The world's easiest language is NOT what you expect

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  • Опубликовано: 22 фев 2022
  • This is my 60 second #shorts review of Indonesian, the world's easiest language. Despite how different it is from English, once you try learning this outrageously elegant language you’ll very quickly be asking yourself, why don’t all languages do it like this?! The grammar, pronunciation, and writing system are all extremely simple and elegant compared with supposedly "easy" languages like Spanish or French.
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Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @LazEden
    @LazEden 2 года назад +74392

    Meanwhile the French teacher yell at me when I don’t know the gender of the door frame

    • @milkteakyan2623
      @milkteakyan2623 2 года назад +3660

      Yess, the most problem when i learn French a few years ago is "how i know this thing's gender?"
      "Is it la or le? Un or une?"

    • @user-fh5ov4tu2j
      @user-fh5ov4tu2j 2 года назад +1328

      I yell at myself when i dont know the gender of any french words

    • @bellenomura
      @bellenomura 2 года назад +1107

      This reminds me of Arabic where even objects have gender 😭😭😭😭

    • @roughysk9851
      @roughysk9851 2 года назад +465

      @@milkteakyan2623 same with german

    • @xano2921
      @xano2921 2 года назад +200

      @Hernando Malinche not so simple...

  • @tsgmer
    @tsgmer 2 года назад +37766

    Man’s speaking in terms and conditions

    • @grantd.335
      @grantd.335 2 года назад +619

      underrated comment

    • @tomasonsynthol8266
      @tomasonsynthol8266 2 года назад +342

      Lol does that also mean we wouldn't really care about what he says 😭
      Edit:I meant if he's speaking in terms and conditions we would've scrolled through this short like it's non-existent, like how we scroll through terms and conditions 💀

    • @Enaccul
      @Enaccul 2 года назад +713

      If you listen very carefully he says batteries are not included at the very end

    • @babylonhasfallen1329
      @babylonhasfallen1329 2 года назад +130

      Be sure to listen to the fine print.

    • @tsgmer
      @tsgmer 2 года назад +17

      😂

  • @GamerTime_2002
    @GamerTime_2002 Год назад +2518

    "mouse mouse"
    I fucking love that

    • @neitea2
      @neitea2 Год назад +99

      Fun fact: That doesnt work only for nouns, but also for adjectives, like
      "The painting are beautiful-beautiful."
      "Those clothes all in white-white."

    • @Vecorix
      @Vecorix 5 месяцев назад +8

      Skaven 😂

    • @anonymousstacker2044
      @anonymousstacker2044 2 месяца назад +12

      My mothertongue (Filipino) is also like that:
      "Ang ganda ganda mo naman" roughly translates to "You so beautiful-beautiful"😊

    • @lenakohl2339
      @lenakohl2339 Месяц назад +3

      Vietnamese do the same for plural.

    • @yes.im.nicholas
      @yes.im.nicholas Месяц назад +2

      tikus-tikus yeah

  • @pingtime
    @pingtime Год назад +917

    Indonesia Language is made to be simple, you can't unite hundreds of tribes with their own mother tongue with hard to understand national language (most of us spoke it as second language)

    • @notvicious8793
      @notvicious8793 4 месяца назад +33

      Interesting, thanks for sharing

    • @secretadmirer5006
      @secretadmirer5006 3 месяца назад +23

      Yes, surprised he left that out!

    • @ant.yo23
      @ant.yo23 2 месяца назад +14

      Yeah, I'm Indonesian they are have tribe language like Javanese, Sunda, batak

    • @jolly-rancher
      @jolly-rancher Месяц назад +2

      is this a fact or a conjecture?

    • @pingtime
      @pingtime Месяц назад +7

      @@jolly-rancher Like man, I live here and been living for atleast 3 years in each main Indonesian Islands

  • @AjiRahman
    @AjiRahman 2 года назад +6361

    as an Indonesian, this easiness make me difficult to learn another languages. 😅

    • @ezandman6804
      @ezandman6804 2 года назад +152

      maybe try dutch language?

    • @TakeHit0
      @TakeHit0 2 года назад +73

      Or norwegian

    • @kinokoxd99
      @kinokoxd99 2 года назад +215

      Damn i litterally learn english from from meme
      Edit:I am also indonesian

    • @TakeHit0
      @TakeHit0 2 года назад +10

      @@kinokoxd99 daz danke bruh

    • @kilantravels
      @kilantravels 2 года назад +130

      @@ezandman6804 Dutch is more difficult than English, and we already struggle with the latter. Just because we have many Dutch loan words doesn’t make it easier to us. In fact, we probably have more English loanwords than Dutch now, and it still doesn’t help us with the language 😆

  • @tanjohn4719
    @tanjohn4719 2 года назад +12566

    I love how xiaomanyc’s face just turns red to squeeze his video in a minute

  • @chickensouvlaki
    @chickensouvlaki Год назад +148

    As a Greek, I am jealous. Why is the balcony door a girl

    • @Cherry_Ramone
      @Cherry_Ramone 2 месяца назад +3

      😅

    • @cursedcat6467
      @cursedcat6467 2 месяца назад +1

      She has always been a girl, la porte, die Tür, η πόρτα, la puerta, la porta, дверь, all feminine, so if anyone tries to win an online argument against you by telling you that you have never touched a women in your life, respond with the fact that a door is objectively a woman. In fact, my girlfriend is a door

    • @vasiliki_R
      @vasiliki_R 2 месяца назад +3

      We are doomed

    • @khoirulanam9141
      @khoirulanam9141 Месяц назад

      As an Indonesian, I also feel sorry for Chinese and Japanese people, they have to memorize at least a minimum of 2000 Kanji to communicate, I am aware that many languages ​​in the world violate the Geneva Convention because of their crimes against humanity.

  • @eddavanleemputten9232
    @eddavanleemputten9232 9 месяцев назад +212

    When I moved to Malaysia as a teenage girl I absolutely LOVED the way plurals were constructed in Bahasa Malaysia. Just say the word twice. It did make me giggle once: the first time I heard “ladies and gentlemen” in a speech: “Puan-puan dan tuan-tuan”. Then I realised it sounds like the start of a poem…
    The hardest part of leaning either Indonesian or Malay is to get to practice… people kept switching to English!

    • @hurindturambar
      @hurindturambar 5 месяцев назад +13

      Because they do speak english in malaysia, but here in Indonesia majority can't speak english haha

    • @17meisha
      @17meisha 4 месяца назад +12

      No no, we dont, indonesian rarely mix bahasa indonesia with english. If u say we mix it with our mother languages (traditional/local languages) then yes. Even i sometimes mix indonesia language with Javanese or sundanese at the same time, like :
      - Sebentar, tos ieu urng rek kemana deui?
      Sebentar, kemana : indonesia language
      Tos, ieu, urang, deui : sundanese
      - mbok yang bener toh yoh
      Mbok, toh, yoh : Javanese
      Yang, bener : indonesia
      We have so many local languages here, we more prefer to mix bahasa indonesia with our mother languages than English, 🤷

    • @belphegor_dev
      @belphegor_dev 3 месяца назад

      They don't. Most Malaysians can't speak English. ​@@hurindturambar

    • @TheGrimmCommoner
      @TheGrimmCommoner 3 месяца назад +4

      I was in Malaysia for a wedding and spent a week there. The people always light up when you speak even a little of Malay, happy that a foreigner made the effort. It's quite easy to learn.

    • @hdajq892ey7
      @hdajq892ey7 3 месяца назад +2

      if i learn indonesian, can i go to malaysian and be okay?

  • @anovosedlik
    @anovosedlik Год назад +6141

    'Mouse mouse' is dope. I drink beer beer to that now.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Год назад +105

      we use "minum minuman" for 1"drink drink"

    • @user-pq4dl1qc4k
      @user-pq4dl1qc4k Год назад +8

      😂

    • @cylearnpvp9566
      @cylearnpvp9566 Год назад +67

      ​​@@carkawalakhatulistiwa *minum-minum.
      Minum = to drink (activity)
      Minuman = drink/beverage (object)
      So, it's gonna be like:
      Minum-minum = drink drink
      Minum minuman = drink(-ing) (a) beverage

    • @Ddozsoy
      @Ddozsoy Год назад +34

      The Earth has 8 billion human human on it

    • @ymskkuroneko
      @ymskkuroneko Год назад +17

      ​@@Ddozsoy and there are more cows in India then people

  • @oxqlion9661
    @oxqlion9661 2 года назад +4714

    ah yes, in Indonesia we do say "look at that mouse - mouse". Basically, if it's plural just say it twice.

    • @she7061
      @she7061 2 года назад +332

      Honestly amazing wish English was like that

    • @zahrazarqaa5210
      @zahrazarqaa5210 2 года назад +141

      Mouse2 ✌️

    • @cepeduck6577
      @cepeduck6577 2 года назад +19

      True

    • @adejaya1692
      @adejaya1692 2 года назад +54

      Not always. "Saya membeli buku" could mean "I bought a book/some books, many books".

    • @oxqlion9661
      @oxqlion9661 2 года назад +220

      @@adejaya1692 well it depends on the question. If the question is "kamu habis dari mana?" ("where have you been?") then yes the answer is "saya habis membeli buku" (I just bought a book/some books"). But if the question is "apa saja yang kamu beli?" ("what did you buy?") then you would answer "saya membeli buku - buku ini" ("I bought these books"). So plural is always said twice anyways.

