So refreshing to see an American who actually knows other cultures 👏
@slayandserve6 ай бұрын
@@module79l28 probably they didnt mention that to her
@slayandserve6 ай бұрын
@@module79l28 It literally says american guesses europeans on the top left. She even pointed out at the belgian girl that she might be from Turkey because she looks Asian but the closest country to Europe thats kind of seen as Asian is Turkey, so she tried staying within Europe. I dont think she would be so familiar with european culture and wouldnt know that france or turkey isnt germanic, lol.
@renofumi286 ай бұрын
@@module79l28so you saying you can do better?
@slayandserve6 ай бұрын
@@module79l28 u're so slow they probs told that to her, if they said germanic languages it would have been too easy.
@manoloantonio52066 ай бұрын
Yes, because Americans are no different from people from other countries which means that there are well educated, thoughtful individuals as well as people that are not. I think this speaks more of your prejudices based on nationality than anything else.
@realhawaii5o6 ай бұрын
It's great to see an American that knows and cares about other cultures. Hard to find this depiction online.
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
Things we see online are literally staged. So it seems like Americans are stupid but really there are many many MANY smart Americans out there. This is not bias as I am a Swede and I can say we have pretty dumb people too like someone told me once Dutch people are from Germany or France has the city Rome (it’s just staged stereotypes) not always true
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
Not nowadays since Americans now are really good at culture, maybe newer gen will be way better than Europeans at knowledge
@DrVictorVasconcelos4 ай бұрын
@@ItzDenholmI don't think so. They've gotten better, but in general it's more of a personal desire to travel or liking of diversity that corresponds to a specific type of person as opposed to actually having mandatory world history and geography classes. You still get a lot of people answering "What country are tacos from?" with "Texas". Schooling in the US in general is very spotty, curricula are based on antics by local politicians, and a lot of people fall through the cracks.
@DrVictorVasconcelos4 ай бұрын
True, but I was very surprised that she didn't know Austria was a German-speaking country. History classes in the US are pretty spotty but if there's one thing you'll learn about is WW2. It's the US's entire claim to fame.
@AvarianGuard2 ай бұрын
Well thats because negativety gets clicks, people would much rather watch dumb people give dumb answers and laugh at them then watch people just give normal answers.
@Tatiana-zi7by6 ай бұрын
This American girl is so sweet, kind and gentle!
@Joshi_Mayd6 ай бұрын
I'd personally, agree.
@nah1UwU6 ай бұрын
I would.
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
She’s definitely very kind
@MultiJoel19976 ай бұрын
Smartest American teenager I've seen on the internet all year
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
I hate this comment so much bro, it’s not like there are stupid people in every country (America has some of the highest educated ever)
@Neal_McBeal5 ай бұрын
@@ItzDenholm Not all stereotypes are wrong. Sadly.
@Rat_da_cheese_eater5 ай бұрын
@@ItzDenholmtoo bad
@mcduck66275 ай бұрын
@@ItzDenholmi agree with the original comment
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
@@Neal_McBealthis stereotype is wrong Af what are you on?
@jasperkok87456 ай бұрын
As a Dutchie who has lived very close to the border with Germany for most of his life, I would never have guessed that the Austrian girl was from Austria. Her accent was so neutral that I couldn’t possibly tell it apart from standard German from Germany.
@mmww11276 ай бұрын
As a German I also thought she was german
@egoneiermann-tn7sc6 ай бұрын
I would have put the Swiss woman in Eastern Europe, even though I come from Southern Germany and grew up with the Allemanic dialect. She probably just spoke too fast as a Bernese.
@Dominiquekreekels6 ай бұрын
I'm a duchtie
@martenspitzner4086 ай бұрын
@@jasperkok8745 That's because she's from Tirol, a Region in Austria and Italy where they speak a very different dialect than the Standard austrians. My father is from there. Aside from the dialect the tiroleans rather learn high German instead of austrian German because of closer historical ties to Germany than to Austria and because when going on a Holiday in Austria the Germans mostly go to Tirol, so it's Not uncommon for a German on Holiday there to meet other Germans.
@jasperkok87456 ай бұрын
@@martenspitzner408 Oh, that’s interesting, thanks for explaining. I studied Spanish at university, so I know a fair bit about how languages differ (though more in the Romance language family than the Germanic languages). I had a similar experience with an Australian lecturer once. He spoke in such a neutral accent (cultivated Australian English), that I initially thought he was British. It was only when I listened more carefully that I noticed a few non-British features in his pronunciation.
@TheJonTendo6 ай бұрын
1:28 Actually the Kebab Döner was invented in Germany by a Turkish guy. He brought the Kebab Plate to germany and noticed his restaurant was empty. That's when he saw outside how german people were always in hurry and ate Hamburgers and Cheeseburgers while running. And he was like why don't I stuff everything inside a flatbread and make it to go? And that's how the Kebab Döner came to existence.
@Ismail_ibn_Ishaq6 ай бұрын
This was the first time I saw a German person online admitting Donor came from Türkiye. I encountered multiple people who genuinely believe Turkish people saw donor in German and introduced in Türkiye.
@CrushIWFNation6 ай бұрын
@@Ismail_ibn_IshaqNo, Döner Kebab was invented in Germany BY a turkish guy. That‘s the point.
@north286 ай бұрын
@@CrushIWFNation thats right, If I remember right, round about 35 years ago in West Berlin.
@TheJonTendo6 ай бұрын
@@Ismail_ibn_Ishaq Well Yesn't The *Kebab Plate* came *from Turkey* to Germany yes BUT the *Kebab Döner* was *invented* IN *Germany* BY a *turkish guy*
@Rifatshorts1154 ай бұрын
And then it was called döner kebab nacho Alejandro garnacho döner kebab nacho Alejandro garnacho megaphone telephone gianluigi Buffon megaphone telephone gianluigi buffooooon
@Maedhros0Bajar5 ай бұрын
6:22 technically we have 3 languages in Belgium. But given that the German speaking Oostkantons only have 80K inhabitants, I can understand not having heard that
@Ju1sen4 күн бұрын
As a German speaking Belgian - thank you very much 😁
@Maedhros0Bajar4 күн бұрын
@@Ju1sen That's not meant as an attack on the German community. Just that I can at least understand people outside Belgium not knowing about the German speaking community.
@wilfreddv6 ай бұрын
The Dutch being called German is a timeless but infuriating fact.
@sanipine6 ай бұрын
Well, even the national anthem states, that the Dutch national hero is of German heritage ("ben ik, van Duitsen bloed")
@Answerisequal426 ай бұрын
tbf dutch does mean "Deutsch" from an etymological standpoint. So dutch literally means german in terms of raw meaning.
@aquilschutte6 ай бұрын
@@Answerisequal42but only english people call dutch people dutch.
@junop18806 ай бұрын
@@Answerisequal42 only english calls it dutch
@ikbent2626 ай бұрын
“Diets” in Dutch, means “belonging to the people”
@AnniJ156 ай бұрын
Even Germany has many dialects and we germans don't understand each other sometimes 🤣
@ItsClariundAno6 ай бұрын
Yea true, I’m from germany
@chrrol67046 ай бұрын
@@ItsClariundAnoservus. und aus woher genauer, wenn i frong derf?
