@@aniram13cNot really, Belgium has 3 Language that it speak's, they speak german in parts of wallonia, and they speak French in most of Flanders and wallonia, they speak Dutch at most parts of Flanders and parts of wallonia. Edit: For those who are arguing, its According to "Google"
@@aniram13c A tiny part of Belgium speaks German, while half speaks french and the other half speaks dutch. The dutch they speak there is called Flanders which is a variation of actual dutch
@@Francais5015 What would be your argument?? 😅😅 It's way harder to get into French which is the top reason it's harder for me, but also orthography, pronunciation and of course listening comprehension.
@Alltagundso for example, there are so many irregular verbs, and you basically have to memorise their conjugation in different tenses and then we have tenses including subjunctive. Some verbs are irregular and regular in some tenses. All of this basically drives the learner crazy like for example, I had a really hard time learning spanish, but still, I managed to learn.Hope you understand.
@Alltagundso french is a non phonetic language like English it takes you a lot of time to learn the pronunciation by mastering the accents, the sounds, and also the infamous french R.But the grammar is very easy.
@@fathimahfarzana6891 Sure, but grammar is only one part. Also, I think the Spanish grammar is easy, it's just more. All in all, the fact that an average person will get the hang of it faster and will be able to have conversations earlier, beats it all for most people and that on the other hand keeps up the motivation, which is crucial for learning. 🤗🤗
NO WAY! If you know english, then you can easily learn australian, all you have to do is memorize "oi", "mate" and know what "yeah nah" and "nah yeah" means, easy!
C'est très facil si tu le connais depuis que tu es jeune. Le seule problème est qu'il y a tellement d'exception ! Je ne connais aucune règle qui n'en a pas.
He actually used the wrong flag for Dutch (im from the netherlands), its this one🇳🇱. But corect me if im wrong, cuz he also could have meant deutch. Hope this helps❤️
As a Norwegian i confirm some of our words have the same words in English for an example. English: smart Norwegian: smart (the t sounds slightly a ch sound)
Spanish should swap with French from my experience learning both languages, it took 3 years to casually learn how to speak French and literally like 5 weeks for Spanish
@@diggernick6515 You might be surprised but I actually can speak English without using Google Translate. (I know it's crazy since French speakers suck at English).
As a matter of fact, Dutch is the easiest language in the world (just as easy as English) and also for an English speaker - I learned Dutch to an advanced level (over 8.000 base words) after only focusing on it for about three months, because Dutch has almost only very pretty words, and one tends to remember prettier and more distinctive words faster, and I also focused on the other languages that I’m learning for a few months, so I am intermediate level in Norwegian / German / Swedish and Portuguese, and I learned Spanish to a native speaker level in childhood 100% passively by watching a lot of movies and TV series in Spanish and by learning many songs with lyrics in Spanish, so Spanish / Italian / Esperanto are also super easy, and Welsh / Breton / Cornish are also super easy, and they are all category 1 languages, but I am beginner level in most of them at the moment - French is also a category 1 language and the words are easy to learn, but the spelling it’s a bit harder to learn and to get used to, but I know over 2.000 French words at the moment, and hopefully I get to an advanced level fast, but I am learning so many languages at the same time, so over the past few days I’ve been focusing more on Hungarian and Slovene and Icelandic and Swedish and Norwegian!
As a Norwegian I can confirm the reason is that we speak quicker we have more words for one word we have a lot of shortcut for words and we have over 10 different accents witch means we can say earth in 10 different ways if we did all accents
read rhymes with lead, read rhymes with lead, but read doesn't rhyme with lead, and read doesn't rhyme with lead also buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo
@@britaandriannegrov9337it's like putting the Mexican flag for Spanish or the Brazilian flag for Portuguese. In fact its worse because Dutch (flemish)isn't the only language spoken in Belgium
@@amiwill. If you were brought up with French and/or lived in Quebec yes, for the rest of the provinces who don't have French as our main language it's a bit harder
French is so ez I got a 93.5 in my first ever delf in grade 5 and met the French ambassador of my country a year later with some of my other friends who got even higher!! A girl even got 99!!!!!!!
As another Norwegian I have to agree, but would like to add that there are like 1000+ dialects here and might be really difficult to understand those if you learn "bokmål"
@@ARogueGod It's maybe easy for you it is harder for me as a Russian I have to remember all noun,pronoun,verb,adverb,adjective,objective and also there are past, present,and future form
@@angelvillalobos6776 perhaps, but whenever I discuss them with my friends (I take Spanish and they take French) it always seems to me as though there are more ways of conjugating a verb or specifying something with only a slight change of spelling in French. I’m not expert though and languages are not really my thing, so don’t count on me 100% 🙂
Russian is actually surprisingly easy to learn to if you don't know it then it can be kind of intimidating but do a couple Duolingo lessons and it's pretty easy
I knew Norwegian was going ro be atleast on it because i speak it and its easy for my family from another country who cant speak or now can speak a little.
