okay but why is Joshua whispering and giving serial killer vibe 😭
@PhoneMyintAung早稲田大学Ай бұрын
He wants to emphasize that he is a German
@lesamunosolomАй бұрын
he wants to correct the image that german is not a harsh language because in the past people have exaggerated the pronunciation but people just need to come to terms with the fact that german is harsh :D
@ChristinaDonnelly7 ай бұрын
I had such a fun time talking with Joshua and Elena! Hope you guys enjoyed the video! 😊 -Christina 🇺🇸
@henri1917 ай бұрын
I can't believe you're back , good see your return , Christina , hope see more of you 😊
@вариантыглаза7 ай бұрын
Does joshua have Instagram?
@keanancupido7 ай бұрын
@@вариантыглаза😭😭
@vooides7 ай бұрын
Madre del amor hermoso, niña. Lo tuyo no es normal 😭😱😱💔
@twoworldsof_yerin7 ай бұрын
It was so much fun! :)
@henri1917 ай бұрын
So happy in see the lovely Christina from US back , amazing girl , Joshua's accent is always be notable for me no matter what 😂
@ChristinaDonnelly7 ай бұрын
❤❤
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
@@ChristinaDonnelly Your accent is a pleasure ❤
@nirutivan98117 ай бұрын
5:26 I hate this „fun fact“ because it is just not true at all. But so many Swiss think it’s true. We do have grammar! No language or dialect would work without grammar. We do not have defined spelling rules, so words maybe written in different ways. But there is a grammar, it might be different between different dialects, but that does not make it non-existent. We have one past tense (yes just one), most dialects have three grammatical cases, we have male, female and neuter grammatical gender, the verb usually comes in the second place in the sentence and so on. For any Swiss who don‘t believe me: If I say: „Ich luege es Video“ it is clear that I‘m saying „I‘m watching a video“ When I say: Ich ha es Video gluegt“ it is clear that it is in the past. If I say: „Ich gang go es Video luege“ it is clear that I am going to watch a video. If I say: „Lueg i es Video“ it will be understood by Swiss people as a question („Am I watching a video?“) And if I say: „Video lueg es ich“ I‘m pretty sure many Swiss will look confused because the syntax does not make sense at all. All of that is grammar! Without grammar this would not work. We could not communicate with each other. And one little thing: Both „Danke“ and „Merci“ are common here in Zurich. It‘s not just „danke“ here.
@danikaHR7 ай бұрын
In Zug it's also both: Danke and Merci.
@DE-iv8if7 ай бұрын
How can People even think it is a Language without Grammar ? :D Makes no Sense..
@MammiJoy7 ай бұрын
Thanks for pointing that out. I was just about to write it down. And then there's luzern: "häsch dä frau xeh?“ Yap, they say; "en frau/dä frau." Fun fact? XD
@mattia60137 ай бұрын
@@MammiJoyi‘m from lucerne and no one here would say that😅
@B777Cap6 ай бұрын
Tsüri🫡
@LOL-gn5oh7 ай бұрын
Joshua is so chill, his voice is so friggin' smooth. Damn, what a handsome bloke.
@Frey_20267 ай бұрын
Yeah, he's like a Final Fantasy villain
@LOL-gn5oh7 ай бұрын
@@Frey_2026 I literally spat out my coffee from laughing so hard at your comment. LOL
@daimsaeed7 ай бұрын
Bros forcing it
@masaru3407 ай бұрын
@@daimsaeedand of course you would know that ;)
@fabricio47947 ай бұрын
I Think he Eastern German..He stills on 80s
@Morena_falida7 ай бұрын
I would spend an entire hour listening to ASMR with this guy's voice, it's so relaxing and fills your entire brain.
@festivelyplump7 ай бұрын
I love Joshua’s sarcasm 😂 …such a fun video
@EddieReischl7 ай бұрын
Owing to my mom's grandparents being from Switzerland and Baden/Wurttemberg, and my dad's grandparents being from Bavaria, this video was right up my alley. It reminded me of being a little kid at a wedding, and all the 70+ year-old relatives are speaking different dialects of German to each other and not quite getting their point across, till finally they give up and start speaking English.
@estellemelodimitchell82597 ай бұрын
That’s interesting. Why didn’t they speak Hoch Deutsche, which I’m sure they would be more proficient in since it’s a language they learnt in school?
@KiaraKitsune7 ай бұрын
@@estellemelodimitchell8259 for some reasons, from my experience, bavarians refuse to speak high german, at least the older people
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
Eddie lives in the States so that's the reason of confusion 😅
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
@@KiaraKitsune they just cant speak the standard idiom, thats all 😅
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
@@KiaraKitsune they just cant speak the standard idiom, thats all 😅
@Charl_es197 ай бұрын
Christina , my darling , wonderful see you again 😊 , Joshua is always so good at speaking with his accent , either english or german.
