As a hindi and telugu speaker. I'm convinced that all Indian languages have the most diabolical swears. In telugu, one of my favorite insults translates to, "mental vagina"
As an Pakistani language speaker I confirm Hindi cuss words are funny some are like maa ki ankh bhen ka Bhai these two cuss words are probably the least abuseive one ngl Bru this is the most like I ever got in my life Edit: if your wondering how i am rn.. im depressed asf
I can pronounce all of them expect the "dha" I can't find any word in English that has the Hindi "dha" sound Anyways, always nice to have Indian viewers 💜🇮🇳
As a Gujarati, I can say that Hindi swears might have variety but they don’t pack enough of a punch. Hindi is still a soft spoken language. Gujarati is naturally informal and raw
@@chetananand1167 that's what I said bro. It's about the language. If you know how to speak Gujarati you can understand better. Gujarati is an inherently insulting and harsh mouthed language. From the pronounciation to the meaning. If you know how to Converse in proper Gujarati, you'll already know what I'm talking about. Different languages sound different and Excel in different things. English is for communication. French can be said as the language of romance. Imo, Hindi and Urdu are more formal and poetic. Arabic & Gujarati Excel at insulting. Or at least sound better when used in that context.
@@kdjoshi726 Like OP said, it's a conlang that the creator made in an attempt to get everyone to learn as a second language since he was frustrated by how many people couldn't understand each other in the town he lived in. The League of Nations actually considered adopting Esperanto as their official language after WW1 but ultimately decided against it. Unfortunately, the Nazis didn't like Esperanto speakers since the creator was Jewish, though it did survive in Nazi Germany since guards thought it was Italian. Then the USSR didn't like Esperanto speakers cause of the language's international reach. Finally the US was weary to Esperanto since the creator was Russian and the USSR initially supported the language. English, Mandarin, Arabic, and Spanish kind of took the place of Esperanto as international languages.
As a Russian I completely agree. We even combine swears and create whole phrases of them. There are so many words that can be replaced by swears and everybody would understand it
I asked a guy in Internet on how to say going good in Russian , he said "Ahuyenno". I said it to my friend who was a receptionist in Goa. A Russian greeted him and asked him how he was doing, for that he responded "ahuyenno.". He' smirked
As a native Hindi speaker I can say that द , ध and ड , ढ are not that difficult to differentiate. it's the इ , ई and उ , ऊ along with their "matras" that gave me a tough time in primary school 🤣🤣🤣
@@hasana1051A maatra is a vowel sound derived from it's vowel. It's a letter combined with a consonant to make a syllable. CV. For the first maatra. I don't know what it is, but I believe it makes a similar sound to an L. It isn't used in many Indian scripts. As for the second one, “ः", it's called a visarga and it's used mostly in Sanskrit. It denotes an h sound. For the last maatra, “ॉ", it is the same as an “ो", exact same sound, but “ॉ" is used for foreign words and almost never in Hindi writing.
as a Russian, I can confirm that we swear very often, and we even have a system of these swear words, and we can also come up with new swear words based on the "basic" ones. also, we have "alternative" swear words that sound less rude. and you can invent words indefinitely because of all kinds of prefixes, suffixes, postfixes, endings. it's really very interesting.
As a Thai person, Thai language is really difficult because it has more letters plus the things on top for pronunciation as well. Plus there is no spaces between each word which makes it hard to read sometimes.
The gender of the door part got me dying lmaooo, I used to study French as an optional language from 8th to 10th. And omg the gender verification rules were so sick
from someone that speaks a gendered language: there are no rules, you have to trust your intuition to decide if a humanized doorframe would be a man or a woman
@@GockBlock64 tbh it's kinda easy to tell in my language most times, if the word ends on an a it's usually feminine and if ends on an e or o it's usually masculine
@@fulana_de_tal From someone that speaks a gendered language as well: don't even bother with intuition, just start a riot against gendered words in language to save everyone else the hassle of learning it all.
For those who don’t get the joke at 0:10, “That” in Chinese is pronounced like the n word. Google Translate demonstrates it pretty well; get the tts to read this: 那個
0:42 why people think it's hard? It's just "da", "dha", "da" and "dha". One more flex, our alphabets are ordered & classified by their nature & where tongue touches mouth Ka Kha Ga Gha (back of mouth roof) Cha Chha Ja Jha (front of mouth roof) Ta Tha Da Dha (tip of tongue on roof) Ta Tha Da Dha (base of top teeth) Pa Pha Ba Bha (only lips) There's some others too :)
@@Canying_ylia okay I might sound confusing xD We don't give much pressure while speaking (like letter P) English speakers speak: Phee (with lot of air coming out of mouth) Indians speak gently: Pee (very softly) Same case with other letters Here's analogy द : ध :: ड : ढ :: Pa: Pha
It's better than learning Dutch (my native language) where everything that comes out of your mouth sounds like you're choking on a shoe, and that's putting it _very_ nicely.
