Is Spanish Hard to Learn?

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • 🇪🇸🤔 Spanish is one of the most popular foreign languages, but is it easy to learn? What aspects are easy or difficult for English speaker? Watch on to find out!
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    😅 CORRECTIONS:
    - It should read "Tú peleas" in the chart at 7:10
    ⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Spanish is easy, right?
    0:17 - What’s Your Mother Tongue?
    0:59 - Spanish Alphabet & Pronunciation
    3:55 - These Things Are Hard
    6:15 - Fun, Not Hard
    6:55 - Conjugating Verbs is Hard
    7:42 - Some Dialects Are a Little… Strange
    8:32 - So… What’s the Verdict?
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Komentáře • 972

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning  Před rokem +40

    🇪🇸 Learn Spanish through the power of story 👉🏼 bit.ly/slescourses

    • @DeSlagen8
      @DeSlagen8 Před rokem

      fortnite bunrger

    • @optimizing_fitness
      @optimizing_fitness Před rokem +1

      If someone has your intermediate Spanish Uncovered, would there be any reason to invest in Grammar Hero?

    • @ignacioheredia9599
      @ignacioheredia9599 Před rokem

      Intuyo que aprendiste español en Andalucía, ¿me equivoco?edit : ahora lo entiendo, he visto tu video de aprendizaje de español. Buena decisión aprender español con un canario, justo el mejor puente entre América y España.

    • @iohannsepulveda7605
      @iohannsepulveda7605 Před rokem +1

      Hi Olly, there is only one very small flaw in this video and it is at minute 7:09, "tú peleas" (you fight) is missing the "s". I hope you can fix it so no one mislearns this.
      I love your videos and your knowledge of languages. ❤️

  • @asdrubaleduardo
    @asdrubaleduardo Před 6 měsíci +29

    I’m watching this being a native Spanish speaker just because, you know, it’s always interesting to know the English speakers perspective.

    • @rainerdiazrodriguez6730
      @rainerdiazrodriguez6730 Před měsícem +1

      I'm doing the same lol

    • @juandiegovelez9160
      @juandiegovelez9160 Před měsícem

      It's funny because I'm a Spanish native speaker too and I struggled trying to understand the Spanish clips that were put here... Honestly, in the last clip I understood more or less a 30% ( being a native speaker )

    • @rainerdiazrodriguez6730
      @rainerdiazrodriguez6730 Před 3 dny

      @@juandiegovelez9160 those things happen

  • @marcelobaute2689
    @marcelobaute2689 Před rokem +269

    The good thing about Spanish is the consistency in its pronunciation. If you already know the sounds, every time you come across a new word, you can feel pretty confident on how to pronounce it. That's why we don't have spelling games on TV like in English speaking countries. Think about all the different sounds an 'a' can have in an English word.

    • @vhickj
      @vhickj Před rokem +5

      As Native speaker that's the most I hate from spanish how inflexible its pronunciation is. 😅

    • @rayelosado6260
      @rayelosado6260 Před rokem +21

      Absolutely, it's super easy. Once you get the pronunciation Spanish is yours.
      Obviously, it has its irregularities as every language, but that's all.
      Edit: I am native speaker and the other one who says that hates the perfect pronunciation of the words is simply a psycho

    • @vhickj
      @vhickj Před rokem +2

      @@rayelosado6260 The edit part is refiring to me ? Hahahahahahahaha
      I hurt spanish what can I do now? Die😭? Go to jail 🤧? OMG Hahahahahhaha
      Y nunca dije que odiaba la pronunciación de las palabras, parece que no sabes leer en inglés, hablé de la inflexibilidad que tiene el español con relación a sus fonemas, que no es lo mismo, es inevitable ver la carencia de variación fonética del español frente a otros idiomas, dependiendo de, puede ser una ventaja o una desventaja. ✌🏽

    • @rayelosado6260
      @rayelosado6260 Před rokem +1

      @@vhickj ¿Qué diferencia hay entre la pronunciación y la fonética?

