First non-Indic person I've heard who could actually say ঢ (dh). Well done!
@Rahi558406 ай бұрын
Until ড় ঢ় arrives
@metro96406 ай бұрын
Uniquely, it also shows up in some Irish accents
@WannzKaswan6 ай бұрын
Wait until you see Javanese people
@madiam4u6 ай бұрын
It exists in Hindi too (धा)
@arbabasukalsar43616 ай бұрын
@@madiam4u I’m talking about ढ
@afrinchry6 ай бұрын
Every time you pronounce a bangla word, your slight accent makes me weirdly happy
@sou_r6 ай бұрын
11:54 it really does sound alien to me like he has rolled his tongue inward
@afrinchry6 ай бұрын
@@sou_rYeah it seems like he pronounced each vowel exactly as written, so he pronounced e-kar as (eh) even though its pronounced (ae) and (o) as (ou) instead of (oah). Not his fault though, the vowels being open or closed seems pretty arbitrary unless you dig deep
@YorkShire-fb1jq6 ай бұрын
Fr
@sou_r6 ай бұрын
Umm maybe studying some works of baba robindro ji can help that
@Muhammed_English3146 ай бұрын
@@YorkShire-fb1jq I agree, French is hard...
@afrinchry6 ай бұрын
You actually pronounced it Dhaka and not Dacca, this is so cool
@king_halcyon6 ай бұрын
I think he pronounced it alveolar instead of retroflex, but I like that he tried!
@WannzKaswan6 ай бұрын
Kid named 'nativisation of loanwords'
@afrinchry6 ай бұрын
@@king_halcyon And so he did, but as you said just the attempt itself is really touching, it almost makes me emotional. Maybe this is close to what they mean when they say diversity and representation is important, it's just insane (in a good way) to me to see this guy on the internet appreciate my language since we don't get talked about much
@goatpepperherbaltea78956 ай бұрын
It’s wack! It’s daka
@RumanaRunu6 ай бұрын
@@goatpepperherbaltea7895are you stupid?its pronounced "Dhaka".
@soumyadeepdutta37266 ай бұрын
Yes, Bengali is so CRIMINALLY underrated that even Bengali people don't recognise the potential of their language, and give more focus to English or some other language. ( Caste and education related politics are major reasons for this)
@enacausmembrane6 ай бұрын
That’s mainly because our schools made us hate the language with the constant exams and no proper resources. Bengali is also useless in the internet as most of us spend as much as 10 hours+ on the internet. Our languages: English is a necessity Arabic for Islam Bengali, for just speaking with our family 😂 (because there’s no way in hell we’d be speaking Bengali with them if they knew English/arabic)
@soumyadeepdutta37266 ай бұрын
@@enacausmembrane আপনি কি বাংলাদেশের বাঙালি?
@enacausmembrane6 ай бұрын
@@soumyadeepdutta3726 জি
@ZayanKhan-yv5rj6 ай бұрын
@enacausmembrane same I also hate bangla because of rochona like seriously have to memorize 40 rochona
@brahmbandyopadhyay6 ай бұрын
একদম সঠিক
@ratguy2786 ай бұрын
as an indian bengali (+both sides of my family was displaced in 1971 from bangladesh) i think i could predict that 99% of the viewers would also be bengalis and i do not mind and i am so glad to see someone non-bengali talk about it hehehaha
@shubh.bapi_94236 ай бұрын
Hi!!! I am a bangal too! 😂❤ My entire maternal and paternal ancestors (grandparents) were from Dhaka and Barisal.
@Dheeraj-y4f6 ай бұрын
no iam from kerala
@xlr8_bs5146 ай бұрын
@@shubh.bapi_9423 I am quite a huge mix lol. My maternal family stems in the region of Bengal that is now under Bangladesh (my grandpa fled during the partition of Bengal, alone, as a small child :( ). My paternal family has stems in both the regions of Bangladesh (grandpa's family fled during partition) and Rajasthan (since we're Rajputs). So I am a Bangal who likes to consider himself as Ghoti 😂❤.
@adri.annie-.6 ай бұрын
Same!
@aremxlle6 ай бұрын
yoo same
@crazybfg6 ай бұрын
Bangla is so underrated. It is like portugesse where a lot of people speak it but no one learns it. Also do video on Panjabi
@TheGribblesnitch6 ай бұрын
I hear punjabi all the time but can't find any good summaries like this for it, so it would be great
@SantaClaauz6 ай бұрын
agreed would love to see smth on punjabi
@Huuuuuuuuuuuu1076 ай бұрын
Panjabi is soo similar to hindi.
@laRh777066 ай бұрын
I being a Bengali, I Love Punjabi so much.
@rkang65315 ай бұрын
@@Huuuuuuuuuuuu107 Yeah, and Italian is basically Turkish 🤡. Mulla ate Mashalchi Dono ikko chitt Lokkan karde chann'na aap hanere nitt
@mattbattaglia46946 ай бұрын
two common thoughts as an American watching these videos: 1. Of course our government was involved in an atrocity 2. Can't even comprehend how language is viewed in some regions of the world... So fucking cool
@thomasnewman-j8x6 ай бұрын
america's government is just terrible 😭
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
When Canada takes over the world you won't have to worry about that anymore.
@rnd_penguin6 ай бұрын
Funny how whenever there is a genocide, US always finds itself on the wrong side.
@slowcuber_aze6 ай бұрын
yeah, governments always suck everywhere.
@AlmostSaDiK6 ай бұрын
It's good to see that people from the US also respect different cultures
@justsomeguy3356 ай бұрын
For a top 10 language in the world, Bengali sure lacks a lot of content and exposure. Thanks for making this video which is very well researched.
@xlr8_bs5146 ай бұрын
We lack the exposure. Content? Hell nah we're one of the most interesting languages in India. Not to mention that we also have the sweetest language in the world tag. Most Nobel Laureates from India are Bengalis and most of the famous film-makers, singers, and composers are Bengalis, including Satyajit Ray, who is considered as one of the greatest filmmakers in the history of cinema and is often credited with bringing Indian cinema to the global stage.