As a Thai people I confirmed that Thai language is very hard to pronounce in some word because we don’t have only vowel, we also have the word that have a same vowel but it pronounce differently because each alphabet will have their own group to pronounce with each vowel.
@@candylover6419 No. I would nominate क्ष or ज्ञ, latter being butchered by many Hindi speakers too. Or if you allow understanding and ignore correct pronunciation, then all the nasal letters.
Voiced aspirated consonants (bh, dh, gh, etc.) are extremely rare sounds that only exist in Indian languages and a few languages in Africa. They're very difficult to hear and pronounce that's why they're so rare
@@sugandhakohli True, Sanskrit is the language with a Perfect Grammatical structure, no other language is as perfect as Sanskrit. Not even Greek and Latin.
as someone who is studying the japanese language, I can confirm that we finally feel relieved after memorizing every kanji in the universe (impossible) edit: im not going to say thanks for the likes, but this comment blew up!! i never thought it would, but thank you for the information in the replies!
0:17 As a Brazilian I will explain in a short summary of why we speak Portuguese The Portuguese navigator Pedro Alvarez Cabral made this happen here in Brazil around 1500, which is why Portuguese colonisation was started there. As a result, Portuguese was passed down to Brazil and is currently our national language. Btw, before Portugal colonised us, there lived indigenous tribes of all sorts in Brazil, and they spoke Tupiguarani I think
@@emreemre-dj9wo Pakistanis are Pakistanis, Indians are Indians, don’t confuse the nationality. Yes, the Eastern half of Pakistan speaks Indo-Aryan languages just like North India
@@adonaimartins5632 Não vejo isso como um benefício, mesmo sendo brasileiro. A maioria de nós é barulhenta, caótica e miscigenada. Os portugueses que conversei têm a mesma visão que eu.
@@diogenescinico E miscigenado é problema ? Não quer se miscigenar, não se miscigena... Agora falar que é problema (sem base científica ou até LÓGICA nenhuma) é foda. Barulhenta e caótica ? Tá falando dos brasileiros ou dá sua avó ?
I'm French, and when i first learnt that English didn't use gender for every objects that exist, i was so happy to go in English class. (Sorry for my bad english)
@@rishikkeshsuresh3692 thank you! But you made a mistake in your sentence, it's "Vous parlez bien annglais" (you just put the "bien" after the "anglais" but exept that its good)
@@rishikkeshsuresh3692 Haha you forgot the l' in your sentence, you know why? Because the Mega Knight card is unlocked from Royal Arena (Arena 7) or a Legendary Chest. He is a melee-ranged splash damage troop with very high hitpoints and moderate splash damage. He appears with black spiked fists and huge armor, along with grey chainmail and a team-colored belt. When deployed, he will deal damage around enemy units around him in a 360º area around him, which deals 160% the amount of damage as his regular attack. If there are ground units between 3.5 and 5 tiles of him, he will stop moving and begin charging a jump attack which takes a few seconds, which deals double the damage than his regular attack. However, he's still vulnerable mid-air while jumping, and unlike a mid-air Hog Rider, cards like X-Bow will remain locked on to him. A Mega Knight card costs 7 Elixir to deploy. Strategy His spawn damage is similar to a Fireball, which makes him useful for quickly defeating cards with similar health to a Musketeer or Wizard. He will then only require 1 more regular attack to defeat them fully. However, the Night Witch, Witch, and Bandit have slightly more health than these units, so he will require a second swing to finish them off. The Mega Knight's high spawn damage and very high hitpoints make him a bit hard to defeat on the opposing side. He can get enormous value against massive pushes because of this. However, he can be countered relatively easily if alone. Mega Knight has enormous defensive potential, but despite everything, he is not effective at taking out tanks such as the Golem. His main defensive potential comes from his very high health and his spawn and jump damage obliterating support troops and glass cannons. He is very good at countering equally-leveled Elite Barbarians, thanks to his high spawn damage and knockback. Make sure that the Mega Knight is placed in such the way that both Elite Barbarians are knocked towards the same direction
half chinese here, and yes "that" is a very good word. the funny thing is that we also use it as a filler word like in english its "um, like". really funny
@@TheDAKing5 there are a lot of examples but the ones I can remember rn 1. ळ doesn't even exist in Hindi for starters. 2. In one language I don't remember which one, ढ is pronounced similar to ळ. 3. च in my language is pronounced more like "tch" instead of "ch". 3. In Sanskrit, you say the "a" sound or basically vowel sound at the end of every word but in Hindi, you don't end with "a" sound. For eg राम Ram(Hindi) Rama(Sanskrit). Arjun, Arjuna. Geet, Geeta.
