Features English is missing - but most other languages have

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2019
  • Other languages have unique features that English just doesn't have access to. So, English, why don't you level up your skills with these linguistic tricks from around the world?
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    Become my patron: / nativlang
    ~ Briefly ~
    The first of two fun, experimental videos where I'm playing with features English lacks and has. This time we'll take a look at some grammatical skills that English might consider unlocking:
    - reduplication
    - distributive numerals
    - politeness
    - predicative adjectives
    - question particles and interrogative word order
    - copula vs locative be
    - weather verbs
    - instrumentals vs comitatives
    - clusivity
    - evidentials
    Thank you for watching!
    ~ Credits ~
    Art, narration and animation by Josh from NativLang.
    My doc full of sources for claims and credits for music, sfx, fonts and images:
    docs.google.com/document/d/1K...

Комментарии • 16 тыс.

  • @ilanastrauss7510
    @ilanastrauss7510 4 года назад +20260

    "You can't repeat a word twice to create a new meaning." Yeah, yeah.

  • @Vincent-kl9jy
    @Vincent-kl9jy 4 года назад +6162

    I had a german friend tell me that english is perfect for constructing jokes because it doesn't give away the punchline until the end of the sentence

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom 4 года назад +310

      ... not

    • @lauralaura4362
      @lauralaura4362 4 года назад +402

      but saying the punchline first would be like spoiling the joke

    • @fwcolb
      @fwcolb 4 года назад +714

      First German joke I have ever heard. A joke because the Germans put the verb at the end of the sentence. So, not until the end do you know the action: who is doing what to whom.

    • @masons4425
      @masons4425 4 года назад +234

      Oh, no wonder why the French are boring

    • @edge3220
      @edge3220 4 года назад +491

      In Japanese, verbs are said last, which makes noun-based jokes nearly impossible to use as well as English.

  • @ObiWanBillKenobi
    @ObiWanBillKenobi 10 месяцев назад +267

    A clear detriment I’ve noticed in English is only one word for “love.” Greek (see the New Testament) has 6 different words for love, depending on whether you mean self-love, long-standing love, deep friendship, playful love, love for people in the world in general, or sexual love. You can get in big trouble in English if you mean one of those but someone else who speaks only English thinks you mean another.

    • @Ciprian-IonutPanait
      @Ciprian-IonutPanait 8 месяцев назад +4

      well, consider this: the highest level of love from those 6 is agape . But women ( except very few exceptions that generally become saints) cannot really reach that level. So would cause problems for those that believe that women can do whatever men can do

    • @Jane_Doe...3
      @Jane_Doe...3 8 месяцев назад +20

      i love children

    • @headphonesaxolotl
      @headphonesaxolotl 8 месяцев назад +8

      @@Jane_Doe...3 I guess this is what they mean... Hopefully you mean in a parental/older sibling way!

    • @Jane_Doe...3
      @Jane_Doe...3 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@headphonesaxolotl i like kids

    • @realdragon
      @realdragon 7 месяцев назад +9

      Polish is more precise in other way, if I say "I ate" in English that's it. In Polish if someone says that you know their gender or if it were multiple people and if you finished it or was interrupted by something

  • @nindi3615
    @nindi3615 8 месяцев назад +56

    In Indonesian, we use reduplication for several things:
    - as plural indicator
    - as “ish” in english (e.g childish, reddish etc)
    - imitation of something (e.g mobil = car, mobil-mobilan=car toy)
    - or completely different meaning (irregular) e.g langit = sky langit-langit = ceiling.
    We use “-“ for the repeated words to indicate they are one word. Anyway I don’t think saya-saya is Indonesian word tho but reduplication is indeed a thing in our language

    • @farhanaditya2647
      @farhanaditya2647 4 месяца назад +3

      Yep, that was a poor choice of example, and a wrong interpretation as well

  • @ohadklopman1536
    @ohadklopman1536 4 года назад +3825

    Reduplication:
    "So, do you *like* her, or do you *like like* her?

    • @sackerland
      @sackerland 4 года назад +74

      You're a damn genius man.

    • @dogwithacoolhat
      @dogwithacoolhat 4 года назад +172

      this is *really really* stupid but somehow works

    • @FlattRas
      @FlattRas 4 года назад +12

      This reduplication always reminds me of the Baby-Sitters Club movie.

    • @Ssalyer41
      @Ssalyer41 4 года назад +60

      @銀竜を白影 it is still part of common language

    • @nandakishoren8566
      @nandakishoren8566 4 года назад +11

      I haven't heard anything more 5tupid in my life like "like like her".

  • @jamesh.dickens7682
    @jamesh.dickens7682 4 года назад +4586

    Native lang: we need reduplication
    My sixth grade self: Do you like her? Like, like like her?

    • @nickzardiashvili624
      @nickzardiashvili624 4 года назад +148

      Those merely happen to be homonyms put next to each other in a sentence, that's not reduplication.
      Edit: I won't delete this comment, since people have replied to it, but I do stand corrected. Only the first and the second like as homonyms the second and the third are not. They are, basically the same word, but used in a different context, so this is indeed an example of reduplication.

    • @sand0decker
      @sand0decker 4 года назад +188

      @@nickzardiashvili624 effectively it is as it changes the strength of the word like. It is more than like, but less than love. It makes the same meaning as crush

    • @woodfur00
      @woodfur00 4 года назад +44

      Nick Zardiashvili That's the reason for the _first_ 'like', but not the other two.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry 4 года назад +35

      @@nickzardiashvili624 If you look at all three words yes, but the second two likes are reduplication

    • @fwcolb
      @fwcolb 4 года назад +2

      If you can write at a sixth grade level, you might win a Nobel Prize, as Hemingway did with The Old Man and the Sea.

  • @Mini-yl8mz
    @Mini-yl8mz Год назад +36

    5:45 yes, when it rains, we should point out the window and yell “RAINING”

    • @Melissa-gh6wg
      @Melissa-gh6wg Год назад +1

      right! 😂

    • @kadeadams2308
      @kadeadams2308 8 месяцев назад +2

      Wait, you said "it rains", not rains. Your message should say "5:45 yes, when rains, we should point out the window and say 'RAINING'"
      🤓🤓🤓/j

    • @raymondgabriel5724
      @raymondgabriel5724 Месяц назад

      Yelling "RAINING" would be the American-english dialect. Most other English dialects would *say* "raining".

  • @pilotservice8221
    @pilotservice8221 2 года назад +106

    I think the majority of Austronesian languages have different words for inclusive and exclusive "we". This avoids awkward conversations.

    • @iskandarishak8998
      @iskandarishak8998 2 года назад +13

      That's true. In Malay, we have "kita" (inclusive) and "kami" (exclusive). And to be honest, this feature in Austronesian languages is extremely useful.
      I learned English when I'm 7, so sometimes it's kinda confusing to listen and talk with the word "we". I have to guess either it's about "everyone" or it's just about "us".

    • @pilotservice8221
      @pilotservice8221 2 года назад +6

      @@iskandarishak8998 In Tagalog, "tayo" is inclusive while "kami" is exclusive. Kitá means I (predicate) you(singular). Eg. "Narinig kita" means I heard you. Other meaning of kita(with glottal stop at the end) are profit and visible.

    • @rexsceleratorum1632
      @rexsceleratorum1632 Год назад +1

      My Dravidian language (Malayalam) has the same distinction. "nammal" is inclusive, while "njangal" is exclusive.

    • @cyborgbeard3391
      @cyborgbeard3391 Год назад +5

      ​@@iskandarishak8998 In Cebuano, it's also "kami" and "kita" but it can be shortened to "mi" and "ta" if they are positioned after the verb.

    • @MrJeffcoley1
      @MrJeffcoley1 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm trying to think of an instance where the inclusive or exclusive "we" wouldn't be clear from the context. If you're sitting in camp, and 7 strangers walk up to you and say "we are lost" you know they're referring to themselves, not you.

  • @itsaalex430
    @itsaalex430 4 года назад +5189

    This whole comment section reminds me of a story.
    "An english teacher said to his class, 'in many languages there is an equivalent to a double negative, in which two negatives make a positive. But there are no languages where a double positive makes a negative.'
    From the back of the class a student said, 'yeah right."

    • @leirbag1595
      @leirbag1595 4 года назад +888

      Goddamn, he just ruined that teacher's whole career.

    • @jessc408
      @jessc408 4 года назад +465

      "Yeah, Right" is a tonal phase.

    • @DNTMEE
      @DNTMEE 4 года назад +438

      @@jessc408
      Yeah, right.

    • @PedroHawk1
      @PedroHawk1 4 года назад +223

      Sarcasm exists in any language.

    • @PedroHawk1
      @PedroHawk1 4 года назад +169

      @Jake Sangria Well, English is an overly simplified in some ways and overly complicated in others. It's a germanic language at its core, but borrows 2 thirds of its vocabulary from other languages. The most difficult thing in English is the irregularity of the pronunciation. You literally can't be sure how a word is pronounced if you haven't heard it at least once before.
      The Hungarian language, on the other hand, has a really difficult grammar, yet you can trust that people will read something exactly like the author did when they wrote it.
      Compound words in German are also a great way to describe something with precision (though I confess it is a nightmare to read).
      Romantic languages (French being an exception) can hide the subject of a sentence without harming the comprehension. Ex.: "(Tu) Vais ao mercado?" (Are (you) going to the market?)
      I do like how you don't have noun genders in English, however, it makes things considerably easier.

  • @TiernanWilkinson
    @TiernanWilkinson 4 года назад +3208

    The correct way to address short people: "You don't tall."

    • @Albukhshi
      @Albukhshi 4 года назад +103

      That's Afroasiatic in a nutshell: All of them would sound super-odd if translated literally:
      "I am tall" would be literally: "I tall"
      He is at the market: "He at the market"
      It's dead: He/she dead (most Afro-asiatic languages have no neuter: everything's masculine or feminine).
      He's not dead: he not dead.

    • @lancetheking7524
      @lancetheking7524 4 года назад +30

      *hindi ka matangkad*
      it hurts me every time

    • @tepes578
      @tepes578 4 года назад +17

      That 'feature' reminded me way too much of Newspeak for me to be comfortable with.

    • @kinwiekszy
      @kinwiekszy 4 года назад +13

      in Polish it's some things like "nobody don't move" or something, it's a little strange, I think...

