The 5 Most Boring Languages (According to the Internet)

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  • čas přidán 8. 05. 2024
  • 🤔 If the Internet says a language is boring, it must be true, right? Far from it! In today's video we look at 5 languages that are most definitely NOT boring!
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    📜 SOURCES & ATTRIBUTIONS:
    Beethoven Sonata # 14 “Moonlight” Op. 27 No. 2 Valentina Lisitsa
    • Beethoven Sonata # 14 ...
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    The Swedish language, casually spoken | Johanna speaking Swedish | Wikitongues
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    How Sweden survives without small talk - BBC REEL
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    Latinos Imitate Each Other’s Accents
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    French is Weird
    fb.watch/i3T4SwLagB/
    “Mexicans, we speak spanish slow…”
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    Spanish Dialects Around the World: How Spanish Varies from Country to Country
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    Sloane’s Boring Class - Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)
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    The Pronunciation Problems
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    Mattur - The Sanskrit Speaking Village in Karnataka
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    “Origins of English Pie Chart” by Murraytheb is licensed under Public Domain via Wikipedia
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...
    ⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:29 - Mean Tweets Incoming…
    1:40 - Boring Language #1
    3:37 - Boring Language #2
    4:39 - Boring Language #3
    7:25 - Boring Language #4
    9:27 - Boring Language #5
    12:10 - Boring Bonus!

Komentáře • 458

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning  Před rokem +26

    Boring languages? I beg to differ! Check out this non-boring language 👉🏼 czcams.com/video/SyUdxD_mvy0/video.html

    • @filipwodarczyk8946
      @filipwodarczyk8946 Před rokem +2

      Did you hear of the tragedy of the language called Polish? Or Belarussian? Those people were under occupation for a simmilar amout of time, yet Ukrainian got the credit for being the langugage of resilience. Why so? (Propably not because of something that is happening today)

    • @Electrostatic_Fusion
      @Electrostatic_Fusion Před rokem +2

      English is the most boring language. Change my mind

    • @user-mp3md3yg8h
      @user-mp3md3yg8h Před rokem +2

      Yes, please tell us more about Sanskrit and Nasa!

    • @londongael414
      @londongael414 Před rokem +1

      @@user-mp3md3yg8h Yes! Language of the gods? Perfect for AI? I want to know more!

    • @MDobri-sy1ce
      @MDobri-sy1ce Před rokem +1

      Also, maybe a video on which languages people regret learning. I use the term 'regret' loosely as in wishing they could of learned a different secondary language instead. So, far I have no regrets other for any of the languages I am learning other than wishing I started sooner.

  • @ronshlomi582
    @ronshlomi582 Před rokem +347

    I think that a lot of these languages are considered boring as they are common languages to learn in school. Nothing is fun if you are forced to learn it.

    • @UmbryClown
      @UmbryClown Před rokem +12

      Facts

    • @Gobbete
      @Gobbete Před rokem +18

      That's why I know so many people who find English (as a foreign language) boring. You MUST know English, wether you like it or not.

    • @AcobraBE
      @AcobraBE Před rokem +10

      That's why i dislike learning French because i was forced to learn it.

    • @soleyalexandravalbergsdott3126
      @soleyalexandravalbergsdott3126 Před rokem

      This deserves more likes. So true

    • @yoru900
      @yoru900 Před rokem +2

      I somehow didn't get any language classes in school and still think French is boring

  • @TheNynjspider
    @TheNynjspider Před rokem +184

    I've been studying Norwegian and I'm having a great time finding all the commonalities with English. Sure, not a lot of people speak Norwegian...but If "usefulness" and utility were the most important thing for me, I would have learned Spanish long ago. Learn what you like

    • @mortenhje
      @mortenhje Před rokem +16

      Lykke til med norskstudiene.

    • @Tehui1974
      @Tehui1974 Před rokem +2

      I'm surprised this topic was even discussed to be honest. We're talking about languages not music or movies.

    • @teuvorallikuski390
      @teuvorallikuski390 Před rokem +8

      Learn what you like, totally agree! Also, defining the "usefulness" of a language is very tricky to begin with. Going by the number of speakers would be fine if we were playing a game where you're randomly assigned to talk to a person from anywhere in the world, but that's not life. Your own surroundings and circumstances can easily turn a language that's generally considered useful rather useless and vice-versa.

    • @bestianegrafcbayernmunchen5454
      @bestianegrafcbayernmunchen5454 Před rokem +2

      as a Swedish learner I fully agree

    • @PJM257
      @PJM257 Před rokem +1

      Norwegian was actually the first foreign language I ever attempted to learn. I don't remember why I quit

  • @Pablo-bn2nz
    @Pablo-bn2nz Před rokem +37

    As a brazilian, i relate to the english speakers that think germanic languages are boring, for a long time i refused myself to try to learn spanish because "It is too similar to portuguese, therefore it is useless". Turns out, i was a massive idiot,my spanish learning experience has been great so far.

    • @englishdaniam9723
      @englishdaniam9723 Před rokem +2

      damn it, this turns out similar to me, i think it isn't a great idea to learn portuguese because its similar to spanish, though some people around to me, they have said that learning potuguese could make worse my time , its interesting find this situation from a portuguese speaker, greetings!

    • @raymond8920
      @raymond8920 Před 3 měsíci

      I found that learning german as an english speaker rather pleasant as I'm easily able to pick up the similar words

  • @biaberg3448
    @biaberg3448 Před rokem +93

    I’m Norwegian and will say that Swedish is NOT boring! It’s a beautiful language and some dialects sounds like music.