@justsomeguy3356 ай бұрын
I meant on the internet
@xlr8_bs5146 ай бұрын
@@justsomeguy335 agreed
@PnbOrca6036 ай бұрын
@@xlr8_bs514 you are west bengali your not ethnically bengali just another hindu indian, we are not indian
@xlr8_bs5146 ай бұрын
@@PnbOrca603 Aree gadha I am the one who's ethnically, religiously and culturally Bengali. You on the other hand, my friend, might not be considered an ethnic Bengali in traditional terms. Always remember, Bengalis are Indians. Some Bengalis whose ancestors got converted to a different religion, made a new country, which in no way represents "real" Bengali. We are the real deal. People who don't celebrate Durga Pujo, don't read about Bengali literature and don't speak pure Bengali, shouldn't talk about being ethnically Bengali, doesn't suit their mouth.
@anowarjibbali6 ай бұрын
2:58 The /h/ in Sylhet is silent, but at least someone's finally talking about Bangla.
@Morshed20056 ай бұрын
Also in Dhakaiya , the H is often silent , I think it is the case for most Bengali dialects of Bangladesh
@BanglaBitTheAi6 ай бұрын
Depends on your dialect.
@jubeerkauwsar38716 ай бұрын
In all eastern dialects yes
@noonecares53256 ай бұрын
@@Morshed2005'h' isn't silent in 'Dhaka' It doesn’t pronounce like 'Daka' but 'Dhaka'
@Morshed20056 ай бұрын
@@noonecares5325 I didn't say about "Dhaka" , I said about the dialect "Dhakaiya" . And yes , most people of Greater Dhaka ( Dhaka and surrounding districts ) do say "Daka" instead of "Dhaka" , some even pronounce it "Daha" . But standard Bengali pronunciation is "Dhaka" .
@rekhahassan9257 күн бұрын
আপনি আমার ভাষা এভাবে তুলে ধরলেন।আপনাকে অনেক ধন্যবাদ❤❤❤❤❤
@roku84746 ай бұрын
As an Indian Bengali I thank you for making a video about our language not many people talk about it
@rishavkumar12506 ай бұрын
Ki bolchis bhai, it's the second most spoken language in India after Hindi
@styronticstatic6 ай бұрын
Akebare thik kotha kintu onno desher manus ra khub akta bole na bangla niye kotha tai hoito orokom bolechen uni .
@1minuteofgaming5966 ай бұрын
And what did you sacrifice for "your" language?
@roku84746 ай бұрын
@@rishavkumar1250 I don't mean the amount of people who speak bengali, I'm talking about the amount of people who acknowledge it
@roku84746 ай бұрын
@@1minuteofgaming596 Our ancestors have suffered a lot for our language didnt you watch the video?
@FairyCRat6 ай бұрын
I remember here in France, we would learn how our language is so high on the list of most spoken languages (which is good for globalization and stuff), and among those ranking above French (idk where that 310 mil figure came from, maybe massive population growth in francophone Africa?), Bengali was always the one that I (and most of my classmates) didn't know anything about. I'm glad that more people are giving attention to non-European languages nowadays.
@rashikajmain91805 ай бұрын
Literally clapped when you perfectly pronunced the sounds ❤🇧🇩
@sbansban6 ай бұрын
The first Asian Nobel laureate was Rabindranath Tagore - he was awarded the Literature Prize in 1913 - all written in Bengali, translated by himself and his good friend the Irish poet Y. B Yeats who himself received the Nobel prize in 1923.
@ritabanbasak70626 ай бұрын
Your pronunciation of "Bangla" is better than most English speaker I have heard till now.
@mottom26576 ай бұрын
That's because English speakers talk casually, so they speak in their own way, and that's correct for them. We cannot always expect them to speak in the 'correct' way we perceive. But LingoLizard is consciously making efforts to speak the name in our version of the correct way, and he can.
@anweshakar1465 ай бұрын
Still not perfect. I'm tired of having to perfect my English pronunciation all the time and non-Bengalis getting so much praise for saying maybe just one word semi-correctly
@ritabanbasak70625 ай бұрын
@@anweshakar146 well, I never try to pronounce English correctly, I always do it in my own way and it is one of the benefits of global language... depend on region its pronunciation changes ( hear american 'often' and british 'often' pronounciation)... I praise him cause many English speaking people don't bother to make conscious effort to pronounce other language correctly.. but he did.. you don't get praise because ENGLISH IS A GLOBAL LANGUAGE AND EVERBODY EXPECTS ( ESPECIALLY IN SOME INTERVIEWS) YOU TO SPEAK IT DECENTLY CAUSE YOU HAVE LEARN IT FROM CHILDHOOD... NOW If you speak a little bit good Punjabi to a native speaker probably he/she also praises you FOR LEARNING THEIR LANGUAGE AND PRONOUNCING THEM SOMEWHAT CORRECTLY..
@ritabanbasak70625 ай бұрын
@@mottom2657 hmm.. that makes( his effort) me feel good ☺️☺️that's why I wrote this..
@lokalnewz31682 ай бұрын
Sweetest language in the world
@reesh22576 ай бұрын
I'm currently learning bengal along with spanish and was desperately waiting for this video since the community post
@abdulquddustalukder47526 ай бұрын
What county are you from?
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
I was also desperately waiting for a video like this
@aniksamiurrahman63656 ай бұрын
Thnx. How does it feel, say easy or hard?
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 somewhere in between, I'm having fun
@mahbubhasan15216 ай бұрын
Hit me up If you need any kind of help regarding Bangla.
@breseph6 ай бұрын
I feel shocked and disgusted that we haven't yet been taught about the Bangladesh genocide. I only learned about it today, that is absolutely heartbreaking. Awesome video bro
@celestia44396 ай бұрын
Wait till you learn about the genocide committed by Bengali people on native people of Chittagong hill Tracts in Bangladesh
@tasnim5696 ай бұрын
@@celestia4439Both are bad ! I don’t know why people love to pretend theyre opposites, when both the pakistani administration and bangladeshi administration are corrupt
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
More confirmation that we humans are a bunch of dumb, greedy jerks. Everybody likes to pretend they are perfect, and nobody is.
@clousdy54646 ай бұрын
@@celestia4439that was not a genocide
@urbi-ob8qv6 ай бұрын
@@celestia4439bruh that was not a genocide
@biprajitghosh70715 ай бұрын
বাঙালি হিসেবে আপনার কাজ দেখে আমি খুব আপ্লুত ও কৃতজ্ঞ Keep growing bro🪷❤
@Inescapeium6 ай бұрын
আমার ভাষা নিয়ে ভিডিও বানানের জন্য আমি আপনাকে আন্তরিকভাবে ধন্যবাদ জানাই! I greatly appreciate you for making a video regarding my language!
