Awesome World is a Channel made to connect different culture around the World! How Awesome is That!
Пікірлер: 437
@Wyb85243 ай бұрын
Haha our Finnish pride Robin, missed the chance to tell them the iconic finnish sentence. ”Kokko, kokoo koko kokko kokoon. Koko kokkoko? Koko kokko.” Translated it would be.. ”Kokko (a last name in finland), put together the whole bonfire. The whole bonfire? The whole bonfire. Also the fact that the word ”kuusi” can mean ”a Spruce” the ”number six” or ”your moon”. The sentence, ”Kuusi palaa” would mean ”Six pieces.” ”Your spruce is on fire.” ”The spruce returns” ”your moon is on fire” ”Your moon returns” ”Number six returns” ”Number six is on fire” ”Six of them returns” ”Six of them are on fire” Also had to laugh at the ”das auto” coming from Robin. I thought the same thing at the same moment.😂
@aneasmr13 ай бұрын
I thought the same!
@вариантыглаза3 ай бұрын
Finish pride?
@Lennu233 ай бұрын
Äijä kirjotti kunnon esseen tänne
@SantovuFIN3 ай бұрын
@@вариантыглаза finnish "representative" in this video
@Wyb85243 ай бұрын
@@Lennu23 joo tiiät jo.
@softesthedgehog3 ай бұрын
French girl probably confused Finnsh with Slavic languages, because Finnish is actually pretty vowel heavy
@pyrylehtonen-caponigro31983 ай бұрын
Yeah, you can almost write Finnish in katakana. Finnish avoids consonant clusters and words rarely end with a consonant
@mahamann77342 ай бұрын
@@pyrylehtonen-caponigro3198 not almost, it's pretty much possible. Only exception is with words that end with an s. Otherwise finnish can be spelled with Japanese charcaters. But others can give some more examples on those exceptions, because iI can't think of anything else right now.
@pyrylehtonen-caponigro31982 ай бұрын
@@mahamann7734 I'm Finnish and I've studied Japanese. In Finnish there's a wider variety of consonants that can be put together and Finnish has 8 vowels instead of 5 and Finnish doesn't have the う sound, but has 2 similar sounds which are u and y
@mahamann77342 ай бұрын
@@pyrylehtonen-caponigro3198 That's cool, because I'm also finnish, and I've also done my fair share of japanese practice. Aside from words that have two different consonants next to each other, other finnish words can be spelled via japanese characters. Altho it's not possible to differentiate between L and R.
@pyrylehtonen-caponigro31982 ай бұрын
@@mahamann7734 and you can't have any words with ä or ö or properly with u or y also anything with ti, si or the letter v are not possible in standard Japanese.
@lumiukko42963 ай бұрын
Kinda pained me to see that Robin didn't know much about Finnish language structure. It's common misconception to think Finnish grammar makes no sense when it actually does. It is complicated but it has rules. Would be more interesting if actual linguists would compare the languages.
@pietasofia57562 ай бұрын
YESSS
@oltzu52062 ай бұрын
Yeah i guess regular people explain their languages differently. Would be interesting to see
@annabjorn87282 ай бұрын
And he didn’t even take the french girl up on the bs that she can’t even read finnish. Just learn the phonemes for the letters and you’re good to go. Français au contraire 😅
@Tenseiken_2 ай бұрын
To be fair, that's what everyone says about their language though. "Yeah it's complicated but is has rules".
@lumiukko42962 ай бұрын
@@Tenseiken_ I could tell you more but I doubt people are interested. I studied Finnish language in university so I actually know what I'm talking about.
@Sayitlikitiz1013 ай бұрын
French girl was working overtime to make sure French didn't get the title of hardest language. 😂
@jessytheyodellingirl3 ай бұрын
😀True, and I think it's awesome. She'll make a good debater
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
😅😅😅 Taking Thai as a reference, the French girl literally took French out of the title of most difficult language. Now if you put English x French then it's already for French it gets the title of a difficult language to spare 😂😂😂😂😂🎂🎂🎂🎂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🌷❤
@olgahein43842 ай бұрын
German girl was doing the tactic with which our current councelor got his job: Try to be as quiet and invisible as possible and avoid anything that could make people ask questions. Speak only the bare minimum and only when called out. It worked well, i must say. She avoided the fact that 'die' (feminin singular aritcle) is also the default plural article for everything. Or that some words are identical in singular and plural except the article. Or that the pronounciation of several letters (especially vowels) can change drastically depending on the following letters. And so on.
@wthiskubaa2 ай бұрын
It’s one of the easiest😭😭
@mozmateus2 ай бұрын
I'm dead 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Leopez023 ай бұрын
Siellä on meidän Suomen Turun oma poika Suomen LEGENDAARISIMPIA Artisteja Robin Packalen Suomi mainittu Torilla tavataan perkele hyvää Keski-kesää ja aurinkoista Juhannusta kaikille teille ihanille ihmisille! There's our very own Turku's boy the most LEGENDARY Finnish Artist of all time Robin Packalen Finland mentioned at the market square hell yeah happy Mid-Summer Celebrations every lovely people! ☀️🏞😎🇫🇮
@kpt0023 ай бұрын
Mutta Robin ei osaa suomea, kun hän sanoo, että suomen kielessä kaikki on "se". Vain puhekielessä, mutta ei yleiskielessä, jossa on sana "hän" ihmisille. Virallisissa yhteyksissä kuten mediassa ei käytetä sanaa "se" ihmisistä. Se olisi huonoa kieltä. Eikä Robin osaa selittää sijapäätteitä eikä sitä, että korean kielessä on samanlaista rakennetta kuten esim. "na"/"nahante" = "minä"/"minulle"..
@TiaIela3 ай бұрын
@@kpt002harmi kun sinä et ollut siellä selittämässä. Äidinkieli L varmasti, mutta anna olla tällainen harmiton video mistä kukaan ei opettele puhumaan kenenkään äidinkieltä. Ymmärsit varmasti hänen pointtinsa, mutta päätit silti valittaa(aika suomalaista tho) mene itse ensi kerralla mukaan. Luulis ymmärtävän, että tuolla ei kerkeä hirveästi ajatella ja Suomessa totuttu puhuun puhekielellä nii mikä taas on niin iso ongelma?
@freezedeve31193 ай бұрын
@@kpt002 kukaan normaali suomalainen ei osaa selittää miten suomenkieli toimii, pitää olla joku asiaan perehtynyt kielitieteilijä jotta osaa kertoa mistä on kyse.
