Комментарии •

  • @YEOLO
    @YEOLO Год назад +227

    this ees me befoh mai sheeeef

    • @Geethepancake
      @Geethepancake Год назад +2

      Imao

    • @etherealhopes
      @etherealhopes Год назад +9

      this ees me afte mai sheeeef

    • @susannyoro705
      @susannyoro705 11 месяцев назад

      you should look up afro asiatic languages, eg. is the shanga people in africa from whom mandarin originated, first dynasty in china is the shang dynasty if am not wrong

    • @Yadobler
      @Yadobler 7 месяцев назад +2

      Singaporean English lacks the tense/lax vowels and a lot of diphthongs are also merged into monothongs
      So like "this is me before my shift" becomes "tees ees mee beefoo maaii sheef"
      1)The sharp tense "i" sounds become a lax but long "eee"
      2) dental th sound becomes t
      3) "my" becomes "ma-i"
      4) consonant clusters (ft) breaks into just the fricative (f)
      5) non-rhotic (r not pronounced in "before")
      6) constant stress, also due to the lack of tense/lax vowel differentiation (tEEs EEs mEE bEEfOO mAAi shEEf)
      ------------
      It's interesting because it's very clearly influenced by hokkien. Hokkien does not have rhoiticity (r sound) unlike mandarin, lacks retroflex sounds (cha zha ra) which tamil and mandarin have, vowels are not tense/lax differentiated so no stress either, but instead it's all tones - which is why we have a slight singsong sound, especially with the lah leh particles
      Another thing if you note, all the ch8 veterans, if they come over to Ch5 to act, listen out for the "forced rhoiticity" - growing up without saying the "r" trill/tap, what happens is that these performers tend to overcompensate, so you hear something like "is it this color" being said like "ees eet tees kóloRw"
      It's something you can notice in Singaporean Chinese, but not mainland Chinese or Singaporean malay/tamil speakers
      So ye.

    • @Appassionata311
      @Appassionata311 6 месяцев назад

      @@Yadobler...

  • @mahmoodhaliru9369
    @mahmoodhaliru9369 Год назад +66

    Bro even you sound Nigerian!😂😂😂

    • @juditherese
      @juditherese 4 месяца назад +3

      Exactly. He himself sounds Nigerian 😅

  • @mirrow9735
    @mirrow9735 Год назад +405

    I AM NIGERIAN. THE SINGAPOREAN ACCENT DOES SOUND LIKE THE NIGERIAN ACCENT A BIT . HOWEVER , IT DOES NOT AS WELL. THIS IS BECAUSE YOU SPEAK FASTER THAN US, ANOUNCIATE A BIT LESS AND PITCH IS HIGHER. NOT TO MENTION AT FIRST IT DOES, BUT GRADUALLY IF YOU LISTEN MORE THEN YOU NOICE THSE DIFFERERNCES

    • @audeamus7388
      @audeamus7388 Год назад +56

      ok chill bro

    • @BigPurp9
      @BigPurp9 Год назад +45

      People aren’t saying that they’re 100% carbon copies. We’re just amazed that 2 countries thousands of miles apart sound slightly SIMILAR. It’s a bit like how people say Jamaican and Irish accents sound alike aswell. There’s only so many accents to go round you’re bound to find some that sound alike

    • @AlexSilva-gp3ti
      @AlexSilva-gp3ti Год назад +8

      Bro chill

    • @cvpiguy
      @cvpiguy Год назад +8

      Bro why so angry chill leh

    • @bellaelleira
      @bellaelleira Год назад +8

      @@cvpiguy I’ve seen people who struggle with vision or not have English as a first language type like this. Their tone/wording doesn’t sound angry though

  • @zangichingole5156
    @zangichingole5156 Год назад +63

    😂 but even you sound Nigerian to me 😭 especially when you say the word “Nigeria”

  • @smooveayy
    @smooveayy Год назад +112

    The jollof was definitely a joke, it flew right over your head 🤣

  • @svel8395
    @svel8395 Год назад +99

    8:02 the joke flying over yeolo's head is the funniest thing ever, he looks genuine concerned lmao

    • @mytuh4
      @mytuh4 6 дней назад

      That convinced me that this YEOLO dude is an oblivious idiot.

  • @lekomoakeem8355
    @lekomoakeem8355 11 месяцев назад +12

    Oga you even sound Nigerian ,
    Y'all sound Nigerian 😅

  • @AngryKittens
    @AngryKittens Год назад +90

    As a non-Singaporean and non-Nigerian: the singsong cadence is similar when Nigerian English is spoken fast. The way Nigerian and Singaporean English also remove copulas and speak in "shortcut" sentences is similar. Other than that, they don't sound the same.

