The benefits of a bilingual brain - Mia Nacamulli

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • Check out our Patreon page: / teded
    View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/how-speakin...
    It’s obvious that knowing more than one language can make certain things easier - like traveling or watching movies without subtitles. But are there other advantages to having a bilingual (or multilingual) brain? Mia Nacamulli details the three types of bilingual brains and shows how knowing more than one language keeps your brain healthy, complex and actively engaged.
    Lesson by Mia Nacamulli, animation by TED-Ed.

Комментарии • 25 тыс.

  • @TEDEd
    @TEDEd  Год назад +330

    Did you know TED-Ed now publishes animations in 5 other languages? Subscribe via our channels tab or learn more here: bit.ly/3D5Xf9Z

    • @Ranong_
      @Ranong_ Год назад +2

      first comment:)

    • @bigbangbigbang1065
      @bigbangbigbang1065 Год назад +2

      ใช่มันเป็นการดีที่รู้หลายภาษาสามารถเข้าใจและวิเคาะห็ได้ถูกตอ้งขอบคุณ😉

    • @Alex-sn9gl
      @Alex-sn9gl Год назад +1

      ​😊😊😊😊😊😊

    • @centrummedycznebaranowscy3976
      @centrummedycznebaranowscy3976 7 месяцев назад

      @@Ranong_a

    • @centrummedycznebaranowscy3976
      @centrummedycznebaranowscy3976 7 месяцев назад

      @@Ranong_a😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @bart869
    @bart869 4 года назад +10359

    Lets be honest. One of the greatest advantages of being bilingual is getting YT videos praising you😂

    • @red10tus
      @red10tus 4 года назад +20

      Bartek Rybakowski are you one of them?

    • @user-xk9hs1cz9c
      @user-xk9hs1cz9c 4 года назад +53

      True doe I wanted them to praise me lol

    • @andrefourier
      @andrefourier 4 года назад +157

      Yes 😎😎😎 it makes me feel special for a moment and that helps me filling the emptiness of my existence and life

    • @jameslee7126
      @jameslee7126 4 года назад +5

      sorry for interrupting. but what is YT videos?

    • @user-xk9hs1cz9c
      @user-xk9hs1cz9c 4 года назад +11

      James Lee RUclips videos

  • @davidtorres718
    @davidtorres718 5 лет назад +3733

    When you are learning a language and someone asks you to say something in that language, but you forgot EVERY word of the language so you’re like .__.

    • @ucantgetuson
      @ucantgetuson 5 лет назад +38

      IT'S TRUE

    • @Sandwichscoot
      @Sandwichscoot 5 лет назад +64

      I hate that! Sometimes, when I tell people that I'm learning Latin in school, they'll ask me to say something, or give me a Latin sentence to translate, and my mind just goes blank. I wonder why that happens. 🤔😑

    • @margotwillocq2262
      @margotwillocq2262 5 лет назад +42

      It basically means you’re not bilingual

    • @mariac525
      @mariac525 5 лет назад +12

      @@margotwillocq2262 I was thinking the same, lol. I mean, you may get blocked SOMEtime... but always or most of the times...? mmm, that just means you still don't have knowledge enough in that language. Just a little more time :)

    • @issavibe3123
      @issavibe3123 5 лет назад

      Omg relatable

  • @user-xj8pf3kl6m
    @user-xj8pf3kl6m Год назад +316

    as a person, who knows 3 languages (and English isn't my first language) I can say that when I started to learn languages as a hobbie it changed my life a lot
    now, when I angry or sad I just start to think in English or French. it really helps to relax and think more clearly

    • @yakovlevskiy
      @yakovlevskiy Год назад +1

      hi. tell me, if you don't mind in a nutshell, how would you rate learning French, for example, in comparison with English. Do you find this language difficult to remember. I don't know... Stacking in the head or something like that. Naturally we are talking about a person who already speaks English

    • @farihariti2553
      @farihariti2553 Месяц назад +4

      Heyyy me tooo!!!

    • @baxtercol
      @baxtercol Месяц назад +1

      I'm a native English speaker who also is fluent in Spanish and French. I have found that languages with the same roots, i.e the romance languages are easier to learn than something like Arabic which isn't related. I also wonder if it gets easier as you begin to learn more languages. My nephew's girlfriend is Brazilian so I'm making a concerted effort to really learn Portuguese. Years ago when I was getting my master's degree in Spanish literature, we had to take a couple of courses in Portuguese but everybody wrote his finals in Spanish because nobody could write Portuguese. I've also dabbled with Italian and as a Catholic singer had more than my share of Latin chants. When I first read your comment before I read the replies, I was going to tell you that hobby is spelled with a y😊

    • @sabuba47913
      @sabuba47913 Месяц назад

      Apparently your English is bad cause you wrote "when I angry" 💀

    • @farihariti2553
      @farihariti2553 Месяц назад +1

      @@sabuba47913 There's a thing called "typing mistake"💀

  • @culturapopeespiritualidade6566
    @culturapopeespiritualidade6566 Год назад +710

    As an English Teacher, I can honestly say that learning a second language can help the learner in so many ways. Many students have reported to me that improving their second language has also improved his native one.

    • @toygarersoy2840
      @toygarersoy2840 Год назад +33

      it is the opposite for me xd i literally forgot how to speak my NL as i immersed myself in english

    • @luciminho
      @luciminho 11 месяцев назад +18

      I suppose learning a second language, we regularly make comparisons between the two languages, so, this lead us make an additional research in the first language.

    • @xixijames
      @xixijames 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@toygarersoy2840make balance between them ,maybe you don't know that much about ur tongue language but u just born with it(routinely words&basic)so its need some development

    • @nonotrongnguyn
      @nonotrongnguyn 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@luciminho😅

    • @artugert
      @artugert 9 месяцев назад +2

      * teacher (not Teacher)
      * their native one (not his native one)

  • @emily-ei9yd
    @emily-ei9yd 4 года назад +5769

    the worst part is when people ask you to translate stuff and you forget what it means and then you start panicking because you forgot :/

    • @nyanayayansh6464
      @nyanayayansh6464 3 года назад +358

      You just are like “look, I know what it means, but I can’t tell you in words” we just kinda feel the language jaja

    • @leticiaokane3036
      @leticiaokane3036 3 года назад +67

      Man I hate it, in my school we’re forced to translate in the tests and I always forget how to do it lol

    • @emily-ei9yd
      @emily-ei9yd 3 года назад +4

      Letícia Okane yeah ikr

    • @dama5682
      @dama5682 3 года назад +12

      Wait till your college ask you to translate letter and your vocabulary only bad word😂

    • @ihavealotofhusbies8470
      @ihavealotofhusbies8470 3 года назад +4

      I hate it the most

  • @adamharris9733
    @adamharris9733 3 года назад +4292

    Me:*Bilingual*
    Also me:Still reads subtitles

    • @hazimmuzhaffarsuherman4372
      @hazimmuzhaffarsuherman4372 3 года назад +70

      sometimes when u remember a word in ur 2nd language u become unsure of it.

    • @adamharris9733
      @adamharris9733 3 года назад +19

      @@hazimmuzhaffarsuherman4372 This dose'nt really happen to me since i'm profficient in english which is my first language even though i'm asian and i'm not very good at my mother tongue.

    • @studytimelapse597
      @studytimelapse597 3 года назад +72

      It’s like a distraction! Even though u don’t need it, it’s just there so u read it anyway, sometimes it’s even a struggle trying not to read it because it just so distracting

    • @zomblyacopalypse6469
      @zomblyacopalypse6469 3 года назад +3

      Ah! I feel you!!

    • @yoannr1054
      @yoannr1054 3 года назад +8

      Because of the accents, yeah

  • @rustinwilde
    @rustinwilde Год назад +142

    I live in Azerbaijan. Here it's a common thing to know 4 languages. Most people (usually the young generation) know Azerbaijani as their native language, Turkish because it has some similarity with our language, Russian, because the country was a part of the USSR, and English as must known language (because of its internationality). Being bilingual is great and helps to absorb Information from different sources.

    • @singhmilikumari4
      @singhmilikumari4 Месяц назад

      Yes in India too many people commonly know 4 languages- Hind urdu english and their native one.
      I can speak in 7 languages fluently (hindi urdi english bengali marathi odia & haryanvi) and understand 9 languages(+bhojpuri and gujrati) its really helpful when travelling from state to state and some of the languages lyk odia and marathi i learned from my friends in school tym and gradually were able to speak with as fluency as them.

  • @kanoko_
    @kanoko_ Год назад +558

    My first language is Japanese and I started learning English when I was 15.
    Even though it's been more than 3 years, I have no idea how bilingual people could speak as fast and as smooth as native English speakers.