@rosmu11303 ай бұрын
14:53 - 15:06 😂
@LordJashin3 ай бұрын
@@freezedeve3119 No juu mut kun puhuttiin vaikka tuplakonsonanteista, eikä Robin kertonut yhtään sanaa jossa on tuplakonsonantti 😅
@alicemelon_3 ай бұрын
When I was a bit younger, almost every girl close to my age was a big fan of Robin. After these years it's so cool to see how he's still doing so well and even making content with one of my favourite kpop groups, 8Turn!! I really loved watching this
@shadowprod52053 ай бұрын
Lmao mä en edes tajunnut en toi oli 8turnin jäsen ekaks 😭☠️
@alicemelon_3 ай бұрын
@@shadowprod5205 Mä aloin kattoo just 8turnin takii ja huomasin vasta sitten et Robin oli siin kans :0
@shadowprod52053 ай бұрын
@@alicemelon_ lmao ite aloin kattoo ku huomasin suomen lipun
@SatuTamminen-t1q3 ай бұрын
Robin ❤
@Gittas-tube3 ай бұрын
Robin is actually a Finland-Swede. His mother tongue is Swedish, which is our second official language here in Finland.
@SK-nw4ig3 ай бұрын
Few points Robin could have used to justify his case to make Finnish seem the easiest: Phonetic language, everything is always pronounced the same way it is written, one does not have to guess; emphasis always on the first syllable; order of the words is rather irrelevant, people will understand you anyway; and as he mentioned, no gender, but also no articles in the language.
@magomistico5623 ай бұрын
Finnish so beautiful ..
@ottomakinen133 ай бұрын
That's nice to hear as a Finn!
@montse933 ай бұрын
Robin Packalen! The only Finnish singer that I know and listen to, what a coincidence😮😅❤
@a_puddle_of_emotions3 ай бұрын
It feels sorra bizarre that (guessing?) non-finnish people listen to him, since i grew up listening to his old songs written in finnish when i was like 6 lol
@montse93Ай бұрын
@@a_puddle_of_emotions finnish is SO HARD
@torredevigilancia3 ай бұрын
Ana voltou, coração alegrou! 😍😍😍😍
@isag.s.1743 ай бұрын
Mas ela quase não falou nada sobre a língua portuguesa 😢
@LuizFelipe-x7n3 ай бұрын
@@isag.s.174 Pensei o msm! 😭
@LuizFelipe-x7n3 ай бұрын
Precisaria de 2 horas para falar o básico kkkkkkk Acho q foi por isso!
@iammatheus3 ай бұрын
Achei ela meio triste nesse dia
@isag.s.1742 ай бұрын
@@LuizFelipe-x7n não... acho que usaram ela só como enfeite nesse vídeo. Andam fazendo isso direto com brasileiros. Colocam eles em vídeos que não precisa ou então n dão espaço pra eles (querem as visualizações do Brasil)
@teza29223 ай бұрын
As a European I think Thai is the most difficult of them all.
@Aurinkohelmi3 ай бұрын
Robin didn't know what Finnish is related. It's finno ugric language, other languages in same family Estonian, hungarian and some minor languages in Russia.
@Xarmutinha3 ай бұрын
17:06 as a greek learning finnish i agree.... Finnish phonetics except ö\y\ä are almost identical to greek.... Icelandic as well and even more.... To me Finnish when i started (and even now lots of times😢😅😂) sounds like greek gibberish, for examle: "lentokonesuihkuturbiinimoottoriapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas" would be pronounced the exact same way as "λέν'τοκονεσουιχκουτουρμπιινιμοοττοριαπουμεκαανικκοαλιουψεεριοππιλας" (the apostrophe is needed) For me the ranking would be: 1. Thai/korean 2. German 3. Finnish 4. French 5. Portuguese 6. English
@sledgehog13 ай бұрын
Not to mention that both Greek and Finnish have the same "whistly" 'S' sound.
@Xarmutinha3 ай бұрын
@@sledgehog1 indeed the aspirated s
@ellav53873 ай бұрын
I just came home from a vacation in Greece and I found it very easy to pronounce words and names, so that was nice lol. Also you have a very beautiful country, Meteora probably being the most stunning place on the continent.
@ghosttkeeper2 ай бұрын
Consider me intrigued, maybe I'll have to learn some greek then!
@Xarmutinha2 ай бұрын
@@ghosttkeeper id be glad to guide u through it!🥸
@gabynas3 ай бұрын
Anaaaa🇧🇷❤️
@Mattmerrison3 ай бұрын
The difficulty level of each language is relative to whether it has any root similarities to your mother tongue.
@kilobiten3 ай бұрын
yessss like i feel like the thai girl was being left out because everyone else except korea was from europe
@Aurinkohelmi3 ай бұрын
Though I wonder saying that almost all were European, as Finno ugric Finnish is way different than those other indoeuropean languages 😊
@Sipu973 ай бұрын
@@kilobiten Well Finnish has no other connections to any of the other languages except for some loan words so...
@pinjap91502 ай бұрын
@@Sipu97Yes it has, it has a whole language family and i guess you never heard any estonian
@Sipu972 ай бұрын
@@pinjap9150 I meant the languages represented in the video... I obviously know my mother tongue's relations to other languages in the world.
@Stratos.23 ай бұрын
The Korean guy is confusing the Korean alphabet with the language. They're two different things. The language wasn't created to be easy by the king, just the alphabet was. The language is way older and how easy the alphabet is to learn has nothing to do with how easy the language is to learn.
@kilobiten3 ай бұрын
all the other people were talking about reading and their alphabets.. and the alphabet is smth u usually learn to learn the language in a whole, so id say its pretty important whether or not hangeul is easy or not
@anastasia-fr1gn3 ай бұрын
Korean is easy at the beginning. Alphabet, simple sentences, etc. but to be fluent is difficult…the nuances of the language are overwhelming sometimes.
@CrsdrsWrStnsts2 ай бұрын
I imagine that Korean has a lot of homonyms and is difficult to understand because Chinese characters existed in Korean until recently but no longer exist.
@The_Real_Thamaell3 ай бұрын
Please, if any participant reads this, if Robin ever says he/she is "it", ("se") in Finnish, please correct him by saying it is when you speak informally among friends, but Formal is "Hän", which is both he and she. We don't speak to people generally, as though they are things.
@justskip45953 ай бұрын
Many many times people have gotten offended from me using "Hän" instead of "se" = it or "tämä/toi/tuo/tää" = that, because it sounds way too polite for them like they would be really old or something. By my experience it is easier to be too polite than too rude. Respect on the other hand is a different thing.
