American Guess 4 Slavic Languages Speaking Countries!!(Belarus, Czech Republic, Poland, Ukraine)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @soldierswag4884
    @soldierswag4884 Год назад +1058

    Slavic People speaking their language
    American people : Russia

    • @wojtulacehoe5089
      @wojtulacehoe5089 11 месяцев назад +98

      typical american world awareness

    • @NocnaMara867
      @NocnaMara867 11 месяцев назад +38

      Sad but true xD

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 11 месяцев назад +34

      to be honest, as a Czech when I hear some other slavic language, I also don't know what is that and I guess russian 😀

    • @soldierswag4884
      @soldierswag4884 11 месяцев назад +22

      @@Pidalin Im your Slovak brother and idk :D i never think of russian language at first

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@soldierswag4884 when I really have no idea, I say it's probably bulgarian 😀

  • @GdzieJestNemo
    @GdzieJestNemo Год назад +304

    it's pretty hilarious that she asked for numbers and colours - both of them are pretty much same in all same in all slavic langs :D

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +14

      The oldest basic words are similar even in other language groups like germanic or romance.

    • @user-tk5rg6hc8s
      @user-tk5rg6hc8s Год назад +4

      Number 3 is similar even with English.
      Pink in Ukrainian really sounded similar to French red, but they are not related at all. If someone is interested, I could describe why.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +1

      @@user-tk5rg6hc8s It is actually related, word pink in slavic languages is from flower rose, so it can be actually from french.

    • @user-tk5rg6hc8s
      @user-tk5rg6hc8s Год назад +2

      @@Pidalin Thank you for your interest. Yes, their pink literally means rose as adjective. Rouge was inherited from Latin word rubeus, which with another Latin word rosa possibly are very far cognates, actually rosa's origin is not certainly known.
      When I looked for information about rouge, I found another similarity, it's an Ænglisc word rudiġ, means reddish and sounds very similar to the word that indicate ginger colour.

    • @Paolo-gj7ip
      @Paolo-gj7ip 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Pidalin It actually comes directly from Latin, not French.

  • @Charl_es19
    @Charl_es19 Год назад +119

    Finally , the slavic are back , i hope see of this new US lady too 😊

  • @thepsychic736
    @thepsychic736 Год назад +366

    1. Ahoy does give it away, but could be Slovak or Czech
    2. Borst is Ukranian.
    3. Vodka and pierogi are Polish.
    4. Tricky, it is East Slavic, but she mentions nature, so i think of Belarus, because it is way smaller than Russia, since Russia has more land diversity.

    • @mareksicinski449
      @mareksicinski449 Год назад +15

      2. borscht is general regional not just ukrainian, alsopolish - historically it passed on to ashkenazi quicisne - to some extent klhuthianain belarusianlater also russian
      3. vodka is poliush but other countries too

    • @kubx5036
      @kubx5036 Год назад +13

      fun fact borsh is from 16 century and its central eastern countries dish not ukrainian there was no ukraine back then

    • @Anbopro
      @Anbopro Год назад +54

      @@kubx5036 It was actually 😂
      Keep listening russian propaganda, dude

    • @vinn_kr
      @vinn_kr Год назад +12

      Its Ahoj

    • @kubx5036
      @kubx5036 Год назад +8

      @@Anbopro im not russian xd bro red borsh is also polish national dish invented by central eastern slavic people

  • @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166
    @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166 Год назад +715

    does this girl really only think of russia? borscht originated in ukraine, vodka in poland

    • @ImJustRandom-z
      @ImJustRandom-z Год назад +18

      Fr💀

    • @MononokeOhime
      @MononokeOhime Год назад

      A lot of Americans are uneducated in other countries besides the US 😂

    • @Onnarashi
      @Onnarashi Год назад +120

      Pierogis are Polish too. I'm not even Slavic (I'm Nordic), and I learned that vodka and pierogis are Polish and that biorscht is Ukrainian. In fact, I learned about borscht after Russia's war against Ukraine.

    • @perdelkin
      @perdelkin Год назад +30

      Yeah, many people really have to educate themselves about these topics before talking about them because they are walking on a very thin ice

    • @serbreadboard8578
      @serbreadboard8578 Год назад +35

      I think it's a general lack of knowledge of eastern Europe. Not just her, but many Americans know they have borscht and especially vodka in Russia but don't know the origins and hardly know anything about the smaller Slavic countries so they attribute them to being Russian. Russia gets more exposure because of their larger role in more recent history in events such as the World Wars and the Cold War. Eastern European culture is also harder to learn than Western Europe unless you have Eastern European background since Eastern Europe is farther and so different from Western Europe.

  • @henri191
    @henri191 Год назад +106

    First member from Czech Republic / Czechia 🇨🇿 , someone from Slovakia 🇸🇰 would be great too ,

    • @Aldraz
      @Aldraz Год назад +12

      There are probably more Americans that have won a lottery than those that could correctly identify between a Czech and Slovak person every time lol

    • @michaelateplarkova3271
      @michaelateplarkova3271 Год назад +10

      so excited to see Czech here!:)

    • @Elsa-dt4ve
      @Elsa-dt4ve Год назад +11

      yes I was so excited when I was reading "czech" and then my smile just slowly disepeared when I didnt see slovak. but still happy to see our brothers ^^

    • @spiritofthewinds9089
      @spiritofthewinds9089 3 месяца назад +3

      Exactly my opinion! I've waited so long for Czechia to be in it, now I'm waiting for them to also add Slovakia! Would be so great. And much more interesting because they would have such a hell of a time guessing Czech and Slovak😅

  • @IUsedToBeAnAdventurerLikeYou
    @IUsedToBeAnAdventurerLikeYou 5 месяцев назад +21

    I’m currently learning Czech, Polish, and Russian. As soon as the first girl came in and said hello I got stupidly excited and started yelling “she’s Czech! She’s Czech!” At my phone. I think I scared my cats.

  • @AndRei-di1ox
    @AndRei-di1ox Год назад +464

    As a Belarusian I can say that I have a few questions in the last girl (Belarus). At the beginning she said "Pryvet" but it would be more correct to say "Pryvitańnie" or "pryvit" or just "vitaju", it would also be possible to say "Dobry dzień", Because there is no word "pryvet" in Belarusian, it is more like a mixture of Belarusian and Russian.
    Ukrainian will be closest to Belarusian, and Russian and Polish will be in second place, which are approximately equally close to Belarusian. The Belarusian language has its own history and vocabulary, which is larger than in Russian, the third statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was written on it, it used two alphabets: Latin and Cyrillic. But during the times of the Russian Empire and the USSR, Russification was carried out in Belarus, which caused great damage to the Belarusian culture and language. in 1933, the Soviet authorities carried out a reform of the Belarusian language in order to artificially bring it closer to Russian, as a result, there are now two variants of the Belarusian language:
    1) Classic Belarusian (before the reform of 1933)
    2) Official Belarusian (after the reform of 1933).
    Now the Belarusian language is not in the best condition, and the official Belarusian authorities are not interested in what state it is in. Russian Russian is mainly used by the authorities, and Belarusian is perceived as the language of the opposition, so it performs only a decorative function, and the president, once even resented the traffic sign in Belarusian, and said that it should be replaced with Russian. Therefore, the topic of language is very important to me and I am a little not pleased and sad that some Belarusians do not know Belarusian or mix it with Russian.
    In general, there are a couple more mistakes, for example, instead of the Belarusian "kava" she said "kafi", which is more like a strange mixture with the Russian "kofe".

    • @flea1985
      @flea1985 Год назад +114

      never give up on preserving Your culture and language - all the best from Poland!

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Год назад +2

      ¿Pero la chica no dijo que estaba hablando ruso?

    • @jorgecandeias
      @jorgecandeias Год назад +13

      @@ivanovichdelfin8797 Disse, mas não estava. Ela falou um belorrusso contaminado pelo russo.

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Год назад +1

      @@jorgecandeias Ahh, vale

    • @chrisa.4022
      @chrisa.4022 Год назад

      as a belarusian get your shit straight and start using your own language!

  • @GeorgeGzirishvili
    @GeorgeGzirishvili 10 месяцев назад +322

    - Borsch.
    - OK, it's not Ukraine.
    Bruh... I'm not even Ukrainian and I lowkey found this offensive. 😂

    • @tvm2209
      @tvm2209 6 месяцев назад +15

      Haha fr and the Ukrainian chick kept her poker face with laugh when she said that haha

    • @harti4876
      @harti4876 5 месяцев назад

      You say so rightly, it makes me sad, and I am a Ukrainian, as for me this girl is fixated on Russia, because Russia steals national moments from others and passes them off to the whole world as its own, like borscht, or vodka.

