Can British Identify FRENCH Languages? (French, Quebec, Belgium)ㅣ GUESS THE NATIONALITY

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • Can you Identify different French Accent just by listening to them?
    Today we put this on the test
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @emondmi
    @emondmi Год назад +1290

    I once met a British guy, fluent in French, who had an interesting take on the matter. He told me (I am Québécois) I spoke French like Americans speak English.

    • @andraflorescu
      @andraflorescu Год назад +170

      Personnelement, je me sentirais insultée 😅

    • @cardenova
      @cardenova Год назад +43

      @@andraflorescu I think I actually prefer the American/Canadian dialect 😂 It depends a lot on which words or sentences.

    • @nuansd
      @nuansd Год назад +3

      @@andraflorescu arent you romanian anyway?

    • @andraflorescu
      @andraflorescu Год назад +2

      @@cardenova aawwn, thanks, thats really nice to hear!

    • @andraflorescu
      @andraflorescu Год назад +1

      @@nuansd Dude, what?

  • @drylander8560
    @drylander8560 Год назад +2656

    French languages? I think that you mean French accents.

    • @rajacyrilchidiac760
      @rajacyrilchidiac760 Год назад +71

      More like accents

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Год назад +26

      Différent accent

    • @liabstrait8306
      @liabstrait8306 Год назад +81

      Creoles are french dialects as well as some regional languages inside of france but, belgium, canada and france all speaks the same modern french with differents accents due to history and environment but at the end we can still mostly understand each other

    • @fablb9006
      @fablb9006 Год назад +23

      Not even dialects, just accents. There are dialects in France (not yet spoken nowadays), but these are just accent of standard french.

    • @baski2757
      @baski2757 Год назад +3

      @@liabstrait8306 creole is in Guadeloupe 🇬🇵 (me)or another creole it’s Martinique creole 🇲🇶 et another creoles sure!

  • @caudron5926
    @caudron5926 Год назад +1114

    ça aurait été intéressant de prendre un Africain , un Suisse Roman et un Cajun de Louisiane en plus .

    • @Javo_Non
      @Javo_Non Год назад +100

      Et un de l'Algérie ou Maroc

    • @baski2757
      @baski2757 Год назад +26

      @@Javo_Non non

    • @baski2757
      @baski2757 Год назад +5

      Oui

    • @caudron5926
      @caudron5926 Год назад +78

      @@baski2757 Pourquoi pas ? c'est vrai que c'est rarement leur langue maternelle, mais il y a beaucoup de francophones dans ces pays.
      Quelqu'un disait qu'il y a plusieurs accents africains, je le crois volontiers mais mon oreille ne distingue que les accents maghrébins des accents d'Afrique noire.
      Quoiqu'il en soit sur cette chaine qui est amusante, on ne voit pas beaucoup d'Africains.

    • @lawtraf8008
      @lawtraf8008 Год назад +22

      Un Africain ?? Y'a different accents dans les pays francophone Africains.

  • @user-bk6cm2ny4d
    @user-bk6cm2ny4d Год назад +577

    The lady from belgian doesn't only has a belgian accent. Her case is super unique ! Cause she definitely speaks with a mix of different accents. French doesn't seems to be her native language. "Une belle pays" ?? Is a very weird mistake for a native ahah I understand why the british dude was confused and I wouldn't be surprised if her mother tongue language isn't french considering she speaks 6 languages

    • @lawtraf8008
      @lawtraf8008 Год назад +205

      You're sot on, that's because she's from the Flemish part of Belgium, not the French speaking part but she still speaks French. Obviously not as good as a Belgian from the French speaking part of Belgium.

    • @lea9966
      @lea9966 Год назад +65

      I’m a native French and I didn’t heard the Belgium accent neither

    • @italixgaming915
      @italixgaming915 Год назад +55

      @@lea9966 It did recognised a Belgian accent but only because the Belgian "r" sound is characteristic.

    • @italixgaming915
      @italixgaming915 Год назад +47

      The fact that she made one mistake is not an absolute proof that it's not her native language. She said that her parents came from Africa, and if we imagine that they emigrated from former Belgian colonies, there is a chance that they were speaking French at home. And assuming that she is from Antwerp, there is also a chance that she went to a Dutch speaking school. It that case she didn't have the opportunity to fix all the mistakes she used to do as a young child. And about her accent, it really sounds Belgian to me, I didn't notice hints of other accents mixed with it.

    • @user-bk6cm2ny4d
      @user-bk6cm2ny4d Год назад +37

      @@italixgaming915 But the "male or female" isn't a mistake you do. I teach to 6 years old dudes at school, they wouldn't have any doubts specially for "pays".

  • @SKhybrid13
    @SKhybrid13 Год назад +313

    Saying Drake cause she thought Céline Dion would be too obvious is the most québécois thing I’ve ever heard 😂😂😂

    • @peteralbert1485
      @peteralbert1485 Год назад +20

      I love how shocked she was that he didn’t know Céline Dion! (Or maybe that he didn't know Céline Dion was from Québec, which would seem hard to understand if you ever lived there because there, she's as iconic as les Habs and maple syrup)

    • @ghxsty_
      @ghxsty_ Год назад +4

      @@peteralbert1485 tbf he knew her but just didn’t know where she was from, wouldn’t be surprised if he said switzerland because of the eurovision

    • @Rosannasfriend
      @Rosannasfriend Год назад +4

      He knew Celine Dion. He didn’t know where she was from. He says that clearly in the video. That in itself was kind of surprising to me, but things that were common knowledge in the 90s I guess are come and knowledge to you young ones.

    • @pommedap6137
      @pommedap6137 Год назад +1

      @@Rosannasfriend Surely depending for who, personally I knew for Céline Dion but not for Drake, so I was as surprised as the Canadian girl. I’m French btw

    • @leandrocruz2744
      @leandrocruz2744 7 месяцев назад +1

      I love Céline. I'm her die-hard fan.

  • @henri191
    @henri191 Год назад +286

    "Drake" , "that's worse" lol 😂 couldn't handle this one

    • @STOCKHOLM07
      @STOCKHOLM07 Год назад +17

      Poutine got it for me but yeah Drake was a dead giveaway

    • @xenotypos
      @xenotypos Год назад +3

      I didn't even know he was canadian, I think in France it's really singers like Celine Dion and other singers from Quebec that are really associated with Canada in the collective mindset. Drake well whatever, let's say he's from north america.

    • @astouaiisha
      @astouaiisha Год назад

      @@xenotypos
      well not really? it's true we make a difference between anglophones celebrities of Canada versus Francophones but their nationality is still a known fact. Like we know that Justin Bieber, Alessia Cara, Shawn Mendes, The Weeknd are canadians and not united states citizens. just like we know for Garou, Coeur de Pirate, Zaho etc...
      I think what you're saying is more the case for actors😂at least for me

    • @pazelloxu
      @pazelloxu Год назад

      Shawn Mendes, Justin Trudeau

  • @zahrahmiike369
    @zahrahmiike369 Год назад +468

    Quand tu est français et que tu écoutes ça, tu ne peut juste pas t'empêcher de rire aux éclats tellement que notre accent et manière de parler se remarque 😂

    • @nimethcheng5007
      @nimethcheng5007 Год назад +20

      A fond!
      J'adore lire les commentaires qui voit difficilement la différence, ça me plie de rire

    • @undefinedfr-fr
      @undefinedfr-fr Год назад +35

      « Heu », « ouais-ouais-ouais » and the blasé way she speaks is hilarious and feel really obvious after the two other persons.