@miak40063 ай бұрын
We do generally refer to people as "it" (se) tho, in spoken Finnish.
@ghosttkeeper2 ай бұрын
Hmm I'm finnish myself and I will have to say I really don't think it matters unless you are in a professional setting. Hän is far more formal and actually I've seen people feel more uncomfortable with that word than something more informal/casual. Even I often refer to others as "it", like "toi" "se" or "tää", it's just what almost everyone here does regardless of whether we know each other or not. Also maybe more accurately "hän" is a singular "they/them" in english, it is an entirely neutral pronoun.
@hmvollbanane12592 ай бұрын
Don't worry your language is still more progressive than my German dialect. Contrary to standard high German we just have two genders, but for whatever reason we ended up with masculine and neuter, so a man is masculine while a woman is a thing. This also isn't helped by us naming people with their last name in it's possessive form before the first name. So "et Schmitzens Käthe" would be "that Katharina belonging to the family of the son of the smith" (-(s)en indicates "son of", though our last names no longer change so people are stuck with whatever the relative whose name got first written down into a church book was named)
@bluumberryАй бұрын
@@miak4006 I dunno where you're from but definitely not in southeastern finland. Hän usually gets turned into "hää" or something similar but rarely is a person referred to as "se", usually if it's a person that is very removed from the people actually having the dialogue.
@msc21272 ай бұрын
brazil did great here, she always gave comments towards other languages, and even while she spoke about portuguese it didnt seem too hard, managing to keep attention far away from it lol. Although i dont think anyone from the table would point something towards portuguese since they dont have a lot of contact or (not)understanding about it. (like how european countries had a lot to talk about each other due to close interactions) I feel like if there was a spanish speaking person, they would be like "Why is portuguese has so many more pronounciantions than spanish if we are rather similar languages??"
@LordJashin3 ай бұрын
Oh Robin, you dont really know much about the mechanics of finnish do you, listening your explanations was a bit painful. 😅😅
@birgittae90463 ай бұрын
I am Swedish. In the long Finnish word I at least understood ”turbine engine mechanics” 👍🙂 Finnish is hard to understand though. I am going to try to study some Finnish because my son has moved to Helsinki with his Finnish girlfriend. 🙋♀️🇫🇮🇸🇪
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
😘🆗🙂🫂😊🥂🍫🎂good look to you anothers idioms close to finnish are kven,estonian anda karelian 😘🌟👍🌷🏵️
@ellav53873 ай бұрын
I think one big hurdle to Finnish is the fact that the written version that everybody learns can be very different from the spoken language, which is probably why you find it hard to understand. It's often spoken much faster and skips many syllables of words. For example "minusta" could be: "minust", "musta" or just "must" when spoken depending on dialect or the sentence. Good luck though, as long as you learn some common words and phrases it would make any Finn happy!
@birgittae90463 ай бұрын
@@SinilkMudilaSama great thanks! 🤗🇫🇮🇸🇪
@birgittae90463 ай бұрын
@@ellav5387 thank you for your tip and good luck! 🫶🏼🙋♀️🇫🇮
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
@@birgittae9046 👍💙🫂😘♾️♾️💓🥂😋🎂🍫🧃cuddles hugs to you 👍😘
@afjo9723 ай бұрын
That depends on your native language. It’s ridiculous to say French is the hardest language because for Romance-speakers French will be very easier. And on the other hand, Germanic-speakers (apart from English) won’t struggle learning German… I don’t know about Thai, though …
@masoncampbell8140Ай бұрын
Thai is ridiculously hard to learn and pronounce. I watch a lot of Asian dramas, Korean, Japanese, Taiwanese and Thai. Just from watching them I picked up some of the languages, (although I did know some basic Japanese before). I picked up around 20-30 words each in Korean, Mandarin and Japanese, but maybe 6 very basic words in Thai, Hello, Thank You, Sorry etc and I've watched a lot. They speak so fast and there are no spaces between words, like Korean it has polite and casual forms and the tones just make it almost impossible for someone from a language without tones. I think Thai would only be easier for people from languages with tones.
@kuuttinenАй бұрын
That's true. Like for me italian is easy to pronounce because when I see it written it is pronounced the same way that the letters are pronounced in finnish. It's odd because the languages are otherwise quite different. I also think that italian words and their meanings seem quite logical(unlike words in my native language).
@T.K.T3 ай бұрын
I don't understand, Finnish is not a consonant heavy language, and we have few consonant clusters
@pyrylehtonen-caponigro31983 ай бұрын
Probably mixed it up with Slavic languages
@Gittas-tube3 ай бұрын
👩🏻🌾🏞️🇫🇮 Totta! Finnish does not have a lot of consonants. Germanic languages have a lot more, for instance. As a matter of fact, original Finnish does not allow words to start with more than one consonant. For instance, borrowed words, when spoken by 'genuine' Finns, may be changed like this: to train, training - treenata treeni - reenata, reeni. Words with many consonants are most likely compond words. (many words glued together into one long one), or endings added to one word. Germanic languages such as German, Swedish, Dutch, Norwegian, Danish etc. also have compound words, whereas, by comparison, English has got rid of most of its compound words, so the words are much shorter.
@juju-un8vo3 ай бұрын
Hardest to easiest, my vote: 1 Thai 2 Finnish 3 Korean 4 German 5 France 6 Portuguese 7 English I speak portuguese so im not sure, maybe for some people i would change the french with portuguese
@Mattmerrison3 ай бұрын
I would put Portuguese and French as a tie, they both have unique and difficult pronunciation!
@sledgehog13 ай бұрын
A gramática da língua Portuguesa a um nível avançado pode ser bastante complicada, o inventário fonético também é maior que o da língua Francesa.
@paulapalhao90343 ай бұрын
Amiga se tu fala português e acha tão fácil assim é porque nunca fez uma prova de gramática né? Nós achamos fácil porque falamos errado, quando você tem que realizar uma prova e verifica como deveria realmente ter elaborado a frase, com quem você deveria ter concordado, qual o plural correto das palavras tu percebe que de fácil não tem nada!
@juju-un8vo3 ай бұрын
@@paulapalhao9034 na verdade não acho português fácil não, mas acho francês e as línguas acima muito difíceis 🥺 Não só por gramática, mas pronúncias e entonações q são muito únicas pra reproduzir
@Juhani963 ай бұрын
I would put french harder than german but yeah
@Doglover13-h3c3 ай бұрын
I know that Finnish person cause he is a famous singer in Finland❤. Love u Finland and It is really hard cause like this comment if ur country has these letters: Ää Öö Åå. So yeah.
