Germans Try To Guess The Language | Easy German 418

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  • čas přidán 18. 09. 2021
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    ---
    Other Easy Languages Channels:
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    Easy Languages: / learnlanguages
    Learn German with our street interviews: In this episode we test how well Germans know other languages and show the random conversations from our Easy Languages partners as an audio file. How many languages can you guess right? 😃
    This video was inspired by "Easy Greek 114 - Greeks Try To Guess the Language": • Greeks Try to Guess th...
    ---
    PRODUCED BY:
    Easy Languages is an international video project aiming at supporting people worldwide to learn languages through authentic street interviews and expose the street culture of participating partner countries abroad. Episodes are produced in local languages and contain subtitles in both the original language as well as in English.
    ---
    Hosts of this episode: Janusz Hamerski/Carina Schmid
    Camera & Edit: Chris Thornberry
    Translation: Ben Eve

Komentáře • 994

  • @sesshia8560
    @sesshia8560 Před 2 lety +292

    I think the reason they couldn't recognize Turkish is that of the difference in intonation and rhythm between immigrant Turks and Turks living in Turkey

    • @conorsmith8551
      @conorsmith8551 Před 2 lety +16

      I thought the Turkish was danish 😆😆

    • @Tan-zi4eh
      @Tan-zi4eh Před 2 lety +14

      @@conorsmith8551 I think Danish sounds like Scandinavic French.

    • @conorsmith8551
      @conorsmith8551 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Tan-zi4eh danish is very distinct isn't it haha

    • @DE-iv8if
      @DE-iv8if Před 2 lety +19

      I do not know, but I actually could recognize Turkish. :D Maybe thd Germans simply do not _really_ listen to Turkish _when_ they hearing it. It just passes through them like a "Ghost".... :D And so they do not know how Turkish actually sounds like...

    • @realsociedad3858
      @realsociedad3858 Před 2 lety

      that's true!!

  • @sosolafrenchgirl197
    @sosolafrenchgirl197 Před 2 lety +357

    No one
    Not a single soul
    French :
    J'AIME BEAUCOUP LE FROMAGE 😂😂😂

    • @confusioneternelle
      @confusioneternelle Před 2 lety +15

      Hatte er nicht sogar gesagt "J'adore le fromage"? xD

    • @yianniskatsos7012
      @yianniskatsos7012 Před 2 lety +4

      When you recognise this because you watched the Easy French video…

    • @sosolafrenchgirl197
      @sosolafrenchgirl197 Před 2 lety +2

      @@yianniskatsos7012 nah im just french 😂😂😂

    • @Marie-zo7hy
      @Marie-zo7hy Před 2 lety +2

      But I find he sounds strange... like a stranger who speaks French🤔

  • @bujub7250
    @bujub7250 Před 2 lety +64

    06:25 the guy who said Kazakhstan 😳😳 He was sooo close Kazakh language is one of the Turk languages like Turkish, Uyghur, Azerbaijani and more!

    • @Sheijian
      @Sheijian Před rokem

      Yeah, it sounds different from the turkish I heard until now, but still similar, so it had to be something in the region.

  • @hugodaniel8975
    @hugodaniel8975 Před 2 lety +259

    Funny how greek always sound like spanish and european portuguese like a slavic language.

    • @alpardal
      @alpardal Před 2 lety +43

      To my ears, Greek sounds a bit like Italian - I think it has a bit of that characteristic rhythm

    • @ilovekittens129
      @ilovekittens129 Před 2 lety +17

      I also thought it was Italian

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Před 2 lety +14

      @@alpardal most people think it is Spain Spanish because of the way how they pronounce the s and the fast rhythm and musicality of the language. Same with Portuguese. How Portuguese pronounce the S is the same as polish people pronounce it and the rhythm sounds Russian. And these are only the languages we most commonly hear. Imagine how many more languages there are. I heard Quechua from South America and I could swear they were speaking Finnish or Swedish! 🤯

    • @alpardal
      @alpardal Před 2 lety +23

      @@klimtkahlo I'm a native Portuguese speaker and so it's pretty easy for me to understand Spanish since they are really close languages - that probably makes it harder for me to "hear" Greek as Spanish. Italian is also pretty similar and understandable to a certain extent, so that's why it's sort of easy for me to recognize Greek: it sounds a bit like Italian, but I can't understand anything at all, so it's probably Greek 🤣

    • @DE-iv8if
      @DE-iv8if Před 2 lety +3

      If You _really_ heard Greek and Spanish before that little Experiment, both Languages would _not_ sound alike, just if You maybe do not really know both Languages and really only know English than both Languages could sound alike to You. To me Spanish sounds like Spanish and Greek sounds like Greek. I can not speak both of these Languages but I heard them before.. And both Languages sound even _very different_ to me.

  • @futtran5535
    @futtran5535 Před 2 lety +129

    Ich komme aus Vietnam, und das ist toll, Vietnamesisch zu hören. Liebe aus Vietnam !!! 🇻🇳

    • @MissMoonshineDance
      @MissMoonshineDance Před 2 lety +6

      so funny that the vietnamese example states the word Vietnam several times and folks still couldn’t guess

    • @mys31f70
      @mys31f70 Před 2 lety

      @@MissMoonshineDance like how lol

    • @mys31f70
      @mys31f70 Před 2 lety +1

      Ein andere Vietnamesen hier. :) Dieses Kanal hilft mir viel mit meiner Hörfähigkeit

    • @MissMoonshineDance
      @MissMoonshineDance Před 2 lety +2

      @@mys31f70 aber bin ich keine VNische, nur spreche ich VN und Thailandesisch. ich bim dabei, die dieses Kanal hilfreiche ist zum D lernen

    • @whyparkjiminnotridejimin
      @whyparkjiminnotridejimin Před 2 lety

      Ich finde Vietnamesisch ist recht einfach rauszuhören🤔

  • @alinaciobanu8763
    @alinaciobanu8763 Před 2 lety +51

    Ich finde es sehr schön, dass Menschen auch an Rumänisch gedacht haben.