    • @bera2856
      @bera2856 Před rokem +6

      stop the cap bro

    • @londongael414
      @londongael414 Před rokem +5

      @@bera2856 A perfect example of why English is not boring. I am a native speaker, and yet, while I understand all the words in it, I have absolutely no idea what this comment means. (I am old - that might have something to do with it.)

    • @Mongol_animations
      @Mongol_animations Před rokem +2

      swedish is a ripoff of danish

    • @biaberg3448
      @biaberg3448 Před rokem

      @@Mongol_animations 😁 That’s what they say in Denmark about Norwegian and Danish.

    • @gabriellawrence6598
      @gabriellawrence6598 Před rokem +4

      To my ears, Danish sounds like a French guy attempting to speak Norwegian.

  • @CrysolasChymera2117
    @CrysolasChymera2117 Před rokem +68

    I completely disagree with the statement that "similar languages to mine are boring"; in the case you're a romance-language-native, is very fascinating and even exciting finding other romance languages similar to yours, like when you're a child and discover that are other countries that "quirk a language like the one you speak in a very different and interesting way".

    • @DaviFigueiraChavez
      @DaviFigueiraChavez Před rokem +4

      As a brazilian and Portuguese speaker I gotta admit that I find romance languages pretty lame (yes, pls don't kill me I just find them too similar to Portuguese), but this is not the case with French. Differently from other romances languages, French is not really boring. This language is the most unique and different romance language and can be really entertaining and curious sometimes, this make me continue to constantly study French, everyday I learn something special.
      Btw the other romance languages are just so similar to Portuguese (like Italian), I have almost no desire to learn them even though I want to.
      I already speak Spanish since my mother is from Bolivia (a Spanish speaking country in south america), but it is so boring for me, I just find it a really easy language and it is not "rare" cuz it's related to Portuguese.

    • @CrysolasChymera2117
      @CrysolasChymera2117 Před rokem

      @@DaviFigueiraChavez And do you find Romanian similar to the other romance languages?

    • @DaviFigueiraChavez
      @DaviFigueiraChavez Před rokem

      @@CrysolasChymera2117 I find it way more similar to other romance languages than French, romanian still shares more things in common with Portuguese and Spanish (both are my mother tongue) than French.
      Romanian grammar and vocabulary are not that different.
      French vocabulary has something similar but also unique for me. And French grammar is something that differs from other romance languages: even tough it maintains the same bases it has it's secrets and weird things

    • @israelmiranda8803
      @israelmiranda8803 Před rokem

      I am a Portuguese Native speaker and find Spanish boring. It is too similar to Portuguese. I like Italian and French though.

    • @maximipe
      @maximipe Před rokem +1

      This, I'm an spanish speaker learning portuguese and find it pretty fun. Also thinking of taking up catalan at some point, both are similar and still find them interesting. On the other hand Greek sounds really fun too.

  • @roul4842
    @roul4842 Před rokem +168

    German is so underrated for being "ugly".
    Personally, I find it goofy and kind of cute. Very enjoyable to learn.
    The only language I tend to think of as "boring" is Spanish... I'm sure I could learn to enjoy it, if I applied myself, but in the US it just seems like such a default language to learn. Schools have ruined it.

    • @jonathanlange1339
      @jonathanlange1339 Před rokem +4

      it is not more boring, if you every word direct translate but the word order keep. I mean german.

    • @ArminMuslim
      @ArminMuslim Před rokem

      My mother language is German and I think German is a very boring language in daily conversations
      German can be fun if you like reading complicated ass texts from philosophers
      I swear they’re such a challenge to understand even for me
      But other than that German is pretty boring and it doesn’t even sound good
      But Spanish
      Lord if I could speak Spanish
      Every time I watch some Mexican cartel shows I get multiple orgasms in my ears and in my brain
      It just sounds so fucking COOL so powerful the way you PRONOUNCE WORDS and the R SOUND
      Also Mexican music is fucking dope
      In short , Mexican is Sigma to me and German is kinda meh not ugly not beautiful just meh

    • @mep6302
      @mep6302 Před rokem +18

      In Latin America English is "boring" for the same reason. School. So we forgive you if you do too 🤪

    • @maximipe
      @maximipe Před rokem +3

      That's the thing here, most boring languages according to who? and what makes it boring?
      I'd bet a kidney most of those answers from "the internet" are mostly from US or other english speaking countries.

    • @jonathanlange1339
      @jonathanlange1339 Před rokem +3

      @@maximipe
      They most certainly are. Because he wrote the question in the search bar in english. But because it's subjective anyway it doesn't matter.

  • @JoaoPessoa86
    @JoaoPessoa86 Před rokem +20

    I used the "boringness" of Spanish to my advantage in school. I was basically able to test out of my language requirements by using Spanish's proximity to my native Portuguese

  • @filipwodarczyk8946
    @filipwodarczyk8946 Před rokem +63

    This probably cause those are typical languages that people learn. When I started learning Hungarian people were like: WHAAAT?! You are learning Hungarian? Wow, you are special.

    • @lockerain1517
      @lockerain1517 Před rokem +4

      Hungarian is very beautiful.

    • @wirti94
      @wirti94 Před rokem +6

      Nice to see you were learning our language, it's so great. How difficult did u find it?

    • @filipwodarczyk8946
      @filipwodarczyk8946 Před rokem +8

      @@wirti94 Very. But after 7 months it is (kinda) possible. Still hard though

    • @annacsek3508
      @annacsek3508 Před rokem

      Whaaat you're learning Hungarian?? All my respect for you, as a native speaker I don't think I would be able to learn it as a foreign language 😂

    • @barrysteven5964
      @barrysteven5964 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@annacsek3508 Hungarian is just very different. The vocabulary is different and the grammar is different. When you actually start studying it, it's not that complicated. Most of the so called 'cases' are just like putting a preposition on the end of a noun and the grammar rules are very regular with few exceptions. But it's the difference that makes it so enjoyable. The opposite of boring. But the best thing is going to Hungary and saying things in Hungarian to Hungarians. Their faces light up, they encourage you and they tell you you're great even if you've just made a mistake. I love Hungary so much.