@sophievanmeerbeeck73136 ай бұрын
"Joshua is always so good at speaking with his accent, either English or German"... Where else could I hear him speak, please? Who is he? Is he well-known in Germany?
@StranieroPL7 ай бұрын
In Polish language hospital it's: "szpital". The pronunciation is almost the same like "spital" in the swiss german. Interesting!
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
in fact germans could also say hospital. there are more words for it you could also say "Klinik". but most used word is krankenhaus
@N3v3r_S3ttl37 ай бұрын
@@popokaka4763 In Dutch "kliniek" is more a specialized building for one or two specialist, "ziekenhuis" is the bigger hospitals.
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
ah okay :)@@N3v3r_S3ttl3
@Tuliosantos17 ай бұрын
@@N3v3r_S3ttl3in Portuguese too, but we say "clínica".
@EsthermariaSaezmayoral7 ай бұрын
@@popokaka4763in Spain hospital have many more specialties and are bigger the same than in many countries i suppose😊😅..
@li.zhh76 ай бұрын
Just want to remind y'all that there are different dialects so don't think that this is the way all swiss people talk (she's from Bern but as a person from Zurich I speak very different) and there are some grammar rules that you're just born with lol, it's hard to explain because it's just so random
@Grimsyreaper7 ай бұрын
Dont really like how swiss girl was targeting german things the whole time. "German dont know about love, least romantic people in the world, krankenhaus sounds so harsh." Sis if u keep complaining about Germans, ur gonna be the one who's considered harsh. Love the guy, he was so chill, didnt care about all the noise.❤
@Kane_20017 ай бұрын
There was a video 5 months ago of Joshua being scolded by an American girl for using a British accent
@masaru3407 ай бұрын
@@Kane_2001yeah, she was so rude to him
@Grimsyreaper7 ай бұрын
@@Kane_2001 i was tryna find the video but couldnt. Could you possibly provide me the link to that video or tell me the title?
@Grimsyreaper7 ай бұрын
@@masaru340 hey man could you provide me the link to that video or tell me the title, i need to watch the video.
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
@@Grimsyreaper while I'm not gonna start looking for it myself, it was a video of a bunch of Europeans trying to guess each other nationalities. should be easy enough to find
@MatthewJohnHadodo7 ай бұрын
She didn't have to say she was from Bern, i knew as soon as she pronounced spital as [ʃpitau]
@danikaHR7 ай бұрын
Same 😆
@OWnIshiiTrolling6 ай бұрын
i was a bit disappointed when she didn't say sekklä
@Alex.Zoeggeler6 ай бұрын
and laufe as loufe
@groudonvert72865 ай бұрын
One of the few words I remember in Swiss German XD
@waynebrady18195 ай бұрын
And still she got the word for skirt wrong. In Bern we call that Jupe...
@MMF16747 ай бұрын
Can you guys do a netherlands dutch vs belgian dutch vs afrikaans?
@Morena_falida7 ай бұрын
I support this idea
@edwardcorrea39507 ай бұрын
are they even that different?
@MMF16747 ай бұрын
@edwardcorrea3950 alot of differences in some words tbh
@estellemelodimitchell82597 ай бұрын
Dutch and Belgian would be able to understand each other better than between Dutch/Belgian and Afrikaans, which I think would be mostly a one way thing, that the former should be able to understand the other 2 better.
@fabricio47947 ай бұрын
And Flemish?no one dig that language...
@ruemignon2 ай бұрын
In Zurich, I kept hearing everyone say 'merci' whenever they were showing appreciation. It caught me off guard at first, but I soon realized it's their way of saying 'thank you.' Also, don't they call a skirt 'jupe' in Switzerland too?
@chavem2 күн бұрын
yep we do, Jupe or Rock
@andreasghb80747 ай бұрын
Not true that Swiss-German has no rules about syntax. There absolutely are syntactical rules. It's just that they are different from High German rules.
@OWnIshiiTrolling6 ай бұрын
I think people just confuse it with orthography, which isn't really a thing in swiss german. Xi, gsi and ksi are all the same word, and while the first one is an abomination unto the lord, all three are correct and in use.
@TS-cf9zs5 ай бұрын
😅😂
@richardschulthess51052 ай бұрын
It's true that Swiss-German has no rules about syntax. It highly depend on the region you are in. And of course it also is changing over time and generations .