@JizzyPres6 ай бұрын
@@AnniJ15 thats so true
@enlightendbel6 ай бұрын
Gets even worse when you go to other German speaking countries. But it's similar with Scandinavian languages, they are essentially the same while sounding very different, but there's always this one language that just sounds like the other ones if a person speaking were just severely drunk. That's the same sense I got with Austrians when hearing them speak. They are just Germans that sound exceptionally drunk.
@kolimoli88256 ай бұрын
I heard a Swedish person describe danish as just swedish but with a potato stuck in their throat.. I found it quite fitting actually
@stargazer00166 ай бұрын
Yes, Switzerland has 4 national languages but they are regional so don't go thinking everyone speaks all four! As of 2022, 61.8% speak a Swiss German dialect as their first language, 22.8 % French, 7.8% Italian, 0.5% Romansh (it's endangered and all speakers are perfectly bilingual with Swiss German or Italian) and 23.4% speak a non-national language natively, the top ones being English, Portuguese and Albanian. All Swiss people have to learn at least one of the other national languages in school (not Romansh, the other three). But it's common knowledge that the German speakers don't like learning French and the French speakers don't like learning German and most people are pretty bad at it lol.
@Alias_Anybody6 ай бұрын
I've experienced it once and the amount of vitriol German speaking Swiss have for learning French (and vice versa I assume) sometimes makes me wonder how and IF people there communicated before English became the default language for international commerce.
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
@@stargazer0016 in Belgium French language expanded at the expense of Dutch. Dutch people have to learn French but not vice a versa. It's good that Germans are fiercely nationalist about their language that's why French didn't expand at the expense of German. It's good that Germans are reluctant to learn French unlike Dutch people who have to learn French
@stargazer00166 ай бұрын
@@Alias_Anybody Oh no, we don't use English to communicate. Either our job/life requires us to know the other language (and then we obviously do), or we barely have any contact with the other language region at all. You have to understand, every Kanton ("state") of Switzerland is very individual, there's different taxes and school systems for example. We are not a centralized state and there are significant divides between the three main language regions.
@stargazer00166 ай бұрын
@@NikhilGupta-jw3ob French in Switzerland was never in danger of expanding or repressing German, nor the other way around. And simply acquiring language skills doesn't endanger your own language. What you're describing sounds like a political problem of Belgium (the government favoring one language) that we don't have in Switzerland. We Swiss just don't like learning French/German because it's HARD.
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
@@stargazer0016 you are right in general learning another language doesn't endanger your language but in Belgium French expanded at the expense of Dutch. E.g. Brussels was a Dutch city now it's mostly French city. Lot of people who's grandparents spoke Dutch speak French today (and they don't understand Dutch).
@yurenchu28 күн бұрын
3:20 "Do you like to put sprinkles on your toast, or something..." Very clever question, Nessa knows about our _hagelslag_ !
@Hart.Of.Islam.6 ай бұрын
This channel "World Friends" is playing an important role in protecting world brotherhood. This is my favorite channel. I am a subscriber and regular viewer of this channel 🥰❤
@waverunner70636 ай бұрын
I'm glad you bring relatively educated and well-traveled Americans on your show.
@fluffyMajestic6 ай бұрын
rich kids
@thomas173756 ай бұрын
Tbf it's an American that lives in Korea at a young age, the average American doesn't even know what or where Korea is (except maybe because of the war)
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
@@thomas17375no the education In Korea is miles worse than America (they cannot even distinguish Italian from Spanish which imo is sad since i can do that so easily) but it also they cannot even retain information since they are in school until like 10 pm
@ItzDenholm5 ай бұрын
@@thomas17375and also that’s why a lot of Koreans send their children abroad or move abroad to somewhere else (the American stereotype is one of the biggest lies I’ve seen in history)
@troy50942 ай бұрын
@@ItzDenholmdifferentiating Spanish from Italian is not really a useful skill for most East Asians though? They just need to know these languages exist and I don't think that indicates failure in the education system
@henri1916 ай бұрын
Belgium was way too easy to guess, basically the best question to ask if someone is from Belgium 😂 , french fries is a big thing in Belgium...probably because it's from there
@retowalti92276 ай бұрын
i love how the americans say french fries even its from belgium originally - its from the WW1 or WW2 where the American Soldiers were based in Belgium near to France and thought it was France because they spoke alot of french there
@CT-7567R3X6 ай бұрын
No!!! French fries are from France. The Belgian food historian Pierre Leclercq has traced the history of the french fry and asserts that "it is clear that fries are of French origin".[39] They became an emblematic Parisian dish in the 19th century. Frédéric Krieger, a Bavarian musician, learned to cook fries at a roaster on rue Montmartre in Paris in 1842, and took the recipe to Belgium in 1844, where he created his business Fritz and sold "la pomme de terre frite à l'instar de Paris" ("Paris-style fried potatoes").[40][41] The modern style of fries born in Paris around 1855 is different from the domestic fried potato that existed in the 18th century. From the Belgian standpoint, the popularity of the term "french fries" is explained as "French gastronomic hegemony" into which the cuisine of Belgium was assimilated, because of a lack of understanding coupled with a shared language and geographic proximity of the countries.[38] The Belgian journalist Jo Gérard [fr] claimed that a 1781 family manuscript recounts that potatoes were deep-fried prior to 1680 in the Meuse valley, as a substitute for frying fish when the rivers were frozen.[29][35] Gérard never produced the manuscript that supports this claim, and "the historical value of this story is open to question".[42] In any case, it is unrelated to the later history of the french fry, as the potato did not arrive in the region until around 1735. In any case, given 18th-century economic conditions: "it is absolutely unthinkable that a peasant could have dedicated large quantities of fat for cooking potatoes. At most they were sautéed in a pan".[43]
@CT-7567R3X6 ай бұрын
@@retowalti9227 Absolutly not. Amercan call them french fries because they are french. invented during the revolution in Paris Pont Neuf.
@Koalaster6 ай бұрын
@@retowalti9227 In the Netherlands we have 2 different words for them, Vlaamse(belgium) and French, Vlaamse are usually a bit thicker than French here, but honestly idk where they are originally from.
@Erdnav276 ай бұрын
@@Koalaster But it's patat either way.
@zoetjez6 ай бұрын
Huh, as a dutch person (The Netherlands) I understood the swiss girl. The swiss-german dialect sounds kind of like a dutch dialect. And the austrian girl was easier to understand than the german girl
@teqfreak6 ай бұрын
Im Dutch too, I have also often found it to be easier to understand Austrian and Swiss German. I don't know why exactly.
@Ronnet6 ай бұрын
Same here. Initially I thought it was danish with a funny (funnier) accent. I could completely follow what she was saying. Which I can also do with Danish but not German (I'm from Friesland).
@thomas173756 ай бұрын
Dutch too, Swiss sounded surprisingly like German mixed with a Scandinavian language. Never knew it was so different to "normal" German before this video
@zorromuis2226 ай бұрын
As a dutchman i was suprised how close to dutch she was speaking ..
