Everyone keeps talkin about sasha but no one wants to mention jeremiah, the vietnamese dude that got most of the languages spot-on. Thats incredibly hard to do even when you study languages
He did ask some questions that I'm not sure should have been allowed. He was able to get some right just by knowing where a music artist is from and nothing about a language.
I am as well. Knew it was something north west america somewhere. There are so many languages but they do sound similar. Edit: I mean as in the continent. I'm west coast Canadian.
I am so, SO envious of Sasha right now. Knowing all those languages is seriously impressive. (Though I think it's interesting that Jeremiah got nearly the same amount of people, but by asking specific questions like "what's a popular song in your country?" that got him the info he needed without knowing exactly about phonemes and stuff.)
But isn't that kinda cheating to ask info that has nothing to do with the language? The point of this is to figure out just by hearing the language and not where Lars Ulrich, Saddam Hussein, Ronaldo or Angry Birds are from?
@@Zhaggysfaction Eh, they do that with every one of these. Like, the one where they're guessing people's haircuts, there's a lot of questions about how their hair makes them feel/how they maintain it/etc., which narrows down the guesses. Same with guessing the country someone's from by asking them about a popular dance or the national anthem or something.
@@StarUnreachable Yeah but asking someone how their fair makes them feel is very different question and whatever answer they give than asking "name a famous person there" "oh yeah Pele is our most famoud football player." Don't you think? I mean those kinds of questions where you don't actually need to here the language at all.
And it always confuses the hell out of people lol. Those languages sound so different to what we're used to, so it's cool that they get put in the spotlight here.
So so so important to keep indigenous languages alive! There are 700 dialects for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages, belonging to Indigenous Australian’s and so many of those dialects are missing in history. Māori people who are Indigenous to New Zealand also have a beautiful language that is trying to be kept alive by being taught in schools. I also love seeing/ hearing other Indigenous/First Nations languages being spoken
@@DA-js7xz I'm not an expert but as far as I know we have more african and arab ancestry and the north has german ancestry. A big factor is the fact Sicily has ben colonized by many different cultures, from arabs to normans, so we are 'a mix' of many different DNAs
@@DA-js7xz Sicilians actually have far more eastern Mediterranean ancestry (Greek and Levantine) than north African, but Sicilian itself is a romance language. It's different from Italian because Italian really is just the language of Tuscany - Italy is actually home to many distinct romance languages with many dialects of all of those languages.
They did another episode a while back and they included Pugliese! Italoromance dialects are so cool. I have conversational Italian and can sort of get by but Sicilian and Neapolitan languages are so different
It makes you realize how vast the world actually is and how many different and exciting cultures we have. Super interesting. Especially the guy from Alaska.
Ikr it really is fascinating gettin' to know different beautiful rich cultures and languages small or big 🥰🥰😍😍😇. The world is really vast!! Thinkin' of it is crazy tho' ☺☺😁
The Vietnamese dude and the lady who spoke multiple languages got a lot right but they approached their answers very differently. Super interesting to see!!
I'm one that gets the Slavic languages confused as they all sounded the same to me as a child and teen. But now i can hear the difference just enough to know what is Russian and Not Russian. Still have a hard time with Serbian and Bosnian but am working on it.
The only ones I'd be able to fully recognize are Russian and Polish but I think given that I'd be able to recognize Czech and Slovak aren't Russian or Polish either, I'd just not be able to tell them apart.
@@wednesdaya.5780 As soon as he spoke I knew it was a Slavic language but hearing him talk more allowed me to exclude Russian and Polish. They're very similar though, even same words but different meanings. I'm learning Polish at the moment and he said jutro for "this morning" which in Polish, jutro is tomorrow morning, if I'm not mistaken.
@@philbecker4676 Pretty surprised she guessed Nahuatl for the penultimate one, as it was very clearly Inuit-Yupik-Unangan to me, with the uvulars and all.
Sure you're American. For me as a European and actually being fluent in 5 languages (B2+) she made me cringe a lot because knowing few phrases doesn't mean you speak the language
@@Лима-д4и way to stereotype. 🙄 I too am European and not all Europeans are language savvy, just as not all Americans are monolingual and ignorant of languages. Perhaps if people spent more time focusing on the positive instead of bringing down people's achievements, big or small, the world might be a better, more brighter place. Oh and buddy, being B2 doesn't make you fluent. Hit C2 and then we'll talk.
@@Nuraar1I’m so glad u were in the video! I thought it was cool that i also heard some similarities like Sasha mentioned in náhuatl and in ur language too! So happy to see another native in these cool videos!!
Holy cow, Sasha coming out as a heavy weight in this. I definitely want to see her do more of these. Watching her break down where the language was from and seeing the surprised looks on the speakers was so much fun.
She’s extremely gifted with languages. I went to school with her and one day she just started speaking Polish to me because she knows I speak it 😂 I think she started out with Russian, Yiddish and a few others
@@henrybastable5735 she even replied in English to the Sicilian rather than Italian lol It's great she knows basics from all those languages, but when "polyglots" claim to be such when only A2 in most of their languages...
@@Nononononononononononononoo Polyglots like her are very impressive definitely. But as a mandarin speaker I’ve heard over a dozen self proclaimed polyglots speak mandarin and I can tell from the first word they’re nowhere near fluent.
I can understand why someone would think Yupik were similar to Nahuatl. Indigenous American languages in general use a lot of that lateral fricative sound they were describing. As someone who knows very little Nahuatl though, it sounded too guttural and "deep." I guessed general Inuit-Unangan languages since it sounded a lot like some Greenlandic songs I'm familiar with. Glad to hear Yupik is growing and kudos to this participant for keeping the language alive!
