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@SuhbanIo10 күн бұрын
Malayalam is faster than all of these
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
I have alleged and will assert always, English the fastest language in the world.
@jonasholmqvist52319 күн бұрын
Sorry, but this is nonsense. There's actual research on how fast-spoken languages are. In reality, the top 10 are 1. Japanese 2. Spanish 3. Basque 4. Finnish 5. Italian 6. Serbian 7. Korean 8. Catalan 9. Turkish 10. French The Economist had a recent article on this. The research is by Coupé et al. (2019), published in Science Advances.
@SuhbanIo9 күн бұрын
@@jonasholmqvist5231 what is the sample size of these studies? Are the Dravidian languages even included? In fact, I would argue the fastest language is Malayalam
@jonasholmqvist52319 күн бұрын
@@SuhbanIo The researchers only studied 17 languages, so The Economist was wrong to claim they are the fastest - although it still disproves this video. Here is the relevant paragraphs on methodology from the research article: We studied a sample of 17languages from 9 language families spread across Europe and Asia, showing a remarkable diversity in terms of linguistic and typological features at all levels, from phonetics and phonology to morphology and syntax and to semantics and prag- matics (see table S1). Focusing on their phonetics and phonology, these languages vary in their number of phonemes (from 25 in Japanese and Spanish to more than 40 in English and Thai), the number of distinct syllables (from a few hundred in Japanese to almost 7000 in English), tonal complexity (from none to six contrastive tones), and various otherphonological phenomena (e.g., vowel harmony is present in Finnish, Hungarian, Korean, and Turkish). Thanks to its size and diversity, this sample is adequate to reveal robust trends reflecting phenomena that can potentially be extrapolated to human language in general. We collected recordings of 170 native adult speakers of the afore- mentioned 17 languages, each reading at their normal rate a standardized set of 15 semantically similar texts across the languages (for a total amount of approximately 240,000 syllables). Speakers became familiar with the texts, by reading them several times before being recorded, so that they understand the described situation and minimize reading errors (see Materials and Methods below for more details). For each recording, we extracted the duration [in seconds, excluding pauses longer than 150 ms, i.e., longer than typical phonemic silences (17)] and the total number of syllables (NS) of the text’s“canonical” pronunciation.
@mandioca-84985 күн бұрын
o whindersson na capa invocando os brasileiros kkkkkkkk
@Estudo-q6b4 күн бұрын
Se ele acha que os brasileiros falam rápido, devia ver os portugueses 😂
@filipesantosabreu48073 күн бұрын
Haha😂
@user-fi5mn8vj1j3 күн бұрын
@@Estudo-q6bportuguês de portugal parece ser otimizado pra fala rápida, pq vc não precisa abrir muito a boca pra falar com sotaque português
@YourBrazilian3 күн бұрын
Pse mn sksksks, eles sabem q brasileiro viraliza vídeo
@Estudo-q6b3 күн бұрын
@@user-fi5mn8vj1j eu sou português amigo 🤣🤣
@shiny25755 күн бұрын
I'm brazillian and my mom complains i speak too fast all the time. I didnt actually expect portuguese to be in the list but looking back, im not very surprised
@seufimeaqui90345 күн бұрын
same!
@jorgeenriquehernandez21474 күн бұрын
I was going to say that Portuguese is not fast at all, but it's because I speak Spanish as mother tongue 😅
@manualdobabaca-mdb77914 күн бұрын
The sound of Portuguese is different depending on where you are. I'm from São Paulo, so the accent from Ceará, for example, sounds a little fast, and the accent from Portugal, especially from the countryside, sounds incomprehensible.
@Craft074 күн бұрын
Baiano vendo isso 😢
@AmandabeatrizBini4 күн бұрын
Po, eu sou do Paraná e aqui a gente não fala tão rápido não (ou é só eu, sei lá)
@thealves638010 күн бұрын
Brazil mentioned...
@Eduardo-bk9xz9 күн бұрын
🇧🇷🇧🇷
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
It was a deliberate move)))
@ta_pegandofogo29888 күн бұрын
QUEM NOS INVOCOU?? 🇧🇷
@joaojosevaldo8 күн бұрын
VAI BRASIUUUUUU
@KururuFrog7 күн бұрын
AEEEEE PORRAAAAAAAA
@everythingisblueevenyourso14325 күн бұрын
As a Brazilian Portuguese speaker, the hardest part about learning and pronouncing other languages like French and Russian is indeed that I speak so fucking fast I swallow so many sounds and letters. Although even here in Brazil I have people telling me to slow down so maybe I am the problem 😅
@clarissemiller32744 күн бұрын
I’m learning Portuguese and i feel like everyone swallows sounds. i sounds like everyone is speaking with mini marshmallows in their mouth!
@AlanTargas4 күн бұрын
@@clarissemiller3274 wait until you hear the north-east accent.
@Lobenswertmeister4 күн бұрын
@@clarissemiller3274In the state of Minas Gerais they commonly swallow the words' ending.
@everythingisblueevenyourso14324 күн бұрын
@@clarissemiller3274 I would recommend you to try learning with the accent from Bahia, while it's still fast we pronounce the vowels much more clearly than the Rio or São Paulo accent.
@nooblink3 күн бұрын
@@everythingisblueevenyourso1432sotaque paulista é mais claro que o sotaque baiano
@mglenadel10 күн бұрын
About the “don’t ask people to talk slower”, very true. I work as a Portuguese/English interpreter and one of the tenets of the profession is that asking people to speak more slowly is utterly useless. They may even comply with the request, but in a few sentences they will be back to their natural rhythm. In addition to that, people trying to speak more slowly will usually start breaking their speech in odd chunks (their idea of ‘slower’ is basically adding more and longer pauses), completely erasing any sense of naturalism in their speech, making it much more difficult to parse and translate.
@Pluminha10 күн бұрын
I, too, am a PortugueseEnglish interpreter. English is my native language and when calls come in from northeast US, I literally sometimes have to ask the English speaker to slow down. Have you ever heard "Sa'rday" for example (New Jersey).
