@wdvnge Жыл бұрын
Todella loistava pätkä!
@source92642 жыл бұрын
Im finnish and I understand every word. Its like finnish language with partly estonian accent and few estonian words that are understandable, mostly words that are also modern finnish words.
@Uralicchannel2 жыл бұрын
Well Siberian Finnish is a dialect lol
@Kotifilosofi6 ай бұрын
I find there's a lot less postpositions than in Finnish words, words are more in their simple basic form like in Estonian. Also the order of words on sentences resembles more that of Estonian than Finnish I think (Finnish is my native, I don't know Estonian other than what I've heard).
@tapijoz6 ай бұрын
@@Kotifilosofi There are so many siberian Finnic Peoples so saying that is generalizing. But overall there are more postpositional suffixes in Estonian and the Finno Uralic languages other than Finnish. There are also way more consonant sounds and consonant gradation is more common and more widely used.
@Kotifilosofi6 ай бұрын
@@tapijoz I didn't generalize anything, I just merely stated what I heard, without knowing the language and these dialects of Finnish. I doubt there is, because there's way more cases in Finnish than Estonian far as I know. For example, the suffixes of verbs in Finnish vs. Estonian. Or maybe I have false information 😅
@tapijoz6 ай бұрын
@@Kotifilosofi I checked this and you were right, about estonian and finnish. Anyway, all the different languages should be thought about individually, because even though the languages are related, they have very different environmental influences. For example ngangasan love consonant gradation, there are so many different ones and they are thought to be germanic origin.
@jax998886 ай бұрын
Jännän kuulonen kieli, ku kuulostaa suomelta, karjalan kieleltä ja eestiltä yhtä aikaa, lievällä venäläisellä aksentilla. Interesting language, sounds like finnish, karelian and estonian at the same time, with a slight russian accent.
@hilkkahovi74946 ай бұрын
Ihanat vanhukset, vaimo yrittää "pomottaa" 🥰
@TheSmardu6 ай бұрын
Yrittää 😂 ei yritä, vaan pomottaa ja teurastaa lampaat
@heikkileivo6 ай бұрын
Brilliant, pity the video was so short. God bless the algorithms for recommendation.
@Uralicchannel6 ай бұрын
I somehow managed to hit the algorith jackpot!
@94matson6 ай бұрын
Neuvostoliitto oli valtava tragedia. Venäjän alueen eri kulttuurit, kielet ja kansat venäläistettiin pakolla. Stalin tuhosi inkerinsuomalaisten kulttuurin Pietarin alueella, muista kansoista puhumattakaan. Voidaan hyvällä syyllä puhua miljoonien tai ainakin satojen tuhansien suomalaisten kansanmurhasta.
@TheRenaissanceGuys6 ай бұрын
Siinä olisi varmaan ollut muidenkin suomalaisten kohtalo, jos Venäjä olisi valloittanut. Suomi olisi sitten asutettu "paremmalla väellä".
@TeroVaan-hi3hr6 ай бұрын
No tuohan on suomalaisten alkuperäinen asuinpaikka.
@JohnDoe-ro4nf6 ай бұрын
@@TeroVaan-hi3hr Niin on Afrikkakin
@robertohartikainen35786 ай бұрын
Vai olisko ollut sama kohtalo ku Baltian mailla...
@Nobody-Nowhere6 ай бұрын
Ei tainnut Venäjä valloittaa vaikka hävittiin kaksi kertaa sodassa. Mutta mikäs olisi ollut lopputulos, jos oltaisiin voitettu? Luuletko että Saksa olisi säilyttänyt Suomen itsenäisyyden?
@krisu81936 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-ro4nf debunkattu moneen kertaan toi "afrikka teoria".
@BirdEgg1234 ай бұрын
I'm an Ingrian, who speaks Russian and Finnish fluently, and the accent sounds just like a Russian trying to speak Finnish for the first time. Even some words are loanwords from Russian, like Malina and ukuritska (ogurets). She also uses expressions like "po-moemu" (as I understand).
@juocyjay57326 ай бұрын
As a finn that also speaks estonian fluently, I understand this near-perfectly. It’s funny how I caught myself understanding words like ”suvimüts”(more estonian than finnish) watching this with a finnish friend, who was then confused.
