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@thaipro103 ай бұрын
You said in your video that north Korean language is so important and now your are saying I will not learn Korean do you have a memory problem?
@peacefullyok3 ай бұрын
@@thaipro10He said he wished there was more resource for North Korean Korean. Did you not watch the entire thing?
@lukaeror43853 ай бұрын
Can you please play languageguessr again?
@n_asmo3 ай бұрын
fart
@RunaLaila-o2n3 ай бұрын
When you gonna learn bengali❤❤🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
@kfitch423 ай бұрын
Oh, please don't be ridiculous, Korean doesn't just throw "smida" (습니다) at the end of every sentence.... sometimes they mix it up with a "hamnida"(합니다)!
@sobakakustovsky39093 ай бұрын
It depends on the politeness level.
@Tessa_Gr3 ай бұрын
But that's only for formal speech. If you're talking politely it's even just "-yo" (요) at the end of every sentence, even imperative and inquisitive!
@igorbegpines61793 ай бұрын
Bro you just proved he's right
@gentleken78643 ай бұрын
습니다 and 합니다 are just formal endings for statements. You hear them in announcements and formal work settings but you'd use them rarely when with friends or work colleagues. Also as a foreigner, as long as you stick a '요' or a '세요) on the end of sentences, you'll be fine. I've been here for a while and have a decent grasp of changing my speaking in certain occasions, but it's really not that hard. Although, to be a 3.1 or 3.2 level in Korean is kind of pointless for day to day stuff.
@JulianaLimeMoon3 ай бұрын
@@igorbegpines6179 That was the joke.
@angryyordle46403 ай бұрын
My girlfriend is indian. She's not a native hindi speaker, but even in her language I've noticed absurd levels of code switching to english when she speaks with her family. It really is like they're speaking two languages at once.
@Real_life_anime.3 ай бұрын
Wow
@tunatuna872 ай бұрын
@@IndianKat huh? Please add the disclaimer that this is your own personal theory for the rationale! There’s certainly no established study that evidences this!
@IndianKat2 ай бұрын
@@tunatuna87 what is your local language? Let's test it with yours. What I said is true in practicality.
@9ine-fd6zc2 ай бұрын
@@tunatuna87say what you said in PURE HINDI and see if it feels comfortable enough for you to communicate what you are saying in pure Hindi so the other person can understand
@IdealEdittt2 ай бұрын
@@IndianKat i agree with you
@reny622 ай бұрын
9:00 that's because as a hindi speaker i can tell that most spoken language in india is not hindi but hinglish, which is like hindi+english. that's mainly because in india most of us get English medium education, most of the books in schools are written in english and teachers explain them in hindi so from childhood we get used to use both hindi and english together. local languages are used for normal conversation and english for technical terms, so u will always find people using a mixture of their local language + english in india. pure hindi is actually difficult for us as well, moreover when u talk about people coming up with different translations of same line in hindi, that's because in hindi itself there are several dialects with different words for same thing. i mean yes u can easily understand all other dialects if u know one, but u must know one of them in the first place.
@inamurrahmansir94712 ай бұрын
I am from India and i belong to Generation Z but I am proud I can speak both خالص فصیح زبان اردو शुद्ध संस्कृत युक्त हिंदी भाषा۔ हमारे देश की युवा पीढ़ी को हमारी संस्कृति और सभ्यता का स्वरक्षण करना चाहिए
@anindyasundarmanna66832 ай бұрын
@@inamurrahmansir9471 ❤
@Lord-Aizen_992 ай бұрын
I'm from West Bengal but I can speak Hindi, while speaking English I also use english Words. Cuz We don't know lots of Hindi.
@EpicBunty2 ай бұрын
@@inamurrahmansir9471 you being able to speak multiple local languages is not gonna "protect the civilization" let alone the "culture". culture evolves. one has to move with the times. no need to overly pat yourself in the back and make a big deal out of it. your comment reminds me of those cringe comments under music videos "I am xx years young but I like to listen to this old music instead of hannah montana/justin beiber!" like good job dude. surely you are protecting our culture. as if our culture is all in a language.
@Hero_himmel2 ай бұрын
Abe tujhe hindi nahi aati to kya mujhe hindi aati hai, aur ustaad ji hinglish wo hai jis script me main ye text likh raha hun
@pesteeeeegdАй бұрын
the fact a portuguese guy got so mad because you just didnt like european portuguese just makes them portugueses even funnier to me LOL
@rickbolado467214 күн бұрын
Nossos amiguinhos portugueses não conseguem superar o fato de que a gente melhorou demais o português. Todo mundo sabe disso menos eles.
@andremendes85698 күн бұрын
It was a joke video...
@Science_Atrium3 күн бұрын
@@rickbolado4672 "Melhorar" não é a palavra certa.
@adamam597713 сағат бұрын
The video was made after a joke bro
10 сағат бұрын
@@rickbolado4672 felicidades de 🇵🇹😘
@AbanDaFish3 ай бұрын
'Bulgarian's not depressing enough for me'
@Kaz-sg1ih3 ай бұрын
Nice photo of Bulgaria
@HuckleberryHim3 ай бұрын
Man has clearly never been to Bulgaria
@DanSolo8713 ай бұрын
At my age, Bulgarian would be the first Slavic language I’d try from the Slavic languages. And I have Czech ancestry. I do agree if you choose a Slavic language, you pick one using the Cyrillic script.
@dungeontnt3 ай бұрын
Try Macedonian @@DanSolo871
@huskytailАй бұрын
@@HuckleberryHim why? Where in Bulgaria have you been?
@TerminalAddict3 ай бұрын
As a native Hindi speaker the reason why some people randomly switch to English while speaking Hindi is that they don't even know the equivalent sentence in Hindi, it might shock you but some Hindi speakers don't even know how to count in Hindi. I used to be like that too then I had to learn all of that, I really feel ashamed that many native Hindi speakers don't understand their own language
@Forgerlegacy3 ай бұрын
It's because of the Indian schooling system which is more focused towards English rather than their native language
@LoveYourself-my9nz3 ай бұрын
It's because most Hindi speakers have different regional languages. India is a very diverse country and therefore everything is very diverse here, even language there's no such thing as pure language here at least. Pure language sounds so robotic to us.
@jiminies3 ай бұрын
@@LoveYourself-my9nzthat is not the reason even though it is true, regional languages aren't the reason why hindi speakers don't know the basics of their language.
@OfficialTheFury3 ай бұрын
@@Forgerlegacy Not only in school but everywhere wheather its a job interview or work in offices, etc they just want us to speak in English even all the official paper work is done in English due to which after learning intermidiate Hindi we stop learning it and focus more on English
@Itsmeadi83 ай бұрын
Yeah I don’t think I know anyone who knows how to speak in pure Hindi, everyone talks in hinglish.
@matthewkendrick82803 ай бұрын
I can’t believe he actually said Hindi and not Indian
@Vanswock3 ай бұрын
then said american and not english
@avenov3 ай бұрын
Fr
@sanaxluv80363 ай бұрын
@@DahyunCuteCat The difference is inaccuracy
@Lilac_liha3 ай бұрын
@@DahyunCuteCat Bcz in India not everyone speaks Hindi. Especially in the south
@peterii35123 ай бұрын
@@Lilac_liha that’s like saying because not everybody speaks Spanish in Spain we shouldn’t call the language Spanish. There’s also Occitan, Breton, Basque in France too, should we stop calling French French?
@RYAN-fv1qr2 ай бұрын
The Indian education system is pretty messed up when it comes to teaching languages. On one hand, schools keep telling us to speak only in English, but the reality is that hardly anyone actually does. Even most teachers, except the Hindi teacher, don’t always speak in English. This creates a weird situation where we don’t really get to practice English enough. And then there's Hindi, which feels like it’s pushed aside. The system treats English as more important, so we just study Hindi to pass exams rather than really learn it. What makes it even harder is that Hindi has so many different forms and dialects. That just adds more confusion, especially when we try to speak it properly. So, we end up not being great at either language-our English isn’t polished, and our Hindi feels half-baked. The system just focuses so much on English that Hindi becomes something we cram for exams, not something we really understand or use well. It’s frustrating because we don’t end up mastering either language, and that leaves us feeling stuck somewhere in the middle. literally just ask any indian what we call 68 or 76 or 87 in Hindi , half of them cant answer it
@induchopra30142 ай бұрын
Hindi itself is spoken in no particular state. It evolved in delhi , up it has lot of sanskrit Persian arabic turkish mix. Every area has its own language like hindi but not hindu. India is not France or Spain. We have pretty diverse spectrum of languages. Purity is not important,communication is. Hindi is still evolving fast. Its picking up English words now. Pure literature people speak it beautifully,rest is intrest. All use it in their own way. Purity or standardization is not important..English of England and America are not same. That doesn't stop anyone from learning English. Language has a practical use. Foreigners learn hindi to shop, assimilate, be accepted. They dont otherwise. We try our English in France Spain when we fail we try their language. Its all about need. Sonia after 50 years couldn't speak, Karl Rock picked up in a week. People do follow leaders. Govt. Our new breed of leaders are fluent in hindi. So people getting aware. The language spoken in a family is the real language and its never English. Never. Its only only for work, outside.