    • @Storm-cc3id
      @Storm-cc3id 4 месяца назад

      Потому что ты обиженка)

    • @KonradZ22
      @KonradZ22 2 месяца назад +1

      offensive is that you think barszcz jest wasz nie ma takiej opcji XD

    • @МакакаФілософ
      @МакакаФілософ Месяц назад +1

      Borsch is only Ukrainian meal. It was created when in russia only frogs lived 😂. Ukraine is oldest country

  • @GuzelKyrim-Ukraine
    @GuzelKyrim-Ukraine Год назад +218

    Ukrainian lady speaks kind of mixture of Ukrainian and Russian! We call it "Surzhik"! I say that confidently because I am native speaker of Ukrainian. Polish and Belarus languages are the most understandable to me. Belarus girl speaks kind of "Trasyanka" which is mixture of Belarus (the language is almost dead) and Russian!

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 11 месяцев назад +3

      What about Rusyn?

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 11 месяцев назад +23

      no she doesnt. she had one single word from russian in her speech. dont spread bs

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@lenas6246 You probably dont even speak any of those slavic languages. She sounded for me like a native Russian speaker who learned Ukrainian later, probably from East Ukraine or Kiev.

    • @viktorias63
      @viktorias63 11 месяцев назад

      ​​@@Denyo666*Kyiv

    • @elizabet9137
      @elizabet9137 11 месяцев назад +36

      @@Denyo666 If you want to be truly right, don't call Kyiv “Kiev”.
      "Kiev" is a Russianized name.

  • @Антон-ж1я4я
    @Антон-ж1я4я 11 месяцев назад +74

    As a native Belarusian speaker I'd like to say, that girl's level is something between B1-B2. Though this is the same for many belarusians.
    She doesn't speak Russian in this video, but she speakes belarusian with mistakes and even some made up words😅
    Also, the word "privet" or "pryvet" doesn't exist in Belarusian.
    I mean, it's not her fault, it's about the educational system.
    However I am very glad that Belarusian sounds here. Thank you Anastasia.

    • @Антон-ж1я4я
      @Антон-ж1я4я 11 месяцев назад +15

      For a native Belarusian speaker, her speech sounds like.
      Hola. Mei name is Anastasia.
      Today I also had a cahfeea.
      We have a muchogh (made up word) delicious potato.
      ..but the mostO famous is Draniki
      I really WILL like dark green
      I was put on with a white dress

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +13

      I hate these video's when they invite people to present their "native" language when they are not native speakers at all. It sounded for me that the Ukrainian is also a native Russian speaker who learned Ukrainian later. Also very weird that they never include the Russian language in all these Slavic language video's

    • @Антон-ж1я4я
      @Антон-ж1я4я 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@Denyo666 it's quite difficult to find someone who speaks fluent C2 Belarusian even in Belarus (in Korea it's almost Impossible).
      The situation with Belarusian language is similar to the situation with Gaelic Irish in Ireland.
      Still, Anastasia speaks Belarusian better than 80% of Belarusians.
      I also noticed the problem with the Ukrainian girl. Her pronounsiation is OK, but she confuses some words as well. But she was born in Crimea, so I am not surprised.

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Антон-ж1я4я Aah so they are in Korea? Didn't know that! Belarus is an amazing country, I speak Russian and I have been to Belarus and I really liked it. The food was amazing there, my wife is from Russia from the Moscow region and she said she didn't hear a different in accent between the people in Minsk and Moscow. But she can always tell when someone is from Ukraine when they speak Russian.

    • @Антон-ж1я4я
      @Антон-ж1я4я 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@Denyo666 in Minsk and other big cities most of people speak quite standard Russian, rarely using some specific Belarusian words such a "shufliadka", "burak"
      Belarusian land survived two waves of polonization and strong russification in 18-19 centuries and the Soviet era.
      For example my ancestors are from western Belarus and my Greatgrandmother spoke pure Belarusian, her daughter spoke mixed belarusian-russian language, her son (my grandfather) was forced to speak pure Russian when he moved to Minsk University back in 60s. Now as a result, my mother and uncle can't speak Belarusian.
      If someone wants to hear authentic belarusian they need to go to small towns and villages especially in the northern-west part of Belarus.
      You can hear ot from the old ladies here (for example at 7:05):
      ruclips.net/video/YFxYkhZW2qU/видео.htmlsi=aElX2HfsTi2aYA-k
      They use some Russian words though, which makes it more understandable for russian speaking people, but your wife will definitely hear the huge difference.

  • @kunegundabrunhildabrum-bru4306
    @kunegundabrunhildabrum-bru4306 Год назад +107

    I'm sad, bcs people from Belarus don't know Belarusian language. I mean I live one year with girl from Belarus and she know only Russian and she couldn't say anything in Belarusian. And she told me that nowadays people know only Russian and maybe older people know Belarusian at least partially. So I wish they will use their mother language or at least know both Belarusian and Russian and not only Russian. Poland wasn't on map for 123 years and we still use Polish language, so it's sad for me that Belarusian is going to stop existing in future.

    • @Brukc87
      @Brukc87 Год назад +18

      Щоби знати білоруську, треба забути російську.

    • @glebkhrapov6197
      @glebkhrapov6197 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@Brukc87не разумный вариант

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +2

      Not of your concern.

    • @kunegundabrunhildabrum-bru4306
      @kunegundabrunhildabrum-bru4306 11 месяцев назад

      @wr3t3tgetedxadge3fvzdqfgwr5gva maybe, but I am from east Poland and nowadays here is a lot of Belarusian people, they escaped to Poland, so maybe young generation see problem or at least more people than in older generations. I hope some people will learn Belarusian and pass to their children, so this language will not vanish.

    • @figard9855
      @figard9855 11 месяцев назад

      he can post an opinion online, couldnt he? @@Denyo666

  • @bull_n_se
    @bull_n_se 8 месяцев назад +21

    Excuse me, but the Belarusian girl speaks Belarusian slightly incorrectly. We don't say "Pryvyet" and we don't say "Cafye". I think it would be more correct to say “Vitayu” or “Pryvitanne”, and the coffee would be “Cava”. In Belarusian, the sound “Ya” is used in the pre-stress position and “Menya” turns into “Myane”. We don’t have the word “Adzho”, she probably wanted to say “Duzhe smachnaya bul'ba.” And some other small mistakes. Once again, sorry for my bias towards the girl😅

    • @WindRider1314
      @WindRider1314 2 месяца назад +1

      She was speaking in Trasyanka dialect (mix of russian and belarussian), Same as Ukrainian girl was speaking in Surzhyk (mixture of Ukrainian and russian)

  • @sunsettes
    @sunsettes 11 месяцев назад +20

    It might be just me, but i loved when polish girl kind of triggered when was about to say shes russian

    • @KaijuEdits875
      @KaijuEdits875 8 месяцев назад +1

      That makes no sense, your comment but she was joking

  • @Panyo_83
    @Panyo_83 10 месяцев назад +13

    As soon as Deni mentioned Švičkova, I knew that she was Czech.

  • @karpenka
    @karpenka Год назад +51

    This Ukrainian girl speaks Ukrainian with great difficulties. It seems she spoke Russian when she lived in Ukraine.
    Next time choose the Ukrainian-speaking girl.

    • @jaegerms
      @jaegerms 11 месяцев назад +5

      it's weird because she has a western accent

    • @TarikIAm
      @TarikIAm 3 месяца назад +3

      @@jaegerms аж ніяк !
      вона має російську звичку вимовляти "О" як "А"
      - так роблять лише російськомовні.

    • @zorgovenga
      @zorgovenga Месяц назад

      Or else what?

  • @isalutfi
    @isalutfi Год назад +39

    *Wow great! Slavic Languages here!*
    *East Slavic* : Belarus 🇧🇾, Ukraine 🇺🇦
    *West Slavic* : Poland 🇵🇱, Czech 🇨🇿
    *South Slavic ?*
    Slovene, Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Bulgaria

    • @Aldraz
      @Aldraz Год назад +6

      Imagine identifying between all of these nationalities.. would be level impossible even for slavs :D Also, btw you are missing some, like Slovakia.

    • @milbje
      @milbje Год назад +3

      South Slavic languages - Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian and North Macedonic. In Montenegro people speaks Serbian, in Bosnia Serbian and Croat. On Kosovo in use are Serbian and Albanian (not Slav language).

    • @mirekkisiel9719
      @mirekkisiel9719 Год назад +3

      3 language : Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, Bulgarian

    • @EddieReischl
      @EddieReischl Год назад +1

      Who knows? Maybe Draga will join in later.

    • @milbje
      @milbje Год назад

      @@mirekkisiel9719 You are right. I forgot Slovenian. My mistake.

  • @meliae.
    @meliae. Год назад +122

    As a Pole, Belarusian still remains the most intelligible to me out of this list, both semantically and phonetically, while Russian (and Bulgarian which is not here obviously) seems furthest from Polish, I tend to have a hard time understanding Russian in general.

