Eastern VS Western Tongue Twisters Challenge!!

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  • Опубликовано: 12 май 2023
  • Eastern VS Western Tongue Twisters Challenge!!

Комментарии • 445

  • @MrViking69
    @MrViking69 Год назад +221

    It's so much fun to watch people try to pronounce swedish. It's like they're having a tiny aneurysm 🤣

    • @nossflodaamme
      @nossflodaamme 10 месяцев назад +8

      Yeah I know. I’m from Sweden and speak fluent Swedish, and for us we have to practice to speak the tongue twisters. But for the others who doesn’t speak any Swedish thinks it’s super hard. Us Swedish people have it easy to say a few tongue twisters both from Sweden and from different countries but we need to practice, and that’s what many other people need to do too. 💗

  • @johnnorthtribe
    @johnnorthtribe Год назад +1164

    The hardest word for a foreigner to say in Swedish is most of the time the word "sju" (seven). The way we pronounce the letter "u" is kind of unique in Scandinavia.

    • @michaelgoetze2103
      @michaelgoetze2103 Год назад +69

      My sister lives in Sweden for 6 years now and whenever I visit I try to learn a few more phrases. I have given up on sju. 😂

    • @Juicy_Metra
      @Juicy_Metra Год назад +27

      omg this is giving me ptsd when i tried to learn how to say kÖlsch in german - no matter how many germans i tried to copy and how close i thought i sounded they would look so frustrated with me. i'm like PLEASE it's only one syllable why can't i say it right!?!? hahaha

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Год назад +33

      I think "tjugo" (20) is harder at least for people from Finland, their "tj" sound sounds like "sj", so when they try to say tjugosju (27) it sounds like sjusju (7 7). I think their ears aren't trained to hear the difference.

    • @Juicy_Metra
      @Juicy_Metra Год назад +14

      @@reineh3477 idk why but hearing you say "their ears aren't trained to hear the difference" enlightened me so much. I always thought i had an innate talent for hearing little differences and noticing details, when it came to accents (and even faces) but now i'm realizing language isn't innate - it's learned. lol how dumb am i

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe Год назад +17

      @@reineh3477 the "tj" sound in "tjugo" a lot of languages have in their native sound. "sj" as in "sju" are more rare. Plus the swedish letter "u" which is almost unique for Scandinavia. So "sju" is a lot harder for foreigners to pronounce because it is two sounds they are not familiar with. The finnish swedish-speaking people speaks swedish fluently though since swedish is their native tongue. It is their dialect.

  • @philip2205
    @philip2205 Год назад +367

    As a Swedish person I can say the Swedish speaker here definitely softened the blow (by a bit).

    • @Mikusagi
      @Mikusagi Год назад +49

      Yeah, for two of the persons I could not understand at all what they were trying to say, well for one of them I could maybe have figured out the last word. But she's like "oh I'll give you 5" haha

    • @WillThinkAboutIT
      @WillThinkAboutIT Год назад +31

      As another Swedish speaker, I'd say the rating was fair, since the phrase was just a giant trap. There's no way for any non-speaker to recognize that those are sj-sounds, and swedish has dozens that may or may not be used as sj-sounds in any instance. If it would be fair as compared to the Chinese example, the phrase should have been written "shu shoeshuka shoemaen schoettes av shu shoena shukschoeteshkor".
      Sh, ch and sch are recognizable as sj-sounds, not so much sj, sk, skj, stj, t, ti, tj, j, si, ssi, ssj, rs, g, ge, gi, k, kj, and whatever more obscure variants there are.

    • @infectiousangel
      @infectiousangel Год назад +7

      Agreed, except for the french man that did well. His pronunciations were off, but I could clearly understand what he was saying.

    • @nerdgirl8978
      @nerdgirl8978 Год назад +6

      I think the girls were really good at pronunciating "sju", and the second girl manage sort of to pronounce "sjuksköterskor" but very slowly and with some brakes. The French guy sounded a little bit like he came from Finland and the Korean guy was impossible for me to understand at all (sorry). XD

    • @limern777
      @limern777 Год назад +5

      That’s the most Swedish thing to do too

  • @monkeconleche
    @monkeconleche Год назад +546

    The fact the went for the easier version of the Swedish one as well and still had so much trouble is so relatable (Born in Sweden but am ethically Spanish)
    The harder version is “Sjuhundrasjuttiosju sjösjuka sjömän sköttes av sjuttiosju skönsjungande sköna sjuksköterskor på sjunkande skeppet i Shanghai” for anyone wondering

    • @andiuti
      @andiuti Год назад +116

      I have more problem with "Sex laxar i en laxask"

    • @monkeconleche
      @monkeconleche Год назад +17

      @@andiuti than with this Abomination??? Ig sj is just very hard to pronounce for a Spanish speaker

    • @andiuti
      @andiuti Год назад +79

      @@monkeconleche I see, Im swedish so I dont have a problem with pronouncing "sj". but "laxask" is just impossible to say right

    • @novawells4451
      @novawells4451 Год назад +2

      yea! and they still thought it was the most difficult one.

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Год назад +32

      @@andiuti Same here, the "sju sjösjuka sjömän..." is easy for a native Swede, as it's really just a play on the specific "sh" sound. The placement in the mouth is the same all the way through so it's not really that tricky. "Sex laxar i en laxask" on the other hand is plain difficult because it's harder for the tongue to form those sounds in quick succession.

  • @Al-KA1mist
    @Al-KA1mist Год назад +316

    As a regular Swedish non-giant, I think the best response I've heard to the Swedish tongue twister is that it sounds like a hissing cat because I can't disagree.

    • @Unlike_Monster
      @Unlike_Monster Год назад +20

      I once saw someone calling Swedish people vampires due to the hisssing. Goddam halarious!

    • @karinberonius8799
      @karinberonius8799 Год назад +4

      ​@@Unlike_MonsterBwahaha! 😂😂😂

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie Год назад +5

      @@Unlike_Monster But Chinese is so similar with all the sh sounds, but yeah, the Swedish language sounds like it was Parseltongue from Harry Potter...