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
@@Pluminha This is very interesting. Keep us updated.
@grace-yz2sr9 күн бұрын
If you ask native people to speak slower, many of them tend to speak louder ^^
@Gleveniel8 күн бұрын
@grace-yz2sr So true lol. I was in Spain for 3 weeks and on one of my taxi rides I told the driver he spoke too fast for me to understand and asked if it was possible for him to speak slower... he just yelled at me and continued to talk his same speed lol.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э8 күн бұрын
@@Gleveniel This driver knows what real service is, lol.
@johnlabus735911 күн бұрын
There's no faster English than the woman's voice on pharmaceutical commercials when she rattles off the bad side effects of taking the advertised drug. 🤣 Americans will know.
@MaoRatto11 күн бұрын
She to me, sounds like she is sped up.
@1kTroopKoopas11 күн бұрын
Ben Shapiro 😂
@AlienInSider11 күн бұрын
It's like that all over the world...
@Internautalegal010 күн бұрын
Yeah. It's the same in Brazil@@AlienInSider
@noemialvarado465110 күн бұрын
It's the same with Spanish except the voice is male most of the time
@JoaoP.43411 күн бұрын
I saw Whindersson, I clicked. Well done.
@NoRygBu9 күн бұрын
Fiz também. 😅
@pragmata79975 күн бұрын
EXATO KKKKKKKKKK
@Craft074 күн бұрын
Sim João kkk
@tutscristina3 күн бұрын
Eu tbm 😂ksksksk
@japeri17110 күн бұрын
I'm a native speaker of Portuguese and I'm at an intermediate level in English, Spanish and Italian. Honestly, I don't think spoken Italian is that fast. I can understand most speakers of Dante's language. I just don't understand them when they speak in dialect .The only exception so far has been a KZbin channel called Casa Surace.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
Is it a deliberate move on their part to speak to you in dialect?
@C_In_Outlaw381711 күн бұрын
I’m a Spanish student. Spanish is interesting because I find that it depends on which country you’re from. Colombians and Mexicans I find to speak a little slower and I can understand them a bit better. Spaniards and Dominicans speak SOOO fast. My barber is Dominican and I have no idea what he’s saying
@ba889811 күн бұрын
It's not just the speed but the lack of enunciation, which seems to be more common in some regions than in others.
@patax14411 күн бұрын
@@ba8898lack of enunciation and sometimes changing or omiting sounds Caribbean Spanish in all of its varieties does this, from turning s into h r into l or French r getting rid of some d's
@ba889811 күн бұрын
@@patax144 yep. Paraguayan Spanish, too, can be very difficult for similar reasons. And Andalucían Spanish - I've even heard native speakers from Latin America say they often couldn't understand very much when visiting Andalucía.
@InvinciblePythonEddy11 күн бұрын
It can actually be difficult switching between Spanish speeds. If get used to a certain speed such as Spain or Venezuela and then speak to people from countries where they speak slower, it’s hard to adjust to this slower speed I find. It’s like someone speaking really slowly and get bored waiting for the next words.
@irinamaribelcruz11 күн бұрын
Dominican here, you speak the truth about Dominicans speaking at the speed of light 🤣🤣🤣
@tatatikah7 күн бұрын
That’s so funny. Portuguese (my native language) and Italian (which I don’t speak) seemed to be the slowest ones for me.
@stkosta248212 сағат бұрын
Brother, if you thought that Italian is slower, you don't have any experience with the language.
@ruralsquirrel515811 күн бұрын
Next, please do the slowest spoken languages in the world.
@sahkogile11 күн бұрын
would be Korean and Malaysian lmao
@MaoRatto11 күн бұрын
malayasian feels too Slow?
@rinotilde269911 күн бұрын
YES
@shadowspoon19211 күн бұрын
@@sahkogileKorean tends to be fast. There are only certain regions that speak slowly
@canchero72411 күн бұрын
I love Japanese and German when spoken slowly. So soothing
@NullCyan4 күн бұрын
Nice video! Brazil is a massive continental country itself and has tons of regional portuguese accents that are different between themselves. I live in the region of Minas Gerais and for me, people from southern states seem to speak way slower than I'm used to, the speed at which people speak colloquially in daily life varies like A LOT depending on the accent. I guess this also applies to any massive country however, take the USA for example, I'm not american but I perceive that people from Texas speak way faster than those from California.
@masterdon382110 күн бұрын
I like japanese as it is so clear . Consonant followed by vowel. Almost like a artificial made language. No annoying consonant clusters
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
And Japanese still hasn't deteriorate
@fulana_de_tal4 күн бұрын
You wouldn't believe how hellish it is to be a native speaker of a language that doesn't support consonant clusters and then start encountering languages that do (in my case, it's Brazilian Portuguese, and i didn't even have to learn another language to discover those nightmares, just take a quick look at the European accents)
@bennythetiger60523 күн бұрын
I've always loved Japanese because of this. It sounds like an advanced language (as in a futuristic world) because it's so efficient. And yet, the hard cap for languages is human brain processing, which makes all languages have the same data throughput
@masterdon38213 күн бұрын
@@bennythetiger6052 Alavise love japanese bicaze thise fiture. If English was japanese lol
@Seele2015au2 күн бұрын
@@fulana_de_tal I can sympathise with native Japanese speakers trying to learn Croatian, Polish, Welsh, etc.
@lumbrefrio10 күн бұрын
I read an article a few years ago about the study of language information density. This means how much information a language packs into syllables, etc. What they found is that the denser a language, the slower speech was because they didn't need to talk fast to get information out. The less dense (i.e. more sort of useless sounds), the faster a language is spoken. Ultimately what they found is that no matter the language or its speed, all languages generally get the same amount of information out in the same time frame.
@erkkinho10 күн бұрын
EXACTLY!
@banuchandar486016 сағат бұрын
The truth has been spoken
@puzzls_fun11 күн бұрын
German doesn't really have a stronger tendency to build long words than other Germanic languages, such as English. In English you would say "almond biscuit", in German you would say "Mandelkeks". Both terms are compound nouns. The difference is just orthography and orthography is not really a property of a language. We might also write "Mandel Keks" and "almondbiscuit". (Just as you can write "homepage" or "home page".)
