Latin Language Spoken | Can Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian speakers understand it? | #1

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2020
  • 🤓 Have you ever wondered what Latin sounds like? In this video, you'll hear the Latin language spoken in a natural way. Luke Ranieri is a helicopter pilot, a polyglot, and one of the Latin speakers who create content in spoken Latin. In this episode, we'll see if speakers of Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian can understand the Latin language spoken? Can you understand it?
    📝 Contribute to the translation of this video → czcams.com/users/timedtext_vide...
    Support my Work: @Ecolinguist
    My name is Norbert Wierzbicki and I am the creator of this channel.
    ☕️Buy me a Coffee → www.paypal.me/ecolinguist (I appreciate every donation no matter how big or small🤠)
    📱Instagram: @the.ecolinguist
    🤓🇵🇱👨‍🏫 Book a Polish Lesson with Norbert → ecolinguist.com/ (language conversation practice)
    Contact details for the guests of the show are:
    🦂 Luke Ranieri:
    Channel in Latin → @ScorpioMartianus
    Channel in English → @polyMATHY_Luke
    Luke teaches Latin through Latin 🤓 [Lingua Latina Comprehensibilis 1A · Salvē! Valēsne? ] → • Greetings in Latin · L...
    🇮🇹 Linda Riolo - Italian language teacher and podcaster.
    🎥CZcams Channel: Speak Italiano - Italian with Linda
    🎤Podcast for Italian learners: speakitaliano.org/
    📱Instagram: @italianwithlinda
    ​Gustavo Rangel - Brazilian Portuguese speaker, English teacher from Brazil
    🎥CZcams Channel: @GustavoRangel
    🇺🇸Website for English learners: gustavorangel.com.br/
    🇺🇸for 🇧🇷Gustavo's English Online Course for Portuguese Speakers: go.goforit.vip/curso
    📱Instagram: @goforitcourses goforitcourses?...
    Isidor Morales - Mexican Spanish speaker, a Spanish teacher from Mexico
    🇲🇽Spanish lessons with Isidor: www.italki.com/teacher/412045...
    You get $10 Dollars towards your lessons on italki by signing up using the following link: www.italki.com/i/ACBGGA
    🎥Recommended videos:
    🤓 Part 2 of the Conversation → • Latin vs Italian vs Sp...
    🔴 Luke Ranieri answers questions LIVE → • 🔴 Why Learn Latin? | N... 🤓
    🇫🇷🇮🇹🇧🇷🇲🇽French Language | Can Italian, Spanish and Portuguese speakers understand? → • French Language | Can ...
    🇮🇹🇧🇷🇲🇽Italian Language | Can Spanish and Portuguese speakers understand? → • Italian Language | Can...
    🇧🇷🇲🇽🇮🇹Brazilian Portuguese | Can Spanish and Italian speakers understand? → • Brazilian Portuguese |...
    🤠🇧🇷🇲🇽Norbert speaking Spanish to Polyglot Erika - a Brazilian Portuguese speaker. → • Comparacion Lenguas Ro...
    Romance Languages Comparison Playlist → • Romance Languages Comp...
    🤗 Big hug for everyone reading my video descriptions! You rock! 🤓💪🏻
    #latin

Komentáře • 12K

  • @Ecolinguist
    @Ecolinguist  Před 3 lety +5222

    Latin is alive and kicking! 💪🏻 Please share the video with your friends if you believe it's worth it! 🤓Grātiās! 🤗

    • @Kalifornya040605
      @Kalifornya040605 Před 3 lety +62

      ¡Espectacular! Ahora tengo curiosidad de cómo habría funcionado con rumano, francés y catalán. 😯
      Now I'm curious about how much a romanian, a catalonian and a french would have understood...

    • @zwit666
      @zwit666 Před 3 lety +8

      Norbert, idealnie by było jakby jeszcze pojawiał się angielski odpowiednik zgadywanego słowa, tak dla rozwiania wątpliwośc. Nigdy tak na serio nie uczyłem się żadnego z języków w tym materiale (trochę transmisji meczów włoskich i hiszpańskich w ich językach i duuużo komparatystyki ze znanymi językami), a udało zgadnąć (chyba) wszystko poza skorpionem, jeśli ostatnim słowem mógł być, żal czy żałoba. Świetny materiał i czekam na więcej języków germańskich, a przede wszystkim skandynawskie (może old norse?).

    • @lawrencerodriguez6671
      @lawrencerodriguez6671 Před 3 lety +18

      I absolutely loved this episode. Muchas gracias por hacer este video. 😀👍

    • @kame9
      @kame9 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Kalifornya040605 creo que más dicícil, español e italiano son similares en muchos aspectos, peró para hacer hay multiples variaciones.

    • @TheKarts
      @TheKarts Před 3 lety +15

      Muito bom a maneira que o Luke fala. Bem didático. Talvez não tenha entendido tanto se fosse outra pessoa falando de qualquer jeito.

  • @dashie.7910
    @dashie.7910 Před 3 lety +7403

    Latin: grãtiãs
    Spanish: gracias
    Italian: grazie
    Portuguese: *O B R I G A D O*

    • @gabrielweiss
      @gabrielweiss Před 3 lety +1247

      Grato, também serve!

    • @hl8176
      @hl8176 Před 3 lety +876

      Grato, graças, gratidão, agradeço ou agradecido existe também.

    • @irrelevance3859
      @irrelevance3859 Před 3 lety +350

      Graças is also a word but obrigado/a is more so used in the context of thank you

    • @ZecaPinto1
      @ZecaPinto1 Před 3 lety +173

      "garças" a Deus

    • @eliassantos4930
      @eliassantos4930 Před 3 lety +306

      Tessellation I don’t know if it’s true, but I have already heard that we say “obrigado” to give a sense that once you did a favor for me, I am obligated (obrigado) to do a favor for you too. It’s a kind of giving back.

  • @japeri171
    @japeri171 Před 3 lety +14177

    When someone who speaks Latin gathers Spanish,Portuguese and Italian speakers.He looks like a grandfather when he gathers his grandchildren.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +734

      Hahaha, and I do a pretty funny grandfather voice too!

    • @Hepponisme
      @Hepponisme Před 3 lety +265

      @@ScorpioMartianus You did an amazing job,a really nice latin.

    • @caseyrogers573
      @caseyrogers573 Před 3 lety +16

      YES!!!!

    • @caseyrogers573
      @caseyrogers573 Před 3 lety +189

      This is so freaking cool!! Next do Old Church Slavonic and Slavic speakers or Old Norse with Nordic Speakers!

    • @andresvillanueva5421
      @andresvillanueva5421 Před 3 lety +41

      @@ScorpioMartianus You were so good! Thank you!

  • @pakman184
    @pakman184 Před 2 lety +402

    As an English speaker who knows none of these languages, I'm shocked at how easy it is to pick up on the general concept of what's being discussed. It really is a small world

    • @johanneswestman935
      @johanneswestman935 Před 2 lety +72

      It is as long as you stay within the Indo-European family. Once you jump out of it you understand nothing :P.

    • @Chevymonster203
      @Chevymonster203 Před 2 lety +21

      Probably to do with the Norman influence, or French influence on modern English. Old English or even middle English doesn't transfer over very well. As languages branched off they kept some lone words but the pronunciation maybe different.

    • @jayclarke777
      @jayclarke777 Před 2 lety +11

      Fun fact. "English" is 30% Latin. Most English words have their etymology from the language.

    • @johanneswestman935
      @johanneswestman935 Před 2 lety +35

      @@jayclarke777 This is the sort of thing that people like to say but it's a sort of "half truth". A significant portion of English words do come from Latin/French. However, the vast majority of words that people use in their every-day life are of Germanic origin.
      Words like "hand, house, water, man, dog" etc. are of Germanic origin.
      Words like "defenestrate, auditorium, lecture" are of Latin/French origin.

    • @jayclarke777
      @jayclarke777 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johanneswestman935 So what's the half-lie?

  • @Moutacreeper
    @Moutacreeper Před 2 lety +171

    I swear, if you're a native speaker of any of these languages, you can understand all of them. This is amazing, I feel so powerful. (From Portugal btw)

    • @tick_tack
      @tick_tack Před 2 lety +8

      Really? I'm from Spain and I don't understand what he is saying

    • @FAUlinguist
      @FAUlinguist Před rokem +3

      I’m L2 for all 3 and it was fascinating. I was anticipating the “alacrán” commentary before it even happened and I was on the fence between avô and idoso before our Brazilian friend chose the latter. 🤔 🤣

    • @cesarsr2090
      @cesarsr2090 Před rokem +2

      @@tick_tack te hace falta mas vocabulario, yo también soy español y es verdad que al que habla latin es dificil entenderle, pero muchas palabras si eres habil puedes relacionarlas y saber de que esta hablando. Yo acerté todas las palabras y al que habla portugues le entendi al 95% mientras que a la italiana 70% o así.

    • @cesarsr2090
      @cesarsr2090 Před rokem +6

      @@tick_tack nunca di clases de latin pero sobretodo los adjetivos son muy similares, los verbos si que cambian mas.

    • @angelgjr1999
      @angelgjr1999 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@tick_tackI speak Mexican Spanish and I understood most of what he said. I guess it depends on how you were raised, for example I grew up learning Spanish English and some French.