@siddhirbhavatikarmjaАй бұрын
@@induchopra3014 but that's the problem for everyone See code switching can be a common thing among people as they interact with hindi and both mutually understand English But people exaggerate it for looking cool forcefully code switching in middle of nothing frustrates
@AnshumanLovesSpace26 күн бұрын
Now that's a lie l, (I am an Indian)all the kids in my age know Hindi only because they watched cartoons like Motu and Patlu so they can now, Speak Hindi fluently but I instead watched English cartoons like pepa pig, Masha and the bear so in resalt I can speak English fluently...
@siddhirbhavatikarmja26 күн бұрын
@@AnshumanLovesSpace dude literally problem is you don't know hindi That was the problem Not other way round
@riichobamin761226 күн бұрын
And then on top of that, for students of CBSE, even if they are from non-Hindi regions like the South or Northeast, we still have to learn Hindi (atleast in Hind belt you guys are native Hindi speakers).
@lifeofyama3 ай бұрын
This means Uzbek is still on the table! 😎
@doroschnk3 ай бұрын
Гордон Рамзи, это ты?
@ddashelixir3 ай бұрын
o'zbekistonga shon-shuhrat!
@idiosomatic52423 ай бұрын
AUATT
@SignsBehindScience3 ай бұрын
As-Salamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuhu from Pakistan
@SignsBehindScience3 ай бұрын
@@ddashelixirIn Urdu, Shan wa Shuhrat means glory and fame
@DIOFFF47473 ай бұрын
If this comment gets 1000 likes, I will start learning Polish
@Monoruso3503 ай бұрын
Do it
@K24120_3 ай бұрын
Do it
@morfy25813 ай бұрын
Let's go
@balkaba39273 ай бұрын
begging for likes imagine
@danilmalkoc3 ай бұрын
I'd learn polish only to rozumieć piasenku "gdzie jest biały węgorz"
@sststrАй бұрын
Hangul is shockingly easy to learn. It genuinely takes at most a few hours, much less if you are particularly good with writing systems. Or Tetris.
@SansTheSkeleton_8 күн бұрын
is it easy to learn Japanese too then?
@sststr8 күн бұрын
@@SansTheSkeleton_ No. Japan has three different writing systems, and they use all three of them all mixed in together seamlessly. But the biggest bother of the three is Kanji, which is basically just Chinese characters. So you have to learn the entirety of the Chinese writing system, already a daunting task in itself, and then learn two more writing systems on top of that.
@BattyBest7 күн бұрын
@@SansTheSkeleton_ No. Japanese orthography is the hardest of any not-conlang. Its a syllabary... which is fine... and another... thats kinda weird and obtuse for no reason... and then just all of chinese. Yup. Just all of chinese too. Actually, not just chinese, chinese in quadruplicate, because every kanji has 4 sets of pronounciations and usages depending native japanese pronounciation and meaning as well as random sampling of middle chinese that they tried to make official but failed upon. Did I also mention they randomly turn h's to p's and k's to g's and so on? And you just gotta memorize it for every single word? And that they also borrowed the incredibly fun and exciting counters system from chinese too? Fun times. Actually if you try to learn japanese, you'll find the language just constantly trolls you. What do you mean 3 particles for location? 4 ways to express "if"? Why the hell are all the counters irregular? What do you mean if I sound either too certain or too uncertain I sound rude? Why the hell does this language still kinda make sense regardless of all this?
@SansTheSkeleton_7 күн бұрын
@@BattyBest When I was trying to learn Japanese, I had only did hiragana, and was about to do katakana but I kinda gave up. At first I was thinking maybe I should learn a language that uses english as it's script, like German or spanish, but the more I've experienced things, I feel like either japanese or korean would be nice, tho I don't think south korea is that welcoming to foreigners that much, and idk if japan has such standards too, like idk if I even learn the language, that I'll be able to settle there
@BrokenDollyTV25 күн бұрын
I'm half korean and it is my first language. The writing is very easy to learn. Idk how hard it is to learn to speak though. The beauty of korean is that you can speak it in a very broken form and get your thoughts across. Dont have to be fluent to have conversations
@firenze647816 күн бұрын
I’m learning Japanese and Korean simultaneously and noticed a lot of similarities in sentences structure making both kind of a breeze despite being “ hardest languages for English speakers.”
@Bazroshan3 ай бұрын
I studied Hindi for a few years in the nineties. (I'm white British in spite of my handle). It has a regular verb system, a grammar easily grasped, and a fairly straightforward script. The problem is the order of ideas in a sentence. I agree that is is depressing that many Hindi speakers look down upon old-fashioned Hindi words, especially high-flown Sanskrit-based words, and prefer English words as if they were superior; e.g. anyone would say 'attack' but few would say 'aakraman'.
@Vagrankfdfklgfklnegf3 ай бұрын
hamla is decent enough, tbh. I don't think I'd ever say "Ukraine par attack ho gya". Though, one thing I absolutely hate is the lack of a standard Hindi keyboard layout that's available on all OSes and platforms.
@IndianKat2 ай бұрын
@@Vagrankfdfklgfklnegfwhat are you saying. Attack is more common in Hindi now than "hamla" or "aakraman". Most people around me now use "attack"
@reny622 ай бұрын
that's sadly because English is just used too much in India, from our schoolbooks to social media to official government documents to court judgements to everyday news and to almost everything else, all are written in English. so, people in India are actually reading more English than they read their local language which results in them replacing their local words with English words. the biggest factor of all in English medium teaching in schools.
@reny622 ай бұрын
@@IndianKat just change your name to englishkat not cuz u hate indian languages and india, i can tell after reading your other replies.
@IndianKat2 ай бұрын
@@reny62 Maybe truth hurts you my friend but accepting it is still any day better. Instead of getting angry at me, you should just see our education system Why do we study everything in English? I'm telling you, if the word "attack" is not yet common around you then it will be, eventually.
@kankankankankankankan3 ай бұрын
Never say never brother, i used to tell myself i would NEVER learn chinese, five years later im majoring in mandarin🤡
@Rooopy5663 ай бұрын
I told myself I would Never learn japanese but I do now ……
@heheboi6393 ай бұрын
@@Rooopy566same😅
@xyriumelement3 ай бұрын
yh now you have a username spamming 看, great
@kankankankankankankan3 ай бұрын
@@xyriumelement omg you noticed it!!! lol
@Vuden133 ай бұрын
Best resources to start learning mandarin?
@zerofkrz18473 ай бұрын
So, this means he HAS to learn Hungarian! Mashallah!
@elouanlahougue3 ай бұрын
No islam in Hungary! Magyar!
@mominsheikh57253 ай бұрын
@ArabianElectornicsoldier I think the first guy said it as satire. Muslims are pretty much everywhere but doesn't mean Islam in the mainstream way or as the societal norm.
@Venik753 ай бұрын
@@elouanlahougueforcément fallait que ce soit un français ; ferme ta gueule un peu
@youcefsiouda3 ай бұрын
@@elouanlahougue The ottoman kebabs hit you so hard back then You don't want it again
@elouanlahougue3 ай бұрын
@ArabianElectornicsoldier Not in Szlovákia))
@devinlamigo58182 ай бұрын
The irony about bulgaria/the bulgarian language is that it is where the cyrillic alphabet ( The script most often associated with Slavic languages such as Russian and Ukrainian) originated before being spread/adopted to the other Slavic languages.