As someone whos first language is English and has learned both Spanish and French, I would just like to say.... French is WAYYYY more difficult to learn than Spanish by far!
@@cinnamonxbunz some of them speak dutch, some speak French. It would be more reasonable to show the Netherlands, as people from the Netherlands are Dutch
My current levels are... - intermediate level in Old Norse / Icelandic / Welsh - writer level in English + native speaker level in Spanish - upper advanced level in Dutch + advanced level in Norwegian - mid intermediate level in German / Swedish / Portuguese / French / Italian - beginner level in Breton / Hungarian / Gothic / Latin / Faroese / Galician / Danish / Slovene - total beginner in Cornish / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Aranese / Elfdalian / Gallo / Limburgish / Occitan / Luxembourgish / Catalan / East Norse / Ripuarian / Swiss German / Alemanic / Austrian German / PlatDeitsch / Greenlandic Norse / Friulian / Pretarolo / Sardinian / Neapolitan / Sicilian / Venetian / Esperanto / Walloon / Ladin / Guernsey / Norn / Burgundian / West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian / Yiddish / Afrikaans / Finnish / Latvian / Estonian etc (and the other languages based on Dutch / German / Norwegian / Italian / French that are referred to as ‘dialects’ but are usually a different language with different spelling etc) (I highly recommend learning Dutch / Icelandic + Norse + Faroese / Norwegian as they are so magical, as pretty / refined / poetic as English, and they are super easy to learn, like, about 4 months ago I started learning lots of new words in Icelandic & Norse, and I noticed that every word or almost every word is so pretty and memorable, so the words are as easy to learn as the Dutch words, and now I know well over 2.000 words in each, and I didn’t even try too hard to learn one language only, as I am learning 15+ languages at the same time, and I feel like I am at that level where I can understand how the Norse languages work very well and I know all the sounds and pronunciation rules and almost all the spelling rules very well, and I can naturally pronounce almost every word without even practicing, as the pronunciation is very easy for most words - all other Germanic and the other pretty languages on my list are also gorgeous, so they are all a great option!)
Norse and Icelandic are two of the prettiest languages I’ve ever seen, with real gorgeous words like erfiði / yfir / haf / vindr / dyn / skegg / dróttinn / veit / drengr / fjall / hǫnd / fisksins / lengr / hvassir / rauðr / hvarr / grænn / hvat / líkligr / hǫss / afi / frændi / heitir / veð / hráka / þó / kvern / mælti / hét / setja / hinn / kveða / sinn / leið / brott / knerri / við / dýr / með / heyra / eða etc, and the word endings (like nir and inn and sins etc) and the letter combinations are so pretty, just like the word endings and letter combinations in English and Dutch and Norwegian, and Icelandic is very similar, and Faroese also, and Icelandic also has almost only gorgeous words like efni / verða / fer / eyra / nafni / hef / leita / hafið / drekka / líf / dreki / samviska / logn / vindinn / viska / hæna / garðinn / sófn etc - I can’t stop learning new pretty words in Old Norse and Icelandic (and the other pretty languages) and they are really áddìctive to look at and read and hear in lyrics etc, I’ve been listening to Skáld songs in Old Norse and Icelandic since I found the first song in Old Norse (Troll Kalla Mik) and I’ve memorized most of those lyrics!
Some of the prettiest Welsh words are derwen / nest / afon / talar / adeilad / helygen / afal / hyd / lolfa / enaid / bedwen / neithiwr / ynys / nos / sydd / noswaith / ers / mynd / rhosyn / eistedd / gwych / tân / fawr / telyn or delyn / ynddyn / llaw or dwylo / doeth / fewn or mewn / gwar / bys / ffynnon / swrn / tew / blin / mynydd / braich etc, and Welsh reminds of Dutch because they have a similar intonation / vibe and they both have the soft CH (H-like K-controlled) sound and many of the words have similar types of letter combinations - Welsh is a category 1 language, and Breton / Cornish are also category 1 languages, just like Dutch and English and Norwegian etc, so they are very easy to learn, and have mostly pretty words, and they have many words that remind of Norse words and Icelandic words and Dutch words and English words and Norwegian words etc, and I am beginner level in Welsh and in the other 5 Celtic languages!
Another one I would recommend, is Italian. It has very similar sentence structure, with minor changes in a few parts, the words are simple enough to remember and simple enough to use
I am from Romania and I have been learning English for 10 years and German for 6 months, and Norwegian seems to me to be a more simplified German with many influences from English!...