  • @naufalzabady2767
    @naufalzabady2767 Год назад +148

    Bahasa Indonesia definitely one of the easiest language to learn, but rather hard for foreigner to speak. Especially for those who speak English, and Indonesians rarely speak formal language in daily uses. Indonesians love to speak using a lot of slang words

    • @omhh1986
      @omhh1986 Год назад

      People who speak easy languages usually have a smaller mental capacity and lower iq than the rest of the world

    • @ikhsanramadhans214
      @ikhsanramadhans214 9 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@omhh1986dude Iq has nothing to do with language, if it like that then why some of the Khoisan who speaks language with clicks and with tone also is not as advanced as us??

    • @RoryRoo
      @RoryRoo 8 месяцев назад +5

      Yea, but for me, even if foreigners only speak formally at least it's understandable cause the language system is easy, better than my sorry ass Spanish at least:)

    • @alchemist_one
      @alchemist_one 3 месяца назад

      meh, compare it to Cantonese where there are lots of tones and thousands of characters

    • @fiornato6393
      @fiornato6393 28 дней назад

      Very true, indonesian also use their respective ethnic languange as mother tongue

  • @youtb-user
    @youtb-user Год назад +45

    Another fact about Indonesian: about 90% or more of Indonesian people's first language or mother tongue language is not Indonesian. Most of Indonesian people's mother tongue language is vernacular language based on region where they born/grow up in Indonesia. There are even some people in some regions in Indonesia that really can't speak Indonesian.

    • @axolotl1780
      @axolotl1780 19 дней назад

      Yeah we Indos have difficulty with the textbook Indonesian because conversational Indonesian & textbook are two different things, heck me & my classmates struggle with remembering which is the formal or informal words. If u speak to an Indo with textbook Indonesian it'll sound so formal & like ur reading from a dictionary

  • @rmdhn1
    @rmdhn1 2 года назад +11546

    English :
    Struggling to not assume pronouns
    Indonesian :
    Why do words need to have gender?

    • @faith-uk1ov
      @faith-uk1ov 2 года назад +630

      Tbh yes with how pronouns is very diverse with random stuff people create i think Indonesian language is a lot simple and most people wont get offende here

    • @CaesarLvcivs
      @CaesarLvcivs 2 года назад +218

      And you think the English language has gendered words?

    • @tristanneal9552
      @tristanneal9552 2 года назад +650

      @Blake Rose "If your whole identity is your pronouns you don't deserve to have them" -Tony Stank, The Avengers

    • @Enaccul
      @Enaccul 2 года назад +607

      @@CaesarLvcivs Actor, actress. He, she (which was said in the video) waiter, waitress. And literally so many others. It's hard to notice if you're a native speaker, but English is full of arbitrarily gendered words.

    • @melopuss375
      @melopuss375 2 года назад +257

      @Blake Rose ho boi wait until you go to japan and nobody’s even bothering with pronouns
      It’s really not important to have your gender confirmed to you on a daily basis

  • @aahhhhhhh726
    @aahhhhhhh726 2 года назад +6866

    If Xiaomanyc run out of languages to learn, He'd start learning to speak to animals

    • @ajjoseph8165
      @ajjoseph8165 2 года назад +33

      😂😂😂

    • @zayneytem
      @zayneytem 2 года назад +187

      We'll definitely see "Human speaks Alaskan Killer Whale! Local wildlife shocked to death!"

    • @Eradicatetheobvious
      @Eradicatetheobvious 2 года назад +13

      Eliza Thornberry in this bitch lol

    • @Nuxest
      @Nuxest 2 года назад +10

      He just tries to learn like fictional languages in movies/series

    • @Zzzz-lg3iw
      @Zzzz-lg3iw 2 года назад +7

      Transition from The language guy to Dr.Dolittle Lol. I’ll be waiting for that season of The Language Guy .

  • @hydroclaws
    @hydroclaws 10 месяцев назад +59

    I am currently learning indonesian and it is definitely being the easiest language to learn based on the languages I have tried to learn and quit randomly, and also learning it makes me want to learn it more because of the amount of progress I already have!

    • @lightninggaming4569
      @lightninggaming4569 9 месяцев назад +3

      Well,good luck learning the daily sentence structure,it's not as easy as you think it was.

    • @hydroclaws
      @hydroclaws 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@lightninggaming4569 I knoooooowwwwwwwwww

    • @tofakaa5661
      @tofakaa5661 8 месяцев назад +9

      ​​​@@hydroclawsyou don't have to worry, day to day indonesian is actually without rules, you can speak in any structure and locals will still understand it clearly, just sounded a bit weird for them.
      But the thing about Indonesians is that they will appreciate your effort in learning their language. Their doors will open for you any time and they will offer you food when you speak Indonesian even just a bit.

    • @RoryRoo
      @RoryRoo 8 месяцев назад +4

      ​@lightninggaming4569 naaah, day to day use of indonesian didn't really have a rule

    • @bonnyfasius1216
      @bonnyfasius1216 4 месяца назад

      If your target is to talk to natives then I suggest learning the informal one instead of the formal one

  • @Melissafullofgrace
    @Melissafullofgrace Год назад +103

    Sounds like a language I would love to learn. Short, sweet and to the point!

    • @vogel2499
      @vogel2499 10 месяцев назад +1

      He masked some ugly side of Indonesian language. In exchange of the non-existence of tenses, Indonesian verbs have complicated/sometimes very abritrary conjugation rules. Not as hardcore as Hungarian and Finnish, but still difficult to learn.

    • @ilhamseptian1604
      @ilhamseptian1604 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@vogel2499i mean formal way is the easiest one but people might feel weird yo hear it....

    • @Dafa__-xo6gg
      @Dafa__-xo6gg 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ilhamseptian1604not in some places, Because many are used to foreigners speaking broken Indonesian. Me for example.

    • @EsettanRick
      @EsettanRick 4 месяца назад +2

      Indonesian is just like Norwegian, when you become fluent in Indonesian and decide to go to Indonesia, the speak a whole different langauge.
      what you may learn: "orang tua saya meminta saya untuk membelikannya makanan"
      what Indonesians may say: "gue disuruh bonyok beliin makanan"

    • @imtiredtiredtired
      @imtiredtiredtired 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@EsettanRickHaha this, you could learn formal, text book indonesian for years and will be shocked that the spoken language is _very different_ . And that's not counting if your speaking partner somehow speaks Indonesian mixed with regional language

  • @ghivifahmi4252
    @ghivifahmi4252 2 года назад +4691

    Internet: Fighting over neopronouns
    Indonesian: DIA

    • @KunjaBihariKrishna
      @KunjaBihariKrishna 2 года назад +302

      They often mix up he and she when speaking English, it's funny sometimes

    • @cyraazalea6832
      @cyraazalea6832 2 года назад +95

      seperti apa yang slalu kunantikaaannn

    • @zebul5854
      @zebul5854 2 года назад +100

      @@cyraazalea6832 ..,aku inginkan...
      oh DIAAAAAAAAAAAA

    • @suzyburger2548
      @suzyburger2548 2 года назад +235

      I am not indonesian but i speak bahasa melayu* and im justt soooo grateful we dont have pronouns in our languange

    • @TalLeyKAL
      @TalLeyKAL 2 года назад +2

      @@zebul5854 bruuuuuj 😂😂

  • @nathanaelmoses7977
    @nathanaelmoses7977 2 года назад +7601

    English : there are many plural form in my language!
    Indonesia : hehe repeat them twice goes brrrrrrr brrrrrrr.

  • @AbrahamCollins1786
    @AbrahamCollins1786 Год назад +26

    Bahasa Indonesa was one of my favorite languages to learn. It's been a long time since I've put it to use.

    • @DokterMeow
      @DokterMeow 9 месяцев назад +1

      Mw praktek kak? Gue juga bljr b.indo

  • @JohnathanPorkenstein
    @JohnathanPorkenstein 8 месяцев назад +22

    Bro speaks in 1.5 speed on default

  • @Miuoshki
    @Miuoshki Год назад +8156

    Indonesian be like "why waste time say lot word when few word do trick?"

  • @spellonyou7987
    @spellonyou7987 2 года назад +4070

    Indonesian here, the first time I learned roman language I was quite confused with the feminine and masculine words I was like wtf why words need to have a gender 🤣

    • @Josue-xd5ru
      @Josue-xd5ru 2 года назад +499

      As a English and Spanish speaker, I never questioned words having gender because it seemed normal to me but now I start to question why we actually do if millions of Indonesians are doing good without it 😂

    • @captainblake4931
      @captainblake4931 2 года назад +453

      Indonesian studying German here, why the f chair has a gender????

    • @ericrawson2909
      @ericrawson2909 2 года назад +74

      A subject which sometimes crosses my mind, but I have never seen discussion of anywhere, is how the woke fanatics handle languages with gendered words. Life is enough of a minefield in English where words are not gendered.

    • @BicycleFunk
      @BicycleFunk 2 года назад +19

      It is so seemingly arbitrary too, but does give some somewhat hilarious cultural context.

    • @PermadeathHD
      @PermadeathHD 2 года назад +14

      @@captainblake4931 hehe it’s based on whether objects have a gendered aura LOL

  • @whosweptmymines3956
    @whosweptmymines3956 11 месяцев назад +65

    My pastor was a missionary in Indonesia and he told me that it was the easiest language to learn. Nice to hear this!