@Joni_Tarvainen6 ай бұрын
I have no idea why this was recommended to me, but I'm glad it was. By looking at the other people commenting, it seems that Estonians understand the Siberian Finnish but not the narrator/interviewer whereas I as a Finn understand both but not Estonian. Their dialect sounds very Savonian from time to time, especially Kosti's & Mari's pronunciation and the choices of the words. Especially when Kosti was speaking about how Finns weren't drafted in USSR and he was "savotassa" (doing forestry) which is a word still used in Northern-Savonia, but I haven't heard the word anywhere else in Finland.
@petrikarkkainen15866 ай бұрын
Kyllä savotta tunnetaan Kymenlaaksossakin.
@Joni_Tarvainen6 ай бұрын
@@petrikarkkainen1586 No perhana, eipä ole tullut kuultua kertaakaan täällä vähän päälle vuosikymmenen asuneena 😅 Kiitokset infosta, hyvä että säilynyt täälläkin
@t0msula6 ай бұрын
Lapissa kans savotta sana elää. Luulenpa että lähinnä merkityksensä takia hiipunut arkikäytöstä. Harvempi ihminen nykyään savotassa hommissa. Toki joissain murteissa sanaa käytetään puhekielessä vastineena kovalle työlle. Esim: "Oli siinä vain savottaa, mutta saatiin tehdyksi"
@Joni_Tarvainen6 ай бұрын
@@t0msula Sittenhän tuo minun alkuperänen kommentti on ihan huuhaata ja tietämättömyyttä 😅 Tuo on kyllä ihan totta, että ei sitä metsä hommia yhtä isolla kädellä tänä päivänä tehdä ellei siihen oikeen kouluttaudu. Tuo myös, kuinka sitä käytetään yleisen työn nimikkeenä oli jotain, jonka olin jo unohtanut kokonaan kunnes sanoit. Esimerkiks minulla saattaa mutsi sanoa että "olipaha savottaa" ja hää on Kymenlaaksolainen, tosin Savossa pitkään myös asunut.
@SetiSupreme6 ай бұрын
@@Joni_TarvainenSavotta on kyllä erittäin yleinen sana ympäri Suomen. En nyt äkkiä edes keksi puunkaatohommille muuta nimeä! Terveisin Oulu
@andresrenss11 ай бұрын
I remember singing the same song from the beginning of the video at Estonian sunmer camp in Toronto as a kid.
@thamor47466 ай бұрын
Ihmeellinen kun ehdotettu juuri nyt tätä, mutta mielenkiintoinen dokkari. Koskahan tää oli Yle:ltä oikeasti tullut.
@mantiateria50706 ай бұрын
Onpa kiva nähdä vanhaa filmiä, vanhoja ihmisiä köyhistä oloista ja mutta läsnä rikkaasti elämässä kiinni.
@mustamuri6 ай бұрын
Sieltä löytyy vielä aitoa vanhaa käsityöosaamista , jota ei enään suomesta löydy ✨🙏✨
@Alexandros.Mograine8 ай бұрын
Tavallaan muistuttaa Viron (eesti) kieltä aika paljon.
@j9mmer2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I can understand most of it as an Estonian.
@endrebaracska5583 Жыл бұрын
Write please your english sentence please Estonian.I sent you Hungarian" Nagyon érdekes. Mint Észt a többségét nem értem"
@j9mmer11 ай бұрын
@@endrebaracska5583 Väga huvitav. Eestlasena saan suuremast osast aru.
@MyFalabella10 ай бұрын
I speak Finnish as my mother tongue and Russian as a foreign language. I feel like their speech is a Finnish dialect with Estonian influences topped with some Russian words.
@arkan3246 ай бұрын
@@MyFalabella And a slight russian accent. It's confusing how the man wearing flat cap at times sounds like a native and then uses some completely foreign words.
@sitema4236 ай бұрын
Karvalakki päässä oli kesä eli talvi👍❤
@6pakki3 ай бұрын
@@sitema423 armeijassa talvella kun satuit syömään lakki päässä, alikessusta Majuriin kysyi että onko pioneeri kuusamolaisia kun syö norsun vittu päässä. No sanoin että olen. Kerran leirillä ku syötiin niin tulipa ihan eversti ja laski että hän on laskenut että Kuusamolaisia on 14. Lepo ja syökää.