    • @anOlie01
      @anOlie01 Год назад +11

      et les américains, australiens et anglais se tordent de rire en nous voyant bégayer sur leurs différences d'accents !

    • @papyrusse.
      @papyrusse. Год назад +6

      ​@@undefinedfr-fr ça sert a rien de parler anglais mon reuf, ça se voit que t'es francais

    • @undefinedfr-fr
      @undefinedfr-fr Год назад +1

      Oui ça se voit c'est même clairement écrit dans mon pseudo. Ce qui aurait dû vous permettre de deviner qu'il n'y a aucun lien entre les deux.

  • @johnalden5821
    @johnalden5821 Год назад +463

    I have often heard that Québecois French is quite different from European French, but this is the first time I really heard it. She definitely had a different accent, maybe even leaning toward a different dialect. btw/there are other European countries in which French is a native language, including Switzerland, Luxembourg and Monaco.

    • @canada4life551
      @canada4life551 Год назад +28

      as a person from quebec i can’t make a difference between french from france belgium or switzerland

    • @zouz3588
      @zouz3588 Год назад +51

      @@canada4life551 les suisses parlent super lentement avec un léger accent germanique mais après c’est dur de le détecter parce que les français d’alsace et des alpes ont à peu près le même accent. Pour les belges, on les reconnaît parce qu’ils ont des « r » beaucoup plus harsh que les nôtres

    • @katoub3718
      @katoub3718 Год назад +18

      ​@@zouz3588 En tant que québécois,la différence de l'accent français de celui de Belgique est plus facile à distinguer pour moi,surtout quand on parle d'année 1990 ou comme ils disent "nonante-dix"!

    • @TheNmecod
      @TheNmecod Год назад +11

      Un dialecte non je crois pas. On construit nos phrases différemment et on a une prononciation différente mais bon ça reste du français.

    • @anthonyg9938
      @anthonyg9938 Год назад

      @@katoub3718 La seule différence avec les belges et les suisses c'est que eux disent nonte et septante alors que nous on dit quatre vingt dix et soixante dix.

  • @Djino
    @Djino Год назад +276

    Naya, the Belgian girl, is certainly Flemish. We can hear that in her accent, like in the way she pronounces the R's

    • @smelly1060
      @smelly1060 Год назад +6

      right that's exactly what i thought(im dutch), or at least she speaks it more often

    • @itachiwife8670
      @itachiwife8670 Год назад +3

      i would have loved to know where she's from, i tought she might be from Brussels but maybe you're right

    • @carthkaras6449
      @carthkaras6449 Год назад

      @@itachiwife8670 there are a lot of french speaker in flanders actually arround brussels

    • @lxportugal9343
      @lxportugal9343 Год назад +1

      The R's in ending of the words??????
      I noticed something different there too

    • @oliveranderson7264
      @oliveranderson7264 Год назад

      ​@@itachiwife8670 Maybe Alost/Denderleeuw

  • @Morwenna16
    @Morwenna16 Год назад +79

    Naya is Flemish or from Brussels but her accent is pretty unique. I’m from Wallonia and my accent is totally different from hers or from my friend who lives in Liège!

    • @MerlinetUriel
      @MerlinetUriel Год назад +3

      L'accent Wallon une petite

    • @bleucha
      @bleucha Год назад +2

      And even liegois accent is different than mine (Hainaut). I sound almost french (when i don't try to speak in patois).

    • @Morwenna16
      @Morwenna16 Год назад +1

      @@bleucha my friend from Liège says I sound French 🤪

    • @yourikhan4425
      @yourikhan4425 Год назад +1

      Yes but the accent from Liege is very strong.
      It's funny in a way how many accents are there on such a small area.

    • @gameknightjek2640
      @gameknightjek2640 Год назад

      @@bleucha Yeah, you are the most french-sounding in belgium.

  • @victouxxx
    @victouxxx Год назад +22

    Ils auraient dû prendre un gars du Lac St-Jean, ou de la Gaspésie, ça aurait été drôle 😂

  • @Imsemble
    @Imsemble Год назад +130

    Thank you for representing Québec on your channel

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +6

      After doing Spanish, German and English, I think it’s time for French and Portuguese to have their own miniseries

  • @kaihiroku8495
    @kaihiroku8495 Год назад +85

    I always find it funny that Canada insists on translating certain english terms in french like "magasiner" which actually means "shopping" and France just uses the english terms with a thick french accent. They also translate almost all movie titles in french, despite being so close to the US and much better at english than French people. Yet at the same time, they use english vocabulary a lot when speaking😂

    • @mariamb1777
      @mariamb1777 Год назад +35

      Since they are not many in North America they do this to preserve their language

    • @ultimateblaze23
      @ultimateblaze23 Год назад

      People need to protect their native languages from American english take over, even british english is being corrupted with American terms

    • @kaihiroku8495
      @kaihiroku8495 Год назад +1

      @@user-nv1zf6ps7t Which makes it funny that you use so many other english words and expressions 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @rpoutine3271
      @rpoutine3271 Год назад +4

      The French use even more English words and the Canadian French usage of English depends on the region, Montreal is the worse.

    • @cedo3333
      @cedo3333 Год назад +6

      Sometimes the quebecois is more french than pure french as they translate some english word that we don't. And then you are 90% true, their language is mixed with a lot more of english. And finally they do have specials words that is purely quebecois like "Char" for car and this word in french is tank lool. I don't have a Sherman in my garage lool. Love from france ;)

  • @heleneb514
    @heleneb514 Год назад +29

    French is French ..we all speak the same French. The accent changes.

    • @shi6600
      @shi6600 Год назад

      👍

    • @cookiedraw8173
      @cookiedraw8173 Год назад +3

      Some words, expressions, turn of phrases are different

    • @Koreynp
      @Koreynp Год назад

      @@cookiedraw8173 yes like pain aux chocolats ou chocolatine

    • @heleneb514
      @heleneb514 Год назад

      @Cookie •Draw• slightly, but we all speak the same literary language.

    • @heleneb514
      @heleneb514 Год назад +1

      @PoweringManipulation yeah but if you say "pain au chocolat " in France or Belgium, everybody will know what this is.

  • @TheReverses78
    @TheReverses78 Год назад +79

    To recognize someone from Belgium, close your eyes and listen to all the R's they pronounce all the R's

    • @jfrancobelge
      @jfrancobelge Год назад +10

      In French from France the R is definitely softer, less from the throat. I'm a Frenchman who lives in Belgium.

    • @lakm9062
      @lakm9062 Год назад +15

      People that are dutch native pronounce the r more but french nativs not

    • @ophelieb5454
      @ophelieb5454 Год назад +2

      This might be tricky because depending on where you come from in France, you can pronounce the R's as strong as a belgian people. As an example, I come from South-West of France, close to Toulouse and in the deep countryside we do pronounce the R's this way !

    • @TheReverses78
      @TheReverses78 Год назад +1

      @@ophelieb5454 ah bon??

    • @ophelieb5454
      @ophelieb5454 Год назад +1

      @@TheReverses78 Oui, dans la campagne tarnaise !

  • @sabrinasgandurra4818
    @sabrinasgandurra4818 Год назад +174

    I'm actually surprised at the French Canadian's accent. I'm Canadian, and all of my French Canadian friends have very distinct accents that you can really hear on vowel sounds, particularly when they say "Oui", and I assumed that accent carried through all of Québec. Clearly, I was very wrong 😂😂

    • @awsd_0_0
      @awsd_0_0 Год назад +34

      Her accent is closer to international french than how most québécois sounds. She's probably been abroad for a long time or she has a lot of French friends maybe

    • @lepotdefleur9906
      @lepotdefleur9906 Год назад +52

      Or she was shy to let her jargon out haha.

