I don't think any other country uses so many languages in one sentence 😅 I'm amazed the drive through lady could understand
@wongfongwei3 ай бұрын
this is called pure Malaysian, it will be good to add in Tamil .
@Sangsinga6823 ай бұрын
I agree with you. Malaysians struggle with consistency.
@pengejarbintang3 ай бұрын
"Aney, one Milo ais bungkus kasi kaw-kaw!" 😂
@aoitempest3 ай бұрын
Bruneian does the same thing cuz we neighbours and share the same malay blood ❤❤❤
@IvanAng-ns8ez3 ай бұрын
Your neighbour Singapore does also 😂
@boiiiii71273 ай бұрын
we malaysian, mix our language depends on which sentence more shorter and easy to pronouns, and also as long as it the pronouncation is matching together
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
You guys can even switch the kind English depending on who you speak too 😂 super proper if speaking to a foreigner
Singapore also 🤣 It just somehow sounds right though
@ai_b0y-2n3 ай бұрын
True true
@chooijenlin79133 ай бұрын
Some people said we show off , is daily for us , is not professional, but useful for daily life .
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
Right! I think it isn't showing off. It's shows how Unique Malaysia is. Especially with so many difference race and cultures involved
@jiri77883 ай бұрын
As an Indian from NE region, I've always switched languages since childhood, my friends come from different race so it's like very common for me now. I always end up mixing my words from like 4 languages that I know
@alive10053 ай бұрын
Yeah it seems that you lost your origin language but well who cares about that
@muhammadshafiebinsayednasi54903 ай бұрын
But many use for show off bruhh
@deeznuts-je6dd3 ай бұрын
That guy is chinese so its normal for him to change@@alive1005
@SourireBlancNeige2 ай бұрын
My mother tongue is french, but when i lived in japan (for 4 y) while learning english and german... With korean, Canadian and spanish people 🤪 i can't tell you how many languages we mixed on a daily basis. But i can tell you no one from outside the roomates (we were 7) were able to understand any of us. But we all could speak in japanese (more or less well) since it was our only common language. Ah... Crazy times.
@jadamood20 күн бұрын
🤣 chaotic alright!
@vijaysingh-db2qc9 күн бұрын
I am wondering what the outcome will be after 4 years, 😂
@Musicescape172 ай бұрын
Living in the 🇺🇸 where not speaking English triggers ignorant people, I must say this video is beautiful. To have the ability to switch languages without struggle is wonderful! No one should be harassed for speaking in another language, but that’s ‘Merica for ya!
@mukeedcoforstuff29 күн бұрын
I think that's because the other language community have a tendency to come into the country without proper documents and are unwilling to assimilate with the locals and local ways of living. This is very apparent in southern California where some parts of the cities are in the third world countries level. This phenomenon also happens in heavy tourist areas like Bali, Greece, Portugal, Hawaii. Locals hate it when visitors disrespect their local cultures
@MedicaBruja27 күн бұрын
I speak three languages, two fluently and use them constantly. I live in the USA, nobody harasses me for switching when speaking with people who speaks both. I do not switch on people unless they speak the other language, or I say “excuse me” and switch back if I made a mistake, but people around have never harassed me.
@Musicescape1726 күн бұрын
@@MedicaBruja you are very fortunate. In the 4 states that I’ve lived in, so far, have all showed me they don’t particularly like when people are speaking in a different language around them. I’ve had one employer ask me not to speak to another employee in Spanish, only to help a customer. The reason being, a customer might think w are speaking about him/her. When I’m speaking directly to a person in Spanish, that person is not the one that has a problem with my language, it’s those around us that do sometimes.
@flamemano3 ай бұрын
Its called code switching. Its extremely common among multilingual people
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
It's increbile how their brains can process all these languages so quickly 😂
@makasii3 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTVafter the 3rd language, the brain separates them quite efficiently.
@flamemano3 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTV and the crazier thing is that they do it all without a single thought. Its as natural for them as breathing.
@rais19533 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTV We're an Australian/Cocos Islands family and we switch between English and Malay all the time without thinking about it.
@IreenaChoong-pl3us3 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTV well.. As a Malaysian, in elementary school, I had a hard time possessing the main language, malay. But in high school I got used to it 🙂
@NesanesanessАй бұрын
I watched this so many times and couldn't figure out what was weird until I read your comment to explain. Using different languages comes so naturally, we don't notice until someone points it out.
