The Romance Languages and What Makes Them Amazing

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  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2024
  • What are the Romance Languages? This is a mini documentary about the Romance Languages, their history and how they developed, and their importance in today`s world.
    Learn a language with Innovative Language courses: langfocus.com/pod101/.
    Support Langfocus on Patreon: / langfocus
    langfocus.com
    / langfocus
    / langfocus
    / langfocus
    Music: "Causin Havoc" by The Passion HiFi; "Harlem Incident" by The Passion HiFi; www.thepassionhifi.com/
    "Voodoo Like You Do" by Huma-Huma.

Komentáře • 13K

  • @yousandro1999
    @yousandro1999 Před 7 lety +6683

    It´s funny how Spanish, Portuguese and Italian speakers can quite understand each other, but no one understands French and Romanian xD

    • @danielopris8451
      @danielopris8451 Před 7 lety +392

      Linkin Park .I. I have a lot of Italian freinds who understand Romanian very well , so don t talk shit.

    • @Ariranhaa
      @Ariranhaa Před 7 lety +419

      Brazilian here, can't understand Italian on a normal conversation.

    • @danielopris8451
      @danielopris8451 Před 7 lety +64

      That's your fault :)).

    • @6koko3
      @6koko3 Před 7 lety +624

      That's because italian, Spanish and Portuguese have remained closer to original Latin but French and Romanian are the ones that have changed more.

    • @danielopris8451
      @danielopris8451 Před 7 lety +28

      Because they don't have enough brain to learn harder latin languages , that is why .

  • @rikady
    @rikady Před 4 lety +3196

    I'm mexican and can understand:
    Portuguese. 75%
    Catalan. 75%
    Italian. 70%
    French and Romanian. 20%
    Chilean. 1.2%

    • @shaide5483
      @shaide5483 Před 4 lety +74

      Qual português? De Bresil (Brazileiro), ou Portugal?

    • @judna1
      @judna1 Před 4 lety +105

      @@shaide5483 O meu português é de Portugal, porque morei dois meses em Lisboa. Mas eu sou catalã.

    • @shaide5483
      @shaide5483 Před 4 lety +8

      Oooh

    • @judna1
      @judna1 Před 4 lety +91

      Podes perceber o que estou a dizer sem ter nenhuma dificultade, não é? É porque falas alguma lingua mais a parte do espanhol?
      Sei sicura? Io adesso sto parlando in diverse lingue che sò parlare, posso complicarti la vita, posso cercare delle cose que non sono cosí semplice di capire, ma adesso sono nei guai perchè non ci riesco a trovare delle parole cosí difficile, è per quela ragione che comincerò a parlare nella mia propia lingua.
      D' acord doncs, de veritat ets capaç d'entendre perfectament tot el que estic dient? Fins a la més mínima paraula? Perquè puc embolicar perfectament la troca, especialment amb la meva llengua materna, ja que és la llengua que més anys porto parlant. Per mi el català és pa sucat amb oli, bufar i fer ampolles, de fet, he composat més d'una cançó en aquesta llengua. És la llengua amb la que millor m'expresso.
      Dicho esto, espero que te tomes esto como un reto, como un pequeño ejercicio, no como una ofensa ni nada por el estilo, simplemente, al ver los porcentajes tan elevados, me ha picado la curiosidad y quería saber si realmente son así de altos. En verdad, el que más me intriga es el catalán, si realmente eres capaz de entender un 75%, te aplaudo. Del portugués es la lengua más facil de entender. Desde el primer día, mi profe ya hablaba solo en portugués, ya que el parecido es abismal.
      After all of this, why not, let's end this comment in english shall we?
      Best regards from Barcelona by the way!
      Edit: Se podes perceber a Filomena Cautela falando em português, realmente percebes bem a lingua, porque ela fala muito muito rápido.

    • @shaide5483
      @shaide5483 Před 4 lety +11

      Noice

  • @yoandez300
    @yoandez300 Před 4 lety +1057

    As a french I often understand other romance languages, especially when it's written. But the other romance languages don't seem to understand french that much...

    • @Alice_vampirinha
      @Alice_vampirinha Před 4 lety +238

      Your pronunciation is very difficult. I'm learning french and often i can understand better If I'm reading rather than hearing

    • @caesarus
      @caesarus Před 4 lety +60

      @Strainul Misterios but we Romanians always understood decently the other Romance languages, even as they do not understand us

    • @mariafulga1308
      @mariafulga1308 Před 4 lety +53

      I'm learning french at school but I can't understand that much, maybe like 15% if I hear it, but if I read it I can understand like 80% of it. I think French it's a really cool language

    • @ARKAN9765
      @ARKAN9765 Před 4 lety +55

      @@mariafulga1308 it looks like that french written text and french spoken words are 2 different language....the spoken one is the most difficult unless they speak slowly... anyway I'm from Indonesia and just started learning french for 2 weeks

    • @notchinham316
      @notchinham316 Před 3 lety +39

      M'pardonais por moi imitation d'français
      Le raison porquoi le lang français es dificil d'comprender es porquoi vous tener una forma de parlar três complexo pour nosotrum parlentes de lang romanas. Le français es maîs similar a les lenguas germanicas en forma de parlar y escribir.
      Also, I think I just figured out how Occitanian is written and spoken.

  • @edikrow8271
    @edikrow8271 Před 3 lety +825

    The word "Monday" in the romance languages:
    LATIN: Lunae
    ITALIAN: Lunedi
    FRENCH: Lundi
    ROMANIAN: Luni
    SPANISH: Lunes
    GALICIAN: Luns
    CATALAN: ...
    LATIN: mmmh?
    CATALAN: Dilluns
    LATIN: ok
    PORTUGUESE: ...
    LATIN: NOOO
    PORTUGUESE: 𝙎𝙚𝙜𝙪𝙣𝙙𝙖-𝙛𝙚𝙞𝙧𝙖

    • @mhntennis4451
      @mhntennis4451 Před 3 lety +48

      KKKKKK nada ver né mano

    • @maryocecilyo3372
      @maryocecilyo3372 Před 3 lety +7

      Lol

    • @wesley_tavares
      @wesley_tavares Před 3 lety +112

      Ainda bem que no português é diferente, já pensou dizer
      Poxa, amanhã já é lua, fim de semana passou tão rápido

    • @alves5466
      @alves5466 Před 3 lety +15

      @@wesley_tavares Kkkkkkkk

    • @bruna9588
      @bruna9588 Před 3 lety +33

      @@mhntennis4451 nunca entendi esse feira e nunca entenderei

  • @sirbjergsen308
    @sirbjergsen308 Před 5 lety +2850

    Latin: Amicus
    Italian: Amico
    Spanish: Amigo
    Portuguese: Amigo
    French: Ami
    Romanian: ....
    Latin: please don't
    *Romanian: Prieten*

  • @romania1918
    @romania1918 Před 5 lety +2001

    France:romania are you a latin country?
    Romania: *da*

    • @settratheimperishable3491
      @settratheimperishable3491 Před 5 lety +14

      xD

    • @Rosx1000
      @Rosx1000 Před 5 lety +75

      @@settratheimperishable3491 Dá o que e para quem? Aí complica , amigo.

    • @juancristobalsanchezabreu98
      @juancristobalsanchezabreu98 Před 5 lety +32

      @@Rosx1000 Da=Sim xD

    • @oceanlopez4739
      @oceanlopez4739 Před 5 lety +8

      This sent me into a fit of laughter.

    • @briandalion366
      @briandalion366 Před 5 lety +38

      ocean lopez I’m Romanian and I’m dying 😂😂omg. Should I learn Spanish or Italian dude? Idk which one, I feel like Italian by I have more Spanish speakers by me since I’m in Arizona. Lol

  • @nuclearfox210
    @nuclearfox210 Před 3 lety +779

    O interessante das línguas românicas é que eu posso escrever este comentário em português e os falantes de espanhol, italiano, francês e romeno ainda conseguem entender e vice-versa

  • @XxMrLimeyxX
    @XxMrLimeyxX Před 4 lety +586

    As an English speaker I understand:
    Spanish: 0%
    Portuguese: 0%
    Italian: 0%
    French: 0%
    Romanian: 0%

    • @cinesaudade4483
      @cinesaudade4483 Před 3 lety +114

      Very good, congratulations.

    • @tt_sallie
      @tt_sallie Před 3 lety +65

      As an English speaker I understand:
      Spanish: ~30%
      (I take it in school)
      Portuguese: ~20%
      Italian: ~15%
      French: ~10%
      (English is heavily influenced by Latin and Old French)
      Romanian: ~0% (I have never taken it nor learned any of it)

    • @lucascarozza
      @lucascarozza Před 3 lety +4

      hahahahahahaha

    • @vince371vc
      @vince371vc Před 3 lety +5

      😂😂😂

    • @1244226
      @1244226 Před 3 lety +18

      But you can understand German

  • @arnauuu1
    @arnauuu1 Před 4 lety +787

    Romance languages are the most beautiful, in my opinion. All of them. It's like they were designed for poetry and music...

    • @marcmontbleu5516
      @marcmontbleu5516 Před 4 lety +33

      É isso mesmo

    • @magnusscheck4425
      @magnusscheck4425 Před 4 lety +27

      Así es, no tengo nada más que decir Mio amico.

    • @trujilloroldancarlosarturo4281
      @trujilloroldancarlosarturo4281 Před 4 lety +23

      @@magnusscheck4425 mi padre mamá el chino y esas lenguas del lejano oriente pero yo las encuentro muy feas al escucharse, incluso en su música las siento extrañas mientras que las lenguas romance para la música son lo más bello del mundo

    • @magnusscheck4425
      @magnusscheck4425 Před 4 lety +3

      @@trujilloroldancarlosarturo4281 Eso mismo

    • @notme6753
      @notme6753 Před 4 lety +2

      I love listening to thier song hahaha

  • @michaelcardamone1209
    @michaelcardamone1209 Před 6 lety +695

    This dude is so dedicated to spreading knowledge he’s sweating like Patrick Ewing out here

  • @Marina-mj9nt
    @Marina-mj9nt Před 3 lety +734

    Italian: Biscotto
    French: Biscuit
    Romanian: Biscuit/Biscuite
    Portuguese: Biscoito
    British english: Biscuit
    Australian english: Biscuit
    Spanish: Bizcocho (or Galleta)
    People from São Paulo, Brazil: *BOLACHA*

    • @Marina-mj9nt
      @Marina-mj9nt Před 3 lety +44

      João Teixeira Aqui onde moro (Pernambuco) falamos biscoito para doces, como biscoito polvilho, biscoito Treloso, Trakinas, etc. Bolacha usamos para por exemplo Cream Cracker.

    • @zelots8887
      @zelots8887 Před 3 lety +12

      En español una traduccion de Biscuit seria bizcocho que esta hecho de harina y la galleta también hecha de harina pero ay que añadir que le agregan más dificultad determinar de que esta hecha la galleta maíz trigo integral ya saben los subjuntivos

    • @infectedvoice4670
      @infectedvoice4670 Před 3 lety +18

      Galleta y bizcocho son cosas diferentes en español.

    • @RegenteDoBrazil
      @RegenteDoBrazil Před 3 lety +7

      "People from São Paulo" Não sabia que São Paulo tinha uns 8 milhões de km² 😒

    • @RegenteDoBrazil
      @RegenteDoBrazil Před 3 lety +7

      @@Marina-mj9nt Não sou paulista, eu só quis dizer que não é só São Paulo que diz "bolacha", mas sim, todo o Brasil (com excessão do RJ).

  • @spanishrse6637
    @spanishrse6637 Před 4 lety +448

    Romania + France - romance!

  • @marcelocabral463
    @marcelocabral463 Před 4 lety +1523

    brazilians and portuguese: "A"
    world: it's spanish

  • @michalreingraberskaliasmiz185
    @michalreingraberskaliasmiz185 Před 4 lety +1927

    Brother:
    LATIN: Frater
    ITALIAN: Fratello
    ROMANIAN: Frate
    FRENCH: Frère
    SPANISH: ...
    LATIN: No...
    SPANISH: *Hermano*
    PORTUGUESE:...
    LATIN: NOOO
    PORTUGUESE: * _Irmão_ *

    • @Rosx1000
      @Rosx1000 Před 4 lety +3

      @Alisson ....................... no at all.