    • @damanidorsey7255
      @damanidorsey7255 4 года назад +15

      @@Albukhshi i use that all the time its called aave

  • @chesspiece4257
    @chesspiece4257 2 года назад +51

    “I like him, but I don’t like like him” we have repeating words (and sounds too!) but they’re mostly used informally and speaking so you wouldn’t see them in a book. In addition you can use adjectives as verbs but, again, you don’t verbify nouns and adjectives in formal writing, just informal :)

  • @francisbengua5458
    @francisbengua5458 Год назад +23

    In our Cebuano (Central Philippine) language, which is a Malayo-Polynesian language, reduplication is a prominent feature, the implications of which often refers to a second-rate version of the original word, regardless whether a noun, an adjective, or a verb is reduplicated.
    1. NOUNS: refers to second-rate versions of things.
    asáwa = wife
    asawa-asawa = common-law wife
    anák = child
    anák-ának = adopted child; child in a role-play arrangement
    baláy = house
    baláy-bálay = makeshift house
    With nouns, reduplication could also imply multiplicity of the nouns:
    baláy = house
    baláy-baláy = houses; neighbourhood
    2. VERBS: refers to less-serious versions of the actions being done.
    túlog = sleep
    túlog-túlog = pretending to be asleep
    kaón = eat
    kaón-kaón = leisurely eating, or eating not quite seriously
    3. ADJECTIVES: refer to descriptions which are just second-rate to the original adjective from where it came from.
    dakû = big
    dakû-dakû = biggish; quite big
    ulán = rainy (usu refers to the noun “rain”, but could also be used as adjective, like in this example)
    ulán-úlan = drizzling; light showers

  • @crappyaccount
    @crappyaccount 4 года назад +14083

    I'm surprised grammatical gender wasn't mentioned. I never knew it was a thing until I took a foreign language class and realized my door was in fact a girl.

    •  4 года назад +2227

      those handles can get quite hot.

    • @t2jhkt3b8adb5
      @t2jhkt3b8adb5 4 года назад +1519

      Hobostarr180 wait a minute, in my language doors are male

    • @aiaman
      @aiaman 4 года назад +1840

      I started laughing because doors "are girls" in my native tongue

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 4 года назад +1316

      Hobostarr180 In German a young girl is neither male nor female but NEUTER.

    • @gewgulkansuhckitt9086
      @gewgulkansuhckitt9086 4 года назад +906

      How old is your door? Should you be touching her like that?

  • @MyLeg_Fred
    @MyLeg_Fred 4 года назад +3276

    This must be why Google sucks at translating to English.

    • @Cuktisntfunny
      @Cuktisntfunny 3 года назад +144

      I agree with australia even tho i have no idea how a piece of land can write a comment i still agree

    • @men_del12
      @men_del12 3 года назад +61

      Well it mostly translate the common meaning or used. Worst scenario is that grammatically it wobble the original text and turns it into unexpected...horrifying...sentence.

    • @galvatk2194
      @galvatk2194 3 года назад +62

      Google sucks at translating pretty much all languages

    • @Mr_PotatoMaster
      @Mr_PotatoMaster 3 года назад +10

      Eu concordaria com você, entretanto o fato de que a evolução da tecnologia é originária dos EUA, vocês tem melhores ferramentas

    • @galvatk2194
      @galvatk2194 3 года назад +9

      En el español la traducción es en verdad horrible

  • @readyfreddie1256
    @readyfreddie1256 2 года назад +31

    in danish (and i think other scandinavian langauages too) we have different words for grandparents based on whether they're your father or mothers parents
    it's really simple tbh, the words are:
    mormor: mom mom (mom's mom)
    morfar: mom dad (mom's dad)
    farmor: dad mom (dad's mom)
    farfar: dad dad (dad's dad)

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo 8 месяцев назад +3

      I've studied some Turkish, which distinguishes between "anneanne" (mother's mother) and "babaanne" (father's mother), but only has "dede" to mean "grandfather". However, it does have separate words for maternal and paternal aunts and uncles: "teyze", "hala", "dayı", "amca".

    • @readyfreddie1256
      @readyfreddie1256 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@ghenulo ooh neat!!
      with regards to uncles and aunts, that’s another one where danish is exceedingly simple 😅 we have:
      - morbror: mom brother (your mother’s brother)
      - farbror: dad brother (your father’s brother)
      the sisters are a little harder to explain but it’s:
      - moster (kinda an amalgamation of “mom” and “sister”, your mother’s sister)
      - faster (the same but with father and sister)
      and then we also just have the words aunt and uncle (tante & onkel) which are used for the spouse of your parents’ siblings, or occassionally just used for a parents’ sibling themselves haha.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 5 месяцев назад

      So mor and far should work though.

    • @readyfreddie1256
      @readyfreddie1256 5 месяцев назад

      @@magnarcreed3801mor and far means mom and dad.

    • @myg3637
      @myg3637 2 месяца назад

      Gran = mothers mother
      Grandma = fathers mother
      Grandad = mothers father
      Grandpar = fathers father. I am almost certain this is not strictly the rule but seems to be used commenly in my area of the UK

  • @Jool4832
    @Jool4832 11 месяцев назад +17

    5:56 In Russian, the Instrumental is formed just by using the Instrumental form of a noun. A comitative case is formed when you add the preposition с to the instrumental noun.

  • @adrianvelasquez5867
    @adrianvelasquez5867 4 года назад +4291

    What English has that other languages don’t:
    phonetical inconsistency

    • @frankbruder3097
      @frankbruder3097 4 года назад +207

      German has that! To a lesser extent than English does, but still.

    • @solorock28
      @solorock28 4 года назад +661

      @@frankbruder3097 but not as english, to read english you need to understand how to pronuonce every fucking word, while in others languages you only need to know how the letters sound.

    • @TheRenegade...
      @TheRenegade... 4 года назад +88

      That implies phonotactics. English phonotactics are very clear. If you mean graphene-phoneme correspondence, look at Chinese.

    • @rzaku5536
      @rzaku5536 4 года назад +400

      The best is French where half of written word is silent

    • @TheOliveiradejesus
      @TheOliveiradejesus 4 года назад +21

      Well, in Portuguese we dont have it... we say „depois de amanhã“ (after tomorrow). In german it exists, but I think probably because German simply many times puts words together... „übermorgen“ is also like „After tomorrow“... but not literally translated

  • @lexibyday9504
    @lexibyday9504 4 года назад +2167

    Australian english has reduplication.
    Yeah = tell me more
    Yeah yeah = I've heard enough
    yeah nah = no
    nah yeah = yes
    na na = bannana

    • @kulturfreund6631
      @kulturfreund6631 4 года назад +206

      Simmilar in German ja = yes, ja ja = fuck off

    • @parthbonde2106
      @parthbonde2106 4 года назад +69

      @@kulturfreund6631 funny how ja means go away in Hindi lol

    • @lancetheking7524
      @lancetheking7524 4 года назад +36

      tagalog as well,
      baba, down
      bababa, are you going down?
      and so on

    • @lexibyday9504
      @lexibyday9504 4 года назад +43

      @@kulturfreund6631 wait so when you watch starwars is he called Fuckoff Binks?

    • @sonospiacente3334
      @sonospiacente3334 4 года назад +19

      @@kulturfreund6631 ja means right now in Portuguese

  • @TheMicdave
    @TheMicdave 2 года назад +11

    In the Philippines, we also have two words for the word "of"
    In tagalog, its
    Ng- referring to any abstract object, or a common noun
    Ni-refering to a specific person.
    Example
    House of my friend- bahay NG kaibigan ko
    House of Juan- bahay NI Juan

  • @ms_slytherin
    @ms_slytherin 2 года назад +13

    There are three you's in Marathi:
    तू (tu)
    तुम्ही (tumhi)
    आपण (aapan)
    The first one is used for someone your age, like a friend. The second one is used for people elder than you, your parents and your teachers. And the third one is used for strangers or someone you do not know very well.

    • @Samirustem
      @Samirustem Месяц назад

      That makes sense why indian kids get so shy talking to older people in america

  • @iavv334
    @iavv334 4 года назад +15239

    So you think English doesn’t have question particles at the end of phrases, eh?

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 4 года назад +2784

      i know, right?

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 4 года назад +2601

      maybe it's more of a structure, ya know?

    • @silver2zilver
      @silver2zilver 4 года назад +901

      Can I be the comment that just laughs cus this is hilarious? Lol

    • @LAFN-si1oz
      @LAFN-si1oz 4 года назад +652

      This is like a tag question, just like the usage of ね(ne) in the end of a sentence in Japanese
      お酒じゃないです
      This is not alcohol
      お酒じゃないですね
      This is not alcohol, isn't it?
      お酒じゃないですか
      Isn't this alcohol?

    • @kekeke8988
      @kekeke8988 4 года назад +232

      @nameless
      だ isn't used with i-adjectives.
      They are already predicative in and of themselves.

  • @chibisf4
    @chibisf4 4 года назад +2226

    I'm alway shocked that there are no words for "the day after tomorrow" and "the deay before yesterday". 😵

    • @Maria-fr9cn
      @Maria-fr9cn 3 года назад +88

      there are

    • @ondras5241
      @ondras5241 3 года назад +249

      @@Maria-fr9cn but they are obsolete and not used

    • @alexkatakuna2615
      @alexkatakuna2615 3 года назад +111

      in spanish it would be pasado mañana (after tomorrow) and antes de ayer (before yesterday)

    • @ursaori5658
      @ursaori5658 3 года назад +3

      chibisf4 ikr!

    • @eduardoestrela7452
      @eduardoestrela7452 3 года назад +92

      In portuguese we use the prefix "ante", which means "before", to express "the day before yesterday". The word is "anteontem". We don't have a word to express "the day after tomorrow", though (if there's a word meaning this, I don't know it).

  • @liamsohal-griffiths1094
    @liamsohal-griffiths1094 Год назад +8

    One observation about a slight deficiency in the language that no-one's mentioned (although it's not really a missing feature). The difficulty in differentiating in speech between "thirteen/thirty", "fourteen/forty", "fifteen/fifty" etc.
    This happens with native speakers all the time, where we commonly find ourselves either saying the number very slowly an emphasizing the final syllable very carefully, or spelling out the individual digits (e.g. "one-three" or "three-oh"). It's a genuine inconvenience.
    This is a pecularity of English because during the Saxon period it lost the distinctive "-g" endings which German and Dutch have. For example, you'd never get confused between "vierzehn" and "vierzig".

