6 CUTE THINGS Germans do [PART 2] 😍🇩🇪

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2024
  • #expats #germany #expatsingermany #lifeingermany #expattips
    In this video, we talk about another 6 cute things Germans do. So buckle up, for another sweet ride down German culture 🍬.
    📼 RELATED VIDEOS:
    6 CUTE THINGS Germans do [PART 1] 😍🇩🇪
    • 6 CUTE THINGS Germans ...
    ⏰ Timestamps:
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:31 - Cute thing #1
    01:39 - Cute thing #2
    02:25 - Cute thing #3
    04:29 - Cute thing #4
    07:35 - Cute thing #5
    10:32 - Cute thing #6
    📺 Subscribe to our channel if you want more information on life in Germany as an expat:
    / simplegermany
    We know how frustrating and painful it might be to move to a new country, especially if you don't fully speak the language. That's why we created Simple Germany.
    Simple Germany provides tips & information in English about living in Germany as an expat. We talk about services that are friendly and easy to use to beat German bureaucracy. We also cover the cultural aspects of living in Germany. All of this brought to you from the eyes of an expat and a German duo. We want to help you settle in Germany more smoothly.🍻
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Комментарии • 203

  • @PalmyraSchwarz
    @PalmyraSchwarz 2 года назад +31

    Between the 17th and 19th centuries, French was considered the universal language among educated Germans, and since the nobility in particular wanted to emulate Louis XIV, French was of course spoken at German courts. Only the uneducated mob or the rural population spoke German. There are tons of Gallicisms in the German language. So German has always been quite flexible when it comes to adopting words from other languages that one wanted to emulate culturally. Since the Second World War, English terms have been increasingly Germanized.

    • @mikes-bmedic5484
      @mikes-bmedic5484 2 года назад +2

      I was going to mention in a comment about geopolitical and intra and post-WW2 influences but you beat me to it.

    • @thes764
      @thes764 2 года назад +3

      I'd think there is a lot more french vocabulary adapted into English than into German. It's just that the English adapt the pronounciation while Germans keep it as original as we possibly can. ;)

    • @dancelord0708
      @dancelord0708 Год назад +2

      Siehe auch: Ruhrbesetzung. Als Reparation vom 1. Weltkrieg war das Ruhrgebiet von 1921-1923 von belgisch- französischen Truppen besetzt.

    • @RB-vw8zq
      @RB-vw8zq Год назад +2

      Yes. The incorporation of French words is most common in areas where French influence has been strongest, i.E. in South West Germany and in the Rhineland. In Baden-Württemberg, for instance, they don't call the pavement/sidewalk "Gehsteig" nor "Bürgersteig", they (to this day) call it "Trottoir". And the sofa/couch still is a "Canapé" or a "Chaiselongue" (pronounced "Tschässlong") there.
      The "Tschüß" (or "Tschüüüßß") is also a Germanized form of the French "Adieu", by the way (in Düsseldorf they ususally do not say "Tschüß", they say "Tschööö"). Since Bavarian dialects do neither have an "ö" sound nor an "ü" sound, some Bavarians resent the "Tschüß" as it would sound un-Bavarian. Instead, they say "Pfiati" ("(Gott) Behüte Dich") or "Servus". "Tschüß" is becoming more and more common in Bavaria much to these people's dismay...

  • @monicavaquerano6271
    @monicavaquerano6271 2 года назад +28

    *The video ended*
    Me automatically: ach nööööööö 🙁

  • @jhdix6731
    @jhdix6731 2 года назад +29

    Well, most Germans will say "Portemonnaie", but if you ask them to spell it, might suddenly switch to "Geldbörse"

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад +2

      😅

    • @alexradojkovic9671
      @alexradojkovic9671 2 года назад

      My mum used that word 50 years ago.

    • @lumina9995
      @lumina9995 2 года назад

      JH Dix: Speak for yourself 😜

    • @Danny30011980
      @Danny30011980 5 месяцев назад

      French can be v intricate as often words are spelled different than they are pronounced.

