American was shocked by Europeans' English Differences!!
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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🇺🇸 Shallen
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🇫🇷 Athalane
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🇮🇹 Selena
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🇵🇱 Aylie
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🇩🇪 Sarah
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🇪🇸 Lola
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🇧🇪 Ednar
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🇩🇰 Sophia
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🎧Music
incompetech.com...
incompetech.com/
It annoys me that they don't get that German, Danish, English and Flemish are all Germanic languages and therefore obviously have similar words and origin, it shouldn't be surprising!!!
Don't be too hard on the young ladies 😉
Plus, some origins from the Latin language
Those are basic from primary school. Should be hard on them. To be so ingnorant is sad in XXI century.
American girl didn't know Italia is the same thing as Italy, don't be surprised xd
Every time I watch these videos, I think the exact same thing. I’m pretty sure that all the Germanic-languages-speaking girls know that their languages have the same origin and I always wonder why they are not saying anything. It annoys me - a German native speaker - every time tbh. 😅
3:02 Yeah, and we also have a lot of Aldi's, Carrefour's, Netto's and Auchan's in Poland
Leviathan,Lidl,le clerc a z polskich to dino,społem,Polo market
I am a Polish Girl living in germany and its very cool hearing them both.
I'm one as well! It's nice to see both languages compared
Yeah, i'm an half marsian, and half mongolian girl living in an desert island. Real question here is: who asked ;)
@@MxKxz Imagine being mad that people post random stuff on a Social Media platform where everyone posts Random stuff omg😭
@@nekonyla Ja das ist wahr, vorallem weil die Osteuropäischen sprachen selten in solchen Videos sind!
@@nikamuszynska6315 Yeah, righT?!
The italian, polish and American - my types 😳
Polish *
8:39 The German word for free is "frei" and "Tag" is day so an easy conclusion is that it means free day but that's actually not true because it derived from the old germanic/nordic goddess Freya. (langobardic: Frea; southgerman: Freya / Frija; oldgerman: Frigga; Nordic: Frigg)
In the Romans (Roman Empire) 's seven days week Friday "dies Veneris" is the day of the goddess Venus ( Goddess of Love ), when South Germans adapted the roman seven days week they named the day after their similar goddess of love and marriage Frija/Freya (south german) (Edit: She is called "Frigga" in old german and "Frigg" in nordic languages; langobardic: Frea). As English has it's origins in the old germanic language (anglo-saxons) the Fri( j ) in Friday is of the same origin: the goddess Freya/Frija.
yup, just like other days of the week in german and/or english like Diens/Tues (Tyr's), Wednes (Wotan's), Donners/Thurs (Thor's)
Genau, aber es scheint so als ob das Wort "frei" eventuell mit dem Namen Freya verwandt ist, eine alte ungültige Schreibweise für frei ist "frey" und die Wörter sind sich schon ziemlich ähnlich
@@clintwestwood3046 nein wir sagen heutzutage Mittwoch, nicht Wodenstag/Wodanstag, im Englischen sagt man Wednesday was von Wodan/Wotan kommt, aber nicht immer deutschen (Mittwoch=middle of week)
@@Volzotran Ich weiß man... Deswegen habe ich Mittwoch auch nicht erwähnt
@sjakke85 sources? My sources clearly stated its from Freya.
5'50: in France we Say "voiture"...
It's written "auto" in the translation :
We also use "auto" but it's realy rare in curent language, it's more use for magazines or TV shows, or realy old way to speak.
Sorry for my english, ...so long time i didn't practice.
In Yorkshire (Northern England) you would say "Ey Up" which is of old East Norse origin, Swedish "Sey upp" but it actually means "Look up" in both, but people in Yorkshire think it means "hello"
Venerdi refers to Venere ancient roman goddess (and also greek before), it's not after the planet, which also probably took the name identified with the ancient goddess
Athalane looks like a goddess.
A girl from Denmark says that some Polish words are similar to Danish words. I think it may be due to the fact that in ancient times Slavic pirates, equivalent to the Vikings, plundered Danish lands and maybe some words have remained in the vocabulary to our times
She didn't say that. She said the other ones were more similar, where polish and Danish were more unique. Danish and Polish are definitely not similar languages.
Could you put some more Slavic languages like Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Estonia, Serbia, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Slovakia and so on? 😊
TIL Netto is a danish company. A lot of Nettos in Germany, too. And AFAIK there are a few german supermarket companies in the US, because the US was bad at the discounter thing and the german chains found it an easy market, see also Wallmart failing miserably in Germany. Both ALDI chains and Lidl are there, AFAIK.
The day thing indeed comes from nordic gods. Wednesday comes from Wodan, the germanic incarnation of Oden, Thursday was mentioned (and the german Donnerstag is the same, Donner means thunder) as was Friday. I think at least one other day name comes also from the Aesir, but I don't remember.