    • @SrAlliphe
      @SrAlliphe Před 4 lety +107

      haha, i'm brazilian i can confirm this xD

    • @Emersonunes
      @Emersonunes Před 4 lety +107

      In portuguese is
      A desgraça que veio pra destruir sua vida

    • @caleumarques146
      @caleumarques146 Před 4 lety +228

      Hermano and irmão are developed of the Latin word "Germanus" and that also means brother

    • @felipemelo8772
      @felipemelo8772 Před 4 lety +150

      In Brazil we have some words coming from latin "Frater", as "fraternidade" (that is, brotherhood)

  • @diegoflorencio
    @diegoflorencio Před 3 lety +1883

    🇵🇹 Nós somos a melhor família de línguas!
    🇮🇹 Noi siamo la migliore famiglia di lingue!
    🇫🇷 Nous sommes la meilleure famille de langues!
    🇪🇸 ¡Nosotros somos la mejor familia de lenguas!
    🇷🇴 Noi suntem cea mai bună familie de limbi!

    • @MD-qz6gk
      @MD-qz6gk Před 3 lety +52

      @Local host ma che dici??
      Sembra uguale...
      Paragonandola all'Italiano
      Noi = Noi
      Suntem = Siamo
      Cea mai = la (più)
      Buna = migliore non esiste quindi si usa Buona
      Familie = Famiglia (anche familia si scrive)
      De limbi = Di lingue
      In rumeno per dire "migliore" si usano spesso quelle due parole "cea mai" che sarebbe "la più".

    • @diegoflorencio
      @diegoflorencio Před 3 lety +65

      @@flowershower6857
      Quis botar o país de origem, por isso da bandeira de Portugal e da Espanha

    • @tommyaviles4472
      @tommyaviles4472 Před 3 lety +21

      ¡Por supuesto!

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 3 lety +65

      I can understand every single one except Romanian!

    • @diegoflorencio
      @diegoflorencio Před 3 lety +8

      @@Musicienne-DAB1995
      What language do you speak?

  • @adonaymacedodovalle3092
    @adonaymacedodovalle3092 Před 4 lety +420

    As a brazilian I can understand
    Spanish 86%
    Italian 78%
    French 10%
    Romanian 0%

    • @mininudoalem7950
      @mininudoalem7950 Před 3 lety +27

      romeno escrito até vai mas falado é brabo

    • @slavoicus
      @slavoicus Před 3 lety +29

      E normal, tu esti brazilian nu roman ! :))))))))))))))

    • @adonaymacedodovalle3092
      @adonaymacedodovalle3092 Před 3 lety +39

      @@slavoicus this phase I can understand

    • @Trencavent
      @Trencavent Před 3 lety +2

      El cstalan lo hablamos 9 millones..no 5...

    • @alecbrito4397
      @alecbrito4397 Před 3 lety +4

      @@adonaymacedodovalle3092 kkkkk né! Até eu entendi!

  • @MigueldeLysII
    @MigueldeLysII Před 8 lety +2141

    Spanish, italians and Portuguese we can have a talk without change the languaje and we all will understand wichothers. Frenc h and romanian are harder.

    • @DrVegal
      @DrVegal Před 8 lety +178

      pienso lo mismo.

    • @SirAdrian87
      @SirAdrian87 Před 8 lety +285

      +Brichetercero Which is weird because as a Romanian I can watch spanish TV and understand almsot everything even if nto every word, and I can understand 90% what an italian says word for word from the first go.
      Portugese is impossible though and it's also extremely unpleasant because it sounds like somebody is speaking romanian to me but I don't understand the words.

    • @claudiodealba2010
      @claudiodealba2010 Před 8 lety +116

      +Erick Vega Penso o mesmo, podemos entender muitas coisas. :)

    • @claudiodealba2010
      @claudiodealba2010 Před 8 lety +39

      +Sir Adrian What about Brazilian Portuguese?

    • @MigueldeLysII
      @MigueldeLysII Před 8 lety +23

      Hummm. I really don't know, never had the opportunity to talk with a brazilian in spanish.

  • @hot-dogmapper3935
    @hot-dogmapper3935 Před 5 lety +603

    As a Romanian i can understand :
    Italian 70%
    Spanish :50%
    Portugese : 40%
    French : 30%

    • @juancristobalsanchezabreu98
      @juancristobalsanchezabreu98 Před 5 lety +15

      Use a magical letter called Ñ (ñ) xD

    • @lain7758
      @lain7758 Před 5 lety +22

      Ou outra letra mágica chamada "ç"

    • @florin.cimpean
      @florin.cimpean Před 4 lety +29

      As a fellow Romanian, I agree with the 70% Italian claim.but I can't understand Portuguese more than 15-20%. Also, I understand French maybe 60%.

    • @giovanni1606
      @giovanni1606 Před 4 lety +5

      Because.. Latin language come from Romanian language.
      (Michael Ledwith)

    • @fabiolimadasilva3398
      @fabiolimadasilva3398 Před 4 lety +33

      I am Brazilian. So, I can understand:
      Spanish 95%
      Catalan 80%
      Italian 70%
      French 50%
      Romanian 30%

  • @jordangreen7886
    @jordangreen7886 Před 4 lety +81

    As a native Spanish speaker:
    Portuguese: 95% written 85% spoken
    Italian: 85% written 70% spoken
    French: 55% written 8% spoken
    Romanian 30% written 2% spoken

    • @oswaldoramosferrusola5235
      @oswaldoramosferrusola5235 Před 3 lety +8

      I am also a Spanish language speaker. My experience is similar to yours. I can translate Portuguese text into Spanish, no sweat.
      In my university days I could conduct a conversation with Brazilian and Portuguese students for hours. They would talk to me in their language and I would reply to them in Spanish. That means of comunication has even got a name: portuñol.

    • @Onyxslayed
      @Onyxslayed Před 3 lety

      Same with french lol

    • @Iemonic
      @Iemonic Před rokem

      how much LFN (lingua franca nova) can you understand?

  • @tacusarcalis5152
    @tacusarcalis5152 Před 3 lety +292

    as a catalan native speaker, i understand:
    Catalan 100%
    Spanish 100% (not the chilean, haha)
    Occitan 95%
    Portuguese 90%
    Italian languages-dialects 75-80%
    Italian 70% (90% read)
    French 50-60% (80% read)
    romanian 30%
    sardinian 20%
    latin 20%

    • @tommasodavola9122
      @tommasodavola9122 Před 3 lety +11

      As italian i understand 40% of sardinian

    • @jalesneto
      @jalesneto Před 3 lety +23

      Ninguém entende os chilenos, nem os falantes de espanhol. KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK

    • @Stoirelius
      @Stoirelius Před 2 lety +3

      It’s crazy because for me Catalan sounds more like Spanish and Occitan sounds more like French.
      It’s like one language morphing into the other at this exact order: Spanish-Catalan-Occitan-French

    • @murakyo79
      @murakyo79 Před 2 lety

      @@Stoirelius I mean they're part of those countries

    • @taniah4285
      @taniah4285 Před 2 lety +1

      wow, so you knowing your native language + English - can understand almost 2bil people.
      much more if to include people like me, who speaks English as second language.
      and the volume of info that you can get from CZcams or websites is huge.
      So cool!!!

  • @matiasguerra591
    @matiasguerra591 Před 4 lety +536

    Everyone is making fun of romanian BUT....
    Let's take a look at the word "son" :
    Latin: Filius
    French: Fils
    Catalan: Fill
    Galician: Fillo
    Portuguese: Filho
    Italian: Figlio
    Romanian: Fiu
    Spanish: ................
    Latin: Please DON'T....
    Spanish: HIJO
    (even the pronunciation of "J" is different from the rest of romance languages)

    • @druidamagiblatleaf9692
      @druidamagiblatleaf9692 Před 4 lety +82

      en el castellano antiguo la letra f empezo a cambiarse por la h en varias palabras como higo, higado, ahogar, etc.

    • @danielvargas1455
      @danielvargas1455 Před 4 lety +96

      The J is a gift we got from the arabic people when they were in Spain killing catolics and vice versa

    • @primitivochapa7837
      @primitivochapa7837 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah italian there is ni J

    • @dianapan6447
      @dianapan6447 Před 4 lety +5

      @@danielvargas1455 this is so sad :c i would be mad

    • @jorgemoreno5819
      @jorgemoreno5819 Před 3 lety +6

      El catalán y gallego, son también lenguas españolas

  • @montyvlc1634
    @montyvlc1634 Před 7 lety +647

    I'm german, but I speak spanish almost fluently. Once I met a girl from the italian speaking part of swizzerland and we could have a conversation by using different languages. I spoke in spanish to her and she spoke in italian. Worked out pretty good :D

    • @de3904
      @de3904 Před 7 lety +1

      Rafael RED cool

    • @diegoastudillo7666
      @diegoastudillo7666 Před 7 lety +65

      El español, italiano y portugués son muy parecidos. De hecho, como dijiste, para cualquier hablante de estos idiomas, es fácil entenderse unos a otros.

    • @montyvlc1634
      @montyvlc1634 Před 7 lety +49

      deaz 97
      Verdad. Estoy estudiando portugués en mi universidad y es más fácil para mi porque ya hablo español. :)

    • @santiagochauprincipe4885
      @santiagochauprincipe4885 Před 7 lety +7

      deaz 97 la verdad yo sé francés casi casi fluido y puedo entender algo del italiano

    • @Lei_1
      @Lei_1 Před 7 lety +18

      The greatest proof of what Paul said is that I can understand you all even though I never studied Spanish in my life (and was able to understand it completely prior to learning Latin, French and Italian aswell). For example, +Rafael RED said that he is studying portuguese in his university and it's easier for him because he speaks spanish. Parabéns, meu nobre! Me alegro com tua proeza, espero sinceramente que aprecie bastante essa língua tão charmosa e sensual :) haha

  • @cyntiadossantos5
    @cyntiadossantos5 Před 4 lety +306

    Hola, soy de Uruguay, mi lengua materna es español, entiendo muy bien el portugués, algo de italiano pero me cuesta muchísimo entender francés! Me encantaría aprender muchos idiomas, es algo que siempre me ha interesado.
    Saludos!

    • @cafe1925
      @cafe1925 Před 3 lety +16

      ¡Hola! Yo soy aprende español como nueve idioma, soy de India . ¿Como está mi escritura?
      Lo siento para error gramatical.😝

    • @cafe1925
      @cafe1925 Před 3 lety +7

      Puedo entender tu español. Estoy muy feliz.

    • @cafe1925
      @cafe1925 Před 3 lety +3

      @@salvulcano756 ¡Gracias!

    • @alejandroag3674
      @alejandroag3674 Před 3 lety +8

      @@salvulcano756 it would rather be, "Yo estoy aprendiendo español como un nuevo idioma (Masculine). ¿Cómo está mi escritura?". I am a native Spanish speaker, I could understand the both of you, keep it up!

    • @ja4309
      @ja4309 Před 3 lety +3

      Que tal amigos como estan? He aprendido la idioma español al punto donde es conmigo a todos dias y puedo decirlos que puedo entender frances por que estoy aprediendola tambien pero puedo entender tambien italiano y portugués en sus formas escribidos.

  • @mariafulga1308
    @mariafulga1308 Před 4 lety +142

    It's funny how Romanians can understand more than 50% but the other romance languages understand no more than 20% :)))

    • @danielpetrubejinariu7489
      @danielpetrubejinariu7489 Před 3 lety

      POTUGAL,SPANIA,EGAL ARABIA ARABICOS SE INTIENDE SON HERMANOS HA HA HA

    • @steph2790
      @steph2790 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes!! I found learning French, Italian, and Spanish to be super easy!! It’s like we have an advantage 😌

    • @marxistmystic
      @marxistmystic Před rokem

      @@georgianavram6047 lasa teoriile ceausiste ca nimeni nu le mai crede

    • @obirynruin6678
      @obirynruin6678 Před rokem

      @@marxistmystic 😂😂

    • @elenabibescu1848
      @elenabibescu1848 Před rokem

      @@marxistmystic Nu stiam ca era teoria lui Ceausescu, eu am invatat ca limba vine de la roman, te referi la dacii liberi!! Este o certitudine ca limba latina nu era vest, limba basca este completa diferita de spaniola,

  • @marcioaso
    @marcioaso Před 4 lety +316

    Romantic languages are like Doom:
    I'm too young to die: Spanish.
    Hey, not too rough: Portuguese.
    Hurt me plenty: Italian.
    Ultra-Violence: French.
    Nightmare!: Romanian.
    Much love from Brazil.