  • @dagmarszemeitzke
    @dagmarszemeitzke 2 года назад +6

    The first bike was a "Draisine" a Laufrad evented from Freiherr von Drais in the mid 1800

  • @martinbruhn5274
    @martinbruhn5274 2 года назад +19

    Well of course we have a lot of french influence, they are our neighbours after all, I happen to come from the german,french border and many people here also have relatives on the other side of the border. I'm faster in Paris than in Berlin.

  • @LythaWausW
    @LythaWausW 6 месяцев назад +1

    I got corrected this week for the way I say creme fraiche - apparently I was saying creme frech. I was told it's French and I need to say it the French way. I said 3 languages is too many.

  • @astrodyke
    @astrodyke 2 года назад +3

    “Hallo” sounds so friendly and sing-song-y too :)

  • @jolong4049
    @jolong4049 2 года назад +4

    I have german friends from Munich who I send packages to. They always send me a video of them rating the snacks and they end it with the "tchüüüüsssss!" Lol

  • @kuftamarc
    @kuftamarc 2 месяца назад

    Add to the list of cute German things the face Yvonne made when Jen suggested shoving the ducklings at 8:21. Love these two!

  • @JimmyR2023
    @JimmyR2023 2 года назад +16

    Hi Guys another great video. I asked my German teacher the question about French words. She said it is connected to the Napoleon days when speaking French or being a Francophile was seen as aristocratic, trendy and hip where some of the words blended and become part of the German language.

    • @miriamreiss
      @miriamreiss Год назад +2

      It was earlier than the napoleonic times. Remember, Friederich der Große only talked in french at his court in Potsdam. French also was known as the official language for diplomats even up to the beginning of the 19th century.

  • @mylena3086
    @mylena3086 2 года назад +3

    The fun thin is that the Tschüüühüüüß even works when you say it at the end of the vid
    I can't help but say Tschüüüß back :D:D:D
    And it's true even a deep voiced rather grumpy seeming man can do the sound very accurately
    I also think it does sound a bit like singing

  • @JakobFischer60
    @JakobFischer60 2 года назад +10

    There is only a small remnant of the french we had in Germany. French was the language of the nobility and especially in western and southern parts many words were integrated into the language. In swabia we say Billettle for ticket, Trottoir for sidewalk, Chaislong for sofa, and the list goes forever.

  • @Romualdomgn84
    @Romualdomgn84 Год назад +4

    Ladies, any sad mood disappears after your videos. You are so cute and funny! Thank you for your efforts and commitment.
    By the way, in Russian language I found many words, which came from German language (like Buchhalter, Zirkel, etc, hard to remember right now all of them, but while I was studying German language I came across different of them).

    • @TheJohnnycab5
      @TheJohnnycab5 6 месяцев назад

      Butterbrot is another one for you. ;o)

  • @nothingspecial123Q
    @nothingspecial123Q 2 года назад +7

    I remember when our oldest daughter (turns 23 this winter) was 2 or 3, the "Laufrad-thing" became popular but you had very little choice, mostly very expensive and made of wood. She learned to ride a bike with "Stützrädern" bekause the Laufrad was so very expensive.... But our younger daughter (turns 18 soon) hat a Laufrad when she was small. One day she played at her friend's and when I came to pick her up and asked the friend's mother, where the girls were, she told me: "Oh they are outside riding bike" - I answered: "What??? S. cannot ride a bike - she has a Laufrad!". Suddenly both girl appeared riding bike - my daughter was so proud!!! She learnet it in a few minutes because the balance was no problem for her. She just hat to handle the pedals :-). The "Laufräder" are really very, very fantastic to learn riding a bike!