আপনি শুদ্ধ ভাষা না বলেন নাকি তা জানি না কিন্তু বানানের না বানানোর
@Inescapeium6 ай бұрын
@@nido84 Beda ami English medium e porsilam tai amar Banglar sedabeda obostha lmfao
@ZakirHossain-lq6zg6 ай бұрын
Bah@@Inescapeium
@grandparick31765 ай бұрын
Alhamdulillah as a Bangladeshi, I feel very happy and proud that you made a video about our language since our ancestors fought and gave their life for this language.
@ummenasima97466 ай бұрын
As a Bangladeshi your bangla pronunciation definitely made me happy
@mottom26576 ай бұрын
True, he puts genuine effort in his pronunciations.
@anweshakar1465 ай бұрын
It's really not on target. The bar is very low, even Hindi people who try to speak Bangla (even after living here for generations) in Kolkata get such applause even if they're totally off target
@PYSSMILK6 ай бұрын
LETS GOOOOOO 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
@lonewolf14696 ай бұрын
Joy bangla bangladesh 🇧🇩 aka the lone indipendent country of bengal
@adibajannat3346 ай бұрын
@@lonewolf1469 the one n only country of Bengali Nations on this world. That's really cool❤
@PlaneNoob126 ай бұрын
JOY BANGLAAA🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥🇧🇩🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅
@PlaneNoob126 ай бұрын
WAHT THE FUCK IS MILE🇧🇩🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅
@少女吸血鬼6 ай бұрын
JOY BANGLA ❗❗❗🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
@shahmatsharaf69636 ай бұрын
holy shit ive never seen someone go this in-depth into the bangla language, thank u for presenting EVERYTHING in the proper way and not simplifying the harder letters/words. huge admiration for u and ur work bro well done, and thank you for educating sm people about our language as well as myself!
@dcontraptionist6 ай бұрын
arehh mama ki khobor
@tacti_tiger6 ай бұрын
Sometimes I love KZbin for recommending this stuff. Bengali is a really underrated language and I am not even lying Bengali sounds really beautiful.❤️
@andypaulsibakoff98166 ай бұрын
Got hooked on Bengali when I was making the IMLD monument in Finland - a very intriguing language and the script is probably even more beautiful than Devanagari per se IMHO. This was an unexpectedly good & thorough video, keep up the good work! Greetings from Finland!
@osasunaitor6 ай бұрын
From another outsider's perspective: the Bengali script has too many triangles and corners for me, it looks rough and cutting. I prefer the more rounded and soft Devanagari. Although my favourite South Asian script is by far Burmese, it's all circles!! So rounded and beautiful
@Rayz99896 ай бұрын
I agree, I totally luv the bengali script (altho I might be a lil biased since I am a bengali myself eheh) and I think more people should learn it!
@warpdrive92296 ай бұрын
Bengali uses the Brahmic Script just like Tibetan!
@User1to1006 ай бұрын
*What a wonderful video. Probably the first time seeing someone from the west talking about Bengali. Thank you for this very detailed video. অনেক ধন্যবাদ ও শুভকামনা* ❤
@king_halcyon6 ай бұрын
Very nice video, man! I appreciate that you finally did Bengali, since your Assamese video kept me longing for a video about my own tongue. However, I should tell you about some slight errors: * 2:50 the map is not correct. The dialect is spoken across Bangladeshi districts above Jessore and below Pabna as well, west of the Padma [Ganges]. Also, the color extends to Kolkata, but that dialect is distinct and more akin to the "Sundarbani" lects than this one - therefore, the sketch is biased af. * 4:30 the breathy version of B is almost never pronounced as a fricative akin to V except in some pronunciations for loanwords like "ভিসা" (from English 'visa'). It is either pronounced as breathy B or, for many Eastern dialects, a plain B with distinct vowel tone. * 4:40 afaik, H is voiceless at word ends as well, and often dropped at that position (also medially, for many tadbhavas / inherited lexicon). * 4:50 since you mention the dialects, you should specify that not all the western dialects merge S and Sh. For example, the Nadia [Nodiya] dialect, aka the main basis for standard Bengali across BD and IND, often distinguishes the two. So you can say it _some_ western dialectal thing, but not really as _few_ dialects as those which say the breathy retroflex tap distinctly. Again, many eastern dialects often debuccalize the Sh to plain H, like Shagor 'sea' is pronounced Ha(g)or - speaking of which, the "g" velar often fricatives and dropped almost always after the fricativization, in many eastern dialects. * 4:44 you can technically mention that the nasalization (anusvara ং) in Sanskrit, which just nasalized a vowel before a consonant in it, is universally pronounced as the velar nasal in Bengali, which is why native (tadbhava & deśya) terms with nasalized vowels put the candrabindu (ঁ) above the matra of them. * 4:26 you should add that that both voiceless labials fricativize to the F sound in some eastern dialects, as well as that the aspirated form of velar K can fricativize even in fast standard speech, or at word final positions in there, and of course the fricative [x] pronunciation can encompass both the plain and aspirated K sounds in some eastern dialects, again. However, aspirated dental T is generally either retained aspirated or made plain, but never fricativized (? though, it might become like that in fast/finishing speech for some) * 6:50 Sanskrit pronounced the first one as a syllabic, potentially retroflexed, R, not as "ri". The next two were also pronounced with the more backed vowel (represented by alpha in IPA). * 7:00 hey, you can't forget Portuguese! Sino-Tibetan words are not so dominant, and most of them prolly are from an older substrate language of the land. But Portuguese words are more widely used in everyday life, at least for us city-dwellers. * 7:12 Christians don’t exactly use more Sanskrit vocab, but rather more Anglo and Portuguese vocab. Buddhists may also use some Pali words, but I am not too sure of this. * 8:27 "gula" and the kin terms to it are more predominant. I have travelled quite a lot to tell you that. * 7:47 objective has two affixes: -ke and -re, with the former being more used in the "standard" and many western dialectal speech, but both are used widely. Sorry, if this comment was hard to read. I really liked your video, and I just want to improve the accuracy of it!