@@zoebasina1804 Yupik? Or Nahuatl? Or Greenlandic? In any case, yes. Those are some of the many languages spoken by the Indigenous people of the Americas
@@Nuraar1 I knew right of the bat that you were speaking An Alaskan Native Language just by how you spoke and the tones. Glad that you came on this show to show your language and give a little history about your people
@@karan_karan_karan its an indian thing lol indians cant speak their native languages including hindi without adding random english words in. This girl was clearly an nri so that makes even more sense for her
It was so interesting to see three different people with different levels of knowledge about other languages try this challenge. They all tried their best with the info they had. The plaid shirt guy used his practical knowledge and music, the woman used her polyglot skills and the last woman went off what best she knew from her life experiences. All really sweet respectful people. It’s nice to know that such cultured people like this exist in America and not everyone is oblivious to the outside world. Would love more videos like this!
I’m so genuinely curious how that woman was able to know all the different languages. She’s so knowledgeable when it comes to listening to fluctuations in peoples language and voices. I’m honestly impressed and envious xD Edit: guys, I didn’t say she was fluent, but she knows enough to pin point a lot of pronunciations in different languages, and guess correctly with a lot of languages. Y’all need to chill and stop trying to fight everything
@Anglofone lmfao it’s clear you’re just trying to get ppl mad cuz what does that have to do with anything... we don’t even know if she’s trans tho ...?
Yh im gonna press doubt on this one, its unlikely she is actually fully fluent in all of them. Recognising languages is easy when youve heard a lot of them.
I'm Azerbaijani from Russia that lives in Germany, knowing 5 languages, I wasn't expecting Turkmen language being SO CLOSE to Azerbaijani language, wow, I completely understood everything, it was 90% similar and more similar to Azerbaijani than the Turkish (even though you'd say these 2 languages are very close)
the girl completely butchered turkmen language it was horrible wtf real turkmen doesnt have any kurdish at all and veery minimal arabic influence, Turkish has more arabic words than turkmen for example turkmens say otyruc or skembl to chair turkish it is sandalye which is the same in arabic, turkmen say sichan turkish say faare wich is rat which is same in arabic, turkmen say ata turkish say baba which is again same as arabic, I can go on and on oh and tex she said soal to question that is not turkmen at all it is arab again, in turkmen it is suroo. idk I was so weirded out by the way she spoke it was like she was speaking arabic or somethin and her pronouncation was 90% off, turkmen does not sound like that but it is true it does sound similar to azerbajian.
Azerbaijan is my favorite country name! I'm impressed that you know five language, and I didn't realize those two would be so close either. I suppose you can add a 6th language now to your repertoire! Btw, I was way off and thought Turkmen was Hungarian .. they share a few words.
@@OKBoomer2k being a favourite name, that's so nice to hear! That being said, yeah, it's kinda my life taught me languages, born in Russia so I knew Russian, Azerbaijani my native one, Turkish is close language and learnt coz of TV shows, English as international and living in Germany made me to learn German. Also I'm a language geek as well 😅 I know couple words in Hungarian and Turkish: Kapı - gate Alma - apple
You should get an Indigenous Australian on next. Would be good to see some Koori languages on these shows. Willing to bet nobody will guess it unless they are some kind of Australian
I love that one of the women knows Yiddish. It’s sadly a language that has been dying off for years. My grandmothers would be very proud to learn younger people are making an effort to learn it. ❤
Multilingual people never ever fail to amaze me, even when you mix up the languages there's still understanding almost immediately Human brain is so incredible I wish I spoke more than just English!
I always get excited when they feature Native languages. Ojibwe classes have helped me be able to identify other tribes as well. They have such a unique, distinctive sound.
i'm turkish so when i heard turkmani i was like this is definitely azerbaijani with a twist cause you know we're mostly used to azerbaijani and can understand about %98 of it, it's crazy how turkic languages are so diverse and spread all around the world, i could never guess it was turkmani. i love our languages.
Hearing Yugtun spoken was definitely an experience, as I’m more used to hearing Inuktitut/Greenlandic through music but he was an absolute delight and quite the cutie too! I would love to see more of the language being spoken either in videos or such, maybe he could do a side hobby ;). Love from Vancouver!
Sasha is freaking amazing, I learned from them what to pick up on when listening. And they were so genuinely respectful and interested in each person. FREAKING AMAZING JUST WATCHING THEM WORK
It's pretty impressive Sasha knew so many languages, it automatically makes you connect to people more. But it was also impressive that the guy guessed a lot of them right without knowing the languages, unlike Sasha who had an advantage. This was an enjoyable video, more like these!
As a Nigerian-American with a best friend who is Yup’ik, I was so excited to hear a language that I could recognize right off the bat~ Quyana caknek for the representation !! We love to see it ❤
when the video started, I was just thinking that there should be an Alaska native language in one of these! As soon as he started speaking I GOT SO HAPPY I KNEW HE WAS YUPIK! Makes me happy when we get to be represented
It's really important. I'm from the Caribbean but I, and a whole lot of people of my generation, have some Inupiaq words that will forever be in our brains thanks to the Ukiuq song on Sesame Street back in the day - kamikluk, tutuluk, atigi, tupik, aaga etc
The turkmani girl shocked me when she said she was from iraq i was like what!!! Cause I'm iraqi I've never met a turkmani person before this is amazing
We have many Turkmens in Turkey but I never heard of that language before. It felt like she was adding up bunch of non sense into Turkish so my first guess was Azerbaijani haha
I've never been so excited for a cut video, I've been awaiting for more Arabic and yet you hit it on the head and get the Lebanese dialect! beyond thrilled to see more Lebanese content on the internet
Yeah it was cool how he could guess languages and yet only knew french. But then again, if you live in diverse communities it becomes a lot easier to pick up on those things.