    • @sabrinasgandurra4818
      @sabrinasgandurra4818 Год назад +2

      @@lepotdefleur9906 ah yeah that makes sense

    • @sabrinasgandurra4818
      @sabrinasgandurra4818 Год назад

      @@awsd_0_0 that would explain it!

    • @italixgaming915
      @italixgaming915 Год назад +9

      There are several accents from Quebec and other French speaking regions in Canada, as you can guess. Some of them are really strong, especially in Northern Quebec. Personally I can't really differentiate all these accents but maybe that girl was not from Quebec but from Ottawa or something like that (there are native French speakers from there too).

  • @AuxaneST
    @AuxaneST Год назад +40

    Too bad they don't have Louisiana French as well. We also speak French in the US as an heritage language. Also a Swiss or a Luxembourgish. Also if they took a French from Occitania with the singy accent it would have been fun...

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Год назад +2

      Part 2?

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Год назад

      True. But Cajuns are not numerous enough.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Год назад +4

      @@goofygrandlouis6296
      True, but they should at least try to give their audience the opportunity to have one of them on here. I mean, I'm sure there are Cajun RUclipsrs!

    • @hakanstorsater5090
      @hakanstorsater5090 Год назад

      @@sion8 They seem to prefer hiring people that are residents in South Korea, though...

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Год назад

      @@hakanstorsater5090
      That is true.

  • @emjizone
    @emjizone Год назад +6

    7:15 Luxemburg and Suizerland, too. Monaco of course. And despite it's not and official language at all in Portugal you'll find french speakers there without much difficulty.

  • @ej-miranda
    @ej-miranda Год назад +82

    That Quebecers accent is verrryyyy neutral for a Quebecer. It only comes through a little stronger when she says hiver, populaire, and printemps

    • @italixgaming915
      @italixgaming915 Год назад +6

      I agree, this is a light accent, like when she pronounces the word "ça" almost like a French instead of "ço". However, I've heard this kind of light accent very often from Canadian speakers. I assume that in the most cosmopolitan areas, the accent is getting softer due to the fact that people from France also live there.

    • @yehet_squish
      @yehet_squish Год назад +20

      nah her accent is typical quebecois lmaooo

    • @cornie7339
      @cornie7339 Год назад +1

      @@yehet_squishsome words sounded a bit more English, but I think it’s because she had to speak English throughout the video

    • @ej-miranda
      @ej-miranda Год назад +5

      @@yehet_squish Maybe in Montreal and Quebec City. I live in a small town and it gets so much worse than that dude.

    • @yehet_squish
      @yehet_squish Год назад +15

      @@ej-miranda I'm Québécoise and I know when I hear my people her accent is typical, not every Quebecois/e sound like Ginette who smoke 67 pack of cigs a day

  • @kronosbot5
    @kronosbot5 Год назад +57

    Belgium has such wonderful and interesting young women. They have such a pleasant demeanor.

  • @Nancy-sf2pl
    @Nancy-sf2pl Год назад +99

    I could listen to the Belgian girl talk all day 😩

    • @GoodOldErin
      @GoodOldErin Год назад +19

      Yes, she is very cute. Or should I say hot? 😊
      I would love to meet her. Speaking six languages is awesome.

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +12

      Is it related to the fact she's hot

    • @lucaswells933
      @lucaswells933 Год назад

      @@mic498 I doubt it because she’s not

    • @shinyemi
      @shinyemi Год назад +2

      Yes her accent is very pleasing to hear

    • @huldah1605
      @huldah1605 Год назад +1

      ​@@lucaswells933To you

  • @intreoo
    @intreoo Год назад +84

    The poutine should've given the Quebecois girl away. Regardless, even before the poutine I immediately could tell that this was not metropolitan French. Even as an Anglophone, I could sense that something is very different from the standard French you associate with France.

    • @Emixam9090
      @Emixam9090 Год назад +4

      Yes it is particularly ugly so it’s easy to guess the canadian accent

    • @goodsoup7477
      @goodsoup7477 Год назад +11

      @@Emixam9090 hum waw ouch okay

    • @bicsfireextinguisher
      @bicsfireextinguisher Год назад +1

      i think he might not have understood what she was saying that well bcs yeah it would be a big giveaway

    • @Emixam9090
      @Emixam9090 Год назад

      @@goodsoup7477 you don’t think?

    • @goodsoup7477
      @goodsoup7477 Год назад +9

      @@Emixam9090 no I don’t think my accent is ugly no.

  • @L-Quebecois
    @L-Quebecois Год назад +34

    Je suis du Mexique, j’ai compris l’accent québécois et l’accent France

    • @TheNmecod
      @TheNmecod Год назад +4

      Vive le Mexique 🇲🇽

    • @allinix7intp
      @allinix7intp Год назад +1

      *j'ai compris 😉

    • @L-Quebecois
      @L-Quebecois Год назад

      @@allinix7intp Merci pour la correction!

  • @anttirytkonen11
    @anttirytkonen11 Год назад +18

    I couldn't have told 🇨🇵 French and 🇧🇪 Belgian French apart because they sound so similar to me. I found it pretty easy to distinguish 🇨🇦 Canadian French/Québécois though since I'm a typical 🇫🇮 Finn who loves 🏒 ice hockey and my favourite team comes from Montréal, so I've watched videos in Canadian French (I know only the basics of French but Spanish helps). If she had named a famous hockey player (not Wayne Gretzky) instead, he probably would not have guessed Canada. 🤓 Personally, I absolutely love Canada. ☺️ There'd be so much to explore and I only managed to scratch the surface by seeing a little bit of Toronto, Montréal, Calgary and Banff during my only trip there. A beaver tail pastry with maple syrup and a poutine tasted delicious. 😋

    • @bereny45
      @bereny45 Год назад +1

      It's cause the french woman is from the North of France. The accent is kinda close to a belgian one.

    • @iyzfedyherbzyfe
      @iyzfedyherbzyfe Год назад

      The belgian one said "belle pays",that is not french.

  • @ahoraya1047
    @ahoraya1047 Год назад +16

    There is also Swiss French and speakers of French in Luxembourg

    • @dictiustecare
      @dictiustecare Год назад +3

      There are french speakers in Vals d Aosta in Italy .

    • @romaingillet2526
      @romaingillet2526 Год назад

      ​@@dictiustecaremore like another latin language, no? I'm from Savoy.

  • @SALx96
    @SALx96 Год назад +60

    We finally have a quebecoise 🇲🇶

    • @chloecze5851
      @chloecze5851 Год назад +7

      c’est pas le bon drapeau, tu as mis celui de la martinique 🇲🇶

    • @cornie7339
      @cornie7339 Год назад +3

      @@chloecze5851il n’y a pas de drapeau du Québec dans les emojis, c’est celui qui lui ressemble le plus mais non c’est pas le bon

  • @megxoxo1244
    @megxoxo1244 Год назад +24

    My history teacher told me that us Quebec French people, our accent and language in general is very close to the ancient French. So yes we are REAL French. French from France got influenced by Italian and Spanish

    • @GIoo-yc9jz
      @GIoo-yc9jz Год назад +1

      French people are extinct soon anyway

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Год назад +4

      Those Italians...

    • @yourikhan4425
      @yourikhan4425 Год назад +5

      It's not just influence. It's just that languages naturally evolve over time and these two have simply evolved differently.