@interneda982 ай бұрын
👆🏻
@Rudrakxh3 ай бұрын
timestamps of all languages: 0:58 korean 2:38 portuguese 5:22 bulgarian 7:07 hindi 10:38 afrikaans
@kahpyvara3 ай бұрын
*portuguese portuguese
@Rudrakxh3 ай бұрын
@@kahpyvara read correctly it's already written
@user-dp6gm8ky5p2 ай бұрын
mluvím česky
@WafaSenani2 ай бұрын
@@RudrakxhI think they meant portugal portuguese
@lucienoon72622 ай бұрын
for someone who claims to be a polyglot, he exudes too much linguistic ignorance for spewing his dislikes for these languages based on his dust particle in the universe level knowledge of each one
@Suedetussy3 ай бұрын
True about code switching in Hindi. It has happened to me several times that i‘ve watched KZbin videos and wondered whether people spoke English with a very heavy Indian accent, or whether it was Hindi and English mixed.
@Mehedi0fficial3 ай бұрын
Actually, in India, people believe that mixing Hindi and English makes them appear smarter or more sophisticated. And if someone speaks pure Hindi, they assume he is a countryman or illiterate.
@Catimixto3 ай бұрын
@@Mehedi0fficial indians should have more respect towards their culture, only by respecting yourself you'll get others to respect you as well
@தமிழோன்3 ай бұрын
It's sadly true for all the Indian languages. Thanks to the British colonisation, Indians ironically regard the English language as the symbol of sophistication. Mixing English in their language gives them the false impression that they belong to the "upper class". As you know, class hierarchy is really important for Indians. So English gives them the easy path to climb up the social hierarchy: speaking English + flaunting wealth = upper class. I heard that the English people mixed French in their language for similar reasons during the Norman rule in England. They regarded French as the language of the upper class. Similar thing is happening now in India.
@aviraice3 ай бұрын
This very true,I’m Bengali and I code-switch all the time,not for the reason the person mentioned above me☝🏾 it’s mainly because my parents taught me to talk like that
@HuckleberryHim3 ай бұрын
As Indo-European languages, they both can sound extremely similar. But if you listen closely there are subtle differences
@joaoemanuel74563 ай бұрын
As a Brazilian, I laughed so much at your mimic of Portugal’s accent. It’s literally like that 😂😂
@pelletrouge30323 ай бұрын
Fan do skank?
@Skill-Issue793 ай бұрын
Lol as a Portuguese he didn’t make enough sh sounds for my liking
@lxportugal93433 ай бұрын
@@Skill-Issue79 Temos que falar com o Want 😄
@Tealen3 ай бұрын
Foi bue engraçado, nao me ria assim tanto de um video de youtube ha tanto tempo. ainda que exagerado, a pronuncia tava tal e qual.
@mr-vet3 ай бұрын
As a polyglot myself (English, Spanish, French, Indonesian…learning Italian and Catalan; have dabbled in learning German-took 2 years in high school- and Japanese in the past), Portuguese to me sounds like a drunk Russian (or other Slavic country/language) trying to speak Spanish.
@ரக்ஷித்2007Ай бұрын
When I moved to Uttar Pradesh in 8th grade, I was shocked that most of my classmates didn't even know the whole Hindi alphabet, but obviously knew the English alphabet. While I knew Hindi, English and Tamil(my native language) alphabets since grade 1 or 2. Also, I was flabbergasted that many of them made really silly mistakes even in 10th grade like mixing up vowels like इ and ई, उ and ऊ; that our teacher had to take a few dictation tests. This shows the amount of dominance of English in India.
@TheShamelessTurtle3 ай бұрын
I love how he showed kazakhstan flag when he said russian language
@DSAhmed3 ай бұрын
Or talking about American using the flag of Liberia. A common mistake when posting Emojis.
@SuhbanIo3 ай бұрын
@@DSAhmed I don't think you understood the joke
@em0_cheet03 ай бұрын
i was looking for this comment lol
@nbayern70003 ай бұрын
I think Ukraine flag might just be inappropriate
@TheShamelessTurtle3 ай бұрын
@@danilmalkoc это специально было, он так же показал на флаг Либерий, когда говорил про США
@PolyglotMouse3 ай бұрын
That means you can still learn Basque-Icelandic Pidgin!
@danlewis54793 ай бұрын
Anyone who has heard of Basque-Icelandic Pidgin is cool in my books…. or a whaler from 1700 🤔
@HuckleberryHim3 ай бұрын
As a whaler conducting trade in the extreme north Atlantic, it's the obvious choice for me
@em-sf7me3 ай бұрын
Basque Algonquin?
@feigdarfrost3 ай бұрын
it is obvious one of the best choises! With this pidgin you can talk to Basque pirates and Scandinavian Black metalists, and get some start point for learning Basque-Algonquian pidgin and be friend with Algonquin fur traiders!
@tiredcatman73813 ай бұрын
@@danlewis5479I wish I were a whaler but my basque ancestors only gave me celiac disease
@dem0lished_3 ай бұрын
lol the hindi thing was so true cuz some people have different words for different ting due to different regional dialects. its so bad that even different cities that are just a couple dozen miles from each others have different dialect. still it was super fun and i would love to do it again!
@Pheoniex3 ай бұрын
Wow, that's sad and seems isolated sounding. The hindi language looks beautiful regardless. English is kind of like that too a little. Some people say pop instead of soda. Some people say chips instead of french fries... etc
@TheEnderPearl3 ай бұрын
@@Pheoniex there is standardized Hindi too, you just need the right teacher, most Hindi speakers grow up with a lot of English infused words so they are usually unaware of the real ones. not to mention the fact that modern Hindi is just Urdu written in a different script
@shadowking7733 ай бұрын
@@Pheoniex the thing is even though people have different dialects you can clearly understand every one of them if you know basic hindi, the words are the same but pronunciation is different
@beautiful_sky1113 ай бұрын
@@TheEnderPearlit's the other way around Urdu is hindi +Persian written in different script
@Pheoniex3 ай бұрын
@@TheEnderPearl Cool, that's interesting.
@kajfjd2 ай бұрын
Dude original hindi is much more tougher than english that's why we choose to mix english in the middle where we know it's hindi word will be much harder to say and will take more effort
@dr.strange1238 күн бұрын
Colonial mindset 🤷♂️
@niji_k3 ай бұрын
Korean, and an avid hater on K-pop here. The 'smida' thing is the result of something called honorifics. Basically, the way you talk changes if you're talking to a higher up or an elder person. This is a feature in pretty much most of the languages used in East Asia. Regarding North Korean Korean: it's pretty much the exact same thing to the South Korean one, but with some notable differences (ㄹ doesn't turn into ㄴ/ㅇ at the start of a word, drastically less frequent loan words from English, etc.) If you know one, you know at least 70% of the other.
@Thirty_Five3 ай бұрын
honorifics... how it feels to accidentally disrespect someone's entire bloodline because you didn't say 있음니다
@themistake89043 ай бұрын
I think that Korean should get rid of ㄹ in its alphabet.
@Thirty_Five3 ай бұрын
@@themistake8904 huh whar why
@niji_k3 ай бұрын
@@themistake8904 username checks out ㄹ is the best character in the language, you can just write a zigzag/squiggle that just loosely resembles ㄹ and it'll be acceptable, how cool is that?
@GarryBoyer3 ай бұрын
Curious, what about ㅐ/ㅔ? In South Korean I can barely (if at all?) hear the difference
@Haruki-_3 ай бұрын
Korean is pretty hard but King Sejong did a pretty gigachad move inventing hangeul, it’s literally made to be so easy that everyone, no matter the social class, would be able to learn it. And he did it with backlash from China and the other nobles.
@KoreanlearningChannel-bc2cb2 ай бұрын
I love Hanguel. Logic, smart, VERY easy to learn. And for dyslectic people an easy writing system as well.
@OTC-k1o2 ай бұрын
There is nothing about Hangeul that is easier than other alphabets.
@Burn-8482 ай бұрын
"세종대왕" he is chinese
@KoreanlearningChannel-bc2cb2 ай бұрын
@@OTC-k1o You can read Hangeul? It is very easy to learn. Very.
@SweetMelodies_Official2 ай бұрын
@@OTC-k1o Hangeul has only small numbers of alphabets and consonants, little letter combinations, the grammar rules are also much simpler than some languages.
@toyotaa903 ай бұрын
0:11 bro really did the derp face 💀
@User_chan5392 ай бұрын
HOWD HE DO THAT i can cross my eyes if I want to but that's???
@DerFilc2 ай бұрын
@@User_chan539 He has a natural squint / eye condition, so he can make it look more intense.