Jeremiah and Sasha were interesting because of how Sasha knew lots of stuff but Jeremiah knew a bunch of specific things and took like, educated guesses
Omggg I'm Lebanese but born in Quebec, Canada, so I have French influence in my Arabic so it was so cool hearing the Lebanese girl with a bit of an English colour in her accent, at first I wasn't even sure if it was Lebanese!! So cool and I loved the song :)
That guy knew his languages and wow that one lady we need more people like her that can actually conversate. That black girl thinks everyone is aggressive lol
I LOVE those types of educational videos, and there's so much diversity!! I think it'd be better if you could include spellings of new words introduced though.
Wow I felt like such a boss when I guessed Yupik. I'd never even heard it before but it sounds like a blend of Coast Salish and Inuktitut, which geographically totally makes sense. It's got the G and K sounds from up north and the breathy throat sounds of the coast!
This one was great! Keep getting language experts or very travelled folks to do these. It’s so cool hearing their reasoning or history/impact of the specific languages
These will ALWAYS be my favorite cut videos. Something about so much culture in the same room just makes me beam. It's always so respectful and supportive, too.
Jeremiah just getting the languages right literally looks like him throwing a dart at a dartboard in his blindfold XD Like he clearly has some knowledge, but he didn't really verbalise his thought process as clearly as Sasha so we just see the dart hit the bullseye. Cool! Speaking of Sasha, it's so lovely to see her talk to others even though they aren't speaking the exact same language. Love everyone's vibes :D
The Yupik gentleman's opening line was the cutest thing said in the cutest way I've possibly ever heard! His gentle, kind vibe is like the human version of a teddy bear~
I love these videos, I learn so much. It’s especially fun to have someone with so much knowledge of languages play, I enjoyed hearing Sasha’s process and the way she broke down the components of language to solve the puzzle
This video is so wholesome lol. From the black girl misguessing but still having a great energy and receptive to the cultures to the Asian and white woman guessing the heck out of them. Good video!
@@schmuck3787 So what? Can you tell the difference between Swahili and Zulu? You’re judging her for not recognising european or Middle Eastern languages, but you can’t name up to 2 African languages neither recognise them.
We briefly covered First Nations/North American indigenous languages at linguistics undergrad but at European universities there's not much attention given to them. I could tell it was probably an Eskaleut language but nothing more specific than that. Amazing to hear it from a native speaker, quyana!
This one of guessing languages was very intriguing because we got to see some lesser known languages! We had some big ones like Arabic and Punjabi, but Serbo-Croatian is not often seen on videos like these, And throwing in an Alaskan native language was crazy! (I also thought it was Nahuatl frankly). Would be cool to see something like Quechua, Basque, Syriac, or a lesser known Indian language like Kannada. Though I'd love to hear Georgian personally. And to the woman speaking Sicilian, its more than a dialect!! Sicilian is a separate language and worth telling as such :) It is indeed though pretty mutually intelligible to Standard Italian
@Ahmed punjabi has over 100 million native speakers. Tell me German with the same amount of native speakers is not a big language. FRENCH only has 100 million *native* speakers. You just think it's not a big language because it's mostly confined to 1-2 countries
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Punjabi is one of the most well-known Indian languages, along with Hindi, Gujarati, and Tamil. And Punjabis are basically everywhere, making communities everywhere and spreading their language (Brampton in Canada, Southall and Leicester in the UK, Yuba City in California, Sacramento area of California, Richmond Hill in Queens New York, Texas, etc). But there are Indian languages that even Indians don't know about that need represention like Northeast Indian languages, Kannada, Tulu, Konkani, etc
2:11 great example of a question you may NOT want to ask about any of the balkan countries, especially if one is Serbia. Lucky the guy seems really chill and understood it is just out of curiosity.
Wow! As a azeri I am deadass impressed when Iraqi turkmen woman spoke. I know we shared same ancestry as Safivid turcomans but after some centuries I still fully understand every bit of it!!!
The 1st man speaking i knew right away that his language was not Ukrainian or Russian. I was wrong though on my guess thinking it was Serbian. I was close in a way but way out in far field at the same time. Also love how fun and playful his facial experstions are when everyone is trying to figure him out.
Serbian and Bosniak and Croatian are too similar when spoken, it's only written that it's different. Of all the Balkans only Macedonian is somewhat different as it has heavy Bulgarian influence.
I was thinking that the woman was kidding about speaking so many languages, but she has so much knowledge about it, impressive
So many** languages. :)
@@MiZzBee1 I still don't have her knowledge though lol thanks
same!!! she is so cool
Seriously, he is very knowledgeable with his knowledge
@@BaldLezB_In who?
Everyone keeps talkin about sasha but no one wants to mention jeremiah, the vietnamese dude that got most of the languages spot-on. Thats incredibly hard to do even when you study languages
Yeah he killed it. Clearly he’s interested in other cultures
Also because he’s more low key and not braggy about it, it’s even more impressive that he got as many right as Sasha did.
He did ask some questions that I'm not sure should have been allowed. He was able to get some right just by knowing where a music artist is from and nothing about a language.
Man, that guy in the plaid doing well!! And it’s very interesting to see the one who spoke a lot of languages work it out
that is a woman
@@danascully1767 yeah but he's talking about the dude in plaid.
@Anglofone … soooo you’re just going to be THAT person in ever comment thread, huh.