    • @Jh0nJhon
      @Jh0nJhon 9 месяцев назад +11

      Jesus Bless Indonesia 🙏🏻✝️

    • @HatterTobias
      @HatterTobias 15 дней назад

      ​@@Jh0nJhonreal

  • @FebruaryHas30Days
    @FebruaryHas30Days 9 месяцев назад +26

    I wish Indonesian became an international language

    • @amdbox_
      @amdbox_ 9 месяцев назад +8

      international language used to spread through colonization, the problem is indonesia is not colonizing other countries

    • @ladycempluk2481
      @ladycempluk2481 9 месяцев назад +8

      John McWhorter(linguist) suggested that colloquial Indonesian would be an ideal universal language for the world.

    • @elintocable0072
      @elintocable0072 9 месяцев назад +3

      I approve that, ONU and international organizations should start using Indonesian.

    • @coolbeans7z539
      @coolbeans7z539 8 месяцев назад +1

      Nah make it Esperanto

    • @FebruaryHas30Days
      @FebruaryHas30Days 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@coolbeans7z539 Esperanto can be used in Europe, Africa and the Americas, making it an international language.

  • @VcentChips
    @VcentChips 2 года назад +2311

    As an Indonesian seeing my language has been explained makes me want to re-learn my language

    • @wahyudyatmika5119
      @wahyudyatmika5119 2 года назад +105

      Ikr? Watching this I was like, "Is it that easy for foreigners to learn? Damn"

    • @Akhtar48
      @Akhtar48 2 года назад +3

      Banh Nama karakter profile pic kau apa banh

    • @Advokaiser
      @Advokaiser 2 года назад +12

      @@wahyudyatmika5119 Is it difficult for you guys?

    • @wahyudyatmika5119
      @wahyudyatmika5119 2 года назад +70

      @@Advokaiser nah not really, plus the everyday slangs very much disregard the already small amount of grammar we have, so I can say it is pretty easy to speak our language

    • @abrahamsitompul2851
      @abrahamsitompul2851 2 года назад +49

      @@Advokaiser because our language are so simple, it's a bit hard for some of us to learn other languages

  • @bonie_bonie_
    @bonie_bonie_ 2 года назад +678

    English : "I told you to not do that, but you did it anyway. Now you face the consequences"
    Indonesian : "Kan"

    • @dedybadharu2804
      @dedybadharu2804 2 года назад +6

      😁

    • @revolvency
      @revolvency 2 года назад +92

      English: told ya

    • @annaling2366
      @annaling2366 2 года назад +24

      Lol at "kan" part. Shortest reply ever but 💯 true.

    • @simbathelion123
      @simbathelion123 2 года назад +28

      another alternative : "kan , udah dibilangin."

    • @lesussie2237
      @lesussie2237 2 года назад +34

      Informal indonesian is just so different to standard indonesian lmao

  • @smurfiennes
    @smurfiennes Год назад +17

    It’s easy to learn it, just memorize the words and put them together to form a sentence. Done.

  • @Alonoda
    @Alonoda Год назад +11

    Started learning today! It's really fun and it's so cool to know how possible it is to understand people in that part of the world 😊

    • @axolotl1780
      @axolotl1780 19 дней назад

      This is not meant to discourage u from learning but textbook Indonesian & conversational Indonesian is VERY different. Of course locals can understand u, u'll just sound very formal to them. If u wanna learn conversational I recommend learning from the internet. That said I hope u are enjoying learning our language. Love from Indonesia

  • @phadenswandemil4345
    @phadenswandemil4345 2 года назад +2605

    When he said Indonesian words don't use different tenses, i was like "neither does mandarin, why isn't mandarin the easiest?" Then i remembered the mandarin writing system 😂

    • @kyurise6685
      @kyurise6685 2 года назад +356

      Tje pronunciation too man, fucking hell it's hard af

    • @ZacharyRodriguez
      @ZacharyRodriguez 2 года назад +219

      The tones put me off too.

    • @SimplyAdia
      @SimplyAdia 2 года назад +161

      Tones tones tones tones hahaha so many tones!

    • @stonkman7878
      @stonkman7878 2 года назад +77

      to remember how to write it read it and memorise it is fucking torture (9 years of experience)

    • @stonkman7878
      @stonkman7878 2 года назад +21

      pronunciation for me gets easy after getting the hang of it maybe a few years, the memory work is the one you cannot get the hang of because logically speaking its memory work

  • @ashleycnossen3157
    @ashleycnossen3157 2 года назад +763

    Yes, my husband is Indonesian and as I started learning I realized it was literally the easiest language ever.

    • @luqmanalif2758
      @luqmanalif2758 2 года назад +31

      If u know indonesian , u can speak malay too. They're very similar

    • @r2k88
      @r2k88 2 года назад +14

      Until you learn that we have over 700 regional languages. Which is still actively used now.

    • @Sajovo
      @Sajovo 2 года назад +2

      @@luqmanalif2758 kinda i dont even know malay that much

    • @lestatschlongh8065
      @lestatschlongh8065 2 года назад +3

      @@luqmanalif2758 or you might not be able to speak malay but still understand a small part of it

    • @rifkynda8588
      @rifkynda8588 2 года назад +5

      @@Sajovo Indonesian-Malay basically the same like Hindi-Urdu, but Indonesian dominated and more popular than malay

  • @Tombless
    @Tombless 2 месяца назад +2

    This is so true, I started learning Indonesian a few months ago, and in the first week I already knew how to form so many sentences by myself

  • @RolandDeschain1
    @RolandDeschain1 Год назад +43

    Thirty years ago, when I was in high school in Australia, Indonesian was the language we were made to learn.
    Just a couple of years before it was German.

    • @va_sirberpasir9708
      @va_sirberpasir9708 8 месяцев назад +6

      Seems like your school like those games that gave sudden difficulty spikes

    • @xxkissmeketutxx
      @xxkissmeketutxx 2 месяца назад

      20 years ago the options were French, Italian or German

    • @einflinkeswiesel2695
      @einflinkeswiesel2695 Месяц назад +1

      As a German I pity everyone who has to learn my language😅😂

  • @mynona2491
    @mynona2491 2 года назад +3028

    "In English words change a lot"
    Laughs in german articles and genders
    My favourite german word : Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz

    • @wavell14
      @wavell14 2 года назад +121

      Laughs at German in polish

    • @Niall69Irish
      @Niall69Irish 2 года назад +211

      English people really do be thinking that english is difficult.... like not even close. One of the easiest, if not THE easiest language in the world

    • @mynona2491
      @mynona2491 2 года назад +163

      @@Niall69Irish I'm actually glad it's not the most complicated language. We can understand each other almost all around the globe. Hundreds of years ago that would've been a super power

    • @wariret8866
      @wariret8866 2 года назад +74

      @@mynona2491 tbh English is very similair to French and Spanish and many other Latin languages, it's simple for them to learn it because of similair pronunciation and such
      But I just hate how people in this comment section act as if languages were made in one go and shiting on them as if they were made to be spoken by everyone on this earth and didn't evolve from how people over hundreds of years picked words and pronunciation from each other to form a language

    • @dapodix
      @dapodix 2 года назад +21

      🇩🇪 : achtung! eim ze moust komplicated language.. Muhahaha
      🇸🇮 : *shakes head*

  • @iwillsmiteyall
    @iwillsmiteyall Год назад +2482

    petition for english to ditch ‘mice’ and adopt ‘mouse mouse’

  • @randomguy0047
    @randomguy0047 Год назад +13

    As an Indonesian, I'd like to contribute my 2 cents.
    Lots of people here glorify how hard the language is when it comes to daily use in communication due to slangs and whatnot, however, I believe that it is NOT that hard, AS LONG as you are willing to spend some time immersing yourself with native speakers.
    The more you do that, eventually your brain starts picking up on the slang and builds up an internal dictionary where you can translate entire sentences/phrases into shorter phrases.
    For instance (I am not sure what region/language/dialect the examples below are from)
    Lho?/Lah? - What?/That's not right...
    Kan? - I told you not to , now you see what the consequences are.../"told ya"
    There are also simpler loanwords. Some examples are substitutes for certain nominal of money (from Hokkien iirc) such as goceng, gocap, ceban, etc
    However, it IS true that there is a distinction between formal/textbook Indonesian and the Indonesian used in day-to-day communication.

  • @Coconut997
    @Coconut997 11 месяцев назад +4

    Foreigner here, it's quite easy to distinguish the differences of the words once you get used to it :)

  • @DindaNastiti
    @DindaNastiti 2 года назад +3885

    As indonesian, when I read the title I was expecting.. "Oh the easiest language to learn, I gotta learn this language" 😭🌪 yeah other languages are difficult

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 2 года назад +62

      To be fair, English and Spanish are not particularly difficult either.

    • @lujuria9920
      @lujuria9920 2 года назад +34

      @@holliswilliams8426 agreed, when i came to the US, it took me 6 months to communicate with no assistance, and less than a year to speak, write, and communicate with others fluently. I took a Spanish class for my HS and found it easy (as I am Hispanic), but the ppl around me found it hard due to the many dif ways of talking abt things, but they still understood it pretty well in about 3 years. They’re still pretty easy I agree

    • @pqb0
      @pqb0 2 года назад +34

      @@holliswilliams8426 Lol english is so much easier than spanish, try memorizing all conjugations for just 1 verb Lmao .