  • @PuckishAngeI
    @PuckishAngeI Před 3 lety +9333

    This guy looks like a roman citizen transported in time, but now he just accepts reality and works as tech support

    • @guillermorivas7819
      @guillermorivas7819 Před 3 lety +99

      LoL!!!

    • @JorgeSchz2004
      @JorgeSchz2004 Před 3 lety +201

      Rectissime!!!

    • @UncleRecolour
      @UncleRecolour Před 3 lety +131

      He needs one of those ridiculous bowl haircuts and he's set

    • @fredrickpoggi5493
      @fredrickpoggi5493 Před 3 lety +63

      Thats hilarious lol! An ancient roman would make for a priceless interview.

    • @caseyrogers573
      @caseyrogers573 Před 3 lety +43

      Every time I hear “recte” or “bene” in Luke’s voice it sounds like a sound bite.

  • @chococho5370
    @chococho5370 Před 3 lety +3510

    As a russian, I understand:
    0% Italian
    0% Spanish
    0% Portuguese
    0% Latin

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Před 3 lety +173

      INCORRECT !
      Russian is an indo-European language too, just like Latin.
      sestra in russian means sister in Latin (and ENglish).

    • @jameeztherandomguy5418
      @jameeztherandomguy5418 Před 3 lety +256

      @@goofygrandlouis6296 but Russian is slavic and Latin is romance. Similarities are far fetched.

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Před 3 lety +72

      @@jameeztherandomguy5418 That division happened after.
      Iranian, Sanskrit, Russian and Latin all have a common ancestor language.
      Look it up.

    • @ryuzakev3656
      @ryuzakev3656 Před 3 lety +10

      But you've understood latin?

    • @MurakamiTenshi
      @MurakamiTenshi Před 3 lety +49

      If you speak English, you understand some of each. Much of the language is Germanic, which uses a lot of Latin

  • @giannifois8948
    @giannifois8948 Před rokem +251

    As an italian, I’m impressed because of how I understood almost everything of what everyone said (even Lucius Ranieri speaking latin) without subtitles. Le lingue romanze sono fantastiche!

    • @Ooilei
      @Ooilei Před rokem +34

      Add French and everybody would suddenly become confused

    • @Sara-fd3dd
      @Sara-fd3dd Před rokem +9

      I don't understand barely a freaking damn of Latin actually (in comparison with the other languages), even if I'm Italian and I also know Spanish and I can fully understand Portuguese or French

    • @Michael_the_Drunkard
      @Michael_the_Drunkard Před rokem +5

      ​@@Sara-fd3dd non era moltp difficile.

    • @Sara-fd3dd
      @Sara-fd3dd Před rokem +3

      @@Michael_the_Drunkard Per te magari, che probabilmente hai studiato latino per anni. Io di latino ho solo una minuscola preparazione, e non trovo affatto che sia una lingua facile da capire, soprattutto se parlata con la sua pronuncia e non quella ecclesiastica.

    • @curropataqui
      @curropataqui Před rokem +2

      Sobre todo el castellano, que todos los demás latinos deberían aprender para conseguir una lengua mundial franca indiscutible, que lee y pronuncia lo que escribe y no utiliza letras inútiles en sus palabras, excepto la H.
      Qué sería de la LATINIDAD sin el español...., qué habría sido del catolicismo sin los españoles ?

  • @andres-rodriguez
    @andres-rodriguez Před rokem +214

    Latin is not a dead language. It has evolved into Portuguese, Italian, Spanish and other romance languages. I liked the introduction twisting the names in latin. Gustavus, Lindae, and Isidorum.

    • @PaoloLeoncini
      @PaoloLeoncini Před 11 měsíci +14

      English imported more than 50% of its vocabulary from Latin just changing the way they pronounce Latin words

    • @Leoterio76
      @Leoterio76 Před 11 měsíci +6

      Latinos conseguem se entender dependendo do vocabulário usado.

    • @haakoflo
      @haakoflo Před 11 měsíci +4

      Latīnus nekwis est mortuos! Solom in universitātibus akwā monasteriīs abskondit. Mortuos sum tamen. Kwis sum?

    • @ThighErda
      @ThighErda Před 8 měsíci +1

      usually represents the lesser used & bigger words in english too@@PaoloLeoncini

    • @MuhammadAliGoat00
      @MuhammadAliGoat00 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Actually the Romanians speak the closest language to latin, because latin was one of the many language dialects that the DACIANS (Romanians ancestors) had. There are artefacts that the Vatican have, and they stated that the Dacians spoke this language with more than 10.000 yrs Bc.

  • @matyaskrzok1728
    @matyaskrzok1728 Před 3 lety +5412

    Latine: canis
    Italiano: cane
    română: câine
    francois: chien
    rumantsch: chaun
    português: cão
    ESPAÑOL: PERRO

    • @kevindasilvagoncalves468
      @kevindasilvagoncalves468 Před 3 lety +1202

      (2) español: can

    • @matyaskrzok1728
      @matyaskrzok1728 Před 3 lety +87

      ou sorry

    • @laels1269
      @laels1269 Před 3 lety +294

      Matyáš Krzok hahah you’re right, we call them “can” or “perro”

    • @O_Tucano
      @O_Tucano Před 3 lety +375

      Also Portuguese: CACHORRO
      (at least in Brazil, I dont know if there's this one in Portugal too lol)

    • @laels1269
      @laels1269 Před 3 lety +276

      M. Ribeiro Marinho “cachorro” for us is a baby dog haha

  • @Alamasterjar
    @Alamasterjar Před 3 lety +3665

    Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese speakers: **can understand latin**
    Me, a French speaker: 😐🤨

    • @Brunnu
      @Brunnu Před 3 lety +208

      I speack portuguese and I also can't undertand much ekzkwkz only like... 18%?

    • @enkor9591
      @enkor9591 Před 3 lety +147

      I think theyre just skilled in this. My native language is polish, and there are many polish related videos on this channel, and I usually understand much less than participants of this videos.

    • @GGBGameplays
      @GGBGameplays Před 3 lety +40

      No, we can't.

    • @TechnoForever21
      @TechnoForever21 Před 3 lety +240

      La raison est simple, le français a eu beaucoup plus d'influence germanique que les trois autres langues dûe à la géolocalisation de la France.
      I'll put it in English too so people can understand: The reason is quite simple, French has had a lot more germanic influence than the three other languages due to France's geolocalisation.

    • @fredyllanos8972
      @fredyllanos8972 Před 3 lety +55

      @@TechnoForever21 From what I understand, that plus the specific Celtic tribal dialects in Francia, was also a contributor in the disparity. Interesting stuff. I wonder if this disparity also exists in the Lombardy region of Italy, in the way they speak Italian, due to neighboring Germanic countries like Switzerland & Austria.

  • @antoniobarbalau1107
    @antoniobarbalau1107 Před rokem +66

    I am a romanian and I can get a grasp of most of what is happening here. It's amazing how each can speak it's own language and understand each other.

    • @HarryHaller1963
      @HarryHaller1963 Před 6 měsíci +2

      There are CZcams videos like this one, perhaps from ecolinguist but I'm not sure, in which the host speaks Romanian and the guests from other countries try to understand what is being described--and vice versa (a Romanian guest among those who listen to someone describing something in another language). A Russian woman I know thinks that Romanian isn't easy for people who speak other Romance languages to understand, because of the Slavic influence, but I find it much more similar to the Latin family than the Slavic. I mean overall--I understand that Romanian is rich with Slavic words as well.

    • @antoniobarbalau1107
      @antoniobarbalau1107 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@HarryHaller1963 Yes, it is kind of mixed with a lot of other languages from the area, many greek words, turkish words, slavic words, I've also been amazed to visit a friend from Prague and to discover that some of our words are the same ones they use in the Czech republic. That you for your reply, I will check on those videos. Wish you a great day.

  • @marlygomesalmeida4375
    @marlygomesalmeida4375 Před 2 lety +103

    Sou brasileira e meu bisavô , da Espanha, quando ele veio para o Brasil, falava 3 linguas , falava em latim , castelhano e em português, isso a mais de 100 anos atrás, quando ele , chegou aqui no Brasil em 1885 , ele era de Andalusia Espana .Abrazos à todos hermanos, de Portugal , Espanha e Itália! ! 🙏❤

  • @verderame
    @verderame Před 3 lety +5196

    I would have never thought I’d watch a guy with AirPods speak fluent ancient Latin to people talking to each other in different other languages.

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety +280

      Welcome to the future, where nerds who wanna speak Latin can get fluent by talking to each other on the internet 😋😁

    • @salsalinas5325
      @salsalinas5325 Před 3 lety +133

      Yep. Can I ask we are speaking English if its all about Latin languages? Porque estamos hablando en ingles si es todo acerca de lenguajes latinos?

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +40

      Yeah! It's awesome 😃😃😃

    • @verderame
      @verderame Před 3 lety +71

      Sal Salinas Oh, scusami, allora passo a parlare italiano così restiamo in tema!