@Dalmen7 ай бұрын
in my opinion the most german also understand without any problems spital for Krankenhaus. And "schaffen" is in German a slang word for "arbeiten". But schaffen is at the end a German word, whats mean "to accomplish". btw: romantik have one of the main roots in Germany. May you have heard of Johann Wolfgang Goethes, Friedrich Schillers etc. 🙄 But I get it, its a starotype like germans have no humor.
@waltergro91022 ай бұрын
"Schaffe" mean working in Swabian. No accident that's right north of the Alemannic dialect area (like Swiss German in Switzerland).
@hakimykeemy98627 ай бұрын
joshua got more spotlight in this channel day by day..awesome
@masaru3406 ай бұрын
His videos barely got any views, so I doubt they’ll ever invite him back anytime soon, mark my words, this is the last time you’ll have seen him
@sophievanmeerbeeck73136 ай бұрын
What is his Channel? I just LOVE his Voice. ❤
@marvinjoa24 күн бұрын
@@masaru340 as a German, I really dont like the most German people they invite because they are weird.
@danwoo18177 ай бұрын
Christine is back! yay!
@Nikioko7 ай бұрын
8:48: That is actually a difference in Alemannic dialects: in Swiss German, "been" is "gsi" ("geseien" in High German), while in Swabian, it is "gwäa" ("gewesen" in High German). This language border goes straight through Upper Swabia.
@groudonvert72865 ай бұрын
What does geseien mean ?
@machjiffy47107 ай бұрын
Welcome back Christina, one of the first appearances on these series of channels!
@dipankarchattopadhyay53417 ай бұрын
what a deep voice the man has....yo
@PerSvensson-pf3rm7 ай бұрын
When the word child, kind, was brought up I was surprised that Christina didn't make a comment like, "yes like in kindergarten!", do americans know the etymology of the word in general? In swedish the word for child is barn, wich may sound fun for english speekers.
@LePetitNuageGris7 ай бұрын
I think in general North Americans (as far as my own experience as a Canadian goes) don’t generally know the etymology of the words we use in English. I think since English is such a dominant language in the world now, less people seem to be aware not only of its origins (for example the fact that it was partly derived from German), but also aren’t fully aware of the pronunciations and words of other languages (again, I do mean this GENERALLY, not to mean everyone). If you think about it, both Canada and the US are on a completely separate continent from many of the languages of the world, and though many foreigners seem to travel here, the majority of us tend to be from here and many foreigners also learn English and speak it quite well, so we don’t get much exposure. As opposed to, say, British people, who are very close to several countries in Europe that speak many foreign languages, and you can literally drive to the countries, which is much more affordable/accessible than flying. So I would imagine lots of tourists, lots of tourING, lots of exposure themselves. This is all my conjecture. But yeah, I think we don’t really think about these things. Even words like entrepreneur or foyer, which come from French (and French is the second language in Canada), I think most of us generally don’t even think about the fact that they’re French words until someone points it out (and then in retrospect it’s obvious). I think the pronunciation also can be so different from the original that we wouldn’t draw the connection, either, until we’re learning that language (like seeing “stool” come up in German to mean chair, we might think, “Oh, that’s easy. I know that one”, and maybe not think any deeper than that… lol Also if you take a word like karaoke, which we pronounce like “carry-o-key”, versus the Japanese pronunciation of “kah-rah-oh-kay”, it’s a bit hard to draw the connection, although I think at least with this word, it’s generally known that karaoke was borrowed from Japan. I think, anyway…)
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
Isn't barn or bairne or sth like that a word for child in English, too? But somewhere around Scotland, Ireland and/or the North of England, I think (bc of the Danelaw and Vikings in general)
@LePetitNuageGris7 ай бұрын
@@MellonVegan Well, I’ll be darned. Never heard that one (though it makes sense since I’ve never been to Scotland lol). A quick google says it takes its origin from Old English, written as “bearn” (btw, apparent “bairn” is the correct spelling of the Scottish English version).
@keinjuan7 ай бұрын
Koreans and Japanese have a fair bit of German in their lexicon because many of those seeking higher education during the time of Westernization went to Germany. ARBAITEU (arbeiten) is definitely one of them (the meaning is slightly different - more like a temp job). This trend is especially strong in medical vocabulary where tradition tends to last longer. For instance, neurosis is called NOIROZE (how the German word neurose is heard to them) and allergy is called ALLELEUGI (how the German word allergie is heard to them).
@clifforddang59477 ай бұрын
I’m in love with the host!
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
4:35 Korean "arbeitu" for part-time job is likely from Japanese. Japan historical had tight relations to Prussia (when still existing until 1918, the year of revolution)
@luigicimorelli22772 ай бұрын
Swiss people are amazing, they also managed to make german sound cute.