@rtflone10 күн бұрын
My mum called it Mandel bread rather than Mandelkek. I never gave it a thought until now, but I suppose it was due to its loaf shape rather than round. Mandel bread or kek is crumbly like a cookie for you rookies. Either way, it was wunderbar..
@Jombozeus10 күн бұрын
I live in Germany and tell Germans this and they get very sad because it’s like I took away one of their toys.
@kapuzinergruft10 күн бұрын
Wrong: German compound words are different from English. A danube steam engine society captains wife... doesnt make sense. In German it would make sense. Like "braves Schulstoffvermittlungskino" (only recently read in a comment on a dull German movie)
@Jombozeus10 күн бұрын
@@kapuzinergruft it absolutely makes sense. If I wrote “Danubesteamengine’scaptain’swife” you tell me honest to god you can’t decipher what it is
@kapuzinergruft10 күн бұрын
@@Jombozeus For English speakers it doesnt make sense, because they dont like compound words. "Making sense" and "still being able to understand" are two concepts. You can found German compound words on a spot and create new meaning... Trostlosigkeitsgarantie... how to translate this? The certainty of falling into tristesse via... 😮😅. Tellerschwund, Vertröstungsstrategie... Thomas Bernhard even jokingly created the word: Fäustlingswolle.
@Kat-tr2ig10 күн бұрын
The speed of Spanish depends greatly on where it is spoken. Listening to Bolivians, Peruvians, or Colombians speak Spanish is NOTHING like listening to Dominicans, Cubans, or Puerto Ricans.
@nadiapitarch587010 күн бұрын
Yupp, that's right. In some Spanish dialects, like Andean ones, people tend to speak more paused and fully enunciate each word. Caribean dialects are the opposite. In Spain people tend to speak quite fast as well.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
I think the Spanish language has deteriorate since it was widespread in Latin America. Classical Spanish is better.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
@@nadiapitarch5870 I think the Spanish language has deteriorate since it was widespread in Latin America. Classic Spanish is better.
@gerardsotxoa8 күн бұрын
Caribbeans don't speak specially fast. Black people always trims and chop the words as in every language.
@PrimaYuurinTM4 күн бұрын
Yup, just like Portuguese, when it comes to dialects and accents, there are some who are fast AF, like the southern and northeast in Brazil. And don't even mention when we're fighting 😂😂😂
@favOriTe-v6e11 күн бұрын
this video was genuinely interesting, thanks for sharing it with us
@storylearning11 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@jonasholmqvist52319 күн бұрын
Unfortunately the information in it was wrong, though 😒
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
@@jonasholmqvist5231 Can you give an instance?
@rosepinkskyblue11 күн бұрын
5:54 this clip is NOT hindi. It’s a South Indian language, maybe Tamil or Malayalam but I’m not familiar with them to know for sure.
@tj563011 күн бұрын
It’s Marathi from Maharashtra.
@kiragillett833810 күн бұрын
I was looking for this comment 😂 I’m learning hindi and I understood the comedian hindi clip but didnt get a lick of the first clip lmao. Glad to know it was a different language and my hindi was not THAT bad
@LlyrKimimela9 күн бұрын
Yeah. I know Hindi very well, that first one was not Hindi. Probably Gurjrathi or Marathi, or something along those lines. The second tho, that was FFUUUUNNNYYYYYYY!!!! “Ask your sister or your landlord for the money. You get beaten up either way. But, but, those were past times/old days.”
@bleepbloop62344 күн бұрын
The number of factual errors in this video is astonishing.
@alanjyu11 күн бұрын
Language families often exhibit general trends in speech speed based on their common features. Romance languages (e.g., Spanish, Italian, French) are typically fast due to their simple syllable structures and complex conjugation systems, which facilitate rapid articulation. In contrast, Germanic languages (e.g., English, German, Dutch) tend to be slower, influenced by more complex syllable structures and stress-timed rhythms that create varied pacing. Sino-Tibetan languages (e.g., Mandarin, Cantonese) are usually slower because their tonal nature requires precise pronunciation to convey meaning. Slavic languages (e.g., Russian, Polish, Czech) often fall on the moderate to slower side due to complex consonant clusters and inflectional systems that can slow down speech.
@sazji10 күн бұрын
Also you’ve somewhat mischaracterized Turkish; if you’ll forgive me, it sounds a little bit like a “tourist view” of the language; reacting to the things that seem unusual to an English speaker without enough familiarity to look at it from inside. Turkish is agglutinative - they don’t string words together like German, they add suffixes that provide information like person, tense, mood and case. (When we say “hopelessness” in English, it’s not the same as a compound word like “lighthouse.”) In Turkish, those suffixes get strung together, and so they have undergone changes to make them flow more smoothly. That includes vowel harmony as well as consonant changes. Example: The suffix for “in/at” is da/de/ta/te. If you read these words you’ll see how it works: Ankara’da (in Ankara) Kocaeli’de (in Kocaeli) Yozgat’ta etc… İzmit’te It’s just a natural “smoothing” out of the suffixes, similar to the way contractions make words flow more easily. So you can have a word like “çalıştırılmamalıymış” (work + causative + passive + negative + should + 3rd person suffix for reported or surmised actions): “They say s/he shouldn’t be made to work.” And it just flows off the tongue easily. As for the “being kept hanging” by verb-final position, it’s only an issue if you’re trying to translate from English. It’s all information that combines to form the total thought being transmitted. Also, don’t mistake “official standard grammar” for the way people actually speak. Turkish is not so rigid in word order; there are lots of situations where you could put the verb at the beginning of a phrase, and in poetry it can be extremely flexible. You could argue that long sentences, which appear more in written Turkish, can get pretty complicated. But in reality even those long sentences are often a series of shorter verbal phrases. So it really isn’t this giant waiting game, unless you’re trying to translate. it is true that Turkish is very idiomatic, and a lot of those idioms don’t seem to make much sense if you translate them literally. But I would say a lot of that is linguistic culture as well. We don’t think twice when we say something like “what are you on about?” or “that’s just not on,” or “she’s really turned on.” Languages have idioms.
