If YouTube Polyglots Were Honest

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Language Simp

Language Simp

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 7 500
@nichtsistkostenlos6565
@nichtsistkostenlos6565 2 жыл бұрын
"I speak 30 languages", means: I speak one language to a C1 level and two languages to a B1 level and I know how to say "How are you?" in 27 languages with a foreign accent so deep you can barely understand me.
@caramelapple5562
@caramelapple5562 2 жыл бұрын
what do the levels mean?
@fraufuchs9555
@fraufuchs9555 2 жыл бұрын
@@caramelapple5562 C1 = advanced. B1 = pre-intermediate.
@caramelapple5562
@caramelapple5562 2 жыл бұрын
@@fraufuchs9555 thanks!
@エルフェンリート-l3i
@エルフェンリート-l3i 2 жыл бұрын
@@caramelapple5562 A1: Absolute Beginner A2: "i might take this serious" B1: early intermediate B2: the infinite intermediate plateau C1: advanced/fluent/native-ish C2: native++ aka the people who enjoy science, literature and legal stuff
@horrificdetective
@horrificdetective 2 жыл бұрын
@@エルフェンリート-l3i thanks!!!
@PlzCa1mDown
@PlzCa1mDown 2 жыл бұрын
I watched a "polyglot meets another polyglot" video once and literally all they did was introduce themselves in like 21 languages.
@mcmerry2846
@mcmerry2846 2 жыл бұрын
True, I saw that one
@babykiller122
@babykiller122 2 жыл бұрын
They're pretty much A1's in like, five of those - the rest, they just memorized two commonly used phrases.
@nicoleraheem1195
@nicoleraheem1195 2 жыл бұрын
😆😂😂😂 I remember that one ! 😂
@papapawer4043
@papapawer4043 2 жыл бұрын
Wouter Corduwener hahaha saw that one as well
@Iemonic
@Iemonic 2 жыл бұрын
lmfao
@slawero
@slawero 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, your Polish was impeccable. I'm impressed. As a Polish native speaker I can totally attest his accent is indistinguishable from that of native speakers.
@ThatBoomerDude56
@ThatBoomerDude56 2 жыл бұрын
... because native Polish is incomprehensively indistinguishable.
@ololo518
@ololo518 2 жыл бұрын
Come on, he has to work on his sz, cz and dż :P
@katokianimation
@katokianimation 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a Hungarian who can't speak polish at all, and only talked once with a polish person... in English. But the two country is close enough so yeah I can say he is fluent
@pulykamell
@pulykamell 2 жыл бұрын
Needs more shhhhh, chhhh, zhhhhh. Come on, say it with me: chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie.
@amadeosendiulo2137
@amadeosendiulo2137 2 жыл бұрын
I think it should be "bzdz" and not "bzbz" but okey. Maybe it's a Silesian accent.
@UwU-xk5cx
@UwU-xk5cx Жыл бұрын
As a spanish speaker, I like how in spanish you didn't sound fluent at all but in Portuguese and Italian you totally sounded like a native spanish speaker imitating italian and brasilian accents
@mr.ocelotguy8995
@mr.ocelotguy8995 Жыл бұрын
same
@actionmarco8556
@actionmarco8556 Жыл бұрын
Hahaha for real!
@nandu12345
@nandu12345 Жыл бұрын
Su pronunciación en español no es muy buena.
@jerstumc5033
@jerstumc5033 Жыл бұрын
parece que hablaba chileno con acento brasileño
@Dinger_D
@Dinger_D Жыл бұрын
pero es verdad osea imitando otros acentos suena mas a español que simplemente cuando intenta hablar español
@robertszumiowski589
@robertszumiowski589 2 жыл бұрын
I'm Polish and the point you were making about ancient philosophies while speaking fluent Polish was extremely thought provoking. I would love to see more of you speaking Polish
@Kylephibbsky
@Kylephibbsky 2 жыл бұрын
I thought he was just reciting every last name from the last Polish census.
@itsytyt5192
@itsytyt5192 2 жыл бұрын
sd
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
If you French kiss a Pole in winter, will your tongue get stuck to it?
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
@@Kylephibbsky Your last name is "Phibbs." It literally means "lies." You and Ms. Whitehead should consider changing last names.
@LouBarnes12
@LouBarnes12 2 жыл бұрын
He's just fluent in Polish as a native speaker. Woow
@chronofactor2037
@chronofactor2037 2 жыл бұрын
It's kinda funny how he speaks spanish with an american accent but goes full blown mario bros with his "italian"
@Jaredstav
@Jaredstav 2 жыл бұрын
Lol yes it’s so funny and it was making me dye laughing that he was speaking Spanish and in a Brazilian and Italian accent 😂😂
@brukernavn3409
@brukernavn3409 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jaredstav What colour?
@Jaredstav
@Jaredstav 2 жыл бұрын
@@brukernavn3409 ahaha
@4imee198
@4imee198 2 жыл бұрын
Same
@JesusRodriguez-zi8gj
@JesusRodriguez-zi8gj 2 жыл бұрын
Tbh his spanish pronuntiation improved a lot when he spoke it in an italian accent. He legit sounded like an native spanish speaker trying to sound italian
@PASTRAMIKick
@PASTRAMIKick 2 жыл бұрын
The real chads are the ones who say "Umm yeah I know a little" and then proceed to speak a language more fluently than the native speaker.
@ItsAsparageese
@ItsAsparageese 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah exactly, they're the equivalent of the people who say "Sorry, my English isn't very good" after an impeccably worded comment lol
@PASTRAMIKick
@PASTRAMIKick 2 жыл бұрын
@@ItsAsparageese lol true
@user-es7ui5mc1m
@user-es7ui5mc1m 2 жыл бұрын
@@ItsAsparageese I feel like this often comes from how you're treated by other speakers of your first language rather than English speakers and it's hard to gain confidence - at least that's my experience as a German. English teachers in school can be quite ciritcal (depending on grade and school) and you could speak perfect English but have a slight German accent and other Germans will tell you "how can you not speak English, did you not go to school, blah blah blah". I'm confident in my English now but I also used to put that at the end of comments when I had never interacted with a native English speaker irl and basically only knew criticism for my language skills (even though they were always decent for the amount of time I'd been learning).
@ItsAsparageese
@ItsAsparageese 2 жыл бұрын
@@user-es7ui5mc1m That makes so much sense. I'm sorry to hear the learning environment for it can be so critical! Hadn't thought about that variable at all. Seems like it works, though, since people who learn English tend to speak it far better than native English speakers tend to end up speaking other languages XD
@suphachaisrikaew873
@suphachaisrikaew873 2 жыл бұрын
Sound more like a humble bragger.
@alicja777.
@alicja777. Жыл бұрын
As a pole I am genuinely impressed by your polish speaking skills. I have to admit that I haven’t seen a foreigner speaking so fluent polish in a long time.
@SchimbaChannel
@SchimbaChannel Жыл бұрын
I was aspecially toched by the part where he told about his dead gay grandmother. 🥲
@SageJasper628
@SageJasper628 Жыл бұрын
I especially loved the part where he said “bzhbzzzbzhbzhhhbbzhbzhbzh”
@FrozenMermaid666
@FrozenMermaid666 11 ай бұрын
I cannot understand Polish spelling, tho I noticed that there are some pretty words in Polish like zestaw / skała / rekąw / motyl / bitwa / dziennik / błąd / wieża / lekarstwo / głupi / egzamin / srebro / zwariowany / sąd / kierunek / biznes etc, so I am learning the pretty words and use them in Slovene - by the way, is the letter ł / Ł in Polish pronounced like an U sound and is the letter ą / Ą pronounced with an extra N sound?
@FrozenMermaid666
@FrozenMermaid666 11 ай бұрын
By the way, my current levels are... - upper intermediate level in Old Norse / Icelandic / German - writer level in English + native speaker level in Spanish - upper advanced level in Dutch + advanced level in Norwegian - intermediate level in Swedish / Portuguese / French / Italian / Welsh - beginner level in Breton / Hungarian / Gothic / Latin / Faroese / Galician / Danish / Slovene - total beginner in Cornish / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Aranese / Elfdalian / Gallo / Limburgish / Occitan / Luxembourgish / Catalan / Urkers / Hunsrik / East Norse / Ruhrpöttisch / Alemannic / Ripuarian / Swiss German / Pälzische Deutsch / Austrian German / Waddisch / Palatine German / Westföälsk Sassisk / Austro-Bavarian / PlatDeitsch / Greenlandic Norse / Friulian / Pretarolo / Sardinian / Neapolitan / Sicilian / Venetian / Esperanto / Walloon / Ladin / Guernsey / Norn / Burgundian / Sognamål / West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian / Yiddish / Afrikaans / Finnish / Latvian / Estonian etc (and the other languages based on Dutch / German / Norwegian / Italian / French that are referred to as ‘dialects’ but are usually a different language with different spelling etc) (I highly recommend learning Dutch / Icelandic + Norse + Faroese / Norwegian as they are so magical, as pretty / refined / poetic as English - all other Germanic and the other pretty languages on my list are also gorgeous, so they are all a great option!)
@FrozenMermaid666
@FrozenMermaid666 11 ай бұрын
Very few ppl know more than two or three languages fluently, most of them are only fluent in English and the first language they were made to learn and sometimes in Spanish or Italian or French or German (usually one of these four) and in most others they only know a few phrases and the most used words maybe, which does not equal knowing the language lol, one must know at least 10.000 base words automatically to be native speaker level - one can tell that they only learn the basics and the words they use the most in conversation by the ns they tell to others, lol they always tell viewers to only learn the words they use the most, that they can become fluent in 6 months etc, which is total bs and it has nada to do with actual fluency, so what they refer to as ‘conversational fluency’ isn’t true native speaker level fluency, but, I am the exact opposite, I am learning every word that I can find in every target language, and I am already very close to advanced level (upper intermediate) in Icelandic / Norse / German and advanced level in Norwegian and upper intermediate level in Dutch and mid intermediate in Swedish / Portuguese / French / Italian and intermediate in Welsh, and it takes a lot of watching and rewatching tons of vocab videos with hundreds and thousands of words and memorizing lots of lyrics and watching all sorts of videos with subs and also using Google translate a lot etc to really learn the languages permanently and automatically, so it takes at least two or three years to reach native speaker level fluency in some of these pretty and easy languages that I am learning!
@glatres
@glatres 2 жыл бұрын
It's really funny how his "Spanish with Italian accent" pronuntiation is better than the regular Spanish
@blatinobear
@blatinobear 2 жыл бұрын
So true, native Spanish speaker here and I understood his “Italian” so much better than his Spanish atrocity, how is this possible
@sephikong8323
@sephikong8323 2 жыл бұрын
@@blatinobear He simply spoke Argentinian
@camiloelgueta2213
@camiloelgueta2213 2 жыл бұрын
@@sephikong8323 lmao
@trollocat
@trollocat 2 жыл бұрын
@@sephikong8323 TRUE...
@SIC647
@SIC647 2 жыл бұрын
He does speak Spanish. Which causes me to be kind of impressed that he was able to speak Spanish that bad. And I guess he wasn't able to suppress it in "Italian".
@EllaEllaAudios
@EllaEllaAudios 2 жыл бұрын
"I learned to say "watashi wa alice desu" through Google translate, I am now a master at the Spanish language" - KZbin polyglots
@chiefpanda7040
@chiefpanda7040 2 жыл бұрын
yo tamben el espanghol es muy facilmente das muy spriechnen gut
@BT--vo2oi
@BT--vo2oi 2 жыл бұрын
Have you seen alice in borderland by any chance?
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 2 жыл бұрын
Warshi wa baka.
@Luxxy_noob
@Luxxy_noob 2 жыл бұрын
@@belstar1128 👏👏👏
@-sorta
@-sorta 2 жыл бұрын
watashi suki anime. watashi speak nihongo for juuni sai. watashi wa sugoi.
@ANN-ug2hd
@ANN-ug2hd 2 жыл бұрын
The Indonesian one was so accurate, also the Albanian got me dead.
@ronlugbill1400
@ronlugbill1400 2 жыл бұрын
Apa kabar. I speak Indonesian fluently.
@gtc239
@gtc239 2 жыл бұрын
@@ontime. Yea even some of Indonesians are struggling with it like me lmao like howw to make that sound!!
@arzalalbuchari7095
@arzalalbuchari7095 2 жыл бұрын
his indonesian is better than mine,
@halkerens
@halkerens 2 жыл бұрын
Bener banget wkwk
@klepikovmd
@klepikovmd 2 жыл бұрын
Do you know Albanian?
