@@news_oftheweek idk, but i often fall to earth when i hear German English :D i often simply dont understand some words and idk what is the reason :D :D :D ... but that in EN, too, actually ... i think EN is quite hard to understand language ... but it is simple and have unique words, so you dont confuse them like in German for example - same radix, just different prefix, and different meaning than similar words in Czech ... not all words are "good friends" like pře-kvapení - Über-raschung at all ... i hate especially German courtesy phrases, idk if it is just me or they are worst of all languages i know ... exaggerated, hypocritical, like German classical philosophy, idealism (lie) ... nazism ... they simply try hard to be in the front like the UK, US - front Teutons, biggest Roman (empire, slavery) nonsense ... i am sometimes surprised with Polish names - Romuald Lipko ... i was surprised just he died, i thought he looked best from all men in the music group ... maybe just looked or that looking was too exhaustive ... or Michał, Rafał is funny :D sounds like Dachau ... what does Jaruzel mean? it sounds like karuzela ... or Lazar Yeluzarich Podkhalyuzin ... i am also often confused from Polish h/ch, it is both kh, not like in Czech ... so i guess you vary between h and ch, so i am often confused, because i am used to distinguish it ... the same has to be our vocals for Germans, i guess ... they often have atleast two variants (tight and wide, open) plus umlauts ... Czech has diphthongs, but then rather simple vocals like Hungarian :D ... British sounds like it has never heard simple vocals :D ... we had at university a female Polish teacher (of German language :D she taught Goethe, at this course ... f*ck, i forgot her name ... i didnt like her husband, also a teacher, and his surname was Němec :D :D :D he was afraid of students so he attacked them steadily, i think ...) ... she once said in "Czech" "Já tomu nehápu" (i dont understand ... why you dont learn), so there are 2 mistakes ... h instead of ch, and is "rozumět tomu" (understand it), but chápat to (similar verb, meaning; actually like "to catch something", rozumět is like analysis, i think, roz- is like spread, explode, 2 or more things go away from each other ... rozumět is like rozbít - to destroy, analysis is actually (like) an autopsy, right? ...) ...
@@bartoszmanikowski7480 Thats good to know as I generally remember understanding Polish before as a Russian(without learning it), but didn't understand what some of them said there like at all.
I absolutely LOVE when you come across finnish people. For me, this is the most beautiful and musical language ever, even the accent when they speak english is very very pleasing to my ears. Anyway, keep those videos coming man, I laugh, cry and it restores my faith in humanity. Love you dude, and all the people you come across. All beautiful. Cheers all the way from France.
@@Aethelhadas that’s Arthur Miller, a brilliant American playwright and part-time husband of Marilyn Monroe. I was unsure how to name and label my online identity, so I just stole that of someone more influential and complete. Who’s your pfp? Is she an actress?
@@fredhasopinions It's an English model and actress Jean Shrimpton :) (thank you TinEye :P ) PS I tried to tag you two in one reply, but somehow RUclips didn't let me do it properly.
Every polish person: present itself, tell him about its hobbies, etc. Lingualizer: WTF language is it?! Again polish person: kurwa. Lingualizer: POLISH!
@@heubata Pierdolisz głupoty bobson,na Śląsku mówi się inaczej,a ta dziewczyna pewnie mówi w taki dziwny sposób ponieważ nie mieszka w Polsce i może nauczyła się troche Polskiego przez rodziców czy coś takiego imo,bo po Angielsku mówi z mega dobrym akcentem to bym obstawiał że mieszka w UK.
It's interesting how many people speak the same language, but don't understand each other. This happens with English, Portuguese, Dutch, French, Spanish, German, and Arabic. The English spoken in Scotland is hard for an American to understand. Brazil/Portugal Mexico / Philippines Spanish French Canadian / Parisian Dutch / Afrikaans Arabic in Algeria to Iraq North German to Swiss German
@@Hexnilium I'm from Northern Germany and Bavarian or Austrian isn't any easier than Swiss German... At least Swiss German is spoken relatively slow xD
Most of brasilians have difficulty understanding Portuguese either from Portugal or Angola or Moçambique or even Crioulo languages as well. It's mostly because of the lack of knowledge and multiculture.
4:08 🇵🇭 The Philippines has actually some Spanish speakers, especially in the Cebu area (Central Visayas region) and Zamboanga peninsula (West Mindanao region). Chavacano is a Spanish-based creole language in the Philippines. About 85% of Chavacano is Spanish. Tagalog, the standardized national Filipino language, also has words influenced from Spanish by about 25-30%. This is because Spain ruled The Philippines _(Pilipinas_ in Tagalog; _Filipinas_ in Spanish) for 333 years from 1521-1898. A high concentration of Spanish is present in Cebu because that is where Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan landed when he found the Philippines in April 1521. And in 1542, Spanish explorer Ruy López de Villalobos named the Philippines _Islas Filipinas_ after King Philip II of Spain. (Ah, I love history.)
I’d just like to correct you that Tagalog and Filipino are different languages. Tagalog is a language (and not dialect) spoken in NCR. Filipino is the national language composed of multiple languages in PH, comprising of Tagalog (majority), Cebuano, Spanish, etc.
@@springdayisnottoday371 Tagalog is the foundation upon which Filipino was built, and Filipino is the natural evolution of Tagalog. Filipino is simply the standardised version of the Tagalog language. About 80-90% of Filipino is Tagalog and the remaining is comprised of Spanish, English, and other Philippine languages. In general, it is safe to say that Filipino is an updated version of the Tagalog language. Since the languages are so close to one another, those that speak Filipino are typically not differentiated from Tagalog.
Just to add, according to historians, some 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, groups of people from Indonesia and Malaysia arrived in the islands of the Philippines to be its first settlers. Both of these countries belong to the Austronesian region and they brought with them their own cultures, traditions as well as languages. This is how the story of the Filipino languages started. Over the years, other influences made their own contributions to its evolution but the roots of Filipino language will always be traced back to its Austronesian heritage.
I'll add that I live near an avenue named "Islas Filipinas" after that part of history, and I plan to reconquer the spanish lands in Asia and America 😈
@@Valkbg I think the only Polish person he got was the person with the accent There's only a few things that could've made her more French she almost seemed like a movie character
9:22 For those who don't know, The language is Malayalam, its the language of Kerala (a south Indian state) and the language is from the dravidian language family. And to be honest I would say its damn hard for foreigners and if u are sooo dedicated to learn this language, U may need a Malayali friend to help u and give u tips 😀
I'm a Polish native and I couldn't recognize my own language, I thought it was Ukrainian. The syntax was not correct and the accent was unique. Maybe it's a Polish girl brought up abroad.