@garmr2146 ай бұрын
That’s because Dutch and Swiss German are more phonetically conservative than Standard German
@Nico-se8ws6 ай бұрын
Fun fact even English is a Germanic language
@usshelenacl-506 ай бұрын
whose only 26% words are of Germanic origin though
@schurlbirkenbach19955 ай бұрын
@@usshelenacl-50 the basic vocabulary of English language is completly germanic. And the elevated vocabulary in all Western European languages is practically Latin. Even words like Mauer (=Wall in German) is of Latin origin.
@schurlbirkenbach19953 ай бұрын
@Andreyas-ou7fq I also spoke about Western Europe
@schurlbirkenbach19953 ай бұрын
@Andreyas-ou7fq Well I spoke of Germanic languages. That's a Western, originally a northern European language. I could also speak about the influence of Arabic on Farsi. But that was not the content of this podcast. Of course I know, that alkohol comes from Arabic and Anorak from the Eskimos but even a lot of foreign words don't change the basic vocabulary and the structure of a language.
@schurlbirkenbach19952 ай бұрын
@Andreyas-ou7fq of course it is. And it influenced all Western European languages heavily because of the political and cultural dominance of Rome, 2000 years ago. As scientific language it was used till 1700. Isaac Newton wrote his most important book about physics in Latin, not in English.
@Ava_Grim6 ай бұрын
I really like this channel, but as an Austrian I have to say one thing - Austria is misrepresented in this video, because Austrian dialects are so different from high german, it´s not just pronounciation, we have many words that does not exist in high german and just like swiss german most germans won´t understand austrian dialects while austrians would understand germans perfectly. But even if all of that was covered in the video, you simply cannot define THE austrian dialect, because there are so many. Austrian german also is more of a spoken language, just like swiss german, there are no actual rules how to write the words, you just write them how you say /feel them, because of this you won´t find written austruan german in restaurants etc, with some exceptions, for example if you order a very regional product, there are chances that they still have the original name in that specific dialect.
@moritz19326 ай бұрын
As a German, I can tell you that it is A LOT easier to understand Austrian than Suiss-German.
@patrickm39816 ай бұрын
@@moritz1932 Beside the western most part where Alemannic dialects are spoken, Bavarian dialects are spoken in Austria. If you understand them better then Swiss-German then either you live in Bavaria or have at least been exposed more to Bavarian dialects then to the Alemannic dialects where the Swiss dialects are part of. It might also be the case that the Austrians toned down their dialect so they can be better understood. I speak an Alemannic dialect and standard German. Still, it can be very hard for me to understand these Bavarian dialects if the speaker does not tones it down. On the other hand of course Swiss dialects are a lot easier to understand for me.
@reneevansteenbergen15586 ай бұрын
U know in Austria speakd GERMAN GERMAN because it was taken over by germany
@katze990006 ай бұрын
@@patrickm3981 As a swabian (alemannic dialect) who lived in switzerland for two years I still understand austrian a lot better than swiss german :D Most people I know do, to be honest. So I think this isn't always the case. But maybe you come from a different part of germany or maybe you have some special power for the swiss language :D
@chcucivtxzclccucifudohzfu67666 ай бұрын
Tbf you could say the same thing about Germany. We have tons of different dialects which use different words and pronunciation so it’s hard for people to understand dialects from other regions. Technically both Austrian and Swiss aren’t languages but dialects from German so it’s a bit unfair to use them here (same with Belgium that also has no own language but uses dutch, french and german with some dialects)
@clay288919 күн бұрын
The American girl is awesome! I love how open she is about learning other cultures.
@EddieReischl6 ай бұрын
This is a really nice video. What is really cool is that Nessa is a quintessential American. She's adorable. Switzerland and Austria were tough. If they hadn't already had a German girl, I would have guessed German for the Austrian girl. She was probably being a little cautious about using her local dialect, wanting to avoid derogatory comments. The Swiss girl was like, "If I use my dialect, no one outside of West-Central Europe will guess where I'm from."
@Slithermotion6 ай бұрын
The swiss girl wasn‘t trying to trick anyone swiss people, at least in the german part always communicate in local dialect. In Austria and Germany it‘s much more common to restrict dialect with the closest family and friends while in switzerland it has socialy an equal status to standard german. Swiss german is a prime example of a diglossy.
@EddieReischl6 ай бұрын
@@Slithermotion It's a game, everything is for fun, they're trying to make it not easy. It's all fair. They had an Austrian girl from Vorarlberg a while ago that caught all kinds of scheiß from other Austrians for using her dialect. I don't blame the Austrian girl for using Hoch Deutsch. Switzerland is a tough guess no matter what. They could speak French. Schweizer Deutsch from Bern is extra tough for an American.
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
You have a German name. For you to guess Austria/Germany should not be difficult
@EddieReischl6 ай бұрын
@@NikhilGupta-jw3ob If only you knew how pathetic my German is, it's a work in progress. But yeah, regular German and simple Dutch I can sort of follow along with.
@DrPeterLankton3815 ай бұрын
@@EddieReischl Your surname looks like it could be from Austria or Bavaria. The ending with l instead of el is typical for Austria and Bavaria.
@naj_z6 ай бұрын
Chosen the smartest American they could find to do this video hahaha. She actually knows her stuff!
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
Majority of new gen Americans are exposed to the world now so I am not surprised, maybe in the past it was worse
@ManuelRuiz-xi7bt6 ай бұрын
Somebody from the USA on this channel in the leading role that knows a bit more of the world AND is better in languages. Nice!
@flitsertheo6 ай бұрын
Once Americans move out of their country they become as intelligent as other humans. Mostly.
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
Majority of Americans teens now are more educated on the world than some european countries now, I’m not surprised even that the new gen knows a lot about other cultures
@danielmcallahan6 ай бұрын
As an austrian i can understand swiss german but it just sounds off somehow but not in a bad way. Its just not what im used to
@-_-Hayden6 ай бұрын
Yeah same, Voralberg dialect is similar
@Terrown6 ай бұрын
That's cos it's a different Dialect group. Swiss, Vorarlberg and southern Baden-Württemberg (like Swabian) are Alemanic Dialect, while Austria and southern Bavaria are Bavarian(-Austrian) Dialect.
@chrrol67046 ай бұрын
i vasteh d, schweizer aa einigermaßen.
@Insertsomethingpls6 ай бұрын
Same here, even as a Swiss I didn’t realise I could understand it right away
@qbvh6 ай бұрын
Good to see an American teenager who is smart and interested by other countries, their cultures and languages! Others must take an example!
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
This is a newer gen American, so maybe her education is better than old generation, since nowadays exposure is way higher now, so maybe the past is still in your mind, the stereotype will die out soon
@blablahablub6 ай бұрын
Döner was invented by a German Turk in Berlin. So it wasn´t "brought" into our country how she said.
@caimaccoinnich95946 ай бұрын
That's not true
@jtinsidemk29616 ай бұрын
@@caimaccoinnich9594 of course it is. Whats your source to say somthing like this. It was 1972 if you want to research
@MissHimbeere6 ай бұрын
It's true.