@ruelongcha
@ruelongcha 2 жыл бұрын
as a native chinese speaker the botched accent and weird phrases followed by “I speak chinese with NATIVE fluency” was way too accurate😂
@eddlake5694
@eddlake5694 2 жыл бұрын
你好 look Im fully fluent
@Rodzyniastyyyy
@Rodzyniastyyyy 2 жыл бұрын
@@eddlake5694 the way you said it gave me goosebumps!The accent is spot on!!!
@chobai9996
@chobai9996 2 жыл бұрын
Same, from Guangzhou and I laugh every time I see a video by that xiaomanyc guy, he's some American that speaks Chinese and while he's kinda fluent he acts like he is the master, it's hilarious but also dangerous since he misleads a lot of people
@someyetiwithinternetaccess1253
@someyetiwithinternetaccess1253 2 жыл бұрын
@@MatthewBHoth one tip to learn Chinese (any language really), is to like watch Chinese shows with English subtitles, so you know what it means, it also helps to have someone you know who knows Chinese teach it to you! Cheers! - some overseas Chinese
@lemonadeslices
@lemonadeslices 2 жыл бұрын
@@MatthewBHoth learn the 4 tones, and nail them when you learn each word. then string phrases/sentences together, making sure you get the tones correct. (native mandarin speaker here)
@bradicalhabibkhoda4138
@bradicalhabibkhoda4138 2 жыл бұрын
KZbin polyglots and programmers have a lot in common. They put a new language on their resume the second they know how to say hello in it
@JohnFlower-NZ
@JohnFlower-NZ 2 жыл бұрын
You got that wrong. Programmers have higher standards. They claim mastery when they say "Hello World".
@emerson23946
@emerson23946 Жыл бұрын
I am apparently conversationally fluent in French. I’ve studied it for almost 7 years and went abroad. But I still can’t understand music or most shows because I need the context clues in a conversation and the ability to ask follow up questions. I can always get there with someone but it’s not pretty. I don’t like to say I’m fluent because I’m still so far from a native speaker. I still don’t like to put it down on a resume because I feel like I still have so far to go, even though I could figure out what someone was saying and probably somewhat easily have a someone disjointed but effective conversation with someone. I shudder at the idea of proclaiming a language you know nothing in
@TheKarabanera
@TheKarabanera Жыл бұрын
Programming languages are way easier though. If you know at least 2 or 3 - you can figure out others rather fast. Actual languages might get easier, but not as much.
@kencootoko8815
@kencootoko8815 Жыл бұрын
Work in the industry and interview people. Its 100% true. I have seen people claim "Proficient in C++" who had only ever written one list sort.
@SangerZonvolt
@SangerZonvolt Жыл бұрын
​@@TheKarabanera Funny you would mention that. My girlfriend is a polyglot and allways says how it does in fact get easier to learn more languages if you already know a few, especially if they are from the same language family. So if you already know 2 languages from a region chances are a 3rd will be relatively easy to learn. Of course there are exceotions with some regional languages being completely different from their neighbors. But even in completely different languages is apparently gets easier as your brain not only learns the language, but also learns to learn languages. As in it gets better remembering vocabulary and picking up gramatical rules. Not speaking from personal experience, I can only speak english and german fluently, with a bit of duolingo level of japanese.
@SabbaticalTommy
@SabbaticalTommy 2 жыл бұрын
🤣 I swear if I ever made a "language" channel, these are the videos I'd make. You saved me the effort, cheers.
@LanguageSimp
@LanguageSimp 2 жыл бұрын
You’re an alpha male
@ddang8463
@ddang8463 2 жыл бұрын
@Sabbatical love your videos man! Greetings from a sub in Texas 👋
@501sabu501
@501sabu501 2 жыл бұрын
Keep going Sabbatical! Loved your vids in Nigeria & Argentina
@chibiromano5631
@chibiromano5631 2 жыл бұрын
As a Mexican American whose family is from Chichimecan Zacatecas that is a speaker of a Constructed langauge (based out of DF) called Classical Nahuatl( a language that nobody actually spoke).. I whole wholeheartedly agree. I was going to start my Classical Nahuatl channel too but both you smarks saved me effort tambien.
@ShadowValleys
@ShadowValleys 2 жыл бұрын
oh hi Sabbatical!
@ShadowChief117
@ShadowChief117 Жыл бұрын
I feel like I've stumbled into a parody of a community of people that I never even knew existed lmao
@ellen3000gaming
@ellen3000gaming Жыл бұрын
Right there with you lol
@lucminax
@lucminax 2 жыл бұрын
The Brazilian Portuguese part activated my fight or flight reflexes
@chibiromano5631
@chibiromano5631 2 жыл бұрын
and that's why I learned European Portugese... Brazilian sounds like a Simlish(Simms) version of Spanish. ..
@louievegan1098
@louievegan1098 2 жыл бұрын
@@chibiromano5631 KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
@lucminax
@lucminax 2 жыл бұрын
​@@chibiromano5631 lol I'm Brazilian, I was referring to what he REDACTED the translation of o.o
@eduardolins5391
@eduardolins5391 2 жыл бұрын
@@chibiromano5631 Beta Portugal fan simping european portuguese.... (Ironical comment btw)
@malkaviano14
@malkaviano14 2 жыл бұрын
@@chibiromano5631 Não existe uma língua chamada "português ". O que existe é brasileiro e brasileiro europeu
@MaxJanowiczSawicki
@MaxJanowiczSawicki 2 жыл бұрын
As a native Russian speaker, I couldn't agree more with your statement, about the global geopolitical challenges, climate change and poverty. Your Russian is just perfect, no accent whatsoever, great job!
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
"climate change" is the most ambiguous propaganda term in history. It's not just a joke, but an insuilt to the intelligence of mankind, which apparently is deserving.
@ВалерияКарелина-и3е
@ВалерияКарелина-и3е 2 жыл бұрын
He literally could read my thoughts, what a genius man he is
@eni9matical556
@eni9matical556 2 жыл бұрын
Such a cohesive and impressive speech… I’m so excited
@DenMokin
@DenMokin 2 жыл бұрын
Omg, he know Russian better than i do 😍
@madkir8206
@madkir8206 2 жыл бұрын
@@DenMokin No jokes his prononciation is better then half of the generation including myself
@WaaDoku
@WaaDoku 2 жыл бұрын
As a native German speaker I'm honestly blown away by your German skills! You should be really proud of yourself! And I know you didn't speak any German in this video but I can just tell by how many languages you already pretend to know that your pseudo-German gibberish you learned from that one Charlie Chaplin movie must be impeccable as well! Keep it up!
@WaaDoku
@WaaDoku 2 жыл бұрын
@Ricky Smith I was making a joke comment.
@Avestan69
@Avestan69 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah bro as a native German speaker form North Korea his german was amazing
@carlosv7801
@carlosv7801 2 жыл бұрын
He have not spoke not even a word, just like a native german
@Avestan69
@Avestan69 2 жыл бұрын
@@carlosv7801 yeah bro he is more German then Germans
@adventureswithaurora
@adventureswithaurora Жыл бұрын
@@carlosv7801 🤣
@Rinabow
@Rinabow 2 жыл бұрын
Years ago, I got caught up in the idea of trying to become a huge polyglot, and had aspirations of becoming one myself. I spread myself thin over so many languages that it really started to hurt my progress in the languages I cared about, or actively used. Eventually after completely burning myself out, I stuck to just 2: Japanese, which I'd been actively interested in since my teens, and was easily the one I'd consistently remained the most proficient with, and Dutch, the language of the place I live in now. As my language study become more focused, I really started to notice how deep these languages really go, and I'd come to realize that there was no possible way I'd be able to know and retain this depth for 5 to 10 other languages. When I talked with people in those languages I'd find myself in topics of discussion that would open me up to entirely new vocabulary, including words that had no translation to English at all. I will often still refuse to call myself fluent, because despite actually having a romantic partner with whom I communicate exclusively in Japanese, I recognize that there are still a lot of things I don't know. To bring this back to the topic of KZbin Polyglots, I've started to realize how surface-level their proclaimed language skills actually are. Whenever I see videos of these people in unscripted settings, such as talking to people on the streets ect, their conversations rarely go past surface level self-introductions, and when I hear Japanese in particular, I really notice just how unnatural they actually talk. I do find it a little concerning, because for anyone who is passionate about learning another language or culture, these polyglot flexes can lead people into feeling like their one or two languages aren't good enough, like they did for me, and then possibly try to sell a solution with apps or services.
@madeleine61509
@madeleine61509 2 жыл бұрын
Something YT polyglots will do to seem better in languages than they actually are is to fling around the word "fluent/fluency". I have the same mindset as you: I am a native speaker in English, I attended Hebrew school growing up, I studied Spanish for 15 years, AND I have also been living in France with my French boyfriend for 6 years now. I can hold a conversation in 4 different languages (my Hebrew isn't great anymore, but I can get my point across). Despite that, I still believe that the only language I'm fluent in is English... Not because I suck in the others, but because fluency is more than just "speak the language gud". I've seen proof of some polyglots throwing around the word "fluent" inaccurately. I saw a video just the other day of a supposed polyglot talking about celebrities who are multilingual and frequently said "(Celebrity) is fluent in (language)" then they inserted a clip where that celebrity is speaking that language and somehow manages to make 10 grammatical errors in a single sentence, as well as having a terrible accent. "Bone jor. Geem apple John" is not fluency. Merely saying a word or sentence is not fluency. Another thing: unless you have a lot of free time and spare cash, being a fluent polyglot of more than 3 languages is flatout unobtainable for 99% of people. No matter how much you study, your language skills will always be limited until you immerse yourself. Unless you plan to live in a country for every language, being a polyglot is impossible... And even then, I think people don't realise just how much your language skills deteriorate when you don't use that language regularly. You would have to constantly cycle through living in those 10 countries, constantly moving between them. I use English a fair bit daily: the internet is obviously predominantly in English and I still have my English speaking friends and family. Despite that, the fact that that isn't the language I'm hearing day in and day out has meant that I have started to make more mistakes than when I lived in an English-speaking country. Sorry for the long comment, but the only thing that pisses me off more than ignorance is when people exploit, feed into, and profit off of ignorance. Also, I know you didn't mention this but I absolutely hate Duolingo with a burning passion. It is literally the worst language learning tool in existence. Duolingo can go suck an egg.
@BallisticaMetal
@BallisticaMetal 2 жыл бұрын
@@madeleine61509 This! And on the other hand, let me give you a reality check: no one gives a fuck. Speak/learn the languages that you like and love and that's it. You don't have to "impress" anybody, do it for yourself.
@gekkenhuisje
@gekkenhuisje 2 жыл бұрын
Wholeheartedly agree with you and @Mad Dog. "Fluent/fluency" is overused a lot. For a language that isn't your native tongue, fluency is a lifelong goal to work towards.
@jadeevergreen
@jadeevergreen 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with you. Watching a few of those videos made me question my language studying ability a lot. Though I think i have enough people in real life to compare to who are really amazing imo. I can understand how easily the gratification comes when you tell people about studying languages. I've been studying Japanese and I took Chinese lessons last Semester, considering it more of a hobby of mine. My level in Japanese is alright and I'm still a beginner in Chinese (not planning to reach "native-fluency"-Level either), but many people who don't study languages themselves or who struggled with this in school think that I am really amazing to be able to do this. They can't judge my actual fluency level, so they think I must be some kind of genius. I personally feel a bit bothered by that as I don't want people to expect anything great of me and I just want to do this for fun, but I can imagine some people to really like this attention.
@idek7438
@idek7438 2 жыл бұрын
I'd rather be able to communicate effectively and articulately on a variety of topics in 3 languages than be able to ask where the bathroom is and talk about my family in 15 languages.
@thiagukkj
@thiagukkj 2 жыл бұрын
As a brazillian,the part where you speak in spanish to pretend you're speaking in portuguese is 100% accurate
@kevinschutze7376
@kevinschutze7376 Жыл бұрын
bolsonaro é muito gostoso
@lemonadeinmyveins9078
@lemonadeinmyveins9078 Жыл бұрын
"Bolsonaro muito muito muito muito gostoso"
@onironius8008
@onironius8008 Жыл бұрын
It sounded like Spanish with a Dutch accent.
@TicoKamisaki
@TicoKamisaki Жыл бұрын
As a Brazilian myself I can confirm that was not only a 100% accurate, that was also precious 😭😂😂 this guy's too fuuny
@benjaminbustamante7924
@benjaminbustamante7924 Жыл бұрын
JAJAJAJAJAJ muito muito muito muito gostoso
@barrysteven5964
@barrysteven5964 2 жыл бұрын
To be serious for a second, what really fucks me off about these 'polyglots' is not the amount of languages they've learnt but the lack of honesty about how many they've forgotten. It's a skill like playing an instrument or a sport. You have to practise or you get rusty and forget things. To keep a language up and not forget it you need to use it every day. How the hell can you practise 20 languages every day?
