Lol it happened to me. If you watch enough videos in Korean and listen to music is korean, your brain will just start to digest and understand it. That’s how some ppl learn languages just from watching TV shows.
Jack lied, he studied korean not because he dated a korean girl but because he's a trainee and he's about to debut this year as the first Irishman kpop Idol.
Jack isn’t shitting when he says you can learn the alphabet really fast. I learnt it in 10 minutes using something I saw on Pinterest three years ago and I have never forgotten it lmao
@@legendaryhero6695 it’s a comic strip titled Learn to Read Korean in 15 minutes. It has a cartoon man who goes through the alphabet with you and everything and has a blue background. I don’t know how to describe it sorry lmao
17:30 okay so I'll explain the origins of Hangul (한글) briefly, Sean was almost right. Korea had its own vernacular (spoken language), but didn't have their own script, and so they used what's called Literary Sinitic (or simply Sinitic), which was a script in China that was written only and didn't have a spoken form, so other countries (Korea, Japan, Vietnam) began using this script to write and started using their own vernacular languages to read it out. In Korea, it was used in different forms, so originally it was used logographically, but they also created new ways of using it phonetically as well (for example Hyangchal/Idu). As Sean said, in the 15th century, King Sejong and his scholars decided to create a new, phonetic script called Hangul to read and write in the Korea vernacular, with the aim of improving literacy rates in the country. However, Hangul wasn't used immediately, as Sinitic was considered to be the script of academia and learning, so Hangul was used by women for personal writings such as poetry etc, and a few others. It was only really in the late 1800s and early 1900s that Hangul became more publicly used such as in newspapers, partly due to wanting to bolster their national identity. The Chinese characters, known in Korean as Hanja (한자) are still used alongside Hangul but only in certain types of writing, again such as in newspapers etc. For anyone who actually reads this, hope it shed some light on the subject! :D
That was a nice read, thank you! :) I've been trying to learn and it's been fun, though I barely know any words haha. Thank you for the history lesson :D
no joke hearing someone say your accent in your second language is actually good is such a great compliment. im dutch and a friend of mine has an american girlfriend, and she actually told me she was surprised at how good i was at english the first time i met her. that actually made me feel amazing
Pro tip for learning languages: watch podcasts and listen to songs in your target language. Even if you don't know what they're saying, you'll get familiar with more casual/conversational speech and speech patterns, tones/word-emphases, pronunciations, and you'll learn to recognize when one word ends and another begins, even on faster speakers. Edit: I've seen a couple people ask about ASL and other sign languages, and the concept is the same. Immerse yourself in content that uses your target language in a casual, day-to-day manner, to learn the nuances and word-separations of the language. Personally when I was first studying ASL, I liked watching tiktoks or youtube channels made by Deaf/HoH people.
@@LeanneVlogzFilmz i like to watch anime like boku no hero academia, so if i wanna learn more japanese i like to listen to bnha radio where the voice actors just talk about the show and other random stuff and that’s helped me quite a lot with tones and pronunciation :)
exactly how i learned english lmao now i speak pretty fluent english that no one knew that i was actually from a country that didnt have english as the main language lol
@Joanna Andree not always. if you’re learning a new language in a different country/environment than the language is from there’s usually not a lot of places where you can just hear people speaking it conversationally. especially if you’re learning in school, you usually learn vocab, grammar, reading and writing first, but speaking with a bunch of people who also are beginners is not super helpful lmao
It’s even more impressive because it’s much harder to learn a language as an adult compared to learning it as a child due to some brain thing that I don’t remember
7:25 this is an interesting thing to think about... like in german for example Auf Wiedersehen (goodbye) is literally translated as "until I see you again"... which is a different from Auf Wiederhören which is "until I hear you again" (aka goodbye over the phone). Its very interesting to analyze direct translations from other languages, it really gives a lot of insight into the culture and the way people think from different parts of the world.
I dont know how it's spelled so forgive me, but I remember some German pals I was staying with for a bit used to say chus (?) as goodbye, is that more of an informal/friend goodbye?
Idk if someone already cleared this up but since Jae was raised in America his Korean he wasn’t very fluent so he actually had to learn (unlike if he was raised in Korea) so that’s why you calling him native was a compliment ^^
yes yes, he’s said before on that korean shows that his pronunciation was really bad, and that he was embarrassed lol. and he prefers to speak in english.
Like Felix from Stray Kids. He's Korean but was raised in Australia and had to learn basically the entire language while in the competition to be in Stray Kids at the label. I think the leader of SKZ Bangchan taught him most of it.
@@ameliahoward9861 no he never said that. His pronunciation is perfect and good and he’s fine with that but when he tries to articulate his thoughts into Korean he found that difficult on variety shows. Jae has now lived in Korea for like 10 years now and he’s super fluent speaker now coming from a Korean myself. Whenever is see him speak Korean now he doesn’t have trouble speaking his thoughts in Korean which is good
I'm the person who made that video with the admittedly clickbaity title and I didn't at all expect that 4 million people would watch it - I only made it for my brother to see. Thank you for reacting to my video and I'm glad that you could get some deserved content out of it! And again - your Korean is quite good for a Westerner. Thank you for all that you do - you really helped make my quarantine, which was already compounded by me going through a hard time in my life, much better. Hoping that this gets twice as many views!
*laughs in uno dos tres* I challenge you to a Spanish vs Japanese battle I’m waiting it should be before 24 horas Edit: Oh god I didn’t realized how much replies were gonna come in just 1 day, guess I won’t have time to do a battle... adios mi vampiro
Jack explaining how he struggled with school and learning and saying it got worse as he grew oder Now being diagnosed with ADHD: EVERYTHING MAKES SO MUCH MORE SENSE NOW!!
Hahaha this reminds me of when I was dating a Korean guy, I could read hangul and knew like only a few words/phrases but he didn't know any of it so he'd joke about how I was more Korean than him. I had to tell him how to pronounce his middle name LOL
6:50 Sean, you’re actually very fluent and you were absolutely correct! “노랬어” means “it was yellow”, it is indeed close to “노래 불렀어“ which means “I sang”. The phrase she was likely trying to say was “놀았어” which means “I played”. As a side note though, Korean is a bit different, so in this context, Tina should’ve said “어몽어스 했어“ or similar. 17:57 Sean is very close to the actual history. To simplify, before 한글 was invented, we used 한자, which is logographic. Just think of this as the Korean equivalent of Kanji. Korean was only spoken, and King Sejong (the Great) developed the writing system. This is why we have a Hangeul Day as well on October 9th.
@@SupplySupplier did you say he's not the imposter? I think you said something about "no" and "imposter" but I'm not sure cause the last time I studied Korean was like 3 years ago lol. What did you say?
This kinda stuff is normal, every language has a tonal cadence, most asian languages put more emphasis on Vocal tone and language, the Masculine vs Feminine, so most males speak harsher and deeper, because they expect their words to be taken as important and must be listened too, while most females speak softer and shorter, im not an expert in this stuff, I only studied a small amount of Japanese and 2 years of Italian.
