Komentáře •

  • @hadar.shemesh
    @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety +50

    Now tell me... Do YOU have a funny or embarrassing story about pronouncing food names wrongly??
    What other food names give you a hard time?

    • @aimefiori1104
      @aimefiori1104 Před 6 lety +3

      Now we have salmon, cement and semen. One of my friends have a funny story to tell regarding these words!

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety +1

      haha tell him to share it with us! :)

    • @GuillermoPradoObando
      @GuillermoPradoObando Před 5 lety +1

      My nightmare was coke. 😢

    • @Daf3tish
      @Daf3tish Před 5 lety

      Gyros 😣 I hear people say its more like "Euro"... I love lamb gyros btw lol

    • @cindysnow802
      @cindysnow802 Před 5 lety +1

      My boyfriend says " knocki" haha!

  • @ClaudemirMartins
    @ClaudemirMartins Před 4 lety +85

    I’m from Brazil... the ways she says açaí is perfect.... 100% correct.

    • @UlanKG
      @UlanKG Před 3 lety +2

      not really, u r most probably from Rio. In San Paolo we pronounce differently.

    • @ClaudemirMartins
      @ClaudemirMartins Před 3 lety +8

      @@UlanKG I'm originally from São Paulo (now living in the US). You are not assuming correctly and probably you pronounce differently than I do, but everybody I know (from São Paulo) pronounce the way I do.

    • @chaves8134
      @chaves8134 Před 3 lety +2

      poisé, i think so

    • @camilaconell1739
      @camilaconell1739 Před 2 lety

      sim!!!

    • @anasilvia2325
      @anasilvia2325 Před 2 lety

      I am from Brazil as well

  • @Paulo37580
    @Paulo37580 Před 5 lety +182

    Your pronunciation of 'açaí' is just great.
    Greetings from Brazil.

    • @robsonjosedasilva1277
      @robsonjosedasilva1277 Před 4 lety +2

      She is pretty and funny. I like her.

    • @mestrejedidaanalisetecnica2489
      @mestrejedidaanalisetecnica2489 Před 4 lety

      Me too

    • @andreialexiev7858
      @andreialexiev7858 Před 4 lety

      I recall asking a lady from Brazil,"Como se chiama?" She didn't understand. It turned out I pronounced the "ch" like an Italian would. Of course, the lady spoke English, so there was no problem. I wonder if you and other Brazilians can understand Galician, which is similar to Portuguese. Many Cubans, including the Castro family, have roots in Galicia. I wonder if that contributes to the unique Cuban pronunciation of Spanish.

    • @mestrejedidaanalisetecnica2489
      @mestrejedidaanalisetecnica2489 Před 4 lety

      @@andreialexiev7858 Galician is more similar to spanish. Portuguese is different. In Como se chama? The "ch" is a sh sound, like Show, Schubert. For that reason she didn't undestand.
      Try "Como se chama" or better: "como você se chama?" and she will undestand you.

  • @ginnyjollykidd
    @ginnyjollykidd Před 5 lety +9

    Your husband was very noble in accepting the bagel. And the chef was nobel for trying to make sense of the order. Kudos and props to both!

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +2

      What lovey insights from this story! I’m going to share it with my husband:)

  • @luciano-mra
    @luciano-mra Před 6 lety +21

    Glad to hear a correct pronunciation of Açaí. The natives indigenous tribes from Amazon's forest are likely to thank you too. Although Açaí is its worldwide known spelling, it's the Portuguese spelling to resemble its indigenous (original) pronunciation, as you might know.

  • @LaMansionDelIngles
    @LaMansionDelIngles Před 2 lety +16

    During my first month in Spain, learning Spanish, I asked for a coffee with milk and a chocolate croissant. I was given a black coffee, a glass of milk and a hot chocolate. I was too embarrassed to say anything and I drank all of them!

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 2 lety +2

      Oh nooooo!!! 😂😂 I’d probably do the SAME THING!!

    • @samuelwakuraya7541
      @samuelwakuraya7541 Před 2 lety +2

      Dude same thing happened to me the first time I went to Barcelona

    • @AurYouReading
      @AurYouReading Před rokem

      Really? I got café con leche all the time in Seville.

  • @leannasteffen3371
    @leannasteffen3371 Před 4 lety +12

    The spelling of the Italian words actually does indicates the pronunciation. "Gn" is typically a "ny" sound (think lasagne). The "ch" is pretty consistently a hard "k" sound.

  • @ManishSharma-jn7ud
    @ManishSharma-jn7ud Před 5 lety +61

    Jus point the finger in Menu card n smile at waiter..Say thankyou n don't forget a good tip while leaving...Ur next visit wud b much easier...hehe

  • @Bowhaus
    @Bowhaus Před 5 lety +46

    I agree - gnocchi is wrong... nye-ock-ee, bruschetta also wrong - broo-skett-a (not bruce-kett-a)

  • @aliciac9303
    @aliciac9303 Před 5 lety +27

    whenever i pronounce açaí correctly someone always wants to correct me it’s so annoying 🤦‍♀️😂

  • @aminafuller7079
    @aminafuller7079 Před 5 lety +23

    From a Palestinian, Hummus is pronounced Humous. But very close!