Funfact: english i actually one of thw hardest languages to learn if you dont already know it, because all of the different pronounciations from different countries and how many words look similar. English is also the hardest language to write because they have alot of punctuation you need to get right and all of the random symbols.
the more southern part of spain is english speaking like malaga marbella etc but central spain like madrid for example when I went there about 1 in 100 people spoke decent english the rest could only say a few words
@@Entername-md1ev french in canada is big considering it is the 2nd largest country in the world over 7 million of their population can speak the language fluently
I personally think irish is very easy to speak like i used to write everything in irish down in my books and then i became very fluent by 8 im from Ireland and we only learn a little bit in school
I'm learning Norwegian and as a German I find it quite easy. Because it has German and English aspects. For example: vinduer means windows, stol means Stuhl (German for chair). Sometimes it sounds like a German or an English word and sometimes it looks like a German or an English word, so from the spelling. I also think that Spanish and French are one of the hardest to learn, 'cause they have sooo many articles and in English it's just "the"😅
I'm learning German (im native English speaker) and i find it much easier than Spanish or French just because i love the German pronunciation of words. However, i do find it difficult having to use six different words for "the" and the over all sentence structure
@@razberrycuddles22 Yeah, that's the difficulty with German. Most of it doesn't make sense at all. For example: "wieso", "weshalb" and "warum" means all why and you can use it in the same context😅. I'm glad, that I learned that language as a native speaker. I couldn't learned it by myself. 😅
@@LilyPottersBookTube after i learn German im either going to do something I'm going to enjoy, or despise. But after German i want to learn Bokmål Norwegian, polish and here's the twist... Greek
@@LilyPottersBookTube I'm self teaching since my school doesn't offer. I use German marching music. I like German heavy metal. And i also use Duolingo. Sometimes even i play games i put some text on in German
Bro really had the audacity to put the Belgian flag with the word Dutch
Wdym Both Belgium and The Netherlands speaks dutch- right?
@@aniram13cNot really, Belgium has 3 Language that it speak's, they speak german in parts of wallonia, and they speak French in most of Flanders and wallonia, they speak Dutch at most parts of Flanders and parts of wallonia.
Edit: For those who are arguing, its According to "Google"
@@aniram13c That's like putting Finland's flag for swedish
@@aniram13c A tiny part of Belgium speaks German, while half speaks french and the other half speaks dutch. The dutch they speak there is called Flanders which is a variation of actual dutch
Ikr😊
"Then we have Dutch"
Puts Belgium flag💀
They also speak Dutch
@@O.G.M.A AND FRENCH AND GERMAN
@@O.G.M.A yeah but its like saying spanish and putting the flag of mexico
@@Kai_075its like becoming ishowspeed
Yeah
Bro had the guts to put an Belgian flag by Dutch 😭🇳🇱
I know😢
I am dutch
I was thinking same
its ''a Belgian flag'' not ''AN Belgian flag'', when a word begins with a vowel, you put AN, but if it doesnt, you just put A
I,m dutch
As a French and Spanish speaker as myself, French is way harder than Spanish
Oui
True
I mean, you can see that he had no idea whatsoever what he talked about, so who cares at this point. 😅😅
Non
@@Francais5015 What would be your argument?? 😅😅 It's way harder to get into French which is the top reason it's harder for me, but also orthography, pronunciation and of course listening comprehension.
I speak a bit of French “OuI oUi OuI” “BoNjOuR” that’s about it
My French ass died 💀
Que?
Ouais, toujours ces gens qui croient qu’ils peuvent parler français mdr..
@@deadteddybear2423 their just joking
@@dheran1769 ik i was joining in the joke
Bon appetit
Top 5 easy language for english speakers:
1.American
2.Canadian
3.British
4.Australian
5.Texan
Aren’t those already english 😂😂
@@duncan54197r/wooosh
Newzealandian
Those are dialects not languages
New zealandian
Spanish pronunciation is easy, but the grammar is hard in french things work the opposite way.
What for example?? 😮
@Alltagundso for example, there are so many irregular verbs, and you basically have to memorise their conjugation in different tenses and then we have tenses including subjunctive. Some verbs are irregular and regular in some tenses. All of this basically drives the learner crazy like for example, I had a really hard time learning spanish, but still, I managed to learn.Hope you understand.
@@fathimahfarzana6891 So by opposite you meant that French is easier than Spanish??
@Alltagundso french is a non phonetic language like English it takes you a lot of time to learn the pronunciation by mastering the accents, the sounds, and also the infamous french R.But the grammar is very easy.
@@fathimahfarzana6891 Sure, but grammar is only one part.
Also, I think the Spanish grammar is easy, it's just more.
All in all, the fact that an average person will get the hang of it faster and will be able to have conversations earlier, beats it all for most people and that on the other hand keeps up the motivation, which is crucial for learning. 🤗🤗
NO WAY THAT HE PUT THE BELGIUM FLAG WITH DUTCH!
One thing to note: no language is ever "easy" to learn
as a french girl, spanish IS easy since its similar to french
Yes some are easier to learn though like Spanish for an English speaker is easier to learn than mandarin for example
NO WAY! If you know english, then you can easily learn australian, all you have to do is memorize "oi", "mate" and know what "yeah nah" and "nah yeah" means, easy!