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад

      Woah super cool!! Yes after the Laufrad the transition to a bike is super fast 🤗

  • @stefanhaustein503
    @stefanhaustein503 2 года назад +8

    Thanks to this video I now remember some of the french words we used for everyday things in the area of Germany I grew up.
    Blavon - for ceiling, Waschlavon - for sink, suterain - for basement, peut-êtrle for a cigarett lighter (sometimes works, sometime doesnt) , Trottoire for sidewalk The spelling might be off but the words are so incorporated in the schwábisch/german language that I go by sound rather than the correct french.
    Thanks for your entertaining videos

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад +1

      Wow, I did not know most of those words. Thanks for sharing! -J

  • @lunalovegood69
    @lunalovegood69 2 года назад +6

    Laufräder got more popular shortly before my oldest daughter started to ride one, and that was 14 years ago. And the exercise for her balance made it really easy for her to ride a bike at the end. A great invention. 😊

  • @anchouse94
    @anchouse94 2 года назад +8

    Haha, so on point with the French words Germans pronounce the French way! Another word - 'Chance'. It's so nasal :D
    And about the geese and ducks, I was riding a tram in D'dorf the other day and there was a goose LITERALLY crossing the road ON A PEDESTRIAN CROSSING, so slowly and non-chalantly, cars were waiting obvsly, and people around giggling :D So CUTE :D

    • @RB-vw8zq
      @RB-vw8zq Год назад

      True. But not in all parts of Germany are people capable of actually pronouncing the nasal "Chance". In Bavaria, the say "Schaas", whereas in the Ruhr area, they would say "Schangse". So, a fan of Bayern Munich would say "Wir hamm viele Schaasen aufn Ausgleich ghabt", while a fan of Borussia Dortmund would say "Leider hamwer unsere Schangsen nicht genutzt".

  • @ramzi0
    @ramzi0 2 года назад +3

    I always smile when i hear the elongated Tschüß 😂

  • @theonijkerk3012
    @theonijkerk3012 6 месяцев назад +1

    In Dutch we have a lot of French words: garage, passage, etui, portefeuille, portemonnaie (in the new spelling: portemonnee), toilet, parfum, souterrain, vide, vitrage and lots more.

  • @ganage6599
    @ganage6599 2 года назад +2

    😂😂 eure Freude beim Tschüüüß Zelebrieren 😁😁

  • @NotSoFastOldtymer
    @NotSoFastOldtymer 4 месяца назад +1

    In British Columbia, Canada we stop for any animals crossing the street, big or small.

  • @laeum1433
    @laeum1433 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for keeping the words on screen longer!!!! I noticed.

  • @kiernanfraser6970
    @kiernanfraser6970 Год назад +1

    I live in the states and work as a daycare teacher. Some daycares or smaller schools with very young children use those kind of bikes for the toddler (sometimes older)

  • @katepoulton3025
    @katepoulton3025 2 года назад +7

    Lauffahrrad - we call it a balance bike in the UK. They have become very popular here too in the last few years :)

    • @mylena3086
      @mylena3086 2 года назад +1

      balance bike is sch a cute term !

    • @Skyl3t0n
      @Skyl3t0n 2 года назад

      @@mylena3086 Balance is another french word in german 🤣

  • @ninan9650
    @ninan9650 2 года назад +3

    Regarding Point Number 6, there is even a known song that is called “In Hamburg sagt man tschüüüs”

  • @the_mew_one
    @the_mew_one 2 года назад +1

    Aww This is really cute 😍
    Thanks for sharing, it made my Monday!

  • @nfp911
    @nfp911 2 года назад +6

    Training wheels are "die Stützräder" in German, there's was also a french word used for Bürgersteig, Gehweg, Gehsteig etc. my Grandpa (in Franconia) used to say Trottoir. He also used the word Paterre for "Erdgeschoss" which is the 1st Floor in English.

    • @flok462
      @flok462 2 года назад +1

      Same here in Schwaben. People over 50 regulary use words like Trottoir instead of Gehweg.

    • @hilmarwornle3798
      @hilmarwornle3798 2 года назад

      Diese Wörter mussten eingedeutscht werden weil GröFaZ das so befahl!

  • @Skyl3t0n
    @Skyl3t0n 2 года назад +2

    Way back it was Greek, then Latin, then Frech and nowadays it's English.
    These were the universal languages of that time and some/many words survived until today

  • @johnsheridan7428
    @johnsheridan7428 2 года назад +1

    Lovely video really nice 👌🇮🇪☘

  • @mariae8196
    @mariae8196 11 месяцев назад +1

    You girls are great! Thanks!