Polish girl obviously the most beautiful, but Italian, French and American are also good lookin'
says the Polish guy LOL
The polish girl is the most beautiful girl of them all😊
French girl and italian girl enter the chat.
I didn't know the German supermarket Netto is located in Poland, too. Haha, I think Aldi is known worldwide but the biggest German supermarket franchise is "EDEKA". I know some shops from thr Netherlands, Czech and Austria like Billa, Hema and Albert Heijn and yes, Aldi is in Austria and the Netherlands, too. In Austria its called "Hofer".
I was curious about supermarkets inside and outside of Germany because I live in Germany and sometimes went shopping abroad in neighboring countries to get to know what their supermarkets were called, but looking them up in the internet is actually easier, also because that way, you can also find out about their groupings. For instance, what is now known as Netto once used to be known as Plus. Plus, Kaiser and Tengelmann was once owned by the Tengelmann supermarket group. However in more recent years, the Tengelmann group ran into financial difficulties and was disolved soon afterwards. Along came the EDEKA Group and bought up the Plus Discounter Supermarkets, renaming them Netto but keeping the discounter state. Thus, the EDEKA Group now owns Netto, EDEKA, E-Center, Nahkauf, Nah und Gut and MarktKauf. I thought that this group was only concentrated on German territory, though, without expansions to countries like northern Switzerland or Austria where german is also spoken. So learning now that Netto also got a foothold in Poland is rather unexspected...
Have they changed their minds about expanding beyond German borders?
There is another Group that originated in Germany but is now known beyond Europe by the name of Schwarz- Gruppe. It is known for Lidl-Supermarkets (discounters) and for Kaufland. Lidl has expanded westward to as far as North America as far as I know, whereas Kaufland seems to be known at least in Poland, Chzechia and Slovacia(?). So at least Lidl is establihed in other European countries, as I saw for myself.
@@2RANbit Also ich kann wohl auch auf Deutsch antworten, da wir wohl beide Deutsche sind. Das meiste wussten ich schon, wobei ich erst dachte Plus sei von Penny bzw. REWE aufgeworden. Bis auf ALDI kenne ich tatsächlich auch keine deutsche Supermarktkette im Ausland.
Sa dwa NETTO jeden skandynawski
2:10 my fave "Shark-joke" is: Treffen sich zwei Fische, sagt der eine "Hi", sagt der andere: "wo?"
Finally person from Poland
Hihi
Am I the only one shocked by the fact that the girl from the US always says "In America, we say..." ? America is not just the US, hellooo
Just need to add Vrijdag in Dutch also comes from Freyja the Norse/ Germanic goddess and also worshipped to some degree by the Franks before Catholicism became their state religion.
Has anybody questioned why there re 7 days in a week?
I mean, not just from european culture, but arab culture as well. And probably in many other cultures.
In my traditional calendar (jawa/javanese culture), we got only 5 days a week.
@Riccardo Venturi Totally wrong answer. 90% of the nations of the world have 7 days, because they are the days of the moon phases, simply. The moon has 28 phases of the moon, which in turn divide into 7
@@erosgritti5171 So, what is the first day according to your theory?
And why it didnt become rather 4 days a week or 14 days a week?
@Riccardo Venturi Good point.
But thats from judeo-christianity alone.
In islam The Creator doesnt need to rest.
Quran 7:54
Indeed, your Lord is Allah, who created the heavens and earth in six days and then established Himself above the Throne. He covers the night with the day, [another night] chasing it rapidly; and [He created] the sun, the moon, and the stars, subjected by His command. Unquestionably, His is the creation and the command; blessed is Allah, Lord of the worlds.
People thought there were 7 planets, including the moon and the sun. Each day for each planet, or its respective god
Abrahamic religions.
How mind-blowing that languages that come from the same origin are similar🤯😂😂
Not "Bianco Neve" (subtitles),
It is "BiancA Neve"
The word for "car" in for example Danish (and Swedish since it's my language) - bil - and German - auto - actually comes from the same word - automobil. We just took differnt parts from it :p
trust the polish person to explain the sound as [ʐ] in a word where it gets pronounced as [ʂ]
Dzień dobry Grafie :)
*Polish, mości hrabio.
Technically in italian we should say "Automobile", and that's why we say Auto as an abbreviation. Macchina is partially incorrect because it should be used more for machine in general
In America, automobile would be the more technical or formal version, but car is more common version. We use both here, so I was surprised that the American girl didn’t say anything after hearing the other languages.
Non incorretto, ma impreciso
L'automobile è effettivamente una macchina
Yasss Belgium !!