    • @____5461
      @____5461 Год назад +18

      Hi, actually, Belarusian girl mixed a lot russian words there. There is a big comment above or below about that. But she is still great

    • @meliae.
      @meliae. Год назад +6

      @@____5461 yeah, true, but in general I’ve heard a bit of Belarusian before, so I kinda have associated my opinion with that as well 😀

    • @L1berty1776
      @L1berty1776 Год назад +1

      How about czech? Do you understand that or pieces like russian. For me its hard to understand polish except when i hear similar words and context.

    • @meliae.
      @meliae. Год назад +19

      @@L1berty1776 Czech and Polish are very tricky because even if it sounds similar, it usually has a completely different meaning. And Czech usually sounds more archaic to us in a way that they’re using specific words that we’d use like 200-300 years ago 😀 Not to mention the part when both of us find each other funny, haha! But I love Czech and the fact that they’ve kept our original Slavic long vowels that Polish unfortunately got rid of

    • @ThomasRoll-lo4fj
      @ThomasRoll-lo4fj Год назад +3

      @@meliae. There are at least several hundred false friends between Czech and Polish.

  • @siliqua4584
    @siliqua4584 11 месяцев назад +82

    As a Russian I feel a little awkward when someone confuses another Slavic language with Russian, because I hate it when it’s like Slavic=Russia I just want other Slavic cultures and languages to be more praised and receive more representation.
    Also vodka and borscht don’t mean Russia immediately. I mean borscht is definitely eastern Slavic , mostly Ukrainian.

    • @xawecki8149
      @xawecki8149 11 месяцев назад +8

      The only reason people are thinking right away about Russia is because it is the largest, the most significant and the best known Slavic country. Other Slavic countries in Europe are desperately trying to be considered "western" and thus people not very familiar with this area may get somehow confused, whereas Russia is very proud of her history, traditions and achievements (and so should be you), and never pretend to be something she's not. Similarly if you ask North or South American to name three countries in Europe, in 99% they say France, England and Italy. Nobody will start with Austria, Belgium or Finland for example. Let those other countries earn such prestige and importance and then perhaps people will start noticing them too.

    • @beasnoil3139
      @beasnoil3139 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@xawecki8149 my nie próbujemy być nikim innym niż Polakami, za to ty prezentujesz wzorową postawę pucownika rosyjskich chujów xD Rosja jest naszym naturalnym wrogiem, ale jak ktoś jak komentarz na który odpowiadasz zdaje sobie sprawę z tego że nie są najwspanialszym narodem świata to jest dużo bardziej wartościowym człowiekiem niż zdrajcy jak ty, ha tfu

    • @beasnoil3139
      @beasnoil3139 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@xawecki8149what should the current russians be proud of? Destroying their "brother" nations, genocide, disrupting global peace, poverty, or hiv?

    • @vaenii5056
      @vaenii5056 11 месяцев назад

      @@xawecki8149 What the heck you are on about. It's you who are ashamed of your history and traditions. An offshoot of the Mongol Empire where people have Slavic, Baltic, Uralic, Turkic and East Asian ancestry yet you insist being more Slavic than anyone else and bully people over it. That's like having an average white American claim they are more Anglo-Saxon than people in England or Wales.
      The Mongol Empire was a multiethnic Empire and if you start from the Grand Duchy of Moscow and then conquer everything in reverse it does not change the fact. Centuries of government led Russification and national insomnia do not change it either.

    • @DeanTzvetkov
      @DeanTzvetkov 10 месяцев назад +4

      As a Bulgarian I hate when they say that I'm speaking Russian))

  • @Taketheredpill891
    @Taketheredpill891 Год назад +54

    Inviting Belarusians person who don’t speak the Belarusian language.
    World Friends ☕

    • @SiarheiSiamashka
      @SiarheiSiamashka Год назад +3

      She did. But not at a perfect native speaker level.

    • @pinagrrrr2280
      @pinagrrrr2280 День назад

      Today Belarusian suffers Russification, so you can’t blame the girl but your own people for choosing Lukashenko.

  • @sylwiapuzewicz7815
    @sylwiapuzewicz7815 Год назад +65

    Let's go Poland!!!!!!!!🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱

    • @kushin5212
      @kushin5212 11 месяцев назад +4

      Polska Gurom

    • @Azotador_de_peruANOS
      @Azotador_de_peruANOS 11 месяцев назад

      🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🇵🇱 🏳️‍🌈 💩 💩 💩

    • @wojtulacehoe5089
      @wojtulacehoe5089 11 месяцев назад +4

      POLAND STRONC

  • @petrpinc7695
    @petrpinc7695 Год назад +11

    To video: As a Czech I had this one a easier. First girl same language as me. The second and third girls I guessed correctly based simply on their facial structures alone. If it wasn't bellow, I wouldn't be able to differentiate from Belarussian and Russian.
    My experience: A online group I am part of had a meeting IRL. When we were guessing who is who, based on our speech in English, my Czech accent was confusing for most and they were guessing I am maybe one of the southern Germans. French guys had the most problems understanding me and to be honest I barely understood one from the north-west France. He had the most sterotypically Frenchiest-French accent one can speak in. Funnily, the rest of the French guys also barely understood him.

  • @Emmas375
    @Emmas375 Год назад +23

    The Belarusian girl is speaking poor Belarusian. Although people in Belarus speak 2 languages for the ‘purity’ of the linguistic guess experiment you should have found somebody speaking better Belarusian, it sounds like Polish and Ukrainian in vocab and pronunciation…

    • @Pes_patron.
      @Pes_patron. 10 месяцев назад

      Ти ще спробу знайти таку людину.

    • @techgregory5253
      @techgregory5253 7 месяцев назад

      @@Pes_patron. я тут

  • @kilanspeaks
    @kilanspeaks Год назад +24

    I’m Indonesian, our languages are worlds apart from Slavic languages but I was gobsmacked when I heard the numbers 😮 Due to Hindu-Buddhist influence, we’re also familiar with Sanskrit numerals on top our own, so I was amazed that they’re very similar with the numbers spoken in this video. The Proto-Indo-European language connections can be clearly observed here!

    • @xawecki8149
      @xawecki8149 11 месяцев назад

      There is a reason why we call it Indo-European group of languages...😊 Look for Sir William Jones to learn more about this subject.

    • @zepeterinma
      @zepeterinma 10 месяцев назад

      You're right, and in Hindi the word for 5 is also panch almost just like slavic

  • @Postat-tk1vo
    @Postat-tk1vo Год назад +109

    Запрашваць дзяўчыну якая валодае акурат трасянкаю, а не моваю - то дрэнна. Выбачце, але шмат русыфікаваных словаў ад яе, што якраз паказвае які зараз ўплыў на беларусаў ад Расеі😊

    • @КепськийЗайменник
      @КепськийЗайменник Год назад +20

      Це вельми журливо

    • @Wyraxx
      @Wyraxx 11 месяцев назад +5

      думаю дуже важко в Кореї знайти білоруса який говорить не суржиком - наслідок асиміляції

    • @A-speed
      @A-speed 8 месяцев назад +1

      Russian Russians and Ukrainians are not "Russified" - they are Russians who speak dialects of the Russian language.

    • @NergalMDL
      @NergalMDL 8 месяцев назад

      Змагарское хрюканье это не беларусский язык.

    • @БориславСвидан-и5ф
      @БориславСвидан-и5ф 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@A-speed Почему-то этих диалектов не существовало пока русские не научили этих русских говорить на русском. В основном насильно, по какой-то причине запрещая литературу на их языках. Украинские книги на украинском же языке и вовсе почему-то анафеме некоторое время предавали

  • @skyflower2572
    @skyflower2572 Год назад +29

    🇨🇿 Ahoooj Denisko !!!!!!
    I really enjoyed this video + nice expirace to hear Belarussian
    I have never listen this language (maybe once) but I'm really glad that I heard it
    🇵🇱 Nice come back Monica - I remember her by her name 😅

    • @____5461
      @____5461 Год назад +7

      Please, Belarusian with only one S).
      Also it wasn't pure Belarusian, more like mix of Belarusian and Russian. After all, our language has a long history of repressions till the very day and Belarusian is almost never used in cities

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 Год назад +3

      It is not Belarusian.

  • @flavio-viana-gomide
    @flavio-viana-gomide Год назад +32

    Man, the languages are very different from my language Portuguese.
    You will explode my heart with these women! ❤🤯
    All of them are very beautiful.

  • @majinboo2549
    @majinboo2549 Год назад +41

    It’s better not to invite Belarusians who don’t speak the Belarusian language, otherwise it’s cringe.

    • @maksimkempe3425
      @maksimkempe3425 Год назад +6

      In fact, she did speak Belarusian language, which is obviously isn't her native language. That's why she also used couple Russian words and spoke with distinctive Russian accent.
      Unfortunately, native Belarussian speakers are the minority in Belarus.