  • @OneLifeManyStories
    @OneLifeManyStories 2 года назад +2

    I can related to that laufarad cycle....I am indian and when I moved to Germany. ..I found kids with laufarad very cute😆😆😆

  • @jakobjorgensen7773
    @jakobjorgensen7773 2 года назад +1

    Alternative to "Tschüss" - to also get a reply - is "Schönen Tag noch" (being a dane with a german GF)

  • @turjo119
    @turjo119 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love Jen's shirt here, very fitting with the theme 😆
    The goose and ducklings story is very cute and reminds me of how during my travels to Inida I'd often see the same but instead of ducks or geese it's cows instead

  • @ArloReeves
    @ArloReeves Год назад +1

    Great vid you two. My favorite Germified English word: Ausgeflipped! “Er ist total ausgeflipped!”. Mach bitte weiter - ich bin abonniert (more french).

  • @sisterpanic9588
    @sisterpanic9588 Год назад +2

    The French thing is very Rheinisch (Rhinelandian) because Napoleon captured the area and a lot of French words made it into everyday speech. At least that is what I learned in school about the dialect of our region.

  • @tonyhoward1735
    @tonyhoward1735 Год назад +2

    Nice new hairdo Jen

  • @barbws2856
    @barbws2856 2 года назад +1

    We here in Canada also stop for our geese crossing. 🥰

  • @merica1978
    @merica1978 2 года назад +3

    The Laufrad is in common use for at least 15 years. Maybe even twenty.

  • @ArloReeves
    @ArloReeves Год назад +1

    I thought of another cute German thing, Redensarten (Sayings). They have one for *everything*. One my German mother often used: “Ordnung müß sein.” (There must be order) Typisch!

  • @Vonkater
    @Vonkater 2 года назад +2

    Hello Jen and Yvonne ! 😀🤚 Nice to see your smiling faces on RUclips. 😁👍 I'm playing someone on line chess that is from your city Dusseldorf. I asked her about the bike 🚲 lanes and things you mentioned and sent her a link to see your videos. 😁☀️ I guess we will never get a game of chess. 😢 Oh well hope all is well with you two. 😉🇺🇸Keep up the Gut gamacht ! 😎👍🌅

  • @MADHUGUPTA-po1ng
    @MADHUGUPTA-po1ng 2 года назад +2

    I don't understand but my 10months old daughter love to watch your videos

  • @rachaelkramer9746
    @rachaelkramer9746 2 года назад +1

    I just love y’all!

  • @olivia1853
    @olivia1853 2 года назад +1

    The “jo” lips! Jen you made my day! LOL! This is hilarious!! I noticed the “jo lips” very early and I didn’t think of it as cute, but actually just very German and now you just gave it another meaning LOL

  • @andyspark5192
    @andyspark5192 2 года назад +28

    Imagine this. Terminator movie and Schwarzenegger doesn't say "hasta la vista, baby" but
    "Tschüüüß"
    that's terrifying

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад +7

      😅

    • @aw95505
      @aw95505 2 года назад +4

      In spanish dub Schwarzenegger says "Sayonara, baby" ;-)

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 2 года назад

      @@aw95505 😂

  • @michaelbrauner758
    @michaelbrauner758 2 года назад +1

    Ich hab die Serie gebingewatched, genau wie eure Videos😅😂

  • @andreaseder6220
    @andreaseder6220 2 года назад +1

    In bavaria many older people say Trottoir instead of Gehweg

  • @lumina9995
    @lumina9995 2 года назад +2

    Large parts of Germany were for years under French rule under Napoleon, and hundreds of Huguenots (French protestants) immigrated to Germany as well when they were threatened with death by catholic France. The latter mostly moved to Berlin and left a lot of meal names and other words. So that explains the French influence on the language.