    • @gabytrifoy7012
      @gabytrifoy7012 Před 4 lety +4

      Marcio Oliveira romanian native here Nightmare romanian f
      u are funny :)) romanian it s the sweetest one for me listen these songs

    • @fnaffyou7662
      @fnaffyou7662 Před 4 lety +10

      What if the Romance Languages are a family :
      Italian : Big brother singer
      French : The kids always wants to be Perfect
      Spanish & Portuguese : The twins of Arabic
      Catalan : The kid who wants to follow the twins Arabic
      Romanian : The forgotten Kid

    • @UlpianHeritor
      @UlpianHeritor Před 4 lety +3

      Only true gamers play Doom on Romanian level.

    • @literallythesenate581
      @literallythesenate581 Před 4 lety +2

      You wrote "romantic" Hahaha :-)

    • @the_stashiest
      @the_stashiest Před 4 lety

      @Alex C heck yeah, I was born with the Nightmare difficulty language 😎

  • @jackofromsouth
    @jackofromsouth Před 4 lety +713

    As a Spanish speaker:
    Italian: 70%
    Portuguese: 75%
    Catalán: 80%
    French and Romanian: 0.0000000001%

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Před 4 lety +9

      French and spanish are similarities

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Před 4 lety +33

      @Nic777 because we has silents letters
      I understand that it is hard but there are words similarities like :
      Je pense pienso
      Reaction Reaccion
      0,00001 it is abused

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Před 4 lety

      @Nic777 but if you understand my native language
      I think that it will be a little easy

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Před 4 lety

      @Nic777 I wanted to say " if you learn "

    • @MaestroSangurasu
      @MaestroSangurasu Před 4 lety

      @Nic777 where do you come from ?

  • @WhiteDaisy
    @WhiteDaisy Před 4 lety +463

    Latin: mos, moris
    Spanish: costumbre
    Portuguese: costume
    French: coutume
    Italian: tradizione
    Romanian: tradiție
    Latin: I hate every single one of you

    • @helloworld-sl2lw
      @helloworld-sl2lw Před 4 lety +118

      In Spanish costumbre and tradición are both acceptable.

    • @vadae-san7550
      @vadae-san7550 Před 4 lety +55

      Same for french, coutume and tradition

    • @FelipeCarreiro
      @FelipeCarreiro Před 4 lety +70

      @@helloworld-sl2lw Costume and tradição in Portuguese

    • @ufhb6649
      @ufhb6649 Před 4 lety +22

      French has another word for « coutume » or « tradition », it’s « mœurs » (with an Œ) and this one comes from Latin.

    • @cspresimir
      @cspresimir Před 3 lety +5

      In Romanian the native word is OBICEI - pl. OBICEIURI

  • @alexpezeshki301
    @alexpezeshki301 Před 4 lety +88

    The word party in
    Spanish: fiesta
    Italian: festa
    Portuguese: Festa

    • @leolight5369
      @leolight5369 Před 4 lety +30

      You forgot French : fête

    • @adriana1837
      @adriana1837 Před 4 lety +10

      In romanian is "petrecere" "bairam" or "orgie " I love that we have at least 3 words for every single english word 🥰

    • @juanmoreno267
      @juanmoreno267 Před 3 lety +24

      @Alex C oh i definitely want to go to a fiesta in romania

    • @MD-qz6gk
      @MD-qz6gk Před 3 lety +2

      @@juanmoreno267 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @juanmoreno267
      @juanmoreno267 Před 3 lety

      @@MD-qz6gk yes man of course why not 🤣

  • @markusoz1660
    @markusoz1660 Před 5 lety +472

    Hi... I'm from Argentina and can understand Portugese and Italiano... Here, like a joye: When we want talk with people from Brazil, we use "portuñol" 😁

  • @legaleagle46
    @legaleagle46 Před 8 lety +365

    I speak all five of the major Romance languages (four of them fluently) as well as their parent language Latin, and I can absolutely say that learning one (or even just learning Latin) really does make learning them all easier. In fact, because of my Italian and my French, I was able to pick up Romanian to a conversational level in just a couple of months.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +38

      That's great! Do you have any problem with mixing them up?

    • @legaleagle46
      @legaleagle46 Před 8 lety +32

      Langfocus Not really, although there are some slight differences between Portuguese and Spanish usage that I have to keep in mind whenever I'm studying my Portuguese.
      Where I REALLY have difficulty is mixing my German with my Dutch, as German always interferes with Dutch to the point that I want to use German word order where it doesn't apply in Dutch and put endings on adjectives in Dutch where endings don't belong.

    • @legaleagle46
      @legaleagle46 Před 8 lety +1

      So how many different languages do you speak, Langfocus, and which ones?

    • @gengotaku
      @gengotaku Před 8 lety +4

      +Lee Cox: I have the same problem with German and Dutch because I was already fluent in German when I started Dutch so my teacher would always tell me ¨duits is geen nederlands¨
      ;.

    • @KJ-iv3bg
      @KJ-iv3bg Před 8 lety +13

      Romanian? That's dope, I want to learn it too, I am suffering with french though :/

  • @ramontorrijosmartinez
    @ramontorrijosmartinez Před 3 lety +436

    El español, el portugués y el italiano son muy parecidos. Si no hablan muy deprisa se pueden entender perfectamente entre ellos.

    • @bansheee2266
      @bansheee2266 Před 3 lety +16

      Aunque el español tiene más acentos que las otras lenguas romances lo cual es más difícil para los que estudian nuestra lengua

    • @Arsenic404
      @Arsenic404 Před 3 lety +22

      And I as a french speaker understood this

    • @chinchanchou
      @chinchanchou Před 3 lety +4

      Nada que ver el italiano es como francés nada entiendo,... la familia iberica entiendo mejor

    • @bansheee2266
      @bansheee2266 Před 3 lety +3

      GABI PAR al único que entiendo es el portugués

    • @meu2210
      @meu2210 Před 3 lety +3

      Não penso dessa forma. Cá no Brasil, as pessoas parecem falar uma língua criola, parecem ter pressa para falar e abreviam tudo ( incluo-me ). Em Portugal, escrevem e falam corretamente, mas com uma pronúncia muito estranha.

  • @Stefan_2003
    @Stefan_2003 Před 2 lety +59

    As a Romanian i understood
    Franța: 99%
    Spania:99%
    Italia:180%
    Portugalia:99%
    Catalan:93%
    Respect la toate țările care vorbesc limba latină! De la un Român Ardelean! :)

    • @Iemonic
      @Iemonic Před rokem

      how much LFN (lingua franca nova) can you understand?

    • @Stefan_2003
      @Stefan_2003 Před rokem +1

      @@Iemonic mult 99% cu un pahar de țuică și mai mult!

    • @Iemonic
      @Iemonic Před rokem

      @@Stefan_2003 merveliosa!

    • @obirynruin6678
      @obirynruin6678 Před rokem

      @@Stefan_2003 mmm Bravo puişor👏

    • @carol4681
      @carol4681 Před rokem +1

      A escrita de vocês é bastante diferente, lendo eu não entendo quase nada 😂 mas ouvindo até dá para entender um pouco melhor! Falo português

  • @biancagonella7933
    @biancagonella7933 Před 4 lety +1031

    I love how we can all understand each other while the rest of the world is just like "????????????????????????????"

    • @Diego-ys9tv
      @Diego-ys9tv Před 4 lety +21

      Yeah haha, it's cool tho

    • @DomFonseca21
      @DomFonseca21 Před 4 lety +59

      @Evryatis I'm a Portuguese native speaker who easily learned Spanish (even when I wasn't studying I could understand almost everything) not that easily learned also french ( quite hard, not that much, most the conjugation) and now learning Italian a can say I am almost a full romance language specialist 😎😎 and I'm just 18... Hahaha

    • @gotterdammerung6088
      @gotterdammerung6088 Před 4 lety +5

      @@DomFonseca21 Still not an English specialist

    • @DomFonseca21
      @DomFonseca21 Před 4 lety +55

      @@gotterdammerung6088 I'm doing my best, but I don't really give a shit for English

    • @korzenpl
      @korzenpl Před 4 lety +16

      Have you ever heard of Slavs?

  • @maelstrom57
    @maelstrom57 Před 8 lety +290

    As a French-speaker I think it's easier for us to understand speakers of other romance languages than the other way around because French, while remaining true to its Latin roots, has evolved a rather complex phonology and a lot of letters have become silent, which makes words harder to decipher in oral speech. For example, the Italian for body is corpo, from Latin corpus, in French it's corps, where the two final consonants are silent ([kɔʁ])-it's easy for a French-speaker to guess that corpo probably means body as they know that corps is spelled with a P, corps however sounds like gibberish to an Italian-speaker as they have no idea about the final P in that word. Another example, Italian: pietra, French: pierre (stone)-a French-speaker can infer the meaning of pietra from the verb pétrifier (to petrify), which literally means to turn into stone (one might think of the legend of Medusa), but pierre ([pjɛʁ]) doesn't have anything that sounds similar in Italian.

    • @litten75
      @litten75 Před 8 lety +17

      +melv douc je suis tout à fait d'accord avec ce que tu dis sauf que l'exemple de la pierre n'est peut être pas le mieux trouvé ;) Si on prend le prénom Pierre en français, son équivalent italien est Pietro, mais si on prend le prénom Pierre-Louis (qui est le mien héhé), son équivalent italien est Pierluigi (bon, c'est peut être un peu tiré par les cheveux...)

    • @Saosyant
      @Saosyant Před 8 lety +3

      +Ermenegildo Sforza Picozza Piero è una variante di Pietro, poi il solo fatto che il nome comune pietra=pierre è una conferma

    • @claudiodealba2010
      @claudiodealba2010 Před 8 lety +25

      Yes, because relative languages have common words from the ancestor root. Spanish and Portuguese people say "comer" for "to eat", in French, they say "manger", and "mangiare" in Italian. But both French and Italian have the words "comestible", "commestibile" for "edible", respectively, thus they can infer what "comer" means in Portuguese or Spanish. ☺

    • @SebastianLopez-nh1rr
      @SebastianLopez-nh1rr Před 8 lety +1

      +melv douc Interesting!!!! Pierre translates to "Pedro" in spanish (Peter) which closely resembles "Piedra" (stone)

    • @claudiodealba2010
      @claudiodealba2010 Před 8 lety

      Sebastián López In Portuguese stone is "pedra". And the name is Pedro.

  • @alice-df
    @alice-df Před 3 lety +59

    Native Italian speaker here. I've studied French and Spanish during high school so I can understand them pretty well, especially in written form. Oddly enough I can understand more than a bit of Portuguese (and I love the pronunciation) and some Romanian too even if it's much more difficult for me.

  • @valentinasandu6725
    @valentinasandu6725 Před 3 lety +29

    I am a Romanian girl, living in Scotland. My boyfriend is from Spain. After two weeks in Spain, already my level of understanding of Spanish language was 70%. I speak with my boyfriend every day, in Spanish language, and now my level of understanding is 90%. I forgot to mention that I speak Spanish language (60%) at the moment. Still have problems with the grammar part, but I didn't study Spanish language at all, only speaking and listening. I think for Romanian people, one of the easiest language is Spanish language. 🙂

    • @obliviongigan6360
      @obliviongigan6360 Před rokem

      Scoția?
      Normal când aud că sunt Români care merg în UK sunt 99% sigur că ei merg în Anglia, nu știam că și Scoția e o destinație populară.

    • @valentinasandu6725
      @valentinasandu6725 Před rokem

      @@obliviongigan6360 Scoția nu este o destinație populară datorită climei, dar eu m-am adaptat.

  • @diiegu21
    @diiegu21 Před 4 lety +559

    Languages I understand the most from spain:
    1 italian (both written and spoken)
    2 Portuguese (only written)
    3 catalan (written)
    4 french (NONE)
    5 Romanian (ok bye)

    • @matheuslanerre2895
      @matheuslanerre2895 Před 4 lety +48

      I'm Brazilian and the romance languages I understand most from:
      Portugal Portuguese: Written (Off course) spoken (90%);
      Spanish: (both written and spoken);
      Italian: written (but not as easy as Spanish) Spoken ( kind of);
      Romanian: written (bye) spoken (some wordssss);
      Frensh: written (some words) spoken (bye bitch).