@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena
@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena Жыл бұрын
You don't really forget they just become dormant. Hell you actually don't need to practice them all every day just ask Steve Kaufmann he is old and can speak 20 languages and one of his most fluent ones is Japanese because he has worked in Japan for years. And by speak i mean to a B2 level at least you know conversation with actual native speakers as no way in hell majority of natives are a C2 level
@marialandar8619
@marialandar8619 Жыл бұрын
I can really relate to the fact that you have to be practicing in the foreign languages you’ve learned. Once I was really good in Englisch and I still consider myself as being fluent in it but since I’ve started studing and learning German and focused on it more (have a C2 level by now) my Englisch kinda rusted up a bit. And it’s quite hard for me now to switch from German to Englisch and be equally good in both of them. It feels as if a brain has some sort of a separate and space limmited section for your knowledge of foreing languages and at some point it’s just “filled up to the top.”. like you are getting better in one foreign language and the other one(s) have not enough “space” left. But it’s not how it works. just my thoughts when I have difficulties in Englisch (German words come to my mind much faster).
@thesampsoninstitute
@thesampsoninstitute Жыл бұрын
I know the point you're trying to make. It's basically that many native speakers do not use C2 vocabulary very often. However...almost all native speakers of a language are C2.
@deadwolf3607
@deadwolf3607 Жыл бұрын
@@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena there was a french dude who spoke french his entire life He needed a french lang certificat to move to canada He failed the test🤣🤣
@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena
@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena Жыл бұрын
@@thesampsoninstitute I would argue they are at most C1 even those without education that just acquired language through communication
@martinenyx-filmstuff305
@martinenyx-filmstuff305 Жыл бұрын
The worst thing is that these “KZbin polyglots” who claim they can speak 17 languages fluently encourage the myth that mastering a language is EASY. It’s NOT. Very few people COMPLETELY master one or more languages, and it takes constant practice to not forget other languages you know. I speak three languages and I STILL occasionally make mistakes when speaking them, including in my NATIVE one, lol. Respect for real polyglots ✌️
@Eskimoso
@Eskimoso Жыл бұрын
And where are you from exactly?
@martinenyx-filmstuff305
@martinenyx-filmstuff305 Жыл бұрын
@@Eskimoso Italy originally, been living in North America for eight years
@julnitti
@julnitti Жыл бұрын
The struggle is real! I speak 4 fluently and sometimes I’m forced to speak all four of them in one day 🥲 Exhausting!!
@Systolic_Gaming
@Systolic_Gaming Жыл бұрын
Nobody speaks any language perfectly. It’s basically impossible to be fluent in more than 7 languages because to maintain proficiency you need at least half an hour of genuine conversation a day. 4 hours of just talking is not possible without special circumstances (another commenter said their dad was basically the head of UN translation, and he only knew 6).
@austenpoppy558
@austenpoppy558 Жыл бұрын
"including in my NATIVE one" I second that. I went to the UK to study and sometimes I joke that instead of mastering English, my second language, I now speak no language fluently because I make mistakes in mine. At first I was frankly ecstatic because I thought it meant I was becoming bilingual, but then it becomes really frustrating when you have to look up a word in the dictionary because you can't remember how to say it in your mothertongue, and when you get corrected by your own friends because you say words from your second language in your native one without realizing it...with the accent of your mothertongue (and confidently at that !).
@gentryhaney4713
@gentryhaney4713 2 жыл бұрын
i like how his mistranslations make it fun for people to know what hes actually saying, its the ultimate language troll
@HighlightHeaven
@HighlightHeaven 2 жыл бұрын
“White flag, surrender” lmao
@brianahernofficial
@brianahernofficial 2 жыл бұрын
That got me too 😂
@PIVfirestarkproducon
@PIVfirestarkproducon 2 жыл бұрын
Damn so this where u at off season huh
@thalesshu6615
@thalesshu6615 2 жыл бұрын
I'm still crying
@markdavis7397
@markdavis7397 2 жыл бұрын
That joke is soooo tired and overused. It's also not very accurate, but I wouldn't care about that if it were funny. After 10,000 repetitions, it just isn't that funny anymore. My 2-year old granddaughter thinks the same thing is funny only about 20 times; it would be nice if the internet would get tired of things at least as fast as a 2-year old...is that too much to ask? I guess it is.
@PortalOfKaden
@PortalOfKaden 2 жыл бұрын
@@markdavis7397 so you surrender to the jokes?
@maqaroon
@maqaroon 2 жыл бұрын
My father used to be chief interpreter of the United Nations and during his entire career they only had one single interpreter who was genuinely fluent in 6 languages. He was a Cambridge graduate and incredibly valuable for conferences because he could jump in for others. The entry requirement to be a UN interpreter is fluency in 3 of these languages (English, Spanish, Arabic, Russian, French) with the exception being Chinese where you only need to be fluent in English and Chinese. So it is absolutely confirmed bullshit that an average person can easily be fluent in 4 languages, let alone 6 or more.
@hodidebb197
@hodidebb197 2 жыл бұрын
I would like to disagree using myself as an example. I studied by myself and became fluent in 5 languages. I believe studying languages is extremely easy though. Italian, Spanish, French and Romanian. After you learn one fluently, you will be able to easily learn the other 3. The structure is almost always the same and the words change a bit from language to language but are not that different. Feliz, fericit, felice.What is actually hard is learning languages with completely different structures: Italian-Chinese-English for example.
@Sergio-nb4hj
@Sergio-nb4hj 2 жыл бұрын
​@@hodidebb197 Definitely agree. Any slavic language for example is a walk in the park if you already know one, and the same can be said about turkic languages. It's learning a language with different genealogy that is truly challenging, and that's why the UN has that requirement
@morpher728
@morpher728 2 жыл бұрын
You're hyper exagerating, 10 languages in 1 month is beyond impossible but being completely fluent in 4 languages could even be considered "easy" however consider that the translators you're talking about don't simply speak those languages but have advanced translation and comprehension skills
@CHIVA195
@CHIVA195 2 жыл бұрын
@@hodidebb197 I doubt that you are fluent if you got a foreigner accent lol
@hodidebb197
@hodidebb197 2 жыл бұрын
@@CHIVA195 i don’t have accents when I speak.
@JorgeLourenco000
@JorgeLourenco000 Жыл бұрын
So accurate, I once argued the same thing in a “polyglot” channel and all hell broke loose. Imagine me, being a Portuguese native, having someone telling me that the guy was talking Portuguese and that I did not know anything about it.
@siesaw1
@siesaw1 Жыл бұрын
had a similar situation happen to me with a delusional American. We (about 6 native Irish commenters) kept on telling him that calling our language "gaelic" is incorrect, it's an umbrella term used for grouping gaeilge and other similar languages such as welsh etc. After about 50 replies the guy said he seen it on Wikipedia and still fully believes he's right, even though all of us grew up in Irish speaking parts lmfao. He never backed down.
@ZaneConnor
@ZaneConnor Жыл бұрын
The American has Dunning Kruger syndrome 😊
@tatherva7387
@tatherva7387 9 ай бұрын
@@siesaw1 This is so funny because I remember reading that exact thread. I don't think I replied at all but it stuck with me because of the second hand embarrassment
@tatherva7387
@tatherva7387 8 ай бұрын
@@layelee Honestly I don't remember which exactly, but I don't think the stubborn American guy in the comments was the one who made the video, just a random defender of the guy. If I had to guess, was probably xiaonyc but could be any number of similar copycat channels.
@The420033
@The420033 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair, your Russian pronounciation is on point. It felt like I was having a stroke or a bad dream: my language, but no familiar words.
@GippyHappy
@GippyHappy 2 жыл бұрын
Simlish
@EminencePhront
@EminencePhront Жыл бұрын
I'm just amazed he didn't toss in a cyka blyat.
@nicoleellis6794
@nicoleellis6794 Жыл бұрын
Да, он как будто говорил на русском задом наперед 😅
@ЕвгенийБагрянов-н9э
@ЕвгенийБагрянов-н9э Жыл бұрын
@@nicoleellis6794 😅
@PaulusCaesar
@PaulusCaesar Жыл бұрын
Once I recorded random words in English, played it backwards, it sounded so Russian it was uncanny. It meant nothing of course, but the sound was there
@izyyyblanco5052
@izyyyblanco5052 2 жыл бұрын
I LOST IT WHEN HE STARTED SPEAKING POLISH VERY FLUENT JUST ADD "KURWA" AND YOU'RE A NATIVE POLISH PERSON I SWEAR
@cheetooreo6636
@cheetooreo6636 2 жыл бұрын
As a non-Polish speaker, I definitely didn't Google that, and will include it as a greeting. 😌
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 2 жыл бұрын
Bardzo kurwa.
@tymondabrowski12
@tymondabrowski12 2 жыл бұрын
I think people always forget how essential of a word Polish "no" is. (I don't mean "nie", I mean literally "no", which can mean "yes", or a comma, or indignation, or a lot of different thongs especially if you add some more words to it, honorary mention of "No kurwa no" which is appropriate when your personally duck-taped fiat 126p still doesn't start).
@izyyyblanco5052
@izyyyblanco5052 2 жыл бұрын
@@tymondabrowski12 this is so kurwa true, no
@mmtigan
@mmtigan 2 жыл бұрын
I learned how to say "ja pierdole" from watching professional e-sports players.
@turnkey_hole
@turnkey_hole Жыл бұрын
The most mind-blowing thing I've learned while learning a second language is that on the continuum of proficiency, anybody ahead of you sounds like they have fantastic fluency, accent, and vocabulary and anyone behind you sounds obviously off. So like... If you don't speak a language, you have absolutely no basis for evaluating how well some dude trying to sell you some course speaks whatever language he wants to teach you.
@KorianHUN
@KorianHUN Жыл бұрын
I just realized locals say my english is good if they hear it because 80% of people in m country can't hold a conversation in english lmao
@Serena-or7sl
@Serena-or7sl Жыл бұрын
I would say it's more that you can recognize some levels above and below you accurately, but cannot really distinguish levels way above you. Also it matters a lot if you are hearing only few selected phrases or if you are listening to multiple conversations. For example, I don't know Japanese above A1 level (I'm not A1 either), but I can recognize that Dogen (a youtuber), but after listening to multiple video I can reasonably say that he speaks at least decent Japanese (it helps that he does comedic skits of people at different level of Japanese pronunciation, so you can get a feel of the difference between American pronunciation or a more proper one.).
@rijjhb9467
@rijjhb9467 Жыл бұрын
@@Serena-or7sl I'd like to learn Japanese but I'm frightened by it. How harder it is compared to English (assuming that English is not your first language)? Do you think it would be feasible by studying just an hour a day? Also, can you do an hour of Japanese per day or it'll make you crazy?
@Skaftholu
@Skaftholu Жыл бұрын
@@rijjhb9467 I took Japanese in high school and it's very difficult. It's kinda nice because pronunciation is 100% consistent, but you also have to learn the script which can be really challenging. Especially when you start to get into kanji as there are literally thousands of kanji characters. Add in the fact that Japanese has several levels of formality depending on who you're talking to that will change how you say things and it can get really overwhelming. Granted, I only took it for 2 terms to fulfill my language requirement so I didn't get too deep into it, but even at the basic level it's tough. Learning to read/write in Japanese was by far the hardest part for me though
@sofieatcenie
@sofieatcenie Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the time i got a duolingo ad and the lady absolutely butchered a swedish sentence w the smuggest confidence
@canter1ter
@canter1ter 2 жыл бұрын
After living in Poland for about a month, i can confidently say that its literally half of their vocabulary, and i fucking love laughing about it
@bloomernessdiffusion2405
@bloomernessdiffusion2405 2 жыл бұрын
I confirm this. After a month in poland environment you start literally "think" in polish as it is your native language. I'm ukrainan. Probably it works this well only when you're ukrainian or belorussian.
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 2 жыл бұрын
Bardzo kurwa.
@eksprolek2924
@eksprolek2924 2 жыл бұрын
As being Polish, and havic spech problems, i sound exactly like what he qas saying.
@SlowPolish
@SlowPolish 2 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha I love his Polish 😂😂
@chibiromano5631
@chibiromano5631 2 жыл бұрын
As a Spanish speaker aka Neutral Brazilian Portugese or Informal Italian.. French and Portugese are literally same lagnague .. French just sounds more .. like if you mixed the Lion King with a drunk Portugese making Poland noises. I'm just kidding, French is not even a romance langauge. It's Celto-Germanic version of pig latin none of us ; Romanian, Espanol, Italiano and Portugese can understand a go* **am word that French is saying.. 'Weegh wee pa po po pa pe jeh surrendeghhhhhrr(*weird french noises) .. blanq flag.'