  • @eoseguinte7529
    @eoseguinte7529 Před 2 lety +299

    That episode was really cool.
    Interesting to see that almost everyone identified Portuguese first as a Slavic language, then suggested it to be a romantic language. That's because the girl is Portuguese and Portuguese from Portugal sounds Slavic, unlike the Portuguese we speak here in Brazil which sounds completely romantic. Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷

    • @brunopimenta8204
      @brunopimenta8204 Před 2 lety +17

      Well, we Portuguese speak with closed vowels and you Brazilians speak with open vowels, that's the only major difference.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p Před 2 lety +10

      It's more the many "sch" sounds, that makes it sound slavic. The slavic write cz, or or cs or like in Janusz, the portuguese write their português without any indications, the s is not an s. From reading it, you got no idea how to speak it (if you had no course). .. there is not much difference from Portugal to Brazil cause there is not much contact to either language.

    • @eoseguinte7529
      @eoseguinte7529 Před 2 lety +7

      @@brunopimenta8204 It's not that simple, Portuguese from Portugal is more complicated to understand, and the reason don't resume itself only in open and close vowels. Sometimes we have to listen 2 or 3 times to understand what you guys said and we both speak the same language, imagine who doesn't speak. You people and 90% of other lusophone countries sound more Slavic and hard to understand while we sound more romantic and easy to understand.

    • @eoseguinte7529
      @eoseguinte7529 Před 2 lety +4

      @@holger_p That's one of the reason in fact, but there's more reasons to Portuguese from Portugal sound slavic. And when it's about the way you write, Brazilian Portuguese and European Portuguese really look like. But spoken, they considerably different.

    • @alpacinoxz
      @alpacinoxz Před 2 lety +3

      @@holger_p I am brazilian and I dont understand what Portuguese say...In this video at the first time I only recognize 3,4 words

  • @tFighterPilot
    @tFighterPilot Před 2 lety +76

    Was surprised they had such a hard time recognizing Turkish. I'm from Israel and imidiately recognized it, even though it doesn't exist at all here. Can't for the life of me tell apart Slavic languages though. All sound the same to me.

    • @zelena_helena
      @zelena_helena Před 2 lety +1

      As an Ukrainian speaker, I can only recognize Polish, Belarusian and Russian 😂😂😂

    • @aviationkid1286
      @aviationkid1286 Před 2 lety +1

      Easiest way to identify Turkish is by how it sounds. They have "e'ch..e'ch..e'ch" sound when they speak.

    • @nikitaberejnoy4359
      @nikitaberejnoy4359 Před 2 lety +1

      i heard a lot of turkic languages, but jesus i'd never say that this one was turkish

    • @xzthls4613
      @xzthls4613 Před 2 lety +2

      @@nikitaberejnoy4359 haha yeah but this is exactly what a proper turkish sounds like lol the pronunciation and everything is amazing

    • @rabia1687
      @rabia1687 Před rokem +1

      @@nikitaberejnoy4359 I dont think Turkish sounds so much like other Turkic languages, at the least to my ears as a Turkish.

  • @EasyGreekVideos
    @EasyGreekVideos Před 2 lety +360

    Als wir unseren ersten Guess the Language Video gedreht haben, haben wir gedacht, dass es wäre schön und sehr interessant, wenn alle Easy Languages Kanalen eure eigenen Version machen würden. Also, super aufregend! Die Antworten und der Video haben mir seht gut gefallen. 🎆 Wir sollen auch einen zweiten Teil mit nicht-Europäischen Sprachen machen. -Dimitris

    • @sihemghaoui9735
      @sihemghaoui9735 Před 2 lety +11

      @ Easy Greek Ja! es wäre echt toll, ich freu mich schon auf diesen zweiten teil!

    • @SamA-xu9gy
      @SamA-xu9gy Před 2 lety +2

      Where is the video ?

    • @sihemghaoui9735
      @sihemghaoui9735 Před 2 lety +2

      @@SamA-xu9gy czcams.com/video/nyWIj4P46ow/video.html

    • @rufatmaster2510
      @rufatmaster2510 Před 2 lety +8

      Hallo aus der Turkei ❤️🇹🇷🇬🇷

    • @e.koelnn
      @e.koelnn Před 5 měsíci

      das Video*

  • @hfchow007
    @hfchow007 Před 2 lety +107

    I surprised myself by being able to recognize Turkish. Interesting episode.

    • @pinboard4582
      @pinboard4582 Před 2 lety +7

      Me too

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před 2 lety +10

      @@pinboard4582 Turkish sentence in the video; sadece ben mutlu ve huzurlu yaşayıp, çevremdeki insanlar mutlu olmadıktan sonra bir anlamı olmuyor heralde.=I guess it just means nothing if I live happily and peacefully and the people around me aren't happy.

    • @Dashcam_istanbul
      @Dashcam_istanbul Před 2 lety +1

      @@PimsleurTurkishLessons Bunu bence yukarı yazmak iyi olur. 👍

  • @stefano19951995
    @stefano19951995 Před 2 lety +50

    Italian has been recognised so easily by all participants.. this makes me happy ! 🤣

    • @mujmujkit
      @mujmujkit Před 10 měsíci

      başka ne olacağdı, avrupalılar avrupa dillerini de bilmeyecekse neyi bilecekler

  • @Gaming-fantics
    @Gaming-fantics Před 2 lety +43

    Dein Kanal ist der Beste, den ich zum ersten Mal gesehen habe, als ich versuchte Deutsch zu lernen 😄

  • @MoSalah-fw5si
    @MoSalah-fw5si Před 2 lety +85

    Es ist schön, das Vietnamesisch in Video auch gespielt wird 😍. Noch ein tolles Video. Danke Easy German

  • @nemaminika
    @nemaminika Před 2 lety +135

    6:37 The guy on the left has good ears! There are so many similarities between Turkish and Korean that some scholars believe that both languages may belong to the same linguistic group, Macro-Altaic. I remember when I was watching Turkish TV, I was legit surprised by how much it sounded like Korean. 😅

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před 2 lety +14

      grammarly Turkish and Japanese are also very close. word order and suffix order etc. but to me, Korean, Japanese, Turkish all sound very differently.