  • @thomaswalsh4552
    @thomaswalsh4552 2 года назад +32

    English does have reduplication; there are plenty of examples of repeated words which changes the meaning. Some examples fall into sarcasm, but many don’t, and sarcasm is fairly important in social interaction anyway.

    • @sotmh
      @sotmh Год назад +15

      "Do you like her or do you like like her?"

    • @user-lv5rd6kb5o
      @user-lv5rd6kb5o Год назад +4

      @@sotmh A _guest_ guest? - Bernard from Spider-man 3
      Also XXL means extra extra large.

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ 11 месяцев назад +3

      Hear hear 👏

    • @wren_.
      @wren_. 11 месяцев назад +3

      Do you only use reduplication to add extra emphasis to the word. Other languages use reduplication to change the meaning of the word completely

    • @sotmh
      @sotmh 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@wren_. It's for emphasis but also contrast, "Do you want soy milk? No I want milk milk." Milk is reduplicated to indicate bovine milk.

  • @piratejack6577
    @piratejack6577 3 года назад +1451

    “You” was polite version so we’re just really nice all the time

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 3 года назад +49

      What we have here is a failure to communicate

    • @piratejack6577
      @piratejack6577 3 года назад +8

      @@nosuchthing8 ?

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo 3 года назад +49

      @Pirate Jack That’s, how it was taught to us in the elementary school English here in Finland, as well. Also, English people *ARE* known for being very polite, at least relative to us Finns. So, it’s not that you don’t have politeness; quite the opposite: You’re *EXTRA* polite. 😁

    • @johnwilson1094
      @johnwilson1094 3 года назад +51

      This is true. In German the formal or polite "you" is Sie. The informal or "intimate" "you" is "du". In English the formal or polite "you" is "you", and the informal or intimate is "Thou", so within a family parents and children would address each other as "thou".

    • @Adhjie
      @Adhjie 3 года назад +5

      @@PC_Simo well, perkele

  • @viharsarok
    @viharsarok 3 года назад +3069

    The lack of levels of formality in Engilsh is a blessing. Sometimes it's not clear cut which one to use so it just creates awkward moments and linguistically imposed hierarchies.

    • @scriptyshake
      @scriptyshake 2 года назад +196

      I know right, it can create some really akward moments sometimes, so when I learnt English, it felt so liberating to know I wouldn't go through that trouble xD

    • @user-dm1sd7fz2b
      @user-dm1sd7fz2b 2 года назад +169

      I can't agree more. It is especially useful for introverts, because you might know a person for a long time and still hesitate to call him/her informally, which is like a barier to more intimacy.

    • @dianapohe
      @dianapohe 2 года назад +61

      I remember it happened with my elementary school teacher. As kids, we were all just calling her with the informal "tu", but then growing up and proceeding to middle school or high school it is the formal "Lei" that has to be used with teachers (not to mention uni professors!). So, when I once bumped into her after years, i really couldn't stick to one form because it sounded so strange to me to say "tu" to a teacher 😅so i was always jumping from verbs declined to the informal way to those declined to the formal one 😅
      I think that what conveys formality in English is the use of Sir/Ma'am when speaking, and the overall tone when writing.

    • @viharsarok
      @viharsarok 2 года назад +29

      @@dianapohe The English equivalent is to be on first name terms. If you're chummy with somebody you use their first name to address them.

    • @dianapohe
      @dianapohe 2 года назад +29

      @@viharsarok i think it depends, i address my boss (or any of his superiors as well, and university professors) by his first name, but I wouldn't say I'm chummy with him 😅 it sounds just like a neutral choice, adding "sir" would convey a lot more formality

  • @adrianlodzermensch1828
    @adrianlodzermensch1828 7 месяцев назад +3

    In Polish we have imperfective and perfective pairs of verbs, like robic = to do, zrobic = to have done. Besides, we have frequentative pairs of verbs, like jesc = to eat, jadac = to eat regularly or often. Finally, we have short-time action forms of verbs, jesc = to eat, pojesc =to eat for some short time, biec = run, biegac = run for some time. P. S. Polish nouns decline for 7 cases and 5 genders, yes 5!

  • @enjarichards8100
    @enjarichards8100 2 года назад +51

    English has many (many many) faults, but not one of the things you pointed out is among them. You made a great case for everything that English makes simpler and easier. By using English to illustrate what other languages can do you pointed out that English can do all of these things, usually in a simpler or better way. As the English say "Quod erat demonstrandum".

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ 11 месяцев назад +8

      Hear hear.
      Oh wait, apparently we don't reduplicate words to change their meaning. My bad 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @skye1283
      @skye1283 11 месяцев назад

      3:42 english has this feature, right?

    • @_Mentat
      @_Mentat 10 месяцев назад

      @@Rachel_M_ It's not reduplicating; it's just duplicating.

    • @sethwick8348
      @sethwick8348 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@_Mentatif reduplication means changing the meaning through duplication, then English certainly has it. Though I think most of these really are much simpler, more straightforward and clear than English. Like Japanese particles, so simple, so clear. Nightmare writing system in Japanese, but the grammar is great.

    • @anthonykneipiii4562
      @anthonykneipiii4562 9 месяцев назад +1

      I have to agree. Each example given was just as quickly backed-up by the sentence in English when trying to show otherwise. I’m not disrespecting everyone else out there, but i find that english has been able to remove a lot of unnecessary representations that exist elsewhere. I’m pretty sure that English does “it” better.

  • @duane6386
    @duane6386 4 года назад +3005

    English has reduplication, though it might not seem like reduplication reduplication.

    • @SleinJinn
      @SleinJinn 4 года назад +518

      A: You mean you're going home, or are you going home home?
      B: I'm going home home, eating fast food is fine once in a while, but I need some food food, and no one cooks like my mum.

    • @Dualidity
      @Dualidity 4 года назад +183

      So so, same same, like like,

    • @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577
      @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577 4 года назад +132

      Yeah yeah

    • @dooglitas
      @dooglitas 4 года назад +118

      Doo-doo.

    • @DamianYerrick
      @DamianYerrick 4 года назад +189

      She doesn't read e-mail, so send her mail mail.

  • @danreyn
    @danreyn 3 года назад +2400

    Me: "I was watching this video and the guy said English doesn't put 'what' or 'who' at the end of a question."
    Friend: "He said what?"

    • @tagaway6173
      @tagaway6173 3 года назад +247

      THANK YOU!
      Even if it is not correct, that's what I hear most of the time since learning English.

    • @jovanp9348
      @jovanp9348 3 года назад +50

      I am from the UK and I can identify that this is true because the UK was the first country to speak English

    • @nikitaberejnoy4359
      @nikitaberejnoy4359 3 года назад +72

      @@jovanp9348 but you know that modern American much more looks like English that Shakespeare spoke than England English right?

    • @nikitaberejnoy4359
      @nikitaberejnoy4359 3 года назад +8

      @Rei Ren because of the reforms of language that were accepted in England after USA get independent

    • @nikitaberejnoy4359
      @nikitaberejnoy4359 3 года назад +5

      @Rei Ren even standards are different. But I told mostly about speech.
      About grammar differences you could read in wiki

  • @drop7399
    @drop7399 Год назад +2

    Regarding clusivity: in Skarù·ręʔ (Tuscarora), we distinguish "we" in four different forms. Which one you use depends on who your relationship to the audience and the subject of the sentence.
    1.) í·θ yęknę̀·ruh = (EETH yik-nehh-roo) = you and I
    2.) yęknę̀·ruh = (yik-nehh-roo) = someone else and I (you excluded)
    3.) í·θ yękwę̀·ruh = (EETH yik-wehh-roo) = you all and I; we all (you included)
    4.) yękwę̀·ruh = (yik-wehh-roo) = they and I (you excluded)

  • @zacharywranovsky
    @zacharywranovsky Год назад +5

    I remember for a long time I wondered about clusivity all on my own. I realized that it would make sense to have two different forms of we, one where you include the person you’re talking to and one where you don’t. Glad to learn that this is in fact a thing in other languages!

  • @annabrik2439
    @annabrik2439 2 года назад +4113

    As a native Russian speaker, I love English for its kind of... Mysticism. When I write songs about something that's hard to explain, I always use English, because my native language is too direct and detailed for describing what can have a million meanings. Personally, I don't think there are bad or dumb languages in the world, they're all just different and good at their own purposes!

    • @alexissoto5662
      @alexissoto5662 2 года назад +41

      Teach my Russian пожалуйста

    • @darck_marque
      @darck_marque 2 года назад +35

      Вау, I didn't expect the Russians here...

    • @sussusamogus8985
      @sussusamogus8985 2 года назад +41

      USE ANCIENT GREEK
      sorry caps but i was mad after hearing this

    • @endless2239
      @endless2239 2 года назад +179

      is also good for jokes, so many languages are too specific for that "gotcha" or any punchline for that matter.

    • @vladoshka9014
      @vladoshka9014 2 года назад +13

      @@darck_marque why not?

  • @HunterShows
    @HunterShows 4 года назад +676

    English is very polite! I haven't heard a "thou" in some time!

    • @kulturfreund6631
      @kulturfreund6631 4 года назад +41

      thy, thee and thou, is old English.
      (Dein, Dich und Du in German.)

    • @markhorton8578
      @markhorton8578 4 года назад +31

      Now you mention it, I don't think I have heard a "thee" for a few decades either. Used to.

    • @kulturfreund6631
      @kulturfreund6631 4 года назад +6

      @@jerkjerkington3874 Very interesting. Thanks for all the details I haven't known about so far. I thought these pronouns were abandoned even earlier and that they were used nowadays only to recite old poems, theatre plays, biblical sayings, idioms etc.
      I like these old fashioned tunes. Thou shalt have a good night. (Is that correct?)
      Cheers from Berlin. : )

    • @warrengwonka2479
      @warrengwonka2479 4 года назад

      HunterShows Know any Quakers?

    • @Markle2k
      @Markle2k 4 года назад +1

      @@jerkjerkington3874 The Quakers kept the "thou" and all that because that was the language used in church. The other aspect of the singular informal was that it was used to speak to the flock. I think it was a deliberate choice to be godly in all aspects of their lives.