@davidturner751310 күн бұрын
Dont be salty. no one cares about your culture of armenians and greeks k1llers anyway.
@julinaonYT5 күн бұрын
I feel like your comment will help me learn turkish
@sazji2 күн бұрын
@ İnşallah. :-)
@davidturner75132 күн бұрын
@@sazji no one cares about your culture of genociders anyway.
@mumumununununenene9 күн бұрын
As a native Japanese speaker, I don’t really feel that my mother tongue is particularly fast or slow. If anything, English sounds way faster to us! Most of the time, Japanese natives can’t quite catch what’s being said and get confused, thinking “Oh🤯, that’s just too fast to understand...😦😧😟” One reason might be that Japan-born brains, tuned to mora-based language, tend to split unfamiliar syllables into consonants and vowels, interpreting each as separate units, or morae. For example, when the "In-gu-dish" speakers hear a genuine syllabic word such as “street,” it might sound like layered “sue-chu-ree.” Plus, Japanese people barely get any chance to train in English liaison. Unless the individuals study abroad or teach themselves outside of school, they rarely get exposed to how English words connect in real speech. So even a simple phrase like "hot or cold?" from an American can just blur together as one strange word: “her-ra-coe.” And listening to Adele’s interview was a total nightmare of British. WHAT THE 🤬!
@alicesacco93295 күн бұрын
I'm Italian and Japanese doesn't sounds that fast in my ears. To me, the only one that sounds fast is Spanish.
@BlackHoleSpain5 күн бұрын
@@alicesacco9329 I'm a Spaniard and for me Italian is mutually inteligible, but Italian has 3 times our vocabulary. We use a much reduced set of just 95,000 words, so Italian have many more Latin roots that are long forgotten in Spanish, or are just used in very complex academic words which common people never heard of.
@BlackHoleSpain5 күн бұрын
But you say that English sounds faster to you, when you don't fully know the language or you're not used to the pace it's spoken naturally. I've been listening to English for 30 years, and I think only with KZbinrs from a lot of different countries I managed to get used to fluency in the last 3 or 4 years.
@EstherQueiroz-re9eb16 сағат бұрын
Que video incrível, amei❤
@TheZenomeProject10 күн бұрын
The speed of Japanese is very speaker-dependent, as well. Older ladies always tend to take their time, but your usual salaryman speaks ridiculously fast. The fastest ones are often restaurant owners, from my experience.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
This is the result of immense intake of manga and anime. I am ready to allege this because my friend is instance it.
8 күн бұрын
Every language is speaker dependent to a certain degree
@AfonsoBucco5 күн бұрын
salaryman?
@Seele2015au2 күн бұрын
@@ЯрославКривич-ч4э Fubuki is a video game enthusist, hip-hop dancer, singer, meme lord, vtuber, and stage performer; if that be the case, she's got all of the advantage to speak like the example, helped by the nature of the Japanese language.
@EJJ50910 күн бұрын
I agree with story learning being effective. My Spanish teacher uses it and it works GREAT
@ximia92011 күн бұрын
It really calms me down that I am not the only one who learned french for years and still can't unterstand native conversations because of the speed...
@Limemill11 күн бұрын
And then there’s Québec French that keeps the rhythm but tosses out half the sounds like Dominican or Cuban Spanish would
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
Where in the modern world can French be applied?
@Satan-lb8pu9 күн бұрын
@@ЯрославКривич-ч4э what
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
@@Satan-lb8pu Why are you surprised?
@accaeffe80328 күн бұрын
@@ЯрославКривич-ч4эin France 😊
@kilanspeaks11 күн бұрын
A Thai friend recently told me he thinks Indonesians talk super fast, kind of like the Japanese or the Spanish. I had to break it down for him; this is because our words are generally longer, so yeah, we speed up to pack in enough info in less time. It’s different from tonal languages like Thai, Vietnamese, or Chinese, where the tones themselves already help convey meaning more efficiently. But here’s the funny part: it still doesn’t explain why we speak so much faster than Malaysians, even though our languages are closely related. Go figure! 😂
@sahkogile11 күн бұрын
the reason why Indonesian is more faster than Malaysia is reason why Spanish is faster.But if you include Malaysian dialect some of them another beast.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
@@sahkogile This is an instance of how even close languages can be so different.
@sahkogile9 күн бұрын
@@ЯрославКривич-ч4э yes
@artfonteslopes5 күн бұрын
10:26, not Brazil! Maybe Trinidad and Tobago?
@g1r4f453 күн бұрын
This is Bahia
@artfonteslopes3 күн бұрын
@@g1r4f45the excerpt with the ladies dancing, with glitter outfits and feathers? I'm from Salvador da Bahia and I can assure you this is not here, not even Rio (where those extravagant outfits with feathers are really a thing for Carnaval). The previous excerpt, yes, this one is here in Salvador.
@SiKedek10 күн бұрын
Rather than the "syllable per second" measurement, I'd rely on a "morpheme-per-second" measurement, so one can easily determine how much relevant information is being conveyed in one second. This might actually knock down Turkish and Japanese a bit, actually.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
You can implement this in your own video. If you allege this, you should prove it.
@boptillyouflop9 күн бұрын
I think that's likely to measure something different from syllable rate... Something like the "propensity of the language to subdivide meaning into small grammatical units". For instance, English has the word "bureau" which is more or less 1 morpheme, and yet the same word in French is like 5 morphemes (many of which are silent): "bur", "eau", masculine, singular, and the fact that it's a noun...
@iammotanz11 күн бұрын
I find the languages I understand to be slower than they're supposed to be in this list, which indicates that all of this is subjective and eventually anyone would be able to understand and speak a language with enough practice and determination 😊 EDIT: Exactly the point you're making at 17:20!
@airbmacndeehoc7 күн бұрын
Olly, thank you for briefly including Catalan!! I'm currently learning it and when I speak with native speakers I often find it hard to keep up.