    • @iatsarulashvili3893
      @iatsarulashvili3893 2 года назад +2

      Lmao, imagine trying to learn Georgian as an Indonesian.

    • @alibcan
      @alibcan Год назад +20

      @@pqb0 u think its easy because its the language u grew up speaking dont look at it from ur own perspective look at it from a universal perspective (sorry for the bad english lol i hope u get what i mean)

  • @isaacwinoto3312
    @isaacwinoto3312 2 года назад +2921

    As an Indonesian, I can attest to this. However, colloquial and formal Indonesian sound very different, so if you're thinking of learning the language through Duolingo to be able to converse fluently with locals, you'll only go so far. Immersing with the Indonesian culture is the way to go!

    • @Dhi_Bee
      @Dhi_Bee 2 года назад +71

      I’m one of those English speakers trying to learn Indonesian from Duolingo for the past few months (along with 2 other languages). Compared to the other 2, I’m still learning the very basics like “saya membaca menu. Saya ingin telur dan roti dengan kopi” And I’m not even sure I got that correct haha. Anyhow what do you mean by colloquial? Do they just talk an informal version of Indonesia or is it mixed with their local languages (like Balinese, Acehnese, Tetum, or a west Papuan language mixed with Indonesian)?

    • @advanceringnewholder
      @advanceringnewholder 2 года назад +68

      @@Dhi_Bee Every ethics has a different way of speaking Indonesian. For example, banjarese doesn't use e and o

    • @alexandersonmei
      @alexandersonmei 2 года назад +104

      @@Dhi_Bee it depends, region by region. But if you speak formal Indonesian, about 9 times out of 10 people will understand you anyways.

    • @littleidiotka
      @littleidiotka 2 года назад +43

      @@Dhi_Bee I've seen people speak informally, but even if you speak formally, they will understand

    • @samirkhoury2935
      @samirkhoury2935 2 года назад +73

      @@Dhi_Bee here is an example from my area. In formal indonesian we say "saya sedang makan sekarang, ayo kesini" for "i am eating right now, come here", but in my area we say "lagi kemek gwej, skut sokin"

  • @thebinarangkawan9336
    @thebinarangkawan9336 2 месяца назад +2

    The prefix and suffix: *HELLO MOTHER FATHER!!!!*

  • @alexx_93
    @alexx_93 Год назад +17

    I'm tryna learn Malay and Indonesian at the same time rn, lol..ngl pretty fun

    • @amdbox_
      @amdbox_ 9 месяцев назад +2

      learn indonesian first then you'll gonna understand malay quickly

    • @Dakenousss
      @Dakenousss 7 месяцев назад +3

      As a Malaysian… You need to learn Bahasa Indonesia first then Malay because Malay language is more complicated such a verb changing and slang etc
      Here’s the thing… Malay got more slang that’s why they couldn’t speak fluently. Malay people speak with a mix Malay and English on their sentences. We call it Manglish. Malay + English.
      After that you can learn Tagalog which is sound similar a bit to Bahasa Indonesia and Malay.
      Good luck bro

    • @rifkynda8588
      @rifkynda8588 7 месяцев назад +1

      Malay is hard and rarely people speak Malay even in Malaysia they speak english more. Better learn Bahasa Indonesia

    • @odeychan9014
      @odeychan9014 5 месяцев назад

      @@rifkynda8588 terpaling tahu 😂 kalau belajar bahasa Melayu memang automatik faham org indon cakap apa bukan sebaliknya 😅

    • @odeychan9014
      @odeychan9014 5 месяцев назад

      @@amdbox_ sebenarnya terbalik tapi kalau dia nak cakap dgn org Indonesia sahaja bolehlah tapi kalau nak dapatkan the best of both world, belajar bahasa Melayu dulu

  • @declan5073
    @declan5073 2 года назад +1446

    "mice is just mouse mouse"
    Oh how I would love for this to be in English

    • @thegoddess6569
      @thegoddess6569 2 года назад +118

      Yep people is orang orang and orang is person .

    • @hijugontis
      @hijugontis 2 года назад +21

      ah yes because english has such complex plural forming 😂

    • @sfgrgfsf212
      @sfgrgfsf212 2 года назад +60

      @@hijugontis It actually does though, plurals sometimes randomly change spelling and letters and stuff. Battery/batteries mouse/mice sandwich/sandwiches goose/geese cactus/cacti shelf/shelves

    • @skywatcher458
      @skywatcher458 2 года назад +53

      @@hijugontis don't forget a plural forn of animals.
      a murder of crows
      a pack of wolfs
      a herd of cows

    • @e.h-v.8070
      @e.h-v.8070 2 года назад

      Yes! It is more more better to lean many many less.

  • @bauhiniafolia9673
    @bauhiniafolia9673 2 года назад +586

    Indonesian language is expected to be learned by 700+ tribes, each has their own language / dialect, so it gotta be simple

    • @henrytusco375
      @henrytusco375 2 года назад +84

      Agreed! Our founding fathers chose Riau Melayu dialect to be our Lingua Franca because its simplicity compared to other ethnic languages and how common the were spoken across major islands due to trading.
      Although most spoken language at that time was Javan but it's definitely harder to learn ;)

    • @Qwerty-jc3so
      @Qwerty-jc3so 2 года назад +29

      I'm sorry for interrupting, but what's the history of this language? Why were the tribes learning this language? I'm not indonesian but this comment made me curious.

    • @dianputra7336
      @dianputra7336 2 года назад +125

      @@Qwerty-jc3so its a language created to united the whole nation, from sabang to marauke. Each province has their own language and dialect, so the founding fathers make this one language so people from anywhere in Indonesia can communicate with each other no matter from which part of Indonesia they came from.

    • @Qwerty-jc3so
      @Qwerty-jc3so 2 года назад +33

      @@dianputra7336 wow, that's truly amazing. Pardon me but, did it cause any protests or objection when they tried to "impose" this language on the tribes? Or were they cool with it? I'm not condemning it at all, but i'm just curious because my country has a similar situation of having too much diversity in languages, and the efforts of enforcing one uniform language accross the country has been futile here. I want to know how the great founding fathers dealt with the trouble.

    • @bauhiniafolia9673
      @bauhiniafolia9673 2 года назад +88

      @@Qwerty-jc3so riau language was spoken across the archipelago since it was the language of trade in the area (its part of the maritime silk road).
      The decision to use riau language as a basis was agreed upon the "Sumpah Pemuda / the youth pledge" event where nearly each island and tribe send their youth representative to gather and discuss the basis of indonesian independence. They agreed upon 3 things
      1. That we will fight together as one indonesia
      2. That they are part of one nation, one indonesia
      3. That "Bahasa Indonesia / indonesian language" would be used as the language of unity
      So the decision was made from a nation wide agreement, and should be used if you're communicating to other people from different culture.
      Riau was choosen because the language only has 1 level of communication, unlike several others. But Riau is only the basis, since Indonesian borrow a lot of words from outsiders and from the different culture of the tribes inside as well

  • @trollboy2910
    @trollboy2910 11 месяцев назад +38

    The guy who invented French should be thrown in prison and be forced to learn Indonesian.

    • @gatoreptiliano8785
      @gatoreptiliano8785 4 месяца назад +2

      No, better force him to learn Haitian Creole, that hits closer to home 😂

  • @inventorsam
    @inventorsam 3 месяца назад +5

    Ohhhhh, so that’s why people from that part of the world sometimes say things like “I go to store tomorrow”?

    • @HenryS360
      @HenryS360 2 месяца назад +1

      I think it's more general than that. My mom knows all about conjugating and tenses in Spanish but just doesn't do it in English. She's heard "I'm not going" a billion times yet always says "I no go". That's why I think it's better to just learn phrases first instead of individual words.

    • @cmaxz817
      @cmaxz817 Месяц назад

      Pretty much, they have yet to solidify the idea of tenses in English.
      Actually, writing poems or other text-based arts in a heavily context based language is kind of fun because you can deliberately leave out some information for various purposes like making a punchline, letting the audience conclude themselves, or just simply giving vague ideas to the readers.

  • @cawrtnei
    @cawrtnei 2 года назад +613

    "A lot of mouse" I like that

    • @Josue-xd5ru
      @Josue-xd5ru 2 года назад +26

      *everyone liked that*

    • @anomienormie8126
      @anomienormie8126 2 года назад +30

      I like mouse mouse more

    • @ucupzzz3759
      @ucupzzz3759 2 года назад +4

      @@anomienormie8126 but actually, mouse mouse translated in indonesian is a proverb to cramps.

    • @YusufGamingq
      @YusufGamingq 2 года назад +12

      MOUSE MOUSE in indonesia is TIKUS TIKUS
      A LOT OF MOUSE in indonesia is BANYAK TIKUS
      BANYAK means MANY so you don't have to add some A and OF

    • @soundmattersuk
      @soundmattersuk 2 года назад +1

      I like a lot of mousse. Preferably chocolate mousse...