@@arklemen australian isnt a language
@@arklemen oh it was a joke
As a Belgian I have never seen anyone put our flag on 'Dutch'. I already could smell the genuine dutch people in the comments
Me neither.
i am mad
Kan echt niet!!
It hurt so much. I as a Dutch person am so sad that this guy did this to us
Ik bent en Jongen (I only know a little bit of dutch)
Dan:
"I speak a little bit of French,"
"Baguettes on the Eiffel tower"💀💀💀
Loll
As a French I feel traumatized from some of the comments 💀
Do you people not like when outsiders try to talk in French with you? I have heard this somewhere and I wanted to confirm
You canno possibly say French is easier than Spanish
True
i was looking for this exact comment
C'est très facil si tu le connais depuis que tu es jeune. Le seule problème est qu'il y a tellement d'exception ! Je ne connais aucune règle qui n'en a pas.
@@have_a_great_day. No sabemos francés amigo
Meanwhile me learning spanish nos as a native English speaker while my friends learning french
this guy really said spanish is harder than french...
No?? France is second… Spanish is fifth??
@@nyxiethepixie it's top 5 easiest, according to the video spanish is harder than french
Like Spanish is so easy
Fr
I’m taking French and I took Spanish, he is 100% wrong. French is so mf hard
as someone who’s first language is english and is currently learning Spanish, it’s not hard at all
Exactly. English is my second language and I am learning Spanish these days it is quite similar to English.
He actually used the wrong flag for Dutch (im from the netherlands), its this one🇳🇱. But corect me if im wrong, cuz he also could have meant deutch. Hope this helps❤️
It really means that French is the easiest to learn for English foreign language learners other than the English language that's ranked #1.
Thank you Sherlock
😂
@@notBeyazKurt 😂😂😂😂
Actually it's Frisian!
No shit sherlock
As a Dutch person, I don’t know how to feel anymore…
How tf did this blow up 💀
🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪
Hij doet het express voor de vieuws 😂😂
Do you know urdu?
Dude your language is literally "gee bee juggy dee"
Ye that’s what u think our language is
To be an Norway Norwegen person it's really easy not questioning I'm Norwegen.
As a Norwegian i confirm some of our words have the same words in English for an example.
English: smart
Norwegian: smart
(the t sounds slightly a ch sound)
Bro really used the flag of BELGIUM for Dutch
I mean they speak dutch too
@@funtimetim7109 yea but they speak fake dutch just trust me bro
@@timovankleef7476 ok I live in germany,I will go there
@@funtimetim7109 there dutch is a different accent a literal variation called Flanders
@@kingofnothingman1884 i know but still its fake
Bro had the balls to put the Belgian flag for Dutch 💀
BaLls, gImMiE tHeM, tHeY sO yUmMy DaDdY!
@@ThatOneBeaniedKid bro wtf
69th likes
@@ThatOneBeaniedKid Wth girl
Spanish should swap with French from my experience learning both languages, it took 3 years to casually learn how to speak French and literally like 5 weeks for Spanish
I have been learning French in skl for 10 years now and I still can't make a full sentence 👍
As a French, I can confirm Spanish is way easier to learn than French for an English person.
Did you use google translate or are you one of those few rare french man that speak english.
@@diggernick6515 You might be surprised but I actually can speak English without using Google Translate. (I know it's crazy since French speakers suck at English).
Russian is much harder than French
As a matter of fact, Dutch is the easiest language in the world (just as easy as English) and also for an English speaker - I learned Dutch to an advanced level (over 8.000 base words) after only focusing on it for about three months, because Dutch has almost only very pretty words, and one tends to remember prettier and more distinctive words faster, and I also focused on the other languages that I’m learning for a few months, so I am intermediate level in Norwegian / German / Swedish and Portuguese, and I learned Spanish to a native speaker level in childhood 100% passively by watching a lot of movies and TV series in Spanish and by learning many songs with lyrics in Spanish, so Spanish / Italian / Esperanto are also super easy, and Welsh / Breton / Cornish are also super easy, and they are all category 1 languages, but I am beginner level in most of them at the moment - French is also a category 1 language and the words are easy to learn, but the spelling it’s a bit harder to learn and to get used to, but I know over 2.000 French words at the moment, and hopefully I get to an advanced level fast, but I am learning so many languages at the same time, so over the past few days I’ve been focusing more on Hungarian and Slovene and Icelandic and Swedish and Norwegian!
Dutch words are just too pretty not to know, and 83 of the prettiest words in Dutch are - ver, vlinder, verloren, feest, adem, vaste, veel, verdween, heel, het, heen, voorbij, vandaan, verven, domein, verwaald, drijfzand, lief, leegte, liefde, heerst, einde, zonder, weet, avond, vult, gekomen, centrum, moment, pad, loop, overheerst, vallen, twijfel, vinden, kelde, wald, ter, geweest, vrees, grenzen, verleg, rein, van, stellen, wilde, steeds, verstreken, evenbeeld, bleef, steile, vrede, stem, wens, net, tijd, stille, verwenst, zalig, ochtend, zilverreiger, weer, overwint, heerlijk, zin, hart, beweert, vanaf, kwijt, wolken, mes, verliezen, dwaling, verlaten, rede, trek, tuinhek, brand, verdien, blikje, vertellen, verder, vertrek...