    • @mirage2585
      @mirage2585 Год назад +5

      how is it influenced by Spanish and Italian? no, French has been influenced by Latin, which has become vulgar Latin, French has Latin, Celtic origins and German influences.

    • @allister.trudel
      @allister.trudel Год назад +9

      @@mirage2585 your comfusing being "influenced" and "originating from".

  • @nathanspeed9683
    @nathanspeed9683 Год назад +42

    Didn't know that French Canadian are known as Québec or Québecois! I've heard of the city Québec. Also, I never visited Canada, so I didn't know there're differences between French Canadian and regular French! Emanuel seemed to have some knowledge of the French language, which helped him a lot.

    • @dictiustecare
      @dictiustecare Год назад +16

      Not all the people who speak french in Canada are quebecois ,there all also french speakers in New Brunswick and Manitoba .

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +13

      It's not that French Canadian are known as Québécois, it's just that most of the french-speaking canadians are in Québec. In france we often say "Québecois" to refer to French-speaking Canada, exactly like we say "England" for UK, or "Hollande" for the netherland. It's not technically accurate, it's just a way of speaking

    • @AT-rr2xw
      @AT-rr2xw Год назад +2

      Maybe it is just my personal experience hearing French Canadians from a certain place, but her accent didn't strike me as super strong Canadian. A lot of the French Canadian French that I have heard had had a noticeable dollop of a North American accent mixed in. I figured that she wasn't France French, but I would not have guessed French Canadian. Her mentioning poutine and maple syrup genuinely surprised me, but maybe I just had not heard her particular accent that much.

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +7

      Well if you didn’t see, Québec is the biggest province in Canada and the sole provincial language is French.
      But they’re French-Canadians all over the country so yeah Franco Canadian isn’t just Quebecker.
      It will be like saying that you didn’t know there is a difference between British English and American English .

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +13

      @@AT-rr2xw her accent is pretty normal Québécois to me. I don’t know what you mean by North American accent because she DOES have it

  • @henri191
    @henri191 Год назад +64

    Emmanuel is back , good , the first UK male member , last time he also had to guess , but in english , French is harder for him

  • @jean-lucleblanc5825
    @jean-lucleblanc5825 11 месяцев назад +3

    Ok but how was maple syrup and poutine not a dead giveaway 😭😂

  • @erikpetermans
    @erikpetermans Год назад +4

    He forgot that they also speak French in Switserland. A big tip to find out where the french speakers are from is to ask about numbers. The French do the really weird math counting whilest Belgian French is more logical except 80 and the swiss have the most logical where 80 is octante instead of quattre-vingt. That's how I would figure out what part of Europe they are from.

    • @CH-VS
      @CH-VS Год назад +1

      huitante*

    • @erikpetermans
      @erikpetermans Год назад

      @@CH-VS Ow for real? I always thought it was that. Thanks for informing me

  • @brunetpm
    @brunetpm Год назад +61

    It's interesting that he thought Naya might be from Africa. Given her parents are from Africa, it is reasonable that their accents might subtly influence hers despite the fact that she herself is from Belgium. I am not familiar enough with a typical Belgium accent to identify if hers differs in anyway.

    • @Poussindesdomtom
      @Poussindesdomtom Год назад +30

      I was actually surprised that she was surprised people might think she comes from Africa... since she has a quite strong African accent. Our accent doesn't only depend on the place we were born, it also depends on if our parents have an accent or not.
      Also, she has a small belgium accent, the way she pronounced the sound "R".

    • @buzzbuzztv6266
      @buzzbuzztv6266 Год назад

      @@Poussindesdomtomit’s not an « African » accent retard SHE is from the dutch part of Belgium (i speak FRENCH) Thats why she has an accent

    • @rienavoirmdr
      @rienavoirmdr Год назад +7

      ​@@Poussindesdomtom well i don’t think it’s the case for everyone tho, i was born & raised in belgium but my parents were both born in Africa (west & central) and still it doesn’t affect my accent i also speak dutch but if you hear me speaking you wouldn’t immediatly think i could be African. She doesn’t have a strong afro accent tho😂 she has more a dutch accent i can hear it

    • @Poussindesdomtom
      @Poussindesdomtom Год назад

      @@rienavoirmdr I never said that's the case for everyone, I just said it has a chance to influence our accent.
      Ok maybe not a _"strong"_ african accent but an african accent anyway.
      It looks like people with african origins are pretty bad at recognizing african accents! 😂

    • @rienavoirmdr
      @rienavoirmdr Год назад +8

      @@Poussindesdomtom well you said "our accent depends on our parents too", if you don’t add "in some cases", then yes you’re generalizing. Also, she has more of a dutch accent than an African one, i completely don’t hear the african accent and my parents have one so i know what an african accent sounds like trust me. I feel like when y’all see a black person, you immediatly expect them to "sound african" or atleast have an accent and not have a wide vocabulary and to sound let’s say less intelligent etc even when they don’t you just force it on us because i guess it’s the stereotype, but y’all are not ready for this conversation🤷🏾‍♀️

  • @heleneb514
    @heleneb514 Год назад +12

    The young lady from Belgium is flemish. Her first language is not French but Dutch. Therefore, she has an accent that is not the accent of a native French speaking person.

    • @vicky7645
      @vicky7645 Год назад

      Her French was perfect, as someone who lived in French Belgium (and who's French) I would say she just had a slight French Belgium accent, not a Femish/Dutch one

    • @heleneb514
      @heleneb514 Год назад +4

      @@vicky7645 je suis francophone (wallone). J'entends son petit accent flamand. Son français est en effet excellent mais le français n'étant pas sa 1ere langue, la comparaison des accents est un peu biaisée. Mon commentaire ne cible en rien sa connaissance du français ( je voudrais bien parler néerlandais comme elle, elle parle le français) mais c'est une constation par rapport au but de la vidéo qui est de comparer les accents des francophones. Comme le français n'est pas sa langue matenelle, elle a un accent mais ce n'est pas un accent francophone , c'est un accent lié au fait que le français est une 2e langue pour elle. L'accent flamand n'est pas du tout le même que l'accent néerlandais que ça soit dans l'utilisation du néerlandais, du français ou de l'anglais.

    • @intercepte
      @intercepte Год назад +1

      @@heleneb514 Même la Française n'a pas l'accent et l'articulation générique du français, mais de sa région.

    • @Konichimah
      @Konichimah Год назад

      @@heleneb514 totalement raison

    • @niracat15
      @niracat15 Год назад

      I'm agree

  • @jonaramire
    @jonaramire Год назад +7

    What about our swiss acccent ?!

  • @naturalsoundsoftheworld
    @naturalsoundsoftheworld Год назад +14

    The Northern French girl really needs to visit Quebec. Everyone who settled the French colony largely hails from Northern France, and we share a near identical culture with an old language that she would recognize quite profoundly. Northern France is a wonderful area, and spans two continents ultimately.

    • @crixusthenorman1603
      @crixusthenorman1603 Год назад +1

      Many French Canadians are decended from Normandy. French Canadian genealogy is very well documented and goes back to the first settlers and back to France. There is a very small gene pool in Quebec. Very unique.

    • @sid7088
      @sid7088 Год назад

      ​@@crixusthenorman1603unless it comes to native tax exemptions, then they're all suddenly part native. 😂😂

  • @ZYaruru
    @ZYaruru Год назад +5

    The Belgium girl and him were funny together XD

  • @envar1
    @envar1 Год назад +6

    8:59 She literally says France 😂

  • @Wickerrman
    @Wickerrman Год назад +26

    Really couldn't tell Canadian from typical French, but come on, she said poutine when talking about food! That's such a giveaway!