  • @markshade8398
    @markshade8398 11 месяцев назад +4

    And ps - simpler isn't always better. I live in Central America and have learned Spanish. There are soooooo many "simple" things... But the "simple" things often lack any ability to talk about or describe the much more complex things. For example, when talking about barrowing or lending things....
    In English, if I borrow something that means I received it. If I lend something, the other person received it. So much more clear. But in Spanish there is only 1 verb - prestar. And the conjugation indicates some of the direction the thing travelled... From and to whom.... But it is often only understood by context, not directly expressed in words.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same issue in German. They then added prefixes to the verb to awkwardly mend the situation.

    • @adalbertoholguin6928
      @adalbertoholguin6928 Месяц назад

      But words are always spoken within a context. To just say “lend” or “borrow” in a vacuum, even if the words have more nuance to them, would be ultimately useless.

  • @soundtrack1405
    @soundtrack1405 2 года назад +11

    I love how the english language sounds. Native english speakers use so many interesting sounds that no other language uses or at least they are rare. I learned most of them but they still fascinate me as someone who studied english as an adult

    • @jayc1139
      @jayc1139 2 года назад +1

      Curious isn't it...what are the chances that a language like English with its strange phonemes, and odd grammar, would become dominant?

    • @soundtrack1405
      @soundtrack1405 2 года назад

      @@jayc1139 Yh but it's also easy to learn i guess. It has very wierd rules from my point of view (as a hungarian) and the spelling is annoying at times too, but i got used to it over the years.

    • @Justowner
      @Justowner 5 месяцев назад

      @@soundtrack1405 Old comment I know, but i have personally found as a native English speaker, that trying to puzzle out where we stole the word from helps with spelling. For instance, if it was originally french then it's probably an abomination of vowels.

    • @soundtrack1405
      @soundtrack1405 5 месяцев назад

      @Justowner That's a smart tactic.

  • @jbloveday9538
    @jbloveday9538 4 года назад +875

    What’s wrong with “We read 3 books each” - this clarification is just as easy as adding to a word.

    • @senantiasa
      @senantiasa 4 года назад +116

      And if you wanted to say it the other say, you would say "We read three books in total"? Anyway, I think the point of the video is about features of languages that are compulsory, not about whether it's easy to add more words.

    • @UFO314159
      @UFO314159 4 года назад +42

      Each of us read three books. No, it's not hard.

    • @iyaayas
      @iyaayas 4 года назад +28

      We read the same three books.
      We each read three different books.
      Nope, not too hard.

    • @jeffsieck
      @jeffsieck 4 года назад +30

      also: "we read three books" means three total, not three each. The meaning is not obfuscated.

    • @iant419
      @iant419 4 года назад +7

      @@jeffsieck ambiguous*

  • @BenSlamka
    @BenSlamka 3 года назад +2983

    Other than English I also speak Czech, Slovak, German, Dutch and Italian. English is by far the easiest language where everything is so so so simple. The grammar tenses are so chill and there is so few of them. In slavic languages every word has around 15 - 50 different forms with different endings you just have to know and learn. English is just simple and lovely.

    • @jayc1139
      @jayc1139 3 года назад +127

      I've noticed tho that, with tense in English, tense is required making it more 'clear' as well. In Swedish I've noticed that 'jag dricker' could mean either 'i drink' or 'i am drinking' based on context. In english you need to use 'am' there if you're doing something at the moment, such as when you're asked what you're currently doing...'i am drinking water'. Saying 'i drink', in english, commonly means you drink alcohol often (unless you add the name of the drink after that). It's nice that English dropped the tense forms a long time ago giving way to more simple detached prepositions that don't change much.

    • @AleksNeve
      @AleksNeve 2 года назад +67

      @@jayc1139 But... who needs that? I'm Polish and we have something like Swedish. "(Ja) piję" means "I drink" but also "I'm drinking" and everything is clear with a context. And I like that a lot, I find those two tenses rather annoying than useful.

    • @laurenblanc6172
      @laurenblanc6172 2 года назад +29

      @@jayc1139 also past continuous sounds better when telling stories: “I was drinking water when...” instead of the simple past, “I drank water when someone robbed me” (that sounds really wrong). You can say “I drank some water and then I went to the gym”, but that’s more of a routine or stating the past stages you did in a day. I’m a native English speaker and this is what Ive noticed. Idk how to explain how to effectively to the tenses with their matching meaning/context. And I think this is a difficult part of English and if your birth language doesn’t have the same pattern or tense form for that certain context, can be confusing & takes a moment to get the hang of it. Our spelling & pronunciation is a bitch too.

    • @ShiroiTenken
      @ShiroiTenken 2 года назад +20

      @@laurenblanc6172 Oh no, Polish, as well as most European languages have a past and future continuous and simple, they just don't split present tense into any forms. At least in polish we have a different way to differentiate things that are done often/regularly and separately 'from time to time' and it's not as much a tense as a different form of the verb. So, "chodzę" - I go, "chadzam" - I go from time to time, "Idę" - I'm going.
      All 3 of these verbs can be used in most of the 5 tenses that we have.
      Believe me we have so many moods, modes and aspects that 5 tenses are enough to say anything exactly the way you mean it.

    • @reemademashki7656
      @reemademashki7656 2 года назад +4

      You haven’t seen arabic

  • @mainlander3920
    @mainlander3920 Год назад +6

    I, for one, prefer to have to add a couple more words to the phrase to generate the same effect instead of having to deal with extremely complicated grammar stuff that might make some sentences shorter and wittier, but make the learning of the language way harder in general. I particularly have the German cases in mind while writing this.

  • @JonathanWrightSA
    @JonathanWrightSA 2 года назад +10

    Learning Mandarin was amazing. It's such an intuitive language even if the writing is monstrously difficult

  • @melissatownsley
    @melissatownsley 3 года назад +3086

    In England “there there” is used. To show somebody comfort and support when you don’t know what else to say to make them feel better. And it often comes with a pat on the back or maybe a hug

    • @PhilipLafeber
      @PhilipLafeber 3 года назад +259

      This example actually is a repetition of the word. I don't think it falls under the definition of reduplication. In the same line, you could go "Oh, oh!" or "Hmm, hmmm". In bahasa, adding "jalan" to "jalan" means you are going to _say_ something completely different; from "jalan" (a road or a path, noun) to "jalan jalan" (walking, verb). Same for makan and makan makan.

    • @hectorromero3903
      @hectorromero3903 3 года назад +32

      In the Caribbean Spanish “Casi Casi” is used to say “almost”

    • @JoseRojas-hl7sn
      @JoseRojas-hl7sn 3 года назад +59

      @@hectorromero3903 But "casi" is also almost

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo 3 года назад +22

      @Philip Lafeber Fun fact: In Finnish, ”jalan” means: ”on foot”. ”Menen töihin jalan.” = ”I go to work on foot.” Nice coincidence. Next you tell me that ”makan” means: ”a bed” (noun), and ”makan makan” means: ”lying” (verb). 😆

    • @dibelgelo
      @dibelgelo 3 года назад +47

      @@PhilipLafeber I think it does, actually. Same as in "so so", "well well", because duplication has different meaning than single word.

  • @Hairmetallurgist
    @Hairmetallurgist 4 года назад +369

    English does exhibit some reduplication:
    "I'm going out."
    "Are you going out-out?"
    (A special occasion, like a date).

    • @Sensiav703
      @Sensiav703 4 года назад +66

      "That video game is hard, but it's not hard-hard" (not obnoxiously difficult, but still challenging.)
      "It's cold outside." "Yeah, but not like cold-cold" (not absolutely freezing, but you'll feel a chill for sure).
      Just two more examples of English reduplication off the top of my head. The common theme is to emphasise an extreme in that situation.

    • @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN
      @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN 4 года назад +23

      That’s not what reduplication is at all. It’s hard to explain if your language doesn’t have that but I’ll try. For example, Run run would mean running. Eat eat would meaning eating. Cold cold would mean chilly. Etc. so if English had it, there would only be “cold” and “cold cold” to express it being chilly, the word “chilly” simply wouldn’t exist.
      .

    • @Zveebo
      @Zveebo 4 года назад +35

      @@Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN The purpose of reduplication varies from language to language - it is not the same thing everywhere. English does use reduplication (in English's case mostly to create an emphatic form of nouns), and the video is wrong in saying it doesn't - it just uses it less than some other languages.

    • @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN
      @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN 4 года назад +8

      Zveebo you’re incorrect. Reduplication is saying a word more than once to make a new word. You May say “I like like you” in English and you’re saying “like” twice but that’s not what reduplication is at all. It’s hard to grasp like I said

    • @JoshMessmer
      @JoshMessmer 4 года назад +12

      @@Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN "like like" is a new word, very distinct from "like" or "love" though? Cold cold might be a synonym of "chilly" (I would understand chilly to mean barely cold not extra cold, but agree to disagree), but it's also new distinct word. Is "big" not a new word because you could also say "large"?

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
    @PimsleurTurkishLessons Год назад +6

    Turkish has evidental too. (also Korean has it)
    Withnessed past tense (-di suffix) and Heard past tense (miş suffix) are different in Turkish.
    (I saw that ) A thief broke into the house. =eve hırsız girdi.
    ( I did not see but I heard or learned/realized it later) A thief broke into the house.=Eve hırsız girmiş.
    (when you are back to your home, you see some objects are missing so you understand/realize that a theif stole them.
    gir=come in
    di=withnessed past tense
    miş=heard/learned later/realized later

    • @Samirustem
      @Samirustem Месяц назад

      What is gir-miş-miş-miş?

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Месяц назад

      @@Samirustem there can be only 2 miş.. more than 2 miş do not have any meaning.

  • @theresiacitraningtyas7059
    @theresiacitraningtyas7059 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have never heard saya-saya in Indonesian. We have a lot of duplication - usually to indicate plural but sometimes a similar but different meaning. For example we have a joke: what is far shorter if you double it? Langit (sky) vs. Langit-langit (ceiling). Usually to change meaning we add suffixes such as -an for a pretend object (mobil =car vs. mobil-mobilan)

  • @Fix-It_Felix256
    @Fix-It_Felix256 4 года назад +764

    Is it crazy how saying sentences backward creates backward sentences saying how crazy it is?
    Wouldn't've ever thought 'bout this.

    • @tz7524
      @tz7524 4 года назад +18

      Chinese:上海自来水来自海上。
      Shanghai’s running water is from the sea.

    • @alejandrite9
      @alejandrite9 4 года назад +2

      lmao epic palindrome

    • @tz7524
      @tz7524 4 года назад +3

      @Róisín Grant Close enough, it means “on sea” actually, shang means up while hai means sea. If you translate the sentence word by word, Shang hai zi lai shui lai zi hai shang will be up-sea auto-come water comes from sea-up.lol.