  • @woltti
    @woltti Před rokem +18

    I don't know if I'm just coping with the lost 10 years I was forced to learn Swedish, but I think it's a pretty cool language. Especially with all the variation between dialects in Sweden *and* Finland.

  • @microcolonel
    @microcolonel Před rokem +19

    Imagine learning to read Sanskrit telephone books.

  • @TomJohnson67
    @TomJohnson67 Před rokem +63

    Maybe they're not as fun to learn to speak, but I've always found Dutch and Afrikaans interesting to listen to. As an English speaker, you can understand a lot without ever studying the languages.

    • @AcobraBE
      @AcobraBE Před rokem +6

      Same, as a native dutch speaker i had a blast learning English when i was younger and i still enjoy learning new things about the language.

    • @paholainen100
      @paholainen100 Před rokem +4

      I agree, i think the German languages are the coolest in my opinion. I'm a native English speaker( and Italian speaker) who has been learning German for 20 years. Nothing gives me more joy than speaking or writing in it. Dutch and Afrikaans sound cool too

    • @paholainen100
      @paholainen100 Před rokem +2

      @@AcobraBE sorry I meant * the Germanic languages in general*

    • @somewhereright3160
      @somewhereright3160 Před rokem

      Agree. I always found Dutch so cute to listen to.

    • @rowen42069
      @rowen42069 Před rokem

      As an Afrikaans speaker I always found Afrikaans boring in school because we learned Standard Afrikaans which is more like white Afrikaans and I speak Coloured Afrikaans. White people tend to speak slower and more monotone which makes it sound boring and coloured people speak faster and louder so it's like the Mexican and Puerto Rican Spanish dialects

  • @supercroc8172
    @supercroc8172 Před rokem +12

    As an native English speaker studying German, I always find it fun to find a German word that’s very similar or identical to English. It’s a nice feeling to see a word you already know in a language, especially since most of the time you already know how to pronounce it (if the pronunciation isn’t different), because after trying to pronounce words like Die Geisteswissenschaftlichen (the humanities), it’s always a nice change of pace to get a more familiar word. German has been really fun to study, so for me, it’s not boring at all!

  • @TVandManga
    @TVandManga Před rokem +11

    Swedish isn't boring! I really enjoy learning it!

  • @Britishbjornis
    @Britishbjornis Před rokem +13

    I am learning Norwegian, I wouldn’t say it’s a boring language it’s a fun language like all languages are cool especially ones what interest you.

  • @Lemonz1989
    @Lemonz1989 Před 11 měsíci +10

    My native language is Faroese, and I absolutely _hated_ learning Danish in school. It was a required subject from the 3rd to 9th grade. I liked learning English a lot more. This is even though we use a lot of Danish in our own language, but the Danish we “borrow” follows Faroese grammar and pronunciation. I think it’s called “code-switching”?
    Now I live in Denmark and have to use Danish every day 😂
    I actually quite like Danish now, but it’s pretty difficult to speak, even though the grammar is pretty easy.

    • @deguonis
      @deguonis Před 8 měsíci +1

      Hi, is Icelandic easy for you? Do you understand a lot either via sound or written ? I'm intensely intrigued about their linguistic familiarity. Thanks

    • @Lemonz1989
      @Lemonz1989 Před 8 měsíci

      @@deguonis It’s very difficult for Icelanders and Faroese people to understand each other when speaking. We share a lot of words, but the pronunciation is often (but not always) so different that we usually can’t get the context of a longer sentence. I would say the pronunciation is even more different than it’s between Swedish and Danish.
      It’s much easier to understand when reading, because we have similar grammatical rules and we share a lot of words. If I read an Icelandic text I can usually understand what it’s talking about, even though I might not understand every word.
      I wouldn’t say it’s like learning a new language when learning each other’s languages, but more like learning 1/2 or 1/4 of a language, lol. It’s mostly just getting used to the differences than learning something completely new.

  • @nykki21
    @nykki21 Před rokem +9

    I hope we all find things that spark curiosity and a desire to learn with abandon!

  • @gottlos7
    @gottlos7 Před rokem +16

    my native language is Spanish, and I was so bored in my Spanish class in high school that I got a "02" grade for the whole year. in my country, it is from 0 to 20... 20 is A+, 19=A, 11=D-, 10=F, 08 or less=shame.
    when I got older and moved to another country I started to like and study Spanish grammar.

  • @deutschmitpurple2918
    @deutschmitpurple2918 Před rokem +4

    Excellent video ❤️❤️❤️

  • @mep6302
    @mep6302 Před rokem +16

    I'm learning Dutch. The reasons why I enjoy learning this language are:
    It's a challenge for me, however not so much compared to learning Russian or Mandarin Chinese
    It's similar to a language I already know (English)
    It's not a typical language that people learn
    It doesn't descend from the same language family my language does (Spanish).
    I've had struggles but I've also made progress.
    Learn what you want instead of what you think you should learn. Maybe that's why people find these languages boring. Because they're the most popular ones.
    I learned French and I did enjoy it because I wanted to learn it.