  • @etherealhopes
    @etherealhopes Год назад +76

    when i heard "lee kuan yew" and "1907" i burst out laughing help ☠️☠️

  • @janetsfurr9551
    @janetsfurr9551 Год назад +43

    I love seeing my Singaporean and Nigerian friends talk to each other. they have no problem understanding each other.

  • @jolomendez6338
    @jolomendez6338 11 месяцев назад +24

    As a Londoner from Congo. You sound Nigerian too 😅 wow

  • @zy5992
    @zy5992 Год назад +56

    The jollof rice is an iconic dish and that was probably a joke… it’s not that serious

    • @brownekat
      @brownekat Год назад +11

      It's most definitely a joke. Y'all are too serious on here 😅 try laughing sometimes

    • @avateraangshoe5025
      @avateraangshoe5025 7 месяцев назад +1

      It is a joke! The guy doesn't even sound Nigerian 😂

  • @jl6320
    @jl6320 Год назад +33

    No wonder Nigerian Princes like contacting us

  • @Shawoleritiny
    @Shawoleritiny 8 месяцев назад +15

    I'm Malaysian and our accents (Malaysian and Singaporean) are pretty much the same. I was just telling my husband that the Nigerian accent reminds me of ours. I wouldn't say they're the same but I can definitely hear the sing-songness.

  • @Ipsofactumest
    @Ipsofactumest 11 месяцев назад +16

    So apparently Nigeria has a lot of accents - since they’re pretty diverse with many different tribes and languages. The one that Nigerians are probably referring to is the Calabar accent. You can RUclips it. I didn’t hear it at first, but if you were to speed up a video (1.5x) of a female person from Calabar speaking - you will definitely hear it. It’s bizarre.
    Don’t compare males with males - no Singaporean male speak like these SG girls.

    • @soso694
      @soso694 11 месяцев назад +5

      Nigeria has a lot of accents in the same way America has a lot of accents. Existence of regional variances doesn't change the fact that they all still fall under a distinct “Nigerian accent”. Cameroon and Benin are the only countries I'd say have an identical accent to Nigerian.

    • @avateraangshoe5025
      @avateraangshoe5025 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@soso694 OP didn't say otherwise. I think they were trying to be more specific so he wouldn't go around listening to igbo people speak and expecting it to sound exactly like Singaporeans

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +11

    I don’t want to get too excited too quickly but I’m happy to hear you’re on your way to 100K Subscribers.

  • @entrydenied
    @entrydenied Год назад +15

    There's a Nigerian youtuber that I watch (he does movie reactions) and there have been many times where I thought I heard a Singaporean accent. I think when they're alike, they're very close but at the same time different enough.

  • @ianngoh842
    @ianngoh842 Год назад +97

    I recently met someone from Zambia who said that our accents are similar, may be due to being former British colonies. Non-english forced to learn English, this is kinda what you get

    • @user-lk4jd5yc8d
      @user-lk4jd5yc8d Год назад +13

      It’s not just the British colonies. Many other African countries also have that similar accent/manner of speaking. It’s really a combination of the use of bastardised English (pidgin in Africa, singlish in Singpaore), and the pre-existing speaking characteristics

    • @bellaelleira
      @bellaelleira Год назад +9

      @@user-lk4jd5yc8ddk if I’m misunderstanding your comment but it sounds like pretty much what OP said but just in more detail/added context…? I’m still gathering that British influence played a part. English came from them so pidgin and singlish is a variation of mixing their home language with English, yeah? It seems like you’re just saying what they said lol

    • @soso694
      @soso694 11 месяцев назад +4

      There's a lot of former British colonies in the world, so that's not the reason. As a Nigerian, I can tell you the sing songy rhythm is due to our indigenous languages being tonal. Sub-Saharan African languages are notoriously tonal, and the same is true for most Asian languages as well. I believe that's why the accents sound similar. The influence of tonal languages.

  • @purplepotato8849
    @purplepotato8849 Год назад +23

    Dude: We have to take our accents back from Singapore.
    Me: Uh... ok? *_uninstalls Accent_Nigerian.exe_*

    • @Panda-0183
      @Panda-0183 Год назад +2

      Bro can you give me a tutorial on how to uninstall Accent_Nigerian.exe it seems I installed it a while ago and can’t remove it

  • @Ifeomaa
    @Ifeomaa 9 месяцев назад +9

    Dude you also have the accent, its not completely alike but there are similarities. I noticed it in 2018, my aunt was watching the video of a preacher on TV, he sounded SO Nigerian, I thought he was a Nigerian preacher just hearing the audio, then I saw he was an Asian man - his name is Joseph Prince.