    • @zeynepozgeozdemir
      @zeynepozgeozdemir Před 2 lety +23

      Are you sure? I dont think Korean sounds like Turkish. For me, they have different sounds completely but yeah grammatically similar

    • @precursors
      @precursors Před 2 lety +3

      @@zeynepozgeozdemir Actually Korean has all the Turkish sounds and both languages often use ö, ü and sh sounds

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ Před 2 lety +11

      He also said Kazakhstan and Kazakh is a Turkic language

    • @rosalia5535
      @rosalia5535 Před rokem +1

      ​@@precursors korean don't have ö ü sound 😅

  • @ReCreso
    @ReCreso Před 2 lety +367

    Janusz: Und wieso hast du Japanisch so einfach erkennt?
    Der Typ: Ah, ich habe es, ah, als ich jünger war, hab ich es... gelernt... aber nicht seriös.
    Was er sagen wollte: ICH BIN EIN WEEB
    (Und das ist gut.)

    • @filipponicotra5125
      @filipponicotra5125 Před 2 lety +7

      Bitte sagt ihr mir, dass ich nicht der einzige bin, der mit der Stimme von Janusz das gelesen hat

    • @gibranaditama2256
      @gibranaditama2256 Před 2 lety +2

      @@filipponicotra5125 haha ja ich auch

    • @grace-yz2sr
      @grace-yz2sr Před 2 lety +8

      Was ist ein WEEB?

    • @ReCreso
      @ReCreso Před 2 lety +18

      @@grace-yz2sr man nennt weeb die Leute, die die japanische Kultur (exzessiv) lieben und besonders die Anime und die Manga. Viele "weeb" haben in ihrem Leben versucht, Japanisch zu lernen, und fast alle können Japanisch einfach erkennen, weil sie es immer in Anime hören. Natürlich gilt das Gleiche für mich auch.
      Das Wort war etwas anzüglich, aber nun alle es ironischerweise benutzen - ich auch.

    • @jannekerothmann6990
      @jannekerothmann6990 Před 2 lety +11

      I was thinking that too😂 I thought he would say because he watches a lot of anime. His answer just seems too good to be true.

  • @mileshoney262
    @mileshoney262 Před 2 lety +3

    wow unglaublich tolles Video, macht ihr bitte als Series!

  • @DarkCuriosity
    @DarkCuriosity Před 2 lety +5

    I often smile when I watch your channel! This episode was really interesting!

  • @jualkyn
    @jualkyn Před 2 lety +77

    Please please do more of these !! I absolutely loved it. Would love it if you could include Korean and some other languages from Africa and Europe, like Albanian, Romanian, mongolian, etc

  • @marcianaidin2144
    @marcianaidin2144 Před 2 lety +1

    Ihr seid so kreativ! Tolles Video!

  • @casperkasparov302
    @casperkasparov302 Před 2 lety +3

    I Love This Channel!
    It Shows How Human We All Are !

  • @emirhantahta4725
    @emirhantahta4725 Před 2 lety +37

    You are the reason why I learn German cari , love from turkey

    • @blokflotnbrass
      @blokflotnbrass Před 2 lety +18

      I am Italian and I know no German but I am learning Turkish , I love Turkish and Turkish people are very open and helpful, türk kültürünü seviyorum

    • @blokflotnbrass
      @blokflotnbrass Před 2 lety +1

      @@Tan-zi4eh I don't know by the way Turks speak Italian I wouldn't say so

  • @amim7077
    @amim7077 Před 2 lety +3

    This video was so much fun and full of stuff to learn thank youuuu ♥️♥️♥️

  • @hannofranz7973
    @hannofranz7973 Před 2 lety +45

    Griechisch und Spanisch sind sich von Tonlage, Duktus und Silbenfolge sehr ähnlich ohne dass die Wörter selber irgendeine Ähnlichkeit aufweisen.

    • @sanlucar3042
      @sanlucar3042 Před 2 lety +1

      Auf Deutsch erklärt czcams.com/video/JwrTEmVdcOk/video.html

  • @mirutani4357
    @mirutani4357 Před 2 lety +84

    Janusz hat im Video gesagt, "Japanisch ist eine wunderschöne Sprache".
    Japanisch ist meine Muttersprache.
    Also habe ich mich über seine Aussage gefreut!
    Danke schön/どうもありがとう!

    • @MrGMS1221
      @MrGMS1221 Před 2 lety +9

      Many europeans love japan language, expecially compared to corean or chinese. I like it too!

    • @marcusmartins8442
      @marcusmartins8442 Před 2 lety +3

      omedetou gozaimasu. Ore ga nihon ni yon nenkan sunde itta.. Tochigi ken Ashikaga Shi. 80km Tokyo kara. Okusama wa nikkejin. Ima ore ga doitsugo benkyou shitte iru.

    • @akari8168
      @akari8168 Před 2 lety +6

      Für mich ist es die schönste Sprache der Welt!!