  • @teagannam
    @teagannam 2 года назад +577

    “mouse mouse, a lot of mouse” is the single best thing I’ll hear all day

    • @immortalwitch
      @immortalwitch 2 года назад +19

      banyak tikus or tikus - tikus. banyak tikus - tikus is incorrect use of grammar. Indonesia and Malaysia has fairly same language (some might disagree) but we are able to understand them without learning their language. Basic communication is easy but language teacher makes literature a whole another level of difficulty. In other words, I hate learning my own nation language that makes everything unnecessarily difficult when it is so freaking easy. Like why ancient Malay needs to be included in examm like whyyyy? It's not like we're travelling back in time ughh. Sorry for rambling. This is the frustration of high school student.

    • @FuriouzDragon45
      @FuriouzDragon45 2 года назад +12

      @@immortalwitch yeah bro like why tf do i need to know what that laksamana say to the sultan in the 19th century or some shit. Is pencurian the actual act of the thieving or does it mean somebody got rob?

    • @chikoritapkmnfg7331
      @chikoritapkmnfg7331 2 года назад

      Same, so cute!!

    • @chenxiongxiong6778
      @chenxiongxiong6778 2 года назад +5

      @@immortalwitch banyak tikus is correct. Literally means lots of mouse. Tikus-tikus means more than one mouse. Both tikus-tikus and banyak tikus are correct.

    • @immortalwitch
      @immortalwitch 2 года назад

      @@chenxiongxiong6778 yeah. I said banyak tikus - tikus is the one that's wrong.

  • @stwida91
    @stwida91 28 дней назад

    This is how every language should be structured.

  • @all4fitz
    @all4fitz 10 месяцев назад +5

    I have always loudly stated that English is a ridiculous language but yet it's the only one I know and I never was interested in learning another one.
    You have made me more intrigued than ever before in a language.

  • @allifairm
    @allifairm 2 года назад +1431

    I vote to start a movement of Indonesian as the international language. 👍🏻

    • @nicklatino7157
      @nicklatino7157 2 года назад +136

      We can just modify English in the same sense. Because so many people around the world already speak English

    • @altafnaufal247
      @altafnaufal247 2 года назад +22

      @@nicklatino7157 Agree!

    • @dhanlitozi184
      @dhanlitozi184 2 года назад +52

      Yeah. Just modify the English, grammar and spelling is hard.

    • @SujalRajput10
      @SujalRajput10 2 года назад +55

      Then we would need Colonisation 2.0

    • @derekrivera3487
      @derekrivera3487 2 года назад +43

      @@SujalRajput10 wow coolest name I've seen

  • @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923
    @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923 2 года назад +870

    "mouse mouse" or "a lot of mouse" has to be my fave thing ever now

    • @dezzydream
      @dezzydream 2 года назад +25

      i mean repeating nouns does exist in english but it's usually used in rural dialects and with a tonal emphasis on the first word. like where i'm from, saying "food food" refers to a meal in comparison to a snack. it even works with adjectives, saying "big big" simply adds emphasis to the idea that something is big. it's usually considered "informal" speech but honestly it's an interesting linguistic quirk and just shows how language can evolve entirely new conventions in only a hundred years or so if isolated.

    • @argo1879
      @argo1879 2 года назад +11

      @@dezzydream the food food thing is something that everyone does I think. It’s just telling someone you mean “real” food not fake food like a snack as you said. In general we don’t do that in English though, and we definitely don’t just repeat nouns to make them plural

    • @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923
      @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923 2 года назад +5

      @@dezzydream I mean, we do that in English all the time, all of those. it's just general phrasing. yeah, it's not formal, but everyone does it. y'know, "do you like me or LIKE like me?" "do you want snacks or do you want FOOD food?" "that thing is BIG big" it's pretty common. I've just never heard it in the English language for specifically mice

    • @kyupin1075
      @kyupin1075 2 года назад +13

      @@wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923 it's used for emphasis in those cases though, I've never heard of saying a word twice to make it plural in English. "food food" just means real food, not lots of food/plural food (food is plural anyway so maybe not the best example)

    • @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923
      @wolfiebunnyshopofficial3923 2 года назад +1

      @@kyupin1075 yeah that's what I meant, its more an adjective than a plural

  • @xipetotec666
    @xipetotec666 6 месяцев назад +6

    The thing is if u use formal Indonesia to native it will sounded awkward

  • @NurmuhammadBaraka
    @NurmuhammadBaraka 3 месяца назад +1

    I loved this language. I wish English was easier like this

  • @Eric-kg2nc
    @Eric-kg2nc Год назад +4089

    One time I asked my Spanish teacher, “wait why is pizza a girl?”

    • @tian3092
      @tian3092 Год назад +218

      The shape: V😑

    • @sellmoon
      @sellmoon Год назад +142

      it's because it ends with "a", if it ended with "o" it would be a boy, if it ended with other letter.... it depends 😅

    • @sellmoon
      @sellmoon Год назад +37

      in my language (pt) water is female 😅is it "male" in spanish?

    • @michaelcolbourn6719
      @michaelcolbourn6719 Год назад +5

      ​@@tian3092 pizzas are circular....

    • @frnwdx
      @frnwdx Год назад +40

      ​@@sellmoonyes, it is. Sometimes not every word in spanish that ends in "a" is exactly a "female", so that's why it's so hard for non-spanish speakers to learn the language

  • @user-fh5ov4tu2j
    @user-fh5ov4tu2j 2 года назад +283

    My favorite part of the language is that its phonetically consistent. No matter what word you never change how a letter is pronounced

    • @aiko9393
      @aiko9393 2 года назад +19

      Well, not the all letters. The most famous example is how you pronounce the E in sate (satay) and empat (4) 😁

    • @phoenixxena8194
      @phoenixxena8194 2 года назад +1

      AMEN!!

    • @kodax1292
      @kodax1292 2 года назад +16

      English is so annoying in that context, the way its spelling is so inconsistent makes it much harder to learn

    • @Niall69Irish
      @Niall69Irish 2 года назад +6

      @@kodax1292 wait till you discover french

    • @byunbaekhyun2283
      @byunbaekhyun2283 2 года назад +2

      @@aiko9393 sate is only used by javanese, people outside java didnt call it sate, they call it satai.

  • @mariemelansongundy-vx4ox
    @mariemelansongundy-vx4ox Год назад +5

    Thank you! great crash course. Would of never thought Indonesian.

  • @p_louis
    @p_louis 6 месяцев назад +6

    Hearing mouse mouse is weird even though I've essentially been saying that all my life.

  • @stevenalexander6262
    @stevenalexander6262 2 года назад +545

    As an indonesian this is hilarious tbh, and I never really noticed these as much

    • @misterrwiggle
      @misterrwiggle 2 года назад +22

      imagine Indonesian doing colonialism 🗿

    • @zebul5854
      @zebul5854 2 года назад +1

      @@misterrwiggle learning spanish, russian, germany, or C̶h̶i̶n̶e̶s̶e̶ mandarin would've been much easier

    • @rendyajadech1957
      @rendyajadech1957 2 года назад +5

      @@zebul5854 we cant, we are too permissive 😅

    • @cathpalug1221
      @cathpalug1221 2 года назад +12

      @@rendyajadech1957 _majapahit gang has enter the chat_

    • @jirehemanuel
      @jirehemanuel 2 года назад +8

      @@cathpalug1221 imagine majapahit conquering the world 👀

  • @cibongpokemontrainer4040
    @cibongpokemontrainer4040 2 года назад +808

    Basically all language around the world : we should make it hard and complicated it differs based on context, time, gender. And also it shouldnt be said as it was written
    Indonesian : why?

    • @lesussie2237
      @lesussie2237 2 года назад +21

      Indonesian is a simplified and standardised form of malay to be used by all indonesians so it's designed to be easy to learn
      Mind you, standard indonesian is nothing like the indonesian that is actually used

    • @Josue-xd5ru
      @Josue-xd5ru 2 года назад

      @@lesussie2237 Few questions. So does every Indonesian speak the standardized version? or do they have their own versions that they speak too? If so, can they understand eachother? Like can someone who speaks solely Malay understand Indonesian? Excuse my ignorance.

    • @Maranakech
      @Maranakech 2 года назад +7

      @@Josue-xd5ru bunch of indonesians use a 'slang' words daily or just a more of 'unformal' (in Indonesia we call this "tidak baku") form of words which makes it easier to speak.
      ps. sorry if my explanation is bad...

    • @r2k88
      @r2k88 2 года назад +8

      @@Josue-xd5ru we also have dialects or local set of languages as well. If you look up Indonesia in wikipedia, it says it has OVER 700 regional languages. Some of them are: Javanese (majority), Sundanese, Balinese, Papuanese, and so on and so forth. So yeah it’s good to have a unifying language.
      Also some of these regional languages may or may not be understood between each other.

    • @lesussie2237
      @lesussie2237 2 года назад +6

      @@Josue-xd5ru no not really. Standard indonesian is usually only heard in the news and very formal occasions like public speeches. Most indonesians speak informal versions that have heavily contracted grammar and influence from surounding regional languages. Standard malay and indonesian are about 80-90% similar, so if you know one you can understand the other, but informal malay and indonesian (the one used most of the time) are only about 40-50% similar to one another
      This video by langfocus goes into more detail if you're interested
      ruclips.net/video/3kAbNdot4e0/видео.html

  • @umaxen0048
    @umaxen0048 11 месяцев назад +10

    "Hey, did you find your dog dog?"