@kimmendiola30378 күн бұрын
I’m a Filipino living in Malaysia who speaks English at home or Filipino only with my mom. It’s awesome how I can order now in Bahasa Melayu at the drive thru with my mother beside me and listens to me speak in Bahasa, then I’d turn back and ask my kids what they want to order in English. My mom would be looking at me like I’m a complete stranger, she doesn’t often hear me speaks in Bahasa Melayu at home because I speak purely in Filipino with her. She always look bewildered like I just grew a second head 😂
@iqbalmuhammad29208 күн бұрын
Tagalog & Malay came from the big Austronesian language family, so some shared or similar sound/meaning words also helps. Kudos for your Bahasa Melayu!!! 👍👍
@thegamerwithin16763 ай бұрын
Here's a fun fact: if you learn two or more languages at different time, they'd be stored in different areas of brain. But if you learn languages at the same time, they'd stored in the same area of brain thus allowing a mix and usage of all the available language data subconsciously
@crescentsaa3 ай бұрын
Damn, that's why i always mix 3 languages all together because i grew up speaking Bahasa Indonesia to my mom, english with my dad and javanese with my friends
@rmadzikanda3 ай бұрын
So your brain is like one giant delta lake house capable of storing structured and unstructured data 😅😅
@thegamerwithin16763 ай бұрын
@@dcngn_ I never said you'd have trouble speaking them. I just said you'd be switching them subconsciously if you learned them at same time. Most bilingual people speak a mix of languages that they learnt. Also, this fact is true. It's from Snell's neuroanatomy, a book I studied during my second year as a med student
@peaceweapon19333 ай бұрын
This is why I Nani when I should have Ma’ed 😢
@annewagnera75673 ай бұрын
That actually explains a lot! 😮
@lemonc51843 ай бұрын
Its funny cuz sometimes i forgot my own language and proceed to google the word i have been saying in another language 😭
@y53r1sliv1ng3 ай бұрын
omg TRUU
@braebrae08103 ай бұрын
Me with the word beansprout
@celotehsinana76853 ай бұрын
Same
@Udaya-wt4hg3 ай бұрын
Same
@leebwit3 ай бұрын
Same here 😭 there's some indonesian words I can't remember instead its english lmao
@user-io5zx6xp4cАй бұрын
That’s me with 5 Languages and I fr need all of them in my life like Iam Syrien so I speak Arabic with my family, I live in germany that’s why I speak German in school or other places, English for social media, Korean for my lovely kdrama and Iam currently learning French because that’s what my school wants😂😂
@kentweichen887515 күн бұрын
But u only speak one language at a time,but malaysian sometime use three languages in one sentences😅
@haileylavenderia103323 күн бұрын
Us in the Philippines meanwhile having over 164+ dialects:
@haziqfurqan42713 ай бұрын
My mom is a Chinese. However, my dad is a malay. So we always converse in various languages, especially when my aunt is around. Hokkien, malay, english.
@user-mq4ko9su9d3 ай бұрын
Well Hokkien is theoretically not a language. It's a dialect. In my family though, during gathering, we speak Hokkien and Cantonese dialects together with English, Mandarin and Malay. All in one house during gathering
@mythrin3 ай бұрын
@@user-mq4ko9su9dYou’re wrong and you should know better if you speak it. Hokkien theoretically IS a language, but its “technically” a dialect being of political and legal reasons in China. It is fully another language that Mandarin speakers wouldn’t able to understand at all, grammatically and phonetically more different than Italian vs Spanish.
@user-mq4ko9su9d3 ай бұрын
@@mythrin as long as it's not internationally recognised as a language, it's a dialect of an ethnic group. Whether it's for political reason or not, if it's not, it's not. Just like Cantonese is not a language even when spoken by a whole country of Hong Kong, because legally and politically, Hong Kong is part of China. There's nothing to debate really.
@user-mq4ko9su9d3 ай бұрын
@@mythrin also I might just want to add, Hokkien is not really widely use as there are many variants of Hokkien, whether Taiwanese, Malaysian Penang or Malaysian KL. And another major part in which Hokkien is not a language is because rarely, have we heard of its written form. Hokkien is more of an oral communication than written communication. Any communication without written form, is only recognised as dialect.
@Simon124423 ай бұрын
@@user-mq4ko9su9dlanguages can be defined as purely speaking languages and written languages or characterised both as the time
@felixleong613 ай бұрын
Us Malaysians knowledge of multiple languages truly shine when we swear and curse 😂
@pembenci_pembohong2 ай бұрын
u mean while cursing right?
@Key-oh5fd2 ай бұрын
@@pembenci_pembohongi pretty sure swear is correct too
@pembenci_pembohong2 ай бұрын
@@Key-oh5fd well i think it have difference meaning even the translation to malay is the same word
@pwincessyat2 ай бұрын
@@pembenci_pembohongboth are just the same.
@jgamin10102 ай бұрын
And here I am from Philippine with already tagalog, english, and 2 other ethnic language going to study in Malaysia then faham bahasa malayo sikit
@fadheelmАй бұрын
That’s why most of us are at least trilingual but none at really fluent level😂
@Seoranglelakii2 ай бұрын
English and malay is the best combination
@jacku830410 күн бұрын
Because Malay uses ABC and not a tonal language.
@suan3332 ай бұрын
What language do you speak? Malaysian people: yes
@yutakago17363 ай бұрын
In Malaysia university, the lecturers teach in Malay, the text books are in English and the Malaysian Chinese students process the information in Chinese. :D
@anabellarouche95203 ай бұрын
WTF?! I'm lost just reading that 🤣
@nghibluu3 ай бұрын
Like HOWWW?