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před 2 lety +3

      Su=water (Suv)=fluent-flowing (suvu)=Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Mak/Mek (emek)=exertion /process
      Suv-mak=~ to make it flow onwards
      Suy-mak=~ to make it flow over
      Süv-mek=~ to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek=~ to make it flow on something
      Suv-up =liquefied=(soup), Sür-up(shurup)=syrup, Suruppah(chorba)=soup, Suruppat(sherbet)=sorbet, sharap=wine, Mashrubat=beverage
      (Süp-mek)=~ to make it flow outwards
      (süp-der-mek>süptürmek)=süpürmek=to sweep
      Say-mak=~ to make it flow (drop by drop)one by one (from the mind) = ~ to count up, ~ to deem (bilgisayar=computer) (sayı=number)
      Söy-mek=~ to make it flow from the mind (Söy-le-mek= to make the sentences flowing through the mind =~to say, ~to tell )
      Sev-mek=~ to make it flow from the mind (to the heart) = to love
      Söv-mek=~ call names (to say whatever on ownself mind)
      Süy-mek=~ to make it flow from inside (süyüt) =Süt= milk
      Soy-mak=~ to make it flow over it/him/her ( to peel, ~to strip, ~to rob ) (Soy-en-mak)>soyunmak=to undress
      (Sıy-der-mak)>sıyırmak= skimming, ~skinning
      Siy-mek=~ to make it flow downwards =(peeing) (siyitik) =Sidik= urine
      Süz-mek=~ to make it lightly flow from up to downwards (~to filter, strain out)
      Sez-mek=~ to make it lightly flow into the mind (~to perceive, to intuit)
      Sız-mak=~ to get flowed slightly/slowly (~to infiltrate)
      Sun-mak= to extend it forward (presentation, exhibition, to serve up)
      Sün-mek=to expand reaching outward (sünger=sponge)
      Sın-mak=to reach extending upward or forward
      Sin-mek=to shrink reaching downward or backward (to lurk, to hide onself)
      Sön-mek=to get decreased reaching inward or outward (to be extinguished)
      Sağ-mak= ~ to make it to get poured down (Sağanak=downpour)
      (sağ-en-mak)>sağınmak=~ to make oneself pour from thought into emotions
      (Sağn-mak)>San-mak= ~ to make own self pour from thought into an idea (to get an idea)
      Sav-mak=~ to make it pour outwards (2.>put forward- set forth in) (sağan)=Sahan=the container to pour water
      Çün=(chun)=factor ( Jiŋ= agency /being the agent/element of..)
      Ka=(Qua)= (which)
      U=(ou)= it (that)
      (Ka-u)= Ki=(Qui)=which that
      (Çün-ka-u) =Çünki =(parce que/ c'est-pour-quoi)=(that's why))=(therefore)= Because
      (U-çün)= İçün=için= (that factor..)= For.. (it's for)
      (Ne-u-çün)=Niçün=Niçin=(what-that-factor)= Why.. (what-for)
      Temür= iDemir= Iron (ferroum)
      (Temur-jin)= Demirci =ironsmith (temouchin= mongolian)
      Thengiz= Deŋiz= Sea ( tchenggis= mongolian)
      (Theŋiz-jin)=Denizci=seaman
      Yaban =faraway/ out of center =Jaban
      (Jaban-jin)=Yabancı = outsider=foreigner
      our language
      (This one)= Mu-eun= (Men)= Ben= Me
      (That one)= Tsu-eun= (xien/thien)= Sen= You
      (These ones)= Mu-eun-iz=(miŋiz)=Biz = We
      (Those ones)=Tsu-eun-iz=(siŋiz)= Siz =You (Plural)
      Ou-ël=Ol =O= it (he /she)
      El=someone else (bearer / hand)
      (El-der)= Eller= other people
      (different persons)
      Ou-ël-dar= (Ouldar) =Onlar (The bearer and other-s nearest to it/him)
      Ou-eun-dar= (Ondar)=Onlar= They
      (Meniŋ-ka-u):=which that my...= benimki=mine
      (Seniŋ-ka-u):=which that your = seninki=yours
      (Olniŋ-ka-u):=which that his/her/its= onunki= his/hers/its

    • @jakobanimator116
      @jakobanimator116 Před 2 lety

      Ich liebe die japanische Sprache und Kultur!

  • @xxdrosexx
    @xxdrosexx Před 2 lety +27

    Low-key wanna move to Germany and be adopted by Cari and Janusz because they super cute and give off so much happy couple energy

  • @mariamyaser1612
    @mariamyaser1612 Před 2 lety +21

    Awesome video! But I waited for you guys to show an Arabic audio or something 🥺, I really wanted to see if people would recognize my language or not. Love you all Easy German team♥️

  • @stefanstroescu
    @stefanstroescu Před 2 lety +1

    It is a matter of language exposure ! Excellent exercise ! Bravo Easy German!

  • @chihabaddine2331
    @chihabaddine2331 Před 2 lety +1

    Super😃😍❤️, wir hoffen auf einen zweiten Teil des Videos.

  • @albamadero7207
    @albamadero7207 Před 2 lety +17

    Ihr habt immer tolle Ideen! 😍

  • @brianbui9349
    @brianbui9349 Před 2 lety +68

    Vietnamese is a real deal when it’s coming to learning a new language, the complexity of pronunciation and one word could have different layers of meaning 😅😅😅

    • @tFighterPilot
      @tFighterPilot Před 2 lety +4

      At least they switched to the Latin alphabet (with *some* additions). Japanese is very easy to pronounce, but their Alphabets make it a nightmare. Chinese is kinda the worst of both worlds.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před rokem +1

      @@tFighterPilot I don't think that Vietnamese latin is big advantage, latin alphabet is not meant for such language, it looks crazy. Probem is that it's tonal langauge so they can't use neither hangul which is actually pretty simple in comparison with other asian scripts, but it's not meant for tonal langauge.

    • @ac1455
      @ac1455 Před rokem

      @@Pidalin not to mention that it’s an analytic language so conjugations don’t exist to give words context, and that there are an ABSURDLY low number of sound combinations to represent through an alphabet.

  • @mohammadsalehi9028
    @mohammadsalehi9028 Před 2 lety +1

    Einfach mega cool. Super Arbeit!