@Oxalis_acetosella10 күн бұрын
Olly. You talk pretty fast yourself. I watch various videos to study English, but your speaking speed is one of the best.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
Yes, you should apply it
@gmcjunior832 күн бұрын
Caramba 😨, sempre tive essa impressão a cerca da velocidade da informação e eficiência do seu entendimento. Parabéns pelo trabalho maravilhoso. 🎉👏🏽
@javiermoretti182511 күн бұрын
I have no problem understanding rapid-fire Latin American Spanish, but I sometimes have some difficulties with Iberian Spanish, which doesn't seem to flow as well. Perhaps that's because I learned Spanish first in Mexico, then perfected it in Central America, Peru, and Argentina.
@ThaiIsland6 күн бұрын
Well, I'm glad English is not on this list otherwise I wouldn't be able to understand you. This is by far my favorite video of yours. That's impressive that you were able to gather this information. Thank you Olly for sharing! 🤙
@storylearning6 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@IanKemp19609 күн бұрын
Great video! As a native English speaker I spent years learning Japanese.... but when I visited Japan what threw me was the 'compressed' nature of the language. For example "hito-ka' can mean 'who's you're friend?' (Hito-ka literally means person-questionmark). At the other end of the scale was the kind of phrase I found myself saying after I'd live in Wales for a while... "what is it we're going to do about this, now then?' (English = 'now what?')
@yo2trader5398 күн бұрын
May I ask the scenario in which we would say something like 人か?
@pauloandrebonifacio47883 күн бұрын
A great way to get your videos highly viewed is by talking about Brazil, brazilians or putting a photo of something to do with Brazil in your post hahaha you can see how many brazilians commented here. Very smart, sir! Great video too!
@Boxhemia10 күн бұрын
Like many others said already; Spanish varies heavily depending on region, the fastest dialect by far is Metropolitan Chilean, not only because many consonants and ending letters just get flat out deleted, but also because its a language heavily reliant on local slang which either further abbreviates words, or replaces them with ones that have little to no consonants( Ex: Entiendes=Cachai, Estomago=Guata, Orinar=Mear) and another thing that is commonly done among the "lower class", is to sometimes combine the pronunciation of of two vowels that are together into one sound, which makes it even more confusing. All of this while already speaking extremely fast in general.
@tookitogo9 күн бұрын
I would be very, very surprised if Chilean were anywhere near as fast as Andalusian Spanish.
@PastelDeChocloReign4 күн бұрын
@@tookitogoit can be sometimes. Yes, in general we speak very fast but the country people from here tend to speak even faster to the point of being almost incomprehensible to the rest of the country lol
@zhujessie-ns2ku11 күн бұрын
I’m a young native mandarin, I just love hearing ancient languages being spoken. It’s just sounds beautiful 我是一个年轻的中国人。我超喜欢听古老的语言的声音。我就是觉得听起来特别流畅。
@entropie13811 күн бұрын
Eminem raps in English above 9.6 syllables per second.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
Lol😁This is the best instance of the fastest spoken language today.
@slowanddeliberate68939 күн бұрын
Over 11 in some songs.
@DanskAlex4 күн бұрын
Very interesting! Thank you!
@anti_acido2 күн бұрын
portuguese speakers from portugal speak much faster. if anything, i think brazilians are quite slow at speaking because we stretch our vowels, while in portugal they "eat" their vowels leaving only consonants lol
@バロクエ2 күн бұрын
f'ma um s'garro
@octavianova13007 күн бұрын
The domination of this list by Romance languages makes me wonder what how fast the speaking rate of classical Latin was
@Oxalis_acetosella10 күн бұрын
18:52 I am a native Japanese speaker, but I cannot hear much of this part because it is too fast. The speaker does not seem to be able to keep up with the tongue either. Normal Japanese is not spoken this fast.
@h2knad10 күн бұрын
オタク特有の早口ってやつか certainly not "normal" but i can understand it
@yo2trader5398 күн бұрын
I can understand her from the context, but the entire clip sounded like a tongue twister. The only people in Japan who usually speak that fast are: (1) voice actors; (2) SERI or auction house; or (3) Rakugo.
@lofwyr50633 күн бұрын
She's a 'virtual youtuber'. A voice and model rig actor for a graphical puppet... usually for the purpose of live streaming. An entertainer, so yes, it's not regular Japanese anyway. It's casual entertainment Japanese. She pretends to be a saucy pirate captain and she and her audience are almost all otaku.
@annalisajames655811 күн бұрын
Wow! Truly fascinating.
@alpo2smith11 күн бұрын
I am practicing 4 - 6 languages at the same time. For me, in all of them, if people would slow down to ~3/4 speed I am sure that I would understand them so much better. As such, when I speak to an English language learner I practice speaking @ 3/4 speed. I have been told that I am very easy to understand. Perhaps it’s just because my Vancouver Canada accent 😂
@MaartenSFS11 күн бұрын
There is no way that English is anywhere near the top 10! Still a fascinating topic regardless.
@Huehuecoyote10 күн бұрын
My honorable mention: Dutch I have been living in NL for 5 years and I still cannot understand two Dutch people speaking to one another
@acasualviewer58618 күн бұрын
I don't think they can either ;)
@MaxwellCatAlphonk6 күн бұрын
Dat kunnen ze waarschijnlijk wel, ten eerste zijn ze eraan gewend, ten tweede is het waarschijnlijk niet zo snel als je misschien denkt Nederlands voelt wel een beetje snel, je hebt wel gelijk
@MaxwellCatAlphonk6 күн бұрын
Ik heb Nederlands als moedertaal
@mr.octopus-plag9 күн бұрын
Excellent video! I speak Portuguese and Spanish natively, also French and last one is English, which is by far the hardest one for me. Because my brain is shaped with the Latin languages.
@artxavBR743 күн бұрын
Hi there, I’m brazilian and we have a really hard time understanding our portuguese fellows! It took me 3 to 4 times to get what the guy at 11,26min was saying (still not sure I really got it…)
@valije10 күн бұрын
Fastest speaker in the world was/is Luis Moya when he was copilot of Carlos Sainz in WRC. Try to find any footage from inside the car in any stage and just listen. The amount of syllables per second he is able to articulate is just amazing.