    • @mercenery1232
      @mercenery1232 Před 3 lety +16

      Si vis pacem, para bellum

  • @julian_ossuna
    @julian_ossuna Před 3 lety +2897

    As a Brazilian, I found this guy speaking Latin easier to understand than the French guy from the other video

    • @Arthur-gf8yf
      @Arthur-gf8yf Před 3 lety +184

      Muito mais kkkkk ler frances é facil, agr ouvir e entender eh quase impossível

    • @matheushenriqueandrade1396
      @matheushenriqueandrade1396 Před 3 lety +57

      @@Arthur-gf8yf nem lendo eu entendi kkkk

    • @wanessamartinsdavitoria4341
      @wanessamartinsdavitoria4341 Před 3 lety +36

      Eu entendi bastante do francês, mas eu já tentei aprender francês quando tinha 14 anos, então não vale!
      Fiquei surpresa como consegui entender bastante coisas em latin rs

    • @tita_piranna
      @tita_piranna Před 3 lety +87

      Es que los franceses son los especiales de la familia romance 😖

    • @TrollTroll-wf6dt
      @TrollTroll-wf6dt Před 3 lety +6

      @Julian🤣🤣🤣👍

  • @TheMule71
    @TheMule71 Před 2 lety +193

    1. If they could read the caption, it would have been easier for them
    2. If Luke used ecclesiastical pronunciation, it would have been piece of cake for them, and especially for Linda
    3. If Luke used Latin spoken in IV century, probably they would have understood him better than each other.
    This was a very interesting experiment!

    • @vincentloutkovnguyen1428
      @vincentloutkovnguyen1428 Před 2 lety +25

      Yeah I got so shocked when he said laetitiae. I've only heard it in Ecclesiastical pronunciation. It sounded SO odd in classical, I would have never recognized the word if it wasn't for the writing.

    • @HasufelyArod
      @HasufelyArod Před 2 lety +2

      Makes total sense.

    • @alexgomez002
      @alexgomez002 Před 2 lety +7

      @@vincentloutkovnguyen1428 hey! would you mind explaining a little bit what's the difference between the two ? I've never learnt latin in class and I'm kinda interested ! :)

    • @vincentloutkovnguyen1428
      @vincentloutkovnguyen1428 Před 2 lety +21

      @@alexgomez002 I have also never learned latin in class, I've mainly gotten an interest in it since I'm catholic and attend a latin Mass.
      The classical pronunciation is a pretty recent attempt of restoring latin to how the romans allegedly would have pronounced latin at around the time of Christ. It is very harsh and every letter is pronounced quite literally (lack of a better word). Most noticable differences in classical pronunciation:
      1. All C's are pronounced as K's (so Vincent is pronounced as Vinkent)
      2. All G's are hard (so all G's are pronounced like G in Golf)
      3. V's are pronounced as W's
      There are of course many more differences.
      The Ecclesiastical pronunciation (i.e. church latin) is to my knowledge pretty much the latin pronounced in europe since at least the time of Charlemagne (ca 800s AD), as that is when latin 'officially' became another language from the vernacular languages. Though I think many of it's elements are much older (soft C's and G's etc which came around 300s or something)

    • @alexgomez002
      @alexgomez002 Před 2 lety +6

      @@vincentloutkovnguyen1428 I see, nice of you to seek knowledge though! Thank you for your explanation. It makes me wonder how much I would've been able to understand him as a french speaker haha

  • @Verbalaesthet
    @Verbalaesthet Před 2 lety +215

    This was incredibly interesting. I could understand quite a bit of it. I was surprised how many similarities I found with German, like "haben" is "habent" or "recht" is "recte" or "ist" is "est" or "schreiben" is "scribere". But I mostly understood it through my knowledge of French and English. I never learned any Latin. Maybe I should. Very fascinating. Bene.

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 2 lety +40

      Interestingly, 'haben/have' and 'habent' are unrelated words, and their resemblance is a complete coincidence. Recht/right and ist/is are cognates to recte and est via Proto Indo European. Meanwhile 'schreiben' is a loan word from Latin into Germanic languages which English missed out on.

    • @ronsub4753
      @ronsub4753 Před 2 lety +1

      En español es lo mismo "haber-haben", "recto-recte", "es-est" , "scribere-escribir".
      El deustchland es similar, por eso quiero estudiarlo.

    • @dandondera2618
      @dandondera2618 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes. Kinda makes me wonder how mutual intelligible were the european languages in antiquity.

    • @prezentoappr1171
      @prezentoappr1171 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Philoglossos ah the the germanic one is habbjan coincidences like that might be false cognates then if it got the same meaning if it got diff meaning then false friend

    • @rcl5555
      @rcl5555 Před 2 lety +8

      Well, first both Latin and German are Indo-European, so similarities are expected (numbers 1-10, words for milk, mother, father, brother, sister sound recognizable in all Indo-European languages). Second, German borrowed some words from Latin directly, even very common ones (Das Fenster from "fenestra", native Germanic one would be Windauge, still retained in English).

  • @hichammagnin9069
    @hichammagnin9069 Před 3 lety +2769

    Me: tonight I’m going to bed early
    Also me at 3AM: *watches a bald man speak latin*

  • @links-gut-versifftergrunme1809

    German latin teacher: _"Don't be affraid. Spoken latin isn't real. It won't hurt you."_
    ScorpioMartianus:

    • @lucascarreno3063
      @lucascarreno3063 Před 3 lety +12

      AHAHAHAHAHAHAH
      I spit out all my cereal for laughing

    • @robertoroosevelt5741
      @robertoroosevelt5741 Před 3 lety +44

      The german latin teacher's pronounciation is nothing compared to what we heard in this video. Here it was pretty accurate, although the is controversial. Some say it's [v] and some say it's [w]. In Germany they read latin as if it's a german text. As a university standard. So awkward.

    • @bumpsy
      @bumpsy Před 3 lety +14

      @@afilanus7084 I see it like this: schools usually don't teach Latin for verbal communication. Professions with reading (and maybe writing) Latin far outweigh the ones where you have to be able to speak it properly (you can probably count them on one hand, although one can always come up with something new).
      Since schools mainly try to prepare for a wide range of professions for one's later life, spoken Latin isn't nearly as important as spoken English, Spanish or French (the three other languages my school taught besides Latin).
      But I also have to agree that phonetics is always part of a language, as dead or alive as it may be

    • @XraynPR
      @XraynPR Před 3 lety +7

      @@bumpsy I think it might be helpful for the "popularity" of Latin to actually teach a little of how it is spoken, because quite frankly it sounds much nicer than the german pronunciations ...

    • @NateROCKS112
      @NateROCKS112 Před 2 lety +9

      @@afilanus7084 it's also quite dumb because you also get into Latin poetry, and even prose was meant to be read out loud. It would be obviously beneficial if we knew how to actually speak it.

  • @pepitosbazzeguti1073
    @pepitosbazzeguti1073 Před 2 lety +27

    The thing I find extremely wholesome is the fact that people from different countries, speaking different languages can somehow understand each other even without actually knowing the respective languages! Plus, knowing that the language you're using on a regular daily base is so similar to the one once spoken by the people who lived in the most powerful society of the history of humanity is so f***ing amazing I can't even tell!

  • @thiagovicente9720
    @thiagovicente9720 Před rokem +32

    Esse vídeo é MARAVILHOSO. Adorando ver as línguas latinas se comunicando.

  • @Daniel-mv7zm
    @Daniel-mv7zm Před 3 lety +1197

    It's like a parent (Latin) speaking to its three children (Spanish, Italian and Portuguese)

    • @Reansel
      @Reansel Před 3 lety +42

      Literally.

    • @andream5310
      @andream5310 Před 3 lety +67

      Well, French and Romanian are also Latin's children...

    • @WhenAllTheWarmthLeavesUs
      @WhenAllTheWarmthLeavesUs Před 3 lety +194

      @@andream5310 yeah but romanian is like that child no one likes and french no one understands quite well.

    • @fernandoroberts3591
      @fernandoroberts3591 Před 2 lety +14

      @@WhenAllTheWarmthLeavesUs EXACTLY!!

    • @roccociccone597
      @roccociccone597 Před 2 lety +45

      @@WhenAllTheWarmthLeavesUs If I’m not mistaken, Italian is the closest to actual Latin out of all of them.

  • @lucasmacielfonseca8948
    @lucasmacielfonseca8948 Před 3 lety +1402

    English: similar
    Portuguese: similar
    Spanish: similar
    Romanian: similar
    French: similaire
    Italian: simile
    Latin: similis
    OMG how similar similar is XD

  • @imperivmgameplays
    @imperivmgameplays Před 2 lety +31

    As a native Portuguese speaker I just turned off the youtube subtitles and watched the full video just looking at them and not even reading the video subtitles. I understood everything, of course not every single word but the concept was always very clear and I could guess accurately 4 of the 6 words too (my guesses for the other two were related to the actual words). It's really impressive! I never thought that Latin would be so nice to follow.

  • @elerroy
    @elerroy Před 2 lety +117

    Italian here, I'm surprised! I could understand EVERYTHING 🤯🤯🤯

    • @SistoActivitatemAtm
      @SistoActivitatemAtm Před 2 lety

      What would you say the percentage of understanding Latin?

    • @kalvinkalvarino9536
      @kalvinkalvarino9536 Před 2 lety +11

      I'm Jealous of people who speak Latin languages. That sounds so cool to have a lot more with their language than you originally thought. Imagine only knowing English, there is no other language we can understand that is close to English and people from the UK who speak the same language, well we can barely understand a word they say lol. 😆

    • @justsomejusstsome8994
      @justsomejusstsome8994 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kalvinkalvarino9536 Learn it then

    • @randomjoch2804
      @randomjoch2804 Před 2 lety +1

      @@justsomejusstsome8994 it isnt easy to just learn a language

    • @justsomejusstsome8994
      @justsomejusstsome8994 Před 2 lety +2

      @@randomjoch2804 Then what u gonna do? Cry about how difficult it is? No. You just gotta learn it, it's that simple. The process may be hard, but it's not impossible.