@fabricio47947 ай бұрын
How id Like To hear Joshua Says"Stooonks"his voice is perfect for the role....
@bastyaya7 ай бұрын
It depends also where in the Swiss you come from within the German speaking area. As there are different words and pronunciations within all over Germany through the dialects.
@markushengstler84827 ай бұрын
Love it! But they could have used some words in Swiss German that are less likely to be understood but mean the same thing. Like secklä instead of rännä for to run
@b_bobsch7 ай бұрын
Yep. And the German guy some Low German, to spice it up. Like birsen for to run. 😉
@KiaraKitsune7 ай бұрын
@@b_bobsch we don't know from which region Joshua is, so depending on where he comes from, he most likely doesn't know "low-german" or platt-deutsch as we call it
@markushengstler84827 ай бұрын
Guetsli - Keks - Cookie just came to my mind
@Mandaia6 ай бұрын
Mii erscht Gedanke be „run“ isch au secklä gsie, hät au ghofft, dass t Wörter echli „exotischer“ usgwählt worde wäred
@Dalerod887 ай бұрын
That guy is super cool
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
in germany usually you would say "gestern bin ich zu hause gewesen". "daheim" is more like an old way to say "at home" or a little bit depending on where you live in germany
@uliwehner7 ай бұрын
gestern war ich daheim, oder zuhause.
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
ja geht auch@@uliwehner
@RafaelpSalvador7 ай бұрын
I've been learning German, when I heard this sentence, I though could be 'Gestern war ich zu hause' is that wrong?
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
yes thats absolutely correct. there are a few different sentence structures to say yesterday i was at home. "gestern war ich zu hause" would be one most germans would say@@RafaelpSalvador
@EddieReischl7 ай бұрын
Woher kommen Joshua? Wo wohnen Sie? Maybe that was a hint for those of us from the US who aren't super familiar with the dialects or beginners speaking German.
@Minaeditssss2 ай бұрын
Joshuaa please come back to world friends ❤
@masaru3402 ай бұрын
That’s not how it works. It’s now about him wanting to come back or not. This production picks and invites these people. So if the production doesn’t invite them back, they can’t. Even if they want. I guess production decides based on how successful the videos are and how much people like them
@stephenrowell93736 ай бұрын
Great video , made even more enjoyable by having Christina back on World Friends , she is looking terrific...!
@hendrik943177 ай бұрын
8:46 I would say "zuhause" instead of "daheim" is more comon in standard german. "daheim" sounds bavarian.
@ilregulator7 ай бұрын
Yeah I guess if he had had to answer first, he wouldn't have used "daheim". Also I think he would have used Präteritum and not Perfekt. It's more common to say "Gestern war ich zuhause" than "Gestern bin ich zuhause gewesen". That's another big difference between swiss-german and german. In swiss-german there is only one past tense (only Perfekt)
@jhonydepp84517 ай бұрын
Joshua is Like Robert Pattinson when acting in Twilight...All My Respect!!..
@Markus_Abrach6 ай бұрын
3:10 'Rock' starts from the shoulders till about knees, here was a 'Jupe' visible, which starts on the belly
@p.andreacastillo2087 ай бұрын
The German guy looks and sounds like a vampire 💅🏻💅🏻💅🏻💅🏻
@IIIOOOUS7 ай бұрын
South west Germans understand Swiss German, since their dialect is similar.
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
Bc it's the same language group: Alemanic
@maja-kehn91307 ай бұрын
I think he is from Baden-Württemberg
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
@@maja-kehn9130 yeah, several tells there that I think I heard, like saying gfangen instead of gefangen, using "daheim" instead of "zu Hause" and I'm not sure if that counts but at least every example of a German speaking with that more monotone (sounds so negative but I don't mean it in a negative way) voice in their lower register that I have heard is from BW.
@groudonvert72865 ай бұрын
Basel german is similar to Bade-Würtenberg dialect, but more you go south and more different it is. Swiss German has problems to understand Wallis German for example.
@waltergro91022 ай бұрын
@@hnrccaa German dialect group.
@angyML7 ай бұрын
I was supposed to be studying German now but procrastinate has sent me to this video The Swiss word for House sounds like the Dutch one But I'm struggling with the sentence with fishing (in High German). Can someone help me?
@andyx68277 ай бұрын
He said: "Ich war fischen und hab ganz viele Fische gefangen" (I was fishing and caught lots of fish). A more correct translation would be "Wir sind angeln gegangen und haben viele Fische gefangen" (We went fishing and caught lots of fish).
@peterfunfstuck80947 ай бұрын
@@andyx6827 I guess it really depends where exactly you're from - born in Saxony and raised in Berlin here - I would always say "Wir waren angeln und haben viele Fische gefangen."