    • @gifariii
      @gifariii Год назад +76

      I think it's normal for not speak as native speakers because sometimes the accent from our mother language affect the way we speak, just like me, my Javanese accent still carries away when i speak English

    • @breadcrumbb3182
      @breadcrumbb3182 Год назад +28

      @@gifariii interesting, the way i started out learning english was through tv shows when i was 4, so i got used to american and british accents i hear from them and adapted those to my own speech. i've never carried an indonesian or javanese accent when i talk eng 🥲

    • @7loslocos
      @7loslocos Год назад +4

      ステーキはレアなのね

    • @bookwormd8627
      @bookwormd8627 Год назад +3

      レアのステーキメッチャ不味いんだけど。
      Also did you attend a local school? If so, then they do teach English there since first grade, even though it is pretty useless

    • @dakk3
      @dakk3 Год назад +24

      It's a matter of practice. If you'd suddenly talk 10 hours a day in English for years, you could eventually talk as fast as natives. Smoothness can be improved as well.

  • @Segio.Ramirez
    @Segio.Ramirez 5 лет назад +30709

    Things that bilinguals do:
    Forget the word they trying to say in one language so they say it in another expecting that the other person understand.

    • @hannahg8439
      @hannahg8439 5 лет назад +620

      Actually that often works for French and English😂

    • @claudiaciganova2633
      @claudiaciganova2633 5 лет назад +547

      I always forget the word i want to say in slovak (my native language) but i know the english word. 😂😂

    • @milliecabrera9355
      @milliecabrera9355 5 лет назад +48

      Meeee

    • @user_9697
      @user_9697 5 лет назад +158

      Yeah it's code-switching

    • @Yenimatics
      @Yenimatics 5 лет назад +39

      thats meeeeeeee

  • @isabelaareas9766
    @isabelaareas9766 4 года назад +4805

    The point is: you feel satisfied of understanding another language without translation

    • @imd123
      @imd123 4 года назад +12

      Isabela Fiusa indeed

    • @jofx4051
      @jofx4051 4 года назад +7

      Imagine hazzle using translator

    • @kiki-lv4ut
      @kiki-lv4ut 4 года назад +2

      Yes

    • @growupwithmay1207
      @growupwithmay1207 4 года назад +65

      And sometimes you know that something means more than what the subs are saying yet there is no way to say it in your native language and you can only let it go😂

    • @ellastevenson7510
      @ellastevenson7510 4 года назад +1

      Yes

  • @MonaHermosura
    @MonaHermosura Год назад +514

    My parents are both from Mexico and only speak Spanish, growing up the main language I knew was Spanish until I started school, I’m so lucky my school had bilingual classes and I was in them until 3rd grade. Which helped with not forgetting my Spanish, but at the same time I have no choice because I still have to speak Spanish to my parents since they can’t understand English.
    One thing I struggle with is not knowing how to translate very professional complicated English forms and Spanish forms. ☹️ which sucks because I can’t help my parents with translating letter in the mail for them 😭
    A funny thing for me in knowing two languages is how some things I can only understand in Spanish and other things I can only understand in English 🤣

    • @charenny7797
      @charenny7797 Год назад +25

      same with me, my parents are Chinese and when I need to translate documents for them, I struggle to do so because it’s so formal. I have no problem reading and writing formal sentences in English but idk how to speak or write formally in Chinese 😭

    • @InssiAjaton
      @InssiAjaton Год назад +1

      My language education (during my school years) was totally based on translation. That between my native language and three others. Yes, three! But that also means that I have a hard time translating between any language pair of which neither one is my native one. Also, I never adopted the sanctioned "Oxford English" and due to just a month long interaction with an American, quickly decided the American way was way better for me. That despite the fact that "I'll go to my grave with my odd accent". Meaning that my pronunciation sucks, and keeps doing so after my decades in the US.

    • @ihsannurmizan6128
      @ihsannurmizan6128 Год назад +1

      Maybe, this what we call "think english, or think arabic".
      Cuz sometimes we could find the relation of both meanings of languages, but we always fail to find word explains

    • @davidbouvier8895
      @davidbouvier8895 Год назад +8

      @@ihsannurmizan6128 One of the benefits of knowing at least one other language than your mother tongue is that sooner or later you will encounter a concept that can be precisely expressed by one word in language A but has to be paraphrased in language B, and vice versa. This demonstrates the cultural relativity of all languages. It's not just grammar and syntax, it's the way people think and experience the world in a particular language. That realization is mind expanding.

    • @DaviFigueiraChavez
      @DaviFigueiraChavez Год назад +3

      I'm from Brazil, my dad is brazilian and my mother is bolivian, so I grew up being bilingual speaking both Portuguese in day life and spanish with my family. I learned English in schools since it's a mandatory subject in Brazil and now I am trilingual. I have some relatives in the US and in Bolivia and when I can I translate some things for them. But I also struggle to translate formal forms, I just learned day life English, not professional one. Spanish I have the same problem, I just learned simple Spanish. Portuguese I can understand more formally since it's my first language and I've been taught in school since childhood. But there are moments that I suffer to comprehend even some formal articles in Portuguese, imagine understanding Spanish or English.

  • @raulvaldesriveras3033
    @raulvaldesriveras3033 Год назад +138

    Very interesting!
    My native language is Spanish, and I think I'm not bilingual yet but I'm learning every day. It's cool to know that learning a new language has social benefits but also physical or specifically brains benefits.
    I would like to have a childhood like Gabriela and to have a compund bilingual, but I am like Gabriela's parents and I am doing subordinate bilingual, for me it is a challenge and I am learning much more and beter than when I was younger.
    It is crazy that there is technology that shows the physical differences of a bilingual brain with other that is not, and it is crazier than before some scientists said learn two lenguages at the same time is bad for the kids

    • @sircaspeedy5972
      @sircaspeedy5972 Год назад +11

      Estoy orgullosa de que estes mirando videos en ingles y que puedas escribir tan bien. Sigue aprendiendo! Y yo haré lo mismo con el español 😜

    • @joody289
      @joody289 Год назад +17

      If you wrote all of this I’m pretty sure you are bilingual

    • @orlandobonney8847
      @orlandobonney8847 Год назад +2

      You have a very good grasp of the language! You would definitely be considered bilingual.

    • @ssiao3140
      @ssiao3140 Год назад +4

      You alr bilingual fr

  • @wheresrome3633
    @wheresrome3633 6 лет назад +31007

    Cons of being bilingual :
    You forget how to say a word in one language but not the other.
    You mix up words and create a new language

    • @neptuneconsus4992
      @neptuneconsus4992 6 лет назад +343

      Where's Rome that's true.

    • @neptuneconsus4992
      @neptuneconsus4992 6 лет назад +523

      Where's Rome and After doing this mistakes monolinguals say you to learn to speak lol

    • @copinman
      @copinman 6 лет назад +376

      True that mierda

    • @neptuneconsus4992
      @neptuneconsus4992 6 лет назад +349

      Yes porque I think that ç'est vraie

    • @neptuneconsus4992
      @neptuneconsus4992 6 лет назад +81

      FUUUUU xD
      I don't consider myself as an english speaker, just Basque French and Spanish. Im learning english at school : )

  • @SuperSas89
    @SuperSas89 3 года назад +40976

    YOU watched this video while English isn't your first language... good job.

    • @poughkeepsie8516
      @poughkeepsie8516 3 года назад +1581

      Thank you, English is my third language btw. French my fourth and Latin being my fifth. Ask me now if I have a life 😂

    • @paraamisss1331
      @paraamisss1331 3 года назад +545

      hehe thanks english is my third language actually my native language is farsi and my second language is portuguese and im currently learning turkish at school

    • @poughkeepsie8516
      @poughkeepsie8516 3 года назад +222

      @@paraamisss1331 Turkish! Hey this is my second! I am German but my surrogate family is of Turkish origin, growing up I learned their language 😍
      Then English, Latin and French at school 😂

    • @sevdenuraksit5913
      @sevdenuraksit5913 3 года назад +71

      @@paraamisss1331 what country is it? I am just asking cause I am just curious native turkish speaker

    • @zhraaashraf3131
      @zhraaashraf3131 3 года назад +35

      @@paraamisss1331 wow I was just thinking about learning farsi, arabic is my first language I thought it would make it easier

  • @bookwormd8627
    @bookwormd8627 Год назад +170

    I lived in Singapore so I had a massive advantage. Local schools offer 4 different language classes: Mandarin, Malay, Tamil and Hindi while classes are in English. If you don’t pick any of those, you have to take an additional language outside of school. Singapore is also very multicultural and most people speak 3 language normally so you get a lot of practice outside of school too. I now live in japan and speak Japanese with my mom, take Chinese at school while other classes are in English, and learn Korean via zoom.

    • @dasdasasdasd9335
      @dasdasasdasd9335 7 месяцев назад +2

      you get to learn tamil in singapore? wow i'm proud of my language... ik it's a very cliche thing for indians/srilankans to say that they're proud but i don't often say this

    • @bookwormd8627
      @bookwormd8627 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@helehelexx____5924 lmao I’m half Japanese half Korean, I’ve been speaking Japanese since my literal birth cuz I’m from there, never watched anime in my life

    • @arimsong
      @arimsong 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yooo I’m Korean, living in Korea right now, but i lived in Singapore for 6 years until I moved back this year July. I used to go to a Korean international school, and I had to learn Korean English and Chinese…. Not a fun experience.