To be fair though, Jae speaks Korean fast af. Like he doesn't speak English that fast but Goddamn get him excited for something and if he replies in Korean it's like uhh... I've seen a couple clips of him speaking to other members of Day 6 so fast they were confused 🤣
The Chinese characters were reconfigured for Japanese too. They added Hiragana for phonetics and Katakana for foreign words (like how we italicize foreign words in English). The Kanji (Chinese characters) was used as the basis for a few languages, but essentially Japanese has three alphabets.
@Logan Roof I can tell you're an anger sniper judging by your pfp, but please, stop trying to be quirky and cool for being an edgelord. It was only 2 months ago godammit!
Learning languages is extremely contextual! I speak okayish German from 4 years in Berlin, but only within specific scenarios. I worked there in English, so my ability to learn was limited. My French is fluent (but not native/perfect) because I spent a year on exchange in high school dedicated to learning French in Brussels. The amount of immersion/privilege to dedicate time to learning really impacts how much you can learn.
the reason they all complimented Jack for saying “Jaes a native speaker.” is because Jae isnt from korea. he was born in Argentina. so when he said that everyone was like “ohh thats a compliment because that means jae sounds like an actual korean.” edit: guys it aint that deep💀
I mean, he was born in Argentina but he moved to the U.S really young, like he's Korean-American, not Argentinian. He spent his entire childhood through university in the U.S. so he tends to identify himself as American.
@@444sun im not going to put all his born info, he was born in argentina then later in his childhood lived in california where he stayed there for awhile. he isnt a native korean.
I JUST started learning Korean and 11:42 I will say that the best decision I made was to learn and practice the alphabet first because MY GOD the romanization complicates it so much. It took me like a day to learn the alphabet. I was so glad I chose to study that. I installed the korean keyboard and would do modern-day flash cards using google translate with the characters and memorize the rules more than the characters. For example ㅏ is ah with an open sound and ㅓ is aw with a softer sound ㅋ I will always remember because 키 is my favorite 샤아니 member (역시 태민 )... but even spelling Shinee out I have to discard what I know about pronouncing letters. There is no ㅎ or H in the Korean spelling. it's S-yah-e-n-ee. (edit, I spelled 샤아니 wrong earlier and got some... undesired search results so be careful 😂 its ㅑnot ㅏ) So learning the pronunciation of the characters and separating it from english completely helped me learn better. I realized if I continued not being able to write and visualize the words then it would take a long time. On the other hand I could read japaneese romanji -very- well but I had trouble learning Hiragana because of the required memorization. Anyway, I recommend to anyone: when teaching yourself learn the 14 characters and how they are pronounced. If you have to look up words then avoid looking at the romanization and read the characters themselves. use the pronunciation tool they provide to help correct you but I would avoid using the roman version as much as possible. Sorry for going on so much about it but I've been excited lol.
My parents would always tell me to take Spanish classes in school because it’s the most useful second language to learn (for where I live anyway) but I want to take Latin because I just want to be that person that can speak a dead language lmao. You never know when it might come in handy after all
As someone who has also pursued Korean as a foreign language, i completely agree. The Korean alphabet is so perfect. The blocking of sounds and simple line structures making the letters are so simple to learn to read (even if you don’t know what the word means lol). I definitely think it’s one of the easiest asian languages to learn (once again in reference to the writing in particular).
Just a small note: a lot of Asian languages actually use the roman alphabet, especially those in the Southeast. However, they don't get any easier even when they use the roman alphabet. Like oh my god, have you seen how Indonesian or Filipino languages are structured?? Also just wanted to make this comment because "Asia" isn't just consisting of East Asia. I know a lot of you guys from the west forget that tho :')
@@mosstits Yeah, it seems like a lot of ppl forget that western Asia includes the middle east and central Asia includes countries like Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, etc.
@@imdva Yep! Malaysian is under the Austronesian language family, and all members of it have tons of borrowed English words due to colonization. However, to answer your question, the grammar is insane if your first language is English. The topic here is writing though, and yeah, that's easy because it's just the roman alphabet. There may be tweaks (like some of them don't have "c" but "k"), but it's easy to remember.
if anyone is confused, the reason why jaes chat said jack complimented him is because jae isn’t from korea he was born in SA and raised in NA. people used to say his korean sounded more like japanese because of how off his pronunciation was when he first moved to SK edit: SA = South America NA = North America SK = South Korea sorry for any confusion
@@Gremlin-Glizzy I mean, that's kind of on you bro? Why would you jump straight to 'states of America' and not the significantly more logical 'South America'??? If someone said 'I was born in the EU' would you ALSO just assume it meant something else?
I’m currently learning Korean and I’m so excited to keep learning it! It’s such a nice language! It’ll be my 4th after English, ASL, and Spanish. I’ll be going to high school next year and I hope that I’ll be able to use it a little
Jae: *insults Jack in Korean;* *kalm* Jack: [in Korean] what did you just say? Jae: *panik* Jack: [in Korean] I meant I didn’t understand what you said Jae: *kalm*
@Lunar Studios actually it wasn’t stolen just some others also had the same comment as me Which I didn’t realize after I posted it but it doesn’t matter I find it funny so I posted it
To explain the native thing about jae: he wasnt born in korea, although his parents are from there. he lived in america for most of his childhood/teen years, until he went to korea for an audition. While he had studies/learnt some korean, he wasnt /fluent/, and he has talked about his, i guess learning? several times. So yeah saying that probably made him really happy : D anyways go give day6 a listen they're amazing
I feel that. Kanji is the death of me, but a little tip to Remembering it is to apply a little story to it. Take the Kanji for fire, it looks like a man running around on fire. And always keep in mind, you don't need to know how to write it. Most native speakers don't know how to write them either, they just remember what it looks like.
The best thing to do is to go down the JLPT order and to practice the different radicals. The radicals help you give a basis for bigger ordered kanji which consists of those radicals
As a Chinese who grew up in Germany. I have noticed that seeing someone "obviously not Asian" (as in someone who doesn't look Asian) speak an Asian language (be it fluent or not) just amazes me. There's always this feeling of pride to know that someone went or is going through the trouble to learn a completly different "breed" of a languange. Because it usually means that they are also very interested in the culture to the point where they want to learn the language. And it's also this sort of funny feeling? Of seeing someone who looks "different" speak Chinese or Korean or etc. It's an interesting sight and sometimes also gives me the thought of: Oh shoot I can't shit talk them in Chinese anymore XD
Honestly, as a Korean person who isn't fluent in Korean, Jacksepticeye reads Hangul better than I do. I read at like 2/3 his speed... IM NOT WORTHY (┬┬﹏┬┬)
7:35 I read once that it's a slurring of "God be with you" that was written "God B W Ye" and got more compact over time, but I don't know what the source was on that
The origin of "Goodbye" is "God be with ye" which was then abbreviated down to "Godbwye" which was basically the monk version of text-speak, and it evolved from there.
