He spoke English throughout the entire video with an amazing accent, wow.
@luissdstuff63819 ай бұрын
LOL
@Seenu_49 ай бұрын
Hamburger 🍔
@robthegungunsen9 ай бұрын
Il sonne comme un natif, c'est incroyable, j'essaye toujours de trouver la source de ce DLC.
@ungaul9 ай бұрын
@@robthegungunsenquoi de la vache tu es aussi français ?
@thevigilmain66289 ай бұрын
Ever so fluently, too!!
@jenm19 ай бұрын
The good thing about English is there's so much English content out there that there's no way you won't find something you like
@AmirSatt9 ай бұрын
me on the way to watch every single historical documentary and learn English all by my own
@thevigilmain66289 ай бұрын
This is so true!
@regarrzo9 ай бұрын
I don't like anything that has anything to do with English. 👎👎
@thesupperdud44329 ай бұрын
*on my own (or) *by myself. Good luck on your journey 👍@@AmirSatt
@AmirSatt9 ай бұрын
@@thesupperdud4432 I merged both variants for some reason lol
@repacharge4319 ай бұрын
As a native english speaker, your accent was incredible. Keep up the great work man!
@isaacwortzel80339 ай бұрын
Don’t you mean American?
@TheMastermind7299 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing, he literally sounded native
@happyelephant53849 ай бұрын
heah, props to him, he probably spent a long time mastering it
@FrozenMermaid6668 ай бұрын
English is one of the prettiest and best languages ever made like Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / Norwegian / Gothic etc, and all should be learning English and the other prettiest languages ever 2gether as they are way too pretty not to know, plus they are the languages that should be the universal languages - this review is ns and it isn’t based on truth and facts, as are most other reviews, so learners should never choose based on reviews and recommendations, since most aren’t fair or factual! Besides, English is English, no such thing as American, and those are just accents, which are different, depending on the region, but the language itself is only one, and it is the Modern English language, which is the easiest and most practical language ever created in every way, and it is also one of the prettiest ever, so all should be learning English to a writer level or at least to a native speaker level! Lol, I cannot even believe that there are still ppl in the 21st century that aren’t fluent in English, but anyways, learners should also know that the TH in English is not an F sound, and that it is a type of T sound (approximant of T) in words like think / thing / thin etc and it is a type of D (approximant of D) in words like this / the / that (dis / duh / dat) and they are called the thorn sound aka þ / Þ and the eth sound aka ð / Ð and they are also used in Icelandic and Norse, and the eth sound is also used in Spanish in words like nada etc, so they are just less obvious T and D sounds that are kind of lispt!
@FrozenMermaid6668 ай бұрын
English is English, not American, and American English vs British English vs Australian English are just the different standard accents, not different languages, and also, there are over 3 billion speakers of English, if one includes the ones that speak it at a B1 or B2 level aka the intermediates, and, all ppl are the exact opposite of ‘royalty’ and are just an avrg citizen made to obey the avrg citizen’s laws and rules, as everyone else, and I am THE only Royalty aka the pure / superior being, and my pure protectors aka the alphas too, and I also am the only girl / feminine being, and réłationships are only meant for us pure beings (me & the pure protectors) and were never meant for ppl, and there must be a distance between all ppl at all times and no śÿnńing, and one should never learn languages to ‘get x or y’ etc, it’s literally the most efd non-reason to learn anything, and the right reasons to learn languages are for their pretty and poetic words, so all should only learn the pretty languages for their pretty words and for their pretty sounds etc, which is the wise thing to do and the key to being a successful polyglot, as one naturally learns the prettier and more distinctive words faster, which makes pretty languages the easiest languages ever - grammatical genders are a very necessary and great and logical part of every pretty language that isn’t neutral with neutral word endings, so nouns that sound masculine or that reflect a masculine element or that have masculine word endings should be a masculine noun, and very few languages work without grammatical genders, including English which is a very neutral language that doesn’t have strong word endings, and, English pronunciation is one of the easiest pronunciation ever, including the TH sounds which are just T and D sounds that are made in a less obvious way, maybe the ones teaching English don’t know how to properly explain these sounds, or maybe the ones learning aren’t good at imitating the sounds and don’t know the words automatically yet, which is why they find it difficult!
@birgiollo92299 ай бұрын
Can we appreciate the effort he put into learning English just to record this video? You almost can't hear the Uzbeki accent, it's amazing!
@bialaakaczkaa9 ай бұрын
Yes, Uzbek accent is virtually unnoticeable, but Karakalpaki accent is just so tough and remarkable. It is such a fraud that he claims he is from Pennsylvania!
@imsamuka9289 ай бұрын
I know, right?! It's like he lived in Mainland America for his whole life!
@ethandouro43349 ай бұрын
Exactly, his Uzbek accent is almos unnoticeable, he should get a video in Uzbek
@FrozenMermaid6668 ай бұрын
English is one of the prettiest and best languages ever made like Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / Norwegian / Gothic etc, and all should be learning English and the other prettiest languages ever 2gether as they are way too pretty not to know, plus they are the languages that should be the universal languages - this review is ns and it isn’t based on truth and facts, as are most other reviews, so learners should never choose based on reviews and recommendations, since most aren’t fair or factual! Besides, English is English, no such thing as American, and those are just accents, which are different, depending on the region, but the language itself is only one, and it is the Modern English language, which is the easiest and most practical language ever created in every way, and it is also one of the prettiest ever, so all should be learning English to a writer level or at least to a native speaker level! Lol, I cannot even believe that there are still ppl in the 21st century that aren’t fluent in English, but anyways, learners should also know that the TH in English is not an F sound, and that it is a type of T sound (approximant of T) in words like think / thing / thin etc and it is a type of D (approximant of D) in words like this / the / that (dis / duh / dat) and they are called the thorn sound aka þ / Þ and the eth sound aka ð / Ð and they are also used in Icelandic and Norse, and the eth sound is also used in Spanish in words like nada etc, so they are just less obvious T and D sounds that are kind of lispt!
@FrozenMermaid6668 ай бұрын
English is English, not American, and American English vs British English vs Australian English are just the different standard accents, not different languages, and also, there are over 3 billion speakers of English, if one includes the ones that speak it at a B1 or B2 level aka the intermediates, and, all ppl are the exact opposite of ‘royalty’ and are just an avrg citizen made to obey the avrg citizen’s laws and rules, as everyone else, and I am THE only Royalty aka the pure / superior being, and my pure protectors aka the alphas too, and I also am the only girl / feminine being, and réłationships are only meant for us pure beings (me & the pure protectors) and were never meant for ppl, and there must be a distance between all ppl at all times and no śÿnńing, and one should never learn languages to ‘get x or y’ etc, it’s literally the most efd non-reason to learn anything, and the right reasons to learn languages are for their pretty and poetic words, so all should only learn the pretty languages for their pretty words and for their pretty sounds etc, which is the wise thing to do and the key to being a successful polyglot, as one naturally learns the prettier and more distinctive words faster, which makes pretty languages the easiest languages ever - grammatical genders are a very necessary and great and logical part of every pretty language that isn’t neutral with neutral word endings, so nouns that sound masculine or that reflect a masculine element or that have masculine word endings should be a masculine noun, and very few languages work without grammatical genders, including English which is a very neutral language that doesn’t have strong word endings, and, English pronunciation is one of the easiest pronunciation ever, including the TH sounds which are just T and D sounds that are made in a less obvious way, maybe the ones teaching English don’t know how to properly explain these sounds, or maybe the ones learning aren’t good at imitating the sounds and don’t know the words automatically yet, which is why they find it difficult!
