The Hardest Languages according to Polyglots | Easy Dutch 74

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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 290

  • @thijsholdijk9855
    @thijsholdijk9855 Год назад +301

    As a native Dutch speaker I´m actually impressed by how well they all speak it.

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +9

      Not a native Dutch speaker (just a low-intermediate speaker with advanced passive comprehension), but I agree!!!

    • @BobWitlox
      @BobWitlox Год назад +14

      Ik ook! De meeste polyglotten (in RUclips filmpjes) spreken vaak slecht Nederlands, maar dit is erg goed!

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +8

      @@BobWitlox De meeste mensen die zich polyglotten noemen zijn het niet! Het ergert mij!

    • @Adam-de8yi
      @Adam-de8yi Год назад +3

      I honestly don’t know how people can speak Dutch. It looks so difficult!

    • @knotwilg3596
      @knotwilg3596 Год назад +3

      @@eliasshakkour2904 Akkoord. Er zijn veel internet-polyglotten die heel goed kunnen praten over talen, maar eens het onderwerp verandert, zijn ze nergens meer. Ik durf niet eens zeggen dat ik goed Engels spreek. In veel contexten wel, maar zet mij in de tuin of in de keuken en het is ook huilen met de pet op.

  • @linguaEpassione
    @linguaEpassione Год назад +24

    12:22 Thanks for the lovely shout-out! It's such a pleasure to know that my content has helped people tackle their language learning difficulties, even for languages I can't speak!

  • @itsmemiranda954
    @itsmemiranda954 Год назад +19

    As a Dutchie myself (Dutch, English and some German), my respect for all!! 🙌🏻 There are a lot of people living years on end in a country, not (willing) learing the native language. These people, wow! 😌🍀

  • @SIC647
    @SIC647 Год назад +48

    As a Dane I am amused that the ones who have learned Nordic languages, have all chosen Swedish or Norwegian.
    Words and grammar is much the same between all three, but the pronounciation of Danish is uniquely difficult.

  • @eliasshakkour2904
    @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +59

    This video is trippy. The non-native speakers have such good accents it’s hard to pick up differences between them and the native speakers! I’m especially impressed with the American at 1:29. 👍🏼

    • @knotwilg3596
      @knotwilg3596 Год назад +3

      And the Swede. I've known a few Swedes who speak Dutch like natives. Their language might be close but they have a knack for pronunciation.

    • @ofjeworstlust69
      @ofjeworstlust69 Год назад +2

      The most convincing to me is the person at 1:16, they seem to have mastered the language perfectly. Very convincing Flemish, although I am not good enough with Flemish accents to place it to a specific region. The way they speak is proper standard language in Belgium.

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +7

      @@ofjeworstlust69 That person is a native speaker from Belgium! 😅Were you confused, like me, by the wrong flag? The first stripe is supposed to be black, but it's blue, which would make this the flag of Romania, so I wonder if you thought they were Romanian?

    • @ofjeworstlust69
      @ofjeworstlust69 Год назад +1

      @@eliasshakkour2904 Haha yes! I thought they were Romanian.

    • @Exyllr
      @Exyllr 10 месяцев назад

      no f u

  • @baltfriedoverwatch5719
    @baltfriedoverwatch5719 Год назад +65

    Ik vind het echt geweldig dat zoveel mensen op deze bijeenkomst ook Nederlands hebben geleerd. 🇳🇱🧡Op een dag zou ik ook heel graag bij zo'n polyglotbijeenkomst willen meedoen. Dat ziet er heel leuk uit. 👍

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +4

      Kijk dan zeker op www.polyglotgathering.com/2023/ 😊

    • @-_YouMayFind_-
      @-_YouMayFind_- Год назад

      Inderdaad dat zie je niet vaak

    • @evastapaard2462
      @evastapaard2462 Год назад +1

      @@EasyDutch ik spreek Nederlands, Fries, Duits, Engels, Afrikaans (maar niet vloeiend) en ik ben nu Frans en Spaans aan het leren. ben ik nu een polyglot?

  • @AroLiberteSquad
    @AroLiberteSquad 7 месяцев назад +4

    As a Pole I respect so much all people who try to learn our difficult language!

  • @dumpling3309
    @dumpling3309 Год назад +24

    I have been learning German for quite some time and can understand almost all Dutch. I find it so unbelievable.

    • @scaathreykr
      @scaathreykr Год назад +3

      Great job! I'm German and I understand not even half of the Dutch language. ( * . _ .)

    • @agatastaniak7459
      @agatastaniak7459 Год назад +7

      @@scaathreykr I also understand with my very basic German but I know Swedish. So maybe this is why it's understandable.

    • @scaathreykr
      @scaathreykr Год назад +2

      @@agatastaniak7459 The few words I do understand is only due to sounding somewhat similar to Norwegian.

    • @scaathreykr
      @scaathreykr Год назад +6

      @@mary.739 So true. It's only a few words one understands, that might give you some idea what they are talking about. Also due to the context - we know it's some kind of polyglot-meeting and in the interview they are probably talking about what languages they have learned and to which degree and what other languages they intend to learn in the future and why.

    • @Lily_and_River
      @Lily_and_River Год назад +1

      @@scaathreykr I agree that Dutch and German are very different when it comes to vocabulary. But I also think how easily a person can understand a new language depends on how many languages they already know or how much they are exposed to a certain language. I'm Dutch and I only had a bit more exposure to German during the past years by visiting Germany a couple of times per year. I haven't been actively learning the language, I've just been listening. I feel I can already understand about 70% (when it's spoken in a clear accent) without being able to say much. On the other hand I know many Germans who don't understand the simplest sentence in Dutch. But those people mostly only speak German and it's like their brains don't even expect to hear another language.

  • @Graphite2983
    @Graphite2983 Год назад +17

    The most obvious emotion I felt while I watched this video was envy; they all speak these languages so well, and seemingly in such little time, that I don’t quite understand how, even with the most efficient techniques, they retain all these words and grammar points.
    Also, I observe that everyone has their own struggles depending on their strengths and weaknesses. Although the people in the video talking about Mandarin gave points that helped me understand their struggles, I still don’t completely find it so difficult but mostly because I was already exposed to Hokkien and Mandarin since I was young.

    • @evastapaard2462
      @evastapaard2462 Год назад +2

      dont envy them, you dont know what their basics are. my mothertongue is Frisian, Dutch my second language. after those I learned German, English and a bit Afrikaans but I always feel like im cheating because those languages are quite the same to me. lately Im learning French and thats not a germanic language but has latin roots so for me thats harder to learn. but there are so many french words in English and Dutch! Im learning French for two months now and I can already read in French....chances are that learning Mandarin will be close to impossible to learn! to me that is. Ive never been exposed to asian sounds.