@Desertime8 ай бұрын
It's funny how the intonations *really* remind me of breton (spoken the good ol' way, but it sadly is very influenced by french pronunciation amoung the younger people that still speak the language, apart from a lucky few). It truly sounds rural, I love it.
@Markoboy996 ай бұрын
This is an experience to say the least. I'm a native Estonian speaker and I moved to Finland when I was 11yo, so 14 years ago now. Basically I know both languages very well so it is so strange to hear this.
@schooj85 ай бұрын
Iso etu työmarkkinoilla. Voin sanoa suoraan olevani kateellinen.
@paulaautio42519 ай бұрын
❤ Mitä sinne teille nyt kuuluu? Kaunista laulua, ja niin hyvin ymmärrettyä suomenkieltä vanhan pariskunnan puheessa. Inkerinsuomalaisia joita asui ennen Inkerinmaalla.
@ПенттиАхво19792 ай бұрын
Minä olen korlakka meitä on vielä muutamia jäljellä mutta ukrainan sota on tappanut suurimman osan nuorista korlakka miehistä minäkin olen armeijassa ja ollut lähellä kuola monta kertaa olisi kiva tietää miten siellä esi isien maassa menee nykyään
@mionee_m2 күн бұрын
Menee hyvin suurella osalla ei ole liian paljon köyhyyttä. Media haittaa monia mutta viisas kyllä huomaa asioiden olevan aika hyvin lopulta
@ПенттиАхво1979Сағат бұрын
@@mionee_m Suomessa keski palkka 2500 euroa venäjällä jotain 400 euroa että olkaa iloisia että teillä menee hyvin 👍🏻
@markkumanninen65242 жыл бұрын
My father's family evacuated from Karelia. The elders in this vid looked quite like my grandparents and their friends. My dear late grandmother used to say "a vot" when offering something to others. I understood these people quite well. A very interesting video!
@osk90132 жыл бұрын
:) My grandparents from Karelian Isthmus spoke in similar way.
@jameslongstreet92592 жыл бұрын
My grandad was from Kanneljärvi and my granmom from Uusikirkko on the Karelian Isthmus
@ReidGarwin11 ай бұрын
Very similar to the old norse word for offering "blót"
@mijusa47249 ай бұрын
@markkumanni... Mulla on samankaltainen tausta. Isovanhempani isäni puolelta olivat Suojärveltä👍🏻😊
@yeast74856 ай бұрын
@@jameslongstreet9259 My great grandfather and grandmother are from uusikirkko as well! pieni maailma
@Palilalia229 ай бұрын
Konaukko :D
@kari-pekkamakkeli94945 ай бұрын
Erittäin mielenkiintoista materiaalia! 👍
@miklu566 ай бұрын
Todella mielenkiintoista, kuunnella ja oppia. Hieno dokumentti.
@IgorMikeshin6 ай бұрын
As a Russian currently living in Finland and learning Finnish, and previously living in Estonia, this is absolutely fascinating
@TimiTamminen3 ай бұрын
It definitely is, fascinating people!
@mikekoo3 ай бұрын
Why u live in here?? In 🇫🇮??? Why?
@IgorMikeshin2 ай бұрын
@@mikekoo Why not?
@gloriajuanita88862 ай бұрын
@@mikekoo Maybe because this is a beautiful country with good honest ppl. Why wouldn't someone want to live here?
@ee326k Жыл бұрын
Really interesting, for some reason it's a lot easier to understand this dialect as an Estonian than it is to understand someone from only 80km north from Helsingi, it's perhaps some differences in pronounciation or accent (and words being mixed)
@FinnSwede9066 ай бұрын
Im a finnish swedish american, on my dads side my grandmother and all my great aunts would speak english with a very thick finnish accent. On my moms side her grandmother lived here in the U.P. of MI and never learned English, only spoke finnish.
@halozxz577017 күн бұрын
its actually insane to ponder the fact that even into the 80s there was probably americans who didnt speak english
@zoolkhan2 жыл бұрын
wow... as a finn i was surprised to understand so much of what they said. it is weird to know that we have relatives in siberia ...but also kind of cool. too bad their children leave the villages and become russianized in moscow
@yksi2883 Жыл бұрын
My ancestors was born in Finland and in eastern Karelia, i was born in Siberia, buy i remember about my heritage and study finnish language.