    • @williamhrivnak7345
      @williamhrivnak7345 4 года назад +4

      gapple * You only need one “creates” because it’s the middle word and therefore the point of reflection

    • @eraunpuebloconmar
      @eraunpuebloconmar 4 года назад +12

      Some Spanish palindromes here:
      - Dábale arroz a la zorra el abad = The abbot gave rice to the fox (female)
      - Yo hago yoga hoy = I do yoga today
      - Roma ni se conoce sin oro ni se conoce sin amor = Rome is neither known without gold nor is it known without love.

  • @hermanbrachey7653
    @hermanbrachey7653 4 года назад +439

    Person: “What is the weather today?”
    Me: “rains”

    • @JimboDoomface
      @JimboDoomface 4 года назад +17

      I mean... I would just say rain, or forecast rain. is that wrong?

    • @SMJSmoK
      @SMJSmoK 4 года назад +29

      Might sound funny to you but that's exactly how we say that in Czech :-D

    • @hermanbrachey7653
      @hermanbrachey7653 4 года назад +16

      SMJSmoK Czech is basically drunk Russian

    • @SMJSmoK
      @SMJSmoK 4 года назад +3

      @@hermanbrachey7653 Haha that's...an interesting observation :-D

    • @lunacron
      @lunacron 4 года назад +9

      IT GONNA RAIN!!!
      Thank you Ollie.

  • @jojojo8835
    @jojojo8835 2 года назад +6

    2:36 we do have ”thee” and “thou” (the informal/familiar/single of “you”) but they’ve fallen out of use. “You” used to be the formal/plural.

  • @enderwiggins8248
    @enderwiggins8248 2 года назад +6

    “I’m gonna read a book”
    “A book book or an e-book?”
    “I think I like him”
    “You like him or you like-like him?”
    English definitely does have reduplication

    • @doodle-pen
      @doodle-pen 2 года назад +2

      He's talking about reduplication that's "built" into the language that's known by all basic English speakers. Not "regional", "adaptive" or "temporary" ones like the examples you gave. For example, if you said 'book' and 'book book' separately, alone and with no context, they would have the same meaning, especially to an English speaker who hasn't been exposed to the word/phrase
      I hope this makes sense

  • @SacredCowStockyards
    @SacredCowStockyards 4 года назад +89

    As a Spanish speaker I find English's lack of a formal "you" to be a massive relief. Saves me the trouble of figuring out whether I should address someone as tú or usted.

    • @thepuredrop79
      @thepuredrop79 4 года назад +2

      Aleksei Carrion As an English speaker learning Spanish, I am envious.

    • @anonymouscandle1223
      @anonymouscandle1223 4 года назад +7

      @پاسدار فرد Александр
      From Yorkshire so pretty northern and I'd love to know what the hell you're talking about. We certainly don't have a polite way of saying you.

    • @jennyrose9454
      @jennyrose9454 4 года назад +5

      Maybe they mean sir or ma'am but those are just titles not a form of you.

    • @lauragalvao1937
      @lauragalvao1937 4 года назад +2

      As a portuguese, i also think its a very big relief, i dont have to think about my relationship with someone or about their age so i dont have to chose from "tu" to "você/vós"

    • @hugobourgon198
      @hugobourgon198 4 года назад +7

      "You" is the formal "thou." They eliminated the informal one to be formal all the time.

  • @noob19087
    @noob19087 3 года назад +429

    4:30
    Swahili: Nani means who.
    Japanese: *何?!*

    • @user-hv6dv6wh7v
      @user-hv6dv6wh7v 3 года назад +16

      What?

    • @noob19087
      @noob19087 3 года назад +30

      @@user-hv6dv6wh7v I figured someone was going to ask this. In japanese, nani means what. The comment is a reference to the omae wa mou shindeiru meme from fist of the north star, where the main character tells an enemy "you're already dead" and the enemy replies confused "what?". 何 Is the kanji for nani.

    • @user-hv6dv6wh7v
      @user-hv6dv6wh7v 3 года назад +11

      @@noob19087 So Desu! I know that. It's why I said just what. I didn't say, (kore wa nan desu ka) what is this or (nan desu ka) what's this I just said what meaning nani. Which is the direct translation of what you wrote. I didn't need the long explanation just an acknowledgement that I got what you meant.
      II desu! Sayonara. (It's good! Goodbye)

    • @noob19087
      @noob19087 3 года назад +7

      @@user-hv6dv6wh7v これを読んだ後、わたしはとてもばかみたいだったよ。あなたも日本語の学習者ですか?

    • @user-hv6dv6wh7v
      @user-hv6dv6wh7v 3 года назад +10

      @@noob19087 Romanji please, I'm operating on a phone here with a western keyboard only... I haven't found a hiragana/katakana/kanji keyboard that works at all.

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 11 месяцев назад +4

    To me, many of the shortcomings and aspects of simplicity of English make it the best language for humor, which is immensely valuable to me.

  • @flavio5046
    @flavio5046 7 месяцев назад

    Something that made my informal english understanding better was when I noticed that you can make any name into a verb. It's often if not always used for humor and the context will make it understandable.

  • @idunnoalaska5071
    @idunnoalaska5071 4 года назад +427

    “You saw who?” is perfectly good colloquial English.

    • @parishna4882
      @parishna4882 4 года назад +7

      * puts saw away... "He went over there, guv."

    • @idunnoalaska5071
      @idunnoalaska5071 4 года назад +2

      D Sullivan colloquial.

    • @nandakishoren8566
      @nandakishoren8566 4 года назад +4

      Whom did you see.

    • @parishna4882
      @parishna4882 4 года назад +1

      @@nandakishoren8566
      For whom the bell once tolled, and angels carpets rolled, with which these things untold.. by any certain means.
      I watched the cusp so sure, her form surly allure, but not cup a was there so which brings,
      No things to see, no things.

    • @nandakishoren8566
      @nandakishoren8566 4 года назад +3

      @@parishna4882 Poetry is different from communication.

  • @kenster8270
    @kenster8270 3 года назад +698

    To me, the only really useful thing that's missing from modern English is two distinct pronouns for singular "you" and plural "you". I don't really miss any polite pronouns or other grammatical politeness markers, just an simple, non-awkward way of distinguishing between 2nd person sing. vs. pl.

    • @floo1465
      @floo1465 2 года назад +157

      the southern US has “y’all” for a plural you. i never use it because i find it to sound strange, but it’s there.

    • @segbaillie2824
      @segbaillie2824 2 года назад +36

      Simple. Thou is singular/informal and rarely used outside Yorkshire and the Bible. You (plural/formal) is the default form for simplicity. In fact, English has no impoliteness. When speaking other languages, English speakers are far more likely to address a child formally than the Queen informally.

    • @zubbworks
      @zubbworks 2 года назад +45

      You all. Cheese speak for yall.
      All Yall. Lotta guys.
      Yall. Multiple guys, ye-all, old british stuff.
      Yous guys. Lobstaaa speak for yall.

    • @StormKnight1
      @StormKnight1 2 года назад +14

      Y'all :P

    • @Aman-qr6wi
      @Aman-qr6wi 2 года назад +3

      Hindi also has tum(तुम) and aap(आप). But these are more related with respect than with numbers. So, "tum" is for singular but it can be made plural by "tum log" or "tum sab". " Aap" is generally for elder singular or general plural. Politeness and number are mixed.
      Sanskrit is very clear with this, it has 7x3= 21 ways of saying "you" with three number and 7 case system.

  • @atsugadri3155
    @atsugadri3155 2 года назад +2

    1:25
    A more appropriate term for Ghana English Creole, will be Ghana pidgin. And it isn't spoken by the population (like the Liberian or Nigerian pidgin English which is universal to most social or ethnic groups) but rather a few youngster social class- sth they adopt in high school.
    .
    It also spoken amongst downtown young ppl. In all cases men. It is also based on urban masculinity. Nobody in the country or villages speaks it.
    .
    I dont think there's anything like 'some lait lait' in Ghana . There are however, other similar expressions; "my body is doing me oh" or 'my body is doing doing...'
    which can mean many things depending on the context.

  • @thorbjrnhellehaven5766
    @thorbjrnhellehaven5766 11 месяцев назад

    I think clusivity for first plurl would be nice feature.
    It sure is a feature I've kind of missed a few times, where I had to specify what kind of "we" or "us" I ment.
    The way around can be anything from a few extra words, to a full sentence or two, depending on how explainable it

  • @kitashikaangel3020
    @kitashikaangel3020 4 года назад +430

    As a Kiwi, that's the best te reo Māori pronunciation that I've ever heard from a foreigner. Good job, man. Credit where credit is due.

    • @Hy-jg8ow
      @Hy-jg8ow 4 года назад +10

      Kiwi is a tasty fruit, innit?

    • @majarimennamazerinth5753
      @majarimennamazerinth5753 4 года назад

      Hell yeah!

    • @majarimennamazerinth5753
      @majarimennamazerinth5753 4 года назад +8

      NZ Europeans are pretty lucky; the phonology of Te Reo is very easy for English speakers to pick up. Doesn't stop people from completely failing though :\

    • @hannah.r6613
      @hannah.r6613 4 года назад

      @@majarimennamazerinth5753 that's because english people first translated Maori into the Latin script so all the letters are pronounced our way

    • @ronzac55
      @ronzac55 4 года назад

      He really killed it with the pronunciation. I notice it with other languages too. Especially the Mandarin i guess.

  • @RocksDXebec-dw3cn
    @RocksDXebec-dw3cn 4 года назад +1947

    English is missing a word for "the day after tomorrow"

    • @willthefin
      @willthefin 4 года назад +174

      In finnish its "Ylihuominen"
      It directly translates to over tomorrow

    • @Zdrange03
      @Zdrange03 4 года назад +268

      And the day before yesterday

    • @aronchai
      @aronchai 4 года назад +571

      There are the archaic words overmorrow and ereyesterday

    • @richardokeefe7410
      @richardokeefe7410 4 года назад +401

      Some of us still understand "overmorrow". The fact that we *had* a word for this and lost it suggests that it wasn't that much of a loss. We also lost "darg", sigh.

