Top 5 Easiest Languages To Learn For English Speakers

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning  3 года назад +615

    🚀 How to learn one of these languages fast? Follow the 10 rules of StoryLearning: ruclips.net/video/PqCJSXHYth8/видео.html

    • @heraldomedrano851
      @heraldomedrano851 3 года назад +6

      Top 5 easiest languages for Spanish speakers.

    • @heraldomedrano851
      @heraldomedrano851 3 года назад +3

      I can some what understand Italy and Portugal.

    • @bhangrafan4480
      @bhangrafan4480 3 года назад +1

      The only way to learn any language fast is by immersion. That means extensive, continuous contact with speakers. Now that we have RUclips etc. materials such TV shows, interviews etc. in different languages are much more available too, as a learning resource.

    • @lolitaapplewhite8128
      @lolitaapplewhite8128 3 года назад +2

      Try Greek !! Its not easy but English language is 39,1% made out of Greek in total... So i believe you will find it interesting ! (Okay greek is inside every language but English particularly have a recor of loans out of greek)

    • @michelevillafana3008
      @michelevillafana3008 3 года назад +3

      My maternal grandmother was Norwegian. Through My Heritage I was able to find a third cousin in Norway. She speaks English fluently, but I think it would be pretty cool if I could Norwegian. Now that I know it isn't a difficult language to learn, I am encouraged to give it a try. Thank you for the video. I am subscribing to this channel.

  • @hotrodjones74
    @hotrodjones74 3 года назад +9310

    The language you like most is the easiest to learn. There's more to language then study, grammar and vocabulary. Mastering a language is a serious time commitment. You have to spend thousands of hours with it. I've been learning and "using" Russian everyday for 10 years; 6 of them spent in Russia. It was/is a huge commitment that most people simply won't make.

    • @Visionery1
      @Visionery1 3 года назад +213

      I started Russian a week or so ago after watching Удивительные люди and liking the expressiveness of the language. Even though I'm already fluent in 3 languages (English, Afrikaans, German), Russian is not one of the 'easy' languages.

    • @lisa7414
      @lisa7414 3 года назад +60

      @@Visionery1 this is not the easiest language but if you like it then you'll definitely be successful. You just have to put a little more effort than with other languages. Желаю удачи ☺️

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 3 года назад +66

      @@Visionery1 Your knowledge of German should help you out a lot with grammar, especially noun cases. Thankfully, Russian noun cases aren’t nearly as bad some other languages like Hungarian with 18 or Tsez with 64 (That isn’t a joke).

    • @Visionery1
      @Visionery1 3 года назад +14

      @@Odinsday I came across this link recently, it's a novel way to learn a language, without worrying about annoying things like grammar etc. ruclips.net/video/illApgaLgGA/видео.html I speak three languages fluently, I know when a sentence sounds right or wrong, but I often have no idea why. In 2014 I spent 6 months learning Hindi (including the Devanagari script), it was an amazing moment when I viewed online newspapers written in the script and could actually read them. Hindi being an SOV language made it even more interesting (if one constantly hears "I John am", then saying "I am John" in Hindi just sounds so wrong). If someone listens to a language - like a baby - long enough, one eventually picks up the correct tenses, sentence structure etc. Spending months learning grammar before actually speaking makes it a boring chore.

    • @anonymous-xy5ue
      @anonymous-xy5ue 3 года назад +27

      @@Visionery1 I'm currently trying to learn russian! It's hard but I enjoy it

  • @arch3223
    @arch3223 3 года назад +2716

    To me, Afrikaans is what English must sound like to people who don't know English. It's like hearing a conversation in a different room where you can't quite make out what is being said.

    • @oui9296
      @oui9296 3 года назад +175

      As a non native english speaker, afrikaans more sound like german

    • @astonplayshd7522
      @astonplayshd7522 3 года назад +44

      @@oui9296 true, my family are dutch afrikaans and i thought they sounded german too

    • @ZhuLee06
      @ZhuLee06 3 года назад +3

      @@oui9296 that’s cap I know over 250 languages

    • @nofood1
      @nofood1 3 года назад +11

      Same with Dutch!!!

    • @Visionery1
      @Visionery1 3 года назад +79

      I'm fluent in English, German (home language) and Afrikaans. Comparing Dutch and Afrikaans is like comparing Plattdeutsch and Hochdeutsch. Afrikaans is a beautiful language, if spoken correctly it contains almost no English words, it's also much clearer than Dutch.

  • @cillboon
    @cillboon 2 года назад +2969

    00:20 Afrikaans
    03:35 Italian
    05:53 Indonesian
    08:38 Dutch
    10:18 Norwegian

    • @mylah4507
      @mylah4507 2 года назад +62

      Thank you

    • @zander6699
      @zander6699 2 года назад +47

      Thanks man 😂

    • @Mmolesy
      @Mmolesy 2 года назад +50

      I would of thought German or Hebrew would of been in their somewhere...🤔

    • @shohamhadad5033
      @shohamhadad5033 2 года назад +86

      @@Mmolesy hebrew would never be on this list TRUST me😂 we have a sound that I’m not even sure that even mandarin speakers can pronounce cause some of their sounds we use but the one I’m speaking about is much much more complicated it’s the ח sound not only is it difficult to pronounce but also you can’t write it in english but have to change it a bit to h which is the closest sound to the ח sound
      for example:
      my last name in hebrew is: חדד
      and in english it’s: hadad
      which is pronounced differently in english😅

    • @Mmolesy
      @Mmolesy 2 года назад +7

      @@shohamhadad5033 Thankyou for that, you learn something new everyday.😊🇮🇱

  • @samsadax230
    @samsadax230 2 года назад +729

    Italian is only easy if you already know a romance language (for example French or Spanish). I personally started recently to learn Italian, and since I speak French and Spanish, the learning process has been rather smooth 🙂

    • @sarahbasto6520
      @sarahbasto6520 2 года назад +17

      It's very controversial when he says "we pronounce the way we read". No, we don't.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 2 года назад +7

      @@sarahbasto6520 When do you pronounce the closed E and O vs the open E and O in Italian?

    • @Idk_imagine_a_cool_name
      @Idk_imagine_a_cool_name 2 года назад +18

      @@sarahbasto6520i think its one of the easiest languages to read (at least between European languages, I don’t know others). But it surely isn’t a easy language: the grammar is very complex compared to English and it’s full of exceptions

    • @alisonpereira3718
      @alisonpereira3718 2 года назад +10

      Speaker of portuguese also think italian is easy

    • @cyrillpresler3442
      @cyrillpresler3442 Год назад +6

      But you already know a huge portion of vocabulary if you speak Australian or American language, it consists 50% of romance words.

  • @HizumiUna
    @HizumiUna 3 года назад +286

    The way this guy just gets to the point instead of filling the first 2 minutes with an eternal introduction depicts a great channel.

  • @tangerinefizz11
    @tangerinefizz11 3 года назад +2417

    I have studied Spanish, German, and French. Of all those, Spanish is definitely the easiest.

    • @ammszz5939
      @ammszz5939 3 года назад +124

      I find German slightly easier to Spanish but I’m having such a bad, bad time learning Spanish atm because I’m doing Spanish A-level 😂

    • @steveharris1740
      @steveharris1740 3 года назад +267

      Well, German is 100% the most difficult of the three.

    • @ammszz5939
      @ammszz5939 3 года назад +112

      Steve Harris yeah it’s the hardest because the grammar is a bitch but since both English and German are Germanic languages they’re pretty similar 😂

    • @felixdom9693
      @felixdom9693 3 года назад +29

      I must agree! because im learning spanish past 3 month and i can improve and will keep improving since i also learning from music, film and newspaper

    • @samuel_leocadio
      @samuel_leocadio 3 года назад +30

      They are very similar bcs they are latin languages

  • @keetrandling4530
    @keetrandling4530 3 года назад +2393

    Olly, you missed the REAL easiest language: ASL (American Sign Language). It is *not* 'English on the hands,' as it has its own grammer, but the rules are not difficult. (Although, if you do default to English word order you would be understood, like a baby learning to converse.). ASL is literally a visual language, many of the nouns are intuitive hand-shapes & positions, and many of the verbs are intuitive movements. If you can mime, and have good facial expressions, you're well on your way already.

    • @lavenderpixel9092
      @lavenderpixel9092 3 года назад +87

      It’s not the easiest for everyone though if you suffer from joint problems, dislocations or coordination problems or even overstimulation it can be hard for certain people. Asl is helpful to a lot of people but I always see it being suggested to nonspeaking autistic people and I just mean to say it’s not for everyone.

    • @ahorsewithnoname643
      @ahorsewithnoname643 3 года назад +47

      Is it only for use in America? How does it compare with International Sign Language. Is it like metrics, an American only version that no one uses outside the US?

    • @rickwrites2612
      @rickwrites2612 3 года назад +9

      @@ahorsewithnoname643 oooh good question, i wanna know too

    • @nathanielwiens
      @nathanielwiens 3 года назад +28

      @@rickwrites2612 My understanding is that ISL is a fairly limited language that can "get by" regardless of which "version" of sign language you use, but most countries have their own flavor. So yes, ASL is primarily used in the USA but it's still a language as compared to metric measurements.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sign_languages

    • @pennywisethedancingclown2702
      @pennywisethedancingclown2702 3 года назад +2

      ASL will count for a 2 year degree but if you want to go higher up with your education it wouldn’t.

  • @althavdbosch
    @althavdbosch 2 года назад +9

    I am from South Africa, and I can't believe Afrikaans out of all languages is on this list. I am so proud!

  • @haraldodunkirk1432
    @haraldodunkirk1432 3 года назад +2436

    Problem with Dutch and Norwegian is they’ve all got flawless English...

    • @Islandicus
      @Islandicus 3 года назад +352

      I learnt a technique years ago to get over this. I am British but look like a Slav so when a Dutch person speaks to me in English, I reply in Polish, "Nie rozumiem. Jestem polakiem. Dobrze?" It works every time.

    • @eiriks680
      @eiriks680 3 года назад +193

      @@Islandicus Good idea. Just pretend you don't know English and you should be fine. I will totally use this technique

    • @jellevm
      @jellevm 3 года назад +49

      @@Islandicus Do you then also speak Dutch with a Polish accent? haha

    • @Islandicus
      @Islandicus 3 года назад +60

      @@jellevm To be honest, I don't know. i just know that I am very good at hiding my English accent. My Flemish friend says i speak with a kind of Dutch accent from the south. I don't say melk, I say melek as in Belgium for instance.

    • @stevedavenport1202
      @stevedavenport1202 3 года назад +21

      True. Probably a waste of time to master Dutch if you are only looking to be a tourist.

  • @CarinaCoffee
    @CarinaCoffee 2 года назад +1710

    I'm German and I speak Mandarin Chinese (as a foreign language, no family connection) and I LOVE that there a no conjugations! It makes it sooo easy to learn the grammar!
    Personally the tones are the hardest part of Chinese for me.