@zoolkhan Жыл бұрын
@@yksi2883 Very nice. It is so hard to keep the culture alife in times when the young people dont care, or cannot afford to care. All the best, and peace to you
@derkov Жыл бұрын
these people are also sorry that Finns leave their farms and become Anglophiles in Swedish cities
@oltzu52066 ай бұрын
@@yksi2883Mahtavaa
@nou7126 ай бұрын
@@derkov Even if you were fried in butter...
@Tomijee6 ай бұрын
Mielenkiintoinen video, kiitoksia
@eddyc89002 жыл бұрын
I think my grandmother in Finland spoke like that. It's not hard for me to understand 😀
@DerMacko6 ай бұрын
interesting point of note, she uses "veljeä" @4:40, karelians would use "veikat", so they're are southerners, indeed. At teh start of the vid i had some doubts, but that one tidbit settlet it. :D
@terivaara4 ай бұрын
Aikamoinen aarre tämä. Kiitos!
@Demons9726 ай бұрын
I'm learning Finnish and I was surprised on how much I could understand even tho my Finnish still not that good, I did noticed some Estonian words and a slightly Russian accent on their dialect.
@mikrologia7455 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like Finnish from Rauma area. Some bits sounds like spoken Estonian but definitely Finnish words rather than Estonian. Excellent example how languages evolve.
@brandoninhofer65926 ай бұрын
Yes. After living around Rauma, I agree 😂.
@aleksisuuronen59696 ай бұрын
There is also a lot of traits about finnish that was spoken before it has formed. Like say some 1940's finnish. There is that more so rouding up words when we don't really do that anymore. Kinda like Päläkähällä (a places name) with a swang and it would be now just straight up be Pälkähällä. Also like we used to elongate words a lot more like tyttö kasvanut kauniiiiks (girl has grown to be beautiful) with the swang when now wouldn't even be frased like that but more like on kyllä kasvanut kauniiks (really has become beautiful).
@mursuhillo2422 жыл бұрын
"Suolainen suomen maa" *thumbsup*
@vilivonkin62432 жыл бұрын
Aika tönkkösuolattu jo.
@BuyChees2 жыл бұрын
Ukkini ja ukin suku kotoisin Suojärveltä, Karjala brihatsu tziikaili zirbuloit ja jne. Olisi hienoa kuulla lisää näiden Krjalaisten sukujuurista.💪
@DerMacko6 ай бұрын
heiii it stops short!! eh, he was gonna say somethi
@Neonols8 ай бұрын
I am Turkish and my uncle looks like that grandma, especially in nose and eyebrows I also look like her but ı don't look like her husband and I look like a bit of a Kosti Mertsov face type
@haikeaintiaani91839 ай бұрын
fucking facinating my grandpahs side is from carelia viipuri and other fathers father is origined from norther lapslands so i goth those siberian eskimo eyes but they are more deep inside in my head not having those russian ears and noses what amasing sympathethick scene to see my roots and still unerstand some what they try to tell if you speaks simple things
@ykserkki9929 Жыл бұрын
Kiitos!
@LumiSisuSusi6 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in Finland and speaks some Finnish I understand a lot of what they are saying.
@Mikko_Kivioja6 ай бұрын
Mummo oli suomalainen ja synty Murmanskissa. 😊
@henriikkak209127 күн бұрын
Suomenkielisten ja suomensukuisten kansojen diaspora ei katsos rajoitu Suomen rajojen sisäpuolelle. Meikäläisiä on natiiveina Norjassa, Ruotsissa, Virossa ja tietenkin Venäjällä, aina Uraliin asti.
@qwertyu600 Жыл бұрын
It's Finnish, very easy to understand, they rhytm they speak in is more similar to Estonian.
@incremental_failure Жыл бұрын
Very true. Must be the slavic/Russian influence. Many Estonians further in the south and/or near Russia speak like this. I find it quite alien as well. Northern Estonians speak more like Finns, slower and smoother.
@qwertyu600 Жыл бұрын
@@incremental_failure Interesting. I have noticed that some Estonian speakers are alot easier to understand with Finnish backround. Are there alot of dialects?
@incremental_failure Жыл бұрын
@@qwertyu600 Estonian had many dialects before but since the language standardisation, they only exist as peculiarities, no-one in a modern settings would use them. There's some still used like in Tartumaa the word "hea" is often said as "hää" or Saaremaa resisting the õ letter and using ö instead.