  • @soso694
    @soso694 11 месяцев назад +12

    African and Asian languages differ from most languages in the world in that they are tonal. We “sing” when we speak, or else it could change the meaning of our words. As a result, the way we speak English is influenced by the tonal features of our indigenous languages. Singaporeans and Nigerians just happen to have similar tonal cadences, hence the similarities. Language is funny, isnt it?

  • @malakhangelle
    @malakhangelle Год назад +7

    The jollof thing is a joke and that guy is not Nigerian.. also, you can't learn the Nigerian accent from Hollywood. They don't speak Nigerian, they speak wakandan.

  • @earnestjonahdaniel3802
    @earnestjonahdaniel3802 11 месяцев назад +4

    The Jollof Rice joke was just classic 😂🥲

  • @dumkeleonwuegbuzie4904
    @dumkeleonwuegbuzie4904 Год назад +10

    Yes, both accents do similar. Even watching this video in it self is a testimony to that. About them sounding the same though, I disagree. Lastly, the guy who said the 1907, jollof thing is just a troll😭😭

    • @historicdude7996
      @historicdude7996 Год назад +2

      Everybody talks about why the Nigerian accent sounds like the sgporean accent but no one talks about why the malaysian accent sounds like the sgporean accent

  • @ca-ke9493
    @ca-ke9493 Год назад +13

    Can we get Sgs reacting to Nigeria accents? I think they are reacting to the additions of lah and aiya (which sounds more musical in Nigeria) which is similar from what I can tell they might not pick up on how much we slur and monotone our accent is?

    • @s._3560
      @s._3560 Год назад +2

      ''Aiyah'' is a Chinese expression. "Lah" is mostly Hokkien. So is ''leh", which is in Cantonese. The colloquial Chinese language attaches a lot of these codas at the end of their sentences.

  • @lemonadeslices
    @lemonadeslices Год назад +17

    ok this is wildly interesting: as a sgrean visiting NYC, i was told my accent sounds like it's south african. so perhaps there might be similarities to other ears/listeners? (and i enunciate when i speak and don't conflate my long and short vowels!!!)

    • @tbdhk
      @tbdhk Год назад +3

      someone told me this when my family went to europe too

    • @spartawelly5863
      @spartawelly5863 11 месяцев назад

      My family still has the greek accent even after generations here lok

  • @kaycee3303
    @kaycee3303 3 месяца назад +1

    They sound pretty identical. If you close your eyes and listen to both.. you won't be able to distinguish between both

  • @brownekat
    @brownekat Год назад +9

    Don't take everything so seriously 😅 the jollof rice comment was a joke

  • @etherealhopes
    @etherealhopes Год назад +9

    i remember replaying the video trying to hear similarities but cannot find leh

  • @happynappyable
    @happynappyable 11 месяцев назад +7

    I’m South African who has many Nigerian and Singaporean friends and yo me they sound similar 😂

  • @curtiscrentsil2836
    @curtiscrentsil2836 11 дней назад

    The prime minister something was a joke my bro😂😂😂

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад

    Your face journeys are (chef’s kiss) 😂

  • @alienated1847
    @alienated1847 11 месяцев назад +8

    Hey I'm a half malay and half Nigerian born and raised in Singapore here! At first I could not understand how people hear the accent to be similar as I grew up hearing both and can kinda differentiate, but now that this has been brought to my attention I can actually hear it! Of course there will be differences but I always wondered if my accent sounds weird to my Nigerian family and friends but they never actually commented on it much unless I use malay terms

  • @hironyx
    @hironyx Год назад +6

    1907 LKY not even born yet 🤣🤣

  • @MYBWADA
    @MYBWADA Год назад +44

    If you don’t hear it, it is simply because you do not want to. Often, one’s desire to espouse cultural and ethnic uniqueness distorts what is objectively there! Students of linguistics understand stress timed languages, sibilants and consonant clusters. These components and others combine to create English speakers who inarguably sound quite similar. The same audio echoing (from an English perspective) can be heard in Russian & Portuguese, Irish brogues & Jamaican patois! In conclusion, Yeolo, you sound Nigerian

  • @BlackGoldberg
    @BlackGoldberg Год назад +7

    Ahh humanity in 2023. They are all so focused on their differences rather than their similarities. Don’t let the shade thrown in this video go over your head.