@Anglofone this is why no one loves you and you'll be forever alone
@Anglofone They mean you're going to be THAT transphobe in every thread lol. Just don't.
As an indigenous person it means a lot to have us/our languages included in things like this. This is so awesome!
I can’t stop smiling
Your languages are so unique and special
I am as well. Knew it was something north west america somewhere. There are so many languages but they do sound similar.
Edit: I mean as in the continent. I'm west coast Canadian.
If only the "polyglot" were half as educated about any of our languages as she is about (mostly) white European ones...
@@voiceineheadphones Our languages have to fight to stay alive, unfortunately…
I am so, SO envious of Sasha right now. Knowing all those languages is seriously impressive. (Though I think it's interesting that Jeremiah got nearly the same amount of people, but by asking specific questions like "what's a popular song in your country?" that got him the info he needed without knowing exactly about phonemes and stuff.)
But isn't that kinda cheating to ask info that has nothing to do with the language? The point of this is to figure out just by hearing the language and not where Lars Ulrich, Saddam Hussein, Ronaldo or Angry Birds are from?
@@Zhaggysfaction Eh, they do that with every one of these. Like, the one where they're guessing people's haircuts, there's a lot of questions about how their hair makes them feel/how they maintain it/etc., which narrows down the guesses. Same with guessing the country someone's from by asking them about a popular dance or the national anthem or something.
knowing is different than being able to speak
@@StarUnreachable Yeah but asking someone how their fair makes them feel is very different question and whatever answer they give than asking "name a famous person there" "oh yeah Pele is our most famoud football player." Don't you think? I mean those kinds of questions where you don't actually need to here the language at all.
@Anglofone lonely troll 😂😂
Sasha is the business. I'm impressed with how many languages she knows and I love how cultured she is.
It's a man. But yes, impressive.
@@jbaby007 Nah, she’s a woman
na man she only knows the most basic sentence in each language, that doesnt mean you speak it
@@jbaby007 get a life
@@soutzou If you subscribe to the cult ideologies, then sure. But I don't and I'm not a sheep. It's a man.
I love when they bring in someone who is First Nation /Native American I absolutely love hearing those languages
I'm glad to hear that! That was me :)
Agreed!
@@Nuraar1 thank you for sharing!
And it always confuses the hell out of people lol. Those languages sound so different to what we're used to, so it's cool that they get put in the spotlight here.
So so so important to keep indigenous languages alive! There are 700 dialects for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages, belonging to Indigenous Australian’s and so many of those dialects are missing in history. Māori people who are Indigenous to New Zealand also have a beautiful language that is trying to be kept alive by being taught in schools. I also love seeing/ hearing other Indigenous/First Nations languages being spoken
I'm so happy to see Sicilian being recognized, many people don't know it's even considered a separate language from italian. I'm glad it was included
Isn't it because they have more North African ancestry?
@@DA-js7xz I'm not an expert but as far as I know we have more african and arab ancestry and the north has german ancestry. A big factor is the fact Sicily has ben colonized by many different cultures, from arabs to normans, so we are 'a mix' of many different DNAs
@@DA-js7xz I’ve grown up with Italian and Sicilian spoken with family! Sicilian has Arabic, Greek, and Catalan influence!
@@DA-js7xz Sicilians actually have far more eastern Mediterranean ancestry (Greek and Levantine) than north African, but Sicilian itself is a romance language. It's different from Italian because Italian really is just the language of Tuscany - Italy is actually home to many distinct romance languages with many dialects of all of those languages.
They did another episode a while back and they included Pugliese! Italoromance dialects are so cool. I have conversational Italian and can sort of get by but Sicilian and Neapolitan languages are so different
It makes you realize how vast the world actually is and how many different and exciting cultures we have. Super interesting. Especially the guy from Alaska.
Thanks! That was me! :)
@@Nuraar1 I loved hearing you speak. Such an interesting cadence to your language!
Ikr it really is fascinating gettin' to know different beautiful rich cultures and languages small or big 🥰🥰😍😍😇. The world is really vast!! Thinkin' of it is crazy tho' ☺☺😁
If you live in Alaska, you probably have unique access to some of the indigenous Inuit languages. I think that's cool and worth exploring too!
american realizing the existence of other cultures
The Vietnamese dude and the lady who spoke multiple languages got a lot right but they approached their answers very differently. Super interesting to see!!
As an Arab I can confirm that the word ''habibi'' just gave it away XD
Fairouz confirmed where too
The only word that would have sounded more Arabic, was if they said Alhamdulillah
Not even looking at the screen I heard that and was like lebanese.
It’s the labneh for me us lebanese ppl love our labneh
@@drunkpaulocosta
I hear non Arab Muslims use it all the time so not really.
@@drunkpaulocosta all Muslims say this phrase and I'm Arab and I don't say cause I'm not Muslim
Slavic languages always get confused for Russian. The amount of people who think I’m Russian is insane
I'm one that gets the Slavic languages confused as they all sounded the same to me as a child and teen. But now i can hear the difference just enough to know what is Russian and Not Russian. Still have a hard time with Serbian and Bosnian but am working on it.
Yeah but you can’t blame them. Russian is a Slavic language.
The only ones I'd be able to fully recognize are Russian and Polish but I think given that I'd be able to recognize Czech and Slovak aren't Russian or Polish either, I'd just not be able to tell them apart.
@@wednesdaya.5780 same but that's only because I lived with Polish roommates for about three years.
@@wednesdaya.5780 As soon as he spoke I knew it was a Slavic language but hearing him talk more allowed me to exclude Russian and Polish. They're very similar though, even same words but different meanings. I'm learning Polish at the moment and he said jutro for "this morning" which in Polish, jutro is tomorrow morning, if I'm not mistaken.