    • @AT-rr2xw
      @AT-rr2xw Год назад

      I got the feeling that she was not from France, but...I would not have guessed Canada until she mentioned poutine and maple syrup.

    • @MW_Asura
      @MW_Asura Год назад +13

      The weird anglicised tone from Quebec French is a giveaway

    • @AT-rr2xw
      @AT-rr2xw Год назад

      @@MW_Asura Maybe. It just seemed more subtle than what I remember hearing, both in media and in person.

    • @fs400ion
      @fs400ion Год назад +5

      ​@@MW_Asura It's not that much anglicised it's just more nasal just like Portugese

    • @fs400ion
      @fs400ion Год назад

      ​@@AT-rr2xw Depends on the age and region, but most young people have a similar accent to hers.

  • @nabilhussain605
    @nabilhussain605 Год назад +9

    What about Swiss French?

    • @tonyhawk94
      @tonyhawk94 Год назад +2

      Swiss French is very very close to standard French, unless you are native there is a few chance you would tell who's who. :)

  • @jonna7777
    @jonna7777 Год назад +3

    the canadian girl made me laught. thank u for that it made my day!!!

  • @Noah_ol11
    @Noah_ol11 Год назад +45

    There are more French speakers out of France , in Africa it's the official language of many countries , I would think the lady from Belgium is from there

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад +12

      This is the result of the Colonies.
      We have French Overseas Territories scattered across the Globe, mostly islands.
      We 🇫🇷 have the most Time zones
      Secretly the 5th Largest Country in the World.

    • @lxportugal9343
      @lxportugal9343 Год назад +11

      So as English...
      so as Spanish....
      so as Portuguese...
      But I still suspect that there are more French native speakers in France than outside

    • @itachiwife8670
      @itachiwife8670 Год назад +18

      she said she never even went to Africa...

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +21

      @@itachiwife8670 Yes, this. If you are born in a country, raised in a country, educated in a country, you ARE from this country. I know people from African origin in my country, we watched the same cartoons when we were kids,we grew up in the same environment, we have the same cultural references... The only difference is literally the skin color. This young girl is Belgian

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +7

      ​@@lxportugal9343 If i'm not wrong Rep.Dem. of Congo is now the biggest Francophone country, yet the thing is they don't have many access to the internet and therefor aren't very present in the Francophone world

  • @ced205
    @ced205 Год назад +8

    C'est marrant comment les québécois ont vraiment un accent américain quand ils parlent anglais. Un français qui parle anglais se reconnaît direct alors qu'un québécois ça paraît beaucoup plus naturel
    (Logique vu la proximité géographique en soit + le fait que tt les canadiens sont bilingues dès l'enfance)

    • @eloise-uc5bw
      @eloise-uc5bw Год назад +1

      Oe j'avoue

    • @Emixam9090
      @Emixam9090 Год назад +10

      Faux. Les Canadiens ne sont pas tous bilingues dès l’enfance. Au Québec, 60% gens qui vivent dans la métropole, Montréal, sont bilingue. Si tu sors de la métropole c’est moins de 30%. Notre accent en anglais est différent car on consomme plus de culture américaine donc on est capable d’effacer l’accent un peu. Mais écoute par exemple George St Pierre un Quebecois qui ne parlait pas anglais son accent en anglais est aussi pire que les Français, différent, mais tout aussi horrible.

    • @OdinWannaBe
      @OdinWannaBe Год назад +1

      @@Emixam9090 50% du Québec est bilingue étant la province la plus bilingue du Canada.

    • @Emixam9090
      @Emixam9090 Год назад +1

      @@OdinWannaBe si tu enleve Montreal le chiffre tombe a moins de 25%

    • @OdinWannaBe
      @OdinWannaBe Год назад

      @@Emixam9090 et alors ? ça va de plus en plus être bilingue Québec, Montréal fait partie de Québec ce que je sache ;p. internet change tout ça en plus.

  • @emjizone
    @emjizone Год назад +3

    7:46 Oh, it's funny, because if you go to Switzerland, they'll definitely tell you in French that they have the best chocolate too, even though it's very debatable. I mean debatable in Switzerland. There is no debate in Belgium about what nation makes the best chocolate.

  • @RainbowNatsuki
    @RainbowNatsuki Год назад +1

    When he said that the quebecoise didn't seem like a real french person but that quebec's french is the old and first french that have existed before and even France speaked that way before, but not today and quebecois are the only one who kept the same french.

    • @Rowlph8888
      @Rowlph8888 Год назад

      Yes ironically, in France itself, the language has been infested by the English-language, they organnised a programme to defend the French language against English influence going forward many decades ago.Quebec is Is more insular

  • @hannahdavis7089
    @hannahdavis7089 Год назад +15

    when he asked who was famous in lucie’s (the french girl) country and she said « dans ma partie de france » (in my part of france) lmaoo

  • @aldarxi5148
    @aldarxi5148 Год назад +2

    As a Belgian I didn’t know the girls was from Belgium. She really doesn’t have the accent I’m use too. Maybe that Dutch is her first language but it doesn’t even sound like it

  • @elouenmyas580
    @elouenmyas580 Год назад +17

    7:52 The idea that french fries are from Belgium is actually a misconception which comes from a claim from Belgian historian Jo Gerard. He claimed that he had a manuscript in this family, which described a peasant recipe of potato fried in fat and which would have dated back from the 17th century. The problem is that he has never been able to provide the manuscript in question. The only serious origin of french fries currently is still France where it is attested that fries were cooked at the end of the 18th century.

    • @theanalymous
      @theanalymous Год назад +3

      You're right but at the end Belgian fries are still better 😁

    • @Mia-gi7wy
      @Mia-gi7wy Год назад +1

      Anyway, today it's considered Belgium because we have the best ones. Go to Belgium and you will find fries trucks and shops everywhere. It smells like fries in the whole city of Brussels. We eat French fries a lot and they taste way better than in France.

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Год назад +2

      Jo Gerard was a journalist, not historian. And a liar.

    • @lmnll2742
      @lmnll2742 Год назад +4

      @@Mia-gi7wy Belgium is the leading producer and consumer of frozen fries the world.

    • @bleucha
      @bleucha Год назад

      @@lmnll2742 That not because we froze them that they can't be better. Secret is the frying.

  • @emjizone
    @emjizone Год назад +1

    1:48 Come on ! She literally sold it ! 😆

  • @astouaiisha
    @astouaiisha Год назад +6

    4:20 That is so funny cuz to my french ears, the belgian accent is so noticeable 🤣

    • @thibaut4181
      @thibaut4181 Год назад

      not for me i thought she was from Haïti or something like that

    • @astouaiisha
      @astouaiisha Год назад +3

      @@thibaut4181
      Mais archi pas, leur prononciation des mots est reconnaissable entre mille, surtout le R 😅 J'ai un collègue qui parle comme elle
      Les Haïtiens ça n'a rien avoir

    • @lea9966
      @lea9966 Год назад

      @@astouaiisha pas d’accord peut-être c’est parce que j’habite à côté de la Belgique mais j’ai pas entendu de différences avec le français classique

    • @philippesales2842
      @philippesales2842 Год назад +3

      @@lea9966 l'accent n'est pas aussi marqué qu'on aurait pu le penser pour une Belge, mais le "r" est nettement plus prononcé qu'avec l'accent français. A part ça, rien à voir avec l'accent haitien, mais alors rien de rien de rien ^^

    • @astouaiisha
      @astouaiisha Год назад

      @@lea9966
      Bah du coup Je comprends pas pk tu l'entends pas, c'est vraiment audible! On parle pas comme elle en France, du moins en Île de France, pourtant c'est pas tout le temps que j'entends l'accent belge, jdirais que la première fois que je l'ai entendu, c'était avec les stars de téléréalités belges qui venait à Secret Story

  • @girlfromgermany
    @girlfromgermany Год назад +2

    These different French accents made me think that it would be fun to do something like that with different German accents as well. And different British accents or basically different accents in any language.