  • @DrowningInTea
    @DrowningInTea Год назад +33

    I am a native Cantonese speaker who can speak Mandarin and Japanese. I like how so many people say Mandarin is difficult while i'm like "all western languages with tenses and inflections are difficult" 😂.
    Personally I think Japanese is more difficult than Mandarin due to the inflections, multiple readings of kanji and honorifics. I've spoken to a Polish polygot who could speak Russian and many other languages, and he said Japanese was definitely more difficult than Polish.

    • @s-dyorindyorin-s149
      @s-dyorindyorin-s149 Год назад +2

      Grammar wise Japanese is a simple language. Inflections and tenses don't make a language hard as long as they are regular, like in Japanese, Korean or Turkish.
      Polish as any other Slavic language on the other side, as well as Greek, Celtic languages, Icelandic etc. are extremely irregular.

    • @DrowningInTea
      @DrowningInTea Год назад +2

      @@s-dyorindyorin-s149 I was comparing its grammar to Mandarin, which does not have tenses and inflections.
      You are correct that Japanese is easier than slavic languages grammar-wise but that's not why Japanese is difficult. It's the writing system, extremely irregular kanji readings (onyomi/kunyomi/nanori), different structure of the language, and its reliance on context. If even a Chinese person can struggle a lot in learning this language (we are already familiar with hanzi, onyomi readings and their culture so we don't have to relearn these parts), I'm sure to a western person it will be like rewiring your whole brain.

    • @hanskloss9482
      @hanskloss9482 Год назад

      @@s-dyorindyorin-s149 what do you mean about Polish being irregular? I'm a native Polish speaker, and I'd say this about English. In English letters and pronunciation are almost completely independent, you have to memorize it, for example in "Pacific Ocean", each "c" is pronunced diffrenttly, in Polish you can write down everything, then give it to someone to read it, and pronunciation will sound always the same

    • @futuredoctor-y2b
      @futuredoctor-y2b Год назад

      You're right, japanese is harder because of its complicated grammar, but the chinese pronunciation is harder than the Japanese one 😅 so, every language has its own difficulties and simplicity, but chinese is a FANTASTIC language and I'm learning it currently 😊
      很高兴认识你☺️!

  • @felixmiles4909
    @felixmiles4909 Год назад +14

    Make a video of these polyglots discussing a difficult topic in Polish. It will surely be fun for the Poles themselves. Pretty please.

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +5

      Some of them were featured in the Easy Polish video at the PG: ruclips.net/video/QH37pkk8ZYw/видео.html 😁

  • @alinaguritanu8562
    @alinaguritanu8562 Год назад +56

    Richard Simcott has learned so many languages that he chose just to mention the families for not taking half of the video 😅

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +3

      Correct 😂

    • @amjan
      @amjan Год назад +1

      Yeah, that was so funny. He grew tired of answering that question ;)

    • @StillAliveAndKicking_
      @StillAliveAndKicking_ Год назад +5

      Yes I too laughed at that. One day he will just say he speaks indo-european languages, sinetic languages etc.

    • @Gerard_2024
      @Gerard_2024 Год назад

      @@StillAliveAndKicking_ semitic languages ?

  • @knotwilg3596
    @knotwilg3596 Год назад +14

    I don't consider myself a polyglot, especially after seeing that video. I'm native in Dutch, almost equivalent in English I'd say, proficient in French, likewise in Portuguese with some dusting, and then I can easily understand and read (and speak with difficulty) Spanish, German and Italian thanks to their similarities to the languages I know. I have tried, with variable effort, Polish, Welsh and Chinese but I'm basically nowhere with these.
    From this experience I would say Chinese (Mandarin) looks by far the bigger challenge. I understand the Polish grammar might be a little tougher but having studied Latin and knowing German, that's just a system to apply. Chinese has the tonal challenge, the writing and the pronunciation, which is hard in Polish too but I found it easier to figure that one out.
    My mother has studied Arab and Turkish and she found the latter the toughest language she ever tried, I believe also due to agglutination.
    Interesting to learn that for those who tried, Georgian was the real nightmare!

    • @FPSJesus
      @FPSJesus Год назад

      Why did you try Welsh, out of curiosity?

  • @loraivanova8635
    @loraivanova8635 Год назад +19

    I'm from Bulgaria (my native language is Bulgarian apparently...) and I can speak English and Greek very well. I have been learning Turkish. And I used to learn Romanian and Albanian at university (Greek too). I find Albanian and Turkish most difficult and actually contrary to popular belief Greek never was that difficult to me (probably because its logic is close to the Bulgarian logic). But I love all of them! 🇧🇬🇬🇷🇹🇷🇷🇴🇦🇱
    I also find Polish, Portuguese, Hungarian and Icelandic very interesting. Years ago I tried to learn to read Polish and Portuguese. Both were really difficult.
    In conclusion I understand the girl who has been learning Albanian (and all the people who complained about the difficulty of Polish language). 😅

    • @antimimoniakos
      @antimimoniakos Год назад

      The actual bulgarian language is turkish because Bulgarians were turkmongols. You speak the language of Kyrilos and Methodios made when translated the holly bible to the slavic language which was spoken in villages around Thessaloniki city.

    • @loraivanova8635
      @loraivanova8635 Год назад +2

      @@antimimoniakos That's absolutely not true?? Bulgarian language is a Slavic language and when it comes to grammar rules it's COMPLETELY different from Turkish. We use a lot of Turkish words because years ago Bulgaria used to be in the Ottoman Empire but apart from that the 2 languages have nothing in common.
      Also I can't argue if Bulgarians are turkmongols or not because our origin is kind of unclear but our language is definitely a Slavic one.
      Also yea, the Bible was translated from Greek to many other languages. So what? Kiril and Methodi (as we call them) gave us an ALPHABET, not a whole new language! It's very different.

    • @tyxeri48
      @tyxeri48 Год назад +1

      @@loraivanova8635 I am astonished that you took the time to answer to a short-brained nationalist. I teach Ancient and Modern Greek and I have been learning Turkish for ages, although I lived in Turkey for years. It's quite a hard language for me to learn. Greek is intimidating for most, but the mechanism is easy to be understood. Living in Northern Greece, I can understand some Bulgarian as well.

    • @loraivanova8635
      @loraivanova8635 Год назад

      @@tyxeri48 Haha I know, right. Maybe I shouldn't explain myself to stupid people. I was just annoyed by the way this person mixed true facts with total lies haha.
      Anyways. It's awesome to meet a person who speaks my favorite languages. 😀

    • @marieljackman1850
      @marieljackman1850 4 месяца назад

      Greek is written and spoken so badly by even the Greek journalists. Too many errors to count.
      People don’t know how to write and stress the words, no clue about basic adjectives and participles … etc. 😮
      Greek is a demanding language!