He can distinguish Greek pretty easily, if I had the chance to speak to him in Greek with Cypriot dialect he wouldn't be able to understand me even Greeks have trouble understanding us xD (Cyprus)
@@Camaverde we consider ourselves European. we are white but the original Cypriots are more tanned due to the sun. some of us look kinda latino sometimes. I am totally white cause I'm not in the sun all day. We love Greece and we share their culture we have history with them and sometimes we consider to be the same. some say we are brothers. I personally love Greece and I'm proud to be Greek cause we are basically Greek Cypriots. Also half of our country was taken by Turkey in 1974 so half of Cyprus is inhabited by Turkish Cypriots and Turkish. That is another story. Our dialect consists of different pronunciations of words and even our words and sayings that Greeks don't have. We can speak more fluent English than Greeks due to some of our pronunciations. we have different words that were influenced by different eras and countries that took Cyprus in the past, and we also use words that are in the Ancient Greek language. When we speak Greeks know deep down know that we speak in a way Greeks spoken long ago. Our Language sounds like the Scottish of Greek. A more "pirate" type Greek. as I said sometimes Greeks don't understand us. but we use words like χαμέ which means down on the floor which the great Poet Omiros has written the Odyssey has used it several times, we say that in modern Cyprus we want to say something is on the floor and many other interesting words and phrases.
As a hungarian, i had a very good laugh at the romanian who was so disappointed in you guessing he was hungarian. Idk man that "cmon dude" he definitely took it as an insult xdddd
i bet a hungarian would be dissapointed too if he said he spoke romanian. i am romanian btw. aside from our neighbourly rivalty we share, they are very different languages. like different language branches. i don't know much about hungarian, aside from being related to finnish, and not a slavic language. is it hunic language? it came from the east with the huns, i think. romanian is part latin with a mix of dacian and slavic words. also some turkish ones.
@@johnconstantine7442 probably would be furious xdd, also hungarian is a unique language, that has a lot in common with turkish and finnish, but it's not very apparent, it sounds like finnish, but there are words we have from turkish.
Dziewczyna z "Polski" ma ładne neony w pokoju, sam pokój w ogóle niezły. Chociaż sposób w jaki mówiła nie był zbyt polski. Za pierwszym razem też jej nie zgadłem The girl from "Poland" has nice neon lights in the room, the room itself is not bad at all. Although the way she spoke wasn't very Polish. I didn't guess her the first time either
Ja też nie załapałem za pierwszym razem. Trzeciej dziewczyny wogule nie mogłem zrozumieć. Nie wiem, co to za Polski był.😂Tylko ostatnia dziewczyna normalnie mówiła😂
4:07 Wow, that's so rare to see someone speak Chavacano in this video, the only Spanish-based creole in Asia, and that's like a lot less than 1/8 of the whole Southeast Asian population, was totally not expecting he'd encounter someone who can speak that, let alone someone native in the Philippines. (Was expecting atleast Cebuano or Tagalog since its more common lol)
@@ventanasdelalma7623 Afrikaans sounds like when an English speaker is trying to hear someone from the other room but can't quite make out what they're saying.
Nonsense! All Polish speakers in this video spoke in an understandable way. The Polish language is practically homogeneous. Apart from the Silesian dialect and the Kashubian language, we speaks in the same way in Poland
@@rayan69pl this is very interesting to me. Is it historically like that or just modern reduction of dialects after the massive urbanization during the 20th century?
@@huskytail To put it simply, everything changed after the Second World War. Before the partitions, Poland was a multicultural country (due to its huge area and was the only country in Europe where Jews could easily live and have civil rights - at the same time without integrating very well). After regaining independence, this multiculturalism decreased (as did the country itself in relation to the 17-18th century). On the other hand, through the atrocities of World War II, German concentration camps and the post-war resettlement actions, Poland has become a culturally homogeneous country. The lack of SIGNIFICANT and different local dialects from the Polish language does not result from indutrialization. Ps. The Silesian dialect is a mix of Polish with German words. On the other hand, the Kashubian language is a language completely incomprehensible to Poles, but I will not describe the genesis of its creation here, because I do not feel competent enough
@@huskytail No it's modern old people who used these dialects, who were living mostly in countryside, have died and newer generations just weren't using them, it simply died out.
Morocco was really hard for you to know Cause she was speaking Berber language . Because in Morocco we speak a lot of languages like Berber And Arabic in general. Love u from Morocco 🇲🇦🇲🇦❤❤
I'm from Morocco and I thought she was speaking an Asian language or something. Eventhough my neighbors speak Berber all the time. When she said "safi" I was like mybe that could be Maltese...
It would be very interesting if people tried to confuse you with border dialects, like the Dutch/German border where it's basically half Dutch half German lol
i had my teacher speak dutch and then speak german and i was like ‘bro these sound completely different how would-‘ and srsly the amount of times ive mixed them up since then is bAaaD xD
1:09 I from Poland and I love it ! 😅❤ Edit : 1:49 And this . 🇵🇱 Edit 2 : 6:16 And this . 🇵🇱 Edit 3 : 8:04 And this . 🇵🇱 Edit 4 : 10:54 And this . 🇵🇱 After all these changes , I can see how many Poles are watching you and how difficult our language is . 😅❤
Man, you know that Brazilian and Portugal Portuguese are different when you are Brazilian and don't understand a single word that the first Portuguese guy said by first besides Cristino.
I’d say that it depends on your exposition. However, there’s something I’d like to point out: as I started to learn English, due to the latter’s stress-timed nature that also happens in PT-PT, I could emulate it and understand it more easily. You might consider that there are also people with a superiority complex that will say they can’t understand PT-PT, such as some students from my previous school, where they wouldn’t even give a chance to written pt-pt letters and activities without Portugal-only expressions because “It was Portuguese”, even though the grammar is basically the same, except for the gerund x infinitive thing, which also happens in Brazil but uneducated people aren't aware of it.
The fact that he guessed the Egyptian guy it was so much on point.. Like OK I get it he got the Arabic but the fact that he knew the Egyptian accent waow it means he knows all the arabic accents.
Yeah as an Egyptian that was surprising as hell for me too But I guess he guessed it from "izayyak" which means how are you in Egyptian arabic, as it's obviously one of the most used words in the dialect, but it's still very impressive
Aww so cute! 9:09 the kid asks: "Waar is dat feestje?" A famous line from a Dutch song: Where is the Party? Answer: "Hier is het feestje (here's the Party)." I loved that little interaction 😊 🇳🇱
you'll be surprised when you find out that people don't actually learn others countries histories in school if it is not relevant to understand their own history. I'm Brazilian and I never ever learned that Portugal colonized Sri Lanka, and they have a portuguese influence in their capital because it somehow isn't relevant to understand our own history, I had to learn it by myself.
@@marlimbob6688 Yeah that's the thing. Unless their country had to do something with it people don't usually learn those kinds of things in History class. I mean, I did know about that Spanish creole, but that's because I'm a Spaniard haha
@@marlimbob6688 I mean true, but this guy had made a living on identifying other languages and knowing other countries for a living. Tagalog, the main language of the Philippines also uses Spanish words so it shouldn't be too surprising to learn a dialect does too if he's heard the main spoken language before. Also... it's an Asian country with the name Philip for a reason, though he might not know which European king it was named after.