@Seevawonderloaf2 ай бұрын
Omg that’s so skilful
@yunaonsecret4 күн бұрын
as a brazilian, we claim you.
@DasOmen023 ай бұрын
As someone who couldn't choose between Korean or Japanese, since I had initially started learning Korean with my ex, I'm taking this as my sign to become the weaboo I always knew I could be! Also not wanting to learn Afrikaans is valid tbh, if I were to learn an African language it'd easily be a click language. Also funnies aside, I do appreciate that you're still respectful to all languages in this video :) except conlangs, fokka conlangs
@davimag20713 ай бұрын
Japanese is awesome and so pretty my dude, Go for It!
@Rooopy5663 ай бұрын
Same here i can’t choose Korean or Japanese , im already knew lots of Korean words and grammars and speakin as 10% , but still i want to choose one
@kakahass88453 ай бұрын
@@davimag2071 Yeah, I'm still mad he put it in the dogwater tier just because some learners are cringe. It's language review not speaker review!
@kakahass88453 ай бұрын
@@Rooopy566 Ok can you voluntarily and consistently lower your larynx? If not then Japanese is better. Korean has a set of sounds made by lowering your larynx and they distinguish words.
@Rooopy5663 ай бұрын
@@kakahass8845 i notied that n i saw korean is better for me n im already learnd 15% of K language but still want to learn Japanese
@FigipeGames3 ай бұрын
As a port of geese myself, I completely understand, but remember, if you learn the port of europe ull be able to spoke to brazilians AND confuse americans into thinking ur speaking russian
@shinytomoon3 ай бұрын
i actually am learning korean. i like the language and it can be so poetic...the fact hangul WAS made up is actually so logical. the grammar can be intense yes but its about the only language i'm willing to learn more than high school level spanish lol. anything more and my brain starts speaking all 3 in one sentence. idk how people separate the languages in their brain. mine is swirling all of them in a language soup at all times when i try to make a new sentence lmao
@Rooopy5663 ай бұрын
잘했어요, im also learnin korean its fun to learn and easy if u take it clearly but we cant say “not hard” it hard but endly u can learn it
@Vuden133 ай бұрын
How did you start learning korean?
@Chalow05123 ай бұрын
As a Korean, I'm glad you're learning Korean. It can be a bit tricky but I hope you don't stress too much and instead find joy in the process. 화이팅!
@shinytomoon3 ай бұрын
@@Chalow0512감사합니다 ~ 진~~짜 어렵지만 할 수 있어요💪🥹
@Chalow05123 ай бұрын
@@shinytomoon ㅋㅋㅋㅋ 맞아요.. 그래도 할 수 있으실 거예요!!
@disgruntledtoonsАй бұрын
The reason so many Hindi speakers code switch to English is because a lot of Indians learn English, and it's often the only language in common when they encounter someone from another part of India.
@HaukePlayz3 ай бұрын
ESPERANTO WAS NEVER ON THE LIST!!!! 😱
@SageArdor3 ай бұрын
you missed the honorable mentions
@spoonerboy62813 ай бұрын
Sparanto語 is in 0 place
@LandofWater3 ай бұрын
he said no conlangs other than toki pona
@akemqiy3 ай бұрын
Blue comment
@PlayerNamed_Josh3 ай бұрын
It’s in honorable mentions. Esperanto (🤮) is a conlang
@talktomeinkorean3 ай бұрын
I'll teach you Korean! 😆🇰🇷
@LanguageSimp3 ай бұрын
@Gnats11113 ай бұрын
Im a native korean i can teach you too
@Itube1003 ай бұрын
@LanguageSimp If you learn Korean language it means you are not straight man and listen to girly music, hahahahaha I'm joking I am gay man myself and I talked with a woman who used to like k-pop when she was a teenager she said K-pop was the biggest lie in her teen years because of K-pop plastic surgeries and she said without K-pop and K-drama South Korea would be an isolated country like China, The South Korean governments spends thousands of millions to support K-pop and K-drama and to promote them abroad to improve the national image, improve economy, to promote Korean products and to promote tourism that is why 60% of tourists in South Korea are young women and most people who learn korean are young women.
@zamaluddin56283 ай бұрын
@@LanguageSimpWill you learn Bengali?
@TheShinyShrimp3 ай бұрын
@@LanguageSimp why is india flag in ur thumbnaill ?
@Lunamanka3 ай бұрын
I want to tell you about the language I THOUGHT I will never learn. It's Ukrainian. It just wasn't any interesting, basically like my native language (Russian), but like from a weird village. The shock factor is also dubious, especially for slavs. And I'd been learning Swedish for more than a year at that time, why would I learn another language? Yeah, and I also heard lots of bad things towards me and my country in this lang (u know why). All these things were hella demotivating... but.. My closest friend is Ukrainian and not very long ago I found out that I am like half Ukrainian (I was learning about my ancestors and somehow hadn't been thinking anything about my last name being Ukrainian before) and got interested in Ukrainian culture. Now I learn it everyday by speaking to my friend (girlfriend now). And I progress very fast, she says I already have strong B1 (I don't care much about CERF yet it's kinda motivating), though I've been learning it for less than three months.
@slightlyopinionated81073 ай бұрын
Love Russia. I tried learning that language though and it is so hard but I know how to fake a Russian accent now lol so my pronunciation would be perfect haha
@АртурБриджес3 ай бұрын
Можу побажати лише натхнення та терпіння
@marwaqoura78043 ай бұрын
I am an Arab and want to learn Russian
@SunTzuArtOfWar43 ай бұрын
Cool @@marwaqoura7804
@wornpaladin3 ай бұрын
Ааааа, привіттттт, я тебе кохаю
@M1551NGN02 ай бұрын
Hindi phonetics are actually cool though. Hindi letters actually resemble the shape of the mouth while speaking it out. For example, ज causes your tongue to touch your teeth in a similar shape that the letter is. Also, the grammar rules are definite and don't have exceptions unlike English.
@SmokedBarbecue3 ай бұрын
0:42 once you go "يعني" there is no coming back. Remember watching an English interview of Ghassan kanafani from the late 1960s just to hear the word "يعني" i was shocked when it happened and had to rewind. You are playing with fire.
@GoodMorning-b2w3 ай бұрын
bro it's a turkish word. the turks say it
@TMShadowZ3 ай бұрын
@@GoodMorning-b2wits an Arabic word, not Turkish. Turks do use it though.
@AsmaTheTeaPot3 ай бұрын
@@GoodMorning-b2w it is arabic. The Turkish do use the word but it is arabic in origin.
@whichoneispink3 ай бұрын
@@GoodMorning-b2w just because they say it doesn't mean it's originally turkish lol
@GoodMorning-b2w3 ай бұрын
@@AsmaTheTeaPot i know. but only the turks use it in english. and the youtuber knows how to pronounce y3ni, but he said yani
@Voltaic3143 ай бұрын
Languages of the Philippines have the same code switching issue too. When I was talking to people out there and observing their culture it blew my mind how many of them just speak English and switch out so many times. Gave me whiplash trying to listen to anything they say. Haha
@KobeSande3 ай бұрын
And phillipines have different "dialects" but we can talk to english of tagalog. Im filipino
@hayabusa13293 ай бұрын
Philippines should just speak full English if they code switch so much
@KobeSande3 ай бұрын
@@hayabusa1329 nah thats impossible. All our ancestors hardwork to create this langauge, just go to waste? Nah
@hayabusa13293 ай бұрын
@@KobeSande English is the most important language so speak that instead. All countries should switch to English or at least teach them to speak it fluently as a second language
@KobeSande3 ай бұрын
@@hayabusa1329 english is our second,so?
@danilmalkoc3 ай бұрын
There are so many native speakers around the world. Why nobody learns Latin?
Technically, Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Romanian (and Corsican and Sardinian and Catalan and Occitan and Rumansch and Provencal and Galician and Piedmontese and Ligurian and Tuscan and Sicilian and Venetian and Neapolitan etc.) are all dialects of Latin. that's what happens to a language when there hasn't been any centrally enforced linguistic unity for 16 centruries.
@boltez65072 ай бұрын
Spot on , Pure Hindi is literally spoken by a minority in India,mostly old folks,the young generation mostly speaks Hinglish or even a mix of local language+Hindi+English
@dudutrutru75483 ай бұрын
8:24 he is right , bollywood distroyed hindi, first with urdu and then english. The fact we can't even speak pure hindi is a shame.