    • @lorie76yt
      @lorie76yt Před rokem +2

      I love Dutch - there’s something about the sound of it that sounds adorable to me :D I mean “Snopje” (snohp-yeh) how cute is that 🧸

    • @isaac-p6126
      @isaac-p6126 Před rokem +3

      @@lorie76yt Nederlands is een heel interresante taal ik heb it gelerent omdat het tamelijk geleijk als duits is. Ik maak nog fouts wanner ik schrijve maar ik vind dat is dat gekompliceerendste van de taal. Vertalen en spreken is eenvoudig

    • @duncandl910
      @duncandl910 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@lorie76yt look up blaasoppie from afrikaans, translates literally to blowuppy haha

    • @duncandl910
      @duncandl910 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@isaac-p6126 je kan jezelf er in elk geval al erg goed mee uitdrukken! Chapeau ❤🎉

  • @julian.16
    @julian.16 Před rokem +6

    Every language could be boring when you are learning it, becuase it's exhausting to hear something you want to understand but you can't

  • @jmwild22
    @jmwild22 Před rokem +4

    Oh my gosh this is such a cool video.

  • @danstobbart4406
    @danstobbart4406 Před 3 měsíci

    Good one Ollie👍😂

  • @smashstuff86
    @smashstuff86 Před rokem +3

    5:53 True. I could only find one German comic book that I didn't have to pay for. Of course, I have your two German short stories books (Der Ungeheuer im Wald, irgendjemand?). How come you apparently have an intermediate Japanese short stories without a beginner one?

  • @misssiddle5023
    @misssiddle5023 Před rokem +3

    I know you’ve done a video on ASL, but I’d love you to do a video on BSL. 😮

  • @EliDeNeige
    @EliDeNeige Před rokem +5

    Well, do you have any short stories in Scot Gaelic? That would help me… 😊

  • @AnnaKaunitz
    @AnnaKaunitz Před rokem +2

    Me; a Swede often pleasantly exhausted after engaging in lots of small talk with my fellow people. Some days, small talk just drains me completely and I simply do not have the time because life. But this is universal. Everybody has those days.
    I’ve chitchatted with so many interesting, nice and fun people of all sorts during decades of traveling 🥰

  • @malenaboy
    @malenaboy Před rokem +5

    Swedish is so Cool. I’m sad to see it on this list. It’s the language I’ve been working on for a long time. I don’t find it in any way boring.

  • @DewelynC
    @DewelynC Před 8 měsíci +1

    I don't find any language boring. 🧐 They all have interesting things, historical connections to other languages and beautiful ways of describing the world.

  • @abernardes2
    @abernardes2 Před rokem +10

    Hi Olly! I’m waiting for the “Is Arabic hard to learn” video 😊

    • @ADHDlanguages
      @ADHDlanguages Před rokem +6

      5 second video where he just says "Yeah, that one's pretty tough."

    • @avishly
      @avishly Před rokem

      if you are native english, it is one of the hardest

  • @jabbalone2068
    @jabbalone2068 Před rokem +2

    You asked about the cultural identity of English?
    For me it looks like that:
    A small house of stone in a flat, greem dale covered by grass. It is windy, a little bit rainy and it feels cold outside. You go into the hut and hear the voices of the people. They eat fish, meat, bread and beans and they drink beer. The folks there speak English. Despite it is English, you have problems to understand it. They still use "thou" and have many glottal stops in their speach. You hear many words that you, as a speaker of Standard English or American English don't know, but that are familiar for speakers of Frisian, Dutch or German. They talk about their day, how many fish they caught and how the shepherding was.
    This is, how I imagine the identity of the English language and for me, it's very beautiful

  • @JF-wp2rz
    @JF-wp2rz Před 10 měsíci +2

    If you ask me, capitalising all nouns doesn't make the language easier at all. Maybe you can read a little bit faster but it makes writing a lot more difficult. That's because you don't only capitalise regular nouns, but also nominalised verbs, adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions ... (basically any word can be nominalised) That's even difficult for native speakers. I am currently taking German lessons again in university (a course for native speakers) and it drives me CRAZY! But if you want to learn German, don't worry too much about it because unless you need to write formal texts, people won't care that much and probably wouldn't even notice mistakes as long as you capitalise all the regular nouns. And in very informal settings like on social media or text messaging it's common to not follow these rules at all.

  • @guitargresurrect2117
    @guitargresurrect2117 Před rokem +4

    i'm an italian mothertongue and to me english is like crackers with dark chocolate, german is like Dark Nutella with Chli pepper sauce,Dutch is like Hazelnut PAste/Peanut Butter and a tiny sprinkle of honey, and scandinavian languages are roughly like an hybrid between After Eight (norwegian) Jaffa Cakes (Danish/Swedish) and Chocolate-Blueberry Ice Cream (icelandic) all of those share this murky,sandy,rough,earthy undertone i cant put my finger on but i could never label them as "boring" to be fair

    • @JF-wp2rz
      @JF-wp2rz Před 10 měsíci +1

      That's SUCH a fun way to describe languages 🤣

  • @baerlauchstal
    @baerlauchstal Před rokem +3

    Olly: "Germanic languages all use the same alphabet..."
    Yiddish: "Am I a joke to you?"

  • @bradnotbread
    @bradnotbread Před rokem +6

    I agree with French and Spanish as they are the go-to languages whenever a noob wants to learn a new language. Strongly disagree with Swedish, for the same reason in that it's a language that isn't studied all that often.

  • @Seetiyan
    @Seetiyan Před rokem +2

    I personally don't find any languages boring. Some are less interesting to me than others, but it's mainly due to lack of interest in the culture associated with that language. But once I develop in an interest in that culture, or a desire to visit the place, (or if I want to flirt with a someone from there, hehe) the language is suddenly interesting to me.
    And also, like he said, there are just some cool-ass traits in certain languages. Like animacy, which I think is really cool, but we have almost no animacy at all in English.