    • @tim3440
      @tim3440 2 года назад +17

      Hi, can you maybe help me with your routine to learn Chinese. Dutch myself, also speak German, but how did you learn Mandarine? Kind regards :)

    • @benjiang9789
      @benjiang9789 2 года назад +12

      Indeed. Spoken Chinese is so easy.

    • @TRJK
      @TRJK 2 года назад +2

      @@benjiang9789 indeed, then easy?

    • @cptyolowaffle
      @cptyolowaffle 2 года назад +10

      I'm learning Mandarin too and I agree, the tones and pronunciation are the hardest part for me. Writing is easy, reading is easy, but I can't pronounce it well

    • @fractal_gate
      @fractal_gate 2 года назад +18

      I'm a native English speaker who has learned Spanish and Chinese to fluency. Spoken Chinese is at least 4 times as difficult as Spanish despite the many conjugations in Spanish and none in Chinese. Apart from the tones, the reason is that the way of thinking and vocab are totally different. With Spanish I could often guess how to say new things, but with Chinese you never can guess. This will become more apparent as you move into the advanced level. There are almost zero Indo-European loan words and you will be starting from absolute scratch. I'm not saying Chinese is the hardest language in the world, and this could be something common to all non Indo-European languages, but I'm just saying that just because a language has more conjugations doesn't mean it's more difficult.

  • @kiwiiikotiro8437
    @kiwiiikotiro8437 3 года назад +1151

    just a tip when learning languages:
    don’t stop practicing!
    even if you don’t need to use that language, not keeping up the practice can really deteriorate your skill when speaking it.
    I’m fluent in english, and i used to be semi-fluent in spanish, german, czech republican, japanese, māori, samoan and tongan, but due to lack of practice i’ve forgotten most of my knowledge about 5 of those 7 languages. learning a new language takes a lot of dedication so remember to practice often ☺️

    • @gabrielaj2066
      @gabrielaj2066 3 года назад +16

      You’re so right

    • @TakahashiQR
      @TakahashiQR 3 года назад +13

      Yo me sabía 20 idiomas pero me chingué la rodilla y se me olvidaron

    • @dmore
      @dmore 3 года назад +6

      I can’t back this up enough!

    • @SuperSpecies
      @SuperSpecies 3 года назад +35

      The language from the Czech Republic is called Czech ;)

    • @stianjohansen7555
      @stianjohansen7555 3 года назад +12

      My english teacher knew 7 languages, and spoke 5 of them fluently. He was always trying to learn and pick up words from new languages. I remember him telling us that the key to knowing so many languages was using them all the time. Keeping it fresh so to speak

  • @Cavernvision
    @Cavernvision Год назад +151

    As an American living in Denmark for almost 16 years, I can definitely say that learning Danish is not so easy. Even while living in the country, surrounded by the language, it’s been a real struggle. And I actually use the language daily!

    • @chrisd8183
      @chrisd8183 Год назад

      Your problem is you are an American.

    • @faesk
      @faesk Год назад +7

      the pronounciation is the problem right?

    • @poisonivory6017
      @poisonivory6017 Год назад +13

      @@faeskrødgrød med fløde

    • @faesk
      @faesk Год назад +4

      @@poisonivory6017 fr tho, every dane asks abt that when you talk to them

    • @SadMatte
      @SadMatte Год назад +13

      At its core it is grammatically as easy as Norwegian and Swedish, but the pronounciations of words compared to how they are spelled are english and french levels of ridiculousness

  • @giuliariommi8643
    @giuliariommi8643 2 года назад +694

    As an italian i think our language is fairly easy to learn up until you get to the level of true proficiency that enables you to understand fancy lectures or books and poetry. You do have to stick with us for the verb tenses.

    • @simonwelser6973
      @simonwelser6973 2 года назад +41

      Hey, I‘m from Switzerland learning Italian right now. I must say, Italian is certainly easier than French but still not very easy, at least for me. Especially verb forms drive me nuts sometimes. As you say, you need to stick with them. The Italian way of cutting off the personal pronouns (e.g., «sono» instead of «io sono») can be quite a challenge when you have to focus twice on one word what verb you use, and about who you speak, only depending on the ending. I think French is a bit more straightforward here with using pronoun + verb, but I guess it is mainly because I‘m used to this structure since all languages I speak use it that way.

    • @giuliariommi8643
      @giuliariommi8643 2 года назад +4

      @@simonwelser6973 thanks for giving me some new prospective. Yes, be careful as to which pronouns verbs are referd to, it's mainly understandable due to context clues and concordance with the other parts of the phrase

    • @julioconsuegra1351
      @julioconsuegra1351 2 года назад +17

      Agree 💯
      I understand Italian even when is spoken fast or with different accents.
      I used to play Calcio (soccer) with an Italian team and my coach spoke in Italian to me and I spoke to him In Spanish and we understood each other pretty well.

    • @lipeeefl
      @lipeeefl 2 года назад +5

      Is it similar to Spanish? I am Brazilian and thinking of learning Italian as a 4th language.

    • @irenestar9256
      @irenestar9256 2 года назад +6

      @@lipeeefl as a native Spanish speaker, I can understand most of what's being said in italian, there are many similar words, as well as some similar words that have a different meaning in each language.

  • @sippintea1513
    @sippintea1513 3 года назад +877

    By learning Indonesian, you won't get lost in Brunei, Malaysia, Southern Thai & Singapore 🥰

    • @sippintea1513
      @sippintea1513 3 года назад +81

      @Nhân Trần Thành Nguyễn ya, cus we can understand each other

    • @khairulazhar8118
      @khairulazhar8118 3 года назад +118

      @Nhân Trần Thành Nguyễn yes, because the language actually are Malay language. Indonesian just don't want to believe it's actually from Malay language.

    • @Mcberto
      @Mcberto 3 года назад +92

      @@khairulazhar8118 true, its a malay origin language, we filipinos can understand some words in malay/indo

    • @heyyoitsmat
      @heyyoitsmat 3 года назад +48

      It’s also true vice versa; learn Malay and you can get around relatively well in those countries too :))

    • @syeraisya5346
      @syeraisya5346 3 года назад +59

      I am from Malaysia, and this is true. They’re may be different but we pretty understand each other.

  • @nozuchan
    @nozuchan 2 года назад +993

    As an Indonesian, at the start of this video I think to myself "I think Indonesian is easy to learn, Right?"
    And actually seeing it on this list makes me happy
    The reason why indonesian is easy to learn is because it's designed that way, indonesia has hundreds of local/regional language, because Indonesian consists of a lot of different tribes and ethnicity. So they have to make the law that every Indonesian has to speak Indonesian, as a tool to unite the nation by eliminating language barriers between regions. Indonesian language is made out of modified Malay added with local language words from java and dutch and English

    • @avernion
      @avernion 2 года назад +15

      That’s very cool :)

    • @mar97216
      @mar97216 2 года назад +38

      I know a few random words:) its a fun language.
      Selamat pagi, selamat datang. Teri makhasi, Apa kabar? baik baik. Sama sama. I wish to learn it some day. 😊

    • @thediandilouis7004
      @thediandilouis7004 2 года назад +16

      @@mar97216 It should be terima kasih

    • @mar97216
      @mar97216 2 года назад +10

      @@thediandilouis7004 oh yeah I forgot. Thanks

    • @cuggsbach3998
      @cuggsbach3998 2 года назад +21

      @@mar97216 what a missed opportunity.... You should've said "Oh yeah, i forgot. Terima kasih."

  • @quinn6160
    @quinn6160 Год назад +103

    As a South African, I would highly recommend Afrikaans. It's super easy to learn and honestly quite useful outside of SA. I can mostly understand Dutch, fully understand Flemish and get the gist of German. It also helps with learning other languages since you get some interesting sounds that you will find in other languages like the rolled R/guttural G. I'm trying to learn Russian and I think knowing Afrikaans has made it a bit easier. PS: I did not learn Afrikaans I am a native speaker.

    • @eastafrica1020
      @eastafrica1020 Год назад +5

      Afrikaans also help your pronunciation of Hebrew or Arabic.

    • @quinn6160
      @quinn6160 Год назад +1

      @@moonknight5743 Why is that? I am South African. I live here I have my entire life. Why is it doubtful that I speak it? Ek kan nogsteeds did praat maar nie regtig skryf nie, dit's my twede taal nogsteeds 😎 PS: Forgive my spelling in Afrikaans, it has been a good long while since I have written it, luckily its mostly phonetic xD

    • @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey
      @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey Год назад +2

      Is it really that easy to learn or do you find it easy because it's your native language? Lol 😅
      In any case, I love how the Afrikaans language sounds and can see how it would help with picking up other languages.
      Best wishes and good luck in your language learning from England☺

    • @quinn6160
      @quinn6160 Год назад +1

      @@WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey 😂Probably a bit of both 😂😂

    • @jessicaflemister4825
      @jessicaflemister4825 2 месяца назад

      I am so intrigued! I’m going to look into it!

  • @animeking1357
    @animeking1357 3 года назад +3692

    Me struggling horribly to learn Japanese: I live on the edge.

    • @fahimahsan3603
      @fahimahsan3603 3 года назад +209

      Man Japanese seems really easy to me. But writing it is really challenging. My mother tongue is Bangla, so pronounciating Japanese is not that challenging at all.

    • @Marvinmenthol
      @Marvinmenthol 3 года назад +270

      @@fahimahsan3603 well Japanese pronunciation is pretty easy what’s hard is kanji and keigo and some more advanced grammar

    • @yorybago1035
      @yorybago1035 3 года назад +64

      @@Marvinmenthol i agree with you.. its easier for me to speak than writing japanese hahaha

    • @oldfogey4679
      @oldfogey4679 3 года назад +22

      Anime me too I'm struggling with Japanese! When I go visit my daughter in Japan it won't be so hard?

    • @jwlsiee
      @jwlsiee 3 года назад +25

      @@Marvinmenthol the politeness and onyomi is honestly a pain but yeah daily japanese is fairly easy

  • @foreverlearningfrench
    @foreverlearningfrench 3 года назад +1310

    I need to learn Afrikaans. You had me at no grammatical gender and only three tenses! French has a lot of gender rules and tenses.

    • @FloweijFR
      @FloweijFR 3 года назад +56

      Can confirm as a native French

    • @FloweijFR
      @FloweijFR 3 года назад +7

      @Remmington Johnson what ??

    • @FloweijFR
      @FloweijFR 3 года назад +4

      @Remmington Johnson i dont understand mate

    • @ErikVSV
      @ErikVSV 3 года назад +64

      You should change your username to "Finally Learning Afrikaans"!

    • @duvian77
      @duvian77 3 года назад +1

      Yes, you are right.

  • @hadriel1228
    @hadriel1228 3 года назад +1862

    "Dutch linguistically is the closest language to English"
    Sad Frisian noises

    • @dogdemon1522
      @dogdemon1522 3 года назад +85

      I was thinking the same thing!!!! And speaking Frisian would be way cooler than Dutch.

    • @hadriel1228
      @hadriel1228 3 года назад +76

      @@dogdemon1522 a little bit more impractical tho

    • @killerbuzzit347
      @killerbuzzit347 3 года назад +43

      Dude I actually cracked up. I mean no offense to the Dutch, but it sounded like that woman was drunk!