@qwertyu600 Жыл бұрын
@@incremental_failure That's sad. :( Finland standardized their language aswell but people kept speaking their own dialects and still do to this day very strongly, alot of people do hide it though when they move to the cities but as soon as they go visit home they speak their dialect. And I'd say even that is changing and dialects are seen as more cool in the cities nowadays when before they were thought as farmer talk.
@incremental_failure Жыл бұрын
@@qwertyu600 Finland is a far bigger, more important country. In the world of globalisation, it's all getting lost though in Estonia and it's just a natural process. No point being a luddite.
@Jaksary6 ай бұрын
Avartava pätkä, thanks for the upload
@oranienbaum6 ай бұрын
Niin muuten...Suomalaisten alkuperä on muiden länsiuralilaisten ja itämerensuomalaisten kansojen tavoin Volga-, Oka- ja Kama-jokien välillä nykyisen Venäjän alueella.
@Yourabortwouldhavebecome-ie7lr6 ай бұрын
incredible! Just magnificent! I've never in my life heard that there is still trases of my people and our language left in siberia. And its compleatly undersandable, ofc there is some things that are at least for me left in the dark what they are saying but most I understand as a finnish man.
@SergeyPRKL6 ай бұрын
many words they used, are used in the "Stadin slangi" the Helsinki city dialect from the earlier part of 1900's. And Karelian and Ingrian.
@Yourabortwouldhavebecome-ie7lr6 ай бұрын
@@SergeyPRKL ik i've lived my whole life speaking stadin slangii
@henriikkak209127 күн бұрын
This was filmed in the 1990s. There probably isn't anymore
@leevi6606 ай бұрын
This is pretty interesting. I myself am from around the Pirkanmaa region in Finland, lived a long time in Lapland, and I can understand everything fluently. Like Finnish with a Estonian rhythm to it. Some of it sounds kinda Karelian which is in part close to the northern dialects.
@einienj32816 ай бұрын
Hieman on vaikeaa pysyä perässä, mut jos asuis heidän kanssaan pari päivää niin ehkä ymmärtäisin paremmin.
@tuolinkantaja6 ай бұрын
Käyttää vähän väliä venäläisiä lainasanoja mutta sanovat ne suomalaisittain. Itelle särähtikorvaa ”Kasutarstva” sana. Just niiku mummo aikoinaa sen lausu 😂
@tampereenkeskustaajama30573 жыл бұрын
Miten nämä siperiaan on pääytynyt? Stalinin vainoissa vai?
@Uralicchannel3 жыл бұрын
Joo
@tampereenkeskustaajama30573 жыл бұрын
@@Uralicchannel Kiitos vastauksesta!
@jiajiaoioi6 ай бұрын
Tosiasiahan on se, että suomalaisten maat on yltänyt norjan rannikoilta aina uralille asti. Voit itse päätellä loput. Jos siis kriittistä ajattelua on tänä päivänä enään pätkääkään jäljellä.
@molotovribbentrop28396 ай бұрын
@@jiajiaoioi *Suomalais-Ugrilaisten maat, ei Suomalaisten
@SergeyPRKL6 ай бұрын
suosittelen lukemistoa: Vieras isänmaa INKERILÄISEN KOHTALONTIE Oskar Himiläinen
@Xiefux2 ай бұрын
sounds very much like estonian, i could understand most of it.
@Jayteaseepiirturi6 ай бұрын
Around 5:05 "...Mikä natsi me ollaan..." "...What nazi we are..." That cracked me right up. Nationality is what it means here, but of course that evoked a few chuckles. :D
@martinlaulunen718910 ай бұрын
Kiitos,...:)
@reinokarvinen88458 ай бұрын
talking like my karelian grand mum. I understand the lot
@ookami1126 ай бұрын
This is like finding gold ! My grandparents spoke some sort like this so i understand it 99% Most of it it Finnish with an acsent and "frases" that chances in every region.
@anssi22676 ай бұрын
"Jos on liikaa niin kruunulle annetaan" 🤣 Neuvosto-Venäjällä ei ollut kansalla mitään muuta liikaa kun vessapaperin arvosia ruplia.