    • @viktorias63
      @viktorias63 11 месяцев назад

      ​@wr3t3tgetedxadge3fvzdqfgwr5gvathat's not true

    • @Pes_patron.
      @Pes_patron. 10 месяцев назад +1

      Бро, знайти таку людину , яка добре володіє білоруською , на мою думку не так просто.

    • @hannablvd
      @hannablvd 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@Pes_patron. я. вось вы мяне і знайшлі. у гэтым годзе паеду на рэспубліканскую алімпіяду па беларускай мове. Каб вы ведалі, тых, хто размаўляе па-беларуску, стала значна больш пасля падзей 2020 года і 2022 года. асабліва за мяжой вы знойдзеце многа беларускамоўных людзей. На жаль, у Беларусі тых, хто спрабуе размаўляць на роднай мове знішчае сама дзяржава і грамадства

    • @hannablvd
      @hannablvd 9 месяцев назад +4

      @KGBkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbk мая родная мова беларуская. так, большасць размаўляе па-расейску, але нават тых, хто лічыць беларускую мову сваёй роднай вельмі многа. цяпер я бачу, што многія яе любяць і вучаць. у мяне ёсць беларускамоўныя сябры

  • @flavio-viana-gomide
    @flavio-viana-gomide Год назад +35

    One issue for the channel: I know is hard to find someone from every country, but if you put Belarussian person, she or he must speak the native language.
    If the person doesn't speak it, Belarussian people will get mad at you.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +5

      I guess it's hard to find a speaker of language which nobody uses. No offense, but just deal with facts. It can be hard even to find an Ukrainian speaker who can really speak Ukrainian. That's why it is so tricky to distinguish these 3 languages.

    • @stacy264
      @stacy264 Год назад +2

      Belarusian Anastasiya spoke precisely in the national language and at the end she just clarified that she also knows Russian

    • @maksimkempe3425
      @maksimkempe3425 Год назад +5

      @@Pidalin You were just unlucky with Ukrainians that you've met. However, it's definitely harder to find native Belarussian-speaking person. They are rare breed nowadays (my grandfather was one of them).

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +2

      @@maksimkempe3425 Well, most of those ukrainian workers who are here since 90s are from eastern Ukraine I guess, so it kind of makes sense. In west, economical situation is maybe better, so we don't see them as workers that often.

    • @ledkicker2392
      @ledkicker2392 Год назад +3

      @@stacy264 she spoke mostly in Belarusian, but she injected a couple of Russian words and didn't remember how to say 'coffee'

  • @tomekville7
    @tomekville7 11 месяцев назад +8

    Wow when Czech girl says sweater (2.20) sounds 200% like polish !!

    • @vrbka2692
      @vrbka2692 9 месяцев назад +1

      Měla říct řeřicha. Nebo třistatřicettři stříbrných stříkaček stříkalo přes třistatřicettři stříbrných střech. 😊

  • @boochica
    @boochica Год назад +96

    Im surprised how Americans get affected by using “ wrong pronouns ” and not being ashamed to call Ukrainian people and national dishes- russian .

    • @tsd74
      @tsd74 Год назад +11

      stop cry

    • @EddieReischl
      @EddieReischl Год назад +2

      What we discovered during the pandemic is that this multi-gender theology seems to be the primary subject taught in American schools. Home schooling is becoming a popular option for those Americans that can afford it.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +12

      @@uchexo It's not about american education, it's just about Russians stole their culture and people just can't know something is originaly from Ukraine when all movies show it as a Russian thing. I think it's mainly fault of popculture where everything slavic is russian and everything russian is slavic.
      I am Czech and before war, nobody knew there is a difference between russians and ukrainians and still, we can't distinguish between them. I know they will be angry, but they look the same, speak the same and their culture looks the same for us, so how can they want from americans to recognize them when even as a Czech I can't distinguish them?
      It's the same even with Africa, in movies, there is just Egypt and rest of Africa, but it's a really big continent, so I guess there must be massive differences.

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 11 месяцев назад

      why choose her for the video then@@CactusGirl-x7f

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 11 месяцев назад

      ok you are slovak then@@Pidalin

  • @aleskosir2727
    @aleskosir2727 10 месяцев назад +7

    Czech sound so nice. Greetings from Slovenia

  • @sk.lat10n
    @sk.lat10n 11 месяцев назад +74

    Borshch is a ukrainian national dish!

    • @elenapovarova4201
      @elenapovarova4201 8 месяцев назад +8

      It’s a slavic national dish

    • @AntoninaNetik
      @AntoninaNetik 7 месяцев назад

      ні, це українська національна страва, не присвоюйте її собі, ви маєте щі@@elenapovarova4201

    • @ISupportGenoZidrusni
      @ISupportGenoZidrusni 6 месяцев назад +9

      @@elenapovarova4201 no, in 2022 it was added as intangible cultural heritage of UNESCO as ukrainian dish
      So you are wrong, it's ukrainian

    • @АрчибальтРомуальдович-м7ы
      @АрчибальтРомуальдович-м7ы 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@ISupportGenoZidrusni lol unesco experts

    • @ISupportGenoZidrusni
      @ISupportGenoZidrusni 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@АрчибальтРомуальдович-м7ы xD
      You even don't know, what unesco does xD. There are no experts in unesco xD

  • @dramatqueen
    @dramatqueen Год назад +61

    OMG, she didn't know that vodka is the most famous polish invention! Outrageous! 😁😉

    • @azarishiba2559
      @azarishiba2559 Год назад +11

      I discovered this year that fact when I met a Polish girl in Japan n_ñU In my defense, I know nothing about liquors, since I BARELY drink those. I don't know if that is an actual wide misconception, I need to ask some of my fellow Costa Ricans where do they think Vodka come in order to verify it.
      Uczę się polskiego, ale nie możę mówić po polsku. I tried to write it from memory, so I don't know if I mistake in something XD XD Greetings from Costa Rica, ¡Pura Vida!

    • @maksimwiszniow9
      @maksimwiszniow9 Год назад +7

      Vodka is not the most famous polish invention.

    • @JesusMagicPanties
      @JesusMagicPanties Год назад +1

      @@maksimwiszniow9 Talking about vodka as a "Polish invention" is the same as talking about wine, beer or, for example, the wheel as the invention of a particular person or nation - and is simply a display of stupidity and ignorance. The oldest find that proves the use of distillation is a vessel for performing the process from Mesopotamia (Tepe Gawra) dating back to 3500 BC.
      Brakuje, żeby się okazało , że dumni Polacy to nawet wibratory i berety z antenką wynaleźli.

    • @Paolo-gj7ip
      @Paolo-gj7ip 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@JesusMagicPantiesTell the same to the Irish/Scottish about whisk(e)y. 🤣 Wine is a Georgian invention. And the oldest image of the wheel (actually even of a 4-wheeled carriage) as well as the oldest tools for making cheese have been found in Poland.😛

    • @Paolo-gj7ip
      @Paolo-gj7ip 11 месяцев назад

      * Polish

  • @VVishq
    @VVishq Год назад +35

    The unfortunate truth about why it is hard to distinguish Ukrainian and Russian, is because many of Ukrainians only recently started to switch to the Ukrainian fully. They have accents that make a melodic language sound harsher than it should. It is a tragedy, since the two languages are distinguishly /not/ alike.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +1

      That's what I am saying all the time, they don't make it easier for us to distinguish them and they are angry when we say that because of today stupid war with russia. For me as Czech, only hint is H sound in Ukrainian and ETO in Russian, everything else sounds totaly the same to me. Sometimes I was sure that it's Ukrainian and it was Russian or vice versa, everything very depends on actual speaker and his accent. But that's the same even with Czech, speakers from Bohemia sound totaly different than someone from Moravia or Silesia.

    • @user-4j5nv8dgiUd
      @user-4j5nv8dgiUd Год назад +6

      @@Pidalin As a Ukrainian, not agree. There are many differences between Ukrainian and russian phonetic . They cannot pronounce many Ukrainian words, for example "palyanytsia" (the sort of Ukrainian bread), "zaliznytsya" (railway), "spindnytsya" (skirt) etc 🙂

    • @VVishq
      @VVishq 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@Pidalin This dynamic will change with years, trust me :). And if you'd heard the Western Ukraine's speakers, you'd instantly notice a distinctive difference.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@VVishq you have to realize that for people who don't speak Ukrainian nor Russian, there is no distinctive difference

    • @VVishq
      @VVishq 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@Pidalin I know :). Because most of what people in the world hear of Slavic languages is ruskies one, and because Belarusian and Ukrainian language were heavily infused with ruskies one because of loooong history of occupation, it does sound pretty similar. This will change in a few decades though, which is a positive thing.
      For example Czech and Polish that were less affected by russification, have more profound and distinguished accent even when they name the same word.