As a hindi speaker, I would say a massive advantage of my first language being hindi is that I can easily pronounce basically every sound which makes it easier to learn new languages and speak any accent relatively easily compared to other languages.
As a Brazilian I confirm. We (almost always) have to explain that Brazil was colonised by Portugal and that's why we speak portuguese instead of "brazilian"
English being more inconsistent than a teenager's personality
Me who got 99 out of 100 in boards in eng and got first rank IEO 😎
@@Helpadoggoreachsubs I rarely score below 90% on english tests, but my god is the language a disaster
@@Helpadoggoreachsubs who the fUcK asked bro
@@Helpadoggoreachsubs jis board me Lang me 99 aa rhe h us board ko doob ke mar jana chiye
English is so stupid.
As a hindi speaker, insults without swears are pretty easy to handle but hindi swears are on another level
As a hindi and telugu speaker. I'm convinced that all Indian languages have the most diabolical swears. In telugu, one of my favorite insults translates to, "mental vagina"
As an Pakistani language speaker I confirm Hindi cuss words are funny some are like maa ki ankh bhen ka Bhai these two cuss words are probably the least abuseive one ngl Bru this is the most like I ever got in my life Edit: if your wondering how i am rn.. im depressed asf
@@Disissid19 mind translating into hindi
My favourite is the classic "bencho" other than that "bhadva"
as a malayalam speaker i'm glad that no one can pronounce our language
as an indian i truly found it astonishing that people found our language difficult lol, but now i understand why
I can pronounce all of them expect the "dha" I can't find any word in English that has the Hindi "dha" sound
Anyways, always nice to have Indian viewers 💜🇮🇳
@@Canying_ylia so you're learning Hindi? Where are you from
@@amey104_ not learning Hindi but I know a bit of the language
@@Canying_ylia yeah to most people they all sound the same, and yes im pretty sure no english word has that sound
Da dda dha and dhha. Just put stress and you'll get it out
As an Indian who speaks Hindi, it’ll take you a whole lifetime to learn the swears
As a Gujarati, I can say that Hindi swears might have variety but they don’t pack enough of a punch. Hindi is still a soft spoken language. Gujarati is naturally informal and raw
@@insert-name101Bro tell me some Gujarati swears with a punch
Can you please teach me some?
@@insert-name101Impart some of your knowledge with us
@@chetananand1167 that's what I said bro. It's about the language. If you know how to speak Gujarati you can understand better. Gujarati is an inherently insulting and harsh mouthed language. From the pronounciation to the meaning. If you know how to Converse in proper Gujarati, you'll already know what I'm talking about.
Different languages sound different and Excel in different things. English is for communication. French can be said as the language of romance. Imo, Hindi and Urdu are more formal and poetic. Arabic & Gujarati Excel at insulting. Or at least sound better when used in that context.
As a German I 100% agree. For us it is impossible not to be mad when we are speaking and even the finger motions are perfectly represented.
Na heiligs blechle. Da finde einen Landesmann!
@@falcony6790 Nicht nur ein Landesmann sondern aouch ein Kamerad zum Biertrinken.
@@beatemeyer1242 Prost !!
@@beatemeyer1242 this all sounds like third reich
It's pretty much impossible to get the pronunciations right if you use a soft voice.
As a Russian speaker I can confirm that swearing is indeed the most developed part of our language.
Да блять аргумент
Ikr
It's not the most developed part, it's the ONLY developed part of russian language
I will agree
@@cool_waffle8492 real
As someone learning Esperanto, I can confirm that, not only do the swears not exist, but also people who learn and know Esperanto
mi ne estas ĉi tie, kaj ĉi tio ne okazas 😔
As an esperantist, Im currently fading away
Yeah honestly this is my 1st time hearing about Esperanto... Idek where it's spoken
@@kdjoshi726 Its an artificial language, there is no country that speaks it.