  • @s.senocak
    @s.senocak Před 2 lety +10

    Very interesting and fun video. I liked it a lot. It was also interesting that the 2 greek words that the ladies were telling at 10:30 was Ottoman-Turkish words derived from Arabic and Persian :))

  • @AnhTuan-ht4dy
    @AnhTuan-ht4dy Před 2 lety +5

    Ein witziges Video. Mich war entspannt, wenn ich meiner Sprache gehoert habe. Vielen Dank fuer eure Arbeits

  • @frankmerriwell8339
    @frankmerriwell8339 Před 2 lety +14

    It’s true mandarin is difficult in reading and writing, especially writing (even for native speakers), but it’s much easier in speaking and listening. So for mandarin learners I recommend starting with only listening and speaking. With the help of Pinyin you will find it’s not much of a difficult language at all. Good to see my native tongue being recognized.

  • @maanj.8275
    @maanj.8275 Před 2 lety

    I enjoyed this video a lot. Thank you!

  • @VJDanny1979
    @VJDanny1979 Před 2 lety +2

    Sehr cooles Video! Hat Spaß gemacht, mitzuraten. Und ihr habt da nette Leute auf der Straße getroffen.

  • @WhiteSpatula
    @WhiteSpatula Před 2 lety +5

    This video was way fun! Thanks! And, by the way, I do happen to watch other Easy Languages videos all the time. Or I should say I listen to them, while doing other things around the house. Not necessarily to learn any of the other languages, but merely to let my brain steep in them a bit and improve my recognition. And for that reason, and with all due modesty, I must admit I guessed all but two correctly (yay me). Cheers! -Phill, Las Vegas

  • @narimanmammadov2192
    @narimanmammadov2192 Před 2 lety +22

    i really like your channel and i watch from Baku / Azerbaijan 🇦🇿 . Thank you very much for teaching us German language 👍🇩🇪

  • @kathyoneill4011
    @kathyoneill4011 Před 2 lety +1

    Loved this experiment!

  • @alexanonymous5823
    @alexanonymous5823 Před 2 lety +2

    thanks a lot=)) really fun to watch and guess=)) thanks again

  • @shutupcrooow
    @shutupcrooow Před 2 lety +18

    I've been taking German classes in high school for about 6 weeks now and I have to say it was so worth it. I've already learned so much and these videos help me with my pronunciation and I even learn new words sometimes which helps me on my test and homework!

    • @whyparkjiminnotridejimin
      @whyparkjiminnotridejimin Před 2 lety +1

      I should do the same with Spanish then because I struggle with it. I can perfectly understand Spanish but when it comes to speaking and writing... oof.

  • @Karol-oq5re
    @Karol-oq5re Před 2 lety +22

    Wunderschönes Video!! Das freut mich sehr, wenn ihr Japanisch genommen hat und Janusz Japanisch als eine schöne Sprache gesagt hat! ありがとう!Aus Japan 🇯🇵

  • @samykiani944
    @samykiani944 Před 2 lety +11

    Languages I like are French, Italian, Greek and Turkish.

  • @blotski
    @blotski Před 2 lety +29

    I'm English and I was interested to hear the people who thought the English example was Australian. The joke wasn't really long enough for me to tell exactly what accent he had but it sounded a little bit like Kent or somewhere near. I live in the north west of England and we had a colleague at work once from Kent and when I first met her I thought she was Australian and she told me people in the north often thought she was Australian.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před rokem +2

      When it sounds like British accent, but more annoying, then it's always Australian accent. :-)

    • @sb_dunk
      @sb_dunk Před rokem

      It could've been anywhere in the South/Southeast of England tbh, I reckon you could come across this accent in Oxford, Cambridge, Kent or Southampton and anywhere in between.

    • @gmansid3576
      @gmansid3576 Před rokem

      Middle class ‘Home Counties’ English.

    • @FinnbarrGoesFast
      @FinnbarrGoesFast Před 8 měsíci

      I'm from New Zealand and I had no idea what the english person was saying until they said "what do you call a pig..." like were those even words? I didn't recognise them

  • @thbui3491
    @thbui3491 Před 2 lety +4

    as Vietnamese i am flattered, thank you Janus :) I'm myself proud of my cooking as well.

  • @uartim
    @uartim Před 2 lety +7

    Italian - quite easy to figure out, very unique rhyme and sound

  • @AndreaScalia81
    @AndreaScalia81 Před 2 lety +1

    Das ist wirklich ein tolles Video!

  • @gillchristopher
    @gillchristopher Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant video gang keep up the good work😃🤠🤘

  • @foreyfriend145
    @foreyfriend145 Před 2 lety +5

    Scored well! I missed only the Turkish Language.
    For some reason some voices sounded like 'processed', the Portuguese tape was it from Portugal? it didn't sound Brazilian.
    Great job Easy German Team 👍.

  • @ling982
    @ling982 Před 2 lety +4

    Dieses Video ist wirklich sehr interessant! Und ich bin so froh, dass ich in diesem Video meine Muttersprache gehört habe und viele Leute in diesem Video Chinesisch erkannt haben. Ich habe aber auch viele Sprache erkannt. Ich interessiere mich sehr für die Sprache. Aber erst hoffe ich, dass ich Deutsch beherrschen könnte.

  • @estrellad2904
    @estrellad2904 Před 2 lety

    Immer Wunderbar, danke schön für diese Video.

  • @user-bl1ob2qi1z
    @user-bl1ob2qi1z Před 2 lety +1

    Ein tolles Video! Hab' ich aber das ganze Video auf Russisch gewartet. Ein supergeiler Format, es wäre super ihn weiterzumachen, mindestens 2 Male geht's noch, die Sprachen sind Vielfalt! Danke! :)

  • @sihemghaoui9735
    @sihemghaoui9735 Před 2 lety +4

    Vielen Dank! es macht richtig spaß! Ich habe einige der Sprachen erkannt, weil ich sie lerne und abonniere diese Kanäle bereits: esay german, easy englich, easy french, easy spanich, easy italian, easy türkich

  • @user-td6uz4hm5f
    @user-td6uz4hm5f Před 2 lety +13

    Es ist ziemlich komisch und interessant, von Easy Germans Video meine Muttersprache, Japanisch zu hören. Und ich bin froh, dass viele Leute sie schnell erkannt haben. Cooles Video!