    • @Unlike_Monster
      @Unlike_Monster Год назад +3

      @@livedandletdie Well I can’t say for sure. But I think the Chinese sound is more lighter in its sound. Almost like the English sh noise. While Swedish is more aggressive. To say a more English ch type of sound. But Yeah similar.

    • @User-wr5qz
      @User-wr5qz Год назад +2

      what the hell do you mean. Do we hiss like cats?🤣😂😂 meeoooow!
      Maybe you mean the breathing IN air in a "sscchhhp", which simply means yes?🤣😂 If this is unique in the world it makes me proud 😂

  • @Netashas
    @Netashas Год назад +352

    As a swedish, I laughed 🤣 I think the France is most hard because I don’t know that. I can read Korean, and understand some Chinese and Thai aswell 🥰

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад +4

      Å å [oː] Ä ä [ɛː] Ö ö [øː] > 😵‍💫 | Миру мир!

    • @Divig
      @Divig Год назад +20

      And they did only use half of it! Where was "det sjunkande skeppet Shanghai"?

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Год назад +7

      @@Divig Right, they went easy on them! There's so many variations of it, but they really chose the shortest one lol.

    • @Sora123-r7g
      @Sora123-r7g Год назад

      Ja

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      上海[Shànghǎi]?@@Divig | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.

  • @Emily-T
    @Emily-T Год назад +129

    As a swed, I was at the breaking point of breaking down laughing-

    • @tindrajonsson7160
      @tindrajonsson7160 Год назад

      Same

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Today, Germanic language > Romance language | Миру мир!

  • @MrZeuz666
    @MrZeuz666 Год назад +33

    That’s definitely the hardest one to pronounce (in Swedish).
    But we also love the: Sex laxar i en laxask. The point for that one is you have to say it fast many times over. It’s designed to make Swedes completely trip over the words and fail, so would be fun hearing others try it.
    It’s hard because the X is always strong/hard in Swedish. And pronounced roughly as eKs and then at the end it’s also strong but sK. So it flips the sound.

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 Год назад

      @@ecardecardian7839 😂

    • @kricku
      @kricku Год назад +1

      Packa pappas kappsäck

    • @sirsalsayt
      @sirsalsayt 10 месяцев назад +2

      En annan bra är: "Pappa hänger upp hinkar i taket"

  • @bynflew8552
    @bynflew8552 Год назад +72

    Sjuksköterska is always a word that will make people learning swedish want to give up xD

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад +2

      ¹¹:²¹ 11:21 | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình. Sjuksköterska > Hukskweterska🥶

    • @VilleHalonen
      @VilleHalonen Год назад +3

      Now I understand why some Swedes laugh at Finnish Swedish :D

    • @snowfloofcathug
      @snowfloofcathug Год назад

      I wanna hear them try “Västkustskt”

    • @stekeln
      @stekeln Год назад

      @@snowfloofcathug Sex vaxer växlande av växande västkustska väskväxter vätskas.

    • @makynator101
      @makynator101 11 месяцев назад +2

      I totally agree😂moved here over a year and a half ago and this word is my enemy😅

  • @aburn9891
    @aburn9891 Год назад +149

    I think for foreigners, longer tongue twisters are harder since it is hard to critique pronounciation. For Thai we have a lot of very hard tongue twisters but this one is quite easy but I think you need to put tones for Thai just like Chinese because it is also a tonal language, and tones are very important for meaning and is what makes these tongue twisters hard.

  • @eddiemc7
    @eddiemc7 Год назад +41

    As a chinese born in Sweden learning French, I absolutely loved this ❤

  • @tovekauppi1616
    @tovekauppi1616 10 месяцев назад +6

    The funny thing about the Swedish tongue twister is that it’s only hard for foreigners because of the very Scandinavian sounds. It’s super easy for swedes to pronounce. If you want something that trips swedes up, say “sex laxar i en laxask” (literally “six salmon in a salmon box”). It is hard because is combines k-sound and s-sound with sometimes one being first and sometimes the other.

  • @ouilegdsart
    @ouilegdsart Год назад +27

    My dude said it's an honor to see the alphabet. I love him :D

  • @mytube001
    @mytube001 Год назад +10

    The French guy actually pronounced the sentence close to what it would've sounded like 600 years ago (had all the words existed then), as that was before the consonant clusters merged to form the modern sounds. Back then, "sk" would've been pronounced "s-k", like in English "skin", and "sj" would've been "s-j", akin to a posh English pronunciation of "suit" or "super" ("syoot", "syooper").

  • @Noah_ol11
    @Noah_ol11 Год назад +43

    Dude , the tattoos on Alexander's arms are pretty good and charming , and now i noticed that Sofia is wearing a great outfit

    • @jessicasvensson4067
      @jessicasvensson4067 Год назад

      Nice to see a Swede with. Not easy with Å Ä Ö. How to pronounce in Swedish. Thought you all gave a good try. To pronounce it. ☺👍🏻

  • @ersia87
    @ersia87 Год назад +21

    I'm impressed by the french guy trying the swedish phrase. Had he known about the sj- and sk sounds hed pretty much nailed it.
    Next time I wanna see them do "sex laxar i en laxask", which is one that's actually hard for natives too.

  • @TheRedBastion
    @TheRedBastion 11 месяцев назад +8

    There’s a famous danish tongue twister, not for Danes, but for foreigners learning our language. It’s “rødgrød med fløde” which uses phonetic sounds of the “d” which are unique to the language. It was so difficult, that during WW2, it was used to spot nazi spy’s in Denmark as they would force them to pronounce the phrase, something only someone who grew up in Denmark would be able to pronounce.

  • @catinabox3048
    @catinabox3048 Год назад +70

    I'm a native Chinese speaker and am fluent in French. I'm super impressed with the Korean guy. His Chinese sounded almost native at the beginning. He only lost points because the tongue twister was long, and it seemed like as he kept going, he kind of got tired of trying that hard. His French was also not bad. His accent was thick, but the pronunciation (in terms of pronouncing the right stuff in a comprehensible way) wasn't bad at all. I'd be a happy prof if all my students could do that.