I know French ..
"Wee wee wee, bonjour"
*Ends**
💀
its not wee its oui
@@b1ued fr
As a person who is learning french i can say that who made this is an as§holę and just heard ppl speak these languages and never tried to learn em
As a Norwegian I can confirm the reason is that we speak quicker we have more words for one word we have a lot of shortcut for words and we have over 10 different accents witch means we can say earth in 10 different ways if we did all accents
English 🤝 French: Their grammar makes absolutely no sense
He made 2 comments
@@HoaTran-cy7sd 3*
read rhymes with lead, read rhymes with lead, but read doesn't rhyme with lead, and read doesn't rhyme with lead
also buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo
Ive lived in Bosnia my whole life and i'm still learning bosnian grammar... At this point i know english better
@@ChuuyasTackyHat i’ve heard how bad the language is in terms of grammar. It really depends what has a bigger presence in your life.
I swear, not all British people are like this.
ok :’)
Hope so.
Most of British people don’t know any language except English
Bri’ish
All my knowledge about Brits and the UK comes from the documentary series Little Britain.
Fr tho I’m Romanian I moved to Norway and it’s super easy I go to school and I learn French and Spanish and let me tell you Spanish is hella hard
Belgium is now Dutch meanwhile Netherlands
“Dutch”
**put’s Belgium Flag**
They speak dutch too
@@britaandriannegrov9337 multiple languages tho, and Dutch originates from the netherlands
I speak dutch and i am indeed belgian ( english is easy here too )
@@britaandriannegrov9337it's like putting the Mexican flag for Spanish or the Brazilian flag for Portuguese. In fact its worse because Dutch (flemish)isn't the only language spoken in Belgium
the majority in Belgium speaks Dutch 😛
Bro had the audacity to say french is easy
Fr
@@amiwill. If you were brought up with French and/or lived in Quebec yes, for the rest of the provinces who don't have French as our main language it's a bit harder
Spanish is way easier than French
I am surprised by number 2. French is not at all an easy language to learn for English speakers.
Go to Canada bc you can speak French
@@Dogg488 ok
Everything he said makes no sense, it's all just a joke.🤣😂
@@Alltagundso I thought so
French is objectively an easy language for me english speakers.. stop making it seem like it’s extremely hard to learn
As a Serbian, i can confirm that our laungage is hard.☺️
He really had the audacity, put the Belgium flag instead of the Dutch🇳🇱
And you hqd the audacity too
Norsk er enkelt
Belgium is just southern Netherlands🇳🇱 .
Well, at least they speak Dutch in northern Belgium…
@@LorzThat’s the Dutch flag
Me:🇳🇱Dutch flag
Dan:🇧🇪Dutch flag
Teacher:no wonder you couldn't learn Spanish
French is so ez I got a 93.5 in my first ever delf in grade 5 and met the French ambassador of my country a year later with some of my other friends who got even higher!!
A girl even got 99!!!!!!!
belguim'i can ex-
netherlands'no you can not💀
Bro put the Belgian flag next to the word Dutch 😂
Northern Belgium
But Belgiums also speak french
@Mayux101 and dutch is spoken in the whole country (and some english)
Flemish region of Belgium speak dutch
@@mahadabdi5996 southern Belgium is French speaking and north Belgium is Dutch speaking
I am currently learning French on Duolingo and honestly tenses etc are hell. Spanish is relatively easy actually because the language is phonetic.
Watch out for the bird
Allo je parles français et englais
Spanish or vanish
The actual answer: the easiest language to speak is the language you speak everyday.