Sasha is a walking Language Wikipedia. Her knowledge is staggering. I'm so impressed and intimidated right now. 😳
Don't be that impressed. She didn't display much fluency here.
@@philbecker4676 Better than you could have done
@@philbecker4676 Pretty surprised she guessed Nahuatl for the penultimate one, as it was very clearly Inuit-Yupik-Unangan to me, with the uvulars and all.
Sure you're American. For me as a European and actually being fluent in 5 languages (B2+) she made me cringe a lot because knowing few phrases doesn't mean you speak the language
@@Лима-д4и way to stereotype. 🙄 I too am European and not all Europeans are language savvy, just as not all Americans are monolingual and ignorant of languages. Perhaps if people spent more time focusing on the positive instead of bringing down people's achievements, big or small, the world might be a better, more brighter place. Oh and buddy, being B2 doesn't make you fluent. Hit C2 and then we'll talk.
Love to see the Native/ Indigenous representation! He was so kind & patient
Ahhh quyana (thank you) for you kind words! :)
That was me!
@@Nuraar1I’m so glad u were in the video! I thought it was cool that i also heard some similarities like Sasha mentioned in náhuatl and in ur language too! So happy to see another native in these cool videos!!
Holy cow, Sasha coming out as a heavy weight in this. I definitely want to see her do more of these. Watching her break down where the language was from and seeing the surprised looks on the speakers was so much fun.
She’s extremely gifted with languages. I went to school with her and one day she just started speaking Polish to me because she knows I speak it 😂 I think she started out with Russian, Yiddish and a few others
@@ElleixGaming Did she piss standing up when she was at school?
Not cut teaching me more geography than my school did 😂, this was wholesome, thank you to everyone that participated
Sending all my love from Uganda🇺🇬
Definitely, it's just a shame that they didn't include more African languages in there
My parents and older sister is is from Uganda🇺🇬
Ayy my fellow Ugandan 🇺🇬
I'm seriously so impressed that Sasha can speak ALL those languages. I can barely speak English properly 🤣🤣🤣 Very impressive!!
Queens is forever!
@@Fodderforthesoul Yessss girlll! 👏 💖💖
I doubt she speaks all of them, probably just at A1-A2 in most of them.
@@henrybastable5735 she even replied in English to the Sicilian rather than Italian lol It's great she knows basics from all those languages, but when "polyglots" claim to be such when only A2 in most of their languages...
@@Nononononononononononononoo Polyglots like her are very impressive definitely. But as a mandarin speaker I’ve heard over a dozen self proclaimed polyglots speak mandarin and I can tell from the first word they’re nowhere near fluent.
I can understand why someone would think Yupik were similar to Nahuatl. Indigenous American languages in general use a lot of that lateral fricative sound they were describing. As someone who knows very little Nahuatl though, it sounded too guttural and "deep." I guessed general Inuit-Unangan languages since it sounded a lot like some Greenlandic songs I'm familiar with. Glad to hear Yupik is growing and kudos to this participant for keeping the language alive!
Is that Native American?
@@zoebasina1804 Yupik? Or Nahuatl? Or Greenlandic? In any case, yes. Those are some of the many languages spoken by the Indigenous people of the Americas
Hi! That was me! Thanks for your kind words! I feel so fortunate to be able to continue to speak it today!
@@Nuraar1 I knew right of the bat that you were speaking An Alaskan Native Language just by how you spoke and the tones. Glad that you came on this show to show your language and give a little history about your people
I wouldn’t have thought of nahuatl but i can see why she did lol
Jeremiah did great!! It was really cool seeing how many he got correct through his educated guesses
as soon as the girl started speaking punjabi i couldnt stop smiling
i love how all the younger punjabi speakers add in English to it LOL i do the exact same! words like weekend, so, etc.
She was so gorgeous too.
@@DA-js7xz indian women generally are
@@karan_karan_karan its an indian thing lol indians cant speak their native languages including hindi without adding random english words in. This girl was clearly an nri so that makes even more sense for her
@@sae311 As an indian girl thank you
It was so interesting to see three different people with different levels of knowledge about other languages try this challenge. They all tried their best with the info they had. The plaid shirt guy used his practical knowledge and music, the woman used her polyglot skills and the last woman went off what best she knew from her life experiences. All really sweet respectful people. It’s nice to know that such cultured people like this exist in America and not everyone is oblivious to the outside world. Would love more videos like this!
I’m so genuinely curious how that woman was able to know all the different languages. She’s so knowledgeable when it comes to listening to fluctuations in peoples language and voices. I’m honestly impressed and envious xD
Edit: guys, I didn’t say she was fluent, but she knows enough to pin point a lot of pronunciations in different languages, and guess correctly with a lot of languages. Y’all need to chill and stop trying to fight everything
@Anglofone imagine being this unintelligent in 2023.
@Anglofone lmfao it’s clear you’re just trying to get ppl mad cuz what does that have to do with anything... we don’t even know if she’s trans tho ...?
Yh im gonna press doubt on this one, its unlikely she is actually fully fluent in all of them. Recognising languages is easy when youve heard a lot of them.