  • @PaulinhaVianna
    @PaulinhaVianna 2 года назад +1

    Tschüss has a friendly and melodic tone and Hallo as well! Haáaalloooô!

  • @shrutipillai2705
    @shrutipillai2705 2 года назад +1

    You guys are soooo good!! completely drooling over your content. You'll must get active on Instagram as well.

  • @klausbenker8410
    @klausbenker8410 2 года назад +3

    I own a bike made by a US company called Specialized and I walked by our local Specialized bike shop and they had a Laufrad in the store but they called it a Hotwalk. Living in Canada, I have never seen this before until recently then you mentioned this in your video. They look like a lot of fun for a child.

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 2 года назад +1

      They are a lot of fun an train the ability to balance

  • @PanyaWongpanit
    @PanyaWongpanit 10 месяцев назад +1

    In Thailand, we call a bike without a pedals for a very little kid as a strider. I think this word came from the brand of the bike itself. But this word is commonly used by Thai people.
    One thing I was surprised, when my kids switched to a normal bike with pedals (without training wheels). They could balance the ride and made it conformtably by just one training day.

  • @aceace632
    @aceace632 Год назад +1

    As someone born in the mid 80s I haven't really seen balance bikes when I was a kid. I learned to ride a bike at the age of 6 I think. My father held the back of the bike to help me keeping balance. After some time when I got better he let go of the bike without me realising it. After a few seconds I turned my head and I was surprised seeing him standing there far behind.

  • @theonijkerk3012
    @theonijkerk3012 6 месяцев назад

    We have geese and ducks in the Netherlands and people stop for them when they are crossing. In Gdansk I was returning from a night out in an Uber and there were 2 foxes crossing the street at the pedestrian crossing with the pedestrian light on green.

  • @deborahguthrie8786
    @deborahguthrie8786 2 года назад +1

    I live in North Carolina and in reference to #5 yes, we stop for duck and geese families crossing the road as well. Recently there was a news clip where state troopers had stopped traffic for a young adult bear to cross the road and even followed the bear into the forest to make sure it was out of the traffic.

  • @esztervegvari519
    @esztervegvari519 2 года назад +1

    Lauffahrrad is used for teach the kids how to bike too in Hungary :)

  • @kineko7823
    @kineko7823 Год назад +1

    Regarding the Laufrad: I didn’t know that either! It’s interesting how recent trends develop which you are not aware of if you are not in that life phase even if it’s within your country.
    And yeah, I agree regarding Spanish: I think they are fighting as well.

  • @CeciOchoCero
    @CeciOchoCero Год назад +2

    You made me laugh with this one! Can agree with all the points, but the Laufrad and the "Tschüüüüß" were already also on my own list (which doesn't officially exist, but well... :P).
    PS: Obviously also the ducks/geese thing, but I've seen that in other places and never ran into that situation here.

  • @patrickschindler2583
    @patrickschindler2583 Год назад +1

    At the beginning of the 19th century, Napoleon was also in Germany as a conqueror, and French words have also become common here.

  • @oliverschmitz203
    @oliverschmitz203 2 года назад +1

    schön wieder was von euch zu sehen,in meiner familie hat sich das wort bagage für familie eingebürgert, ich mag das.

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад

      Oh ja das kenne ich auch ‘was für eine Baggage’ 😅

    • @oliverschmitz203
      @oliverschmitz203 2 года назад

      @@simplegermany richtig, oder: wie gehts deiner bagage? :))

  • @doririchard9016
    @doririchard9016 2 года назад +1

    oh Gott, wie lieb und nett ihr seid😘😘🌈🌈🌈

  • @witty2u
    @witty2u 2 года назад +5

    It has to do with the French occupation. That's why we have some French words in our language.
    In Cologne we still say Plumeau for example for a duvet with feather filling.
    Not sure, if you even call this duvet too or if you'd say feather bed. 😅

  • @ContinuumGaming
    @ContinuumGaming 2 года назад +2

    It only gets interrupted if you have "TA" activated in your radio. That is a special functionality radios offer ;).