@TeroKoskinen-xy2zz3 ай бұрын
Åå = is more like Sweden letter.
@choco34243 ай бұрын
@@TeroKoskinen-xy2zz No siis onhan se meiän aakkosissa vaikka ei suomen kielessä paljoo näykkää..
@lyondragons88983 ай бұрын
@@choco3424 Se on meidän aakkosissa koska suomi on kaksikielinen maa
@Arthurfinnish8 күн бұрын
@@lyondragons8898jep
@watashiyo85233 ай бұрын
Well, Ana should have said that Brazilian Portuguese is closer to the 'pure form,' as Portuguese spoken in Portugal has changed over time, while Brazilian Portuguese has preserved some sounds and writing conventions. So...
@sledgehog13 ай бұрын
That is not proven.
@isag.s.1743 ай бұрын
True
@flpReges3 ай бұрын
Essa tese pertence somente ao campo teórico, não temos uma máquina do tempo para comprová-la, até porque até mesmo o Galega já está BEM distante do Português.
@williankran50823 ай бұрын
@@flpReges sua tese é basicamente: historiografia não existe. Se eu n posso ver acontecendo n posso acreditar. Ela anula qualquer lógica de modelo. Baseado nisto, campos como a geologia, genética, história, filosofia e linguística são basicamente nulos em busca pela verdade.
@sledgehog13 ай бұрын
@@williankran5082 Current days' Brazilian Portuguese says otherwise. "Tu viu?" What is this???
@strikebr3 ай бұрын
By knowing from a musician that Finish is a hard language to make music, I respect Tuomas Holopainen from Nightwish more for his music, the guy is more than a genius.
@pietasofia57562 ай бұрын
Yeah!! Love him
@olgahein43842 ай бұрын
He does make his music for the most part in english though. Still my favorite poet and composer and band, but just saying.
@strikebr2 ай бұрын
@olgahein4384 well, he does double effort. He think in finish and has to translate it to English.
@hadassabezerra51383 ай бұрын
se a Ana fosse explicar a diferença de xc, ss, s,ç,c sc, eles ficavam loucos
@cscunha953 ай бұрын
I vote for French. As a Romance language, it has no bussiness being that hard.
@isag.s.1743 ай бұрын
Agreed
@Soikkufani7933 ай бұрын
English: A dog. Swedish: What? English: The dog. English: Two dogs. Swedish: Okay. We have: En hund, hunden, Två hundar, hundarna. German: Wait, I wan't to try it too! English: No, go away. Swedish: No one invited you. German: Der Hund. English: I said go away.... German: Ein Hund, zwei Hunde. Swedish: Stop it! German: Den Hund, einen Hund, dem Hund, einem Hund, des Hundes, eines Hundes, den Hunden, der Hunden. Finnish: Sup. English: NO. Swedish: NO. German: NO. Finn, you go away!! Finnish: Koira, koiran, koiraa, koiran again, koirassa, koirasta, koiraan, koiralla, koiralta, koiralle, koirana, koiraksi, koiratta, koirineen, koirin. German: WHAT? Swedish: You must be kidding us! English: This must be a joke... Finnish: Aaaand... koirasi, koirani, koiransa, koiramme, koiranne, koiraani, koiraasi, koiraansa, koiraamme, koiraanne, koirassani, koirassasi, koirassansa, koirassamme, koirassanne, koirastani, koirastasi, koirastansa, koirastamme, koirastanne, koirallani, koirallasi, koirallansa, koirallamme, koirallanne, koiranani, koiranasi, koiranansa, koiranamme, koirananne, koirakseni, koiraksesi, koiraksensa, koiraksemme, koiraksenne, koirattani, koirattasi, koirattansa, koirattamme, koirattanne, koirineni, koirinesi, koirinensa, koirinemme, koirinenne. English: Those are words for a dog??? Finnish: Wait! I didn't stop yet. There is still: koirakaan, koirankaan, koiraakaan, koirassakaan, koirastakaan, koiraankaan, koirallakaan, koiraltakaan, koirallekaan, koiranakaan, koiraksikaan, koirattakaan, koirineenkaan, koirinkaan, koirako, koiranko, koiraako, koirassako, koirastako, koiraanko, koirallako, koiraltako, koiralleko, koiranako, koiraksiko, koirattako, koirineenko, koirinko, koirasikaan, koiranikaan, koiransakaan, koirammekaan, koirannekaan, koiraanikaan, koiraasikaan, koiraansakaan, koiraammekaan, koiraannekaan, koirassanikaan, koirassasikaan, koirassansakaan, koirassammekaan, koirassannekaan, koirastanikaan, koirastasikaan, koirastansakaan, koirastammekaan, koirastannekaan, koirallanikaan, koirallasikaan, koirallansakaan, koirallammekaan, koirallannekaan, koirananikaan, koiranasikaan, koiranansakaan, koiranammekaan, koiranannekaan, koiraksenikaan, koiraksesikaan, koiraksensakaan, koiraksemmekaan, koiraksennekaan, koirattanikaan, koirattasikaan, koirattansakaan, koirattammekaan, koirattannekaan, koirinenikaan, koirinesikaan, koirinensakaan, koirinemmekaan, koirinennekaan, koirasiko, koiraniko, koiransako, koirammeko, koiranneko, koiraaniko, koiraasiko, koiraansako, koiraammeko, koiraanneko, koirassaniko, koirassasiko, koirassansako, koirassammeko, koirassanneko, koirastaniko, koirastasiko, koirastansako, koirastammeko, koirastanneko, koirallaniko, koirallasiko, koirallansako, koirallammeko, koirallanneko, koirananiko, koiranasiko, koiranansako, koiranammeko, koirananneko, koirakseniko, koiraksesiko, koiraksensako, koiraksemmeko, koiraksenneko, koirattaniko, koirattasiko, koirattansako, koirattammeko, koirattanneko, koirineniko, koirinesiko, koirinensako, koirinemmeko, koirinenneko, koirasikaanko, koiranikaanko, koiransakaanko, koirammekaanko, koirannekaanko, koiraanikaanko, koiraasikaanko, koiraansakaanko, koiraammekaanko, koiraannekaanko, koirassanikaanko, koirassasikaanko, koirassansakaanko, koirassammekaanko, koirassannekaanko, koirastanikaanko, koirastasikaanko, koirastansakaanko, koirastammekaanko, koirastannekaanko, koirallanikaanko, koirallasikaanko, koirallansakaanko, koirallammekaanko, koirallannekaanko, koirananikaanko, koiranasikaanko, koiranansakaanko, koiranammekaanko, koiranannekaanko, koiraksenikaanko, koiraksesikaanko, koiraksensakaanko, koiraksemmekaanko, koiraksennekaanko, koirattanikaanko, koirattasikaanko, koirattansakaanko, koirattammekaanko, koirattannekaanko, koirinenikaanko, koirinesikaanko, koirinensakaanko, koirinemmekaanko, koirinennekaanko, koirasikokaan, koiranikokaan, koiransakokaan, koirammekokaan, koirannekokaan, koiraanikokaan, koiraasikokaan, koiraansakokaan, koiraammekokaan, koiraannekokaan, koirassanikokaan, koirassasikokaan, koirassansakokaan, koirassammekokaan, koirassannekokaan, koirastanikokaan, koirastasikokaan, koirastansakokaan, koirastammekokaan, koirastannekokaan, koirallanikokaan, koirallasikokaan, koirallansakokaan, koirallammekokaan,koirallannekokaan, koirananikokaan, koiranasikokaan, koiranansakokaan, koiranammekokaan, koiranannekokaan, koiraksenikokaan, koiraksesikokaan, koiraksensakokaan, koiraksemmekokaan, koiraksennekokaan, koirattanikokaan, koirattasikokaan, koirattansakokaan, koirattammekokaan, koirattannekokaan, koirinenikokaan, koirinesikokaan, koirinensakokaan, koirinemmekokaan, koirinennekokaan.