10:13 The guy shocked me up soo much. The part he talks were a rap music lyrics and i wasnt expecting these kind of spelling the words well done boy :D
I love how everyone is talking about Linqualizer saying Merry Christmas to the greek boy that has an algebra test tomorrow and he hasn't studied, like that's gonna fix his problem-💀👍
It really made me happy you said Georgian several times even tho my language wasn't it this video lol usually everyone forgets we exist so thanks for including us :)
@@t.castro4493 yes. I am not from Georgia and I have never been there, but in Ukraine Tarkhun is also popular. (I am half Ukrainian) So I know what it is and I found out a Georgian restaurant with tarkhuns that was really great. It has specific taste. I recommend 😉
Awesome! I love guessing languages and countries too. Some Asian languages are difficult for me to guess correctly. Happy that underrated countries got into the video. Was surprised to see Lithuanians and Latvians. Olá do Brasil :D
While Hungary is located in Europe, its language is so disconnected from the rest that I don't blame him for not knowing. Also him asking if its European might have thrown him off even more.
He did know the second Hungarian girl almost immediately. I am Hungarian, but even for me the first Hungarian took five seconds to realise it is my mother language...
You definitely need to hear Polish more. 🤣 I wish I would believe in myself more to teach foreigners Polish in Englush, but I'm afraid I wouldn't be able to explain everything that's needed. 😢
I’m surprised you have such little exposure to Hebrew!!!! I work with so many people who speak Hebrew that the second I hear “ma shlom cha” it’s instantly recognizable.
I love the denial Palestinian occupiers, they believe they're in Europe and only "technically" Asia. Not only a stolen land but they want to pretend it's some where else!
People always say Greek and Spanish (particularly European Spanish) sound so alike that if you don't pay attention you can't tell them apart. I always just thought "eh, probably a bit exaggerated though". But listening to the Greek dude passively while I was distracted made me legit think he was from Spain for a second and so when Lingualizer guessed Greek that really snapped my attention back to the video 😂
Yeah, I'm fluent in Polish and the only girl I understood 100% the first time, was the last one. I've never heard any Polish that sounded like what the other girls were speaking, and I have no idea what the hell Girl 3 was speaking.
albania belongs to serbia bulgaria and greece it will be taken back its land to it rightful owners your country didnt exist until 1918 you got no history
@@docdoc7691 first Albanian state was founded in the 11th century. Before that Albanians were paleo-balkanic peoples, most likely illyrians. Albanians are paleo-balkanic, that's fact. And the Albanian language is unique to this region, having heavy latin influence from the Romans. Greece and Albania are friendly, Arvanites helped free Greece from the Ottomans afterall. And Greece, Albania and Bulgaria are in NATO. Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia and Hungary should just invade and partition Serbia, do Europe a favor and wipe Serbia off the map
That Filipino guy is speaking Chavacano language that is 70% Spanish. One of 170 dialects only in Philippines that is very rare and interesting to learn!
@Leo Vazquez and the other sentence in caps refers to two rappers that are former friends that turned against each other and have sort of a beef. They had a collab that was a huge hit, and the second Turkish guy (whom was guessed as Azerbaijani) was quoting that song's lyrics.
Because he even has a very italian looks (long face, black/darkbrown curly hair), roman nose.. it was more than obvious he was an italian..even before he opened his mouth..
That look the romanian guy gave him at 9:43 when he said he was hungarian 😂 remember folks, don't mix those up in person or you'll likely catch some hands
did not think I would ever hear berber (tamazight) let alone exactly my exact dialect (which is Tarifit) in one of these video's. berber isnt one language it is a collection of different dialects which are so different they are basically their own language throughout north afrika
I like how when a random Polish person speaks English you can tell that they’re Polish but when they actually speak Polish you can’t tell
Thats called Polish English hehe I can relate
"Polinglish" 😁
Cuz everyone knows the accent but not the language.
@@kotgarfield Actually ponglish haha
@@news_oftheweek idk, but i often fall to earth when i hear German English :D i often simply dont understand some words and idk what is the reason :D :D :D ... but that in EN, too, actually ... i think EN is quite hard to understand language ... but it is simple and have unique words, so you dont confuse them like in German for example - same radix, just different prefix, and different meaning than similar words in Czech ... not all words are "good friends" like pře-kvapení - Über-raschung at all ... i hate especially German courtesy phrases, idk if it is just me or they are worst of all languages i know ... exaggerated, hypocritical, like German classical philosophy, idealism (lie) ... nazism ... they simply try hard to be in the front like the UK, US - front Teutons, biggest Roman (empire, slavery) nonsense ...
i am sometimes surprised with Polish names - Romuald Lipko ... i was surprised just he died, i thought he looked best from all men in the music group ... maybe just looked or that looking was too exhaustive ...
or Michał, Rafał is funny :D sounds like Dachau ...
what does Jaruzel mean? it sounds like karuzela ... or Lazar Yeluzarich Podkhalyuzin ...
i am also often confused from Polish h/ch, it is both kh, not like in Czech ... so i guess you vary between h and ch, so i am often confused, because i am used to distinguish it ... the same has to be our vocals for Germans, i guess ... they often have atleast two variants (tight and wide, open) plus umlauts ... Czech has diphthongs, but then rather simple vocals like Hungarian :D ... British sounds like it has never heard simple vocals :D ...
we had at university a female Polish teacher (of German language :D she taught Goethe, at this course ... f*ck, i forgot her name ... i didnt like her husband, also a teacher, and his surname was Němec :D :D :D he was afraid of students so he attacked them steadily, i think ...) ... she once said in "Czech" "Já tomu nehápu" (i dont understand ... why you dont learn), so there are 2 mistakes ... h instead of ch, and is "rozumět tomu" (understand it), but chápat to (similar verb, meaning; actually like "to catch something", rozumět is like analysis, i think, roz- is like spread, explode, 2 or more things go away from each other ... rozumět is like rozbít - to destroy, analysis is actually (like) an autopsy, right? ...) ...
Lingualizer: i know every language!
Polish: I’m about to ruin this mans whole career.
It was Polish with really strange accent,I think this girl was maybe from polish family but raised abroad
As a pole, even I wasn't able to understand it. The third polish person also sonded kind of off, but that could be just a cheap michrophone.
Yeah a lot of poles, including myself, didn’t even understand
@@bartoszmanikowski7480 Thats good to know as I generally remember understanding Polish before as a Russian(without learning it), but didn't understand what some of them said there like at all.
I'm Polish and I thought the first girl was Czech. Had to rewind and re-listen. She didn't sound native to me at all.
U said Merry Christmas to the 2and greek while he told u that he has an algebra test tomorrow and he havent studied-
Πεθανα
Κρίμα για το παιδί δηλαδή.