    • @carotravaglia
      @carotravaglia Před 4 lety +24

      I'm Brazilian and is almost same thing!!
      Italian: written and a little spoken
      Spanish: written and spoken
      French: none
      Romanian: bye too hahahh

    • @MahouneArrow
      @MahouneArrow Před 4 lety +11

      Vamos falar em nossas línguas só pela diversão?

    • @wthsamdi1221
      @wthsamdi1221 Před 4 lety +23

      Pourquoi personne arrive à parler français😭😭

    • @diiegu21
      @diiegu21 Před 4 lety +4

      @@MahouneArrow me parece bien jeje

  • @Alejojojo6
    @Alejojojo6 Před 4 lety +149

    Italian is also spoken in Switzerland, in Tiscino. Its one of the four official languages.

    • @miticogabry68
      @miticogabry68 Před 4 lety +11

      Exactly! (Ticino, not Tiscino) And one of the four, of these languages of Switzerland (here incredibly ignored!), is Romanch, spoked in Canton Grisons...

    • @Froschburger
      @Froschburger Před 4 lety +3

      @@miticogabry68 Exactly! And Romanch is definitely a language worth learning more about.

    • @miltonbarella
      @miltonbarella Před 4 lety

      Ticino actually

    • @beniaminosani2719
      @beniaminosani2719 Před 4 lety

      @Alex C no

  • @sana.melodymay
    @sana.melodymay Před 3 lety +163

    As a Brazilian, I can understand:
    Speaking:
    Spanish (85%)
    Italian (80%)
    French (20%)
    Romanian (10%)
    Written:
    Spanish (100%)
    Italian (90%)
    French (70%)
    Romanian (30%)
    On Spanish, it depends on the accent. I understand more the Spanish spoken in Latin countries, especially those that are close to Brazil.

    •  Před 3 lety +1

      Have you studied Italian? Because as a guy that have never studied it, I would say that I understand just a few words, less than 50% I think.

    • @sana.melodymay
      @sana.melodymay Před 3 lety +8

      @ I never studied Italian, but I know people there, and even my stepfather's family is from there. So I have a certain "closeness" with the language, and I understand it well.

    • @vic230
      @vic230 Před 3 lety +2

      then i guess you would understand me kshdjd

    • @sana.melodymay
      @sana.melodymay Před 3 lety +1

      @@vic230 What is your language?

    • @vic230
      @vic230 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sana.melodymay spanish, just north of Brazil

  • @rachelbusby670
    @rachelbusby670 Před 3 lety +43

    I thought they were called Romance languages because they sounded really beautiful and natives were passionate in relationships...

  • @isaaczaiek487
    @isaaczaiek487 Před 8 lety +252

    spanish has the easiest phonology of all romance languages. That's why Portuguese and Italian speakers often understand spanish. I will go as far as to say that Spanish is one of the languages with the easiest pronunciation in the world.

    • @neonmarkov6544
      @neonmarkov6544 Před 8 lety +6

      +Isaac Z QUE DIGAS LO QUE PONE COÑO
      xD

    • @argiemerc
      @argiemerc Před 8 lety +18

      +Isaac Z Thats not true. We had a few Italians working on our company (here in Argentina) a few years back and they could only understand between 10% to 30% of what we were saying.
      On the other hand. If spanish is that easy to pronounce why do I only know a handful of spanish students with a decent pronounciation.
      You should say where are your from and whats your mother tongue to put your comment in context.

    • @isaaczaiek487
      @isaaczaiek487 Před 8 lety +49

      argiemerc​ just because you only know a handful of Spanish students with a decent pronunciation doesn't mean I'm wrong. My mother language is spanish but, that doesn't matter. Spanish has only five vowel sounds. Which other language has that same amount or less? I don't think it can get simpler than that.

    • @argiemerc
      @argiemerc Před 8 lety +21

      ***** Do you know how silly that statement you just did is ?
      so Spanish is easy because it has 5 vowels. I think it took me a week to learn how to properly pronounce german vowels. So, the vowels make a language hard or easy, huh.
      By the way, you are a spanish speaker saying YOUR language is easy.
      Sorry dude, this conversation is over. extremely dumb for my taste. Thank you.

    • @isaaczaiek487
      @isaaczaiek487 Před 8 lety +43

      argiemerc​​ I didn't say spanish was easy. Sorry if I was not clear. Spanish PRONUNCIATION is easy because it only has 5 vowels. Yes, vowels make pronunciations harder or easier. The more vowel sounds there are the harder the pronunciation is and the less vowel sounds there are the easier the pronunciation is. It's common sense. It doesn't matter how long it took you to pronounce german vowels. German has more vowels. Also, german is not as phonetic as spanish. If we go by your logic then, how long do you think it'll take a german to pronounce spanish vowels?

  • @peda8607
    @peda8607 Před 7 lety +312

    I am Romanian and I don't understand why people say that Romanian is the most different language from the other romance languages. I personally find French the most different from the others, because of the accent and the way they pronunce words. Almost all Romanians words are pronunced as they are spelled and we also don't really have an accent. Sure, there are some regional accents in the country, but that's because those regions were influenced by other countries such as Hungary and Russia. People probably think that because all the other romance language speaking countries are right next to each other, while Romania is far away in the east and has a lot of slavic influences. I find Italian, Spanish and Portuguese very similar to Romanian, unlike French.

    • @TheGaulishThroat
      @TheGaulishThroat Před 7 lety +20

      I do agree about the French not being latins by ethnic(we are mostly celts and germans by ancestry,excepted the immigrants),but it's also the case with your people,the Romanians.You are mostly Dacian,slavic and Thracian.So not latins as well...

    • @alexdragoon74
      @alexdragoon74 Před 7 lety +18

      So romanian are genetical brothers whit us sardinian? There are 26% I2/I2a from Romania, and 37.5% from Sardinia!

    • @user-qr6qs4ox2z
      @user-qr6qs4ox2z Před 7 lety +10

      Well, we know that after emperor Trajanus won the Dacian wars in 106, there was an influx of roman citizens(especially legion veterans who were given land) who established a well ordered society and most definetely there was some mixing of blood between the locals and the newcomers.We do not know for certain what proportion of newcomers were form the Apennine or Iberian Peninsulas or elsewhere, but it is certain that it was a sizeable chunk.
      To better understand the dinamics please read this, it helped me a lot too:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup

    • @mironadriana
      @mironadriana Před 7 lety +13

      poate pentru ca limba romana este 60% latina si 20% SLAVICA. zic si eu .. De asemenea,noi avem multe cuvinte si din turca

    • @elenaionescu8607
      @elenaionescu8607 Před 7 lety +5

      Ceea ce conteaza este frecventa in vorbire a diferitelor lexeme, iar nu procentajul.

  • @allegria007
    @allegria007 Před 3 lety +31

    I speak French, Spanish and I’m currently learning Italian. From my own experience, French and Italian have very similar vocabulary and grammar in some cases but still I understand a lot thanks to Spanish. If it’s possible for you to learn any Romance language, do it because this language family is amazing!

    • @Itsnk430
      @Itsnk430 Před 5 měsíci

      hello sir,
      how can i do this?

    • @dashaa6174
      @dashaa6174 Před 4 měsíci

      Duolingo is the answer​@@Itsnk430

  • @alinesantossilva7660
    @alinesantossilva7660 Před rokem +31

    I'm Brazilian and obviously my native language is Portuguese. I love Spanish and I guess the two languages really have a strong connection. Although sometimes we can find some troubles in order to communicate well. That's why I think I need to learn Spanish. And I will do it from English on Duolingo 😆
    When I finish the English tree (from Portuguese) I'll learn Spanish from English and develop a very good connection 😍.

    • @rafaelsilva1012
      @rafaelsilva1012 Před rokem

      Vc aprendeu inglês no Duolingo?

    • @Yes-Bean
      @Yes-Bean Před rokem +2

      Ola eu sou de portugal e vivo em mexico

    • @Yes-Bean
      @Yes-Bean Před rokem +1

      Eu falo português, espanhol, alemão e inglês

  • @jmmurillo86
    @jmmurillo86 Před 4 lety +565

    I'm Spanish, and I can read Portuguese so easily sometimes I only realize it's not Spanish at the end of the sentence. However I find it very hard to understand it spoken, while Portuguese people understand us so well. I'm so jealous. We love you, Portugal!

    • @albertodelblanco6923
      @albertodelblanco6923 Před 4 lety +23

      Es que parece que hablas español estando borracho xd

    • @idkman309
      @idkman309 Před 4 lety +14

      @@albertodelblanco6923 Spanish sounds Portuguese when you break a teeth and you are with so much rush to talk and somehow doesn't have air .
      I'm sorry lmao but that's how it sounds ksjsksj joke 💟

    • @yago455
      @yago455 Před 4 lety +6

      vengo aprendiendo portugués desde hace un año, y es muy fácil la verdad

    • @fabiolimadasilva3398
      @fabiolimadasilva3398 Před 4 lety +18

      I am Brazilian. When I have been to Galicia, in Spain, I spoke only in Portuguese...

    • @nono7120
      @nono7120 Před 4 lety

      Ikr!

  • @basedpony3325
    @basedpony3325 Před 4 lety +232

    I'm a Spanish Speaker and i can understand.
    Portuguese: 80%
    Italian: 78%
    Romanian: 72%
    French 60%

    • @Andrew-hk4dh
      @Andrew-hk4dh Před 4 lety +20

      hermano usted es un crack si puede entender a los fraceses tanto. yo solo entiendo como un 5%

    • @brolin96
      @brolin96 Před 4 lety +5

      Yo entiendo el francés escrito, ¿Pero el rumano? No, no puedo entender una simple oración aunque mi vida dependa de ello.

    • @ish3026
      @ish3026 Před 4 lety +3

      Drew Deaza I speak French and I can easily understand what ur saying in Spanish so I don’t doubt he understands some french

    • @basedpony3325
      @basedpony3325 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Andrew-hk4dh El Rumano es facil encontrar los cognados, ademas, cuando estudias Italianl a la par estudias un Poco de Rumano, y con ello puedo entender lo que dicen.

    • @sovietunion6109
      @sovietunion6109 Před 3 lety

      Por favor, la gente si exagera aqui, el frances lo unico dificil es la pronunciacion, el idioma escrito es super parecido al español :/

  • @tocagolden3633
    @tocagolden3633 Před 3 lety +186

    The Romance Languages
    🇫🇷🇮🇹🇵🇹🇷🇴🇪🇸

    • @gary-uz7lc
      @gary-uz7lc Před 3 lety +1

      yesss

    • @isacsantana8146
      @isacsantana8146 Před 2 lety +1

      Faltou a bandeira do Brasil

    • @yomilala8929
      @yomilala8929 Před 2 lety

      *🇨🇵🇮🇹🇧🇷🇷🇴🇲🇽

    • @unknowndevice8947
      @unknowndevice8947 Před 2 lety +4

      @@yomilala8929Protuguese originated from Portugal not f*cking Brazil.

    • @yomilala8929
      @yomilala8929 Před 2 lety

      @@unknowndevice8947 I didn't comment the flags of countries where those languages were born
      I comment the flags of most relevant country for each language ;)

  • @latinboi4327
    @latinboi4327 Před 3 lety +110

    I’m native Romanian speaker this is what I understand
    Italian:70%
    Spanish 50%
    French 0%
    Portuguese 1%
    We are Latin brothers

    • @CalinFR
      @CalinFR Před 3 lety +7

      french 0%? Have you ever heard French? go ahead and play a clip in French. Given that you understand Italian 70% which is not taught in schools, I have to assume that your upbringing was around there (traveled, visited, worked, etc)

    • @LUISALBERTO-on6tj
      @LUISALBERTO-on6tj Před 2 lety +4

      soy español y el rumano suena muy parecido al portugues. es extraño que no lo entiendas😮

    • @raulsanchez-hornerosmartin4337
      @raulsanchez-hornerosmartin4337 Před 2 lety +2

      @@LUISALBERTO-on6tj para un rumano los sonidos del portugués brasileño si que le pueden sonar como el español, pero el portugués de Portugal es diferente.