@aaush_6 ай бұрын
very impressive
@mottom26576 ай бұрын
About 2:50 - Kushtia district itself is dialectically variant. Eastern Kushtia regions (Kumarkhali and Khoksa) have close to zero Rarh influence, the speeches there are more like Vanga speeches. But yes, Western Kushtia, Meherpur and Chuadanga generally have more Rarh-like speeches. Especially, the border regions like Vaidyanathtala/Mujibnagar, Darshana have the Standard Bengali speech. About 4:26 - Yes, both /p/ and /pʰ/ become /f/~/ɸ/ in Eastern dialects. This change is very common in casual speeches, and is found even in Kushtia speeches. /k/ and /kʰ/ become /x/ in Sylhet, and further become /h/~/∅/ in Chittagong, Noakhali, and sporadically in Barishal and Dhaka speeches. But I've never heard /t/ and /tʰ/ becoming /θ/ for anyone. I agree with the other points!
@mahboob826 ай бұрын
I'd be surprised to know how much work you put into this video to make it a reasonable one. Obviously, that starts with your Bangla pronounciation. You've deserved a subscription to the channel at least, and you've got one. Thanks for the video.
@rijusorkar92536 ай бұрын
His pronouciation of Bangla words gives me a wierd sense of happiness ❤
@arn31076 ай бұрын
probs cuz it has passion behind it
@坦吉哈6 ай бұрын
Weird **
@anweshakar1465 ай бұрын
It's not correct
@arn31075 ай бұрын
@@anweshakar146 it's not really about being correct
@pratickghosh2635 ай бұрын
Goddamn your bengali pronunciations are on point. Lovely video, much respect!
@Mcttore6 ай бұрын
Words cannot describe how happy this made me. Finally someone spoke about the struggles of our Bangladeshi brothers and sisters. Every pronunciation was near accurate. Im glad you covered this topic. Thank you 💚❤
@unlikeclockwork6 ай бұрын
as a language nerd as well as a person in the bangladeshi diaspora this video makes me so happy
@newbie47896 ай бұрын
It's a very fun language and culture. Happy to see more people talking about it. Bengal really should be talked about more
@Masteroogway_26 ай бұрын
only west bengal preserved the culture
@adibajannat3343 ай бұрын
@@Masteroogway_2 Just bcz of Bangladesh Bengali is surviving u get lost Delhi’s servant
@Masteroogway_23 ай бұрын
@@adibajannat334 kangladesi chuslims are arab servent
@sumimasen_wtf22 сағат бұрын
@@adibajannat334Incorrect. You guys don't even speak proper Bangla, but a very Urduized version of it. The audacity to humiliate us, when you are the ones to remove Robi Thakur's song as your anthem. We aren't Delhi's servants. Rather, India is surviving because of us (just like Bangladesh does). Atleast our country has the national anthem & national song written by Robi Thakur & Bankim Chandra Chatterjee. Toder toh sheta'o neyi, lmao. Abar boro-boro kotha.
@GuidedPirate6 ай бұрын
Your pronunciation is spot on, my mom would be proud
@cosmosheep43066 ай бұрын
Must say! Very well researched Keep it up bro 🙌 Cheers from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
@lonewolf14696 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@lonewolf14696 ай бұрын
Bangla and bangladesh 🇧🇩 ♥️
@shariarshuvo6 ай бұрын
You have made me a happy man today. For years I have been trying to improve my language, but there is no online content.
@sodium3036 ай бұрын
what i love about bangla is the casual tones we have, the informal dialect. It's so fun
@anweshakar1465 ай бұрын
It's a very flat pronunciation, kinda like Japanese. And it's easy to learn!!
@i_am_shanto6 ай бұрын
As a Bangladeshi I feel very happy and surprised with your correct pronounciation of the word "Bangla" and "Bangladesh"...Onek Valo(Very Good)...
@James-vw9yy6 ай бұрын
Do you think you'll go over some native languages of the United States? The Chinuk wawa language of the PNW is quite interesting, being widespread until (relatively) recently. It is currently trying to be revived by the tribes who spoke it. However, it wasn't a language specific to a tribe, since it was a trade language, so the intent is just to get people to learn it.
@alexswift-scott57116 ай бұрын
naika kumtuks wawa chinuk! Do you speak it? Do you know about any communities/groups trying to promote or revive it? I want to get more involved
@James-vw9yy6 ай бұрын
@@alexswift-scott5711 There is the r/ChinookJargon subreddit, and a fairly active discord link on that. It's not the most active since it's a small community, but if you ask questions you will get answers! They also have a lot of good resources there.
@Progamezia6 ай бұрын
5th video in all of youtube about any single indian language probably.. good job!
@ERMZIESS6 ай бұрын
Not at all.
@Progamezia6 ай бұрын
@@ERMZIESS ofc im exaggurating but yk, there's not too many about the languages
@belstar11286 ай бұрын
@@Progamezia but there is a lot in the language
@Progamezia6 ай бұрын
@@belstar1128 ofc, LOTS of content IN Bengali. I'm talking about English videos ABOUT Bengali and other Indian languages and most other asian languages
@kingbolo45796 ай бұрын
@@Progamezia There's a fair number of videos to help English speakers learn Tamil, admittedly all by Tamilians, as you'd expect.
@Hello_World4186 ай бұрын
Broooo I'm a Bengali from the West Bengal state of India and I'm so happy seeing my favourite channel doing a video on my language! Your pronunciations were a little off but that's probably because I speak the Kolkata dialect or smh Bhalo theko!
@king_halcyon6 ай бұрын
Apnio bhalo theken, bhai/dada
@buntyafxal70916 ай бұрын
hehe apnio bhalo thaken
@anweshakar1465 ай бұрын
No, his pronunciations were a bit off because they were a bit off. Let's admit it
@snigdhadas62845 ай бұрын
You're right! Not many people talk about Bangladesh. As a Bangladeshi, I feel very happy that you discussed this topic. I loved your pronunciation of Bengali words.❤
@brahmbandyopadhyay6 ай бұрын
As a Bengali from Nadia district (speaking Rarhi Bengali), I find it very nice that some non-Indian/non-Bengali person is making a video on our beloved language.
