Hope you're doing alright. I really appreciate information from your area!! 🥰🥰🥰👃✌️🇨🇦 tv
@lgiproperties35742 күн бұрын
I'm American, and while I didn't understand one word, this was very interesting - Thanks!
@sae27055 күн бұрын
I started learning Tuvan and there were familiar words in there like horse (at), lake (khol), black (kara), girl (kys), is/are (bar) and some others and "Kara-kys" is a name in Tuvan. But Sakha is another language I am interested in, but it is interesting to see the commonality between languages. Though my vocabulary for Tuvan is very limited, but it was nice to be able to recognise some of these words.
@wilfriedolemans58625 күн бұрын
This is a very very heavy marathon. It reminds me to a marathon in Morocco called "Le Marathon Du Sable". This one is severe for the extreme hot temperatures. In contrast, the Tarahumara people in Northern Mexico (Chihuahua state) are the people who can run the longest, estimate 200 kms!
@Sergio-vp1gj6 күн бұрын
Ben sana tapıyorum * gibi mi?
@user-ji7fs3xy2z6 күн бұрын
Maria ayo kentu sayang ❤❤❤
@user-kc9db3vo6o6 күн бұрын
Hii maria ...are you ohkk???where are you?i am missing your vlogs
@altaykalpak66676 күн бұрын
You look like tween sisters
@user-kc9db3vo6o7 күн бұрын
Hii ... where are you Maria...I am missing your vlogs and shorts...plzzz come soon
@beaumontfamily61028 күн бұрын
I wants to live YAKUTSK city And wants to learn YAKUTSK language, please suggest me to how to learn YAKUT.
@Kadir85Akin8 күн бұрын
Many love to all Yakut people from Türkiye ❤
@Kadir85Akin8 күн бұрын
I am Turkish from Türkiye 🇹🇷 I can understand 60% of both languages. A lot of love to all Kazaks and Sakha people ❤ We are all brothers and sisters.
@DmLeimuikham10 күн бұрын
Wow beautiful ❤❤❤ love from india (manipur)
@loril.mangold816010 күн бұрын
Your family looks very happy, and I Love your Aunties Beautiful house, the Construction is very Smart, In my family, we have family reunions too once a year, about 200 people show up, back in the 1960's more like 300 people were there but we no longer have 8 to 10 children per family
@loril.mangold816010 күн бұрын
I lived off grid for about 8 years, and it was probably the Happiest In my life I have ever been, no phone, no computer, no TV, or radio, just Nature, My senses were so acute, I hear hear for 4-5 miles away. It was Amazingly Peaceful, and inexpensive
@loril.mangold816010 күн бұрын
Thank you to both of you for speaking this in English for Westerners who cannot speak All of your languages
@abhijith333311 күн бұрын
🇮🇳
@msborcea24311 күн бұрын
Your point is very true. Colonisation and colonising nation at present, just as in the past ,are engulfing minority languages. My family heritage has been engulfed by English as of when I moved to UK and married to British,my kids don't speak the languages I know,of the language of my husband's heritage. We take interest in other languages though. Such as Turkish and Arabic. I would like to introduce my mother language to my children but I have missed the golden period which is toddle and 5 year old window gaps. They are studying 2 foreign languages already . Yakut being an original And non adulterated mostly, should be preserved as much as possible. Unlike European languages,which have a lot in common and borrowed from each other.
@msborcea24311 күн бұрын
Another point is. Yakut population being half a million,needs extra effort in preservation of language as well as culture. You are doing an amazing job by the way. I have seen many ex soviet countries preferring Russian over native language. Which is truly sad. Now that they have the freedom and access to their heritage,they are reluctant to speaking their native language as a main choice.
@anms202312 күн бұрын
Why Siberian and Kazakh women so beautiful?
@LiuYumi18 күн бұрын
so peacful and relaxing video for me!thanks for sharing!❤❤❤ Tradition food and ways are precious.
@user-fu4zz4ns9x19 күн бұрын
Казахский и саха/якутский языки кажутся очень похожими. На уроке всемирной истории я узнал, что монгольский язык и тюркский язык изначально были одним языком. По мере того как Монгольская империя завоевала мир, монгольский язык распространился по всему миру, а также широко распространился тюркский язык. Насколько я знаю, якуты - тюркский народ из Сибири, и Казахстан - тоже тюркский народ, родом из Северо-Восточной Азии. Итак, и якуты, и казахи имеют происхождение из Северо-Восточной Азии, поэтому их лица похожи на китайцев и японцев. Кроме того, казахский и саха/якутский языки, по-видимому, имеют схожие языки, поскольку они являются тюркскими народами, происходящими из одной и той же Северо-Восточной Азии. Kazakh and Sakha/Yakut seem to be very similar languages. During my world history class, I learned that the Mongolian language and the Turkic language were originally one language. As the Mongol Empire conquered the world, the Mongol language spread throughout the world, and the Turkic language also spread widely. As far as I know, the Yakuts are a Turkic people from Siberia, and Kazakhstan is also a Turkic people originally born in Northeast Asia. So, both the Yakuts and Kazakhs are of Northeast Asian descent, so their faces look the same as the Chinese and Japanese. Additionally, Kazakh and Sakha/Yakut appear to have similar languages because they are Turkic peoples that originated from the same Northeast Asia.