@leel9186
@leel9186 2 жыл бұрын
I bought into the whole ‘fluent in 3 months’ ‘language hacking horseshit’… I speak Italian now as a second language, and it has taken me 5-6 years, my partner is Italian, we go and visit her family regularly, I also study. There are no shortcuts.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
It's hard 'cause Italian is two languages in one: Italian and sign language.
@leel9186
@leel9186 2 жыл бұрын
@@scintillam_dei hahaha. Very true. And you can't learn the sign language part. I look like a fool when I try.
@rashidah9307
@rashidah9307 2 жыл бұрын
Having studied foreign languages a traditional way in school, I would say there are many "shortcuts" in language learning and there are certainly long, dead end streets, as well. I've learned a lot from Benny and other polyglots on KZbin and it HAS helped me learn much faster and more efficiently. Taking charge of my learning journey instead of being dependent on a course or teacher to teach me what they think I should know has allowed me to learn how to communicate what's important to me in my target language, which then motivates me to keep going. The point of Fluent in 3 months is not actual fluency in three months but to get people having short conversations in their target language as soon as possible. All true polyglots talk about the hours they spend each week studying, practicing and maintaining their languages.
@Mrsquiggley
@Mrsquiggley 2 жыл бұрын
@@rashidah9307 as a mono lingual English speaker, I’ve just started my attempt to be a polyglot, but my goal is to learn 4 languages in 15 years plus AUSLAN, Australian sign Language. The idea of fluent in a few months just seems absolutely ridiculous to me. I’m starting with Indonesian because it’s the only foreign language in a Roman script where I know several people closely who are native speakers to be able to practice with, on top of doing 45 minutes a day of Duolingo and then doing formal language classes.
@rashidah9307
@rashidah9307 2 жыл бұрын
@@Mrsquiggley that's great! I've heard that Indonesian is a great language to learn for English speakers because of the shared script and (if I'm remembering correctly) not overly complicated grammar. Best wishes to you! I'm learning Levantine Arabic. It's not so similar to English but I'm highly motivated and I have many Arab friends who don't speak much English. I've made great progress in 1.5 years, and I'm excited about where I'll be a year from now!
@erkenbrand2033
@erkenbrand2033 2 жыл бұрын
I’m going to be honest, as a Spaniard myself, the “Spanish with Italian accent” sounded much more like actual Spanish (indeed a very decent Spanish) than the other one
@KangNamPelon
@KangNamPelon 2 жыл бұрын
LOL yeah basically just sounded like what I imagine Argentine Spanish to be!
@MyMusicSosa
@MyMusicSosa 2 жыл бұрын
Jajaja el wey sonó como un latino haciendo acento Italiano
@SidheKnight
@SidheKnight 2 жыл бұрын
I'm Argentinian, and I can confirm he came close enough to how we speak.
@Netro1992
@Netro1992 2 жыл бұрын
That's the joke.
@morganqorishchi8181
@morganqorishchi8181 2 жыл бұрын
Something similar happened when a friend of mine tried to do a French accent while speaking Arabic - he ended up with a flawless Moroccan Arabic accent pretty much identical to Moroccan bilingual people.
@migrantmel8919
@migrantmel8919 Жыл бұрын
Loved this. As someone that speaks Spanish and worked reaaaally hard to get good at it, I found myself feeling really demotivated by videos of 'I learned 34302 languages in 10 seconds'. Also I found that actually being genuinely immersed in a language and culture was really emotionally taxing (not being able to make friends, not feeling like I had a personality or myself), and that was already being at like a B2, C1 level! But according to these polyglots they're connecting with everyone everywhere!
@Serena-or7sl
@Serena-or7sl Жыл бұрын
They are connecting with everyone everywhere probably because they use English ;)
@dmarl1042
@dmarl1042 Жыл бұрын
It's ok to be demotivated once in a while, as long as you remember your objective is different from them. I learned German seriously for 4 years now, but my first super beginner (a1.1) course was 25 years ago. I'm at B1/B2 level, but still finds it hard to start talking spontaneously. I admire those fast learner, but it's my choice to learn it slow so that I can have meaningful conversations with native speakers.
@Lunamana
@Lunamana Жыл бұрын
I've been studying English since primary school, I still haven't grasped all of the intricacies of the language even though I use it pretty much daily on the internet. There's so much culture and intricacy in how a language is used that it's always going to be a very long journey to mastering it, I'm also going to be taking a certification test this weekend, I've never taken an official language test before so I'm excited to finally have a reference point to compare myself to once I get the results :P
@Lunamana
@Lunamana Жыл бұрын
Also on the topic of connecting with people, I think you hit the nail right on the head, thing with actually learning languages is connecting with people it can be quite hard to achieve because there's usually both a cultural barrier and a language barrier. What I learned over time on the internet is not being fluent in the language you're communicating in usually just ends up resulting in a superficial relationship with whoever you're talking to. Words and language is how we deliver emotions to one another, if I can't do that with the language i'm learning then I wouldn't even bother in the first place
@migrantmel8919
@migrantmel8919 Жыл бұрын
​@@Lunamana First of all your English is amazing! Using idoms like "hit the nail on the head" can be really hard to do and always a good sign of a high level in any language (because it's not just studying but experience). And good luck on your certification, I'm sure you'll surprise yourself with the results! I actually am not interested (at least right now) in learning another language for exactly the reason you said. I feel extremely comfortable in Spanish now, have amazing friends, and a wonderful partner. It took so long to feel so comfortable though, that I couldn't jump into another language without also feeling exhausted haha.
@clearly_average
@clearly_average 2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for recommending Luodingo. I just made a 59 day streak there and learned nothing. Totally worth it!
@andrewmattar4178
@andrewmattar4178 2 жыл бұрын
Nah... I learned a lot. I, now know, how to say "the duck is wearing a green hat" in 10 danguages!
@Xeem_Pad
@Xeem_Pad 2 жыл бұрын
That's 'cause you haven't reached 69 streak
@saramaxon1946
@saramaxon1946 2 жыл бұрын
I'm currently learning Korean from the app and I'm both laughing and crying reading your comment
@TheCimbrianBull
@TheCimbrianBull 2 жыл бұрын
The Duolingo owl wants to know your location!
@Purple_Penwing
@Purple_Penwing 2 жыл бұрын
Out of the topic, but I love you have Oliver as your profile picture!!!🤣🤣
@bea7823
@bea7823 2 жыл бұрын
In all seriousness, Duolingo helped me get to intermediate German. I was able to hold a conversation with this one German dude who kept correcting me because my sentences don’t sound completely natural, but he said he could understand me fine, so I was still pretty happy.
@isaacbruner65
@isaacbruner65 2 жыл бұрын
An intermediate level is something I could believe. Duolingo is a good tool, but it's no substitute for conversation. It would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to become fluent through Duolingo alone.
@bea7823
@bea7823 2 жыл бұрын
@@isaacbruner65 I completely agree! It’s a pretty big help, but I think immersion matters the most.
@thatsinteresting3415
@thatsinteresting3415 2 жыл бұрын
@@bea7823 Oh, it's very effective for learning like any resource, actually more than many traditional resources for dummies like me, but emersion is what helps develope fluency. Fluency and knowledge are not 1 to 1 correlatives.
@chandrakatel4354
@chandrakatel4354 2 жыл бұрын
@@thatsinteresting3415 immersion*
@notavailable403
@notavailable403 Жыл бұрын
Yeah it helped me with Spanish too! It helped me build a good foundation and then I moved to Spain and practiced here. Of course you need more resources to learn languages, but Duolingo is pretty helpful depending on the language you're learning.
@sittingstill3578
@sittingstill3578 2 жыл бұрын
This is hilarious. My friend who has learned a lot of Korean since moving to South Korean and marrying a Korean, pointed this out about these KZbin polyglots to me a few years ago. I recently had a coworker claiming to speak a language I know a little of and everything that came out of his mouth was both nonsense and pronounced incorrectly at that. Those who speak other languages fluently or even partially don’t need to brag, they just do it and use it as a tool to get work done. Language is a means not an end.
@barkspasenine
@barkspasenine 2 жыл бұрын
What's the point in learning a language if you aren't gonna use it somehow? Honestly.
@brendanthedreamer
@brendanthedreamer 2 жыл бұрын
@@barkspasenine Obviously so you can flex your muscles and act better than everyone else.
@joob40
@joob40 2 жыл бұрын
It's ok to have this as a hobby. Not everyone thinks that learning languages proves that a person is smart. I know enough about it to know that it has very little to do with intelligence. But I do appreciate that someone interested in language learning is more likely to be intelligent than someone who, e.g., would rather memorize Nascar statistics. Anyway, both are hobbies. And we like to talk about our hobbies. If someone's fragile ego is triggered by me talking about my language hobby, they've just shown me a little bit about their own insecurities. Funny... when I got my doctorate degree, we had a whole ceremony celebrating it, and even changed the way people say my name in formal settings. But I'm supposed to stay quiet about my language hobby? Not logical. Do you also get offended when people play musical instruments? Similar learning/ training experience with that hobby. Shaming intellectual endeavors is a "dumbing down of society" practice that I will never agree with.
@sittingstill3578
@sittingstill3578 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t understand the relationship between our comments. I do know a few folks with doctorates pretty closely all of whom have different levels of success with languages. Do you find that it is hard to have a good conversation about subjects you know deeply like your area of study because the knowledge of your conversation partners is too low or they have too little interest to allow time to build an accurate mental model? I’ve come across this from the other end when I try to pick the brains of professionals in a field I have only a rudimentary knowledge of. I’ll put a model I’ve developed to see if I have understood to ideas correctly and they don’t respond to correct it. I’ve also had times where my understanding has been corrected and it has often included lots of details and implications I couldn’t foresee, so I am eternally grateful. The bragging coworker had taken maybe one or two college classes in the language. As far as I can tell, the language is not an ongoing hobby or passion. It’s NASCAR as it is an initialism for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing. For something that looks so _boring_ to the casual eye, it actually goes really deep in regards to the technology and strategy used. EDIT: I just checked your channel and your playlist suggests you may be an INFJ. Very interesting. You might enjoy the channel _Your Never Sleeping Beauty_ which is the writings of an older INFJ who has invested a lot time into understanding the challenges and possibilities of the type.
@tulkasastaldo4114
@tulkasastaldo4114 2 жыл бұрын
I think language can absolutely be an end in and of itself. Even if you're not all that interested in linguistics, if you like to read it is nice to be able to read works in the language they were originally written in. The beauty of many literary works comes in large parts from the manipulation of language in very particular, subtle ways. If utility were your only goal, you could simply read a translation and glean essentially the same information from it. But translations often fail to capture the experience created by the language.
@tylerowens
@tylerowens Жыл бұрын
As someone who learned Albanian and lived in Albania for a year and a half, the funny thing is that there is actually a well understood gesture language. One time I saw two older gentlemen have an entire conversation across a crowded plaza exclusively in gestures, and the thing that surprised me more than the fact that they were able to do that was that I completely understood what they were saying to each other.
@TheGloriousLobsterEmperor
@TheGloriousLobsterEmperor 9 ай бұрын
That sounds insanely awesome.
@EconPods
@EconPods 2 жыл бұрын
I now speak 34 languages with a mindblowingly native-like accent after watching this video! Might try this KZbin thing and scam the shit out of innocently motivated and good natured people for every single last penny they have. Thanks Language Simp!
@YDSD
@YDSD 2 жыл бұрын
Just pay 248$ for this course that you cant even try for free on the link below
@ascendedi6202
@ascendedi6202 2 жыл бұрын
only 34??
@GotGoud
@GotGoud 2 жыл бұрын
rule 34 :0
@amadeosendiulo2137
@amadeosendiulo2137 2 жыл бұрын
I parol 69 linguas.
@A_DOG
@A_DOG 2 жыл бұрын
I speak 420 language in a week
@damondominique
@damondominique 2 жыл бұрын
DON'T EXPOSE OUR SECRETS ABOUT HOW ONCE YOU LEARN ONE ROMANCE LANGUAGE YOU BASICALLY KNOW THE REST
@sirvirgo1705
@sirvirgo1705 2 жыл бұрын
And learning a creole language is like learning multiple languages in one 🤫
@thinksie
@thinksie 2 жыл бұрын
não mano o que você diz é simplesmente imposivel e engraçado, no es que español es muy parecido al portugués, não cara, cê mente!
@Blast-Forward
@Blast-Forward 2 жыл бұрын
@@thinksie Estoy gozando el viaje en la buseta. 😝
@Ricardo242-y2l
@Ricardo242-y2l 2 жыл бұрын
I've noticed and I love it
@DerToasti
@DerToasti 2 жыл бұрын
nah i know french and i can tell that learning spanish will be a pain in the butt. grammar is a mix between english/german and french but most of the vocab is barely recognizable. maybe italian would be easier.