@MaskedSandman6 ай бұрын
Greater Kushtia district of Bangladesh is also part of historical Nadia and rahri dialect... during partition Nadia was later added to West Bengal in exchange of Chakma district of chittagong in demands of indian congressmen
@Eternal_Servant_Of_Vaiṣṇavas6 ай бұрын
Nadiya 😍 the appearance place of Gaurasundar 😍 You are very fortunate to live there
@stxfdt12406 ай бұрын
@@MaskedSandman chup
@MaskedSandman6 ай бұрын
@@stxfdt1240 i mentioned that to promote bengali ethnic unity and avoid arrogancy arriving from the standard dialect theory of Nadia. We are the largest ethnic group in South Asia. Cheers
@stxfdt12406 ай бұрын
@@MaskedSandman chup
@thatweirdo1506 ай бұрын
ভাই তোমার ভিডিও খুব ভালো লেগেছে। বাংলা ভাষা নিয়ে কথা বলার জন্য তোমকে ধন্যবাদ।
@ayushmanchakraborty57446 ай бұрын
As a Bengali from India, I am more than happy that my native language is getting some recognition. Thanks man, appreciate your effort.
@lydwac6 ай бұрын
It scares me how I, as a Romani Speaker, recognize that many words
@minskdhaka6 ай бұрын
Don't be scared. 🙂 As a Belarusian of partly Bengali ancestry, I can understand some Romani words, like "dui" (two) and "pani" (water), because they're the same in Bangla.
@unexpected24756 ай бұрын
Romani is an indic language, so I suppose that makes sense
@antons53026 ай бұрын
@@minskdhakaвітання, сябре, від українця з бенгальським корінням
@unknownmanbd36 ай бұрын
Listen Bengali language has some foreign words. example: pencil is English word and it has no Bengali meaning
@amaduck21326 ай бұрын
@@minskdhaka pani is used in the east. Western bengali terms water as "jol"
@mk_annan226 ай бұрын
As a Bangladeshi, 🇧🇩, I'm impressed and can imagine the amount of research you had to do for this video. Excellent work 👍
@jBM74206 ай бұрын
I speak Bangla as my home language, though it's very broken Bangla as I've lived in a majorly English-speaking country for most of my life. A lot of English words substitute the Bangla equivalent when I'm speaking as my English vocabulary far surpasses my Bangla one. This is especially the case for verbs, for example instead of saying ami ghai (I eat) I could say ami eat kori (I do *eat*)
@ArianIbraheem6 ай бұрын
its khai btw, what u said sounds like 'I am an infection'
@jBM74206 ай бұрын
@@ArianIbraheem probably a difference in dialect. Everyone here pronounces and romanises it as ghai.
@jeongbun23866 ай бұрын
I do this same when speaking urdu but the other way round. “I’m showering” turns onto “I’m nainai-ing” and “My blanket tore” becomes “My chaadar phatted” 💀
@Mashfi236 ай бұрын
@@jBM7420 Not aware of any dialect which uses a "g"/"gh" sound for that particular verb
@Rhythm4126 ай бұрын
@jBM7420 so true, since influences of English so much we unconsciously use so many English words in our native languages.
@Reana00xx5 ай бұрын
Thank you for recognizing and talking about our beautiful motherland!
@HerzlichkeitRoy6 ай бұрын
Thanks for making a video on বাংলা। Love from মেদিনীপুর।
@tasnim5696 ай бұрын
cool ! im from burichang
@uchihapain92016 ай бұрын
Yo contai is my hometown too
@alahiri20022 ай бұрын
Bro the way my jaw _dropped_ at 4:16. Congratulations sir! You are literally the very first person who does not speak an Indic language that I have seen pronounce the full set of breathy voiced consonants _perfectly._ A fantastic video, and we Bengalis appreciate the effort that went into making this. It means a lot to us, especially because it is extremely rare for us to see our language discussed in linguistic circles, as you highlighted. Thank you for doing our wonderful language justice. Edit: A slight correction I haven’t seen mentioned yet is a spelling error in the list of postpositions shown at 8:31. সম্মন্ধে is incorrect. সম্বন্ধে is what it should be.
@manashjyotideka70536 ай бұрын
As a Assamese and bangla speaker I love this video definitely a beautiful video. ❤❤
@anubhavpaul65166 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video...i am proud of my language bengali...lots of love from india🇮🇳
@czechistan_zindabad6 ай бұрын
As a Bengali speaker, dhonobad bhai! Thank you, brother! I’ve always your channel ❤
@anjandasgupta36315 ай бұрын
Thank you for this very comprehensive video on Bengali, which is mother language and I'm proud of it.
@yrysf7776 ай бұрын
Living in Calcutta for 3 years, now I underdstand Bangla. To me Bangla is the classiest indian language
@jagobangalijago56656 ай бұрын
Facts
@Albus_TheProfessor.6 ай бұрын
Bangla is not an "Indian" language
@yrysf7776 ай бұрын
@@Albus_TheProfessor. what do you mean ? is Bangla to you a Russian language ?
@qwerty_qwerty5 ай бұрын
@@yrysf777 uh bangla to them is probably a bangladeshi language
@supriyachakraborty50755 ай бұрын
@@Albus_TheProfessor. Indian Army helped Bangladesh against Pakistan army. And Bengali is a language of India too. Bangla originates from Sanskrit & Sanskrit is an Indian language. Thank you. Just because partition happened - and a separate country was created by Muslim league - doesn't mean that Bengali is not an Indian language.
@instructions40715 ай бұрын
This is insane. Your knowledge about language is so perfect. Also your pronunciation is very well.
@navisnau31406 ай бұрын
I once had a Quora question called “Do you want to learn Bengali” and said “Yes , I’d like to”. However I still need reasons, I have no Bengali friends. Convince me to learn Bengali
@DB-me7ol6 ай бұрын
Bengali has many speakers and a beautiful literary history and tradition; if this is not reason enough, perhaps you shouldn't bother learning it anyway.
@navisnau31406 ай бұрын
@Db-me87ol OK, I want to hear how it sounds like first, can you put me any random link of a video in Bengali, so that I’m fully convinced. Actually nvm, Ikm almost convinced
@thepotatoman90696 ай бұрын
For one, It has great literature, arguablly the best from the subcontinent. Being the 7th largest spoken language also opens door to 270 million people. And you should watch India in Pixel's "Why does Bengali sound so sweet" video if you are looking for cool features of the language.