  • @MDobri-sy1ce
    @MDobri-sy1ce Před rokem +10

    I have been learning Swedish for almost 2 years now and I find it beautiful and interesting. Norwegian sounds beautiful as well. Danish not exactly the same feeling.

    • @alexanderfelix83
      @alexanderfelix83 Před rokem +3

      Vad trevligt! Själv håller jag på och lär mig portugisiska och polska

    • @MDobri-sy1ce
      @MDobri-sy1ce Před rokem +3

      @@alexanderfelix83 Tack. I am also learning Russian, French, Spanish, and German but not sure if I want to pick up Portuguese or Ukrainian or wait a bit because I do have some Ukrainian heritage but Portuguese is a growing economy. And despite the popularity of Chinese it’s an aging population with fleeting investors. I read in the next 10-20 years that Brazil and India will be in the list of top global markets.

    • @miguelluissousadias1371
      @miguelluissousadias1371 Před rokem

      @@alexanderfelix83 gott fur den. Herr Alexander. Portugisiska ert bra tunga. Polska ert lika gott tunga.

    • @natashacallis2736
      @natashacallis2736 Před rokem

      Dansk lyder også smukt, hvad snakker du om? 😂

  • @christinahammond9146
    @christinahammond9146 Před rokem +3

    Could you make some chat gpt videos where you ask chat gpt some language questions?

  • @tedc9682
    @tedc9682 Před rokem +3

    Computer languages are fun! Fortran, Pascal, PL/1, DG/L, Algol, Fortran-77, C, C++, Java, Javascript, Python...

  • @Ellary_Rosewood
    @Ellary_Rosewood Před rokem +21

    Personally, I find Swedish to be my favorite language out of every language I've studied thus far. I've never really enjoyed Spanish that much, even during the time when I was living in México and was using it every day. I just never found that deep love and passion for the language. Unfortunately it always felt like a chore for me and I found it to be very limiting when it came to explaining deeper emotions and feelings. I also have a similar disinterest in other romance languages. However, when it comes to Swedish, I always feel so excited to study and it brings me so much joy. I also feel the same way about Georgian. 💙🇬🇪

    • @jayc1139
      @jayc1139 Před rokem

      I'm in the same boat as you girl...never really cared for Romance languages myself. Germanic languages are pretty nice to learn and sound more unique vs. the Romance languages and their lacking of interesting consonants and vowels (aside from French and Portuguese but they still have that Romance tinge).

    • @patax144
      @patax144 Před rokem +4

      @@jayc1139 As a native spanish speaker, I did feel that French was the most interesting out of the other romance languages, and the first I learned, currently learning Portuguese, but also German, however in defence of Romance languages, I find interesting our conjugation nuance and the way we play with our sentences and word order, something germanic languages don't appear to have, phonetics may be simple, but other aspects of romance languages are quite rich.

    • @jonathanlange1339
      @jonathanlange1339 Před rokem

      @@patax144
      can you give an example what is interesting about your conjugation nuance and what exactly you mean?
      And also about play with sentence and word order?
      I can't speak spanish so I don't know.
      I can only say that in german you can play quite alot with word order.

    • @LOKI77able
      @LOKI77able Před rokem

      Are you a native English speaker?

    • @Ellary_Rosewood
      @Ellary_Rosewood Před rokem

      @@LOKI77able Sí.

  • @Mono-tony-fritz
    @Mono-tony-fritz Před rokem +3

    I'm german, living in France, speaking english ( or trying to)...I feel like the most boring person existing.

  • @mariavs5801
    @mariavs5801 Před rokem +5

    It seems that I only speak 'boring' languages. French, Swedish and Dutch !

    • @molly702
      @molly702 Před rokem

      😂😂😂

    • @molly702
      @molly702 Před rokem

      Vilket språk är ditt modersmål?

  • @johnoneill2084
    @johnoneill2084 Před rokem

    What a fun video. All a bit tongue in cheek. Off course no language is boring. I am learning Turkish and have the beginner course which is great but in the past have learned Spanish. Going on a trip to Spain last month I revised and within a week I had the basics again after not picking up a book for two years. I am sure I could not do it with Turkish. Learning other languages shows me one thing and that is to be thankful I am not learning English. It has no rules, is completely contradictory and let’s face it, if people did not need it for work or travel they would close the book straight away:

  • @almightyswizz
    @almightyswizz Před 11 měsíci +2

    Un morenito de la ciudad, este espanish es bastante común, lo aprendi de las calles poniendo attencion a otros hablando, una vez yo fui buscando un trabajo, la habilidad me ayudó mucho y hay mas opportunidades en comunicando con mas gente

    • @pablobordon4121
      @pablobordon4121 Před 10 měsíci

      No es un perfecto español el que usas (nada grave). Puedo comprenderte perfectamente.
      Si lo aprendiste así cómo dices, y te animas a escribirlo también, quizás tengas alguna habilidad para esto, úsala. 👍

  • @cheyechamney
    @cheyechamney Před 5 měsíci

    I'm only at about an A2 level in my German but I absolutely love it. The internet makes it out to be this very aggressive gutteral language, but I find it to be quite goofy actually. My favourite word at the moment is "Handschuhe" which means "gloves" but the literal translation is hand shoes. There's a lot of funny stuff like that. 😂
    Side note: I'm Canadian and I love seeing the comparisons between American vs British English because we're kind of a mix of both 😊

  • @Sandalwoodrk
    @Sandalwoodrk Před rokem +3

    When I was in grade school I thought Spanish was such a boring language
    but now its my favorite language in the whole world

  • @corinna007
    @corinna007 Před rokem +7

    I don't see how German is boring. Or Spanish. German has so many fun words, and Spanish is so beautiful.