    • @frankpow9429
      @frankpow9429 4 года назад +61

      In Croatian (and Serbian as well) tomorrow - sutra, day after tomorrow - prekosutra, two days after tomorrow - zakosutra. And we have words for the day before yesterday and two days before yesterday

  • @Lifes4fn
    @Lifes4fn Год назад

    Very funny and instructive, keep on going your good work, lad! Greetings from Belgium ;)

  • @JimSmithInChiapas
    @JimSmithInChiapas 2 года назад

    6:45 As I recall from my time in Idaho, the Shoshone language has those features as well.
    5:55 Having different words for the instrumental and a comitative "with" would be helpful in scientific writing.

  • @NativLang
    @NativLang  4 года назад +446

    Any ideas about how I could start using these in English? Oh, for next time: features English has but other languages lack!

    • @sirk603
      @sirk603 4 года назад +15

      I’m just going to guess accent marks

    • @robertcoleman349
      @robertcoleman349 4 года назад +13

      Way to set up anticipation for the next episode, 10/10

    • @PartiallyGeorge
      @PartiallyGeorge 4 года назад +6

      I'd say free migration of different parts of speech between categories without requiring any special 'migration suffixes', like He bettered himself, or 'inning' etc., but I'm not at all sure there aren't any languages that share just the same capability (Mandarin, for ex.?)

    • @juliahenriques210
      @juliahenriques210 4 года назад +7

      How about all the redundancy English has with prepositions? Or the way substantives just verb themselves almost seamlessly? Or onomatopaeia as a major word formation source, just whoosh and tadaaa? Or 537 different etymological routes a word can have? Or the repetition of words in prose sentences in ways that would have Neolatin language speakers running to the hills? Or... Yep. English is a rather quirky language, in fact. :)

    • @Amehtta
      @Amehtta 4 года назад +34

      I've been wondering a lot about English's unspoken adjectival hierarchy when using multiple adjectives. Like, there are certain adjectives that just go before others, and ignoring this rule makes things sound wrong, but it's not something I ever remember learning about in school as an official grammatical rule. Ex: size supersedes color, as in "the big red car" vs "the red big car", or "little black dress" vs "black little dress".

  • @danielmacdonald9287
    @danielmacdonald9287 4 года назад +777

    "English, you're not normal."
    Aye, the fact that there's almost ten different ways of pronouncing 'ough' is proof enough.

    • @DreymimadR
      @DreymimadR 4 года назад +17

      But that's the fault of the first printers who came from Germany with no type for the yogh rune!

    • @user-gf1bb3fu4u
      @user-gf1bb3fu4u 4 года назад +11

      Prough*

    • @barsozuguler4744
      @barsozuguler4744 4 года назад +23

      "ough"
      this is painful and hard to say xdd

    • @libefiken1863
      @libefiken1863 4 года назад +6

      It all depends on the word being spelt.
      Though through sough tough rough rouge blah blah.
      Spelling makes the difference.

    • @danielcallegaribr
      @danielcallegaribr 4 года назад +62

      Yes, English can be weird. It can be understood through tough thorough thought, though.

  • @sparklingdeath1730
    @sparklingdeath1730 2 года назад +5

    Personally, as someone who lives in England and has grown up speaking English, I like the language quite a lot, especially since it’s grammer rules are quite lax.
    For example, in quite a lot of languages, items have gender, or maybe there’s formal language and more casual language (like how there’s a formal ‘you’ and an informal ‘you’ whereas in English it’s all the same).
    So yeah, quite like the language even if it’s a little vague sometimes.

    • @quasar4072
      @quasar4072 7 месяцев назад

      You might be surprised but only few European countries like Russia and french do that thing with genders and obviously you think it is ok because you haven't seen better ones i think Georgian is the best language from languages that i know which include Georgian Russian japanese English and German. Not trying to offend your language but you know that English sucks.

  • @chessematics
    @chessematics Год назад +2

    The weather thing; in Bengali (and many other Indian languages) we call it "বৃষ্টি (rain) পড়ছে (is falling)". The weather elements of weather act as the subjects themselves. Even if it goes a bit further like "it's sunny", we'll say "সূর্য (sun) বেরিয়েছে (has come out)". But the problem arises if it's consistently sunny from a long time. We don't have an EXACT expression for that, although there are many spare expressions, some even non-grammatical, to get the job done.

  • @jrseahorse5886
    @jrseahorse5886 4 года назад +483

    Hopefully they add these features in the next update.

    • @10Exahertz
      @10Exahertz 4 года назад +3

      When was the last update?

    • @justinatorxv
      @justinatorxv 4 года назад +23

      Purple Planet a couple years ago they added “boi” and “succ”

    • @Lizaherden
      @Lizaherden 4 года назад

      _Funny_

    • @jamesfrederick.
      @jamesfrederick. 4 года назад +13

      These aren’t missing features the language intentionally vague so you can collect all the meanings at once at the end of the sentence; this also makes this language better then most for story writing because you won’t here the punch lines in jokes or you will know the scary clown jumps out but before the sentence explaining every thing elms about the seen is up...English is naturally more dramatic witch makes a better artist language

    • @josiahferrell5022
      @josiahferrell5022 4 года назад

      Yeah, I'm not sure about many of these. The question particle can be good I think and OMG it would be amazing if people outright told you what their level of evidence was for their claims, but that would take some maneuvering to fit into English.

  • @eu_arntz
    @eu_arntz 3 года назад +1249

    Surprised you didn’t mention “you” referring to a singular person and “you” referring to multiple people. (Like in portuguese, singular: você/tu, plural: vocês/vós). Now that would be useful.

    • @skipskip7737
      @skipskip7737 3 года назад +96

      Simple, just add a S like
      You: single person
      Yous: multiple people

    • @dale3404
      @dale3404 3 года назад +218

      That’s why we Southerns say “ya’ll. You plural.

    • @afanoftheclassics
      @afanoftheclassics 3 года назад +22

      Down our way 'tis as follows:
      Ye -plural (also singular but inviting a response from others not being addressed)
      Yourselves-plural, less formal
      Yeerselves- plural, informal
      Yourself -singular, informal
      Standard English and the various dialects are very different animals.

    • @linhhoang1363
      @linhhoang1363 3 года назад +44

      Who invented "you" to be both singular and plural in english in the first place anw ?

    • @Wolfoe-ex2jj
      @Wolfoe-ex2jj 3 года назад +51

      Jokes on you, the south figured that out. Now we’ve developed the most southern word of all southern words, y’all. Or if you want to get real crazy, all y’all.

  • @geoffchurchill5492
    @geoffchurchill5492 7 месяцев назад

    te reo maori also changes articles to indicate number, is this more common in other languages?

  • @roysigurdkarlsbakk3842
    @roysigurdkarlsbakk3842 Год назад +1

    Back when I learned Norwegian sign language, I leraned that the signs for 'we' or 'us' (same thing) was highly different according to context. 'We' as in 'us two', two fingers rolling back and forth between I and the person I was talking about, whereas 'we' as in a group, could be specified differently. If there were a group of people around me, I'd signal that by drawing a smaller circle in the semicentre of that group - and so fourth. Then - if it were to be a talk about 'we' as in 'all of us', the circle drawn, would be above my head, and rather large. I'm not sure if this is specific to Norwegian sign language or how they do it in other sign language languages/dialects, but I'm quite sure it's about the same.
    PS: Learning sign language is highly recommended - not just for including those that cannot hear to well, but perhaps most of all to see how rich that language family really is!

  • @suckmyass123
    @suckmyass123 4 года назад +517

    as someone from holland, who studies english, italian, german and french, i still think english is the easiest language

    • @jeffthevomitguy1178
      @jeffthevomitguy1178 4 года назад +105

      As someone from mars who studies marsian, the native languages of uranus, plutonian, and mercurese, i can confidently (without bragging) say that pluto is not a planet.

    • @Hi11is
      @Hi11is 4 года назад +11

      @@jeffthevomitguy1178 Martian?

    • @jeffthevomitguy1178
      @jeffthevomitguy1178 4 года назад +43

      Gary Hillis no, understandable mistake, martian is the species of life on mars, marsian is the tongue we use to communicate with( pronounced marz-EE-in)

    • @Hi11is
      @Hi11is 4 года назад +8

      @@jeffthevomitguy1178 Marsian was the language of the Marsi people of central Italy. Your explanation sounds plausible, but it's BS.

    • @jeffthevomitguy1178
      @jeffthevomitguy1178 4 года назад +26

      Gary Hillis No i think you’ll find that the marsian people of italy indeed did speak marsian, However, mars, as we all know, has very diverse languages of which, one of them happened to be the marsians. It is unknown whether or not the marsian tongue was chosen because of the nominal simularity, or if it was due to the fact that the marsians were indeed the first to establish a permanent settlement on mars in 2077, Either way, marsian has been adopted by mars and please be inclusive to all speaker of marsian, not just those originating from italy.

  • @timothybell5698
    @timothybell5698 2 года назад +2897

    "We each read three books."
    There, that wasn't hard, was it?

    • @zoch9797
      @zoch9797 2 года назад +57

      His videos are entertaining, but educational.

    • @Lucky13Ravens
      @Lucky13Ravens 2 года назад +418

      Yeah. Linguistics gives English a bad wrap. Because English is less a set of rules for constructing speech and more a toolkit.

    • @billyt8868
      @billyt8868 2 года назад +11

      @@zoch9797 ha no.

    • @fsinjin60
      @fsinjin60 2 года назад +75

      We read three bookseach

    • @davidlamb1107
      @davidlamb1107 2 года назад +149

      That's impossible! Didn't you watch the video? The narrator said that you can't DO that in English!

  • @alissiyaify
    @alissiyaify Год назад +1

    OH MY GOD - to the topic of two "with"s - in Russian we have the one "with" for "going with" and a whole instrumental case for "using with", which is even called somewhat like "creating case". I've never thought about it from this perspective, but now it appears so useful! It's so fascinating to think about cases not as those pure grammar rules you should just learn, but as the actual concepts used to represent certain relations between words.

  • @Lilith_2191
    @Lilith_2191 Год назад +1

    Omg if the “we” differentiation existed in English it would have saved me so many awkward moments! The number of times someone else has said “we’re going to lunch” and I thought I was included. So awkward!
    The with one makes sense to. But the double meaning of with provides so many fun opportunities for a play on words.

  • @speadskater
    @speadskater 4 года назад +695

    Nativelang: "no reduplication"
    Me: "Shots shots shots shots shots!"