    • @bookwormd8627
      @bookwormd8627 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@arimsong wait no way I live in korea now lmao. I moved like 6 months after commenting this, I also go to a korean international school now. I learn Chinese at school (AP Chinese), everything else in English, and then Japanese at home and korean in public when I go out. Its a lot but it better than just speaking one language!

    • @maxmust-dw1mu
      @maxmust-dw1mu 2 месяца назад

      Not true. Most people in Singapore do not speak 3 languages, they speak usually 2. And one of them usually not very good and mixing up a lot.
      Specially the younger generation, lots of them only speak „proper“ english.

  • @piyushsinghal9518
    @piyushsinghal9518 Год назад +20

    Well, I grew up in India, where I simultaneously learned English and hindi at the same time, and I don't have any issues switching between languages. I think it's important to note that if you've learned two languages at the same time, it's going to be way easier and almost an everyday function to switch between those languages.

  • @shadesofblue6982
    @shadesofblue6982 4 года назад +57045

    The worst thing is sometimes, people think that you’re showing off but actually you just forget the word in the language your speaking

    • @ShashaStudios
      @ShashaStudios 4 года назад +3081

      shadesofblue I’ve forgotten a word in both languages

    • @CBRONXY
      @CBRONXY 4 года назад +1432

      a major issue really :(

    • @Tomos_J-J
      @Tomos_J-J 4 года назад +663

      @@its4672 Beat them up, fearing intelligence and using violence against it is a humongously big sign of low IQ.

    • @itsalex7229
      @itsalex7229 4 года назад +211

      I know right..

    • @chris7563
      @chris7563 4 года назад +145

      It's so true!

  • @milesmaxine5740
    @milesmaxine5740 3 года назад +5914

    the benefit of a bilingual brain is to understand different *memes* in different languages

    • @allaboutsboyzz4737
      @allaboutsboyzz4737 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/b9FunEkhTNo/видео.html

    • @majad9898
      @majad9898 3 года назад +40

      *Yeah, this is big brain time* Being bilingual since age 3 I have never thought of it in this way XD I have wasted my ability by not reading Polish memes XD

    • @annadang5811
      @annadang5811 3 года назад +41

      But some memes in other languages require for you to understand the cultural/socio-economical background as well. 🤔

    • @BlockWorks
      @BlockWorks 3 года назад +8

      O bom de ser bi-lingui é que você pode entender memes em várias línguas

    • @Juxtaroberto
      @Juxtaroberto 3 года назад +18

      And realizing that different languages even have unique styles of meme that wouldn't work in another one.

  • @jyim9836
    @jyim9836 Год назад +62

    My two children can speak Japanese and English quite fluently and they are Korean. . While I paid much attention to their acquiring English, I had no idea that they could speak Japanese quite well until recently. They said they come to acquire Japanese through early exposure to the language from the media. In fact, I am a big fan of Detective Conan and have watched the anime since I was single. . Didn't expect this to happen.. I was busy reading subtitles while they were acquiring the language.

  • @alarmlessRifleman
    @alarmlessRifleman Год назад +191

    As a wise man once said, "if you know just one language, you know none". I'm a Russian man who speaks Russian, English, German and Esperanto (also I study Latin right now), and I'm fascinated by how many small things in your language you only start to notice when you learn another one. There are grammatical and lexical structures that can only be said in one language and can't be fully translated to another - as in, it's not like they cannot be translated at all, it's a misconception, but they are translated using different methods.
    As a Russian, I find it easier to think in English. It strips down all unnecessary grammatical elements. In English, there are no genders, no cases, no endings that change throughout the sentence every time you change the case. English is a clean, reliable language. I love it.
    Latin is a mess. As in, it's not really *that* messy, it has structure (no duh, all languages have a structure). But learning it is the same thing as learning Russian for the first time. Too many grammatical categories, too many things to keep track of.
    German is a perfect balance between simplicity and capacity. I don't know what else to say, German is my absolutely favourite language. I think my life would've been easier if German was the language I think in. If there are Germans who read this, know that I bow before you and your language that shows enough flexibility to convey all sorts of thoughts but doesn't have too many unnecessary details sewn to every single word.

    • @graffity_x6624
      @graffity_x6624 Год назад +17

      not german, but Austrian. Thank you, bro :3

    • @codysmith8639
      @codysmith8639 Год назад +11

      Latin makes me cry. All the messy-ish things like Ablative, Accusative, Dative, and Genitive forms. Don’t even get me started on conjugating and declining.

    • @bookwormd8627
      @bookwormd8627 Год назад

      Who the fck said that? Murray Bauman?

    • @f666j7
      @f666j7 Год назад +7

      i am also russian speaker, but i can only speak two languages. im so proud and jealous of youuu

    • @user-tq9dv6yy8o
      @user-tq9dv6yy8o Год назад +1

      I wonder if you spend a lot of time memorizing words when learning a new language? For me, memorizing words is really boring.

  • @tonatalaki
    @tonatalaki 4 года назад +10649

    Being multilingual means:
    More music
    More films
    More series
    More memes
    More books
    More everything.
    I wonder why some people don't even try to take up a language.

    • @weirdface3838
      @weirdface3838 4 года назад +176

      Hmmm.... I think I'm satisfied with Filipino and English 😂

    • @earljohnsanchez2493
      @earljohnsanchez2493 4 года назад +86

      @@weirdface3838 me too
      plus filipino has many dialects too

    • @SamekySantos
      @SamekySantos 4 года назад +8

      Exactly!

    • @daddysasageyo9263
      @daddysasageyo9263 4 года назад +81

      Indomitus you couldn’t have been more wrong

    • @daddysasageyo9263
      @daddysasageyo9263 4 года назад +42

      Indomitus that’s interesting. while I agree that many english memes are translated into my native language as well, I see a lot of ‘original’ (not adapted from a english) meme formats too. If you don’t mind me asking, what is your native language?

  • @yszhnd
    @yszhnd 4 года назад +4568

    The craziest thing is when you start to see dreams in the new language

    • @preay8111
      @preay8111 4 года назад +83

      yszhnd ' I don’t think that’s ever happened to me. But maybe I didn’t notice it😂

    • @yuh4946
      @yuh4946 4 года назад +78

      I was so happy when i saw a dream in English lol

    • @khanhhuyenpham8150
      @khanhhuyenpham8150 4 года назад +64

      My friend said that I talked when I was sleeping in another language :))

    • @rectangleartemis7953
      @rectangleartemis7953 4 года назад +7

      YEEES EXACTLY!!!

    • @giulietta-1555
      @giulietta-1555 4 года назад +1

      yszhnd ' wow hhaha

  • @Amora5503
    @Amora5503 Год назад +59

    I think the emotional connection you have with your native language and other you learned later as an L2 that was mentioned in the video is indeed real. I can easily say "I love you" but I can barely say "eu amo-te". English feels more emotionally detached whilst portuguese comes off as very personal and strong

    • @waltermessines5181
      @waltermessines5181 Год назад +5

      You can say " I love..." about almost anything, it means little to nothing in real life. Amo-te is a whole different ball game; it includes all of her or his family, and is basically a commitment for life. You can't say " Amo Coca-Cola" ; it makes no sense. You can say : "Gosto (de) Coca-Cola" I like... 1on1 translation is rarely accurate.

    • @JabaTheFrog
      @JabaTheFrog 6 месяцев назад

      Same

    • @santamonica4995
      @santamonica4995 4 месяца назад

      I noticed that too with Turkish and spanish. I dont like to say ‘i love you’ in English. It doesn’t feel the same.

  • @cleliaalbano2184
    @cleliaalbano2184 Год назад +99

    That's great! My native language is Italian and my second one is English. I speak also a bit of Greek, Russian, French and Spanish. What I find amazing of bilingualism and multilingualism is the semantic richness one acquires and the ability of developing a deeper connection between language and creativity.

    • @enzonavarro8550
      @enzonavarro8550 Год назад

      Sorry for bothering, but do you know if the dialect that is spoken in Venice is considered "the italian"? Thank you!

    • @ryobutterbutter3375
      @ryobutterbutter3375 Год назад +1

      @@enzonavarro8550 it’s considered the venetian dialect. But you should remember that every Italian speaks the standard Italian, and is also able to speak their own dialect.

  • @hendriyanar1465
    @hendriyanar1465 3 года назад +5574

    Sometimes l suddenly forgot a word in my native language but l know it in English or another language lol

  • @anagabriela9625
    @anagabriela9625 7 лет назад +4279

    i was scared when she said Gabriela from Peru because that's literally me.