@96KN_
@96KN_ 2 жыл бұрын
The Indonesian one caught me off guard. It is embarrassingly accurate... Our people are easily impressed by the smallest thing foreigners do. I think, that seems like a bad thing now, because it makes us look like we're easily get fooled. Making it easier for the people who wants to take an advantage of it. I grew tired of the kind of contents that are chasing for clout by inserting 'anything related to Indonesia' to it, to be honest. But at the same time, there are people that enjoy those contents.
@Punyulada
@Punyulada 2 жыл бұрын
Thankfully, the younger folk don't seem to be as easily impressed by your regular bule learning a few phrases here and there.
@96KN_
@96KN_ 2 жыл бұрын
@@Punyulada Those that are familiar with the English language and the internet may be. But I am still baffled by how many Indonesian people being impressed by the clickbait bule at TikTok.
@robdesti6576
@robdesti6576 2 жыл бұрын
@@96KN_ I think it has to do with how Westerners used to be seen in the past in East Asian countries: kind of admired, but also really self-centered and unwilling to learn the most basic vocabulary, so when older people see Westerners speaking a sentence or two, they're either incredibly impressed or just pleasantly surprised.
@dupatuptup
@dupatuptup 2 жыл бұрын
Yesss ,and I can assure you we ,Indians are same too ,even if you just mention the word India , you'll literally see the comments are flooded with Indians 😆
@frailimbnursery
@frailimbnursery 2 жыл бұрын
@@Punyulada i'm not sure about which age range you referred to as 'younger folk', but if what you mean is young teenager, i disagree. in my opinion, the most targeted audience for bules who chase clout is young children (elementary and secondary school). it's either that or BOOMERS older teenagers and young adults seem not to care as much tho, because bules getting fluent in indonesian are getting more common (at least on the internet) just added my two cents there. sorry if i misinterpreted your comment
@mexadillas
@mexadillas Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much, I'm learning Chinese and at the beginning I was looking for KZbinrs who told about their experience but I always found very young people saying that they spoke like a thousand languages fluently and that they learned in 3 months each. I must admit that it makes you feel very stupid to see the great progress that people "can make" in months, but in many cases it is not true (not in all cases, obviously), so I appreciate these types of videos that help us to be more critical with the content we see♡
@karolinagalus2486
@karolinagalus2486 2 жыл бұрын
As a native Polish speaker, I admire your pronunciation
@themandan4000
@themandan4000 2 жыл бұрын
Pzzzz blzzz zzzzz?
@imacds
@imacds 2 жыл бұрын
Not many Americans are able to pronounce my home town of bszbszb szbzs bzblors szbzsbzsbzbz sbzsbzsbzsb.
@00bean00
@00bean00 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly I wish he gave more into working it there
@hkay3127
@hkay3127 2 жыл бұрын
@@imacds last time I said bszbzszb a cat came over to me
@redxic954
@redxic954 2 жыл бұрын
As a native Indonesian speaker, I ( A gigachad) declare that you are fluent at this language and I am in tears with 5 box of tissue. You are a fellow Gigachad, my friend.
@MMM67-u5m
@MMM67-u5m 2 жыл бұрын
Indonesian speaker letsgooo 😎😎😎😎😎😎😎🙏🙏🙏😂🙏😂🙏😂🙏😂
@gaoda1581
@gaoda1581 2 жыл бұрын
Wkwkwkwkwk
@ilhamuksit322
@ilhamuksit322 2 жыл бұрын
Awokawok but his Pronounciation not bad tho
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
I plan to learn Indonesian. Actually, I plan to upload a video of me trying to speak Indonesian, before I learn the langguage (to later compare me as a noob versus me as a gigachad). Then again, I don't want to be a chad, since Chad dries up.
@redxic954
@redxic954 2 жыл бұрын
@labcoent co As a gigachad myself, you are invalid.
@lud3269
@lud3269 2 жыл бұрын
As a native Brazilian speaker I can confirm that this guy is a certified honest polyglot I wasn't expecting the redacted part though, it was funny😂
@minismalls3096
@minismalls3096 2 жыл бұрын
very sexy bolsonaro 🤣
@lucas-jx6ie
@lucas-jx6ie 2 жыл бұрын
Yaaaah , He is right about the Bolsonaro ( it was a joke) hahahhaha
@Weissenschenkel
@Weissenschenkel 2 жыл бұрын
That redacted part made my butiás fall from my pocket. 🤣
@micaelmz
@micaelmz 2 жыл бұрын
Brazilian speaker?
@lud3269
@lud3269 2 жыл бұрын
@@micaelmz Yep
@ghosttundra
@ghosttundra Жыл бұрын
NOT THE [REDACTED] PART IN BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE I'M CRYING HEHEJHDH
@CatherineRommel
@CatherineRommel 2 жыл бұрын
2:14 As someone who has lived in New Jersey all their life, I must say your pronunciation and fluency of our language is impeccable. Well done.
@unpreparedwithacapitalf
@unpreparedwithacapitalf 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry you've had to go through that
@TraxisOnTheLines
@TraxisOnTheLines 2 жыл бұрын
I only speak Canadian, but I know enough about American that I could tell your accent was nearly perfect. And the French was equally a language you spoke.
@davidbouvier8895
@davidbouvier8895 2 жыл бұрын
There are a great many languages spoken throughout Canada but it has two official languages: French and English. So what, pray tell, is this 'Canadian' you claim to speak?
@p.a.681
@p.a.681 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidbouvier8895 Do you know what sarcasm is?
@africaRBG
@africaRBG 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidbouvier8895 that was a whoosh and a half
@elowin1691
@elowin1691 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidbouvier8895 bruhv
@5kunk157h35h17
@5kunk157h35h17 2 жыл бұрын
The video is about fake polyglots and here comes someone claiming to know "canadian". A made up language! This community can not be trusted.
@aiquesono
@aiquesono 2 жыл бұрын
I studied Russian for around 5 years. I can speak it without any confidence🥸
@MakotoOPT
@MakotoOPT 2 жыл бұрын
heres your problem youu are actually trying to learn the language youtube polyglots are not. change what fleuncy means and go order russian food in russian and claim fleuncy like every other youtube polyglot
@KateeAngel
@KateeAngel 2 жыл бұрын
I studied Russian since I was 2. I can also speak it without any confidence, just as any other language. I have social anxiety. 🤣🤣🤣
@Words-of-encouragement.-.
@Words-of-encouragement.-. 2 жыл бұрын
@@MakotoOPT The problem with "change what fluency means" is that there are varying levels of fluency, and people cannot seem to agree what "fluency" really means. There is no one definition of fluent.
@MakotoOPT
@MakotoOPT 2 жыл бұрын
@@Words-of-encouragement.-. I feel like B2 and higher is when someone can claim fluency in a language. I understand what you mean, but I get annoyed when these creators basically imply that being able to only say "hello how are you" or being able to order your food in your target language is a form of fluency when they cannot continue a conversation that they aren't pacing themselves they cant talk about anything outside of a couple interest. I would not say someone is fluent in English if they can only talk about the weather or ask me how I am doing. I would label them as fluent if they can understand about 80% of what I am saying and they can communicate how they feel about 80% of the time accurately. People say the placement tests mean nothing but having taken those tests there is absolutely no way you could bullshit passing B2 and above. and it tests everything. And lastly the ability to learn in a language is when I will describe someone as fluent which is usually the B level (independent learner). Because its okay to not know jargon or how to talk about chemistry in your target language but can you learn it. Are you fluent enough to keep up with someone talking about it. Fluency has always meant that but Americans trying to do party tricks kinda fucked with the meaning to mean "I can say hi how are you I love languages" in 40 languages. Also I am not attacking you because I know what you mean by fluency having different meanings. I just dislike shady "youtube polyglots"
@Words-of-encouragement.-.
@Words-of-encouragement.-. 2 жыл бұрын
@@MakotoOPT No worries. I understand where you are coming from. I don't feel attacked at all, and I too, dislike shady KZbin polyglots. I understand the level you are referring to with your definition of fluency, and I don't necessarily disagree with it. For me personally I would agree that if someone can learn a topic like chemistry in a language they are certainly "fluent" in it. However, conversational fluency is another topic. I like Olly Richards Idea of the "pub test" for that. The idea is that if you can go grab a drink, sit down at a pub and have a full conversation (beyond surface level bs) with a buddy and no one needs to slow down or cater their language for you...that's a pretty good indication of conversational fluency. That's essentially the goal I intend to reach with most of the languages I want to learn.
@hitotsudaketsukinoko
@hitotsudaketsukinoko Жыл бұрын
This is pure gold. I work in an industry that includes selling foreign language learning material. I'm so sick and tired of those who tout things like "fluent in 3 months!", and publish things terribly riddled with mistakes. Thank you for this video. Imma share it in all da places 😂
@bragiodinsen4604
@bragiodinsen4604 Жыл бұрын
my recently downloaded hello chinese app just sent me a notifcation that i can be fluent in just 3 months with 10 minutes a day! lol, im studying more time than that per 3 days now.
@ChessGrandPasta
@ChessGrandPasta Жыл бұрын
As an Italian guy I feel the urge to admit that its’s admirable how you perfectly replicated every Italian accent and dialect in these few wise words, while getting your point across Dante’s poetry and offering your view on the imperial phase of ancient Rome civilisation. Stunning performance 🤌🏻
@thatsmynametoo777
@thatsmynametoo777 Жыл бұрын
I took an Italian class in college that I got an A in and I totally understood what you’re pointing out. It was beautiful. As talented as I am, I forgot how to say “ow, I hurt my arm patting myself on the back.” In Italian.
@Thatsme849
@Thatsme849 Жыл бұрын
and all of that in kind of spanish while sounding italian!
@ZenoDovahkiin
@ZenoDovahkiin Жыл бұрын
​@@Thatsme849 OP didn't listen to the words, it's the gestures. Italian is a sign language, the sounds don't actually matter. If you turned of sound for the entire world, Italians would be the last to notice because nothing would happen to their ability to understand each other. Source: trust me bro, I speak zero Italian but Italians will back me up.
@Seageass01
@Seageass01 Жыл бұрын
@@ZenoDovahkiin : A very few italians actually speak while doing plenty of hand gestures,it's just a stupid stereotype that became widespread in the US because most of the immigrants who arrived there came from southern Italy,where locals burrowed this ancient custom from the greeks and from other mediterranean people.
@JeanJacqueJaenJeux
@JeanJacqueJaenJeux Жыл бұрын
​@@Seageass01nah fam that's bullshit we do talk with our hands it's not just a stereotype, shit I was living in Paris last year and spotted an Italian at the end of the road just by how much he was using his hands, poi sincero molto meglio che con le mani rigide lungo i fianchi come dei soldatini della minchiazza
@disastermaser
@disastermaser 2 жыл бұрын
as a german i am impressed by your ability to speak fluent german even if you didn't even attempt it in this or any other of your videos
@Skybutler70
@Skybutler70 Жыл бұрын
Chan der nor biipflechte!!
@captainyulef5845
@captainyulef5845 Жыл бұрын
Hallo :)
@spanellaful
@spanellaful 2 жыл бұрын
As an Italian native speaker, I confirm that Italian is just Spanish with a different accent and random hand gestures. Thanks!
@toshiroutte
@toshiroutte 2 жыл бұрын
As a native spanish speaker I second this confirmation.
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet 2 жыл бұрын
I spent a month in Italy and I employed this method pretty well. I thought, "Oh I'll just read signs and I'll be able to read them just fine." Joke was on me, there were lots of places without very much signage (I'm looking at you, Rome Airport).
@KangNamPelon
@KangNamPelon 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I used this method to talk to my grandpa, although I guess the first full sentence in his dialect I learned was “Nun mi parli Spagnuol, I mang capisc nent Spagnuol!” Still, it more or less worked-the random hand gestures help a lot!
@erikas.6790
@erikas.6790 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, our gesture aren't coded and precise or descending from thousand of years where we didn't have the exact same language so gesture helped us understanding better each other, we are just crazy 👍
@clairee5544
@clairee5544 2 жыл бұрын
Username checks out
@maturepopcorn
@maturepopcorn Жыл бұрын
B1 level Swedish learner here; you’ve given me my hope back that was stolen by these polyglot channels who made me feel dumb for taking 2 years of on-and-off learning to get to this point. Tack så mycket; jag älskar dina videor.
@maturepopcorn
@maturepopcorn Жыл бұрын
Actually I have a question: Can you be, hypothetically, B1.5 in a language? Or is that nonsense? These last few months, I haven’t known whether to say I’m B1 or B2 now, so I still say B1 to play it safe.