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
invented by a turkish guy that brought it to germany. it is turkish.
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
@@jtinsidemk2961doner is turkish
@SanneTol6 ай бұрын
The Swiss language sounded to me as dutch. I'm dutch and I could understand. Had the same type of Grammer too
@Kleermaker100024 күн бұрын
Not to me. Maybe you are from a part of the Netherlands where they speak a heavy dialect. :)
@jensschroder82146 ай бұрын
Belgium speaks Dutch, French and German. After WW1 there were few German towns on the Belgian side. It has remained that way to this day.
@flitsertheo6 ай бұрын
Belgium got that territory as compensation for WW1 damages. Of course some of those ex-Germans wanted to return to the Reich but after Adolf and his one-way tickets to the Eastern front they changed their mind.
@TeacherAziotou6 ай бұрын
It's true that German is also a belgian language, but all the cities that were given to Belgium after WW1 did not remain in Belgium after WW2. For instance, the city of Kelmis has an even weirder history, as it was neutral before WW1.
@remidogger54726 ай бұрын
I used to go to Sankt Vith on holiday with my parents. The German speaking part of Belgium is such a beautiful place to visit!
@TeacherAziotou6 ай бұрын
My hometown is Kelmis and I work in Eupen. Therefore, i know the area pretty well. I even made some Video to explain it. ... but it's in german.
@flitsertheo6 ай бұрын
@@remidogger5472 I remember Vielsalm, where an uncle is buried. He only spent the few last months/years of his life there, far away from his home. So in the middle of winter I had to journey more than 120 km to the Ardennes and then it started snowing too. Most of the family weren't that crazy and stayed at home.
@jorgecandeias6 ай бұрын
The Swiss girl is a floating torso...
@Nisan-v6h6 ай бұрын
As a german I understand swiss german really well😂❤
@jimmybondy94506 ай бұрын
Well yeah. Of course people from the south do understand it easily.
@swiss6126 ай бұрын
"Ich heisse xy" oder "ich bin xy Jahre alt" ist wohl auch sehr einfach zu verstehen, in jeder Sprache 😂 Zudem kommt sie aus Bern, genau der Dialekt der dafür bekannt ist seeehr langsam gesprochen zu werden. Woher kommst du aus Deutschland?
@NochEinKamel6 ай бұрын
I understand swiss army knift well :D
@trixfox456 ай бұрын
I understood it partly. (also am from Germany though ) My moms dad was from Switzerland so she would talk about him a lot ,single words that were different and some sentences he said a lot/that she remembers.
@JizzyPres6 ай бұрын
As a German coming from Dortmund (so not used to allemanic dialects) but living now in Konstanz i dont understand any of those allemanic. Not the village dialects of the region. And swiss also. But i have the same with bavarian or austrian.
@Charles_2006 ай бұрын
I also can't undestand german from Switzerland 😂, i'm used to hear from Germany, the original, and also Austrian German, but Switzerland is always a hard time, Belgium is so easy to guess
@12tanuha216 ай бұрын
@@AnXX94 Except that Switzer-German have taken part of the consonant shifts together with the other southern German dialects, and Dutch together with the other northern German dialects not. Switzer-German is southern German with a strong Allemanic dialect (much stronger than Swabian). The origin of Dutch is also not Allemanic, but Low Franconia.
@brittakriep29386 ай бұрын
@@12tanuha21: For me , being swabian, the version of Swiss German used in lower parts of Switzerland is better understandable, and the version of Swiss German, used in TV is also basicly a very old Version of Swabian dialect. But when old rural Swiss persons speak, i understand nothing, even being a descendant of Alemannic tribe too.
@melina93666 ай бұрын
Me coming from more of the north of Germany I have also real trouble understanding Swiss German. It sounds pretty funny, but often I can‘t understand a thing
@williamwilting6 ай бұрын
I first thought that it was either a very unclear dialect of German, Luxembourgish or Danish. I quickly eliminated Luxembourgish due to the lack of French elements and the fact that the accent didn't sound as close to Dutch as Luxembourgish does. And then I realized that Danish has some sounds influenced from English, which I didn't hear here, so it had to be Swiss German. Initially I thought it was Danish, because it sounded a bit Nordic to me, but it couldn't be Swedish, Norwegian or Icelandic, because I knew those are further away from German than Danish is. By the way, I'm Dutch and can understand German, but I didn't understand much of what the Swiss woman said.
@gottfriedheumesser19946 ай бұрын
As an Austrian (not from Vorarlberg, but from Vienna) I have problems understanding people from Switzerland.
@koomaj6 ай бұрын
She is great. Very knowleable person.
@Roanmonster6 ай бұрын
They didn't even mention how the Dutch girl had a southern accent! Usually they can tell by the g-sound where we're from, maybe they picked a southern person on purpose.
@zoetjez6 ай бұрын
She probably couldn't hear that, because she didn't say a word with a g in it. For us dutchies is easier to tell the difference, but it's harder for people who don't speak dutch. I grew up in a village near Eindhoven and we have a pretty hard southern dialect there. I honestly didn't even notice the girl was from the south. Had to listen twice after I read your comment.
@CatBloom426 ай бұрын
@@zoetjez She said she is zevenentwintiG years old ;) I'm from the same area as you, and at first I didn't notice she's from the south either. I only noticed after rewatching it. Her accent is pretty mild compared to the Kempisch I'm used to.
@Roanmonster6 ай бұрын
@@zoetjez "Ik ben zevenentwintiG jaar" though
@languagesolehsoleh6 ай бұрын
The non Gooise R
@LouisFritz-c7v6 күн бұрын
I‘m from germany and I couldn‘t hear a differentere between normal German What I speak and the Austrian Dialect😅
@AskanHelstroem6 ай бұрын
1:25 The Döner as most people know it, is actually an invention made in *Berlin* , Germany. Even tho the Döner Kebab is turkish, the Döner in bread (in German: Doner Bag = Dönertasche) His name was _Kadir Nurman_ He was 26 when he came to germany. He came to that idea, thx to his customers. They asked for a more "mobile"-variant, to eat on the go... So Mr. Nurman just put everything from the plate in a pide-bread.
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
So it is still turkish as it was made by a turk.
@ghost-iu9hv6 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11.No its simply both. Thats how immigration and globalization works
@AskanHelstroem6 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11. soo...The telephone... scotish invention right? A.G. Bell was scottish after all... Or the Tesla-Coil...seems to be a serbian invention :P
@windowstechsupport3562Ай бұрын
Makes no sense to me💀
@lovehighfive61702 ай бұрын
4:54 I died at that part "wow, I've never gotten that before" killed me
@SavedByGrace_CitizenEmperorユウ6 ай бұрын
Very nice video. The American girl was super charismatic and the subject was very entertaining. 😊🎉
@rintmacleanen29722 ай бұрын
She pulled out every Dutch stereotype out of the bag when she heard that one girl speaking Dutch.
@manuela74546 ай бұрын
As a Swiss from Zurich I can say that she has a strong accent
@SplendidMisanthropy6 ай бұрын
She did better than I initially thought.