    • @CanalPanendithas
      @CanalPanendithas 7 лет назад +37

      lol

    • @MegaMaxclan
      @MegaMaxclan 7 лет назад +25

      😂😂😂😂

    • @ilghiz
      @ilghiz 7 лет назад +144

      Ese momento when you start pensar en dos idiomas at the same tiempo! :))

    • @Horaxus
      @Horaxus 7 лет назад +18

      jajajaja or should I say hahahahaha xD

    • @samuel-cm1fx
      @samuel-cm1fx 7 лет назад +2

      lol

  • @braziltokyoschool
    @braziltokyoschool Год назад +60

    I'm multilingual 😁 I was born in a family which speaks English, Portuguese and Italian. And during my life I've learnt 6 languages more. I love to meet new people from different cultures and learn their languages
    My son is 5 years old and I constantly put him to face listening to Portuguese, English and Italian as well. I think it'll be good to him!

    • @kev_x1
      @kev_x1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wow you are a good dad, my parents didn't do this!

  • @curltway
    @curltway Год назад +33

    I'd say I understand 7 languages. I actively speak Indonesian (native language), English, and Spanish on a daily basis, followed by 4 languages that I can understand but passively use it: Sundanese, Javanese, Japanese (I can read and write), and Catalan. By learning Spanish, it opens more opportunities for me to learn and understand a bit of Italian, Portuguese, and French (I'm currently learning Italian). Using and thinking in those languages is such a great exercise for my brain, and it does help to improve my memory. I'm so glad that I have the ability to learn various languages. Hopefully, I still can understand and speak all of them when I'm older.

  • @princessalice8322
    @princessalice8322 5 лет назад +4212

    Came here being very proudof knowing two languages ..
    *reads comments*
    Welp looks like everyone speaks 8+ languages here
    *self esteem -100

    • @ninaplatell7855
      @ninaplatell7855 5 лет назад +34

      So same🙁

    • @pcbingemaster
      @pcbingemaster 5 лет назад +103

      or they know how to use google translator to impress people

    • @leak.9822
      @leak.9822 5 лет назад +83

      i 'only' speak 2 languages either. but damn, i dont care, im fluent and that's enough xD even tho it's kinda annoying when u actually think in two languages but whatever

    • @GL-tm3zt
      @GL-tm3zt 5 лет назад +5

      princess Alice omg sammeee

    • @marymorgan6081
      @marymorgan6081 5 лет назад +40

      Quantity doesn’t really matter - quality matters so that’s ok if you are just hot on two languages or even one imho

  • @kaidayui
    @kaidayui 3 года назад +4544

    My favorite: "Look, I know what it means, but I can't tell u in words"
    I just kinda feel the meaning🤣

    • @minka0705
      @minka0705 3 года назад +102

      And when you go and say that to your language teacher, you've completely nailed it 🤣

    • @myeongsukchoi5180
      @myeongsukchoi5180 3 года назад +42

      oooh this always happen to mee 🤣
      🤣

    • @caro5320
      @caro5320 3 года назад +5

      Meee

    • @akkoucheimen9556
      @akkoucheimen9556 3 года назад +3

      hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh that makes sense

    • @moonchild5769
      @moonchild5769 3 года назад +4

      Yep i feel it

  • @chuteorphee3489
    @chuteorphee3489 10 месяцев назад +13

    Honestly learning a second language is like traveling to another world. Love it ❤

  • @zairanayeligomez1032
    @zairanayeligomez1032 Год назад +37

    I also believe that being bilingual enriches you with other cultures. I have studied English for a long time and I had not seen progress but now that I started with another language I feel that I am making more progress in both languages, I suppose it is due to the theory that the brain is more active

  • @cagdas_demir_albayrak
    @cagdas_demir_albayrak 4 года назад +2446

    Problem is... Sometimes i forget how to talk grammarly correct in my native language because i am also thinking in the second language...
    Struggle is real...

    • @9Rezerk
      @9Rezerk 4 года назад +34

      Give yourself time to be completely surrounded by that language only, for a bit. Then change again, until you develop both. I mean listening, reading, and especially speaking. It's achievable, just don't give up.

    • @bennyrodriguez8788
      @bennyrodriguez8788 4 года назад +2

      Çağdaş you need to watch Noam Chomsky on language. If you interested I give you the link.

    • @TurnipBoy666
      @TurnipBoy666 4 года назад +6

      SPANISH GRAMMER SUCKS!

    • @ANONYMOUS-pr1zj
      @ANONYMOUS-pr1zj 4 года назад +11

      I can relate sometimes it takes me so long to respond or words come out in a weird order because I’m thinking in a different language

    • @somerjohnson7876
      @somerjohnson7876 4 года назад

      I felt that 😂🥺

  • @sososaby2133
    @sososaby2133 8 лет назад +3195

    The downside of being multilingual: when you can't remember a word in a certain language. It's horrible when you're taking an exam or having a conversation with someone that doesn't know the language that you actually remember the word in.

    • @kateemma22
      @kateemma22 8 лет назад +160

      +Soso Saby And then you end up doing that awkward 'insert first language equivalent and pray it makes sense' moment or 'explain the word in the right language while the other person tries not to laugh because you forgot something so basic' disaster and it's just a damn mess.

    • @sososaby2133
      @sososaby2133 8 лет назад +8

      kateemma22 Yes!!!

    • @Ybalrid
      @Ybalrid 8 лет назад +87

      +kateemma22 Something really strange that happend to me fairly regulary is that I can't remember a word in French because it comes out of my brain in English.
      I'm a French native speaker, living in France. But spending all my time in front of a computer, and using English. I think I'm rewireing my brain backwards now xD

    • @sososaby2133
      @sososaby2133 8 лет назад +21

      Ybalrid I know!!! One of my two main languages is French but I'm an internet addict so I can't speak but one language: frenglish.

    • @Ybalrid
      @Ybalrid 8 лет назад +4

      And for me, the fact that I'm a student in computer science engineering doesn't help : I speak French with English words in it all the time xD

  • @cayo3056
    @cayo3056 Год назад +13

    I am Brazilian and I've been learning English since 2021, now I'm 20 and getting better little by little.
    Learning a language in schools here (mostly English) in Brazil are not good enough in general. We spend almost a decade studying it but we finish high school knowing not even the basics.
    But I've made my mind in 2021 and it's been great and I'm proud of myself to start to learn it and I am also proud of anyone who decided to leave your own bubble and started to learn new languages, you rock!

    • @gabrieeuluzumaki6155
      @gabrieeuluzumaki6155 Год назад +2

      Hey, I’m Brazilian too, I speak Portuguese and English fluently, and I agree with you when you say that Brazilian language learning schools aren’t that good, in fact, they don’t care about teaching you pronunciations, idioms, phrasal verbs, what they only care about is teaching grammar which isn’t that of important when you’re a beginner, you shouldn’t start learning English by trying to memorize grammatical rules, you should start learning it by training your pronunciation and accent, and then you can go to the next level which is Grammar, but unfortunately this unhelpful, bogus system isn’t gonna fall that fast 😢

    • @lufeitosa9744
      @lufeitosa9744 10 месяцев назад +1

      The crazy thing is there are so many fun ways to learn English, but we are stuck on this system that only wants you to be a robot, not an actual person. Grammar is surely good to learn, specially with a more formal English, but it's not completely necessary.

    • @MariaFernanda-qk2kn
      @MariaFernanda-qk2kn 2 месяца назад

      Keep going. I'm also Brazilian. You'll achieve fluency!

    • @renitapuspitasari762
      @renitapuspitasari762 Месяц назад

      Why don't you take english course? I learned english for the 1st time when I was in junior high, and I started to take english course when I was on 2nd grade of junior high. In english course the teachers will encourage you to speak and listen (have conversation) in english. At school the teachers just stuff you with theories. But the theories are important, too.

    • @papelzuado
      @papelzuado Месяц назад

      Eu sou brasileiro também, aprendi inglês quando eu parei de ir à escola

  • @williamvictal5021
    @williamvictal5021 Год назад +3

    I'm from Brazil and this is my first time watching this channel, so nice

  • @andreipop5805
    @andreipop5805 5 лет назад +3626

    Am I the only one who thinks both in a foreign and in his native languege ?
    And sometimes knows how to express himself in his 2nd languege better than in his 1st one ?

    • @queenb7209
      @queenb7209 5 лет назад +37

      @@OM-td2on me too and it sucks sometimes

    • @Malaima
      @Malaima 5 лет назад +78

      I think in Spanish and French, and bits of English! IT IS A MESS when you have to write something in either one of each and you have to leave out all the expressions that present themselves in one of the languages, because they feel more accurate for what you're trying to say!!

    • @vicentesanmartin307
      @vicentesanmartin307 5 лет назад +9

      No estas solo hermano

    • @MS-pe2vt
      @MS-pe2vt 4 года назад +83

      I hate it when i dont remember a word in my native language (spanish) and i have to say it in english, because it seems like im trying to show off :(

    • @honeyjar2970
      @honeyjar2970 4 года назад +1

      Wait where are you from?