@GetBack2023Now3 ай бұрын
Damn.
@Travelfast3 ай бұрын
And that is for every finnish word.
@jennimarilla45113 ай бұрын
I'm Finnish, but I'm still VERY confused, OMG! 😅 They all actually are words for a dog, but we don't use most of them in everyday life. Most of the time you need to use/know these words only at school, but that doesn`t make it any easier haha! 😂😂 And yes, the same thing for every word in the Finnish language! 😀
@jennimarilla45113 ай бұрын
@@Travelfast Yep! 😁
@ellav53873 ай бұрын
You forgot the punchline at the end: "And now the plural forms..."
@adeela03253 ай бұрын
OMGG 8TURN and Robin in the same videooo, my life is completed.
@itslinagirl2718Ай бұрын
Who was the right 8turn member
@jkagent3 ай бұрын
That one Finnish word could be separated to the words it is composed of and looked at word-for-word: "lento, kone, suihku, turbiini, moottori, apu, mekaanikko, ali, upseeri, oppilas", and one should understand the meaning. Most compound words are really straightforward like that. The difficulty in Finnish really only comes from how different it is from what most people know, like English. But unlike English it is quite logical once you get to it.
@pietasofia57562 ай бұрын
This
@notjunior3 ай бұрын
Anna was smart in being more quiet and the fact that people don't know much about portuguese, because there's so much you can use to say it's difficult 😂
@ssr-p1n2 ай бұрын
as a Finn, I struggled with he and she a lot for a while, since I'm used to saying "hän" for everything
@sunchi14613 ай бұрын
Thai is like a lot of Indian languages in terms of the alphabets. They have the same alphabets with different inotations depending on the region one comes from.
@wdvnge3 ай бұрын
Robin should learn more about our language since he couldnt even tell what the related languages are. Finnish is uralic language and languages from the same family tree are: estonian, hungarian and quite a few smaller languages for example mari, udmurt, komi and sami languages. It seems like these people dont really understand what makes language hard or easy for certain people. Its technically rather easy for indo-european language speaker (french, german, swedish etc) to learn another indo-european language since they are from the same family tree and have a lot of similarities from technical level to words. Finnish is very hard for most people in the world since they cant relate to anything in it. I learned english from everything since i was a kid but i have studied german for one year and it was hard didnt really pick up anything, same with swedish (3 years) but i know a bit because i have seen that language a lot too. Have been studying korean for a while and from my perspective its somewhat easy but ofc i have more interest in the language than the other ones i studied before. Especially hangul was a nice surprise because there is not many letters to learn.
@Sipu973 ай бұрын
Yup, I was shocked how little he knew of our mother tongue :D But maybe it was the moment that he just forgot. Our language is so unique and cool and I was us native speakers would know more of it and appreciate it more.
@wdvnge3 ай бұрын
@@Sipu97 yeah! I often am frustrated because i see that many especially younger finns dont appreciate our language and how unique it is. Many people seem to have this idea that there is something embarrasing to be finnish or have a finnish accent while speaking english for example. I have only heard positive about finnish language and accent from outside of Finland 😂 people find it very interesting
@wdvnge3 ай бұрын
@@Sipu97 but other than that i think Robin puts on a class act when representing finnish people 👍
🇫🇮lokative forms of the CAR word. AUTO AUTOT AUTON AUTOJEN AUTONA AUTOINA AUTOON AUTOSSA AUTOLLE AUTOIHIN AUTOISSA AUTOILLE AUTOISTA AUTOSTA AUTOILTA AUTOLTA AUTOKSI AUTOIKSI AUTOA AUTOJA AUTOKIN AUTOTKIN AUTOINEEN AUTOKSIKIN AUTOIKSIKIN… (11k more)There was a small number of them. The same inflections for all words but in a sifferent way for all 8003 adjektives, 77 559 sunbstantives and 6 849 verbs.🗿
@pietasofia57562 ай бұрын
So proud of our language 😌✨
@olgahein43842 ай бұрын
And people complain about german being hard. Auto (singular), Autos (plural). End of story. Just kidding, that's spoken language. A car is officially 'Personenkraftfahrzeug' or 'Personenkraftwagen' which can be officially shortened to 'PKW'.
@timohoukka3 ай бұрын
Sauna on sauna, eikä soona😂
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
😅😅😅😅 insane joke😅😅😅😅🎉🎉🎉🎉🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🎂🎂🎂🎂🍫🥂🌟
@HeyItsMikaylaa3 ай бұрын
as someone who speaks finnish, english, korean and some thai I'd say 1. english (Purely for the writing that makes no sense and weird words) 2. finnish (For conjucation and suffixes) long pause 3. thai (Grammar is super easy. Reading/writing a bit of a struggle for me. Tones aren't bad but of course they add to the difficultness) 4. korean (Same reason as finnish but there's less and it's super logical. Reading/writing is super easy and grammar consistent) All the other languages (except thai, finnish and korean) are related to english so it makes sense why'd they think thai is hardest but it's really not.
@olgahein43842 ай бұрын
Well, from a german POV english is in every way (grammar, gender, vocabulary) cause it is just simpler than german. Except the pronounciation, which is also a struggle for us with french. That is until we realize that for english we just have to try to keep our mouth open , even when it's closed, while talking.