🇬🇷🇬🇷
ΝΑΙ🤣🤣🤣🤣
Χαχα όντως
I love how french people don’t even need to speak in their own language bc we can literally hear it through their special English accent 💀
It is not Rite we speak a biotiful english😇
@@bananafreyr3968 oui , oui
Ikr french ppl can't pronounce anything
@@toxic2971 we can, we can ! ( no you're right... )
I guessed it by her hat
greek guy: i have a math test tommorow and i have not studied a thing.
lingualizer: merry christmas!!
👁👄👁
Τέλειο
Im from greece
*Ευχαριστώ*
Im still studying greek btw.
Διαβαζω ελληνικα ακομα. (I'm terrible)
French girl didn't even speak one word of French, yet he knew where she was from.
The power of "Ze Frentch accent" tkt tmtc.
Have you watched Michael Jackson movie zi zi zi (this is it xD).
@@marlimbob6688 zis iz it
@louis george it was definitely the hat xD
Hi French guy i'm too
Actually if you watch the live stream where this clip was from she did speak a tiny bit of French to somebody
2:13
“I have Algebra tomorrow and I haven’t studied anything”
“Aww Merry Christmas”
“Thank you”
IM SO DEEEEEAD LIKE I- BAHHAHA
No one reply to you wtf
Oml
Did lingualizer know that he said that? I mean did he understand?
@@brine1 well *you* did. And I did it too.
@@progamer_221 he didn't he's not that good with Greek lol that's why he only said merry Christmas lol
I absolutely LOVE when you come across finnish people. For me, this is the most beautiful and musical language ever, even the accent when they speak english is very very pleasing to my ears.
Anyway, keep those videos coming man, I laugh, cry and it restores my faith in humanity. Love you dude, and all the people you come across. All beautiful.
Cheers all the way from France.
For Finnish: "Yeah, it is very easy."
For Polish: "What the Hell is that?"
Yea i can t belive that
yeah because finnish has a very distinctive accent and words
Like äääääääääääääää.
KuRwA
"JAK CO KURWA?"
“Your accent sounded so german!”
“Oh…. That could be confusing”
“Poland?!” XD
Whos your pfp? Is he an actor?
@@Aethelhadas that’s Arthur Miller, a brilliant American playwright and part-time husband of Marilyn Monroe. I was unsure how to name and label my online identity, so I just stole that of someone more influential and complete. Who’s your pfp? Is she an actress?
@@fredhasopinions Guess we'll never know.
@@CornyFlakez It's an English model and actress Jean Shrimpton :) (thank you TinEye :P )
@@fredhasopinions It's an English model and actress Jean Shrimpton :) (thank you TinEye :P )
PS I tried to tag you two in one reply, but somehow RUclips didn't let me do it properly.
Every polish person: present itself, tell him about its hobbies, etc.
Lingualizer: WTF language is it?!
Again polish person: kurwa.
Lingualizer: POLISH!
It can be misleading, since all people in the Balkans use that word as well
@@Formula7Driver And also Hungarians. 🙂
@@csillab8601 one could argue that Pécs is in the Balkans, therefore Hungary is in the Balkans, therefore you're included
What does kurwa mean?
It reminds me
- A Platypus?
- "puts on a hat"
- PERRY THE PLATYPUS!!!
the Moroccan girl speaking berber was so cute ....i am Algerian & it's so nice to see that our native north African language is being embraced 🇩🇿
Its still comon here in morocco a big part only speak it
@@zikopro7369 it's commun in Algeria too we have 3 types of Berber : Tergui in the south ; chawi amazigh in east & kabyle in the center
I actually speak it fluently too i am from north est morocco
@@anirbourhayal8901 i'm from athznassen , so i'm from the same region, i do speak it bro.
I knew it sounded like moroccan. But i was confused because it wasn't arabic
He: Doesn't guess Poland 4 times.
Me and other Poles: **angry kurwa noises**
Lol prawda 😆
In my opinion all previous people with whom he had conversations they were sloppy in Polish.
Tak XD
@@MarekLena Momentami sam się zastanawiałem co to za język xD i takie w głowie „Serio?! To był polski? xD”
+1 xd
I am polish and didnt know this polish girl is speaking polish, She talking very srangely and not clearly xD
IKR
Mam to samo, chyba jest ze śląska
@@babobab1357 normalnie, ślązacy mówią jak by żyli w podlasiu
Yup... I understood maybe one word (except for kurwa),and wasn't sure till the "kurwa" it was polish.
@@heubata Pierdolisz głupoty bobson,na Śląsku mówi się inaczej,a ta dziewczyna pewnie mówi w taki dziwny sposób ponieważ nie mieszka w Polsce i może nauczyła się troche Polskiego przez rodziców czy coś takiego imo,bo po Angielsku mówi z mega dobrym akcentem to bym obstawiał że mieszka w UK.
As a latin american I'm so used to brazilian portuguese that the one from Portugal sounds like a totally different language lol
Me pasó lo mismo jajjaja
It's interesting how many people speak the same language, but don't understand each other.
This happens with English, Portuguese, Dutch, French, Spanish, German, and Arabic.
The English spoken in Scotland is hard for an American to understand.
Brazil/Portugal
Mexico / Philippines Spanish
French Canadian / Parisian
Dutch / Afrikaans
Arabic in Algeria to Iraq
North German to Swiss German
@@Hexnilium
I'm from Northern Germany and Bavarian or Austrian isn't any easier than Swiss German... At least Swiss German is spoken relatively slow xD
Most of brasilians have difficulty understanding Portuguese either from Portugal or Angola or Moçambique or even Crioulo languages as well. It's mostly because of the lack of knowledge and multiculture.
I'm brazilian and I didn't understand a single word he said the first time
4:08 🇵🇭 The Philippines has actually some Spanish speakers, especially in the Cebu area (Central Visayas region) and Zamboanga peninsula (West Mindanao region). Chavacano is a Spanish-based creole language in the Philippines. About 85% of Chavacano is Spanish.
Tagalog, the standardized national Filipino language, also has words influenced from Spanish by about 25-30%. This is because Spain ruled The Philippines _(Pilipinas_ in Tagalog; _Filipinas_ in Spanish) for 333 years from 1521-1898.
A high concentration of Spanish is present in Cebu because that is where Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan landed when he found the Philippines in April 1521. And in 1542, Spanish explorer Ruy López de Villalobos named the Philippines _Islas Filipinas_ after King Philip II of Spain.
(Ah, I love history.)
I’d just like to correct you that Tagalog and Filipino are different languages. Tagalog is a language (and not dialect) spoken in NCR. Filipino is the national language composed of multiple languages in PH, comprising of Tagalog (majority), Cebuano, Spanish, etc.
@@springdayisnottoday371 Tagalog is the foundation upon which Filipino was built, and Filipino is the natural evolution of Tagalog. Filipino is simply the standardised version of the Tagalog language. About 80-90% of Filipino is Tagalog and the remaining is comprised of Spanish, English, and other Philippine languages. In general, it is safe to say that Filipino is an updated version of the Tagalog language. Since the languages are so close to one another, those that speak Filipino are typically not differentiated from Tagalog.