  • @CraigSakada
    @CraigSakada 5 месяцев назад +3

    All the Malay family in Austronesian speak this way. And they also don’t have words that label one as male or female. It’s gender fluid, simplified and very easy to learn. 😊

    • @ladycempluk2481
      @ladycempluk2481 5 месяцев назад

      John McWhorter(linguist) suggested that colloquial Indonesian would be an ideal universal language for the world.

  • @sub-zero_
    @sub-zero_ 2 года назад +143

    oooohhh thats why a friend from there said «I play yesterday» not that they’re too bad in english, its just how they would say it in native tounge. thank you

    • @iamgorgeous
      @iamgorgeous 2 года назад +45

      Yeah, many of us feeling frustrated studying english because we are not used to the tenses (including me lol). The suffix -ed like in "changed" and "cooked" also kinda hard to pronounce for us indonesian so you might not hear it when an indonesian (whose english not really good) trying to say it to you :"D

    • @Zedvais
      @Zedvais 2 года назад +8

      Most of the one who learn English later in their life or those who just speak basic English will be talking to you the same way your friend does. I have a lot of friends who struggles with switching out indonesian and english. I have no problem since i learn English from the age of 4 and i grew up speaking both but English wasn’t a big thing when i grew up and people learn it enough just to write a letter or watching movie.

    • @barbarapomeroy6497
      @barbarapomeroy6497 2 года назад +1

      Seems like yours could use some work so you might want to also reign in the automatic judgments.

    • @ketchuppedase2867
      @ketchuppedase2867 2 года назад +1

      Yesss now you understand...

    • @revolvency
      @revolvency 2 года назад

      Globish is still work I guess, better than not talking 😭

  • @linggag.a.9538
    @linggag.a.9538 Год назад +2214

    idk, my australian friend said, before she moved to Indo she thought Indonesian was so easy cuz she aced all her Indo classes. But when she arrived here she couldnt understand a thing because, apparently the hardest part of Indonesian is, people tend not to speak in the proper structure like you found in your text book and they tend to mix their vocabs with the other hundreds local languages. LOL so yeah apparently every language has its own perk ❤

    • @RonaldMSalyer
      @RonaldMSalyer Год назад +207

      It’s true. I’m the opposite I only know slang Indonesian and I can’t understand formal Indonesian or anything you’d find in a class etc

    • @Nophreetime
      @Nophreetime Год назад +46

      Exactly....!! Hahaha... There's always a catch 😜

    • @arfansthename
      @arfansthename Год назад +36

      For example, an informal way to say sorry (formal is "maaf"), is just to say "sorry"

    • @jlwkss
      @jlwkss Год назад +5

      @@arfansthename wait is sorry in indonesian the same as english??

    • @arfansthename
      @arfansthename Год назад +28

      @@jlwkss no it's just indonized

  • @jacobwarmack8751
    @jacobwarmack8751 Год назад +1

    The thing I respect most about this guy is that he chose a goal that is impossible to complete, so he’ll always have a reason to keep going

  • @fruitytarian
    @fruitytarian 11 дней назад

    Cool, I recently added Indonesian to my list of languages to learn 😊

  • @johngaller2751
    @johngaller2751 2 года назад +1243

    "so no Indonesian spelling bees" made me laugh out loud at my desk!

    • @toasterpro71
      @toasterpro71 2 года назад +2

      same with bosnian

    • @arya_1503_fancade
      @arya_1503_fancade 2 года назад +6

      A lot of languages too

    • @alfrredd
      @alfrredd 2 года назад +3

      same with spanish

    • @nomekuni1307
      @nomekuni1307 2 года назад +28

      An Indonesian here. I was confused the first time I heard “spelling bee”. Like.. what? You spell bees? What does that mean? 🙃

    • @arya_1503_fancade
      @arya_1503_fancade 2 года назад +22

      @@nomekuni1307 Spelling bee is a competition where you have to spell a word. For the word "bee"? I don't know
      English spelling is irregular so it's hard to spell a word and that's why English is chosen on the spelling bee competition.
      On the other hand, Indonesian spelling is regular, so it's very easy to spell a word. If Indonesian is chosen, it will be boring because everyone can spell it.

  • @semaraksuara2234
    @semaraksuara2234 2 года назад +670

    Because of being the easiest, most Indonesians find it quite difficult to learn other languages with complicated rules. On the contrary, their clear pronunciation makes it easier to sound like a native when speaking other languages. Still requires some exercises tho.

    • @devitaromlah2866
      @devitaromlah2866 2 года назад

      Maybe they are just dumb when learning other languages.

    • @LUFKK0L
      @LUFKK0L 2 года назад +93

      Can confirm, learning German is hard because literal objects have genders for some ungodly reason, like how pizza is feminine and how salad is masculine, *_why???_*

    • @Alex_Eh
      @Alex_Eh 2 года назад +21

      @@LUFKK0L I mean… Die Pizza and der Salad just sounds right haha

    • @fajarn7052
      @fajarn7052 2 года назад +26

      Yes, we don't have default accent (besides our own ethnic accent), it makes speaking other language somewhat easier.

    • @missaltocontralto
      @missaltocontralto Год назад +3

      @@LUFKK0L Karena takdir, Kak. 😂

  • @christinestevenson1011
    @christinestevenson1011 5 часов назад

    So interesting - I learned something new today

  • @dizzydisciple
    @dizzydisciple Год назад +4

    Dang now I wanna learn Indonesian for some reason lol

  • @SantomPh
    @SantomPh 2 года назад +2396

    Indonesian becomes very difficult when you include loanwords, portmanteaus, millenial speak, urban/rural slang, cyberslang and codeswitching with the 700+ other languages in Indonesia.
    This is also how people talk casually, not some specific method.

    • @meferswift
      @meferswift 2 года назад +212

      Other language pretty have the same.
      Its easier if you talk yhe decent aka formal indonesian.

    • @coderhub-tech7942
      @coderhub-tech7942 2 года назад +54

      As a native Indonesian speaker, true that

    • @coderhub-tech7942
      @coderhub-tech7942 2 года назад +122

      However the slang is pretty easy to understand once you dip your toes in them

    • @ioncekilledamanwithmyshoe
      @ioncekilledamanwithmyshoe 2 года назад +120

      Yeah, but most of that also applies to almost every single language which are already harder.

    • @elgazu1857
      @elgazu1857 2 года назад +82

      If you include slangs, accents and dialects; then Spanish would be the hardest language because every single Spanish country has very different slangs, accents and dialects, we can’t even understand each other and we speak the same language.
      Im from Colombia and it’s difficult for me to understand a Chilean, and I’ve got multiple mexican friends that can’t understand a lot of words that I say because of my Colombian accent.

  • @Syakuro
    @Syakuro 2 года назад +492

    As an Indonesian I agree with you, but I think most foreigner struggles a lot on the affix of the language. It's kinda confusing sometimes, but once you got the hang of it yes Indonesian is a pretty easy language to learn.

    • @kevindavidson8281
      @kevindavidson8281 2 года назад +3

      Affix?

    • @silentviewer.17yearsago65
      @silentviewer.17yearsago65 2 года назад +43

      @@kevindavidson8281 suffix and prefix in verbs. it's frustating. even for natives

    • @fritzid
      @fritzid 2 года назад +45

      Plus it's agglutinative lmao
      *Per-tanggung-jawab-an-nya*

    • @halimmoesa3097
      @halimmoesa3097 2 года назад +39

      It doesn't really matter tho, unless you wanna be really masteres in the language (which even most Indonesian are not)
      Even in daily conversation, we tend to eliminate the affix and suffix, as long you know how to use di- (as passive) you can communicate without much problem in Indonesian.
      E.g :
      Formal: Aku sedang mencuci baju
      Informal: Aku lagi cuci baju
      Formal : Dia menggoreng ikan
      Informal : Dia goreng ikan
      Formal : kamu harus mempertanggungjawabkan perbuatanmu
      Informal: kamu harus tanggungjawab
      Formal : aku sedang mengetik
      Informal : aku lagi ngetik/ketik

    • @Syakuro
      @Syakuro 2 года назад +15

      @@halimmoesa3097 True. Informal Indonesian is easy because it depends on the context of the conversation.

  • @chrisdeal8892
    @chrisdeal8892 4 дня назад

    Dude I love how good u are at language skills your videos are great

  • @theatomic430
    @theatomic430 2 месяца назад +1

    Love this guy but he is... different. Definitely very special to understand languages the way he does.

  • @maesyrae5456
    @maesyrae5456 Год назад +2403

    “Mouse mouse” thank you for this knowledge. I will now do this in English

    • @MsHojat
      @MsHojat Год назад +22

      Nothing wrong with the convention of adding an "s or es" to the end of a word though. The problem is with the silly exceptions where that's not how to say it.
      You could just try to break those exceptions by saying "mouses" instead.

    • @Yazuxi
      @Yazuxi Год назад +25

      In indonesia it just, banyak tikus or tikus-tikus. Banyak = more than one.

    • @umharr
      @umharr Год назад +1

      @@Yazuxi isn’t that bahasa melayu???

    • @alvinr17
      @alvinr17 Год назад +21

      @@umharr melayu/indonesian almost the same

    • @samgyeopsal569
      @samgyeopsal569 Год назад +3

      @@MsHojat yes it’s a great idea. The trouble of repeating the word is that it becomes too long. Adding as “S” at the back makes thing shorter.