Monday (moon) - Lunes, lundi wtc (la luna)
martes, mardi etc
(mars)
miercoles, mercredi etc (mercury) - wednesday (god woden=Odin)
Thursday etc. (Thor) jeudi (zeus, the greek god.. I think)
Friday, freitag, etc. (Freya)
Saturday (saturn) sabado, Σαββατο (idk the etymology)
Dimanche, domingo, Κυριακή, etc not sûrement but I think they've got in common the meaning of "dominant" which is referred to Sunday as "the day of god" - sunday (sun)
Actually two more countries from the list of nationalities have the aurora, but it stretches the imagination slightly. The Arctic Council has eight members, and these are the countries to occupy land in the Arctic Circle, and these include both the US - because of Alaska - and Denmark - because of Greenland! Enjoy the northern lights girls! :)
For French she said “Voiture” not “Auto”
They didn't seem to connect the dots that it's automobile - meaning, auto and bil comes from the same thing
The voice of Spain girl is like magic ❤
Lola's voice is very soothing
YES BELGIUM!!!!
U good?
but she's from Gent and can't pronounce the 'r' properly haha. But still good!
@@irissupercoolsy Still beter than someone from Antwerp who can't pronounce i or Limburg who can't not sing. But all are still beter than West Flanders which can't pronounce the language properly.
@@Killerwale-hk4wy hahahahaha TRUE
@@Killerwale-hk4wy I'm guessing you're from the East flanders outside Ghent or Vlaams-Brabant?
Le moment où la Française dit « voiture » et que les sous-titres écrivent « auto » 😂
From America lol from the US
Are here any polish people?
I,m from denmark, so its very funny to hear their reaction!
Me ,too = også mig 😅🙃👍✌️💎🌈
I’am ita 🫡
Ciao(Hello)
I love how any languege have the same pronuncament but whit that pronuncament
As an italian... wtf is "il gigante"?? never heard about that woman!! 🤣
In Indonesia 🇮🇩 we say :
1. Shark : Hiu 🦈
2. Supermarket : Supermarket 🛒 (Carrefour, Lotte, AEON)
3. Snow White : Putri Salju 👸🏻 (Putri Mean Princess and Salju mean Snow)
4. Hamburger : Hamburger 🍔 (like Italian sound)
5. Car : Mobil 🚙 (from Automobile)
6. Louis Vuitton : sound like Poland
7. Friday : Jum'at (from Arabic)
ty, I'm learning Indonesian, I'll write these words
Hmm... Actually, the belgian version of "shark" is from Flanders, which much the same as in dutch in the Netherlands, so it is most likely written "haai".
fun fact. the hamburger is actually an cheesburger xD
Cheeseburger is a type of hamburger
nah, it's a resident of a city in northern germany
The subtitles piss me off sometimes, they are not 100% correct
History student here: The explanation with the gods and the weeks of the day is true.
Monday = Moon Day, Tuesday = Tiw's Day, Wednesday = Woden/Odin's Day, Thursday = Thor's Day, Friday = Frigg's Day, Saturday = Saturn's Day, Sunday = Sun's Day.
POLAND FOR EVER 🇵🇱
The "Esselunga" killed me ( 3:58 )
Pure a me lmao
Let's go Polska!
The subtitles are always wrong. French girl said "Voiture" for car, not "Auto"
Fun fact: Danish and Swedish are pretty similar when it comes to writing or reading text but when speaking....ERROR 😂 In Sweden we usually say that the Danish people sound like they talk with porridge in their mouth 😅 I'm not hating on Denmark though 🙏😁 people can of course make fun of Sweden as well 😂😉
I would say that Danish and Norwegian sounds more similar with the harsher sounds, Swedish is more soft, bubbly ; )
And I do not speak any of those, but I watch a lot of nordic noir series : > and I definitely can diffrentiate Swedish from other scandic languages
Av, det var ikke sødt sagt
@@PropertyOfK Swedish and Norwegian sound alike and Danish and Norwegian look alike (written).
Being a linguist it's actually pretty painful to look at them talk about languages when they clearly don't know what they're talking about.
I don't mean it in a rude way or anything. I just wish schools would teach more about linguistics. People are completely oblivious to how their own language works, that's not normal.
(I think the French girl doesn't even know that there are different [R] sounds in French, or the English girl just realizing that german languages are things in common).
exactly. i know more stuff than them and i still didnt even go to uni, but i learned this stuff in a linguistic high school
You're a linguist, but then you write "german languages" instead of "Germanic languages"??? German and Germanic are NOT synonyms.
@@andyx6827 This is the first video I saw when I woke up. I was not fully awake when I wrote it.
If the only thing you get from my comment is a typo that's too bad for you.
@@angelica2269 Which country are you from? It's amazing that they teach you some linguistics (even the basics).