german is pretty easy i wouldn't say it should be on the list but it is pretty easy
As a Norwegian speaking person I can confirm it's really easy to learn
True me to
Same with Swedish
True me to
As another Norwegian I have to agree, but would like to add that there are like 1000+ dialects here and might be really difficult to understand those if you learn "bokmål"
You just have to relearn it from scratch if you ever travel anywhere
I never new that Belgium was Dutch
I guess technically half the country speaks Dutch but definitely not netherlands
I just noticed why you mentioned that 💀
I didn’t mean to make a flashback of Germany 💀
Part of it
Only half, its actually slightly different, but still he should have put the Dutch flag
As a Dutchman, I am very mad that you put the f*cking Belgium flag for the Dutch language
Im english and im learning irish on duolingo and its actually pretty hard
Irish is not a Germanic language, so... 😅😅
As an english speaker,i can confirm that english is the easiest language to learn
Except grammar
@@Daniel-js9cr no grammar is easy
@@ARogueGod It's maybe easy for you it is harder for me as a Russian I have to remember all noun,pronoun,verb,adverb,adjective,objective and also there are past, present,and future form
@@Daniel-js9cr oh idk that it's hard for other people all my family is also very good at English
@@ARogueGod Where are you from love from Russia
French is actually much harder than Spanish when it comes to grammar
No, theyre almost the same. French is hard in pronunciation.also french when it comes to Subjuntive is much easier than Spanish
@@angelvillalobos6776 perhaps, but whenever I discuss them with my friends (I take Spanish and they take French) it always seems to me as though there are more ways of conjugating a verb or specifying something with only a slight change of spelling in French. I’m not expert though and languages are not really my thing, so don’t count on me 100% 🙂
I’m from Belgium 😂❤maybe a vacation to me?😂
Russian is actually surprisingly easy to learn to if you don't know it then it can be kind of intimidating but do a couple Duolingo lessons and it's pretty easy
America: I'm basically English but some words are different shopping cart=trolley
Dutch: THATS NOT ME
This is me🇳🇱
We also speak Dutch in Belgium Dont we?
@@Not.ur.fave.brunette dutch was originally from the netherlands
Flanders was originally a part of the netherlands
@@Not.ur.fave.brunetteActually, it’s Flemish Dutch
Two things :
You’re américain cause Dutch = 🇳🇱
And French is VERY difficult
I speak 6 languages and the more you learn the easier it gets
Do you speak Arabic?
@@Egyptian-Animalsno
I speak dutch and its true really easy to learn
Dutch is not 🇧🇪 but 🇳🇱
Flanders tho
@@rongpirson5250 fuck flanders thats like saying spanish and putting down the mexican flag
@@adriantsien1867its both
@@rongpirson5250 you can also say French is from Belgium with that mindset
Ik heb de zelfde voornaam 😮
German has left the chat:
I am doing this language
German is hard asf
@@emilia9791 It isn’t that bad the words are very logical and the word order isn’t too hard to grasp. I find it way easier than French
@@emilia9791 german is easy compared to e.g norwegian imo
Ima learn grman so i can sing Erika
As someone with Spanish as their first langauge, I find French very hard to learn. (French has some similar things but it's still hard)
I knew Norwegian was going ro be atleast on it because i speak it and its easy for my family from another country who cant speak or now can speak a little.
I speak Norwegian and a little bit of Spanish as a non English speaker, and I can agree this is easy
Norwegian is very easy. I'm learning it
@Henrikpromp hi Jeg heter (your name)
@Henrikpromp there are many 'moments' in Norwegian. Which one do you need, like second? Or now? Or any happy moments etc
@Henrikpromp yes it is, there are two more for other 'moments'
@@yoongisshadow281 hei gutta hva skjer? Som en nordmann dere er gode på norsk.
I learned Spanish in a year
Definitely easier than French
Fr Spanish is easy and french is so damn hard
Is the Dutch in Belgium
French is sm easier
@@lucaswesterveld68yes and German in Switzerland.
@@scabbersssit's easy. But the pronounciation is a fckin struggle for me
1 is just crazy, I never expected that…
*"dutch with belgian flag appears epicly"*
I’m learning both French and Spanish. Trust me - Spanish is so much easier!
Gracias!
I’m Spanish speaker, speak Portuguese also and will learn Italian now, after that French because is so different from Spanish
As someone whos first language is English and has learned both Spanish and French, I would just like to say.... French is WAYYYY more difficult to learn than Spanish by far!
As someone whos first language is Arabic and has learned both Spanish and French, I can confirm that Spanish is WAAAAY difficult than french by far!
My first language was Spanish and I learned English not long after and French just seems hard to learn
@@reddysetty French is soo confusing! Spanish is easy once you've figured out the basics
Ikr
I agree
Should’ve put Italian at 1, not fair
Poland sitting in the corner with the hardest
"Yeah I speak French. Listen to this."
"Ok.."
"Je Mappelle France, oui oui baguette!"
My name is france, yes yes baguette!
@@Saviiiiiiiiii I actually know a frenchie named France 😭
@@Kezianisch 💀💀💀💀
Oui je parle français. Ecouter à ce.
About as far as I know from my 8th grade French class
Your name is French?
I’m learning French and Spanish and i find Spanish easier than French for some reason
Porque es mucho más fácil, el francés tiene mucha pronunciación como el english
Netherlands: Am I a joke? 😢
South Pacific forums is the easy one but what we speak with our family is Afrikaans
Bro said Dutch but showed a Belgium flag.
I think they speak Dutch in Belgium
@@cinnamonxbunz Belgium speaks French too
@@cinnamonxbunz some of them speak dutch, some speak French. It would be more reasonable to show the Netherlands, as people from the Netherlands are Dutch
@@CZcams_Central I know
Learn your geography bro Flemish region of Belgium speak dutch
make an apology video for the dutchies right now! 😭😭
You used the belgium flag for dutch and as a dutch person myself i feel very offended but most importantly it is very funny
As a 15 year old girl I learn swedish 🇸🇪 in 4 months it's so much easy.