    • @matheusalves1237
      @matheusalves1237 4 года назад +26

      speadskater EVERYBODYYYY

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd 4 года назад +16

      And what about: Buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
      And how about this:
      Shipping ships ship ships shipping shipping ships.

    • @andrewstoddard6717
      @andrewstoddard6717 4 года назад +6

      I do not know what buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo means.

    • @speadskater
      @speadskater 4 года назад +11

      @@andrewstoddard6717 it means the buffalo named Buffalo from Buffalo bullied another buffalo named Buffalo from Buffalo.

    • @anonamos225
      @anonamos225 4 года назад +31

      "Does he like me or does he like-like me?"

  • @Zaxxon22
    @Zaxxon22 4 года назад +310

    We read three books each. Easy to differentiate.

    • @ZipplyZane
      @ZipplyZane 4 года назад +56

      You also need the other direction, but that also exists:
      We read three books between us. Or "We read a total of three books." If a feature is really needed in a language, speakers will find a way.

    • @d4n4nable
      @d4n4nable 4 года назад +8

      I still don't know if the Georgian version means "we read three books in total (each of us read one)," or "we read three books (each one of us read the same three books, still making it three in total)."

    • @NickRoman
      @NickRoman 4 года назад +2

      That brings up the point that sometimes there are ways to say something in English, but because of history or just difficulty in getting people to do things, people don't consistently use. That renders it almost like it isn't a feature of the language. Like, 'you' could mean the one person you're talking to or it could mean a group that you are addressing. Context usually fixes that, but not always. If you always meant one person and then we had to say youguys to mean we're talking to a group of people, then that would be a consistent rule/feature of the language.

    • @anadventurousattackkitten779
      @anadventurousattackkitten779 4 года назад +1

      @@NickRoman this is when dialects become useful for things such as "y'all", signifying a group that excludes the speaker.

    • @shannonhensley2942
      @shannonhensley2942 4 года назад

      Or you know we all read our own book.

  • @NichaelCramer
    @NichaelCramer Год назад +1

    Corrected title:
    “A list of a few things where English does something in a different way from other languages.”
    Linguistics axiom #17: Anything that can be said/done in any language can be be said/done in all languages.
    Corollary #17a: …although it often may be accomplished using a (possibly very) different form.

  • @isaacvetemotu750
    @isaacvetemotu750 Год назад

    I'd love to see some more stuff on oceanic pacific languages im so glad you talked about maori language. Myself I'm half samoan and wasn't rly taught my language that much (same as my cousins) so I'd love to see some more pacific Island stuff and your opinion on the languages

  • @rogercline5377
    @rogercline5377 4 года назад +251

    "I'm good at chess, but I'm not GOOD good." Reduplication?

    • @nuberiffic
      @nuberiffic 4 года назад +35

      Well you're correct, but you're not *correct* correct yeah?

    • @ezicspy6749
      @ezicspy6749 4 года назад +2

      You would say great

    • @nuberiffic
      @nuberiffic 4 года назад +8

      @@ezicspy6749 You *COULD* say great.

    • @ezicspy6749
      @ezicspy6749 4 года назад +1

      @@nuberiffic yes or grand or I'm not amazing, or I'm not marvelous

    • @nuberiffic
      @nuberiffic 4 года назад +7

      @@ezicspy6749 ...you've missed the point entirely.
      Well done.

  • @sagittario5543
    @sagittario5543 2 года назад +1514

    So a reason like this is why many non-native English speakers, especially us Indians have a weird accent while speaking English because in our languages, we only pronounce the word exactly as it is written. It's just a neat feature to have in a language.

    • @444guns
      @444guns 2 года назад +223

      same in romanian, we pronounce letters, not words. It's indeed a huge advantage that sadly many languages don't have.

    • @etis398
      @etis398 2 года назад +191

      French : "oiseaux" 👁👄👁

    • @Samurollie
      @Samurollie 2 года назад +182

      Same with Portuguese. Once you learn the rules (that are really simple by the way) you can pronounce any word. But for English, I would that it's almost like Chinese at this point, because you have to remember how to pronounce every individual word e just because two words are written very similar doesn't mean that you can pronounce them the same way (Through/though/thought for exemple)

    • @riqrimoli
      @riqrimoli 2 года назад +22

      @@Samurollie engraçado.. eu acho ingles facil pq a gente tem regra pra caralho mas vc fez um bom ponto sobre a pronuncia

    • @Samurollie
      @Samurollie 2 года назад +19

      @@riqrimoli acho que se você já tem um bom vocabulário em inglês você consegue adivinhar (ou chegar perto) qual seria a pronuncia de uma palavra olhando apenas como ela é escrita. Mas eu acho que, principalmente pra quem vem de uma língua como o portugues e ainda tá começando a aprender, acaba se tornando um barreira a mais

  • @gilbertlagrange6419
    @gilbertlagrange6419 8 месяцев назад

    Italian-speakers can omit the subject because the conjugation of a verb changes according to the subject. In English, an 's' is added to the 3rd person singular. In the Past Simple even that 's' is not added.

  • @akilimali_ndag
    @akilimali_ndag 10 месяцев назад +1

    Every language is well in its own. While in German we do have prepositions like : Auf, zu, an, bei, nach, aus, von ...for location or direction. Same with English (with, on, at, to...) In Swahili you add just at the end of a noun a -ni to indicate the direction and location. Naenda sokoni (naenda- I go, soko- market plus the prefix -ni)

  • @grasonicus
    @grasonicus 4 года назад +760

    You missed the most obvious deficiency: the ability to make diminutives from nouns. A small cat is a kitten, a totally different word. Afrikaans: kat - katjie. Spanish: gato -gatito. A small car in English is a small car. Afrikaans: kar - karretjie. Spanish: carro - carrito. I'm told diminutives are easy in German, too. My proposal is to add ling. Duck - duckling. Cat - catling. Car - carling.

    • @grauen1989
      @grauen1989 4 года назад +82

      Yes Germany has that too. You can add -chen or -lein to it, like Katze (cat) gets Kätzchen or Kätzlein (both mean small cat), Ente (duck) gets Entchen or Entlein. Most times both can be used, but be careful some words only use one ending like Buch (book) gets Büchlein, you don't use -chen there, because it already ends on ch and it would be to hard to speak it that way. Herr (Sir) gets another meaning, when you say Herrchen. It doesn't mean a small Sir, what you could guess. Herrchen is the owner of a pet, like a dog. It´s a nicer way to say something like master. Herrlein doesn't exist. When Frau (woman) gets Frauchen, its used in the same way like Herrchen, while Fräulein is old fashion for an unmarried woman. You should not use that word anymore, it´s seen as impolite.

    • @grasonicus
      @grasonicus 4 года назад +18

      @@grauen1989 I always wonder about things. Is there a reason English missed something so obvious? I suppose nobody knows.

    • @dlwatib
      @dlwatib 4 года назад +38

      Whenever we want to use a diminutive we can always borrow one from one of our neighbors, usually the French suffix -ette, as in the small cigar-like thing: cigarette. We don't use it to create catettes because we've already got kittens. We've got specific native words for most immature animals: puppies for dogs, kids for goats, calves for cows, foals for horses, etc. We don't use it to create carettes because we usually want to be more specific, sports coupe, roadster, hatchback, etc. But we do use it to create small dining table booths: dinettes or banquettes. Small kitchens are kitchenettes.

    • @grasonicus
      @grasonicus 4 года назад +29

      @@dlwatib That does not change the fact that English does not have an easy way to create diminutives as other languages do. I know it gets by without it. Latin got by without either the definite or indefinite article. But it is optimal to be able to do it.
      English can change a noun into an adjective, like talking about a dog house. Spanish has to say, la casa del perro - the house of the dog.
      Something bad in English is the 'you' which is both singular and plural. It's not like that in other languages. In English, one has to use extra words to avoid confusion.

    • @marcmarc1967
      @marcmarc1967 4 года назад +14

      Or you could just use that one-syllable word called "small", which is actually less verbiage than adding a two-syllable suffix "-ito". It also leaves open the option to enhance the description beyond just a generic diminutive, such as "small cat", "young cat", "underfed cat", "bony cat", "newborn cat", etc.

  • @scriscape
    @scriscape 4 года назад +401

    Children: We read three books each
    Georgian: We read three times three books.

    • @bobbye7353
      @bobbye7353 4 года назад +22

      Each of us read three books.

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi 4 года назад +17

      you could also say we ALL read 3 books

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 4 года назад +5

      Or you could put it like "we read thrice three books"

    • @NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache
      @NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache 4 года назад +5

      @@BertGrink That could mean that they read and re-read and re-read again those 3 books meaning the 3 of them would've still read only 3 books, thrice. The thrice there would apply to the read as in how many times did they read th the 3 books. If its for the number of something and not the nunber of times I think it should be triple not thrice

    • @NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache
      @NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache 4 года назад

      @@BertGrink sorry for the long reply xd

  • @JubioHDX
    @JubioHDX 11 месяцев назад

    Watching though this has made me happy to have grown up in the southern USA so i have knowledge on both the "correct" formal english terms and slang terms. Redupication? we definitely do that (ex. Hear=to listen, hear hear=i agree. or "i'm hungry but not hungry hungry" to mean only slightly so, etc)
    and ESPECIALLY on the "better yes/no questions" part, cause yeah the formal way to ask a question would be "what did you just say?" or "whom did you see?" but 90% of the time the way i would say these things in a conversation i would say it like "you said what?" and "you saw who?", and it works perfectly well, even if its not whats taught to you in schools its instinctual and reflexive for fluent conversational english speakers who arent worried about writing/speaking in the same way you would type a paper for school or business.
    I could go on longer as well, but most of these are only things in this video english doesnt do OFFICIALLY, but theyre still things used by every day english speakers constantly in regular life.

  • @AMKR4Lyfe
    @AMKR4Lyfe 2 года назад

    Hey, love the content. I'm wondering if you've across or would do videos on General Semantics of Count Alfred Korzybski & "English^2 or English Prime ?" As a guerrilla ontologist/maybe logician love to hear any takes on these and useage in all languages. Keep up the good content either way!
    -AMKR/Shawn

  • @cormyat07
    @cormyat07 4 года назад +752

    English has no way to express the idea "we read three books each?" You know, like by adding the "each?"

    • @JD-gk7eh
      @JD-gk7eh 4 года назад +108

      Yeah, that part was kinda silly.

    • @therealcole7313
      @therealcole7313 4 года назад +48

      Wait I would say that “We each read three books” not “We read three books each.” Which one is right?