Nobody in Ireland can speak fucking Irish it’s the hardest language to learn god It’s more common to be fluent in another language then in Irish. I’m 100% Irish yet I can only say one phrase in Irish, An Bhfuil ceád agam dul go dtí an leithreas which literally means can I go to the bathroom. I’m not even kidding I’ve done Irish for 10 years now and I still can’t say more then one phrase 🔥🔥😏😏
at 18:34, the editor is correct... the individual strokes are the component letters aka "Jamo" (which can represent both vowels and consonants). But when you put those strokes together you get Hangeul characters, which represent syllables.
Just a friendly reminder that 밥 먹다 or “to eat rice” also means “to eat something/to eat a meal”. Tina took Jack’s words as “I ate something” so she was asking what he ate.
Omg the same expression of "eating rice" can also be translated as "eating something/having a meal" in chinese! It is so cool that chinese and korean share this "idiom" :)
@@streamgrapes Yeah! I remember learning that and my mind was blown. I thought people just REALLY loved rice when I lived in Korea. Like damn, you eat only rice day in and day out???? Lol. If someone says 밥 먹다, it’s always best to assume they mean “something/a meal” and not “rice”. Koreans love rice, but not enough to solely eat rice 😂 Also, it’s customary to ask “have you eaten?” instead of “how are you?” when you see someone for the first time after a while. It’s an extremely important phrase to learn to be polite in Korean culture. And they use the same “밥 먹었어(요)?” phrase. And when you say “yes,” many will ask exactly what Tina asked after: “what something/meal did you eat?” 무슨 밥 먹었어(요)?”
Fun fact about the word, “Goodbye.”: It actually comes from the old, “God be with you.” Which is what people used to say when they would leave. It morphed over time into goodbye.
Specifically! God be with you turned into God be with ye, shortened to Godbwye at the most minimalistic, as it was often written at the bottom of letters like how we write "write back, [name]" and such.
@Singers News dude youre making people want to listen to your stuff LESS by doing this. Just buy likes if your mum is actually doing this, she'l never know and it will be far cheaper than actually buying the mic yourself.
I feel like this is true in all languages: when you're not fluent in language X, it ALWAYS feels like people speaking language X speak SO FAST cause your brain literally goes "decoding... please wait... your speech is important to us... brain disconnected from the channel" all the time! I saw that happen in german and spanish as well
Yes! Totally know that feeling. Happened to me when I went to London. 😑 I thought I was speaking english very well and then I went there and my brain decided to stop funtioning. 😂
Learning a different language to cheat in among us is as high IQ as it gets
Sup orangepeanut
Hello orange peanut I'm big fan
How many subs can i get off this comment current is (1,56k)
My parents promised if I hit 60k subs by the end of the year there will buy me a new gaming PC, I really need that
Thank you for bearing the pain of watching Amy Schumer for us
Jack, Jae is Korean American born in Argentina. That's why people were saying that it was nice of you to call him native cause he isn't.
Yeah
FUCK SAKES, I can’t fucking escape these GODFORSAKEN bots 😩😭
Daisy May dude Larson prospecting isn’t a bot, they just have all of the features of a bot comment and they just decided to comment on every reply
@@Wewam-yt8un dude sucks lol. He's on every single jacksepticeye video 🙄
Ahhhhh! That makes a lote more sense. Thanks :D
sean and jae: *speaking korean*
corpse: “i’m stuck in the drum set”
My NaMeS jAe?!?
I am you sure I am not sure 🤔 will do it but he would have a great time to tan the next time you get it up 🆙 is going on with the knockout
Corpse 'bout to drum out with Dowoon lol
Hey, step-jack I'm stuck in the drum set
@@partystarter8041 Tf?!
Jack just straight up casually learning korean without noticing is actuall fucking amazing
It was a joke... taking a dig at the clippers who were saying he was fluent when he very much is not
@@blakebell8533 I thought this was one of the clippers channel before I read your reply wtf
Lol it happened to me. If you watch enough videos in Korean and listen to music is korean, your brain will just start to digest and understand it. That’s how some ppl learn languages just from watching TV shows.
@@hotsexyangel that happened to me with english OLKJNCDMSKJDCNJMSJMDKS
@@hotsexyangel it’s called immersion method or smthn, cos that’s how we all first learnt languages when we were babies
Jack and Jae: Having a normal conversation
Corpse: *I ' M S T U C K O N T H E D R U M S E T-*
Lol-
no one was paying attention 😂
That was my favorite part lol
Heh
Let me help you step-sister ;)
Jack: *speaks korean*
Jae: *speaks korean*
Corpse: *stuck in drum set*
As it should be
hotel: Trivago
Bruh
The Irishman who lives in London.
copied someone else’s comment~
An Irishman speaking Korean is as rare as an Australian not swearing.
I’d drink to that
Cheers mates
Edit: 300 likes and I'll say cheers in every accent
Every accent: cheers
Now read that as you may.
as rare as a scotsman not drinking
*kid friendly lazerbeam intensifies*
Or a brit. Dont leave us out the equasion
Jack: *says the number 18 in Korean*
Also Jack: I'm cursing in Korean!
All jokes, Jack! We love your fluency in Korean.
LOL it is a very fine line between the two!
18 means mass murder in Chinese
I have a korean friend who said that the number 18 and 'fuck' is similar in pronunciation.
Korean here, 18 is 십팔 which is close in pronunciation to the korean equivalent to fuck or shit which is 시발. People do use 18 as another word for 시발
Jack lied, he studied korean not because he dated a korean girl but because he's a trainee and he's about to debut this year as the first Irishman kpop Idol.
Jack oppar 😍❤️
ohh ok fellow teume
Jyp
😂😂😂I’m surprised Séan didn’t like this yet
I just choked on my tea
Irish Potato : *speaks korean*
Swedish meatball : *speaks japanese*
Korean fnaf king: *learning to speak Korean*
Mr world wide
*confused noises*
*their turning asian...*
Coincidence? I THINK NOT!!!
Jack isn’t shitting when he says you can learn the alphabet really fast. I learnt it in 10 minutes using something I saw on Pinterest three years ago and I have never forgotten it lmao
What was the pinterest thing you used?
yeah which pic I wanna use it lol
@@legendaryhero6695 it’s a comic strip titled Learn to Read Korean in 15 minutes. It has a cartoon man who goes through the alphabet with you and everything and has a blue background. I don’t know how to describe it sorry lmao
yeah, the alphabet is really easy to learn and memorize but the pronunciation part.....