@Anglofone if that’s the truth then my bad honestly! i thought you were trying to call her a guy 😭
@@ashtraypup
>we don’t even know if she’s trans tho ...?
pretty visually apparent
if she is a cis woman, that's like a 1 in a million chance
I'm Azerbaijani from Russia that lives in Germany, knowing 5 languages, I wasn't expecting Turkmen language being SO CLOSE to Azerbaijani language, wow, I completely understood everything, it was 90% similar and more similar to Azerbaijani than the Turkish (even though you'd say these 2 languages are very close)
the girl completely butchered turkmen language it was horrible wtf real turkmen doesnt have any kurdish at all and veery minimal arabic influence, Turkish has more arabic words than turkmen for example turkmens say otyruc or skembl to chair turkish it is sandalye which is the same in arabic, turkmen say sichan turkish say faare wich is rat which is same in arabic, turkmen say ata turkish say baba which is again same as arabic, I can go on and on oh and tex she said soal to question that is not turkmen at all it is arab again, in turkmen it is suroo. idk I was so weirded out by the way she spoke it was like she was speaking arabic or somethin and her pronouncation was 90% off, turkmen does not sound like that but it is true it does sound similar to azerbajian.
Azerbaijan is my favorite country name! I'm impressed that you know five language, and I didn't realize those two would be so close either. I suppose you can add a 6th language now to your repertoire! Btw, I was way off and thought Turkmen was Hungarian .. they share a few words.
Exactly, much more closer than Turkish and Turkmen (Türkmenistan Turkic). Iraqi turkmen is closer to our language due to closer history
@@OKBoomer2k being a favourite name, that's so nice to hear! That being said, yeah, it's kinda my life taught me languages, born in Russia so I knew Russian, Azerbaijani my native one, Turkish is close language and learnt coz of TV shows, English as international and living in Germany made me to learn German. Also I'm a language geek as well 😅
I know couple words in Hungarian and Turkish:
Kapı - gate
Alma - apple
As an Iranian azari i agree it was really similar
You should get an Indigenous Australian on next. Would be good to see some Koori languages on these shows.
Willing to bet nobody will guess it unless they are some kind of Australian
Get Maori and Japanese. They sound SO similar it's really cool.
@@DA-js7xz maori and Japanese? I dont hear Japanese at all. Its a very polynesian sounding language. It sounds like Hawaiian or Tongan ect.
YES!!
They’d never guess nyoongar aye 😂
Put me on the show and I could probably get a few Australian languages right lol.
As an Indigenous teacher, I am so happy to see a fellow Native. Representation matters! ❤
I love that one of the women knows Yiddish. It’s sadly a language that has been dying off for years. My grandmothers would be very proud to learn younger people are making an effort to learn it. ❤
Multilingual people never ever fail to amaze me, even when you mix up the languages there's still understanding almost immediately
Human brain is so incredible I wish I spoke more than just English!
I always get excited when they feature Native languages. Ojibwe classes have helped me be able to identify other tribes as well. They have such a unique, distinctive sound.
You should listen to North East Asian languages. Very similar!
@@DA-js7xz When listening to my friend from Mongolia, if I’m not paying enough attention it also sounds like Yup’ik to me
i'm turkish so when i heard turkmani i was like this is definitely azerbaijani with a twist cause you know we're mostly used to azerbaijani and can understand about %98 of it, it's crazy how turkic languages are so diverse and spread all around the world, i could never guess it was turkmani. i love our languages.
It s a fact that Iraqi Turkmen is a dialect of Azerbaijani, that s why its closer to that one, rather than to Turkemistan turkme
im also turk and i was SO confused and couldnt figure out what language she was talking
Why turkmens don't consider themselves central asian tho?
@@LalaLa-ze7kvThere are Turkmens from middle east, and Turkmens from Turkmenistan which is Central Asian
I'm very glad that Sasha was in this and it wasn't only people who spoke one or two languages. Was very cool to see her parsing through everything
Hearing Yugtun spoken was definitely an experience, as I’m more used to hearing Inuktitut/Greenlandic through music but he was an absolute delight and quite the cutie too! I would love to see more of the language being spoken either in videos or such, maybe he could do a side hobby ;). Love from Vancouver!
Sasha is freaking amazing, I learned from them what to pick up on when listening. And they were so genuinely respectful and interested in each person. FREAKING AMAZING JUST WATCHING THEM WORK
It's pretty impressive Sasha knew so many languages, it automatically makes you connect to people more. But it was also impressive that the guy guessed a lot of them right without knowing the languages, unlike Sasha who had an advantage. This was an enjoyable video, more like these!
The Turkmen girl was super cute, I’m Turkish and I was able to understand 90 percent of it. It was lovely to see a Turk representation 🫶🏼🌸
Are u sure it was Turkmen?
My husband is from turkmenistan and for me Turkmen language is soo different from what I know 🤔🤔
@@lillijosephaanka9049 She is Iraqi Turkmen so I think this is why it sounds different from Turkmens who are from Turmenistan
>%90 percent
you type like an american
@@vaylard9474 what do you mean?
As a Nigerian-American with a best friend who is Yup’ik, I was so excited to hear a language that I could recognize right off the bat~ Quyana caknek for the representation !! We love to see it ❤
I love watching their reactions, especially when the guessers get it right!! Very impressed with Sasha as well!
had the biggest smile on my face when she started speaking Punjabi, love the representation!! :D
Always the best videos. Love how knowledgeable those two are! The other lady brings a nice contrast but she is still fun
when the video started, I was just thinking that there should be an Alaska native language in one of these! As soon as he started speaking I GOT SO HAPPY I KNEW HE WAS YUPIK! Makes me happy when we get to be represented
Hi! That was me! I'm so glad they went through and included me. I was so nervous! lol.
It's really important. I'm from the Caribbean but I, and a whole lot of people of my generation, have some Inupiaq words that will forever be in our brains thanks to the Ukiuq song on Sesame Street back in the day - kamikluk, tutuluk, atigi, tupik, aaga etc
Jeremiah was really respectful and freaking good at this. 👏
Yh, my boy was on smoke!