@leonhardeuler76476 ай бұрын
If it lines with your political interests Bengal has had a long history of progressive, revolutionary and even leftist movements with great works of literature, music and film dedicated to social causes and struggles. Check out "Pother panchali" ( পথের পাঁচালি) by Satyajit Ray for instance. Or the short stories of Tagore. Also Bengal has an incredibly complex modern history. A Bengali anti colonial revolutionary, M.N Roy, actually founded the communist parties of both Mexico and India. It reads like an adventure story. Or you could check out Dhan Gopal Mukherjee, another revolutionary who moved to America to garner support for Indian freedom during WW1, settled there, married a local and became a bestselling author. Though his stories were in English, I think this should at least interest you in knowing more about Bengal and maybe learning the language. Or you could read "Am Ãṭir Bhępu" আম আঁটির ভেঁপু which is somewhat shortened version of Pother Panchali more suited for light reading. It's a truly beautiful and humanizing look into the mundane lives and struggles of rural Bengali life.
@debarjandatta21706 ай бұрын
You will be introduced to one of the best pieces of literature in the mordern era. The first Asian to win a Nobel prize was Rabindranath, he received it in literature.
@suchandrasarkar86715 ай бұрын
Thanks man. I am from Kolkata and I loved the way you actually put light in our Bangla language. Thank you❤ love from India
@Srimanti_Roy5 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this video Bengali surely doesn't get the amount of apprehension and popularity which it deserves অনেক অনেক ভালবাসা(lots of love) from West Bengal ❤🇮🇳
@sudad.gaming5 ай бұрын
As a Bangladeshi, I really appreciate you talking about Bangladesh.
@lebollsong6 ай бұрын
Love to my Bengali brothers! 🇵🇰❤️🇧🇩 What happened with Bangladesh was definitely the fault of our army along with a bunch of other factors. Alot of us, at least here don't support what happened with Bengalis. But alot of us are starting to hate our army more since they not only oppressed Bengalis but also rigged our elections and all.
@laurant42826 ай бұрын
As a Pakistani, completely agree
@rnd_penguin6 ай бұрын
Yeah it was all politics and stuff. We bangladeshis don't hate pakistani ppl. But the funny thing is how US always finds itself on the wrong side whenever there is a genocide.
@laurant42826 ай бұрын
@rnd_penguin I know right! Its crazy that the US has committed illegal wars both against AND for Pakistan...like how can you do that???
@saadsEscape5 ай бұрын
Pure hatred toward you, brother. No forgiveness. We didn't get even a mere verbal apology from your country.
@lebollsong5 ай бұрын
@@saadsEscapeyeah the government and especially army are not good at all and you're right that they should've owned up about what they did to Bengalis, but at least concerning us Pakistanis we are fine with you guys and don't support what happened in 1971.
@JOhnDas805 ай бұрын
As a Bengali speaker never seen so detailed analysis of the letter sounds. Keep up the good work. Make one for French letters too.
@leonhardeuler76476 ай бұрын
Finally a video on Sea Assamese 🌊
@minskdhaka6 ай бұрын
As a Bengali who's friends with several Assamese people, I found your comment funny. 🙂
@belstar11286 ай бұрын
Assamese is to Bengali like Danish is to Swedish
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
It's also very to see interesting how Insular Frisian has become the global lingua franca, and so many people learn it.
@leonhardeuler76476 ай бұрын
@@minskdhaka Bengalis and Assamese being friends with each other? You wouldn't say? Nice. :) Last time I tried making a joke about Bengali and Assamese, it didn't go over well. 😅
@Notajerk123186 ай бұрын
The pronunciation 😭😭😭😭(tears of happiness) May god blesss u
@mk007__6 ай бұрын
7:29 adjectives before nouns isnt a strict rule changing the order changes the meaning too 'bhalo ekta boi' = this book is good 'ekta bhalo boi' = a good book
@nmvhr6 ай бұрын
Is ekta not an adjective here? I think the adjectives before nouns is the rule. But I can still think of an exception. “boi bhalo” doesn’t work, but “boi ekta” does. Maybe numbers are treated differently like in Sanskrit? The word order isn’t even slightly strict. SOV is entirely optional. “dekhechi tomake ami” is completely acceptable, understandable, etc..
@himelghosh75 ай бұрын
Being a Bengali from Kolkata who speaks Kolkata-Bengali or rather the Rarhi dialect in which most of the classic Bengali literature was written, I am very satisfied with your pronunciations of many Bengali words which I sometimes try to make my Italian friends say, but they can't pronounce correctly. Your work was well read. I also realised that I never know all the rules as in theory, but I follow them unknowingly being a native speaker, so is the case for every language speaker that they hardly are conscious of their grammar rules all the time and yet follow them by default, its like we are born with the language installed within us, some sort of language genes.
@roomcayz6 ай бұрын
sounds of this language are insane, especially the consonants, very unusual for my ear
@minskdhaka6 ай бұрын
But quite typical for Northern South Asia.
@duovigintillongaming37796 ай бұрын
apparantly they are insane for us too lol. atleast where i live more and more consonants are being replaced by english consonants. like the r trill and rh becoming r and ph becoming f
@Islamicpedia_channel6 ай бұрын
as a Bengali From Assam Barak valley, I'm really happy for this video..
@HushMizuki6 ай бұрын
Finally, I Am Really Glad To See My Mother Language Getting Spoken Of! I Haven't Seen Many People Talking About It, But Whenever I Do, I Feel So Happy! Thank You. :)
@broman178Ай бұрын
Lovely video although I might just point out that the actual phonetic realisation of the র letter is more of a tap/flap [ɾ] (or even an approximant [ɹ], like has been mentioned in the video for [r] and [ɽ] merging) rather than a trill like you've described around 3:37. As someone who speaks Bengali as a second language (although I'm not a fluent speaker) and as I've visited Kolkata a lot over the years to see my relatives there (my parents and the majority of my relatives are from Kolkata, although I'm born & bred in the UK), I have hardly heard anyone roll that r for র like you would hear in languages like Spanish or Italian (and even if some people roll/trill it, that is very rare in Bengali) and my mum, who was born and raised in Kolkata, once told me that the র letter is never trilled/rolled and that its more of a softer-sounding rhotic to the Retroflex Flap/Tap [ɽ] (represented by the ড়, ঢ় letters) so it would phonetically be either [ɾ] or [ɹ].
@Unrecyclabletrash6 ай бұрын
As a Bengali, I never knew how complicated the sounds of bangla were 😭
@EnderGradRPC6 ай бұрын
I'm assuming you haven't or didn't get any Bangla Grammar classes?