  • @EverydayIndonesian
    @EverydayIndonesian 3 месяца назад

    I am always amazed to see how many languages you guys speak. Your Dutch sound so natural to my ear.

  • @MannyWalks
    @MannyWalks Год назад +4

    it's so amazing how they speak Dutch with that native dutch accent! 🤩🔥

  • @lefjuh
    @lefjuh Год назад +8

    Wat een geweldige video van de Polyglot Gathering! Het is altijd bemoedigend om andere mensen te zien die Nederlands leren (of hebben geleerd).
    To any polyglots out there: when you count how many languages you speak, do you always include your native language as one of them?
    Ik ben onlangs ook begonnen met het leren van een beetje Georgisch en Pools. Ik vind ze moeilijke maar mooie talen. Het Georgische alfabet alleen al is absoluut heerlijk! En Pools wordt mijn tweede Slavische taal, dus het is eigenlijk niet zo moeilijk als ik dacht.
    Succes allemaal en bedankt Easy Dutch!

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад

      I always count English, as the first language one has learned should always be counted - I am writer level in Modern English + normal Scots dialect + Middle English (over 60.000 to 100.000 words in the three combined, maybe even more) and advanced level in Dutch (over 8.000 base words) and native speaker level in Spanish (over 10.000 base words to 15.000 words, maybe more, and I learned it 100% passively by watching lots of movies and TV series in Spanish and listening to a lot of songs with lyrics in Spanish) and intermediate level in Norwegian / German / Swedish and Portuguese (anywhere from 3.000 to 3.800 words, maybe more, and I can actually understand over 95% of the words I see in Portuguese because I know Spanish) and beginner level in Welsh / Icelandic / Breton / Frisian / Hungarian / Faroese / Occitan / Gallo / Aranese / French / Burgundian / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Italian / Galician / Catalan / Danish / Cornish / Luxembourgish / Guernsey / Limburgish / Norn / Gothic / Old Norse / Old English / Old Dutch / Vandałic / Slovenian / Afrikaans (by Frisian, I meant all three Frisian languages, namely West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian, and I am also learning all languages based on these languages that are referred to as dialects, but they are in fact different languages, especially the Italian-based languages and the German-based languages and the West-Vlaamse Dutch-based languages and the French-based language that’s spoken in Wallonia / Belgium and Yolo and the Scots Doric language etc) and the other pretty languages that are on my list of languages I want to learn and improve, which is extremely overwhelming!

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад

      Trouwens... Bijna twee dagen geleden ben ik begonnen met het leren van Hongaars en Sloveens, en dezen twee talen zijn niet zo moeilijk! Irish and Scottish Gaelic and Hungarian are category 3 languages, while Manx (probably, but not sure) and Icelandic / Faroese and Slovenian and Old Norse / Gothic / Old English etc are category 2 languages, but all other Germanic / Nordic languages and the Latin languages and Welsh / Breton / Cornish are category 1 languages, so they can be learned very fast, and category 2 / category 3 languages aren’t really that hard, to be honest, they’re just a bit harder to read and they take a bit longer to get used to, because they have many different letters with accents and certain diphthongs and certain letter combinations that make certain words harder to learn, so they may take at least 2 years or more to learn to an advanced level or to a native speaker level, but aren’t extremely hard tho - French also has lots of accents, so it’s closer to the easiest category 2 language than it is to the easiest category 1 languages (Dutch / English / Norwegian and Italian / Spanish / Esperanto and Welsh / Breton / Cornish are the easiest languages ever) on the language difficulty spectrum, and it’s ‘the hardest’ Latin language, but it’s mostly the spelling and the pronunciation that are a bit harder, because the words themselves are very easy to learn and read.

    • @Samplesurfer
      @Samplesurfer Год назад

      @@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038Beheers je de dualis al?

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад

      Wat is een dualis?

  • @northstar2839
    @northstar2839 Год назад +32

    For me, the most difficult language I learned was GEORGIAN. It has every imaginable difficulty you can think of ...

    • @SinilkMudilaSama
      @SinilkMudilaSama Год назад +4

      I can imagine, isolated idiom so...

    • @supermanbrz
      @supermanbrz Год назад +9

      The writing is beautiful

    • @b6983832
      @b6983832 Год назад +5

      Georgian is known for its extremely complex grammar which is no way helped by the language being extremely agglutinative.

    • @januszlepionko
      @januszlepionko Год назад +2

      Navajo, Taa, and some other languages has their own difficulties you can't imagine too.

    • @northstar2839
      @northstar2839 Год назад

      @@januszlepionko I have heard that too. I bow deep before a person who has achieved to learn Navajo ...

  • @cornelisjacobus2083
    @cornelisjacobus2083 Год назад +3

    Geabonneerd. Geweldig hoe goed Nederlands jullie allemaal spreken. Tot ziens.

  • @dbuc4671
    @dbuc4671 Год назад +16

    Chinese _grammar_ is probably one of the easiest among all languages, but everything _else_ about it - pronunciation especially of x, q, j, tones, double-meanings, writing it and character memorization, radical system, 4-character chengyu idioms, are way more difficult than most other languages lol

    • @knotwilg3596
      @knotwilg3596 Год назад +1

      I agree. Most of the time I can make a quick breakthrough by sheer memory and imitation, but in Mandarin I got stuck at even the first sentence.

    • @TheHungarianOak
      @TheHungarianOak Год назад

      its still an easy language, because as you said grammar is a joke and if you just want to communicate, you can learn pinjin.

  • @alexeymalyshev8945
    @alexeymalyshev8945 Год назад +15

    Let's be honest, usually it's much much easier to learn the languages from the same language group. For Dutch people mentioning English, German or even Scandinavian languages, there is a little bit of cheating if we talk about polyglots. For an English or Dutch speaker learning for example 3 languages Chinese, Arabic and Russian will require much more effort than learning 6 European languages.

    • @keithprice1950
      @keithprice1950 Год назад +3

      How is it cheating? For a native English speaker to learn Dutch is still a lot of hard work. If it wasn't then every native English speaker would speak Dutch. There is no such things as easy in language learning.

    • @alexeymalyshev8945
      @alexeymalyshev8945 Год назад +8

      @@keithprice1950 I didn't say it's cheating, I said it's a little bit of cheating. I appreciate their effort, learning any language is a big challenge. I'm just saying there is an easier way of learning multiple languages and a harder way. For example, my native language is Russian. Learning another 4 slavic languages - let's say Ukrainian, Belorussian, Serbian and Bulgarian will take approximately the same amount of time as learning Chinese alone (maybe even less). Adding English which isn't my native language, and - voilà - I'm a polyglot. While speaking Chinese won't make me a polyglot. You know what I mean?