@@kdjoshi726 Like OP said, it's a conlang that the creator made in an attempt to get everyone to learn as a second language since he was frustrated by how many people couldn't understand each other in the town he lived in. The League of Nations actually considered adopting Esperanto as their official language after WW1 but ultimately decided against it. Unfortunately, the Nazis didn't like Esperanto speakers since the creator was Jewish, though it did survive in Nazi Germany since guards thought it was Italian. Then the USSR didn't like Esperanto speakers cause of the language's international reach. Finally the US was weary to Esperanto since the creator was Russian and the USSR initially supported the language. English, Mandarin, Arabic, and Spanish kind of took the place of Esperanto as international languages.
0:42 As a Nepalese Indian, it's so relatable that it hurts my soul
Me calling my self nepali without even knowing the alphabet
The only thing I started to stop learning French because I am too lazy to identify chairs and tables' genders
Same, I already have enough with my main language having gendered words
Use the neuter pronoun for objects. Only people who can't think for themselves use gendered pronouns on objects.
@@user-vt6td9hp3g as far as i know there is no neuter pronouns for either Spanish or French, is either male or female
Same for Arabic as well
turkish has no gender guys, we even dont have he she it, we say "O" and it means he/she/it.
As a Russian I completely agree. We even combine swears and create whole phrases of them. There are so many words that can be replaced by swears and everybody would understand it
Cheeki Breeki!
I heard this in stalker but i don't know what this means
@@stingfly974 These words don't make any sense
Oh I see, the bandits say that dialogue during gunfights
Как в том анекдоте:
"-Папа, смотри! Ебалай!
-Ебалай это ты, сына, а собака алабай называется."
I asked a guy in Internet on how to say going good in Russian , he said "Ahuyenno". I said it to my friend who was a receptionist in Goa. A Russian greeted him and asked him how he was doing, for that he responded "ahuyenno.". He' smirked
As a native Hindi speaker I can say that द , ध and ड , ढ are not that difficult to differentiate. it's the इ , ई and उ , ऊ along with their "matras" that gave me a tough time in primary school 🤣🤣🤣
Nah they're easy.
True. but for foreigners they all sound the same
What’s a matra. Also about Hindi vowels, the vowels I don’t understand are ॢ ः and ॉ
Na hindi is destroying my percentage 😭😭😭
@@hasana1051A maatra is a vowel sound derived from it's vowel. It's a letter combined with a consonant to make a syllable. CV.
For the first maatra. I don't know what it is, but I believe it makes a similar sound to an L. It isn't used in many Indian scripts.
As for the second one, “ः", it's called a visarga and it's used mostly in Sanskrit. It denotes an h sound.
For the last maatra, “ॉ", it is the same as an “ो", exact same sound, but “ॉ" is used for foreign words and almost never in Hindi writing.
as a Russian, I can confirm that we swear very often, and we even have a system of these swear words, and we can also come up with new swear words based on the "basic" ones. also, we have "alternative" swear words that sound less rude. and you can invent words indefinitely because of all kinds of prefixes, suffixes, postfixes, endings. it's really very interesting.
Lol This channel doesn't like your comment if you say you are Russian
Russian is a perfect svear Lego, lol
Too bad...... SWEARING?UGHH!!
Bruh I feel like learning Russian just so i can learn the swears
I need a thesis on this
my mom always gets angry whenever i mispronounce the hindi sounds... hindi is easy and hard at the same time
What about Bengali ?
^same shit
Yes Hindi is easiest language
@@slavoisheir4129 I'm not from Bengal. I'm from Uttar Pradesh
Only an Indian born can speak in hindi u_u
Edit: uhhhhh why is everyone correcting me
As a Thai person, Thai language is really difficult because it has more letters plus the things on top for pronunciation as well. Plus there is no spaces between each word which makes it hard to read sometimes.
Yeah and some word does not exist to English such as และ,เดิน,เหิน.Im Thai and I don’t know how to explain all of this word to English
@@user-tb8ko9fz6i และ เดิน เหิน and, walk, fly
@@user-tb8ko9fz6i what do you mean และ เดิน doesn't exist in the English vocabulary
Even though I'm thai, I'm not even sure myself if I spell simple words correctly and often get it wrong lol 💀
Yeah😅
As a person who learned French for 10+ years, I can attest to the fact that everything in French has a gender
And then there is german with three genders💀
Non binarys who lives in France 💀
Me🗿 who knows hindi , gujrati , odia , marathi , bengali , i have surpassed the limits of swearing .