@HeyItsMikaylaa2 ай бұрын
@@olgahein4384 well yeah they're both Germanic languages. My first language isn't 🤷♀️ Also as far as I know German is way more phonetically consistent than English.
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
Other languages such as German, English, French and Portuguese are easy languages and studied beyond belief all over the world, they have speakers from every continent you can imagine. The video was cool. It was beautiful. 🥂🧃🧃🍫🍧😂🎶🫂💙📸📷💋💋💋💋
@ANJING_SITUMORANG3 ай бұрын
Sadly Finnish part about it went wrong, person is hän not it. It is item like table, cat, dog... animals. Human is not it because saying that way is same as saying that someone have less value. Maybe he speak modern Finnish, some people talk about dog using hän (she/he) even dog is "it" lower than human in Finnish language. Only human is she/he in Finnish language, other animals or items are it. I like his songs and he is talented person, maybe language videos need someone who know more about language. Some people use ketä word in wrong places, annoying.
@camel21603 ай бұрын
Incorrect. Using ’hän’ for humans and ’se’ for non-humans is a very recent ”Standard Finnish” invention from 1800’s. ’Hän’ and ’se’ originally were both used for people and animals. ’Se’ was used most times, while ’hän’ was a logophoric pronoun. In modern spoken language and most dialects ’se’ is the most used word for ’he/she’. Also ’tuo/toi’ and ’tää’ are used for people in Finnish. It is not inhumane or wrong or incorrect and should not be considered as such.
@homer_sexualАй бұрын
Hän is correct in the written formal language, but nobody actually uses it when speaking (except from some western dialects apparently)
@bluemeow3 ай бұрын
This was fun! 😂 Language battle!
@unknownentity82562 ай бұрын
Actually what Robin said about him/her is incorrect, we do have a word that is for him/her but it is used for both genders, "hän" and it is "se". If formally speak to someone "hän" should be used, "se" works too if it's casual.
@xxstormxx563 ай бұрын
I love that discussion, please make more videos about knowledgeable topics
@magomistico5623 ай бұрын
Ana está nesse canal 🇧🇷💙
@lisandrasilva30843 ай бұрын
In Brazil we have a meme that is called traumatizing exchangers with words that are the same but veryyyy different meanings
@SPauloOrgulhoMorumBI2 ай бұрын
O francês está em um nível completamente diferente
@myfaceismyshield59632 ай бұрын
Brazil is not a language. Brazilians speak a dialect of Portuguese
@heijuli183 ай бұрын
Suomen oma kultapoika robin❤ ihanaa nähä robin täl kanaval
@shadowprod52053 ай бұрын
Suomi mainittu torilla tavataan RAH 🦅 🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅
@clownweaver2 ай бұрын
some add-ons to robin speaking abt finnish: finnish is part of the uralic language family and even more specifically finno-ugric languages (which include finnish, hungarian, estonian and a lot of smaller languages like the sámi languages, karelian, mari, veps, mansi, udmurt). that's why it's so different from other languages spoken in europe or even in the nordic countries. at the start robin talked abt using the neutral "it" for everything, but that's spoken language. we have a neutral world which is like he/she/they "hän", but that's mostly used in written language, or if it's used in spoken language someone might view you as arrogant or we use it when we speak about a pet in a baby way. what makes finnish hard in my opinion (as a finn), is that the language is so different depending if it's official written language or spoken and inside spoken language the is dialects (and dialects inside dialects, like southwest finnish dialect but inside there is pori region dialect and turku dialect) and slang (e.g. stadin slangi aka capital city helsinki's slang). also yes the french girl was def confusing finnish with slavic languages because finnish in quite vowel heavy in my opinion, or like... there is a healthy balance on vowels and consonants. :D
@daniloperes18453 ай бұрын
I love Portuguese! The sound and the music is very beautiful!
@ps12513 ай бұрын
As a Thai person, I'd say even though our consonants, vowel, words intonation are very complex, the good news is our grammar is very easy compared to any other language. We don't have tenses, less rules and you can also break some rules and people won't judge you as an uneducated person (E.g.preposition) so let's go learn Thai haha!
@user-tk4gr9zo7t3 ай бұрын
This entirely broke my brain trying to piece together but in Plains Cree 9999 is kêkâ-mitâtahtwâw kihci mitâtahtomitanâw kêkâ-mitâtahtwâw mitâtahtomitanâw kêkâ-mitâtahtomitanâw kêkâ-mitâtahtosâp (roughly: nine times great hundred, nine times hundred, almost hundred-nineteen). I was curious to see how long it would be so I had to test myself 😂 loved the video guys 💖💕
@Ann-b9t2 ай бұрын
Suomii!🇫🇮❤
@5anttu73 ай бұрын
Robin Packalen✌️💪✊😃
@TeroKoskinen-xy2zz3 ай бұрын
16:24 Long word And Robin say wrong, he not say Moottori word.
@AndreaDoesYoga3 ай бұрын
Fascinating insight into world languages, keep it up! 🌎👍
@ReiKakariki3 ай бұрын
👍🎂🍫🥂🌷🎵💋
@ellu30473 ай бұрын
What is Robin doing there😂
@gabrielaserafini57063 ай бұрын
A Ana podia ter falado das conjugações verbais do apocalipse
@naosemacento3 ай бұрын
as a brazilian the easiest has got to be english, then pt, then french thr hardest is finnish
@kilobiten3 ай бұрын
theres no shot english is the easiest maybe when it comes to accessibility because everyone is trying to learn it and theres so many materials but im fluent and sh makes no sense 😭😭
@MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter3 ай бұрын
@@kilobiten but then again high exposure makes it so easy even for some asian chinese or other east asians to pronounce the words. If english was not very popular, it would be an entirely different story
@kilobiten3 ай бұрын
@@MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter facts
@hahahha1272 ай бұрын
kato robbari siellä
@mega_jonne15462 ай бұрын
Brazil isnt a languege its portugal
@esterreinaldodasilva263 ай бұрын
A língua portuguesa não é difícil, apenas sua gramática, o gênero e o dicionário português brasileiro que adiciona cinco palavras para a mesma coisa.
@Xarmutinha3 ай бұрын
A única coisa difícil é quando os falantes comem letras (português europeu) ou conectam tudo juntinho (português brasileiro)
@felixinacio3 ай бұрын
Português é difícil de aprender a escrever, tem muita regra. Falar não é tão difícil se você for falante de alguma língua irmã ou com raizes no latin.
