@aafaking You are right about this brother but most instruments have their roots in ancient china. LIke the one you mentioned "zurna" it´s derived from the chinese word souna, it´s still played in china. Historically we have invented the variations of many instruments used in the middleeast. I only want to tell this because even my own people dont know our musical herritage.
@nated0gggg The Syriac/Syro-Aramaic Christians in Lebanon kept their daily language for quite a long time after the Arab Muslims came (I've read as late as the 16th century; ref. Dr. George T. Labaki's writings), so Lebanese Arabic has a very large substrate of this language in it, similar to how some of the peculiarities of Egyptian Arabic are hypothesized to be carried over from Coptic (i.e., the pronunciation of jeem/geem), which was the daily language for centuries before the Muslims came...
@jonyadegari To say that Aromoyo is an ancient Hebrew is equal to the saying that Dutch is an ancient English. You are wrong, ahi. Aramaic is Aramaic and Hebrew is Hebrew. The languages are closely related to each other, but still different. Read more, yeled, about the true Semitic people. Be well and sound,
it's like arabic
FAAD80 2 months ago 2
Schlomo Suryoye! Taudi la smarjothe basime!
1supersek 4 months ago in playlist Favoriten von 1supersek
@aafaking You are right about this brother but most instruments have their roots in ancient china. LIke the one you mentioned "zurna" it´s derived from the chinese word souna, it´s still played in china. Historically we have invented the variations of many instruments used in the middleeast. I only want to tell this because even my own people dont know our musical herritage.
eriksven1 10 months ago
Beste sind die Aramàer es gibt keine besseren
Syryoyo16 11 months ago
love this from robotruss
Humaneering 1 year ago
@dzheremi Sorry for the very late reply, but you are absolutely right. It's just strange/sad for me that I can't understand a word of this, haha :-(
nated0gggg 1 year ago
@nated0gggg The Syriac/Syro-Aramaic Christians in Lebanon kept their daily language for quite a long time after the Arab Muslims came (I've read as late as the 16th century; ref. Dr. George T. Labaki's writings), so Lebanese Arabic has a very large substrate of this language in it, similar to how some of the peculiarities of Egyptian Arabic are hypothesized to be carried over from Coptic (i.e., the pronunciation of jeem/geem), which was the daily language for centuries before the Muslims came...
dzheremi 1 year ago
wunderschöne Musik :D
Laura92292929 1 year ago
תודה רבה לך, אחי היקר על המנגינה המצוינה הזאת! יחי אשור לעולם ועד!
BulanKhazar 1 year ago
@jonyadegari To say that Aromoyo is an ancient Hebrew is equal to the saying that Dutch is an ancient English. You are wrong, ahi. Aramaic is Aramaic and Hebrew is Hebrew. The languages are closely related to each other, but still different. Read more, yeled, about the true Semitic people. Be well and sound,
BulanKhazar 1 year ago