@tastyfood20206 ай бұрын
@@EnderGradRPCindeed Bangla grammar is so hard most of people don't get good number in it But i think he is confused because he(yt-er) is just pronouncing the word sound not the whole word
@EnderGradRPC6 ай бұрын
@@tastyfood2020 Oh
@Pleiades_Erret6 ай бұрын
@@tastyfood2020 I think Bengali grammar has a lot of unnecessary memorization and categories that are never going to be used other than being a "cool thing". And as usual, memorization isn't a very effective way of studying. Grammar is there to serve as a foundation, not some extra encyclopedia for the language.
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
As an English speaker, until a few years ago, I didn't know how complicated English sounds, especially those in my own hybrid American-Canadian English are.
@alivewhispers6 ай бұрын
As a Bangladeshi I'm so happy that someone finally noticed our language and on a deeper scale, thank you mate!
@kewaso_53136 ай бұрын
Eastern indo-aryan is very interesting in general. Maithili has polypersonal agreement, Some dialects of Odia have up to 4 genders and 4 numbers, Sylheti lost all voicing and aspiration distinctions and has a bunch of tones, Assamese has way too many verb forms. They all have incredibly extensive honorific and register distinctions as well. Most of these are thought to descend from Magadhi Prakrit, a middle Indo-aryan language from which Pali, the core liturgical language of buddhism, is based on. It is also Pali the one Indian language which european-speaking ears typically find the most phonetically pleasant in my opinion.
@king_halcyon6 ай бұрын
Yes, very interesting. I believe there were at least four different substrates responsible for this. I can't go into detail now, but at least the shifting of all sibilants to one pronunciation seems to be the effect of one lost substrate, and Bengal prolly also had another distinct, lost substrate that interacted with this one. The other two were Austroasiatic and Sino-Tibetan. Well, this is just my theory. Apologies for not being able to elaborate. Hopefully you can enlighten me as well.
@kewaso_53136 ай бұрын
@@king_halcyon When one hears "4 substrates" the logic follows that these must be Sino-tibetan, Austroasiatic, Dravidian and whatever mysterious languages were spoken in North India before the aryans (Harappan?) The most obvious layering over or under east IA is first Tibeto-Burman and features of Munda are easily recognizable as well... as for the other two I would not know. The northern dravidian languages may be a latter northeastward migration -And Harappan may have not reached so further east.
@hellothere8426 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for such a detailed video on Bangla language. Much love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
@kaplingnag72676 ай бұрын
omg i cant believe people actually know about this language : D
@ArianIbraheem6 ай бұрын
crazy language. thank god im a native speaker or else it wouldve been very hard to learn lol
@arbabasukalsar43616 ай бұрын
@@ArianIbraheem greatest language on the planet
@UltiAce19146 ай бұрын
As someone from Bangladesh, I am happy you made a video about our language. Also extra subscriber because your youtube channel and videos is very good!
@AlexanderTheGreat8716 ай бұрын
এই হতভাগ্য বাংলা, যে ভাষা রবি ঠাকুর, বিভূতিভূষণ বন্দ্যোপাধ্যায়, হেম-মধু-বঙ্কিম-নবীন এর মতো ব্যক্তিত্ব গড়ে তুলল, বর্তমানে সেই ভাষাটিই লিখতে সকলের ইংরেজী হরফের সাহায্য নিতে হচ্ছে।
@পাপ্পু6 ай бұрын
নজরুলও আছেন। এ আর কি! অদৃশ্য উপনিবেশিকতার গোলামি।
@abdussamadkhan53096 ай бұрын
Being a Bengali speaker I found this really a great research you have done and spectacular pronunciation you had has Amzad me. Never heared Bengali in foreigners voice this good.. Thumbs up.
@thundertiger34796 ай бұрын
An important thing to note that there is a BIG difference between Indian Bengali and Bangladeshi Bengali
@buntyafxal70916 ай бұрын
yeah ppl dont get it
@EL148406 ай бұрын
I don't think so. I think Indian Bengali speaks like the way you would write Bangla on a book - very proper. Whereas Bangladeshis are more informal, they pronounce words differently, or refuses to pronounce certain letters in the word at all. It's very casual tone and everyone speaks in their local dialect without feeling ashamed. I think this is very sincere of them to do so. When Bangladeshis go to Kolkata, it's so obvious they are from Bangladesh based on the way they talk.
@abracadabra162346 ай бұрын
@@EL14840 there is. Indian Bengali underwent sanskritization in the 19th and 20th centuries, thanks to which many Sanskrit words were reintroduced into Bengali, like jol (water), aakash (sky), nodi (river), shorojontro (conspiracy), .etc. Bangladeshi Bengali, on the other hand, has mostly retained its influences from Urdu and Arabic, like paani (water), aasman (sky), doriya (river), saajish (conspiracy), .etc. Not only the way we talk, the words we use can also be relied on to distinguish Indian Bengali from Bangladeshi Bengali. Eg. noon vs lobon, lonka vs morich, .etc Written Bengali is however pretty much same in both the countries
@absawa6 ай бұрын
@@abracadabra16234 Paani is Urdu, but isn't of Persian or Arabic origin, so it's likely another borrowing from Sanskrit into Bengali or just another tadbhava.
@MaskedSandman6 ай бұрын
@@EL14840written bengali/standard dialect and Bangladeshi national language is same as West bengali standard dialect... it's just the common words that have a muslim bengali version and hindu bengali version for both sides of the border, but it will be wrong to say the spoken hood language of urban dhaka is the formal language of bangladeshi bengalis... it's a cool mix of grammo (hood) and sophisticated balance in Urban dhaka for spoken purposes only
@SunilPal-wg9hy5 ай бұрын
I'm from West Bengal. I'm soo happy!!! I love all languages but Bangla has a special place my heart
@NightFalco4 ай бұрын
Bro 90% of bengali speakers (INCLUDING ME) are NOT indians!!😭🙏 We gav our lives for BANGLADESH, yet people still think we're indian😭😭😭😭
@TheDrumstickEmpireАй бұрын
Where the fuck did he say you are Indian… 56% of you live in Bangladesh, he literally mentioned Bangladesh several orders of magnitude more often than India… If you’re talking about the term “indic” that is a scholarly term, like how English is Germanic, but not German.