@aloyspaupe74039 ай бұрын
I'm french, and I'm never been able to understand why you beat up someone, but it's called a beatdown
@DowlphinКүн бұрын
The former is what it looks like if done by a gigachad, the latter is the result.
@jordansikes85949 ай бұрын
As someone who speaks American as my native language, visiting London, I am absolutely stunned that English is a real language. I thought it was a conlang made for actors like in Shakespeare.
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
Every language IS a conlang, duh, languages didn’t magically come out of thin air, each language was created by a dude by modifying a previous language or multiple previous languages and by creating lots of new words based on the new spelling rules that he’d set, except for the first language ever created Proto European that was made by a dude from scratch a long time ago and that came with the first writing system, which inspired all other languages and writing systems that exist today, either directly or indirectly! English is one of the prettiest and best languages ever made like Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / Norwegian / Gothic etc, and all should be learning English and the other prettiest languages ever, which should be the universal languages - this review is ns and it isn’t based on truth and facts, as are most other reviews, so learners should never choose based on reviews and recommendations, since most aren’t fair or factual! Besides, English is English, no such thing as American, and those are just accents, which are different, depending on the region, but the language itself is only one, and it is the Modern English language, which is the easiest and most practical language ever created in every way, and it is also one of the prettiest ever, so all should be learning English to a writer level or at least to a native speaker level!
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
Also, there are over 3 billion speakers of English, if one includes the ones that speak it at a B1 or B2 level aka the intermediates, and, all ppl are the exact opposite of ‘royalty’ and are just an avrg citizen made to obey the avrg citizen’s laws and rules, as everyone else, and I am THE only Royalty aka the pure / superior being, and my pure protectors aka the alphas too, and I also am the only girl / feminine being, and réłationships are only meant for us pure beings (me & the pure protectors) and were never meant for ppl, and there must be a distance between all ppl at all times and no śÿnńing, and one should never learn languages to ‘get x or y’ etc, it’s literally the most efd non-reason to learn anything, and the right reasons to learn languages are for their pretty and poetic words, so all should only learn the pretty languages for their pretty words and for their pretty sounds etc, which is the wise thing to do and the key to being a successful polyglot, as one naturally learns the prettier and more distinctive words faster, which makes pretty languages the easiest languages ever - grammatical genders are a very necessary and great and logical part of every pretty language that isn’t neutral with neutral word endings, so nouns that sound masculine or that reflect a masculine element or that have masculine word endings should be a masculine noun, and very few languages work without grammatical genders, including English which is a very neutral language that doesn’t have strong word endings, and, English pronunciation is one of the easiest pronunciation ever, including the TH sounds which are just T and D sounds that are made in a less obvious way, maybe the ones teaching English don’t know how to properly explain these sounds, or maybe the ones learning aren’t good at imitating the sounds and don’t know the words automatically yet, which is why they find it difficult!
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
English IS a Germanic language, not a Latin language, since it sounds and looks 100% Germanic, and English has the most logical spelling and pronunciation rules, which is why it sounds AND looks awesome and serious and professional, as the creator of English was a true linguist that knew that the pronunciation of each word must be decided based on what sounds best for each word, which is why rough is pronounced with an F sound, as it should! Technically, all the pretty languages that are well-constructed have words that are spellt the same and pronounced differently, and also, words that are spellt differently and pronounced the same, and, they even have words with multiple meanings etc, which is what makes the languages more fun and more diverse, and, learners are supposed to actively learn each word with its pronunciation and spelling, just as natives did passively, which is the right way to learn pretty languages! Germanic languages come from Latin, anyway, and where most words directly or indirectly come from doesn’t make the language what it is, it’s the word endings and the letter combinations and the sound patterns and the combination of sounds and the pronunciation rules etc that make a language what it is, and any true linguist would know these facts, so a language could have only words from Latin, but if its letter combinations and its word endings for verbs and nouns and adjectives etc and its sound patterns etc are Germanic, it is a Germanic language one hundred percent, as the words are modified into Germanic words, which means that words that come from Latin are no longer Latin, once the new word endings and letter combinations or the new pronunciation rules etc are applied, which turn them into Germanic words!
@nessinhabh799 ай бұрын
@@FrozenMermaid666recognizing sarcasm is not your strong suit, I guess. 😂
@EvanP-ie5vt9 ай бұрын
I am not reading all of that the original comment was satire 💀 And all languages are not conlangs Germanic languages all came from Proto-Indo-European
@Ndrreed9 ай бұрын
How do other people describe @LanguageSimp to people they know who aren’t into language learning? My friend asked what I was doing, and I said “my favorite KZbin language learning comedian just dropped a new video so I’m watching it…”. That statement was followed by a lot of silence. 😂
@doriow9 ай бұрын
I say "the/that polyglot who teases languages"
@confusedowl2979 ай бұрын
Easy, just say I'm watching my favorite hyperpolyglot gigachad alpha male youtuber who is attractive to every woman and man on the planet
@Ndrreed9 ай бұрын
@@confusedowl297 good point. I forgot. 😂
@darknaventuredelbarrio67719 ай бұрын
Underated comment 😂👏🏾
@CaioAletroca9 ай бұрын
I usually say "youtuber who talks about languages using redpill language, but without been redpill".
@malwarefish9 ай бұрын
As someone from the empty void off the coast of Australia, I appreciate the recognition!
@todesque9 ай бұрын
Friendliest people on earth! (And I say this as an Aussie.)
@Exclus1ve_barbie9 ай бұрын
You gave me inspiration to keep learning Languages, I was born learning Hebrew and Russian at the same time, then moving to Canada forced me to learn French and English, Dur to your videos however I continued growing my language skills and actually decided to learn Arabic and Spanish, I'm currently in grade 11 taking Chinese as a side class ❤ Thank you for giving my the inspo to grow my skills more!!
@marwaqoura780423 күн бұрын
If you speak learned Hebrew well , not just Yiddish learning Arabic will be much easier .
@BN.ja059 ай бұрын
I didn't really learn English for the reasons listed on the video (Except maybe for the DLC it unlocks) but for its musicality instead, it's so easy to rhyme English words and its capacity to adapt and/or absorb foreign words makes it perfect for song-writing about any topic, no wonder rap music developed in English speaking countries.
@rjuj7 ай бұрын
this guy right here learned english to rhyme words
@BN.ja057 ай бұрын
@@rjuj Well yeah, what good is life worth living for if it ain't for music?
@thedeutschman99059 ай бұрын
As an American Speaker for his first language, I can say that the Yorkshire dialects when I lived in England as a child were particularly hard for me to understand. Also, the Scots dialect is hard to understand, but luckily most people from my experience dial back the dialect when talking to a non local.
@asignificantspek9 ай бұрын
Just so you know, Scots is considered its own language, not a dialect.
@aaronclarke14349 ай бұрын
Eh up
@MinecraftMasterNo19 ай бұрын
@@asignificantspek A language has to be something other than gibberish spoken by people drunk out of their minds.
@koultcechan9 ай бұрын
Do tha’ think?
@fabi_t.2.2799 ай бұрын
Ññl@@MinecraftMasterNo1
@ethandouro43349 ай бұрын
I love how you tied depression to England lmao
@table55849 ай бұрын
He should review klingon next
@table55849 ай бұрын
Or ithkuil
@table55849 ай бұрын
Or mathematics
@table55849 ай бұрын
Or ido
@yoro__339 ай бұрын
is he wrong?