    • @hadriel1228
      @hadriel1228 3 года назад +6

      @@killerbuzzit347 lol I just rewatched that part rn. You're totally right

    • @signorriccio9848
      @signorriccio9848 3 года назад +45

      @@killerbuzzit347 As a dutchman, she spoke a bit dramatically. I wouldn't say it's "drunk".

  • @Myemnhk
    @Myemnhk 2 года назад +28

    Just remember if you're going to learn dutch or Afrikaans the languages are nearly mutually intelligible (90-95% the same). The 2 things you'll need to learn are the different accents and the gendered language for dutch. But it is a nice little 2 for 1.

  • @vincentguy2721
    @vincentguy2721 3 года назад +253

    I was exploring the streets of Amsterdam, back in the sixties before English was quite so pervasive, when a woman stopped me to ask the way somewhere. I said that I had only been there a couple of days but that perhaps blah blah... She was chatty like me, and we talked for several minutes before we were suddenly pulled up short when I didn't understand a phrase of hers. We gawped at each other and only then realised that we had been talking seamlessly in two tongues! I in my English and she in her Dutch.
    She had no doubt done English at school, and my ear was probably flexed by having heard as a kid my great-grandparents speaking proper Scots; but the charm of the moment was not that we strove and MANAGED to comprehend, but that we dopily hadn't even noticed.

    • @rashidah9307
      @rashidah9307 3 года назад +10

      That's a cool story! :)

    • @keppscrossing
      @keppscrossing 3 года назад +7

      Yep. Similarly, when I learned French and lived in France, Belgium, and Luxembourg for two years i would frequently realize that I didn’t know which language I had just been thinking in; French or my native English.

    • @namegoesfirstthenlastname1785
      @namegoesfirstthenlastname1785 3 года назад

      That's so cool

  • @chibatadayoshi278
    @chibatadayoshi278 3 года назад +308

    Afrikaans is like a child of three parents: English and Dutch vocabularies, with Malay grammar. Bahasa Indonesia is relatively easy (to speak especially) because it must be an easy language to learn for everyone. Because for most Indonesians, it is not their mother tongue. Decision to use Low Malay as the based of national language was very smart.

    • @christinalucia6321
      @christinalucia6321 3 года назад +5

      Interesting, Im learning Afrikaans.

    • @gertvanderstraaten6352
      @gertvanderstraaten6352 3 года назад +9

      Afrikaans also has maritime Dutch words, like kombuis is kitchen in Afrikaans but in Dutch strictly a ship's kitchen. Also it probably developed from a Zeeland dialect because they also say ons (us) instead of wij/we.

    • @lizrunciman3695
      @lizrunciman3695 3 года назад +2

      Also the grammar is closer to Indonesian/Malay than it is to Dutch, eg formation of past and future tenses. Word order though is similar to Dutch and German, not English: verb goes at the end of the sentence.

    • @IErfanCN
      @IErfanCN 3 года назад

      ...

    • @eugenec7130
      @eugenec7130 3 года назад

      Malay is similar to Indonesian. It is a very easy language. Everybody in Malaysia (including non-Malays) picks it up from young naturally. But English is a different kettle of fish. Although everyone knows that English is an important language, most Malaysians struggle to learn and use the correct English. English is an unfriendly language.

  • @alanoken3097
    @alanoken3097 3 года назад +428

    Indonesian has two levels: tourist Indo and the real deal. Tourist Indo is pretty easy as you say Olly…you just need a good memory for only about 250 words. BUT real deal Indo is a highly complex language, quite sophisticated actually and quite difficult to understand as people tend to speak quickly, in fluent slang, and in distinct regional and class accents. I have been living in Bali for many years and speak fairly well (somewhere between very good tourist Indo and real deal) but take me out of Bali and the regional accents and slang are very challenging. Norwegian and Italian, spot on…pretty easy to learn. Thanks for really good videos.

    • @nine3430
      @nine3430 3 года назад +54

      Wow, you can describe it well. As Indonesian, I think we're trying to be simple but mostly we make it more complicated without realizing. And it's just for fun

    • @gudseygood3622
      @gudseygood3622 3 года назад +52

      But don't worry
      Just use basic formal Indonesian and everyone will be understand.
      If you talk with basic standard language, people will answer you in standard language too.

    • @Ed19601
      @Ed19601 3 года назад +26

      Yes but a small mistake can cost you your life as an english traveller found out in the 19 century when in rural indonesia he mixed up potong kelapa with potong kepala

    • @bagassatriyou.7267
      @bagassatriyou.7267 3 года назад

      wkwkwk gue spendapat sma loe

    • @loganalleinora3385
      @loganalleinora3385 3 года назад +18

      @@Ed19601 Wkakakakak Potong Kepala 🤣 please dont make it horrifying. When I was a kid my dad used to have old books still written on Dutch letters, that was why I knew how to read Bahasa Indonesia which was already simplified 😂.
      I know... I know... we are the reason why your history books are thick 😭 But hey cuman pandai bahasa Manado saya.

  • @wsrahman
    @wsrahman 2 года назад +230

    Being a native speaker of Indonesian, honestly I was quite suprise that there's verb conjugations, gendered nouns, articles, even tenses in other languages, because all of those feature doesn't exist in my first language, I never realise how simple the Bahasa Indonesia is until I started to learn another language

    • @thesampsoninstitute
      @thesampsoninstitute Год назад +4

      Yeah
      It's funny. Not one but f those phenomena are necessary either.

    • @Erispedia
      @Erispedia Год назад +17

      But the high school level of national exam for Bahasa Indonesia in Indonesia is harder than the English one 😂.

    • @AndreiBerezin
      @AndreiBerezin Год назад +2

      How can you do without tenses?
      How do you even tell DID from DOES or WILL DO?

    • @Erispedia
      @Erispedia Год назад +13

      @@AndreiBerezin by the time indicators: yesterday, tomorrow, now, an hour ago, etc. And there’s Indonesian word for “will”: “akan”, and “have”: “sudah” or “telah”. But there’s no change in verbs when using those words.

    • @AndreiBerezin
      @AndreiBerezin Год назад +3

      @@Erispedia that means you cant just say "I was walking", you have to indicate certain time which makes it a very odd instrument. Like having a separate hand for every item you decide to grab. Very uncomfortable

  • @anna-cv1wv
    @anna-cv1wv 3 года назад +501

    The fact that Afrikaans is one of the easiest languages for me to learn makes my marks even more depressing

    • @AA-vr8ve
      @AA-vr8ve 3 года назад +32

      Dw about it. Languages are hard.
      Source: am immigrant, had to forget native language to learn eng

    • @lizziantiz
      @lizziantiz 3 года назад +5

      honestly 😭😭😭

    • @bernices9923
      @bernices9923 3 года назад +27

      You poor thing. I'm Afrikaans but my kids speak English cause dad is English. My kids hate learning Afrikaans at school, the biggest fights in our household are always about Afrikaans homework. They expect me to magically program it into their brains and I just want to run for the hills. My youngest was very proud when in grade three she had the lowest Afrikaans mark in her class.

    • @helenenicholson6099
      @helenenicholson6099 3 года назад +11

      I am Afrikaans and yet it was my worst subject.. You're not alone!

    • @GretheRosseaux
      @GretheRosseaux 3 года назад +5

      It's not easy.

  • @jeeves9233
    @jeeves9233 3 года назад +795

    As a Norwegian, I can say that this made me happy! Also, benefits of learning Norwegian is that you'll unconsciously start to learn to understand Swedish and Danish as well! Pretty cool isn't it?
    Wish you all the best of luck when learning Norwegian. ❤😊

    • @Arthur0522
      @Arthur0522 2 года назад +6

      Hi ...I interested in Norwegian language. Is it easy to learn plz. could you give me some information about your language, thanks in advance!

    • @Mercinater
      @Mercinater 2 года назад +6

      I love Norwegian I’ve been learning it for years 😋

    • @stineandersen56
      @stineandersen56 2 года назад +40

      I was gonna comment, that if you are gonna learn Norwegian, you might as well learn Danish and Swedish too, since they are all similar in many ways, but you beat me to it!
      I'm Danish myself, and I will admit that Norwegian would be the best thing to learn first, before starting with Danish and Swedish xD

    • @Mercinater
      @Mercinater 2 года назад +1

      @@stineandersen56 Oh I’m learning those too but I know some already

    • @thisperson8441
      @thisperson8441 2 года назад +5

      Ahhh yes Norwegian is underrated!

  • @umbertovanstaden2651
    @umbertovanstaden2651 3 года назад +34

    I'm Afrikaans my fiancé is Mexican and I have to say she learned Afrikaans so easily. Thank you for the great video.

  • @kameelperdkol
    @kameelperdkol Год назад +22

    As an Afrikaans first language speaker, I thank you for this video. Many mock Afrikaans for being kitchen Dutch, but you learned a lot about it and show it respect. Baie dankie.

    • @admiralbenbow5083
      @admiralbenbow5083 Год назад +2

      They are not mocking the language dutchman. They are mocking you.

    • @SkyeAten
      @SkyeAten 10 месяцев назад

      Lol nobody mocks it that way anymore... "kitchen Dutch" is an old outdated term used as early as the mid-18th century and as recently as the mid-20th century. The term is irrelevant now. People only mock Afrikaans for being such a small language. You can only use it in SA and there are only about 7 million speakers....

  • @rinaldskalvis5071
    @rinaldskalvis5071 3 года назад +174

    I mean, I know a bit of Dutch. Reading Afrikaans is almost like reading Dutch but with a lot of spelling errors. At least, I can understand almost everything perfectly.

    • @vamplizzard
      @vamplizzard 3 года назад +23

      Same, as someone who is Afrikaans, Dutch feels like a dyslexic version of Afrikaans

    • @thethrashyone
      @thethrashyone 3 года назад +2

      That's exactly how I feel when reading Asturian or Catalan, I get the sense that I'm reading regular Spanish riddled with typos.

    • @sarah-ut1dh
      @sarah-ut1dh 3 года назад +2

      as someone who spent like 8 years learning dutch, i was able to understand to a certain extent my afrikaans friend

    • @ameliebischoff2204
      @ameliebischoff2204 3 года назад +5

      yeah, my dad's side of the family all speak Afrikaans and he describes it as 'drunk Dutch'

  • @rosaliebosma
    @rosaliebosma 3 года назад +98

    For people wanting to learn Dutch that love satire, I really recommend that you watch Zondag Met Lubach. Many videos have Dutch and/ or English subtitles.

  • @JacoWiese
    @JacoWiese 3 года назад +18

    From South Africa here, really enjoyed your description of some of the Afrikaans words! Well done!

  • @dustincrum1
    @dustincrum1 2 года назад +12

    I've been studying ancient Albanian sign language 14 hours a day for 23 years straight and it's worth it. I can now speak a whole 12 words!