@Anne-cs7mu3 ай бұрын
Malay being the National language and english is a second must learned language cuz most of the materials in English. For chinese people, they need to learn at least 3 language for daily use and also education(not including private university). Chinese, Malay and English. Same goes for Indian Malaysian people.
@szewei853 ай бұрын
Hahahaha
@roykhoo61563 ай бұрын
That’s exactly wat had happen to me during my university life in Malaysia 😂
@chaosfriedeggz60142 ай бұрын
It's the classic code mixing you'd find at multilingual countries.
@faislooYT18 күн бұрын
Palestinian Christian here, whenever we go to any place we use all 3 of English, Arabic, and Hebrew depending on who is working in that place
@MDroid-bn6eb3 ай бұрын
The problem lies when you are thinking in English, you wanted to verbalise in Chinese but you are speaking Malay instead… 😂😂
@ifrending2 ай бұрын
especially when traveling, thinking english but speaking malay 😂😂
@CIKDO_2 ай бұрын
BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
@bakebeans1032 ай бұрын
Kan kan? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@azidadaud5682 ай бұрын
Betul...pastu mula la terkial2 nk cari wording 😂😂
@basarudinbaizura4462 ай бұрын
Yes betulll😂😂😂
@felixnotkjellberg3 ай бұрын
I know chinese english malay. Learnt bit of german and learning japanese. Also can understand cantonese
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
Crazy... One language is already hard to. Learn 😅😅
@clementwg34773 ай бұрын
Same here
@chooijenlin79133 ай бұрын
My ex boss mother language is Cantonese , second is mandarin, 3rd Malay , he mom is Hakka , surrounded with him spoke Hokkian , Hokkian also similar with Teoh Chew , English is business needed 7 languages he learned and spoke fluent in the each language. 1st time I heard , 🤯
@clementwg34773 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTV Welp, I guess we're avatars, master of 3 (or more) languages. 😂
@slchiah0073 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTVwon't be hard if only you know ABC...
@juliannafng748Ай бұрын
After coming back to Malaysia, I wasn't used to the way how the Chinese Malaysian speak too, I was a bit stuck in my language whenever I speak. But I would love and always try to speak in proper sentences 😅😅
@brittacolins959425 күн бұрын
I married a Chinese Malaysian too and he is sooo handsome,caring and loving husband...so lucky to have him😊
@syakilasuhaimi19 күн бұрын
if your husband was ugly, would you love him like you love him now?
@Ro66y_C3 ай бұрын
I heard one KZbinr from HK (who is living here) having a hard time following a conversation whenever there is a bunch of Malaysian with her because Malaysians naturally tend to mix languages/dialects effortlessly back and forth.
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
Yes!!! That's how I feel whenever they speak. Hahaha it's so interesting
@szewei853 ай бұрын
Isnt that chun hahahaha
@yunafiedjypp56773 ай бұрын
I'm also from HK and my friend is Malaysian and thank god I know English but half of the time idek what's shes trying to say
@noraniali20933 ай бұрын
@@yunafiedjypp5677poor you... Don't worry you'll get the hang of it sooner or later😅
@szewei853 ай бұрын
@@yunafiedjypp5677 you get used 2 it hahahaha
@carynshiro36953 ай бұрын
Growing up as a Chinese Malaysian, I had all of my subjects and text books switched at different stage of my education. Primary school- all in Chinese, high school- all in Malay, University- all in English.. so there you go! 😂
@carynshiro36953 ай бұрын
The best part about being a Malaysian, when we travel abroad (not in South East Asia) with a group of friends of different ethnicities, we ALWAYS gossip in Malay language. Never in English/Chinese as it's less known. 😆
@sart37353 ай бұрын
@@carynshiro3695 Malaysians claim they are multilingual, actually almost all I met speak bad English, mandarin and Cantonese. I doubt their Malay is good. Only Malaysians educated in English medium schools speak decent English, but this group doesn’t speak Chinese. So I don’t know why Malaysians keep saying they are multilingua
@emilyleong64423 ай бұрын
@@sart3735multilingual means they understand, and can use multiple languages, it does not translate to proficiency of it, darling
@sart37353 ай бұрын
@@emilyleong6442 😂. Then many people are multilingual in Asia and Europe. I dun know why Malaysians are making a big deal out of it.
@AmsyarBrosku3 ай бұрын
@@sart3735 i dunno why're you making a big deal about it, none of us make a big deal about talking like this. just because we speak so many languages in a sentence like English and Malay at the same time doesn't mean we are trying to speak like an american, we usually use our own accent
@yigga1Ай бұрын
Y’all r cute😂❤… got y’all selves some keepers
@syahiramazlan-s2d12 күн бұрын
Love the clear info !
@abdulrazak14622 ай бұрын
at least he can speak malay fluently 😂
@neoframe412 ай бұрын
He can speak 4 languages. Malays only 2 at most.