    • @Gerard_2024
      @Gerard_2024 Год назад +1

      @@keithprice1950
      How about reversing that statement ? After all, he is speaking from the perspective of Dutch native-speakers, not from the perspective of English native-speakers.
      For a Germanic family native-speaker, learning English is not so difficult. In fact, you could describe it as a step-down, whereas for a native English-speaker, learning a Germanic language (such as Dutch, for example) is a step-up. Within the Germanic family, English is the least difficult language to learn, because firstly, it does not have declensions and secondly, verb conjugation is almost non-existent in comparison to other Germanic languages.

    • @Lily_and_River
      @Lily_and_River Год назад

      @@Gerard_2024 I'm not sure about English being the least difficult language to learn. English grammar, pronunciation and spelling isn't easy at all. It's just that most of the world is exposed to a lot of English which results in many people speaking it.
      But many people also have very heavy accents and mess up grammar and spelling. Also modern English has become influenced by French to a point where it could be seen as half Roman half Germanic (even though it's officially still a Germanic language). I do think the Roman sentence structure is more simple compared to Germanic languages. For Dutch and German people English grammar should technically be harder than for French or Spanish speaking people. Also French vocabulary is often closer to modern English than Dutch and germanic English vocabulary are close to eachother. Still Dutch are the best non-native English speakers. Again I think this has a lot to do with exposure. I think this is also the reason why many Dutch people speak English, but not a lot of English speak Dutch.
      The past years I've been a bit more exposed to German and I can already understand about 70% of the language. Speaking would require more practice. But I definitely think German is easier to learn compared to English. Of course if you compare it to mandarin yes than English might be easier. But it's all relative and depending on the person. If one knows English, all the roman languages become very easy to learn aswell.
      Anyway why should @keithprice1950 reverse his statement. The original commenter did mention English native speakers aswel. Keith just made a point that people in Europe still need to work on learning languages even when languages are similar. It takes effort and time, so the word cheating feels misplaced. After that the original commenter explained himself better.

    • @landsgevaer
      @landsgevaer Год назад

      @@keithprice1950 If there is no such thing as an easy language, then surely there is such a thing as a hard language. I hope you do not mean to claim that all languages are equally easy/hard to learn?
      So, although not cheating, mastering three more difficult unrelated languages can be more - let's say - impressive than learning six easier related languages.

  • @rafawojt2508
    @rafawojt2508 Год назад

    Hey guys! So happy to see you still making movies and now in my mother country! Ive meet you like 8 months ago in Wageningen and talked with you for a while :). Hopefully you will continue your great work and help others to learn languages, succes! Greetings, Rafael

  • @hanskloss9482
    @hanskloss9482 Год назад +11

    1:53 he forgot Polish, he speaks with almost perfect accent and rich words

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +3

      True! He's also featured in the Easy Polish video that was shot on the Polyglot Gathering! You can find it here: ruclips.net/video/QH37pkk8ZYw/видео.html 😄

    • @hanskloss9482
      @hanskloss9482 Год назад +3

      @@EasyDutch thank you yes I am aware Luca inspires me 😄

  • @artattai
    @artattai Год назад +20

    Heel interessant! Also: I agree about Polish, I spent two months in Poland and the few words I thought I have learnt.. Were actually always written by me in a total different/wrong way 😂

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +3

      Polish is very hard!!!

    • @baltuss76
      @baltuss76 Год назад +5

      Yes, Polish is very difficult, mostly because of grammar and pronunciation. As a Pole myself I admire people who learn Polish ❤

  • @seustaceRotterdam
    @seustaceRotterdam Год назад +5

    Mooi gedaan, en leuk om mee te doen!

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +1

      Dankjewel nog een keer! 😊🙏

  • @safronio
    @safronio Год назад +1

    Great video! Thank you, Easy Dutch team ❤

  • @livewithintention1625
    @livewithintention1625 Год назад

    Woahhh. I am blown away. I'm English but lived in Belgium from 2-11 years old, and I thought that was why my Flemish accent is good, because I learnt it as a child. But these people are incredible!! Their accents are amazing for having learnt another language as adults! I'm so impressed

    • @livewithintention1625
      @livewithintention1625 Год назад

      and I know it shouldn't be this way, but I'm particularly impressed by the American and British people speaking Dutch. Just cos we're usually so rubbish at learning other languages

  • @stolgaf4545
    @stolgaf4545 Год назад

    It is very obvious that once you try to learn a language in another language family, it is becoming pretty difficult. Good to see different people having different mother-tongues and their challanges.

  • @konstantinosconstantine
    @konstantinosconstantine Год назад +6

    The term "dead language" is not exactly applicable to (ancient) Greek language because its modern form is just the evolution of the ancient one.
    Long story short; Greek language is continuously being spoken during the centuries

    • @lothariobazaroff3333
      @lothariobazaroff3333 Год назад +4

      According to Luke Ranieri from the Polymathy channel, modern Greek and ancient Greek are more distant from each other than Sardinian from Latin. It's true that Sardinian is the closest "living" language to Latin, but nobody calls it a modern form of Latin.

  • @UrsaSrsek
    @UrsaSrsek Год назад +1

    surprised nobody mentioned arabic, such a widely spoken language! Not quite a polyglot myself (switching between 3 languages per day, with two others somewhere on back up xD) but I tried arabic (one year studying and now passively), and while other languages came easy, arabic was and still remains hell haha

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Год назад

      I think no one from this group has tried Arabic. It's usually really tough for westerners. Steve Kaufmann is trying to learn it currently alongside Farsi and struggling with both like he has never struggled with any other language before in his life

  • @forimar1
    @forimar1 Год назад +5

    Hallo from Hungary! :) I speak ( of course Hungarian) English, Italian and now i am learning Dutch. For me the most difficult to learn the Dutch language of those three.

    • @waddahabdo7273
      @waddahabdo7273 Год назад +2

      hello..
      have you heard of the hungarian novelist Attila Bartis???
      i like him...

    • @robborrel6786
      @robborrel6786 Год назад +2

      I’m Dutch (and I’m fluent/proficient in some other languages), but now living in Hungary and the language here is the most challenging for me….😅

    • @waddahabdo7273
      @waddahabdo7273 Год назад

      @@robborrel6786 but why living in a poor state and left netherlands??
      netherland has a more boosting economy.l and education is at its highst level..