@Milkydere9 ай бұрын
13:09 "if you learn spanish, brazillians will cook you tacos" you have no idea what you've done to brazillians there
@Sparrow_-6 ай бұрын
fr
@Zruiz25722 ай бұрын
I speak Spanish and I laughed my ass off with that.
@skflwphgaawfas740224 күн бұрын
I don't understand
@playinzegame9 күн бұрын
@@skflwphgaawfas7402 Brazilians speak Portuguese not Spanish
@hazelsweenz8 күн бұрын
@@skflwphgaawfas7402 brazilians don't speak spanish, but portuguese, and taco is not Brazilian food
@starades694209 ай бұрын
As a non-native speaker I think the easiest way to overcome English as a learner is consuming content whether it be from movies, TV shows, KZbin, games and other social media as well as interactions with people online that's how all my friends and I learned English. I have also noticed that the knowledge and understanding of the language as well as getting the jokes made in English and understanding the slang is very easy since you're accustomed to it.
@jeroen365714 күн бұрын
Yeah same here. I hear a lot of talk about it not being taught in their schools, but really I am from NL and I learned fuck all in school when it comes to English. Was way ahead of the classes like almost everyone from just watching cartoons in English as a child and later on movies. You just naturally soak in the language wich kinda makes you wonder what the best way to learn a language really is. I suppose you need to just watch movies.
@DowlphinКүн бұрын
My early English learning experience outside of the minimal basics in school is playing Sim City 2000 with a dictionary next to the PC. (Which was the only way to look up words in video games back then. IIRC you couldn't just alt-tab out of the game and into the offline dictionary program you bought at a local store for 200 bucks.)
@dk_boyblue9 ай бұрын
I find it ironic that my value as a member in my society got higher because I was better than my peers at understanding and using the lingua franca. My understanding of English carried me through my school and academic life. The language opened up the floodgate that's called internet content so I became more knowledgeable in my areas of interest. It's both weird and wonderful that how just being able to speak English carried me through my life but that alone obviously won't be enough for me to secure in the near future. So, that situation irked me and I started to desire learning more languages and gain real life skills. But Simp is right. American is so sophisticated it took way too much place on my brain. I can't learn another language now
@Carlusha939 ай бұрын
I went to a Starbucks once in America and asked for a cappuccino grande and I accidentally used my beta male Mexican accent in the word grande (which is 101 % similar to the American grande word used in Starbucks) it's literally the same word ... the girl who was taking my order had a hard time with my tacoland pronunciation ... it was very surprising to me and even if I was still a beta with a Mexican accent, I felt like a giga chad for being able to speak 2 languages, or at least 1.5. Then I remembered that there is nothing special about learning English and nobody gives a crap, so I proceeded to drink my awful ghwrande coffee with my tortilla chips and beans.
@craftah9 ай бұрын
americans always have to pronounce o and e as diphthongs "ou" and "ei". that's kinda funny but annoying too
@CaioAletroca9 ай бұрын
As a brother brazillian speaker, I feel your pain. I had a stroke when I tried to say "Arriwana Ghwraaande" with american accent.
@katerinpersonal8849 ай бұрын
Best story time of 2024
@succulent61236 ай бұрын
I read that as tortilla
@Brunnu5 ай бұрын
it isss, so funny and annoying at the same time, I can’t hear that without feeling any physical pain
@Carftymk9 ай бұрын
betterhelp records and sell patient data
@eggles9 ай бұрын
what!!
@polar56059 ай бұрын
ngl I thought the betterhelp segment was gonna be a joke
@mandrakeblake-tw1uv9 ай бұрын
It's also a scam, since it doesnt help people at all! I wanted to find a comment like this.
@bigtombowski9 ай бұрын
Better help is a total scam
@cevatkokbudak64149 ай бұрын
okay
@magalisurkamp17359 ай бұрын
As an Brazilian, the only thing that they teach in school here is verb to be, which makes most of the population not able to speak english, i learned by interacting with native english speakers in game, watching videos of english speakers and my mother putting english things in tv so i could learn, and here we are also really diverse in accents and people whose ancestors were imigrants from another country (i have ancestors from Germany and Italy)
@kuolettavaVids8 ай бұрын
That seems to be a common theme. Japanese seem to be very hesitant to speak English even though they get multiple years of it because the instruction is very basic route memorization, with no pronunciation practice. In my state, in the US, we're required to take 3 years of a foreign language, and most take Spanish as a sort of "default" option. I can assure you though, most people in my state would not call themselves Spanish speakers.
@محمدالقحطاني-س1ق4ف7 ай бұрын
A mesma coisa no meu país Arábia Saudita, eles apenas nos estudam o verbo to be ing ed.
@gplorsan5 ай бұрын
That explains your inability to use the full stop despite your impressive linguistic ability.
@Gato-y5p4 ай бұрын
@@gplorsanCara nois ta na internet fodasse os eros de gramatica
@MichaBell3Ай бұрын
Sabia que ia achar esse povo do mato
@MatheusSouza-li4jf9 ай бұрын
This video really came in handy! This week classes begin in Brazil and I'll be teaching english to kids who never studied the language before, so I was thinking of giving them a preview of what it will be for them. You just saved a ton of time, so thanks!
@Wyla_9 ай бұрын
As a person from the UK who moved to Texas, I have a semi-weird, hybrid accent. I have an Texan accent, (no, not like the stereotype) but I still pronounce some words how a Brit would. Lol. Some people like it, others just look at me like I'm weird when a say a certain word in a different way.
@ricopowerful9 ай бұрын
So you're Australian.
@christianpipes21105 ай бұрын
We talk just like any other American with the standard accent. I hardly ever hear anybody speak with a southern accent or “Texas” accent as you put it.
@elixtirr2611Ай бұрын
As someone born and raised in Texas, I can’t say I have a very strong, stereotypical Texan accent. I mean yeah sure, I can conjure up one pretty well. I’m sure I have something akin to a Southern twang. But to someone up North, I would probably be mostly indistinguishable. My own Southern twang only comes out with certain words, really. I will say, this dialect is incredibly infectious. “Y’all” is too useful of a word. When you eat Texas BBQ brisket, you’ll start talking like George W. Bush himself, like you were born and raised in a small town called something stupid like “Pottsville” that’s west of El Paso, and your best friend was a tumble weed.
@block_head_steve2409 ай бұрын
I think it’s really cool how you made this like a video for intermediate English learners and talk kind of slowly
@ducciwucci9 ай бұрын
thats just how he talks babez, i agree very accessible :)
@block_head_steve2409 ай бұрын
@@ducciwucci I compared with other videos and there’s just something off about the way he talks in this one, but he talks in the middle of slow and fast in the first place(including that really slow country drawl)
@VanillaCookieCat9 ай бұрын
This video is part of the dlc that English unlocked for me
@SpeedyKhaledGDАй бұрын
lmao
@Walker.....9 ай бұрын
Actually there is shock factor in English, when you speak with a native speaker and you are expected to talk in your accent and then you suddenly shock them by talking in their own accent. I've seen many people do this, the reaction is priceless.