  • @matcha_
    @matcha_ 2 года назад +2224

    You are literally the 8th person in the past month who's popped up and recommended Indonesian as the easiest language to learn (I watch a lot of language/culture related content). Ironically I also had Indonesian food for the first time yesterday. Is this a sign to learn Indonesian? This 👏is 👏a 👏sign👏

    • @JaysGunner
      @JaysGunner 2 года назад +6

      Who are the 7 other people if you don't mind me asking?

    • @irinka_katlova
      @irinka_katlova 2 года назад +1

      Welcome! 😁😁😁

    • @steinlfromthebronx7372
      @steinlfromthebronx7372 2 года назад +21

      @A then if you're actually being expert you would understand Malay lil bit 😅 That's why there's a lot of foreign RUclipsrs made "Indonesian vs Malay", it's almost like "British vs American English".

    • @umumumumumumumumumumumumum
      @umumumumumumumumumumumumum 2 года назад

      Yes, view it as a sign 🙌 I need to begin a language venture as well- I’m thinking German or Japanese (as different as those options are)
      & that wouldn’t be ironic btw, more a coincidence or correspondence

    • @jauxro
      @jauxro 2 года назад +1

      I wonder if learning Indonesian would make it easier to learn Tagalog, if they're related enough :o

  • @ronniedefelice8743
    @ronniedefelice8743 Год назад +4

    Yes I'm learning Italian right now and it can be confusing this way. For example there's like 6 different ways to say eat. And a lot of words have more than 1 meaning. It can be confusing words change depending on gender, whether there's more than one person, past tense and so on. It's a pain but it's going good

  • @thenitpickycat
    @thenitpickycat 2 года назад +280

    Finally someone said that indonesian is the easiest language ever.

    • @ilhamseptian1604
      @ilhamseptian1604 2 года назад +10

      I felt that after realized how hard to learn Arabic and English lmao

    • @xryanxdxgaming4925
      @xryanxdxgaming4925 2 года назад +6

      Pov: lu ga bisa indo

    • @cek0792
      @cek0792 2 года назад +10

      @@xryanxdxgaming4925 POV : Anda mengunakan Bahasa Indonesia informal

    • @spidergoblin.
      @spidergoblin. 2 года назад +2

      Banyak dari mereka mengatakan bahasa Indonesia susah, mungkin susahnya di bagian penggunaan prefiks me-, se-, ke-, pe-, dsb dan juga sufiks -an, -kan, -nya, -i, dsb

    • @yyy2438
      @yyy2438 Год назад +1

      🤣👍

  • @aciesongbird9052
    @aciesongbird9052 2 года назад +192

    My dad learned Indonesian in high school, and he said the exact same thing! He loved how easy it was to learn, and he was actually taught by an Indonesian woman, so they learned about the culture and traditions of Indonesia alongside the language. He said after about two years he even started dreaming in Indonesian! He lived in Australia so he figured Indonesia would be the most useful language to learn as if was one of the closest foreign languages (because imagine travelling to Europe, what could he possibly need French or German for?,, Proceeded to marry a German woman LMAO). Unfortunately he can only remember a few basic phrases now (thank you, please, you're welcome, etc) and swear words, but the language still interests me so much!

    • @eyeballpapercut4400
      @eyeballpapercut4400 2 года назад +25

      "and swear words"
      seems like recurring thing with people lol

    • @ann_alanth
      @ann_alanth 2 года назад +2

      @@eyeballpapercut4400 Indonesian swear words are the best ngl

    • @sahrielnewbie9054
      @sahrielnewbie9054 2 года назад

      NGENTODD!!

    • @ryanhanks8816
      @ryanhanks8816 2 года назад

      What swear word he remeber?

  • @theatomic430
    @theatomic430 2 месяца назад +1

    His point on Spanish is taken but as I am learning Spanish I am getting the sense you can do more than just get by if you know just the present, preterite, and gerund.

  • @booknerd78
    @booknerd78 2 дня назад

    Here I am, trying to decide what new language to add on duolingo and you just convinced me. 😂 Indonesian wasn't even on my short list 😂😂

  • @HimaMotovlog
    @HimaMotovlog 2 года назад +718

    English : “I’ve told you to not to do something stupid”
    Indonesian : “Kan”

    • @rexluther
      @rexluther 2 года назад +14

      So true! Never realize this one.

    • @alb12345672
      @alb12345672 2 года назад +24

      @@rexluther "Kan" means yes/true in Hebrew, kind of the same meaning :lol:

    • @lil_jong-un6668
      @lil_jong-un6668 2 года назад +11

      see?

    • @reigenlucilfer6154
      @reigenlucilfer6154 Год назад +7

      @@lil_jong-un6668 was about to say this. ive seen this meme format a lot but even the english had their ways to express things in an efficient/short way.

    • @lil_jong-un6668
      @lil_jong-un6668 Год назад +2

      @@reigenlucilfer6154 Yep. Honestly i'm getting sick of Indonesian spreading this incorrect, overused, unfunny joke. Instead of being funny, this joke expose your own lack of knowledge about English.

  • @lupine.spirit161
    @lupine.spirit161 Год назад +392

    meanwhile in germany: a bus is male, a tram is female and a bike is just a thing

    • @dakotareynolds3049
      @dakotareynolds3049 8 месяцев назад

      Also, men are male, women are female, boys are male, and girls are a thing

    • @aiaesthetics1124
      @aiaesthetics1124 6 месяцев назад +7

      😂😂😂

    • @rexlongfellow
      @rexlongfellow 6 месяцев назад +5

      😂😂😂😂

    • @VovanPo
      @VovanPo 3 месяца назад +4

      in russian bus tram and bike is all male

  • @teslawhite
    @teslawhite Год назад +3

    You inspired me to teach my kids more language. I look at all words as synonyms with some rules and somehow that clicks great for them and me. I knew enough french and german to navigate and that was it. Now my 13 year old is neck deep in japanese, her 6th conversational language. She is taking an online course in japanese currently, designed for japanese students with an american teacher and is doing great.
    So thank you!

  • @Mewdf
    @Mewdf 3 месяца назад +1

    As an Indonesian, not only our language is easy, it's also easy to learn orther language, for example, im 12 and can speak 3 language and soon to be 4

  • @zeleniawolfe
    @zeleniawolfe 2 года назад +52

    As an Indonesian this is why I find learning new languages kinda hard. Why are there 3 verbs for words or gender 😭😂

  • @aryamalik1716
    @aryamalik1716 2 года назад +1771

    In Indonesian: no noun gender, no cases/ noun declension, no verb conjugation, no tone, no verb changes based on tenses, plural forms are by repeating the noun, everything spelled as it written, subject/direct and indirect object/ possesive pronouns are the same, no definite article, no "to be" verb, it is usually adding another word rather than modifiying a word to make expression

    • @zackbuildit88
      @zackbuildit88 2 года назад +125

      It’s like the closest any fully natural language gets to being toki pona

    • @Voodka07
      @Voodka07 2 года назад +139

      Why cant every languages in the world work like this 🤣🤣🤣

    • @heartmint7364
      @heartmint7364 2 года назад +89

      @@Voodka07 remember that quote by bill gates that basically says "give complicated task to a lazy person and he will make it easy"? Well no nation have people as lazy as the indonesian. So there's that

    • @sab-nm9di
      @sab-nm9di 2 года назад +144

      @@heartmint7364 lazy like generalizing a whole population, amirite?

    • @aquqinn
      @aquqinn 2 года назад +2

      @@sab-nm9di Metaphor

  • @amazingfireboy1848
    @amazingfireboy1848 2 месяца назад +1

    Well if you're looking for a super easy context-dependant language, one that takes literally 2 days to learn and has large communities who speak it online, definitely learn Toki Pona.

  • @Imacrab398
    @Imacrab398 3 месяца назад

    As someone who is learning Indonesian, I can confirm that this is true

  • @zeuslim1543
    @zeuslim1543 2 года назад +197

    i didnt know indonesian was this easy for foreigners😂

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +26

      Between Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, German, Japanese, Turkish, and Indonesian; Indonesian is definitely the easiest. Grammar is simple and words have only one tense.
      I once taught my 5-year old nephew to tell his Indonesian grandfather (my father), “Saya mau angoor” (I want wine)
      Russian words are the hardest to pronounce.

    • @shinsha_
      @shinsha_ 2 года назад +8

      @@perfectsplit5515 why did you teach that to him? 😂

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +2

      @@shinsha_ It is a “tradition” whenever I learn the basics of a new language through the Pimsleur CDs. Immediately after learning how to say, “I want a beer / I want wine”, I teach a young child to speak it in that foreign language to an adult who speaks that language as a native language.
      I once taught a 4th grader in a Hispanic majority school to tell his primary teacher, “Yo quero unaservesa” (I want a beer)

    • @techpassion4126
      @techpassion4126 2 года назад +3

      @@perfectsplit5515 Angoor is wine over there? I didn't know that, that's interesting! Across the pond here in Malaysia Anggur just means grape!