  • @aaliyahthomas1456
    @aaliyahthomas1456 Před 5 lety +13

    Came across this channel in my recommended list. I definitely like this video. I'm an English major, so learning about this kind of stuff in a fun way is fun and interesting to me 😊

  • @stufffstufffington
    @stufffstufffington Před 4 lety +11

    "Semen cream cheese"
    I died

  • @aleempervaiz8789
    @aleempervaiz8789 Před 4 lety +8

    English is an alien and a second language for most of the people living in different parts of the world. It makes no difference that one can write or speak it properly or not. Language is merely a source of communication. It's not a source of honor or pride. Those who still believe that the English language is a source of pride are living in the days of slavery (colonialism). Western colonialism is the darkest phase of human history. There is not a single European country in which the History of colonialism is taught as a subject. Even in the British syllabus there is no mention of colonialism. English is merely a language like any other language but its international status compels the people world over to read, write, speak and understand it. Every language is highly respectable and esteemed. Even an African or Amazonian tribal language is highly respectable although just a few illiterate tribal people are speaking it living far and away from the civilized world. The most important factor of a language is that those who are speaking it, should feel comfort and ease at the time of communication. People should learn English as an international language not as a matter of pride. French Prime Minister Clemenceau in 1904 said that "English is a badly pronounced French." English is terribly influenced by the French.

    • @dkaldossari1242
      @dkaldossari1242 Před 3 lety

      also missing many sounds and weak language to preserve names of places people culture food etc

  • @kaizillaboy
    @kaizillaboy Před 4 lety +5

    I can't tell you how many times waiters and waitresses have tried to correct my pronunciation of bruschetta (brues-KEHT-tah). It seems Americans get a free pass for their pronunciation ignorance.

  • @magdalenawooszyk2006
    @magdalenawooszyk2006 Před 5 lety +19

    you have the double sounds in Italian words wrong. there is distinctive long "k" almost like "kk" in gnocchi and equally long/doubled "tt" in bruschetta . It's the same with latte (which is literally milk, not coffee). It is pronounced with long "tt".

  • @flaviodias5570
    @flaviodias5570 Před 6 lety +10

    Açaí with granola is quite taste, i love it.

  • @28105wsking
    @28105wsking Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! I was pronouncing most of them incorrectly. I have never heard them spoken! I am so grateful to you!

  • @AlfieAndare
    @AlfieAndare Před 4 lety +40

    hi Hadar! I like your videos. I have a comment about the word "Bruschetta", the pronuciation you showed us, is the american one, ´cuz as a Italian word the "tt" (doppia t, means double t) is pronounced stroger, like the word "pancetta" (italian bacon) the stress is on the "e" and then there is a little tiny pause to be followed by the strong sound of the "tt", so the sound is "doble". I hope you don´t feel offended by my comment, my true intenction is to contribute positively. I am an Italo-mexican language teacher, so I believe we are on the same page. Saludos. ciao bella!

    • @miameow4833
      @miameow4833 Před 3 lety +1

      broos-shETTah.

    • @JudiVentress
      @JudiVentress Před 2 lety +1

      Grazie! 🙏🏽

    • @JudiVentress
      @JudiVentress Před 2 lety +2

      @@miameow4833 actually broo-skeTT-ah because ch in Italian make the k sound.

    • @megathron3461
      @megathron3461 Před 2 lety

      Hi Alfielo.
      IMHO there's no point in going for the "native" pronunciation of a loanword, just stick to the language you're currently speaking.
      Regarding geminated consonants (double consonants), there's no "stronger/harder" quality to it.
      That's just how natives perceive it, but it's simply not the case. Geminated plosives are preceded by a slight pause before their release, as you correctly pointed out. Geminated trills, fricatives and palatlized consonants are simply longer in duration. Usually the alveolar trill rr /r/ is contrasted with alveolar tap r /ɾ/ i.e. corro /r/ vs coro /ɾ/.
      If one wanted to be a stickler, the TT in bruschetta and pancetta are dental (not alvealoar), unaspirated geminated and this isn't even taking into account how the geminated cluster affects the preceeding vowel's length /e/ (shorter not elongated).
      The consonants in gnocchi /ˈɲɔkki/ are geminated too, plosive /k/ (little pause before release) and palatalized /ɲ/ (longer in duration). /ɲ/ is part of a group of consonants that,in italian, are always geminated .
      NB: /ɲ/ differs from n+yod found in in words like new /njuː/ proposed in the video.

  • @Hever73
    @Hever73 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you! I have always had a hard time pronouncing correctly Salmon, Quinoa and of course shrimp .

  • @TheGabygael
    @TheGabygael Před 4 lety +5

    I'm a native french speaker, it always takes me a bit of time to pronounce "Baguette" and "Croissant" correctly, and I always feel so wrong pronouncing them the american way x) oh and appareantly there's a difference between macaroon and macaron, which is rather neat

  • @Kmrkq
    @Kmrkq Před 5 lety +3

    I love videos like this! Thanks to you, Gnocchi, bruschetta, hummus and salmon will sound better coming from me now. Thank you for sharing the stories. It'll help me to remember the proper pronunciation 🤗

  • @guustavow
    @guustavow Před 6 lety +45

    Loved the way you pronounced açaí! That’s definitely how we do it here in Brazil hahaha

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety +4

      I know, when I was in Brazil that's what I used to eat ALL DAY!