@shakenbacon-vm4eu10 күн бұрын
Mandarin is NOT the most spoken language in the world. It is the most spoken NATIVE language in the world. English is the most spoken language in the world when you account for it as a second, third, 4th language etc. Only about 380 million native English speakers, where it’s more than a billion second language English speakers. Mandarin is nearly a billion native speakers and just under 200 milllion second language speakers.
@thedu6405 күн бұрын
Right now they're more people speaking Chinese than other languages in the world, so we can say that Chinese is the most spoken language
@iuqz4 күн бұрын
Who cares bro
@bleepbloop62344 күн бұрын
@@iuqz Yeah, who cares when a channel about educations gets stuff wrong? Just say whatever you like and whatever man? Cuz who cares? Go play with your crayons.
@iuqz4 күн бұрын
@bleepbloop6234 he really didn't get it wrong, just wasn't as specific. Chill bro.
@bleepbloop62344 күн бұрын
@@iuqz No, the statement is objectively wrong. You're a total ignoramus for telling people who are correcting mistakes "who cares?" Utter lobotomite.
@derciosoares1113Күн бұрын
Keep it up!
@mentalitydesignvideo10 күн бұрын
check out Tamil and Singhala if you want to hear fast. All other languages I've heard can't even hold a candle.
@ZOOMIE11910 күн бұрын
සිංහල🤔
@MickeyMousOfficial4 күн бұрын
Now you have to make the top 10 fastest written languages in the world
@jonascarva803211 күн бұрын
I know it's never really mentioned in any major list you probably used for this vid, but I would say one of the very fast languages is also Czech, as very often when I speak Czech in front of other non-Czech speakers, mainly english speakers, they almost always ask me if I'm rapping, because of how fast I speak xD
@magpie_girl374110 күн бұрын
Czech has stress on the first syllable. So you have specific rhythm when you speak, because of this your language really sound like rapping. Regards from Poland.
@umrzemy4 күн бұрын
Brazil mentioned in the thumb!!
@luishmontagnana89294 күн бұрын
I'm Brazilian and when I hear Portuguese people speaking I usually don't understand at all what they're saying
@Cybarxz2 күн бұрын
Now imagine working in a call center in Sao Paulo and receive call from them... Thank God I have a new job now.
@BeatrizMarques804 күн бұрын
I thought I speak Portuguese but these Portugal clips are wild lol
@tabularasa_br11 күн бұрын
O Whindersson no vídeo. Não tankei
@MayseSantana10 күн бұрын
Você é seguidor do canal? Eu tomei um susto como seguidora do canal kkkkk
@tabularasa_br10 күн бұрын
@MayseSantana Eu sou kkkkkk adoro o Olly
@tabularasa_br10 күн бұрын
@MayseSantana ou você tá falando do Whindersson?
@MayseSantana10 күн бұрын
@@tabularasa_br é do Olly mesmo kkkkk Achei bem aleatório, mas enfim
@tupacmasteralg124710 күн бұрын
You always have creative topics
@0.4210 күн бұрын
at 0:44 you say mandarin Chinese is the most spoken language in the world. Although its the most spoken native language, english is actually is the most spoken. but thats a common mistake. anyways nice video
@shi_no_kurai_kage11 күн бұрын
My words go so fast that my sentence just slurs ざけんじゃねぇよコラ! ↓ ざけんじゃねぇよオラ!
@LuigiCotocea10 күн бұрын
友達、俺もそこに迷ったと思う!
@SuhbanIo10 күн бұрын
I don't see the differece except the second last character
@makotohanazawa65608 күн бұрын
@@SuhbanIo it happens when japanese is spoken really fast in a heated conversation. they mean the same. they also dropped a first syllable which is quite common
@ohifonlyx3310 күн бұрын
The way I was expecting Korean to at least get an honorable mention... for some of the same reasons as Japanese. Their vowels are very similar and can easily shift meaning.... they covey a lot of meaning in a few words... and they also have a lot of "fun" particles and sentence markers and honorifics that give their words extra syllables.
@sammymarrco4711 күн бұрын
My boy Roman (NFKRZ) looks like he got caught up in the Portuguese gangs with those tats.
@ЯрославКривич-ч4э9 күн бұрын
It was deliberate move
@Who-en2voКүн бұрын
Native English speaker, that easily picked up Spanish as a kid and also picked up Portuguese. Portuguese has a lot of “contracted” sounding Spanish words (eg maçã instead of manzana) but I got on a long talk with a Mexican friend that Portuguese more sounds like an older form of Spanish 😅 I think any language once you figure out the common sounds and patterns and how to make jokes, you’re well on the way to learning the language 😂
@Who-en2voКүн бұрын
Oh and a lot of regional dialects can really change how easy it is to understand/be understood by someone. I find myself sort of adjusting how I speak to match someone else, sort of like trying to fit into a dance routine 😂
@tamakisuo430010 күн бұрын
I was watching your video at 1.5 speed and I can understand japanese. Actually I always watch anime at 2x speed, because I have really short breaks during the day... It's not so difficult to understand languages by listening. You just can't speak like them.
@AriseFN11 күн бұрын
I’m surprised greek ain’t here sometimes when I talk to my parents I can’t tell what they are saying because they talk so fast
@ernestcline286811 күн бұрын
When measuring language speed shouldn't morphemes per second be used instead of syllables per second?
@sundaetheguitar11 күн бұрын
Chileans and Dominicans might be able to rap Crucified songs, casually going “brbebebrbrbrbrbrbrbrbehrbfbfbrbfbrrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrvrvrvrvrbrhrhsyegrgshavefahavrbrbrbrbrrrr”
@mglenadel10 күн бұрын
What exactly do you mean with “reading takes longer to process [than hearing]”? I certainly do read faster than people can speak, and I reckon that’s the same for pretty much everyone, is it not?