@MrPeaceGuy543 ай бұрын
Hindustani and Urdu are not the same. Also, Urdu is an Indian language as well. Finally, languages always evolve with time. I do agree that more concerted efforts are required to preserve and promote our indigenous languages.
@Deccani2 ай бұрын
Hindi came from urdu, u can't explain stuff like" hoon" without urdu
@Djsodjf2 ай бұрын
@@Deccanibruh Hindi is from Sanskrit and Urdu is from Persian. Stop saying lies on the internet
@Deccani2 ай бұрын
@@Djsodjf whatever makes u sleep at night. It is haram to lie. For you it seems not
@Beez-go-buzz2 ай бұрын
@@Djsodjf no language fell out of a coconut,it exists in the context of everything
@dudusbarbosa3 ай бұрын
As a brazilian, your preference for our Portuguese made my week!
@siriusb1442 ай бұрын
com certeza 😊
@SpecialTimeWithDaniel3 ай бұрын
this video was such a rollercoaster of emotions, it's a mix between being happy he didn't say your language and being extremely stressed right before he announces the next one.
@ShellyNooby3 ай бұрын
I'm surprised you care wether he said your language or not.
@jesus_saves_153 ай бұрын
What's your language?
@전윤정-y1r6 күн бұрын
As a native korean "습니다" is kind of like tipping in words. It is used when respecting someone, usually an elder. While not completely necessary, it is considered rude not to, unless talking to a close friend. I hope this was helpful, and this might just be me being native korean, but korean isnt that hard I think. 안녕히게세요!
@Ringer453 ай бұрын
Personally, as a Russian, I will NEVER learn French
@feigdarfrost3 ай бұрын
what about Michif Creole French?
@Epic-12242 ай бұрын
As a non-Russian and non-French learning both French and Russian at the same time, both languages are giving me a hard time.
@dvv182 ай бұрын
Every Russian knows "je n'ai mangé pas six jours" already.
@feigdarfrost2 ай бұрын
@@Epic-1224 dont give up, its gonna be allrite, just take your time u need and take it chill!
@Epic-12242 ай бұрын
@@feigdarfrost Thank you. It's a part time hobby for me and I enjoy learning them!
@salempasangasp3 ай бұрын
8:42 wait till you learn even harder indian languages like malayalam tamil maithili etc
@siddhirbhavatikarmja2 ай бұрын
😂 Hindi is win win of all like distort any word to mean the same Wait till he finds d and dh make difference in languages He is depressed of mere case system of Salvic languages Welcome to Sanskrit and you know where is death
@ItsAadith2 ай бұрын
@@siddhirbhavatikarmja as a Tamilan I agree that Hindi is difficult but just see that Tamil has three 'l' sounds, 6 'n' sounds and worst of all combining words makes no sense (Al + Thinai = Akrinai).
@siddhirbhavatikarmja2 ай бұрын
@@ItsAadith Word combinations are the reason I tried Thamizh many times but didn't succeed Like I tried to learn it Pronouncing l ɭ & zh(ல் ள் & ழ்) is okay even 5 n ŋ ɲ ɳ n m (ங் ஞ் ண் ந் ம் ) is okay But nevery got to know what 6th n sounds like
@siddhirbhavatikarmja2 ай бұрын
@@ItsAadith But actually Hindi has problem that It is a term for many many languages that are never even part of Hindi's family Saursheni prakrit. Languages like Bhojpuri Magahi Awadhi et cectra aren't even from Saursheni They are from Magadhi and Ardh Magadhi But since they are called hindi There literature is forcefully taken and termed Hindi Literature For example NCERT got class 10th Hindi literature second chapter from Ramcharitmanas A text written in Awadhi Like Students are crying over it Tf they know of Awadhi and it's words That's why a word has many distortions in hindi and many same meaning words too
@ItsAadith2 ай бұрын
@@siddhirbhavatikarmja I agree. As a Tamil speaker myself I am amazed to see somebody actually knows how to pronounce most Tamil sounds. As for the homophone problem, we have a similar one in Tamil as well because nobody here actually pronounced all the sounds differently (Thavalai (frog) and Thavazhai (pot) is a good example).
@catherineeASMR3 ай бұрын
You only think Korean uses -ida a lot because the verb comes at the end of the sentence and that's the usual formal/business-casual verb ending used most so it just makes it more prominent in things like TV shows. If you were listening to conversations between friends you'd just hear HAEEEE or Haeyo and not nearly as much
@jixer195611 күн бұрын
So it's like -desu/-masu in Japanese?
@catherineeASMR10 күн бұрын
@@jixer1956 exactly
@juliotancredi746820 күн бұрын
I guess he is pretty biased on Korean language. Korean doesn't finish all the sentences with SMNIDA. And also, Korean doesn't speak the same words all the time. Furthermore, reading Korean alphabet is not like LEGO Blocks, which is only at the very beginning period.
@aisa_mochi18 сағат бұрын
He has the mentality of only koreanboos learn it tbh can learn the alphabet in a day so idk why he is hating on korean just say is hard that’s all don’t stereo type
@Manueltion153 ай бұрын
I don’t know if it’s because I’m more “reserved” or “quiet” but I like speaking the Portugal dialect over the Brazilian. I know Portugal, Brasil, and Angolan dialects but I enjoy the Portuguese more
@lxportugal93433 ай бұрын
😎👍
@Jan_Gavrill3 ай бұрын
2:58 *starts speaking beatbox*
@Shravan-b5mАй бұрын
bruh
@klauberoliveira990913 күн бұрын
This is how portuguese from Portugal really sounds
@CJGS4L3 ай бұрын
well tbh comparing korean to tetris and kids toys feels like quite a compliment as a korean. never really thought of it
@solamentte2 күн бұрын
As a Korean, it’s a bummer that you won't learn Korean that is scientific and creative. It's definitely an interesting adventure for language lovers.
@frequentlyoffline39173 ай бұрын
I'm never going to learn my mother tongue, which is Igbo. My experiences learning the language have been disastrous. I ended up preferring learning Spanish, French, and Dutch to Igbo and my parents are really disappointed (especially my mother).
@Sono_Crucru3 ай бұрын
What is igbo??
@bidinga14803 ай бұрын
@@Sono_CrucruNigerian language
@m_uz12443 ай бұрын
That's because there is no language harder to learn than the one which your parents wish you could've spoken from birth and for which all your cousins back home make fun of you for not being able to speak it. With literally any other language, there is no expectation for you to be able to speak it - you can take it at your own pace and laugh when you mess up. But with the language of your homeland, each mispronunciation and grammatical mistake makes you feel socially outcasted from your own culture. There are few feelings as humiliating.
@frequentlyoffline39173 ай бұрын
@@m_uz1244 I was taught Igbo in high school in Nigeria, but I openly hated going to class. Classes made me feel dumber for even going to attend. Before, I was in Yoruba class and I loved learning Yoruba even if it was only for three months. And my issue with Igbo stems from wanting to articulate myself in the language by learning all the stuff like prepositions, conjunctions, and verbs to help form sentences.
@citrusblast43723 ай бұрын
@@frequentlyoffline3917is the problem that its a hard language?
@crait3 ай бұрын
I live in Korea and love the Korean language. I have been learning it for a few years and my Korean skills are pretty good... It just makes so much sense. As an engineer, I feel like it fits with my brain and it all seems so formulaic.
@anna82823 ай бұрын
I love (and learn) Korean because it just sounds so beautiful. And I love hangul. Korean is quite dufficult tho... I'm also learning Japanese which is easier for me but I hate all three writing systems lol.
@honka4ever2 ай бұрын
I remember that the Korean writing system was borrowed by a small Indonesian language because it was designed to be logical. I have also heard other linguists praise the Korean writing system.
@JShim3 ай бұрын
2:05 that might be the case because you might have been exposed to the Korean on broadcast. The highest politeness register uses "-supnita" extensively, but you can also find many other endings if you, say, try to listen to conversations in other settings. But yeah, the politeness register itself could be a nightmare for second-language learners. That's another story.
@dperrym3 ай бұрын
I don't think that's the highest politeness level
@Reiss-Historia2 ай бұрын
@@dperrymIt is. What do you mean you don't think, when you don't even know?
@dperrym2 ай бұрын
@@Reiss-Historia then 하소서체 (hasoseoche) is less polite?
@JShim2 ай бұрын
@@dperrym I think the hasoseo style is a subcategory of the supnita style. Besides, it is not my main point whether supnita is the highest in the Korean speech levels.