  • @nikeboy69er
    @nikeboy69er Před 5 lety +113

    To say "the spelling has nothing to do with the pronunciation" is wrong.
    Just know how it's pronounced in the language of origin.
    Italians say manya for magna. "gn" is pronounced that way. And "ch" is pronounced like k. So gnocchi's spelling has everything to do with the pronunciation. Just not in English.

    • @IjusVindrBjorr
      @IjusVindrBjorr Před 5 lety +8

      Andrew Christiansen I was just about to point this out. It’s a borrowed word. Same for lasagna. It’s from a different language so it’s pronounced differently . So glad to see I wasn’t the only one who caught that

    • @jessboo173
      @jessboo173 Před 5 lety +2

      Maybe they should make an equivalent word in english with spelling that they'd understand. Like the food tempeh is actually spelled tempe in its origin, but they need to add the H at the end so they pronounce it more correctly

    • @chrisalt971
      @chrisalt971 Před 4 lety +3

      No, it doesn’t matter what how it’s pronounced in the language of origin. Otherwise Italians should say United States instead of Stati Uniti or ‘merica instead of AHmerica

    • @rubenguillen1
      @rubenguillen1 Před 4 lety

      Magna Carta? The word is "mangia".

    • @jawaring4367
      @jawaring4367 Před 3 lety +1

      @@chrisalt971 that's a translation, not an alternate spelling lol

  • @mrnobody9821
    @mrnobody9821 Před 5 lety +282

    Gnocchi is wrong, the O is suppose to be very short and sharp. try and replicate the sound of a door knock using the letter O when it's short and sharp say gnocchi again. Italian here so i know ;)

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +42

      Yes it’s true! But this sound doesn’t exist in English , so ideally you substitute it with the closest sound that does exist in English.
      At the same time, this is one of the most controversial words, I have found at least 4 different and legit pronunciations people swear by 😳😄

    • @mrnobody9821
      @mrnobody9821 Před 5 lety +26

      Accent's Way English with Hadar It does, if you use the tonality of the O from the word “knock” you’ll get it spot on (if you’re from the Versilia area of Tuscany) otherwise yes unless you speak one of the Latin derived languages you’ll probably have a bit of trouble saying a lot of these words. I think a lot of the issue with pronouncements is that certain languages require you to use mouth movements and tongue positions which you wouldn’t use in your native language. Native for me is Italian but I speak English with a native British accent....so it can be learnt, just takes time. :)

    • @MM-kq6fe
      @MM-kq6fe Před 5 lety +6

      @@mrnobody9821 I agree with you. I am Spanish and I've been told by British people I sound like a Londoner. It's just as easy as imitating sounds. You may struggle at first but people don't even bother to check the original pronunciation, they just make it English and that's it.

    • @ellengregory8002
      @ellengregory8002 Před 5 lety +1

      @@mrnobody9821
      So you're saying this Italian O sounds like Ahh? I've heard some Italians say that the O in risotto and ricotta are also pronounced as Ahh, but I've listened to a million Italians speak these words, and it always sounds much closer to a long O than an Ahh sounf. It may actually be a sound that's somewhere between, but it's not very similar to an Ahh sound at all to my ears. Gordon Ramsay says "riz-AHH-toe" and claims that's the correct Italian pronunciation, but I have yet to hear a single Italian person pronounce it that way

    • @mrnobody9821
      @mrnobody9821 Před 5 lety +5

      Ellen Gregory are you American? Because then I see what you mean, knock sounds like nack. But no it’s a sharp O. I’m actually from Tuscany and depending on where in Italy someone is from they will pronounce it slightly differently. The only way to get my point across is for you to hear it lol which obviously you can’t. If you look up the theme tune for a cartoon called Lupin, there’s a part where female voices pronounce the letter O several times, that’s actually close to how it should sound, or look up “come cucinare gli gnocchi in Toscana” that should throw up some video results from Italian people so you can hear how they say it :)

  • @sofiasantachiara1690
    @sofiasantachiara1690 Před 5 lety +63

    Le pronunce in italiano non sono perfette, nella parola bruschetta devi dire TA non Da 😂😂

    • @danielec.3911
      @danielec.3911 Před 5 lety +5

      Se lo scrivi in italiano nessuno ti capisce

    • @abel82
      @abel82 Před 4 lety +1

      Io si lo capisco.

    • @janicepujol4297
      @janicepujol4297 Před 4 lety +7

      I dont even speak italian and caught the mistake lol

    • @Luciana-Superluci-Marchi
      @Luciana-Superluci-Marchi Před 4 lety

      Vero.

    • @albertoolpimo3150
      @albertoolpimo3150 Před 3 lety

      @@danielec.3911 ho provato la traduzione con google della frase di Sofia: "The pronunciations in Italian are not perfect, in the word bruschetta you have to say TA non Da", mi sembra quasi giusta, avrei messo 'not' invece di 'non'.
      Comunque Hadar fa un paio di errori in bruschetta, la tt deve essere una t e non una d (Hadar usa la flap t dell'american English) e la t deve essere lunga (quella che noi chiamiamo doppia), le consonti lunghe (le doppie) dell'italiano sono un problema per quasi tutti gli stranieri.
      Hadar sbaglia anche la pronuncia italiana di gnocchi, anche il suono della gn italiana è quasi sempre un problema per i non italiani.