@xaverlustig35817 ай бұрын
His use of "fischen" for fishing sounds a bit odd to me, guess he let himself influence by the English word. It's not wrong, but for me "fischen" is more like with a trawler. With a fishing rod ("Angel") I would have used "angeln" instead. English has the related word "angling".
@sebastiankarp90977 ай бұрын
I'm from the north in germany and we say daheim or zuhause... take what you want!
@Flo-vn9ty7 ай бұрын
It's the same in the west
@DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig7 ай бұрын
Ihr sagt in Norddeutschland auch daheim? Interessant. Wie weit im Norden ist denn das?
@hyenalaughingmatter81037 ай бұрын
@@DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig Also ich hab das noch nie gehört...
@henner73717 ай бұрын
Daheim kenne ich zwar, genutzt habe ich es noch nie. Ist bei uns nicht üblich, bin Norddeutscher Plattsnacker.
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
@@DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig Ist eher eine etwas neuere Geschichte, dass sich das im Norden verbreite. Ich sags persönlich auch (bin aus und in NRW), aber ich habs von südlichen Mundarten aufgegriffen (ebenso wie gell oder net). Ist einfach ne Konsequenz der besseren Vernetzung untereinander. Inzw. sagt ja auch jeder Diggi, nicht nur die Hamburger.
@nebucamv55246 ай бұрын
Of course we have Latin words in German (e.g. Struktur, Maschine, Doktor, Fenster, etc.)! Maybe what she means is there are MORE Latin words in Swiss German. This for sure is true.
@beratmaliqi54457 ай бұрын
Rennen ( to run ) in Swiss German is SEKLE / seklä
@simpetcla122 ай бұрын
Joshua should be an antagonist in the next Die Hard remake.
@SofyanZauhair-ml3yd7 ай бұрын
Christina has beautiful eyes❤
@jules44.7 ай бұрын
OMGG CHRISTINA CAME BACK!!!
@englishlessonswithsilviopa41396 ай бұрын
In Germany you can use "laufen" and "gehen" interchangeably. It depends on what part of Germany you are from.
@nocturne73717 ай бұрын
I¨m a Swede with a child that studied German in school and based on that I understand a fair bit of German. But Swiss German is totally foreign to me.
@Harry-Hartmann3 ай бұрын
Ein sehr schönes Video 😂👍🏻
@rodneykite8862Ай бұрын
Joshua would be perfect for an action adventure movie.
@journeyneverends_17 ай бұрын
I died at the part of Joshua saying he'd never heard the word "love" in German.
@agnesgrondahl11177 ай бұрын
swiss German sounds like German with a Norwegian twist and accent to me! (I'm Swedish)
@PurpleCastles7 ай бұрын
Haha I'm American but I'm learning both German and Norwegian and was going to write something similar. The word "house" or "huus" for Swiss people sounds just like the Norwegian word for house, "hus", except with a less Germanic "u" umlaut sound (like what a lot of Norwegian "u"s sound like). Also, my German professor in college played a video once of a Swiss German speaking hochdeutsch (standard German) and it was actually kind of funny to me because it basically sounded like typical hochdeutsch but with the constant mix of high and low sounding notes that I hear oftentimes in Norwegian.
@desuwa7 ай бұрын
for me, Brazil in here swiss german sounds swedish, i know some swedish (reading and write at most) i wasn't 100% wrong haha
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
she refers explicit to "nordic" at 7:13"
@tari_runa7 ай бұрын
Around the year 1470 there was a big migration wave from sweden to some central swiss cantons
@JoannaSoul977 ай бұрын
rennen = to sprint laufen = to run gehen = to walk In south German dialects, "laufen" = to walk but "rennen" really only means sprintig. If I go for a run I could never translate this using rennen
@ETERNALCYCLES4 ай бұрын
In Austria I always use spazieren for walking.
@Nikioko7 ай бұрын
To walk would be “gehen” in High German. “Laufen” is to run. For Swiss German and other Alemannic dialects, it's correct.
@EddieReischl7 ай бұрын
Yeah, I found that a little confusing.
@LePetitNuageGris7 ай бұрын
I was wondering about that. I studied a small amount of German in high school, so when he said “Laufen”, I was like, “… wait… what?” Haha
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
That really depends. If you want to say "we're walking" as in we're not driving, that'd absolutely be "wir laufen", almost 100% of the time. "Wir gehen" can sometimes also mean "we're leaving" as in "we're going". So it just depends. Gehen can be to go or to walk, laufen can be to walk or to run, rennen always means to run. For context: I grew up near Dortmund, my parents are from NRW, too (but further West) and I now live in Münster.
