Added: 3 years ago
From: LordAsriel1
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  • Tirraknatouta: Subutā tii Tiřřaknatoutaa!!

    Mî peislû pettiās iaxtiās celtiicā: ian nemmi (ne emmi) uiřos uissos in přittoniicii iaxtis.

    (I understand a part of Gallic tongue, yet I am not a specialist in Brythonic). And I have several dictionaries of Celtic languages​reconstructed by various authors. I am an anthropologist and linguist. I have several friends Celticists: (Mainly artists). I'm on some forums and groups of linguists.

  • Tou ande-iaxtis přitonnicos cainissamos etsi

    (=¨your brythonic dialect is beautifull¨)

    (*ande-iaxtis; sub-language = ¨dialect¨).

  • @oscar85768

    cu widras pritanīcān ieχtin? (how did you learn brittonic?)

  • Because he lives under a liberal lefty politically correct establishment which pushes for globalism by constantly making Europeans feel guilty about their identity and heritage. A victim of globalist propaganda. I'm genetically and Ethnically British, no shame whatsover.

  • Vlog-us LOL I'm guessing 'us' is a postposition

  • I'm glad the the language of my region of england still survives many people still use dialect words from the cumbric language we need to keep dialect alive or we will lose our connection to the past

  • how did u reconstruct this there is only one sentence in it ever reconstructed

  • Is it just me, or does this kid look like Michael Jackson's son?

  • bivlogos brittaanicom senooooooooooooooooooooooooooo­oooo! VICTORIA PATRIAAI!

  • this guy's a magician

  • what the fuck is this

  • "As regards the ancient brown race or races of North Europe, there can be no doubt of their existence in the south-east of Norway and in the east of Friesland"

    -ORIGIN OF THE ANGLO-SAXON RACE by Thomas William Shore (1906)

    GOOGLE

    '''Coat of ArmsFreising''''

  • ...Also, bear in mind that there was no single Brythonic language that was spoken throughought the British Isles... From my understandings, Brythonic was a language of dialects, many not fully mutually intelligible - similar to how a strongly colloquially speaking North Walian will struggle to understand a South Walian (and vice versa) today.

  • Its probably because of those many dialects that you as a welsh speaker couldn't understand much. Here I've tried to reconstruct the (south) eastern dialect, so it would have contained words not found in the western welsh/cornish dialect, though some words here were the same (i.e. "emi" "I am" > wyf, "anman" "name" > enw)

  • Its similar to how I as a native English speaker can barely understand anything said in Old English.

  • Yes, because Old English was mostly typical Germanic language - more similar to modern German, Dutch or Danish than to modern English. Modern English has about 67% French-Latin vocabulary. But well, actually less than 1% of Modern English vocabulary is Celtic.

  • Thanks for the reply. Interesting! Well done you for having an intrest in englands real origins! The divisions that we have to suffer to this day is labled England -v - Wales / Scotland / Ireland etc, but in reality, thats the Norman element of Englads history, not the original England!

  • Comment removed

  • Guys, Im no linguist expert but I'm not sure that Gaulish is the right language to take a steer for Brythonic.The Welsh Language is the living remnant of Brythonic, and as a native welsh speaker myself, I cant understand or even recognise what youre saying or the text in any of your blogs. To my ear, you sound latinized too - so perhaps you need to bear that in mind before you get too deep down the wrong track...

  • Well for a start this isn't gaulish, which has a totally different verbal system to Brythonic. Ancient Celtic and Latin languages were fairly similar in grammar and even in phonology (closer that it was to English), but differed in the verb construction. Though tbh as someone who's studied latin for ages, I may have been pronouncing this like I do Latin just out of bad habit...

  • I am fascinated in the origins of things in a positive way, but a part of me always feels a little bit guilty or that there is something sinister in taking it to far, when genetics starts getting talked about I am always reminded of what I have been taught about the renaissance in paganism in germany just prior to the reich,

    this is potentially dangerous when coupled with the socio political climate at the moment.