  • @OneMoreLayman
    @OneMoreLayman Před 3 lety +1

    Kol hakavod, Dear Hadar! You vids have been my go-to resource when teaching my students Accent Training. Thanks a lot!

  • @riseshine1908
    @riseshine1908 Před 3 lety +2

    I love the way that you make everything interesting to teach😍 Just amazing 😉 Can’t stop watching 🙌

  • @dennisenglishjournal498
    @dennisenglishjournal498 Před 4 lety +20

    This salmon-semen story really made me laughing out loud!:) Thank you for sharing this with us, Hadar! I mispronounce food-related words very ofen too, 'cause I do love cooking and cook for my English-speaking blog from time to time :)

  • @rayanelina4248
    @rayanelina4248 Před 5 lety +20

    that's so educative 👏❤
    plz read this: the word hummus is arabic حمّص
    three consonants
    حـ
    •(which is not an h sound nor the sound you suggested to use instaid, it's not as deep in the throught as h and its not as soft, try to choke yourself and it will come out)
    ـمـ
    •(m sound/ but this one has ّ sign above it which makes it a double consonant, 1st m doesn't have a vowel and while your lips are still closed prounounce the 2nd which has a really short oo sound = m'moo)
    ـس
    • (s sound)
    ===> hoom'moos

    • @alexvictory8265
      @alexvictory8265 Před 5 lety +2

      THANK YOU when she said that I got so pissed

    • @poemsrose2238
      @poemsrose2238 Před 5 lety +1

      Alex Victory I meaaaan... let’s be fair, it is really hard for non-native speakers to get the ح sound right 🤗

    • @English_teacher22_
      @English_teacher22_ Před 2 lety

      @@poemsrose2238 but she's trying to tell ppl how to pronounce it, if she doesn't know herself why talking😭

  • @CamilaMas08
    @CamilaMas08 Před 5 lety +1

    as a brazilian I feel grateful for this video 👏🏻 it’s so disconfortable hearing “assái” everywhere arghh

  • @professorwilliamgnosis4530

    I loved to hear you speaking Hebrew when referring to hummus.

  • @kamilaszymanska3071
    @kamilaszymanska3071 Před 5 lety +3

    Thumbs up for the husband's story, hahaha! 🤣

  • @EllaHablaSpanglish
    @EllaHablaSpanglish Před 4 lety +5

    EVERYONE seems to pronounce “turmeric (TOO-mer-ik) by leaving out the first “r”, saying “tumeric”. The second word that is often mispronounced is “perseverance”. There are 2 r’s in the word, not 3. Have you noticed this, too?

    • @dalemills8052
      @dalemills8052 Před 3 lety

      Most people's pronunciation of turmeric drives me batty. I end up muttering " there are Two r's in turmeric, not just the second one....."

  • @christinalw19
    @christinalw19 Před 5 lety

    I was raised by a very proper Swedish grandmother, married to a Sicilian & a Turk, and I cook international recipes. I take pride in my pronunciation of foreign languages. Thank you. 😉👍🏼 Now explain “mauve” and “forte” to Americans. 🙄 Reading all the comments is also educating! ❤️

  • @benalexender3046
    @benalexender3046 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks from Egypt

  • @roseCcullen74
    @roseCcullen74 Před 5 lety +8

    It annoys me so much when English speakers pronounce açaí wrongly. Thanks for this.

  • @m.h717
    @m.h717 Před 6 lety +3

    Haha! I really liked your husband story very much! :)

  • @LaVidaYogaBodyWorks
    @LaVidaYogaBodyWorks Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks. Some of these I didn’t know.

  • @rmmccarthy1240
    @rmmccarthy1240 Před 4 lety

    Fantacstic! Great content, great delivery.

  • @sketchedInsanity
    @sketchedInsanity Před 5 lety +16

    I’ve been pronouncing salmon wrong my whole life rip

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +2

      ♥️ 🍣

    • @georgelush1998
      @georgelush1998 Před 4 lety

      As my grandfather used to say, “The ‘l’ is silent like the “k” in fish.”

    • @FndoMtnz
      @FndoMtnz Před 3 lety

      I recommend you the song "The salmon dance" by The Chemical Brothers

    • @Chuck0856
      @Chuck0856 Před 3 lety

      No, probably not -- depends on where you live.

  • @TheRebecca6909
    @TheRebecca6909 Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you for settling our curiosity on how these words pronounced. you rock.

  • @BATFAERY
    @BATFAERY Před 3 lety +1

    OMG ... Thank you so much for explaining perfectly the pronunciations of these words.

    • @sometimes2103
      @sometimes2103 Před 3 lety

      It's not perfect
      Actually some of them are pronounced wrong

  • @ubaidrehman7054
    @ubaidrehman7054 Před 6 lety +1

    very short video but fascinating by brilliant Hadar

  • @fartwrangler
    @fartwrangler Před 4 lety +3

    Hell, three years ago I had never heard of "quinoa", much less having to worry about how to pronounce it.
    I have never had to say acai.