@@clemmychan9295 yeah, I always get confused when I see the four syllables on top of each other as well. Like which one do I say first 😫
17:30 okay so I'll explain the origins of Hangul (한글) briefly, Sean was almost right. Korea had its own vernacular (spoken language), but didn't have their own script, and so they used what's called Literary Sinitic (or simply Sinitic), which was a script in China that was written only and didn't have a spoken form, so other countries (Korea, Japan, Vietnam) began using this script to write and started using their own vernacular languages to read it out. In Korea, it was used in different forms, so originally it was used logographically, but they also created new ways of using it phonetically as well (for example Hyangchal/Idu). As Sean said, in the 15th century, King Sejong and his scholars decided to create a new, phonetic script called Hangul to read and write in the Korea vernacular, with the aim of improving literacy rates in the country. However, Hangul wasn't used immediately, as Sinitic was considered to be the script of academia and learning, so Hangul was used by women for personal writings such as poetry etc, and a few others. It was only really in the late 1800s and early 1900s that Hangul became more publicly used such as in newspapers, partly due to wanting to bolster their national identity. The Chinese characters, known in Korean as Hanja (한자) are still used alongside Hangul but only in certain types of writing, again such as in newspapers etc. For anyone who actually reads this, hope it shed some light on the subject! :D
that was so interesting, thank you!
thank you so much!
That was a nice read, thank you! :) I've been trying to learn and it's been fun, though I barely know any words haha. Thank you for the history lesson :D
Nerd
@@AmibwoJeffBob what's wrong with being a nerd?
I can’t wait for “Jack speaks FLUENT English and surprises his friends”
Ooooh savage
Dún do bhéal, amadán
“Jack speaks FLUENT gibberish and surprises everyone”
@@FriskKimura he will NEVER
Top of the morning
Next up jacksepticeye calls markipliers mom and speaks fluent korean to her lmao.
Yes XD
Omg yes, has to be done
Jack please do it, will you?
now this i wanna see
IF THIS DOESNT HAPPEN I MIGHT DIE
Jack : *speaks Korean*
His fans that were learning Irish: *Irish music stops*
@chrißtøfer PéZéT x58 no
Speak IRISH GAELIC JACK!
Lmaoooo
Bagpipes stop
@@johnleed6774 Gaelic isn't actually actively taught in Ireland, it's actually a language that was very close to dying out
no joke hearing someone say your accent in your second language is actually good is such a great compliment. im dutch and a friend of mine has an american girlfriend, and she actually told me she was surprised at how good i was at english the first time i met her. that actually made me feel amazing
Title: Jacksepticeye speaks FLUENT Korean
Jack: Well yes, but actually no
XD
Is it and accomplishment if you get hearted by a RUclipsr?
@@Juicy-KingDerp One of the highest honors in the RUclips community
thank you for over 1.8k likes (i don't know what else to say than thank you people of the internet)
Congrats! You got a heart from Jack! ^^
Comments: “can’t believe Jack is patting himself on the back.”
Actually Jack: “I’m actually not that fluent but I’m happy I know the basics”
I know right
Jack should play ori and the will of the wisps since he played ori and the blind forest
No one said that
@F**СК МЕ! СНЕCK МY РR0FILЕ bot trash, drop dead.
Me: looking for comments that say "can't believe jack is patting himself on the back":
Jae: *Speaks in korean*
Jack: *Responds in Korean*
Corpse: “Im stuck on the drum set! Im stuck on the drum set!” 🤣
Jack should play ori and the will of the wisps since he played ori and the blind forest
@@milome1532 this is not even remotely related.
Not him calling Jae a native Korean speaker and not knowing he lives in Korea lol. Jack if only you knew he was a kpop idol
That was hilarious 🤣
@@reagancoots4783 tbh idk he is a kpop idol bc I'm not kpop fan, but jack is a kpop fan so he should know about him 😂
I'm just wholesomely picturing Jack and Momiplier casually speaking Korean to each other
I really hope they one day do a video trying to have a full on conversation in Korean with momiplier 🤣 THAT would be so entertaining!
@@Jcpierce20 that's a great idea
Momiplier.... Eurgh that's cringe
@@leightonrud66 that's what she's referred to as in Mark's community for years
@@leightonrud66 why is it cringe?¿
Pro tip for learning languages: watch podcasts and listen to songs in your target language. Even if you don't know what they're saying, you'll get familiar with more casual/conversational speech and speech patterns, tones/word-emphases, pronunciations, and you'll learn to recognize when one word ends and another begins, even on faster speakers.
Edit: I've seen a couple people ask about ASL and other sign languages, and the concept is the same. Immerse yourself in content that uses your target language in a casual, day-to-day manner, to learn the nuances and word-separations of the language. Personally when I was first studying ASL, I liked watching tiktoks or youtube channels made by Deaf/HoH people.
That's a good idea. Which podcasts shows do you recommend for Japanese?
@@LeanneVlogzFilmz whatever you do please don’t only watch anime and then think you’re fluent
🙏🙏🙏
@@LeanneVlogzFilmz i like to watch anime like boku no hero academia, so if i wanna learn more japanese i like to listen to bnha radio where the voice actors just talk about the show and other random stuff and that’s helped me quite a lot with tones and pronunciation :)
exactly how i learned english lmao now i speak pretty fluent english that no one knew that i was actually from a country that didnt have english as the main language lol
As a Korean American I am ashamed to say that Jack’s Korean is better than mine.
I'm a Korean American too! :D
@@coffeesoap97 :D hello!
same tho lmaooo
I am not Korean nor American but I wish I was though. Lol
I am Korean American but I have a hard time actually learning to speak in full sentences does anyone have an tips
He claims his Korean isn't impressive but the fact that he's learned to hold a conversation in it is very very impressive
We meet again...
Yeah. I can approve that as a korean. I was quite surprised to know that he knows the history behind our characters very well.
@Joanna Andree not always. if you’re learning a new language in a different country/environment than the language is from there’s usually not a lot of places where you can just hear people speaking it conversationally. especially if you’re learning in school, you usually learn vocab, grammar, reading and writing first, but speaking with a bunch of people who also are beginners is not super helpful lmao
It’s even more impressive because it’s much harder to learn a language as an adult compared to learning it as a child due to some brain thing that I don’t remember
Yeah, I'm a korean american and he's probably better than me.
No but Jack learning a language for love sake is so cute I can’t
I want a friendly conversation between Sean and Mark's mom
Edit after 8 months: In Korean
ME TOO!
Relatable, have a nice day.
Blow this up
@@ShmebNasty kaboom, there ya go
yeeessss lol
"Did you know that jacksepticeye was an korean"
Asian people : "one of us, one of us"
I ruined the 69 your welcome
Gooble gobble!!
a*
techno reference?
me, speaking japanese, in no way related: ONE OF US, ONE OF US
Jack is no longer an Irish potato, he is now a Korean noodle.
He's evolved
He’s potato starch noodles
Its not better but also not worse
He's a Korean Takeaway.
Potato noodles
7:25 this is an interesting thing to think about... like in german for example Auf Wiedersehen (goodbye) is literally translated as "until I see you again"... which is a different from Auf Wiederhören which is "until I hear you again" (aka goodbye over the phone). Its very interesting to analyze direct translations from other languages, it really gives a lot of insight into the culture and the way people think from different parts of the world.