  • @crazycupcakeize
    @crazycupcakeize Год назад +16

    The swedish one means (more accurately) “seven seasick seamen were nursed by seven pretty nurses.”

    • @ActuallyMaxx
      @ActuallyMaxx Год назад +2

      sailor is the correct term for sjömän🤓

    • @crazycupcakeize
      @crazycupcakeize Год назад +10

      @@ActuallyMaxx both are correct but one sounds better in this context. Seamen sounds much more accurate.

    • @mariajansson9327
      @mariajansson9327 Год назад +1

      Seamen when you speak sounds alot like semen, so I understand why she chose to say sailors

    • @ActuallyMaxx
      @ActuallyMaxx Год назад

      @@crazycupcakeize Just translate the word "sjömän" and you'll get sailor, simple as that

  • @hylius5780
    @hylius5780 Год назад +54

    They could have chosen
    "Les chemises de l'archi duchesse sont elle sèches ou archi sèches"
    Or even
    "Un chasseur sachant chasser doit savoir chasser sans son chien"
    But hey it was REALLY interesting 😄
    Also i tough about it the whole video so ps: the thai lady is fkn adorable she made me smile the whole thing 😂❤

    • @SecretLars
      @SecretLars Год назад +1

      Why not "Ton tonton tond ton thon" or "Foin foie foi foire fois" or "Tintin tint un teint thym"?

    • @dickurkel6910
      @dickurkel6910 Год назад +1

      The french one they picked was quite easy compared to the other ones, but maybe I'm biased.

    • @marx2875
      @marx2875 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​​@@dickurkel6910Then what do you think about this one (french one) :
      - Didon dîna, dit-on, de dix dos dodus de dix dodus dindons.
      - Si six scies scient six cyprès, Six cent six scies scient six cent six cyprès.
      - Cette taxe fixe excessive est fixée exprès à Aix par le fisc.
      - Trois gros rats grattent et grillent dans la grosse graisse grasse.
      - Dis-moi, gros gras grand grain d’orge, quand te dégrogragrangraindorgeras-tu ? Je me dégrogragrangraindorgerai quand tous les gros gras grands grains d’orge se seront dégrogragrangraindorgés.
      - Graciles et gras quatre gros grands gredins grognons grignotent quatre gros grains grands. Trois grands gros grillons grattent la grise grève en grès, grignoti, grignoton, graines trouveront, graines grignoteront.
      Not so easy now ?

  • @BlazeLycan
    @BlazeLycan Год назад +69

    The Swedish one is even difficult for us Swedes as well, mainly because there are small differences in the sounds that can trip us up.
    However, this classic Swedish tongue twister is even more devilish for foreigners due to the fact that the Sj sounds as well as the U sound are not very common in other languages. And to throw in an extra cherry on top for the difficulty scale; k before a vowel makes a "ch" sound, with the Sk in these ones making a different kind of "ch" sound. And of course, Ö and Ä nobody will on their first go as they are not just O and A but their own letters.

  • @nerdgirl8978
    @nerdgirl8978 Год назад +13

    When I read a semester in Korean language class, the lessons where in English, but I realized quite fast that 2 of the syllables could be linked to Swedish Alphabet.
    ㅐ→Ä (or Danish æ) and
    ㅓ→ Å (but its a "Å" that are pronounced like the accent in North Sweden)
    (Also, it wouldn't have been wrong if the girl that said she wanted to pronounce the "r" like in frensh, had done that. We have that sound too in the accent from South Sweden.) 😊

    • @User-wr5qz
      @User-wr5qz Год назад +3

      yes, but if the R was pronounced like in Skåne the rest of the prononciation fell off more than it already did.
      (For non native Swedes: She was the nicest judge ever; it was impossible to hear any resemblance to the phrase accept for the french guy 🤣)

  • @serbaserbi6004
    @serbaserbi6004 Год назад +27

    I though chinese is the most diffucult but actually swedish super difficult

    • @moondaughter1004
      @moondaughter1004 Год назад +1

      True. Even I as Swede struggle with it. I've always struggled with s sounds

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo Год назад

      Only the pronunciation though. And Chinese tones most of us don't even understand how tricky they are. I don't .

    • @RnRnR
      @RnRnR Год назад +5

      @@beorlingo tbf swedish has tones too xD

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo Год назад +3

      @@RnRnR only accent 1 and 2.

    • @hnorrstrom
      @hnorrstrom Год назад +2

      Swedish is considered to be in the top 3 easiest languages for English speakers to learn. Mainly because of huge similarities in words and much less complexity compared to French or German. However Scandinavian languages can be difficult to pronounce especially the pitch accents.

  • @_ha..nni_
    @_ha..nni_ Год назад +9

    As a half Swedish and half Thai I understood both

    • @everglxw..
      @everglxw.. 11 месяцев назад

      Me too and i live in sweden! Im not good at thai tho 😅

  • @rythielmyrddyn
    @rythielmyrddyn Год назад +11

    The French tongue twister is a variant of a riddle:
    "Je suis ce que je suis, mais je ne suis pas ce que je suis
    car si j’étais ce que je suis, je ne serai plus ce que je suis.
    Qui suis-je ?"
    -
    it plays with the meaning of "je suis", that can refer to the verb Être (to be) or Suivre (to follow)
    So in English it'd say:
    "I am what I am, but I am not what I follow
    For if I was what I follow, I would not be what I am anymore.
    Who am I?"
    -
    For those seeking the answer: it's a man in a funeral procession (he "is" alive and "follow" a dead)

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      ①Passé composé [複合過去] FR past tensesTT | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
      ②Imparfait de l'indicatif [直說法半過去]
      ③Plus-que-parfait de l'indicatif [直說法大過去]
      ④Passé simple [單純過去]
      ⑤Passé antérieur [前過去]
      ⑥Passé récent [近接過去]
      ⑦Passé composé [複合過去]
      ⑧Passé du subjonctif [接續法過去]
      ⑨Imparfait du subjonctif [接續法半過去]
      ⑩Plus-que-parfait du subjonctif [接續法大過去]
      ⑪Passé du conditionnel [條件法過去]
      ⑫Participe passé [複合形過去分詞]
      ⑬Infinitif passé [不定法過去]