I'm not even sure most people in France know what a linguist is😅
I had basic linguistics on Indo-European languages in my last year of secondary school (in Belgium). It truly made it easier to learn related languages ‘cause I could focus my attention on the unique aspects
Short nitpicking: Freitag is NOT free day but Freyas day, and what's another pronunciation of the goddess Freya? Frigga, so fridag or friday - basically in all germanic languages the 5th day is the day of Freya.
Monday / Montag - The day of the MOON
Dienstag / Tuesday - The day of TYR or ZIU
Mittwoch / Wednesday - Middle of the week in german / Wodan's day in english
Donnerstag / Thursday - the day of DONAR or THOR
Freitag / Friday - The day of FREYA or FRIGGA
Samstag / Saturday - The day of the SABBATH in romanic languages and german or the day of SATURN in english
Sonntag / Sunday - The day of the SUN
The Polish girl isn't 'Aylie', she's 'Anna', and if you want to say it shorter it's 'Ania' (as she said). Greetings from Poland :)
Zamknij dupe
@@Megagrzybek123 I tak Cię pozdrawiam i życzę mądrzejszego dobierania słów do wypowiedzi :) nie warto wyrażać swojego zdania w taki sposób. Jak chcesz, żeby w przyszłości to wyglądało lepiej (aby nie urażać kogoś każdą wypowiedzią) to możesz popatrzeć na mój komentarz, który napisałam tylko jako drobną korektę do filmu, który ogółem mi się bardzo podobał, bo uważam, że warto pokazywać takie różnice. Napisałam to uprzejmie i z szacunkiem do innych, nikogo tym wpisem nie uraziłam. Jeszcze raz cię serdecznie pozdrawiam :)
😂😂😂🤦🏻♂️
@@Natasza1988 przepraszam Nataszo. Nie byłem sobą, byłem pijany. Pozdrawiam
@@Megagrzybek123 Zamknij dupe
The polish girl's diction is so beautiful! Also her name is Ania, not Aylie
Yeah, but didn't see name issue here, sh1tstrom is unnecessary. That translates directly to english name Ann/Annie. End of topic, thank you, have a greamt time! xD
@@MxKxz Ania is Anne not some weird Aylie ...
@@MxKxz Ania doesn’t translate to Aylie 😂🤣 Ania translates to Anna or Ann. No need to feel offended. All of us learn sth new every day, so embrace it and don’t be ignorant lol
Aylie is what she named herself on instagram, thats why Aylie
about SnowWhite Poles say "królewna śnieżka" with translate as "princess snowball"
How could you make name "Ania" into "Aylie" for Polish girl? Like, how? xD
Aylie is her instagram username so it's not like they made it up, she just uses that nickname
@@sokjabkowy8821 But she introduced herself as Ania,all the other girls have their names written
Didn't 'Sarah' not call herself 'Larah' as well?
As a czech I have to shout out support to the polish lady :)
As a Pole the Czech Republic is wonderful. Would go again.
More Slavic languages please
This is a woke channel, what did you expect xD
@@frog382 Care to explain?
🇷🇺🇵🇱🇧🇾🇨🇿🇲🇪🇸🇰🇷🇸🇺🇦, the woke channels will never promote the conservative anti eu establishment countries especially Poland
@@jimbell122 but those are the goverments that are like tjis. not the people
Yes, more Slavic languages :)
As an American I'm kind of shocked by how little Shallen knows about language and culture... especially European languages
Especially when you consider she's apparently a big-time runway model who travels the world, but it's good that she seems to be making an effort to learn now.
yea shes really dumb, when the danish girl tells her that the weekdays come from nordic gods, and the us girl say "I hear that but Idk if its accurate tho", SO RUDE, she just told you, thats her culture, thats the origin of your language dumbfk, jeezuz
as an europian that travels oftne to the usa, im not shocked at all, this feels like an avarage im not elaving usa except maybe for canada type of american (and well with how huge usa is i can understand that ofc)
i thought that too, i was almost wondering if she was playing it up for the "shock" factor of the video
As an English person who has only ever lived in England I thought Shallen did fine ! , seven different nations and languages to try and keep on top of cannot be easy while on camera .
"What country you wanna go to?"
"Paris"
so American 🤣
but she obvs didn't imply Paris was a country 😅
@@annabnrd she said she wants to go to Paris....how does that mean she only knows Paris????
"I've always wanted to go to Paris, so France."
Troll fail.
Polish sounds so beautiful definitely I just unblocked a new wish: travel to Poland
Make sure to take wock to support polish community
@@soker2047 wdym?
@@izzydaizzy3745 "i took the wok to poland"
Maybe not right now tho 😫
@@stienvanhoof179 Because of the war in Ukraine? Poland is super safe even right now.
Fun fact: the Polish word for shark "rekin" likely comes from the French "requin". We have a lot of words borrowed from French lol.