I dont know how it's spelled so forgive me, but I remember some German pals I was staying with for a bit used to say chus (?) as goodbye, is that more of an informal/friend goodbye?
Idk if someone already cleared this up but since Jae was raised in America his Korean he wasn’t very fluent so he actually had to learn (unlike if he was raised in Korea) so that’s why you calling him native was a compliment ^^
I still remember back in the day when he'd say speaking in interviews in English rather than Korean were easier for him hehe :3
yes yes, he’s said before on that korean shows that his pronunciation was really bad, and that he was embarrassed lol. and he prefers to speak in english.
Like Felix from Stray Kids. He's Korean but was raised in Australia and had to learn basically the entire language while in the competition to be in Stray Kids at the label. I think the leader of SKZ Bangchan taught him most of it.
@@jasmined.greene8907 iirc it was Minho who was his primary teacher
@@ameliahoward9861 no he never said that. His pronunciation is perfect and good and he’s fine with that but when he tries to articulate his thoughts into Korean he found that difficult on variety shows. Jae has now lived in Korea for like 10 years now and he’s super fluent speaker now coming from a Korean myself. Whenever is see him speak Korean now he doesn’t have trouble speaking his thoughts in Korean which is good
"jacksepticeye FLUENT in korean"
jack: I KNOW CARROT
감자 소년은 자랐다. 이제 감자 남자.
@@Mr12Relic why is this so funny to me lmao
IM THE 1.1k LIKE HEHEHEHE
@@convection20 what does it say?
@@w1nr322 "The potato boy grew up. Now he's the potato man."
Reality: Jack can speak rudimentary Korean.
Internet: JACKSEPTICEYE IS LITERALLY ASIAN.
@jacksepticeyes dad is in hell LOL shut up attention seeker
@Contaminator [mandatory second name] it's a troll account, they want people to get mad at them.
@Contaminator [mandatory second name] eh, doesn't really seem like they regret it, look at their channel
what comment?
oh it was deleted
I love the fact that he roast’s himself more than roasting other people
jack: speaks other languages except for English and Irish
everyone: "impossible"
@chrißtøfer PéZéT x58 n o
hOi
@chrißtøfer PéZéT x58 fuck what you want, youre pretty cool 😎
@chrißtøfer PéZéT x58 you have some really heavy competition
@chrißtøfer PéZéT x58 if you wanna be the most hated make a shitty video about someones death
“I learned some Korea” *realizes* “learn some fucking English”
When I say I felt this on a deep personal level
I don't understand this comment
what...?
@@nootnootmofos7415 he said Korea not Korean
@@actualgarbage8549 tf?
greetings. it’s a good decision of type in “chill yall” on youtube search bar, its good!
@@nootnootmofos7415 as in I speak Korea (the country) not Korean the language
I'm the person who made that video with the admittedly clickbaity title and I didn't at all expect that 4 million people would watch it - I only made it for my brother to see. Thank you for reacting to my video and I'm glad that you could get some deserved content out of it! And again - your Korean is quite good for a Westerner. Thank you for all that you do - you really helped make my quarantine, which was already compounded by me going through a hard time in my life, much better. Hoping that this gets twice as many views!
Wow. Pretty crazy
It was a good video bro, good content for you good content for Sean I respect that. :) have a good year :)
Nice!! Loved that vid. Great job dude, high fives all around!
hang on i checked you actually did!
also wdym it’s not that clickbaity
Aww you did good!
7:40 Fun fact: Goodbye is originally a contraction of "God be with ye" (which was contracted into Godbwye at some point in the 16th century)
jack: speaks in korean*
meanwhile pewds: screams in japanese*
yare yare daze...
YAMETE!!
bakayarou!
Konichiwa hajimaste watashi wa Joey -im Aussie haha
@@SmittenAce :D
Konnichiwa! Watashiwa RositheCat! Yorushikun.
Jack: You can probably learn the Korean alphabet in 30 minutes.
Me: *Crying in Japanese*
ikr, over 2000 fucking characters I'm literally crying.
if you count all the rare characters it totals up to 50,000
*laughs in uno dos tres*
I challenge you to a Spanish vs Japanese battle
I’m waiting it should be before 24 horas
Edit: Oh god I didn’t realized how much replies were gonna come in just 1 day, guess I won’t have time to do a battle... adios mi vampiro
Hiragana, Katakana then the fucking demon KANJI
@@jacobkim3690 bruh Japanese has 50,000 characters. There’s three alphabets. How many characters are there in Spanish? 27? That’s laughable.
@@yusha1059 NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DONT REMIND ME MAAAAAAN
7:33 this is definitely the first time i've ever realized this too omg......
hello verified person
Ily Caitlin
❤️
Interestingly enough, the term "goodbye" comes from a misread lazy writing of "God be with ye," or GODBWYE, leading to goodbye.
Jack should play ori and the will of the wisps since he played ori and the blind forest
@@noodsdood6977 i thought it was “go by”
"Learned some Korea?! Learn some fucking English!!" Has gotta be my fave jacksepticeye quote to date.
Jack speaks *FLUENT* Latin and accidentally summons a demon instead of impressing everybody
*Jack speaks fluent Latin and accidentally summons a demon, impressing everybody.
Demon jack summon's: i can grant you one wish
jack: those meanie spammers
demon: this one's on me.
I just imagined Anti being forced into the mortal realm and swearing at Jack in a thicc irish accent
@@mirceadraculov6515 he even impress demon
Jack speaks FLUENT Latin and accidentally starts a fourth punic war
“Jack you’re so mean”
Jack, genuinely confused: WHAT did you just say to me??? 🔫
What jack is bread god
@@zoeyhatzenbuehler3868 🍞
Corpse: Im stuck on the drum set.... XD
Jack: *has an Irish accent*
me: *hears him speak Korean and his whole accent disappears*
Jack: *SURPRISE SHAWTY!*
me: *WHAT-*
Hahahahahahaaaaa
Shawty’s like a memory in a my head.......
@@urmumhuge5556 *melody
@@Rommy456 No, he's on to something...
not laugh, didn't funny.
Jack explaining how he struggled with school and learning and saying it got worse as he grew oder
Now being diagnosed with ADHD: EVERYTHING MAKES SO MUCH MORE SENSE NOW!!
**Jack speaks Korean**
Momiplier has entered the chat
y u p
🧀
@@user-id6fl9jd4q 🐀
tsk tsk tsk....
1 more like for 1k lol
Noice
Me a full korean American: *doesn’t know jack shit abt how to speak korean* this Irish guy:
As a half Swiss half Filipino i can relate, (i have no idea to speak Swiss or much Filipino)
unfortunate! i love studying korean and im Romanian hahaha
Im Mexican and haven't spoke Spanish in YEARSSS
Hahaha this reminds me of when I was dating a Korean guy, I could read hangul and knew like only a few words/phrases but he didn't know any of it so he'd joke about how I was more Korean than him. I had to tell him how to pronounce his middle name LOL
Bro my spanish as a mexican american NOT GOOD AT ALL
Everybody gangster till the Irishman starts speaking Korean.