@Nikioko7 ай бұрын
@@MellonVegan Well, they say laufe for walking, springe for running, and lupfe for jumping. And the foot goes up to the hip, while the hand goes up to the shoulder. And holding is the same as lifting.
@LePetitNuageGris7 ай бұрын
@@MellonVegan Cool! Thanks for the info!
@luisferr20017 ай бұрын
German guy looks like a young Beethoven.
@PurpleCastles7 ай бұрын
Lol that is true too although, for some reason, when I first saw the thumbnail I thought maybe he was trying to dress like a 1700s American colonist
@fabricio47947 ай бұрын
@@PurpleCastleshe is From Final Fantasy...a girl told me four or five comments above...
@PurpleCastles7 ай бұрын
Gotcha, that'll do it
@adjusted-bunny20 күн бұрын
He looks like an a-hole.
@wolfgangheinzhupp70577 ай бұрын
I'm from Baden-Würrtemberg and Theo Language bethween us have the Same Base (Alemannisch), so we can understand without Problem(The Language Alemannisch was spoken only in Southwest of Germany (Baden-Würrtemberg, Vorarlberg), Alsace na França, German Suisse and in the North of Italy (Piemont)
@thiagooliveira5837 ай бұрын
Loved the videos as usual
@alejandroanklin8366 ай бұрын
I don't know if anyone even sees this but here is some more information about (swiss) german: So there is high-german (Germany) and Swiss-german (switzerland). But actually there is also kind of a high-german in switzerland. Imagine it like swiss people speaking high-german but they often use swiss-german words (just kind of translated into high-german, meaning without the dialect). This is especially a thing in the northern parts of switzerland where the country borders germany. And btw if you think all swiss have such an accent: not all uf us have it. I'd say you find the really strong accents of swiss-german more in the center of the country. These are hard to understand. Even I sometimes don't understand them really. (I'm from Zurich) If you read this far, thanks. A like would be appreciated...
@ulvessens59027 ай бұрын
Great to see Christina again, but terrible choice of camera angles!
@mountainadventures73467 ай бұрын
German sounds awesome!💪🏼
@aadilmohan32247 ай бұрын
Best part...I could feel a part of it even with my A1 level German!
@sickgringo0073 ай бұрын
They missed a big one with the "to walk" and "to run" prompts, which the producers probably tried to set up. It's very confusing because the Swiss word for walk is "laufe" but the most common word in German is "gehen". The German "laufen" is generally used for "to run", while in Switzerland you never say that for running, only for walking. Then for the Swiss word for running, yes you can say "ränne" or "rennen" like they say in the video but another translation for running in Swiss would be "springe", and again "springen" has a completely different meaning in German, namely "to jump". "Springe" can not be used for jumping in Swiss German, only "gumpe" or "jucke".
@DcobosarenasMusic7 ай бұрын
the next video are will cool that put they a "german, swiss, austrian, belgium, netherland, norwegian, swedish, danish, english, icelandic afrikaan". really put the germans languages speaking
@EddieReischl7 ай бұрын
It'd be cool if they could put an Amish guy in the mix, see what Germans make of that dialect. Of course, it's my understanding that there aren't very many Amish people living in S. Korea, mostly due to the problem of finding a horse that is a strong enough swimmer.
@DcobosarenasMusic7 ай бұрын
@@EddieReischl It's a lot, if we go like this, there are many Germanic Creole languages in America, the list is very long.
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
@@EddieReischl i watched some videos on that and the Amish slang is just the Palatinan dialect, mixed with some Badenian. Fun fact: exact the region where Grandpa Trump is from 😉😉
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
@@DcobosarenasMusic Hi Diego, the most popular one is Pennsylvania "Dutch", which is mainly the dialect of Palatina.
@hnrccaa7 ай бұрын
I really want to take up the cudgels for the Palatinans. They are so nice people, can get emotional some time, yes, but still down-to-earth. Another celeb from there was former chancellor* Helmut Kohl (served 1982-1998). * equivalent to prime minister, so head of government
@claudiaf.22367 ай бұрын
Wrong: Swissgerman has Grammar like Amy other language. We just never learned it in school. What we do not have is Rechtschreibung (orthography).
@njkf7 ай бұрын
German guy is like a stereotypical German villain :D He really plays into it I must say
@AvoryFaucette7 ай бұрын
Me listening to swiss French: cool yep sounds pretty much the same except for nonante... Me listening to swiss German: ...wtf just happened?! 😂(no shade to the Swiss, I just found it funny how the American didn't seem to think there was a huge difference and I'm pretty sure if the Swiss person was speaking quickly I would get every sixth word. Totally made sense when broken down, but man, I thought Austrians were tough to understand, this is next level... 😀)
@peterfunfstuck80947 ай бұрын
Nah - Austrians are a lot easier to understand :) With the Swiss it get's more difficult by the word - the longer the conversation lasts the less you understand. As a native German speaker you'll most likely get the idea but it's hard to follow.