  • @phoopwint5139
    @phoopwint5139 2 года назад +4698

    The moment you get confused with your own language, you become fluent in the language you're studying.

    • @ritarostiawati7027
      @ritarostiawati7027 2 года назад +39

      I agree

    • @travelermalori1080
      @travelermalori1080 2 года назад +32

      Like fr💀

    • @ravysaini127
      @ravysaini127 2 года назад +28

      I couldnt find some of the words when I started learning French and Im slowly forgeting.

    • @pedrosso0
      @pedrosso0 2 года назад +53

      Also known as: Bye-Lengual or Try-lengual or Qwhat-lengual

    • @lisar9800
      @lisar9800 2 года назад +76

      That! My native language is German, but I have been learning English since early childhood. Sometimes I think in English and I am like: "Now, what was that in German?" And I randomly throw in English words without even noticing 😅

  • @user-cv7op7lz6r
    @user-cv7op7lz6r Год назад +12

    As a Mauritian, I feel so grateful that such videos have been made. People from other countries usually get confused about how we speak so many languages.
    My first main language was French, but also English. Both languages were introduced to me as a toddler. By the age of 5 I was completely fluent in them. I started learning hindi and Spanish in which I am also fluent. And since I as a little child, I was hearing creole everywhere and I am fluent in it too.
    Fun fact:our national written language is basically English but we speak French and creole. The school system is different, they explain in French n the books r in English BUT IT'S ACTUALLY EASIER FOR US TO UNDERSTAND 💀

    • @it9s
      @it9s 10 месяцев назад

      Are you from Mauritania?

  • @user-xl5bb9hb8b
    @user-xl5bb9hb8b Год назад +2

    I’m an aspiring polyglot and i found this vid very interesting i love this channel so much.
    Don’t give up guys everything takes time, you can do it, find what’s best for you and helps you improve :’)

  • @kysuneh
    @kysuneh 4 года назад +11493

    Bilingual/Multilingual Problem:
    When someone asks you to translate something, you might suddenly forget how to accurately word it in the other language of your choice. You can comprehend the sentence, but the translation is at the tip of your tongue. It's like, "I understand what that sentence means, but I just can't remember the phrase for it in ."
    Dunno if that made sense, but it happens to me a lot lol.

    • @noemierollindedebeaumont1130
      @noemierollindedebeaumont1130 4 года назад +375

      Yeah, it happens to me constantly. It has gotten to the point where i need to research the translation in my native language... and what makes it even harder is when there is no translation !
      Help ?😅

    • @BigBy221
      @BigBy221 4 года назад +38

      happens to me ALOOOOOT

    • @fishasaurus159
      @fishasaurus159 4 года назад +171

      Omg yesss and it gets annoying when people start to think you don’t actually speak another language

    • @janniegarcia3181
      @janniegarcia3181 4 года назад +90

      Or sometimes, you understand the language but can't translate it real quick. It happens to me a lot too.

    • @chesca9670
      @chesca9670 4 года назад +23

      I FELT THIS.

  • @alicemacias13
    @alicemacias13 4 года назад +23131

    when bilinguals starts to lose vocabulary in both languages BYE LINGUAL

  • @alenyi1
    @alenyi1 Год назад +3

    It's very interesting that about the bilingual brain, because I only want to speak english, but I didn't see before that I'm changing my brain learning new words in another language, ways to showing my ideas or ways for descripting anything.
    Speak english It's hard for me, but I'm trying to speak with other people with my same language but in a second language and I'm not alone in this.

  • @saalbefleur
    @saalbefleur Год назад +2

    This video makes me think about my experience as a bilingual person and how learning English unconsciously helped me think more complexly and strengthened my rationality and brain activity when using it.

  • @ulNag
    @ulNag 7 лет назад +3482

    I feel so proud of myself until the narator say "So while bilingualism may not necessarily make you smarter,"
    Noooooooooooooo

    • @lemuelygusquiza8117
      @lemuelygusquiza8117 7 лет назад +26

      ulNag 😂😂 me too

    • @hectorpalacios5527
      @hectorpalacios5527 7 лет назад +196

      Not smarter, but certainly more capable, be proud.

    • @lecobra418
      @lecobra418 7 лет назад +44

      I wouldn't say more capable, it's a matter of will not capacities. Anybody can learn a new language but it's not everyone who's willing to do so.

    • @hectorpalacios5527
      @hectorpalacios5527 7 лет назад +70

      But learning language make your brain more capable of learning, memorizing, reasoning, etc. Maybe you want to say that everyone has the potential to get there, and I would agree, but not because of the will, but the environment of every person, the kind of ideas they are exposed to.

    • @justinfung4351
      @justinfung4351 7 лет назад +36

      *felt
      *narrator
      *said
      *,
      *.

  • @rushfudge62
    @rushfudge62 4 года назад +3456

    As a student, one of the greatest benefits of being a bilingual is just translating the english essay for your essay on your native language subject.

    • @septbelleza1935
      @septbelleza1935 4 года назад +27

      What? you can do that? I’m not even fluent in either 😩😂

    • @veenarani5413
      @veenarani5413 4 года назад +215

      Yeah. I can't even count how many times I've done that. My proficiency in English is better than my proficiency in my native language (quite sad, I know) so sometimes I first write the essay in English and then translate it.

    • @dizzylimes2099
      @dizzylimes2099 4 года назад

      jealous.... Italian isnt studied at my school so I have no chance 😓

    • @xuxu3703
      @xuxu3703 4 года назад

      EXACTLY!

    • @yuh4946
      @yuh4946 4 года назад +24

      I always copy essays in English from Google and translate them to kazakh and Russian lol

  • @Krzysiek1118
    @Krzysiek1118 Год назад +9

    I started learning english in kindergarten, then I studied it at school as one of the subjects. I've discovered more of it thanks to extra classes and now I'm about to (hopefully) get accepted to a bilingual class in high school. I usually speak English in the internet and mostly use Polish in real life, but for some reason I'm just as likely to think in english as I am to think in my native language!
    Great video 😎

    • @sazu4238
      @sazu4238 Год назад +1

      O, wreszcie ktoś z Polski :>

    • @ilovememes2238
      @ilovememes2238 Год назад

      On the internet* not being rude, just trying to help. I’m bilingual too:D

    • @sazu4238
      @sazu4238 Год назад +1

      @@ilovememes2238 That's kinda funny, cause in Poland when we say,, na internecie" (on the Interne) it's an actual mistake. However,, w internecie" (in the Internet) is correct, so that's exactly opposite in English. To make this even more complicated, we also copy lots of stuff from English and make that,, na internecie" mistake, so our teachers get mad lmao. I like spotting those differences, so I don't make little mistakes (and also cause I'm a weirdo probably). That was my fun fact, have a nice day :>

    • @ilovememes2238
      @ilovememes2238 Год назад +1

      @@sazu4238 lol thanks, ur from Poland?

    • @sazu4238
      @sazu4238 Год назад

      @@ilovememes2238 Yeah

  • @hyeilooza
    @hyeilooza 9 месяцев назад +3

    It started at pandemic, I got really bored so I learned another language which is French then I liked it it was fun for me so I thought "why not learn multiple languages?" next language I learned is Korean/Hangul, I learned how to write and read Hangul in just a very short time, that's when I realized God gifted me a talent, now I'm currently learning Mandarin,Japanese,Spanish,and German.

  • @leonardosouza6680
    @leonardosouza6680 4 года назад +2215

    The biggest benefit of being bilingual is crying in different languages, right now I'm crying in Spanish

    • @zahranulila
      @zahranulila 4 года назад +36

      This made my day😂

    • @elliewalker1894
      @elliewalker1894 4 года назад +4

      HAHA aw

    • @lamiah.2938
      @lamiah.2938 4 года назад +35

      Really? I usually cry in **BrOkE**

    • @lamiah.2938
      @lamiah.2938 4 года назад +5

      @deoumipotatoes yes LOL ARMYyyy!! 💜💜👍

    • @quynhhoa664
      @quynhhoa664 4 года назад +3

      @deoumipotatoes sorry but it's actually annyeonghaseyo

  • @chenniekim2992
    @chenniekim2992 3 года назад +3452

    Me: speaks more than 2 languages
    Also me: not fluent in any of those

    • @user-ze8fr9wq1t
      @user-ze8fr9wq1t 3 года назад +113

      Story of my life lmao even though some are my native languages 🙃

    • @jemeilleure
      @jemeilleure 3 года назад +99

      omg istg everyones flexing in the comment section, glad I found a relatable comment 😭😭

    • @e6026
      @e6026 3 года назад +14

      Omg yesss

    • @yourubehours
      @yourubehours 3 года назад +24

      this comment makes me feel better lmao, cheers m8

    • @lemplatinum
      @lemplatinum 3 года назад +7

      Same same

  • @MJkuwaitHub
    @MJkuwaitHub 6 месяцев назад

    My first language is Ilonggo, dialect from one provonce in Philippines. At 6 I have to learn Tagalog our national language and juggle it with English curriculum at school. By the age of 11 I can converse mainly in Tagalog, write nicely in English and speak my native language while in my house. Now I love my 3 languages and I am always grateful for this blessing.
    KANAMI LANG NGA KABALO KA MAG HAMBAL SANG IBAN NGA LINGWAHE. (Hiligaynon)
    MASARAP SA PAKIRAMDAM NA MARAMI KANG ALAM NA IBA’T IBANG SALITA. (Tagalog)
    IT’S AMAZING TO THINK THAT YOU CAN SPEAK IN THREE DIFFERENT LANGUAGES . (English)

  • @rvalperez
    @rvalperez Год назад +6

    Speaking 4 languages here. In the Philippines, we learn English and Filipino in school. And for every local region, there is a specific language we all use, which is completely different with the national language, Filipino. Then, I was fortunate enough to work in a a Japanese company, so we had to learn Nihongo as well.
    Sometimes all the languages get mixed up when you're drunk! 😂

  • @devriana
    @devriana 3 года назад +4468

    Benefit of being bilingual:
    You have more various options of RUclips videos bcs you can watch videos that are not in your native language, which means you can get more information 👍

    • @afreshavocadohere
      @afreshavocadohere 3 года назад +39

      EXACTLY!