응
6:50 Sean, you’re actually very fluent and you were absolutely correct! “노랬어” means “it was yellow”, it is indeed close to “노래 불렀어“ which means “I sang”. The phrase she was likely trying to say was “놀았어” which means “I played”.
As a side note though, Korean is a bit different, so in this context, Tina should’ve said “어몽어스 했어“ or similar.
17:57 Sean is very close to the actual history. To simplify, before 한글 was invented, we used 한자, which is logographic. Just think of this as the Korean equivalent of Kanji. Korean was only spoken, and King Sejong (the Great) developed the writing system. This is why we have a Hangeul Day as well on October 9th.
"The imposter speaks Korean"
Everyone: *accuses Irishman living in Brighton*
Jack: *sweats nervously*
나 임포 아니야
@@SupplySupplier did you say he's not the imposter? I think you said something about "no" and "imposter" but I'm not sure cause the last time I studied Korean was like 3 years ago lol. What did you say?
@@lyrinis me in
I love how jack's voice gets a little higher and softer when he's speaking Korean
He said it's because he learned from his girlfriend so he speaks kind of like a girl
He said this like 3 years ago idk why I remember this
but its kinda like my japanese friend that has a high voice in english but when he switches to japanese his voice like mf corpse
I take Japanese and it’s like I need to have a higher pitch when speaking
This kinda stuff is normal, every language has a tonal cadence, most asian languages put more emphasis on Vocal tone and language, the Masculine vs Feminine, so most males speak harsher and deeper, because they expect their words to be taken as important and must be listened too, while most females speak softer and shorter, im not an expert in this stuff, I only studied a small amount of Japanese and 2 years of Italian.
Jack when speaking korean: *Normal foreign accent*
Pewds when speaking japanese: ゴゴJOJO THEME INTENSIFIESゴゴ
Now they need to face off
i speak all the language only if use google translate
To much anime
한국말
@@gunnerfunk159 got a problem with that?
To be fair though, Jae speaks Korean fast af. Like he doesn't speak English that fast but Goddamn get him excited for something and if he replies in Korean it's like uhh... I've seen a couple clips of him speaking to other members of Day 6 so fast they were confused 🤣
It’s amazing how much of a language one can learn
@Logan Roof dude
I want to learn German
@Logan Roof bruh
@Logan Roof wow such a troubled person
That’s kinda how language works bro😂
The Chinese characters were reconfigured for Japanese too. They added Hiragana for phonetics and Katakana for foreign words (like how we italicize foreign words in English). The Kanji (Chinese characters) was used as the basis for a few languages, but essentially Japanese has three alphabets.
The true legends are out here with some serious knowledge
@Logan Roof I know you’re trying to be edgy, but stop
@Logan Roof I can tell you're an anger sniper judging by your pfp, but please, stop trying to be quirky and cool for being an edgelord. It was only 2 months ago godammit!
Oh hi there. Love your videos.
Chinese characters are Hanzi but Kanji is the Japanese version/pronunciation of Hanzi
Jae: *compliments jack on his korean*
Jack: *explains that he is a mere amateur*
CORPSE: hlep, i'm STUCK.... D;
greetings. it’s a good decision of type in “chill yall” on youtube search bar, its good!
@@bvl1335 Nah
Learning languages is extremely contextual! I speak okayish German from 4 years in Berlin, but only within specific scenarios. I worked there in English, so my ability to learn was limited. My French is fluent (but not native/perfect) because I spent a year on exchange in high school dedicated to learning French in Brussels. The amount of immersion/privilege to dedicate time to learning really impacts how much you can learn.
I’m fluent in American, British, Australian, and Canadian, if you couldn’t tell, I’m multilingual in different ways.
I am also fluent in those and in english
Really? Define “biscuit”
@@RachelSoma yes
I speak a language that many countries understand and speak, and, having multiple versions.
Basically i speak english.
I understand southern American women. I am a god
Plot twist: Jack only knows Korean because he's about debut as a kpop idol
Not haha
@@karsbamir6890 yes very not haha
With pewds, yes. Their group is called A.S.S
underrated comment XD
Your pfp gives me ptsd, that manga scarred me
the reason they all complimented Jack for saying “Jaes a native speaker.” is because Jae isnt from korea. he was born in Argentina. so when he said that everyone was like “ohh thats a compliment because that means jae sounds like an actual korean.”
edit: guys it aint that deep💀
ohhh that makes a lot of sense tysm!
yeah he grew up in america though!
I mean, he was born in Argentina but he moved to the U.S really young, like he's Korean-American, not Argentinian. He spent his entire childhood through university in the U.S. so he tends to identify himself as American.
i dont even like jae but u got this so wrong
@@444sun im not going to put all his born info, he was born in argentina then later in his childhood lived in california where he stayed there for awhile. he isnt a native korean.
I JUST started learning Korean and 11:42 I will say that the best decision I made was to learn and practice the alphabet first because MY GOD the romanization complicates it so much. It took me like a day to learn the alphabet. I was so glad I chose to study that. I installed the korean keyboard and would do modern-day flash cards using google translate with the characters and memorize the rules more than the characters.
For example ㅏ is ah with an open sound and ㅓ is aw with a softer sound ㅋ I will always remember because 키 is my favorite 샤아니 member (역시 태민 )... but even spelling Shinee out I have to discard what I know about pronouncing letters. There is no ㅎ or H in the Korean spelling. it's S-yah-e-n-ee.
(edit, I spelled 샤아니 wrong earlier and got some... undesired search results so be careful 😂 its ㅑnot ㅏ)
So learning the pronunciation of the characters and separating it from english completely helped me learn better. I realized if I continued not being able to write and visualize the words then it would take a long time. On the other hand I could read japaneese romanji -very- well but I had trouble learning Hiragana because of the required memorization.
Anyway, I recommend to anyone: when teaching yourself learn the 14 characters and how they are pronounced. If you have to look up words then avoid looking at the romanization and read the characters themselves. use the pronunciation tool they provide to help correct you but I would avoid using the roman version as much as possible.
Sorry for going on so much about it but I've been excited lol.
Jack and Jae: Speaking and discussing Korean with each other.
Corpse: "I'm stuck on the drum set..." ;^;
sad sad
I'm sorry, but I have to: "Who touched my drum set"
@@EzioNova9293 nnmjj
@@uranbilegenxtuvshin5585 What?
@@EzioNova9293 bshsuciq
I always wanted to learn a language that many people don't know so I could talk about people right in front of them and no one would know.
Learn dutch
Yea I know a bit of pig Latin
@@wolfgirlplays375 Saaaaame!!!
Sumarian. Nobody knows
My parents would always tell me to take Spanish classes in school because it’s the most useful second language to learn (for where I live anyway) but I want to take Latin because I just want to be that person that can speak a dead language lmao. You never know when it might come in handy after all
Jack: let’s go back
*Universe being created*
Jack: Wait not that far back
Punchline?