  • @ayubamuazu7488
    @ayubamuazu7488 10 месяцев назад +2

    You sound Nigerian yourself too my guy. Hope to visit Singapore soon

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +6

    This is like that dress meme all over again. Is it gold or blue and black?

    • @melan.cholia
      @melan.cholia Год назад +1

      or laurel and yanny (i'm team "i cant hear the similarities")

  • @MyFitgirlLifestyle
    @MyFitgirlLifestyle 6 месяцев назад +2

    7:20 He's being sarcastic😅 can't be serious

  • @EL-xg4yq
    @EL-xg4yq Год назад +7

    I was thinking about similarities for many years even before this. Your first line "the singaporean accent," and it's upwards inflection then going down, is typical. Of course, it's not going to be exactly the same and yes, Nigerian to me also sounds more "lyrical" and more articulated, but there are a lot of similarities you cannot deny.

  • @xecck
    @xecck Год назад +5

    1907 Mr Lee Kuan Yew wasn't even born yet lmao wtf

  • @SeraphDunsinane
    @SeraphDunsinane Год назад +4

    Idk why but by just using the Nigerian Tiktoker as reference, he honestly sound more like how my french friends would speak than Singaporean

  • @sarahlim75
    @sarahlim75 Год назад +4

    In the 1800s, there was a set of British twins who became missionaries. They each left for different parts of the world to teach English. Mystery solved. 😂

  • @jianxiongRaven
    @jianxiongRaven Год назад +3

    Its similar but not totally the same .
    Espeically when u hear it more .

  • @servingcant
    @servingcant Год назад +7

    This is giving laurel or yanny vibes 💀

  • @jeffanugwom1737
    @jeffanugwom1737 Год назад +4

    The accents in the movies are refined lol.. infact I call the accents in the movies wakanda accent 😂

  • @avateraangshoe5025
    @avateraangshoe5025 7 месяцев назад +1

    3:59 the yoruba name "Tumise" is pronounced as "Too-Me-ShAy" not Tumece😂

  • @Spirit-pz2hj
    @Spirit-pz2hj 11 месяцев назад +2

    The jollof rice thing was a joke 😂

    • @avateraangshoe5025
      @avateraangshoe5025 7 месяцев назад

      Honestly! And the guy doesn't even sound Nigerian 😂

  • @zangichingole5156
    @zangichingole5156 Год назад +1

    Ooh what show is that? 👀 I’m trying to watch that

  • @oreoluwaadenrele107
    @oreoluwaadenrele107 11 месяцев назад +2

    Well, I am Nigerian and what I hear is a similarity to English speaking west African accent. The way they introduce themselves is same as Nigerians. Nigeria being the most populous of those countries makes it seem like the accents are similar, and they are. I think Singaporeans don’t get it because they aren’t familiar because they don’t know how typical Nigerians speak.

  • @boluwharsheyi3313
    @boluwharsheyi3313 Год назад +1

    Nah that guy was only doing sarcasm that is never true😂

  • @KingAlexFX
    @KingAlexFX 11 месяцев назад +2

    Bro even your accent sounds Nigerian joke’s on you lol

  • @Emma594-c1u
    @Emma594-c1u Год назад +4

    I’m Nigeran I can confirm I sound nothing like them

    • @rain1676
      @rain1676 11 месяцев назад

      I love you

  • @gothicpinkk
    @gothicpinkk Год назад +5

    I kinda get it. IMO Nigerian accent sounds like Hokkien lmao.

  • @bangtanluver
    @bangtanluver Год назад +12

    Singaporean accent is very distinct and Nigerian is clear and they enunciate more but the speech pattern is similar but that’s it

  • @kelvinsixtus3646
    @kelvinsixtus3646 11 месяцев назад +2

    You sound do like a Nigerian that left the country at a very young age and jsyk you didn't use the right movie for your research. Loved your video btw even if you came off defensive

  • @animashaunsegunnurudeen7334
    @animashaunsegunnurudeen7334 Год назад

    Even you sound like an Igbo brother making a product review

  • @TimJilimin22
    @TimJilimin22 Год назад +2

    Yeolo is a man of culture because he watched Ted Lasso. Nuff said.

