UnRelated discussion > Off-topic

Sami's Bouncing arrows got revisited.

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Tervaskanto:
So, I was awake in the middle of the night, as I usually am, watching YouTube and found interesting video from Tod's Workshop about bouncing arrows from water surface linking to a archery channel where he got the original idea, so I thought I'd check it out since the guy looked somewhat familiar...

I had forgotten Sami had a YT channel, Ugri Archer, and of course it was his video.

Tod tried them for some duck hunting in his video, check it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAX8N8Ycs1g

Buoidda:
Sami's bouncing arrows

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Owy6sAPusoc

Brygun:
Whelp.... I learned two new things

1) bouncing arrows are a thing

2) I definitely don't understand Finnish. So if ever manage to fund Saami visiting Canada we'll have to hope he speaks English. My French is only marginal enough to say that I don't speak French and other basic phrases.

PALU:
It's not surprising that you don't understand Finnish, as it's not even an indoeuropean language, so the roots common with English (or the languages involved in the linguistic train wreck that became English) are very far back.

Sami (not Saami; that's a people) does speak English (and you can see on the forum that he writes it).

JP_Finn:
I find it entertaining that he uses very formal pronunciation.

Yeah, as PALU wrote, Finnish isn't indo-european (so not Germanic, nor Romance, nor Celtic), but Uralic/Fenno-Ugrian(F-U, hehe, excludes samojedic languages). There's very few languages in the group: Finnish, Estonian, Magyar (Hungarian), and some tribes in Siberia(most of these fall in the Uralic group). Of the above, Finnish and Estonian share some vocabulary, but not fluently. Similarly to French and Italian, or Spanish. Finnish and Magyar, have even less common words. After going through a long, long time with a Hungarian friend, only reasonably close match is Finnish "pusu”, Hungarian "puszi”. In English a little kiss, a peck

So to understand Finnish, you need to know Finnish or to get mainline idea what someone is saying in Finnish, one needs to be native Estonian speaker.

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