For those who don't understand the 2nd one, in chinese "that" is ‘’那个‘’ which is pronounced nà ge but most when people say it it sounds like "nega"
YO 🇷🇺 ruclips.net/video/CWfd8OjWkwg/видео.html
@Товарищ Морозов thats alright,
but unfortunately,
nobody asked
@Товарищ Морозов Nobody asked lol. Совок.
a good example of this is that one song
那个 in IPA is /nä⁵¹ kɤ⁵¹/
I've told you many times to stop writing same comments. Now you'll never know what was here.
Hindi same
Here in Brazil is the same
@@Taix-ok9wo agreed
So why u dont swear in this text
@@Umaconta0501 because you don't have that much sweating.
F*ck
B*tch
N**a
F*g
Is that all?
Also, combinings of your swearing are boring too.
as a french speaker, i can confirm that if you say "la seuil de le porte" you are going to be guillotined
*that moment when your language is a combination of 2 other languages but nobody can speak it*
As a Greek I'm glad that we escaped slander.
Could have mentioned middle school boys not swearing every 0.001 seconds
Don’t worry *you’re next*
@@Canying_ylia 💀💀
@@Canying_ylia please no 💀💀💀
Not for long
English speakers trying to have consistent grammar rules: 😰
As a Esperanto speaker, I can confirm that Duolingo has not taught me how to swear yet
the only swear i know in esperanto is fuck and, to be honest, "fiku" doesn't sound all that insulting
0:46 As a russian-speaking I agree. No matter how many times I try to stay calm, I will be a fucking choleric forever.
द, ध, ड and ढ अरे pretty easy, even for non-Indic language speakers. There's a reason the Devanagari script is one of the most phonetic scripts ever.
Wait are you that same Ishan Dhawade from quora?
@@Akira-dm3tj yes, why?
@@ishaandhawade8583 dude, I follow you, I am so happy that you are on youtube.
@@Akira-dm3tj That's a pleasure, lol.
Which launuage are the alphabets from?
The gender of the door part got me dying lmaooo, I used to study French as an optional language from 8th to 10th. And omg the gender verification rules were so sick
from someone that speaks a gendered language: there are no rules, you have to trust your intuition to decide if a humanized doorframe would be a man or a woman
yeah like at least languages like greek make it super easy to tell what gender a word is
Chutiye zyada mat ban, hindi bhi gendered h
@@GockBlock64 tbh it's kinda easy to tell in my language most times, if the word ends on an a it's usually feminine and if ends on an e or o it's usually masculine
@@fulana_de_tal From someone that speaks a gendered language as well: don't even bother with intuition, just start a riot against gendered words in language to save everyone else the hassle of learning it all.
Pronouncing ड, ढ, द and ध is actually easy if you're a native Hindi speaker
I am native but I find confuse I think because of if they dha or da so I some time I confuse which dha or da word
@@runajain5773 he means if hindi is ur first language then its easy
As a person who studies French I can confirm that all my teachers were mad because of incorrect articles.
As a brazilian I can confirm that we are always telling americans that we speak portuguese and not spanish.
exato!!
Isnt it almost the same
@@030elias8 yes, that is why
@@030elias8 "umm actually..." 🤓
Or just.. "Oh so you speak **brazillian right? **"
*deep breath* **BRAZILIAN ISNT A LANGUAGE, IT'S PORTUGUESE YOU D-**
"yeah sure." smh
As a Chinese who lives in America, I've had situations where I had to explain to my classmate what the word I said actually mean.
YO 🇷🇺 ruclips.net/video/CWfd8OjWkwg/видео.html
@Товарищ Морозов Чё ты высрал.
I have so had it with the bots in the comments.
@@MariOmor1 Me too
@@MariOmor1 Wait... aren't you dead???
I fucking died at the french part, great vid
This is the peak of all slander videos
For those who don’t get the joke at 0:10, “That” in Chinese is pronounced like the n word. Google Translate demonstrates it pretty well; get the tts to read this: 那個
那个
We should just ban the Chinese language for being racist.
@@abnerdoon4902 you’ll be waiting
You mean 0:10 ?
@@kairo_9512 o shit
0:42 why people think it's hard? It's just "da", "dha", "da" and "dha".
