He just phonetically memorized a few sentences and conned the good ol' CNN. He sounds like someone who not once experienced the flow that comes with any type of exposure to any of those languages.
He does speak like he learned by reading dictionaries, very slow and without the rhythm of each language. But still very impressive. If he visited each respective country he would easily achieve native fluency.
You are truly a source of inspiration to other Africans including me 😊. May I know how long it took you to learn these languages? Keep shining your light!
They speak a lot of languages in places like Rwanda and Kenya; I know a Kenyan that speaks 7 languages. His Japanese was really good and I noticed he had the N1 grammar book so he has been studying for a while now!
I am by no means fluent in Japan, but did he just say 私にとって (to me/as far as I'm concerned) and と言われていると思います (i think I am being told) at the same time 💀 ?
I am not fluent in Spanish but I can tell that his Spanish accent is off. He needs to work with an accent coach to perfect his accent in each language because it is clear to me that he is speaking every language with one accent.
Exactly, I'm native Rwandan and work with Spanish speakers and his spanish accent sound like the way we speak Kinyarwanda. Despite that we should celebrate his courage as it hard to speak foreign language with proper accent when you don't speak that language regularly
"Human Google translate" set my expectations at an all-time high. How is he fluent with a monotonous delivery, lack of distinctive accent or typical vocal mannerisms and speech patterns? Task stress, maybe? Far from the hyperpolyglot BBC hyped, but impressive nonetheless. Bravo, Habineza!
I speak English with a Nigerian accent, most ppl say i talk with a monotonous delivery that lacks excitement in anything. so, according to your quip, I guess I can't speak English? All that matters is he can understand the language and locals can understand him, though in some extent they might have to listen really careful to understand him but his monotonous delivery should help with that
I was specifically talking about fluency, not "just speaking" the language. Here's a perfect example, Bradley Cooper speaks French while Jodie Foster is fluent. Watch some clips of both and you'll notice the difference. In your case, Nigeria is officially an English speaking country, so you do speak English, Nigerian English. There's American English, Australian, British....but, no Japanese or Chadian English. Hope you get the point.
@@ornel9195 Lol, one of my close friend is from Chad, another is from Burkina Faso and both speak English with a distinctive accent that's different from each other but influenced by their native tongue. Same with some Japanese ppl I met in the states, who speak English with a distinctive accent that I only hear from those born and raised in Japan . So there is a huge difference btw fluency, and maintaining an accent/exhibiting a certain vocal mannerism/speech pattern. I for example taught myself French on my own and every one I met say I speak it with a unique accent they not used too, and sometimes I have to slowly speak to native speakers in other for them to understand what am saying.
One is considered fluent in a foreign language based on specific criteria. Correct pronunciation, natural rhythm and rich vocabulary are among those. Accent (which seems to bother you for some reason) is one of them. Most countries have a broad spectrum of accents. Not all Americans have the same accent. You do know that, right? I, for example, speak English with a Standard American accent and speak French with a Parisian accent. It could've been English with a New York accent and French with a Mediterranean accent. Back to Habineza, and that's my personal opinion, he's not as fluent in those languages as this video is tryna tell us. A Russian speaking person commented that he couldn't clearly make out what he was saying.
@@ornel9195 A decent amount of Americans and British folks I met while in Britain have a hard time understanding me cos i grew up in northern Nigeria and have a northern accent which is really thick and not the eastern/western Nigerian accent they used too. I usually have to talk slow for them to understand me. When I was in Macon Georgia, I couldn't understand what most of them were saying cos I wasn't used to that accent. So, according to your quip, am not fluent in English cos a decent amount of Americans and brits couldn't understand me. Also, those ppl i met in Macon Georgia weren't fluent in English cos i couldn't understand them. And if that isn't the case, then the comment about the Russian speaking person is moot. How one speaks a different language that is not native to them, is influenced by their native tongue. How my Burkinabe friend sounds while speaking English is different than how my Chadian friend sounds, which is also different than how my Nigerien friend sound (whom by the way I can barely understand when he speaks English) unless he speaks really slow but I know he is fluent cos we text in English but chat in French when we hang out. So, how Habineza speaks those languages is influenced by his native tongue.
It depend with your native language. I'm Rwandan and our local language follow latin vowels and consonants, it easier to learn latin derivative language like french or Spanish but Germany look more complex for us.
It was supposed to be Rwandan media to expose this gem. We have so much to unearth in Africa. The local media is continually underrating us.
They are looking gitumo
@@Spokenshelf😂
What's fascinating us that he speaks all these languages with the same accent😂
As rwandese i can confirm
Yeah , may be you you can make a difference.
He just phonetically memorized a few sentences and conned the good ol' CNN. He sounds like someone who not once experienced the flow that comes with any type of exposure to any of those languages.
Very impressive! He should travel the world! He deserves it.
This man is a genius!! Huge respect 🔥
Makes sense. A lot of us are polyglots even those without formal education. I hope he receives more recognition
Dreaming in Hebrew got me😂
😂😂😂
He quedado impresionado. De todos esos idiomas el único que yo hablo es el español, y su español no es perfecto, pero habla bien! Felicidades.
Being able to speak several languages is a grace to behold...
This is awesome. Hopefully, he would be celebrated in Africa as w whole and have the privilege to travel all over the world.
He does speak like he learned by reading dictionaries, very slow and without the rhythm of each language. But still very impressive. If he visited each respective country he would easily achieve native fluency.