    • @waddahabdo7273
      @waddahabdo7273 Год назад +1

      @@robborrel6786 but why living in a poor state and left netherlands??
      netherland has a more boosting economy.l and education is at its highst level..

    • @forimar1
      @forimar1 Год назад +1

      @@robborrel6786 Well, hats off to you that you are trying to learn/understand this very unique language! :) and if you think sometimes that it doesn't make sense, remember what I am writing now: learning Hungarian improves logical skills 😄

  • @doctorthenjie
    @doctorthenjie Год назад +6

    No African languages attempted here :( ......(aside from Afrikaans which isn't truly an African language)

  • @Pauliii2334
    @Pauliii2334 Год назад +2

    I like that I am able to understand English and German, even if I don't speak Dutch I am able to understand a lot of words/sentences. Maybe in the future I will learn Dutch too 😊

  • @joanxsky2971
    @joanxsky2971 Год назад +7

    heel leuk video ik begreep alles:)

  • @jetteramsey9292
    @jetteramsey9292 Год назад +1

    A Dane here,to me Dutch is a mix between Danish,English,and German,I do not speak it,but I can understand it.

  • @yoseflaurent3376
    @yoseflaurent3376 Год назад +2

    I won't discuss the Asia languages nor minor regional European languages and dialects like breton or welsh or piemontese which I don't know too much, however I dare affirm that Polish, Russian and other Slavic languages are not really difficult. the MOST difficult of all European major national languages is clearly the Georgian language. If I extend my analysis to the Middle East and North Africa, let's say Semitic languages are not really difficult either, but for Amazigh, the language of the North African Berber people which is by far the most difficult in that area and clearly more complex than most European languages as well.

  • @senoner90
    @senoner90 Год назад

    2:35 I like how the guy is reading from a hidden paper the languages that he knows

  • @jhlaurence
    @jhlaurence Год назад +3

    Chinese here. I find Arabic and Georgian can be a lot more difficult than the other languages I have ever encountered...

    • @EvHateisForbidden
      @EvHateisForbidden Год назад +1

      As a Georgian, I can say Chinese was hardest I have ever come across. Ni Hao 😂

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Год назад +1

      ​@@futuredoctor-y2bAre you talking about Arabic dialects or standard Arabic?

  • @hcjkruse
    @hcjkruse Год назад +1

    Compliments to all speakers. They sound natural and relaxed in speaking Dutch. The only thing a native speaker might do different is dropping "het" in the list of languages they speak. instead of "het Pools, het Georgisch, het Spaans.. en Nederlands." we would say "Pools, Georgisch, Spaans... en Nederlands". Waarom schrijf ik dit eigenlijk in het Engels 😂?

  • @singingcat02
    @singingcat02 Год назад +1

    They’re all talking about grammatical cases but it’s really not that unusual and not that hard once you got the concept. Maybe it’s because I started studying German, Latin and then ancient Greek very early so I’m used to it, but to me the hard part would be assimilating the vocab and using it properly, not the grammatical cases, which are just something you learn by heart. Once they’re in your head, with a little practice it’s fine.

  • @aizuni
    @aizuni 10 месяцев назад

    1:47 omg I got shocked when she said she learned Latvian, it's my mother tongue and it's so hard!!

  • @bamereg
    @bamereg Год назад +1

    Wat leuk! Ik wist helemaal niet dat er zo'n bijeenkomst bestaat. Is dat elk jaar?
    En wat spreken deze mensen allemaal goed Nederlands. Sowieso vind ik het al heel gaaf als mensen Nederlands gaan leren. En dan kunnen ze het ook nog zo goed. De Poolse meneer (met baardje en lichtblauw hemd) is gewoon helemaal accentloos.
    Dat is meteen ook iets wat mij opvalt aan Polen: Polen zijn zo goed in vreemde talen leren. Hier in Nederland merk ik bij voorbeeld ook dat Poolse arbeidsmigranten eerder geneigd zijn om Nederlands te leren dan bij voorbeeld Slowaken of Roemenen.

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +1

      Ja, wij zijn ook onder de indruk van hun kennis van het Nederlands! 😊 En ja, de Polyglot Gathering vindt elk jaar plaats! Je kunt meer info vinden op: polyglotgathering.com/

    • @bamereg
      @bamereg Год назад

      @@EasyDutch dank je wel!

  • @lothariobazaroff3333
    @lothariobazaroff3333 Год назад +1

    1:40 That was the most interesting part for me: a Welsh woman who speaks Latvian. Dw i'n dysgu Cymraeg, yr iaith brydferth. Cymru am byth!

  • @minanovkiril
    @minanovkiril 8 месяцев назад

    i speak german and english and dutch is somewhere in the middle
    i also speak a bunch of slavic lang. as well as several of the latin group

  • @Nina-uh1ie
    @Nina-uh1ie Год назад

    Props to anyone who chose polish as their first slavic language and didn't give up halfway through lmao

  • @hannofranz7973
    @hannofranz7973 Год назад +4

    Mijn moedertaal is duits maar ik spreek ook engels, spaans, frans, catalans en een beetje nederlands. Mijn nederlands is een beetje een mix tussen wat ik heb gelerd en wat ik met het duits en engels improviseer.

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад

      Deutsch ist zwar nicht meine Muttersprache, aber ich habe sehr fortgeschrittene Deutschkenntnisse und mir geht‘s in etwa genauso wie Dir! 😅 Ich glaube, wenn man schon Deutsch kann ist es ziemlich leicht in die Falle zu tappen, deutsche Wörter einfach zu „verniederländischen“. 😂 Dabei gibt es eigentlich sehr viele Unterschiede zwischen den beiden Sprachen! Deutsch hilft zwar beim *Lernen* der Sprache, aber nicht so sehr beim Erraten unbekannter Wörter!

    • @hannofranz7973
      @hannofranz7973 Год назад +1

      @@eliasshakkour2904 Ja, das stimmt. Improvisieren in einer verwandten Sprache und diese Sprache beherrschen, ist nicht das Gleiche.

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Год назад

      ​@@eliasshakkour2904Fallen und Falsche Freude zwischen Niederländisch und Deutsch gibt's zwar viele aber das ändert nichts an der Tatsache, dass die extrem vielen Ähnlichkeiten und die grundlegenden syntaktischen Gemeinsamkeiten auf jeden Fall dabei helfen, Wörter, Strukturen usw. zu raten mit einer relativ hohen Wahrscheinlichkeit richtig zu liegen.

    • @hannofranz7973
      @hannofranz7973 Год назад

      ​@@ihsahnakerfeldt9280Ja, das ist wahr.