  • @sheenakaleb642
    @sheenakaleb642 3 года назад +287

    Whoop whoop! Afrikaans made it to the list.
    Edit: I'm South African and speak Afrikaans as a second language :)

    • @keanancupido
      @keanancupido 3 года назад +10

      Same. Afrikaans is ook my tweede taal. Ek is só bly dat Afrikaans op hierie lys is T^T

    • @lisanarramore222
      @lisanarramore222 3 года назад +13

      @@keanancupido Myne ook! Uiteindelik, die wereld gee om!! Haha.

    • @keanancupido
      @keanancupido 3 года назад +2

      @@lisanarramore222 jaa natuurlik hahaaa XD

    • @현-n5v
      @현-n5v 3 года назад +10

      so funny that i can understand what you all are saying, my native language is Dutch :D

    • @sheenakaleb642
      @sheenakaleb642 3 года назад +3

      Same! I can understand Dutch but I think it would confuse me if I had to learn to speak it.

  • @robertschlachter3724
    @robertschlachter3724 3 года назад +105

    Glad to see Indonesian on your list. I was assigned that language at the Army language school in Monterey, Ca. when I was in the military. I agree, it was easy to learn. Unfortunately, I graduated in '68 so I've forgotten most of it.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +22

      It's still in there somewhere, Robert!

    • @TS29er
      @TS29er 3 года назад +1

      I am just curious...do you speak any German?

    • @judasthepious1499
      @judasthepious1499 3 года назад +1

      wow.. uncle Bob, if you wanna refresh the memories maybe you could ask the embassy or some NGO for some voluntary works.. that is if you are interested..
      As far as I know there is still a lot of english native speaker needed for teaching english.. but not in the cities, mostly they are needed in the jungle villages or some remote island

  • @callllllllllico
    @callllllllllico 3 года назад +72

    Indonesian actually pretty interesting to learn too because a lot of the words here are loaned from other languages like Sanskrit, Dutch, Arab, and a lot more!

  • @Islay2806
    @Islay2806 2 года назад +102

    I’ve been learning Norwegian since February and I love it. The most difficult part was that adjectives have to agree with the noun and that’s not even that hard to learn

    • @duff0120
      @duff0120 2 года назад +3

      where are u from?

    • @Islay2806
      @Islay2806 2 года назад +8

      @@duff0120 the usa, but i want to visit norway a lot

    • @Marit123
      @Marit123 Год назад +7

      Velkommen til Norge 🥰

    • @CO0L_CAT
      @CO0L_CAT Год назад +6

      @@Marit123 skal vi fortelle han om nynorsk og dialekter?

    • @Marit123
      @Marit123 Год назад +2

      @@CO0L_CAT let it be😂😂 😂

  • @fisicogamer1902
    @fisicogamer1902 3 года назад +224

    great to see indonesian in the list! after trying to crack my head open with japanese, it is super energizing to learn indonesian in a so much faster rate! Also, it sounds so cool and direct! I love it! The only hard part is the slang and the acronyms that are almost endless.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +34

      Yes, but I suppose it's the same with any language!

    • @PotatoKernels
      @PotatoKernels 3 года назад +6

      bagus

    • @adamaunya69
      @adamaunya69 3 года назад +7

      Mantap

    • @tokosuburselalu8689
      @tokosuburselalu8689 3 года назад +13

      As a native speaker i can say most milenials here speak indonesia slang. Also, indonesia language has no tenses 😄

    • @PotatoKernels
      @PotatoKernels 3 года назад +13

      @@tokosuburselalu8689 but the acronym tho. As a native speaker i still have not learnt a what all the acronyms stand for

  • @hkrohn
    @hkrohn 3 года назад +98

    Hosepipe is literally "garden snake" in Norwegian too: hageslange.

    • @ilseawesomeness9828
      @ilseawesomeness9828 3 года назад +9

      In Dutch too: tuinslang

    • @justinjanecka3203
      @justinjanecka3203 3 года назад +3

      You mean water hose? 🤣

    • @svenmorgenstern9506
      @svenmorgenstern9506 3 года назад +3

      Ah, but how do you say "danger noodle" in Norwegian?

    • @natsunohoshi7952
      @natsunohoshi7952 3 года назад +1

      @@justinjanecka3203 I thought 'hosepipe' was odd as well. Do they really call it that in the UK? Because I was like, "That's a garden hose!"

    • @arcticblue248
      @arcticblue248 3 года назад +1

      @@svenmorgenstern9506 farlig nudel ...

  • @mrpetebojangles21
    @mrpetebojangles21 3 года назад +126

    I find Dutch so fascinating. I’m American, but I lived in SW Germany for almost 2 years, went to a German Gymnasium etc. When I spent time in Maastricht, Utrecht and Amsterdam, I had a very very good idea of what strangers around me were saying. It was so cool. I felt like I’d had a stroke or something where I couldn’t tell exactly what people were saying, just a real good idea. To me it sounds like a drunk American speaking German! I find the Dutch accent to have a very similar pronunciation to American English more so than Oxford English. I loved this video as Norway and The Netherlands are 2 of my favorite places in Europe and I’d have a very tough time deciding which of these languages to learn.

    • @irissupercoolsy
      @irissupercoolsy 3 года назад +14

      as someone who speaks native Dutch and knows English... German just sounds like someone drunk.

    • @CarinaCoffee
      @CarinaCoffee 2 года назад +11

      As a German that knows English, the first time I went to the Netherlands and read Dutch it felt like someone had just thrown German and English into a blender and got Dutch out of it 😂
      When Dutch people speak really fast it can be a bit difficult to follow, but generally speaking, if you know German you can sort of grasp Dutch.
      I remember when I went to a store in Rotterdam from a company that shut down their stores in Germany and I had asked for help in finding a certain item (in English mind you, as I know very little Dutch and think it's offensive for Germans to just start talking in German to the Dutch and expect them to understand them). The clerk then came to the till with me as she was apparently teaching a new employee how the till works and she told the new employee about how their stores in Germany closed the year before. I understood exactly what she was saying, that was really a weird moment for me, because that was the first time that happened. I talked a bit more with them in English after that.
      The Dutch are so good with English though! I think they don't dub shows and movies over there? Because their pronunciation is always so spot on.

    • @mrpetebojangles21
      @mrpetebojangles21 2 года назад +5

      @@CarinaCoffee haha super cool. I agree about the pronunciation, I think Dutch vowels and lip movements generally provide an easier transition to English. Sounds pretty natural to most Americans.

    • @bomhof2002
      @bomhof2002 2 года назад +3

      @@CarinaCoffee yes we have subtitles. We dont dub 🙂

    • @kfelix2934
      @kfelix2934 2 года назад

      @@CarinaCoffee I cracked up on your comparison, buy you are right that Dutch is like some one took English and German put it in a blender.

  • @raymondwalters2723
    @raymondwalters2723 Год назад +3

    As a native Afrikaans speaker who is learning Dutch and German, I definitely agree.
    I might even go as far as to say it is the single easiest language for a speaker of English, Dutch or German to learn.
    Pros:
    - Very closely related to English, and actually also later somewhat influenced by English.
    - No noun case.
    - No noun gender.
    - No verb conjugation.
    - Only 3 main tenses which are dead easy to form. Future tense: 'sal + '. Past tense: 'het + ge' (or 'het + ' for verbs that already have a prefix).
    - Only 2 irregular infinitive verbs (het, is -> hê, wees). The rest of the infinitives are the same as the regular verb.
    Cons:
    - Very high chance that the person can also speak fluent English.
    - Only spoken by a handful of people mostly in southern Africa.
    - Somewhat difficult phonetics for English speakers like the hard consonants and many vowels and diphthongs.
    Thanks for the mention either way!

  • @igorantonelli8558
    @igorantonelli8558 3 года назад +82

    Currently speaking three languages, i also have to say that even those languages close to my native idiom are challenging, don't fall easy for italian, some grammatical rules can trap you and i gotta say learning a language is commitment and the fuel is how much you want to learn it

    • @dunruden9720
      @dunruden9720 3 года назад

      I gotta...? Boy, Ah say Boy...!!

    • @fahimahsan3603
      @fahimahsan3603 3 года назад +1

      And here I speak 4 different languages while gaming,,, '3
      My mother tongue also have 8 main dialects to speak with people of different regions.

    • @mahatmaniggandhi2898
      @mahatmaniggandhi2898 3 года назад

      @@fahimahsan3603 😯👍what languages?

    • @rosdiono
      @rosdiono 3 года назад +2

      Already speak 3 languages too as we Indonesian basically speak at least 2 languages plus English, and now learning Italian. This video inspired me to learn more after at least I can communicate in, let's say, standard Italian for foreigner. Dutch, Afrikaan and Norwegian sound interesting!

  • @katherinemcintosh7247
    @katherinemcintosh7247 2 года назад +35

    I lived in Leeuwarden, Friesland on a semester abroad back in 1993. I desperately wanted to learn how to speak Dutch, but did not have the life experience to go about learning it when every Dutch person I came in contact with spoke English fluently.
    This experience informed how I addressed my desire to learn German when my family and I moved to Germany almost 20 years later. We were there for 5 years and by the end of 3 years I was fluent enough for all day to day use and spoke the language confidently. How did I do this? I learned enough before we arrived to be able to tell people, “I understand you speak English, and I understand English, so you may speak it to me. However, I am living in Germany now, so I must learn to speak German. I will only speak German to you so I can learn. Please excuse my bad German.” People stopped speaking to me in English fairly quickly and helped me learn.
    I also managed to make friends with a Russian immigrant who could not speak a lick of English. That was the biggest help of all.

    • @katherinemcintosh7247
      @katherinemcintosh7247 2 года назад +2

      @Alex Alex gut…viellleicht…ich weiß nicht. Wann ich spreche Deutsch, mein Mann sagt mir, “Kathy du spricht Deutsch wie du ins gefagnes haben gelernen.” Ich sage, “wann man kann mich verschtehen, das ist genug…”
      So, you tell me. Lol!

  • @DewHope
    @DewHope 3 года назад +123

    I've mastered Thai, but probably because I was born there. Joking aside, I lived in Indonesia for 18 months and did find Bahasa Indonesia relatively easy to learn and definitely to read and understand. Terima kahsi.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +21

      I've met lots of people who learned Indonesian and they're always pleasantly surprised!

    • @adamaunya69
      @adamaunya69 3 года назад +7

      Terima kasih

    • @lazvegaz
      @lazvegaz 3 года назад +2

      Terima kasih kembali.

    • @jiptsu9631
      @jiptsu9631 3 года назад

      Sama-sama. Aku pengen bisa bahasa Thailaaand!!

    • @judasthepious1499
      @judasthepious1499 3 года назад

      pantesan Jirayut cepet banget bisa ngomong pake bahasa Indonesia 😂

  • @johnphdk
    @johnphdk Год назад +23

    and a little bonus.... if you learn Norwegian, you can also generally understand and be understood by Swedish and Danish speakers

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp Год назад +2

      Some Finn's and Icelanders aswell, as some of them speak Swedish and Danish.

    • @zareien2290
      @zareien2290 2 месяца назад

      @@johnphdk Danish is impenetrable to me 😂 they understand me at least

  • @michaeljameson920
    @michaeljameson920 3 года назад +200

    My biggest problem is when I'm reading a different language I try to translate it back to english in my head instead of just picturing what the word means.