Just to add, according to historians, some 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, groups of people from Indonesia and Malaysia arrived in the islands of the Philippines to be its first settlers. Both of these countries belong to the Austronesian region and they brought with them their own cultures, traditions as well as languages. This is how the story of the Filipino languages started. Over the years, other influences made their own contributions to its evolution but the roots of Filipino language will always be traced back to its Austronesian heritage.
@@springdayisnottoday371 wrong
I'll add that I live near an avenue named "Islas Filipinas" after that part of history, and I plan to reconquer the spanish lands in Asia and America 😈
Everybody speaking in their own language:
the guy at 7:21:
“I have to say something in my language”
“Are you Bulgarian?”
*”How did you know?”*
as someone who lived in Bulgaria for two years it's freaking easy even if they don't speak in Bulgarian, their accent is really typical
@@Romrijsel I realised he was Bulgarian by the accent. I havent realised we have such typical accent.
@@Valkbg he also guessed a Polish dude second try and stereotypical dressing french girl
@@thethingcalledlisa He didnt have much luck with Polish though. As for the French girl she was the frenchiest girl I have seen.
@@Valkbg I think the only Polish person he got was the person with the accent
There's only a few things that could've made her more French she almost seemed like a movie character
OMGGGG. I got into his video!!! 9:32 and iM ON THE THUMBNAIL TOO😭😭❤️
Nice girl I'm happy for you
Ügyes vagy😊
great reaction :D
@@lingualizer 😄😄
hungarian gaaaaaaang 🇭🇺😌😁 gratulálok 😊
9:22 For those who don't know, The language is Malayalam, its the language of Kerala (a south Indian state) and the language is from the dravidian language family. And to be honest I would say its damn hard for foreigners and if u are sooo dedicated to learn this language, U may need a Malayali friend to help u and give u tips 😀
Yeahh many foreigners don't know abt south Indian languages Tamil, telugu, malayalam and kannada
Yes he just looked at screen and guessed it on the basis of his looks that he is either Indian or Pakistani 😂
We can have a guess which Indian language.
@@lookintoit4537 south Indian languages are way different from north Indian languages bro...
@@lookintoit4537 dude we can but he can't. As he is only familiar with Bengali & hindi or urdu.
I'm a Polish native and I couldn't recognize my own language, I thought it was Ukrainian. The syntax was not correct and the accent was unique. Maybe it's a Polish girl brought up abroad.
1:09 girl sounded like a Gypsy from Ukraine, not like a Polish
@@krakendragonslayer1909 when she spoke english she sounded quite british to me maybe she moved to the uk at a young age
Ukrainian and polish are very different, nonono
Tell this as a ukranian
I am a polish guy brought up in Germany and I thought that it was Hungarian or something lol
@@owl2944 Ye, i think you are right.
Lingualizer: i am not afraid of any language.
Also Lingualizer: "But this..." *looks at polish*
"This scares me."
*Wears a Beret*
Lingualizer: "You're from France"
The person: It’s Polish.
Lingualizer: WAIT, WHAAAAAAAAT????!!!
He can distinguish Greek pretty easily, if I had the chance to speak to him in Greek with Cypriot dialect he wouldn't be able to understand me even Greeks have trouble understanding us xD (Cyprus)
I am from Greece
do yall consider yourselves middle eastern european or just european?
@Tasia Jones Cyprus is in the middle east but i didnt know if they were preseaved as one. sorry for bad english
@@Camaverde we consider ourselves European. we are white but the original Cypriots are more tanned due to the sun. some of us look kinda latino sometimes. I am totally white cause I'm not in the sun all day. We love Greece and we share their culture we have history with them and sometimes we consider to be the same. some say we are brothers. I personally love Greece and I'm proud to be Greek cause we are basically Greek Cypriots. Also half of our country was taken by Turkey in 1974 so half of Cyprus is inhabited by Turkish Cypriots and Turkish. That is another story. Our dialect consists of different pronunciations of words and even our words and sayings that Greeks don't have. We can speak more fluent English than Greeks due to some of our pronunciations. we have different words that were influenced by different eras and countries that took Cyprus in the past, and we also use words that are in the Ancient Greek language. When we speak Greeks know deep down know that we speak in a way Greeks spoken long ago. Our Language sounds like the Scottish of Greek. A more "pirate" type Greek. as I said sometimes Greeks don't understand us. but we use words like χαμέ which means down on the floor which the great Poet Omiros has written the Odyssey has used it several times, we say that in modern Cyprus we want to say something is on the floor and many other interesting words and phrases.
@@ste5842 Τι γίνεται φίλε μου όλα καλά?
As a hungarian, i had a very good laugh at the romanian who was so disappointed in you guessing he was hungarian. Idk man that "cmon dude" he definitely took it as an insult xdddd
As a hungarian from transylvania, the pain on the guy's face when lingualizer said "but it sounded so hungarian" made me laugh out loud
i bet a hungarian would be dissapointed too if he said he spoke romanian. i am romanian btw. aside from our neighbourly rivalty we share, they are very different languages. like different language branches. i don't know much about hungarian, aside from being related to finnish, and not a slavic language. is it hunic language? it came from the east with the huns, i think. romanian is part latin with a mix of dacian and slavic words. also some turkish ones.
@@johnconstantine7442 probably would be furious xdd, also hungarian is a unique language, that has a lot in common with turkish and finnish, but it's not very apparent, it sounds like finnish, but there are words we have from turkish.
@@johnconstantine7442 Romania doesn't even exist. It's what parents tell their kids where they'll take them if they don't behave.
@@johnconstantine7442 not at all and I refuse to accept that I should be
"i have algebra tomorrow and I haven't studied"
"Aww merry christmas"
totally understandable
someone should post that on the subreddit lol
Dziewczyna z "Polski" ma ładne neony w pokoju, sam pokój w ogóle niezły. Chociaż sposób w jaki mówiła nie był zbyt polski. Za pierwszym razem też jej nie zgadłem
The girl from "Poland" has nice neon lights in the room, the room itself is not bad at all. Although the way she spoke wasn't very Polish. I didn't guess her the first time either
najlepsze bylo to ze jest slodka piekna laseczka
Ja też nie załapałem za pierwszym razem. Trzeciej dziewczyny wogule nie mogłem zrozumieć. Nie wiem, co to za Polski był.😂Tylko ostatnia dziewczyna normalnie mówiła😂
4:07 Wow, that's so rare to see someone speak Chavacano in this video, the only Spanish-based creole in Asia, and that's like a lot less than 1/8 of the whole Southeast Asian population, was totally not expecting he'd encounter someone who can speak that, let alone someone native in the Philippines. (Was expecting atleast Cebuano or Tagalog since its more common lol)
As a Dutchy, recognising Afrikaans is always fun. Also that Dutch kid going "waar is het feestje" was adorable
Africans sounds like "baby dutch"
I was trying to figure out how that shit is spelled to be able to search for it lol thank you
Jaaa, dat kindje was zo schattig!