    A bit like two virus's coming together and mutating into something nasty

  • I know what you're talking about (having studied nazi ideology) but I think this is different these days.

    I can't see why you should feel "guilty" as you put it about this, theres nothing to feel guilty about.

    They'll always be some twats who'll take it too far, but no one listens to them.

  • Theres a distinction between patriotism and nationalism! The former should be embraced! Im truly patriotically British & Welsh in equal measure. Im neither a nationalist or right wing in any way shape or form. Tease out the detail before you shy away from this subject and dont let any nationalist lure you in with their warped ways - thats where the political climate in Europe in the 30's went astray... Nationalists stole the show because they passed themselves off as patriotic!

  • do you study archaeology?

    i like your vids

    x

  • It sounds like chinese or something..

  • Dude that was awesome! I just now found out about Brythonic and was googling/youtubing to see if I could hear what it sounded like. Where'd you learn to speak that language?

  • Thanks mate ;)

    I learnt it from a course in speaking Gaulish online, which gave the grammar, then I took the words from proto-celtic and "evolved" them into what they would have been in British, so not the easiest language to learn... But I'm doing lessons soon though :)

  • Why do people always start harping on about genetics? Genetics are interesting and useful for historical research but the history of a people is not just genetics. In the UK who won't have at least one Briton, Norseman, Norman-French, Breton, Gael and Anglo-Saxon- not to mention Roman/Mediterranean, Jewish,. Romany and whoever else may have arrived in 16000 years of history in their makeup? The important thing is language and culture, what you feel and what you've been brought up in!

  • Its fabulous that you are doing these videos, and I whole-heartedly agree that by large in England, that Brittonic is the native tongue in one dialect or another ... but which in the North, is Cumbric. I'd be interested in seeing a more scholarly description of what you are calling 'British' as the suffix "ish" effectively acts as an umbrella to account for anything that is articulated to the Britons without actually being it. But nevertheless, Bravo!!

  • And what problem exactly do you have with it?

    As far as I nor many others can see there is nothing sad or false about it.

  • R1a1(found in Slavic countries) and I1b-N came with Norwegian and Swedish vikings.

  • im from cheshire which is west england

    would that make me more of a celt

    than a saxon

    my mum is from cheshire

    and my dad is from yorkshire

    i think im half english celt

    half saxon

  • Great to see your new vid is up Edward. Where could we find more information about Ancient British?

  • DarSpar, I've got a book being published on the topic in the next fortnight, if you are interested, drop me a line!

    Anthony ap Anthony

  • Isn't ancient english a saxon dialect? I am not sure about it but I read that the english which is spoken today used to be ''Spätwestsächsisch'' a dialect spoken by saxon invaders.

    But otherwise it doesn't sound german lol

    Is ancient english still taught in england or did you teach yourself?

  • You won't learn Old English unless you specialise in it at university.

    What he is speaking is not Old English but a Celtic tongue, Old British, which has no written record. He is guessing what it sounds like.

  • oh^^ thank you ^^

  • Old Englsih can be learnt through most books, cds, and tapes. Theres even a teach yourself Old English cd and book from the same people who teach, french, german, etc.

  • PS, I am a socialist 'leftist' type, but not a PC liberal race-traitor, so don't lump us all together. I am a nationalist too. I don't like the BNP but I sympathise with their supporters, who are mainly working-class and fed up with wanky capitalist liberalism.

    Socialism is NOT liberalism.

  • Id much rather be european then either. And race traitor come on? What the fuck is one of them. A girl who has a relationship with a black guy or somebody who thinks labour and conservatives are a shower of cunts.

  • What are you talking about?

  • I don't mean to piss on your fire, but this seems like a waste of time. We can never know for sure how the ancient Britons spoke.