@tookitogo9 күн бұрын
I can only assume it’s highly individual. As a fast reader, I can read information way faster than I can listen to it. On the other hand, when reading, if we need to pause to actually process something, we can do that and then resume when done, or re-read to make sure. I suppose it’s also the difference between reading carefully for thorough understanding, vs. the skimming/speed-reading that is my default.
@boptillyouflop9 күн бұрын
If you asked me the relative syllable rate of different languages I would have said: - Slowest syllable rate: Vietnamese, Cantonese, Thai, Hmong - Slow syllable rate: English, Mandarin - Slowish syllable rate: French, German and other Germanic languages - Medium syllable rate: Turkish, Finnish, Korean, Mongol, Slavic languages - Fastish syllable rate: Italian, Portuguese, Greek - Fast syllable rate: Spanish - Fastest syllable rate: Japanese, many Polynesian languages Generally, for East Asian languages, the raw number of distinct syllables is a good indicator of the syllable rate due to the isolating grammar and tendency to have a similar amount of complexity in each syllable. (This doesn't work in European languages due to the mix of simple and complex syllables) For Romance languages, comparing the speed isn't too difficult due to the similar grammar and vocabulary. Spanish words are very often the same as French but with an extra -a or -o and it adds up pretty fast... Also note that the syllable rate of French varies: it is fastest in Southern France, and slowest (bordering on the rate of English) in Canada and Northern France, with more elisions and contractions in the slower varieties and also fewer vowel mergers (Paris French has 13 vowels, Canadian French has 16 if you don't count English loans, some varieties are bordering on 10 vowels).
@elmerzcosta9 күн бұрын
This is very interesting, specially as someone that speaks way too fast in my native language hahaha. I'm Brazilian, so I'm a native speaker of portuguese. I also know how to speak English (obviously) and Italian. The examples that were showed were actually easy to understand, and even easier with subtitles. That should be a sign for everyone to not be discouraged when facing these languages, because we eventually get used to speed. Now, this video is actually even more interesting to me, because I'm learning french currently and I started learning japanese some years ago but stopped because of time. Currently, speed in french is only a problem with words I don't yet know and when someone doesn't have a very clear pronunciation. On the other side of the coin, japanese was hell for me not because of speed but because of the fonetic nature of it. You see, the language is composed of syllables, not letters. So "Japan" in hiragana is にほん and in kanji it's 日本 , pronounced "nihon". You can see how its hard to follow spoken japanese even with subtitles, because you have to match the sound to the written syllable after it's completely said. And with kanji, it's matching a whole syllable or word with one symbol that changes meaning and pronunciation depending on context. Japanese is fast but for me the worse part is reading it at that same pace.
@dex1lsp9 күн бұрын
I've always noticed that about Turkish. Each sentence is a rapid-fire burst. It totally makes sense to me now that I know they put the verbs at the end!
@accaeffe80328 күн бұрын
Interesting. I thought that as an agglutinative language it can go almost anywhere.
@shayann222810 күн бұрын
4:50 Or is it? -Vsauce
@pou44474 күн бұрын
Brazil mentioned let's go
@Nilguiri10 күн бұрын
17:40 Interesting... except "estrada" is not Spanish!
@joforgefe1210 күн бұрын
estaba buscando este comentario... y si no, lo iba a escribir yo jajaja "estrada" XD eso es italiano creo
@Smierteln10 күн бұрын
@@joforgefe12 Portuguese i think
@Nilguiri10 күн бұрын
@@joforgefe12 Jaja, creo que sí, es italiano. ¡Y se supone que Olly habla castellano con fluidez!
@mucanan10 күн бұрын
What? Estrada IS a word in Spanish
@Nilguiri9 күн бұрын
@@mucanan It turns out that you're right. I've lived in Spain for 35 years and have never heard it used, as far as I can remember. ChatGPT says the following: Yes, estrada is indeed a Spanish word, though it is not commonly used in everyday speech. It generally refers to a raised platform or stage, similar to the word estrado (which is more common). Both terms describe an elevated area used for public speaking, performances, or ceremonies. However, estrado is preferred in modern Spanish, while estrada may appear more often in historical or formal contexts, or in certain regional dialects. In summary: Estrado: Commonly used to refer to a stage or raised platform. Estrada: Less common, but still recognised, with the same meaning..
@luk3to4 күн бұрын
I'm a simple guy, I see someone from my state, I click, I like.
@thehapagirl9211 күн бұрын
Trisha Paytas speaking English fast af is a language on its own 😅But French speak fast. I’m learning French and god damn they speak fast
@lcc614910 күн бұрын
I don't think we speak fast, it's more like we shorten many words so the sentence is shorter because of the shorten words. (that's my opinion)
@ryujihazama4 күн бұрын
I never knew that our language is the fastest spoken language. I don't quite feel like that because I am a slower speaker in Japan, but it makes sense.
@DoubleMaduagwu-sb4kp4 күн бұрын
I'm favoured, $27K every week! I can now give back to the locals in my community and also support God's work and the church. God bless America.
@AbrahamOGagaOrevaoghene4 күн бұрын
Waking up every 14th of each month to 210,000 dollars it's a blessing to I and my family... Big gratitude to Sonia duke 🙌🏻
@KokoPop-r7t4 күн бұрын
Yeah, 253k from Sonai duke, looking up to acquire a new House, blessings.
@DrewizeBanks-cz5ky4 күн бұрын
As a beginner what do I need to do? How can I invest, on which platform? If you know any please share.
@AquelePequenoNiVy4 күн бұрын
Bot, also god isn't real 🙏❤️
@coelhoazul64939 күн бұрын
Muito bom 🇧🇷
@drdegenerate81411 күн бұрын
6:27 😂😂😂BB ki vines kinda caught me off-guard Love from india❤️🇮🇳🪷
@ariyantmishra190310 күн бұрын
poore yt mein isko bb ki vines hi mila
@lilithius94104 күн бұрын
Spanish, Portuguese, Tagalog.