  • @izziebella3847
    @izziebella3847 Год назад +4

    Actually there are many Nigerian accents. If you take a person from the north of Nigeria and a person from yorubaland or igboland the accents vary!!! So first of which Nigerian accent are you comparing?
    I think you sound somewhat like a Nigerian from the Eastern part of Nigeria but there are still some chinesseish intonations that give you away!

    • @soso694
      @soso694 11 месяцев назад +1

      It's actually really not that different. We have regional variances just like any other country, but I can always pick out a Nigerian accent no matter which part of Nigeria the person is from. They have the same overall features. It's like saying there are many American accents. Yes, but there is a “general American accent ” that all regional variances fall under.

  • @kepalakotak99999
    @kepalakotak99999 Год назад +1

    Hiii! Please do a video on Jocelyn Chia, I'd love to hear your thoughts. Viewers from Malaysia here!

  • @exiblack9370
    @exiblack9370 10 месяцев назад

    You sound like Nigeria man 😂😂😂 for real no joke bro

  • @cocaineminor4420
    @cocaineminor4420 Год назад +4

    Our accents sounds like mix Chinese and malay accent not Nigerian

  • @galaxy_carmen
    @galaxy_carmen Год назад +3

    Ain't no wayyy.... I don't hear it at all😭 like- where you get that sia?

  • @Pwn3dbyth3n00b
    @Pwn3dbyth3n00b 25 дней назад +1

    Bro even you sound Nigerian

  • @Zamzathefirst
    @Zamzathefirst Год назад +1

    CAN YOU TALK ABT THE JOCYLEN CHIA

  • @jamman7344
    @jamman7344 5 месяцев назад

    😂😂😂😂 ok so I'm not going crazy 🤣🤣🤣

  • @juditherese
    @juditherese 4 месяца назад +1

    You actually sound Nigerian yourself 😅 I'm Nigerian.

  • @JuzNicky
    @JuzNicky Год назад

    In b4 some one says :
    So there will be a Nigerian version for the Cai Fan song ?
    iykyk...
    🤐

  • @ovo5459
    @ovo5459 Год назад +1

    Maybe its the way we use our words are similar to the way they speak instead of the accent

  • @melan.cholia
    @melan.cholia Год назад +4

    i cant really hear the similarities too

  • @s._3560
    @s._3560 8 месяцев назад

    Our Singapore-accented English I believe is influenced by dialects spoken by the majority of Southern Chinese who migrated to Singapore. It is probably originated from Hokkien/Teochew inflexions and tones rather than Cantonese-accented English (those characterised by Uncle Roger/Hong Konger accent). Many Malaysians of Chinese descent also have the same accent as Singaporeans.
    Listen to LKY's English in films before independence, he has a British accent. I noticed many years ago that our accent seem to sound similar to that of Nigerians (large population) in London. I believe it is just a coincidence since there was very little interaction between Singaporean/Malaysian and West Africans. Are there any in-depth explanations of where the West African English accent originated from?
    Dig deeper, and it is probably just a superficial comparison. I have doubts their pronunciation of words such as memorable, maintenance, three, colleague, technological, market, change, scarcity, situation etc. are the same nor are there any overlapping colloquialisms.
    There are also a lot of mean, negative comments on the social media/internet disparaging the Singapore-accented English especially prominent in videos posted by Westerners who have lived in Singapore.
    Incidentally, our Mandarin accent is also more flat and very similar to that of working-class Taiwanese-accent Mandarin because most originated from Fujian hence the same inflexions.

  • @pavementpounder7502
    @pavementpounder7502 2 месяца назад

    I always thought there was a definite resemblance. I think its because some Nigerian languages are tonal like Chinese languages so similar substrate.

  • @natalipoland4482
    @natalipoland4482 Год назад

    watch Chuuzus and tell me you dont sound similar. Of course it is different, to make a similarity think central australian and south england accent, and I think in this case is even more similar

  • @KingAlexFX
    @KingAlexFX 11 месяцев назад +1

    Bro you’re not making any point at all. Their accent obviously sounds very similar to Nigerian accent

  • @gaddielogunniyi1748
    @gaddielogunniyi1748 10 месяцев назад +1

    Lol. You even sound like us already as you speak. I'm a Nigerian

    • @ssc.s
      @ssc.s 9 месяцев назад +1

      Our accent is just simply a mix of Chinese and Malay accents tgt when we speak eng that's why it turned that way-

  • @naughtykini
    @naughtykini Год назад +6

    Finally someone points it out! I don't think it is Nigerian specific but I told ppl I hear the similarities between the African and our accent. Some words Africans pronounce that sound like our 'broken English'/word-by-word kind of tone I noticed.