    • @jclyntoledo
      @jclyntoledo 3 года назад +38

      You're still in the beginner beginner stage, once you get past that you won't do that anymore. Maybe try consuming more content but make sure you understand and try not translate it but just understand it.

    • @michaelshort2388
      @michaelshort2388 3 года назад +2

      I'm the same.

    • @eiriks680
      @eiriks680 3 года назад +18

      Read more, and try to read without stopping to translate. Just let the words flow, and when there are things you don't understand because you don't stop to translate, just let it go. When I started letting go of translating, I made huge progress. It was actually because of Matt vs Japan that I changed my tactic. He talked about Mindese which made me realize we don't need to translate to understand it. Just read a lot. Listening is good as well because you can't stop in the middle of the sentence to translate, you just have to understand it.

    • @michaelshort2388
      @michaelshort2388 3 года назад +6

      @@eiriks680 this is true, through watching Korean Dramas i've started to notice words that sometimes don't mean exactly what they literally translate to.
      For example "아니" literally means "no" but sometimes koreans will say it at the start of a sentence to mean . well... :)

    • @GarnetsWeb
      @GarnetsWeb 3 года назад +1

      @@eiriks680 Excellent advice.

  • @EireDiplomat2024
    @EireDiplomat2024 3 года назад +77

    I picked up studying a little Indonesian about two months ago as an accompaniment to my main language (French). It’s very fun! Indonesians are lovely people too, you get some great reactions when you’re from Northern Europe and can speak some Indonesian 😂

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +4

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @stevedavenport1202
      @stevedavenport1202 3 года назад +1

      The way their accent sounds, seems like they have some nasal congestion.

    • @xolang
      @xolang 3 года назад +4

      From my experience, among western Europeans I've heard speaking Indonesian, surprisingly it's been French who managed to sound closest to the way Indonesian is spoken in the (current) capital.
      I guess it has something to do with the way words and sentences are stressed in French.

    • @rifkynda8588
      @rifkynda8588 3 года назад +4

      Lol thats true Indonesian glad to meet foreigner especially from europe or America idk why. if you ask the locals the address they are going to they will try to show you even if they don't speak english. and don't be surprised if you go to Indonesia suddenly you become an artist because Indonesian people like to take pictures with foreigner wkwkwwk

    • @ngabersbersahaja9602
      @ngabersbersahaja9602 3 года назад +6

      @@rifkynda8588 that is embarrassing emotion which should not be happened. Don't show the colonized mentality

  • @generikadeyo
    @generikadeyo 3 года назад +62

    I love that Dutch is so phonemically similar to English with different enough vocabulary that it nearly sounds simglish

  • @t_plauche
    @t_plauche Год назад +91

    As a polyglot, I agree. I have told many people that Afrikaans is the easiest language to learn. Indonesian is a surprisingly straightforward and easy language. Good list!

    • @13_Kas
      @13_Kas Год назад

      any tips on learning Spanish?

    • @BazookaLuca
      @BazookaLuca Год назад +4

      ​@@13_Kas Immersion
      Spanish has a lot of great content and stories(Woo Story Learning!)
      You should also use the language
      And the great thing about Spanish is that you can easily convert a lot of English words into Spanish with a couple rules
      Like Tion becomes Ción
      Words starting with S get an E before them mostly
      So we go from Station to (la) estación
      And there are even more tips and tricks
      There is an audio course called Language Transfer that teaches how to do that but you can also read an article about these tricks

    • @TylerMarkRichardson
      @TylerMarkRichardson Год назад +2

      I think scots is the easiest language to learn
      Prove me wrong i dare you

    • @S1eepy...
      @S1eepy... Год назад +2

      Only problem is that almost no one talks Afrikaans around the world...

    • @bobbychan3750
      @bobbychan3750 Год назад +3

      @@S1eepy...😂 you sure?

  • @Noor_Jacobs03
    @Noor_Jacobs03 3 года назад +39

    As a Coloured South African, Afrikaans is very easy, like you said. It's my second language, and 1 of our 11 official languages here in SA.

    • @johannduplessis3467
      @johannduplessis3467 2 года назад

      There is a lot of english people living in South Africa who can't speak Afrikaans. It sounds quite terrible when they attempt to speak Afrikaans.

    • @Noor_Jacobs03
      @Noor_Jacobs03 2 года назад +2

      @@johannduplessis3467. As long as they're trying boet.

    • @NightWollff1
      @NightWollff1 2 года назад +1

      Ja. Hulle moet net probeer. Baie mense is te skaam om te probeer.

    • @Noor_Jacobs03
      @Noor_Jacobs03 2 года назад +2

      @@NightWollff1 . Ja. A lot of them are scared to try because you get people like Johann du Plessis who mock them instead of helping and encouraging them.

  • @FrenchinPlainSight
    @FrenchinPlainSight 3 года назад +29

    Very cool list! Thanks Olly. I was already planning to try Indonesian this year so I'm really happy to see it on the list.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +5

      Have fun!

    • @julianarchietobiasng9239
      @julianarchietobiasng9239 3 года назад +4

      I am happy to hear that..👍👍 indonesia have similarity with english language and have simple grammar
      For example :
      Active voice : Subject + description + Verb + Object.
      Saya sudah/sedang/akan membeli nasi goreng .
      Passive voice : object + description + verb + oleh (by) + Subject.
      Nasi goreng sudah/sedang/akan dibeli oleh saya (name).
      You can see these similarity word between Indonesian vs English
      www.google.com/amp/s/masteringbahasa.com/list-of-indonesian-words-similar-to-english/amp

  • @cristobalbaehr2661
    @cristobalbaehr2661 3 года назад +36

    Have a look at Tagalog Ollie!! You will be amazed how they use numbers. Prices in English, time in Spanish, the rest in Tagalog. The Philippines were 300 years under Spanish rule and 50 years under US rule. That is why they speak that way

    • @joannaremaneses
      @joannaremaneses 3 года назад +3

      Right! Most of our nouns are from English and Spanish so Filipino ("Tagalog", according to many) vocabulary will be a piece of cake for some people who can speak English and/or Spanish.

    • @snsaccount7871
      @snsaccount7871 3 года назад +3

      The tricky part would be the ever-changing slangs that we have HAHAHAHA

    • @rhoxdethxyrhonemercado2509
      @rhoxdethxyrhonemercado2509 3 года назад +1

      Yeah Filipino is the easiest way because Philippine language is compose mostly of English, Spanish and Filipino Languages (not tagalog because Filipino is the easy version of Tagalog while Tagalog is a deep version of it specially when you go to Quezon and Batangas Provinces where most people speak deep tagalog in this provinces.) however if you are a foreigner and you speak Filipino in other parts of the PH they might not understand you or they might understand you because PH has a lot of Languages however as i study PH Languages there is always a borrowed word mostly from Spanish or it is a direct Spanish word but different spelling and i can say if Filipino's want to study Spanish it is very easy for them.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 3 года назад +2

      Yea the language its easy by non European standards but i ran into 1 big problem i can't find any interesting media that appeals to me in Tagalog so now i am forgetting everything even the Scandinavian languages at least have some websites and podcasts.

    • @joannaremaneses
      @joannaremaneses 3 года назад

      @@belstar1128 I'm not sure whether Filipino shows will be your cup of tea. I find them a bit too cliched and predictable sometimes. However, you might wanna check out this application: WeTV. There are TV series and movies from The Philippines, South Korea, China, etc. It's free and the VIP subscription is very cheap (approximately $1.2 per month)

  • @alexpartridge807
    @alexpartridge807 2 года назад +41

    I was in the U.S. Navy in the 80’s. We were visiting Norway so we brought along a Norwegian/English dictionary and made up our own sentences. We got along very well and I remember them to this day even with using them. Not fluent by any means but must agree it was relatively easy to begin learning.

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp Год назад +7

      The Norwegian peoples fluency in English has changed a lot since then. Anyone born after '79 and forward are pretty fluent and the accent is les pronounced every year it seems like.
      Norwegian is easier when you realize that all the long words are other words put together. Vegetables = Grønnsaker, Grønn = Green. Saker = Stuff. Greenstuff. It's almost comedic.

  • @dougsundseth6904
    @dougsundseth6904 3 года назад +101

    "Camelopard" was the Middle English word for what we now call a giraffe. ("Giraffe" is originally from an Arabic word.) And in fact _giraffa camelopardalis_ is the standard binomial for giraffe in biology.
    So the fact that Afrikaans uses a similar word is interesting, but possibly not in the way that you expect. 8-)

    • @69Mikage
      @69Mikage 3 года назад +5

      So a camel leopard....

    • @alumbo
      @alumbo 3 года назад +3

      @@69Mikage That's what I thought. "Camel with spots."

    • @Alex-fv2qs
      @Alex-fv2qs 2 года назад

      And it was formerly called kameelpardelin Dutch

  • @HalValla01
    @HalValla01 3 года назад +87

    Native Norwegian here!
    Norwegian is a pretty easy language to learn and speak, yes, but almost impossible to understand just because of the vast variety of accents and dialects. To anyone considering it, kudos!

    • @simonwelser6973
      @simonwelser6973 2 года назад

      If I want to learn a Scandinavian language, what would you consider going with? Swedish, Danish or Norwegian? I have often heard Norwegian is somewhat easier than Swedish in standard form to learn, but in reality, accents and dialects are much harder in Norwegian than Swedish.

    • @HalValla01
      @HalValla01 2 года назад

      @@simonwelser6973 you’ve heard correct😂😂

    • @aerialpunk
      @aerialpunk 2 года назад +2

      Is it that much worse than English? I mean, I'm from western Canada and I have to focus very hard to understand people from the east coast, and I moved to Australia where the slang and accent made me feel like I was half learning a new language anyway, haha. Same goes for people with heavier accents from Scotland or Ireland... I couldn't even get through the British Office cos I just didn't understand like a quarter of what they were talking about. There's really a lot of accents in English, they're just often spread around a bit instead of all in one country

    • @HalValla01
      @HalValla01 2 года назад

      @@aerialpunk Take a look at the Trøndelag accents XD

    • @kristin123a
      @kristin123a 2 года назад

      @@simonwelser6973 You don't need to learn all the dialects. You just choose to learn either the most common "dialect" found around Oslo or the local dialect wherever you choose to live. "Standard" Norwegian or Bokmål will get you a long way.

  • @law_wren
    @law_wren 3 года назад +41

    I lived with Afrikaans speakers for a time and have some phrases under my belt. I was just thinking yesterday about starting to learn it in earnest. This was greatly motivating!

  • @gondebrabander8709
    @gondebrabander8709 2 года назад +62

    I am from the Netherlands and speak Dutch. About 10 years ago I started learning Norwegian (Bokmål). It is not only an easy language to learn, but also a beautiful language!

    • @shader26
      @shader26 2 года назад +7

      I’m an American that moved to Norway. It took me a while, but I just worked through to learn it fluently. At the time because of my job I spent a lot of time in the Netherlands too. Was getting confused but also noticed how similar the two languages are. I learned some Dutch. Many words that are the same (like betale, where it is just the pronunciation that is different) while others just seem spelled different. When I got better at Norwegian I had an easier time reading Dutch even though it was still hard to understand the spoken Dutch.