  • @heynyquildriver
    @heynyquildriver Před 3 lety +818

    I love how hyped the Latin guy gets whenever the others begin to get it.

  • @yasmineal-masri6725
    @yasmineal-masri6725 Před 3 lety +1551

    Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Latin speakers : *have fun*
    French : *crying alone*
    Update : thanks to my Romanian and Catalan buddies, we will stand strong lol

    • @marcelo497
      @marcelo497 Před 3 lety +115

      French and Romanian are very different compared to the other languages

    • @---.-----
      @---.----- Před 3 lety +199

      Written is very much comprehensible to other Western Latin speakers, but not spoken French. I have no idea where you guys took those sounds from. Probably from the brits, or some other funky norses...

    • @MeidoInHebun
      @MeidoInHebun Před 3 lety +175

      @@---.----- French sounds so different because it came from latin pronounced with the germanic Franks accent.

    • @yasmineal-masri6725
      @yasmineal-masri6725 Před 3 lety +59

      @@marcelo497 I think French pronunciation is hard to understand for italian/spanish speakers but the opposite is less true, we could understand Latin almost as well as Italian speakers I would say
      Also you could say that for Portuguese, the pronunciation is very hard to understand too

    • @tonyhawk94
      @tonyhawk94 Před 3 lety +36

      @@---.----- French pronouciation and many words comes from the Franks, a germanic tribe. :)

  • @Raen-abss20
    @Raen-abss20 Před 2 lety +47

    Este vídeo me hizo acordar a cuando me estaba preparando para la universidad y mi clase descubrió que nuestro profesor de filosofía que sabía hablar griego antiguo, todo el mundo quedó impresionado 👌 el profesor nos explicó que aprendió para poder leer los libros antiguos desde la fuente sin los cambios de significado que muchas veces tienen las traducciones, nunca se me va a olvidar ❤️

  • @helenavasconcellos5948
    @helenavasconcellos5948 Před 2 lety +23

    Que divertido isso! Eu falo Portugues e consegui entender muito do Latim!

  • @-Faris-
    @-Faris- Před 3 lety +2162

    I watched this with a cup of water.
    Now it’s a glass of wine

  • @augustmagbon
    @augustmagbon Před 3 lety +1738

    The first time I hear someone fluent in latin. So, it Is possible after all.

    • @antonellamR2D2
      @antonellamR2D2 Před 3 lety +57

      So you're not catholic 😄 priests understand each other speaking latin

    • @augustmagbon
      @augustmagbon Před 3 lety +25

      @@antonellamR2D2
      I never heard them. That's why I said what I said.

    • @filipschweiner1989
      @filipschweiner1989 Před 3 lety +33

      @@antonellamR2D2 I know quite a few priests, the more traditional ones are capable of understanding it (often, but not exclusively those who offer traditional latin mass) and maybe write a decent text with a lot of preparation, but I have never met a priest who could speak latin fluently.

    • @moistydoooood
      @moistydoooood Před 3 lety +13

      How do you know what proper Latin sounds like though?

    • @valentinocozzi
      @valentinocozzi Před 3 lety +11

      Except for the fact that he's using Italian to build up phrases, not 100% Latin

  • @vlina4123
    @vlina4123 Před 2 lety +12

    In romanian Placinta- is a Pie (usually a dessert),
    but in (especially) Moldova after funerals when people eat is served a sweet dish made with cereals (mostly rice, nowadays) and raisins called - Plachie (palkie) for celebrating The Dead. Placenta = placinta and Plakus = plakie. We scored both from Latin and Greek!

  • @emersonmaiocchi
    @emersonmaiocchi Před 2 lety +21

    Isso foi demais!!! A aula de idiomas mais legal que eu já vi. Eu falo português, italiano e espanhol e agora latim foi demais!!! Parabéns!!!!

  • @Hirayeet
    @Hirayeet Před 3 lety +1555

    As an Italian, it's incredible how easy is it to understand all they're saying 😂

    • @flask7532
      @flask7532 Před 2 lety +9

      Ma neeeeee

    • @howldorian
      @howldorian Před 2 lety +13

      Vero? :)

    • @AlfredKamon
      @AlfredKamon Před 2 lety +31

      Come italiano, l'unica cosa che trovo incredibile è come abbia sbagliato a pronunciare il 70% delle parole. Oltre ad essere incomprensibile è anche ignorante

    • @samma887
      @samma887 Před 2 lety +82

      @@AlfredKamon in realtà tutte le pronuncia sono corrette. Sia la c che la g sono sempre dure, la pronuncia Latina non è come quella italiana

    • @burundi5427
      @burundi5427 Před 2 lety +78

      @@jacknico9654 Ma quando mai? Quella usata nel video è la pronuncia classica, mentre quella che noi conosciamo nelle scuole è quella ecclesiastica, che si basa sul latino medievale.

  • @fallendaprimeiraguerra5971
    @fallendaprimeiraguerra5971 Před 3 lety +1123

    I am Roman and i undestand
    Portuguese:0%
    Spanish:0%
    Italian:0%
    Latin: *200%*
    *AVE CESAR*

  • @BIZEB
    @BIZEB Před 2 lety +2

    This is actually pretty incredible. Thank you for sharing.

  • @davigramostini1336
    @davigramostini1336 Před rokem +2

    Melhor episódio de todos!!! Muito bom, quero mais vídeos com essa galera!

  • @bockeemusic
    @bockeemusic Před 3 lety +485

    This is just mind-blowing that Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and Latin speakers speak their own languages can have a good communication.

    • @noneinparticular2338
      @noneinparticular2338 Před 3 lety +24

      In my travels the rule has been , speak your own language the other latin speakers eventually understand if you use enough synonims and you r asked enough times

    • @oolooo
      @oolooo Před 3 lety +5

      This is why we need Pan-Latinism , baby

    • @jean-pierrearcoragi6313
      @jean-pierrearcoragi6313 Před 3 lety +7

      As a French speaker (from Quebec) I could understand a lot of the Latin. When I took my very first Italian lesson many years ago the teacher asked us to speak Italian. We all looked at each other wondering if we were in the classroom for beginners. Then she told us that we already knew Italian and that the main thing we had to learn was how to use our hands :-)

    • @oolooo
      @oolooo Před 3 lety +1

      @@jean-pierrearcoragi6313 Larga Vida al Pueblo Latino

    • @alessiobenvenuto5159
      @alessiobenvenuto5159 Před 3 lety +7

      @@jean-pierrearcoragi6313 You just need to talk shit about the French, and suddenly you'll begin to sound Italian

  • @LC00547
    @LC00547 Před 3 lety +562

    It's like children talking to their mother. It's beautiful.

  • @diazen7927
    @diazen7927 Před rokem +9

    I'm a spanishnative speaker, who also speak portuguese and speak a bit of italian, french and catalan. And serously, it's incredible, when there's not a word similar in spanish, ther's one in other languages, i love the romance languages

  • @Theedoacevedosmile
    @Theedoacevedosmile Před 2 lety +14

    Entre más avanzaba el video comprendí todo lo que decía en latín sin necesidad de leer los subtítulos, estoy tan fascinado de lo hermoso que son las lenguas y tan sorprendido de cómo “placenta con candelas” puede significar realmente jajajaj
    It’s a great video and it’s such an excellent channel 👍❤️ I’m so happy right now haha

  • @jbm166
    @jbm166 Před 3 lety +680

    "yeah we got him a big placenta for his birthday"

    • @JosephM
      @JosephM Před 3 lety +2

      lmaooo

    • @melanies9643
      @melanies9643 Před 3 lety +6

      Jajajajaja pensé lo mismo!

    • @Zerofire18
      @Zerofire18 Před 3 lety +39

      Everyone jumps out of a placenta on their birthday!

    • @jty9631
      @jty9631 Před 3 lety +1

      I guess placenta is named so in English because it settles flat?

    • @ubuntuposix
      @ubuntuposix Před 3 lety +16

      it may sound weird to you, but to Romanians is normal. My mom makes "placinta de cirese" (cherry pie) often.

  • @stefanocalesini3923
    @stefanocalesini3923 Před 3 lety +573

    I am really impressed! Never thought that latin could be spoken so naturally. The idea of interacting with modern romance languages that actually stemmed from latin is excellent and stimulating.

    • @napabilirim
      @napabilirim Před 2 lety +6

      It was actually spoken much faster and similar to Italian, but the modern speakers of Latin speak incorrectly.

    • @Sourusophyexe
      @Sourusophyexe Před 2 lety +1

      @@napabilirim wrong

    • @grzegorzossor
      @grzegorzossor Před 2 lety +2

      Traditional pronounciation of latin is very simillar to italian. In Poland we use them, by the catholic church.

    • @natalianoe09
      @natalianoe09 Před 2 lety

      I thought the same, I've learning Latin for three years but I'm only (kind of) able to read it... never speak it so naturally ... wtffff

    • @napabilirim
      @napabilirim Před 2 lety

      @Solangeag1 thats what i meant...

  • @filliperodrigues4354
    @filliperodrigues4354 Před rokem +1

    This was really fun to watch. Nice work.