    • @cormyat07
      @cormyat07 4 года назад +90

      @@therealcole7313 Either one is correct. Yours is slightly more formal, but they're both grammatically valid.

    • @katondragonrider
      @katondragonrider 4 года назад +54

      I believe the point is that English has no way of explain how many books are read besides adding on to the sentence. While other languages can just change a word in the sentence. Keeping it shorter.

    • @davidh.4944
      @davidh.4944 4 года назад +56

      @ktondragonrider: How is "we read threethree books" any shorter or simpler than "we read three books each"?

  • @dmark1922
    @dmark1922 4 года назад +806

    English does have reduplication! Example:
    "My brother-in-law is English"
    "He's from America?"
    "No, the UK"
    "Oh, so like he's Scottish or something?"
    "No, he's ENGLISH English!"

    • @JacobTrueman
      @JacobTrueman 4 года назад +137

      d mark yeah! English doesn’t have formal, standardised reduplication but it definitely exists.
      “I’m having a salad today”
      “Haha like a salad with chicken, cheese, and tons of dressing so it still tastes good?”
      “No, a salad salad. I’m committed to my diet, Linda”
      “Oh.”

    • @EliteGamerDie
      @EliteGamerDie 4 года назад +61

      Yep. Even in this question 'Do you like him/her or do you like like him/her?'

    • @RaymondHng
      @RaymondHng 4 года назад +83

      _Do you speak Canadian French or French French?_

    • @anggaperdana9136
      @anggaperdana9136 4 года назад +71

      I'm not a native speaker of English but I definitely have heard reduplication being used in a sentence
      "Do you know Adam?"
      "Ya!.. Well, I don't know-know him. I met him at the bar the other day."
      Or in a video game where you can revive teammates
      "Are you dead-dead?"
      "No, revive me bro, quick!"

    • @calthyechild
      @calthyechild 4 года назад +32

      Yes, you'll see it in thing like "she's a girly girl" to like, amplify the quality of that trait's existence in someone. It's more casual usage, I have definitely used "Canadian French" versus "French French" and "salad salad" and "like like" and "know know" and possibly even "dead dead" as exampled above. I try to keep it out of my writing but casually verbatim, absolutely use it for emphasis or to point someone in the direction of a specific meaning when a word is multipurpose. Of course there are more formal ways to say all of these things. The evolution of language, eh?

  • @TryinBin8889
    @TryinBin8889 2 года назад +2

    I started studying many languages a few years ago now, and though they were considered difficult to learn for English-native speakers, I found them relatively easy bc they made sense. If you had a question word, it simply acted as a place-holder for what was being questioned, just like you spoke of. "You go [where?]" or "your new friend is [who]?" none of this changing the word order and logic for no good reason.
    AND THE MEANING OF YES AND NO!!! In so many other languages, yes or no simply means agree or disagree. But in English, if you ask the question say, "so you don't need a bag?" And the person answers with 'no', it makes 0 sense. 'No' as in correct, I DON'T need a bag or 'no' as in 'that's incorrect, I will need a bag'. Even though it's my first language and I was monolingual all the way up until my teens, I can confidently say English is the worst language I know so far.

  • @MoleculesAndMinecraft
    @MoleculesAndMinecraft 7 месяцев назад

    We have the two withs in English! Using and alongside/along with.
    In any sentence where you would use "with" to mean "I used this to do the thing," you should be able to replace "with" with "using."
    I made this soup using organic carrots.
    We built the roof using hammers.
    You can write using a pencil or a pen.
    Similarly, in any sentence where you would use "with" to mean "in cooperation with" or "in the presence of," you should be able to replace "with" with alongside or along with.
    Did you go along with Joe and Amy to the fair?
    I made cookies alongside my mom.
    We built the roof alongside our friends.
    It's a little clunky, for sure, and doesn't get used much, but we absolutely do have a way to communicate which "with" we're using when we need to.

  • @moswaggy
    @moswaggy 4 года назад +301

    “English, you’re not normal”
    Two words that look the same and sound different:
    Read
    Read

    • @ISS600
      @ISS600 4 года назад +3

      I don't understand but are talking about homophones?

    • @LeonardoJimenezHerrera
      @LeonardoJimenezHerrera 4 года назад +37

      @@ISS600 The very contrary: homographs.

    • @ISS600
      @ISS600 4 года назад +2

      @@LeonardoJimenezHerrera Oh. Forgive my idiocy.

    • @nightinthetwilight
      @nightinthetwilight 4 года назад +27

      Rēad
      Reād
      Better?

    • @moswaggy
      @moswaggy 4 года назад +5

      nightinthetwilight is this supposed to be a snickers commercial?

  • @matt46142
    @matt46142 3 года назад +76

    Reduplication: Wake me up before you go-go

    • @anomalousdelirium
      @anomalousdelirium 3 года назад +8

      Is the zombie dead ? Like dead-dead ? (affirmation ?)

  • @floriankleinhans6287
    @floriankleinhans6287 Год назад +2

    There are a few concepts that can't be discribed easily in English because the words simply don't exist. Like the German word "gelungen", it means much more than than the common translation "to succeed". It means the success came about with the help of a force that is not conveyed with the meaning of the word. This force could be god, coincidence or luck for example. As success in often not as predictable as we would want.

  • @jonmce1
    @jonmce1 Год назад +1

    The use of eh can be used to turn a sentence into a question in English. It can also be used to ask for agreement.

    • @mbvoelker8448
      @mbvoelker8448 10 месяцев назад

      Likewise for huh or right.

  • @sephalon1
    @sephalon1 3 года назад +1006

    Or we could just say "three each".

    • @nikitaberejnoy4359
      @nikitaberejnoy4359 3 года назад +30

      Too many words

    • @valtyrodinson430
      @valtyrodinson430 3 года назад +47

      That was literally my exact thought.

    • @loganparsons5179
      @loganparsons5179 3 года назад +41

      @@nikitaberejnoy4359 same amount of time to say it

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo 3 года назад +29

      @Logan Parsons ”Threech” is, like, 0.2 seconds faster.

    • @myboy_
      @myboy_ 3 года назад +36

      I honestly wouldn't be surprised if the glottal stop in "three ' each" disappeared over time to make "threech"

  • @Subpar1224
    @Subpar1224 3 года назад +872

    For the confused non-english speakers here, lead is pronounced like read and lead is pronounced like read.

    • @cabrinius
      @cabrinius 3 года назад +67

      But reed is a whole separate word, and it has nothing to do with read or read, or lead or lead!

    • @femmm0336
      @femmm0336 3 года назад +26

      Okay I'm definately not following😅 To me it says exactly the same thing...

    • @knife2143
      @knife2143 3 года назад +102

      @@femmm0336 They're two different words. Read is pronounced like red and past tense from read, which is pronounced like reed. Lead is a little bit different. Lead is like lead in a pencil, and pronounced like led. Lead is pronounced like leed and is like leading someone around. Make sense?

    • @omicronenoch9974
      @omicronenoch9974 3 года назад +23

      Ok, that's funny. Well played sir.

    • @monnamonsta
      @monnamonsta 3 года назад +4

      My brain ehhhhhhh

  • @KororaPenguin
    @KororaPenguin 7 месяцев назад

    With the strong verbs in English, the vowel differences are from Proto-Indo-European dissimilation of reduplicating vowels in the stative stems.

  • @beargreen1
    @beargreen1 20 дней назад +1

    I was studying Old English and it turns out it had many features that we stopped doing

  • @huskybaiano3994
    @huskybaiano3994 3 года назад +380

    4:56 Spanish and Portuguese, two European languages, have "estar" e " ser" to distinguish permanent and temporary being

    • @ropytube
      @ropytube 3 года назад +25

      It IS useful!

    • @marianapereira6656
      @marianapereira6656 3 года назад +57

      @@caio_tito they're originally European, obviously they're also spoken in other continents lol

    • @ryanreis5919
      @ryanreis5919 3 года назад +54

      @@caio_tito So ?? It doesn't change the fact that you're speaking an European language dumbass

    • @marimarianations9355
      @marimarianations9355 3 года назад +33

      @@caio_tito The language is originally European. The fact that you speak a variant native to South America doesn't change that.

    • @marimarianations9355
      @marimarianations9355 3 года назад +5

      Not the only ones, Catalan has it too

  • @varvara9624
    @varvara9624 3 года назад +1067

    Its so surprising you talked about politeness without mentioning japanese and its insane keigo....

    • @user-zb2jx8ji1r
      @user-zb2jx8ji1r 3 года назад +27

      lol ikkkr i was waiting for him to talk ab it XDDDD

    • @alterran1988
      @alterran1988 3 года назад +187

      Yeah Japanese and Korean are both insane, Korean has 7 different honorific levels (used for verb conjugation) and outright different words to indicate respect (밥/진지, 먹다/드시다). Though admittedly a couple of the 7 honorific levels aren’t widely used anymore

    • @twicepilled
      @twicepilled 2 года назад +21

      @@alterran1988 I'm scared to learn the grammar rules now 🚶‍♂️🚶‍♂️

    • @stephena1196
      @stephena1196 2 года назад +36

      @@twicepilled don't be. Most native English speakers get by without learning most of them.

    • @kylecronin3379
      @kylecronin3379 2 года назад +18

      Ya but korea has only 1 alphabet thats normally written by people while japan uses 3 i know hanja exists but the average person doesn't use it often compared to Japan not to mention different drinking rules and food rules

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf2 Год назад

    Old English also used to have three grammatical genders for nouns with 4 - 5 cases for them and their corresponding articles for each of the three genders.
    And OE even had a dualis form as well ( "we two" ).

  • @JimInYamaguchi
    @JimInYamaguchi Год назад

    Very interesting video and informative inasmuch as you point out the diverse manners of expression different languages have, but these things you say we can’t do it English (like differential plurals or evidential systems), we _can_ indeed express; a better way to compare these features might be not whether we can or can’t, but whether it’s obligatory or not. I speak two non-English (one of them not even European) competently, so I’ve experienced lots of “missing” English words and mode of expression (and their counterparts in the other languages I use) and know that the question should be _how_ rather than _whether_ concepts and sentiments can be expressed, and that factoids claiming one language can and another can’t are more an indication of mistaken assumptions based on inadequate data than linguistic fact.
    FWIW, I think English itself is a bit of a creole, especially its local varieties, built on a still very strong Germanic substrate.