    • @Po0pypoopy
      @Po0pypoopy 2 года назад +1

      Don’t forget useless also

    • @shader26
      @shader26 2 года назад +2

      @@Po0pypoopy how so?

    • @Po0pypoopy
      @Po0pypoopy 2 года назад +2

      @@shader26 where else would you use Norwegian? Hmmm? Asia? Africa? The Americas? Only 5 million people speak it

    • @Celtjak7
      @Celtjak7 2 года назад +6

      @@Po0pypoopy Yes it's quite useless, but let's be honest, most people nowadays don't learn an extra language to use, but cuz it's cool

  • @WhamBamShangalang
    @WhamBamShangalang 3 года назад +74

    I’ve been studying Norwegian for a few months and I love it! I have dabbled in lots of languages from Greek, to Japanese, to German, to Korean, etc. I love learning Norwegian because it’s genuinely fun and intuitive. It has a few irregularities but no grammatical ones that change all the time. It’s straight forward and a blast to learn! I’ve also found that I can now intuit Dutch and some other Scandinavian languages as well!

    • @ocwill
      @ocwill 3 года назад +2

      It is a fun language with, truly, HUNDREDS of dialects. You can even choose whether you want to roll your R’s or swallow them, like Danish. Lol. Norsk er flott!

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 3 года назад +4

      man I learn German since 2014 and Norwegian, Dutch and Russian since 2017 (I didn't commit to Dutch and Russian) and I must say, even though I have less hours learning Norwegian than I have learning German, Norwegian flows so easy, I have less trouble speaking Norwegian on the spot than German.

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 3 года назад +1

      @@ocwill the first time I heard "Ka som skjedd? eg må veit" my bokmål only brain just melted.

    • @WhamBamShangalang
      @WhamBamShangalang 3 года назад +1

      @@leoaraujo8590 If you don't mind my asking, what resources did you use to learn Norwegian?

    • @leoaraujo8590
      @leoaraujo8590 3 года назад

      @@WhamBamShangalang Duolingo. Yes it's reliable, those who talk shit about the app are not consistent enough and/or don't use it properly.

  • @theaartjourney
    @theaartjourney 3 года назад +27

    Swahili’s also a pretty easy and fun language to learn, not as easy as when I learned Italian, but still pretty easy compared to some other languages I’ve tried to learn.

    • @shakurfaith
      @shakurfaith 2 года назад

      Hongera sana, Kiswahili ni kirahisi zaidi ya vyote hivyo

  • @bernices9923
    @bernices9923 3 года назад +20

    I speak Afrikaans and was surprised how many words I understood reading a children's book in Danish once.
    Thank you for such an interesting video.

    • @two_motion
      @two_motion 2 года назад

      Same here. You can pick out familiar Danish words from both Afrikaans and English. But the first month or so I always mixed up "jy" -in Afrikaans and "jeg" in Danish. It sounds exactly the same but means the opposite, which was very funny in conversations.

    • @e_wa.n5036
      @e_wa.n5036 2 года назад

      My ma'le het in toerisme gewerk, en op n slag het hulle n helle familie van Nederlanders gehaad. Na so paar minute kan julle omtrent vlot met mekaar gesels!!

    • @marieslabbert6009
      @marieslabbert6009 2 года назад

      @@e_wa.n5036 Dis waar. Mens kan die Nederlanders goed verstaan en toe ek jare terug in Nederland was, het die mense presies geweet wat ek sê.

  • @jazzmusician46
    @jazzmusician46 2 года назад +25

    I went to live in China a few years ago, and only knew Ni Hao. By the end of the first week I had learned numbers out of necessity (not being ripped off). I lived there for 5 years, adopted a little girl and became pretty good at basic conversation. It was necessity and the tones weren’t that hard, although I did make some embarrassing mistakes: Completely different words! I’ve forgotten a lot of what I learned there having been home now for 12 years. I went back a few years ago, and a lot came back to me. I found Pimsleur a great fall back. Don’t be afraid of tonal language. It’s fun to learn, but be prepared to make mistakes. In Mandarin Chinese, there are only 4 tones. With practice, you’ll get it. 😃

    • @larrydi9441
      @larrydi9441 Год назад

      Try reading and writing.

    • @jazzmusician46
      @jazzmusician46 Год назад

      @@larrydi9441 I eventually did. I traded lessons in English with my students while they taught me to read and write basic Chinese.

  • @legoboy-ox2kx
    @legoboy-ox2kx 2 года назад +174

    One of my friends learned Esperanto first because it gives you the basic skills of learning a language, but is a very easy language to learn, every word is based off of their roots and does not deviate from its basic rules.

    • @robsen.87
      @robsen.87 2 года назад +13

      Esperanto estas tre bona lingvo. ;-)

    • @EKA201-j7f
      @EKA201-j7f 2 года назад +1

      Where is Esperanto spoken?

    • @legoboy-ox2kx
      @legoboy-ox2kx 2 года назад +25

      @@EKA201-j7f nowhere as a first language, but a lot of people know it because it's easy to learn

    • @MarcioSilva-qe1vd
      @MarcioSilva-qe1vd 2 года назад +8

      @@EKA201-j7f Anywhere

    • @ChilapaOfTheAmazons
      @ChilapaOfTheAmazons 2 года назад +15

      Esperanto has some interesting ideas but it's also built on a big mistake: its alphabet has 28 letters and includes sounds that are very rare in most of the world.
      This single flaw makes it unnecessarily harder to learn with no upsides for the added complexity.
      It would have been much more sensible to create a language with 18-20 letters, and probably would have been more successful without losing versatility and pleasant sounds.
      Esperanto is a big missed opportunity.

  • @SeattleSoulFan
    @SeattleSoulFan 3 года назад +158

    Swedish is pretty easy: Germanic, so lots of cognates. In a given verb tense, the verb form is the same for singular/plural, 1st/2nd/3rd person.

    • @harriseppanen5207
      @harriseppanen5207 3 года назад +14

      Proper pronunciation is difficult though, we easily notice if it is not ones mother tongue. Some accents are very distinctive like Skånska , Värmländska or Åländska.

    • @steveharris1740
      @steveharris1740 3 года назад +24

      Swedish is a tonal language which is rare in the Indo-European language family. It can sound quite sing songy at times…it’s pretty neat actually. But it is still really simple to pick up. And if you learn Swedish, you will be able to manage quite well in Norwegian too (and vice versa)! But 90% of Scandinavians speak English so if they hear you struggling through any sentences or phrases they will probably just switch to English.

    • @muffinhead2164
      @muffinhead2164 3 года назад +4

      @@steveharris1740 Swedish isn't really a tonal language lol

    • @oldfogey4679
      @oldfogey4679 3 года назад +2

      Seattle i found Swedish next to impossible to learn! French and Italian were easy for me! I always assigned gender so that was easy!

    • @oldfogey4679
      @oldfogey4679 3 года назад +2

      @@steveharris1740 i found Swedish impossible to learn! French and Italian were easy! Japanese is also hard for me!

  • @ivymelanie39
    @ivymelanie39 2 года назад +67

    Indonesian is my first language, and I learned English in school as foreign language. Based on my experience (comparing the pronunciation, grammar, etc), Indonesian is easier to learn than English 🤓

    • @andres-vb7js
      @andres-vb7js 2 года назад +8

      I'm colombian, I'm studying indonesian from duolingo and some other places, it's super easy, but almost every word is totally new, that's the downside

    • @drdal
      @drdal 2 года назад +2

      @@andres-vb7js I am Norwegian and I think Norwegian is the easiest language to learn for an english speaker because this to languages are near related to each other. But austronesian languages (like Indonesian) are easy to learn. My wife speak is filippina and she gave me a dictation in filippino and even I not have learn the language at all, I write much of it rigth because the pronunciation and writing is almost the same in austronesian languages. In english it is absolutely not so.

  • @sarumano884
    @sarumano884 2 года назад +14

    Number one: Esperanto. I'm a linguistic dunce- still at speak a sentence level in French and Spanish after at least four years of lessons, but I discovered that I was fluent in Esperanto after only eighteen months with a "Teach Yourself ..." book that I bought out of curiosity.
    Speaking with an ex-American Army person, I also learned that Esperanto is used (was used?) by the US Army to identify people who can easily learn other languages, and it is (was?) used by them as an "enemy" language.
    A man of your talent should be fluent in about three weeks...

    • @doigt6590
      @doigt6590 Год назад

      Even better, learn Lingua Franca Nova which is much easier to learn than esperanto or even all IALs out there combined because it has a more forgiving grammar, which is directly taken from creoles, and pronunciation, which is officially tolerant of all kinds of pronunciation (the official grammatical guide outright tells you that as long as the sounds are audibly different, it counts).

  • @zacheray
    @zacheray 2 года назад +205

    I’ve been studying Italian for 5 years as my first second language. It was really hard to get close to fluent for two main reasons: nightmare level verb conjugations with like 7 tenses to choose from (still don’t know remoto) and the big one.. the way they convey and construct thoughts is fundamentally different from English.. one example is the numerous ways they use reflexive verbs where we don’t, but it goes way beyond that. They have a preference to make their sentences feel elegantly crafted.

    • @just_kiri1278
      @just_kiri1278 2 года назад +42

      Don’t worry even the Italians don’t know passato remoto, unless you’re in Naples

    • @jfrancobelge
      @jfrancobelge 2 года назад +24

      @@just_kiri1278 Same in French; our conjugations are a nightmare, but in practice we only use a few of the tenses, and most French people are just unable to use the intricate, very literary ones such as past subjonctive (and I'm one of them). But you do have to know how to use the reflexive form.

    • @oscaro.350
      @oscaro.350 2 года назад +5

      Exactly the same in Spanish hahaha

    • @matteobertotti
      @matteobertotti 2 года назад +17

      @@jfrancobelge Italian and French share 90% of the grammar, syntax and lexicon.

    • @lavenderoh
      @lavenderoh 2 года назад +4

      @@matteobertotti Spanish too.

  • @AuntNutmeg
    @AuntNutmeg 2 года назад +154

    Amused that you chose Norwegian as your #1. I learned Norwegian at 15 as an exchange student. I found many aspects easier than English, not least of which was the consistent pronunciation. I still enjoy keeping in contact with friends and family in Norway via social media and exercising my language skills.

    • @CO0L_CAT
      @CO0L_CAT Год назад +2

      Koselig

    • @AuntNutmeg
      @AuntNutmeg Год назад

      @@CO0L_CAT Ja, der er det!

    • @zvoid_error000
      @zvoid_error000 Год назад +3

      I technically just start Norwegian and the pronunciation has me stressing 🥲

    • @AuntNutmeg
      @AuntNutmeg Год назад

      @Zenith Keep at it. Don't stress, just keep trying! You'll get it as you keep working on it.

    • @mariefriedmann3203
      @mariefriedmann3203 Год назад +3

      There’s that Trollhunter movie!!! 😍 and can get an introduction to listening to Norwegian!