    • @dickurkel6910
      @dickurkel6910 Год назад

      The last "Qui suis-je" would be really tough for foreigners to pronounce correctly due to liaison

  • @amandaplays9404
    @amandaplays9404 Год назад +97

    You should try polish tongue twisters next time 😁It'll be really funny to hear your versions of e.g: ' Szedl Sasza sucha szosa' or ' W Szczebrzeszynie chrzaszcz brzmi w trzcinie' 🤣🤣

    • @sophiemoser1752
      @sophiemoser1752 Год назад +9

      I heard some polish guys smash the second one, it was really impressive!! Imo polish tongue twisters are the hardest just because lots of people aren't used to the szcz

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      AĄBCĆDEĘFGHIJKLŁMNŃOÓP(Q)RSŚTU(V)W(X)YZŹŻ | aąbcćdeęfghijklłmnńoóp(q)rsśtu(v)w(x)yzźż > 😵 | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Год назад +1

      A flotsam of vowels on a frothing sea of sibilants.

    • @maggan2808
      @maggan2808 Год назад

      Or, stółspowylamywanyminogami. Apologies in advance, I'm not sure if I got the spelling right.

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Год назад +3

      Polish is just a language of tongue twisters altogether tbh. It's a mess to try and learn lol.

  • @andreiamendes9116
    @andreiamendes9116 Год назад +48

    Finally I see Hoseung again!! The most nice and smart guy on this Channel. 🥰🙏

    • @judithadanma_
      @judithadanma_ Год назад +1

      Every video with Hoseung is a good video 👍🏽

    • @ssjkaryuusennin
      @ssjkaryuusennin Год назад +1

      Exactly what I thought. I only clicked because of Hoseung

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад +1

      @@judithadanma_may be a big fan of himTT | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.

  • @20reb24
    @20reb24 Год назад +8

    가운데 앉아 있는 태국아가씨..... 인상 너무 좋음! ㅋ

  • @celianeher7637
    @celianeher7637 Год назад +34

    Sandanavia languages sometimes make Mandarin sounds easier. Nobody outside of that area has yet to pronounce the name of the volcano that caused a havco a few years ago.

    • @tt9660
      @tt9660 Год назад +18

      That's Icelandic, which is on a whoooooole other level from the continental Scandinavian languages. Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian are actually not that hard.

    • @Xaimy_3777
      @Xaimy_3777 Год назад +15

      @@tt9660 As a swedish person I can’t even understand nor speak Danish.... Lmao

    • @tt9660
      @tt9660 Год назад +2

      @@Xaimy_3777 I bet you can read it fine though.

    • @Xaimy_3777
      @Xaimy_3777 Год назад +3

      @@tt9660 Actually no, I can understand and read a little bit of Norwegian but I think that Danish is rlly hard.

    • @lol69970
      @lol69970 Год назад +8

      @@Xaimy_3777 in my view norwegian is just an accent that i can understand really well. Perhaps cause I watched a lot of norwegian shows but eh. Danish is harder, but i can still understand it quite okay-ish.

  • @user-iz7uo4om1z
    @user-iz7uo4om1z Год назад +5

    the hardest one to pronounce (fast) for me as Swedish is "kvistfritt kvastskaft" the one in the clip is easy for a native speaker.

  • @J0HN_D03
    @J0HN_D03 Год назад +18

    *11:22** And some people dare to say French is difficult...* 🤣🤣🤣

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Juice, juice, juiceTT | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.

    • @gryyta9617
      @gryyta9617 Год назад +1

      yeah, and she chose the easier version of that tongue twister...

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      Nah mate, fairly easy for swedes at least, there are much worse versions of that tounge twister haha. Add to that, we can have infinitely long combined words in swedish, a common "joke" word that actually is a word that kinda makes sense is "Flaggstångsknoppsputsare" and all the even longer versions of it lol. But I see how the "sj" and "tj" sounds can be really hard to non native speakers.

    • @marx2875
      @marx2875 6 месяцев назад +1

      Then what do you think about this one (french one) :
      - Didon dîna, dit-on, de dix dos dodus de dix dodus dindons.
      - Si six scies scient six cyprès, Six cent six scies scient six cent six cyprès.
      - Cette taxe fixe excessive est fixée exprès à Aix par le fisc.
      - Trois gros rats grattent et grillent dans la grosse graisse grasse.
      - Dis-moi, gros gras grand grain d’orge, quand te dégrogragrangraindorgeras-tu ? Je me dégrogragrangraindorgerai quand tous les gros gras grands grains d’orge se seront dégrogragrangraindorgés.
      - Graciles et gras quatre gros grands gredins grognons grignotent quatre gros grains grands. Trois grands gros grillons grattent la grise grève en grès, grignoti, grignoton, graines trouveront, graines grignoteront.
      Not so easy now ?

  • @kfnwuwbw9s
    @kfnwuwbw9s 2 месяца назад +1

    Temmie is so cute! Her facial expressions are perfect!

  • @DMC8707
    @DMC8707 Год назад +32

    I hope to see more countries people can speak tongue twister in different languages. 🙂 part two

  • @Un1corns
    @Un1corns Год назад +10

    As a Norwegian the Swedish was ok, some I didn’t understand but Chinese was the easiest tbh

    • @dorte3791
      @dorte3791 Год назад

      Yeah im Danish and it was pretty easy compared to ours

    • @catinabox3048
      @catinabox3048 Год назад +1

      I think the French was easiest. Most sounds there are easily pronounced for most of them, and the one sound that could be hard to get perfect (suis) is comprehensible even when it's pronounced slightly wrong. With the Chinese, the Korean guy was the only one who came anywhere close to saying anything comprehensible. The Swedish girl and French guy both pronounced everything monotone and you can't understand anything they're saying.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Are 🇳🇴·🇳🇴🇷 ﹠ 🇸🇪·🇸🇼🇪 αβs the same? | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.