Op zich wel, al vind ik "Waar is dat feestje? Hier is dat feestje!" nogal irritant worden, omdat het te vaak wordt gebruikt.
@@ventanasdelalma7623 Afrikaans sounds like when an English speaker is trying to hear someone from the other room but can't quite make out what they're saying.
Each person in Poland have their own dialect, confirmed.
Not true
Nonsense! All Polish speakers in this video spoke in an understandable way. The Polish language is practically homogeneous. Apart from the Silesian dialect and the Kashubian language, we speaks in the same way in Poland
@@rayan69pl this is very interesting to me. Is it historically like that or just modern reduction of dialects after the massive urbanization during the 20th century?
@@huskytail To put it simply, everything changed after the Second World War. Before the partitions, Poland was a multicultural country (due to its huge area and was the only country in Europe where Jews could easily live and have civil rights - at the same time without integrating very well). After regaining independence, this multiculturalism decreased (as did the country itself in relation to the 17-18th century). On the other hand, through the atrocities of World War II, German concentration camps and the post-war resettlement actions, Poland has become a culturally homogeneous country. The lack of SIGNIFICANT and different local dialects from the Polish language does not result from indutrialization.
Ps. The Silesian dialect is a mix of Polish with German words. On the other hand, the Kashubian language is a language completely incomprehensible to Poles, but I will not describe the genesis of its creation here, because I do not feel competent enough
@@huskytail No it's modern old people who used these dialects, who were living mostly in countryside, have died and newer generations just weren't using them, it simply died out.
Love your videos. Seems Polish ones are specially hard :) Thanks for the video! Greetings from Croatia!
If they speak with some abnormal accent and structure their sentences weird, then of course it's hard.
Imagine just having this random Austrian guy guess exactly where you live, I would scream
*oh hello there-*
@@Justaperson_oke Oh-
@@nebulaocto *i know you on doitsuduck's vids commenting* 👀
@@Justaperson_oke Damn, another doitsuduck watcher here
@@nebulaocto lol
tip: if you do not know exactly what language it is, and you are considering between Czech and Slovak, then this is Polish.
and then it ends up being serbian or something
Morocco was really hard for you to know
Cause she was speaking Berber language . Because in Morocco we speak a lot of languages like Berber And Arabic in general.
Love u from Morocco 🇲🇦🇲🇦❤❤
@@jaredwilliams6853 That's cool...
I'm Moroccan, I have Berber roots and I couldn't guess it till she said "safi", I was like that's probably Berber 😂 I wish I knew how to speak it.
@@tawfiqgab me too hhhh
That explains the weird arabic accent. A lot of influence from berber.
I'm from Morocco and I thought she was speaking an Asian language or something. Eventhough my neighbors speak Berber all the time. When she said "safi" I was like mybe that could be Maltese...
finally saw someone from SEA here and a fellow Filipino no less !! love that for us
It would be very interesting if people tried to confuse you with border dialects, like the Dutch/German border where it's basically half Dutch half German lol
That would be great
Dutch Low Saxon, nobody is sure if it's a German dialect or Dutch dialect
i had my teacher speak dutch and then speak german and i was like ‘bro these sound completely different how would-‘ and srsly the amount of times ive mixed them up since then is bAaaD xD
9:23 is *Malayalam* spoken in *Kerala* , South India. It is one amongst the thousands of years old *dravidian* languages ❤️
mallus
mallus
Uff
Ividem malayalikal
Sadanam kayyil undoooooo
Like hogy ha te is magyar vagy🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺
Lájk
Hanem vagyok akkor is?😛
Lájk
Sziaaaaaaaaaa ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
👍
"I'm gonna guess people languages!"
*French girl wears beret*
Well, that was easy.
Having someone speak Swiss-German is like finding a shiney pokémon. Schwiizerdütsch.
phaha ig bi nur do im öber z finge wo Schwizerdütsch redet 😂
chabischääsliimchuchichäschtli alter wenns eine gsi wer wo hüerä walliserdütsch gredet hät hät ers nie usegfunde
de kommentar esch en garantierti lure zum schwiizer aalocke :D
Ich lerne Deutch und Schwiizerdütsch ist meinen letzten Boss. Ich kann nichts davon verstehen 😂
@@gianb3952 Keine Sorge, Deutsche haben das gleiche Problem 😂😂
"It sounds turkish... Azerbayjin?" "No armenia"
"oh shit"
Lol that's what I was thinking
saaame lol
I’m seeing a lot of ppl say this was a bad mistake is it because of the Armenian genocide? (I’m American)
@@Fatima-hl2qg nahh,Armenia has a big conflict with Azerbaijan and like 9 months ago it resulted In a war soo yeah
@@Fatima-hl2qg I think the recent Nagorno-Karabakh fighting in borderland regions
1:09 I from Poland and I love it ! 😅❤
Edit : 1:49 And this . 🇵🇱
Edit 2 : 6:16 And this . 🇵🇱
Edit 3 : 8:04 And this . 🇵🇱
Edit 4 : 10:54 And this . 🇵🇱
After all these changes , I can see how many Poles are watching you and how difficult our language is . 😅❤
This is you? If it so, you had so much luck
też jestem z polski uwu 💜🇵🇱
@@AlmdudlerSpacniok No . 😊
@@ღwღ ❤
@@AlmdudlerSpacniok Pisałam już , że nie .
It's really exciting when someone speaks your language. I got really excited when someone was speaking Bulgarian 🇧🇬
Is this guy Bulgarian?
Man, you know that Brazilian and Portugal Portuguese are different when you are Brazilian and don't understand a single word that the first Portuguese guy said by first besides Cristino.
Quando se escuta pela 2 e 3 vez da pra entender sem dificuldades, mas realmente na primeira não dá kkkkkk
Bruh, I'm Brazilian and I understood everything he said... Ele disse: "Consegues adivinhar a língua que falo?".
I’d say that it depends on your exposition. However, there’s something I’d like to point out: as I started to learn English, due to the latter’s stress-timed nature that also happens in PT-PT, I could emulate it and understand it more easily.
You might consider that there are also people with a superiority complex that will say they can’t understand PT-PT, such as some students from my previous school, where they wouldn’t even give a chance to written pt-pt letters and activities without Portugal-only expressions because “It was Portuguese”, even though the grammar is basically the same, except for the gerund x infinitive thing, which also happens in Brazil but uneducated people aren't aware of it.
Depois de uma palestra de 2h com Boaventura de Sousa Santos, isso aí é fichinha 😂 saí até com dor de cabeça
Wtf he spoke normally
The Hungarian one said "who ever understands, understands " and I immediately went "I UNDERSTAND, I UNDERSTAND " xd
Ugyanez... 🤣🤣
@@verbrannte 😂😂
hát én meg csak kamilláztam amikor kiderült hogy amúgy ez magyar volt
@@TejMilkMilch Remélem eljut logopédushoz.