  • @Jamdcup
    @Jamdcup Год назад +7

    I am French and I wouldn't have been able to guess Belgium 🤔

  • @mathlover4994
    @mathlover4994 Год назад +2

    Quebecois they talk like they are singing. Love it. Accent from France is more brutal .

  • @napsiuslebelche5846
    @napsiuslebelche5846 Год назад +15

    Actually, the fries ARE French, even though it hurts me to say it. But it's us Belgians who made them great and famous

    • @mirage2585
      @mirage2585 Год назад

      c'est exactement ça, c'est grandement grâce à vous, que les frites sont tels quels sont

    • @sushiboss4984
      @sushiboss4984 Год назад

      Non il existe encore des hésitations au niveau des historiens on ne sais pas si ça a d'abord été fait en Belgique ou en France.

    • @mirage2585
      @mirage2585 Год назад

      as French what you say is right but it is you the Belgians who had popularized and improved them greatly

    • @napsiuslebelche5846
      @napsiuslebelche5846 Год назад

      @@sushiboss4984 Il me semble que non ? 'fin je pense pas que Jamy aurait avancé ça si y'avait pas un consensus sur le sujet

    • @napsiuslebelche5846
      @napsiuslebelche5846 Год назад

      @@derbygagnant7458 Les frites françaises c'est les frites mcdo, arrête de te la raconter x')

  • @SandlotRider
    @SandlotRider Год назад +7

    4:50 She says "une belle pays" but "belle" is feminine and "pays" is masculine. She should've said "un beau pays". So I guess she's not native from French speaking Belgium. Flemish maybe? I'm wondering because I'd hardly see a Walloon confuse "pays" for a feminine name.

    • @Annielee825
      @Annielee825 Год назад +8

      She's from Antwerp. Said so in another video, so I suppose Flemish is indeed her mother tongue.

  • @shi6600
    @shi6600 Год назад +3

    "ouiiii j'aime bien regarder la TV" ...uhhhh TV? Ahhhh Québec

    • @LePhil79
      @LePhil79 Год назад +2

      au moins elle dit "magasiner" au lieu de "faire du cHoOpiiiiGnE" ...

  • @katjakettmann8679
    @katjakettmann8679 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am from Luxemburg and we speaks French too😊

    • @samuelalexander2992
      @samuelalexander2992 8 месяцев назад

      Do you have a particular accent/way of saying things that differentiate Luxembourgeois French from French French (or Belgian French)?

  • @andrewwilliams2193
    @andrewwilliams2193 Год назад +19

    Good job, being Canadian, as soon as Poutine was mentioned, I smiled. You can tell the difference in the accents.

  • @Leo-Faure1
    @Leo-Faure1 Год назад +2

    It would have been interesting to have people with accents from different parts of France. The girl from the north have a very neutral French accent.

  • @ashleegarcia1806
    @ashleegarcia1806 Год назад +9

    This is really interesting, I have been learning english since I was young and I noticed there was a difference when it comes to accents, now I'm learning french and one of my teachers was a fonetist and he told me about this, I don't think dialects are the key in this video because they actually speak with the same vocabulary as it's different with Spanish (frutilla is strawberry or little fruit), I think the mane difference between the three of them is fonetics, because I noticed a small prolongation in the vowel of the québécoise and guttural things (I might be wrong) dans la femme de Belgique.

    • @cedo3333
      @cedo3333 Год назад +3

      Yeah your ears are very good. About guttural the best give away is the "R" but there is a trick, those R can be found in the south of France too.

    • @ashleegarcia1806
      @ashleegarcia1806 Год назад +1

      @@cedo3333 French is so rich and I love it :3

    • @hakanstorsater5090
      @hakanstorsater5090 Год назад +1

      The Canadian girl uses some typical quebecois words, though...

    • @ashleegarcia1806
      @ashleegarcia1806 Год назад

      @@hakanstorsater5090 Really? I thought there wasn't that much of a different when It comes to dialects. Could you give me some examples for learning purposes? I think is really important because of the use in spoken French. Can you also recommend me channels in French?. Please :'3

    • @hakanstorsater5090
      @hakanstorsater5090 Год назад +1

      In this video, she said "écouter la tele"("listen to TV") and "magasiner" (shopping), I recall, there was another video where she did nearly the same presentation and the French and Belgian girls commented on it...

  • @BucyKalman
    @BucyKalman 5 месяцев назад

    The accent of Quebec was easy to spot, for example, how she pronounced "printemps" or "populaire". She also used Quebec specific words/expression like "magasiner" and "écouter la TV".

  • @NoopyP
    @NoopyP Год назад +5

    Les Québecois disent "magasiner" ? Wow XD

    • @pa_whitecar
      @pa_whitecar Год назад +4

      On parle français oui!🙂

  • @archituere1460
    @archituere1460 Год назад +2

    French fries are from Paris. The Belgian just made it their speciality.

  • @eloise-uc5bw
    @eloise-uc5bw Год назад +8

    For me who is French it was very easy 😂👌🏻

    • @llbeats8396
      @llbeats8396 Год назад +1

      Pas facile en anglais par contre c’est pas who I am c’est who is

    • @eloise-uc5bw
      @eloise-uc5bw Год назад +1

      @@llbeats8396 ah ok mercii 💖😁
      (chui assez mauvaise en anglais mais justement j'essaye de progresser 😅)

  • @user-tc3rr6ew2j
    @user-tc3rr6ew2j Год назад +1

    Chère Dame (3:39)
    J'ai l'honneur de vous remettre cette missive remplie d'intrigue à votre égard.
    Oui, j'ai été plus qu'ébahi par votre sourire angélique, votre façon de vous exprimer coordonné par votre accent belge, en harmonie avec votre fabuleuse coupe de cheveux afro en parfaite philharmonie de vos yeux amendes...
    Les mots me manquent, afin de poursuivre mes flatteries... Je ne suis guère polyglotte à l'inverse de vous.
    Plait-il à mes yeux, comme à mon cœur chavirant entièrement à votre égard !
    "Mais que me veut-il" vous diriez vous ?
    Ma Dame, laissez moi vous déposer une simple requête ; me feriez-vous l'honneur de me fournir votre Insta-missive ?
    Dans une éventualité ou ma missive, n'arrive point à bon port, je tacherai d'avoir eu comme souvenir de vous, un magnifique sourire d'une colombe lâchée signifiant la paix et l'harmonie à travers les peuples du monde.
    Respectueusement,

    • @user-tc3rr6ew2j
      @user-tc3rr6ew2j Год назад

      Diantre !
      Je viens d'apercevoir votre Insta-Missive dans la rubrique déroulante !
      Je vous laisse tout de même ma missive.
      Respectueusement,
      Toujours un jeune homme admiratif.

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Год назад +22

    Please find someone from Geneva who can represent Swiss French. 🇨🇭

    • @frenchfan3368
      @frenchfan3368 Год назад +3

      I am with you. In my personal opinion, Swiss French is the clearest, accent free French that is perhaps the easiest to understand for non native French speakers.