@deafeningsylenth55932 ай бұрын
@@neoframe41 Tak kisahla berapa pun language yg kau tahu but as a Malaysian, it is compulsory to be fluent in Bahasa Melayu. Period.
@neoframe412 ай бұрын
@@deafeningsylenth5593 Saya tak pernah pertikai pun perkara tu.
@Ming19752 ай бұрын
You sound like those western racist who act surprised we can speak English well. Multi language people learn other languages because we are not arrogant to expect others to learn ours. (You have a racist attitude.) just an FYI.
@pokecrazyfans53862 ай бұрын
@@neoframe41 Malaysian toxic mentality that why he/she replied you like this.
@peanutbutteryejam3 ай бұрын
Same in the Philippines too!😂 Me and my friends use 4 different languages when conversing daily at school.
@manilamartin10013 ай бұрын
Haha. My tagalog has never been good. It's always mixed
@BluntBunty3 ай бұрын
You must be a dabaw conyo for sure.
@cy-taku39523 ай бұрын
@@manilamartin1001blood same Tagalog is my 3rd language so I have a hard time speaking fluently
@Jtnn7133 ай бұрын
But mastery on none.
@cherrykamino3 ай бұрын
Lmao same, whether it'd be online or irl convos it's gonna be a mix of Japanese, English, Bisaya and Tagalog and even switching mid sentence on what words fits and all that.
@dojc65262 ай бұрын
little glimpse into your couple life show how cute you 2 are and meant to be. 🥰 one of my favourite YT couple.
@user-el8wo6nl5l14 күн бұрын
in Malaysian we switch languages in one sentence like that where everybody can understand to like me im malaysian but i can speak english cause we learn so much languages in Malaysian
@persephone27413 ай бұрын
It's quite common in where im from actually. I speak bahasa indonesia with family, madurese with neighbors, javanese with mom's family, english with friends, different version of javanese with other friend group. I did switch per sentence if they were all talking & sitting in the same table. And also translating to them who didn't understand
@tinibroto45543 ай бұрын
Saya dengan anak² sy di rumah pakai bahasa campur aduk, bahasa indonesia, bahasa jawa, bahasa inggris
@wahyuika60443 ай бұрын
Wkwkwk tambah bahasa arab 😅
@dimas03023 ай бұрын
Jangan lupa bahasa JakSel 😂😂😂
@beniismail3 ай бұрын
And don't forget about dialect.
@riehafsah44693 ай бұрын
Add Javanese ngoko with friends and kromo with older people 😢
@lladycclover3 ай бұрын
My Indian friend went to a chinese primary school. Growing up she can speaks 4 languages already (indian, mandarin, malay, english) so envy of her 😌
@sakthyathamizh28333 ай бұрын
Indian is not a language 😢
@lladycclover3 ай бұрын
@@sakthyathamizh2833 yea i know its tamil language. Typo
@sakthyathamizh28333 ай бұрын
@@lladycclover ❤️
@user-hm2vs3zf1j12 күн бұрын
You guys are so cute together! 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@giennarozaina17042 күн бұрын
I'm Malaysian.. of course can speak fluent Malay.. plus speak fluent English and Mandarin, understand normal Cantonese.. now learning Korean.. hehe
@konieisnotcanon_3 ай бұрын
As a Malaysian can confirm that we switch languages depending on the situation
@hawaahmad82383 ай бұрын
As a Malaysian myself, I didn't know that this is a special thing .. and yes, we're good with our usage of languages. At least 3 or 4 at one go in our daily conversations.
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
It's super special!! Haha I don't think it's normal to be switching languages like that 😂
@saniakarto65043 ай бұрын
Boss tapau Mee goreng rendek plis.....4 language in 1 sentence
@user-yg8kq6sd5h3 ай бұрын
it's very special! you all are just naturally impressive
@keontyh896 күн бұрын
Hahaha so true. I didn’t even notice myself having so many languages in a sentence until people mentioned 😂
@1337flite20 күн бұрын
My dad is Malaysian Chinese from Sarawak. I have cousins who speak 3 or 4 kinds of Chinese, Bahasa, a bt of Thai and smatterings of European languages, like French and/or Spanish. I have a Chinese in law who adds Viet Namese and Cambodian to 3 or 4 Chineses, Bahasa, French and English. Unfortunately dad didn't teach us any Chinese.
@user-zf3fs3ys2e3 ай бұрын
since everybody knows three languages mandatory, the switch is very normal. most people know English and malay from school, and the additional languages/dialects (chinese, Cantonese, tamil) are usually family taught first.
@shhemalife232 ай бұрын
We Malaysians are built differently
@sart3735Ай бұрын
Yup. Thick skinned. 😆
@nesyasiregar1460Ай бұрын
Im indonesian, but i did that too😊
@BenChai-rl5bbАй бұрын
as a Malaysian, I can say that this video is very relatable
@Midas.Jxmzz.Ай бұрын
I sometimes accidently speak English japanese Portuguese and korean- my classmates always be like "hUH?"