@MRSHARK20152 ай бұрын
3:34 same here ima also Netherlands I live in the Netherlands too 🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@ElizabethAlferink2 ай бұрын
Ik ook
@MikeFoxx380-v8s2 ай бұрын
Same
@semvandervelde-vp7oo2 ай бұрын
Ik ook
@Golden_dummy22Ай бұрын
Same. Honestly, cheese is amazing.💖😅
@MikeFoxx380-v8sАй бұрын
@ sure is!
@angel._-Ай бұрын
As a dutch person, i knew the first few languages, so it wasnt that hard, but i have such respect for how an english speaking person got that! I know dutch and german are very similar. (I was so proud of myself for guessing switserland lol)
@武士道國家を復活しよう日6 ай бұрын
背景白色だと視聴者に目にわるい。眩しい。
@Roman_pire6 ай бұрын
The Austrian girl spoke very german austrian like with an accend but not a dialect
@tomh17276 ай бұрын
yeah, gotta visit the western part of austria and you will be lost as fuck even if you understand german haha
@ghost-iu9hv6 ай бұрын
@@tomh1727you mean Tirol? Never had a problem understanding people and even my non-bavarian friends said it was easier to understand than f.e. Steiermark or Kärnten
@domsenic55486 ай бұрын
@@tomh1727just skip every major city and the surroundings of such and every region of austria just devolves into a dialecticsl mess. God i love austria so much for that❤🇦🇹
@tomh17276 ай бұрын
@@domsenic5548 haha yeah pretty much this
@elenamitterhofer22156 ай бұрын
@@tomh1727 Fun fact: The Austrian girl (my sister) is actually from Tirol but didn't speak in her dialect here 😄
@Slippy65826 ай бұрын
Never saw an young american knowing so much about other countries. Impressive!
@redram60806 ай бұрын
Many do. It's just very common to bash and meme on the USA so people usually actively search for the uneducated ones for entertainment.
@Slippy65826 ай бұрын
@@redram6080 Well there are on average more "uneducated" american than in north and western europe. I worked 2 years in Greenville, SC. Great people, fun to hang out with, but a lot of questions were crazy to me 😅
@redram60806 ай бұрын
@@Slippy6582 I'm sure you can send proof right?
@Slippy65826 ай бұрын
@@redram6080 First hand experience... If you would read my comment. And proof sure, use Google... I think you are able to do it by yourself. And education is not equal to knowledge. A lot of americans do not know the world outside their country and even americans say it themselves. But you got your opinion and i am not here to convince you even though there is enough evidence and stats, i know those kinda ppl. Have a good one!
@Slippy65826 ай бұрын
@@redram6080 Comments get deleted including a link, otherwise i would do it. Google it... And education is not equal to knowledge about geography, other cultures and basic knowledge. Some questions from americans, because i am from Germany: Do you still live in dictatorship? What language do you speak in Germany? I think these two alone are proof enough... And a lot of daily work, i had to teach them, it blew my mind...
@everIark6 ай бұрын
I'm used to stumbling upon random videos like this that are usually from months or years ago, so when I was done and checked I was so surprised to see it only came out 1 day ago lmao
@retowalti92276 ай бұрын
GREETINGS From Switzerland love the videos
@anashiedler69266 ай бұрын
how a german supposed to understand "Chuchichäschtli" when they can't even understand the intermediate (Austrian) term "Kuchlkastl" for "Küchenschrank"/"Hängeschrank"
@klugscheier16446 ай бұрын
@@anashiedler6926why would Germans need to understand?
@Slithermotion6 ай бұрын
@@klugscheier1644 because switzerland is their largest emigration country xD
@maxalexander855Ай бұрын
Wooow Swiss German sounds sooo similar to African Dutch! As a Dutch person I was confused af that I could understand it
@andyx68276 ай бұрын
The Swiss girl thinks she's special for having cherry blossoms 😂 Literally every European country that l've ever been to has them on every street 😂😂
@klugscheier16446 ай бұрын
Really? I don‘t think I can recall ever seeing them in Europe. Which countries did you see them in?
@itsapenguinmachine70466 ай бұрын
yeah, that was confusing to me as well, like we have cherry trees in our garden and it's considered quite normal. (Austria)
@12tanuha216 ай бұрын
Yes, but not from Japan
@hoi-zeme-5006 ай бұрын
cherry blossoms is a specific japanese tree, not the normal european cherry tree.
@andyx68276 ай бұрын
@@hoi-zeme-500 Lmao, I KNOW that it's not a normal cherry tree 😂 Every single town in Germany has cherry blossom trees, even the smaller towns. My entire street is completely filled with like 200 cherry blossom trees and it's just an average street in a medium-sized town. We have absolute gazillions of them all over Germany. I've also seen plenty in France, Austria, UK etc.
@anonymernutzer35155 ай бұрын
I think people from southern Germany (especially from Baden-Württemberg) can understand the swiss-german dialect very well because its an allemanic-german dialect & near the borders the germans speak a kind of allemanic-swabian or allemanic-baden dialect. The same goes for Austria and Bavaria -many Germans from the north have difficulties to understand the southern dialects and sometimes confuse bavarian dialect with austrian dialect, because they sound kinda similar (and they arge neighbours too).
@SchmulKrieger6 ай бұрын
I am Hessian and I understood everything she said in her Swiss German dialect. Austria has in fact only two dialect groups, Bavarian and Alemannic (Vorarlberg), Germany has multiple different dialect groups, so many more than Austria.
@domsenic55486 ай бұрын
Austrian dialects devolde within each region of austria drastically. I know some folks from Känten who just cannot understand my lower austrian, while viennese dialects usually include a lot more loaneords than styrian and tyrolian has a very interesting way to pronounce ch and sch. Thats why austria is considered more diverse than germany, at least according to dialects. Way back in the 70s and 80s Vienna had at least one dialect for every Bezirk, so over 20 dialects alone in our Capital.
@SchmulKrieger6 ай бұрын
@@domsenic5548 every region where dialects are spoken daily have this. The dialect from my mum from Spessart is different in every village. It's not a think of Austria. It's a thing of the last 300 years of New High German, especially with the different vowel changes. Where in Standard is [ ai ] spoken, it is /eu/ in her dialect. But while Bavarian, Alemannic have still the diphthongs of Old High German, you say liab for lieb. In Swiss it's liëb. And a lot of Alemannic also have retained the full sounding vowels in unaccented syllables. liebä Lütä mäd Zungon sprächä. But still, all dialects in Austria belong to the Barbarian dialect continuum, except Vorarlberg.
@herrkloterich34246 ай бұрын
Wir haben schon in Braunfels, drei verschiedene hessische Dialekte. Neben Platt im ältesten Teil „Sankt Georgen“ wird beim Schlossring ein Hochdeutsch Hessisch Mix gesprochen und im Rest einfach das Standard Hessisch aus dem Lahn Dill Kreis. Vor 60/70 Jahren war der unterschied sehr deutlich. Heutzutage ist das schon vermischter. In den eingemeindeten Orten ist es teilweise wieder komplett anders. In Neukirchen habe ich einige Freunde, die das R sehr hart rollen (also nicht so weich wie in z.B. Haiger).