    • @edsondapaz4907
      @edsondapaz4907 3 года назад +7

      Yesssss

    • @piavodusek3868
      @piavodusek3868 3 года назад +89

      i don't watch videos in my native language becuase my country is so small so there's barely anybody from it that creates this kind of content lmaoo and the few youtubers that we do have are all cringey

    • @kenzie9648
      @kenzie9648 3 года назад +14

      @@piavodusek3868 same , i watch american or european youtubers

    • @sindok93
      @sindok93 3 года назад +12

      That is so true. I have learned a lot of things more than my school did; through many youtube videos.

  • @_cloudy5939
    @_cloudy5939 9 месяцев назад +3

    I'm a Korean, and I learned English since I was really young. Now, I'm twelve years old, and managed to perfectly read, write, and speak in two languages! It's really great when I watch netflix lol

  • @nicolezacarias7215
    @nicolezacarias7215 Год назад +26

    I believe that Mia's position, to teach and present the importance of knowing another language, through the development of new active skills such as speaking and writing and passive skills such as listening and reading can open the way to endless adventures both emotionally and At a cerebral level, why is it more entertaining than being able to speak and understand another language that is not your native language? for me now it is the most fun

    • @nicolezacarias7215
      @nicolezacarias7215 Год назад

      I still think the same about video and I also add the importance of new technologies and applications to have a bilingual brain
      for example music on spotify practice on duolingo or watch series on netflix

  • @iution4668
    @iution4668 4 года назад +2923

    Benefit of being a bilingual:
    -Speak more than one language

  • @pengarae
    @pengarae 4 года назад +722

    me after understanding what’s going on in an anime after looking away for a second:

  • @DrTHC
    @DrTHC Год назад +2

    Every year for my birthday, I give myself two gifts: I drop a bad habit and learn a new skill. I've been speaking Spanish now for about seven years and I love the language so much. But what has surprised me most is how many other languages I can correctly guess now that I am intimate with two instead of just one. I can now look at Italian, Portuguese, French and do pretty well. And I can hear the similarities in other languages, like Arabic and Chinese. I've found myself fascinated with language, and it is a skill that has opened up new ways of seeing everything around me. ~THC

  • @gentlybylia3181
    @gentlybylia3181 Год назад +9

    I'm learning Russian right now at 15 by myself ,I'm homeschooled. Its difficult but very fun and interesting. I feel very proud when I can speak in Russian or understand a concept.

    • @ukr009
      @ukr009 Год назад

      Странный выбор учитывая сегодняшние обстоятельства. Уже если и учить язык из кириллической группы, то натуральный где логичные правила, а не русский где одни исключения из-за того что, пытались этот венигрет привести к общему знаменателю. Именно поэтому русский настолько сложный, в плане написания и произношения. Ты бы хорошо подумал, а то сейчас в мире логично негативное отношение к русской речи по всему миру.

  • @nqrtzy8765
    @nqrtzy8765 4 года назад +5987

    What people think being bilingual is like: Fully understanding both languages
    What being bilingual actually is like: How do I translate this other language to my native language

    • @strawtifulbonnie9363
      @strawtifulbonnie9363 4 года назад +219

      That's my whole life in a few words...

    • @anapaulapedro7025
      @anapaulapedro7025 4 года назад +275

      nlolhere Let’s not forget the moment when you forget a word

    • @strawtifulbonnie9363
      @strawtifulbonnie9363 4 года назад +59

      @@anapaulapedro7025 oh yesss so trueeee
      *Bilingual sighs...

    • @rockstardee
      @rockstardee 4 года назад +5

      oh fr

    • @strawtifulbonnie9363
      @strawtifulbonnie9363 4 года назад +3

      @مكافحة الشحاذين الايكات السريه LOL, how you manage to remember that particular word again?

  • @chenniekim2992
    @chenniekim2992 3 года назад +2238

    That time when someone asks you to translate a word but there is no exact translation of that word......
    *Cries in 4 languages

    • @jaehee7196
      @jaehee7196 3 года назад +30

      Lmao that’s so true

    • @sudecolak5844
      @sudecolak5844 3 года назад +37

      YES! Like I’m a kpop fan and I cannot say “I got bias wrecked” or like you cannot explanation it why!?

    • @minyoongisleftear1854
      @minyoongisleftear1854 3 года назад +24

      @@sudecolak5844 yesss like how tf do you say someone is your "bias" in Spanish? It's supposed to be my first language but I'm better at English 😭

    • @sudecolak5844
      @sudecolak5844 3 года назад +5

      @@minyoongisleftear1854 Yes like you just can’t say it! BTW whı’s your bias?😊😅

    • @BBQhenry
      @BBQhenry 3 года назад +2

      you only need to describe that word and it's the listener's duty to find the right word

  • @zwan8299
    @zwan8299 Год назад

    English is a compulsory course for primary and high school students in China, some of us may choose to study abroad in universities in the future, like me. I always thought being a non-native speaker is nothing but a disadvantage, thank you for letting me know that there are so much benifits! You made me feel more confident.

  • @clauzacariasr
    @clauzacariasr Год назад +3

    Being bilingual is very beneficial for our brain and self esteem. I found it very interesting that is also helps delay certain diseases. And you can also trasfer you knowledge to your family and help their brain too. I really liked the video and it is very educational. thanks!!!

  • @lahami2000
    @lahami2000 7 лет назад +3216

    I'm fluent in English thanks to youtube ;)

  • @blue-guymaster5121
    @blue-guymaster5121 2 года назад +5627

    Cons: You don’t just forget words in one language, but both. More like byelingual

    • @SandraStefanova
      @SandraStefanova 2 года назад +230

      And suddenly you don’t look as smart 🤣🤣🤣I hate it when it happens!

    • @bluezitrone9731
      @bluezitrone9731 2 года назад +106

      That's what my 3rd and 4th languages are for 😉👉

    • @blue-guymaster5121
      @blue-guymaster5121 2 года назад +14

      @@bluezitrone9731 😂😂

    • @kyungminnam
      @kyungminnam 2 года назад +16

      this is so accurate

    • @Mark778.
      @Mark778. 2 года назад +64

      Haha usually when i forget in one language, i can still remember how it is in the other language, then i just have to "translate" inside my own mind and voilà, the word suddenly reapears.
      **except for the times when there isn't a translation for that especific word, then i have to google it

  • @paulinaaltamirano6256
    @paulinaaltamirano6256 10 месяцев назад

    I find this information very interesting, since it touches on very important topics, thank you for sharing it

  • @jaime7555
    @jaime7555 9 месяцев назад +2

    I didn't know the benefits of being bilingual; that's so great. I'm currently studying English, and the video motivates me to learn more. Besides, I think being bilingual gives us other types of benefits, not only in the brain but also in our environment, such as hobbies, relationships, and job opportunities.

  • @_wheat856
    @_wheat856 4 года назад +2119

    If you forget a word don’t say “I forgot what that word is”
    Instead say “I forgot the English word for it” that way you seem smarter

  • @andersonsousa7091
    @andersonsousa7091 4 года назад +1294

    I realized that my mind was becoming bilingual when I forgot a word in my native language but knew it in English

    • @cinniemon
      @cinniemon 4 года назад +10

      same lmao

    • @Stefan-om3ht
      @Stefan-om3ht 4 года назад +18

      Same but in 3 different languages fml

    • @shizukagozen777
      @shizukagozen777 4 года назад +24

      For me it was more when I started thinking and dreaming in another language. ^^'

    • @badalohelicoptero8586
      @badalohelicoptero8586 4 года назад +3

      Relatable

    • @Jojo-hz6rk
      @Jojo-hz6rk 4 года назад +2

      shizukagozen777 same!!