@@TXC_CARNAGE how do I punch a line
Bruh wtf kinda joke was this supposed to be
@@_iaden_640 a joke about jack saying “let’s go back” but didn’t specify how far back
That hurt me to read was that supposed to be funny
He structured the title and thumbnail like a clips channel would... clever
Jack when he speaks Korean
Korean People: Impossible
My parents promised me if I hit 60k subs by the end of the year there will buy me a new gaming PC, I really need that.
Let’s see how many subs I can get out from this reply curently I have 390
😐
No u
_K o r e n_
As someone who has also pursued Korean as a foreign language, i completely agree. The Korean alphabet is so perfect. The blocking of sounds and simple line structures making the letters are so simple to learn to read (even if you don’t know what the word means lol). I definitely think it’s one of the easiest asian languages to learn (once again in reference to the writing in particular).
especially compared to kanji or chinese alphabets lol
Just a small note: a lot of Asian languages actually use the roman alphabet, especially those in the Southeast. However, they don't get any easier even when they use the roman alphabet. Like oh my god, have you seen how Indonesian or Filipino languages are structured??
Also just wanted to make this comment because "Asia" isn't just consisting of East Asia. I know a lot of you guys from the west forget that tho :')
@@mosstits Yeah, it seems like a lot of ppl forget that western Asia includes the middle east and central Asia includes countries like Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, etc.
@@mosstits Malaysian also uses roman alphabet and uses ALOT of english words, but i have no idea about the grammar so im not sure if its easier or not
@@imdva Yep! Malaysian is under the Austronesian language family, and all members of it have tons of borrowed English words due to colonization. However, to answer your question, the grammar is insane if your first language is English.
The topic here is writing though, and yeah, that's easy because it's just the roman alphabet. There may be tweaks (like some of them don't have "c" but "k"), but it's easy to remember.
if anyone is confused, the reason why jaes chat said jack complimented him is because jae isn’t from korea he was born in SA and raised in NA. people used to say his korean sounded more like japanese because of how off his pronunciation was when he first moved to SK
edit:
SA = South America
NA = North America
SK = South Korea
sorry for any confusion
States of America yes the most know country it’s like calling UK k or u
I’m bout to stan even more I didn’t know he’s from South America too
@@Gremlin-Glizzy what? They were saying that he was born in South America (Argentina), then moved to the USA...
BiancaHunt ohh sorry I don’t know all the initials for each bloody continent
@@Gremlin-Glizzy I mean, that's kind of on you bro? Why would you jump straight to 'states of America' and not the significantly more logical 'South America'??? If someone said 'I was born in the EU' would you ALSO just assume it meant something else?
I’m currently learning Korean and I’m so excited to keep learning it! It’s such a nice language! It’ll be my 4th after English, ASL, and Spanish. I’ll be going to high school next year and I hope that I’ll be able to use it a little
Wait those are literally the exact same languages I’m learning too are you me
Jack: *trying to give Korean lesson*
Also Jack: *swears in Korean multiple times*
He would wouldn't he XD
@@dont2604 it's a rickroll I saw this ages ago
Oop
@@buzzilybees1292 thank you! saved me from switching videos :)
@@buzzilybees1292 idc
Imagine Mark's reaction to him speaking it fluently
Hopefully not jelly
we need to see this now. i wonder how they would talk to each other in Korean 👀
Imagine your friend speaks better to your mom than you
Pride, I’d bet.
@@badcornflakes6374 we all know it would be "THATS MY BROOOOOOOO!!! YOU GO JACK!!"
Jae: *insults Jack in Korean;* *kalm*
Jack: [in Korean] what did you just say?
Jae: *panik*
Jack: [in Korean] I meant I didn’t understand what you said
Jae: *kalm*
Haha
10:50 jack explaining he is ADHD a year before he was diagnosed hahahaha
Jae and jack: talking
Corpse: I’m stuck in a drum set
Help me step jack 😂😂
This comment is criminally under-liked
@Lunar Studios actually it wasn’t stolen just some others also had the same comment as me
Which I didn’t realize after I posted it but it doesn’t matter I find it funny so I posted it
@Lunar Studios it’s alright 😊
@@ChristyPlayz lmao 😂
To explain the native thing about jae: he wasnt born in korea, although his parents are from there. he lived in america for most of his childhood/teen years, until he went to korea for an audition. While he had studies/learnt some korean, he wasnt /fluent/, and he has talked about his, i guess learning? several times. So yeah saying that probably made him really happy : D anyways go give day6 a listen they're amazing
YESS STAN DAY6
@Singers News your inspiration is not shit like you so...
Lies
@Singers News *SILENCE BOT*
Sykunno: speaks Korean
Jacksepticeye: doesn't understand a word he says but says the right thing
CHAT: HE SPEAKS FLUENT KOREAN
I’m a real person seems rare nowadays huh
@@dont2604 k, we won't.
He understood a word. His name
외국인이 한국말 하면 다들 너무 귀여워 지는거 같아..🥰
Jack: **speaks korean**
Every korean in a 69 mile radius: allow me introduce myself
nice
Nice
Nice
Nice
eciN
Jack: You can learn the alphabet in just 30 minutes.
Me who’s learning Japanese: Well, I envy you, kanji is so damn hard to learn
I was looking into it recently doesn’t kanji have like 50,000 characters?
@@willsprigg6652 Pretty much, but you _only_ need around 6,000 for a fluent adult. They originate from Chinese.
I feel that.
Kanji is the death of me, but a little tip to Remembering it is to apply a little story to it. Take the Kanji for fire, it looks like a man running around on fire.
And always keep in mind, you don't need to know how to write it. Most native speakers don't know how to write them either, they just remember what it looks like.
The best thing to do is to go down the JLPT order and to practice the different radicals. The radicals help you give a basis for bigger ordered kanji which consists of those radicals
Probably why I've heard that Japanese kids learn to write in the Latin alphabet first, and don't learn Kanji until, like, 3rd grade.
Corpse being stuck on a drum set whilst jack and Jae have a wholesome moment is everything
it was so funny to me because i forgot that corpse was playing with them in that video so I was just like “CORPSE!” out loud to myself lol
@@Grimrose_04 omg same when they were taking I completely forgot then he comes through, I just can’t with corpse he’s too funny it’s dangerous lol
As a Chinese who grew up in Germany. I have noticed that seeing someone "obviously not Asian" (as in someone who doesn't look Asian) speak an Asian language (be it fluent or not) just amazes me. There's always this feeling of pride to know that someone went or is going through the trouble to learn a completly different "breed" of a languange. Because it usually means that they are also very interested in the culture to the point where they want to learn the language.