@SchmulKrieger6 ай бұрын
@@herrkloterich3424 mein r ist ein ɣ das ist zwischen Rachen-r und ach-Laut.
@wilsusonnect7953 ай бұрын
Germany actually also has cherry blossoms, at least in the area where I'm from. In Franconia, we've got lots and lots of cherry orchards, so in the spring when they're in full bloom, the sides of hills and mountains are covered in white fluff. It's quite pretty, but it only truly shines once you go hiking through the orchards. The paths will be lined with cherry blossoms left and right and the weather in spring is just perfect. Also, if you come back during the summer, there are edible cherries and nobody will know if you grab one or two. Be mindful, though, they are part of the livelihoods of local farmers. If you're in a particularly busy area with lots of tourists, it's better to just leave them alone and even if you're on a remote hiking trail, keep it to having a taste. Chances are that there will be a roadside stand nearby where you can buy the fresh cherries directly from the farmers. They're cheap as there's no middle man and you support the farmer.
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
It's surprising how she didn't knew people in Austria speak German. When I was her age I knew it bcz Austrian painter's native language was German and just like him most Austrian people spoke German.
@chrrol67046 ай бұрын
Hawara, host du jetz grod ernsthaft an Ade mim Rest vo Österreich vaglicha? der war wieder extra, alloa acho des rollende R vo dem is einmalig.
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
@@chrrol6704 i don't know German please translate to English
@Harry-Hartmann4 ай бұрын
Ein sehr schönes Video 😂👍🏻
@MLWitteman6 ай бұрын
It’s a shame we didn’t hear the accent of the Austrian girl!
@powidlkm6 ай бұрын
She `s been speaking with a perfect austrian accent. But she avoided her local dialect as she said.
@MLWitteman6 ай бұрын
@@powidlkm exactly, and I wish we could have heard her local dialect
@StrongKickMan4 ай бұрын
I met many people from the U.S in Portugal. Maybe it has to do with the fact that people who travel are often more open minded, but the American people I met are pretty good informed when it comes to Europe. I had some good conversations, that changed my view.
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
Newer gen is taught way more about the world so I guess the stereotype is no longer gonna be true
@Camryndawn226 ай бұрын
10:40 my family (on my moms side) is from Basel Switzerland !! 🇨🇭🇨🇭they speak fluent Swiss German
@StrongKickMan4 ай бұрын
When the Austrian girl said that German dialects are not as different as the Austrian ones, I was like really? I am from the west, a city called Dortmund, and when I go to the east or to the south, it is like a different language to me.
@einfachkerrox90756 ай бұрын
Funfact: English is germanic language too..
@Doomlover_6666 ай бұрын
I am from the netherlands and finally an american that knows our little country Thank you :)
@batavuskoga6 ай бұрын
Actually, in Belgium they speak three languages : Dutch, French and German. They speak Dutch in the northern part of Belgium, French is spoken in the south and in the East a small number of Belgian speak German, close to the German border.
@vincentchan45766 ай бұрын
That’s what they said in the video at 06:25?
@batavuskoga6 ай бұрын
@@vincentchan4576 Yes, I reacted to the comment of the American woman just before the Belgian girl said it.
@MustardSkavenАй бұрын
@@batavuskoga What is the point if she was already corrected by the other girl?
@Nifuruc6 ай бұрын
I'm surprised! That was actually really good!
@Sweepout6 ай бұрын
Wow, ich kann spreche ein bisschen Deutsch. Ich verstehe die Deutsche, und Österreichische, aber Ich verstehe nicht die Schweizer Frau. Eigentlich ich weis nicht es war Deutsch.
@BIGDAV906 ай бұрын
Menschen aus Süddeutschland verstehen Schweizer besser als leute von Norden oder osten
@ClevisHeadtheFrenchie_editz5 ай бұрын
I speak German as a second language, I immediately knew the First Lady was German.
@IvanSibi-1a35 ай бұрын
I don't speak German but I heard her say "ich heisse ..." So I thought "this girl's German"
@Bergmanovic6 ай бұрын
Who is from the Nederland’s? 👇
@kskutty1006 ай бұрын
Jara
@andrezandbergen66116 ай бұрын
Ik!
@halvarf6 ай бұрын
I was super impressed by the American, she is obviously well traveled and knows a lot.
@N.sieraden5 ай бұрын
I am 3/4 netherlands (Brabants), but I am 1/4 Belgisch
@Teringluier45465 ай бұрын
Belgies en Nederlands is het zelfde
@MustardSkavenАй бұрын
@@Teringluier4546 Nope. 2 verschillende landen.
@Teringluier4546Ай бұрын
@@MustardSkaven zelfde land
@MustardSkavenАй бұрын
@@Teringluier4546 Nope. Aparte landen, aparte overheden, aparte landstalen, etc.
@Teringluier4546Ай бұрын
@MustardSkaven nah Ze spreken de zelfde taal
@swiss6126 ай бұрын
Another special thing about Swiss German is that it is a mix of all kinds of languages (especially German, French, Italian and English). What I find strange is that some English words that are used in exactly the same way in Swiss German are further removed from English in standard German. Here some examples (left is German, middle is English, right is Swissgerman) Alle - all - all Sommer - summer - Summer Unter - under - under Aufzug - Lift - Lift
@RichardHoogstad6 ай бұрын
7:47 Round 4 was so weird to me. I understood most of it and I was like, is this a weird dialect of Dutch?
@Hy_dro6 ай бұрын
Yeah as a swiss person when hearing dutch it always feels like i dont uderstand my own language because we pronounce this similarity sometimes
@Killerwale-hk4wy5 ай бұрын
As a Belgian I am obligated to remind you that we also officially speak German. Might only be 1% but we do want them to feel included.
@esrohm64606 ай бұрын
but isn't döner german made by a turk in germany
@caimaccoinnich95946 ай бұрын
No
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
yes so its turkish.
@esrohm64606 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11. i heard that you can basically not find it in turkey which in my eyes does not sound like a dish of a country when you can't get in in said country
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
@@esrohm6460 its still made by a turkish guy so its turkish
@De_URO6 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11. What is a Turk in your eyes? Turks are half Armenian half Arab half Kurdish half Greek.
@kevin-on5uo6 ай бұрын
Ik ben Nederland: i em Nederland we is Nederland like ❤😊
@wendyleys85816 ай бұрын
Bedoel je I am nederlands we nederland
@kevin-on5uo6 ай бұрын
Ja
@kevin-on5uo6 ай бұрын
Ik kan niet goed Engels 😅
@to.l.24696 ай бұрын
13:17 There are definitely more different accents in Germany than in Austria. Some oft them are actually are whole language of it's own like Low German or the Frisian languages. I can understand that she thinks Austria has more, because in the whole south of Germany there is only East Franconian German like in Austria and Swabian German .