"rekin" is the more popular version but not the official one, officially a shark is "żarłacz"
@@2sebtember721 Not true, "rekin" is a general name for any shark, whereas "żarłacz" pertains only to the genus Carcharodon, e.g. Carcharodon carcharias (great white shark).
@@lothariobazaroff3333 Okay, I read and found out that "żarłaczowate" (Carcharhinidae) and "rekinowate" (Scyliorhinidae) are families of animals (lat. familia) that belong to the order of animals (lat. ordo) "żarłaczokształtne" (Carcharhiniformes)
Yeah I noticed the German and the Polish words for hair-dresser come from the French word.
So cool, didn't know both our languages had so many words in common! Love from france
Why is it titled like that? They don't discuss Europeans' English. They talk about words in their native languages
☕
cause it is a clickbait title to get the most viewers possible
clickbait obviously
Yes.. absolutely annoying...
The latin for car is "automobile", literally "self-moving". Most European languages shortened it to the first part, "auto". In Scandinavia, we shortened it to the last part, "bil".
Samochód also means literally self moving :P
Automobile is still italian, not latin
@@luigidomenicopace1329 this is the most stupid comment ever. U do know italian comes from Latin right?
@@gugugaga1233 Do you know that latins didnt have cars?
@@gugugaga1233 And if you want to be precise and not a sucky sucky like you are, you should know that "auto" comes from ancients greek "Αυτός" which means "self". Go study baby boi
I love how they ask the french what is the closest pronunciation for Luis Vuitton and she answers Blegium and everyone is like of course yeah what a surprise!! but the american girl is sitting there having no idea what they are talking about lol
I have no idea too, explain please?
@@ggerdagg French is one of Belgium's three national languages and even the Dutch-speaking people in Belgium (such as the girl in the video) often come into contact with the French language and speak Dutch with more French influence than people from the Netherlands. Also many Flemish (Dutch-speaking Belgians) learn French at school.
@@mrstrategy9763 Yep pretty much. We, the Dutch, also have a few 'borrowed' words from the French but not nearly as much as the Flemish because they're basically in between us and the French. But it's still easily 200 words like abonnement, coupe, affaire, décor, camping, chantage and so much more. We also learn French at school still, although we can pick between German and French. The majority chooses German because the chance we come in contact with Germany is much larger.
@@hagelslag9312 LOVE your RUclips name. Without saying another word Every Dutch person in the world would recognize that you are from the Netherlands :)
For those not understanding: 'hagelslag' is how the Dutch name their (chocolate) sprinkles. We also have sprinkles that are not of chocolate, so that's why that word is in parenthesis.
@@gardenjoy5223 its called "shit of mousse" 😉😂
Funny to have two groups of languages that are super similar: French, Italian, Spanish and German, Danish and Dutch
It wasn't Dutch, it was Flamish. Slight difference in both vocabulary and pronounciation. Dutch is spoken in The Netherlands, Flamish in Belgium.
@@TheQRec I know it’s Flemish, but the girl in the video alternated between calling it Dutch and Flemish. A lot of Belgian people call it Dutch, so that’s what I went with in my comment. And either way, it’s still similar to German and Danish, which was what stood out to me 🤷🏼♀️
Germanic Gang vs Latin Gang
I wouldn't say French is "super similar" to italian and spanish
so annoying when the danish girl told them that the weekdays come from nordic gods, the german and belgian were silent, and the us girl said "I heard that but Idk if its accurate tho", SO RUDE, she just told you, its her culture, its the origin of your language, stfu
Finally! Someone who represents Polish language with a perfect pronounciation and diction. It's pleasing to hear Ania's talking ❤ I've seen too many videos like this one, where Poland was represented by some person speaking with a strong American accent and not sounding Polish at all because the only contact with Poland was through their family roots. But actually Polish is a beautiful language, which you can hear when someone speaks it fluently 😊
i'm confused as to why they used very similar languages, it would be way more interesting to have one from each langueage family
I think the point was to see how different words can be in related languages.
Seeing how a word can slightly change from a country to another is also interesting, for example « Hai » was pretty unexpected
Interesting! I'm just a little bit sorry that there was only Polish representative of many European Slavic languages. Languages inside Germanic and Latin groups are quite similar, it's obvious.
Fun fact about polish word for car - "samochód": literall meaning is self walking. Original proposed name was "samojedź" (self driving), but it sounded to similar to Samoyed, and at the time people was affraid of Samoydes due to scary stories and predujice.
So the polish word is very similar to "automobile" which gets shortened to "auto" in many languages.
Samochod in Russian would have meaning like "self going"
*Polish = polski Tak trudno zapamiętać?
@@HappyBeezerStudios *Polish
@@CarriettaCarrieWhite interesting fact, if someone says in Russian "samoyed" it would be understood as the man eating himself.