@rohanhearn296511 күн бұрын
Estrada is in Portuguese not Spanish and then later in the audio none of the things the lady was saying was matching the subtitles at all 😂😂
@favOriTe-v6e11 күн бұрын
estrada exists in spanish but it doesnt mean street
@LAJAP11 күн бұрын
Truth is that he needs content. And, as Englishman does, they can make anything look like it is real. There's no such thing as the fastest language, you can speak any language at any speed.
@InvinciblePythonEddy11 күн бұрын
@@LAJAPOf course you can speak languages faster or slower but on average some are statistically proven to be faster than others. It’s noticeable on an anecdotal level too. It’s not a conspiracy theory.
@LAJAP11 күн бұрын
@@InvinciblePythonEddy Read your contradiction. How do you statistically prove a language is faster than the next one, if anyone of its natives can speak it faster or slower at any time, in many different contexts? Who proved it statistically? Point us to that study. Is it statistically proved or anecdotal? Which is it? No wonder you had to bring up "conspiracy theory". I guess I was lucky, you could have thought I was being anti-semitic. I bet you've got all sorts of keywords that you've been taught to throw at others when someone calls your bullshit out.
@InvinciblePythonEddy11 күн бұрын
@@LAJAP Don’t you know what on average means? Let me lay it out for you. A group of people within a certain language can and will speak at a certain speed naturally, but can periodically speak faster or slower depending on factors such as environment, emotion or stylistic choice. This will happen across languages however, some languages note a considerably faster speed even at normal rates of speech than others. Of course a Japanese person can speak at a snails pace or a Chinese person like a bullet train, that doesn’t mean all languages are consistently spoken at whatever whimsical speed one individual decides to spit their words out. There is literally a study on it, if you want to know the methodology just google which languages are fastest. There is also a plethora of videos which cover language speed and document peoples anecdotal experiences. Why are you even responding, you have no argument.
@JB-jt6oq3 күн бұрын
I'm brazilian and i actually used to speak too fast when i was young. I'm from the north east part and we tend to speak like that naturally (i think a similar would be Texas in EUA) But i was so over it man, i had to change my accent and i did🤖
@AlienInSider11 күн бұрын
I don't agree with that 39 bits per second! But I agree that fast languages carry the same amount of information as slow languages per unit of time. There is only one reason for this and there is no escaping it. Fast tongues reproduce sounds, flatter taftologically and physically. Physics - the tongue in the mouth and the air pressure at the top of the vocal cords! By the way, I'm Bulgarian, and we have the same word for tongue in mouth and tongue - (Език - Ezik)
@sanjaymoncrieffe71269 күн бұрын
Any stats on Haitian kreyol or Jamaican Patwa?
@musicuser99679 күн бұрын
I have been trying to learn russian for awhile and i would say russian is spoken pretty fast by natives, years back in highschool i was trying to learn japanese and i noticed a much easier time understanding native japanese speakers saying words i knew compared to russian
@heberccruz4 күн бұрын
BRAZIL MENTIONED!!! 🔥🔥🔥
@Techmanda3 күн бұрын
I struggle with Portuguese because of the speed. People don't think I am fluent in Portuguese because of the speed, but I am. I just need more practice.
@sazji10 күн бұрын
With Mandarin (and Vietnamese), it seems you’re conflating some things that shouldn’t be conflated: 1) Meaning of syllables with what comprises their written characters. The character for “eat” includes the radical for “mouth,” but the _word_ for “eat” is just “chī.” It’s just a syllable that contains no hidden components of any kind. 2) Tones and meaning. Tones are just part of pronunciation that likely evolved when consonant clusters were disappearing from ancient chinese and replaced by tones to avoid a huge confusing crop of homonyms. There is nothing magical about them, any more than the difference between the vowels in “net” and “nit.” It’s happening today in the Phnom Penh dialect of Khmer. Khmer has lots of initial consonant clusters. In those with secondary R (such as srey, pram - woman, five) the R is dropping out leading to “sey, pam”. But it’s also being replaced by a low rising tone, so you have sěy, pǎm. But the tone doesn’t add some meaning to the words, it just helps to distinguish it from possible homonyms that would occur if there were no tone to distinguish them.
@retrohipster10605 күн бұрын
I've been learning Japanese for a while and I wondered if Japanese was going to be up there. But what's interesting is that you are very right about the effect of it. Now that you mention it, I can see that it's fast, but it's not something that really registers with your brain. It really is about the meaning. I will say that all of the syllables make it very difficult to find your place again once you start to get lost in a sentence.
@Pippis7810 күн бұрын
I - a city dweller - probably speak 10 times faster than someone from a remote rural place in my country. Including how much more information I get out in a set time. Words are also shortened dramatically in my dialect/slang. In some dialect words are even lengthened from the standard version. I am probably a particilarly lively and fast speaker in general for a Finnish person.
@vegardaukrust544710 күн бұрын
What about "meanings" pr. second? Wouldn't it be more relevant to measure units of meaning pr. second?
@akumayoxiruma3 күн бұрын
I am a bit surprised that Danish isn't on this list. As a Swedish speaker (a lot of mutual intelligibility), I am perfectly able to decipher written Danish but listening comprehension is quite difficult: Similar to French, Danish swallows lots of letters and smashes them together.
@alanjyu11 күн бұрын
Are there trends? Languages with features like tonal requirements, monosyllabic word structures, and complex syllable structures tend to be on the slow side. Languages with simple syllable structures, complex conjugation systems, and consistent phonetic rules are typically on the fast side.
@yorgunsamuray9 күн бұрын
When you don't know or at least accustomed to the language it seems faster than usual. I'm a Turk who speaks Japanese and while during my first days learning Japanese, it sounded crazy fast to me, but not anymore. On the contrary, as a speaker of three languages stated here (Turkish, English and Japanese) I find Greek really fast...specially its news (Greek TV can be watched from some parts of the country).
@matute75plus53 күн бұрын
Just to satisfy my curiosity, how would guaraní rank on this list?
@Naruneyl4 күн бұрын
One thing that has unironically helped me get better is slowly cranking up the video speed. I used to do this to cram things back in college but it carried through and it's both hilarious and interesting to just see someone talking 1.75x faster than usual.