  • @mariancuenca7114
    @mariancuenca7114 Před 2 lety +17

    ¡Genial este vídeo! I had so much fun watching it!! Me ha encantado. Quería comentar que la palabra "alacrán" se usa en España también (y seguramente en otros países aparte de Méjico); su etimología según la RAE proviene del árabe ('aqrab) como es común en muchas palabras en español que comienzan con "al". He disfrutado muchísimo escuchando el latín e intentando adivinar el significado. ¡Enhorabuena!

  • @azzureone78
    @azzureone78 Před 3 lety +1121

    The father talks to his children.

    • @kevindasilvagoncalves468
      @kevindasilvagoncalves468 Před 3 lety +98

      The father is Vulgar Latin. Classical Latin is the grandfather

    • @Edgar_Cantu432
      @Edgar_Cantu432 Před 3 lety +18

      rather it would be the grandfather I think, as far as I understand this is classic Latin, the mildest Latin and that was the standard Latin, which everyone understood, you found it in books, documents, etc., while the vulgar Latin would be the son, It was the Latin of the town and this varied depending on the region,a Roman from Spain, France or Italy did not speak the sam, the one that did have accents, different words, expressions, etc.

    • @Wasserkaktus
      @Wasserkaktus Před 3 lety +9

      The mother talks to her daughters*.

    • @dapain8228
      @dapain8228 Před 3 lety +1

      Mexico isba grandchildren son of spain the son

    • @mrpurple11
      @mrpurple11 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Wasserkaktus i don't think the host identifies as a woman tho.

  • @vinicius2uiciniv
    @vinicius2uiciniv Před 3 lety +1375

    As he speaks Ancient Greek, putting him to speak with Modern Greek natives would be very interesting!

    • @philomelodia
      @philomelodia Před 3 lety +150

      I don’t know about that one. They would probably yell at him and tell him he was saying it wrong. There are lots and lots of modern Greek speakers who get very passionate about reconstructed Greek and saying that it is being mispronounced. They confuse it with erasmian pronunciation. There’s even quite a few of them that argue that ancient Greek was pronounced a lot like modern Greek. They just use different words.

    • @keptins
      @keptins Před 3 lety +5

      Not really

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Před 3 lety +33

      @@philomelodia Depends on the time (Greek pronunciation changed a lot between -333 and +333) and the place (Athenians were still pronouncing θ as an aspirated stop when other Greeks had already turned it into a fricative). 333 AD Greek sounded almost like modern, but 333 BC Greek was quite different.

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety +62

      @Russell Richards There's nothing 'erasmian' about this haha. This is the reconstructed classical pronunciation of Latin which is based on mountains of evidence and direct testimony from the romans themselves. :-)

    • @philomelodia
      @philomelodia Před 3 lety +29

      Pierre Abbat you are, of course, absolutely right. However, say that to a lot of modern Greeks and you’ll have an argument on your hands. I have seen them get triggered by somebody pronouncing the post Alexandrian common variant of the language Koine insted of kee-neh. Others get mad when you pronounce beta like a b instead of a V. You should check out the channel called podium arts. It’s run by an actual native modern Greek speaker who uses ancient reconstructed pronunciation for a lot of the classics. The comment sections are absolutely chock-full of challengers and naysayers taking him to task. In Greek, of course.

  • @sosijiz1971
    @sosijiz1971 Před rokem +1

    All of this was amazing, but that bit about the scorpion (and the added facts) was simply gorgeous.

  • @andresmora5192
    @andresmora5192 Před rokem +25

    Recordemos que El Español, El Italiano, y El Portugués son un Latín evolucionado por el paso del tiempo, por eso no es muy dificil para los hablantes de estos idiomas, entender al ancestro mayor (LATIN).

    • @ottobormann
      @ottobormann Před 11 měsíci +1

      Es más bien ancestro común.

  • @deebles4082
    @deebles4082 Před 2 lety +1482

    The world is weird. As a german guy watching Spanish, Portuguese and Italian speakers try to understand Latin whilst writing and reading comments in English and understanding only 50% of the video because of my scuffed French and Spanish classes I had in school.

    • @john99brazil
      @john99brazil Před 2 lety +32

      Deutsch Qualität

    • @nebucamv5524
      @nebucamv5524 Před 2 lety +27

      For me the same. I'm German and feel weird listening to a Brasilian, Italian and Mexican who are trying to understand Latin. 🤣 I learnt Latin in school and university and Spanish in school.

    • @john99brazil
      @john99brazil Před 2 lety +14

      @@nebucamv5524 Ich sage dasselbe, ich versuche Deutsch zu lernen, habe ich es richtig geschrieben? Ich verstehe die Grammatik noch nicht.

    • @amongusztav655
      @amongusztav655 Před 2 lety +10

      @@john99brazil Deutsche Qualität

    • @amongusztav655
      @amongusztav655 Před 2 lety +10

      Me too, but my first language is Hungarian which doesn't have anything in common with any Indo-European languages

  • @Lokomasloko76
    @Lokomasloko76 Před 3 lety +724

    I'm Mexican and I understand Latin more than french

  • @lesscrement1448
    @lesscrement1448 Před 2 lety +48

    Ok I know I'm a weird case but, as an Italian who is fluent in Spanish and studied a bit of Latin in school I understand :
    100% Italian
    100% Spanish
    80% Latin
    75% Portuguese
    Yes, I understand a dead language better than I do Portuguese lmao

    • @oskarhoffmann8312
      @oskarhoffmann8312 Před 2 lety +1

      Feel u. I'm German and fairly fluent in understanding them

    • @imnotreallyjess4318
      @imnotreallyjess4318 Před 2 lety

      pra ser justa, português é muito difícil, só sei falar porque nasci no brasil, mas aprender isso é impossível

    • @gabriel049512
      @gabriel049512 Před 2 lety +2

      I think that Brazilian Portuguese is harder for Italians than European Portuguese. The way some letters are pronounced in Portugal is more similar to Italian, like T and D

    • @mateuslucena524
      @mateuslucena524 Před 2 lety +4

      @@gabriel049512 i think that's the contrary.

    • @fatygalonenuno9315
      @fatygalonenuno9315 Před 2 lety +5

      wtf bro, the hardest one for me was italian and i understood 95% of the portuguese being a native spanish speaker lol

  • @gamaltk
    @gamaltk Před 2 lety

    This was a joy to watch, thank you!

  • @jonferngut
    @jonferngut Před 2 lety +927

    The guy speaking Latin has such a good understanding of the others' languages, he's so fast at catching what they didn't get.

    • @paradoxmo
      @paradoxmo Před 2 lety +148

      He also speaks Italian, so he can understand Linda perfectly and probably doesn’t have too far to go to understand Spanish and Portuguese.

    • @brunoguedesguimaraes9859
      @brunoguedesguimaraes9859 Před 2 lety +32

      He probably must had classes on spanish and portuguese tough since the portuguese language (particularly the brazilian portuguese that is used in the video) can have huge differences from its fellow latin languages due to the many dialects, ethnic groups and regions that shaped the language as we hear today.
      Also the european portuguese may have words that have complete different meanings here in brazil, so yea we pretty much have our own branch of latin

    • @fernandomanzanarespreciado5032
      @fernandomanzanarespreciado5032 Před 2 lety +21

      I've heard it's easier to understand from Latin to other romance languages than the other way around. It would make sense, as these languages are derivatives from Latin. If you know Italian on top of that, it would make it even easier to pick up the other languages.

    • @KduJuggler
      @KduJuggler Před 2 lety +9

      @@fernandomanzanarespreciado5032 i know Italian and Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish I never studied but it's soo easy to understand. The point is i can understand what the latin guy is saying (at least guessing)

    • @wasabi7117
      @wasabi7117 Před 2 lety +9

      He's a polyglot! He knows Spanish & Portuguese and is a native speaker in Italian, u can check it out on his channel

  • @jessica5497
    @jessica5497 Před 3 lety +1339

    I'm a portuguese speaker and Latin sounds like an "posh italian" lol

    • @7yep4336dfgvvh
      @7yep4336dfgvvh Před 3 lety +165

      To me Italian sounds like posh Latin. Latin sounds hard, rough, tough, abrasive, imposing. Italian sounds ... romantic and frivolous by comparison, to me

    • @l.f.r.6523
      @l.f.r.6523 Před 3 lety +58

      @@7yep4336dfgvvh that probably has to do with the way that especific dude speaks. He has a deep voice and talks really assertively.

    • @ashlieneevel9671
      @ashlieneevel9671 Před 3 lety +40

      Ive never really heard Latin spoken at more than a few words at a time so never knew the way it really sounded or the cadence at which it's spoke and after hearing this I have to agree with you this sounds Posh like something only royals would speak

    • @7yep4336dfgvvh
      @7yep4336dfgvvh Před 3 lety +20

      @@l.f.r.6523 no. It's really just the way it sounds. Italian has a lot more words ending in 'o', e.g. 'Flavio'. And latin has a lot more words ending in 'us' and 'orum' and such, e.g. 'Flavius'. Latin sentences also kind have more of a 'final' feel to them too. 'blah blah est.' It sounds final.

    • @eduardoxavier7878
      @eduardoxavier7878 Před 3 lety +9

      He speaks restoured Latin..it sounds hard. It's horrible. I prefer Latin sounded like roman sound. Roman Latin.