@IsaagainАй бұрын
its not shocking its an earsore
@dread_trap9 ай бұрын
12:36 When I first came to Britain, each time I pronounced “r” and “th” the correct way, all of the pedestrians closer than one mile away from me started doing quadruple backflips, praising me and giving me money, so yeah, Britz are most likely to appreciate you for learning their language
@OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt9 ай бұрын
Lang Simp I challenge you to take the Clozemaster 10 languages 10 questions each challenge. Pick any 10 languages video yourself taking the challenge and inspire us. (whether you have studied are familiar with or not). This is a fun opportunity to showcase your talent with a little bit of humility proving you too are human and still a language learner. You can put the flags of the 10 languages you choose for the challenge in both the thumbnail and the title and tag the video as #takingtheclosemaster 10 languages challenge. While also tagging the languages of the challenge. When choosing from a diverse variety of languages consider this, to include some of those you're familiar with, those that you are not, and those that you will later learn. Choosing to include a conlang like Interlingua and an ancient language like Latin will keep the challenge diverse while bringing recognition to these languages (you may surprise yourself). Consider getting a hold of Clozemaster they may be interested in sponsoring the video. We as a community of language Learners need a challenge that we can all appreciate and try together. To get the most out of the video challenge adjust the settings as follows: put the skills to listening, the question count to 10, and the mode to multiple choice. Then you can adjust the account to dark mode (as it's more attractive) and the default speed to 75% for better hearing the questions. Doing a dry run will ensure all the settings are correct. Keep a notepad by your side to keep track of the language scores. Before you end the video it would be nice if you encouraged other polyglots and language Learners to take up the challenge. Buenas suerte Carpe Diem السلام عليكم
@dingus429 ай бұрын
As a native English speaker, there are so many native accents that other natives aren't aware of that I very often get told on holidays that "I speak very good English!", maybe because I'm Asian. So unfortunately, maybe SHOCKING THE LOCALS isn't out of the question...
@roymarshall_9 ай бұрын
Woah you write really good English! 🤸♂
@Alessandro_Batistuda9 ай бұрын
It's not an accent if we talk about natives. It's rather dialects
@dingus428 ай бұрын
@@Alessandro_Batistuda When talking about the intonations and manners of speech, it's usually referred to as an "accent", no? "Australian accent", "Irish accent", "New York accent", "British accent", etc...
@Alessandro_Batistuda8 ай бұрын
@@dingus42 in English people used to call it that way, yes. And i don't understand why
@dingus428 ай бұрын
@@Alessandro_Batistuda That's because that's just the correct term for it in English :)
@XxUSAF1RExX9 ай бұрын
As a native english speaker i want anyone whose learning english to know im genuinely impressed at your accomplishments in learning my language. Im learning español right now, and because learning spanish has taught me how untrivial learning a new language can be, ive grown to really appreciate people who have taken their time to learn english.
@gigogrom2169 ай бұрын
It's actually not so hard because there's a ton of content in youtube with subtitles. I came to english speaking youtube at a pretty low level and started remembering some words and phrases, not even thinking about tenses and grammar, altrough I knew some things. And now I am even brave enough to reply to youtube comment
@А.В.Н-ю5ъ9 ай бұрын
@@gigogrom216 same story. For some reason, it was rather easy to grasp the English vocabulary and grammar by mainly consuming online media. Can't say the same about German though, this language requires a lot more effort for me to learn.
@freekingfreaking2469 ай бұрын
i think you meant brazilian*
@ccsvenezuela20069 ай бұрын
+1 for using the "ñ".
@Jatzki9 ай бұрын
*Who's 🤓
@kianpfannenstiel9 ай бұрын
letting your eye wander while saying "little kooky" was an excellent touch, man.
@clpasztorАй бұрын
Duuuuuuude. Thank you for teaching me about PHRASAL VERBS?! I have been trying to figure this out for months!! I am into linguistics and I literally have a saved note on my phone that's just phrasal verbs (I now know) and how they don't actually make any sense and would be a nightmare to learn for non native speakers. DUDE!!! Like "looking forward to it"?? How does that mean I am excited? Forward is a DIRECTION?
@juliatorre88039 ай бұрын
They need to have a full release of the entire language
@hayyanalmemsani8059 ай бұрын
I'm writing this comment to express my lingering and fiery frustration that this didn't turn out to be about Arabic
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
Pfff, Arabic is a non-pretty language and one of the most overrated languages ever, I am so syhk of hearing about Arabic and Japanese and Chinese and Korean and all other non-pretty languages that aren’t fun to hear and see and learn etc, and I wish everyone støpped talking about non-pretty languages, and I wish all started talking about and recommending the pretty languages only with the best reviews, as pretty languages are the ones that should be learnt and spoken etc, and the prettiest languages ever Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / English / Norwegian / Gothic are the languages that deserve the most attention and they are the languages that should be learnt and spoken by all - however, this review is totally untrue and incorrect and unfair, and it shouldn’t have been made at all, as most other reviews, and, ppl shouldn’t even be ałw’d to review languages or to vote etc, since ppl in general cannot be objective and fair and don’t usually give the right ratings and votes, and they usually give the prettiest languages ever a negative review on purpose, while giving the most non-pretty languages positive reviews, for no logical reason, it literally makes no sense, so no one should choose languages based on yt reviews or recommendations etc, and, only I have the correct rankings and recommendations!
@deanal-jackson45939 ай бұрын
@@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 You're logic is basically: "the languages around where i was born are pretty anything else is non-pretty" that's just being subjective and biased
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
It’s the facts, and all I said is an objective fact, not subjective - also, Hungarian is not similar to Germanic languages as it’s an agglutinative language, and it’s a pretty language with mostly pretty words, so it’s total ns that it’s ‘just the languages around me’ lol!
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
And, English IS a Germanic language, not a Latin language, since it sounds and looks 100% Germanic, and English has the most logical spelling and pronunciation rules, which is why it sounds AND looks awesome and serious and professional, as the creator of English was a true linguist that knew that the pronunciation of each word must be decided based on what sounds best for each word, which is why rough is pronounced with an F sound, as it should, and, technically, all the pretty languages that are well-constructed have words that are spellt the same and pronounced differently, and also, words that are spellt differently and pronounced the same, and, they even have words with multiple meanings etc, which is what makes the languages more fun and more diverse, and, learners are supposed to actively learn each word with its pronunciation and spelling, just as natives did passively, which is the right way to learn pretty languages! Germanic languages come from Latin, anyway, and where most words directly or indirectly come from doesn’t make the language what it is, it’s the word endings and the letter combinations and the sound patterns and the combination of sounds and the pronunciation rules etc that make a language what it is, and any true linguist would know these facts, so a language could have only words from Latin, but if its letter combinations and its word endings for verbs and nouns and adjectives etc and its sound patterns etc are Germanic, it is a Germanic language one hundred percent, as the words are modified into Germanic words, which means that words that come from Latin are no longer Latin, once the new word endings and letter combinations or the new pronunciation rules etc are applied, which turn them into Germanic words! Also, there are over 3 billion speakers of English, if one includes the ones that speak it at a B1 or B2 level aka the intermediates, and, all ppl are the exact opposite of ‘royalty’ and are just an avrg citizen made to obey the avrg citizen’s laws and rules, as everyone else, and I am THE only Royalty aka the pure / superior being, and my pure protectors aka the alphas too, and I also am the only girl / feminine being, and réłationships are only meant for us pure beings (me & the pure protectors) and were never meant for ppl, and there must be a distance between all ppl at all times and no śÿnńing, and one should never learn languages to ‘get x or y’ etc, it’s literally the most efd non-reason to learn anything, and the right reasons to learn languages are for their pretty and poetic words, so all should only learn the pretty languages for their pretty words and for their pretty sounds etc, which is the wise thing to do and the key to being a successful polyglot, as one naturally learns the prettier and more distinctive words faster, which makes pretty languages the easiest languages ever!