One more flex, our alphabets are ordered & classified by their nature & where tongue touches mouth
Ka Kha Ga Gha (back of mouth roof)
Cha Chha Ja Jha (front of mouth roof)
Ta Tha Da Dha (tip of tongue on roof)
Ta Tha Da Dha (base of top teeth)
Pa Pha Ba Bha (only lips)
There's some others too :)
Most non-Indians can do the non retroflex letters like "द and ध" but not even I understand how to pronounce "ड and ढ"
@@Canying_ylia ड is same as 'D' in "Dust", "Dish", etc.
Just add 'H' sound to get 'ढ' (Dha) (I don't remember such word in English)
@@Canying_ylia okay I might sound confusing xD
We don't give much pressure while speaking (like letter P)
English speakers speak: Phee (with lot of air coming out of mouth)
Indians speak gently: Pee (very softly)
Same case with other letters
Here's analogy
द : ध :: ड : ढ :: Pa: Pha
🤓
@@classic1625 you can cope that he gave a detailed response
Spanish speakers calling their close friends by the most insulting, gross and disgusting swear you'll ever heard:
I love your channel keep up the great stuff!!
as a person who is currently learning German, i agree. i sound like I'm angry for no reason
kan konfirm
Really? I sound robotic when I speak German.
yeah 😂
non-native speakers always sound quite angry 🙂
It's better than learning Dutch (my native language) where everything that comes out of your mouth sounds like you're choking on a shoe, and that's putting it _very_ nicely.
I also speak German and I always get in some trouble cause they think I am angry 😅
0:03 As a waiting person, i feel it accurate °>°
YO 🇷🇺 ruclips.net/video/CWfd8OjWkwg/видео.html
As a Thai people I confirmed that Thai language is very hard to pronounce in some word because we don’t have only vowel, we also have the word that have a same vowel but it pronounce differently because each alphabet will have their own group to pronounce with each vowel.
The theme is literally better than gta 4 opening theme
you know the source m
0:42 I love how difficult it is for non Indians to differentiate between aspirated and non aspirated sounds
signature look of superiority
@@candylover6419 No. I would nominate क्ष or ज्ञ, latter being butchered by many Hindi speakers too. Or if you allow understanding and ignore correct pronunciation, then all the nasal letters.
Voiced aspirated consonants (bh, dh, gh, etc.) are extremely rare sounds that only exist in Indian languages and a few languages in Africa. They're very difficult to hear and pronounce that's why they're so rare
@@candylover6419 among all Indian languages, it'd be the 'rli' sound. India in pixels made a good video on that.
@@candylover6419
1) क्षत्रिय or क्षमा
2) ज्ञ = ज् + ञ
As someone who took Sanskrit classes I found odd you chose those instead of the cerebral series altogether. They make द and ध feel like kid's play.
Man Sanskrit is on an entirely different level!
@@sugandhakohli True, Sanskrit is the language with a Perfect Grammatical structure, no other language is as perfect as Sanskrit. Not even Greek and Latin.
@@amulya_asmi agreed sir
I would say ith'kuil vid by xiomanyc iirc is the most crazy not even biblidarion is that descriptive
Descriptive
You got me with that german one
The thumbnail one got me lmao
Pronouncing द, ध, ड, ढ is easy but prounouncing ण, ड़, ढ़ is really difficult for non hindi speakers
What is song name
as someone who is studying the japanese language, I can confirm that we finally feel relieved after memorizing every kanji in the universe (impossible)
edit: im not going to say thanks for the likes, but this comment blew up!! i never thought it would, but thank you for the information in the replies!
I'm almost learned some katakana and hiragana. I'm scared for the moment i need memorize kanji💀
@@Morrocoy. please check it out
Kanji💀💀
@@Morrocoy. it’s alright. as I did, I think you’ll learn the basic ones first, then slowly learn harder ones. but trust me, it can be a pain💀
@@i.nakanon 💀💀💀💀💀💀
0:17
As a Brazilian I will explain in a short summary of why we speak Portuguese
The Portuguese navigator Pedro Alvarez Cabral made this happen here in Brazil around 1500, which is why Portuguese colonisation was started there. As a result, Portuguese was passed down to Brazil and is currently our national language.
Btw, before Portugal colonised us, there lived indigenous tribes of all sorts in Brazil, and they spoke Tupiguarani I think
As a French student that part was hilarious 😂
As a Russian I can confirm it is very hard to not swear when you have like a whole second native language to use
Indians master in using swear 😂
As a Thai people this video is truth
Edit: Sheesh This is my most like comment Yet
as a THai , I agree with you. lolll
I don't get it ):
@@MattRTGBYou don't get it cus you not thai people
@@MattRTGB basically, those indicates the sound of the word and they can change meanings entirely (aka it's important)
@@hithere3885 basiclly
Hindi language is accurate to every sound made by tongue, I literally have no confusion in त ठ ड ढ.