  • @mariaeduardadias3935
    @mariaeduardadias3935 7 месяцев назад +1

    My mother language is Portuguese, which help me to understand a few words in spanish too (actually, since I was younger, I love to watch TV series from Argentina and Mexico, so it brought some familiarity also). I started to learn English at school when I was fourteen; however it was just the basic one's. During the outbreak, I become more close to the idiom and right now I'm capable of understanding, reading, speaking, and writing english (I'm trying to improve the last two of those). It is incredible to see how the bilingual brain works, such an interesting video!

  • @St4rr.Kygo4
    @St4rr.Kygo4 Год назад +2

    My first language is Portuguese, for some reason, I started learning English when I was like 7, and I can assure that it was one of the best things that ever happened to me, I learned it all by myself though, which the age probably explains why I learned so fast

  • @mahamed6137
    @mahamed6137 5 лет назад +3807

    Comments be like: I speak 1748 languages😏

    • @galaxy9379
      @galaxy9379 5 лет назад +35

      Yeah :c I feel jelous 😢

    • @jamaton
      @jamaton 5 лет назад +67

      C'est vrais, hay muchos aqui bragging about their languages,

    • @eezhan2579
      @eezhan2579 5 лет назад +48

      Then there’s me procrastinating learning Korean

    • @noonyno7257
      @noonyno7257 5 лет назад +6

      @@eezhan2579 same ;-; and all my cousins speak Spanish, Mandarin, Korean, Vietnamese. ;-; have you started? 😊🌈

    • @eezhan2579
      @eezhan2579 5 лет назад +18

      Minki Rawr I’ve started learning Hangul but I have a short-term memory so I keep forgetting and I keep saying, “I’ll do it” but my brains like
      *NAWWW*

  • @greensquid_
    @greensquid_ 4 года назад +2012

    Sometime ago i learned english on my own, but not because i had to move somewhere else,
    Because I didn't know how to change language in Minecraft

    • @one1ratax1a9
      @one1ratax1a9 4 года назад +87

      GreenSquid dude that’s amazing 😂

    • @eisque
      @eisque 4 года назад +127

      The reason is so silly lol, but at least you learned a language.

    • @jianyuhua
      @jianyuhua 4 года назад +5

      GreenSquid totally

    • @jianyuhua
      @jianyuhua 4 года назад

      eis que just joking, dude 😂

    • @marinamorandi8347
      @marinamorandi8347 4 года назад +3

      The same happened to me ;-;

  • @valerieyang8697
    @valerieyang8697 Год назад +1

    As a native Mandarin speaker using English and Japanese on daily basis, I would say it exposes me to lots and lots of new stuff and definitely shapes my personality. And the best part of it is you get to date people from different backgrounds and it’s amazing:)

  • @isisaguayo8788
    @isisaguayo8788 Месяц назад

    The video is interesting to me because it highlights the importance of language acquisition during childhood, yet it emphasizes that it's not impossible in adulthood. Constant learning is crucial for my personal growth and opens up opportunities in my work or studies abroad, such as specialization. I love it the content.

  • @johnemmanuel3090
    @johnemmanuel3090 4 года назад +2546

    I’m bilingual and I understand my native language but when I’m asked to translate it my brain stops working :/

    • @adrianagrace2294
      @adrianagrace2294 4 года назад +8

      LOL Same !

    • @ichbinhier355
      @ichbinhier355 4 года назад +78

      because translation is a skill that has to be developed, so if you speak your target language well it doesn't mean that you can translate it accurately...

    • @antiopikoukouli5407
      @antiopikoukouli5407 4 года назад +1

      Me too 🤯

    • @girloffaith8389
      @girloffaith8389 4 года назад

      Luna Va Solovāy grandma*

    • @VK-pk8uz
      @VK-pk8uz 4 года назад

      Intersting. I can translate English to Dutch or the other way around out loud to someone else *as I'm reading it*.

  • @maddie2132
    @maddie2132 3 года назад +6724

    Anyone else feel like they have a different personality when speaking another language 😂

    • @hughjazz4936
      @hughjazz4936 3 года назад +300

      I tend to swear a lot more when I'm spreaking English or French. My native language is German where swearing isn't nearly as satisfying!

    • @organicenglishlangson8946
      @organicenglishlangson8946 3 года назад +60

      That happens with every single person.

    • @emilia6500
      @emilia6500 3 года назад +47

      yeah definitely jdjsjsjdsh i literally switch personality even in one single conversation if i switch languages

    • @salmonella6051
      @salmonella6051 3 года назад +7

      YES. YES. YES.

    • @marinettegranger3169
      @marinettegranger3169 3 года назад +3

      Yasss

  • @ranimcalister5026
    @ranimcalister5026 11 месяцев назад

    That is absolutely fascinating. I am currently learning Hindi, and, the more I practice and listen to content in Hindi, the more I find myself naturally thinking and speaking it, sometimes, unintentionally.

  • @NatalisaDesigns
    @NatalisaDesigns Год назад +5

    “The more languages you know the more times you are a human” I don’t remember who said it, but for my family it was a life long ideology. Each of us speaks at least 2 languages, and we all keep learning!

  • @user-fp7cb6jk1b
    @user-fp7cb6jk1b 3 года назад +4357

    cons of being multilingual: *people automatically assume you will be their translator*

    • @SleepyPanda-co3iy
      @SleepyPanda-co3iy 2 года назад +37

      exactly

    • @norukamo
      @norukamo 2 года назад +14

      Hey I recognize the kanji compound in your name! I think it means "depression"?

    • @limpidity-0000
      @limpidity-0000 2 года назад +9

      @@norukamo true

    • @lottaplettinx3831
      @lottaplettinx3831 2 года назад +23

      The fun thing about this though is that you can totally mess with people by giving a rong or slightly rong answer so they are confused i do this all the time when people ask for a translation of some word... for instance they ask for tree and you give them the translation of bush.

    • @bryangiron1960
      @bryangiron1960 2 года назад +3

      My life in a nutshell

  • @thwartshroom2946
    @thwartshroom2946 4 года назад +13291

    Who else watched this video for self-gratification?

  • @angieowo9278
    @angieowo9278 Год назад +1

    My mom immigrated form Uzbekistan when my sister was 3. She Learned English from songs, and work because she was a hair stlyist and needed to communicate with others. On the other hand, my sister finished school in America so she speaks perfect English and no accent. My mom has a accent still, but it is much better then it was. Being a bilingual (English and Russian) is great for me as it allows me to speak to my grandma and non english family.

  • @andreamanrique3243
    @andreamanrique3243 Год назад +1

    I loved the video, it is very interesting and has a very necessary information that generates awareness and motivation to learn other languages.

  • @prodigyx1089
    @prodigyx1089 4 года назад +2553

    A wise man once said:
    "If a person speaks in a horrible accent, prejudice will get you no where because they are the ones that know 2 languages and not you, don't mock them dummy"
    Edit: Grammar! Good luck in your language learning, and don't forget to always smile!

    • @Archangel-Anonymous
      @Archangel-Anonymous 4 года назад +8

      I love killua XD

    • @indigofenrir7236
      @indigofenrir7236 4 года назад +15

      A wise man once said, "Bananas float in water." However, they don't. His point was that not everyone will give you a styrofoam banana and that eating paper is actually good for your health.

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 4 года назад +7

      I love how you just made hundreds of people get triggered and then realizing they are jerks by saying "I wise man" instead of "A wise man"

    • @prodigyx1089
      @prodigyx1089 4 года назад +3

      @@animationspace8550 haha, I try not to edit comments, but ok I'll fix that :p

    • @Ray2311us
      @Ray2311us 4 года назад +1

      Prodigy Enigma how old are you 6? Cause thats how you sound when I read this

  • @-dn-sdrawberiee253
    @-dn-sdrawberiee253 4 года назад +2215

    Y'all, knowing to say a couple of sentences in 4+ languages doesn't count as being multilingual. Fluency matters.

    • @eatrocks6704
      @eatrocks6704 4 года назад +11

      -DN- Sdrawberiee ik

    • @jenini7574
      @jenini7574 4 года назад +12

      very

    • @julysunrush4483
      @julysunrush4483 4 года назад +283

      -DN- Sdrawberiee YES OMG!!! I hate when people say for example in kpop that ”this idol can speak 6 languages” when in reality they can only introduce themselves in those languages. like no, they aren’t fluent they can’t _speak_ that language

    • @maurizstoddard3204
      @maurizstoddard3204 4 года назад +120

      FACTS i hate it when people in my French class (outside of class) say they speak French and understand the struggles of being bilingual. Like shut up I speak three and I don’t count French bc we know damn well we’re not fluent. And u don’t know the struggles cuz u don’t get bullied for ur accent or when u mix ur grammar.