    • @Wahrheit_
      @Wahrheit_ Před rokem

      omg I'm native spanish speaker and learning (swiss) german

    • @JF-wp2rz
      @JF-wp2rz Před 10 měsíci

      @@Wahrheit_ Swiss German is especially beautiful to me (an Austrian) even though I do have a hard time understanding swiss people at times 😅

  • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
    @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Před 9 měsíci

    The Sanskrit comment is accurate ✅.
    You need to remember so many case sets, sandhi rules, and random bits of grammar to read a basic sentence. More realistically, you are going to skim through them then guesstimate what is going on.
    It does have more of a reward than other languages as it helps understand a lot. One important thing it teaches is just how complicated and convoluted the ancient languages 📜 are. Which is something you will never understand without learning about them, as you would never in a million years predict natural languages so hard to use would exist.
    But it is definitely a chore compared to modern languages, especially creoles and deliberately simple conlangs.

  • @orangew3988
    @orangew3988 Před rokem +2

    Ngl if you think English is boring you should go to Scotland. A very colourful use of language, lots of new and fun ways to use words you thought you knew inside and out.

  • @RovexHD
    @RovexHD Před rokem +6

    As always, schools teach the same languages, leaving other interesting and unique languages up to yourself to learn. Being different reaps all the rewards, when you speak to someone in a language they never expected you to know.

  • @danielleinad3461
    @danielleinad3461 Před rokem +1

    My boring languages: Spanish and English
    I'm Portuguese speaker, and I'm still learning both of them!
    They're amazing languages, but everyone learn, or "have to learn" and this become that languages so obvious and I don't feeling pleasure learning em like when I learn german!

  • @solzzy9221
    @solzzy9221 Před rokem +4

    I think every language can be fun

  • @Mert_Ozfirat
    @Mert_Ozfirat Před rokem +3

    As a Turkish person I can say that English sounds like a game of word bending. It sounds so feminine in a perspective of our culture. We learn it in school but many people can't fully understand the language because it is inconsistent unlike our language. I think, if you don't have enough letters to write, then you should create more letters or change the way you write the words to make your writing system phonetical, just like we did to our alphabet a hundred years ago. It would be really easy for everyone to learn it.

    • @russelldavidsen7669
      @russelldavidsen7669 Před rokem

      To english speaking people Turkish is a very difficult language to learn.
      It may have phonetic spelling but what do these strange words mean?
      Also almost all words in Turkish are not similar to ANY other european language.
      So it can be real struggle too as the grammar is completely different than
      English. And the way sentences are made, like backwards.

    • @Mert_Ozfirat
      @Mert_Ozfirat Před rokem +3

      @@russelldavidsen7669 Yes, Turkish is a little bit diffrent from other European languages because it's word order is S-O-V, we use suffixes instead of prefixes, we have vowel harmony so the vowel in a suffix changes according to the last vowel. But we have many foreign loan words from other languages too. And I don't think that Turkish is hard because when you learn how to read, you can read anything unlike in English. Maybe suffixes are new for other people but it is just the way we make new words like:
      Göz=Eye
      Gözlük=Glasses
      Gözlükçü=Optician
      Gözlükçüler=Opticians
      Gözlükçülerde=At the Opticians
      Gözlükçülerden=From the Opticians
      Gözlükçülerden mi?=Is it from the Opticians?
      Gözlükçülerden misiniz?=Are you from the Opticians?
      I hope it helps for you to understand the logic. You can find videos about Turkish in this channel.😊

    • @slimytoad1447
      @slimytoad1447 Před rokem

      @@Mert_Ozfirat nicely put

  • @lisab2856
    @lisab2856 Před rokem +1

    I would love to see a video on Sanskrit...☺

  • @paholainen100
    @paholainen100 Před rokem +9

    Good video, I don't think there's such thing as a boring language. I wouldn't trust the internet with advice on this subject. Seems all very subjective to me. In addition, I actually find the German language interesting and quite charming. People who criticize it tend not to know much German.

  • @cliffenyprize8489
    @cliffenyprize8489 Před rokem +13

    As someone very interested in Sanskrit, I'm afraid you've fallen for some Indian nationalism. The idea that Sanskrit is ideal for AI according to NASA came to be because one scientist at NASA once did a paper talking about both. However, this has been debunked many of times by both linguistics and other people working at NASA. As a language nerd I love how passionate many Indian people are about their languages, but this has also caused a lot of misinformation about certain languages and their importance or supposed supiriority, this is one of those cases.

  • @juandiegovalenciahurtado1367

    My mother language is Spanish and yeah, sometimes it is difficult to understand Latin Americans hahahaha we speak so fast, but German and French aren't boring, those are amazing languages with its tough parts but amazing and I hope someday I could learn Swedish

  • @betos-08
    @betos-08 Před 8 měsíci

    English is not boring. It's so fun to learn etymologies and figure out whether this word is from latin, Old English, or greek. or see how this word mixes 2 languages' morphemes. or comparing the pronunciation to the written form. or comparing dialects' pronunciation or word usage.

  • @akiko7298
    @akiko7298 Před rokem

    In my perspective any language gets boring at some point but once you get over the boring hump, it's very interesting! Especially eavesdropping on people!

  • @jokerzyo
    @jokerzyo Před rokem +1

    Swedish has been my favorite to learn. German I'm having a blast with. Swahili might take the top spot so far it's incredibly fun. Italian got boring for me not sure why tho.

  • @ellenkeyne
    @ellenkeyne Před rokem

    I'm still puzzled by the slide that says English drew from "Celtic" and "Gaelic" -- Celtic is a language family, and it includes Gaelic. (I doubt that he meant Proto-Celtic, because that split long before Latin and Germanic speakers arrived in Britain.)