@codeslacker773 ай бұрын
Just your average day in Malaysia.
@justanordinaryguy._.73993 ай бұрын
Damn, his tone change is large when talking between languages.
@lydiasithole18702 ай бұрын
Also in South africa, we switch between languages when speaking.
@fitlandeu202718 күн бұрын
That is so Malaysian when you reply Thank you with a Thank you 😂❤
@davidbunyau83132 ай бұрын
As a Malaysian, we all speak at least 3 languages; mother tongue, Bahasa Malaysia & English. In a conversation it's either a Chinese-English or a Malay-English mixed. That's why we understand each other when we have a conversation even though there're some mixed languages in a conversation.
@HazeEmry2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately Malays don't have that luxury and half of us only know Malay and English hahaha. At least the people I know growing up. Some take another language but I never see the reason to since I can just look up translations. Kinda wish I did but hey, I'm immersing myself in German and Irish stuff now and I still watch anime. Still at the recognising part and not at the conversational part of them
@mohammadsyazwigeoffrey7325Ай бұрын
@@HazeEmryUnfortunate for Malays and not everyone else including us orang asli
@subscribeburntriversАй бұрын
@@HazeEmry I’m chinese Malaysian who can speak malay, english, cantonese and hokkien. But my malay friends can speak both with japanese, korean, mandarin, arabic, more than I ever expected. Their tongue never twisted???? 😭
@J-wc4hjАй бұрын
What!? so Malaysian also speak Chinese 😮 I'm impressed wow
@mohammadsyazwigeoffrey7325Ай бұрын
@@J-wc4hj You ever watched films with Mexicans in America? It's essentially like that.
@sturis6182 ай бұрын
As a Malaysian this is so relatable. I think some Malaysians have the power to speak different kinds of language in one sentence
@jeppykun052 ай бұрын
Filipinos too; we regularly speak a mixture of English and Tagalog, which we call "Taglish," as well as other dialects in the same sentence.
@xcjsmith53102 ай бұрын
Not have the power, we are like this, also I think it is based on who we address to, for example, we speak Malay and English to the Malay because they don’t know Chinese, we speak to ourselves and our races Mandarin and Chinese dialect and we can see from the vid, he speaks Japanese to the wife so it is common. Tak akan you go to mamak and speak to them only Chinese, they wouldn’t know
@sturis6182 ай бұрын
@@xcjsmith5310 yep thats true we speak a different language to a different person if you speak chinese to a malay of course tak tahu pun.
@sakuraplumlove52922 ай бұрын
Africans as well.
@waseelahsampson68352 ай бұрын
So common here in south Africa especially amongst muslims ...3 languages , 3 types of slang in one sentence 😂😂😂😂that's how we do it
@none0113Ай бұрын
As a Malaysian, it is probably normal for three languages to be used in a conversation when a Chinese tries to communicate with a Malay, usually it goes like Chinese talks to himself in a thinking way and mix Malay and English when communicating with a Malay. But this video tops it off by adding Japanese, which I find to be interesting and impressive.
@janosephlit832613 күн бұрын
pengantin jepun, that's why.
@realryleuАй бұрын
i'll do something in a similar vein where i'll sounds like a texan when talking to a texan and i'll sound like i'm from new york when i'm talking to a new yorker
@calvinyip3643 ай бұрын
Sometime if we cant remember the english word or chinese word. We just use malay word. Vice versa and anything pun boleh. 😂😂.
@Jaja19583 ай бұрын
rojak language also can lah...hahaha...
@hermanduh70373 ай бұрын
True... Yg penting paham... 😂😂😂
@Yourlocalbedwarsfan2 ай бұрын
I'm Malaysian and I'm proud to say all of us do it idk how!😂 Edit: tysm for 182 likes!👍 Edit:OMG 1K IVE NEVER GOTTEN THIS MUCH TYSM
@katty632112 ай бұрын
Please explain how many languages he spoke and what are they ?!
@PrograError2 ай бұрын
TBH it's more like most SE Asians, with English being the common denominator.
@sleeparalysisdemon11642 ай бұрын
@@katty63211 Malay, English, Chinese and Japanese I think
@Yourlocalbedwarsfan2 ай бұрын
@@katty63211 the languages are malay chinise and english
@Yourlocalbedwarsfan2 ай бұрын
@@sleeparalysisdemon1164 no there is no japanese
@AndreasSilva100Ай бұрын
is he speaking like 6 different langauges in one interaction? holy man thats so damn cool
@shard312 ай бұрын
As a malaysian, in school we learn 3 or 2 langugues which is English, Malay and the third one is chinese ( if in chinese school )
@mcdibyoe3 ай бұрын
I speaks 5.. When I got upset they all got mixed 😂😂😂
@aiko93933 ай бұрын
I believe one of their MP did parts of his speech in Malay, Javanese, Chinese, and Tamil recently. Awesome feat
@seonghwaflex35173 ай бұрын
Why Javanese including?