This dude is fluent in zil of them.
You are truly a source of inspiration to other Africans including me 😊. May I know how long it took you to learn these languages? Keep shining your light!
It looks like he is reading from a script
Hater
@@nikeakliar supporting lies
Wait until he learns the aliens 👽 language.
They speak a lot of languages in places like Rwanda and Kenya; I know a Kenyan that speaks 7 languages. His Japanese was really good and I noticed he had the N1 grammar book so he has been studying for a while now!
I was waiting for Portuguese
A true African gem🎉
I am by no means fluent in Japan, but did he just say 私にとって (to me/as far as I'm concerned) and と言われていると思います (i think I am being told) at the same time 💀 ?
His Arabic was also horrendous. He is nowhere near to fluent in it
Fabulous!
Extraordinary😊
Moi Aussi, najua lugha , zhongwen, danke Schoen
Hahahahahha, I knew it , German remains undefeated in it's complexity
I am not fluent in Spanish but I can tell that his Spanish accent is off. He needs to work with an accent coach to perfect his accent in each language because it is clear to me that he is speaking every language with one accent.
Exactly, I'm native Rwandan and work with Spanish speakers and his spanish accent sound like the way we speak Kinyarwanda.
Despite that we should celebrate his courage as it hard to speak foreign language with proper accent when you don't speak that language regularly
Wow 😮
"Human Google translate" set my expectations at an all-time high. How is he fluent with a monotonous delivery, lack of distinctive accent or typical vocal mannerisms and speech patterns? Task stress, maybe? Far from the hyperpolyglot BBC hyped, but impressive nonetheless. Bravo, Habineza!
I speak English with a Nigerian accent, most ppl say i talk with a monotonous delivery that lacks excitement in anything. so, according to your quip, I guess I can't speak English? All that matters is he can understand the language and locals can understand him, though in some extent they might have to listen really careful to understand him but his monotonous delivery should help with that
I was specifically talking about fluency, not "just speaking" the language. Here's a perfect example, Bradley Cooper speaks French while Jodie Foster is fluent. Watch some clips of both and you'll notice the difference.
In your case, Nigeria is officially an English speaking country, so you do speak English, Nigerian English. There's American English, Australian, British....but, no Japanese or Chadian English. Hope you get the point.
@@ornel9195 Lol, one of my close friend is from Chad, another is from Burkina Faso and both speak English with a distinctive accent that's different from each other but influenced by their native tongue. Same with some Japanese ppl I met in the states, who speak English with a distinctive accent that I only hear from those born and raised in Japan . So there is a huge difference btw fluency, and maintaining an accent/exhibiting a certain vocal mannerism/speech pattern. I for example taught myself French on my own and every one I met say I speak it with a unique accent they not used too, and sometimes I have to slowly speak to native speakers in other for them to understand what am saying.
One is considered fluent in a foreign language based on specific criteria. Correct pronunciation, natural rhythm and rich vocabulary are among those. Accent (which seems to bother you for some reason) is one of them.
Most countries have a broad spectrum of accents. Not all Americans have the same accent. You do know that, right? I, for example, speak English with a Standard American accent and speak French with a Parisian accent. It could've been English with a New York accent and French with a Mediterranean accent.
Back to Habineza, and that's my personal opinion, he's not as fluent in those languages as this video is tryna tell us. A Russian speaking person commented that he couldn't clearly make out what he was saying.
@@ornel9195 A decent amount of Americans and British folks I met while in Britain have a hard time understanding me cos i grew up in northern Nigeria and have a northern accent which is really thick and not the eastern/western Nigerian accent they used too. I usually have to talk slow for them to understand me.
When I was in Macon Georgia, I couldn't understand what most of them were saying cos I wasn't used to that accent. So, according to your quip, am not fluent in English cos a decent amount of Americans and brits couldn't understand me. Also, those ppl i met in Macon Georgia weren't fluent in English cos i couldn't understand them.
And if that isn't the case, then the comment about the Russian speaking person is moot. How one speaks a different language that is not native to them, is influenced by their native tongue. How my Burkinabe friend sounds while speaking English is different than how my Chadian friend sounds, which is also different than how my Nigerien friend sound (whom by the way I can barely understand when he speaks English) unless he speaks really slow but I know he is fluent cos we text in English but chat in French when we hang out. So, how Habineza speaks those languages is influenced by his native tongue.
Very interesting.
I need to learn another language to compare to German.... English is by far the hardest to learn as a second language in my opinion.
It depend with your native language. I'm Rwandan and our local language follow latin vowels and consonants, it easier to learn latin derivative language like french or Spanish but Germany look more complex for us.
He is from Kenya but he works and reside in rwanda🎉🎉🎉
😅😅😅
Bro a kenyan named Habineza Antoine?😂
HAHA Yes i know his sister, Nafula, a great lady
"Habineza" is a mega rwandan name man 😅 maybe he's half kenyan? But his dad is definitely rwandan
A Kenyan named Habineza lmao😂 I have seen it all
Just gotta perfect my 8 languages 😅
We need this dude in an international spy movie. Hahaha
叫一聲媽以示尊敬
叫兩聲媽以示提醒
叫三聲媽以示禮畢
敬酒不吃
罰酒也不用吃了😊
叫一聲媽以示尊敬
叫兩聲媽以示提醒
叫三聲媽以示禮畢
敬酒不吃
罰酒也不用吃了
😂😂😂❤
His arabic is barely understandable