@maturepopcorn
@maturepopcorn Жыл бұрын
@crispycream6882 ??? I’m definitely not though, I’m at least B1
@taniadisuria3653
@taniadisuria3653 Жыл бұрын
It depends on similarity between the languages. If someone has mastered Spanish, it will be much easier to master Italian. If the languages are totally different it will require a LOT of time to master, for example English and Chinese. If we really want to master a language it will take years. I am not believing someone can master a language in very short time.
@Illersvansen
@Illersvansen 9 ай бұрын
Måste vara svårt att lära sig svenska när vi alla svarar på engelska 😂
@maturepopcorn
@maturepopcorn 9 ай бұрын
@@Illersvansen Ja! Också, jag känner ingen som pratar Svenska här :(
@aimox2054
@aimox2054 2 жыл бұрын
This is genius, I love it. I am really sick of these polyglots with their channels to boast their ego and no substance in their videos.
@chibiromano5631
@chibiromano5631 2 жыл бұрын
@Red Marble I was reading your comment and saw Lindie Botes.. i was like.. She's actually a good one. But its ridicolous now... white boy or lack man speaks ancient dead langauge from 2000 years to villagers in some random far a55 place.. to make them feel at home.
@kme3894
@kme3894 2 жыл бұрын
as an actual polyglot (mostly by chance and life twists and turns), I totally agree. Very few are genuine, respect-deserving polyglots on YT
@hydrargyruschaldaecus2572
@hydrargyruschaldaecus2572 2 жыл бұрын
@@chibiromano5631 I feel very cringe when seeing videos like that. How can someone be so blatantly boastful like that and not feel weird?
@chibiromano5631
@chibiromano5631 2 жыл бұрын
@@hydrargyruschaldaecus2572 i feel very cringe at seeing people believe it and inspire them to do the same. But then remember the dead itnernet theorys.. It's not real portugal ball, they are just bots , nobody is that dumb... * Goes outside and sees lack man trying to speak Mandarin to a Cantonese girl. Weiss boi speaking to a Oaxacan[zapotec] farm worker in Classical Nahuatl (invented langauge never spoken by anybody but in thearters).. *** Agh!! .. They are that dumb.
@snoopyguy21
@snoopyguy21 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that one guy that speaks Chinese doesn't have much of videos. I politely said I'm not a huge fan of his videos because most of them are him going into a restaurant to order food instead of doing something that shows he knows the language like facilitating a businesses transaction. That got me down voted into oblivion.
@agentfox1017
@agentfox1017 2 жыл бұрын
"You don't wanna learn languages? Ok, but have you ever heard of the greatest game on play store? It's RAID SHADOW LEGENDS"
@pavladavlas
@pavladavlas 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing this shit out. As a linguist and translator, it makes me so fucking mad whenever I come across people like this. The humblebragging with these people is unbelievable.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
"pointing this shit out" Signaling towards feces to go outside. English.
@pavladavlas
@pavladavlas 2 жыл бұрын
@@scintillam_dei slang.
@mcmerry2846
@mcmerry2846 2 жыл бұрын
Are you a free lancer or you work for a company?
@shimrrashai-rc8fq
@shimrrashai-rc8fq 9 ай бұрын
Experts honestly gain far more respect from me than "soooo insipring" celebyoutube figures.
@pavladavlas
@pavladavlas 9 ай бұрын
@@mcmerry2846 I freelance
@szprinter
@szprinter Жыл бұрын
Your polish was really on point! Good work!
@5Gazto
@5Gazto 2 жыл бұрын
The ironic thing is that the less subscribers they have, the more likely they are authentic polyglots.
@JV-km9xk
@JV-km9xk 2 жыл бұрын
true
@shangobunni5
@shangobunni5 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, because they wouldn’t have the time and energy to keep up with being a KZbinr as well.
@trainerred6582
@trainerred6582 Жыл бұрын
Another fact is that the less they say they study, the less likely they are able to speak that language; whereas the ones that are honest and tell you how many months / hours it really took to get that good at X language, the better they are at said language. It’s like of the ones that say less are trying to sell you something like being fluent in 3 months. It’s just not gonna happen
@SevenTheMisgiven
@SevenTheMisgiven Жыл бұрын
@@Jess-737 Most western people that learn Mandarin have a whole career planned out for themselves that doesn't include youtube or tiktok. And even then if it doesn't work out they usually become a teacher.
@chicagotypewriter2094
@chicagotypewriter2094 Жыл бұрын
Sad but true
@Fishmorph
@Fishmorph 2 жыл бұрын
I have a degree in linguistics and I can honestly say I speak less than one language perfectly. I’m trying to learn others, but damn, it’s so easy to get out of your depth if the conversation doesn’t go totally as scripted. That’s where the magic of editing comes in!
@alexanderk.6869
@alexanderk.6869 2 жыл бұрын
I'm studying linguistics right now and whenever people ask me how many languages I speak I say "one, on a good day"
@Langwidere903
@Langwidere903 2 жыл бұрын
I’m a linguistics major and someone once said that asking a linguist how many languages they speak is like asking a doctor how many diseases they have, and I love that
@lexacutable
@lexacutable 2 жыл бұрын
@@Langwidere903 I'm a linguistics major and I work as a game developer... "oh, so you play video games all day?" same shit really
@holliswilliams8426
@holliswilliams8426 2 жыл бұрын
It's not even editing, most conversations when you meet someone for the first time always proceed in almost exactly the same way. Where are you from? How long have you been learning the language? etc etc
@premierlanguagelearning1820
@premierlanguagelearning1820 2 жыл бұрын
Linguistics degree holder her with teaching certifications. I speak fluent Spanish, and I am maybe an A2 level at best in German. My Spanish is not anywhere near perfect. I'd give myself a C1. I haven been studying Spanish for over 2 years now (not including the years I took in high school and college), have a Spanish speaking girlfriend, and live in SW Florida which is full of Spanish speaking citizens that don't speak English. Learning a language and mastering it takes SOOOOO long. Even with my years of study, my Latino surroundings, and living with a Latina, I can't watch a Spanish show or video without not knowing at least one or two words.
@W.H.V.
@W.H.V. 2 жыл бұрын
As a native speaker of English, I have to say that your pronunciation is nearly flawless and you almost sound like a native speaker.
@W.H.V.
@W.H.V. Жыл бұрын
@Bill ENGLISH Actually so true, brother! Thank you for correcting that mistake. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@nutronstar45
@nutronstar45 Жыл бұрын
@@W.H.V. 🔫🦅🇺🇸🍗💪
@utubekullanicisi
@utubekullanicisi Жыл бұрын
Nah, he's just a Brazilian who obsessively worked on his accent.
@incoocat150
@incoocat150 Жыл бұрын
One of these 'polyglots' went to a shop, where the shopkeeper was speaking my native language. After the initial bs sentences, like 'I have friends who speak your language' and 'I've been studying this language for 6 months' the lady replied and said how nice this is. Then she asked something and the guy didn't answer her, but kept saying some completely unrelated things. She then politely asked something else in a very basic way and the guy yet again didn't answer her question, but said something unrelated bs. She became uncomfortable with the situation and wanted to cut it short, but the guy kept going on and butchered my language even further. I commend if someone learns languages, it really helps breaking barriers, but please stop pretending your skills are incredible, when in reality all you do is just memorize a few sentences in different languages. It's nice and all that, but it doesn't make you a polyglot.
@JustBuyTheWaywardsRealms
@JustBuyTheWaywardsRealms Жыл бұрын
what a grand and intoxicating innocence.
@muizzsiddique
@muizzsiddique Жыл бұрын
This reminds of how Wouter speaks languages. He hardly has a conversation and is instead just speaking paragraphs at people without ever considering their input.
@Lilith-sj7xp
@Lilith-sj7xp Жыл бұрын
Out of curiosity, what language?
@soffren
@soffren Жыл бұрын
​@@JustBuyTheWaywardsRealms*grand Also, nice
@averagejoessb3110
@averagejoessb3110 Жыл бұрын
It's like the opposite of me. Usually I'll say my Spanish isn't very good and won't even try to speak it but if someone speaks Spanish to me I can *usually* understand if they're not speaking super fast
@nlm8722
@nlm8722 Жыл бұрын
That bit of french was actual gold Wallah mon reuf
@Kibouo
@Kibouo Жыл бұрын
2:15 I’m so emotional to hear somebody else speak my native language. It’s actually not that well known, which is why people often don’t think it exists, but what he mentions here has poetic beauty that is untranslatable into any other language.
@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory
@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory Жыл бұрын
Well done lol!
@graf
@graf 2 жыл бұрын
02:01 that's actually a really good bigos recipe, thank you!
@ololo518
@ololo518 2 жыл бұрын
Boże nie skojarzyłam słowa bigos 🙈
@amadeosendiulo2137
@amadeosendiulo2137 2 жыл бұрын
Graf.
@BBBodzio
@BBBodzio 2 жыл бұрын
Grafie
@zaidmaaita3759
@zaidmaaita3759 5 ай бұрын
Polish language be like.
@moonhunter9993
@moonhunter9993 2 жыл бұрын
Great video! I've been a self-employed foreign language teacher for the last 24 years and these false claims from polyglots really create such messed up expectations in students. I do actually speak three languages fluently. Two at a mother-tongue level and one other really well. Learning these languages to such an advanced level was incredibly hard and literally took me decades. I have also studied two further languages (french and latin) through horrible foreign language courses, and I don't speak neither of those.
@rashidah9307
@rashidah9307 2 жыл бұрын
I think you're talking about fake polyglots. The real ones who take the time to teach others how they were successful in learning other languages actually HELP people to understand how to learn effectively. I've benefited tremendously from the things I've learned from polylots like Lydia Machova, Luca Lampariello, Benny Lewis, Steve Kaufman, etc. These guys don't put themselves on a pedestal but assert that everyone can learn and empower people to take charge of their learning progress/process. If it weren't for them, I would most likely have given up on Arabic, thinking I was too old and having no clue how to go about studying. But instead I'm at an intermediate level conversationally, daily working towards my goal of conversational fluency. And my Arabic teachers love me because I know how to learn, I embrace the journey, and I continue to make progress.
@Olivia-W
@Olivia-W 2 жыл бұрын
I'm C2 in two and... I used to be B2 at a third but honestly forgot so much I'm probably A1 at best. Currently attempting to learn another one. In a few years I should be decent enough. Maybe I'll be motivated to relearn the third one someday. Looking over at basic review notes it's still in there somewhere though, stuff is still surprisingly understandable. Accent is probably shot to hell.
@bloodwrage
@bloodwrage 2 жыл бұрын
Don’t speak either, not “neither”. That’s a double negative. Learn English.
@1Thunderfire
@1Thunderfire 2 жыл бұрын
@@bloodwrage Could have just been a typo you know.
@rashidah9307
@rashidah9307 2 жыл бұрын
@@1Thunderfire yeah and honestly it's a mistake that even native speakers make sometimes. Truly not a big deal for the KZbin comments section. Lol 🙃
@TuxLinuxOfficial
@TuxLinuxOfficial Ай бұрын
I got a LuoDingo ad before this
@michaolszewski9790
@michaolszewski9790 2 жыл бұрын
Widzę, że mówisz płynnie w języku polskim. Moje gratulacje. Pozdrowienia z Polski.
@Lobo1888
@Lobo1888 2 жыл бұрын
everyone is a polyglot until they hear polish :)
@vampen4957
@vampen4957 2 жыл бұрын
How to speak polish. Step one: Open google translate
@charlytaylor1748
@charlytaylor1748 2 жыл бұрын
I'm trying to learn it!
@dawidwojacki5049
@dawidwojacki5049 2 жыл бұрын
XDD
@robertszumiowski589
@robertszumiowski589 2 жыл бұрын
@@charlytaylor1748 good luck!
@Telencephelon
@Telencephelon 2 жыл бұрын
His polish was pretty good but I could discern a slight southern style accent spoken in Katowice. He clearly studied there for decades
@rashidah9307
@rashidah9307 2 жыл бұрын
But he's not old enough to have studied Polish for decades. . . Does he ever tell his real language learning story or are all his videos comic relief and sarcasm?
@Hellenicheavymetal
@Hellenicheavymetal 2 жыл бұрын
He only looks to be in his 30's.
@vladraduandrei5227
@vladraduandrei5227 2 жыл бұрын
@@Hellenicheavymetal the guy is 24 lol, he almost 3 years younger than me but looks slightly older .
@Mhaakify
@Mhaakify 2 жыл бұрын
You can tell how fluent they are when the people they talk to just nod and smile, before immediately switching back to English lmao.