    • @flxdz7103
      @flxdz7103 Год назад +2

      @@frenchfan3368
      I totally agree with you 👍
      You might also include Louisiana French wherein the contraction can easily be followed and I love their vocabulary such as "petit(e)" for "enfant(e)"but the main meaning is still small 🍹

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +1

      @@frenchfan3368 really?

    • @frenchfan3368
      @frenchfan3368 Год назад

      @@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Yes, really.

    • @MsJuval
      @MsJuval Год назад

      ​@@frenchfan3368 but French in Switzerland differs also highly on where the person speaking it is coming from. And I am not talking about a Swiss German speaking French. There are different accents of French in Switzerland. You probably mean the French spoken in Neuchâtel, which has kind of a reputation 😉

  • @allthe1
    @allthe1 8 месяцев назад

    As with everything in language learning, exposure is the best teacher! This guy spent some time in France and seems to have guessed it in under a sentence into the interview with the French lady 😅

  • @BigSlimyBlob
    @BigSlimyBlob Год назад +23

    Québécois is fairly easy to identify, no surprises there. The Belgian girl did have a bit of an accent from Africa (which is natural, she would have gotten it from her parents), she was definitely the "trap" here. But the French girl was about 107% French.

    • @tomminho
      @tomminho Год назад +9

      No african accent at all she sounds like she’d be from nothern france if anything.

    • @Rowlph8888
      @Rowlph8888 Год назад +7

      @@tomminho All those French-speaking girls said she didn't have any African Intonation - they would know better than anyone

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob Год назад +1

      @@tomminho Admittedly it's quite subtle. Very slightly different Rs, and half-skipping a consonant here and there.
      I haven't heard that many Belgians speak, though. Those that I have didn't sound like her, but it could be that some parts of Belgium just happens to have that same accent she has.
      But most likely she got hints of her parents' accents.

    • @TheReverses78
      @TheReverses78 Год назад +1

      She had no african accent buddy, she even said she never been to africa..... u probably haven't heard many people from belgium.... Expose yourself more to different culture before saying ignorant nonsene.....

    • @aurelieb.6552
      @aurelieb.6552 Год назад +8

      Trap is that she's from Antwerp (watch the 3rd video of this serie) and her mother tongue is actually Flemish Dutch and her parents are from Africa. You can clearly hear her Dutch accent and she said "une belle pays" misgendering a common word like "country" twice. Not a native speaker and has a foreign accent.

  • @sunlight.travels
    @sunlight.travels Год назад +9

    Im guessing there will be several videos about different french accents? Can’t wait 🎉

    • @JosephOccenoBFH
      @JosephOccenoBFH Год назад +1

      There are several outside Europe, Haitian French (Creole), Madagascar French, West Indies French and of course, West African French among others.

    • @jfrancobelge
      @jfrancobelge Год назад

      @@JosephOccenoBFH Even within France, the southern accent is different from the northern "Parisian" accent.

  • @mecha-sheep7674
    @mecha-sheep7674 4 месяца назад

    Just in France alone you have very different accents (and regional languages as well). But I guess it would be hard to find young people speaking with the South-West french accent in Korea... Likewise for overseas accents.

  • @lxportugal9343
    @lxportugal9343 Год назад +11

    The Canadian one was easy... not in the 1st sentence but after... those R really tell
    I would like to hear a swiss too

    • @jasperkok8745
      @jasperkok8745 Год назад

      The i (which in French from France usually sounds as ‘ee’, but in Canadian French tends towards the i in words like “in, pit”) is the main giveaway for me, but indeed, the r sounds very peculiar too.

  • @da_little_tsundere1281
    @da_little_tsundere1281 Год назад +2

    I don't understand what everyone means by Belgian accent 😅
    I'm Belgian and I have a similar accent to Parisians and the girl clearly has a flemish accent
    But it's true some regions have a very particular accent like in Liège but nothing much

  • @sageares
    @sageares Год назад +5

    On a de belles filles en Belgique hein :o

  • @simoneortolani3604
    @simoneortolani3604 Месяц назад

    Never experimented such uncommon way of speaking french, even from Quebec

  • @anthonyg9938
    @anthonyg9938 Год назад +3

    It has been proven that historcally french fries were created in Paris in the 19th century so french fries are really FRENCH !

  • @ptichkagoat
    @ptichkagoat Год назад +1

    do it with the antilles, la réunion, and africa

  • @Ice_V
    @Ice_V Год назад +4

    2:36 Drake🤣 Famous meme-person, curse to all football (soccer) clubs and national teams😅
    Lucie is so serious

  • @tigerbesteverything
    @tigerbesteverything Год назад +2

    fun fact, french fries aren't from beligum, but from france, more exactly Paris. Other theory is that the term comes from the verb frenching and not the country of France.

    • @sushiboss4984
      @sushiboss4984 Год назад

      Non il existe encore des hésitations au niveau des historiens on ne sais pas si ça a d'abord été fait en Belgique ou en France.

  • @francoiswaroquier3676
    @francoiswaroquier3676 Год назад +6

    Rien qu'en France, il y a des accents ou des mots différents dans toutes les régions..... même dans certaines situations : par exemple dans le nord on dit ' diner' pour le déjeuner, ou 'chicon' pour une endive.....bon courage pour faire le tri !

  • @LancerDeCrocs
    @LancerDeCrocs Год назад +1

    I lvoe how they took the most typical belgian accent for the shoot it amazes me

  • @yourikhan4425
    @yourikhan4425 Год назад +4

    It was funny to watch. Note that in Europe, there are many other countries speaking French : Switzerland, Luxembourg, Monaco, ...
    The main difference for the Belgian gild is the way her "r" were being pronounced.
    For me the Canadian and the French were instantly obvious. It took me a bit more to guess the Belgian one.
    Also there are so many French accents in France and in Belgium that you could have taken several people from all around the countries and have an even more difficult test.

  • @basil2512
    @basil2512 Год назад

    7:15 Well in fact, France, Monaco, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland all have French as an official language in Europe haha (French is also Vatican City's official diplomacy language!)
    But French is also spoken in Andorra, even if it's a minority ^^

  • @alexandrebouvier7731
    @alexandrebouvier7731 Год назад +8

    A lot of words in Quebec French kept the correct phonology. Ex : mettre (put) vs mètre (meter) vs maître (master) or jeûne (fasting) vs jeune (young) vs jaune (yellow). French in France has been simplified after the French Revolution to be easily taught at school outside Paris.

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Год назад

      Just like modern English.
      If you want a language to spread to the masses.. simplify it !

  • @EdwardRock1
    @EdwardRock1 Год назад +28

    Quebec accent sounds like the Australian version of French.

    • @flxdz7103
      @flxdz7103 Год назад +3

      While Swiss French is the Colombian Spanish of the French-speaking world 🍹

    • @JosephOccenoBFH
      @JosephOccenoBFH Год назад

      Or Brazilian Portuguese is to European Portuguese

    • @MW_Asura
      @MW_Asura Год назад +3

      @@JosephOccenoBFH The difference is that Brazilian Portuguese actually sounds good (in comparison to the Quebec accent)

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +1

      Literally that’s what everyone says.
      People also compare us to the US and UK but also people compare France to America because they are more famous than their other counterparts, the Britain and Canada

    • @canada4life551
      @canada4life551 Год назад +1

      @@MW_Asura non

  • @Fizzys_FunFest
    @Fizzys_FunFest Год назад +12

    Idk why but as soon as I heard the first girl talk I knew she was from Québec- Guess that’s just like an instinct since I live in Canada- French Canadian is just so different from French it’s just easy for me to tell for some reason

    • @AT-rr2xw
      @AT-rr2xw Год назад +2

      Wow. I couldn't at all. Maybe the Canadian French that I am used to are from different parts, but I usually notice North American influences in the pronunciation. But maybe I have heard more French Canadians than I had noticed and simply assumed that they were from Europe.