  • @Spyro1701
    @Spyro1701 Год назад +6

    As a Finn I'd like to respond with just one word. It goes as follows:
    lentokonesuihkuturbiinimoottoriapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas
    I can not be bothered to actually translate it but google does a fairly decent job of it.
    aircraft jet turbine engine sub-mechanic non-commissioned officer apprentice

    • @eldafint
      @eldafint Год назад +3

      Ez, as a Swede I've read all the funny Finnish words on the back of the shampoo

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      Flaggstångsknoppsputsarmaskinoperatörspraktikant (Flag pole tip polisher machine operator apprentice). There you have a swedish horrible word that none will most likely ever use but it exist none the less lol

    • @eldafint
      @eldafint Год назад +1

      @@assarstromblad3280 The beauty of a compound language is that you can make anything (more or less) into a word. You can just keep adding words together forever

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      @@eldafint Yep. So a competition about the longest words in a language is kinda useless when it comes to languages like finnish and swedish. It becomes more of a question about how logical the word is lol

  • @creamcakecoffee
    @creamcakecoffee 11 месяцев назад +2

    The Swedish and French were both very easy for me since I speak Swedish and I’m learning french in school

  • @sm0kei38
    @sm0kei38 Год назад +13

    the swedish one was hilarious, as a swedish its really easy for me ofc but i hadnt thought about how hard it is for others haha

  • @zahidurrahman2869
    @zahidurrahman2869 Год назад +7

    11:20 ... the surprised look on her face

  • @caturina
    @caturina Год назад +5

    As a Finland Swede, we pronounce the "sj" as a "sh" sound :D
    Själ (soul)
    Skäl (reason)
    Stjäl (steal/stealing)
    They are all pronounced the same way. With a "sh" sound 🤣 /ɧɛːl/

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      And as a Swede that doesn't speak "finlandsvenska", I would pronounce them all with the "sj" sound use by the girl in the video. Just a dialect thing :)

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      Although to add, Words starting with Tj like "Tjäle" (ground frost, permafrost), or "Tjäna" (earn) I would use the "sh" or "sch" sound

    • @caturina
      @caturina Год назад

      @@assarstromblad3280 Those we would pronounce as a "tch" sound

  • @murderoustendencies
    @murderoustendencies Год назад +2

    Pretty sure Alexander translated the tongue twister wrong. It's a play on the fact that both the verb "to be" and the verbe "to follow" conjugate as "suis" as the first person singular present time.
    So while it could be translated as he says, it could also be translated as "I follow what I follow, and if I follow what I follow then what am I following ?"
    But it's more likely that it can go either :
    "I am what I follow, but if I follow what I am, then what am I" or "I follow what I am, but if I am what I follow, then what am I following ?" or any alternative you can think of. Which actually makes it kind of unsettling.

  • @cottoncandy3534
    @cottoncandy3534 11 месяцев назад +1

    Would love to see them all try out some of the danish once 😂 especially those with æ ø å 😂

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      i died | Нехай наш Бог береже Україну

  • @giuliabarbieri7855
    @giuliabarbieri7855 Год назад

    I think that if you try with some Italian tounge twisters, someone will really end up cursing 😂

  • @DaidairoGS
    @DaidairoGS 11 месяцев назад +2

    At 11.22 Temmie's expression change is hilarious HAHAHA

  • @clementwymiens7955
    @clementwymiens7955 Год назад +2

    Alexander slaying as always ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Jaespjutfiskare
    @Jaespjutfiskare 11 месяцев назад +2

    The France guy is so cute 😊

  • @pelstussen
    @pelstussen Год назад +7

    the swedish one is so easy if you know swedish. it's literally just the same "sj" sound over and over, which kinda defeats the purpose of a tongue twister..

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      It means that there is 'hu' sound as wellTT | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.

    • @thatpandaz6094
      @thatpandaz6094 Год назад

      It's not tho, if you try to do it fast you mess it up, the difficulty is reapeating that sound many times fast, like "Sju laxar i en lax ask" it's really short and repetitve but super hard to get it right

    • @pelstussen
      @pelstussen Год назад +2

      @@thatpandaz6094 yes ‘sex laxar i en laxask’ is genuinely difficult. but there you have waaay more consonant + vowel sounds that trip you up and make you mispronounce the s + [other letter] sounds, since they change throughout. the sj-sounds in sju sjösjuka sjömän sköts av sju sköna sjuksköterskor do not (even though it visibly looks like it because of the swedish language’s illogical decision of spelling the same sound in 22 different ways 😩). but i mean, maybe it’s more difficult for a swede with a different regional accent.. 🤷🏼

  • @FileSelect1S2M
    @FileSelect1S2M 10 месяцев назад +1

    As a swede it's nice hearing people tryna pronounce the "sj/sk" sound

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Год назад +2

    Same producers of World Friends.
    Keep it up guys. 👍😃

    • @dragoneer121
      @dragoneer121 Год назад +1

      I was thinking, HAvent Alexander and Temmie done this already??

  • @ttaimell
    @ttaimell 10 месяцев назад +2

    as a Finnish who was forced to learn Swedish at school i have to confess I always thought sju is said "shu" and not "hu"

  • @clementwymiens7955
    @clementwymiens7955 Год назад +2

    Very impressed by the Chinese lady!

  • @Lampchuanungang
    @Lampchuanungang 7 месяцев назад +2

    The most hardest were in tongue twisters were:
    Swedish, Chinese and Thai.
    French and Korean are accessible and Nice.