@mateuszjozefiak43887 ай бұрын
It's funny in case of hospital. In Polish we say szpital so it is almost the same how in German Suisse pronounce it.
@zitloeng87137 ай бұрын
it was borrowed from middle high german but later modern german lost it
@jtdimension2 ай бұрын
I really like seeing in person tinder learning other people the differences between languagees. xD it is so cute do it more
@KysorWarren-iz6yeАй бұрын
Hace años tuve oportunidad de reunirme con un Suizo y un Alemán por cuestiones de trabajo; el suizo se llamaba Piter y el alemán le decía " Pita " y yo veía que el suizo ponía cara de enojado y no entendía porqué, supuse en ese momento que los dos hablaban alemán; pero con este video, ahora entiendo por qué se enojaba el suizo ( En un momento Piter el suizo, me dijo: Qué el alemán no me diga pita, parece que me está diciendo gaver 😂😂)
@P-Mouse7 ай бұрын
these are some fashionable people
@Markus_Abrach6 ай бұрын
4:30 Als eine Bernerin hätte ich von ihr 'bügle' erwartet 😁
@matishah35474 ай бұрын
I'm a boy . But DAMN . That German dude is very attractive 😍😍😍
@illillyillyo7 ай бұрын
If you don’t think there’s a grammar in your language, you probably just don’t recognize it. Every language has some kind of rules.
@DEUTSCH-kurzundknackig7 ай бұрын
Wenn drei, vier Sätze Schweizerdeutsch auf einmal kommen, wird's für Deutsche komplizierter.
@wichtel753 ай бұрын
Bei Kölsch hab ich auch Mühe als Schweizer, als ich mal in Frankfurt verfahren hatte, fragte ich an der Tankstelle nach dem Weg, er meinte das ich aus Holland komme. Am schluss fragte ich ihn auf Türkisch, Mit der Strassenkarte klappte die Verständigung. Ich kann nur ein paar Wörter auf Türkisch.
@Ethan7_73 ай бұрын
Isnt spazieren walk? Whats the difference between laufen and rennen?
@isak69286 ай бұрын
Correction: In TV and radio there is a lot of spoken Swiss-German, even the Meteo Information. Mainly official information is spoken in Standard-German. And: The Swiss word for skirt is "jupli" (pronounced [Schüppli] coming from French "jupe") as well as "röckli". And "run" is "springe" in Swiss-german, i would not say "renne". The Swiss word "Springe" is not to be confused with German "hüpfen" (EN "to jump") is "gumpe" in Swiss German (comming from the english word "jump" => G-ump). 😉
@adirong7 ай бұрын
Nawww, great to see Lestat is still enjoying his undead life!
@thedeadman829887 ай бұрын
Hi Joshua, Elena and Christina!!! Stay awesome
@maylinbruns73167 ай бұрын
A nice example is also for German's the butter is feminin and for Swiss German's it's masculine. And German's say "das Haus" While Swiss German's say "s huus". They take only the last letter and lett the rest away.
@abalamdepaimon68914 ай бұрын
The swiss girl was trying hard to get a "gotcha" moment out of the guy, by overly adding words and the berner accent, while he was just copying her words in a very neutral or somwhat austrian accent. Nevertheless this seemed more like a hidden dating show lol. He was totally win her over and she just wanted to win the game 🤣
@juanfran5796 ай бұрын
As a German I'd say pronunciation sounds harder in Swiss German (vety much due to the overall guttural ch-sound) but its intonatiin is way smoother and melodic. Also many people from Southern Germany have problems with identifying with standard German (High German) as dialects are very present in daily life. Standard German sounds cold, distant and too rational to them. It's not that different to how most Swiss feel about High German. It can feel like having two identities.
@Pidalin7 ай бұрын
I always thought that word "špitál" in Czech came from German, pronunciation is completely the same as that Swiss girl pronounced it. I am pretty sure they use word spital in Germany too, maybe it's not default for them, which is the same even here, but we understand it. It's weird for me that he says they don't understand it, it's hard to believe that. But maybe it came from Austrian German or something.
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
in germany you can also say hospital (not spital) but it not so common we mostly use krankenhaus
@Flo-vn9ty7 ай бұрын
Actually, in Germany you can say Krankenhaus, Klinik, Hospital or Spital. But using Hospital and even more so Spital is really old fashioned.