  • @Dylan-q9l2v
    @Dylan-q9l2v 7 месяцев назад +42

    Pierogi 🥟🥟🥟🇵🇱 ukraine, that’s like saying Pizza… spanish 💀

    • @h2unted0
      @h2unted0 3 месяца назад +1

      bro, you used a dumplings emoji, so dumplings is actually from Ukraine💀

    • @ardagne3204
      @ardagne3204 3 месяца назад +5

      @@h2unted0bro what, pierogi are a kind of dumplings, most cultures have some sort of dumplings

    • @noii1524
      @noii1524 2 месяца назад +1

      Both pierogi and varenyky are basically the same thing and both are a huge part of their country's culture, so she's not that far off

    • @saszablaze1
      @saszablaze1 Месяц назад

      erm. no, pierogi are slavic. vodka is slavic. but from poland. borscht is slavic. from ukraine.

    • @1234567qwerification
      @1234567qwerification 24 дня назад

      But pierogi sounds almost like russian "пироги" which is a different thing 😂

  • @elaisamisstery1577
    @elaisamisstery1577 Год назад +35

    cheers Ukrainians returned to this channel, thank you

  • @mrsmartypants4541
    @mrsmartypants4541 2 месяца назад +5

    I can't help but laugh when a Czech says "Ahoy". They are a landlocked country and speak like pirates, what's that about?

    • @KyriusVeritis
      @KyriusVeritis 7 часов назад +2

      Hello, I'm Czech so I can help with this so you can shine on parties, telling all your friends random facts about Czech language, because who doesn't love that? (I have a couple more facts if anyone wants extra luck with irresistible flirting at the bar.)
      "Ahoj" is a latin abbreviation and is a greeting meaning "Ad HOnorem Jesu" / "Ad Honorem Orderes Jesu" = "Glory to Jesus". In Czech republic paddling is a very popular sport, very very popular and this SAILOR greeting, not pirate actually, but sailor (that was used to greet boats passing by, wishing them good luck and protection with this abbreviation, something like "Jesus be with you!") PROBABLY got here with paddling that was creating a very friendly and informal collective, taking some phrases from sailors!
      During the time that Czech republic was a part of Austro-Hungarian monarchy (1867-1918), a lot of Czechs were joining their military service in Austro-Hungarian marine actually! (According to one Czech military historian I'm currently reading books from, up to 10% of their marine were Czechs). So another connection with this greeting MIGHT be influenced by that. My grandfather was a very different generation, obviously, but he was working as a sailor as well in the 1960's actually, some Czechs were doing this job even this late.
      Hope this helps and take it with a grain of salt, etymology is tricky and some words have vague origin, leaving a lot of space for assumptions and legends to be created!

  • @Ur_fav_D3ath
    @Ur_fav_D3ath 3 месяца назад +3

    The czech girls face when the Britt said "i dont think its czech republic"😭

  • @slimetyphoon
    @slimetyphoon Год назад +29

    Самыя распаўсюджаныя вітанкі на беларускай мове гэта “Вітаю” і “Прывітанне”. “Прывет” у бел мове не існуе

    • @SiarheiSiamashka
      @SiarheiSiamashka Год назад +4

      Або "дзень добры" як на 5:56. Мне нават спачатку падалося, што гэта была беларуска. Адзін з маіх сваякоў заўсёды казаў "дзень добры ў вашу хату", калі прыходзіў да нас у госці 🙂

    • @slimetyphoon
      @slimetyphoon Год назад

      @@SiarheiSiamashka дакладна

    • @АлександрСемёнов-ч9ч
      @АлександрСемёнов-ч9ч 5 месяцев назад

      С каких пор в Белоруссии говорят на белорусском?

  • @msciwojstalkiewicz9510
    @msciwojstalkiewicz9510 Год назад +9

    "Guess nationality by language" challenge.
    *speaks Italian*
    "Nope, sorry, Switzerland."
    Seriously? That was a cheap shot.

  • @Onnarashi
    @Onnarashi Год назад +55

    I felt a bit bad about the Ukrainian girl, considering current events, and the fact that borscht is internationally recognised as Ukrainian heritage. Similar with vodka and pierogi regarding Poland, given Poland's history. Both are originally Polish, and Poland has a very turbulent history with Russia.

    • @mirekkisiel9719
      @mirekkisiel9719 Год назад +6

      Why ? Many people in ukriane speak Russian language. Its normal

    • @kyrylopysanets9186
      @kyrylopysanets9186 Год назад +35

      @@mirekkisiel9719 This is not normal, I hope the next generation will all speak Ukrainian

    • @Taketheredpill891
      @Taketheredpill891 Год назад +7

      @@kyrylopysanets9186 Next generation will speak Russian, Russia will win in Ukraine

    • @moykumir
      @moykumir Год назад +14

      @@Taketheredpill891 россия исчезнет в следующем году, как исчез советский союз. а русский язык останется, но не принадлежит россиянам

    • @rusoiob5946
      @rusoiob5946 Год назад +1

      ​@@Taketheredpill891in your wet dreams, little goblin

  • @Ice_V
    @Ice_V Год назад +8

    Zdravím Denisu! 🤗Finally smn from Česká republika😁Greetings to Denisa! Hope to see you more here❤🇨🇿

  • @sabe0505
    @sabe0505 Год назад +84

    Polish sounds the best to my non-Slavic ears. I hope one day I can learn more about this language.

    • @gerohubner5101
      @gerohubner5101 Год назад +5

      You can surely learn more ABOUT Polish, but better not try to learn Polish...

    • @maniek-pp4hg
      @maniek-pp4hg Год назад +5

      From a Pole's perspective, Polish sounds the best to my ears.😅😅
      But I would learn one sentence in each of these languages, so it's a simple task for me. The problem will appear with Belarusian and Ukrainian, but I will also distinguish them.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +5

      They pronounce their softened Z like in French and they have nasal sounds, that's why it sounds more romance than slavic. But even other slavic languages have that French like softened Z, our Ž in Czech doesn't sound that French.

    • @vojtechjanca9053
      @vojtechjanca9053 Год назад +2

      @@maniek-pp4hg From a Czech's perspective, every time I hear Polish my ears starts bleeding. Sorry I like you guys.

    • @Paolo-gj7ip
      @Paolo-gj7ip 11 месяцев назад

      Congratultions! May I ask, how old are you?😁

  • @farvix6490
    @farvix6490 8 месяцев назад +4

    Its so weird watching this as a person from Poland. I guess all of them after like 5 words

  • @youaregonnalikeme3882
    @youaregonnalikeme3882 2 месяца назад +2

    As a Polish, Czechs are so different with sounds.... Language maybe seems to be similair, but their sound is really so strange to other slavic language... thats why i always recognize Czechs.

  • @novh4ck
    @novh4ck 4 месяца назад +3

    I looked up Jane the Virgin and it's obvious why Britt didn't recongnize Czech. :D Czech language in that series is spoken by non native speakers with an extremely strong accent. Almost sounds more like Russian than Czech.

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 12 дней назад

      At least she didn't get her Czech recognition from Deus Ex: Mankind Divided 😅

  • @Lumperator
    @Lumperator Год назад +6

    I love beauty of belarusian girl! So pretty! Regards from Poland.

  • @ukrainer7723
    @ukrainer7723 Год назад +23

    Ok, I would like to change my mind from the other video featuring Ukrainian from this girl. It is obvious she has been speaking Russian before (and yes, they indicated that in the video), but she switched to Ukrainian nowadays, we all know why. Good job, Elizaveta! You have a way to go) I guess, you know already, but "depends" is "залежить", not "зависить". :)

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ye same for the Belarusian girl.

    • @viktorias63
      @viktorias63 11 месяцев назад +3

      Glad to see Ukrainians coming back home, leaving occupier language behind.

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@viktorias63 You mean the language the language they always spoke when they were born before the war? People are so dumb, a language doesn't have to do anything with war lol. It's not like Russia came and forced people to speak Russian lol

    • @viktorias63
      @viktorias63 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@Denyo666 lol sure they don't
      That's why when Russian territorists started to occupy Ukraine, the first thing they did is change the name of the cities in to Russian and banned Ukrainian language. Because language doesn't matter, definitely never did.

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад

      @@viktorias63 You are an idiot, they already spoke Russian since the collapse of the soviet union not recently. I know many Ukrainians who speak Russian as their native language, they also know Ukrainian now. But doesn't change the fact that they speak Russian since birth when there was no war. You are not so smart

  • @jankajdziepavioscy
    @jankajdziepavioscy Год назад +33

    Навошта запрашаць дзяўчо, у якой узровень беларускай мовы ніжэй сярэдняга? Яна ёй не карыстаецца ў штодзённым жыцьці, зачапіце каля сэрца ёй сьцяг іншай краіны.
    Навошта прыдумляць нейкія Прывет/прывіт, няма гэтых словаў у беларускай мове, ёсьць Вітаю/вітанкі/добры дзень/дабрыдзень.
    Кафі? Таксама стрэл у іншы бок. Кава.
    Якая ў яе бульба? Аджу (гэта якая мова?) смачная? Можа Вельмі/дужа/надта/занадта?
    Наиболее - зноў памылка - Найбольш.
    Яна не валодае беларускай мовай, зразумелі, але ёсьць перакладчыкі, слоўнікі, чаму нельга выправіць памылкі ў цітрах?
    Наапошку. Вымаўленьне Belarusian - гучыць як Беларусіэн (b ɛ l əˈ ɹ u ː s i . ə n). Судзячы па ўсім, з ангельскай мовай таксама ёсьць цяжкасьці.