As a native portuguese speaker, spanish is way easier to learn
edit: thanks for the 10 likes :D
I am a native English speaker and I speak French better than English-
Before anyone asks I have no clue
I'm learning Norwegian and I think it does deserve to be number 4
Guys, every language is easy to speak. Just grind doulingo.
😅😅 For example Russian on Duolingo. 😂😂
Blud really had the guts to put the Belgian flag with the word "Dutch"
Half of them speak Dutch. Close enough.
My current levels are...
- intermediate level in Old Norse / Icelandic / Welsh
- writer level in English + native speaker level in Spanish
- upper advanced level in Dutch + advanced level in Norwegian
- mid intermediate level in German / Swedish / Portuguese / French / Italian
- beginner level in Breton / Hungarian / Gothic / Latin / Faroese / Galician / Danish / Slovene
- total beginner in Cornish / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Aranese / Elfdalian / Gallo / Limburgish / Occitan / Luxembourgish / Catalan / East Norse / Ripuarian / Swiss German / Alemanic / Austrian German / PlatDeitsch / Greenlandic Norse / Friulian / Pretarolo / Sardinian / Neapolitan / Sicilian / Venetian / Esperanto / Walloon / Ladin / Guernsey / Norn / Burgundian / West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian / Yiddish / Afrikaans / Finnish / Latvian / Estonian etc (and the other languages based on Dutch / German / Norwegian / Italian / French that are referred to as ‘dialects’ but are usually a different language with different spelling etc)
(I highly recommend learning Dutch / Icelandic + Norse + Faroese / Norwegian as they are so magical, as pretty / refined / poetic as English, and they are super easy to learn, like, about 4 months ago I started learning lots of new words in Icelandic & Norse, and I noticed that every word or almost every word is so pretty and memorable, so the words are as easy to learn as the Dutch words, and now I know well over 2.000 words in each, and I didn’t even try too hard to learn one language only, as I am learning 15+ languages at the same time, and I feel like I am at that level where I can understand how the Norse languages work very well and I know all the sounds and pronunciation rules and almost all the spelling rules very well, and I can naturally pronounce almost every word without even practicing, as the pronunciation is very easy for most words - all other Germanic and the other pretty languages on my list are also gorgeous, so they are all a great option!)
Norse and Icelandic are two of the prettiest languages I’ve ever seen, with real gorgeous words like erfiði / yfir / haf / vindr / dyn / skegg / dróttinn / veit / drengr / fjall / hǫnd / fisksins / lengr / hvassir / rauðr / hvarr / grænn / hvat / líkligr / hǫss / afi / frændi / heitir / veð / hráka / þó / kvern / mælti / hét / setja / hinn / kveða / sinn / leið / brott / knerri / við / dýr / með / heyra / eða etc, and the word endings (like nir and inn and sins etc) and the letter combinations are so pretty, just like the word endings and letter combinations in English and Dutch and Norwegian, and Icelandic is very similar, and Faroese also, and Icelandic also has almost only gorgeous words like efni / verða / fer / eyra / nafni / hef / leita / hafið / drekka / líf / dreki / samviska / logn / vindinn / viska / hæna / garðinn / sófn etc - I can’t stop learning new pretty words in Old Norse and Icelandic (and the other pretty languages) and they are really áddìctive to look at and read and hear in lyrics etc, I’ve been listening to Skáld songs in Old Norse and Icelandic since I found the first song in Old Norse (Troll Kalla Mik) and I’ve memorized most of those lyrics!
Dutch words are just too pretty not to know, and 83 of the prettiest words in Dutch are - ver, vlinder, verloren, feest, adem, vaste, veel, verdween, heel, het, heen, voorbij, vandaan, verven, domein, verwaald, drijfzand, lief, leegte, liefde, heerst, einde, zonder, weet, avond, vult, gekomen, centrum, moment, pad, loop, overheerst, vallen, twijfel, vinden, kelde, wald, ter, geweest, vrees, grenzen, verleg, rein, van, stellen, wilde, steeds, verstreken, evenbeeld, bleef, steile, vrede, stem, wens, net, tijd, stille, verwenst, zalig, ochtend, zilverreiger, weer, overwint, heerlijk, zin, hart, beweert, vanaf, kwijt, wolken, mes, verliezen, dwaling, verlaten, rede, trek, tuinhek, brand, verdien, blikje, vertellen, verder, vertrek...