This was the best language guessing video 😍 so fun to watch
I love how awed the woman was about learning all these different languages, she was so respectful
I’m italian and it was sooo difficult for me to understand Sicilian, and my father is sicilian ahahaaha
Where you born in Italy?
Italy is so diverse ethnically and culturally, so it makes sense that their dialects would be equally as diverse!
Idemmmm
Sometimes similarities in a similar language can really throw you off even more than a completely different kind of language!
were you BORN in italy? if not, you're NOT italian. your PARENTS are.
That Iraqi girl didn't sound at all aggressive or like she was yelling/angry...
The turkmani girl shocked me when she said she was from iraq i was like what!!! Cause I'm iraqi I've never met a turkmani person before this is amazing
We have many Turkmens in Turkey but I never heard of that language before. It felt like she was adding up bunch of non sense into Turkish so my first guess was Azerbaijani haha
@@keremh. samee like I heard many Turkmens speak before and they didn’t sound like her so I also thought it was so type of Azerbaijani
Evet ben de Azerice konuştu sandım ama bazı kelimeler Türkçeden çok farklıydı
@@elifs.8923 Aslında ikinci dinlemede birkaç kelimesinin daha Türkçe olduğunu fark ettim. "Avrat" dedi mesela. Birçok cümleyi anlayabildim sonradan.
The reason being that she‘s not Turkmen from Turkmenistan but Iraqi Turkmen, who are closer to you Turkish people descending both from Ottoman Turks.
8:00 I'm impressed she knows about Nahuatl, and even pronounces the word good!
The short girl in the black dress is too cute around 4:00 with her getting excited and stuff that someone might recognize it ,❣️💖👌🏾
I've never been so excited for a cut video, I've been awaiting for more Arabic and yet you hit it on the head and get the Lebanese dialect! beyond thrilled to see more Lebanese content on the internet
i really don't like how that girl describes languages as "agressive".
She didn’t sound aggressive at all lmao
I found her anoying xD
@@FranciscoJavier246 so did i
6:34 omg she is soo Cultured she even know the dialect😳😳😳
Super impressed with the plaid guy in addition to the multilingual person!!!
Yeah the multilingual girl was pretty rad!
more of Sasha please!!! she's so sweet and respectful, the interaction at 7:03 was so cuteeeeee
Wow the man is incredible! He has great intuition and general knowledge
Yeah it was cool how he could guess languages and yet only knew french. But then again, if you live in diverse communities it becomes a lot easier to pick up on those things.
Both of the men were quite talented.
@@jbaby007dudes making it his mission to hate on Sarah but in reality it’s just social media and no one cares and he wastsing his time for nothing
Jeremiah and Sasha were interesting because of how Sasha knew lots of stuff but Jeremiah knew a bunch of specific things and took like, educated guesses
Omggg I'm Lebanese but born in Quebec, Canada, so I have French influence in my Arabic so it was so cool hearing the Lebanese girl with a bit of an English colour in her accent, at first I wasn't even sure if it was Lebanese!! So cool and I loved the song :)
@Anglofone gurl what pipe down
@@Emma-qd5mc they're trolling all of the comments here.
Yeah same i m Lebanese and i thought it's mixed Lebanese Palestinian accents at first, she so cute btw.
they were all really good guessers!!! Jeremiah did a really good job recognizing the lebanese music I loved that
That guy knew his languages and wow that one lady we need more people like her that can actually conversate. That black girl thinks everyone is aggressive lol
I think she was projecting because she was insanely aggressive.
I LOVE those types of educational videos, and there's so much diversity!! I think it'd be better if you could include spellings of new words introduced though.
Wow I felt like such a boss when I guessed Yupik. I'd never even heard it before but it sounds like a blend of Coast Salish and Inuktitut, which geographically totally makes sense. It's got the G and K sounds from up north and the breathy throat sounds of the coast!
This one was great! Keep getting language experts or very travelled folks to do these. It’s so cool hearing their reasoning or history/impact of the specific languages
As a half Serbian-half Bosnian I was so happy to see the Bosnian guy, I just love Balkan people
tooo majstore
I love how interested and respectful they all were. Great episode !
The fact that the video started with a Bosnian guy shouting:"Mater ti jebem" automatically makes this a banger.
Sasha is brilliant. It was great to listen to her thought process. Bring her back!
Idk if I’ve ever enjoyed a cut video more in my life! The celebration of cultures and languages is just 😍🤤 all these people are so cool!
Yupik!! Wow so awesome to see a fellow Alaskans!
I'm glad to be representing Yupiit! :)
I love that this wasn't languages "everyone knows". And that there were some really knowledgable people in it. Please more.
I really love this one. And Sasha was awesome. I would love to get to know her a bit more cause languages really interest me.
Alaska native representation 🥲🤍 we love to see it !!
Waqaa! That was me! :)
@@Nuraar1 you were incredible man
These will ALWAYS be my favorite cut videos. Something about so much culture in the same room just makes me beam. It's always so respectful and supportive, too.
Jeremiah just getting the languages right literally looks like him throwing a dart at a dartboard in his blindfold XD Like he clearly has some knowledge, but he didn't really verbalise his thought process as clearly as Sasha so we just see the dart hit the bullseye. Cool!
Speaking of Sasha, it's so lovely to see her talk to others even though they aren't speaking the exact same language.