And it's also this sort of funny feeling? Of seeing someone who looks "different" speak Chinese or Korean or etc. It's an interesting sight and sometimes also gives me the thought of: Oh shoot I can't shit talk them in Chinese anymore XD
我這個白人一般會 等人開始講一些不合理的話才會開始跟人家講國語哈哈
小心喔~ 從不知道人家有沒有聽懂~
Honestly, as a Korean person who isn't fluent in Korean, Jacksepticeye reads Hangul better than I do. I read at like 2/3 his speed... IM NOT WORTHY (┬┬﹏┬┬)
I don’t even know *any* Korean-
At least you *know* Korean...
@@abbeygiles7034 Damn, that sucks. I'm half Korean so I do sort of understand most of what is said, half of time I don't so...Yeah. (┬┬﹏┬┬)
괜찮아! 영어 잘하니까 괜춘
@@nvliaen 네, 그렇습니다! 나는 주로 한국어보다는 영어를 사용합니다. (I usually get my sentences wrong every time I do this. Haha.)
If it makes you feel better, i read and speak Spanish at the speed of a kindergartener and I'm hispanic lol
Markplier: Finally! A worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary!
I would love to see both of them in a video talking in Korean.
Momiplier as the final boss.
When people used to use msn. I was a 10 year older boy 😑
He has known Korean for really long u know
Markiplier's in the corner just really really mad at you right now
He'll probably be wanting to learn a few lessons but has too much pride to ask for it lmao xD
@@yuukokagami wait who
@@yuukokagami wait who
AUWAHAHAHAHAH SHEEEEEEEEESH
@@calatwork7308 markiplierm
7:35 I read once that it's a slurring of "God be with you" that was written "God B W Ye" and got more compact over time, but I don't know what the source was on that
The origin of "Goodbye" is "God be with ye" which was then abbreviated down to "Godbwye" which was basically the monk version of text-speak, and it evolved from there.
Woah, my mind is blown
Ye learn something new every day
🙏
"Thank you" in Russian is "spasibo" which came from "spasi bog" which means "god save [us]"
The same with irish, if you say "dia dhuit" (hello), it directly translates to "god be with you" and is now used as a greeting and casual "hello" (:
For some reason my fav part was Corpse going "I'm stuck in a drum set"
I broke down at that
@@errorsans4308 it was so funny
Where can I find that video
Lolol
Jack: Apparently I speak fluent Korean
I think we missed a few episodes
We need more of these really made me feel better about finding it hard remembering languages and not learning in school
Bruh I died when corpse was like “guys I’m stuck on the drum set” omfg 😂
Timestamp?
@@SamTheDutchMan 09:54
Corpse over here listening to them talking in Korean, probably doesn't want to interrupt, but finally just "I'm stuck on the drum set" 😂
Funny 😐😐😐😐
حدلت مع سجثططخظا هي غثققخوطث
Jack: "a gaelic irish gladiator"
Also jack: "speaks korean"
Me: "visible confusion"
그래서 이걸 어떻게 이해하려고?
Nobody in Ireland can speak fucking Irish it’s the hardest language to learn god It’s more common to be fluent in another language then in Irish. I’m 100% Irish yet I can only say one phrase in Irish, An Bhfuil ceád agam dul go dtí an leithreas which literally means can I go to the bathroom. I’m not even kidding I’ve done Irish for 10 years now and I still can’t say more then one phrase 🔥🔥😏😏
don't forget "son of viking"
@@Kat-ub6yq yes Irish is super annoying and they shouldn’t teach it
안녕하세요!
Jack's Korean: real language
My Korean: Fluent gibberish
My English is gibberish and I’m nz
@@Erebu5_ You're a nazi. Ok
@@Jedits6055 LMAO
@@Erebu5_ your weird
@@PlayedLOL_XD no u
at 18:34, the editor is correct... the individual strokes are the component letters aka "Jamo" (which can represent both vowels and consonants). But when you put those strokes together you get Hangeul characters, which represent syllables.
Just a friendly reminder that 밥 먹다 or “to eat rice” also means “to eat something/to eat a meal”. Tina took Jack’s words as “I ate something” so she was asking what he ate.
that’s so interesting!! you learn something new every day 🤓
Omg the same expression of "eating rice" can also be translated as "eating something/having a meal" in chinese! It is so cool that chinese and korean share this "idiom" :)
@@notheretoargue2885 same with Japanese!
It's similar in Bengali too!
@@streamgrapes Yeah! I remember learning that and my mind was blown. I thought people just REALLY loved rice when I lived in Korea. Like damn, you eat only rice day in and day out???? Lol. If someone says 밥 먹다, it’s always best to assume they mean “something/a meal” and not “rice”. Koreans love rice, but not enough to solely eat rice 😂
Also, it’s customary to ask “have you eaten?” instead of “how are you?” when you see someone for the first time after a while. It’s an extremely important phrase to learn to be polite in Korean culture. And they use the same “밥 먹었어(요)?” phrase. And when you say “yes,” many will ask exactly what Tina asked after: “what something/meal did you eat?” 무슨 밥 먹었어(요)?”
Fun fact about the word, “Goodbye.”: It actually comes from the old, “God be with you.” Which is what people used to say when they would leave. It morphed over time into goodbye.
Specifically! God be with you turned into God be with ye, shortened to Godbwye at the most minimalistic, as it was often written at the bottom of letters like how we write "write back, [name]" and such.
@@danmeifan oh that's gross im gonna start saying satanbye instead
@@ellieraccoon huh??
@@ellieraccoon Bruh. We get it. You’re openly atheist or satanist but you can’t just walk around and say “satanbye” lmfao. That’s weird af.
That’s actually really interesting! Thank you for sharing!
Tina talks to him like he's a baby it's so cute
Tina is preciousssss
His accent is actually really exceptionally good for a non-native. Better than a lot of 2nd generation immigrant speakers
Therapist: jaegsepticeye doesn't exist, it can't hurt you
jaegsepticeye:
@Singers News dude youre making people want to listen to your stuff LESS by doing this. Just buy likes if your mum is actually doing this, she'l never know and it will be far cheaper than actually buying the mic yourself.
@Singers News here I can give you a free dislike
@Singers News Bro. Stop.
@Singers News You are obnoxious
@Singers News just shut up man
I feel like this is true in all languages: when you're not fluent in language X, it ALWAYS feels like people speaking language X speak SO FAST cause your brain literally goes "decoding... please wait... your speech is important to us... brain disconnected from the channel" all the time! I saw that happen in german and spanish as well
Yes! Totally know that feeling. Happened to me when I went to London. 😑
I thought I was speaking english very well and then I went there and my brain decided to stop funtioning. 😂
@@Emsev100 English ain’t the easiest language to learn, English has some weird terms that not even I get as a Wenglish person (Welsh & English)
Spanish is the second fastest language in the world
This is me every time I have a listening test in Japanese
And then there's me who has to decode their own language when talking to people.
Jack: I never did anything exceedingly well
Me: you spread positivity exceedingly well Jack you really do
@chad tha cat I know but am I wrong?
@@NoobTEZF no, you're not wrong. He inspired us all
Yes!
He does and i really appreciate it
Did he say dead gf
13:15 hearing jack pronounce anime in the correct way is such a good thing