    • @marx2875
      @marx2875 6 месяцев назад +2

      Then what do you think about this one (french one) :
      - Didon dîna, dit-on, de dix dos dodus de dix dodus dindons.
      - Si six scies scient six cyprès, Six cent six scies scient six cent six cyprès.
      - Cette taxe fixe excessive est fixée exprès à Aix par le fisc.
      - Trois gros rats grattent et grillent dans la grosse graisse grasse.
      - Dis-moi, gros gras grand grain d’orge, quand te dégrogragrangraindorgeras-tu ? Je me dégrogragrangraindorgerai quand tous les gros gras grands grains d’orge se seront dégrogragrangraindorgés.
      - Graciles et gras quatre gros grands gredins grognons grignotent quatre gros grains grands. Trois grands gros grillons grattent la grise grève en grès, grignoti, grignoton, graines trouveront, graines grignoteront.
      Not so easy now ?

    • @Lampchuanungang
      @Lampchuanungang 6 месяцев назад +1

      To be fair to you, this is difficult for those who don't like French, easy for those who already study the language and at an intermediate level for those who are new to French.
      But contemporary French has many dialects and is accessible today.
      Now these laryngeal languages like Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Estonian tonal musical languages like Chinese, Burmese, Thai, Lao Vietnamese, Mong etc are quite difficult than French, Inuit and difficult visceral guttural and musical sounds as well.
      And there is the anti-language Itkhuil, any Frenchman runs away from Itkhuil like anyone else, it was a language made not to be spoken in order to be studied as an anti-language.
      There are other languages that are very closed and worse than French.
      See you soon, health, peace. Goodbye.
      😉😉😉😉🫂🫂🫂🫂🥂🥂💲💲🥂🥂🍾

    • @marx2875
      @marx2875 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@Lampchuanungang Thanks you very much for your answer, you developed it a lot in your comment for me an it is very nice ☺️ ! And to Come back to my comment, sorry i didn't understand what you meant 😅, at frist i tought you were saying that because the french tougue was easy, and has french myself i was like "haha, not really" because the one they chose in the vidéo was ridiculously easy when compared to other words (like the ones i just send to you) which are very difficult and those even for the french because some sounds literally cannot be said too quickly otherwise is just unpronounceable because the differents sounds mixe each other like : "un chasseur sachant chassé sur des souches sèchent sans sont chien". But seeing your comment i understand better what do you meant and yeah it's truth, you right. Have a good day you to 😁 !

    • @Lampchuanungang
      @Lampchuanungang 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@marx2875 🤗🥂🎸🎶🎹🌎🌎💙🫂🫂😋☺️👏🍾🥂🥂🥂
      Culture and linguistic codes are my area, I've seen many videos of native French speakers speaking tongue twisters, interpreting poetry and prose in French, I've seen everything non-native understand details of French that the native doesn't feel and doesn't understand in French, but I've seen native French speakers help non-native speakers not to make it difficult to speak French but to make it more practical and syllabic without losing its tonality and musicality 🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🫂🫂🫂🫂💙🌎🫂💙🌎🥂🎶🎶🎶💐 Of course, I have to comment on the reality of French without mystifying it.
      Thank you for understanding me hugs, happy 2024🫂💙🌎🥂💐🩷

    • @Lampchuanungang
      @Lampchuanungang 5 месяцев назад

      @@marx2875 🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻

  • @spookyanimator4695
    @spookyanimator4695 Год назад +2

    The swedish one made me laugh so hard!!

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Sj soundTT | Миру мир!

    • @Mrsuperdestroyer
      @Mrsuperdestroyer 10 месяцев назад

      It's actually not that hard because it is the same sound over and over again. So as long as you are able to do that then you can do the whole thing. There are harder tounge twisters in Swedish, at least for Swedish people. "X" is quite hard to pronounce in combination with s right after, so "sex laxar i en laxask" is quite a bit harder than the one they used here. Means "six salmons in a salmonbox"

  • @MrRait8
    @MrRait8 Год назад +4

    Would be fun to see some Estonian tounge twisters in there part 2.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Let me introduce several Estonian TTs ; the Finno-Ugric family | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!

  • @michaelsmith6729
    @michaelsmith6729 Год назад +10

    Bring back Heejae!

  • @saltedpeanuts6441
    @saltedpeanuts6441 Год назад +1

    as a finnish speaking finn i cant do the swedish one, cause the way they pronounce the "sj" sound is different to ours. They say it as a wierd h sound with but without an s, we simply pronounce it as "sch"

  • @henrycabrera-zk3ll
    @henrycabrera-zk3ll 8 месяцев назад +2

    Ok we can talk about the boy from France He is so Handsome

  • @shadowprod5205
    @shadowprod5205 Год назад +6

    Can't wait them to put Finnish on this bc That would Be funny

    • @henrikswanstrom9218
      @henrikswanstrom9218 Год назад

      Finnish is the GOAT language. No clue what's going on with it and so different from other languages. Especially how you casually stack vowels after eachother.

    • @shadowprod5205
      @shadowprod5205 Год назад

      @@henrikswanstrom9218 true

    • @Divig
      @Divig Год назад +1

      Finnish is hell to understand, but not that hard to get the sounds right from just reading.

    • @shadowprod5205
      @shadowprod5205 Год назад

      @@Divig this

  • @vc6094
    @vc6094 Год назад +2

    I had a laugh when they tried the swedish one.

  • @a.gachette5019
    @a.gachette5019 9 месяцев назад +1

    The french tongue twister doesn't mean only:
    "I'm what I am, and if I am what I am, who am I"
    The funny fact is that "je suis" means "I am" or "I follow" in french 😉
    It could mean for example:
    "I am what I follow, and if I follow what I am, who am I ?"
    Or
    "I follow what I am and if I am what I follow, what do I follow ?"
    Etc...
    🙂

  • @andreiamendes9116
    @andreiamendes9116 Год назад +12

    See, this is a true Awsome World video with people from different parts of the world learning with each other. ❤❤❤

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Exactly^^; andreiamendes9116 also are interested in language ﹠ it is great^^; | Миру мир!