@ukk7686 ай бұрын
Eikä kyllä rupliakaan ollu, ku kaikki mitä jäi yli meni armeijalle
@janikemppainen26795 ай бұрын
Jep. Ei myydä. 😂
@MikeBeachcola6 ай бұрын
Surullista, kun pakotettu muuttamaan kotimaastaan aikoinaan :(
@barocuseremiticus Жыл бұрын
Interesting. It took a few minutes to get adjusted to their dialect, but after that I understood nearly everything. The words I didn't understand I could guess from context.
@SpringWaterPaul Жыл бұрын
Nii
@barocuseremiticus Жыл бұрын
no@@SpringWaterPaul
@seppostolt9024 Жыл бұрын
Suomea myös muualla. Hyvä🎉Seppo Suomesta. 😍
@diegobassofficial11 ай бұрын
As a estonian i can understand siberian finnish more than finnish itself.
@johnnorthtribe4 ай бұрын
For me, that have heard both Estonian and Finnish during my childhood and adult life (I am Swedish), this sounds like Finnish spoken with Estonian accent. It sounds faster than what I am used to hear Finnish people speak and it is more monoton similar to Estonian. Very interesting to hear it.
@isantaiii59046 ай бұрын
Suomalaiset siperissa 💪🏻🇫🇮
@DiabloManiacz6 ай бұрын
Tears started flowing 5 seconds after they started talking :(
@johnnydark48024 ай бұрын
Vittu mun mieli loksudata...Amazing!!!
@gabrielgabriel517711 ай бұрын
Waaaw. As a finnish guy this is fascinating God bless our brothers and sisters all around in Russia 🔥
@Crimson50 Жыл бұрын
Mitenköhän nuorena ovat muuttaneet Siperiaan, kuitenkin ovat syntyneet Suomessa mutta kieli on niin paljon muuttunut.
@karikoivu6458 Жыл бұрын
Veikkaampa että karkoitettu koko perhe Siperiaan sodan jälkeen
@Sealife834 Жыл бұрын
Ei nämä ole syntyneet Suomessa vaan ovat Siperiaan karkoitettujen karjalaisten jälkeläisiä. Kun Venäjä valloitti Suomen Karjalan sodassa, iso osa karjalaisista joutui Siperiaan
@Telfia Жыл бұрын
Kõlab eesti ja soome keelte segu moodi. Kuulostaa viron ja suomen kielen yhdistelmältä.
@tomsilven6 ай бұрын
Inkerinmaa
@Telfia6 ай бұрын
@@tomsilven Voi olla
@SergeyPRKL6 ай бұрын
@@Telfia on. Iha selvää inkeriä.
@ZadenZane Жыл бұрын
PLEASE ENABLE SUBTITLES! I'd love to see KZbin trying to translate this!
@juhanaliesjarvi91396 ай бұрын
impossible😂 this ain't even a language but a dialect
@MultiPets.6 ай бұрын
I swear Paavo is Estonian, I can tell from his mumbling.
@petrikarkkainen15866 ай бұрын
Enemmän nämä ihmiset kuulostavat savolaisilta kuin virolaislta.
@teemunator6 ай бұрын
Kuis usein saunaa lämmität..? Joka viikko, lauantain. OG OG :)
@InkyMuste6 ай бұрын
Mielenkiintosta kyllä miettiä että miten kauas tuokin tapa menee
@SatumainenOlento6 ай бұрын
Supi suomalainen siis 😅
@digitalspecter4 ай бұрын
@@InkyMuste Ainakin niin kauas kuin on kirjallista materiaalia täältä. Keskiajallakin (1400-luvulla) oli tapana lämmittää lauantaina sauna.. joten luultavasti vielä sitäkin vanhempi tapa
@cts92135 ай бұрын
Türk insanı gibiler aynı hareketler, vurgular, tavırlar.
@opeltulikylkee74793 ай бұрын
To me and as a fin this sounds like a VERY strong weird accent for Finnish. Almost like how old British might sound to someone who is native. I've read a couple comments and I find it very interesting that this language or dialect or whatever you want to call it is almost entirely legible by both Estonian and Finnish people. This footage is simply just amazing.
@mariahankilanoja15816 ай бұрын
Ymmärsin täysin!
@UncleHam13372 жыл бұрын
70% Finnish 25% Estonian 5% Russian. Juontaja on muuten nykyään maanpuolustuskorkeakoulun strategian laitoksen professori, Alpo Juntunen. Ehdotteli 2016 sotilasliittoa Venäjän kanssa.