    • @MattZaycYT
      @MattZaycYT Před 2 lety +2

      Portuguese is 90% similar to Italian and Spanish. French I understand 50% and Romanian I know very little and it's very different. I am still confused.

    • @flocoresi5514
      @flocoresi5514 Před 2 lety

      0:10 Does anyone know the name of this background music.

  • @POLSKAdoBOJU
    @POLSKAdoBOJU Před 6 lety +382

    Je parle français couramment.
    Ho studiato italiano all'università per un anno e l'ho trovato facile a leggere e capire.
    Yo no hablo español pero puedo entender mucho.
    E agora estou aprendendo português porque minha noiva é Brasileira. :)

    • @yadielnieves2894
      @yadielnieves2894 Před 6 lety +17

      POLSKAdoB0JU Entendí de lo más bien.

    • @ingridp4457
      @ingridp4457 Před 5 lety +6

      perfecto

    • @alexdragoon74
      @alexdragoon74 Před 5 lety +6

      Bravo ragazzo!

    • @bobsyouruncle732
      @bobsyouruncle732 Před 5 lety +24

      Obrigada. As a native European speaker of Portuguese, I am able to understand everything you wrote, except I did have to look up "capire" equals to understand (comprehend). I did study French for a couple of years long ago but never Italian or Spanish. "Trovato" stumped me until I recognized "trove" and realized it means find.

    • @Sorellalunamistica
      @Sorellalunamistica Před 5 lety +3

      And you are from poland?

  • @AdsonCristian
    @AdsonCristian Před 6 lety +159

    Hi, Paul!
    Portuguese speakers can understand and be understood by other romance language speakers in these order:
    1. Galician (sometimes it just seems to be Portuguese iteself)
    2. Spanish (it's the second most similar language to Portuguese)
    3. Catalan (it's very close to Spanish)
    4. Italian (it's easier to understand if you already some foreign language basis)
    5. French (it's only possible to catch some words here and there. Sometimes it sounds like German)
    6. Romanian (almost not understandable, except by some spare words that remind of Portuguese)

    • @zak.886
      @zak.886 Před 5 lety +10

      Adson Cristian I'm somali if you speak the southern somali dialect there are a good amount of Italian loanwords due to them colonizing us btw I'm not from the south

    • @MFPRego
      @MFPRego Před 5 lety +8

      Well, im portuguese and i understand sicilian alot better than castillian...

    • @michelleoliveira121
      @michelleoliveira121 Před 5 lety +2

      I'm happy that I'm not the only that thinks German sounds a bit like French

    • @rondonalves2897
      @rondonalves2897 Před 5 lety +2

      i can't understand catalan so well. it has hard pronunciation for me (brazilian native), sometimes it is easier to understand italian than catalan.

    • @federicomanuelolveira7658
      @federicomanuelolveira7658 Před 5 lety +2

      You forgot Asturleonés. The secondone is Asturleonés. Is the seme family of portuguese and galician.

  • @paulinotovar3730
    @paulinotovar3730 Před 4 lety +1

    I can see you put a lot of effort into making these videos. Not everyone breaks a sweat without batting an eye like you just did. Keep up the good work!

  • @diogorodrigues747
    @diogorodrigues747 Před 4 lety +143

    I'm Portuguese (from Portugal) and I can understand:
    Portuguese from Brasil - 99-100%
    Galician - 100%
    Spanish - 40-100% (it depends on the accent)
    Catalan - 20%
    Mirandese - 70%
    Italian - 10-35%
    French - 0-12% (because I studied a long time ago)
    Romanian - 0-3%
    Sardinian - 0% (I'm sorry...)

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 3 lety +7

      @Iris Bos Yes, there is some controversy about the Galician language. Spain says it's a diferent language but most linguists say it's the same language as Portuguese.

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 3 lety +1

      @Lewuy 82 Because Italian and Spanish are very different languages! I think the problem with Italian is phonetics - for us that is the most complicated part!

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 3 lety +1

      @Lewuy 82 Nós também não conseguimos entender muito francês... ;)
      Eu, por acaso, aprendi francês na escola e ainda não consigo ver um programa francês sem problemas!

    • @danielpetrubejinariu7489
      @danielpetrubejinariu7489 Před 3 lety

      PORTUGHEZII SI SPANIOLII SUNT METISI LA VERDAD EGAL ARABI ,ARABICOSSSSS

    • @brianda1528
      @brianda1528 Před 3 lety

      @Iris Bos As a native Galician I can say. I cant understand shit of spoken portuguese. You sound like russians :/

  • @glucosepouches
    @glucosepouches Před 6 lety +160

    My turn...
    Spanish speakers understand written Italian, written French, and written Portuguese. Spanish speakers understand spoken Italian.
    Portuguese understand written Spanish, written Italian. Portuguese speakers understand spoken Spanish and spoken Italian.
    Italian speakers understand written Spanish, written French, and written Portuguese. Italian speakers understand spoken Spanish.
    French speakers understand written Spanish, written Italian, written Portuguese. However, they do not understand and romance language spoken.
    Romanian speakers understand written Spanish, written Italian, written French, written Portuguese. However, no romance language understands spoken or written Romanian. Maybe just a tiny bit. Like less than 3%. Trust me.... I've studied every romance language and i know.

    • @KlavierMenn
      @KlavierMenn Před 5 lety +10

      Seems legit. Also, the difficulty to understands a romance language decrease wherenever you learn another romance language. If you speak Portuguese and learns french, romanian is more understandable. (actually i don't speak french, but portuguese and I can at least make sense of a written romanian text most of time via deduction , but the spoken still eludes me )

    • @nekko2645
      @nekko2645 Před 5 lety +4

      My Spanish friend can understand sometimes what I am saying , if you do not pronounce words hard as Bulgarian for example it starts to sound like Italian , maybe if you use some synonyms then you can understand quite a bit of a Romanian sentence. At least that worked with my friend :)

    • @pablorai769
      @pablorai769 Před 5 lety +6

      Entiendo bastante bien el portugués brasileiro, otra cosa es el portugués lusitano

    • @TheVallixx
      @TheVallixx Před 5 lety +11

      I'm romanian and indeed we understand quite easy italian, then spanish and with difficulty french or portuguese. It's also true that romanian is very hard to understand and that is because it has a lot of influences from slavic languages. Geographically Romania is surrounded by slavic countries: Ukraine, Bulgaria, Serbia....so it's the most modified romance language.

    • @alexconstantinescu6809
      @alexconstantinescu6809 Před 5 lety

      Respect

  • @ilarymatera8036
    @ilarymatera8036 Před 4 lety +347

    I’m an italian and for me Spanish is the easiest language, there are so many similar words between Italian and Spanish. I learned Spanish by listening to music and I noticed that if you learn a romance language you can learn another with more ease. Now I’m trying to learn Portuguese and it’s like Spanish with Italian pronunciation. I study French at school and it’s more difficult, maybe because the pronunciation is different and the grammar is complicated.
    I can’t understand Romanian, only some words.
    I think Italian is a difficult language too (and I’m an Italian lol), many Italian people don’t even know half of the italian grammar, but the main cause is that the people, especially adults, always speak dialect, and in Italy they’re so many!
    But I think that they’re all beautiful languages in beautiful countries!
    Un saluto dall’Italia!❤️
    🇮🇹🇪🇸🇵🇹🇫🇷🇷🇴

    • @giovanni1606
      @giovanni1606 Před 4 lety +1

      Latin language come from Romanian language.
      (Michael Ledwith)

    • @laawesome9695
      @laawesome9695 Před 4 lety +16

      @CineMa Wy Yeah maybe French is the most beautiful language for u, but for me it's Spanish🇪🇸🇨🇱🇨🇴🇨🇷🇪🇨🇩🇴🇦🇷🇺🇾🇻🇪🇵🇪🇵🇷🇲🇽🇳🇮🇭🇳🇬🇹🇨🇺

    • @andreifurdui5715
      @andreifurdui5715 Před 4 lety +15

      Un salut din românia! = hello from Romania!

    • @PrSp00
      @PrSp00 Před 4 lety +1

      Im Portuguese and i also think that Portuguese pronunciation is similar to Italian pronunciation
      Abraços de Portugal

    • @brolin96
      @brolin96 Před 4 lety +3

      @CineMa Wy La lengua francesa no es tan fácil, mas es muy hermosa.
      Un caluroso y fraternal abrazo a Francia. Y a los demás países con lenguas derivadas del latín. 🇫🇷🇪🇸🇮🇹🇷🇴💕

  • @martiserraminguella3322
    @martiserraminguella3322 Před 3 lety +15

    The word window in:
    Latin: Fenestram
    French: Fenêtre
    Italian: Finestra
    Romanian: Fereastră
    Catalan: Finestra
    Spanish: Ventana
    Portuguese: Janela

    • @danielpetrubejinariu7489
      @danielpetrubejinariu7489 Před 3 lety +1

      spaniolii si portughezii sunt metisi egal arabi la verita ha ha ha

    • @destiaptah2197
      @destiaptah2197 Před 3 lety +1

      Aromanian for window is...Firida

    • @slavoicus
      @slavoicus Před 3 lety +1

      The word in Spanish is ventana probably from latin ventus. I am thinking at an opening where the wind is passing trough. It's really easy for me as a Romanian. I cannot figure out janela... :)

    • @seid3366
      @seid3366 Před 3 lety

      @@destiaptah2197 What’s Aromanian like?

    • @TechnoForever21
      @TechnoForever21 Před 3 lety +2

      Fun fact, in Old French "fenêtre" was written "fenestre" most accents that look like a hat, aka accent circonflexe, have been introduced to replace the "s" in many words because nobody was talking that way anymore.
      For example, forêt was forest, fête was feste, tête was teste, même was mesme, bête was beste, conqueête was conqueste.
      You may think it was only for the letter "e" but actually, a, i, o, u too. For example, côte was coste, île was isle, Pâques was Pasques, Benoît was Benoist. Middle French was a lot more similar to Spanish than it is today, as we can see. Just another blatent example would be that before the 10th century, the way to say château would be castel, just like in Spanish.
      There's also plenty of letters that disappeared with time and we used accents to replace them. For example, aage became âge, baailler became bâiller, piquure became piqûre, saoul became soûl (although saoul is still accepted). It's also to replace Medieval diphtongs that were still written the ancient way at the 18th century, just like dû which was deu, mû was meu, crû was creu, sûr was seure, crûment was cruement, mûr was meur.
      You guys would probably understand middle French a lot better than modern French tbh.

  • @lukethomeret-duran5273
    @lukethomeret-duran5273 Před 4 lety +28

    I'm French from Toulouse and understand:
    Occitan: 90% (language in my region)
    Catalan:85% (sister language of occitan)
    Italian:70%
    Spanish:65%
    Portuguese:45%
    Romanian: 20%

    • @lukethomeret-duran5273
      @lukethomeret-duran5273 Před 4 lety +7

      @Lewuy 82 porque el español es fácil de entender para los franceses, pero la pronunciación francesa es demasiado difícil de entender para los españoles.

    • @lucabralia5125
      @lucabralia5125 Před 3 lety +5

      i'm italian and i can understand pretty well written french... i can't speak it or write it, but it's understandable,
      i also have some parts of my family from france, in montpellier.

  • @waterblonk
    @waterblonk Před 4 lety +292

    I can't be the only one who always thought these languages are called Romance languages because they all sound sexy.
    Pls tell me other people had that conviction.

    • @eileencampos5680
      @eileencampos5680 Před 4 lety +29

      They are all Beautiful Latin Languages! They are all similar to one another that makes it so fascinating!