  • @thatweirdkidontheinternet7009
    @thatweirdkidontheinternet7009 Год назад +7

    I know a different version of the Swedish one which is a little longer that goes: sju sjösjuka sjömän sköttes av sjutton sköna sjuksköterskor på det sjunkande skeppet i Shanghai (seven seasick sailors were taken care of by seventeen pretty nurses on the sinking ship in Shanghai)

    • @SecretLars
      @SecretLars Год назад

      Make it longer with sköna sjungande sjuksköterskor

    • @snowfloofcathug
      @snowfloofcathug Год назад +1

      Only ever heard Shanghai being the name of the ship, never its location (as in, drop the “i”)

  • @doricemichelle3614
    @doricemichelle3614 Год назад

    I wish to see more from different countries

  • @user-ex5qs9km4m
    @user-ex5qs9km4m Год назад +1

    the was of temmie in 11:20 was just like mine
    and when she said thank you so much was really cute

  • @haru_kulf
    @haru_kulf 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thai girl so cute when her smile😊

  • @ItsLycheee
    @ItsLycheee Год назад

    This got me looking up Norwegian tongue twisters😂😂

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Please save me from 🇳🇴·🇳🇴🇷 language^^; | Нехай наш Бог береже Україну

  • @PannkakaMedSylt
    @PannkakaMedSylt Год назад +1

    About the swedish one, They were saying SJ is like SH, but it's not the same and we have SH too
    SJ would almost be like mixing SK and SH start, the swedish girl in the video pronounced SJ very MILD.
    It's not a completly UNIQE sound for sweden, but it's deffinetly not common in most languages.
    Americans can never pronounce the SJ sound for example.
    SJ could almost be it's own letter potentially, like Å,Ä,Ö but we'v settled for showing it with SJ.

  • @linkybee3778
    @linkybee3778 Год назад

    All my French lessons paid off

  • @gangstertempy
    @gangstertempy Год назад +1

    Asians are so surprised when foreigners cant pronounce a simple word, but then comes their turn to try the scandinavian languages and I think they understand it more after that.

  • @mel3ina7
    @mel3ina7 Год назад +1

    I like this one like im chinese that can speak well and i live in sweden and can swedish to so its very Fun to se

  • @pandore3274
    @pandore3274 Год назад +5

    Les chaussettes de l'archiduchesse sont-elles sèches? Archi-sèches ?, Trois gros rats gris dans trois gros trous ronds rongent trois gros croûtons ronds; Si six scies scient six cyprès, six cent six scies scient six cent six cyprès ! Seize chaises sèchent Je troque trente trucs turcs contre treize textes tchèques.

  • @CoolCatDoingAKickflip
    @CoolCatDoingAKickflip Год назад +4

    You can expand the Swedish tounge twister:
    Sjuttisju sjösjuka sjömän sköttes av sju sköna sjuksköterskor på ett sjunkande skäpp.
    Translation:
    Seventy seven sea sick sailors were taken care of by seven beutiful nurses on a sinking ship.
    Here is another tounge twister which is shorther:
    Sex laxar i en laxask
    Translation:
    Six salmons in a salmon container.

    • @user-bs1lr8nx1h
      @user-bs1lr8nx1h Год назад +1

      skepp ,not skäpp -men förtjusande bra

    • @GothicLightingQueen
      @GothicLightingQueen Год назад +1

      Kan även lägga till sjunkande skepped shanghai

    • @user-bs1lr8nx1h
      @user-bs1lr8nx1h Год назад

      @@GothicLightingQueen sjunkande skeppets skäggiga sjaskiga tjuvpack shanghaijade

    • @hin_hale
      @hin_hale Год назад

      @@xohyuunot exactly. It's a sound made by creating resistance using your tounge and lips. If you raise the middle part of the tounge to the roof of your mouth (think hissing like a cat) and simultaneously purse your lips, almost to a whistle but not quite, thats how you make the sj-sound.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Scandinavian ways of pronouncing sounds may be more difficult than the way of doing Монголian languageTT Learners should have ²~³ native speaking mates@@hin_hale | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!

  • @GuilesGarden
    @GuilesGarden 11 месяцев назад

    What a wholesome video

  • @HelezNC
    @HelezNC Год назад +3

    Did the thailand girl introduce herself in. Korean??

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      This channel is from 南韓[ROK]^^; | Миру мир!

  • @ruthrau8970
    @ruthrau8970 Год назад

    I think personally they should have put for the french "les chaussettes de l'archiduchesse)

  • @zuperdoggie
    @zuperdoggie Год назад +3

    The sh sound can in Swedish be: sh, sk, sj, stj and I don’t think there’s any more

    • @ln8173
      @ln8173 Год назад +6

      You forgot skj

    • @Ebbagull
      @Ebbagull Год назад +2

      The sh (the sound that exists in english) and the sch - sounds are different sounds. The different spellings I can think of are for now:
      Sch: sch, sk, sj, skj, ch, g
      Sh: sh, tj, stj, k.
      When an r is followed by an s it turns into a sh sound when speaking normally, as well.
      We should really standardize that... one letter for sch, one letter for sh.

  • @a_921
    @a_921 Год назад +4

    Even the "worst" attempts were better that what I could do here, alone, without a camera....

  • @user-tq9vs6fc9u
    @user-tq9vs6fc9u Год назад +11

    The Thai girl kind of looks like Joy from RV from some angles.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      Yes^^; | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.

  • @atallhobit.7567
    @atallhobit.7567 Год назад +2

    If only they had done “ Sex laxar i en lax ask” for the Swedish one, I can’t even say it right slowly and Swedish is my first language

  • @tcntad87
    @tcntad87 11 месяцев назад

    They're doing pretty good reading Swedish :P

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Å å [oː] Ä ä [ɛː] Ö ö [øː] > 😵‍💫 | Миру мир!

  • @zoom5024
    @zoom5024 10 месяцев назад +1

    sj & sk must be super hard for foreigners to learn, sj is pronounced like the wind blowing outside haha, SK can sometimes be pronounced hard like SKata/SKola or make the same wind blowing sound like in sj, sköta.