  • @Deutschdude100
    @Deutschdude100 Před rokem

    Please make a video on how sanscrit is similar to computer languages

  • @jan_kisan
    @jan_kisan Před rokem

    could you please read all the screen text outloud? like the quotes and all

  • @lrowlands53
    @lrowlands53 Před rokem +4

    Yes, a video about Sanskrit please.

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus Před rokem +2

    Seriously pedantic comment coming up: Nobody spoke proto-Germanic, or indeed any other proto-language, because they're like photo-fit images of what we think such a language might have sounded like. I'm not complaining about the idea you're trying to express, I'm complaining about the use of the indicative - and I'm fully aware that everybody does it. I think this may be a use-case for subjunctive mood, or at least some degree of irrealis. I realise that attempting to dictate usage is futile at best and I need to get used to the fact that people use the indicative to express conjecture. Caesar believed in unicorns after all

  • @MichaelaBennison
    @MichaelaBennison Před rokem +3

    Imo English has a different culture depending on the country. In the same way Spain, Mexico and Chile (for example) all have different cultures despite all being Spanish speaking, the UK, the US, and Australia all have different cultures. I can understand Americans and American culture because of the amount of American media that's available but the culture in the UK isn't the same. We have different humour, different spelling, we can be more cynical and sarcastic on the whole. Culture is more than language - it's history, politics and societal values.

  • @martinkullberg6718
    @martinkullberg6718 Před rokem +2

    I do not look at if languages are boring, but If I do I think I do it the next way: it is only boring if the words do not have enough variety AND if it does sound blend, if one of these two not apply for me it's not boring,
    So swedish is not boring,french also ,and spanish is my favourite language, espechially the canarian variety
    Further I more look at how languages sound,

  • @DaniLangTalk
    @DaniLangTalk Před rokem

    0:22Turkish word is the most funniest 😂😂😂In Kazakh has an interesting meaning 😅

  • @MDobri-sy1ce
    @MDobri-sy1ce Před rokem +6

    I guess the next video will be "The most exciting languages to learn (According to the internet)"?

  • @MDobri-sy1ce
    @MDobri-sy1ce Před rokem +4

    Well, I learn Castilian Spanish not Mexican Spanish. This Dominican artist I like Natti Natasha I can understand most of her Spanish in her song Me Gusta. But Farukko I think, he is Porto Rican I am like, what? The same when I hear Bad Bunny sing.

    • @FannyPlusvi
      @FannyPlusvi Před rokem +1

      I'm from latin america ( Venezuela) and I can't understand Bad Bunny either.

  • @MrBegliocchi
    @MrBegliocchi Před 7 měsíci

    In Italian you can also say m’annoio for “I’m bored”

  • @Bolachas25
    @Bolachas25 Před rokem +1

    I thought Aymara was a good language to use for computer programming? Are there similarities in structure then between Sanskrit and Aymara? I’m now intrigued.

  • @nameless9851
    @nameless9851 Před 4 měsíci

    I’m from Eastern-Europe so every language is fascinating to me 😂 most schools teach English but not even that is cumpulsory

  • @PierreMiniggio
    @PierreMiniggio Před rokem +4

    10:29 It's a really interesting question to me.
    Because I've an english (language) cultural indentity, because that's how and why I now can speak it.
    But my cultural attachments are not realated to a single country, some of them even are related to non-english speaking countries.
    And most of my interactions using english were with non-native speakers.
    So I do have an english culture that comes with the english language, but that culture is just my own, built by many snippets.

    • @thinker646
      @thinker646 Před rokem +3

      I agree. International English is a different culture than local english. Maybe it does not have its own identity. Fascinating question.

  • @irisselene2325
    @irisselene2325 Před rokem

    I am guilty of thinking this about many languages even though I always say I love all languages haha some I find boring by how they sound, and the type of repetitive sounds the language has, since, every single language has a set of repeated sounds. Others I find boring because they just are too similar to the ones I already speak but just a little off. I've always loved Portuguese, and Italian, yet when I tried to learn them, espcecially portuguese I could not even concentrate, it just felt like a weird mix of romanian and spanish with a weird shift, it lowkey felt like i was learning spanish but wrong, i don't know how to explain it, so I just gave up, but I still love both languages I just don't think I will ever actually learn them. I am fine with that because understanding them and being able to read them is already good enough for me. But I was really disheartened by my failed attempts lol.

  • @markoverman4023
    @markoverman4023 Před rokem +1

    Ankorau mankas la plej enuiga lingvo: esperanto. I missed esperanto in your listing of boring languages. It is very simple and easy to learn, but it sounds a bit boring with all the a and o sounds at the end of adverbs and nouns.

  • @jayc1139
    @jayc1139 Před rokem +4

    I can understand English being boring, as a native speaker of it myself...but that's why lol. It's essentially a language most people speak and/or are learning. Tho...it is well that it's no longer as complex as it was when it was Old English. If it still was, the grammar would cause people to take longer to learn it anyway.

    • @rosshart9514
      @rosshart9514 Před rokem

      "The official language of the EU is Bad English."
      Herman Van Rompuy, former president of the European Council

  • @auadisian
    @auadisian Před 11 měsíci

    As a native speaker of Arabic, learning MSA at school was boring because most of the texts were either medieval or cheesy. There is only one interesting memoir in high school that I still remember 20 years later!

