Altaic Languages Common Words - #Manchu, #Japanese, #Korean, #Turkic, #Mongolic

preview_player
Показать описание
HERE'S A LIST OF SHARED WORDS. A LOT OF THEM ARE SAID TO BE #LOANWORDS. MANY SEE THE #ALTAIC FAMILY A GENETICAL GROUPING AND LANGUAGES FAMILY AS A LINGUISTIC .
Common words among the Altaic languages. Some see it is as a genetic grouping. Others see it as a "sprachbund" or linguistic area where the common words and other similarities are explained by areal borrowing instead of by genetic descent. This video focuses more on Micro-Altaic or core Altaic which includes the Turkic (including Turkish), Mongolic (including Mongolian) and Tungusic (including Jurchen-Manchu) languages. Altaic includes core Altaic plus Korean and Japonic (including Japanese). These are all agglutinative languages with SOV sentence structure.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Yani gerçekten bütün Altay dillerinin aynı ekleri var. Mesela -“sen” Moğolcada aynı anlamı yok ama mesala Japoncada “sen” “mez/maz” yada olumsuz bir şekilde olan bir ek olabildi ama mesala moğulca’da “sen” farklı da olabilir ama ilginç bence bağlıydılar

Ishay
Автор

Altaycada “dalay” deniz anlamı da var o zaman Türk dillerinin de aynı sözü vardı

Ishay
Автор

Altaic family Language has Died
1-"While 'Altaic' is repeated in encyclopedias and handbooks most specialists in these languages no longer believe that the three traditional supposed Altaic groups, Turkic, Mongolian and Tungusic, are related." Lyle Campbell & Mauricio J. Mixco, A Glossary of Historical Linguistics (2007, University of Utah Press), pg. 7.

2-"When cognates proved not to be valid, Altaic was abandoned, and the received view now is that Turkic, Mongolian, and Tungusic are unrelated." Johanna Nichols, Linguistic Diversity in Space and Time (1992, Chicago), pg. 4.
3- "Careful examination indicates that the established families, Turkic, Mongolian, and Tungusic, form a linguistic area (called Altaic)...Sufficient criteria have not been given that would justify talking of a genetic relationship here." R.M.W. Dixon, The Rise and Fall of Languages (1997, Cambridge), pg. 32.
4-"...[T]his selection of features does not provide good evidence for common descent" and "we can observe convergence rather than divergence between Turkic and Mongolic languages—a pattern than is easily explainable by borrowing and diffusion rather than common descent", Asya Pereltsvaig, Languages of the World, An Introduction (2012, Cambridge) has a good discussion of the Altaic hypothesis (pp. 211-216).
5-a non-existing language family"
The End of altai controversy
Alexander Vovin.
6-"When cognates proved not to be valid, Altaic was abandoned"
-Nichols, Linguistic Diversity in Space and Time

Tokyo
Автор

“Ba” “ve” için ayrıca Türk dillerinde var ama biraz farklı ses var mesala Altaycada барган ла келген

Ishay
Автор

Tanrılı yok işte Altaycada - теҥеридӳ (tengiridü)

Ishay
Автор

Moğulcada tungus dillerinde “-cin/ci” ek çok benzer Türk dillerinin ekine

Ishay
Автор

Çuvaşçada en eski Türk dilinde “ben/sen” “ep/es” olurdu

Ishay
Автор

It's a pity that Manchu is close to extinction.But Why can I communicate normally with some people in Xinjiang

socorobusuku