  • @yogeshtyagi9901
    @yogeshtyagi9901 7 месяцев назад

    Swedan :
    It can be hard we have 3 extra letters!!
    India :
    Girl what are you talking about we have 10 extra

  • @apv5223
    @apv5223 Год назад

    As a Swede that studies French in school I can say that I would be horrible at the eastern tongue twisters

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Å å [oː] Ä ä [ɛː] Ö ö [øː] > 😵‍💫 | Миру мир!

  • @fairysinyourtummy
    @fairysinyourtummy Год назад +1

    Am Finnish but still couldn't say the swedish one 💀

  • @LambruscoPeter
    @LambruscoPeter Год назад +1

    I'm Danish and understand Swedish, but i still think the Swedish one was the hardest to say

    • @karinberonius8799
      @karinberonius8799 Год назад +3

      As a Swede who's enjoyed a lot of Danish tv series, I'm sure I'd fail miserably trying to pronounce a danish tongue-twister.😂

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      What is the difference between 🇩🇰·🇩🇳🇰 ﹠ 🇸🇪·🇸🇼🇪 languages^^? αβs, case, sex[f.·m.·n.], preposition, word order?@@karinberonius8799 | Миру мир!

    • @karinberonius8799
      @karinberonius8799 Год назад

      @@xohyuu I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you mean.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      αβ[alphabet]s, case [I, my, me, mine, you, your, you, yours……], sex [feminine, masculine, neutral]@@karinberonius8799 | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.

    • @assarstromblad3280
      @assarstromblad3280 Год назад

      @@xohyuu You mean if the prepositions are different? If that is your question, I would say (as a swedish person) that the biggest difference between written danish and swedish is the spelling. Otherwise the grammatics are quite similar and many words too.

  • @HalHamza
    @HalHamza Год назад +4

    I'm not racist, right? Temmie looks a little like Moon Ga-young, right? Please, someone tell me it isn't just me.

  • @adamthelin1366
    @adamthelin1366 Год назад +3

    Ah, tounge twisters.
    I have some other lovely Swedish ones that just make you trip up.
    Kvistfritt kvastskaft - Repeat about 5 times. - Twig free broom-handle.
    Västkustsk krukväxt - Repeat about 5 times. (This one is really hard for me as a swede). - West-coast potted plant.
    Sju skönsjungande shamaner skänker schlagervinnare champagne. - Seven beautifully singing shamans gift schlagerwinners champagne.
    Sjutton generade sjätteklassare sjunger tjeckiska skitsånger - Seventeen embarrassed six-graders sing Czech crap-songs
    Skiva skära skinkan skevt - Cut the pink ham unevenly.
    Sex laxar i en laxask - Repeat until failure. (Six salmon in a salmon box).
    Sju skörbjugg-sjuka sjömän på det sjunkande skeppet shanghai stjäl skepparens skjortor. - Seven seamen sick with scurvey on the sinking ship Shanghai steals the skippers shirts.
    :)

  • @Elizabethcollections
    @Elizabethcollections 11 месяцев назад

    The Swedish omg🤣😂
    jätte svårt!!!

  • @blizzardtheunicornafton4193
    @blizzardtheunicornafton4193 Год назад +2

    Try this: sex laxar i en laxask
    Ur supposed to say it six times, as fast as possible
    (the number six is spelled sex in Swedish)

    • @blizzardtheunicornafton4193
      @blizzardtheunicornafton4193 Год назад

      @@xohyuu naaaah😂
      It's pronounced more like schu

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      i died^^; | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.

    • @thatpandaz6094
      @thatpandaz6094 Год назад

      Six times? No one told me about that, I can't even get it right once...

  • @maalxx
    @maalxx Год назад

    When your mums eastern and your dads western:

  • @emptyforrest
    @emptyforrest Год назад +1

    as a born swede, i have never been able to do that tongue twister, it is very difficult even to native speakers. pair that with ÅÄÖ and SJ and SK sounds its pretty much impossible for non native speakers.

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu Год назад

      0:59 Niki 🇨🇳·🇨🇭🇳 3:36 Temmie 🇹🇭·🇹🇭🇦 8:50 Sofia 🇸🇪·🇸🇼🇪 7:00 Alexander 🇫🇷·🇫🇷🇦 5:02 Hoseung 🇷🇴🇰 | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.

  • @becauseimspecial2277
    @becauseimspecial2277 Год назад

    The Chinese was tooo good

  • @UuLi93
    @UuLi93 Год назад

    the chinese chick trying to talk swedish sounds like a dane who tries to speak swedish haha :D

  • @williamlindroos2250
    @williamlindroos2250 Год назад

    Im suprised that they didnt take a "typical swede" as a Swede. Its funny because alot of people do think we are all tall and blonde here.

  • @kimcheonja7132
    @kimcheonja7132 11 месяцев назад +1

    the hard one is swedish because *sju* its so hard on the prononciation;the korean not so hard because i have been learned how to prononce the alphabet;chinese the same thing with korean;the thai not to much hard so easy;the frensh i can say it more then 3 times because i am from morocco and frensh its the second language we use in morocco💝

  • @fvydvvcv6003
    @fvydvvcv6003 Год назад +1

    Chinese girl is so good 😮

  • @Sqwatonch_Inniri
    @Sqwatonch_Inniri Год назад +1

    I don't know why but I love seeing people struggle with "sj" sound

    • @xohyuu
      @xohyuu 10 месяцев назад

      Å å [oː] Ä ä [ɛː] Ö ö [øː] > 😵‍💫 | Миру мир!

  • @monkeybeasts
    @monkeybeasts Год назад +3

    i kept shakin my head saying what?

  • @user-hq3ht2hp6x
    @user-hq3ht2hp6x 6 месяцев назад

    1:37 In fact, Nicki said a Chinese curse word (wocao) to express exclamation here, which means I fxxk.😂

  • @tipitii7388
    @tipitii7388 Год назад

    For the Swedish tongue twister theres a line that can be added in the end that would help everyone. “…på det sjunkande skeppet Shanghai”. All the sj/sk words sound like the Sh in Shanghai.

  • @phaexus
    @phaexus Год назад +1

    Where is the Thai speaking girl from? She doesn't speak Thai when commenting. Is she Chinese or Korean?