    • @mers411
      @mers411 Před 4 lety +2

      @@eileencampos5680 *haitian creole*

    • @eileencampos5680
      @eileencampos5680 Před 4 lety +5

      @@mers411 I can understand some Hatian Creole because it hás some French in it. It hás always been told that the Portuguese and French language are really similar to one another with sound. Also, Spanish and Italian sound like each other. However, I can understand because Portuguese and Spanish are Brother langues! LOL

    • @vatravlahilor492
      @vatravlahilor492 Před 4 lety +5

      Hahaha no man its about roman legacy

    • @Tech-cy9yo
      @Tech-cy9yo Před 4 lety

      Everyone thought that

  • @lissandrafreljord7913
    @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 4 lety +661

    What would happen if you put a French speaker, a Portuguese speaker, an Italian speaker, a Spanish speaker and a Romanian speaker in one room?
    The Portuguese and Spanish speakers would initially speak to each other more than with anyone else, although a bit more slowly than their normal selves (that is if the Portuguese speaker is not from Portugal, unless the Spanish speaker is from Galicia). The Portuguese speaker would understand the Spanish speaker more than the other way around. Both the Portuguese and the Spanish speakers might be tempted to talk with the Italian speaker from time to time, especially the Spanish speaker, so they might get the Italian speaker involved in the conversation as well. The Italian speaker would have an easier time speaking with the Spanish speaker, especially if he/she is Argentinean/Uruguayan, than the Portuguese speaker. The Romanian speaker would try to engage the Italian speaker since he/she would be able to understand him/her more than everyone else but the Italian speaker would be super lost with the Romanian speaker so it would be really difficult. Seeing this, the Romanian speaker would be left all alone, and would eavesdrop on their conversation and understand the Italian speaker and a little bit less the Spanish speaker but would be lost with the Portuguese speaker. The Italian, Spanish and Portuguese speakers would not bother with the Romanian speaker as they can't understand him/her at all. The French speaker might understand some of the Italian speaker's speech (especially if the French speaker is from Corsica or any Occitan-speaking region in the south of France) and to a much lesser extent, the French speaker might understand the Spanish speaker (that is if French speaker knows Occitan), but would be completely lost with the Romanian and Portuguese speakers as well as all of them two with the French speaker. The French speaker would probably be left all alone without being able to speak to anyone except maybe the Italian speaker, if he/she is from Valle D'Aosta or Piemonte, or the Spanish speaker, though to a much lesser extent, if he/she is from Catalonia, Valencia or the Balearic Islands. The French and the Romanian speakers would not be able to speak to each other much in their own languages, other than the Romanian recognizing some cognates here and there in their languages. Most likely, the French and Romanian speakers would look at each other lost and shrug in agreement, as both can relate to each other's experience of being completely ignored and ostracized from enjoying the unique experience of exchanging conversations with a distant family member. Meanwhile, the Spanish, Portuguese and Italian speaker will proceed in their conversation, with the Spanish speaker acting as the mediator since the Italian speaker will still struggle understanding the Portuguese speaker, even though the Portuguese speaker can understand Italian speaker without much help from the Spanish speaker. As the Spanish, Italian and Portuguese speakers proceed their conversation, they will gradually get louder, more relaxed, assertive and passionate, with hand gestures, jokes, laughter and swear words thrown here and there, all, while, forgetting that the French and Romanian speakers even exist in the room. The French and Romanian speaker have enough of this bs, and decide to leave, though, not before giving the other three the middle finger, and telling them "Sayonara bitchess!!!"

    • @clotildedecasaantici8065
      @clotildedecasaantici8065 Před 4 lety +39

      Je suis Italien et je comprends le français.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 4 lety +3

      @@clotildedecasaantici8065 Are you from Valle D'Aosta, Piemonte or Liguria?

    • @clotildedecasaantici8065
      @clotildedecasaantici8065 Před 4 lety +12

      @@lissandrafreljord7913 No. I have studied French at school

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před 4 lety +24

      @@clotildedecasaantici8065 Oh. I see. But yes. I do hear that Italian is actually the closest to French. They share 89% lexical similarity, and the grammar is most similar. Though the pronunciation might throw people off.

    • @datitingammez
      @datitingammez Před 4 lety +108

      And all of this was written in english

  • @anitanoriega3909
    @anitanoriega3909 Před 4 lety +8

    I am so glad I was born as a Romance language speaker! Awesome video 😁

  • @byoobyoo1280
    @byoobyoo1280 Před 3 lety +12

    As a portuguese (BR) speaker that studied a bit of each of these languages, I could say spanish is not only easier grammatically and phonetically but the language’s range geographically and culturally makes it easier to learn it.
    For example, the music from all these “hispano hablantes” countries or the numerous locations named in spanish, plus culinary, and even american movies offer spanish to some extent and we pick up vocabulary. And it seems its like they say, spanish is a good intelligibility mediator between these romance languages.

  • @annoying_something
    @annoying_something Před 5 lety +92

    I‘m trying learning spanish now. And yes...The Grammar is easier to understand if you have had Latin at school ( an if you watched out in this lesson)...
    Saludos de alemania

  • @germanpalomares2512
    @germanpalomares2512 Před 7 lety +448

    yeah I'm Spanish and Portuguese is easy to understand for me when I read it, when I listen to it it sounds like Chinese lol

    • @alejandroojeda6604
      @alejandroojeda6604 Před 7 lety +5

      absolutely

    • @porchalalsanscolorantnicon3664
      @porchalalsanscolorantnicon3664 Před 7 lety +32

      Álvaro Cortés Ruiz I'm portuguese xD
      The portuguese sound like a mix of russian and spanish

    • @porchalalsanscolorantnicon3664
      @porchalalsanscolorantnicon3664 Před 7 lety +27

      ***** yes portuguese from portugal and portuguese brazilian sounded very different x)

    • @abeirabaixa
      @abeirabaixa Před 7 lety +18

      For the portuguese people, spoken (or written) spanish is not difficult to understand... and surprisingly it's very easy to pronounce...

    • @germanpalomares2512
      @germanpalomares2512 Před 7 lety +10

      abeirabaixa yeah because Spanish is a phonetic language. Portuguese people can learn it in few time

  • @Lolubellule
    @Lolubellule Před 4 lety +46

    French and Italian are pretty close. When I was 16, I've been to Italia with my school and asked for direction in English to a local. He answered back in Italian and I was surprised that I could understand what he was saying, even if I never learned this language. That was an amazing experience!

  • @Goldenskies__
    @Goldenskies__ Před 3 lety +15

    Guys Portuguese is beautiful, yeah as an Italian I had to get used to the pronunciation (because it's very different than Italian phonetically), but know I'm thinking of studying it seriously. Beautiful language ❤
    Non so perché ho scritto in inglese, il mio inglese è tremendo ma spero che qualcuno sia riuscito a comprendere almeno metà di quello che ho scritto 😂😅

  • @cambk7392
    @cambk7392 Před 6 lety +97

    I'm French. In fact, when I see a romance language on a paper, I can understand it. But if someone tells me something using a romance language, except Spanish (learnt at school), I can't understand it because of the pronunciation differences.

    • @vincentlacoursiere9607
      @vincentlacoursiere9607 Před 6 lety +3

      Can you understand Quebec speakers?

    • @hannahroisinreilly8831
      @hannahroisinreilly8831 Před 6 lety +2

      Camille BTN I have the same experiences (Apart from knowing Spanish), it's easy to identify the romance languages by listening and reading but trying the pick up words verbally is too difficult for me.

    • @ducasx3094
      @ducasx3094 Před 5 lety +3

      If speaked slowy, the romance languages are quite intelligible between each other . I (italian) can understand almost all the romance languages. Only romanian is a more difficult because of its slavic Influence

    • @Hey-py2hb
      @Hey-py2hb Před 5 lety +4

      Vincent Lacoursiere As a native french speaker of course we can understand quebecois pretty easily there are some word differences but it still goes well

    • @victuz
      @victuz Před 5 lety +1

      Germany Stronk Are Canadian French and European French differences similar to what we have in American English and UK English?
      Because with Brazilian Portuguese and European Portuguese it's the same thing (some differences in pronunciation and grammar).

  • @cristiangabrielploesteanu210

    For me:
    Italian and Spanish are really easy to learn, and great for everyday speech
    French has a phonology that makes it perfect for songs, literature...etc
    Romanian has the hardest grammar (it uses cases) and it's for those who like learning languages, as it's pretty interesting
    Portuguese is like Spanish vocabulary with French pronunsiation. Also, an interesting language
    BUT WE ARE STILL ONE FAMILLY!

    • @martindouge4504
      @martindouge4504 Před 4 lety +9

      @BatJoker At least we can pronounce each other's nasal sounds ã/an, õ/on and so on :)

    • @martindouge4504
      @martindouge4504 Před 4 lety +3

      @BatJoker I find it funny how French is a Latin language with Germanic songs. Almost all of the vowels of French are found in the majority of German languages (except English)

    • @Valandix
      @Valandix Před 4 lety

      @@martindouge4504 Wat, I do speak french, but seriously apart from Walloons no ones in french-speaking regions have an alike germanic pronouciation or accent

    • @martindouge4504
      @martindouge4504 Před 4 lety +7

      @@Valandix I don't mean the accents, I meant just the sounds. At some point in history, Latin got pronounced with early germanic sounds like "ö" or "ü" in Modern German, and that gave the basis to what is now French. If you take the vowels of French and compare them to vowels in German, Icelandic or Swedish, you'll see what I mean. Same for the guttural "r" which is borrowed from those sources, normal latin "r" was rolled.
      Of course all languages went their own way and French is definitely romance jn its construction but its pronounciation comes from the latin pronounciation of the Celtic and Germanic tribes that lived in modern day France, namely the Gauls and later the Franks.

    • @crowphoenix1154
      @crowphoenix1154 Před 4 lety +1

      El Francés tiene un tono suave como shhh o zhhh o owa o nyi

  • @evushkalanguages6050
    @evushkalanguages6050 Před 3 lety +6

    This is really making me want to get more heavily involved with Romance languages again! They’re so cool aaah

  •  Před 3 lety +3

    This is such a great family of languages!
    Greetings from Brazil! Great video :)

  • @geraldaurand2954
    @geraldaurand2954 Před 4 lety +36

    In between my senior year of high school and the freshman year of college (summer 1972) I was returning from a European trip that began in Switzerland, where I studied French for a month and ended in Rome where my flight was to NYC. I had good linguistic experiences, particularly in Italy, where I used a bilingual dictionary to help be communicate with Italians.
    As I boarded the plane, two teens were helping an elderly man find his seat. I wasn't sure what language they were speaking as the approached me. It turned out that he was seated next to me. In English the teens explained that he was traveling alone. Listening to their parting I thought they were speaking Spanish or Italian. When we were alone I asked him in Spanish, which I studied for two years in high school if he spoke Spanish. He replied that he spoke Italian.
    I tried to converse with him in a combination of my six years of H.S. French, Spanish, and Italian cobbled together from recent experience amounting to three days and my dictionary, supplemented by what I'd learned at home from an Italian workbook ( I knew. I'd be in Italy).
    From this cobbled together conversation I discovered that he was an 84 year old Yugoslavian who had learned Italian during the Second World War, from Italian troops. He was taking his first flight ever to St. Louis MO to meet his younger brother who he hadn't seen since the War.
    When we arrived in NY we were told that due to engine trouble we had to remain aboard the plane for a whole. I tried to xplain this to my fellow traveler. I thought I got through to him, but I wasn't sure. After we deboarded I realize from his ticket that he'd missed his connection as had I to Columbus OH. I called my parents to let them know about the delay. I thought we should let his family, too. Myfamily were aware .
    I started looking for someone connected to the airline or the airport who could speak Italian to make sure he understood what was happening and to get in touch with MO. In an international airport in a city with a large Italian population, I couldn't find a soul.
    In the end, he had an envelope with his brother's address. I contacted a phone operator. And I found another language impediment: she had a local accent so heavy, that usually didn't find accents hard to understand, could barely understand her. We had a triangular. cnversation in Italian, English (bidialectal), and the Italian/Spanish hybrid I'd been using.
    At last, a very young chld answered the phone and passed me along with to her mother and then her father- in-law, my guy.'s brother, and grandfather they proceeded to converse in Serbo-Croatian. Everything was clea l
    My new friend was thankful and offered me some peach brand y he had on hm. At 18 that was my fist liquor. I had just a swig. It burned all the a to my gut.
    I never had so much so much fun TOR satisfaction during the rest of my trip. I'd used all my language skills.

  • @jorehir
    @jorehir Před 4 lety +217

    As an italian...
    spoken spanish: i can deal with it
    spoken portuguese: mmmh...
    spoken french: eh?
    spoken romanian: nope
    written spanish: ok
    written portuguese: mmmh ok
    written french: mmmh maybe...
    written romanian: nope

    • @clotildedecasaantici8065
      @clotildedecasaantici8065 Před 4 lety +5

      E pensare che il francese è così facile.