  • @adrienb2762
    @adrienb2762 Před rokem

    True, i used to find spanish and italian boring and didnt want to learn them, for the other only reason that is ressemble french

  • @tarafinnegan9385
    @tarafinnegan9385 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm learning Spanish in school and I don't find it a boring language at all (or even the learning part), so I don't really understand how any language is boring, but I guess the most widely spoken languages are considered more boring because *many* people speak them

  • @nmn5701
    @nmn5701 Před rokem +3

    yeah bro, make a video on sanskrit. its a very spiritual ,old and mysterious language in the world. I persoanally tried learning sanskrit myself but had to give up really soon. i feel that its really really hard to understand its grammar and broo the words in sanskrit are soooooo big, i was like WTH, it was almost like 45-70 romanized letters for each word in sanskrit i have no idea how some people can understand it and use on daily basis.
    although in all honesty i find sanskrit very spiritual and really interesting, i mean it was one of the oldest languages in whole world, it also shows how indo-european language was created and how ancient people overtime migrated and settled in india........... i just wish that i could learn the language too one day but i am scared by just looking at so many long words and difficult pronounciation.

  • @adriantepesut
    @adriantepesut Před rokem

    As a Romanian-American who had to learn Romanian as an adult, I would recommend Romanian as a perfect mix of easy but also interesting for fluent speakers of English. The common narrative is that it’s a Latin language but I personally believe it’s a sister language to Latin and not a descendant of Latin.
    Regardless, it has a lot of cognates but then also a lot of Slavic loan words: “plug” for plow, “slavă” for glory, and it also has some unique phonemes and contractions along with three types of declensions which again make it interesting but not overwhelmingly challenging.
    Ex.
    El mi-a dat cheile mașinii
    (He gave me the car keys)
    In this example alone we see cognates with English and Latin languages
    Cheile = the keys
    mi-a dat = has given me
    A cognate with Slavic languages
    Mașină = car
    Which is also declined for the genitive case into mașinii (of the car)
    In terms of usefulness it’s not extremely useful but I would say a majority of Romanians are not fluent in English making it still somewhat worthwhile financially

  • @RovexHD
    @RovexHD Před rokem +2

    Reading Shakespeare sonnets is fresh and totally different. Not something the average non native English speaker does.

  • @josephbrandenburg4373
    @josephbrandenburg4373 Před 9 měsíci

    4:03
    🤍🤍🤍
    ❤❤❤
    This is the easiest to pronounce Polish sentence.

  • @AndresMartinez-tx6hc
    @AndresMartinez-tx6hc Před rokem

    I’m Puerto Rican and I completely confirm what is said here.

  • @mollycarlson9715
    @mollycarlson9715 Před rokem +7

    In general I have rather eclectic (or perhaps just ornery) taste and don't tend to take interest in things just because they're trending. One big exception to that is Spanish (and yes, Mexican Spanish at that!) Though I've lived in California for the majority of my life, the ubiquity of Spanish doesn't make it seem less desirable to me. Rather, I feel lucky that there are so many opportunities to learn it. I really do love the sound.

  • @MireiaOnTheMoon
    @MireiaOnTheMoon Před rokem

    pls make a video about the sanskrit thing

  • @davidmccormack99
    @davidmccormack99 Před rokem +3

    I reckon the specific accent/dialect of a given language has a huge bearing on whether it is perceived as boring. RP is a fairly dull version of English. I imagine that if I wasn’t already a native English speaker I’d be steering my pronunciation and vocabulary towards that of a well-spoken person from Scotland, Ireland, or Australia. I love the sounds and cadence of many Latin American Spanish dialects but not so much the Spanish of Spain. That said, I was in the Canaries last week and that sounds very nice (even if dropping the terminal ‘s’ on plurals confused me!).

    • @JF-wp2rz
      @JF-wp2rz Před 10 měsíci

      As a native German speaker I just love the sound of RP. I don't know why that's the case but I just enjoy listening to it.

  • @coraholunder1989
    @coraholunder1989 Před rokem +3

    As a German I have to say collectively assigning a gender or no gender to a new invention never gets boring. And our intellectuals are still not tired of putting words together to describe complex things more easily.

  • @ianboakes8670
    @ianboakes8670 Před 3 měsíci

    The only language I'm bored by is my own because I'm far too used to it. I rank other languages on how frustrating they are, or would be, to learn.

  • @JustLooking
    @JustLooking Před rokem

    I happen to _love_ the Nordic languages and earned a degree in Scandinavian studies; most Swedes refuse to believe I am American when they hear my Swedish.

  • @arthur_p_dent
    @arthur_p_dent Před rokem +1

    1:31 Olly: Germanic langauges all use the same alphabet
    Yiddish: Am I a joke to you?

  • @rauloropeza7426
    @rauloropeza7426 Před rokem +1

    I was surprised to see the person who complained about my native language (Spanish from Mexico) was a fellow Mexican too. How could you betray your own country and language

  • @NeonBeeCat
    @NeonBeeCat Před rokem +2

    we did it language simp family! we did iiiitttt

  • @wild_insomnia
    @wild_insomnia Před rokem +2

    Olly is a cool dude !

  • @shine2577
    @shine2577 Před rokem +3

    I only think French is boring because I have to take a French class this semester.

  • @WMEC38
    @WMEC38 Před rokem +2

    I love Mexican Spanish. Caribbean Spanish sounds like your tongue is covered with soars.

  • @TenorCantusFirmus
    @TenorCantusFirmus Před rokem

    Must confess I'm a bit in the "Languages similar to mine are boring" crowd... Italian native speaker, maybe it partly is because of bad experiences with some Teachers of French in High School.

  • @scottnance2200
    @scottnance2200 Před rokem

    I'm a native English speaker who also speaks German, Dutch, and Swedish. I find them totally fascinating -- especially Dutch, which is the closest to English. But, to be honest, English is the most interesting of all.

  • @cyclpiancitydweller9517
    @cyclpiancitydweller9517 Před rokem +2

    The Scandinavian languages are interesting.