@aiko93933 ай бұрын
@@seonghwaflex3517 No idea. Perhaps there are some Javanese descents in Malaysia and they actively speaking it.
@zenn973 ай бұрын
@@aiko9393 I can confirm this. There are many Javanese descents in Malaysia. Javanese makes a big part of Malaysian population and they are very common in Johor and Selangor. However Javanese is considered as Malay by law (Malay is actually an umbrella term for many descents/ethnics). My dad is also a Javanese descent. When he is with his uncles, aunts, or any relatives that are also Javanese, he will fluently speak Javanese with them.
@Sambucha12343 ай бұрын
@@seonghwaflex3517nice touch
@NightSkyTower3 ай бұрын
In Indonesia..Malay is one of many ethnic groups. Not the main umbrella..just ask any Indonesian...they seems have a better idea..
@RB-oh2jn24 күн бұрын
What a great guy!
@lediazura95612 ай бұрын
So real😭I have a friend that moved to Malaysia since 10 years ago, and when we met each other for the first time, i was shocked that she's so rich of languages😭She talked to me in Bahasa (Indonesian language), mins later she turned into a Malaysian and she mixed her Malaysian accent with English and Mandarin, but when she was excited about something, she talked to me in Cantonese😭10 years of her life in Malaysia really changed her to be a polyglot
@naomi06592 ай бұрын
Bahasa means language . Not Indonesian language
@nashchtuk1942 ай бұрын
@@naomi0659fyi bahasa ia familiar to Indonesian language for foreigner
@janosephlit832613 күн бұрын
first of all: rich in, or full of. second: did she just fire off single sentences as a publicity stunt or was she actually speaking with full sentences? here's the thing. with translators people can just play around with one or two long sentences of their choice just to impress others. if it's a language you're familiar with, try throwing them a difficult question and see if they know how to respond.
@firdnord2 ай бұрын
yang pentingnya, orang Malaysia akan reply "Terima Kasih" dengan "Terima Kasih/Thank You" juga
@NGorso127 күн бұрын
In the states you are glad if the counter at the Mc can speak their mother tongue properly
@user-oo7dw4qw4b2 ай бұрын
Code switching is pretty common in countries with atleast 2 languages. I code switch between English and Filipino frequently with Japanese from time to time.
@dsafgsh3 ай бұрын
Im Indo and I somewhat understood Bros whole Conversation 🔥🔥💯
@BelanovaIsabel-ke4mq3 ай бұрын
Indo? please write Indonesian.
@son96263 ай бұрын
@@BelanovaIsabel-ke4mq contohnya??? Apa kabar? Dari mana kamu berasal? Atau Kontol?
@aryadutap.59363 ай бұрын
@@BelanovaIsabel-ke4mqwhat's wrong??
@itzzme_zaher3 ай бұрын
Karena indo doang biasanya artinya India@@aryadutap.5936
@naonao._.3 ай бұрын
@@aryadutap.5936 sometimes people know indo as india not indonesia :)
@TropikoTerra2 ай бұрын
Southeast Asians are amazing language switchers 😄, especially Philippines and Malaysia
@jeanlee95695 күн бұрын
Growing up w a mom from Japan and American Japanese dad who spoke limited Japanese, they code switched all the time so it was normal to hear them speak in this vid.
@DewiAqef-yp2di16 күн бұрын
You guys have great friendship and a great love Im Malaysian to😉🇲🇾
@MalayPanTV16 күн бұрын
Thank you!! I do think that way too! Best friend, best partner, best lover!:)
@rhitaouahid97722 ай бұрын
Me too 😂 , I m Morrocan and in morocco we speak fluently arabic ,.french an English . So we always mixed all languages possible 😂😂
@imanebhm8352 ай бұрын
And Amazighiya 😅
@themultifandoming4685Ай бұрын
@@imanebhm835 it's definitely less common but it depends on the region.
@Mais04Ай бұрын
Yeah that’s what I thought of when I saw the video 😂 and add Spanish as we also use it in the north
@mglee14312 ай бұрын
Singaporean in the early 90s did speak like this too. I knew the mother of my colleague spoke Malay, english, Hokien and mandarin in between while shopping in China and the Chinese sales person couldn’t understand. Until she told this to my colleague (her daughter) than we had a good laugh. It was such a norm to speak multiple language at the market in our country that the old lady forgot she was in a foreign land where the Chinese is different from our Singaporean Chinese 😂
@afsstudio9296Ай бұрын
One good thing bout drive thru mekdi is the usage of bahasa kebangsaan there
@NGWEITONGMoe2 ай бұрын
This is too relatable. I’m currently in school and we currently learn 3 languages. But if add all the other language like Hokken etc, it can add up to a total of 5 or 6 languages.
@KingJH05103 ай бұрын
The perks of being malaysian I am so glad i was born in this country tbh I will definitely teach my kids all 4.5 languages that i know
@kothaikoko57063 ай бұрын
😂😂 that's the power of people learning multiple languages in Malaysia 😂😂
@eugenec71303 ай бұрын
This is not power. Learning many languages means you can't master any language, ending up speaking and writing broken languages.