I speak Hungarian but what she said was damn unintelligible
Polak: Mówi po polsku.
Lingualizer: I have no idea what this is!
Polak: Kurwa.
Lingualizer: Oh yes, Polish!
"Azerbaijan" "Armenian". Ooof. They don't have the best history together. I hope the guy's not mad
And he guessed turkish before that.
It's just guessing, why should anyone be mad
10:18 fincan kahvem hatrına saydım bir yudumluk aşkın beni sorhaş komplo orduların gardiyanlar neyim varki rapten gari? Güzel seçim :D
burada türkleri görmek güzel
@@ivory9025 aynen
Selam olsun hepsine :D
Seni seviyorum !!
Bencede güzel seçim qweqwqeq
Fincan kahvem hatrına saydım diyen koca yürekli.
Dk kaç
@@travisbickle3835 10:13
Hungarian dedi amk
: ))
@@varolussalsanclar1163 en azından bazı ortak kelimelerimiz var
- ''It sounds a bit Turkish to me?'', ''Azerbaijani?''
- ''No, Armenian...''
FAIL OF THE YEAR lol
sad artsakh noises
@@kzeriar25 **twerks in despair to mayroke**
It was awful actually
@Jackson’s Account turkey and azerbaijan yes, armenia no.
@@leo7325 Turkish countries can't understand each other and they use russian to communicate in their political meetings
The fact that he guessed the Egyptian guy it was so much on point.. Like OK I get it he got the Arabic but the fact that he knew the Egyptian accent waow it means he knows all the arabic accents.
Yeah as an Egyptian that was surprising as hell for me too
But I guess he guessed it from "izayyak" which means how are you in Egyptian arabic, as it's obviously one of the most used words in the dialect, but it's still very impressive
Or maybe it's because Egypt has a population of more then 100,000,000 so it's the most probable option.
Aww so cute! 9:09 the kid asks: "Waar is dat feestje?" A famous line from a Dutch song: Where is the Party? Answer: "Hier is het feestje (here's the Party)." I loved that little interaction 😊 🇳🇱
Jaa, dat was echt schattig 😃
It was so cute 😂
Ek weet nie of jy sal kan verstaan wat ek hier sê nie, aangesien dit Afrikaans is, maar jy kan wel probeer!
@@extra4594 ik versta dit ^w^
@@extra4594 ik weet niet of jij dit kan verstaan wat ik hier zeg aangezien het Afrikaans is maar jij kan het wel proberen. Thats my guess
"You're from the Philippines and you speak a Spanish language"
Anyone who studied a little bit of Philippines history would not be shocked by that.
you'll be surprised when you find out that people don't actually learn others countries histories in school if it is not relevant to understand their own history. I'm Brazilian and I never ever learned that Portugal colonized Sri Lanka, and they have a portuguese influence in their capital because it somehow isn't relevant to understand our own history, I had to learn it by myself.
@@marlimbob6688 Yeah that's the thing. Unless their country had to do something with it people don't usually learn those kinds of things in History class.
I mean, I did know about that Spanish creole, but that's because I'm a Spaniard haha
yeah phili[[ines
@@marlimbob6688 I mean true, but this guy had made a living on identifying other languages and knowing other countries for a living. Tagalog, the main language of the Philippines also uses Spanish words so it shouldn't be too surprising to learn a dialect does too if he's heard the main spoken language before. Also... it's an Asian country with the name Philip for a reason, though he might not know which European king it was named after.
@@Timelessthought Philippines comes from Phillipe. You just blew my mind thanks
I had to leave this video because my classmate sent me a video... and it was this video! We both watch Lingualizer
Lmfao
@Andreo Moŝirio Imagine getting 10 links and at least 2 of them are Rickrolls
10:13 The guy shocked me up soo much. The part he talks were a rap music lyrics and i wasnt expecting these kind of spelling the words well done boy :D
I love how everyone is talking about Linqualizer saying Merry Christmas to the greek boy that has an algebra test tomorrow and he hasn't studied, like that's gonna fix his problem-💀👍
It really made me happy you said Georgian several times even tho my language wasn't it this video lol usually everyone forgets we exist so thanks for including us :)
Georgian is cool, love the alphabet.
@@t.castro4493 and Tarkhun ❤️
@@syniasynia6736 Is that a drink? I should try it one day :)
@@t.castro4493 yes. I am not from Georgia and I have never been there, but in Ukraine Tarkhun is also popular. (I am half Ukrainian) So I know what it is and I found out a Georgian restaurant with tarkhuns that was really great.
It has specific taste.
I recommend 😉
@@syniasynia6736 I'm in Brazil, but perhaps there's a way to import it!
Ukraine is also intriguing, would love to visit Kyiv.
Awesome! I love guessing languages and countries too. Some Asian languages are difficult for me to guess correctly.
Happy that underrated countries got into the video. Was surprised to see Lithuanians and Latvians.
Olá do Brasil :D
Greek!! What a beautiful language...😱❤️🇬🇷
7:46 yay, that's me!!
Ce noroc ai :)
"Salut,ma numesc Mihai și sunt HAIDUC!?"🤣
Genial
Wooow you are famous at lingualizer hahaha lol
Lmao, mihai haiducul
While Hungary is located in Europe, its language is so disconnected from the rest that I don't blame him for not knowing. Also him asking if its European might have thrown him off even more.
He did know the second Hungarian girl almost immediately.
I am Hungarian, but even for me the first Hungarian took five seconds to realise it is my mother language...
The second girl started with Szia, thats why he guessed immediately
@@zsoltturi6989 She needs speech therapy.
Not guessing Polish is bad and all, but telling the Romanian guy he's from Hungary is worse
Nothing bad about it
Adv
Oh boi i can feel the pain, but from the other side
Dude he mixed serbia,croatia and bosnia... Way worse
Every Romanian: *reveals vampiric teeth*
4:35 lol he said "I love you". Surprised to see my fellow
You definitely need to hear Polish more. 🤣 I wish I would believe in myself more to teach foreigners Polish in Englush, but I'm afraid I wouldn't be able to explain everything that's needed. 😢
Bro, I'm Polish and I thought that first girl was Czech XD she definitely didn't sound native.
Me: *angry debil noises*
@@Thematic2177 Poland you mean the country with CDPR
@Medieval Stategist Dobrze powiedziała, nie rozumiem w czym problem.
@@Thematic2177 Nie rozumiem jak można było nierozpoznać że to Polski był? Ma lekki akcent ale żeby nic nie zrozumieć?
I’m surprised you have such little exposure to Hebrew!!!! I work with so many people who speak Hebrew that the second I hear “ma shlom cha” it’s instantly recognizable.