  • @nomirrors3552
    @nomirrors3552 2 года назад +5

    I had my kids in the US, and my second child was using this kind of bike in Brooklyn, NY. He's 13 now, so at least 10 years ago you could get them in the US. I think the German version is built better, though.

  • @stevenschaeding2336
    @stevenschaeding2336 2 года назад +7

    The French influence on the the German language has been already explained in the previous comments. But the English language has way more french (and Latin) in it.
    Another thing besides Tschüüüüss is the Ciao Ciao. The Italian Tschüss. But somehow sometimes it reminds me of that dog with the blue tongue 🤣😉

  • @joeaverage3444
    @joeaverage3444 10 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of French-German words also still stem from the Napoleonic occupation of much of western and northwestern Germany in the late 1700s and early 1800s, called the Franzosenzeit. The French had a large impact on Germany's government and culture during that time, which led to many French words being adopted into German, some of which are still today part of the German vernacular.

  • @alexanderblume5377
    @alexanderblume5377 Год назад +1

    Y are so funny!

  • @zlykluk1
    @zlykluk1 2 года назад

    In CZ is the pre-bike called odrážedlo, quickly gegoogled and it looks it came here at 1996. And since then there goes discussion if it is more of harm (bone growth) or help (sense of balance).

  • @rickyn1135
    @rickyn1135 2 года назад +4

    I want one of those Pookie bikes as an adult, when I don’t want to walk. Lol. Yes,we have them and in the the last ten years more common.
    In America I still say,”Bye. Bye”,not “Goodbye”. It’s the same as your Tschuuuuuuuuuüs. Usually children or young teens say “Bye,Bye”. This code made me smile big and laugh,too. Hugs. From California

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад +1

      Hahaha thanks for the insights Ricky!

  • @Mia-jx3hv
    @Mia-jx3hv 2 года назад +2

    In addition to my informations:
    Unter französischer Besatzung war die offizielle Sprache die französische Sprache, es durfte nur französisch gesprochen werden. Die Schulen stellten sich darauf ein, auf den Schulen wurde zunächst die französische Sprache als erste Fremdsprache gelehrt.
    Diese Information stammt von meinem Vater.

  • @f1nn0
    @f1nn0 2 года назад +2

    When my kids were early learlers. The funny story about my son at abt 2 1/2 is that I went inside to find a stick so to give a hand. WHAT. When I came back he was biking on his own like a pro. WHAT? My daughter of three drove like a master at 3. Oh yeah they should have had a spank in their behinds, but a kiss instead was the reward :-) (here in Denmarrk)
    And you two are so sweet together. With love :-)

    • @simplegermany
      @simplegermany  2 года назад +1

      Wow, both super young when they learned to cycle! That’s really cool 🙂

  • @echtwaibel6015
    @echtwaibel6015 2 года назад +3

    Ich habe auch mit Stützrädern Radfahrern gelernt.

  • @citycobra5014
    @citycobra5014 Год назад +1

    gestreamt, gedownloaded, gesampelt, etc.
    i know that there are some french words like "etui" or "portemonnaie,", or even "restaurant". but i don't pay any attention anymore that these are actually french words and i am using them in my language for decades now. I just know they are of french origin, and i use them as i use english words in the meantime and also ver-denglische englisch words. F.E. if i ordered something, sometimes i call it "bestellt" (ordered in german) or ge-ordered.
    i have learnd to ride a bycicle still with "Stützräder" way back when i was young.
    Btw. what is THE english word in german...? Pullover. It literally means that you pull something (some clothes) over.

  • @karlknapp2798
    @karlknapp2798 2 года назад +1

    Das habe ich dir doch gestern e-gemailt 🤣

  • @YukiMoonlight
    @YukiMoonlight 2 года назад +1

    A while back I watched a video from 'Arte' where they listed some french words that are used in the German language and up until this point I had never thought about it. Some were specific to the west but since I'm from the west I was like *surprised Pikachu face* half the time.
    Yvonne probably knows ''Plümo''. (Plumeau) And that word even means something else in French. I heard it's mostly used in the Rhineland and other Germans won't even understand 'Plümo'.