@chimochigemuk71052 ай бұрын
It's true..
@msnightstar44182 ай бұрын
We can tell you can only speak 1 language @@eugenec7130
@gundamloverjk2 ай бұрын
@@eugenec7130true, i can barely converse properly in any language i learnt, yet i somehow understand them
@mistymane5222 күн бұрын
I noticed this when I watched some Filipino movies recently! When I watch Korean, English or Japanese.. they stick to the one language unless it has to do with the story of meeting a foreigner or something.. but the Filipino characters were all speaking like this where they kept jumping between languages! Confused me so much in the beginning cause I understood some and then not other bits and my brain didn’t know whether to try to understand what I was hearing or not! 😂
@melapredan62082 ай бұрын
He can speak however and whatever he likes I dont listen ... just staring at him. He is a beauty!🤩
@TheWertiup3 ай бұрын
I guess after growing up with multiple languages and listening to them being mixed in out daily lives, we tend to treat it like a single giant language. Conversely, when I went to study abroad in Australia, speaking purely in English was a bit straining for me 😅
@jedrashidul69523 ай бұрын
I feel u bruh😂 Omitting the lahs & mahs almost feel like I'm offending my ancestors at first, 😂😂😂
@IfAllElseFails_Ctrl_Alt_Del3 ай бұрын
My dad is 🇲🇽Mexican, my mom is 🇫🇷French/🇮🇹Italian. They met in the 🇺🇸U.S & had me. So English, French, Spanish, with a sprinkle of Italian, & ASL (American sign language 🤟🏼 ). Can sometimes leave me a bit tonguetied, & family reunions are very colorful 😆🤷🏻♀️🇺🇸🇮🇹🇫🇷🇲🇽🤟🏼
@stargazeronesixseven2 ай бұрын
😮🙏 OMG! A True United Nations Child indeed! Just love it! A Universal Family! 😊🙏🌷🌿🌏✌💜🕊
@EDD_YT0429 күн бұрын
Same here in PH.. We mix 3 languages in one conversation..
@leedane26943 ай бұрын
I don't know how the other Malaysian do .. but i get a lot of rotan when i was a kid . Have to study Malay , Chinese, English since kindergarten. And my father's parent talk hakka , my mother's parent talk hokkian , and when i studies in KL , they speak Cantonese. Then , i learn Japanese and Vietnamese myself.. then i just become a normal Malaysian that's speak multiple languages 😅😅😅
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
Hahahahaha right I guess in a sense you guys were forced to learn but now I'm sure you are glad you learn all that. It's a wonderful skill to have
@leedane26943 ай бұрын
@@MalayPanTV yah .... U are right 👍👍👍
@Cyeri28063 ай бұрын
My Chinese Malaysian friends sometimes don't understand pure Malay people talking cuz we mixed formal and informal. Our informal malay hard to understand 😂 so usually I would talk in english with nonmalay friend and mix some malay words here and there.
@Si_26vva2203 ай бұрын
Ya
@hurindturambar3 ай бұрын
They live in malaysia, they should learn malay fully, you should stop that or malaysia will lose it's malay identity in the future
@avourrito18193 ай бұрын
@@hurindturambar with the vast mainstream usage of internet with the English language, that's how there's more English usage right now. Even malay kids understand English too early to undo full malay right now
@avourrito18193 ай бұрын
@@hurindturambaralso Chinese and Indian kids go back home to speak their native tongue, to find common ground language with other kids is when we learn English together 😅. It's not their fault or anyone that Chinese and Indian schools exists as well, some just learned malay during kindergarten but that's it
@loveofchiaki3 ай бұрын
@@avourrito1819the chinese and indian learn bahasa baku in school, they speak formal malay, they dont speak bahasa pasar. chinese says kereta, malay says kete, of course they dont understand each other.
@MentallOrientallАй бұрын
Hearing “ah kong” used on a KZbin short has completely shook me! Not use to hearing my dialect on KZbin! 😭♥️ made my lil heart so happy
@MalayPanTVАй бұрын
Aww 🥺 yes he's Hokkien Lang! maybe I should make him speak more of his dialect!!