Wow Ania is so beautiful.
there’s a polish player called krzysztof piatek, which i have just found out means christopher friday
That's true 😁
im polish, the polish girl said "hey my name is Ania" Ania comes from Anna, which obviously can be loosely translated as english Anne, why is it Alyie in subtitles huh
Some ppl say here it's her nickname on ig. Still doesn't make any sense when others' names were kinda translated.
You should polish your English! A little bit.
@@swetoniuszkorda5737
what's wrong about it, I mean yeah maybe it's not the most well-organized sentence and the structure is weird and messy cause thats my style of writing but is there anything wrong... im asking just from curiousity, I've scored 88% in high school final exams last year and I dont feel like I have any problems with english idk
Also yeah Im aware of making sometimes a mistake like giving a wrong idk particule or whatever like everyone non-native english speaker is happened to do, but in general Im quite fluent and dont make such big mistakes.. Whats that comment about
I felt personally attacked for no reason but Im confident and self-aware and I know my abilities, qualities, knowledge, byee
@@asiabrzezinska3867 Nie ma co się stroszyć. Po prostu po angielsku przymiotniki oznaczające narodowość piszemy wielką literą, inaczej niż w j.polskim. "Polish" , "English" ... .A "polish" oznacza 1.(shoe~) pastę do butów 2. polerować, wygładzać etc. Nagminny błąd Polaków, piszących po angielsku. I wqrfiający deczko. Ja tak mam przynajmniej i nie chcę tego leczyć. Miłego dnia!
Yesss finally at least a mention of Czech Replublic in these videos xD Please include some Czechs in your videos! Especially the language guessing ones
These young ladies live in South Korea as they are English teachers in international schools there.
I love Czech language specially with Polish and Slovak to compare, there are so many funny language relations between these languages 😅
@@maaamyto4360 very true!😄
I like Anna. I'm from Czech republic so thanks for mention us!
You should include Greek because it is a lot different and it will add to the variety of the concept.
Yeah, greek would be so interesting 😊
And not just Greek. Other Balkan languages as well.
And next, someone will demand romanian, or hungarian ...
@@Eysenbeiss you re right. The oldest spoken language in Europe is just another demand by somebody.
Fr, ngl I was happy to see Poland something new, but in general most basic countries that we all see it’s kind of tiring. I wish more representation for Eastern Europe, Greek, Albanian, Romanian, Bulgarian something else than french, Spanish and German everyone knows how they sound
Belgium is one of the most "extreme" European country. This small country has two very different languages spoken with germanic and Latin origins.
Ever heard of switzerland? Haha
Yes, Switzerland as well!
Wait untill you hear Limburgish (actually getting more recognizion as a language) and West Flemish. So small yet still very diverse in dialects.
And in Spain we have Euskera (from the Basque Country) which is the only language on the Peninsula that doesn't come from Latin and has its own origin. It doesn't come from any other European language. Apart from Euskera, in Spain there are more co-official languages shared with Spanish (of Latin origin, of course).
You must be from US to say that. hahaha
Świetnie nas reprezentowałaś Ania! Dobra robota :)
Yes, congrats Ania 🙏❤️
I was born in Poland (Polish mom, Danish dad), then moved to Sweden when I was 1 and then came to Denmark in '95, so all this Danish and Polish just makes me smile haha.
And as someone else pointed out, the Polish lady's name was wrong on the screen. A little interesting fact, is that all feminine names in Poland end with an A ;)
the best videos are always with several people from different countries, especially when they are new countries, Denmark and Belgium
• Men make = Civilzation - Thriive for mankind (Creature of Creation) made things.t i.e. money, greed, lust, etc.
• Ceaseless creator (1), created = Nature = Original (earth, sky and water) and its creatures like mankind, birds, fish, etc.
o EARTH : 1. Culture 1 Character 1 (sign and feeelings)
o Men made (195 +) Countries ( + culture)
o Humankind = Amazing. Epitome ex: mind, brain, body, can think, can communicate, etc.
Ceaseless Creator (1), creatgion = world (Earth, Water, Sky)
Mankind make = worldly items, facilities, etc.
Ceaseless Creator (1), Created = Equally
Mankind make = Supiriority, Divide
Originally man and female are equal and Man made it separated. People projected it differently and bad
men made = divide example: religion, rich & poor, politics, facilities, etc.
Some people have divided and destroyed the Oneness and beauty in several pieces like countries, religion, Sub-religion, God, Politics, Color, Ethnic,etc.and as rich and poor.
Selflessness - Creator’s gift.
Selfish - men made. Enough of Man made things like shit - tool in closet.
Natural life : the period of a person's earthly existence terminated by natural as opposed to civil death OR the expected span of a person's life or a thing's existence under normal circumstances.
Civilization describes a complex way of life that came about as people began to develop networks of urban settlements.