  • @rientsdijkstra4266
    @rientsdijkstra4266 Год назад +2

    De moeilijkste (officiële/nationale) Europese talen (voor de meeste Europeanen) zijn Hongaars, Fins en Turks. De reden hiervoor is dat dit enige Europese talen zijn die niet tot de Indo Germaanse talen familie behoren, zodat je echt absoluut geen woordgelijkenissen hoort, waar die er wel heel veel zijn voor de andere Europese talen. (en daarnaast zijn er natuurlijk ook de etnische talen zoals gealic and whelsh en Baskisch natuurlijk)

    • @antimimoniakos
      @antimimoniakos Год назад

      Actually Turkey is not in Europe. As far for the vocabulary many languages including Spanish, English and French have thousands of Greeks words. Are you sure it's easy to learn Greek grammatik?

    • @rientsdijkstra4266
      @rientsdijkstra4266 Год назад

      @@antimimoniakos A few remarks (from an interested layman, I am not (!) an expert):
      1.) Turkey is partly in Europe, but I agree that most of Turkey is in Asia. So that would mean that we would have to delete Turkish from the list and whe would be left with Finnish and Hungarian as most difficult languages in Europe
      2.) It is certainly true that (derivatives of) Greek words are found in many European languages, also in Dutch by the way, so that would mean that Greek is a bit less difficult for us
      3.) Word connections are not the same as grammatics, that is a different subject
      4.) When I look it up on Google / Wikipedia I see that Greek actually an Indo European language, but in another subfamily then the Germanic and Romanic languages. So I would gather that Greek is quite a bit more difficult to learn for most European's compared to other Germanic or Romanic languages... Also the fact that Greek has its own Cyrillic alphabet doesn't make it any easier, of course.

  • @jodyditzel5623
    @jodyditzel5623 Год назад +2

    indrukwekkend hoe goed hun Nederlands is

  • @johnveerkamp1501
    @johnveerkamp1501 Год назад +4

    JEZUS WAT GOED !!

  • @TimWil
    @TimWil Год назад

    I couldn’t help but think of the scene in Sophie’s Choice where Sophie complains about English containing too many words for the same thing (synonyms) while in Poland there’s usually only one word. I assume this complaint was also in the novel from which the film was based!

    • @aislingbooks
      @aislingbooks Год назад +1

      I loved the film but the novel was so much richer, yes.

    • @januszlepionko
      @januszlepionko Год назад +1

      English “Coffee or tea?” might be translated to Polish in at least three ways. So, yes, Polish have less words…

  • @rilkeman4787
    @rilkeman4787 Год назад

    First time I’ve heard LL speak Dutch. Didn’t even know it was one of his languages …

  • @lisk3822
    @lisk3822 8 месяцев назад

    The guy learning Hungarian is in for a wild ride. Vowel harmony, no "to have" verb, suffixes upon suffixes....Good Luck.

    • @barrysteven5964
      @barrysteven5964 7 месяцев назад

      On the other hand it is incredibly regular and predictable compared to the Slavonic languages. It has a regular stress. Adjectives have only two possible forms. There are no genders. And most of the suffixes replace prepositions which are hard to use in most languages and in a lot of languages you have to learn the preposition plus what case ending to use with it but in Hungarian the preposition IS the case ending.

  • @jetteramsey9292
    @jetteramsey9292 Год назад

    Dane here,can understand people from Nederland,but can not speak it,do to it is a blend of English,German and Danish,never know do I say it in Danish,German or English,so I will try English or German.

  • @jaspermooren5883
    @jaspermooren5883 8 месяцев назад

    I'm quite suprised so many people named the grammatical cases. That's the part I thought was the easiest in German at least. There are rules to that you can just follow. It's all the exceptions everywhere I've always found difficult in languages. But I'm a Data Scientist (in general very STEM oriented), pretty bad in languages in general, so maybe I'm just the weird one here.

  • @Kasparos
    @Kasparos Год назад +1

    12:57 zijn accent is heel natuurlijk in het Nederlands, echt knap!

  • @fifi23o5
    @fifi23o5 Год назад +3

    People don't realize Dutch is actually not a language. It's a speach disorder!
    (joke, for those who didn't get it)

  • @VideoCraftingHD
    @VideoCraftingHD Год назад

    Wow I am impressed they spoke very well

  • @OliverKohn-iz2sf
    @OliverKohn-iz2sf Год назад

    Wow a surprise Richard Simcot appearance!

  • @gloria5334
    @gloria5334 Год назад +3

    Ik ben met Turks begonnen en het is heel moelijk voor mij. Ik weet niet waaroom ben ik een andare taal begonnen als ik nederlands moet verbeteren, maar tot nu toe is het leuk, ondanks er zit chaos in mijn hoofd. 😁

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +1

      Ik heb ook iets Turks geleerd en het is inderdaad heel erg moeilijk!!! Wat is je moedertaal?

    • @gloria5334
      @gloria5334 Год назад

      @@eliasshakkour2904 Italiaans. En jouw moedertaal? Wat is jouw Turks niveau? (not sure if this sentece is correct)

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад

      @@gloria5334 Ti rispondo in italiano perché è più facile per me! La mia prima lingua è l’arabo e sono andato a una scuola americana (statunitense) quindi sono cresciuto bilingue e parlo entrambe le lingue a livello di madrelingua. Purtroppo sia l’arabo che l’inglese sono ben diversi dal turco, quindi tranne nel lessico (il turco ha un sacco di parole di origine araba) non ho avuto molti vantaggi nel mio apprendimento del turco! Per me la cosa più difficile è la grammatica, cioè la morfologia e la sintassi. Le parole e le frasi si costruiscono di una maniera totalmente diversa dall’arabo, l’inglese, l’italiano… Tutto è indietro! 😅 Esempio: “Per essere sani bisogna fare esercizio” diventa “Sağlık (sani) olmak (essere) için (per) spor (esercizio) yapmak (fare) lazım (bisogna)”! 😱 Per quanto riguarda il mio livello: Ho studiato la lingua per due anni, quindi con il tempo e le risorse sufficienti posso scrivere abbastanza bene, e posso anche scrivere e capire messaggi semplici, ma parlare e capire quanto detto è un’altra storia completamente! Purtroppo il mio cervello non può lavorare così velocemente da poter costruire e capire con facilità delle frase in una conversazione parlata! Mi manca anche molto vocabolario. E tu? Come ti va? [Se ho fatto errori in italiano e li vuoi correggere, fai pure!]