@klugscheier16446 ай бұрын
As a South Tyrolean (former region of Austria) who has met many Germans from all over Germany I wouldn’t be so sure. Austrians just typically speak in Standard German whenever they meet Germans. I‘m from the city which means my dialect isn‘t as strong but even so most Germans I meet can‘t understand one sentence I say and in my region alone there are multiple dialects that even I can‘t understand. (I can understand most German dialects and a lot of Swiss German)
@NikhilGupta-jw3ob6 ай бұрын
She was probably referring to dialects of High German only.
@to.l.24696 ай бұрын
@@klugscheier1644 Da ist der Name wohl Programm. Nur weil etwas nicht (mehr) so oft gesprochen wird heißt das nicht das es das nicht gibt.. Only the "official" ones (in German) (from Wikipedia): 1. Niederrheinisch 2. Saterländisch 3. Nordfriesisch 4. Westfälisch 5. Nordniedersächsisch 6. Ostfälisch 7. Mecklenburgisch-Vorpommersch 8. Brandenburgisch 9. Mittelpommersch 10. Ripuarisch 11. Luxemburgisch 12. Moselfränkisch 13. Rheinfränkisch 14. Zentralhessisch 15. Nordhessisch 16. Osthessisch 17. Thüringisch 18. Nordobersächsisch 19. Südmärkisch 20. Obersächsisch 21. Oberfränkisch 22. Nordbairisch 23. Zentralbairisch 24. Südbairisch 25. Schwäbisch 26. Niederalemannisch 27. Mittelalemannisch 28. Hochalemannisch 29. Höchstalemannisch
@mori1bund6 ай бұрын
@@to.l.2469 1.) wozu ist es nötig eine Antwort gleich mit einer Beleidigung zu beginnen? 2.) in Österreich gibt es derartig viele regionale Mundarten und Ortsdialekte, dass es nicht ungewöhnlich ist, dass der nächste Nachbarort ein paar Kilometer weiter bereits einen anderen Dialekt hat. (Dürfte vielleicht daran liegen, dass traditionell durch die Abgeschiedenheit in den Bergen leichter unterschiedliche Varianten entstehen konnten. Mittlerweile gehen auch in Österreich die Dialekte zurück.) Insofern gibt es so eine Liste an Dialekten gar nicht -> es sind zu viele.
@Alias_Anybody6 ай бұрын
I think she meant it differently than you guys assume. She didn't mean that Austria has a larger spectrum or total amount of dialects, but that a far larger amount of the population, percentage wise, actually speaks their dialect daily. And that there are more per square kilometer, probably. In Germany, it's basically socially acceptable to bully and mock anyone who speaks any dialect mercilessly. It goes as far as people being proud of not understanding them, even though that realistically means their own vocabulary is lacking.
@not_nxraАй бұрын
As a dutchie, im suprised she guessed the Netherlands people always assume im german😭
@BULGARIANMUSHROOMHUNTER6 ай бұрын
Doner is "invented" in Germany by Turkish emigrants, so it's from Germany.
@ravanpee13256 ай бұрын
Yes, the original Kebab from Turkey and Greece is not prepared like the Döner
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
made BY TURKISH immigrants so its turkish.
@ravanpee13256 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11. Made in Germany, so German :D
@NovaNova11.6 ай бұрын
@@ravanpee1325 Nope :D if i bring french fries to korea it doesnt make them korean fries. use your head, doner is turkish and will always be turkish
@ravanpee13256 ай бұрын
@@NovaNova11. How many Korean immigrants invented something in Japan and it's still japanese..look at your Math Olympics team and you might get it :D
@segka85365 ай бұрын
The first guess by looking does not make any sense when they do not look like the inhabitants looked 50 years ago. The girl from Belgium has her ancestors in Vietnam and the girl from Switzerland also has obviously ancestors from elsewhere.
@hhasslinger96012 ай бұрын
Agreed. It is really odd that they chose girls to represent countries they clearly don't share the ethnicity to. It would be like if they had a black girl representing Japan or a white girl representing Kenya.
@Zuudhofje6 ай бұрын
So we have a german speaker, a german speaker, a german speaker, a dutch speaker and a dutch speaker, yes ofcourse those are 5 languages
@PrettyPancakes-Ani3 ай бұрын
5:55 I’m also a Vietnamese but I live in Germany😄🥹🇻🇳🇩🇪
@SodaDrinker944 ай бұрын
The one from Belgium has a very thicc French accent in Flemish, though… can’t you guys find a better Flemish speaker that is really native?
@kenny44592 ай бұрын
She was totally a Frenchspeaker. A real Flemishspeaker would have guessed more of these German words. But congratulations for her Dutch!
@SodaDrinker942 ай бұрын
@ yeah her Dutch is passable, just sad tbat the “study” was basically nullified by using a non-native
@MrUbisterАй бұрын
Nothing gave me hope for American kids like a 19 year old instantly recognizing spoken Dutch... Respect
@janslavik52846 ай бұрын
Hey it's been over 7 moths since the last Slavic person appeared in a video, could we get someone again? 🙂
@PeterPiskilopoulos6 ай бұрын
She looks so NICE!
@officiallandreform6 ай бұрын
You have to bring Genesia together with people who speak Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Hindi/Tamil, Mandarin/Hokkien, and Japanese.. Let's see how many Indonesian loan words there are from these languages.. Those of you who agree, please like.. 👍👇
@gallirocktas19936 ай бұрын
I am also Austrian. Our language is different in each federal state, but we also speak standard German at school, in church and at some modern events. However, among the family and also in the home environment we speak in the respective country and homeland dialects. I, for example, am currently practicing old Austrian German again. some young people don't even know one anymore (Paradeiser = tomato).
@domsenic55486 ай бұрын
Des is oid? Oida i glaub i beantrag mei pension no bevor i 20 bin
@chrrol67046 ай бұрын
@@domsenic5548 oida, do sogst wos Hawara. i schleich mi dann wieda, muass no duschn und hob no wos zum macha.
@finntastic28966 ай бұрын
Same though with German dialects. We spoke in our dialect exclusively even in school. just not very official and fancy settings, ordering at a fancy restaurant or doing official business like things outside of your town. Many students couldn’t even switch to standard German if our a level teachers wanted us to for presentations.
@КрисМеняэто6 ай бұрын
I like her logic, You're tall, white and blue-eyed, you're scandinavian😪
@ElmarLecher6 ай бұрын
I am amazed on the american girl. Way above expectations. Smart woman.
@ItzDenholm4 ай бұрын
The newer gen is way more exposed than old gen so maybe that’s why, the stereotype is no longer true so
@Eric08166 ай бұрын
The Austrian girl was speaking High German. Why would you do that as an Austrian? If you're not an actor working in Germany there is no point in doing that.
@oliviastreutker14082 ай бұрын
OMG MY COUNTRY IS IN HERE ITS NETHERLAND❤❤❤
@OMEGALULEatingAnEggplant6 ай бұрын
The Belgian girl was kinda weird for be because I'm from Germany and I could swear her Dutch was just German with a French accent.