  • @ilkahellerling2345
    @ilkahellerling2345 Před 2 lety +2

    Tolles Video. Bitte mehr davon.

  • @user-pl2dl3vt6p
    @user-pl2dl3vt6p Před 2 lety +1

    Sehr interessant und lustig! Danke schoen fuer das Video!

  • @thalia445
    @thalia445 Před 2 lety +19

    😉👍 Interessantes und originales Thema!! Ihr haltet uns immer interessiert! Πολλα φιλιά zu alle 💌

  • @diegofeyn66
    @diegofeyn66 Před 2 lety +5

    An Irish or a Chilean Spanish would be amazing to try to them haha. I love both

  • @JannaBaibatyrova
    @JannaBaibatyrova Před 9 měsíci +2

    Diese Folge war richtig toll! 😄 Ich habe nur die Hälfte den Sprachen geraten, aber es war ein super Spiel, danke 🥰

  • @gabrielabejan6412
    @gabrielabejan6412 Před rokem +2

    I was so excited to recognise all languages. I guess it's the consequence of not having anything dubbed in Romania and watching movies in the original languages with subtitles (also the reason Romanians can understand and also speak even if not perfectly many different languages). I loved this ❤

  • @Kostas_2023
    @Kostas_2023 Před 2 lety +4

    8:55 🇬🇷Griechisch
    - Το πρωί πίνω ένα ποτήρι γάλα, με μηδέν λιπαρά, ε... επειδή κάνω έτσι κάποια δίαιτα. Δεν τρώω τίποτ' άλλο.
    - Δεν τρώτε. Πίνετε μόνο ένα ποτήρι γάλα.
    - Ένα ποτήρι γάλα, ναι.
    *
    - To proί pίno éna potίri ghála, me midhén lipará, e... epidhί káno étsi káp-hia dhί-eta. Dhen trόo tίpot' álo.
    - Dhen trόte. Pίnete mόno éna potίri ghála.
    - Éna potίri ghála, ne.

  • @trolareca
    @trolareca Před 2 lety +15

    So funny to see the reaction to Portuguese 😊 Greetings from Lisbon!

  • @ishitabhattacharyya1538
    @ishitabhattacharyya1538 Před 2 lety +1

    Großartiges Video! Es war sehr spannend, die vielen verschiedenen Sprachen zu hören und zu versuchen, sie zu erkennen. Ich habe nur Japanisch und Italienisch erkannt. Japanisch, weil ich als Kind in Japan viele Jahre gelebt habe und Italienisch, weil es Italienisch klang. Ich kenne eigentlich kein Italienisch außer den Basic Wörter wie 'bene', 'come stai' usw.
    Vielen Dank, Easy German Team und auch Easy Greek Team für die tolle Idee!
    Eure Videos machen mir immer viel Spaß.
    Viele Grüße aus Indien

  • @DNA350ppm
    @DNA350ppm Před 2 lety

    Ich liebe und bewundere euch beiden, Kari und Janosz! Danke und alles gute aus Schweden! :-)

    • @EasyGerman
      @EasyGerman  Před 2 lety +1

      Herzlichen Dank, Grüße nach Schweden! ☺️

  • @joao13soares
    @joao13soares Před 2 lety +54

    I'm Portuguese and, just in case you find this information interesting, I only didn't recognize Vietnamese and Turkish out of all those audio clips.
    Also, people are constantly guessing Russian or other Slavic languages when listening to Portuguese because of the similar sonority with some aspects of our language. There's a whole video by Langfocus explaining why this is.
    Romanian is also a Romance language, so maybe that's why it was also a guess when listening to Portuguese.

    • @aliceche714
      @aliceche714 Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you, I def will see the video about Portuguese and Russian

    • @quatrosilva1141
      @quatrosilva1141 Před 2 lety +2

      El portugués suena como el ruso y el español suena como el griego. Saludos Juan.

    • @pablovinicius6401
      @pablovinicius6401 Před 2 lety +3

      Except Brazilian Portuguese, that doesn't sound at all as russian

    • @cen80
      @cen80 Před 2 lety +1

      I think they thought Romanian because it's also a Roman language but with slavic Influences.As I was a teenager my sister sad to me,that she saw a black woman speaking Russian and she found it very strange.I said her,that she was surely no Russian but Brasilian.I learned Spanish at school and knew,that Portuguese sounds softer and for untrained ears like a kind of Slavic.

    • @user-ek6xj1ug9e
      @user-ek6xj1ug9e Před 2 lety +1

      As Russian speaking myself it really surprises me cuz these two languages doesn't seem sound similar at all for me. I couldn't guess Portuguese btw.

  • @LoKi-pm7nh
    @LoKi-pm7nh Před 2 lety +21

    I can speak both Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese and can recognize that Portuguese form PT *does* sound like Spanish and Russian hahaha. So different from the Brazilian one.

    • @alexschaeller8881
      @alexschaeller8881 Před 2 lety +9

      Portuguese from Brazil sounds more like Spanish than Portuguese from Portugal.

  • @claradwerri1639
    @claradwerri1639 Před 2 lety +1

    Das war TOTAL interessant!

  • @sidkings
    @sidkings Před 2 lety

    Das war toll. Vielen dank fur dieses Video.

  • @evaaicrag
    @evaaicrag Před 2 lety +3

    It'd be fun to also have a video on guessing German dialects.

  • @DeividH
    @DeividH Před 2 lety +8

    Coloquem a legenda na ferramenta de legenda do próprio You Tube, pois assim a tradução automática do inglês ou alemão para o português fica melhor. Gostei do vídeo, foi da hora.

  • @advermartinez581
    @advermartinez581 Před 2 lety

    Vielen Dank

  • @veronicaamundson6947
    @veronicaamundson6947 Před 2 lety +1

    Das hat Spaß gemacht. Ich möchte andere Episode.