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
There are only a few pretty languages, and they are on my list of languages I want to learn and improve - most of the pretty languages came in a more direct way from the first language ever created Proto European that a dude created from scratch a long time ago along with the first writing system ever, which inspired all other languages and writing systems that exist today, either directly or indirectly, and Proto European was a pretty well-constructed language with lots of pretty words, especially considering how ancient it is! So most European languages had a real strong base, whereas most other languages were just inspired by the idea of creating an actual language and by certain words and elements from it or from other languages that were made from it, but most of their words were constructed at random with random syllables and random combinations of vowels and consonants that don’t go well 2gether, so most languages are just random sounds and random letters słæpt 2gether, which is why most of their words are non-pretty and funny-sounding or embarrassingly funny with very non-pretty word endings and letter combinations that aren’t a good letter combination! And, very few are / were capable of creating perfect and gorgeous languages with great letter combinations and pretty word endings that are a real work of art, such as English and Norse and Icelandic and Norwegian and Gothic the other Norse languages and Dutch and the modern Celtic languages, which are absolute perfection in almost every way, as creating such pretty languages requires a lot of natural artistic talent and having a mind on the logical side and having a good eye / ear for prettiness and harmonies and good pattern recognition skills and good observational skills and good analytical skills, and my protectors & I have the best of these skills and the supreme artistic talents, but I still cannot create a language that’s prettier than Norse / Icelandic / English / Dutch / Gothic, as they were already created by someone else, and it’s not possible to create a language that’s prettier than them!
@fullmetaltheorist9 ай бұрын
Here's my review 10/10 for usefulness 4/10 for difficulty 1/10 for consistency and structure It's the Swiss army knife of languages.
@navoneel9 ай бұрын
Here's my review 1/10 - Uniqueness 6/10 - Aesthetics 3/10 - "Passionate in learning" 2/10 - Logical Spellings 3/10 - Difficulty 5/10 - Mastery/Fluency (for Non Native Speakers) 2/10 - Cool 4/10 - Uniqueness 4/10 - Transformative (as in useful to learn and take guide in learning newer language) 7/10 - Pop Influence 10/10 - Loot experts.
@NotFine8 ай бұрын
@@navoneelim just gonna average your uniqueness score to 2.5
@jonathanmangum43477 ай бұрын
@@navoneelI‘d rate English‘s aesthetica lower. It’s not the most beautiful language in the world
@crypticlol3 ай бұрын
@@jonathanmangum4347 Nah, I really like how English looks
@kumoric9 ай бұрын
Although us Brits won't scream and do backflips when you speak our language, we will when you pronounce any place name correctly. Especially with Birmingham, you really want to emphasize the 'h', making sure to pronounce every letter clearly, and how it's written
@LopsideMakes9 ай бұрын
Br’min’ahm.
@JessiIsHere9 ай бұрын
Worcester Gloucester
@mksushi57549 ай бұрын
@watcher2424 how does that Г work in Russian? wouldn't be unnecessary for pronunciation?
@FakenameStevens9 ай бұрын
We appreciate anyone who can say shire as sheer and don’t say war-cester for Worcester.
@mksushi57549 ай бұрын
@watcher2424 Unfortunately I'm not that good at Russian, but thanks to google translate I think I understand the question. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I think you're asking how to pronounce it in English. I speak American English so I pronounce it "Ber-meen-ham".
@52markin9 ай бұрын
His english is pretty good, seems like a native speaker.
@eltomy1089 ай бұрын
I would like a video about Czech language. I don't speak it, but it sounds amazing 🥰
@lordgianni34409 ай бұрын
10:43 Fun Fact: While yes, the plural of fish is fish, it is also fishes. The difference being, that two fish means, there are two of the same kind, while two fishes are two of different kinds
@clock350512 күн бұрын
We say “fishes”?
@Murmilone9 ай бұрын
I've never heard of the English language before but now I'm going to learn it.
@HurlentalamaisonHilyavait4 ай бұрын
ahaa therefore you are speaking japanese 😂😂
@lexiesanders9299 ай бұрын
I hated English when it was taught in school, my level was 0. Then I studied it for fun quite successfully. And yes, it takes up too much brain space, I started forgetting my native words😂
@abarette_9 ай бұрын
same except I probably still hate English, fuck modal verbs and fuck stress and fuck vowel length. interrogative are also done in the stupidest way possible, and 'can' has got to be the most aids-inducing verb ever, and I've yet to talk about the writing of it all. And yet I think in English from time to time (but it's making me lose braincells for sure)
@Mareterra769 ай бұрын
@@abarette_what is wrong with modal verbs or with 'can'? My native language is Italin and both modal verbs and the way you use can in english can be traced back 1 to 1 to italian counterparts. What's your native language, and how does it handle the couterpart of the english modal verbs?
@jan_Masewin9 ай бұрын
@@abarette_Heck, vowel length makes no sense to me as a native speaker. Apparently people are taught 'long i' and 'short i' when length is almost irrelevant
@JolivoHY99 ай бұрын
thank god i thought i was the only one who sometimes forgets words from his native language
@robertjenkins61329 ай бұрын
@@jan_Masewin Oh, I was wondering what they were talking about with the "vowel length" (Japanese?). But yeah, the tongue is in a different position. [i] and [ɪ] is their ы (troublesome vowel(s)). [θ] and [ð] is their р, or trilled [r] (troublesome consonant(s) (at least it is for me)).
@berserkmoment9 ай бұрын
5:52 as a Canadian, this is 100% accurate
@Kirqos9 ай бұрын
The true gigachad move is to learn English so you can use it to learn Uzbek.
@hqer2k99 ай бұрын
Next language Fiji please. Would be really cool to see something that is not as common. Thanks for the great work. Enjoying your videos a ton!🎉
@YHWHthe19 ай бұрын
As a non-native english speaker. Everyone in my school when learning English, we called American English, English Simplified.
@kevinb22089 ай бұрын
That’s exactly what it should be called! 😅
@Purwapada9 ай бұрын
english traditional vs english simplified lol!
@YHWHthe19 ай бұрын
@@Purwapada wut
@allesindwillkommen9 ай бұрын
As a linguist, I can confirm that the General American pronunciation is often a lot easier for foreign learners than the British Received pronunciation or most other accents in the UK.
@YHWHthe19 ай бұрын
@@allesindwillkommen plus spelling with extra u's n stuff
@Dsamuell9 ай бұрын
If English wasn't the universal language it would be fr*nch. We live in the best timeline
@ProfessionalBedwetter9 ай бұрын
Why the hell was french bleeped
@tizgerard_98169 ай бұрын
As an Italian language student, German needed more glory too imho
@deanal-jackson45939 ай бұрын
@@tizgerard_9816german came close to becoming the official language of the US btw
@ravneetsingh229 ай бұрын
@@ProfessionalBedwettercoz it's a slur in English
@beanapprentice16879 ай бұрын
at least french spelling makes some sense
@Flying_Coon9 ай бұрын
When you learn english its like a whole new world just opened up
@crypticlol3 ай бұрын
As a Brazilian, I still feel that exact way
@Dana-qx2wo9 ай бұрын
Hello, I would like to share my experience. I am originally from Kazakhstan, which is located in Central Asia. I am 25 years old and I recently started learning English on my own. I am interested in it, I want to learn it to level B. Before that I had experience in studying the Russian language. It was much easier and faster for me, since there were native speakers nearby and accessible materials for practice. But even so I had problems because the languages are different. Kazakh belongs to the type of agglutinative languages, archaic, and not too susceptible to modernization. The Russian language is inflexive, and more susceptible to globalization, it has a lot of international words, which just makes learning English easier for me.There are similarities and differences between languages. In both Kazakh and Russian there were only three tenses. Past, present and future. Just great. The difference was noticeable in only two things. The first is the generic designation of men and women in the Russian language, its absence in Kazakh. Prepositions and articles in the Russian language, without which it is impossible to construct a sentence, and its absence in Kazakh. Over time, you get used to this difference and find this phenomenon interesting. How cool, we are so different, it’s even nice.But here I am learning English. And I notice a HUGE difference in the form of this time, there are too many of them. Time changes a certain word into an absolutely different one. Its phonetic sound, the graphic designation of "miscellaneous", so that it is one word, becomes several words. The English language doesn't even explain to me why this is so? Where are the rules of the language, where is the logic? She just dictates that I learn all the words at once!😂😂😂 They say 3000 words level B. I'm shocked. Seriously? I already know 3000-4000 English words, but I can only construct a basic dialogue, and I will not always understand what was answered. Official data says that the English language contains 170,000 words. And the average vocabulary of English speakers is 20,000-50,000 words. The conclusion is that polyglots are very smart people. As a teacher, I assure you that 3000 words are suitable for the level of children 4-5 years old. And children are very, very stupid. It turns out we are also stupid with our basic level of English.