    • @camillag5871
      @camillag5871 4 года назад +22

      @@maurizstoddard3204 Then you're a French learner ? 😁 So glad to know it ! Hope you enjoy our language, even if it's ( uselessly ) too difficult 😂 and hope our culture may interest some overseas students in the whole world 😄 Merci beaucoup !

  • @user-xy8ml3jx7w
    @user-xy8ml3jx7w Год назад +2

    Great video! It motivate me to continue to learn English as a second language. Thank you.

  • @qingyerenping5371
    @qingyerenping5371 Год назад

    很开心看到大家的留言,我觉得这也是一种学习外语的好方法并且非常直接和地道。我现在也在努力学习英语,尤其是努力练习我的口语。
    And I would like to make friends with foreigner to practice my spoken English , We helped and learn from each other.😊

  • @moochikyuu
    @moochikyuu 5 лет назад +1296

    The thing is that, if you know a lot of languages.
    Your personality can change and the way you speak too

    • @MalharetasLair
      @MalharetasLair 5 лет назад +59

      Ooooh, yes! It's so annoying sometimes! And it's not even conscious so you don't notice it until someone speaking the same languages you do, points it out to you... And then you can't un-notice it.

    • @moochikyuu
      @moochikyuu 5 лет назад +39

      @@MalharetasLair if i switch to the language that I speak with my friends that uses the language. I tend to curse more😂

    • @MalharetasLair
      @MalharetasLair 5 лет назад +42

      @@moochikyuu for me it's more the timbre of my voice than anything. Like, I record my voice sometimes and you wouldn't believe how different it sounds in different languages! It's trippy.

    • @moochikyuu
      @moochikyuu 5 лет назад +23

      @@MalharetasLair oH right right. Your voice either gets deep or high

    • @user_9697
      @user_9697 5 лет назад +21

      @glossysunmin I feel you! It's like I have different identities as I speak different languages

  • @chungkrixx1279
    @chungkrixx1279 3 года назад +1636

    Me: Bilingual
    Also me: reads subtitles because It feels relaxing and more understanding

    • @rodrigomanuelalvesfonseca4846
      @rodrigomanuelalvesfonseca4846 3 года назад +67

      I also read them but, damn, dont i get upset when they're wrong...

    • @maryocecilyo3372
      @maryocecilyo3372 3 года назад +58

      I read to make sure about my listening

    • @stefanicalderon7077
      @stefanicalderon7077 3 года назад +3

      Jajaa totalll

    • @piavodusek3868
      @piavodusek3868 3 года назад +11

      @@rodrigomanuelalvesfonseca4846 i'd rather have the subtitles off than have them be written wrong or shortened.. pisses me tf out

    • @piavodusek3868
      @piavodusek3868 3 года назад +7

      @@Madhattersinjeans I am not talking about subtitles used for translation, because then of course any subtitle is much better than none, and I appreciate them. I was talking about having English subtitles on while watching something in English. If the subtitles are different to what is being said, and you understand both, it is very distracting. That is what I find annoying. But I really have nothing against the people that do the subtitles, it's just a personal pet peeve of mine.

  • @snertkriebels
    @snertkriebels Год назад +2

    I'm fluently trilingual, and using all three languages on a daily basis and while it's a huge blessing to be able to talk in three languages, it's also always such a mess in my brain i feel like. I will often get words in another language in my head while talking in one language and it's so hard sometimes to translate on the spot. Or sometimes there just simply aren't any words for the one that i'm thinking of in the other language. Happy to know that it at least contributes to brain health because yeah, it really is brain gymnastics haha.

  • @maxboya
    @maxboya 6 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in Russia. Both my parents are deaf. I am not deaf so growing up I had quite the responsibility, unknowingly sacrificing my childhood to translate for my parents.
    I know
    English
    Russian
    American Sign Language &
    Russian Sign Language
    Gifted with being an expert essentially in body language. Currently learning Spanish and French so no longer Quadlingual. Now multi lingual.
    Wouldn’t trade this life for anything. I’ve noticed I’ve been much sharper than my peers in many things.

  • @Julie-mo7gu
    @Julie-mo7gu 5 лет назад +15411

    This is the amount of people that are bilingual or multilingual
    👇🏽

    • @hannahg8439
      @hannahg8439 5 лет назад +57

      Incorrect

    • @abovenbeyond2826
      @abovenbeyond2826 5 лет назад +239

      I'm not liking that even though i'm bilingual because you're just fishing for likes.

    • @esmeedebruin4660
      @esmeedebruin4660 5 лет назад +15

      no

    • @teiroberts5330
      @teiroberts5330 5 лет назад +35

      The language of native IKEA, language of tea and the language of baguettes

    • @Julie-mo7gu
      @Julie-mo7gu 5 лет назад +2

      woww didn’t think I’d get that many likes, haha thanks

  • @murderhornets1166
    @murderhornets1166 5 лет назад +22764

    What do you call a person who only speaks 1 language??
    - An American.

    • @emilyb4812
      @emilyb4812 5 лет назад +2146

      shaniqua johnson so true! I'm American and speak English, French, and a little Spanish, but most American don't focus on learning new languages because English is largely used.

    • @jmangini9191
      @jmangini9191 5 лет назад +1685

      Yeah most don’t want to learn a foreign language, they just expect everyone to know English, i try to be different by learning another (Russian)

    • @hannahg8439
      @hannahg8439 5 лет назад +225

      @@emilyb4812 true, but this also means there just isn't big of a use to learn another language when you already speak English.

    • @hannahg8439
      @hannahg8439 5 лет назад +277

      @@jmangini9191 and there's nothing wrong in expecting that most people speak English since it's the world language. I say this as a German.

    • @mildav4051
      @mildav4051 5 лет назад +422

      wth.. americans know a lot of languages.. like american, english, austraian, canadian(ik a part of canada has french as its native language.. and i know i am gonna get on r/iamverysmart)

  • @hannahjq9131
    @hannahjq9131 3 месяца назад

    Hearing about all the types of multilingual gives me this view of how we all learn and acquire a language, and what are the situations that led us to it, and how our brain changes when we learn a language, i found really Interesting the way this video explains the way our emotions and how we see the world gets affected by the time we learn other language

  • @lordpreminger
    @lordpreminger 4 года назад +952

    Comes here proud of speaking 2 languages
    **people in comments speaking 7**
    DAMN WHERES MY DUOLINGO AT

    • @rogel4438
      @rogel4438 4 года назад +79

      It is simple... *_SPANISH OR VANISH_*

    • @cameronh3260
      @cameronh3260 4 года назад +52

      @@rogel4438 speak Portuguese or i break your knees

    • @alessiacara4101
      @alessiacara4101 4 года назад +38

      Rogel i’ve been ignoring my duolingo reminders for a week now, it’s *getting madder*

    • @yakigesher-zion7289
      @yakigesher-zion7289 4 года назад +1

      Mwahahahaha אכן זו אמת

    • @Jio_W
      @Jio_W 4 года назад +19

      Cameron Harper it’s simple French or in the trenche

  • @D0wNhiLL
    @D0wNhiLL 4 года назад +2159

    Sometimes I forget whether I watched a movie in my native language or in English 😃

    • @benedictemarding6237
      @benedictemarding6237 4 года назад +86

      I never really know what language the subtitles are in unless I focus on the subtitles

    • @prinkidoodles
      @prinkidoodles 4 года назад +7

      YES, ME TOO!

    • @prinkidoodles
      @prinkidoodles 4 года назад +20

      @@benedictemarding6237 often I am watching something while drawing, I look at the screen from time to time, sometimes while drawing i just think, in which language are the subtitles, and I have to read for a while until I remember the language 🤣

    • @veromas436
      @veromas436 4 года назад +1

      omg same

    • @zilasgregersen2956
      @zilasgregersen2956 4 года назад +1

      So true!

  • @gerardopc1
    @gerardopc1 Месяц назад +1

    Most of us who learned a second or third foreign language did so not because we're super smart but because we're more motivated than the average person. Motivation and passion are the key.

  • @mayraceciliags
    @mayraceciliags 10 месяцев назад

    Very interesting information!
    Thanks for sharing 🙏🏻

  • @shwetasharma7266
    @shwetasharma7266 5 лет назад +2254

    benefits of a bilingual brain:
    you know the grammar of your first language better than your second language, but you know more words in your second language than your first language

    • @Keubi
      @Keubi 4 года назад +19

      Perhaps

    • @biomediciandocomlari8424
      @biomediciandocomlari8424 4 года назад +5

      @@Keubi my life

    • @moshien5562
      @moshien5562 4 года назад +57

      Why is this accurate

    • @moonlightikah6753
      @moonlightikah6753 4 года назад +41

      this is soo true. i know english words more than my first language. but grammar, i would prefer my first language even tho im quite good in english.

    • @388bobek
      @388bobek 4 года назад +26

      It's all different for me. I forget words in both languages. In both languages there's some words I need to use Google translate for. However, my grammar is way better in my second language. It might be because I left my country at the age of 11, and I finished rest of my education, including university, in the country I immigrated to.