    • @gloria5334
      @gloria5334 Год назад +1

      @@eliasshakkour2904 Ma dai, non dovrebbe essere più facile per te imparare l'arabo? Penso che a livello grammaticale fossero molto simili. Come mai stai imparando l'italiano? Per me ci sono altre lingue più belle.
      Come sta andando con turco intendi con "come ti va"? Insomma... non molto bene, sono molto frustrata. Il livello beginner non è mai divertente, ma spero in un anno di migliorare. :)

    • @loraivanova8635
      @loraivanova8635 Год назад +1

      ​​@@eliasshakkour2904 Hello, I'm a Bulgarian who has been learning Turkish for years (with some breaks).
      I just wanted to say that I understand your pain. 😅😅😅 The structure of Turkish sentences is really confusing but I really LOVE Turkish language, music and series/movies. So I'm determined to keep improving my skills.

  • @JustAnotherYou2ber
    @JustAnotherYou2ber 6 месяцев назад

    1:29 Wat dacht je van de taal die je in het filmpje spreekt??!?!? 😛

  • @b6983832
    @b6983832 Год назад +1

    Probably Latin. Reason is not that Latin were especially hard language to learn, but the problem is how it is taught. Usually teaching Latin is by memorizing grammatical tables and reading literature from the ancient Rome. With no attention paid to active usage of the language. Same is true with New Testament Greek that theologians must learn. It is taught only in the context of the Bible, and practically nobody will ever learn to express anything in this language.

  • @lindawentink2725
    @lindawentink2725 Год назад

    Wow! Impressive how many languages they know

  • @Redvexer
    @Redvexer Год назад

    Dutch is like talking swedish/danish/german mixed all togheter

  • @leakoben
    @leakoben 10 месяцев назад

    I wanna learn dutch so fast😲 now i started in duolingo

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  10 месяцев назад

      Click on this link if you'd like to receive Dutch grammar explanations and exercises linked to our episodes! 😄 easydutch.org/membership

  • @friedeldemoeder
    @friedeldemoeder Год назад

    Wat leuk dat Jeanine Frysk leert!!

  • @aliciamendez9333
    @aliciamendez9333 11 месяцев назад

    Me pregunto cuánto tiempo llevaría aprender hablar Nederlandés como hispanohablante?

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  11 месяцев назад

      Depende del tiempo que dediques al aprendizaje y de los idiomas que ya conoces! 😄

  • @henkdevries4687
    @henkdevries4687 Год назад

    Verbaas me dat niemand Arabisch opnoemt met zoveel mensen hier, is redelijk makkelijk als Nederlander die ook Engels , duits en beetje Frans/spaans kan

  • @awatqadir2783
    @awatqadir2783 Год назад +1

    Wat leuke video 🍀🌸🙏

  • @evertvanderhik5774
    @evertvanderhik5774 Год назад

    Ik blijf het zo knap vinden, voor mij is een extra taal al een drama.

  • @Jollofmuncher2000
    @Jollofmuncher2000 Год назад +1

    and im here trying to learn french and my mother tongue dutch. i wonder what techniques they use to learn so many languages

    • @lefjuh
      @lefjuh Год назад +1

      Ik denk dat AI een heel handig hulpmiddel is voor het leren van talen!

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад

      I started learning languages on my own about eight months ago, and I use the best and most effective / efficient language learning methods and techniques, namely spaced repetition (memorizing as many thousands of words as possible as fast as possible by watching all sorts of vocab videos multiple times, but over a period of time, not on the same day, but one should watch them at least twice or thrice on the first day and a few days later, and then they can be watched on maximum speed to save time at least once or twice a week or every other week etc, but one must be very focused on each word and on the English translation and visualize each word and each letter of each word in one’s mind, otherwise one won’t learn anything) and then observing how others use them in sentences and using them the same way, and also watching all sorts of videos on grammar / prepositions / verbs / pronunciation / conjunctions etc and videos with Dutch sub + English sub and videos about idioms and expressions etc, and one should try learning as many song lyrics (in the target language) as possible, and after learning at least 5.000 words, one should start watching more videos with both Dutch and English subs hardcoded, so that both subs are shown at the same time, because that’s how one can easily pick up new words in context and get used to the sentence structure etc, and it’s also a good idea to watch most videos at least twice or thrice, and revise them after a while, and always revise the words that have already been learned until all words can be remembered automatically, and even though it’s good to learn all the pronunciation rules at the beginning because it gives an inkling of what the words words sound like, one should always learn each word with its pronunciation and spelling, in Dutch and other languages, and once one gets to a really advanced level where one understands almost every word, one should start watching mostly videos with Dutch sub (or sub in another target language) and reading eBooks in the target language etc, as that’s how an automatic mode in a new language is developed! Besides, I naturally have great observational skills and great pattern recognition skills and great analytical skills, which makes it even easier for me to learn languages fast! I am writer level in Modern English + normal Scots dialect + Middle English (over 60.000 to 100.000 words in the three combined, maybe even more) and advanced level in Dutch (over 8.000 base words) and native speaker level in Spanish (over 10.000 base words to 15.000 words, maybe more, and I learned it 100% passively by watching lots of movies and TV series in Spanish and listening to a lot of songs with lyrics in Spanish) and intermediate level in Norwegian / German / Swedish and Portuguese (anywhere from 3.000 to 3.800 words, maybe more, and I can actually understand over 95% of the words I see in Portuguese because I know Spanish) and beginner level in Welsh / Icelandic / Breton / Frisian / Hungarian / Faroese / Occitan / Gallo / Aranese / French / Burgundian / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Italian / Galician / Catalan / Danish / Cornish / Luxembourgish / Guernsey / Limburgish / Aranese / Norn / Gothic / Old Norse / Old English / Old Dutch / Vandałic / Slovenian / Afrikaans (by Frisian, I meant all three Frisian languages, namely West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian, and I am also learning all languages based on these languages that are referred to as dialects, but they are in fact different languages, especially the Italian-based languages and the German-based languages and the West-Vlaamse Dutch-based languages and the French-based language that’s spoken in Wallonia / Belgium and Yolo and the Scots Doric language etc) and the other pretty languages that are on my list of languages I want to learn and improve, which is extremely overwhelming!

  • @pputnam100
    @pputnam100 Год назад

    So for those of you who weren't counting, Polish is the clear winner...!!

  • @anyarasan8529
    @anyarasan8529 Год назад

    I speak dutch english chinese turkish uyghurs bit norwegian . I want to learn german and french as well.