The fact that he picked up on shalom but didn't first guess Hebrew is quite shocking to me
He hoped hes not from isreal maybe
Ikr Hebrew is sooo recognisable
@@zinniaward8549 Haha, yes, that was funny... I somehow missed the shalom, and then when he started guessing, I was like, what? Are you serious?
I love the denial Palestinian occupiers, they believe they're in Europe and only "technically" Asia. Not only a stolen land but they want to pretend it's some where else!
I love how every time it's polish their identifier is kurwa
I had friends for Lithuania and I was always with them and once I heard someone speaking Lithuania I knew it was it!
As someone learning Polish this was a treat for me to watch, Polonaise all around you! :D
for me as a Pole I hardly understood some of the Poles here, probably partly because of speaking quietly and bad microphone
"consegues adivinhar a língua que eu falo?😐"
"português?🤨"
"yha, cristiano😀"
tuga basicamente
Based tuga
HAHAHAHAHAHHA
Sou brasileiro pensei que era russo
@@eduardopupucon HAHAHAHAHA
3 Finns and the 3rd one said "You met/bumped into my friend earlier" 😂😂
as a greek cypriot i blew up when he said “Καλα Χριστουγεννα” to the one greek guy
I was so suprised and happy when a fellow South African met you. Afrikaans is not really spoken outside of SA!
Ek ook ek was ook verbaas🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦♥️
Namibia
2:12 1ος λεπτού σιγή για το παλικάρι που είχε να διαβάσει άλγεβρα 😂
Ο Peter του είπε τι θα του πει και η καθηγήτρια του
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂 με πέθανες ρε φίλε
To be honest, Poland does sound like every neighboring language but itself
Those polish people in the video sounded nothing like polish (and I'm one). It sounded like a foreign trying to speak polish.
@@biteme4322 tylko tą o 08:04 miała akcent czy coś a reszta normalnie. Ja niby zrozumiałem.
@@biteme4322 Me too. I've never heard any Polish that sounded like THAT! The last girl was the only one who spoke normal Polish.
I'd be curious to see him react to someone from Quebec, some of us can't even be understood by French people lmao
québécois sont si mignons, les accent bro like im not saying that to make fun of u guys i just like it
People always say Greek and Spanish (particularly European Spanish) sound so alike that if you don't pay attention you can't tell them apart. I always just thought "eh, probably a bit exaggerated though". But listening to the Greek dude passively while I was distracted made me legit think he was from Spain for a second and so when Lingualizer guessed Greek that really snapped my attention back to the video 😂
3:32 Aladdin, is that you?
You're probably one of my favourite channels, so relaxed and funny
2:46 Moroccan Tamazight ( Tarifit/Rif) 🇲🇦❤️ 😍
@Lİngualizer
You can talk with people in english and guess the nationalities from their english accent. I think it will be more challanger
Thats a really cool idea
Yesssssssssss that would be really cool
I like how he said merry christmas to the greek guy that didn't study for algebra I'm dying
Poles have their own dialects, therefore it is sometimes difficult to recognize the Polish language, even if you know Polish a little
Yeah, I'm fluent in Polish and the only girl I understood 100% the first time, was the last one. I've never heard any Polish that sounded like what the other girls were speaking, and I have no idea what the hell Girl 3 was speaking.
I'm half Albanian. I was literally screaming and yelling out of joy when I saw that there were several people from Albania in this video 🇦🇱❤
albania belongs to serbia bulgaria and greece it will be taken back its land to it rightful owners your country didnt exist until 1918 you got no history
@@docdoc7691 first Albanian state was founded in the 11th century. Before that Albanians were paleo-balkanic peoples, most likely illyrians. Albanians are paleo-balkanic, that's fact. And the Albanian language is unique to this region, having heavy latin influence from the Romans.
Greece and Albania are friendly, Arvanites helped free Greece from the Ottomans afterall. And Greece, Albania and Bulgaria are in NATO. Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia and Hungary should just invade and partition Serbia, do Europe a favor and wipe Serbia off the map
@@docdoc7691so
@@docdoc7691 🌲👀🌲 ScArY
@@patrickselca9456 no history boy
Man I was hoping that someone would drop in like Esperanto or something lol The number of native speakers of that have been growing!
its such a shocking change for me when like i dont understand any of them for a while and then suddenly its a language i know like wow..
For the first italian guy " oh that's so difficult "
For the second italian guy, saying pizza " Oh that's italian "
Italia = pizza, pasta, mamma mia
Hai dimenticato mandolino
@zzYr0xX Marcello
Have you thought about getting people from various English-speaking countries and seeing if you can guess what country/city?
The first Greek kid said he is 19 years old and he likes to learn languages
4:44 it's meeeeeeeee. I'm so happy I'm in this video
Nice :D
"It sounds a lil bit Turkish to me"
Me litterally live in Turkey and didnt understand a single word😂
That Filipino guy is speaking Chavacano language that is 70% Spanish. One of 170 dialects only in Philippines that is very rare and interesting to learn!
10:20 Türk kardeşlerim beğenelim üste çıksın ( benim bu arada SKDJSKJ )
CEZA SAGOPA BARIŞSIN ♥ ♥ ♥
Çok sağol vallaha
@Leo Vazquez Translatation:Let's like my Turkish brothers, let's get on the top (it's me by the way, SKDJDJ)
HÖFOGJROFOTFNDK
Aga napıyon buralarda :D
@Leo Vazquez and the other sentence in caps refers to two rappers that are former friends that turned against each other and have sort of a beef. They had a collab that was a huge hit, and the second Turkish guy (whom was guessed as Azerbaijani) was quoting that song's lyrics.
I got the Italian one long before he did, but otherwise this guy is a legend
Because he even has a very italian looks (long face, black/darkbrown curly hair), roman nose.. it was more than obvious he was an italian..even before he opened his mouth..
The Italian guy is awesoem tbh he was talking about how his favorite show is doctor who and how he likes watching it ( I’m Italian )
That look the romanian guy gave him at 9:43 when he said he was hungarian 😂 remember folks, don't mix those up in person or you'll likely catch some hands
OMG on 4:30 is Uzbek person. I can’t just tell you how rare is to see a person from my nation!
2:12
-ohh tomorrowI have not read anything.
-ohhh merry Christmas
-thanks
dude wtf lol
2:22 I have been waiting for ever to find an Afrikaans speaking person in your videos!😻😻
Same! Now I can go to sleep 🤝
Liefde van die Moederstad 🇿🇦💙
did not think I would ever hear berber (tamazight) let alone exactly my exact dialect (which is Tarifit) in one of these video's. berber isnt one language it is a collection of different dialects which are so different they are basically their own language throughout north afrika
Yeah same
I was like wait what ?
same thing, i was shocked hh
Fun fact : People get very happy when someone speak their language as you can see in the video.
1:49 the only moment when Lingualizer recognized Polish
He didn't even speak Polish
no właśnie kur wa xDD
no *kurwa* was needed