    • @ledkicker2392
      @ledkicker2392 Год назад +7

      Мабыць у Карэі не так проста знайсці беларусак. Хоць так беларуская мова прысутнічае, але дзяўчына няхай лепей рыхтуецца да наступных відэа

    • @griffithmov
      @griffithmov 11 месяцев назад +2

      Згодны на 100%, але хто не ведае беларускую мову, не пачуе вялiкай рознiцы. Лепш будзе хтосьтi, хто размаўляе па-беларуску як вучань 5 класу, чым не будзе анiякiх людзей з нашай краiны.

    • @authari11
      @authari11 7 месяцев назад +1

      Чому ви дивуєтесь. Відео зроблено не для "славіків". Відібрали гарненьких дівчат, щоби аудіторія була задоволена. Не заважайте людині грошей заробити)) Ще тре розуміти, що вона не дуже така собі лінгвістка, просто цікавиться мовами.Не можемо від неї чекати якогось наукової методики. Вона вправна, всі оті наші свари - свари папуасів про діалекти суахілі))

  • @zuzelstein
    @zuzelstein 2 месяца назад

    Actually it was entertaining, I was rooting for her and laughed imagining comments when she eliminated Ukraine because of borscht. Really enjoyed watching this. Kudos to Britt!

  • @RJ-mz3co
    @RJ-mz3co Год назад +27

    "dzień dobry" and "pierogi" are immediate giveaways for Polish.

    • @SiarheiSiamashka
      @SiarheiSiamashka Год назад +3

      I find it interesting that "dzień dobry" at 5:56 sounds like a perfect Belarusian greeting "дзень добры" with perfect Belarusian pronunciation. I actually expected Polish "dz" to have a bit different sound.

  • @emili9861
    @emili9861 Год назад +7

    finally there are no European countries like france, italy, germany, spain, usa , japan , vietnam and other👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @Onnarashi
      @Onnarashi Год назад +4

      USA, Japan and Vietnam are in Europe?

    • @emili9861
      @emili9861 Год назад

      @@Onnarashi dont hang on every word, *and other countries that were here* 👋🏻👋🏻

  • @jasonw3055
    @jasonw3055 Год назад +8

    Belarussian girl is very beautiful

  • @ArcasBelissari
    @ArcasBelissari Год назад +18

    Anastasia is actually a Greek name but it became very common in Slavic countries due to Orthodox Christianity.

    • @ukrainer7723
      @ukrainer7723 Год назад +9

      Almost every common name are Greek, Jewish or Latin, so...

  • @onnanob
    @onnanob 2 месяца назад +1

    This would be difficult for us unfamiliar, because there are so many Slavic countries: Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine, Belarus, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Russia.

  • @siarheimarchyk8718
    @siarheimarchyk8718 10 месяцев назад +6

    Я белорус. И для меня самые понятные языки- польский и украинский. Русский язык- самый непохожий из всех славянских языков

    • @poohoff
      @poohoff 9 месяцев назад

      Ага, конечно

    • @authari11
      @authari11 7 месяцев назад +1

      Вы почитайте Афанасия Никитина (научные издания). Он спокойно переходит на татарский. Все расияне (московиты) до Петра Терибля на нем говорили. Так и в Бларуси и Украине все понимают русский. Но говорить на русском в Украине уже зашквар - язык оккупанта. Мы то вас понимаем. И друг друга. А вы нет. Только суржик, который считаете исходным украиским и беларуским. Живите дальше в своих заблуждениях. Это помогает нам на войне.@@poohoff

    • @jdhsga
      @jdhsga 6 месяцев назад

      Це тому що він вигаданий. Зліплений з бідної московської мови і мов сусідніх народів

    • @WindRider1314
      @WindRider1314 2 месяца назад +1

      Wow, I thought russian and belarussian languages are the most similar

  • @johnchen3599
    @johnchen3599 2 месяца назад +3

    It’s nice to hear the Belarusian
    It’s an endangered language 😢😢😢

  • @loraivanova8635
    @loraivanova8635 Год назад +18

    I'm a Bulgarian which means recognizing and understanding Slavic languages is easier for me and still I feel like this challenge was difficult. I could easily distinguish East Slavic languages from West Slavic languages but nothing more. The American girl did a good job for somebody who isn't familiar with these languages.

    • @bobstone0
      @bobstone0 Год назад

      Northern Slavic xDDDD

    • @loraivanova8635
      @loraivanova8635 Год назад

      @@bobstone0 Okay, are they called East Slavic languages?

    • @bobstone0
      @bobstone0 Год назад

      @@loraivanova8635 xd

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +3

      Czech girl made it more difficult because she speaks in something we could call a woman accent or something (mostly girls speak like that, I don't know why, it's that accent which phone sellers and such people have to bother you even more), she sounded much more soft and eastern than average Czech speaker should sound.

  • @karlesia
    @karlesia Год назад +27

    She said Chopin and Lewandowski and I was like, yeah thats it she's going to guess it right now but...🫥
    How can you not know Chopin or Lewandowski, I thought they were pretty famous

    • @pankeriot940
      @pankeriot940 Год назад +2

      she's from US

    • @CMV314
      @CMV314 Год назад +4

      @@pankeriot940 What does that have to do with it? I'm American, and most everyone I know is familiar with Chopin.

    • @pankeriot940
      @pankeriot940 Год назад +1

      @@CMV314 With him maybe, but certainly not Lewandowski

    • @Paolo-gj7ip
      @Paolo-gj7ip 11 месяцев назад +2

      She spoke "Chopin" out Polish way ("Szopen"), not French. Do you know one star of American football?

    • @misko7482
      @misko7482 11 месяцев назад +4

      forget about chopin and lewandowski - no american would have clue, but pierogi? come on, there is something wrong with that girl....

  • @daryakruhlyak
    @daryakruhlyak 11 месяцев назад +8

    How many traditional attributes stereotypically are counted to russia, that actually isn't their. Hopefully such videos breaks such stereotypes

    • @hawkins347
      @hawkins347 8 месяцев назад

      That's because those bastards steal everything.

  • @pinagrrrr2280
    @pinagrrrr2280 День назад +1

    Do Americans really thinks that Russian has something to do with their portrait in the movies? And then the other Slavic languages are harsh?
    Really? Bcs I actually find the Greek the most feminine language and then the Russian and the other Slavic are quite soft and the Germanic are harsh and masculine.
    I am not referring to English pronunciation.

  • @VladyslavaTarhonia
    @VladyslavaTarhonia Год назад +19

    How could she be so serious saying she’s not Ukrainian after girl mentioned bortsch…

    • @VladyslavaTarhonia
      @VladyslavaTarhonia Год назад +12

      I’ve just finished watching and she’s so obsessed with Russia omg. She literally went with Russian for everyone😭

    • @Hubert_G
      @Hubert_G Год назад

      @@VladyslavaTarhonia Well.Its biggest slavic country so she had biggest chance to guess it

    • @lunabkl
      @lunabkl Год назад

      how is she supposed to know? these comments are so salty over such an innocent video. touch some grass

    • @Saverio_Simone_Marino
      @Saverio_Simone_Marino Год назад

      Well i know that for slavs always being confused for russians Is bad, but i would guess that borsht outside of eastern europe Is not that known🤷 ( as an Italian i also never heard of It honestly)

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +4

      because russians stole your culture and nobody knows that bortsch has something to do with ukraine

  • @joebaxter6895
    @joebaxter6895 11 месяцев назад +8

    I'm honestly impressed an American GenZer even knows these countries exist so she gets all the points from me.

  • @lexisasha
    @lexisasha Год назад +35

    this video is a great example of russian imperialism and colonization policy. they have so strongly appropriated the cultural features of other Slavic countries that this girl could not help but think about russia.
    too much russia in a video without russia 😒

    • @Lon1b
      @Lon1b Год назад

      Ты чиканутая грузинка, что россия себе присвоила ?
      Северный кавказ не считает вас кавказцами, вас считают цыганами из ирана. Смотри про свои языки, а к славянам не лезь.

    • @Lon1b
      @Lon1b Год назад +5

      И вообще ты че забыла в славянских языках как будто тебя это касается.