@stellamarisknupfer1603 ай бұрын
A pronúncia são fácies,mas a gramática e a colocação de gênero dá nó nos neuros,mas os asiáticos e mediterrâneo, são impossível...
@sledgehog13 ай бұрын
@@XarmutinhaOu colocam vogais onde elas não existem(tiki-toki, whatxisappi, internetxi...).
@pedro345433 ай бұрын
@@stellamarisknupfer160 coreano nao e tao dificil assim nao, é a lingua asiatica mais facil
@iReactat3 ай бұрын
French girl just gaslighted everyone!!
@_.horanghae_blossom._2 ай бұрын
Am i the only one only here for minho and jaehyun?
17:43 NOOOO WHICH EDITOR SPELT GRAMMAR WRONG 😱😱😱😱😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
@leopartanen87523 ай бұрын
17:42 She's trying to say playing Mozart on piano is easy once you've figured it out how to play it. 👍🏻🇩🇪
@isag.s.1743 ай бұрын
Ana has barely spoken in this episode. She didn't even explain the Portuguese language structure
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
Difficult language ranking according to the perception of World Friends producers and actors: a) Thai b) Finnish c)Korean. (Asians idioms) Easy language ranking by Team World Friends producers and performers: a) English b) Portuguese c) French d) German. (Europeans idioms) This is the idiomatic perception content of the team of actors and producers of the World Friends video. 🎷💗ℹ️ℹ️💻💙💛💚😍🧸❤️🎵🥂🌟👉😊🏵️🏵️🫂🙂🆗👍🎂🌷👋🍫🎗 ️🥇🏅🎖️🎖️🏆🎒💎😘🌈🌈🌈🌈🌅🌅🌅🌅✈️✈️✈️✈️✈️✈️✈️✈️ ✈️👋👋👋👋 III loooooveeeddd!❤ III liiiiiiiiiiikeeeddd!❤
@Tuulikkaa2 ай бұрын
As a finnish i feel like robin should have told them about the fact that kuusi and palaa have many different meanings put like that first of all and when put together kuusi palaa it has many meanings too.
@bhatinne3 ай бұрын
not even yet talking about thai 28 vowels...
@tejasvi33493 ай бұрын
Thai is same telugu and hindi [indian languages]
@RishiRox-ky4gm3 ай бұрын
Actually thai Alphabet is similar to Hindi Aphabet , because they both there Alphabets r offshoots of Brahmi Alphabet from India
@supriyalaha4382Күн бұрын
THAI numbers sounds like BENGALI alphabets
@ahtunyarlathoteppy2360Ай бұрын
Wonder what the Brazilian girl's heritage is... Irish? French? Norwegian? Swedish? English? Perhaps German? A lot of Germans did go to Brazil after ww2.
@LogohtАй бұрын
Actually... Finland has weirdly enough most in common with Hungarian, Swedish (slang mostly tho) and Japanese out of all the things. But that's because Japanese and Finnish are very similar, not only in structure, but also in pronounciation and the basic alphabet are near identical :)
@SallesPepperАй бұрын
Why you guys never invite people from countries of Africa or native Americans , for exemple ? It's soooooooo rude and xenophobic sort of "just Europeans and Asiatic languages deserve attention" . And please don't tell me" we have a no European guest in our table ". Portuguese is a European language, no matter if your guest is a girl from Brazil. Shame on you...
@artbookgaming2 ай бұрын
Another argument for Finnish would've been that even though we have a lot of grammar rules, we have very few exceptions. If you find an "exception" it's way more likely that you actually just discovered a new rule that works for words that share some trait. Like talking vowel harmony (a, o, u are one group, ä, ö, y are another group, they can't be in the same word unless the word is a compound word or a loan word. e and i are neutral vowels, they can be in words with either group.) The way they are conjugated also follows vowel harmony, so there's -lla and -llä which both mean at something or mark ownership and you use -lla if the word has a, o, u, and -llä otherwise. With compound words and loan words it goes based on the last non neutral vowel, so not e or i. This, as you can see, is an indepth set of rules but you don't have to have a list of exceptions! There a literally 2 words that are exeptions to this set of rules: meri (sea) and veri (blood). Because they only have neutral vowels they should have -llä, -ssä, -tä, etc. Ä form for everything. But they don't, we say merta and verta while we also say meriä and veriä, merellä and verellä, etc. But they both conjugate the same way. The only irregular verb is olla. It's translates to "be" or, with -lla/-llä on the subject, to "have". We just have 5 different verb types. Once you know the rules for each 5, if you recognize which verb type the verb is you will know how to conjugate it. Also since Robin didn't know, Finnish is a Uralic language. It's related to Sami languages, Estonian, and Hungarian, as well as a bunch of tiny endangered languages primarely around western Russian border, like Mansi, Karelian, Veps, Udmurt, Mari, etc. The relation to Indo-European languages (English, French, German, Portuguese) is that when humanity left Africa through the Middle East, they dropped off the Middle Eastern languages there, proto-Indo-European languages continued to Europe from which Slavic languages branched off quick and Indo-Europeans continued together for a bit and then started to divide to Germanic/Romance/etc., the rest continued to Asia. Uralic languages were in the Asia group until the Ural mountain range where the group split and Uralic langiages headed back, mixing with Mongol languages along the way, eventually it split to a southern group that became Hungarian and a few dead languages and nothern group, then the northern group mixed more with Russian and split to even more north which became the Sami languages and middle which became the rest including Finnish. The remaining Asia group eventually split to East and South Asia, South Asia continued to Oceania so Australia, Phillipines, etc, East Asia continued to North America and from there to South America.
@daputti53872 ай бұрын
I see your point but how do you explain "Kangasalla"
@artbookgaming2 ай бұрын
@@daputti5387 is the question "why is it not 'kangasalalla' but 'kangasalla'?" The answer is that "ala" in kangasala is not "ala" like field of study or medicine, where the word stem is "ala" making it alalla, alalta, alalle, but the nominative case of "alla" like below something, so it follows how "alla" is conjugated: the word stem is a, so it's ala, alla, alta, alle. All the words that have that same word follow the same conjugation: päiväsalla (during the day, literally "under the day(light)") is probably the best surviving example of this. It still mostly exists in the savonian dialect, I haven't heard it in general speech, so that could be why you're not that familiar with it. People in western dialects have preferred to keep alla as a separate word like "pöydän alla" while in the east it could've easily been "pöydäsalla". It's just that we very rarely use the nominative, nominatiivi (same case as talo), case for alla which is ala, by itself, it always needs to be referring to what it's under, so the default for it is the adessive case, adessiivi (same case as talolla).