@dperrym2 ай бұрын
@@JShim okay, but that was my main point
@anantasadiankhan3 ай бұрын
Bro, we need BENGALI language review its massively underrated.
@Mashfi233 ай бұрын
I hope he (correctly) calls it Bangla instead of "Bengali" if he does do something like that
@anantasadiankhan3 ай бұрын
@@Mashfi23 Yeah but that is what we natives call it. For English speakers Bengali is right. Sort of how we say "French" and actual French people say "français".
@bluerinako3 ай бұрын
@@Mashfi23 You must have missed the entire point of this channel.
@logielleEntiopya3 ай бұрын
Ohh sheta to oshadharon hobe. Language Simp er binodon jokhon Bangla te pouchabe 😂
@Mashfi233 ай бұрын
@@bluerinako I don't see how my comment relates to understanding or not understanding the point of this channel
@subwaysister3 ай бұрын
you prefer Danish to Norwegian?! Danish sounds like you take Simlish, reverse it, and then stress the audio out to make it wavy. Its like a Pokemon attack like Supersonic or something but to confuse the opponent!
@iverbrnstad7913 ай бұрын
More bragging rights, Norwegian too ez, dude should pick up elfdalian or something to flex on all of scandinavia thou
@AS-cc4nc3 ай бұрын
8:33 thats actually one of the reasons why I stopped learning Korean. I dont want to say 컴퓨터 ("kompyutoh") for computer, electric brain as in 电脑 sounds much cooler to me
@taihao.multimedia3 ай бұрын
In Hawaiian they say it like 'lightning brain'
@jarang33042 ай бұрын
As a foreigner with advanced level Korean I am using 셈틀(세- + -음 +틀) instead of 컴퓨터. I agree with you. When I see an English originated word I search the 순화어 of the word which is more pure(atleast hanja).
@김성민-l9m2 ай бұрын
외래어는 어느 국가나 있는데요.. 일본이 한국보다 외래어가 많아요
@AS-cc4nc2 ай бұрын
@@김성민-l9mYeah true, there are also a lot in use in my native language nowadays which I don't like. And btw compared to Chinese I like Hangul BY FAR more, I hate it when I don't remember how to write a character by hand 😢
@vishwadeepsaini74732 ай бұрын
9:17 wrong map 😕😕😤
@Biggyxd2M2 ай бұрын
Why Indians crying always
@Uno_organized12 күн бұрын
Huh? What's wrong?
@Science_Atrium3 күн бұрын
No
@manishmahawar5813Сағат бұрын
@@Uno_organizedPOK is wrong
@Uno_organizedСағат бұрын
@@manishmahawar5813 ohh I love the brainwashing.
@thejuiceweasel3 ай бұрын
Don't you dare slander my hangeul king Sejong, I'm literally just on my way home from Seoul with my little Playmobil Sejong figurine.
@jaizo_3 ай бұрын
here's my list of languages I'll never learn. Abkhaz Acehnese Acholi Afar Afrikaans Albanian Alur Amharic Armenian Assamese Avar Awadhi Aymara Azerbaijani Balinese Baluchi Bambara Baoulé Bashkir Basque Batak Karo Batak Simalungun Batak Toba Belarusian Bemba Bengali Betawi Bhojpuri Bikol Bosnian Breton Bulgarian Buryat Cantonese Catalan Cebuano Chamorro Chechen Chichewa Chuukese Chuvash Corsican Crimean Tatar Croatian Czech Danish Dari Dhivehi Dinka Dogri Dombe Dutch Dyula Dzongkha Esperanto Estonian Ewe Faroese Fijian Filipino Finnish Fon French Frisian Friulian Fulani Ga Galician Georgian German Greek Guarani Gujarati Haitian Creole Hakha Chin Hausa Hawaiian Hebrew Hiligaynon Hindi Hmong Hungarian Hunsrik Iban Icelandic Igbo Ilocano Indonesian Irish Italian Jamaican Patois Japanese Javanese Jingpo Kalaallisut Kannada Kanuri Kapampangan Kazakh Khasi Khmer Kiga Kikongo Kinyarwanda Kituba Kokborok Komi Konkani Korean Krio Kurdish (Kurmanji) Kurdish (Sorani) Kyrgyz Lao Latgalian Latin Latvian Ligurian Limburgish Lingala Lithuanian Lombard Luganda Luo Luxembourgish Macedonian Madurese Maithili Makassar Malagasy Malay Malay (Jawi) Malayalam Maltese Mam Manx Maori Marathi Marshallese Marwadi Mauritian Creole Meadow Mari Meiteilon (Manipuri) Minang Mizo Mongolian Myanmar (Burmese) Nahuatl (Eastern Huasteca) Ndau Ndebele (South) Nepalbhasa (Newari) Nepali NKo Norwegian Nuer Occitan Odia (Oriya) Oromo Ossetian Pangasinan Papiamento Pashto Persian Polish Portuguese (Brazil) Portuguese (Portugal) Punjabi (Gurmukhi) Punjabi (Shahmukhi) Quechua Qʼeqchiʼ Romani Romanian Rundi Russian Sami (North) Samoan Sango Sanskrit Santali Scots Gaelic Sepedi Serbian Sesotho Seychellois Creole Shan Shona Sicilian Silesian Sindhi Sinhala Slovak Slovenian Somali Sumerian Sundanese Susu Swahili Swati Swedish Tahitian Tajik Tamazight Tamazight (Tifinagh) Tamil Tatar Telugu Tetum Thai Tibetan Tigrinya Tiv Tok Pisin Tongan Tsonga Tswana Tulu Tumbuka Turkish Turkmen Tuvan Twi Udmurt Ukrainian Urdu Uyghur Uzbek Venda Venetian Vietnamese Waray Welsh Wolof Xhosa Yakut Yiddish Yoruba Yucatec Maya Zapotec Zulu
@Toma_Marinov3 ай бұрын
Having such a long list of languages, that you're never going to learn is a pity. Why restrict yourself in such a way?
@fly1ngf0x3 ай бұрын
@@Toma_MarinovI agree.
@Alonoda3 ай бұрын
Not learning Mauritian Creole was my biggest mistake. You're still young
@Rakeshgupta-iy7lm3 ай бұрын
I can speak konkani since i was born in goa lol. Had the langaugae pre installed
@HuckleberryHim3 ай бұрын
Spanish it is then!
@LizaLizzaaaa3 ай бұрын
Hindi speakers actually DON'T KNOW the Hindi word for the phrases that they speak in English 😂 thats why they switch including me
@reny622 ай бұрын
mainly because we get our schooling in english, so we forget or never learn hindi words
@MoreiraSavio8 күн бұрын
você é ouro, aqui na minha casa estamos todos seguindo a supremacia Language simp. tudo o que fazemos tem que ser medido numa escala Simp e o mundo ainda não está pronto para essa discussão.
@Abd-Alrahman-12 ай бұрын
8:00 "Skibbidy rizz fanum tax gyatt" 💀
@cloaker........50872 ай бұрын
This dude giving them english generated useless words and then saying they can't translate them. What a joke. 🤡
@maxnoob76122 ай бұрын
Yea these words are became famous in recent times🙏😭@@cloaker........5087
@Abd-Alrahman-12 ай бұрын
@@cloaker........5087 He was joking with that sentence, Ofc these are not the words he meant that they can't translate, Learn to take a joke brah.
@cloaker........50872 ай бұрын
@@Abd-Alrahman-1 I understood it was a joke, which is why I wrote "what a joke" in my comment. Calm down.
@courage042 ай бұрын
We didn't got the brainrot words update in hindi for now lol
@mightyraccoon71553 ай бұрын
Does this mean he's changed his mind on Esperanto????
@moussaalmoussa69893 ай бұрын
He talked about these languages (such as esperanto) in the honorable mentions' part
@HamzaAlZagha.3 ай бұрын
Here's my conlang: It's a mix of Korean, Portugal Portuguese, Bulgarian, Hindi, Norwegian and Afrikaans. Just say the word "Chicken" in every language with slightly different tones Goal: Solve global warming and world hunger
@Bourbon_Biscuit3 ай бұрын
You're a saviour
@pablo1835rigel3 ай бұрын
Here's mine: Serbian, Japanese, Korean and Icelandic.