@nollatoleranssi91772 жыл бұрын
Ihan hauska tieto. Aikamoinen ehdotus tuo puolustusliitto.
@AnoAssassin Жыл бұрын
Vain kaks vuotta Pienien Vihreiden Miesten jälkeen, on otsaa
@vseslavkazakov3563 жыл бұрын
what I like about this clip is that they don't have russian accent
@JoskuEllis2 жыл бұрын
Obvious propaganda.
@ristusnotta16532 жыл бұрын
what do you mean they do have accent :D
@vseslavkazakov356 Жыл бұрын
@@ristusnotta1653 idk I don't speak Siberian Finnish however whenever I listen to any Russian minority language I can hear that the sounds are exactly the same as those in Russian language and if it wasn't for the fact that I could not understand a single word, I would probably not even be able to differentiate between the language and Russian. In this video however, I can clearly hear that the language does not sound like Russian at all.
@ristusnotta1653 Жыл бұрын
@@vseslavkazakov356 well i am a Finnish speaker and that sounds exactly like what it would sound when a Russian tries to pronounce Finnish
@hrn4757 Жыл бұрын
@@ristusnotta1653 No way, man. Puppua! The man doesn't speak much but the woman certainly doesn't sound like a Russian trying to speak Finnish AT ALL. It sounds exactly like she's a native speaker of an Eastern Finnish / Karelian / border zone dialect but maybe hasn't spoken Finnish for a while.
@MRiitta4 ай бұрын
It would be nice to know more about these Finns. I am really interested in their life after the war. Toivotan teille kaikille hyvää elämää❤
@ataraxia45264 ай бұрын
As a Finn I can recognize only couple of words here and there. No idea what they are trying to tell.
@sledgehog16 ай бұрын
I believe one of the uses of AI would be to keep this alive for the times to come!
@TheNismo7773 жыл бұрын
Our ppl the most brave of them all
@samartik7429 күн бұрын
Tehän puhutte Suomea 🇫🇮 Terveisiä 👋🏻❤️
@Chris-mf1rm9 ай бұрын
Fascinating. As a Brit struggling to learn Finnish I could understand quite a lot towards the end with the subtitles. It shows how backward Russia is when you compare what people have achieved in Finland. It’s like a century removed in time,
@구석방-u6x8 ай бұрын
Backward but sent human to space. Embrace backwardness
@Chris-mf1rm6 ай бұрын
@@구석방-u6x no bloody use to the poor people with no infrastructure
@amluist6 ай бұрын
@@구석방-u6x Progress for me, not for thee. Or however it went
@julisod6 ай бұрын
They might also be more isolated from the rest of Russia? At least that would've helped them to preserve the language
@jammi__6 ай бұрын
@@구석방-u6x The space arms race destroyed communism by bankrupting them trying to outcompete the free world. Especially SDI was ingenious on Reagan's part. Russians did try to compete though, but at the cost of things like food and basic stuff for the people, which commies never valued anyway, and still don't. The people will starve rather than letting some abitious goal of the communist leaders fall back.
@ivrishcon-abarth386 ай бұрын
Selevee suomee!
@bennyguardian32254 ай бұрын
En ymmärrä kieltä, niin sekasin puhuvat. Kielitaitoni: Suomi, Eesti
@VaakunNakki2 ай бұрын
Lauantaina aina saunaan
@schlomogigasheckelstein-go86944 ай бұрын
Kostihan haastaa hyvää suomea.
@sassisch11 ай бұрын
How long have these people been living in those eastern locations with little or no contacts with Finland? As to differences between Finnish and Estonian (and Livian), you need to consider the fact that some “estrangement” of Estonian (and Livian) from other Finnic languages came to be exacerbated by strong lexical influences from Low Saxon (“Low German”) and German. I seem to have heard in the video the Estonian word “müts” for “(woolen) cap” (rather than Finnish “myssy”). That comes from Low Saxon “Mütz” (or German “Mütze”).
@avatarion6 ай бұрын
Not for long. Soviets forcibly moved them there.
@irmavalkeapaa59286 ай бұрын
Kiitti paljon,kyllähän elämää paljon kokeneena,ihminen oppii olemaan vähäänkin tyytyväinen.