Life - that is gifted by Ceaseless Creator of Elysium .
World - Body - by earth - with - parent’s participation
Human life (active) = i. Life ii. Body iii. Skin (3 inseparable ingredients) like soil, water and sunrays = 1 unique creation (epitome).
Life is the amalgamation of 2 ingridents of a life. i. the power of body to inhale and relive the breathing sensation. ii. The power of body to carry the breathing sensation. A utmost beautiful creation ’Humankind’
Our precious Gift (life) is the output of 2 pro-found functions. 1. Inner function 2. display (our body)
If there is a problem in inner function, then it it will display in outer portion (disease). So treating outerportion only of No use.
All ‘humnankind’ are with same kind of structure and function. Our body shape is only differet because we all are born from different parents and family. Otherwise all are Equal
True 👍👍👍
I'm just happy to finally have some Belgian representation! ^^ Though, having a wider variety of countries is great.
Yeah! They should add some Eastern and South European countries too
@@FanFictionneer It would be fun to have a Flemish and Walloon (not sure that's the word in English/Flemish) person.
The most accurate translation of Królewna Śnieżka is Crown princess Snowball. Also, the Ż in śnieżka is pronounced as SZ (kinda like the English SH but retroflex) because of the unvoiced K, the Ż gets devoiced, but most Polish people will insist that you pronounce it like Ż when slowly explaining the pronunciation, then they proceed to pronounce it as SZ in fast speech.
They have Ż in English in word "Genre"
@@ziomalisty It's a similar sound, but not the same. My point is that Ż in śnieżka is not pronounced like Ż, but SZ.
@@StrzelbaStian Depends on the speaker and the speed of talk. Sometimes it is Ż.
śnieżka is more like snowball than snowflake ;)
@@onirycznaa you're right, I'll edit that
4:25 as a german it’s always so funny to hear Danish. At first it sounds so familiar but then the endings of the words often sound like someone swallowed a frog prior to pronouncing the word
No no no.. Not frog. Kartoffel(n) 😁
When youre doing some work at home, your parents may give you some pocket money in DK.
In GER its Taschengeld, like a bag (tasche). Geld in Denmark sounds like Gæld, which is when youre in debt to someone.
First time I've heard the Danish language be described as "cute"... will wonder never cease xD
Who ever said that must've had an scrambled head..
I think it was because of our using the word "dyt", so it was the fact that we use the sound to refer to cars that was cute - not the language itself lol
@@sirbattlecat The word "bil" was cute, a.k.a. automobil in Danish.
Danish is cute when Danes speak it.
@@kylevanderwolf4446 Pretty face helps.
What a surprise that English, German, Danish and Flamish sound so similar! It's like they're related or something...!
All got the same base, an old german accent
@@Eysenbeiss English is 30% French and 30% German, we're a hybrid! We, in the UK, know more about the grammatical structures and history of the language compared to Americans as we're taught about it in school
That is because they ARE related to eachother. There was even a time in history in which the norse languages had an influence on the English language, just compare words like "knife" and "egg" to modern Swedish. And the word "tree" could have had similar origins. If you want to find out more, look up Old Saxon, Old Frisian, and Old English languages and also search for Jutts and Vikings.
I could imagine that a word like "spell" is related to German "Spiel" and Dutch "spel", with according verbs like "spielen" and "speelen" respectively, known as "playing" in English. I was intigued by a Norwegian lottery advertising poster in Norway saying "spiller du ikke, winner du ikke." - reminding me of what it would be in German: "Spielst du nicht, gewinnst du nicht." I was kind of mesmerised by the similarity (but not animated to play in the lottery) of the phrasing. English translation: "If you don't play, you don't win." I could see the magic of the moment you would actually win a considerable amount of cash or prize, though - hence the connection between playing and winning...
@@2RANbit
... Seriously? It's kinda ironic that someone who knows the history of languages doesn't understand sarcasm...
I understand you are being sarcastic, but, anywaym it is hardly surprising as they are all Germanic languages. English is a bit of a hybrid though because, although it is mostly Germanic, it has a lot of words with Latin roots that were either borrowed from Old French (when the Normans invaded and ruled England in the Middle Ages) or were added to the language as learned words in the early Modern Age.
The name of the Polish girl is Ania not Aylie...
"I come from America".... Where exactly? Perú? México? Canada? Cuba? A bit confused 😅
United States of is silent.