  • @suzannes5888
    @suzannes5888 2 года назад +5

    WAIT...I wanna know who lives in a country that doesn't stop for geese ?!! 🤔
    Also, I think the word Jen was looking for at :48 is "participle" (it rhyms with icecycle) - it means: a word formed from a verb (e.g., going, gone, being, been ) and used as an adjective (e.g., working woman, burned toast ) or a noun (e.g., good breeding ). In English, participles are also used to make compound verb forms (e.g., is going, has been).

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Год назад +2

      In Sweden near a park with water I saw a traffic warning sign with a text like "watch out for ducks that cross the street".

  • @Ati-MarcusS
    @Ati-MarcusS 2 года назад +1

    geliked, a frenche one Trottwa-Gehweg

  • @JakobFischer60
    @JakobFischer60 2 года назад +2

    It is still not clear whether it is "geupdated" oder "upgedated".

  • @alessandrof2421
    @alessandrof2421 2 года назад +1

    I work in Italy for a german Company, they call the weekly meeting jour fix

  • @dagmarszemeitzke
    @dagmarszemeitzke 2 года назад +1

    We said also Trottoire for Bürgersteig or Gehweg

  • @linwo
    @linwo 10 месяцев назад

    As foreigner living in Germany, I heard lots of time in office,' Ist das Safe ?'

  • @paulsj9245
    @paulsj9245 2 года назад +2

    Love this video!
    #3: French was important in my upbringing in the Rhineland of the 1960s. Whenever there was a subject not suitable to us children, the grown-ups would conspire: "Pas avant (les enfants)!"
    On the lighter side, Tünnes is said to have observed an accident in Cologne (french word!) of the early 1800s: "La Pääd, la Foot, la Finsterschief!" What was the official record?
    And there's a lot in between, containing the Eau de Cologne (sic!) "4711". In plain German: Napoleon ist an allem schuld!
    #4: Stützräder! You beat me to it!

    • @Bruno_Haible
      @Bruno_Haible 2 года назад

      "Pas avant les enfants"? In French it is "Pas devant les enfants".

    • @paulsj9245
      @paulsj9245 2 года назад +1

      @@Bruno_Haible Maybe I remember wrongly, ou c'est un faux ami (?)

  • @dxler2921
    @dxler2921 2 года назад +1

    Possible reason for # 2: Germany had been occupied by France (by Napoleon) and therefore French terms were adopted in the German language.
    It is also interesting that many of the laws that Napoleon passed were adopted into German law, e.g. the divorce of a marriage because there were no divorces before Napoleon's rule in Germany.
    Yvonne should actually know why the Carnival Guard wear a blue uniform and a pointed hat ...

  • @bi0530
    @bi0530 2 года назад +6

    Is it gedownloaded or downgeloaded - ich bin nie sicher...

    • @SilvaLuna
      @SilvaLuna 2 года назад +3

      Ich glaube da es eh kein "richtiges" deutsches Wort ist kannst du beides sagen 🤷

    • @pattyfairytale4024
      @pattyfairytale4024 2 года назад +1

      @@SilvaLuna nur möglichst nicht schreiben : keins von beiden

    • @roelli79
      @roelli79 2 года назад +1

      In Germany we don't say gedownloadet or downgeloadet, we say "runtergeladen" and I think that's beautiful. ;)

  • @kimgrundmann6894
    @kimgrundmann6894 2 года назад +1

    Das stammt noch aus der Napoleonischen Zeit als Deutschland 39 Fürstentümer war und fast alles besetzt wurde durch Napoleon. 4711 zum Beispiel ist die Hausnummer des Geschäfts.

  • @betteryou5210
    @betteryou5210 Год назад +1

    0:45 - gegoogelt, not gegoogled

  • @Kivas_Fajo
    @Kivas_Fajo 2 года назад +1

    Approximately 1/3 of modern German consists of words of French origin. That's why they are pronounced French as well as are the English lean words pronounced Englisch...and all that with German together mixed.