Spanish speakers after having to learn all the types of verbs for types of groups of people
As a Pakistani it's quite easy for us to pronounce those Hindi letters. These sounds also exists in my language Sindhi. 😏
@@emreemre-dj9wo 7-8% Pakistanis aren't Muslims so yeah we also know hindi and u guys also. We are same people at the end 🙏
Is it same for Punjabi as well?
@@emreemre-dj9wo it's okay bro
@@based4560 yes I think so
@@emreemre-dj9wo Pakistanis are Pakistanis, Indians are Indians, don’t confuse the nationality.
Yes, the Eastern half of Pakistan speaks Indo-Aryan languages just like North India
As a Brazilian i can 100% confirm that, if there's something that really pisses us off, is people thinking we are spanish speakers, send help
As a portuguese I can confirm we have the same problem
And some time we are called "spain garden"
@@adonaimartins5632 Pois agora são o quintal dos brasileiros de classe média (infelizmente).
@@diogenescinicocm assim?é por causa da quantidade de brasileiros em portugal?? É q isso sinceramente é até bom pra nós
@@adonaimartins5632 Não vejo isso como um benefício, mesmo sendo brasileiro. A maioria de nós é barulhenta, caótica e miscigenada. Os portugueses que conversei têm a mesma visão que eu.
@@diogenescinico E miscigenado é problema ? Não quer se miscigenar, não se miscigena... Agora falar que é problema (sem base científica ou até LÓGICA nenhuma) é foda.
Barulhenta e caótica ? Tá falando dos brasileiros ou dá sua avó ?
The last second one related to Hindi is really easy tbh.
What is that badass music though?!???!
I'm French, and when i first learnt that English didn't use gender for every objects that exist, i was so happy to go in English class.
(Sorry for my bad english)
vous parlez anglais bien(je learning francias)
@@rishikkeshsuresh3692 thank you! But you made a mistake in your sentence, it's "Vous parlez bien annglais" (you just put the "bien" after the "anglais" but exept that its good)
@@popop7850 Merci ami.
Same history with spanish
@@rishikkeshsuresh3692 Haha you forgot the l' in your sentence, you know why? Because the Mega Knight card is unlocked from Royal Arena (Arena 7) or a Legendary Chest. He is a melee-ranged splash damage troop with very high hitpoints and moderate splash damage. He appears with black spiked fists and huge armor, along with grey chainmail and a team-colored belt. When deployed, he will deal damage around enemy units around him in a 360º area around him, which deals 160% the amount of damage as his regular attack. If there are ground units between 3.5 and 5 tiles of him, he will stop moving and begin charging a jump attack which takes a few seconds, which deals double the damage than his regular attack. However, he's still vulnerable mid-air while jumping, and unlike a mid-air Hog Rider, cards like X-Bow will remain locked on to him. A Mega Knight card costs 7 Elixir to deploy.
Strategy
His spawn damage is similar to a Fireball, which makes him useful for quickly defeating cards with similar health to a Musketeer or Wizard. He will then only require 1 more regular attack to defeat them fully. However, the Night Witch, Witch, and Bandit have slightly more health than these units, so he will require a second swing to finish them off.
The Mega Knight's high spawn damage and very high hitpoints make him a bit hard to defeat on the opposing side. He can get enormous value against massive pushes because of this. However, he can be countered relatively easily if alone.
Mega Knight has enormous defensive potential, but despite everything, he is not effective at taking out tanks such as the Golem. His main defensive potential comes from his very high health and his spawn and jump damage obliterating support troops and glass cannons.
He is very good at countering equally-leveled Elite Barbarians, thanks to his high spawn damage and knockback. Make sure that the Mega Knight is placed in such the way that both Elite Barbarians are knocked towards the same direction
as a chinese speaker I can confirm that saying “that” in chinese would get you killed in the hood
as a person learning hindi, this is so true
Last one fits pretty well with polish too 😂
As a half Japanese guy it gets real hard to remember every single kanji once you get past half of the ones you learn in *First Grade*
As a Thai, even I can't completely grasp how our writing system works.