@@vlatstrapes3931 Don't you sometimes just wish it was?,😉
Gringos mancos
@@vlatstrapes3931 LMAO
“America” is what most people of the world call the USA
Polish and French girl… so pretty ❤️
for me French ❤
The German weekdays actually come from the planets and gods too, they chose the germanic equivalent gods to the roman ones... so it has nothing to do with "free day" 😅
Sunday / Sonntag - Sun
Monday / Montag - Moon
Tuesday / Dienstag - Tyr (Germanic God)
Wednesday / Mittwoch - Wodan/ Odin, but the Christians changed the German one to "Midweek"
Thursday - Donnerstag - Donar / Thor
Friday / Freitag - Freyja (Goddess)
Saturday / Samstag - Saturn for English, For German, it comes from Sabbat.
The roman roots are still apparent in Spanish/Italian/French for the gods:
Tuesday - Mars
Wednesday- Merkur
Thursday- Jupiter
Freitag - Venus
Samstag - Saturn
(Sonntag - domingo/dimanche/domenica = Day of God)
Monday - Lunes/Lunedí/Lundi = Moon)
Same with dutch
The German equivalent to Tyr is Tiu or Ziu.
In Slovak: (and this is almost identical to other Slavic languages)
Pondelok - the day after Sunday
Utorok - the second day (of the week) or literally "the other day"
Streda - the middle day (of the week)
Štvrtok - the fourth day (of the week)
Piatok - the fifth day (of the week)
Sobota - Sabbath
Nedeľa - literally "the day when we don't work"
Du bist ein Schatz! Die Behauptung "Freitag" käme von "frei" hat mich ultra gestört und ich hab nur nach so nem Kommentar gesucht.
@@keesvanderstaai3482 Woensdag and Mittwoch aren't alike at all though.
It's funny for me to watch, because I can speak German (motherlanguage), Polish (second motherlanguage), English (from school) and French (from school). Moreover since there are so many Germanic languages I can understand almost everyone (except of Italian and Spanish). That's fun!
Maar je kan geen nederlands lezen muhahahaha
If you speak French, you should understand a bit of Spanish and, even more so, Italian. French and Italian actually have a very high lexical overlap.
@@Wonkess_Chonkess Reading Dutch is actually easy for Germans, isn't it?
Finally someone from Belgium in a video like this who doesn’t speak French but Dutch
I’m from Belgium and I speak French but I also can speak Dutch a little bit
@@LilooD je'mappelle frikandel
I want to learn polish now :(
Polish girl really pretty and cute! Also.. Ahoj z Česka! ❤
uchylaku😂🤣
Finnish would have been hilarious compared to the other ones. ☺️
Also, Polish is really hard.
When I think of Finnish, I think of the letters k and a mainly. Truly different from the rest. Which language is closest to Finnish?
@@gardenjoy5223 Estonian is closest
Should've included someone from Finland or Estonia or Hungary. Languages that stand alone, to see the difference.
When I hear Bil = Car I thought it was different than the others but mow I realised thath :Bil" is basically sufix from Auto Mobil/Mobil
Maybe someone has already written it, but "Freitag" in the German language is also associated with the goddess Freya ! :)
And the German Thursday "donnerstag" is also related to Thor, hence the thunder/donners.
@@Vlad-sj5yw Fun extra fact, Mittwoch used to be called Wodenstag. Wodan was the Germanic equivalent to Odin, the name of the day was changed because of Christianity.
@@rafox66 Didn't know that! Thank you.
We still have "onsdag" also derived from Odin. Probably held on to it due to being a Nordic country.
A smaller almost irrelevant info is that I live in the city Odense, also clearly derived from Odin and -maybe originally meant Odins Ø (Odin's island)- was originally Odins Vi (Odin's Shrine).
@@Vlad-sj5yw Oh cool, I always think it's interesting to learn about the past and how things came to be.
@@rafox66 You and me both.
I nearly had a heart attack when Czech Republic was mentioned😂❤
Brawo Ania. Greetings from Poland :) 🤍💗
This French girl is so beautiful and speaks English with a strong accent. Very awesome
Literally "śnieżka" means snowball, but that's cuz it's a little piece of snow. So it's Princess Little Piece of Snow. Rather poetic imo
You mean snowflake
@@xManglert No, it is snowball. Snowflake is "płatek śniegu".
@@PiotrPilinko or "śnieżynka"
Tutaj akurat nie należy tego tłumaczyć na snowball. Raczej chodzi o śnieg. Trzeba zapoznać się z genezą powstania tytułu
They even not say nothing when Polish and French is actually the same: "REKIN = REQUIN"?!
Poland 🇵🇱 wins with *KRÓLEWNA ŚNIEŻKA* Boombayah!
Probably because the french girl with her French pronounciation said it a lot different than the Polish girl, but yeah, kinda weird they didn't catch that
Najfajniejsze słowo po 🇵🇱 to chrząszcz 🙃
german "Freitag" come from "Freya" alias Freia, the nordic goddess of love and marriage.
i think english friday have the same, but not sure.
English is aslo Germanic and Freya is a Germanic goddess (the gods we now call the nordic gods)