    Modern Welsh is a perfectly natural outgrowth of Ancient British. It should be taught in English schools. I think Scotland and Ireland should be all Gaelic-speaking, and England and Wales all Welsh-speaking. We need a new (realistic) identity, away from an increasingly Americanised/textspeak-bastard­ised English language.

  • wiki prof David Crystal if you wish to know more about old and Ancient british lanuages. he lives in wales and is worth a check out A.L.1

  • THINK ABOUT IT

    king Arthur might be a myth or real but he was a welsh king who fort the Saxon. he was a legendary Brythonic leader who spoke a Insular Celtic language an old welsh or Cumbric. One day they may get this fact rigth and make a proper historic film in Cymraeg his native language.

    I,am sick of the image and confusion with Richard the lion hart with a white robe and red across. Arthur should be seen in his rightful place. A welsh man and welsh legend. Bring the man back home.

  • If its reconstucted from various Celtic languages,its not real British,but neat nontheless.Welsh,Breton,and Cornish would be closer.

  • Good on you but let's face it it will never displace English will it?

    P.S. If you do a dictionary you'd make good money LOL

  • And may I ask where you got this? (Sorry for being knit picky I'm just interested)

  • I recostructed myself it from Proto-Celtic, Gaulish and Welsh. I'm making a dictionary of the language at the moment and as I've said I'll be doing a "series" of lessons in it soon.

  • Did you make this up or...?

  • I reconstructed it, all the words I'm speaking are real. The only thing I guessed about was the words for "hello" and "goodbye" which haven't survived.

  • Do you know that the Welsh and the Gaelic language are very close to the Hebrew language,with slight differences,and there are videos that proves that!.but some will not acknowledge it,because of Culture Tensions,which can be annoying for many academics!.

  • @Elevationary Oh not this shit again. Look, any similarities between modern Celtic and Hebrew are purely coincidental. Stop trying to impose a false biblical lineage on everyone in the fucking world.

  • I'm answering at the video you posted about British genetics,

    R1b1b2a1a (R1b1c9),R1b1b2a1a1 (R1b1c9b),

    R1b1b2a1a2 and R1b1b2a1a3 (R1b1c9a) are all part of R1b haplogroup though they're all Germanic and have all been found in England at very high frequiencies this hence proves that the English are Germanic though their genetic difference towards Celts isn't a great deal.

    The other haplogroups that can represent Saxons are I1b-AS(AS standing for anglo-saxon,N stands for norse).

  • Good stuff mate! It's nice to hear a little of what our ancestors spoke all those years ago.

  • W00T! That is awesome! How about some lessons for us?

  • I was actually thinking about doing a "how to speak ancient british series" like lessons. I'm still working out the grammar at the moment, but I'll start posting them as soon as I can. Especially now there's interest in it!

  • I was trying to develop my own reconstructed language based on notes from linguists and primarily based on Welsh (ie Welsh, Cornish haf < *sam "summer"), but learning it from ypou would be much easier!

    Also, you support the BNP? I'd go for Plaid Cymru.

  • I've been working on this reconcostruction for about two years now and I think this is fairly accurate now.

    I do support the BNP, since they seem to be the only party thats really fighting for the indigeonous Britons. I thought Plaid Cymru were just for the Welsh?

  • BNP strikes me as "English nationalist", i.e. supporting the Germanic elements of Britain rather than letting Celtic cultures grow.

  • They were like that before, but recently they've started to lean towards the aboriginal British cultures, both celtic and germanic equally. They also agree that the English are celts/britons too, not saxons/germans.

  • Very good. I'm not for abandoning Anglo-Saxon heritage entirely, but Britain is rightfully Celtic (If I'm going to go that route I might as well say it's rightfully Neolithic-"Stonehengian" as they were there before the celts, but the Celtic cultures still exist while Megalithic cultures are, sadly, long gone.)

  • very good friend 5 stars!

  • dagos ac te, mewos carants! (thank you my friend!)

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