@VikingNORGaming
@VikingNORGaming Жыл бұрын
I got a Duolingo ad before this video and that was enough for me to completely understand everything you said
@davehollis5816
@davehollis5816 2 жыл бұрын
Everyone's making stupid sarcastic jokes in the comments thinking this was a meme video. But hidden beneath the biting commentary is a truly impressive feat here. The fact that this clear French native is speaking ABSOLUTELY FLAWLESS American English, with such supreme attention to detail, is blowing my mind. He literally sounds like he doesn't live on frog legs and body odor.
@hakimh9219
@hakimh9219 2 жыл бұрын
Ta gueule stp (said with a strong French accent)
@brinckau
@brinckau 2 жыл бұрын
If viewers were honest in the comments section: "I'm going to post this overused joke to get likes and attention in a desperate attempt at filling the void in my narcissistic personality."
@ZeldaboyOG
@ZeldaboyOG 2 жыл бұрын
So do they like drink body odor or is is some sort of chemosythesis through their skin or something?
@Jarblyy
@Jarblyy 2 жыл бұрын
@@brinckau how else am I supposed to fill the void in my narcissistic personality :(
@brinckau
@brinckau 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jarblyy There are so many ways to do that. For example, you could be a climate change denier. It would send the implicit message that you know better about climate science than most specialists all around the globe. If somebody starts talking to you about math equations involved in climate modeling, just pretend that you have to go and don't talk to the person ever again.
@user-xw9ji6ny3p
@user-xw9ji6ny3p 2 жыл бұрын
It's going to be hard resisting the urge to gatekeep when your channel starts blowing up to 1 million
@user-xr4wp3wj5m
@user-xr4wp3wj5m 2 жыл бұрын
im gatekeeping no matter what
@carlosparra6521
@carlosparra6521 2 жыл бұрын
Why gatekeeping? This guy deserves a whole million audience at least!
@KatzRool
@KatzRool 2 жыл бұрын
I will be the ultimate girlboss
@theofficialpollo
@theofficialpollo 2 жыл бұрын
LMAO calling out many of those "20 language" polyglots out here. It's specially sad when you acually know the language and It's so obvious It's a couple of memorized frases. Happens a lot with japanese, "watashi wa bla bla desu, yeah next language".
@ptw9993
@ptw9993 2 жыл бұрын
日本語が上手ですね
@orti1283
@orti1283 2 жыл бұрын
@@femme_fatalist Same as spanish
@anaseymour4556
@anaseymour4556 2 жыл бұрын
Watashi wa bla bla desu was so funny 🤣🤣
@worldcomicsreview354
@worldcomicsreview354 2 жыл бұрын
私はドーナツです。
@homerthompson416
@homerthompson416 2 жыл бұрын
niwa niwa niwatori ga imasu
@gugumercindados123
@gugumercindados123 9 ай бұрын
Bro, in the Brazil part he just said " Bolsonaro is very very very very very very hot " lol
@TheBrianp1
@TheBrianp1 2 жыл бұрын
I used LuoDingo and was able to speak to the Dingos as my baby ate them. Their pleas for help still haunt me to this day.
@sbp4215
@sbp4215 2 жыл бұрын
"That baby ate my dingo!" -Chindy Lamberlain
@maitlandbezzina2842
@maitlandbezzina2842 2 жыл бұрын
I actually love this video. Been watching language videos for a few years now as I’ve been learning Mandarin at a steady pace, and the amount of utter bullshit that is spread across KZbin about language learning is mind blowing. It takes years to just be ‘ok’ at a language and that’s ok.
@Punyulada
@Punyulada 2 жыл бұрын
More people need to know this. I may have been EXPOSED to many languages as a child, but because I did not pursue any of them seriously apart from the ones I was required to learn in school (English being one of them; I'm not a native English speaker if it isn't obvious,) I'm still a beginner at most of them for all intents and purposes. I wouldn't be able to claim otherwise, at all. Being "okay" at a language after spending 20 years learning it is "okay", unless you spend your entire life almost exclusively learning that one language (at which point it'd still be okay -- just look at my second language, which is the lingua franca of the country where I currently live. Been learning it since I was 4, but I suck at speaking it even at a work setting.)
@SiriProject
@SiriProject 2 жыл бұрын
I've been learning Japanese for 5 years now and you easily learn how much TIME it takes for you to sediment ideograms in your memory. You can use tricks and retain them for a week and such, but it requires a muscle memory you only develop with years and a deep familiarity with the language. You can't just bypass that process. Sure you can get phonetics good enough for a quick video, and get the basic grammar order, but you won't know that language. It requires time to deform your brain out of the shape under which it developed. These videos with a pogging thumbnail and I LEARNED JAPANESE IN A WEEK???? only make me leave this platform.
@elguerotacano164
@elguerotacano164 2 жыл бұрын
@@Punyulada Nope, not obvious at all. Having grown up in the American South, you'd be surprised what passes for fluent English. Yours is pretty damn good.
@levi_freire_lbf
@levi_freire_lbf 2 жыл бұрын
as a native brazilian speaker, the redacted thing that he said was: "Bolsonaro is very very very very hot."
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I was curious haha
@Novidadesecleticas
@Novidadesecleticas 2 жыл бұрын
bolsonaro 2022 mito
@kosmosinc.
@kosmosinc. 2 жыл бұрын
Sim kkkkk ☠️☠️☠️
@luanunes14
@luanunes14 2 жыл бұрын
Exatamente
@paulimriss
@paulimriss 2 жыл бұрын
Also, that's a horrible phrase, Bolsonaro is litterally the most disgusting person I've ever seem, both in appearence and personality
@RidleyHolmes-sr2tw
@RidleyHolmes-sr2tw 6 ай бұрын
Funny how these Polyglots never get tested by professionals. They just tell you how good they are in English.
@melaniegrace7707
@melaniegrace7707 2 жыл бұрын
I love how it goes from Indonesian to polish and just flips the flag upside down. perfect transition.
@corynicolas3175
@corynicolas3175 2 жыл бұрын
I speak six languages and learned them over the course of 46 years. I have native fluency in English-Spanish, speak French, Portuguese and American Sign Language fluently and can also speak Italian which is my newest language. I've been a professional interpreter for 30 years and picked up languages during different decades of my life. I took a year of German in school and studied a few other languages but I don't count them at all. Languages are a lifestyle and you have to have many experiences in the languages to truly know them intimately and this takes time. English was my first language, then I learned Spanish because my uncle married a Mexican woman when I was ten and I chose to become bilingual-bicultural. It became my life. I then learned French in High School and continued studying it for years. I grew up with Deaf friends and learned ASL and eventually interpreted Sign Language. When I was 28 years old, I met some Brazilians while interpreting Spanish, ended up living with them for 2 years and learned Portuguese. Years later I started to delve more deeply into the language because so many of my students were from Brasil and I decided to work on my mastery of all aspects of the language. In the last few years I have been studying Italian. Many of these polyglots who claim to speak 20 or more languages (or even a few languages) don't actually have a high level of fluency in more than one language. I have no desire for quantity. My desire is to continually attain higher and higher levels of fluency in the languages I have learned thus far.
@matteopacelli9001
@matteopacelli9001 2 жыл бұрын
This is very impressive but you should also try learning a language that isn’t a Romance language (as you probably know, spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese are Romance languages and are very similar). It’s amazing to be fluent in these languages but if you started learning a completely different language then it will really open you up to a completely different culture like if you started learning Arabic or Turkish or Japanese, etc, then you would be immersed in a completely new culture. That being said, it’s still awesome that you are truly fluent in those languages and I applaud you
@corynicolas3175
@corynicolas3175 2 жыл бұрын
@@matteopacelli9001 Thanks. My point is that for me it's more important to have an excellent command of at least two languages instead of speaking many languages without proficiency. Being a polyglot wasn't my goal, although I am one. My love for languages and my experiences have allowed me to learn the languages I speak. I might add that I know American Sign Language which is a visual language. It's extremely different than an oral language. The Deaf Community is an entirely different world. I've been blessed to have been able to spend 30 years as a professional interpreter. 17 of those years I worked as a Court Interpreter which requires a very high level of fluency (much greater than that of your typical native speaker in both languages) which is the reason I focused primarily on English and Spanish. The demand for Spanish interpreters is extremely high in the U.S. As for language learning, I don't actually see it as a competition of who can learn the most languages or how hard or different they are. I have plenty to learn and improve on with the languages I speak.
@anthonyfarias5076
@anthonyfarias5076 2 жыл бұрын
Massive respect to you, i'm a native portuguese speaker and I'm learning English to improve internet communication and score better at my exams. I'm confident about my writing and reading skills, but my hearing interpetation still sometimes needs subtitles and talking (a real conversation, not just reciting texts) is always the final challenge. My understanding of spanish is quite limited even though I live in Brazil and all our neighbors speak spanish. Yes our languages are similar but for me that's the problem. While talking I get confused and they overlap. Listening spanish is literal hell for me.
@kisskill9438
@kisskill9438 2 жыл бұрын
@@corynicolas3175 C'est très impressionnant !! Bravo quel beau parcours.
@corynicolas3175
@corynicolas3175 2 жыл бұрын
@@kisskill9438 Merci. J'adore les langues étrangères surtout parce qu'elles me permettent de connaître différentes cultures et voir des choses d'une perspective différente.
@toraneeko
@toraneeko 2 жыл бұрын
Sincerely, THANK YOU. I speak 3 languages myself, and I die a little inside every time I check one of those "polyglots", surprised about how bad they are, but people congratulate them because they have no idea.I needed to see this. Thank you.
@crazystemlady
@crazystemlady Жыл бұрын
i have never watched a fake ad so many times these are the ads i want in life. thanks chad
@cyprienmalavieille2030
@cyprienmalavieille2030 2 жыл бұрын
Bro, i don't know if you are a native french person but this is BY FAR the most realistic french use i have seen by a foreigner. This is how french youth speaks nowadays, more or less, and it's quite different from "academic french". Congrats man
@Kebbab.213
@Kebbab.213 2 жыл бұрын
yes extremely realistic. I think he asked a French friend. I'm actually certain
@miroslavbulldosex
@miroslavbulldosex 2 жыл бұрын
Arabic French lol
@shary0
@shary0 2 жыл бұрын
Too overdone and terrible accent. But just perfect for comedy effect.
@miroslavbulldosex
@miroslavbulldosex 2 жыл бұрын
@@yahyazekeriyya2560 because people from Maghreb in france like to use this word but most french people never use it
@miroslavbulldosex
@miroslavbulldosex 2 жыл бұрын
​@@yahyazekeriyya2560 Maghrebi people who were born and raised in France are french ofc. They share the same culture and speak the same language as native french (most of the time at least lol). What I meant to say was that most white ethnic french just dont really say "wallah", french muslim sometimes do though.
@macaroon147
@macaroon147 Жыл бұрын
I'm learning German and I'm on A2 and it's taken me months of self learning. I genuinely thought I was dumb and learning incorrectly. I need to learn Turkish too (family) and I thought I was stupid for not being able to learn them together. I'm so so so sick of social media and the false narratives it is feeding humans.
@zekibbix
@zekibbix Жыл бұрын
German is harrrrd! Look out for Mark Twain’s quotes about learning German, made me feel less stupid when I was trying to learn it!
@weakanklesfornamjoon
@weakanklesfornamjoon Жыл бұрын
and you might enjoy Dylan Moran’s joke about how the German language sounds. something about a typewriter chewing tin foil while being kicked down a staircase. 😅
@limyarplane1991
@limyarplane1991 Жыл бұрын
Its hard to retain to, i lived there for a few year’s when i was like 10 and it was easier to learn cause i was pretty young and was required to if i wanted to communcate with classmate’s and i got it after a few year’s and i think i was fairly close to fluent, but then moved away and have forgotten most of it, trying to pick it up again but it suck’s when you have no one to talk to..
@deftrw5929
@deftrw5929 Жыл бұрын
Don't worry bro even Turkish people struggling while speaking Turkish correctly lol. It's pretty hard to speak fluently especially for foreigners. It takes a while
@0000x0000referenced
@0000x0000referenced Жыл бұрын
German is hard to learn and I live here
@karablack8336
@karablack8336 2 жыл бұрын
I've been seriously studying German for a year and I'll take a look at other languages from time to time. I can confidently say that I can read a few children's books and speak like a toddler with a learning disability. I've been very suspicious of a lot of these so called polyglots for a long time, but I'll never go after them for wanting to learn languages. The many lying about fluency however, yeah no. I'm glad it's getting more attention now!
@MatthiasW97
@MatthiasW97 2 жыл бұрын
Sehr schön das du deutsch lernst ! Woher kommst du?