  • @dominiquealpha-omega5322

    Since I'm learning all these languages, this is actually a wonderful exercise to listen to speakers of all these languages speaking with one another and tuning my ear.

  • @burqut
    @burqut Před 19 hodinami

    Amazing video! Truly enjoyed watching it.

  • @budgetlifter
    @budgetlifter Před 3 lety +1393

    everybody gangster till you start talking like the romans.

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +22

      lol

    • @fabiofreefire8258
      @fabiofreefire8258 Před 3 lety +25

      Its very fancy to speak latin like a boss

    • @rstriker21
      @rstriker21 Před 3 lety +5

      gaby what did romans speak?

    • @gabrielspricido8902
      @gabrielspricido8902 Před 3 lety

      @@rstriker21 rt

    • @fabiofreefire8258
      @fabiofreefire8258 Před 3 lety +16

      @gaby well ancient egyptian is also a dead language and there are still people who can speak it pretty well. When language is dead it means that it's no longer used by a major population or as a lingua-franca.

  • @MP-uv3nd
    @MP-uv3nd Před 3 lety +903

    I salute to the dude who fluently speaks a language that is DEAD FOR CENTURIES and he does it like it's completely normal. Pretty awesome

    • @eurotop40
      @eurotop40 Před 2 lety +33

      That's basically what happened in Israel with Hebrew, I think.

    • @DansuB4nsu03
      @DansuB4nsu03 Před 2 lety +14

      @@eurotop40 Uh, no. Hebrew is still alive, the Tora is written in it, people of Israel still speak it. I'm afraid your assumption is wrong.

    • @Stoce68
      @Stoce68 Před 2 lety +86

      @@DansuB4nsu03 Hebrew was revived in the late 1800s. Prior to that Hebrew didn't have native, first language speakers for almost two millennia.

    • @doigt6590
      @doigt6590 Před 2 lety +47

      @@DansuB4nsu03 Israel is a relatively new country on the scale of human history. Israel revived Hebrew from its several thousand years death.

    • @greenthumb5730
      @greenthumb5730 Před 2 lety +2

      Ce tare e asta....asa vorbeau stramosi nostri....

  • @franciscovictor7001
    @franciscovictor7001 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Adoro o Gustavo nesses tipo de quadro do canal, chamem mais ele ❤️❤️

  • @val91201
    @val91201 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Norbert for another great video!

  • @paulinaalvaradob1437
    @paulinaalvaradob1437 Před 2 lety +1440

    Es genial cómo alguien que habla español puede comunicarse perfectamente con alguien que habla portugués sin ninguno haber tomado una sola clase del otro idioma

    • @walterpayton2120
      @walterpayton2120 Před 2 lety +144

      Portugal y España eran el mismo país en la antigüedad, yo trabajé con brasileños y de inicio no les entendía nada por el acento, pero me llevo solo como dos meses y ya les podía entender todo e incluso hablarlo casi igual que ellos

    • @gettylowpepe
      @gettylowpepe Před 2 lety +152

      🇧🇷 - Incrível como consigo entender perfeitamente o que você escreve e o que foi falado em espanhol no vídeo 😁

    • @irgendwer3610
      @irgendwer3610 Před 2 lety +85

      @@walterpayton2120 Portugal y España nunca fueron el mismo país, como máximo tenían el mismo rey durante 80 años.

    • @jpgmatrixgmail
      @jpgmatrixgmail Před 2 lety +26

      Sim e além de tudo é incrível como posso compreender tudo que você escreveu graças a eu ter estudado no Instituto Cervantes 😅

    • @flamerollerx01
      @flamerollerx01 Před 2 lety +8

      Boy it's weird to come in here and pick out only a few words you're all using and get even a tiny idea of what you're saying! I even check with google translate addon to my browser and I was SO CLOSE but missing much.

  • @MrsGamer03
    @MrsGamer03 Před 3 lety +467

    Impressionante como, em poucos minutos ouvindo a pronúncia do Latim, a gente passa a se familiarizar e tudo fica mais fácil de entender!

    • @ShinryuZensen
      @ShinryuZensen Před 3 lety +33

      True, but it still sounds very strange for an Italian speaker like me. I get most of the words, but not everything.
      Still, I can understand everything you wrote here perfectly :)

    • @bequinha1996
      @bequinha1996 Před 3 lety +27

      Não sei se é por ser biologa, mas o que entendi mais rápido foi escorpião. Fiquei agoniado pra eles entenderam logo que era isso.

    • @juliadeoliveira3834
      @juliadeoliveira3834 Před 3 lety +1

      Realmente

    • @marcechan759
      @marcechan759 Před 3 lety +1

      Entendí todo lo que escribistes

    • @brendavegas9763
      @brendavegas9763 Před 3 lety +1

      Si, me paso eso mismo!

  • @celinesadiq1037
    @celinesadiq1037 Před 2 lety +1

    wow, this was very interesting to watch! languages are truly fascinating

  • @LarsPallesen
    @LarsPallesen Před 9 měsíci

    This is such a great and fun idea! I really enjoyed that. Thank you very much for doing this.

  • @BoxRadishScissors
    @BoxRadishScissors Před 3 lety +310

    Lol, the Latin speaker looks exactly like the kind of guy that could speak Latin.

  • @bergerle
    @bergerle Před 3 lety +973

    I'm German and learned some Latin in school more than 10 years ago. I'm genuinely surprised how much of this i actually understood

    • @kekeke8988
      @kekeke8988 Před 3 lety +21

      @ユジン
      No articles in Latin.

    • @arrow2589
      @arrow2589 Před 3 lety +2

      Well if you are fluent in English and German and presumably learned some French and Italian and school as well as some Latin then it's not surprising you could understand him

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety

      @ユジン Articles tend to develop as a language loses its case system. Latin probably developed articles around the 5th century.

    • @pb7199
      @pb7199 Před 3 lety +1

      same here! latin was compulsory for me in year 7 and while i can't remember much grammar at all i still remember some vocabulary that makes it easier for me to spot english cognates

    • @andreaborselli568
      @andreaborselli568 Před 3 lety +1

      I am italian and speak german. I can understand everything.

  • @mattbrown4141
    @mattbrown4141 Před 2 lety +2

    Beautiful! My four favorite languages all at the same time!

  • @maryphillips3140
    @maryphillips3140 Před 2 lety

    I loved this!!! Please do more!!

  • @lilveacky
    @lilveacky Před 3 lety +711

    Me starts speaking Latin:
    Demon in corner of my room
    👁️👄👁️

    • @marc0xA
      @marc0xA Před 3 lety +7

      or the demon coming out from your brother body

    • @jlhabitan50
      @jlhabitan50 Před 3 lety +1

      That reminds me, I need to watch Demoni in time for Halloween.

    • @mgdu1023
      @mgdu1023 Před 3 lety

      @⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻ hahaha sto pro sto 🤣

    • @comptegoogle5071
      @comptegoogle5071 Před 3 lety

      OMG Don't say that 😱😱😱

    • @GatorMH
      @GatorMH Před 3 lety

      🤣

  • @ailawil89
    @ailawil89 Před 3 lety +564

    Just learned that the Latin speaker is a native English speaker. I didn’t hear any English influences at all. Good job!

    • @codirobi7478
      @codirobi7478 Před 3 lety +7

      I'm italian and I'm 16 I'm notte so good in latin butta I now the pronunciation better than you ( ae is e )

    • @dabbinghitlersmemes1762
      @dabbinghitlersmemes1762 Před 3 lety +36

      @@codirobi7478 ae is only 'e' in ecclesiastical latin. in classical latin (the older form he speaks) ae says the same sound as english "I" or 'eye'.

    • @janlinhart7914
      @janlinhart7914 Před 3 lety +3

      No English but a lot of Italian. I'd like to find out how exactly classical Latin sounded, I mean the accent etc., not just pronunciation, but that's probably a lost knowledge. Somehow I doubt it had this much of Italian in it.

    • @jeupater1429
      @jeupater1429 Před 3 lety +19

      @@janlinhart7914 there was no single Latin pronunciation, even non vernacular classical Latin varied throughout the empire. I don't know why you'd be surprised by the Italian, it's basically what old English is to modern English. You should also realize about 50% of the Italian population still learns ancient Latin in high school to this day. Much more than any other cultures and you can imagine that only helps to keep the Italian language tied to its roots. It's not like 50% of anglofones thoroughly study old English

    • @7yep4336dfgvvh
      @7yep4336dfgvvh Před 3 lety +1

      @@jeupater1429 maybe you know more than me on this, but afaik what's taught in schools isn't classical Latin but something closer to ecclesiastical Latin, which draws heavily on Italian in both vocabulary and pronunciation

  • @garudo7352
    @garudo7352 Před rokem +10

    I love the fact that he's a polyglot and understands portoguese, Italian and Spanish 😁

    • @Mvtarvs
      @Mvtarvs Před 10 měsíci +3

      No lo entiende del todo, hay veces en las que no entiende lo que dicen los otros, lo ví como 3 veces en el Español

    • @lunainezdelamancha3368
      @lunainezdelamancha3368 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@MvtarvsCreo que tienes razòn; tal vez no comprenda literalmente pero si comprende la idea. De la misma manera tù y yo comprendemos. Yo no hablo ni portuguez ni latino pero hablo Italiano y Español y comprendí, para mi sorpresa, muchìsimo. Es fàcil cuando tienes las bases.