    • @Colorcircle
      @Colorcircle Год назад +5

      Russia is the largest country in the world. Of course the first thought is about Russia

    • @achmed-machachev
      @achmed-machachev Год назад +2

      pig squeak

    • @lexisasha
      @lexisasha Год назад

      @@Lon1b якраз мене стосується на всі 100 відсотків

  • @tinifromthebloc2797
    @tinifromthebloc2797 20 дней назад +2

    The reason why the Czech from Jane the Virgin didn't sound like Deni's Czech is because the TV show didn't actually use Czech actors and it was not authentic language at all, it was extremely infuriating for a Czech person to watch😅

  • @samprase1268
    @samprase1268 Год назад +10

    She went with Russian on all 4 lol

    • @Denyo666
      @Denyo666 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ukrainian girl and Belarusian girl are native Russian speakers, as a Russian speaker myself I could hear that with their mistakes.

    • @MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter
      @MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter 9 месяцев назад

      your stupid, she ruled it out on the first

  • @BloodySilverAMV
    @BloodySilverAMV 4 месяца назад +1

    Czech is the only language from the Slavic branch that stands out and sounds different, as it was influenced by countries from the Germáb branch such as Austria and Germany

    • @teq_nix
      @teq_nix 3 месяца назад

      tak naprawdę jest inny z tego powodu, że jest językiem sztucznym wymyślonym na potrzeby narodu, który z powodu germanizacji zapomniał swojego prawdziwego języka. Dlatego zawiera słowa ogólnosłowiańskie w dodatku często używane w formie archaicznej dla pozostałych języków.

    • @vermull19
      @vermull19 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@teq_nixTo není pravda. Česky mluvila většina populace i v době, kdy zde byla jen úřední němčina. To, jak čeština zní, nemá s národním obrozením nic společného. Co muselo být obnoveno, byla psaná forma jazyka, neboť již neexistovala jednotná pravidla a každý si proto psal, jak se mu zlíbilo (používali se regionální výrazy, kterým druzí nerozumněli, někteří psali postaru-spřežky jako v polšině, někteří ponovu-Husova diakritika či-li jako v dnešní češtině a někteří to kombinovali). Poslední, kdo se staral o udržení jakési formy češtiny byli Jezuité, ale ti se v 18.stol. znelíbili papežovi a tak je Marie Terezie coby správná katolička vyhnala, čímž nepřímo dovršila zánik psané češtiny a tak její syn definitivně zavedl němčinu jako jediný úřední jazyk a zakázal na úřadech používání češtiny. Národní obrozenci se v reakci na to snažili dát psané češtině jednotnou formu a zasadit se o obnovení češtiny jakožto úředního jazyka. Puristé se rozhodli nahradit i některé germanismy, to je pravda. Něco se ujalo něco ne. (Šnuptychl měl být nahrazen Čistonosoplenou, teď se používá spíše Kapesník, Klavír měl být Klapkobřinkostrojem což se vůbec neujalo, Ajznboňák je Železničářem či Flaška Lahví, to jsou dnes nadále synonyma, atd.)

  • @Free_Ukraine_2014
    @Free_Ukraine_2014 11 месяцев назад +10

    why do you show at 5:03 Ukrainian and Russian flags? Elizaveta speaks Ukrainian here and that is why here should be only a Ukrainian flag (even if she knows Russian, because you don't put French or Korean flags to American girl, you put only American flag at her independently of her knowledge base)

    • @MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter
      @MysticThePRO-CoTWHunter 9 месяцев назад

      I think because she could be Half

    • @WindRider1314
      @WindRider1314 2 месяца назад +1

      Mb she was speaking in a dialect of Ukrainian language called Surzhyk, it's a mixture of russian and Ukrainian, same as Belarussian girl was speaking in Trasyanka, mix of Belarussian and russian language

  • @FF-wl1oo
    @FF-wl1oo 7 месяцев назад +1

    I can imagine this is hard for an American. It's like bringing 4 people from Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam and guessing who's who.

  • @karpenka
    @karpenka Год назад +9

    Please, tell Belarussian girl, when there are two state languages, you must speak both. But not to choose.

    • @karpenka
      @karpenka Год назад

      @wr3t3tgetedxadge3fvzdqfgwr5gva 😢😢😢😢🙏🙏🙏

    • @orangevietnam5380
      @orangevietnam5380 Год назад +7

      It's mush better to only speak Belarusian, Russian is everywhere

  • @mayurPdoffical
    @mayurPdoffical 6 месяцев назад +1

    🇨🇿 Czech Republic, you stole my heart! #travel #wanderlust

  • @quiquiqui
    @quiquiqui 11 месяцев назад +4

    yeah, the Czech in Jane the Virgin had very little to do with the actual Czech language... It was like the writers just google translated some sentences from English to Czech and went with it :D

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow 11 месяцев назад

      The quest for Czech comprehensible input continues

    • @quiquiqui
      @quiquiqui 11 месяцев назад

      @@smorrow huh?

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow 11 месяцев назад

      @@quiquiqui Czech CI is almost non-existent. I would have checked the show out if your comment didn't forewarn me. Now I have to look (keep looking) for other things to check out.

    • @quiquiqui
      @quiquiqui 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@smorrow you comments make no sense, sorry

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow 11 месяцев назад

      @@quiquiqui Well I can't make it any clearer. CI for Czech is rare, therefore finding it is a quest. That is the entire comment.

  • @RamsFan93
    @RamsFan93 3 месяца назад +1

    As soon as she said Ahoj, i knew. Then she spoke about breakfast and i got hungry

  • @scrizvevo7660
    @scrizvevo7660 5 месяцев назад +3

    Belarus just speaks Russian because the Language of Belarussian hasn't been spoken for a while. Those that do know it are very old.

  • @works4me89
    @works4me89 Год назад +6

    1st girl "ahoy" czech ;)

  • @alexandergraf9725
    @alexandergraf9725 Год назад +7

    No offense at all. She's a sweet and cool American girl. But she thinks she did well after simply guessing everything wrong, although she's got so much hints. 🤪

    • @gdgrim
      @gdgrim 4 месяца назад +2

      Yes that was the funniest part of the video :-D "I did well" and I'm thinking here, you got everything wrong haha. She seemed like a sweet person so that saves it :).

  • @thysmillan2067
    @thysmillan2067 7 месяцев назад +2

    1. The first woman literally started with "ahoj," that's a dead giveaway she's either Czech or Slovak. When she starts counting, she's immediately given away as Czech by the numbers 3 (tři), 4 (čtyři) and 5 (pět'). Compare the Slovak tri, štyri, and pät'. For a native English speaker of either language, the number 5 is the clearest giveaway: the Czechs pronounce it like "pyet" while the Slovaks almost like "peh-ch."
    2. Again, the Ukrainian greeting доброго дня gave it away immediately, if not for the greeting itself then with the use of an English-sounding "h" sound, which Russian and Belarusian do not have (Russian has a stronger unvoiced fricative "ch" like in Scottish English "loch," while Belarusian has that *and* a voiced fricative that sounds sort of like if you tried to breathe through an English "g" sound - the latter has no equivalent in English phonology).
    3. Dzień dobry is a standard greeting that occurs only in one language: Polish. If in doubt about what West Slavic language it is, "cześć" as a greeting would be the next dead giveaway.
    4. The final language is much harder to establish as Belarusian, especially at the beginning. It sounds and has a very similar vocabulary to Russian (more similar than any of the other languages in this video), but it is (from a Russian perspective) excessively palatized - that is, there is a consonantal "y"-like sound that appears in places where a Russian speaker would find it intrusive or overused. There is also unusual intrusion of the ы vowel (again from a Russian-speaking perspective), which makes certain things sound more like Ukrainian. The use of кафе (kafe) instead of the Russian кофе (kofe) for "coffee" starts to give it up, as well as the phrase у нашай краіне for "in our country." The nail in the coffin is the phrase "...but the most famous one is draniki," which in Belarusian is "але [найболье?] папулярны з'яўляюцца дранікі." Compare the Russian (но самыe популярныe являются драники) and Ukrainian equivalents (але найпопулярнішими є драники), which are both quite different.

  • @Al1en_Boy_The_5th_Kind
    @Al1en_Boy_The_5th_Kind Год назад +5

    This experience proof of one thing, and one thing only Americans are so….. exactly🤣

  • @odysgln
    @odysgln 3 месяца назад +1

    7:22
    -Oh, How to say this all in Polish?
    -She said sweater like a girl from Ukraine
    😂🤣

  • @ondrejlukas4727
    @ondrejlukas4727 11 месяцев назад +5

    I've just checked that Jane the Virgin sequences and except for the woman in TV in the link bellow all of them have so thick foreign accent and sometimes incorrect inflection! So I understand why Brit didn't recognise the real czech language than! :D
    (On the other hand its undestandible what they are speaking about in the serie so I admire the effort. Czech language is quite hard to handle though even for other slavs usually since very evaluated grammar)
    ruclips.net/video/XwbahHtCjuU/видео.html

  • @INNOCENTWIZZARDS
    @INNOCENTWIZZARDS 21 день назад

    The girl from Poland said in Polish: Oh I don't know how to describe this in Polish :-)
    BTW Britt looks very Slavic.