@FebruaryHas30Days3 ай бұрын
Here's my conlang: It's a mix of *ALL* languages with *1 million speakers or more,* as well as Esperanto, Volapuk and Quenya. Just say the word "person" in every language with slightly different tones, vowel lengths and stresses. Goal: Solve politics
@tiredcatman73813 ай бұрын
@@FebruaryHas30Dayspersona persona persona persona persona pessoa persoa persoăna personne. Those were 9 romance languages, easy
@FebruaryHas30Days3 ай бұрын
@@tiredcatman7381 What are those Romance languages? List them
@nahlene1973Ай бұрын
Ah thanks for introducing the Hindi code switching thing to me. I was always curious why sometimes i click on a random Indian video they start in English and then switches to some other languages and then come back.
@brunocalixto74493 ай бұрын
And there we go, with more Tugas hating this channel kkkkkkkkkk. Kisses from Brazil my bro, and good luck
@BabeDogGsD3 ай бұрын
Thanks for not putting Ukrainian on the “NOT” list. Ukrainian is easy to learn. I suggest watching Olly Richards video about The Heroic Ukrainian language. 🇺🇦🍉🌻♥️
@censord69603 ай бұрын
Why should the Ukrainian language be on the 'NOT' list? It's a cool and unique language; for example, it has a unique feature known as ikavism, and it has the highest number of vowel letters among consonants, making it the most melodic among all Slavic languages. This language has a rich history as it is close to the Kyiv dialects of Rus, and it holds the record for the number of folk songs. It ranks third in popularity among Slavic languages after Russian and Polish.
@danilmalkoc3 ай бұрын
Ukrainian is like a mix of Russian and Polish. As russian native from Kazakhstan I so love it. There are so many beautiful songs in Ukrainian.
@BabeDogGsD3 ай бұрын
@@censord6960 it shouldn’t be on the “not list” ever, for anyone lol. That’s why i donated, because i’m happy it made his list of possible languages he will learn. I love Ukrainian language, I practice every morning on pimsluer. & I adore all Ukrainian people, culture and history. I’m with you brother
@BabeDogGsD3 ай бұрын
@@danilmalkoc Yes! My favorite is ой у лузі червона калина. No translator, i use Ukrainian keyboard so sorry for any mistakes
@tuluppampam3 ай бұрын
@@BabeDogGsDwhy should it not be on the list of anyone? I feel like there are many much cooler languages (all very endangered) to learn, like Eyak, Yup'ik, Ket, and many, many more.
@diomello16473 ай бұрын
"Eu falo português do Brasil" 😃🇧🇷 "euflprtgshdprtgl" 🤢🇵🇹
@perf2.0783 ай бұрын
I hear the same thing with my knowledge of Spanish every time I try to hear something that Portugese speaking person trying to say. Which is strange, since I understand almost everything what is written.
@LewisWirth3 ай бұрын
Hahahha how accurate, actually in Brazil 😃🇧🇷 right now Caramba
@diomello16473 ай бұрын
@ngierevos44469 I know, sorry. It was just a joke. It wasn't supposed to be mean.
@ruanpablo3503 ай бұрын
Ah, o português de Portugal é daora, mano.
@ocaradomal3 ай бұрын
@@perf2.078 yeah bro, besides the two languages having a lot of similarities between them, they sound extremely different from each other
@ooh-ahhАй бұрын
every single thing you said about Korean is exactly what makes it uniquely fancy and attractive lol
@senbonzakurakageyoshi6623 ай бұрын
Dutch Is actually pretty fun and really easy to read for someone who already speaks American :D
@marwaqoura78043 ай бұрын
Dutch has the elusive spelling of English and the difficulty of German pronounciation !!!
@Wavinto3 ай бұрын
As a German who speaks American it's definitely easy to read but man am I too stupid to understand it spoken lol
@danhobart40093 ай бұрын
@@marwaqoura7804 Learn afrikaanse then, smooth pronunciation and consistent spelling.
@marwaqoura78043 ай бұрын
@@danhobart4009 Good idea ,actually the only Dutch word I learned was from Afrikaanse 'Goed' 😸..An old ,dear Dutch friend tried to teach me more but he couldn't ,teaching him some Arabic was easier 😸..I know some German , and Arabic sounds are harder ! but honestly I couldn't manage with Dutch at all 😶
@marwaqoura78043 ай бұрын
@@danhobart4009 Can you speak Afrikaanse ?
@Mahendra_Choudhary_M3 ай бұрын
This guy is single handedly proving everyone that says being bialanguals means smart, wrong 8:22 As an Indian myself, I can confirm that, Indian do it because English is overglazed in India BRITISH did this but when they left they couldn't take the "English superiorit" propaganda with themselves
@induchopra30142 ай бұрын
Our leaders were mostly educated in Oxford Harvard Today they are indian educated they speak confidently in nature tongues. So no problem now. All know basic English so that elite factor is gone. Your knowledge degree is respected more. Skills. Not mere English. India has changed and changing fast. The self confidence in native speakers is more. English isolates you. It cuts you from roots and all fun festivals neighbours. To live you need to learn language of those around you or live in a bubble..isolated. language is never a barrier if you are ready to mingle make friends. People accept mustakes
@NetflixForeign3 ай бұрын
THANK you so much for saying this about Hindi. I want to learn Hindi but this is one of my huge problems with trying to learn it, that you actually have to FIND language programs that have curated dialogues which make it possible. I think this is one of the reasons why Pimsleur needs to get Hindi to level 5. Good for you on wanting to learn the other languages there too. Telugu has some great movies, easily as good as many Bollywood. Tamil does well as well. You do have to watch out as some of that some complaint you made about Hindi has made its way into Telugu content with English as well. I think a little of that may be in Tamil as well. Mahayalam and others not sure. I will say with those if you watch maybe a decent bit of 10 or 20 year old movies you may totally be good though.
@CommonContentArchive3 ай бұрын
Bengali is a good language for cinema traditions - lots of interesting, intellectual stuff. Gujarati is the best for saving money. Punjabi might be best if you like parties
@NetflixForeign3 ай бұрын
@@CommonContentArchive Actually I think Bangladesh may be one of the great new places for fantastic Horror movies. I saw "Hawa" and while it was too much of a slow burn for me it was pitch perfect structurewise. You should be VERY proud of that movie and the director and the rest should be teaching because there is very little actual scary Horror coming out of your part of the world. That was serious and scary.
@itszu683616 күн бұрын
Bro knows algorithm 💀
@ahmedharajli1893 ай бұрын
0:41 bro hit us with that يعني like we wouldn’t notice
@darkrad75353 ай бұрын
and what does it mean?
@Intellix13 ай бұрын
@@darkrad7535 in the context in the video, it means "i mean"
@callmefleet3 ай бұрын
You know what I mean but blackoid
@sholka81703 ай бұрын
Top 4 languages I'll never learn: 1. Esperanto 2. Japanese 3. French 4. Korean
@anna82823 ай бұрын
And I speak or learn three of those 😂 but I'll never learn Esperanto.
@catabakies693 ай бұрын
Try Ithkuil
@prashantnaik9012 ай бұрын
Try Kannada 🇨🇦
@Intellix12 ай бұрын
Sure, I will also probably never learn esperanto, but japanese french and korean, eh
@WaveWaterer15 күн бұрын
CHEROKEE SWEEP
@LawXXD3 ай бұрын
2:14 i agree W twice 🗣️🔥
@claudielagueux-qr4ed2 ай бұрын
2:00 Smida is the verb termination
@HanJi-sungthebestyboy3 сағат бұрын
yeah, u r right
@TheWorldIsDumb3 ай бұрын
As an Indian, I am so thankful to you for mentioning the Hindi thing and how polluted the language has now become. Love from India ❤❤❤
@angreagach3 ай бұрын
All languages are polluted. It's just that we're used to old pollution.
@GoodMorning-b2w3 ай бұрын
the air is polluted bro, it's not too late. start to use hindi solely when speaking with ur family and friends. and never succumb to speaking like them. you'll change their way of speaking subconsciously. just be gradual
@StyxNomad3 ай бұрын
Language isn't Polluted, Peoples are.
@TheWorldIsDumb3 ай бұрын
@@GoodMorning-b2w My Native Language is Bangla, yet I try my best to maintain the purity and richness of Hindi when I speak it.