    • @jorehir
      @jorehir Před 4 lety +9

      @@clotildedecasaantici8065 Mah...piu' facile del cinese, sicuramente. Struttura e vocaboli sono al 90% gli stessi dell'italiano, ma deformati a tal punto da risultare difficilmente riconoscibili. La pronuncia e la cadenza locale peggiorano ulteriormente la situazione, quindi risulta quasi impossibile capire il francese parlato per chiunque non abbia una buona esperienza.

    • @caleumarques146
      @caleumarques146 Před 4 lety +9

      Il problema del francese è la pronuncia

    • @Mohamed-.710
      @Mohamed-.710 Před 4 lety +19

      @@jorehir hablo español y entendí un 90% de lo que escribiste

    • @allseer9574
      @allseer9574 Před 4 lety +14

      @@jorehir Sou Brasileiro... consegui entender uns 90% do que tu escreveste

  • @sergio.escamilla
    @sergio.escamilla Před 3 lety +2

    Me gusta tu canal! Recientemente comencé a aprender inglés y tus vídeos me ayudan mucho a practicar mi escucha! Saludos desde México!

  • @Martinl8
    @Martinl8 Před 3 lety

    Este es sin duda uno de los mejores canales de CZcams. Excelentemente explicado y entretenido gracias a Paul

  • @TheHenry014
    @TheHenry014 Před 6 lety +342

    Em um vídeo de línguas românticas, ainda estamos usando o inglês como língua franca. Por que cada um não usa a própria língua e tenta descobrir o que está escrito? É mais divertido assim ;)

    • @diegohernanpujas7480
      @diegohernanpujas7480 Před 5 lety +46

      jajaj tenés toda la razón

    • @non.newtonianfluid
      @non.newtonianfluid Před 5 lety +23

      Entendí todo

    • @adrianm5613
      @adrianm5613 Před 5 lety +25

      I’m Mexican and understood everything He said I’m just not sure what language it is lol

    • @tonybrian7526
      @tonybrian7526 Před 5 lety +24

      portugues por supuesto! jajajaja

    • @Bg-bl3kg
      @Bg-bl3kg Před 5 lety +1

      Flavio Ferreira podía entender todo lo que dijiste

  • @Josledes
    @Josledes Před 6 lety +358

    Para un español nativo es más fácil entender el italiano hablado que el portugués porque ambos tienen una pronunciación muy clara aunque realmente escrito se parece más al portugues, el problema está en la pronunciación.

    • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014
      @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014 Před 5 lety +7

      Parece que Espana y Italia eran mas cerca de lo que parecia, jajaja

    • @yakenhauri5784
      @yakenhauri5784 Před 5 lety +20

      Josledes è vero! il problema è la pronuncia! ;)

    • @sonin608
      @sonin608 Před 5 lety +20

      Bro i speak english and i am intermediate at french and its crazy how i somehow understand what ur tryin to say

    • @benjaminjones8782
      @benjaminjones8782 Před 5 lety

      i dont spanish

    • @ducasx3094
      @ducasx3094 Před 5 lety +11

      Josledes Non ho trovato difficolta nel capire quello che hai scritto.

  • @milagrosdelrosariomondrago7525

    Me gustó tu video. ..claro y conciso...nadie me había explicado mejor lo de el origen de las lenguas romances y porque eran tan parecidas.Gracias!Grazie!Merci!

  • @astolatt
    @astolatt Před 3 lety +83

    Duolingo when you forget to do your French lessons again: 1:54

  • @MihaiKrieger
    @MihaiKrieger Před 8 lety +349

    The topic is interesting. To start off: I am Romanian. I know other Romanians who claim that they can understand Spanish quite well without former training, but this is not the case. I find Spanish hard to understand, especially the spoken form.
    I am better off understanding Italian, which is much closer. So I can safely say I can understand basic Italian without any training, but I cannot follow a complicated discussion.
    On the other hand, Italian and Spanish speakers are having a hard time understanding Romanian, so the the ineligibility is only partial. Written French is easy to understand, but spoken French is giving me a hard time.
    For some reason, I find it extremely easy to pronounce Portuguese words effortlessly, but I don't understand Portuguese. It is likely that Portuguese speakers can pronounce Romanian words just as easily, although they won't understand what they mean.

    • @brendangordon2168
      @brendangordon2168 Před 8 lety +21

      I have Romanian neighbors and found that I could understand a little bit of what they were talking about because I studied Italian

    • @apreciemos
      @apreciemos Před 7 lety +52

      Spaniard here. Most of the Romanian people I have met speak Spanish so well that in many cases I couldn't even tell they were foreigners (unlike French, Portuguese or Italian people). Even if it's not your particular case, for whatever reason you guys definately have an easier time managing with our language than we would ever have with yours, so you have my deepest respect.

    • @CrisSelene
      @CrisSelene Před 7 lety +18

      Romanian too. I have a Brazilian classmate and she picks words up very quickly, but indeed mostly based on phonetics. Her Romanian accent veers a little to Moldavian.

    • @danielponder690
      @danielponder690 Před 7 lety +14

      Născut in România. Mais je parles français and I grew up mainly in the US speaking English and French.

    • @OrangeUtan1
      @OrangeUtan1 Před 7 lety +25

      I always thought Romanian was a Slavic language. I guess I was stupid.

  • @kanaabodi
    @kanaabodi Před 6 lety +38

    I am Thai from Bangkok Thailand, but I love to learn European Languages, and I like your clips very mush. Thank you so much for all the good things you have done !

    • @XV-or8zz
      @XV-or8zz Před 5 lety +1

      I'm catalan and I speak catalan and spanish. I also speak english and french. I undestand all romance languages except romanian. The easiest one for me to learn is french because as occitan,it's very close to catalan in phonology, grammar and structure.

  • @dianahidalgo8446
    @dianahidalgo8446 Před 3 lety +10

    Hi, i'm a native Spanish speaker, and you're right. At least from my perspective, it is very easy to understand either Italian or Portuguese just by listening or reading.
    However, when you learn a second romance language, is waaaay easier to be able to understand the rest of those languages. That's been my experience as a French student

  • @edsonjavier5243
    @edsonjavier5243 Před rokem +14

    I speak Spanish and if spoken slow I can understand Portuguese and Italian. Also given that I speak one of the 5 Romance languages. I’m on my way to learning Italian. 30 day streak so far 💪🏽 arrivederci!

    • @Yes-Bean
      @Yes-Bean Před rokem +2

      Hi, as a protuguese speaker I can understand spanish, catalan and galician pretty well. Italian and especially french are bit harder to understand but its not impossible. But I can't understand a single word of romanian

    • @jd-ttyl
      @jd-ttyl Před rokem

      Hi! How's your progress? I'm learning Spanish and in love with languages in general❤

  • @SotoCaro
    @SotoCaro Před 6 lety +202

    Tes vidéos sont très intéressantes. Moi je comprends surtout l'allemand car je parle le dialecte alsacien. Mais j'apprends l'italien et c'est vrai que c'est facile comme beaucoup de vocabulaire ressemble au français.

    • @Cris-hd1wb
      @Cris-hd1wb Před 5 lety +9

      Le vocabulaire roumain a aussi 30% de vocabulaire français, plus des mots latins. J'étudie le français et je peux dire qu'il est très similaire à ma langue maternelle

    • @sonin608
      @sonin608 Před 5 lety +4

      Bro, je suis d’accord. Moi, j’appendre aussi un peu de l’Espangol car il y a beaucoup de vocabulaire qui resemble au francais. Mais malheuresment pour moi l’itallien est assez difficile pour comprendre

    • @gaanamrutham6276
      @gaanamrutham6276 Před 5 lety +2

      Oui

    • @evansfaria
      @evansfaria Před 5 lety

      Les Brésiliens ont beaucoup de mal à comprendre le français et le roumain. L'espagnol est facilement compris et l'italien un peu moins, tout comme le catalan. Le galicien est pratiquement la même langue

    • @erickzuniga3113
      @erickzuniga3113 Před 5 lety +2

      My first language is Spanish, then I learned English . I studied French for 4 years. I can understand you guys very easily. But if I were to try to speak French I would probably get you guys upset. I feel like Italian is a mixture of Spanish and French. There are so many words that are the same to each language.

  • @Yukitocyborg
    @Yukitocyborg Před 8 lety +210

    I am a portuguese native speaker and I can understand spanish and sometimes Italian pretty well
    But French is just imposible to understand :p

    • @Yukitocyborg
      @Yukitocyborg Před 8 lety +37

      +Gαbriєl -kυи By the way Galician is more easy to understand than Spanish 'u'

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 8 lety +6

      +Ryan Privee Neither is older, and neither is "bad" anything xP. They both split off from one another and share a fairly recent common ancestor, which is why they are similar but not the same. It is impossible for one modern language to be "older" than another (excluding constructed languages like Esperanto) because all languages evolve constantly and have been evolving possibly for hundreds of thousands of years.

    • @Yukitocyborg
      @Yukitocyborg Před 8 lety

      +Ryan Privee Ryan actually they was the same language the culture separate them in two languages almost the same, but not the same :p

    • @VeraDonna
      @VeraDonna Před 8 lety +4

      +Ryan Privee They used to be the same language (Galaico-Português) and some people claim that the're still the same language in different dialects, kind of like the 4 dialects of Sardinian and the controversial oneness of Catalan and Valencian.
      Officially, they're two separate languages, but I've never seen any native speaker of either language needing translation to understand the other - unlike native speakers of Castillian, who barely understand Portuguese.

    • @amarmoghaddam4819
      @amarmoghaddam4819 Před 8 lety +4

      Eu não falo francês mas eu posso entender que eles dizem 😂

  • @lovetolovefairytales
    @lovetolovefairytales Před 3 lety

    I want to say thank you for your lovely videos; I'm trying to learn Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and French and your videos are helpful.

  • @sitmengchue4077
    @sitmengchue4077 Před 4 lety

    Excellent explanation of Romance languages. Thanks for sharing!

  • @SiboWoW
    @SiboWoW Před 7 lety +54

    I'm italian, and i lernt spanish and little bit of portuguese. in general, in italy people think spanish is the "sister" of italian, and we can understand a lot of what we hear.
    But with french, portuguese and romanian, it becomes much difficult for us to understand, and the biggest problem is the fonetic system of these languages. In italy almost nobody knows that romanian is a romance language, it sounds to much slavic for us.
    BUT when it comes to reading, things become much easier: in fact i can understand around 60% of written french and portuguese and i guess around 50% of romanian.

    • @alexandradinca1331
      @alexandradinca1331 Před 7 lety +4

      very sad fact about romania ;( i am romanian and i can understand italian..and ....some people compare romanian with russian and other langueges

    • @Pedro4490
      @Pedro4490 Před 7 lety

      SiboWOW, if you try to communicate with a Portuguese in real life and in need of that communication, you will probably change your mind. Portuguese has several words which are exactly the same as Italian. Not similar... the same... But yeah, like French we have that so-called Celtic aspect. French is more eroded though, the Portuguese have done efforts (stopping excessive evolution) to preserve Latinity

    • @TheGaulishThroat
      @TheGaulishThroat Před 7 lety +4

      French and Romanian people have their own identity,which is very different from Italians,Spaniards and Portuguese,in the way of culture,kind of inhabitants,mentality,etc....
      Us(French people),we are more celts and germans by ancestry,whereas Romanians are Dacian and slavic.
      This explain the difference of phonology between our languages.
      True latins are the Italians,i think,and then the Spanish and the Portuguese.

    • @TheGaulishThroat
      @TheGaulishThroat Před 7 lety +1

      I think that France and Romania have their own cultural and ethnic identity,which does not match the Italian,Spanish or Portuguese one.
      This also explain the differences about language and phonetic.
      However,you seem to be Portuguese and hostile toward France.
      Relatively Strange,because i used to think that Portuguese were neutral or at least less anti-French than Italian or Spanish People.

    • @Pedro4490
      @Pedro4490 Před 7 lety

      There is also Celtic and Germanic influence in parts of Northern Portugal (even within the region there's differences). Although we do not use the word Celtic much, for different reasons but it is the same as you think of Celtic.
      True Latins are from central Italy around Rome, the rest are just like the Portuguese, Spanish or even the French. I dont find the French that different, at least from where I come from. There is only a communication problem. France, in some parts, its difference is that it is more Germanic than Portugal or Spain, even with areas which has some Germanic influence.