  • @analuizahenriques1703
    @analuizahenriques1703 Před 2 lety +7

    I'm Brazilian and I speak English and Italian, so this video was really fun! I had some trouble to understand some parts of Latin, but I could catch up, and the subtitles really helped, cause I guessed most of the words before they did

  • @ScorpioMartianus
    @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +488

    I'm so grateful to have been a guest on your show, Norbert! 😃Summās grātiās tibi agō, cāre Norberte, quod permīsistī mihi advenae alloquī hōs optimōs amīcōs nostrōs Latīnē! Et quam bene intellēxērunt Latīnē! They understood the Latin so well! I'm amazed by them.

    • @pustogolovaya4809
      @pustogolovaya4809 Před 3 lety +8

      hi

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +15

      @@pustogolovaya4809 Salvē, Gabi! 👋 😊

    • @m.z19
      @m.z19 Před 3 lety +18

      Mate, you are just a genius. You know very well latin and all the etymology stuff, that's crazy!

    • @thekyuwa
      @thekyuwa Před 3 lety +3

      this was so fun... how did you learn latin? are you english?

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety +7

      @@thekyuwa Check out Luke's channels Polymathy (English) and Scorpio Martianus (Latin), he talks all about it there! :-)

  • @GabrielFerreira-nc5xu
    @GabrielFerreira-nc5xu Před 3 lety +935

    As a brazilian portuguese speaker i understand:
    98% Spanish
    70% Italian
    20% Latin

    • @vitorgarcia3422
      @vitorgarcia3422 Před 3 lety +186

      entendi mais o latim desse video do que os outros com francês

    • @lucasouza4846
      @lucasouza4846 Před 3 lety +104

      @@vitorgarcia3422 kkkkkk verdade, latim pelo menos da pra entender palavras soltas, já o frances, nada

    • @loby3571
      @loby3571 Před 3 lety +26

      aaah, tipo se eu ler o italiano eu consigo entender, mas se caso eu fosse pra Itália eu n entenderia nada, já o latim acho que seria fácil pedir pra ir no banheiro na casa de alguém q sabe falar latim

    • @gustavodeoliveira5254
      @gustavodeoliveira5254 Před 3 lety +13

      Eu achei mais fácil que o italiano bixo

    • @mmm19981
      @mmm19981 Před 3 lety

      vitor garcia Rt

  • @nigelnyoni8265
    @nigelnyoni8265 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm now addicted t watching these. I'm enjoying the accents, voices, and mannerisms of everyone involved 😭😭

  • @blancadueck8103
    @blancadueck8103 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! increible. Isidor, te felicito!..

  • @elexthemighty941
    @elexthemighty941 Před 3 lety +272

    ...i am italian and it was incredible being able to understand four languages simultaneusly- thank you for the experience.

    • @nataliaquirino
      @nataliaquirino Před 3 lety +10

      un'esperienza arricchente e meno confusa del previsto, molto fluida

    • @FallenLight0
      @FallenLight0 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nataliaquirino concordo muito enriquecedora e muito fluida

    • @ilgattonero8702
      @ilgattonero8702 Před 3 lety +6

      Verdaderamente ha sido una experiencia enriquecedora para todos.

    • @juansamuelarbelaezrocha4113
      @juansamuelarbelaezrocha4113 Před 3 lety +3

      Increible como el conocer a profundidad la raiz de las palabras, puede ayudarnos a entender otros idiomas. Fue maravilloso poder entender 4 idiomas simultaneamente, muchas gracias.

    • @lorenzoboselli1725
      @lorenzoboselli1725 Před 3 lety

      Vero!

  • @tomaslemostrancanelli9798
    @tomaslemostrancanelli9798 Před 3 lety +613

    As a brazilian who transfered to italy and studied latin
    Portuguese: 100%
    Italian: 100%
    Spanish: 90%(spoken slowly)
    Latin:80%
    French: le teaspoon 10%

    • @kkmm-fe3iw
      @kkmm-fe3iw Před 3 lety +31

      I'm brazillian too but mine is:
      Portuguese: 100%
      Italian: 80/90% written or spoken very slowly
      Spanish: 90% ( spoken slowly but I can read in spanish)
      Latin: 80/90% (I never studied latin but it's similar to portuguese/spanish/italian and some words are similar)
      English: 100% (I speak english)
      French: 10% (I'm learning it)
      😊😊

    • @fernandoo.8737
      @fernandoo.8737 Před 3 lety +24

      @@kkmm-fe3iw Also as a brazilian, French is definitely the hardest.

    • @LeoPriester
      @LeoPriester Před 3 lety +12

      @@kkmm-fe3iw 80/90% de Latim? Menos, amigo. Não é para tanto...

    • @kkmm-fe3iw
      @kkmm-fe3iw Před 3 lety +2

      @@LeoPriester oxii, no vídeo dava pra ter noção do que ele tava falando. Não sei se é por causa que tinha legenda junto e tinha hora que ele repetia mas entendi bastante do vídeo sim. Então vamo por 60% então, cristo, n sei como tu mede seu entendimento mas qndo eu entendo sobre o QUE que a pessoa tá falando eu considero como um entendimento bom 🙄

    • @tomaslemostrancanelli9798
      @tomaslemostrancanelli9798 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kkmm-fe3iw è mto isso kkk entender a estrutura è dificil se nao estudou, vc vai chutar sem saber o q è sujeito e o que nao è, vai acertar de vez em qnd por cagada mas maioria das vezes nao vai saber o que è complementos/sujeito etc, mas sla tmb pode ser que vc è extremamente bom em latim msm sem estudar a extrutura

  • @anorganism8913
    @anorganism8913 Před rokem +1

    I grew up around "Spanglish" and that with studying for a little over a year now consistently studying Spanish, this video is very informative and I can actually follow the conversation quite well. Estoy muy feliz por el ayudar que he recibo desde mis Professors y Professoras y continuaré estudiando Español a comprende más para razónes de personale.

  • @ceciliagiorgi615
    @ceciliagiorgi615 Před 2 lety +13

    5 years of studying Latin and Ancient Greek worked!
    Also speaking Italian, Portuguese, French and a bit of Spanish for sure helps 🙃

  • @ArkhBaegor
    @ArkhBaegor Před 3 lety +262

    As a French speaker this made my brain go in overdrive trying to understand everybody.

    • @josebosua1489
      @josebosua1489 Před 3 lety +24

      As a spanish speaker i can understand latin even better than french 😅 (and i only understand about 20 percent of what he says hahah, so crazy)

    • @fs400ion
      @fs400ion Před 3 lety +9

      @@josebosua1489 You're saying you get a language with different sentence structure (Latin) but don't get shit of French (which has the exact same structure as Spanish and has many words written 95% the same). I speak French and it's quite easy to guess what Spanish, Italian, Catalan say. Harder for other Romance languages,

    • @bilbohob7179
      @bilbohob7179 Před 3 lety +17

      @@fs400ion you guys pronuntiate halfwords... The feel when you translate the word is:
      oh and where the rest of the word is?
      One or two words is tolerate but you do this with everything...
      Your way is the opposite, we add letters to your words, it is easier!!!

    • @julianfejzo4829
      @julianfejzo4829 Před 3 lety +31

      @@fs400ion As an Italian speaker I could say that written French is very understandable but spoken French looks like a completely different language, the accent and the fact you cut the words instead of pronouncing them like they are written makes it hard to understand for the other Romance speakers.

    • @fs400ion
      @fs400ion Před 3 lety +2

      @@bilbohob7179 You're right but I think it's easier to remember a word with one syllable instead of two. It also helps speaking faster

  • @polskiszlachcic3648
    @polskiszlachcic3648 Před 3 lety +649

    At last, we have modern Romance speakers trying to understand their ancestral language 😂😂 Summas gratias ago, Norbertus 😊

    • @ScorpioMartianus
      @ScorpioMartianus Před 3 lety +45

      It was such a fun experience! Too bad Proto-Slavic didn't have an extensive literature, because I would love to learn the parent language too. But I adore the modern Slavic languages (and Old Church Slavonic!) I just have to study them. 😅

    • @polskiszlachcic3648
      @polskiszlachcic3648 Před 3 lety +18

      @@ScorpioMartianus Old Church Slavonic is quite interesting as it had nasal vowels (Only Polish has them today, along with Kashubian.) whereas in other Slavic languages they became full vowels.

    • @mejlaification
      @mejlaification Před 3 lety

      ScorpioMartianus man, I was really mindblown. How you could understand everyone of them. Really neat! Also the occasional history and words origins and synonymums were a great addition. I have some basic spanish which helps me understand Italian somewhat ok. The hardest for me is portuguese because of slighly different pronouncination. Great job everyone.

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 Před 3 lety +1

      Latin has everything you ever found difficult about any European language. xD

    • @elimalinsky7069
      @elimalinsky7069 Před 3 lety +1

      @@polskiszlachcic3648 OCS and Proto-Slavic also had short and long vowel distinctions. The short vowels turned into shwas and then omitted completely, creating the characteristic consonantal clusters of practically all Slavic languages today.
      Oh, and Proto-Slavic had pitch accent instead of stress accent, which only Serbo-Croatian retains to this day.

  • @michelletmy8858
    @michelletmy8858 Před 2 lety +2

    Finally I found a video where I could learn to read and speak Latin with accurate enunciation.. Thank you.