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
I plan to learn about 40 languages, with most of them at the same time. Please insult me as stupid, so I can get more fuel to prove you wrong. Naysayers are a source of fuel. Please project your own weaknesses onto me.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
A certain black polyglot died recently, and he did many entertaining videos. But when I heard his Spanish, he lost much credibility, because that's my native language.
@whatsinthename21
@whatsinthename21 2 жыл бұрын
@@scintillam_dei Great! That's my strategy too to do something, 1st get embarrassed and discouraged by others, and this discouragement and embarrassment ignite motivation and then you show them how badass you are! Way to go bro!
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
@@whatsinthename21 Thanks for calling me badass but women have pointed out that it is a good ass.
@dylanintefilin
@dylanintefilin Жыл бұрын
i'm currently starting my third language (native in english, advanced in spanish, beginner in hebrew) and i think something that's woefully overlooked, especially in the usamerican context, is that being born into a family that only speaks english in places like the united states is both a blessing and a curse. you largely don't need to struggle to learn the hegemonic language/lingua franca (obviously this is complex for minoritized dialects like aave and appalachian dialects), but it's also _incredibly_ difficult to learn another language, at least compared to being born into a country where knowing two or three languages is standard
@Lillyluri
@Lillyluri Жыл бұрын
As an outsider to this issue, I'm wondering if one of the major factors isn't the widely accepted normalcy of being monolingual in conversations, too. Also... I'm under the impression that Spanish is the most taught language in the US? The reasoning probably being that that is the most widely known language other than English? But, I don't think that's how it works. To really develop advanced language skills, you have to be immersed in the language, and use it often. How many Americans would know someone who actively strikes non-superficial conversation with them in Spanisch on a regular basis? The point where we, in other parts of the world, take English from a school subject to a skill is the point where we use it. To access tons of information on the internet, to read books or at least articles, to play games that came only in English. It needs this pull, this drive, of the things that exist in that language and that you want to have.
@stillnotstill
@stillnotstill Жыл бұрын
@Dylan M, I adore the thoughtfulness in your parenthetical
@dylanintefilin
@dylanintefilin Жыл бұрын
@@stillnotstill ah thank you! growing up in appalachia, this is something i've experienced first hand. i have friends who were forced to take classes specifically designed to train the local dialect out of them, and don't get me started how relentlessly students who use aave at home are criticized if their code switching isn't perfect. there's an entirely different set of grammar rules, phonemes, etc. that is just as valid as standard usamerican english, and yet bc of classism, racism, etc. those dialects are deemed less intelligent, less "civilized," and therefore less desirable
@Galastel
@Galastel 11 ай бұрын
בהצלחה! And you're absolutely right about context being overlooked. If your parents, or even one parent, are immigrants, then you're bilingual from birth. And if you don't live in an English-speaking country, you'd start learning English pretty early because it's the Lingua Franca. And if your neighbouring countries aren't very distant (meaning your country isn't as big as the US) and use a different language, your exposure to foreign languages is further increased.
@dusk6159
@dusk6159 24 күн бұрын
​@@dylanintefilin How politically correct, such a gigachad
@RuneCode
@RuneCode 2 жыл бұрын
I've never seen any youtube polyglot speaking Indonesian with the right accent as much as you did. Seems like you put more effort into learning it even as a joke
@farhanaditya2647
@farhanaditya2647 2 жыл бұрын
Ikr, that caught me off guard.
@itsmarisia6311
@itsmarisia6311 2 жыл бұрын
I think that was what we all needed at some point 😂 Great video! Your polish is amazing, you speak like a native speaker, omg 🇵🇱😂😂
@Nosiu
@Nosiu 2 жыл бұрын
as a polish speaker I need to say that was one of the best attempts to pronounce Chrząszczyrzewoszyce by an American citizen.
@yorgunsamuray
@yorgunsamuray 2 жыл бұрын
Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz's hometown?
@Nosiu
@Nosiu 2 жыл бұрын
@@yorgunsamuray exactly, district Łękołody.
@austinjon31
@austinjon31 2 жыл бұрын
I can't tell whether I've been whoosh-ed or Poland's master race has conquered the globe 2 centuries ago
@kisskill9438
@kisskill9438 2 жыл бұрын
How do you say it??
@v0id_d3m0n
@v0id_d3m0n 2 жыл бұрын
@@kisskill9438 h-sh-aw-wh-sh-ch-i¹-sh-e²-v-o³-s-i¹-ts-e² 1. as in 'cliff' 2. as in 'pet' 3. as in 'pot' I feel like thats the closest an american would get
@odysseasstavrakakis3038
@odysseasstavrakakis3038 Жыл бұрын
no way i actually got a duolingo ad after all the luodingo thing hahaha
@juanvillanueva514
@juanvillanueva514 2 жыл бұрын
As a native Spanish speaker, I was very impressed when he quoted Miguel de Cervantes in such a beautiful and compelling way, that get directly to me
@myagrimm4719
@myagrimm4719 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like those kinds of language channels simultaneously helped and hurt me when I first started learning languages. They made it seem so easy and quick, which helped motivate me to start. But they hurt because; even though I never fully bought into the idea that it's as easy as they make it seem, and I never bought one of their courses, it felt like I should be learning quicker than I was. Overall, I think they actually helped me more than they hurt because I came from an area where pretty much everyone around me spoke only English (rural Midwest) and people often talked about learning another language like it was the hardest thing in the world, so having that counterbalance at the other extreme helped me get started. Language learning is difficult and it does take time, but it's not as impossible as people around me had made it seem. I get how those "polyglot" channels can make language learning seem impossible to other people though by making them expect it to be easy and extremely rapid. Then, when they're struggling and not picking things up nearly as quickly as they expected, they may think it's their fault and they just aren't good at learning languages and then give up. I would disagree about bashing Duolingo though, it's been a very helpful tool for me. I think it may depend on what your expectations for Duolingo are and on your learning style. I like that it gamifies language learning, that's engaging to me. I don't expect to become fluent from Duolingo but it helps me learn vocabulary and get a feel for sentence structure. It was my first step in learning Spanish (which I speak pretty well now), and I've also used it for starting to learn French and Portuguese. I'm more focused on French right now and have a 264 day streak - the streak feature helps me practice at least a tiny bit every day
@samwiseshanti
@samwiseshanti 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I agree. I'm English and I met a Spanish girl in 2014, she's now my wife and we've had 3 kids together in Madrid, where we've lived since 2016. Duolingo isn't going to teach you a language, but I'd but I'd lying if I said it didn't help me at all, it was a lot better than many, many other resources I used. My mum comes to visit sometimes and she only uses Duolingo, and she does really well considering, she can take the metro or order food by herself, and even more or less follows some conversations. On the flip side, I now work as a teacher in offices and giving evening classes, and it's not like my students have gone from 0 to fluent, even with multiple hours a week over the course of years. It's really hard to learn a language properly and it takes a lot of time. I agree that some products have misleading ads, and overstate their effectiveness, but that's just how advertising works, you might not end up lovin' it if you go to get a McDonald's, you need to have a bit of common sense with these things.
@darren430
@darren430 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I feel the same about Duolingo.
@nostalgiatrip7331
@nostalgiatrip7331 2 жыл бұрын
it also helps keeps the language fresh in your head if you are already intermediate at it you can take the placement test and test out of stuff until you're practicing stuff thats useful
@samyelson
@samyelson 2 жыл бұрын
When I see a polyglot shitting on Duolingo it annoys me. Just because they never used it and are trying it with a fluent langue doesn't mean it isn't useful. Like you said, Duolingo was great for sentence structuring. Once I got that down I started extreme flash carding to learn hundreds of words faster because I just needed the words now to throw into the sentences.
@plebisMaximus
@plebisMaximus 2 жыл бұрын
Language learning is a lifetime thing. I started learning English around the age of 7, now I'm 22 and still picking up new things or finding things I've been doing wrong all this time. It's not something you can be perfect at. Hell, I wouldn't even say I'm perfect in my native language, Danish. Languages are an overcomplicated mess, but good fun to play around with.
@yookoandsatousappreciationacc
@yookoandsatousappreciationacc 2 жыл бұрын
1:44 ""bolsonaro é mto mto mto mto mto gostoso"" EU TÔ MORRENDO AISJWKSKKAKSAKSKALLS
@lynn___.9_9
@lynn___.9_9 2 жыл бұрын
não esperava essa
@jeremieherard2166
@jeremieherard2166 Жыл бұрын
Oh boi, your street french is really good. That was so unexpected to here that
@ianpolitano07
@ianpolitano07 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this. It really hit the nail on the head. When I see someone claim they are a 10 language polyglot I really laugh out loud. I speak 3 languages. 1 as my mother language Portuguese, the language I spoke at home with my family since I was born in Brazil and they are Brazilian (loved your portuguese btw), English as a native language having moved to the USA when I was 5 and learning it in school, and Korean having moved to Korea for 5 years and studying it for the last 10 years (also marrying a Korean so we speak it at home; our dog speaks Korean too). If anything, spending the last 10 years learning Korean has taught me that anyone claiming to become fluent in a short amount of time is a fraud! I would say I'm fluent in Korean as I can hold day to day conversations, understand most media, and have been reading books in Korean, but to get to this level of fluency it took hours and hours and hours of studying and exposure. I'm not saying people can't learn more than 3 or 4 languages, but the farther apart those languages are from one another the harder it is to learn them. Like me learning Spanish wouldn't be hard. I took Spanish in high school and I never studied. I would just read sentences in Spanish and it being in close proximity to Portuguese, I could understand it. However, I'd never say I speak Spanish because albeit similar, I don't have the knowledge and exposure to really hold a conversation in Spanish.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 2 жыл бұрын
I did a video of me trying to speak Portuguese, which is drunk Spanish. Portuguese is to Spanish, what Cantonese is to Mandarin. The former in the relationship are rollercoasters of fun. The latter are serious and down to business.
@frogmn9406
@frogmn9406 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, I have lived in the US for 10 years now and when I talk to people, some would ask if I was born here, but only I know how much I still need to improve. I am proficient, but no way native. I can proudly say that I have a high language aptitude, meaning that I learn a new language faster than the average people, but it still took me 10 years of full immersion (casual and academic) to reach my current level. Mastering a language is hard, and downplaying the difficulty just to sell stuff is just vicious.
@caiovinicius5204
@caiovinicius5204 2 жыл бұрын
I'm brazilian as well, and learning korean right now. Love the language
@ianpolitano07
@ianpolitano07 2 жыл бұрын
@@caiovinicius5204 haha you have my younger brother’s name haha
@matthewnash4953
@matthewnash4953 2 жыл бұрын
I realistically can't expect someone to be able to fluently, and accurately speak more than 3, maybe 4 languages. It takes a few years to learn a language well, and that's if you're putting in a serious amount of effort into it.
@federicoclaps5099
@federicoclaps5099 2 жыл бұрын
As an Italian, I appreciate that you took the time and effort to learn the 3dr canto of Dante's Inferno, that was surprisingly touching.
@silverspoon386
@silverspoon386 2 жыл бұрын
1:49 as Indonesian, i can 100% say this is accurate lol
@racool911
@racool911 Жыл бұрын
2:21 Man I'm from New Jersey and I don't speak that fluently. Excellent work
@Odeiofazeruser
@Odeiofazeruser 2 жыл бұрын
I speak fluent portuguese and spanish and I often see how these “super polyglots” sucks at those languages, specially portuguese. It’s just ridiculous. If you know at least 2 or 3 languages, You can see how basic their knowledge is, not fluent at all. You forgot to mention one important point though, sometimes they talk to random people on the street, but never let them talk too much because they need to monopolize the conversation in a certain direction or, otherwise, everyone will notice how much limited is their vocabulary 🤷🏼‍♀️
@burundi5427
@burundi5427 2 жыл бұрын
Can you link me some examples of that, please? I'm curious to see them failing
@cisium1184
@cisium1184 2 жыл бұрын
So, kind of like my entire life, then....
@vladivanov5500
@vladivanov5500 2 жыл бұрын
​@@burundi5427 How about the 'I'll pay you if I can't speak your language' guy?
@yomama...isaverynicelady
@yomama...isaverynicelady 2 жыл бұрын
@@vladivanov5500 Ugh I cant stand that guy, hes so cringe. He just yells a few unnaturally used phrases at tourists who look so uncomfortable and are obviously trying to flee as fast as they can. And the worst part is that he seems to really be basking in the deluded fake glory of his false assumtions that they think he looks cool and smart.
@keist7
@keist7 2 жыл бұрын
@@vladivanov5500 wouter? In one video a woman told him he mixes ulkrainian and russian words. His response? "I also want to listen to music"
@mateusznowak9155
@mateusznowak9155 2 жыл бұрын
This must be one of the best instances of a foreigner speaking Polish on KZbin. Way to go man. I admire your skills.
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