@ΒασίληςΒλάχος-τ3κ2 ай бұрын
The grammar of a language does not make it "archaic" or "modern" if it's simple, that is a harmful way to think about languages
@hosseinhj90569 ай бұрын
I speak fluent English but i don't remember ever learning it or trying to, just every movie, game, show, label and basically everywhere i look, there's English My brain just magically absorbed it
@jaunjarloss60886 ай бұрын
just like how I’m American and there’s a lot of Spanish speakers here so it’s the easiest language for me to learn can’t imagine how easy it must be for foreigners to learn English
@thehapagirl92Ай бұрын
@@jaunjarloss6088Same. I’m a native English speaker but born and raised in SoCal so Spanish comes easily to me. I’m learning French and it’s not easy
@vaughanlewis9779 ай бұрын
As someone from Liverpool I can confirm that the Scouse accent is the easiest to understand and imitate
@1Know1tHurts9 ай бұрын
"I will knoKHKHKHHKHK you out!"
@deanal-jackson45939 ай бұрын
The ugliest too ngl
@vaughanlewis9779 ай бұрын
nailed it @@1Know1tHurts
@bigtombowski9 ай бұрын
Liverpool, where you drive to town and bus it home.
@lxportugal93439 ай бұрын
I hava no ideia people say it's dificult... I completly understood the Beatles 🙂
@andyman3019 ай бұрын
Fishes is another plural of fish, but it only works if you're referring to a group of different kinds of fish
@Tiaa2976 ай бұрын
Your English for an American is so advanced, the way you spoke it through out the entire video is just so impressive.
@mihai75589 ай бұрын
10:57 I wonder if the old word "Thou" has the same origins as "Tu" (romanian, portuguese, french). In romanian it's also the informal version, the formal version is a much longer word "dumneavoastră", often abbreviated as "dvs." or "d-voastră" in written form.
@kbm20559 ай бұрын
Yes, it goes back to proto-European and has cognates in the other descending language families also (like Balto-Slavic, etc.)
@私-r9p9 ай бұрын
I've been studying American for 1.5 years... Thank you for promoting English, I'm gonna try to learn it, too!
@Maxime_K-G9 ай бұрын
If you want to maximize your default languages you need to spawn on the Dutch side near the Belgian language border from immigrant parents. That way you automatically unlock Dutch, French, English, whatever native language your parents speak and German if you just learn how to pronounce their letters, some basic words and phrases.
@yasinjafari96956 ай бұрын
Basically Me and you too?
@Maxime_K-G6 ай бұрын
@@yasinjafari9695 I know a guy like that. But me not sadly.
@SurfTheSkyline9 ай бұрын
You can get by in English without getting around to getting into the more obscure phrasal verbs so no need to get down on yourself if you don't always get them, but once you get through the early stages (hopefully without letting the stranger ones get to you) and get over initial points of confusion (like how it is that I can get away with get getting used so often in this comment) you'll get to get a load of the reactions that others will have to your new "get" at get togethers with native speakers who may have gotten used to you not using phrasal verbs. Maybe you'll even get along with them better because you'll have gotten more confident and outgoing! What I am getting at is getting ahead on phrasal verbs is something to get in on before time gets away from you that you will get a lot out of. You'll be glad you did once you have gotten past it. P.S. there might be errors in there I missed, that got painful to proofread.
@prabhatkiran32266 ай бұрын
I don't get what you are getting at but I will eventually get there hopefully without getting into much trouble and when I get there, I will get here and we will get ourselves some beer but for now, I really need to get going.
@StarstreakHVM9 ай бұрын
Every language needs content like this
@TransistorLSD9 ай бұрын
1:43 MLP на английском с субтитрами это как раз то, как я начинал учить английский. MLP with subtitles is exactly how i started learning English like 10 years ago.
@crypticlol3 ай бұрын
MLP without subtitles is how I tested my fluency in English
@ZoveRen9 ай бұрын
3:21 Bro became Drew Durnil 💀
@2yldy9 ай бұрын
LOL FR
@komizalotoАй бұрын
Yooooooooo
@thomasnelson61619 ай бұрын
This is all the cultural validation I'll ever need.
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
English is one of the prettiest and best languages ever made like Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / Norwegian / Gothic etc, and all should be learning English and the other prettiest languages ever, which should be the universal languages - this review is ns and it isn’t based on truth and facts, as are most other reviews, so learners should never choose based on reviews and recommendations, since most aren’t fair or factual! Besides, English is English, no such thing as American, and those are just accents, which are different, depending on the region, but the language itself is only one, and it is the Modern English language, which is the easiest and most practical language ever created in every way, and it is also one of the prettiest ever, so all should be learning English to a writer level or at least to a native speaker level! There is also no such thing as ‘culture’ and ppl are just misusing that term, and, culture is all about nature if it exists, it doesn’t have anything to do with groups of ppl!
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
By the way, there are actually over 3 billion speakers of English, if one includes the ones that speak it at a B1 or B2 level aka the intermediates, and, all ppl are the exact opposite of ‘royalty’ and are just an avrg citizen made to obey the avrg citizen’s laws and rules, as everyone else, and I am THE only Royalty aka the pure / superior being, and my pure protectors aka the alphas too, and I also am the only girl / feminine being, and réłationships are only meant for us pure beings (me & the pure protectors) and were never meant for ppl, and there must be a distance between all ppl at all times and no śÿnńing, and one should never learn languages to ‘get x or y’ etc, it’s literally the most efd non-reason to learn anything, and the right reasons to learn languages are for their pretty and poetic words, so all should only learn the pretty languages for their pretty words and for their pretty sounds etc, which is the wise thing to do and the key to being a successful polyglot, as one naturally learns the prettier and more distinctive words faster, which makes pretty languages the easiest languages ever!