  • @midbehavior4737
    @midbehavior4737 Год назад +1

    Lmao l actually hear the similarities in the accents

  • @ladybetsy6199
    @ladybetsy6199 Год назад +1

    I am Nigerian, the first time I heard those girls, I remember my friend who sounds like the last girl. We have the same accent

  • @midbehavior4737
    @midbehavior4737 Год назад +3

    The rice thing was a joke☠️

  • @SauceChef
    @SauceChef 4 месяца назад

    Bro even the way you pronounced “prime minister” as “prime mee-nis-de”. With a downward inflection at “de”.

  • @FGitty
    @FGitty 11 месяцев назад

    @yeolo yeah bro your accent definitely sounds very similar to the Nigerian accent

  • @charlesmao7743
    @charlesmao7743 Год назад +3

    This is the pure example of how a simple and nonsensical video can turn into probably controversy, stealing culture and whatsoever. The way they made things out of nowhere.

  • @JohnJohnson-du7vc
    @JohnJohnson-du7vc 10 месяцев назад

    Different people hear things differently, sometimes they can't hear differences.
    I agree with YEOLO's opinion stated in the video. From the examples here, Nigerian English is easier for me, an American, to understand.

  • @maggiemoses7580
    @maggiemoses7580 Год назад +2

    No he said that like a joke, he’s joking about the jollof rice being the cause of the accent

  • @Jackdemno
    @Jackdemno Год назад +1

    Bro you yourself sounds Nigerians 😂

  • @light6532
    @light6532 Год назад

    Thess iss mee befoee my sheet

  • @adamma1615
    @adamma1615 Год назад +2

    Guy talking sounds a bit Nigerian 😅

  • @SpoilerK
    @SpoilerK Год назад +8

    Even Singlish has its differences: ah beng/ah lian English, auntie uncle English and genz/millennials. Who is to say some don't sound 'Singlish' enough when everyone in Singapore has varying levels of English exposure depending on their background. Though I must say, I really can't hear the similarities between the Nigerian and Singaporean accent.

  • @kazami5699
    @kazami5699 Год назад +1

    I am surprised to the fact Singaporean got Nigerian accent

  • @eseosaabaku3685
    @eseosaabaku3685 Месяц назад

    when working for a call center as an agent responding to customer calls in canada, a Singaporean confused me for another Singaporean. I am Nigerian 😂.
    the accents are very similar

  • @christopherudeh2735
    @christopherudeh2735 6 месяцев назад

    I hear it in your voice too in the way you pronounce some words.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +1

    That Reddit comment is also what I was thinking.

  • @embershen364
    @embershen364 Год назад +6

    Jollof rice is tomato ketchup+curry powder fried rice. My nigerian friend i met while working in the US canteen for my masters taught me how to cook that.

    • @fortuneasuoma7073
      @fortuneasuoma7073 11 месяцев назад +4

      We almost never use the word Ketchup...I had to pause for a while to understand your brief recipe

    • @ley5230
      @ley5230 5 месяцев назад +2

      The recepy is completely wrong

  • @chibuzor5614
    @chibuzor5614 Год назад

    Lol, dude sounda like a calabar man and says he cant hear it.

  • @sk6424
    @sk6424 Год назад +1

    I watched a documentary about maids in Singapore like 5 years ago and I Yup, had to send it to several Friends. Those girls sound like Nigerian girls but you can tell that they aren't Nigerians. BTW you don't sound like a typical Sjngaporean, you're trying to hide your accent lol

  • @sissyfart
    @sissyfart Год назад

    i can't hear it either LOL

  • @thomism1016
    @thomism1016 11 месяцев назад +2

    Nigerian who’s been in the UK for years. I agree. It’s the lack of Enunciation thing. HINT: the Jollof rice guy is DEFINITELY NOT a Nigerian 😱😱😱

  • @neykiks6396
    @neykiks6396 5 месяцев назад

    Slight difference.. 😂. I’m amazed anyways

  • @min1628
    @min1628 Год назад

    i cant even hear it. idk how they can hear as them??

  • @loknandombin5460
    @loknandombin5460 10 месяцев назад +1

    Three things. Nigerians have even less inflections and more mono tone than Singaporeans. Secondly the Nigerian character in Ted Lasso is Nigerian but not the typical Nigerian. Thirdly the dude that was talking about jollof rice is NOT Nigerian at all! He might fool some people but he can't fool a Nigerian.