  • @daniiiiij6695
    @daniiiiij6695 Год назад +10

    I would have guessed Canada immediately but not France and Belgium. Would have been great and interesting if there had also been someone from Switzerland since one part of it is French speaking. Great video!

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад +1

      For the record Switzerland is mostly Germanic than French speakers.
      Only the West side

    • @daniiiiij6695
      @daniiiiij6695 Год назад +4

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 and? It's an official language in CH 🤷‍♀️

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад +2

      ​​@@daniiiiij6695 No Idea. That's their choices
      Je suis Français by the way 🇨🇵

    • @daniiiiij6695
      @daniiiiij6695 Год назад +1

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 sorry, my mistake. I thought that you were telling me the reason why they shouldn't be included. 🤣

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад +2

      @@daniiiiij6695 That's okay 👍

  • @YouTubeExplore777
    @YouTubeExplore777 Год назад +22

    But can they all understand each other in French?
    "Canadian, Belgian, and Parisian varieties have some differences. They are mutually intelligible to some extent. But when a Canadian is speaking to someone from France, the accents might create a problem for them. However, it is only natural for a vernacular to develop its unique features."

    • @81naixy
      @81naixy Год назад +27

      It's mostly mutually intelligible appart from some expressions that are only used in each countries, but other than that we can totally understand each other

    • @itachiwife8670
      @itachiwife8670 Год назад +16

      we understand each other, i'm from Belgium and i follow youtubers from France, Quebec and Swiss. There are some words and expressions that can be different, the Quebec accent is the most different, if the person decide to take a stronger accent when speaking it will get harder to understand but it will still be undestandable if they don't use unknown expressions. It's basically like english in different countries.

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +6

      We totally understand eachother. It's still the same language, the difference between Parisian/Québécois French for example is about the same as between UK/USA English.

    • @mic498
      @mic498 Год назад +3

      @@81naixy Totally unrelated but I love your pseudo

    • @81naixy
      @81naixy Год назад +2

      @@mic498 Thanks, I like it too lol

  • @onegirlmusic
    @onegirlmusic Год назад +2

    did y'all find this guy living under a rock because he keeps on passing every hint like damn 😭😭😭

  • @basheersalah1997
    @basheersalah1997 Год назад +16

    French from France is Fucking Sexy Idk why but it always has my heart❤

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 Год назад +2

    For "who's famous from your country" if she had said "Pierre et Marie sont fameux, mais Marie n'est pas d'ici", would you have gotten it?

    • @kebabman2834
      @kebabman2834 Год назад

      Got*

    • @sgtcrab2569
      @sgtcrab2569 Год назад

      She should have said Tommy Douglas...that would stump him! LOL!

  • @christophermichaelclarence6003
    @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад +12

    This is the result of the Colonies.
    We have French Overseas Territories scattered across the Globe, mostly islands.
    We 🟦⬜🟥 have the most Time zones
    Secretly the 5th Largest Country in the World (bigger than Brazil)
    The Bristish are in fact is our Colonial Empire Rival
    For example, Canada and Québec are the result of our colonies
    🇨🇵🟦⚜️⚔️🇬🇧🟥👑

    • @luksavat7750
      @luksavat7750 Год назад

      Frence is the 5th largest country? I'm curious about this. How? Are you counting the parts of the ocean that belong to France or what? Cause if we count mainland France with its overseas territories, France has not even 1 million kilometers yet.

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Год назад

      @@luksavat7750 Yep our French Overseas Territories that belong to us

    • @luksavat7750
      @luksavat7750 Год назад +3

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 According to Wikipedia, the total land area of France with its overseas territories is about **643,801 km2** (248,573 sq mi). The land area of mainland France alone is **549,060 km2** (211,999 sq mi).
      For comparison, the state of "Amazônia" in Brazil alone measures 1.559.167,889 km2.. Almost three times larger than France with its overseas territories.
      I can't get your math.

    • @romaingillet2526
      @romaingillet2526 Год назад

      ​@@luksavat7750he's talking about our maritime territories.
      Our Exclusive Economical Zone or maritime area is the largest. It's about 11,5 millions km2. So in total our territory is about 12 334 801 km2.
      Most french people don't actually know that we own like 8 percents of the globe, I'm a geography fan and he's a damn french nationalist (he's literally in every foreign french themed video hahaha) 😂
      Take care and have a nice week :)

    • @ESC_Thomas
      @ESC_Thomas Год назад

      @@romaingillet2526 wtf vraiment ?

  • @drewwilliams6888
    @drewwilliams6888 Год назад +1

    beautiful language, and a brilliant video.

  • @--julian_
    @--julian_ Год назад +3

    9:01 gave it away lol

    • @ricartlu
      @ricartlu Год назад +1

      i didn’t even realized, my friends did but Emanuel said after that he did not hear it actually 😅

    • @--julian_
      @--julian_ Год назад

      @@ricartlu lol, that's nice

  • @J0HN_D03
    @J0HN_D03 Год назад +1

    *9:01** "in my part of FRANCE". Did she know the rules???* 🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂

  • @TheResponse01
    @TheResponse01 Год назад +3

    Une fois pour toutes : les frites (French fries) SONT FRANÇAISES ET PAS BELGES !
    Et c'est Pierre LECLERCQ, historien Belge de la gastronomie (on ne pourra pas l'accuser de chauvinisme) qui l'a prouvé en recoupant les dates.
    Likez mon commentaire pour rétablir la vérité svp. 🙏

  • @ahoraya1047
    @ahoraya1047 Год назад +1

    American English. Quebecois French or Mexican Spanish at least keep the common language...but it was not possible with Dutch and Afrikaans, which is not Afrikaner Dutch as the link with the European Metrópolis was broken soon

    • @flxdz7103
      @flxdz7103 Год назад

      Actually, Afrikaners of Dutch descent are very eager to revert back to the Standard Dutch as spoken in the early 20th century. The big hindrance are the Afrikaners of German and British descents who insisted that Afrikaans/Cape Dutch should be distinct from Dutch as much as Norwegian is distinct from Swedish and Danish.

  • @fabulously695
    @fabulously695 Год назад +8

    I think it would be more fun if we do don’t get any obvious clues(from thumbnail) or other bits. We should have to guess too

  • @J0HN_D03
    @J0HN_D03 Год назад +1

    *7:52** FRENCH fries ARE FRENCH!!!! From PARIS actually!!!*

  • @fien4878
    @fien4878 Год назад +3

    at least he is educated enough to know 'french' fries are BELGIAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @rowenn1729
      @rowenn1729 Год назад

      Actually non

    • @fien4878
      @fien4878 Год назад +2

      @@rowenn1729 actually oui. Even people from other countries know it🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️

  • @DocteurInfierno
    @DocteurInfierno 4 месяца назад

    La différence entre le français parlé au Québec et celui en Europe est facile à détecter. Par contre, moi-même parlant français comme 1ère langue, je vais difficilement pouvoir différencier un français d'un belge ou d'un suisse, sauf s'il utile des termes spécifiques comme septante, octante ou nonante

  • @veRGe02
    @veRGe02 Год назад +8

    should have gotten someone speaking cajun american french too haha, would have thrown them off