  • @theferalboy9563
    @theferalboy9563 2 года назад +61

    I'm happy to see Norwegian getting some love. I'm slowly learning it and it's such a fun language to speak. Initially I was thrown off by how "not useful" it is where I live (deep south US) but honestly it doesn't matter. It's just a fun language and it really opens the door on other languages as well!

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 2 года назад +6

      Maybe you can visit some places where it is spoken like in Minnesota

    • @norwegian52
      @norwegian52 2 года назад +8

      fellow norwegian learner here. Yes. I agree its fun. And if you're looking for someone to have a conversation with, There are many Norwegians that would love to help. Some have been discouraging and not that nice about it, but the majority of Norwegians love and appreciate you wanting to learn their language. Good luck

    • @Hypez_Gamez
      @Hypez_Gamez 2 года назад +9

      As a norwegian I love it when people try to learn about our culture, language or country

    • @Thomasromer2002
      @Thomasromer2002 Год назад +6

      Forstår du hvad jeg skriver her når jeg skriver på dansk? 😜
      (Do you understand this, when I write in danish?)
      It’s one of the cool things with Scandinavia language, we share a lot of words.

    • @Istarikit
      @Istarikit Год назад

      @@Thomasromer2002 Förstår du detta, när jag skriver på svenska? :)

  • @critically.panned
    @critically.panned 2 года назад +3

    Kjæresten min og jeg elsker kanalen din. I found this video about two months ago, and we are both now somewhat conversational in Norwegian! Så, tusen takk for de forslag!

  • @richardyudist
    @richardyudist 3 года назад +24

    Learning Indonesian is easy, no complicated rules..But in school, Indonesian language subject is one of difficult subject to master because in daily basis mostly we use local language mixed with informal Indonesian, not mentioning adding some English, now Korean words etc...Some locals (mostly elders) do not clearly understand Indonesian.
    Indonesian languages is a melting pot of languages around the world, refleting our harmonius culture.

  • @claudiahansen4938
    @claudiahansen4938 2 года назад +251

    Spanish is a 2 out of 10, French a 3, Italian a 4, Portuguese 4, Latin 5, German 6, Greek 7, Ukrainian 7. Japanese is a 10. This is my evaluation from having studied these particular languages over my lifetime. Japanese is on top of NSA's six “superhard” languages. Diplomats require much more effort over a longer time to master them. Japanese, Korean, Arabic, Hebrew, Finnish/Hungarian/Turkish, Chinese are the six categories. I just began Ukrainian in honor of my grandparents.

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 2 года назад +26

      I have studied both Spanish and German and would say German is twice as hard, it's surprisingly difficult. I'm not sure how much of the difficulty was lack of native speakers to practice with, there are just more native Spanish speakers where I live who want to do language exchanges.

    • @claudiahansen4938
      @claudiahansen4938 2 года назад +9

      @@holliswilliams8426 good observations, thanks!

    • @batuhanbayraktar6325
      @batuhanbayraktar6325 2 года назад +6

      @@claudiahansen4938 is french really easier then Italian

    • @claudiahansen4938
      @claudiahansen4938 2 года назад +4

      @@batuhanbayraktar6325 yes, I think so, because the endings for adjectives have to change more than French in the plural and accusative. Otherwise, the structure, underlying word roots etc. are both of Latin derivation.

    • @batuhanbayraktar6325
      @batuhanbayraktar6325 2 года назад +2

      @@claudiahansen4938 thanks for this beneficial information. The reason why I asked this was because I want to learn five languages. I can Turkish English and German. At school I am learning Spanish but I couldn't make up my mind about the 5 language.

  • @sittingindetroit9204
    @sittingindetroit9204 2 года назад +54

    I once worked with a guy from Sweden that could speak 9 languages fluently and 6 partially. I asked him if he “translated “ it his mind and he said not the fluent ones. I then asked him when in the process does he “know” he is fluent and he said when he dreamt in the language.

    • @HeroOfTime303
      @HeroOfTime303 2 года назад +4

      I have had a dream in fluent German, but I am not fluent in German.

    • @alf71999
      @alf71999 2 года назад

      To keep it short, fluency means you can understand and use a language without much thinking and / or scrambling for words.
      Becoming fluent is relatively easy if you allow yourself to make mistakes.
      Reaching proficiency is the hardest part. It's when you're able to express the same idea in a plethora of different ways. Basically, acquired bilingualism. When you're proficient, it almost feels like you speak your mother tongue.

    • @DidierDidier-kc4nm
      @DidierDidier-kc4nm 2 года назад

      yes ,Scandinavians and dutch have a special or bigger brain to learn languages they are very clever (not like me and us '''french'')

    • @alf71999
      @alf71999 2 года назад +1

      @@DidierDidier-kc4nm No, they just have more reasons to learn other languages. Just take a look at how many people speak Norwegian, Swedish, Danish or Dutch.
      English gives them more access to media. Plain and simple. And once you've learned a language well enough to be fluent, you'll have an easier time learning other languages.
      They do have exemplary education systems, of course. But a lot of it has to do with the pressure of speaking a rather rare language.
      I'm not saying this to discredit multilingual people up there but to emphasize how important immersion is when learning a language.
      They're not inherently smarter, they just have a loooot more points of contact with other languages than native speakers of "large" languages with dozens or even hundreds of millions of native speakers.

  • @joymckenziewendt4013
    @joymckenziewendt4013 2 года назад +18

    My daughter and her husband moved to Italy a year ago with my three granddaughters so I think it would be good for me to learn Italian. I spent four years in high school learning French which I think could also help me with the Italian. And my dad is half Norwegian and my sister took time to learn Norwegian so maybe I’ll learn it just so I can sometimes speak to her in Norwegian but I’m really motivated to learn the Italian right now

  • @hkrohn
    @hkrohn 3 года назад +33

    Very cool that you included Indonesian in the list! I've been studying it for a couple of years now. I don't agree at all on the "small vocabulary" part though; Indonesian has soooo many synonyms, and that is definitely the hardest challenge for a learner!

    • @keydem6494
      @keydem6494 2 года назад

      and the slangs and shorts too
      indonesian knows how to make their slang words

    • @thediandilouis7004
      @thediandilouis7004 2 года назад

      @Zane Goebel - Everyday Indonesian I am Indonesian and this is my first time heard about Kin
      "Bang" is the standard to calling older brother
      If its regional language, is it counted as Indonesian language?

  • @kdakaisa6668
    @kdakaisa6668 3 года назад +5

    I am so glad you included afrikaans in the list. I've been wanting to learn this language for years!

  • @prestokrs1
    @prestokrs1 3 года назад +251

    I came in thinking: "No way he gets me into Afrikaans." Two minutes later. Three tenses, Camel horse... Where do I sign up? 😂

    • @steveharris1740
      @steveharris1740 3 года назад +9

      That’s the thing though. Where DO you sign up to learn Afrikaans???

    • @dunruden9720
      @dunruden9720 3 года назад +8

      Buy a donkey!

    • @meganholloway1536
      @meganholloway1536 3 года назад +6

      @@dunruden9720 candy floss = spookasem (ghosts’ breath).

    • @lospollos5303
      @lospollos5303 3 года назад

      Haha goodluck :)

    • @PuppyL07
      @PuppyL07 3 года назад

      ​@@steveharris1740 I can teach Afrikaans. There's just one problem. I actually am not the best at it because it's my second language.

  • @zareien2290
    @zareien2290 Год назад +4

    Moved to Norway 3 months ago and am taking the B2 exam in 2 days. Learnt the language almost from scratch in that time. Wish me luck!

    • @corneliaoeltze6967
      @corneliaoeltze6967 2 месяца назад

      Was it your mother language ?
      Breggar for sure

    • @zareien2290
      @zareien2290 2 месяца назад

      @@corneliaoeltze6967 no.
      And while it is a brag of sorts, I am proud of the many hours I put into learning it to this level. It wasn't easy by any means, but it is achievable. I passed the exam, btw

  • @nobirapals974
    @nobirapals974 2 года назад +22

    it sure is easy to learn Indonesian but it’s a different case if we’re talking about sounding natural. since Indonesia has many languages to begin with in everyday conversation there might be some mixed usages every here and there. we also tend to use some ‘semi formal’ words rather than formal (which what language apps usually use) or non-formal (which Indonesians often try to teach foreigners for shiz & giggles)

  • @stefansoder6903
    @stefansoder6903 2 года назад +22

    If you learn Norwegian you get 3 for 1. You will also understand a fair bit of Danish and Swedish!

    • @chrisbeach6043
      @chrisbeach6043 Год назад +1

      Danish is a bit of a stretch. Easy to read maybe but when spoken I find it pretty incomprehensible. Swedish is my second language.

  • @newzealandstories5621
    @newzealandstories5621 2 года назад +93

    We had a huge influx of S Africans into New Zealand in the 90s when I was in high-school. We had a couple of Afrikaans speaking teachers and I would sometimes ask them about Afrikaans as I was studying German at the time and noticed how similar Afrikaans, German, and English all are (obviously, they're all Germanic). I was amazed at how much Afrikaans I could read already. Listening is a bit tougher but I can totally agree that Afrikaans would be fairly easy for an English speaker to pick up.

    • @ak5659
      @ak5659 2 года назад

      Yes, all the Germanic languages are MUCH more similar than than they appear to be when you first hear them or see them written. For English speakers if you think of anything that was around for the Norman invasion in 1066. So basically anything around for King Arthur, the Round Table, & Maid Marian .... Those words in English are almost the same in ALL the Germanic languages. Sentences likemy "My mother is young", "Ice is cold". etc are almost the same in all of them.

    • @doslos5954
      @doslos5954 2 года назад +1

      afrikaans is baie maklik

    • @SeverityOne
      @SeverityOne Год назад +1

      Still, the Germanic languages have a greater lexical distance than the Romance ones. I find it easier to figure out Italian from my limited knowledge of French and Latin, than I do figuring out Swedish. And I'm fluent in Dutch and English, and have a very good knowledge of German.

  • @Aboz
    @Aboz 2 года назад +4

    Growing up in rural North Dakota, I'd often hear Norwegian spoken in the street. Most of my schoolmates had at least one grandparent born in Norway.

  • @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc
    @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc 3 года назад +16

    I totally agree with Afrikaans and Indonesian. I would also add Persian to the list--pronunciation is easy, verbs are pretty straightforward, no gender. The alphabet makes it look intimidating or exotic, but it's quite easy after all.

    • @yungnachty4474
      @yungnachty4474 3 года назад

      Do you mean farsi?

    • @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc
      @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc 3 года назад +1

      @@yungnachty4474 Yes, in English the name is Persian, in German Persisch and in Persian Farsi.

  • @georgebenson4879
    @georgebenson4879 3 года назад +6

    Great video! I’m English and have become fluent in German, I started teaching myself Dutch and Norwegian for personal reasons so it’s great to see both of these languages up there:)

  • @anneliseschroeder2910
    @anneliseschroeder2910 3 года назад +6

    I'm Afrikaans, and you make learning it look so fun!