@mog82777Ай бұрын
That's happened to me when I visited Malaysia. 😭👊🏻 I took a Grab from KL Sentral to Pudu, and I switched talk in Cantonese, Mandarin, English, Melayu and Bahasa in the same time with the driver. 😭👊🏻 After that, I was be like, "What did I just do?", I can't believe with myself. 😭👊🏻 Feel a bit culture shock but that was quite interesting for me, I also found that's quite helpful for me to learn & practicing the languages. 😅🙈
@sumansinghpsparaswarrajamy42993 ай бұрын
As an indian i can confirm that we also mix hindi and english and we call the mixture Hinglish😅😅
@weishi52863 ай бұрын
As a Bank of America customer, I can confirm that is the official support language here
@linthoingambiwairokpam29483 ай бұрын
Lol same here
@waynelau32563 ай бұрын
I heard ppl say singaporeans switch every well, but as a singaporean the malaysians are really so much better than us. I would love to be trilingual too 😂
@hazimsyafiqmuhamadshahril798415 күн бұрын
Im malaysian and i can agree that we do that all the time because me and my family do it every time ❤😊
@ronahemara-wahanui238317 күн бұрын
This is beautiful to listen to Being multi-linguistic is so impressive and a true 'flex'
@XunYunXiao3 ай бұрын
I don't know about other but I switch the language when I can't find the word I want in current language that I use (of course languagethat other person would understand 😅)
@wfhesltutordea80723 ай бұрын
I'm a Filipino. We do the same. It's part of our daily lives now.
@francisrizeyambao93203 ай бұрын
a common filipino only know 2 languages. English and Tagalog
@AdieLee-lm1is3 ай бұрын
The central tagalog region speaks only 2 languages, Tagalog & English. But as soon as you leave that region, the languages expand to Ilokana, Ibatan, Ibanag, Bisaya/Cebuano, Bikolano, Hiligaynon/Ilonggo, Chavacano/Spanish and some Chinese and many others. So technically, we speak minimun 3 languages in any given day. Hope the helps clear it up.
@indaygarutay97373 ай бұрын
@@francisrizeyambao9320 madami din bisaya sa Visayas ay Mindanao. May iba 4 lalo na pag muslim.
@everydayiseveryday45293 ай бұрын
@@francisrizeyambao9320a common filipino only knows 2 languages? Do you live under a rock or something?
@edgardolojo31533 ай бұрын
@@francisrizeyambao9320most tagalog only know 2 languages, but most Filipinos have minimum of 3 I speak 3 my wife 4 my M-inlaw 5 my F-inlaw 6 languages, even my daughter also speak 3
@marioferrara25932 ай бұрын
It's actually very easy if you know multiple languages and are fluent in them
@drei51242 ай бұрын
Yeah, in the Philippines too, since there are alot of dialects, and most can speak tagalog & english fairly they sometimes mix words to say something quicker
@WataShiWa_MaMOrU3 ай бұрын
my indian friend can speak malay,chinese,english and yes tamil
@shubhashrichoudhury72663 ай бұрын
Same! 5 languages here
@MalayPanTV3 ай бұрын
OMG...yeah when I saw Indian family at Chinese restaurant speak very fluent Chinese I was like..amazed and jaw dropping for a few second😲😲😲
@lisapoe8883 ай бұрын
But all with a thick indian accent😅
@aapropertylist3 ай бұрын
Just a simple order at mamak stall already have 3 languages. Anne , roti tampal satu!!. Tapau.
@juliashireen61953 ай бұрын
doh biar ah... sekurang kurangnya pandai gok... mu panda setare mane@@lisapoe888
@BELLA-qu7vy3 ай бұрын
This is very normal in my household since we are multilingual and I love it!!!😊❤
@Kotaro_kunnnnn18 күн бұрын
Your so lucky Malaysian is the nicest people in the world ❤❤❤
@rohanaanum6933Ай бұрын
I mean I am a middle school I talk like this at my friend sometimes haha😅
@malounuguid99283 ай бұрын
We also do that here in the Philippines,depends on who you talk to, words are mingled with some local dialects aside from English, Tagalog and some dialects
@arata312 ай бұрын
Tagalog with English is plain mediocre. We are talking about multiple race and its language here. Some can speak 3,4 or 5 languages, and in just one sentence..
@malounuguid99282 ай бұрын
@@arata31mediocre really?😂
@irwinmier88782 ай бұрын
those aren't dialects, those are languages.
@user-pt5cl2ro6f2 ай бұрын
@@arata31Welp. Ig our 187 languages don't exist or are invalid coz they're just ours right? We're not dick sizing here. Just stating actual facts. When did this become a measurement of mediocrity?
@harukazeeh2 ай бұрын
I heard a bisaya switching between bisaya, english and tagalog in one conversation and I'm already amazed. My mother is bisaya but i don't learn their language, i just become interested to learn now that I'm an adult.
@zareien22902 ай бұрын
With multiple languages, it actually becomes easier to switch like this than separating the languages! Its a relief to speak with people that speak all my languages, but its quite rare because one of my main ones is pretty niche
@sh165927 күн бұрын
There is actually study done on this and so people who learn languages at a younger age or simultaneously when they're younger.Don't have to translate from their mother tongue or like the first language to another language.They just think in multiple languages.
@Raining_acidzАй бұрын
As someone who is not Malaysian but Bruneian, i have no idea
@norafiana78443 ай бұрын
Malay, then english, then chinese, then japanese? Whoa sugoi😂😂
@Starlight_VA.2 ай бұрын
Being multilingual is very useful for the person. You can communicate with more people than normal people (People who knows only 1 language). ❤