Some of the prettiest Welsh words are derwen / nest / afon / talar / adeilad / helygen / afal / hyd / lolfa / enaid / bedwen / neithiwr / ynys / nos / sydd / noswaith / ers / mynd / rhosyn / eistedd / gwych / tân / fawr / telyn or delyn / ynddyn / llaw or dwylo / doeth / fewn or mewn / gwar / bys / ffynnon / swrn / tew / blin / mynydd / braich etc, and Welsh reminds of Dutch because they have a similar intonation / vibe and they both have the soft CH (H-like K-controlled) sound and many of the words have similar types of letter combinations - Welsh is a category 1 language, and Breton / Cornish are also category 1 languages, just like Dutch and English and Norwegian etc, so they are very easy to learn, and have mostly pretty words, and they have many words that remind of Norse words and Icelandic words and Dutch words and English words and Norwegian words etc, and I am beginner level in Welsh and in the other 5 Celtic languages!
As a canadian who was learning french for a total of 11 years and still isnt fluent, put dutch over french... 😅
whoa!
I speak French 🇫🇷
@@mamienatoupapaalexisjujufel13 if it's France french that's better lol
Norwegian people speak with their mouths like normal people I'd assume.
French is actually hard I’ve been learning it for 2 years and I only know like ten words.
Another one I would recommend, is Italian. It has very similar sentence structure, with minor changes in a few parts, the words are simple enough to remember and simple enough to use
Yes
It is also a very easy language to pronounce for anyone, no need to train for months to have a decent accent
Appunto , si pronuncia come si scrive 🇮🇹
It is easy 😊
So true
I’m Norwegian and I think our language is a little bit weird sometimes but it’s also beautiful ofc
Same
Men for å være ærlig. Spansk er lettere. Vi har vanskelige lyder
I am from Romania and I have been learning English for 10 years and German for 6 months, and Norwegian seems to me to be a more simplified German with many influences from English!...
I also come from Norway
Ja, veldig enig
Oui - oui - oui is literally Italian.
Funfact: english i actually one of thw hardest languages to learn if you dont already know it, because all of the different pronounciations from different countries and how many words look similar.
English is also the hardest language to write because they have alot of punctuation you need to get right and all of the random symbols.
The thing about Spanish is Spain and Mexico are near English speaking countries
the more southern part of spain is english speaking like malaga marbella etc but central spain like madrid for example when I went there about 1 in 100 people spoke decent english the rest could only say a few words
@@zakdennison4564 that's because Gibraltar is near in southern part which is a British territory
@@ni0n734 Yeah I forgot to mention that but that is one reason definitely 💯
What about French in Canada?
@@Entername-md1ev french in canada is big considering it is the 2nd largest country in the world over 7 million of their population can speak the language fluently
Take from someone who’s first language is French, it’s very hard to fully learn it (especially the grammar) if it’s not your first language
As a person who speaks Turkish as a misin language I often struggle with my MAIN language I think it is the second hardest language to learn.
I’d say we put Afrikaans somewhere on there since it’s basically Dutch but less difficult.
They guy really said english was the easiest to learn for English speakers but ya ain't learning it if ya already know it
Wasn't it a joke💀
Who know if it was a joke but for real tho English sucks there pen can mean 2 completely different things
🤓🤓🤓
@@MelanieClappWhat about it?
Actually french is very hard, there is alot of rules, exceptions, etc
NO WAY BRO SAID DUTCH AND DARED TO PUT IN THE BELGIAN FLAG
I personally think irish is very easy to speak like i used to write everything in irish down in my books and then i became very fluent by 8 im from Ireland and we only learn a little bit in school
I'm learning Norwegian and as a German I find it quite easy. Because it has German and English aspects. For example: vinduer means windows, stol means Stuhl (German for chair). Sometimes it sounds like a German or an English word and sometimes it looks like a German or an English word, so from the spelling.
I also think that Spanish and French are one of the hardest to learn, 'cause they have sooo many articles and in English it's just "the"😅
I'm learning German (im native English speaker) and i find it much easier than Spanish or French just because i love the German pronunciation of words. However, i do find it difficult having to use six different words for "the" and the over all sentence structure
@@razberrycuddles22 Yeah, that's the difficulty with German. Most of it doesn't make sense at all. For example: "wieso", "weshalb" and "warum" means all why and you can use it in the same context😅.
I'm glad, that I learned that language as a native speaker. I couldn't learned it by myself. 😅
@@LilyPottersBookTube after i learn German im either going to do something I'm going to enjoy, or despise.
But after German i want to learn Bokmål Norwegian, polish and here's the twist... Greek
@@razberrycuddles22 I love Bokmål Norwegian, it sounds sooo great😍 I wanna learn Dutch, Spanish and French after that. How do you learn German?
@@LilyPottersBookTube I'm self teaching since my school doesn't offer. I use German marching music. I like German heavy metal. And i also use Duolingo. Sometimes even i play games i put some text on in German
Woah, woah, woah. Why no Haitian Creole? From my experience, Kreyòl is so much simpler and easier to learn than French. 💪🏿🇭🇹
was half expecting him to put monaco when saying french 💀💀
French: J’adore tes vidéos de CZcams et sa fait toujours ma journée meilleur