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
English IS a Germanic language, not a Latin language, since it sounds and looks 100% Germanic, and English has the most logical spelling and pronunciation rules, which is why it sounds AND looks awesome and serious and professional, as the creator of English was a true linguist that knew that the pronunciation of each word must be decided based on what sounds best for each word, which is why rough is pronounced with an F sound, as it should! Technically, all the pretty languages that are well-constructed have words that are spellt the same and pronounced differently, and also, words that are spellt differently and pronounced the same, and, they even have words with multiple meanings etc, which is what makes the languages more fun and more diverse, and, learners are supposed to actively learn each word with its pronunciation and spelling, just as natives did passively, which is the right way to learn pretty languages! Germanic languages come from Latin, anyway, and where most words directly or indirectly come from doesn’t make the language what it is, it’s the word endings and the letter combinations and the sound patterns and the combination of sounds and the pronunciation rules etc that make a language what it is, and any true linguist would know these facts, so a language could have only words from Latin, but if its letter combinations and its word endings for verbs and nouns and adjectives etc and its sound patterns etc are Germanic, it is a Germanic language one hundred percent, as the words are modified into Germanic words, which means that words that come from Latin are no longer Latin, once the new word endings and letter combinations or the new pronunciation rules etc are applied, which turn them into Germanic words!
@FrozenMermaid6669 ай бұрын
Besides, Germanic languages come from Latin, anyway, so it makes sense that they have tons of cognates with Latin languages, and they aren’t loanwords usually - Slavic languages also come from Latin, and, even the modern Celtic languages come mostly from Latin and Norse, which is why the modern Celtic languages are so pretty and elvish and give off strong Norse / Dutch / English / Germanic vibes and have mostly words that come from Latin and Norse and English!
@thomasnelson61619 ай бұрын
@@FrozenMermaid666 if you say so
@lhzmusic39 ай бұрын
As a Brazilian boy who has been learning English since 2021, I can say that I didn't understand most of what he said at the 11:40 minute. Btw something curious about Brazilian people is that most of them wish they could speak English "like a native English speaker", then I ask them "Okay, but native from where?". And it is funny because most people here can learn English by only using the internet, reading, watching and listening to every kind of content in English. Well, I've done an English course, but I've started learning English when I was a kid, with music and pokémon being my big teachers. Anyways, being able to speak both Portuguese(my first language) and English is just amazing. I hope to learn at least one more language!!
@tigrafale46109 ай бұрын
tbh im english and havent heard "squirrel it away" before.
@killuad09 ай бұрын
as another brazilian learning from games and other social means since 2015 i never heard most of those too, but i can understand most
@fullmetaltheorist9 ай бұрын
Man. Do they count you as three people in the Brazilian census?@@killuad0
@user-nh7my6gg5b9 ай бұрын
English is the native language of England.
@killuad09 ай бұрын
@@fullmetaltheorist phone glitched the hell out xd imma delete the two other
@ddg63vxne3ghc9 ай бұрын
As a native Russian speaker, that was once chaned to the wall at my teacher's garage, I noticed that the word "thorough" is misspelled ЛОЛ (9:32)
@luisdawnfinder31889 ай бұрын
As a native English speaker it feels kind of sad that my native language isn't something cool and niche and unique like literally every other language on Earth rip
@siliconsulfide89 ай бұрын
Suggestion for the next language review: One of the Uralic languages of Europe (Finnish/Estonian/Hungarian), perhaps? Finnish might be the most talked about from these 3 and make more aspiring polyglots respect you, but Hungarian might unlock more DLC as well as _shock more natives_ (and be more distinct from the other two). It could be nice to see you talk about any of these three, though. :)
@Benethen_9 ай бұрын
yes please do hungarian i want to learn hungarian.
@belstar11289 ай бұрын
Hungarian is the best but Finnish impressed me i had low expectations .
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
All agglutinative languages are Uralic and come from the same Proto agglutinative language, pfff, and Hungarian is not similar to Finnish or Estonian at all - Hungarian is closely related to Turkish, not to Finnish!
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
English IS a Germanic language, not a Latin language, since it sounds and looks 100% Germanic, and English has the most logical spelling and pronunciation rules, which is why it sounds AND looks awesome and serious and professional, as the creator of English was a true linguist that knew that the pronunciation of each word must be decided based on what sounds best for each word, which is why rough is pronounced with an F sound, as it should! Technically, all the pretty languages that are well-constructed have words that are spellt the same and pronounced differently, and also, words that are spellt differently and pronounced the same, and, they even have words with multiple meanings etc, which is what makes the languages more fun and more diverse, and, learners are supposed to actively learn each word with its pronunciation and spelling, just as natives did passively, which is the right way to learn pretty languages! Germanic languages come from Latin, anyway, and where most words directly or indirectly come from doesn’t make the language what it is, it’s the word endings and the letter combinations and the sound patterns and the combination of sounds and the pronunciation rules etc that make a language what it is, and any true linguist would know these facts, so a language could have only words from Latin, but if its letter combinations and its word endings for verbs and nouns and adjectives etc and its sound patterns etc are Germanic, it is a Germanic language one hundred percent, as the words are modified into Germanic words, which means that words that come from Latin are no longer Latin, once the new word endings and letter combinations or the new pronunciation rules etc are applied, which turn them into Germanic words!
@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc80389 ай бұрын
I highly recommend learning the prettiest languages ever created Norse / Icelandic / Dutch / Norwegian / Gothic, which are as gorgeous / refined / poetic as English and way too pretty not to know, and also Welsh / Breton / Cornish etc, which are also gorgeous, 2gether with Hungarian - Hungarian is a pretty language, and it’s prettier than Finnish and Estonian, as it looks more Germanic, plus its prettiest words are comparable to Germanic words!
@rodrigoborges81509 ай бұрын
This is by far the best video of the serie.
@n3xus1909 ай бұрын
Now next would be Romanian. The best creative and flexible swearing system after turkish
@dragthemallet8 ай бұрын
You should do a mega episode of the 3 Nordic Languages. Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian.
@HilaryPierpoint-jz8ti5 ай бұрын
As a Pittsburgher I was thrilled to see you include “yinz” as a term for “all of yunz”. 😂 I’m trying to learn Russian is how I came across your YT. Спасибо for your videos. They are funny af.
@Mtk0009 ай бұрын
Geralmente as pessoas falam que "Saber inglês é o suficiente para ir para qualquer lugar", entretanto não é o suficiente para "manter uma boa conversa". Geralmente é melhor saber a língua nativa do local do que inglês. Inglês é mais interessante para assuntos acadêmicos, reuniões formais e criação de conteúdo, principalmente online. Acontece que se eu vou para a Itália, preciso saber italiano caso queira ter boas relações com as pessoas. Então: "Native language > Any supporting language"
@mortis78519 ай бұрын
I absolutely love your videos, I can't watch a single one without bursting out laughing
@PolyglotMouse9 ай бұрын
As a native American speaker who learns languages as a hobby, i definitely did not spawn on easy mode as certain natives will switch to English when I speak, although it doesnt happen often. Great skibidi rizzy fanum tax ohio zyzz creatine ice spice dogwater alpha male baby gronk and livvy dunn sus bussin gyatty video! 🎉
@Goldarlives9 ай бұрын
Rizzed up by Livvy skibidi no Mr.Beast
@wannabepolyglot15849 ай бұрын
i think i just had a stroke reading that last sentence
@Blind_Hawk9 ай бұрын
Please review Finnish.
@TheRealFlubber5 ай бұрын
Magyarul
@Ecanllo5 ай бұрын
You have my 100% support, I'm voting for you now.
@shyguymike9 ай бұрын
As a non-native English speaker, English is the best language I could have ever asked for and I am infinitely glad that it became the world’s international language. The international communication is way too useful to give up for the sake of something as silly as “language diversity”. Not to mention, English is already beautiful. Certainly better than Fr*nch.
@シミズルリ9 ай бұрын
1:41 I did, in fact, learn English to watch My Little Pony in it's original language, and I feel called out. But it was worth it, because this language unlocked ridiculous amounts of content throughout the Internet.