  • @hardheadedmaskman
    @hardheadedmaskman Před 2 lety +1

    I love your channel. It’s very niche because I’m an American who primarily speaks English, studied Latin in high school, and speaks Italian and Spanish because of my family and work respectively

  • @emiliosaymon5096
    @emiliosaymon5096 Před 3 lety +509

    As a Portuguese speaker (Brazilian) I understood:
    Portuguese: 100%
    Spanish: 96%
    Italian: 70%
    Latin: 30%

    • @isaacgaleao
      @isaacgaleao Před 2 lety +27

      This video made me so comfortable about having to get into a conversation with a mexican or an italian person, it's like even if I don't know anything about their language, we can still minimally chat if necessary

    • @emiliosaymon5096
      @emiliosaymon5096 Před 2 lety +13

      @@isaacgaleao man, they're talking slowly and they are teachers

    • @isaacgaleao
      @isaacgaleao Před 2 lety +10

      @@emiliosaymon5096 I know
      But even so, that makes me feel like I would be safe if I *had* to talk in one of those languages
      I chatted with a lot of spanish speakers in my life, I was speaking portuguese and they were speaking spanish, it's actually possible
      I just didn't know italian was this close too

    • @lipetrox
      @lipetrox Před 2 lety +12

      eu entendi tipo uns 50 por cento pelo contexto

    • @gu3sswh075
      @gu3sswh075 Před 2 lety +2

      That’s some pretty specific spanish

  • @beepst
    @beepst Před 3 lety +562

    Latin sounds so badass. As a Spanish speaker, I get goosebumps hearing it spoken. I'm sad it's no longer used by any country as it sounds so rich.

    • @Ichnos76
      @Ichnos76 Před 2 lety +24

      Yo tambien hermano, saludos desde Sardegna

    • @ignls8809
      @ignls8809 Před 2 lety +8

      Actually I learned it in school so I could actually speak it

    • @yamidosuna5685
      @yamidosuna5685 Před 2 lety +10

      Try to learn rumanian, it is maybe the most Latin relatable language :D

    • @MrCount84
      @MrCount84 Před 2 lety +23

      As an english speaker I feel the same. My latin teacher told me latin has an authoritative feeling to Europeans, mainly western. No surprise.

    • @huichinfinity
      @huichinfinity Před 2 lety +12

      Suena bien mamalon, como que invocas demonios o te hace obedecer cada palabra

  • @OctopusTime
    @OctopusTime Před rokem +2

    I find this so absolutely fascinating

  • @juventus2910
    @juventus2910 Před 2 lety

    Stupendo!! Complimenti 👏

  • @flyingfoxes4630
    @flyingfoxes4630 Před 3 lety +1127

    As an Asian, I understand
    Latin: 0%
    Spanish: 0%
    Portuguese: 0%
    Italian: 0%
    Edit: Thanks for all the likes!

    • @guillermolangle
      @guillermolangle Před 3 lety +8

      But did you get the differences among all of them? Can you tell them apart?

    • @flyingfoxes4630
      @flyingfoxes4630 Před 3 lety +32

      @@guillermolangle lol no i only speak english and chinese haha xd

    • @guillermolangle
      @guillermolangle Před 3 lety +3

      HelloIts RandomJake so for you they all sound the same?

    • @flyingfoxes4630
      @flyingfoxes4630 Před 3 lety +1

      @@guillermolangle ye. What about you?

    • @guillermolangle
      @guillermolangle Před 3 lety +24

      HelloIts RandomJake I’m Spanish and I also speak Italian, so it was pretty easy for me to understand. Latin though, I had to read it to get to understand something

  • @SmileClownOnline
    @SmileClownOnline Před 3 lety +896

    Que raro ver 4 personas hablando 4 idiomas diferentes y poder entender

    • @zuffy09
      @zuffy09 Před 3 lety +37

      Assolutamente

    • @federicoruffa7198
      @federicoruffa7198 Před 3 lety +18

      Vero

    • @Meryrequiem
      @Meryrequiem Před 3 lety +50

      Lenguas romance

    • @hl8176
      @hl8176 Před 3 lety +8

      Verídico

    • @simiuciacia
      @simiuciacia Před 3 lety +35

      As a native Romanian speaker and someone who speaks both Italian and Portuguese I find it quite weird that I end up connecting Latin to Romanian rather than Italian

  • @tilolovid2309
    @tilolovid2309 Před 2 lety +2

    Absolutely amazing! I am German and only had some French in school and some Spanish in university. And I think I understood 80% of it and could follow easily. Especially with the written texts.
    This was very interesting and I learned a lot.

  • @diegobenito1877
    @diegobenito1877 Před 2 lety +2

    Me encanta este canal

  • @mevenlebrishoual918
    @mevenlebrishoual918 Před 3 lety +807

    Spanish speaker : Es un ave ?
    Latin speaker : Un ... 'Ave' ? *Emperor hailing intensifies*

  • @islamgaziev1717
    @islamgaziev1717 Před 3 lety +458

    I speak french and was able to guess the words he was explaining, but I guess it is much easier for us, viewers, as we can see the subtitles.

    • @ianbaram3043
      @ianbaram3043 Před 3 lety +4

      le dernier mot, c'était 'deuil' ou quoi?

    • @sikViduser
      @sikViduser Před 3 lety +15

      I try not to look at the subtitles when watching. I've tried not looking at the screen but the facial expressions and body gestures really help a lot in learning the words.

    • @guillaumeatoch2260
      @guillaumeatoch2260 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ianbaram3043 non, il a dit que c'était synonyme de deuil. Je pense pas qu'il y ait d'équivalent en français apart mélancolie ou tristesse

    • @liial9869
      @liial9869 Před 3 lety

      this is funny

    • @ankhi3585
      @ankhi3585 Před 3 lety +1

      @@guillaumeatoch2260 C'est une tristesse profonde. Donc malheur, mélancolie, misère, etc...

  • @jordaocardoso9301
    @jordaocardoso9301 Před 2 lety

    Fantástico, adorei esse vídeo. Tão legal ver a proximidade das línguas neolatinas!!

  • @somarstuga73
    @somarstuga73 Před rokem +11

    as a non-romance language speaker I understood about 65% of their dialogue, indeed the most influencial language of Europe! (I speak ukrainian and russian as native, german and i took some polish language classes)

  • @karineds
    @karineds Před 3 lety +443

    I'm a portuguese speaker and I think the sound of Latin is similar to Italian.
    I understood Latin more than French. 😂

    • @alternativaliguria
      @alternativaliguria Před 3 lety +5

      Yes it is, with a few differences, such as the sound of "c" and "t" (he says "laetitia" which sounds wrong in italian, since it is "letizia", the "z" sounding like "ts")

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety +27

      @@giuseppescafuro8516 No, his pronunciation is not wrong, Luke uses the classical pronunciation of the first century BCE. You are used to the ecclesiastical pronunciation. :-)

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 3 lety +6

      @@alternativaliguria The 'ts' pronunciation appeared in the 3rd or 4th century CE but Luke is using the classical pronunciation of the 1st century BCE so this is why he pronounces it as it's written. Same with 'ae' - it was confused with 'e' later, but originally it was pronounced 'ae' as it is written.

    • @7yep4336dfgvvh
      @7yep4336dfgvvh Před 3 lety +1

      @@Philoglossos wasn't the 'ae' diphthong more like the 'ei' in German, in classical Latin i.e. 'kein' (Caesar - keizahr)?

    • @jessicadiasdacr
      @jessicadiasdacr Před 3 lety +7

      @@Philoglossos he didn't say IT IS wrong, he said that IN ITALIAN, IT SOUNDS wrong.

  • @takatomokobayashi3742
    @takatomokobayashi3742 Před 3 lety +247

    I am Japanese who has studied Latin for two years and knows almost nothing of Portuguese, Italian or Spanish. Now I'm surprised to find myself slowly starting to make sense of what all of you guys speak as I watch the video, though the subtitles are big help to me.

    • @pedro1p0
      @pedro1p0 Před 3 lety +31

      You are japanese and know latin, i am brazillian and after 3 months in latin class, i give up, congrats

    • @Shijaru64
      @Shijaru64 Před 3 lety +3

      一角獣発見!まさかラテン語を勉強している日本人に会うとはな!普通に日本人は片言英語しか話せないからね。日本人が外国語で話しているのを見るのはいつも嬉しい驚きだ。

    • @paolovittoriodigilio7913
      @paolovittoriodigilio7913 Před 3 lety +2

      ラティン語を勉強してる日本人? 珍しい

    • @mavenfeliciano1710
      @mavenfeliciano1710 Před 3 lety +2

      The subtitles made me understand like 90% of it. Otherwise I probably would understand only about 30%. 😂

    • @TheLizardskin
      @TheLizardskin Před 3 lety +2

      Welcome to our languages japa Bro! In Brazil, in the past, we had a japanese immigration, and nowadays there are a lot of japanese descendents, who are in fact brazilians now, but we call them 'japas' yet, in a respectful way, of course. And meanwhile we're all brazilians, they'll always be part "japas", and this kind of makes Brazil and Japan siblings nations. Included, Japanese culture is very popular here. Cheers from Brazil, to all the japanese people.

  • @Taurusthebull8
    @Taurusthebull8 Před 2 lety

    This is something seeing the old world and new world speaking to each other
    really enjoyed it!