Added: 7 months ago
From: Malkibaal
Views: 331
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  • just amazing and some words are close to arabic ^^

  • @TheMitrusa yea I know , actually I never wanted to make videos but I wanted to find some videos as soon as I realized that there are no middle easterners who are interested in it & I as soon as I saw that there are no videos, I felt obligated to learn it for myself & to show all middl easterners the language of the canaanites (language of the carthaginians, phoenicians, classic canaanites) ,I wanted especially find people of tunisia and lebanon and palestinie & syria to remember their roots

  • @Malkibaal It doesnt really sound much like Arabic, although I can understand some words. Shams fi.. Punic is extremely close to Hebrew though, i sounds just like it. Are the two languages closely related someow?

  • @shnoepie1 Where do I claim that it should sound arabic? do you want to throw false claims and assertions at me, which I never claimed? Punic is the daughter language of phoenician-canaanite, phoenician-canaanite language is the language of the canaanites which survived the and hyksos , they were called phoenicians by the greeks ., the phoenician-canaanite language is branch of the canaanit language hebrew language is also a canaanite language

  • @Malkibaal it is a semitic sound, and TheMitrusa realize thisbut he just knows arabic having semitic sounds, so he jumped to the conclusion that it sounds like arabic, it sounds actually semitic, not arabic, but arabic preserved many semitic features :)

  • I understood what was said and its interesting that in Semitic languages, one can immediately recognize what's said - only thing is sometimes I guess the vowels are added or taken away... :D

  • @SefaradiTal thanks for your openness and understanding :)

  • Another great video :)

  • @montezoma thanks my brother :)

  • Super vid, I enjoyed it so much. I think I can spot some similarities even with my current arabic accent lol. Plz continue your efforts Malkibaal. May the gods of canaan bless you.

  • @Kinahnu thank ou my dear canaanite friend and brother ^^

  • Excellent work again and again! Thank you for your ongoing commitment to the Phoenician langauge! I tend to use the vowel 'e' instead of 'a'. Like for example Aze instead of Aza. Especially for the Chypriotic inscriptions I am working on these days.

  • @ahhc07 no it is no problem,I also dont know the exact pronounciation,I looked into the modern cypriotic arabic of the marounites in cypre & they have "adha",it has a remarkable similarity to the phoenician word " V Z" (aza? ).In maltese & in cypriotic arabic there is no kha sound as in arabic nor ghain sound, they both becem hha (like in hhub=love) & ayn,like in phoenician & in hebrew,however till now I am not sure if this has something more to do with the italian, greek influence.

  • Excellent work again and again! Thank you for your ongoing commitment to the Phoenician langauge!

  • @ahhc07 thank you Tony :) I am glad you made so many more videos and gave us all an insight of the live of the phoenician kings and we could listen to long inscriptions.

  • How to say may baal bless u

  • @arabiannight100 "B3al yiberakaki" to females and "Ba3l yiberakaka" to males :)

  • @Malkibaal

    Ba3l yiberakaka

    But i will say it in my arabic accent Ba3al yibarkak :)

    hahahah

    i really enjoyed all of ur Vidoes its informitive and intersting

    shalem/salam

  • LOL im trying to pronouns

    its Hard ....u made me like crazy pronouning alone hahaha

  • @arabiannight100 the ugaritic language also used the dual, which becam frozen in phoenician, riglami/riglayma=two legs, attuma=you two (male)(arabic antuma), beside attum=you all, which is in phoenician ettom, arabic antum

  • @malikbaal

    im very amazed ......its very very close to arabic ..

    haza -hada -hayda -had- haza in some dilects......

    qabr -qabri .shams LOL hahahahahahhaha

    Thanks habibi

    blessses

  • @arabiannight100 thank you my dear :D <3

  • @arabiannight100 there is still one language which was closer to arabic, it was amoritic and ugaritic,

    hadha, hadhi in ugaritic, ana & anaku=I, ugaritic could still distinguish between 7 and 5 and 3ayn and ghayn unlike phoenician, ugaritic had the sound which is in ramazhan(ramadan) , also th and dh sound,ugaritic had also all cases, 2ana 2akul iklum=I will eat some food. 2inshu dhu iklim =the human of the food, ilaya iklam =for me some food, kan3anyuma/kan3anyima =canaanites

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