  • @Victorcolongarcia
    @Victorcolongarcia Před 5 lety +113

    Quinoa is spanish. It should be pronounced QUI-NO-A. Stressed in the second syllable. You learn pronounce it. And PAELLA is paeya 👍

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +19

      But in English it’s pronounced in English :)

    • @Victorcolongarcia
      @Victorcolongarcia Před 5 lety +43

      Accent's Way English with Hadar Shemesh no. In English YOU SHOULD MAKE THE EFFORT. just like I’ve learned. So can you.

    • @g.chatterjee2296
      @g.chatterjee2296 Před 5 lety +29

      @@hadar.shemesh If the word is Spanish , then it should be pronounced as such . Just as gnocchi and bruschetta. But the video was good.

    • @g.chatterjee2296
      @g.chatterjee2296 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Victorcolongarcia I wondered about that as well. It sounded Spanish to me.

    • @MargaritaOnTheRox
      @MargaritaOnTheRox Před 5 lety +28

      Yes, thank you. English speakers are so pretentious, too, claiming you're mispronouncing a word when you actually use the proper pronunciation based on it's language.

  • @CarMa-ito
    @CarMa-ito Před 5 lety

    I really loved your note at the bottom of description box 💖 Very thoughtful!

  • @munirgolsom5850
    @munirgolsom5850 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks so much, have a sweet weekend.

  • @miriam8208
    @miriam8208 Před 5 lety +147

    The italian words are just wrong

    • @Hsdias
      @Hsdias Před 4 lety +11

      Miriam Americans can’t speak anything that’s not English get over it

    • @jvitor.csantos
      @jvitor.csantos Před 4 lety +14

      They're not wrong, Americans just decided to pronounce them with english sounds. All countries do that for the most of the foreign words.

    • @hereticalfreespirit471
      @hereticalfreespirit471 Před 4 lety +6

      Vitor Cardoso what? Italian words don’t have ‘English’ sounds :-/

    • @venomousorange8495
      @venomousorange8495 Před 4 lety

      @Henrique Dias not true but okay

    • @miriam8208
      @miriam8208 Před 4 lety +3

      Vitor Cardoso sorry but the video was about words that americans are pronouncing wrong, and she’s pronouncing them wrong too.

  • @tska8473
    @tska8473 Před 5 lety +3

    3:10 can you roll your Rs like this everytime forever from now on haha

  • @ClaudemirMartins
    @ClaudemirMartins Před 4 lety

    Your videos are awesome. Thank you for sharing.

  • @phamngocdiep3536
    @phamngocdiep3536 Před 2 lety +1

    I love the way you speak at 4:12. It is like switching to another world :)

  • @user-wb1vm9ex4k
    @user-wb1vm9ex4k Před 3 lety +12

    I like the wrong pronunciation of bruschetta more than the correct way lol

  • @TheCrates99
    @TheCrates99 Před 5 lety +14

    Turmeric drives me nuts! It looks like tur-mer- ic but everyone says too-mer-ic.

    • @TigerzLionzPistonzWingz
      @TigerzLionzPistonzWingz Před 5 lety

      Oh god, I thought it was just me! That drives me crazy!

    • @yankeeharp
      @yankeeharp Před 5 lety +1

      That’s how I feel about sherbet. It’s not SHERBERT.. there’s only one R!!

    • @smritichawla9181
      @smritichawla9181 Před 4 lety

      as an Indian, I appreciate that :)

  • @marianabracho8753
    @marianabracho8753 Před 7 měsíci

    This video never gets old. Unbelievable I didn't even knew until now I was pronouncing wrong all this food words. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @marcusgrigsby446
    @marcusgrigsby446 Před 5 lety +1

    50 years in the Restaurant business - the FIRST thing that comes to mind is ICED TEA. SO MANY- SO MANY order 'Ice tea'.

  • @arlequinacontostavlos2100
    @arlequinacontostavlos2100 Před 5 lety +15

    gnocchi is not wrong for her. she's teaching how to say it with an american sort of way. so it's not exactly like the original language and it's not a mistake. she's in the US so she doesn't have to say it exactly like in the original language. people change it a little bit to fit their own language and the sounds that they are able to pronounce. people adapt words from all over the world

    • @19sunheart96
      @19sunheart96 Před 5 lety +1

      The short o sound does exist in English though. It wouldn't be difficult to say the o sounds like block not like go.

    • @lisahenry5668
      @lisahenry5668 Před 5 lety

      I just pronounce gnocchi, noki. Lol

  • @MargaritaOnTheRox
    @MargaritaOnTheRox Před 5 lety +76

    Here's a video on how to mispronounce foreign words but according to people in the US is correct. 🤭

    • @redhotchillin
      @redhotchillin Před 5 lety +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @user-tb7iz1vf7p
      @user-tb7iz1vf7p Před 5 lety

      Yep.

    • @cdcsamira
      @cdcsamira Před 4 lety +4

      she has done a great job in her pronunciation of each word

    • @carlosecastro
      @carlosecastro Před 4 lety +6

      she's pronouncing them correctly in English. It's 100% correct in English. In English. In E-N-G-L-I-S-H!