  • @TimothyGrabarczyk
    @TimothyGrabarczyk Před 2 lety +48

    Regions share linguistic features, include those that go beyond the phonetics. On the other hand, Chinese langauges do not sound anything like Korean or Japanese. Not to blame, is just curious for me.

    • @ominusomega7803
      @ominusomega7803 Před 2 lety +4

      So, I'm not sure about Korean but Japanese and Mandarin do have quite the amount of similarities that stemmed from centuries of interaction between the 2 regions. For example, the most common similarity is the use of Chinese characters in Japanese in the form of Kanji as well as its Chinese pronunciation (Korean used to have something similar called Hanja iirc). (For example, this word 電話 meaning phone (lit. electric talk) in japanese is pronounced "denwa" while the same word in mandarin is pronounced "dianhua". This is an example of the Onyomi reading of Japanese kanji which is the transliteration of the Chinese pronunciation.). Another similarity is the use of a particle (a character or symbol that alone do not have meaning unless used in a sentence) to denote the possessive, in English it would be " 's " and in German it would be the genitive case etc, in the case of Japanese it uses the particle "の" (read as "no") and in Mandarin, the character ”的“ (read as "de") is used. Furthermore, Old Japanese and Old Chinese seem to also have somewhat similar pronunciation rules (tho I'm not so sure about this). However, despite these similarities, these languages are not related and only share similarities due to interaction (which is also why Japanese seem so different, since they had a good few centuries of isolation) and hence, Japanese is considered a linguistic isolate (a language with no other related languages or is a part of any established language families). (though, there was a time that people considered Korean and Japanese to be related but iirc this is not an accepted theory anymore)

    • @afasico9669
      @afasico9669 Před 2 lety +11

      @@ominusomega7803 he said "sound", meaning Japanese and Mandarin don't sound similar at all.

    • @ominusomega7803
      @ominusomega7803 Před 2 lety +1

      @@afasico9669 I mean, one is tonal and the other two have pitch accents at best so of course theyre going to sound drastically different, but again if you isolate certain words, then there are still similarities, even sound wise

    • @amjan
      @amjan Před 2 lety +2

      @@ominusomega7803 No. Just because a horse can be brown and a lokomotive can be painted brown doesn't mean they are similar.

    • @ominusomega7803
      @ominusomega7803 Před 2 lety +1

      @@amjan I am only pointing out the similarities, thats all. By your analogy, a brown horse and a brown locomotive are both brown and are both able to be used as a mode of transport. In these regards, they are similar. I am not saying, they are related or they are similar languages, but simply they have quite some similarities. That is all.

  • @haritikanand8502
    @haritikanand8502 Před 2 lety +5

    Was für ein tolles Video!
    Ich freute mich darauf, meine eigene Sprache Hindi zu hören!

  • @sanskritishrestha999
    @sanskritishrestha999 Před 2 lety

    So ein tolles Video!!! 😍💗

  • @setaretohidi7568
    @setaretohidi7568 Před 10 měsíci

    you guys are really, really nice.I watch easy french channel and then youtube suggests your videos as well, and even though I'm not learning german but I enjoy watching your videos, so clean, so polite so neat, so careful about what you say, always talking about others positively and respectfully, always giving credits to others!!!!! your videos impress me, I don't know if it's your culture, or just EASY GERMAN people are like that, but if it's your culture, I'm packing for Germany!

  • @MrRxProductions
    @MrRxProductions Před 2 lety +3

    Super!

  • @michaelmorgan9824
    @michaelmorgan9824 Před 2 lety +3

    I love Easy German but right now Cari I Love your hair style more!!

  • @curiousme8
    @curiousme8 Před 2 lety +2

    Das war super!👍

  • @xiaogu00fa
    @xiaogu00fa Před 10 měsíci

    Ein interessant video. Danke

  • @oneirosgames
    @oneirosgames Před 2 lety +7

    The Portugal´s portuguese is soo cool. Many portuguese live in Germany and so few know how to identify it. :D

  • @Seca95
    @Seca95 Před 2 lety +68

    I totally understand why people from countries like Germany, who are exposed to Turkish very often, don’t recognize the Turkish spoken in Turkey. Those of us who live outside Turkey speak very different. It’s (mostly) the same words that are spoken, but with different pronunciations that have been affected by the dialects of the cities we migrated from in Turkey + the languages of the countries we now reside in - urghh, Turkish with a German accent sounds like a pain in the ***, sorry alamanci guys (I’m from Denmark, imo we sound a little better and generally have a better vocabulary). Most of us probably speak with an Anatolian accent, which can sound like Arabic or Persian to the foreign ear. Very different to the high Turkish which you heard the young Turks speak in this video. People make fun of our pronunciation when we’re in Turkey🥲

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah. My first guess was turkish, but then it didn't sound like we hear it hear, so I had my doubts.

    • @zincyberia
      @zincyberia Před 2 lety +20

      Turkish sounds nothing like Arabic or Persian lmao

    • @Emulator833
      @Emulator833 Před rokem +11

      @@zincyberia A kurd speaking Turkish or Southeastern Turks speaking Turkish is kinda similar to Persian but Turkish without accent does not sound anything like Arabic or Persian. Accents can change how a language sounds a lot.

    • @sue28493jd
      @sue28493jd Před 7 měsíci

      Exactly. In Turkey we are making fun of their ( the Turkish people's who were born in Germany or live there) way of speaking Turkish.There is a big difference between the "real" Turkish and theirs.And not just the way of speaking but the way of thinking,-perspective- is also much more different..That's why people should not think that Turkish people in Germany represent the real Turkish people in Turkey.They should improve themselves more, most of them do not represent us very well :)

  • @thinking-Mann
    @thinking-Mann Před rokem

    Sehr interessant video😃
    Ich bin in Deutschland seit 8 Monaten und hat schon gehört Türkisch, Polnisch, Italienisch und ein bisschen Französisch Sprache in der Zug, in der Markt usw.
    Die Welt mit alle Sprachen ist complex aber viel interessant.