@Fabianz046 ай бұрын
that was my exact impression too... 😅
@zoetjez6 ай бұрын
I'm from The Netherlands and her dutch was just how belgian people speak dutch. Our dutch is more staccato and in belgium they sound more melodious. So that's why it kind of sounds like french I think
@kenny44592 ай бұрын
Her French is probably her motherlanguage. Her Dutch however sounds like the Dutch of a Belgian French speaker, but brought up in a bilingual environment, I guess the Brussels region.
@NochEinKamel6 ай бұрын
Missed the opportunity to really confuse her by bringing the german, swiss and austrian girl out together and let them say the same thing ;D
@JochenSchoenherr6 ай бұрын
I come from Germany and can understand Swiss German very well. But that's probably because my father is from Basel and so I'm used to hearing it all the time.
@Nozuka6216 ай бұрын
Yeah i think it is pretty easy for Germans to learn to understand it. You just need to get used to it. German people who live in Switzerland for a while understand us perfectly. Which is why most people here will answer you in Swiss-German, even if you talk German to them. They will switch only if they notice you have a hard time understanding.
@PappaLarro6 ай бұрын
Dutch guy here as the woman from the Netherlands said we get a lot of are you german. Our language is a little wierd if you know how its put together as we lend words from english, french and german but say it in a different way.
@valencia0_06 ай бұрын
I‘m from Austria and I understand it pretty well. It sounds like austrian dialect mixed with English sometimes haha😂
@Teringluier45465 ай бұрын
@@valencia0_0 do you understand what I am going to say Ik word ik in de ochtend wakker en ik smeer un broojde met kesse en vur de kost eet ik vissies met reest en spekies vur de kost om ien uur smiddags En in de avend goon ik pas slapen om elf uur en daarna word ik wier wakker om acht uur sochtends
@valencia0_05 ай бұрын
@@Teringluier4546 I think u said that u wake up in the morning and that u make urself a bread with cress maybe? Then u said smth about ur midday, maybe ur food idk.. And u go to bed at 11 p.m. and wake up again at 8. Something like that ig😅
@Teringluier45465 ай бұрын
@@valencia0_0 what the heck how did you know what I said You got like 95 percent right I am Dutch but in my area we speak a different dialect which is a mixture of low german saxon or something like that with heavily Dutch influence as far as I know
@Teringluier45465 ай бұрын
@@valencia0_0 I am assuming that you are either Austrian or German There are petition to make the dialect of my region where i live a language Because the Dutch people from Amsterdam and the South would struggle to understand people from my region
@scordeteyla5 ай бұрын
Sorry but there are also totally different dialects in Germany. I'm from upper Bavaria and I don't understand people from lower Bavaria, Baden and Swabia and that's just the Southern part. And of course I have trouble understanding people from Austria and Switzerland too
@Irene.11.6 ай бұрын
That girl has friends all over the world😂
@-vegeta14106 ай бұрын
Just as a reminder, the kebab was invented in Berlin, but by a Turk. And as a German, I could understand everyone, even the Belgian woman, even though she supposedly can't speak German.
@Ahmed-pf3lg6 ай бұрын
Kebab was not invented in Berlin… lol Kebab is not even Turkish. It is Middle Eastern ancient food, before Turks ever came to Anatolia.
@ByIlgaz6 ай бұрын
Falls du mit Kebab Döner meinst, es wurde in Osmanischen Reich erfunden, lang bevor es nach Deutschland kam
@-vegeta14106 ай бұрын
@@ByIlgaz Google nach bevor du mit mir diskutierst.
@ByIlgaz6 ай бұрын
@@-vegeta1410 glaub nicht immer was du auf Wikipedia siehst. Döner wurde in Bursa Provinz der Türkei erfunden. Es gibt Fotos auch, als Beweise. Wiki sagt dass es in 70er Jahren in Berlin erfunden wurde aber es ist ainfach falsch, mein Großvater aß Döner in Türkei in bevor die 70er Jahren.
@christianpipes21106 ай бұрын
Manche sagen, dass der Döner in Berlin erfunden wurde, manche manche andere sagen, dass er in der Türkei erfunden wurde, und daher bin ich ganz verwirrt 😅
@Jarast16 ай бұрын
Wow!! Im from the Netherlands 🇳🇱 and my name is Jara 😮❤
@jaybay75106 ай бұрын
Grüße aus Deutschland
@armyaj6 ай бұрын
How did she not know they speak german in austria? There's a really really really notorious guy from there that became the chancellor of the other german speaking country..germany..
@se63696 ай бұрын
Most speak Bavarian, not German as a first language I think
@Sarah-kc3fb6 ай бұрын
@@se6369 Don't let the austrians hear that you called their dialects "bavarian" lol
@domsenic55486 ай бұрын
@@Sarah-kc3fb too late
@JizzyPres6 ай бұрын
What is bavarian if not german 😂?
@se63696 ай бұрын
@@JizzyPres Another, related language
@perdurabo42853 ай бұрын
If you are keen on languages then you can hear the many different dialects in austria. Every valley has it's own pronounciation. So a word can sound a bit different 10km away from the place you are actually. It's kind of a funny game to guess where your neighbour is from only of his language. In Germany there are also lots of dialects, but they spread over larger areas.
@K-POP_FACTZZZ20246 ай бұрын
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@johannesadamec86703 ай бұрын
I'm from Austria. It's similar to Swiss here. We learn Standard German at school, but speak our regional Dialekt. I'm from Lower Austria in the eastern part of the country and I met some guys from Tyrol in the west. There was this Guy from Zillertal, where the other Tyrolians said, if he spoke in his own dialect, not even they could understand him! 🤣
@Borys77-mr6sz6 ай бұрын
"Swiss girl" doesn't look Germanic at all, even doesn't look European. Germanic people are palest, blonder, and taller, than others, I'm Slavic, when I'm next to Germanic person I see the difference between me and them, they are paler, blonder than slavs
@sagittariusa90126 ай бұрын
Its about language/ how they speak. And also don't forget that the south of switzerland have a mediterrianean climate and speak italian.
@Slithermotion6 ай бұрын
Ehhh I‘m swiss and I don‘t know what we swiss actually look like… We don‘t really catogarize ourself in ethnic groups but more in regions/culture/language.
@itsapenguinmachine70466 ай бұрын
you clearly mistake Central European Germanic people with Northern Germans and Scandinavians.
@hy3na7396 ай бұрын
There isn't a "Swiss" look... If you've grown up in Switzerland and went to school here ur Swiss... Doesn't matter what you look like.
@Borys77-mr6sz6 ай бұрын
@Slithermotion it's sad for European country. In Poland only ethnically polish people called themselves polish, that's why for me it's strange that everyone can be Swiss. It makes kill culture, and pure European ethnicity. Thank God my country is not like yours. USA made Europe like America. But Europe had deep culture(( but now Africans, Asians can be European. It's not raccism it's save our culture, history, and ethnicity.
@Antje_An2 ай бұрын
These were my guesses: 1:10 German 2:56 NEDERLANDS of Belgisch maar idk, ok nvm 5:11 BELGISCH all the wayy 7:55 idk but I was thinking like swedish... Ok close? 11:29 Austrian :3 (I read a comment about this one hahah)