  • @aliaxuvu._.7643
    @aliaxuvu._.7643 2 года назад +4

    I didn't even know I speak also french :o

  • @klausundderblauenugget632
    @klausundderblauenugget632 2 года назад

    Die französischen Worte hat uns Napoleon geschenkt.😄

  • @MrBenedictus25
    @MrBenedictus25 2 года назад +1

    Also we austrians use lots of french words.
    Vis a Vis, Basain, ( weiß jetzt nicht genau wie man das Waschbecken in Franze schreibt.), Michellin. ( was wir richtig aussprechen und die Deutschen nicht). und die im Video erwähnten auch. Wir haben auch noch Plafond. ( decke as in Sealing), Mezzanin ein Zwichenstockwerk in gebäuden.
    I heard that we use so many of them because at the courts of the Austrian Empire people liked to speak French for some reason.
    And some words stuck and were used by the People too.

  • @chrisweiss3904
    @chrisweiss3904 2 года назад +9

    Ich habe das gedownloaded.
    Ich habe das downgeloaded.
    Er hat das gehighlightet.
    Er hat das highgelightet.

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 2 года назад

      gemailt, gecheckt, gechillt, geyoutubed....

    • @fannychristozova8158
      @fannychristozova8158 2 года назад

      That's an interesting point there, really made me think of it. However, I believe such word formations should stick to going like ge-the whole word-conjugation ending where applicable, instead of separating the word by inserting the ge- part in the logical middle of a word... because then that would have to create a whole new language or dialect or special cases grammar. I don't know, I just feel like it comes more natural to have the ge- part followed by the whole English word, and to have that word actually pronounced in its correct English way. Seen it a lot already. 🙂

  • @tinkerwithstuff
    @tinkerwithstuff 2 года назад

    You two are some goofballs ;) Talking about cultural this and that, but never without some funny faces here and there :D
    Love of French language: I think Germans (depending on social group) try to pronounce any foreign loan words as close to the original as they can manage, unless _maybe_ if there is a long standing bad pronunciation around - then not even the French are safe. Und wenn de mir dit nich globst, denn jeh ick uff'n _Balkong_ und ruf' meen' _Koseng_ an, der wird da schon wieda zur _Rehsong_ bring', wa.

  • @dreasbn
    @dreasbn 2 года назад +1

    Italian is singing, Spanish is gunfire 😂 and in Rhineaerea it’s more Tschö

  • @lauramza
    @lauramza Год назад +1

    Yeah my boyfriend uses amörchen to call me amor from Spanish 😊 germanising words

  • @SvenScholz
    @SvenScholz 2 года назад +1

    "Tschüss" ist btw. ebenfalls ein Lehnwort, wahrscheinlich aus dem Spanischen, und damit ein eingedeutschtes "Adios"

  • @patriciavogel2318
    @patriciavogel2318 2 года назад +1

    Das war sehr lustig.

  • @danielr.5785
    @danielr.5785 2 года назад +1

    There are more French words German often use: Baguette, Crossaint (but spoken Krossong), Bidet, Cremé, Et cetera, (!) Merci, S ´il vous plait,

  • @ladida5707
    @ladida5707 Год назад +1

    thank you are funny without even noting, i took my nation ;)

  • @rolandscherer1574
    @rolandscherer1574 2 года назад +1

    Friedrich der Große hat kaum Deutsch gesprochen, aber fließend französisch - und der war Preuße! Der Adel sprach französisch in Deutschland. Tschüüüüs (Tschö, Adee, ...) ist auch ein französisches Wort: á dieu! kaum wiederzuerkennen.
    Ihr habt Fahrrad fahren gelernt mit Stützrädern - ich mit angeschrammten Knien.
    Deutsche überfahren keine Enten - das würde das Auto versauen!

  • @Mia-jx3hv
    @Mia-jx3hv 2 года назад +1

    'Stützräder' - ' supporting wheels'

  • @danielr.5785
    @danielr.5785 2 года назад

    Tschüüüüsss!!!