  • @MmeZinzin
    @MmeZinzin Год назад +1

    I'm surprised that nobody mentions/learns Arabic :-(

  • @zisukang4361
    @zisukang4361 2 месяца назад

    Such a good content❤ love from koreaa

  • @mrgenetics4063
    @mrgenetics4063 Год назад +5

    The hardest languages to learn are the ones with absolutely no resources like Icelandic or Faroese

    • @dbuc4671
      @dbuc4671 Год назад

      and austronesian ones too because there are that few native speakers of it

    • @ReiKakariki
      @ReiKakariki Год назад

      Old and Proto-Austronesian are retired, sleeper, academical langs they're pretty but today, we have few speakers on the world to multiply this easy and pretty idiom 💜🥂🫂💙🍻🥂

    • @ReiKakariki
      @ReiKakariki Год назад

      Faroese and Icelandic peolpe don't give resources and don share this langs with many countries, they're acessible but the giverments hidden the resources and links ti all learn it.

    • @barrysteven5964
      @barrysteven5964 7 месяцев назад

      There are a few more things now like Íslenska fyrir Alla. But yes, you're right. Finding resources is hard.

  • @weiareinboud6990
    @weiareinboud6990 Год назад

    Hé Mario! Van de ecowinkel in De Gaard toch?? Ik kom niet verder dan Nederlands, Engels, Duits, redelijk Frans, een beetje Italiaans en nog minder Russisch en Fries.

    • @mariotedesco
      @mariotedesco Год назад +1

      Klopt inderdaad. 😄

    • @weiareinboud6990
      @weiareinboud6990 Год назад +1

      @@mariotedesco Ik wist niet dat je zo in het polyglotten zit! Leuk gespreksonderwerp voor bij de boodschappen, alleen ben je niet meer in die winkel!

    • @mariotedesco
      @mariotedesco Год назад

      @@weiareinboud6990 Nee, klopt, ik werk daar niet meer! 😊

  • @jixxytrix1705
    @jixxytrix1705 Год назад

    You see people, Finnish is so hard they won't even mention it!
    I'm learning it right now and I'm losing my mind.
    Why couldn't my mom have been Spanish?

  • @ozlemylmaz4991
    @ozlemylmaz4991 Год назад +3

    als türkin natürlich am schwerigste Sprache ist Deutsch 😮‍💨

  • @GerHanssen
    @GerHanssen Год назад +1

    Neniu lernis Esperanton? Ĉu vere?

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +1

      Aliaj homoj, kiuj estis ĉe la evento, lernis ĝin, sed ĉi tiuj ne!

  • @blueburaq
    @blueburaq Год назад +1

    European Polyglot Conference

  • @jwijn
    @jwijn Год назад

    Kan iemand beamen dat er een regio in roemenie is waar ze nog latijn spreken of in ieder geval iets dat er sterk op lijkt?

  • @garciamiki
    @garciamiki Год назад

    wat een inspiratie!!

  • @Geenmoer748
    @Geenmoer748 Год назад +1

    Nobody who learned Arabic? Whether that’s Modern Standard Arabic or any of the Arabic dialects….

  • @Ghosty.21
    @Ghosty.21 Год назад

    Hello. I love your video's Im learning Dutch I noticed your Videos are Numbered but are not in a Playlist Id love to watch them all and it would help people like me if they wear in a Playlist. Much Love and thank you for the Videos

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +1

      Hi! Thank you for your comment! 😊 There is a playlist with all our Easy Dutch videos on the main channel, you can find it here: ruclips.net/p/PLA5UIoabheFM3fi9i9xw6ODUoSqyKJYU7
      If you're looking for the Super Easy ones, they're here: ruclips.net/p/PLA5UIoabheFOF-wn5yKE8ZI8rmMQCTbMD
      But we'll create playlists also on our channel, as many of you have asked for this. Thank you again and enjoy! 😊

  • @Ian-vj5pv
    @Ian-vj5pv Год назад +2

    Esperanto would make things easier

  • @omerciftci4673
    @omerciftci4673 Год назад

    It is rumoured that the only language Richard Simcott haven't studied is AASL.

  • @Tweeteketje
    @Tweeteketje Год назад

    Jeetje, het valt me op dat het accent van de meeste mensen behoorlijk Nederlands klinkt! Knap hoor.

  • @eliasshakkour2904
    @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +1

    1:16 Are they a Dutch native speaker from Romania? 🤔

    • @EasyDutch
      @EasyDutch  Год назад +1

      No, from Belgium!

    • @pb1634
      @pb1634 Год назад +2

      I first thought she was from Romania as well and was surprised she apparently learned Dutch with a Flemish accent.😅

    • @eliasshakkour2904
      @eliasshakkour2904 Год назад +2

      @@EasyDutch Haha, that first stripe is blue, not black! 😂

  • @faizlabib1088
    @faizlabib1088 4 месяца назад

    Mijn moedertaal is Bahasa Indonesia. Maar ik vind nederlands leuk, dus ik heb het geleerd met duolingo 😇

  • @stevenburns4296
    @stevenburns4296 Год назад

    Super video

  • @EvHateisForbidden
    @EvHateisForbidden Год назад

    გამარჯობათ მეგობრებო, შემიძლია ქართულის სწავლაში დაგეხმაროთ, თუ ვინმეს გექნებათ სურვილი.

  • @dianamanavlishvili7696
    @dianamanavlishvili7696 8 месяцев назад

    Mijn moeder taal is Georgisch. Ik wil graag Nederlandse taal verbeteren. Ik weet ook Engels, Russisch, Turks, Armenian 😂 is someone here who wants exchange languages

  • @orsoslajos1983
    @orsoslajos1983 3 месяца назад

    Whaat??? What kind of camp is this ???

  • @NOERFAUZANRM
    @NOERFAUZANRM Год назад +3

    Ik denk dat Nederlands-spreken is zeer moeilijk te doen

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад +1

      Nee, et is heel makkelijk, net zoals de Engelse uitspraak - ik ken ongeveer 8.000 Nederlandse basiswoorden (geavanceerd niveau) en mijn uitspraak is nu heel natuurlijk!

    • @PetraStaal
      @PetraStaal Год назад +1

      ​​@@thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 would love to hear you speak some Dutch! Will you upload a video?

  • @Beun007
    @Beun007 Год назад +1

    The worst part of the Dutch language are the dt-rules!

  • @Alonoda
    @Alonoda Год назад

    Some cool youtube polyglots right there... I am unworthy!

  • @thwrdg
    @thwrdg Год назад +2

    Tell them to take a glimpse at Arabic 😂

  • @magdasanchez89
    @magdasanchez89 25 дней назад

    Zij zagen dat zij vele taale spreken?🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @whatdoyouexactlymeanbyhandle
    @whatdoyouexactlymeanbyhandle Год назад +5

    Niet eerst

  • @tillylovesholland1161
    @tillylovesholland1161 Год назад

    De nederlandse vlag is deze 🇪🇬 niet de vlag die je steeds bij moedertaal NL zet.