@aviaray608421 күн бұрын
И говорят на инглиш...😂. Вам сколько заплатили ?😂
@doorller3589 күн бұрын
международный язык
@aofeizhang873521 күн бұрын
The food is so similar to Mongolian!
@aofeizhang873521 күн бұрын
That's so similar to Manchu!
@user-zt4pt3cx6w21 күн бұрын
Кэрэ кыргыттар❤
@romeokimss24 күн бұрын
I want to visit Yakutia now. Great video and your guest is a terrific ambassador for your city.
@user-xq9wd8do1s25 күн бұрын
Поставьте лайки красавицам
@Kul-tegin25 күн бұрын
Ulu kayalar!
@danleonte00127 күн бұрын
This plateau with traditional horse meat look exceptional. I look and cry.
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
You are a generous guest, Masha. Respect!!
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
In Switzerland, we ensure the car always has antifreeze, and we start the car and let it run for 20 minutes before we need to drive it.
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
Congratulations Masha!!
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
Amazing!
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
Adorable!! You both look lovely!! Wish you only the best and a little army of kids 😅 🤗
@alphaque993327 күн бұрын
You are earnest and objective. I am enjoying your channel!!
@doradelgado75928 күн бұрын
Maria: do cows stop producing milk during the coldest winter temperatures?
@gitarbro2175Ай бұрын
I understand that it can be difficult and have bad consequences (because Yakutia is part of Russia), but is it possible to somehow make a video on a political topic, about, for example, the current mood in Yakutia regarding the war, Moscow, Yakut self-identification, Yakut and Russian history, someone told me that there are people in the Urals who directly say "Enough to feed Moscow" and advocate the independence of the Siberian republics from Moscow
@md.foridulislamgo5158Ай бұрын
Ruhi canat
@RADS190Ай бұрын
Oh god, the colour of that flame in the boiler! Please clean it and adjust the air fuel mix to get it back to blue, it'll run a bit more efficiently for you.
@seyhanaktasАй бұрын
Those small strawberries are very rare in Turkey as well, I saw only once at a friend's house and he told that his mother collected them from forest.
@HeerHalewijnАй бұрын
Is Proto-Turkic taught in school?
@100parisАй бұрын
Excelente video. Saludos desde CDMX 🥑🌶🌽🌵
@RonlawhoustonАй бұрын
I live in Texas and we also use gas to heat our homes. I would guess we run the heater maybe 20 to 30 days in the winter. I was amazed the gas meter is inside. Here they are outside so we don't need to worry as much about leaks.
@TourPersiaАй бұрын
What an exhilarating and unique look at ice fishing for giant burbot in the extreme climate of Yakutia! This video truly highlighted the tenacity and resourcefulness required to pursue this traditional practice in one of the coldest inhabited places on Earth. Right from the start, I was completely absorbed watching the meticulous process of cutting through thick layers of ice, setting up the intricate fishing system, and patiently awaiting a bite - all while enduring brutally frigid temperatures. The visuals of the vast frozen landscapes were simply breathtaking. I have profound respect for the skills and perseverance on display. Clearly this type of subsistence fishing is deeply woven into the cultural fabric, passed down over generations. Witnessing the pure joy on the faces when that massive burbot was finally landed really drove home the stakes and rewards. But beyond the actual fishing action, I appreciated the insights into how this activity carries such importance for maintaining traditions, providing food sources, and bringing communities together during the harsh Yakutian winters. The glimpses into prepping and cooking the prized burbot liver were really interesting as well. Videos like this open my eyes to unique ways of life I'd never even imagined existed. While the environments seem unimaginably forbidding to an outsider like me, you capture the warmth and richness of cultures adapted to thrive in harmony with their extreme conditions. An utterly captivating educational experience!
@NOORCHANNEL0123Ай бұрын
I'm sorry dear but do I'm wrong, you look like Chinese😊.
@duakrynickiАй бұрын
everything looks great. but i dont eat horses. they are no different than a dog to me😢
@rockpooladmirerАй бұрын
looks lovely!!! greetings from Wales 😊❤
@KathyQinАй бұрын
Where are you fishing? it is really cold
@rockpooladmirerАй бұрын
This is wonderful. I've missed your videos so have come back to this one as we start spring here in the Northern Hemisphere. wishing you and your family, friends and community a beautiful and generous summer this year. thank you so much for sharing your lives and culture with us, and as a person with auditory processing difficulties I really appreciate the closed captions as well. You should be proud of your filmography as well, you captured the day wonderfully. Спасибо 💗☀️🌱🌲🌼🌈
@ardakkarahodga6389Ай бұрын
Казақ тілінде ұлахандай не ұлақандай деген сөзді Огромный (черезмерно большой) ретінде қолданады.
@CelticgermanicmapsАй бұрын
Here from Scotland and to answer your question we are now finnaly opening some of the first Gaelic school's!