@TheWorldIsDumb3 ай бұрын
@@StyxNomad True, and the government is even more corrupt and polluted
@jjoojjoo202963 ай бұрын
My native language is Arabic and I taught myself Korean (not fluently, but I can understand a lot). I knew K-pop and K-drama almost 14 years ago and since I was spending a lot of time consuming Korean content, I thought why not learning the alphabet at least? I gave it a try and the alphabet is quite easy, unlike the assumption of those who never tried learning it. Then, I started teaching myself more and more more I learned, the more I loved this language. It sounds beautiful to me and the way words are combined is interesting. And no, it's not all "smnida". This is just a suffix that indicates you're speaking formally and there are other suffixes used depending on the formality level, and if you're not speaking formally, the sentence end won't really be any suffix. It's just that the Korean culture has a big influence on the language itself, which is something I personally like.
@IC_Masters3 ай бұрын
As a Vietnamese, your pronunciation is really good. Keep it up!
@topotondo8283 ай бұрын
I am also learning Vietnamese right now and I need to know if you are being serious or not.
@EasyVietnamese4u3 ай бұрын
@@topotondo828yes. Simp speaks Vietnamese well !
@IC_Masters3 ай бұрын
@@topotondo828 Yes, I am telling the truth. Just focus on tones, I wish you success on your path of learning Vietnamese.
@kunaldeo96792 ай бұрын
Hmmm tbh as someone who lives in India and has spoken three languages for like all my life (including English) I would say urban India is like that. Rural India the languages stay more 'Pure' of sorts. It occurs naturally in Urban India tbh because imagine using three languages growing up, data stored in your brain gets compressed. Lot of people in India like to shame people for not speaking the 'pure' version of the language (there's some weird unhealthy obsession with purity in India, probably because of colonization), but honestly if I read the 'pure' words in the language I can understand them its just that I can't remember them off the top of my head. Also I'll tell you the Indian Dialects we speak in the cities are super interesting. For example in the Northern Hindi they'll say "kyu?" which means why (don't shoot me if I am wrong I am making this observation based on whatever I have met) and in Mumbai we say "Kaiko?" which also means why its just a Bombay Hindi instead of the 'proper' hindi. Second one is 'Apun' which means us but the grammatically correct word is "Hum". "Apun" is derived from the Marathi word "Apan" which means us. There are many such examples, it is super interesting.
@turkeyaccobaida3 ай бұрын
i love how hes casting "ya3ni , يعني" between sentences , kinda miss the "عييين عييين "days
@PC_Simo3 ай бұрын
I’ll never learn Japanese. It’s not niche enough. If I wanted to learn a language as difficult as Japanese, I’d pick up Irish or Georgian, instead. Well; if this comment gets TREE(3) likes, I’ll consider it.
@thesilentmothtrapper43733 ай бұрын
Hungarian is hard as hell but beautiful and worth studying.
@belstar11283 ай бұрын
do Telegu nobody is learning it but its actually useful with Irish you will probably end up bored Georgian is ok
@mrdeadlift62373 ай бұрын
since when is irish as difficult as japanese?
@anonymous-iu4th3 ай бұрын
I get that. I'm kind of the opposite and I want to learn languages that would give me more freedom to travel to and within the country or region that it's spoken in. I would assume that almost everyone who speaks Irish also speaks English so I probably won't learn it but at the same time I am considering Welsh after I finish with Japanese, Chinese and Russia so that's a bit of a contradiction
@cadian101st3 ай бұрын
Irish is not nearly as hard as Japanese lmao
@zahifar39363 ай бұрын
Sadly I don’t know enough languages to have to worry about which languages I don’t want to learn. Polyglot problems I guess.
@WantToBeAGamer_07Ай бұрын
I'd really love to see his reaction after finding about Malayalam😂❤ (For those who don't know, it's an Indian language spoken in the state of Kerala and probably the hardest Indian language, not to be confused with Malay from Malaysia)
@skidawg223 ай бұрын
5:22 Prepare yourself for Bulgarian hate mail (which is really damn funny).
@interneda982 ай бұрын
What’s so funny?
@shutdown98482 ай бұрын
If you speak pure hindi then people will don't understand a thing😂
@siddhirbhavatikarmja2 ай бұрын
😂 Bhor hote hi chaldurbhashan yantr ka upyog krne me asakt rahne wale nitya vyasani ko kya hi gyat hogenge durdarshan se sushobhit kshan
@ARYANJEE-uu3qe2 ай бұрын
@@siddhirbhavatikarmja hye baigan?
@siddhirbhavatikarmja2 ай бұрын
@@ARYANJEE-uu3qe basic hindi hai ye to
@aniket09022 ай бұрын
@@siddhirbhavatikarmja bhai shuddh hindi devanagari me hi acchi lagti h, ghanta kuch nhi samajh aa rha aise
@gauravshah892 ай бұрын
झूठ क्यों बोलते हो। क्या यह शुद्ध वाक्य तुम्हे समझ नहीं आया ?
@mickistudies15393 ай бұрын
Nah I gave up on Bulgarian because it was too hard even though it was my MOTHER LANGUAGE. I forgot it after learning English in school in Australia. I tried to relearn it and even uploaded videos about it on my channel lol
@misterme11342 ай бұрын
Me who is a native Hindi speaker who learned Korean. I also learnt japanese and french but thats not relevant to this video. Now I do agree 100% with the code switching in Hindi. Thats mostly got to do with modernization honestly because Hindi vocabulary is VERY VERY VERY VAST and some words are incredibly difficult to figure out what they could mean.
@Intellix12 ай бұрын
@@misterme1134 The reason i might just pick hindi is because I'm already planning to learn urdu, and they are basically very similar
@misterme11342 ай бұрын
@Intellix1 yeah that prb smart
@ShivanshThakur-sh8ubАй бұрын
@@Intellix1 i can give you a sample video of what formal hindi is like and they sound different even if you can understand them a bit.
@Mariahmeuamor3 ай бұрын
It’s funny that you don’t like the Portuguese from Portugal but you like Russian, many people say they have similar intonation and sounds. From a far Russian and Port Portuguese sound the almost same to me. Pero me encanta 🇧🇷 para siempre! ❤️❤️
@stasmira3 ай бұрын
As a russian native speaker i can clearly tell you that they are not any similar. Prtgsh do Portgl is funny tho
@lxportugal93433 ай бұрын
He tryied to be funny making fun of Portugal to please Brazilians and it backfired 😄 I think deep down there he likes it
@emulation23693 ай бұрын
No, they don't sound the same
@Tealen3 ай бұрын
Its not similar at all to speakers, but I guess non speakers kinda agree that they are similar in sound. Had people ask me what language i was speaking because they thought it sounded like polish/russian, but at the same time didnt sound like it.
@anna82823 ай бұрын
I've also always thought that portuguese sounds like russian!
@ishitapandey20372 ай бұрын
8:09 because isn't, in reality, one single language. There MANY so-called regional "dialects" that should have been recognised as languages in their own right. Majority of hindi structure as we know it, comes from khadi-boli. But usually words, phrases, sentence structures differs a lot by even villages. Fr.
@areloTET3 ай бұрын
One "language" I'll never learn is Naerpesian (närpésiska) spoken in the small town of Närpes in Finland. It's very close to Old Norse. I may reconsider if this gets 10k likes
@Me7aLfAn2 күн бұрын
Bulgarian may be easy in regards to having no cases but in their place it has a pretty complex tense system, adverbial forms, definite and indefinite forms which also change according to each noun as we use 3 genders for the nouns, very specific preposition rules, form of the verb (very easy to identify a foreigner who doesn't know how to use these even if he otherwise sounds fluent) and it also has case remnants in the pronouns and question words.
@يونسعدوني2193 ай бұрын
This video came out the same time I’m learning languages
@Bpinurarea728Ай бұрын
Good 4 u
@alexstrojny67033 ай бұрын
Just so you know, for Brazilian Portuguese learners, you can totally speak your current dialect of portuguese in Portugal. All people are kind and many people I spoke to were even from Brazil. You understanding them is just a matter of opening your brain up to different dialects, which Brazil has a ton of anyways. Don’t let that chronically online guy that tried to bully Language Simp bother you if you want to go. Normal Portuguese youtubers are Talk the Streets, Portuguese with Leo and Learn European Portuguese with a Simpleton.
@ZoveRen3 ай бұрын
11:38 "Ex-Hawzah" 😭
@Free_palistine_467 күн бұрын
When you said that Korean people are almost repeating the same word, I remembered my opinion about that at the time I started learning Korean. I heard them saying the same words BUT IN DIFFERENT ORDER and it gives a DIFFERENT MEANING!