Australians trying not to swear every second word.... Mission impossible
Wow, I didn't expect Esperanto to be shown here, thanks a lot!
As an Esperantist, I literally don't know any curse words. Accurate meme.
Let's just say we die if we mispronounce "धिक" as "डिक"
Aap adhik buddhiman hai
@@Rithsomware 🤣
@goodsoup 😝
Bade pate ki baat ki aapne
Kitne mahan insann hai 🙏
As an indian i can prove this is very accurate 😂😂
As a nepalese, i agree that it actually is really hard to differentiate द, ध, ड, and ढ
As an Italian speaker, French one was literally the same as in Italian
Most languages actually work this way but people just seem to hate anything french for some reason
as a Thai myself, we Thai student fucking fails our own language
Why so?😂
I can kind of relate though, I'm Ukrainian and Ukrainian is definitely not the easiest language out there
God the french part is so relatable
As a fluent Hindi and Bengali speaker this video sparks joy.
আরে ভাই আপনে দেখি এলাকার লোক!
Ami tomake Bhalobashi
@@gyanendrakami486 simp
@@gyanendrakami486 Ami tomake bhalobasi na.
Sorry.
@Níßchàl Ràjåwat yes,ROSHOGULLA
English and American people trying to pronounce Welsh place names is the funniest.
Trying to pronounce anything really
The last one is the reason my mom beats the hell out of me
as an indian who struggled years to learn hindi, this is very relatable
as a brazilian, i can say that we speak portuguese because the portuguese arrived here first and wanted to speak portuguese, complain to them
With Portuguese in the second part, I mentioned the habitants of Portugal
kkkkkkk
@@arthurrif7297 no the actual language that came here, they portuguese men were just passing by and got infected in the cross fire, poor people
Slavic languages being so similar yet so different
My entire chinese class did a double take when we learned 那个
I felt the french one on a personal level 💀👍
As an Indian, I've smashed the limit of swearing.
As a French person- yes our teachers do get mad when we don’t know the gender of a door frame 😔
Me trying to pronounce "द ,ध,ड and ढ"🤣😆
The Esperanto one got me
half chinese here, and yes "that" is a very good word. the funny thing is that we also use it as a filler word like in english its "um, like". really funny
As a native speaker of three languages with Devanagari script, they sound really different and the sounds also change with language.
who asked
@@gautam4966 yo mom
Could you give some examples of sounds changing with languages? In my experience Devanagari sounds are mostly the same regardless of language.
@@TheDAKing5 there are a lot of examples but the ones I can remember rn
1. ळ doesn't even exist in Hindi for starters.
2. In one language I don't remember which one, ढ is pronounced similar to ळ.
3. च in my language is pronounced more like "tch" instead of "ch".
3. In Sanskrit, you say the "a" sound or basically vowel sound at the end of every word but in Hindi, you don't end with "a" sound. For eg राम Ram(Hindi) Rama(Sanskrit). Arjun, Arjuna. Geet, Geeta.
Thai writing system had me in tears ☠️
French one was relatable asf
Feminists when the word “pain” in French is feminine: *revolution noises*
Hmph Languages ☕☕
*sips coffee*
Hahaha
As a hindi speaker, I would say a massive advantage of my first language being hindi is that I can easily pronounce basically every sound which makes it easier to learn new languages and speak any accent relatively easily compared to other languages.
Same that's why we can compete with any native people in other countries in their accent
I love that ability, can easily pronounce Japanese and Korean. Also HxH is better than AOT
Yup
@@Tenchi707disagreed
same, jap and korean are pretty easy for me to announce. Btw disagreed@@Tenchi707
That hindi pronunciation one was relatable asf
As a german, I can confirm that we do not sound calm.
As Russian I can say that russian language has tonns of the best swearing words in the world.
Blyat
Sorry
As a Chinese person, I can say that every time I say " I want to buy *that* " everybody stares at me like I did something wrong.
That ne ga because nega word is racist black word so chinese speak it you racist to black they make confuse
stressing abt that in my chinese class fr
Man, I need a 12.5x for reading the conversion between the two child..
As a thai I can confirm that even thais sometimes don’t even know what our writing system is on about
As a Brazilian I confirm.
We (almost always) have to explain that Brazil was colonised by Portugal and that's why we speak portuguese instead of "brazilian"
Me trying to prounounce actually sounds like this :- da, dhha , dà and Dha
As a hindi speaker, 0:41 is so goddamn accurate.
As a person that is learning multiple language at the same time by using duolingo, this is way to accurate