@thisisgoodfruit1618Ай бұрын
As a Native English speaker, I find that Finnish is actually sooo much easier to pronounce and read than German. ✨️😅
@Mi-my7pw3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂amei. O homem da Finlândia é muito de boa. Ele é tipo: deixa a vida me levar🌴🦥 E o cara do UK como sempre sendo um comédia. Todos foram fofos de verdade ❤
@gacha._.life._.pt._.2 ай бұрын
Sim mano😂, o menino do uk é muito engraçado e a da França tava a tentar fazer com que a língua francesa fosse difícil 😂😂
@SPauloOrgulhoMorumBI2 ай бұрын
@@gacha._.life._.pt._. Francês é mais próximo do irlandês e do Inglês do que do italiano, e muuuito longe do português, sem contar a pronúncia que não há nenhuma semelhança
@Juhani963 ай бұрын
Robin again keeps lying 😂 we have "it" (se) for objects and he/she for persons but its only neutral "hän" word for all persons.
@Gittas-tube3 ай бұрын
@Juhani96 Hi, Juhani! Robin may be a nice singer but he is not a good representative of Finnish because his mother tongue is Swedish. He is a 'finlandssvensk' as I am, which can be translated as Swedish-speaking Finlander, not a Finn. A Finn is somebody whose mother tongue is Finnish and who counts himself or herself as belonging to the Finnish people, as a Finn. That said, most Swedish-speaking Finlanders are more or less fluent in Finnish. Robin is actually rather bad at explaining Finnish. Why didn't they choose somebody whose mother tongue is Finnish? 18:09
@Juhani963 ай бұрын
@@Gittas-tube good questions
@AoE_73 ай бұрын
@@Juhani96 but not true at all. He is not "suomenruotsalainen". You can Google it.
@AltrantisАй бұрын
French girl does not get to tell others about levels of politeness. French has like 10 levels of politeness and it's not even typified, you just have to know intuitively.
@camilacorreia37003 ай бұрын
I’m just obsessed either way this videos. I love to learn and as a Brazilian there’s a lot to share about Brasil ❤
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
I knew that Thai would win before the video opened and developed, after it, Finnish, which is Asian, is complicated and finally Korean is also difficult for those who are Westerners even though it is not tonal, it has a phonetic alphabet and grammar and linguistics that are very adverse to those who are used to Western languages, which has many conjugations and declensions. Everything as expected. I really liked the honesty of the Thai girl that told about Mandarin and Arabic are more complex, they are full of difficult dialects, they are never simple. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Cool vídeo. Love it 😂😂🍧🍫🧃🥂❤💋💋
@butterflies6553 ай бұрын
All the European languages came from Asia.
@SinilkMudilaSama3 ай бұрын
@@butterflies655 The phrase all European languages came from Asia is dystopian, false, rude and unrelated to the content of the video. Why? For example, Latin, which gave rise to Romance languages such as Portuguese, Spanish, French, Italian, among others, has its roots in the Italian Peninsula region. Ancient Greek, which gave rise to the modern Greek language, is also an Indo-European language that developed in the region of Greece, on the Attic Peninsula. Both didnt, never came from Asia. Furthermore, there are languages in Europe that do not have Indo-European origins, as is the case of Basque in the Iberian Peninsula, which is an isolated language and has no relationship with any other known language and did not come from Asia. The channel's video on tour real content deals with the most difficult languages to understand and speak, such as Thai, then Finnish and at the end German. The video never spoke of the origin of European languages because it is not the channel's footprint and because it is a complex and very dry topic that is very difficult for those working on the World Friends channel team. Therefore, your sentence is false, rude, stupid, dystopian, with no connection to the theme of the video. Farewell and no chat for you forever.
@coraliemoller3896Ай бұрын
In English, the neutral person is One. One needs to look both ways at the traffic before stepping off the kerb/curb. Does one have to pay for entry?
@chimminsАй бұрын
i like how germany just didn't even mention our number system haha we read numbers the other way around, like normally you say 45 but in german you read the 5 first and then the 4. i get confused with it myself
@kualnchaln63621 күн бұрын
Actually Finnish is grammatically most similar to Korean, among the languages in this video.
@ghiblinerd6196Ай бұрын
What I took away from this is they mostly looked like models and French lady looked like she was healing from a vampire bite.
@skr.s20003 ай бұрын
Thai alphabet sounded like nepali alphabet ka kha ga gha nga... Ya ra la wo.sa.sha saa ...
@BrandInMTАй бұрын
Learning Korean and if I remember to speak like Yoda, I get the sentence structure mostly correct.
@Real-Name..MaqavoyАй бұрын
.thumbnail isn't even. Accurate to the *topic* of Discussion...
@lintu25Ай бұрын
Why car is part of masculine? Don't women drove?
@user-bm5gf2pe7eАй бұрын
Gotta love that the captions are sticking to the bit of "New Zealand doesn't exist" at 21:05 😂
@wdvnge3 ай бұрын
Some rankings are bit different for the last 5 but generally quite similar to what are viewed as the hardest languges in the world: Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Finnish, Hungarian, Icelandic, Georgian, and Navajo. Ofc it all depends on what your own language is since like its quite more easy for estonian to learn finnish than french or whatever so you cant really rank them always.
@olgahein43842 ай бұрын
imo russian isn't that hard. Similar to german, it follows the rules quite strictly, so once you know the rules it's easy. It just has more rules. Also some rules are contrary to most european languages. And other rules are just non-existent in other languages. But at least they don't have articles.
@wdvngeАй бұрын
@@olgahein4384 i havent rly studied russian but id agree that it does not seem nearly as complicated like the others on the list.
@MrBetospsp3 ай бұрын
A Ana é muito elegante, admiro muito esse jeito dela
@Petteriks3 ай бұрын
Hello Thai girl 👋🏼
@vtr.M_3 ай бұрын
Which language is easiest? Japanese or Korean? French or Romanian? Mandarin or Cantonese? German or Dutch?
@juju-un8vo3 ай бұрын
I can only say about: Japanese easier than Korean and Mandarin easier than Cantonese
@afjo9723 ай бұрын
As a German, I can assure you that Dutch id basically the simplified version of German (because they have no case system) but they speak like drunken Brits
@pedro345433 ай бұрын
Korean is MUCH easier than Japanese
@mirae91633 ай бұрын
Mandarin is much easier than Cantonese.
@FatViking932 ай бұрын
I feel so ashamed that Robin is the representative of our country.