Love everyone's vibes :D
The Nigerian in her jumped out at 4:28 😂😂
I was going to comment the same😂
The Yupik gentleman's opening line was the cutest thing said in the cutest way I've possibly ever heard! His gentle, kind vibe is like the human version of a teddy bear~
This is such a good idea CUT. Great video, please do more of these, I love all those cultures being celebrated through the languages 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
YOU NEED TO DO A PUT 2 OF THIS ONE, HAS TO BE MY FAV CUT VIDEO IN A LONG TIME LOVE THE PEOPLE.
I love these videos, I learn so much. It’s especially fun to have someone with so much knowledge of languages play, I enjoyed hearing Sasha’s process and the way she broke down the components of language to solve the puzzle
First dude came runnin out the gates with them insults 😂😂 very informative, I got 2 out of all of them
Aaaaa! I was rewatching the old ones just a week ago. I'm so glad that you guys did another one!
8:47 Mexico is in the northern hemisphere :)
I would love to see them try to guess maltese
I thought the Iraqui woman was speaking Maltese 😅
*cue barking from a white fluffy dog*
Fr it’s gonna be impossible
@@ozzitor8 Me too!! Maltese is such a cool mix of languages, I'd love to see them guessing it.
Yes same!
The habibi, lebneh, and fayrouz gave EVERYTHING away for the Lebanese girl - Syrian girl
بالضبط
This video is so wholesome lol. From the black girl misguessing but still having a great energy and receptive to the cultures to the Asian and white woman guessing the heck out of them. Good video!
She was rude af. You could tell people were offended by their expressions after her unwarranted comments.
@@DA-js7xz no she wasn't lol. I think they were taken aback by some of her guesses due to how OFF they were, they did not sweem "offended"
@@DA-js7xz she thought Turkmani was German?! so proudly ignorant
She was disrespectful af it's good they were all really nice
@@schmuck3787 So what? Can you tell the difference between Swahili and Zulu? You’re judging her for not recognising european or Middle Eastern languages, but you can’t name up to 2 African languages neither recognise them.
We briefly covered First Nations/North American indigenous languages at linguistics undergrad but at European universities there's not much attention given to them. I could tell it was probably an Eskaleut language but nothing more specific than that. Amazing to hear it from a native speaker, quyana!
9:26 I LOVE THAT
lebanese woman, I beg of you, PLEASE make a cover of the entire song so i can listen to it over and over again.
The Turkmani girl telling the guy it wasn't in Central Asia threw him off. He was correct in saying that because it likely sounded Turkic to him.
There is two related different people sharing the name Turkmen, There Ottoman ones and Central Asian ones
@BurakYagz-mp2vj true, but him saying "it sounds like a Central Asian language" obviously he means "it sounds Turkic" and not "it sounds like Russian"
This one of guessing languages was very intriguing because we got to see some lesser known languages! We had some big ones like Arabic and Punjabi, but Serbo-Croatian is not often seen on videos like these, And throwing in an Alaskan native language was crazy! (I also thought it was Nahuatl frankly). Would be cool to see something like Quechua, Basque, Syriac, or a lesser known Indian language like Kannada. Though I'd love to hear Georgian personally.
And to the woman speaking Sicilian, its more than a dialect!! Sicilian is a separate language and worth telling as such :) It is indeed though pretty mutually intelligible to Standard Italian
Punjabi is not a big language lol..
Only Arabic is out of these languages.
@Ahmed punjabi has over 100 million native speakers. Tell me German with the same amount of native speakers is not a big language. FRENCH only has 100 million *native* speakers. You just think it's not a big language because it's mostly confined to 1-2 countries
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Punjabi is one of the most well-known Indian languages, along with Hindi, Gujarati, and Tamil. And Punjabis are basically everywhere, making communities everywhere and spreading their language (Brampton in Canada, Southall and Leicester in the UK, Yuba City in California, Sacramento area of California, Richmond Hill in Queens New York, Texas, etc). But there are Indian languages that even Indians don't know about that need represention like Northeast Indian languages, Kannada, Tulu, Konkani, etc
This is definitely one of my favorite series. I'm fascinated with languages and the guessing game is fun.
Naravno da Balkanac pocinje konverzaciju psovkom! 🤣Great episode. We're looking forward to more Balkan/Jugoslovene in the show!
Yay super excited to see some Alaska Native representation!! As an Aleut I'm stoked!!
SASHA IS SOOO COOL like she knows so many languages and she's so good at them
The girl that be twerking on arabic's love song had me dying 😂😂
2:11 great example of a question you may NOT want to ask about any of the balkan countries, especially if one is Serbia. Lucky the guy seems really chill and understood it is just out of curiosity.
She definitely lacked respectful social cues
0:20 I wonder what language she thinks in...
Wow! As a azeri I am deadass impressed when Iraqi turkmen woman spoke. I know we shared same ancestry as Safivid turcomans but after some centuries I still fully understand every bit of it!!!
same! I was so happy when she spoke her language, it felt like we got featured!
I was born in Azerbaijan so I use some azeri words :)
Even only I know Turkish and do not know turkmenian or other turkic language, I understand most of the sentences
3:20 i love her language / voice
The 1st man speaking i knew right away that his language was not Ukrainian or Russian. I was wrong though on my guess thinking it was Serbian. I was close in a way but way out in far field at the same time. Also love how fun and playful his facial experstions are when everyone is trying to figure him out.
You weren't technically wrong, in it's core it's all the same language
You were right. It is actually Serbo-Croatian language that is spoken in Bosnia.
Serbian and Bosniak and Croatian are too similar when spoken, it's only written that it's different. Of all the Balkans only Macedonian is somewhat different as it has heavy Bulgarian influence.
The yupik dude was so cool
4:12 “You’re my height but you’re still nice looking” 😂😂
😭😭😭
i love seeing any languages from former yugoslavia it feels soo good to understand what theyre saying