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +7

      @@techpassion4126 The Pimsleur CDs said that Anggur is wine.
      Coincidentally, when I had my nephew say, “Saya mau anggur” to my Indonesian mother (his grandmother), she interpreted it as, “I want grapes.”
      But when he said it to my father (his grandfather), he interpreted it as, “I want wine.”
      Additionally, I visited my extended family in Indonesia in 2003 and my grand uncle was at a party. He had the title of “Kukong” and was an honored member of the family. He was the only relative at that party who did not remember me and did not know that I spoke no Indonesian. He asked me, “Ciapa bapah?” (Who are you?). The other relatives there knew that I could not understand him, but said nothing, to “prank” him. My Tante Betty (Aunt Betty) answered him by jokingly saying, “He is Mister Bush”.
      Then after a pause, he figured it out and said, “You don’t speak Indonesian!”
      Everyone else there busted out laughing. I had no idea what was going on.

  • @fadhelgartam6840
    @fadhelgartam6840 2 года назад +882

    The Indonesian “formal” or proper language is really easy. But when it comes to conversational language, i guarantee you, it would be a lot lot harder to understand

    • @haritzfadillah8844
      @haritzfadillah8844 2 года назад +99

      Damn right.
      Once they try to have convos with the locals, they'll get their mind fucked, lol.

    • @chocho6766
      @chocho6766 2 года назад +25

      You just need use your feeling

    • @a2-antonio892
      @a2-antonio892 2 года назад +33

      @middle aged man in extreme debt tuh, sana, sini, sono, dih, sih

    • @mirzabagus9872
      @mirzabagus9872 2 года назад +9

      When they learn ethnic traditional language , i mean like java / jawa language , sumatra language , etc their will harder to understand what's meaning 😅

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa 2 года назад +4

      karena mereka pakai bahasa daerah. bukan bahasa indonesia

  • @kabloom6776
    @kabloom6776 6 месяцев назад +1

    In my opinion, having different verbs for each tense, plural singular etc makes a language a lot more beautiful.

  • @IsaiahMartinez88
    @IsaiahMartinez88 3 месяца назад +1

    I’ve heard this too. The easier languages to learn as a native English speaker are Italian, Afrikaans, and yes surprisingly Indonesian.

  • @Eatlead727
    @Eatlead727 Год назад +319

    Languages are a lot easier if you are dating someone that speaks it. I learned Indonesian Bahasa because I really liked someone

    • @elgatoooy
      @elgatoooy Год назад +3

      Lol

    • @turtlemusic1509
      @turtlemusic1509 Год назад +29

      That's cute.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Год назад +6

      The easiest way to get a girlfriend is to speak multiple languages lol

    • @dandanthedandan7558
      @dandanthedandan7558 Год назад

      Something I find amusing is that "Bahasa Indonesia" is shortened to Bahasa. Bahasa only means language lol.

    • @denisborzov8406
      @denisborzov8406 Год назад

      @@belstar1128 I speak multiple languages. Never helped me get a gf, lol.

  • @vuiteau
    @vuiteau Год назад +2269

    As Indonesian, I believe Indonesian has 4 levels of language:
    1. Standard Indonesian (formal)
    ex. "Saya akan pergi ke kantor" (I will go to the office)
    2. Formal casual
    ex. "Saya/aku mau ke kantor" (I want go to office)
    3. Informal
    ex. "gw mau ngantor" (I want to work at the office)
    4. Mixed with locals
    ex. "gw/aku wes kantor" (I'll go office)
    Indonesian grammar isn't easy and barely even used, except for paper or work reports.
    Buttt, due to the diversity of culture, Indonesian pronunciation is very easy. For example, you can pronounce "iya" to "iyi/iyu/iye/iyo" and people still understand that you mean "yes".

    • @wildanfatihg
      @wildanfatihg Год назад +143

      And even those levels can vary widely from region to region. For example in some areas of Sumatra and Borneo, "aku" is as informal as you can get. But in Jakarta, I had people telling me that "aku" is too formal for everyday use, a bit romantic even, so they always use either gw (informal) or straight up saya (formal).

    • @iwoaf
      @iwoaf Год назад +212

      Formal Indonesian is easy, Day to day Indonesian is basically a language with no rules 😭

    • @dandanthedandan7558
      @dandanthedandan7558 Год назад +75

      Indonesia have slangs of slangs lol

    • @mastertofu
      @mastertofu Год назад +72

      I noticed that this extends into how Indonesians use other languages too, bringing a very simplified grammar style into languages like English and Chinese, and another Indonesian can understand it clear as day even if it breaks every "grammar rule" there is. It beautiful how people communicate.

    • @shrimpaerospace
      @shrimpaerospace Год назад

      gw mau ngonto-

  • @vaazig
    @vaazig 4 месяца назад

    Hmm, that sounds very interesting. I love languages, but suck at them, so this would be up my alley! 😅

  • @lacee0
    @lacee0 2 года назад +107

    Wow! In high school I always thought a language like that would exist but was convinced by teachers language wouldnt work in a simple way. I gotta make some "I told you so" phone calls

    • @qb4097
      @qb4097 2 года назад +4

      gotta make the call soon then👀

    • @chocho6766
      @chocho6766 2 года назад +22

      me as Indonesian : why are other language have so many rule

    • @andreaskailola6420
      @andreaskailola6420 2 года назад +6

      @@chocho6766 ikr

    • @The_Divergent
      @The_Divergent 2 года назад

      🤷‍♂️

    • @lacee0
      @lacee0 2 года назад +5

      @@chocho6766 that's what I'm saying. All the rules seem so unnecessary and complicated especially my first language.

  • @rakhayudhistira
    @rakhayudhistira 2 года назад +263

    "Singular: cat, plural: cats"
    "Oh just add an "s" then. Ok, pretty simple"
    "So what about goose?"
    "Gooses"
    "It's geese"

    • @thedoomslayer5863
      @thedoomslayer5863 2 года назад +45

      Yeah to hell with that inconsistent shit lol

    • @asterborealis1417
      @asterborealis1417 2 года назад +6

      Theres actually an interesting history behind that inconsistency

    • @nasywanmuhammadyusuf7d920
      @nasywanmuhammadyusuf7d920 2 года назад +49

      @@asterborealis1417 doesn't make up for the inconsistency though

    • @lukecalos4442
      @lukecalos4442 2 года назад +3

      Biggest problem in english... Nah jk there are lots of worse problems😂

    • @fiona3929
      @fiona3929 2 года назад +26

      "What about Moose?"
      "Meese?"
      "It is moose".
      "Try, mouse".
      "Mouses".
      "It's actually mice."

  • @mikesozickgaming1012
    @mikesozickgaming1012 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'm learning Indonesian because of my family, and it's so great knowing I can ignore a lot of words. All I have to focus on is the main points. They just connect themselves. No "a" or "am."

  • @sleepy4205
    @sleepy4205 7 месяцев назад +3

    Now I dont need to worry on someome cancelling me because I said the wrong pronouns 😂

  • @glupglupp
    @glupglupp 2 года назад +135

    I've said this countless times that Indonesian is the easiest most consistent language, and this is not because I'm a native.

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +5

      I once meant to ask my Indonesian cousin,
      “Mau macan apa?”
      But I made the mistake of saying,
      “Mau macan ciapa?”

    • @kurei746
      @kurei746 2 года назад

      @@perfectsplit5515 I need to know, what does that mean? Im asking because of my personal experience I can't trust Google when it comes to translating things

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +2

      @@kurei746 I do not know if I spelled it right. I was trying to say, “Mau macan apa?” (What do you want to eat?)
      I erroneously said, “Mau macan ciapa?”
      "Who do you want to eat?)

    • @kurei746
      @kurei746 2 года назад +12

      @@perfectsplit5515 oh my god hope they didn't call the police

    • @perfectsplit5515
      @perfectsplit5515 2 года назад +5

      @@kurei746 Indonesian cops only show up if you bribe them enough $$$.

  • @jonpaul3868
    @jonpaul3868 2 года назад +438

    English be like : 2 cats
    Indonesian: mate, we know the cat is plural you put "2" in front of it. No need to add the unnecessary "s"

    • @LeviRHogan
      @LeviRHogan 2 года назад +31

      Same thing happens in Irish. A dog = madra. Dogs = madraí. 2 dogs = dhá madra.

    • @unslaadkrosis9435
      @unslaadkrosis9435 2 года назад +24

      Same in Turkish, dog = köpek, 2 dogs = 2 köpek

    • @Ryan-cb1ei
      @Ryan-cb1ei 2 года назад +4

      Well that’s kind of silly to say because you can also just say cats to imply there are multiple. Saying two is just more specific. But saying cats is quicker than cat-cat…

    • @jonpaul3868
      @jonpaul3868 2 года назад +8

      @@Ryan-cb1ei this is unfortunate. Obviously latins is not native to Indonesian. There was a time in indonesia that we used "cat2" as an equivalent of "cats" (plural). Still used in the unofficial texts around Indonesia tho. Eg: houses/rumah2, etc. Inthe other hand English got dificulties to inform somting that not yet specified, that is why we got, for example: "goal(s)" in a football match that not yet started. No idea is this a formal form in English or they just make it up.

    • @exxelsetijadi5348
      @exxelsetijadi5348 2 года назад +15

      @@Ryan-cb1ei it's quicker, but that also means you have to learn the plural form of almost every word that doesn't have a regular plural form making it harder to learn (i mean, that's why creoles and pidgins based on languages with many word forms make them regular / get rid of them entirely)
      you don't really have to use the repetition system to state the plural in indonesian anyways, since context or just saying the amount is already enough