  • @Yuri-l8f6u
    @Yuri-l8f6u Год назад +37

    I m from Slovenia 🇸🇮 and Czech language is the easiest to understand for me

    • @davidpelc
      @davidpelc Год назад +7

      actualy the american girl was right with the german accent in czech language, its because of big german influence on czech language and because of most of people 200 let ago were german speaking or bilingual in Czech lands.🙂

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад

      We have kind of similar accent, so even when your vocabulary and grammar is more south slavic, we can at least hear what you are saying (it works even with Croatian) and try to type it to the translator. For eastern slavic languages, very often I have no idea what they are trying to say and how to type that, expecially when I can't read cyrillic. When I've been to croatia, very often I didn't understand but because of similar pronunciation, I was able to remember what word was that and google it later, that doesn't work with Russian or Ukrainian and it doesn't work well neither with Polish because of their very alien pronunciation full of nasal words and DZI sounds everywhere instead of our simple softened Ď etc...

    • @ctiradperunovic
      @ctiradperunovic Год назад +2

      @@davidpelc But she compared Russian to thick German words, that it sounds more harsh according to her. She described Czech as a smoother sounding language, even smoother than Polish and Ukrainian when she spoke to a Polish girl. :D

    • @ctiradperunovic
      @ctiradperunovic Год назад +1

      It makes totally sense, although Slovenian is officially classified as a South Slavic language, but due to its relatively large historical connection to the West Slavic region, it has many words and expressions common with Czech or Slovak, as well as the pronunciation of Slovenian (and Serbo-Croatian as well) is way more understandable to us, Czechs, than East Slavic languages, which for us have very strange "uo", "ua" or "eu" sounds and a very harsh accent, which quite often makes mutually identical words very incomprehensible.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад +1

      ​@@ctiradperunovic "which for us have very strange "uo", "ua" or "eu" sounds and a very harsh accent, which quite often makes mutually identical words very incomprehensible."
      Exacty, for me as Czech, even when word in east slavic language can be actually similar, I just can't hear that because I can't identify even basic vowels, everything is just some uo, ua, eu exactly as you said instead of basic latin vowels like A E I O U like we have in Czech. And also I can't tell if they say U or V or some VU/UE/VUE or something. So word can be actually similar, but I just don't hear that. In Slovenian or Croatian, I hear the word, but I don't understand it anyway, but I can at least type it to translator later. 😀

  • @sensila10
    @sensila10 3 месяца назад

    Potrawa ta przywędrowała z Chin, a na ziemiach polskich pierogi pojawiły się około XIII wieku. Legenda mówi, że dotarły do nas za sprawą biskupa Jacka Odrowąża, który tak zachwycił się nimi w Kijowie, że postanowił pomysł ten przywieźć do Polski.

  • @WOJCIECHKMIECIK
    @WOJCIECHKMIECIK 8 месяцев назад +3

    Why at 8:30 you made a mistake? Polish flag, Monika, and "UA" letters? Cmon! Should be PL! She is from Poland guys!

  • @mr.strawberry13
    @mr.strawberry13 2 месяца назад

    As a Czech person, I know that our language sound pretty soft to other slavs

  • @maciejmiastowy9707
    @maciejmiastowy9707 Год назад +15

    Słowianie teraz się pewnie podśmiewają, bo my wszyscy raczej prawidłowo rozpoznajemy swoje języki i często nawet je znamy i rozumiemy. Ale teraz wyobrażam sobie sam siebie, gdy trafiam w grupę ludzi z Norwegii (jak wiemy mają dwa języki), Danii, Islandii i Szwecji. Chyba też bym nie odróżnił. Pozdrawiam wszystkich :)

    • @user-tk5rg6hc8s
      @user-tk5rg6hc8s Год назад +3

      Chyba duński od szwedzkiego i norwezkiego byś wyróżnił. Przecież to jedziny język, żebyś wśród tego bełkotania nie poradził sobie wyróżnić ani słowa. Nie myśle źle o Duńczykach, to widziałem pod jednym wideo, że sami Skandynawowie tak żartują, toż chyba w tym żarcie jest cząstka prawdy...

    • @Rybnikk
      @Rybnikk 7 месяцев назад +1

      Islandzki odrazu słychać od reszty on jest zbyt mocny, w sensie jego akcent itd, ja jestem z isl i nawet rodzina mi mówi że jak mówię po polsku to zaciągam strasznie akcentem bo jest na tyle mocny

  • @yaremusia
    @yaremusia Год назад +9

    I know Ukrainian привіт мене звати Ярема це українська ім'я і мені 8 років click like if you understand me😊 edit: bruh why click like💀

  • @madmaninporsche911
    @madmaninporsche911 3 месяца назад +1

    Britt to bardzo mądra, miła i sympatyczna dziewczyna. Nielada wyczyn dla Amerykanki rozpoznać poszczególne, słowiańskie kraje. Reszta dziewczyn też fajna. :)

  • @janhracho8688
    @janhracho8688 Год назад +11

    Holy shit I didn't even thought that someone from my country (Czech Republic) would make it to World Friends :D

  • @joedee2952
    @joedee2952 9 месяцев назад

    It is nice that the American girl tried to distinguish all the languages. My Swedish friend told me once that all eastern european languages around like russian. Point.

    • @yuliiaol5063
      @yuliiaol5063 6 месяцев назад

      Your Swedish friend told you the clear ruzzian propaganda. During the empire and soviet occupation, the Ukrainian language was banned and restricted with different laws and by all means possible: for my language was banned (!!!!!!) Naturally, it has caused unchangeable damage. But still, it is alive. But still, it is spoken. But still, it is progressing. So never ever tell anyone that Ukrainian unbeatable language is the same as any other it borders with. Because it is simply not. Language defines us as a separate nation. Language tells us how long we are existing on this planet. As a famous Ukrainian writer and poetessa Lina Kostenko said: "Nations are not dying from a heart attack. At first, their speaking ability (language) is taken away".

  • @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166
    @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166 Год назад +44

    i like how she said she is confident about ukraine and russia, and then proceeds to rule out ukraine because of an dish originating in ukraine itself, and then guessing pierogi for ukraine

    • @evgeniib4387
      @evgeniib4387 Год назад +1

      Fucking borscht is eaten equally a lot on the territory of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine, the recipe is different everywhere and everyone didn't give a fuck about where the borscht came from, it's just that Ukraine has nothing to be proud of except a hole in his pants

    • @bobstone0
      @bobstone0 Год назад

      xD

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад

      To be honest, I know these things only because I visited Poland several times and I am in slavic languages group on facebook. If I was just average Czech, I would guess it wrongly the same as she. When you say vodka, everyone will say Russia, that's just fact and the same with borsch. To be honest, in the past, most of people didn't make any difference between ukrainian and russian culture, it kind of change only because of war.

    • @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166
      @dercorta-noyokamiboyteenpr2166 Год назад

      never visited any slavic country so far

    • @tvm2209
      @tvm2209 6 месяцев назад +1

      lmaoo classic american education unfortunately

  • @SpyCorpse
    @SpyCorpse 4 месяца назад

    As a person from Poland. I'm pretty confident i would understand all the languages mentioned in this video.

  • @janslavik5284
    @janslavik5284 Год назад +9

    EEEEEEEEEEEEEEYYYYYYYYYYYYY CZECH REPUBLIC FINALLY, IT ONLY TOOK LIKE 2 YEARS 🤣

  • @1234567qwerification
    @1234567qwerification 24 дня назад +1

    8:22 "UA, Monika 🇵🇱", "I'm from ru..." 😂

  • @awdey
    @awdey 7 месяцев назад +3

    For everyone:
    Vodka came from Poland
    Borsch is a Ukrainian national food, Poland also has own borsh, but it's way more different.
    Pierogy from Poland, in Ukraine we call it Varenyky. It's almost the same dumplings(except some recipes or type of preparing (hot water or steam)).
    But Russia has its own super-power: "Cultural appropriation"

  • @tomas3300
    @tomas3300 9 месяцев назад +1

    Her every time: "Not Russia"

  • @maksimtotski9134
    @maksimtotski9134 9 месяцев назад +2

    In Belorussian Hello is "Вiтаю" (Witaju) and not Privet.

  • @nastiakoff356
    @nastiakoff356 Год назад +8

    Would like to notice that it's correct to pronounce BelaruSian with just one "S", there is no double "SS", like in Russia. But really nice to finally see my home country getting more exposure on RUclips)

  • @alicebenk
    @alicebenk 3 месяца назад +1

    🗣:What's the most famous food in your country?
    🇺🇦: borsht😍😍
    🗣: ok its not Ukraine
    Me: WTF!?