  • @giovannacasadio9600
    @giovannacasadio9600 Год назад +22

    I am Italian but grew up in Kenya speaking English and I don't think Italian is as easy as you think. The grammar is very difficult as it has not only gender but also 6 different tenses if you want to speak it properly. I still make mistakes after 40 years living here. I also speak Swahili which I think is a lot easier to learn. 😊

    • @yonamwakiluma5025
      @yonamwakiluma5025 11 месяцев назад +1

      Mambo vipi😊

    • @chrysaignadu6135
      @chrysaignadu6135 10 месяцев назад

      Sono insegnante d'italiano per stranieri e sono assolutamente d'accordo con te.Neanche gli stessi italiani lo parlano correttamente a causa della sua molto difficile grammatica.È un'altra cosa capire una lingua o farsi capire e un' altra parlarla correttamente.Figuriamoci poi come si comportano gli inglesi e i francesi con un tuo errore di grammatica ,del lessico o della pronucia della loro lingua verso gli stanieri.Facendo un confronto con gli italiani,loro sono gentilissimi e felicissimi con chi parla la loro lingua,non lo mettono in disaggio anzi cercano di aiutarlo per questo la maggioranza pensa di parlare bene e che l'italiano sia una lingua facile.

  • @k.kgacha
    @k.kgacha 3 года назад +18

    Here in South Africa in the Eastern Cape, it is required that you start learning Afrikaans in 1st grade. I've been taught this language for years, yet the only thing I can do is:
    Trappe van Vergelyking (Degrees of Comparison)
    Lydende vorm (Lazy form/Passive form)
    Verlede tyd (Past tense)
    Toekomende tyd (Future tense)
    Teenwoordige tyd (Present tense)
    Meervoude (Plural)
    Verkleinwoorde (Small words)
    Etc.
    I only know how to basically change the form and tense of a sentence in Afrikaans. Sometimes I can say or write very short phrases, and most of the time it's easy, but I didn't pay attention in class lol
    Here's an example for y'all:
    Ek eet ń appel
    (I eat an apple)
    Changed to Verlede tyd (Past tense):
    Ek het ń appel geëet.
    (I ate an apple/I have eaten an apple/I had eaten an apple)
    Hope you liked this

    • @excalibur9376
      @excalibur9376 3 года назад

      Bro somebody tell this dude afrikaans is not easy

    • @rosemarystrobel3437
      @rosemarystrobel3437 2 года назад

      It looks like it sounds like Dutch, and that one loses me fast, as my mind hears German (which is familiar) BUT it simultaneously hears English (native language) and of course, as it is neither of those, comprehension is zero. Very frustrating as it feels like some kind of mental sabotage.

    • @uyandamkhize9550
      @uyandamkhize9550 2 года назад

      Bro it ain't that easy it isn't you know how many kids make Afrikaans a meme on tiktok💀😭😭

    • @uyandamkhize9550
      @uyandamkhize9550 2 года назад +1

      @@excalibur9376 Bro you not lying 🙌Sometimes I find it difficult you will get the hang of it

  • @julioconsuegra1351
    @julioconsuegra1351 2 года назад +165

    My native language is Spanish, I speak English and I was surprised that the first time I listened two people speaking Italian I was able to understand almost everything they were talking about.
    Of all the Romance language the easiest to me to understand and speak a little is Italian and the most difficult is French and Portuguese in that order.

    • @kitsune0012
      @kitsune0012 2 года назад +7

      There is a reason for that. Spanish and Italian is closely related to Latin.

    • @apatheticsticker8137
      @apatheticsticker8137 2 года назад +9

      Really? That’s so interesting! Portuguese is my 2nd language (I’m fluent thought :P) and I can keep up with and read Spanish but I can not understand any Italian and no French!

    • @GamingIsle
      @GamingIsle 2 года назад +17

      How about Romanian? The often forgotten Romance language

    • @shania.-.
      @shania.-. 2 года назад +14

      @@apatheticsticker8137 i personally think it's easier for Portuguese speakers to understand Spanish speaks than vice versa

    • @veronicaaccouche1478
      @veronicaaccouche1478 2 года назад +5

      @@shania.-. It is. Funny thing is learning Portuguese isn't that easy. So many variations and subtext; extra word and sounds. Portuguese and French are very similar. Portuguese is based on the Latin spoken by monks.

  • @exzanneemocling6593
    @exzanneemocling6593 3 года назад +76

    Italian language is so lovely 😍

    • @Rahishashi
      @Rahishashi 3 года назад +4

      Same here very easy

    • @kristinewalberg2938
      @kristinewalberg2938 3 года назад

      I learned a bit when I was studying Voice, and it's lovely to sing in. The one drawback is that I can say highly operatic things, which are sometimes difficult to slide into ordinary conversation.

    • @mygetawayart
      @mygetawayart 3 года назад +2

      @@kristinewalberg2938 that's why a show like Vincenzo (korean drama) sounds very innatural. They use words that normally we wouldn't use ordinarily (like we'd never say "Taci" so tell someone to shut up, we'd say "stai zitto" or "muto").

    • @sofiaa.777
      @sofiaa.777 3 года назад +1

      thank you :]

  • @BDGKruger
    @BDGKruger 2 года назад

    South African here 🇿🇦! Nice to see my language Afrikaans being promoted, thank you.

  • @lunaring5340
    @lunaring5340 3 года назад +5

    Darn it, I've never seriously tried to learn any language outside of Afrikaans, and now you're seriously tempting me to look into every language you mentioned in a video I watched out of curiosity!

    • @marieslabbert6009
      @marieslabbert6009 2 года назад

      Jy moes darem Engels probeer het, want jy is vlot daarin.

  • @sveva7353
    @sveva7353 2 года назад +19

    I really like this video, but as a half Italian I have to say Italian is very difficult because it has many grammar rules different types of verbs,names, adjectives and much more. Also the verbs are very difficult to learn due to many time forms and exceptions so to whoever wants to learn Italian it’s not as easy as it sounds

  • @dngwikipedia8948
    @dngwikipedia8948 3 года назад +46

    I'm beyond proud that this man made a video about the easiest languages to learn without mentioning Spanish. Every time someone makes a video about the easiest languages to learn they through in Spanish because they don't know any other language to use because they don't understand linguistics

    • @lisanarramore222
      @lisanarramore222 3 года назад +2

      I think it's cool that Olly's thinking out the box :)

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 3 года назад +9

      How is Spanish easy for someone who has zero contact with the language? I.E. not Hispanic community USA. It isn't in the same language group as English, its grammar is completely different, the J and ll and Ñ are different, the diphthongs are different. I am fluent in Spanish and learning it was one of the hardest things that I have ever done.

    • @mygetawayart
      @mygetawayart 3 года назад +2

      off-topic: I found that Japanese is relatively easy to learn for Italian speakers, as both our languages pronounce every syllable, with minor exceptions, as they're written. Also, some Italian languages derive from Latin the tendency to invert the SVO word order to a SOV word order, which is closer to both Latin and Japanese. In Sicilian for example it's more common to hear the verb at the end of a sentence ("Io, in montagna voglio andare" -> "I, to the mountain, wanna go -> [私は]山に行きたい). Definetly struggled less than english speakers trying to nail the correct japanese pronounciation.

    • @victorvelazquez6547
      @victorvelazquez6547 3 года назад +1

      There is SO MUCH Latin in hodgepodge(a confused mixture) English that ANY Romance language SHOULD be easier to learn than the Scandinavian languages, IMO.

    • @sofiaa.777
      @sofiaa.777 3 года назад +1

      @@mygetawayart ohh that's why it's so easy for me to memorize the pronunciation of Japanese words (I studied some Japanese vocabulary by myself but not the grammar) while for example with Korean I'm having a harder time (but this time I'm studying the grammar too)

  • @marcosesteban4392
    @marcosesteban4392 Год назад +40

    Swedish is also not a bad language either and in many ways is quite similar to Norwegian. My mom's family is Svensk and Swedes are happy to help you learn the language as well. They love it when we attempt to speak it. And yes, they know of the "Swedish Chef" on the Muppet show over there too but tend to take it in stride. They know we anglophones sometimes consider Swedish to be a bit "singsongish" by the high and low tones/accents often heard.

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp Год назад +2

      Swedish has a lot of French loanwords that don't exist in Norwegian. These French words has also been "Swedified" so they are almost impossible to recognize if you already speak French.

  • @Enrique-ir4yq
    @Enrique-ir4yq 3 года назад +19

    Before visiting the country I learned Indonesian in just 3 weeks, by listening to a podcast while commuting to work. It turned out to be quite useful to talk to all drivers, bartenders, shopkeepers... Not just those who spoke English.

  • @paholainen100
    @paholainen100 3 года назад +18

    Greetings from Australia. I would definitely agree that Indonesian is very straightforward when it comes to Asian languages ( no complex script or tones to learn) and easy compared to European languages ( complex cases and genders). I studied Indonesian for a year and was able to communicate with locals in Indonesia. The pronounciation is similar to Italian (which I also speak ). I don't speak Dutch/Afrikaans but I am an advanced learner of German. To me Dutch seems like an easier version than German. For example "wasser" "trinken" "Mittwoch" "wochenende" in German would be "water, drinken, Woensdag, Weekend" in Dutch, which are all more familiar to a native English speaker.

    • @packisbetter90
      @packisbetter90 2 года назад

      Mittwoch is Wednesday

    • @paholainen100
      @paholainen100 2 года назад

      @@packisbetter90 I know. I speak German:) woensdag is Dutch, mittwoch German and Wednesday English

    • @ThePlataf
      @ThePlataf 2 года назад

      Actually, tones aren't a problem. They come to you with conversation practice. I did Mandarin every day for 2 hours, and my teacher would only speak Mandarin. That meant I had to learn fast! I can still remember how pale he went when I told him that I wanted to buy some red shoes. Red is " hong", but the tone I'd used changed it into an extremely rude meaning. I never made that mistake again!

  • @brianlewis733
    @brianlewis733 3 года назад +5

    Bahasa Indonesia. HilARious! A long long time ago I spent a couple of months in Bali with an English/Indonesian dictionary and I thought that I was doing pretty darn well in the language. Your description of how easy the verb structure is goes a long way to helping me understand why.

  • @amayatsuki5673
    @amayatsuki5673 Год назад +6

    I started learning Danish last year and can say, the Scandinavian Languages are all really similar.

  • @squilliamfancy
    @squilliamfancy 3 года назад +8

    i'm a native english speaker and i've studied mandarin, japanese, french, norwegian, and a tiny bit of greek. can confirm that out of those norwegian is the easiest from an english viewpoint.

  • @nicolelongoni
    @nicolelongoni 3 года назад +11

    I am Italian, and you're the first person to say our language is easy 😂
    Anyway I know a bit of French (other than English ofc), and I want to try and learn all the other four languages you suggested
    P.s. You have a lovely italian pronunciation!

    • @lydia5232
      @lydia5232 2 года назад +1

      A bit of a joke ... now I understand where Berlusconi got the idea for his bunga-bunga parties ... from Malaysia, only at the parties there were "different flowers" :)))))))

  • @pukk6094
    @pukk6094 3 года назад +9

    As a native Dutch speaker I love it so much when others speak Dutch as well