@Prithabiswas5 ай бұрын
As a Bengali I am very happy about the detailed analysis of the byakoron (grammar)
@alihasanabdullah75866 ай бұрын
I feel like this has been heavily simplified while being filled with minutiae, which makes it not useful as a comprehensive overview of the features of the language, neither as a fun introduction to Bangla. It sits in a weird middle ground. Thanks for your effort nonetheless. I'm sure you're not well acquainted with the language though. To elaborate on just one example, Bangla has a preferred word order, SOV, but any order is accurate. This is true for most sentences. To take from your example sentence, 'তুমি আম কাটবে' can be rearranged in all permutations and still convey the same meaning. This is because the verb and the pronoun already have information baked in that specify which is the subject, and which is being acted upon. It's also very common in everyday speech to use SVO or OVS, like 'তোমাকে কাটবে আম' (The mango will cut you). Basically, we can choose whatever word order we want in most cases. And the general rule of thumb is that the focus, or the thing that is most emphasized will come first. So we'd say 'আম খাবে তুমি?' (Will you eat mango? Word order wise - Mango eat you?) if we want to focus on the fact that it's mango we're offering. Or we'd say 'তুমি আম খাবে?' (You eat mango?) if we want to focus on the person. 'খাবে তুমি আম?' (Eat you mango?) will be an odd way to say it because it focuses on eating. But it's also used, especially with a pause, like 'খাবে তুমি, আম?' where the sentence is bifurcated, resembling a meaning like 'Will you eat, it's mango?'. And so on, every way to arrange the words will be intelligible and even usable in daily speech.
@amidstsunshine5 ай бұрын
Your voice sounds more soft and sweet while saying bengali it's so cool!
@MrAllmightyCornholioz6 ай бұрын
SHIVA BLESS WEST BENGAL ALLAH BLESS BANGLADESH
@arbabasukalsar43616 ай бұрын
DURGA
@leonhardeuler76476 ай бұрын
Just say Jôy Bangla (Victory to Bengal) instead. It's more inclusive and relevant for all Bengalis.
@king_halcyon6 ай бұрын
Bhai/dada, Tripura ke bhule gelen? 😢
@nneko85 ай бұрын
ohmgggg i love how u actually pronounced it quite right!!!!!!!!!! tysm for talking about it
@stratospheric376 ай бұрын
Bangladesh is cool
@minskdhaka6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@sreezonpanchbibi99326 ай бұрын
As a Bengali, I respect you for giving attention to the language. It truely goes under the radar for being used by so many
@proud_hindu1086 ай бұрын
Joy Hind Joy Bangla from India 🇮🇳🇮🇳
@Rhythm4126 ай бұрын
জয় ভারত জয় বাংলা! 👍❤️🇮🇳🔥
@bengalithughunter6 ай бұрын
তোরা হিন্দ-হিন্দ করতে করতে হিন্দি তোদের ভাষা রিপ্লেস করে দিবে
@Hammerpunch-93itv5 ай бұрын
Bangladesh great 🇧🇩🔥🌟🐅🙌
@ok_listen6 ай бұрын
As an italian ive been fascinated by this language in the past years. It just sounds good, and i was shocked to realize that no popular language application teaches it.. and the sparse tutorials around are not solid, with translations having different pronunciations and grammar.
@MedinipuriTuka0366 ай бұрын
As I bengali, thank you to bring our language forward to the International audience but I feel the focus on linguistic terms and facts was too heavy than needed. But hey, good work regardless. অনেক অনেক ধন্যবাদ জানাই ভাই ☺❤
@minskdhaka6 ай бұрын
This is a linguistics channel, so the focus on linguistic analysis makes sense. You can watch his other videos for context.
@asphodellie5 ай бұрын
Bro as a person who speaks bengali (just barely, as i never got the opprtunity to learn it properly as a child in favour of english) this video was so cool!
@yorgunsamuray6 ай бұрын
“Khala” the word for maternal aunt in Bengali is paternal aunt in Turkish (written as “hala”, with the softer h sound as well). I wonder what is paternal aunt in Bengali. If it’s something in the line of “teyze” (maternal aunt in Turkish) my mind will be so blown.
@ArianIbraheem6 ай бұрын
Paternal aunt is called phupo, looks like we loaned words randomly.
@Rahi558406 ай бұрын
Phupo
@unclepodger6 ай бұрын
Relationship terms also vary depending on religion and region. Relationship - Hindu/West Bengal - Muslim/Bangladesh Maternal aunt - Mashi - Khala Paternal aunt - Pishi - Phuphu
@Rahi558406 ай бұрын
@@unclepodger many Muslims also use masi pisi
@ajitt99025 ай бұрын
In Hindu Bengali vocab maternal aunt is Mashi and paternal aunt is Pishi. In Muslims it is Khala and Phupo(same as Urdu)
@hemjyotidas31085 ай бұрын
I'm from Kolkata it's fills very good to see a video about bengla
@eshaanbhargavpatel17686 ай бұрын
You should do Gujarati
@Rhythm4126 ай бұрын
Yeah, he should make more videos on Indian languages so that more people can know about Indian languages and he can boost his followers and views.
@thestraltheundead40936 ай бұрын
Yeah bengali is such a sweet language, i love how they speak so soft and fast.
@TheStickCollector6 ай бұрын
Because you basically never hear about it outside of the country of if someone is from there. Script looks cool.
@alihasanabdullah75866 ай бұрын
I'm slightly annoyed he picked the worst font ever. It's the default font in unicode when you don't have any bangla fonts installed.
@AgnisRB5 ай бұрын
This is so crazy as someone who used to live in West Bengal, India. I’m wowed to see a video like this and I fully support you!!
@Moses_Caesar_Augustus6 ай бұрын
I'm really ashamed of what my country did to Bangladesh, and they don't even tell students about the Bengali genocide in Pakistani history books... The history books say that Bangladesh just wanted to leave and Pakistan let them leave, but I know they are lying.
@AntoninHamstra6 ай бұрын
You cannot change the past, but the future, you can.
@Leftoutinthecold6 ай бұрын
On the other hand, in our country we are taught about our past history from a very early age. The injustice done to us by the then West Pakistan, they will surely not tell the next generations truthfully . Unlucky for you, you are not informed about these things. And that's normal. Those times were very horrible as we know from our predecessors. Alhamdulillah, we are free from Pakistan.. By the way, best of luck...
@Moses_Caesar_Augustus6 ай бұрын
@@Leftoutinthecold Pakistan is truly in need of luck... Inflation has skyrocketed and politicians are doing nothing to stop it.