  • @higorhenriquemiranda886
    @higorhenriquemiranda886 Před 4 lety +180

    Português e espanhol tem uma similaridade que:
    Brasileiro: A
    O mundo todo: Spanish

    • @tytania3545
      @tytania3545 Před 4 lety +16

      Correcto, yo te entendí perfectamente. Latinoamérica!!!

    • @Merry19ss
      @Merry19ss Před 4 lety +8

      Correcto,te entendí lo que escribiste ,
      Saludos desde Hispano Americana

    • @philyhero33go
      @philyhero33go Před 4 lety +1

      Higor Henrique Miranda got any bands or singer recommendations for me? I like pop and Rock. I’m not heavy metal or rap. Depending if rap has good lyrics instead of swearing words in it

    • @bernardow9829
      @bernardow9829 Před 4 lety +1

      Verdade kkkk

    • @victor-on4yd
      @victor-on4yd Před 4 lety +9

      @@philyhero33go I'm not Higor, but here there are some bands that I like: Engenheiros do Hawaii, Legião Urbana, CPM 22.
      Some songs of those bands are:
      "Dom Quixote" and "O preço" by Engenheiros do Hawaii. "Por enquanto" by Legião Urbana. "Um minuto para o fim do mundo" and "Dias atrás" by CPM22. There are others good songs...
      That's it. Sorry for my bad english. I'm learning it... Greetings from Brazil

  • @kdengo
    @kdengo Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you, it was a great presentation. ( or Apresentacao). I am living in USA, and my BA was in French-Portuguese literature in Rio - Brasil. Great class. I will look more at your videos.

  • @kahaag
    @kahaag Před 4 lety

    Hi there. I'm a big fan of your channel and came to this particular episode to find some information about the differences between Spanish spoken in Spain and the language of the people in Buenos Aires. Maybe you feel like telling us something about that subject. Thanks a lot for your amazing effort and work.

  • @dougdoliviertraducoeseletr6387

    I'm Brazilian and for me is harder to understand Romanian or French than others romance languages. Btw I like all this languages.

    • @roms4154
      @roms4154 Před 6 lety +16

      may be because french is 75% romance and 25% celtic and germanic !

    • @juanperezgallegos9362
      @juanperezgallegos9362 Před 6 lety +3

      hi doug i am mexican and forme is bery easy understand french or portugues i estudied portugues for understand french

    • @dougdoliviertraducoeseletr6387
      @dougdoliviertraducoeseletr6387 Před 6 lety +5

      juan perez gallegos wow I think that Portuguese and French are so different. But I can understand Spanish, saludo desde Brasil.

    • @dougdoliviertraducoeseletr6387
      @dougdoliviertraducoeseletr6387 Před 6 lety +1

      Rom's agree

    • @juanperezgallegos9362
      @juanperezgallegos9362 Před 6 lety +2

      bom dia doug te felicito por estudiar lenguas es algo que te llena de muchas satisfaccion yo ya tenia desde ase tiempo la inquietud de estudiar lenguas hasta que conoci a una mujer coreana ella fue mi inspiracion ya que ella ablaba ingles y español me enamore de ella y no la he buelto a ver hoy recoro el mundo estudiando lenguas

  • @ilrompiballe6187
    @ilrompiballe6187 Před 7 lety +155

    thank you to recognize Sardinian like a proper language!

    • @lucaszapata
      @lucaszapata Před 6 lety

      George Laurencena ste men

    • @ebukde2361
      @ebukde2361 Před 6 lety

      Fa piacere anche a me, che sono romano. Il punto è che noi italiani abbiamo moltissime lingue in italia, che erroneamente chiamiamo dialetti.
      Secondo me sono una ricchezza e tenerle un po' più in considerazione, a partire dal chiamarle lingue, aiuterebbe a valorizzare la cultura locale, che in italia è immensa a livello regionale.
      Ho vissuto in Spagna e ogni volta che spiegavo a uno spagnolo che abbiamo almeno una decina di lingue in italia, rimaneva sorpreso. Mentre parlavano delle proprie lingue come fosse una caratteristica solo spagnola.
      Oltretutto le lingue che ci sono in Spagna, a parte il basco che è completamente diverso, sono molto simili tra loro, e ad esempio io il galiziano e il catalano li capisco benissimo.
      Mentre il Sardo, il Ligure, il Romagnolo, giusto per dirne alcuni a caso, sono lingue completamente impossibili da capire.

  • @tamtaryba
    @tamtaryba Před 3 lety +9

    Great video! I am a native Polish speaker, in high school I learned Spanish at an intermediate level and then, during my studies, French at advanced level. I wouldn't say that the knowledge of Spanish helped me a lot while learning French which is much more complex (I mean phonetics, spelling and grammar). The 3rd Romance language I have learnt was Romanian and in this case the fact I knew French helped me quite a lot because there are many loanwords. Now, as I speak also Romanian, I can understand Italian, too! But I agree that it does not work the other way round: Italian speakers not necessarily can understand Romanian because of different phonology and loanwords from Slavic languages (about 15% but often present in the everyday vocabulary).

  • @eleonorelemonnier9277
    @eleonorelemonnier9277 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for this very interesting video.
    I can speak English and Italian.
    I have been learning Italian thanks to my knowledge of Latin, being French helps a lot too.

  • @alexplai9237
    @alexplai9237 Před 5 lety +144

    Romanian - 99% (native, but I can't pretend to know everything :))
    French - 97% second language
    Spanish - 90% (self-taught - in 2 months, fluent but use it only occasionally; depends also on accent and amount of regional/slang words)
    Italian - 80%+ (no formal training, but early exposure to Italian television :)
    I would say that for a regular Romanian this is the easiest one to understand almost effortlessly
    Portuguese - 60-70% (more when reading or perhaps with Brazilian Portuguese; I noticed that after a couple of days with my Portuguese friends I distinguish words much more easily)
    Catalan - 30% (but over 70% when reading - I was actually surprised to see how many similarities there are with Romanian, however pronunciation is much closer to Portuguese - at least to my ears)
    As a Romanian native, I find it quite easy to understand pretty much all other Romance languages (to varying degrees, of course). I find French and Romanian to be the most distinctive at a first glance (though Portuguese and Catalan pronunciation are also somewhat , but as French is my second language I am perhaps more aware of the abundance of similarities to its 'sister-languages'. Romanian may strike the untrained ear as a Slavic language, but after speakers of other Romance languages get "attuned" to the sounds of the language and observe some conjugation and declination patterns, it normally takes them little time to understand and be able to converse (by learning the endings of words for verb conjugations and noun declination, it becomes much easier to mentally remove them when reading or hearing a word and identify its root, which in many cases is a common Latin-based one). This is usually easier for Italians :)
    That said, I have met many French, Portuguese, Spanish (mostly South American) and Italian natives who speak excellent Romanian. Some regional Romance languages or dialects are much more similar to spoken Romanian, though - for example some Italian dialects. I once met a girl from Italy, while in France, who could literally translate entire conversations I would have in Romanian. She is a native speaker of a southern Italian dialect and our languages sounded almost the same, often syntax-wise as well. She had no idea what my language sounded like so she was very surprised and utterly pleased to tell me what I had just said to my sister on the phone :))
    From what I've seen after traveling to several countries around Europe, one of the main factors which may have helped me (and other Romanians) have an easier time understanding other languages, was the lack of dubbing in media. There has been significant exposure to various languages over the last 30 years or so in Romania - the most prevalent of which were, initially, English, Italian, German and Hungarian (then SA Spanish, French and others).

    • @Valandix
      @Valandix Před 4 lety +1

      Now try Walloon, have fun dude xD

    • @alexandru1016
      @alexandru1016 Před 4 lety +2

      I think that if you're Romanian and know English (even a little bit) it's much easier to understand many more languages, not just the romance ones. Tho...that might only be my case but i can understand many languages either spoken or written. I currently know a little bit of English, Russian and of course Romanian

    • @afonsoferreira2652
      @afonsoferreira2652 Před 4 lety

      Attention: Brazil doesn't speak portuguese

    • @neymarjr.7775
      @neymarjr.7775 Před 4 lety

      Puta textão heim!

    • @3dwardcullen69
      @3dwardcullen69 Před 4 lety +1

      @Sulayman Tughyan Not the original poster, but I'm fluent in Romanian and Spanish. I have to correct you on one thing. Russian is not a Romance language, it's a Slavic language though still part of the indo-European family. Romance languages are those which evolved from Latin. The major ones are Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian and French. If you want to learn a romance language, I would say it depends on which one you find most pleasing to the ear. For me this was Spanish because I love the plural endings and I found it relatively easy. But also it's a very useful language to know. French is also a useful Romance language, though it may be harder to learn to pronounce the words properly. I think the most characteristically Latin sounding language is Italian, followed by Spanish, Romanian, Portuguese and lastly French.

  • @valeriah.6433
    @valeriah.6433 Před 4 lety +20

    Native Spanish speaker here (I've studied a little bit of Latin in Law school).
    Portuguese: 85%
    French: 75%
    Italian: 60%
    Catalan: 50%
    Romanian: 30%
    Having a really sh**** knowledge in Latin has helped me a lot. We're similar in so many things and that's just beautiful.

  • @KGBkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbkgbk

    I love the beauty of their sound and the relative ease of learning them

  • @dmgh85
    @dmgh85 Před 3 lety +1

    you are awesome.... not only educative but also intertaining .............thanks a lot for your effort

  • @ClaudiaCarrasco99
    @ClaudiaCarrasco99 Před 6 lety +300

    I am mexican, I speak Spanish, English and French. I can understand Italian pretty easily without knowing the language, but at least for me, Portuguese and Romanian are much harder to understand.

    • @Crystal_12gem
      @Crystal_12gem Před 6 lety +32

      Claudia Carrasco how Portuguese if you speak Spanish???

    • @swervofresh4
      @swervofresh4 Před 6 lety +18

      Portugués is a more complex idioma then Español

    • @yntiteixeiratischler9818
      @yntiteixeiratischler9818 Před 6 lety +30

      Claudia Carrasco Soy brasileño y tengo experiencia hablando con nativos de más de 10 países de Latinoamérica y también españoles, las lenguas son mucho similares y muchos lusohablantes relatan que es perfectamente entendible entender español ( claro sin entender algunas palabras únicas en tu lengua). Creo que podrías entender portugués apenas escuchando por una semana , empezé a hablar español en 3 semanas, hoy ya hablo bien ( aunque a veces un portuñol jajaja)

    • @ClaudiaCarrasco99
      @ClaudiaCarrasco99 Před 6 lety +2

      Mark Robinson I don't speak Portuguese, Italian and Romanian either. What I meant was that even without having any knowledge about those languages, I can partially understand some Italian, but Portuguese is harder for me anyway.

    • @ClaudiaCarrasco99
      @ClaudiaCarrasco99 Před 6 lety +7

      Ynti Teixeira Tischler He sabido que para los brasileños/portugueses es más fácil entender el español, que para los latinos/españoles entender el portugués. Imagino que aprendiendo el idioma es posible, pero me refiero a la facilidad natural para traducir algunas cosas de algún idioma a otro, a pesar de no tener conocimiento de tal idioma.

  • @cjseno3549
    @cjseno3549 Před 4 lety +55

    I'm Filipino but I can understand Spanish 🇪🇸.
    Soy filipino pero puedo entender espanol.

  • @matthewriffel188
    @matthewriffel188 Před 2 lety +4

    I’ve spoken Mexican Spanish since childhood and live in the United States. One of my good friends from elementary school was from Bucharest, Romania. At that young age, I didn’t know much about linguistics and was shocked to understand so much of his and his family’s ‘half-Spanish’. As the years went by, being exposed to Romanian, I came to understand even more of it, and to listen to regular differences between Spanish and Romanian. I remember that the Spanish ‘ch’ sound was often something like a “pt” or “ft” sound. It became more regular and understandable over time, even though I’ve never sat down and studied Romanian.

  • @kerenbustos1071
    @kerenbustos1071 Před 3 lety +56

    Los que hablan portugués nos entienden bien, pero nosotros no mucho a ellos 🤪 Creo que entendemos más el italiano por la fonética ❤️

    • @RaffaelFortunatto
      @RaffaelFortunatto Před rokem +5

      Eu, como brasileiro, consigo entender pelo menos 95% do que os falantes de espanhol falam.