  • @angngocson9471
    @angngocson9471 Před 6 lety

    Thank you very much, my teacher,

  • @shannonmemoore21
    @shannonmemoore21 Před 5 lety +1

    Words I believe I pronounce correctly but I wished everyone else did to include Tumeric, gyro, fage (the yogurt brand), cumin. Maybe this can be in your next video! Thank you for your helpful videos

  • @andrescastelblanco7834
    @andrescastelblanco7834 Před 3 lety +3

    It's hilarious to see how native speakers misspell such an important word as "pronunciation" as "pronounciation" which is wrong...

  • @mickmellors190658
    @mickmellors190658 Před 5 lety +61

    WRONG - BRUSCHETTA ends with ....Ta - NOT Da - It is an Italian word and that is how Italians say it. Americans dont seem to like the 't' sound - Like the way they say spagheddi

    • @Aimee42
      @Aimee42 Před 5 lety +4

      For English speakers when the "tt" is between two vowels, it changes from "tt" to "d". Not trying to pronounce it with an Italian accent. Not trying to sound Italian. I dont say "Bol-on-ia" I say "baloney".
      For a non-native speaker, "Brewskedda" is correct.

    • @pelindede
      @pelindede Před 5 lety

      exactly @mick mellors

    • @pelindede
      @pelindede Před 5 lety +6

      @@Aimee42 I'll say this is applicable more to American English vs. British English. In England, they will pronounce it with "tt" instead of "d" - same with butter, water, batteries etc.

    • @Aimee42
      @Aimee42 Před 5 lety +1

      @@pelindede Sure. That makes sense. The person who made the video is speaking American English and so do I. But again, I'm not trying to sound like I'm speaking Italian. If I went to an Italian restaurant an tried to pronounce everything with an Italian accent, I'd probably get smacked. Can you imagine a white girl at an Italian restaurant say "May I have an order of SPAGHE-TT-I and a side of BDDRRRR-USKE-TT-A, and I would like some PAR-ME-SSSAN cheese on that and some NEEYYOHKI."
      I, personally, wouldn't feel comfortable. I'm an American and I speak with an American accent. If I went to the UK and ordered in a British accent I'd sound ridiculous. If you're British and order in an American accent it sounds equally silly.

    • @pelindede
      @pelindede Před 5 lety +4

      @@Aimee42true but the whole idea of this video is to know how to pronounce these words correctly, in the way that they are pronounced in their native countries.

  • @OkanVKILIC
    @OkanVKILIC Před 3 lety +1

    I love your videos so much so sincere and related to me. Thanks for sharing your knowledge 🙏

  • @stck2908
    @stck2908 Před 6 lety +1

    food names always put me on the horn of a dilemma. but this video
    helps me a lot :)

    • @stck2908
      @stck2908 Před 4 lety

      @@israelosilva okay. wise guy.

  • @inrissk
    @inrissk Před 5 lety +5

    Bruce Springsteen? Bruce Willis? Umm... Bruce Lee maybe?

  • @Kadistyle
    @Kadistyle Před 6 lety +4

    Thank you so much.
    4:11 What was that ??

  • @emanuelferreira2377
    @emanuelferreira2377 Před 6 lety

    you got swag, huh! Awesome video!

  • @EgyptFishingVideos
    @EgyptFishingVideos Před 4 lety

    Lovely! Thanks.

  • @mickmellors190658
    @mickmellors190658 Před 5 lety +37

    WRONG - The 'O' of gnOcchi is pronounced the same at it is in stOp - not as you are doing like in nOte - It is an Italian word and that is how Italians say it.

  • @thehorrorstoriestv
    @thehorrorstoriestv Před 5 lety +3

    Salmon sounds like “Semen“

  • @cotygv
    @cotygv Před 6 lety +2

    Great video! I'm spanish native speaker and in Spanish Salmon pronunciation threre the l the ah sound and the o sound salmon the rpiary stress is o and for many years Icouldn't pronounce it correctly in English. Thank you!

  • @mottahead6464
    @mottahead6464 Před 6 lety +3

    Ahsaee I knew, since I'm from Brazil. I also knew gnocchi and bruschetta. (And salmon - I've heard someone pronouncing that way, and even though it sounded really strange, I was like .... oh, it's a native speaker pronouncing it this way, so it must be the right way).
    Keen-what? Well, thanks for the tip.
    And hummus ..... oh, boy.

    • @mottahead6464
      @mottahead6464 Před 4 lety

      Should the average American even try to pronounce Italian words "the right way"? The way I see it , ra, you're being really anal retentive.

  • @Garbongoloid
    @Garbongoloid Před 5 lety +15

    Can we address gyro?

    • @susanwashuta2051
      @susanwashuta2051 Před 5 lety

      Maia Garbett yes drives me nuts. In Alexandria VA a manager at a Greek restaurant pronounced it gy-row.

    • @zoyzoyka24
      @zoyzoyka24 Před 5 lety +4

      It’s yi-ro it’s not a g, it’s more soft

    • @kenlewis2253
      @kenlewis2253 Před 5 lety

      @@susanwashuta2051 The manager is just speaking the customer's language. I mispronounce English words while abroad to reflect the way the locals say them. For example, it isn't cheese in Japan, it is chi-zu. I surely hope they don't take my modified version to be authentic.

    • @VickiFletcherPDX
      @VickiFletcherPDX Před 4 lety

      depends on where you are from. egypt = geero, palestine = jeero, turkey = yeero. true story.