@Pidalin7 ай бұрын
@@popokaka4763 I googled it and it looks like I guessed it, it's from Austrian German. In Czech, it's slang word, in Polish it's their default word (szpital), but it looks like we have it from Austria which makes sense.
@Pidalin7 ай бұрын
@@Flo-vn9ty It's probably from Austrian German, I already googled it. That makes sense when we were part of one Empire, but they use that word even in Polish and only small part of Poland was in Austria-Hungary, so it's still weird.
@popokaka47637 ай бұрын
😎@@Pidalin
@NikeNiceYT2 ай бұрын
In switzerland we say springe to run not renne
@itsollieyx37 ай бұрын
I love Joshua 😂💕 he's funny
@sunny_nuth19 күн бұрын
I am surprised about „Danke/Merci“. I am not a German speaker but have lived for more than 6 years in Zurich. I have some basic “street” vocabulary of Swiss German. And people say “Merci” all the time! (Including me since I have picked it up :)). Also, it may be “merci vielmal” (a more polite form). “Danke” is used as well but much less often.
@cholansivakumar38017 ай бұрын
Christina ❤❤❤❤
@wynterstorm90427 күн бұрын
I definitely understood Joshua more as I have learned High German. I feel like I would need Elena to slow down just a tad 😅
@VitorAntonio-n5r4 ай бұрын
Bruh, i was watching this videos on TV, but i had to pick up my phone and search this video only to say that THIS GUY'S AURA IS UNMATCHED!! What the actual f* 🗿
@rickie_coll7 ай бұрын
Joshua is very charming. 🤤🤤🤤
@Fadogar91119 күн бұрын
for "skirt" you can say "rock" but also the french "jupe" and both are 100% valid in the german-speaking part of switzerland :) if it's a short skirt, they would add "li" at the end, making it "Röckli" (O also changes to Ö) and "Jupeli" :D
@Fadogar91119 күн бұрын
also, yes we say "rennä", but more typical would be to use a completely different word, depending on the region, like "secklä" in bern :D this is the "we can make them understand way" to speak :D
@Fadogar91119 күн бұрын
also..... it's not true that we don't have grammar and can just create sentences the way we want :D it's just that swiss-german is not very standardized as it is a language used in daily life, not in any type of formal communication. more than no grammar, there are no rules on how to write words, but you can certainly speak it in a wrong way if you're putting the verbs and nouns, etc. wherever you want :D
@Fadogar91119 күн бұрын
"danke" in swiss-german would be more typical to say "merci", french with a swiss accent (rolling R, not the french one)
@Fadogar91119 күн бұрын
most in bern would say "ching" not "chind", especially in the city and the younger generations
@ruyerialas98667 ай бұрын
My german: So loudy and markable. A regular German: Joshua starts to speak*
@terega-nui7 ай бұрын
Quite funny for me as to me Swiss German sounds way more harsh than high German.
@andyx68277 ай бұрын
Same. Swiss German has so many "RCHKRCHRKRRCHR" sounds. It's infinitely harsher than Standard German. But yes, they add lots of "li" at the end to make up for it.
@angyML7 ай бұрын
Same to me. There are some sounds that remind me of Dutch and I can't do them. German (the one spoke by Joshua) it's easier.
@shanwyn7 ай бұрын
@@angyML fUNNY LITTLE THING: A DUTCH AND A SWISS CAN UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER IF BOTH SPEAK VERY SLOWLY AND HAVE AN EAR FOR LANGUAGES
@lagavulin71947 ай бұрын
Because it is
@MellonVegan7 ай бұрын
@@shanwyn While that is true, that goes for a lot of language pairs. When I went to Norway, I had no trouble understanding at least the gist of people's conversations there (I'm German).
@marvinjoa24 күн бұрын
Schaffen is also used in southern parts of Germany.
@NikeNiceYT2 ай бұрын
Bro nobody has a dialect like this in switzerland bruh
@olivierbrugger93486 ай бұрын
When they said "yesterday I was home", the Swiss girl used a different tense than Joshua. Swiss always use present perfect while Germans would use past tense, which is practically nonexistent in Swiss German.
@fatoumatagassama47677 ай бұрын
I can’t be the only one crushing on the guy
@braziltokyoschoolКүн бұрын
Grüezi zämä 👀 Sehr güet Video
@LM-vs1ip5 ай бұрын
As someone living in the south of Germany close to Switzerland I can understand the dialect in Basel quite easily but other parts don't
@chuhannakim63657 ай бұрын
How can i get his Info .?!? He really cute . Such as : IG , facebook , …
@MrXentricАй бұрын
I live in the south west of germany and most hospitals are called "Krankenhaus", some "Klinik/Klinikum" and a few "Spital"