  • @souleymanedaouda9498
    @souleymanedaouda9498 Před 2 lety

    Ich geniesse eurer video immer wieder und lerne ich deutsch sehr smoth

  • @ggiiaaccoommoo
    @ggiiaaccoommoo Před 2 lety +28

    Sehr schönes Video. Eigenlicht brauche ich Easy German nicht mehr, aber ich schaue mir eure Videos immer noch an, weil die so gut sind. Gerade gucke ich auch Easy French und Easy Dutch, um wenigstens ein bisschen passive Sprachkenntnisse zu erwerben. Manchmal schaue ich sogar bei Easy Italian rein, weil die Beide sympathisch sind. Mein nächstes Projekt wird aber sein, Plattdeutsch zu lernen. Gibt es vielleicht irgendwann mal auch Easy Platt?

    • @JonVonD
      @JonVonD Před 2 lety +5

      i woart of EasyBairisch und wiard gean dabei höf'n!

    • @leonie364.
      @leonie364. Před 2 lety +3

      Es gibt so viele plattdeutsche Dialekte, die ändern sich fast von Dorf zu Dorf. Es gibt keine einheitliche plattdeutsche (Schrift-)Sprache, deswegen wäre das vermutlich sehr umständlich.

  • @akyolahmet.com4848
    @akyolahmet.com4848 Před rokem +3

    1. Französisch, 2. Polnisch, 3. Vietnamesisch, 4. Englisch, 5. Türkisch, 6. Griechisch 7. Mandarin, 8. Italienisch, 9. Japanisch, 10. Portugiesisch. Die ersten fünf Sprachen haben ich direkt gekannt und natürlich Türkisch ist meine Muttersprache. Das war beachtenswertes Experiment. Es war lustig zu sehen, wie die Menschen beim Zuhören reagiert haben. Danke! Und macht ihr noch mit anderen Sprachen sowie Kürdisch, Arabisch, Koreanisch, Niederländisch, Lettisch, Hebräisch usw.

  • @faso4800
    @faso4800 Před 8 měsíci

    7:55 beide von ihr habt das wort « evet » fantastisch ausgesprochen

  • @roseofsharon815
    @roseofsharon815 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting. Wunderbar!

  • @brunoandremonjarasvera8686

    Ich liebe diesen Kanal, jedes Mal überrascht ihr mich mehr und siehst so viele schöne Menschen auf den Straßen Deutschlands

  • @justajapanesegirl
    @justajapanesegirl Před 2 lety +30

    Wow Ich höre Japanisch und verstehe alles 😂😅 (Ich bin Japanerin und unterrichte Japanisch also ja natürlich hehe! ) Das Thema ist über Wabisabi! (Unsere schöne Kultur☺️) Schwierig haha ich würde immer froh sein wenn ich meine Sprache in Deutschland höre😊❤️ Danke euch! Viele Grüße aus Japan 🙏🇯🇵 PS : Ich finde Janusz sehr nett und süß🥺 Er hat ja gesagt “Japanisch ist eine wunderschöne Sprache.“ ☺️ 日本語をEasy Germanのビデオで聴けて嬉しかったです。ありがとうございます😊!❤️

  • @disdonc6012
    @disdonc6012 Před 2 lety +1

    I didn't expect these people to know so many languages. But French and Italian are very distinctive. Others are more difficult like Chinese, Korean or Russian, Polish...

  • @user-ns7mu4wq3d
    @user-ns7mu4wq3d Před 2 lety

    Dieses Video ist echt interessant!

  • @alesscav99
    @alesscav99 Před 2 lety +10

    Nächste Mal schließe den brasilianischen Portugieisich in die Liste ein 😜! Sehr gut gemacht allerdings!

  • @Onelovekeepcalm
    @Onelovekeepcalm Před rokem +3

    Only one i had wrong was greek !! That sounded like italian to me! Lol but i knew all the others

  • @grubbilove6338
    @grubbilove6338 Před 2 lety

    Ich hätte so gerne Koreanisch gehört. Vielleicht nächstes Mal. Auf jeden Fall tolles Video. :)

  • @naniaralisonbradley5980

    aww nach der 3. Minute ist es Vietnamesisch im südlichen Teil des Flusses, das liebe ich

  • @stratvar
    @stratvar Před 2 lety +17

    To be honest i am very surprised that many Germans in this video could not recognize Turkish, considering how many Turkish immigrants live in Germany. On the other hand, i was not surprised at all that people confused Greek (my native language) with Spanish. It is extremely common for some reason.

    • @kirstenshute2729
      @kirstenshute2729 Před 2 lety +1

      I don't know why, but I thought the Greek was Italian at first!

    • @torquebiker9959
      @torquebiker9959 Před 2 lety +1

      I heard some Turkish in the sample, but I didn't thought it's Turkish. The sound of the language the Turkish people speak here in Germany sound different.

    • @expLos1vEn
      @expLos1vEn Před 2 lety +4

      @@torquebiker9959 they are probably speaking a broken turkish with heavy accent.

    • @rabia1687
      @rabia1687 Před rokem +2

      @@expLos1vEn exactly, Turks from Germany speak broken Turkish with accent.

  • @VieraXXII
    @VieraXXII Před 2 lety +6

    Saying Spanish and Russian for Portuguese isn't nonsense. It's actually how many of us in university could recognize the language. There are distinctive sounds from both languages, but I won't dive into it. 😊

  • @Ai-Peri
    @Ai-Peri Před 2 lety

    Krass! Ich wäre da, konnte ich alle Sprachen sofort erkennen😆
    Liebe euch💖

  • @joranamisan2514
    @joranamisan2514 Před 2 lety +1

    ide kamu sangat luar biasa.. keren