@vivies29 ай бұрын
I can relate, even if certain content should've remained blocked for the sake of my mental health lol 😔✋
@enmanuel19509 ай бұрын
Learning English has made me a lazy language learner now putting the work of learning an entire new language just to unlock less than 1/10th of the DLC you get when learning English just doesn't seem worth it.
@vivies29 ай бұрын
@@enmanuel1950 Yeah, but in the other hand no one is considered cool for knowing English 😔
@dumbalek60019 ай бұрын
I actually learned English cause i just liked it and wanted to understand the internet 👉👈 so even if like. School forces you to learn a language you can find your fun in it.
@righteousflame50309 ай бұрын
OMG SAME
@MeshDy9 ай бұрын
OMG I PREDICTED THE BETTERHELP SPONSOR LIKE 15 SECONDS BEFORE HE EVEN MENTIONED THERAPY.
@onemonthskill9 ай бұрын
I am one of the few native speakers from the void next to Australia. Thank you for showcasing our beautiful langauge
@marqueneshanleypasa95489 ай бұрын
As a Filipino, English is always mother tongue for me when I was young and it's more like native speaker. And also for me, at October in 2023. I always use to amend dictionary words and take notes in paper, since for me in last many years when I can't ambiguous and avail the words to myself from story in lesson. At October 2023, I keeping starting through my acknowledge in words from dictionary. And I also keeping comprehensive the words through my adrift and arbiter mind. And start create essay and poem in creating through my own as a bliss, blithe, and benignant. So for 5 languages for me. I still keep learn through my advancing; instead, after class subject.
@xXxSkyViperxXx9 ай бұрын
i SeE thoust knoweth thy ǽ̨̨̖̱̥̱̭̗̗̱̥̑̊́̀ŋ̨̯̗̖̰̥̰̭́́̃̊̀̉ĺ̖̮̗̲́̃̄̇̉̄̃́̀ì̖̗̭̲̰̖̰̱̲̮̮̀̂̅̑̆̇̈̉̉̃̀s̗̮̣̖̯̮̣̯̰̭̀̀́̂̃̄̅̑̈̃̈h̨̨̖̲̯̮̤̱̰̭̀̀́́̂̃̄̅̑̇k̖̗̭̰̱̲̯̮̀́̂̃̄̅̆
@gergopelyvas86659 ай бұрын
@@xXxSkyViperxXx *thou knowest thine
@komizalotoАй бұрын
Lol sana all nalang boss hahaha balik balikan lang ng lenguwahe ahahahha
@Xeem_Pad9 ай бұрын
1:16 why did the USA invade Canada on this map💀
@brunocalixto74499 ай бұрын
I really was expecting him to make a British accent the whole video kkkkkkkmk
@gagecooper2889 ай бұрын
I think English is widely spoken becuase of the influence of certain attributes makes it little easier for alot of crowds. Since it has Celtic influence and Latin influence and even Germanic and I think Greek as well. This happened over time obviously and the British colonization initiated global influx of world wide speakers with knowledge about the English languages.
@kirilvelinov77748 ай бұрын
How to pronounce the Fen TV logo Ф:pronounced like Gh in Enough Е:pronounced like A_es in Thames(the S is silent like in French) Н:pronounced like Gn in Bologna Ghagnes TV
@virtualdhruv35579 ай бұрын
As an Indian it is very important to Learn English in India to get a high paying job. Just because of English Language other native languages are side lined and it is sad to see people in India prioritize English not other languages to be learnt. 😶 Although I would say that English is universal language to connect with people and understand others.😵💫
@beyondobscure9 ай бұрын
11:57 I rizz, we rizz, he, she, they, rizzes. It's first grade, Spongebob!
@pinkdragon48309 ай бұрын
9:59 B-barn…? OH NOT THAT FUC-
@intellect_junction699 ай бұрын
I said farm
@DEEPWEB-.-9 ай бұрын
it's about time somebody pointed this out man.. it's about time..
@MarcosGabrielSantosRocha9 ай бұрын
The beauty of English, since everybody learns it, is that it has the power to connect communities from all over the world. I'm from Brazil, fluent in English, and learning German as my third language. I've used Tandem a lot before getting the C1 level and I could learn a lot from a lot of different people coming from very unique cultural backgrounds. There were rooms where literally everybody was from a different country, but we could maintain a meaninful conversation and understand ourselves through English. And, at least in my opinion, since the main purpose for learning a new language is communication and cultural enrichment, English does a really well and unique job at it 🇧🇷🇺🇸🇩🇪
@ConchOutOfWater9 ай бұрын
Yeah agreed, really the only point of a language is to facilitate communication, which English does better than any other language. This isn't really just because of the merits of the language itself as it is because of colonial history, although you could make the argument that the myriad of loanwords makes it somewhat more accessible to a wider audience, and that you can still be understood despite making lots of mistakes. Should be gigachad tier for becoming the de facto language of the world regardless
@crypticlol3 ай бұрын
funny how this video somehow bring it up so many Brazilians lmao
@nahin19689 ай бұрын
truly an English moment of all time
@kirflickers18069 ай бұрын
I'm learning English language because those medieval iterations sound badass. The modern one is OK. Also, computer science.
@Lemonsh4rkk9 ай бұрын
i actually love these reviews
@PC_SimoАй бұрын
1:30 As a farmer from Pyongyang, who only ever heard the Kim-family’s official and objective truth, I can confirm that we love the USA & the American government, here, in the DPRK 🇰🇵❤🇺🇸.
@JoaoEscudeiro9 ай бұрын
That was the video I've been waiting for. Great review from a native english speaker perspective. If it's weird for you, can you imagine how it is for us as english learners? English may be confusing so times. Honestly, the most of the time this language doesn't make any sense, but we are forced to learn otherwise we wouldn't be able to talk to anyone else out of our native country.
@adixxx30569 ай бұрын
I agree with every point made and the ranking. I just wish that English wasn't the "main" language and that there instead was a greater value on learning other languages
@danwhite78949 ай бұрын
This is actually an awesome video
@onionboi62539 ай бұрын
Spoke the entire video in English!! 😁👏👏 Amazing accent. Live from The Holy See.
@quinn22609 ай бұрын
I love the fact that you put Taylor on your thumbnail ,as a swiftie,I clicked as fast as I can😂As a non-native English speaker,Taylor is the reason why I fall in love with English again❤
@Lingua.Bailey9 ай бұрын
Damn how he dropped in the Better Help shpeel… lol.. so smooth, didn’t even notice the pitch straight off!
@bananenmusli27699 ай бұрын
Loved this video about Southern Cypriot!
@Mateuszt8569 ай бұрын
C'est bien que tu as mis un symbol français sur le thumbnail 🇫🇷🥖
@dojohansen123Ай бұрын
I expect all natively English-speaking visitors to speak Norwegian. Just to let them experience briefly what it's like for the rest of us.
@ferasalrefai1811Ай бұрын
2:33 I couldn't agree more. Actually I envy the English native speaker they took it so easy.
@EvGamerBETA9 ай бұрын
Hey, Language Simp, since you got acustomed to Russian, you might have noticed the similarities between additional words you add at the end of the verb to change it's meaning in English (like, "up", "down", "out", "in", "across") and Russian verb prefixes (like "под", "с", "вы", "в" and "пере"). like "walk IN" и "Входить". Japanese language have similar stuff with verb pairs So it's really not hard to imagine not native understanding those word combinations, since this kind of verb modification appears somehow in some way in a other languages too