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před 4 lety

      @@VickiFletcherPDX Yeah, but never gy-row like the illiterates say. It's Greek.

  • @erenjaeger2317
    @erenjaeger2317 Před 5 lety +6

    The italian pronunciations are a bit wrong, but is fine :)

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +5

      Because it’s not Italian! It’s how Italian words are pronounced in English :) but honestly, both words have several pronunciation

  • @DV-ux8eg
    @DV-ux8eg Před 6 lety

    Happy weekend teacher thank you so much

  • @josedosanjos2200
    @josedosanjos2200 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for your time !

  • @janegoodwin1823
    @janegoodwin1823 Před 5 lety +4

    I was married to an Italian for 17 years and his family was 1st generation and at least 3 of these are not correctly pronounced in this video.. And never in my life heard anyone pronounce Salmon with an "L" sound.

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +4

      Oh I guess that means that no one pronounces it with L. Because you’ve never heard it in your life:)
      Also, this is not supposed to be the Italian pronunciation, but Italian words pronounced with American sounds

    • @user-mk8xe7hm6r
      @user-mk8xe7hm6r Před 5 lety

      Lol go down south. Where I grew up in Georgia they look at you funny if you dont say then L

    • @slohmann1572
      @slohmann1572 Před 5 lety

      Jane, this channel is for non-native speakers. Up until today I would pronounce the L in salmon. And I would also pronounce an open A like in "father". Thank you Hadar.

    • @conniepayne4425
      @conniepayne4425 Před 5 lety

      "And never in my life heard anyone pronounce Salmon with an "L" sound." You hear it a lot in areas with heavy immigration.

    • @psalux18963
      @psalux18963 Před 5 lety +2

      @@hadar.shemesh If they are italian words pronounced not with italian sounds than you can pronounce it any way you like it, it is all just the same, it is just wrong.

  • @elenafeghali3517
    @elenafeghali3517 Před 5 lety +8

    I'm lebanese. You pronounced hummus wrong.

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety

      Listen, it shouldn’t be the Arabic pronunciation, but the American pronunciation of the word:)

    • @elenafeghali3517
      @elenafeghali3517 Před 5 lety +3

      Accent's Way English with Hadar Shemesh but you say that these word are mispronounced but you are the one who mispronounce them

    • @uppeer
      @uppeer Před 5 lety

      she didn’t pronounce it wrong. please also don’t forget hummus is in reference to the hebrew way of saying so h-oo-mus would be the closest to everything. ch-oo-mus would be hebrew pronunciation.

  • @Motherplantmusic
    @Motherplantmusic Před 5 lety

    Came for the bruschetta (which spell check refuses to acknowledge), stayed for the hair. Gorgeous mane!

  • @moonraker2114
    @moonraker2114 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for this ma'am. Much appreciated. Stay well.

  • @Jabcat-ov7ln
    @Jabcat-ov7ln Před 5 lety +33

    I didn’t pronounce anything wrong why am I here

    • @Jabcat-ov7ln
      @Jabcat-ov7ln Před 4 lety

      the way you just assumed i was American...and the way you assumed how I pronounced them...and then this was a year ago

  • @taniakokelj1481
    @taniakokelj1481 Před 4 lety +10

    Your pronunciation of gnocchi is incorrect! The "o" sound is short and sharper. It's not a drawn out "ow" sound at all. Ask any Italian. How about "dukkha"? There are various spellings.

  • @katiacgf
    @katiacgf Před 3 lety

    WOW, nowadays people are politicizing anything. Hadar didn't choose the way Americans pronounce any foreign word...she is just teaching us the way it's spoken in general, and teaching in a brilliant way. So people, if you know English so well to be discussing how she should be teaching I guess you don't need these videos, but we all do; please allow us to learn from whom we choose, there's plenty of teaching videos to chose from, find one that entices you.

  • @bhuiyanmahi8242
    @bhuiyanmahi8242 Před 2 lety

    Very helpful, Thank you

  • @kemekoist
    @kemekoist Před 4 lety +4

    There are quite a few Japanese words which are pronounced different outside Japan. But I don't think what you call " wrong " pronounciations and accents are big issues because many languages evolve generation to generation and tend to reflect our changing societies, technology and cultures.

  • @katebefore30
    @katebefore30 Před 5 lety +3

    Gnocchi & Bruschetta are not being pronounced correctly.

  • @pablocontreras5626
    @pablocontreras5626 Před 6 lety

    This video was so cool.

  • @juninhobatera14
    @juninhobatera14 Před 2 lety

    Awesome!👏👏👏

  • @thanhloctran4218
    @thanhloctran4218 Před 6 lety +3

    I think the word "Gnocchi"is is pronounced as /'nja:ki/, not /'njəʊki/ as you said. I've watched serveral videos about how to make and cook gnocchi, and they all pronounced it /'nja:ki/ or /'njɒki/ in the cases of Gordon Ramsay and Jamie Olivier since they have British accent. Thanks anyway from Vietnam. I'm also an English teacher.

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety +1

      You know what, you're right. I worked for years in an Italian restaurant in NY and this is how we pronounced it there. I wonder if it's me messing it up again, or both are legit pronunciations (colloquial ). I'll look into it and maybe I'll replace the video !! I guess gnocchi is just not my word!!

    • @barbaraf1511
      @barbaraf1511 Před 6 lety

      Accent's Way English with Hadar
      hi
      In the Italian pronunciation the o is closed, similar to the British
      pronunciation. It is definitively not the o in cop (American) or a dypthong eu...more like the o in water (British pronunciation).
      By the way I am Italian.
      I do not know if in the US they use another pronunciation

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety

      The thing is, since in American English they don't have the pure O as Italian does- there are two possible substitutions for American speakers: ah as in Father or ow as in go.

    • @barbaraf1511
      @barbaraf1511 Před 6 lety

      Accent's Way English with Hadar
      I see, then the o as in go would be closer to the Italian pronunciation.
      Thanks!

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 6 lety +1

      I think so too. And I've done a little research now after Thanh Lộc Trần's insightful comment.
      There are a few 'legit' pronunciations of this word (the Americanized pronunciation of the word 'gnocchi')
      ny-aa-kee, naa-kee and nyoh-kee (as I was teaching). I checked with a few of my American friends (most working in restaurants) and used this resource spoonuniversity.com/how-to/how-to-pronounce-gnocchi-like-a-true-italian to see that while all pronunciations are valid (like PE-can vs. pe-CAN), the latter is the perffered one by Italians speaking English. (again, we're NOT going for the native Italian pronunciation)

  • @larad2278
    @larad2278 Před 5 lety +4

    You pronounced hummus wrong you should pronounce it more like hamos. Arab her so I know bcz hummus comes from the middle east

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety +1

      Yes:) I’m from the Middle East too:) I know Arabic too a little. This is the American pronunciation and there’s no pure /o/ in English!

  • @sweet_iza
    @sweet_iza Před 4 lety

    Love this 👍

  • @thesoumbakchannel8618
    @thesoumbakchannel8618 Před 3 lety

    Hi Ms Hadar Thank you so much for the food names especially Quinoa

  • @Aimee42
    @Aimee42 Před 5 lety +9

    This is not a video on how to speak Italian with an Italian accent. This is how NON-NATIVE speakers should say these words. I dont want to sound like I'm TRYING to sound Italian, or speak Italian. I'm an English speaker saying an Italian word and I would sound dumb if I said "I'll have spaghetti with BREWSKE-TT-A, (make the "Italian hand" - all fingers and thumb touch at the tip, and you reach for the sky when you say it) and some **Italian hand** NY-AH-KEY and some BOL-OHN-YA and THANK-A-YOU-A-BEDDY-MUCH-A!"
    I'D GET BEAT UP.

  • @jane6536
    @jane6536 Před 5 lety +14

    It's food. You eat it, not have a conversation with it. Hi keemwha, oh I'm so sorry how rude of me! So sorry quinoa.

  • @patrickjenkins6383
    @patrickjenkins6383 Před 2 lety

    😆 "It's Definitely not: Semen." You're adorable.

  • @nancymack4429
    @nancymack4429 Před 3 lety

    Thanks especially for gnocchi

  • @arvillarusnak3185
    @arvillarusnak3185 Před 5 lety +6

    Many Italians will argue your pronunciation of Bruschetta IS with an "sh" NOT "sk"

    • @questioneverything6898
      @questioneverything6898 Před 5 lety +1

      Bruschetta definitely has a k sound and not a sh sound; sch followed by an e or an i in Italian is a k sound. You will show your ignorance if you pronouce it with an sh sound. Don't do it, although many waiters do because they've never been taught the correct way. And the comments about gnocchi are correct; the sound of the o is short and sharp, as in stop, pronounced the English way and not the American way, which sounds like ah.

    • @msCandelicius
      @msCandelicius Před 5 lety +1

      You would pronounce it brushetta if the word was "bruscetta" but in this case you have the H, and the correct pronounciation of the "che" syllable is "Ke"

  • @Pidgey95
    @Pidgey95 Před 5 lety +3

    And yet your Gnocchi pronounciation is quite wrong. Foreigners cannot pronounce the italian syllable "gn". You make it sound like it was "neeocki".
    We say gnocchi very differently. But as a waiter myself, I've learned that no one else except us can pronounce it correctly.
    Also, you're not pronouncing correctly bruschetta. Americans don't spell double Ts, I don't know why maybe laziness, and it kind of sound like a D.
    Please be aware that Italian is a language where every letter as a specific sound and each letter (except H) is always spelled. So please make those Ts sound. They're harsh Ts like in "BeckeTT".

    • @hadar.shemesh
      @hadar.shemesh Před 5 lety

      But this is not a video about how to pronounce those words in Italian, but how to pronounce Italian words using the sounds of English. And in American English the t between vowels is flapped

    • @Pidgey95
      @Pidgey95 Před 5 lety +4

      @@hadar.shemesh Well, then the title is deceiving.
      It seems to suggest how to correctly pronounce a word. Pardon me, but if you say that it is "how to pronounce those word in english", then I don't see the whole point of the video. Still wrong pronounciation.

  • @Mag_isabel
    @Mag_isabel Před 3 lety

    You’re great! Thanks 😊

  • @queensnazzy1
    @queensnazzy1 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much!! Been saying some of these wrong for a long time.