    • @oatlegOnYt
      @oatlegOnYt Před rokem +14

      @@rayelosado6260 Se refiere a que tenemos muy pocos fonemas. La parte buena es que la transcripción de escritura a fonética carece de errores. Puede ser transcrita sin errores. Al revés no. Un sonido "v" no sabes si se escribe con v o b, o las "h" insonoras ocultas que puedan existir en una palabra, más allá de saberlo por memorización.
      Pero creo que están relacionados. Usando un alfabeto con tan poca letra (sólo agregamos la ñ al alfabeto común en inglés, más los acentos), para tener más fonemas habría que inventar más combinaciones de consonantes para representarlas o agregar letras nuevas. La mayor parte de idiomas con muchos fonemas requieren demasiadas reglas o peor aún, como en inglés, una transcripción arbitraria que hay que aprender palabra por palabra.

  • @styleniko4339
    @styleniko4339 Před rokem +64

    I am Japanese learning Spanish as my third language after Japanese and English. My English skill gives me a bit of advantage but the conjugation is driving me crazy!! But the fact that Spanish is spoken by so many people in the world that I am inspired to learn the language!!

    • @Jonatan_Fernandez
      @Jonatan_Fernandez Před rokem +6

      Go foward mate ! Es un hermoso idioma :)
      Saludos desde España

    • @salvab13
      @salvab13 Před 11 měsíci +2

      I am trying to learn japense and speak Spanish English lol

    • @zayedashraf1443
      @zayedashraf1443 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Im Indian going to madrid for college
      I think i have to study spanish too
      I already know english malayalam tamil hindi arabic

    • @jessicaalonso-gx1ud
      @jessicaalonso-gx1ud Před 10 měsíci +3

      !los entiendo muy bien, yo también lucho cada día con el inglés, realmente deseo muchísimo llegar ah hablarlo fluidamente algún día ,éxitos en sus estudios y logren sus propósitos muy pronto !.saludos ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️👍👍👍👍👍👍💯🙏

    • @user-zv7cj7mx2n
      @user-zv7cj7mx2n Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@zayedashraf1443inténtalo duroo . Es algo difícil pero no imposible

  • @alejonightwish
    @alejonightwish Před rokem +507

    I guess the most difficult part about learning Spanish is to understand fluid conversations. Spanish is the second fastest language apparently. And also the conjugation and the fact that the subject is normally dropped because the meaning is also heavily dependent on the conjugation. Other than that, it's relatively easy to learn compared to other languages.

    • @MTimWeaver
      @MTimWeaver Před rokem +5

      it's funny you mention dropping the subject pronoun given the verb conjugation points it out. I'm trying to teach myself Swedish, and they have the opposite problem: So far, my understanding is that the verb stays the same (within the tense) regardless of who is speaking, so you HAVE to use the pronoun. Given my Spanish, it was a difficult thing to remember to do all the time. My Swedish friend still laughs at me when I do it.

    • @atlantis4516
      @atlantis4516 Před rokem +6

      Italian native speaker here, never studied Spanish and yes I don't understand anything at all when they speak.

    • @jsphat81
      @jsphat81 Před rokem +20

      @@atlantis4516 Really? Regardless of where they come from? This is the first time I see an Italian say this.

    • @atlantis4516
      @atlantis4516 Před rokem +2

      @@jsphat81 yes I am talking seriously

    • @juanlu3958
      @juanlu3958 Před rokem +18

      As the South east asian Chinese i will never understand why Westerners say Spanish is easy and Chinese is hard.I mean look at the grammar of Spanish wtf is that* - -!!!!!))))

  • @idraote
    @idraote Před rokem +92

    I wouldn't underestimate the difficulty of understanding natural conversations in Spanish.
    Spanish natives speak very fast and it's incredible the number of syllables they are capable of cramming into a single breath.
    I am a native Italian and my only real problem with the written language is memorising verb conjugations.
    But undestanding two natives speaking in informal/semi-formal situations? That's a whole different story.

    • @Tiqerboy
      @Tiqerboy Před rokem +4

      Japanese is like that too. They speak incredibly fast and mash syllables together. Only big difference is, reading it is extremely challenging, and that's why it takes so long to learn.

    • @veronikaw6547
      @veronikaw6547 Před rokem +9

      Right? Especially when i listen to spoken Spanish from Spain it sounds like i put it on at least 1.5x speed 😂

    • @ignacioheredia9599
      @ignacioheredia9599 Před rokem +3

      Vamos a suponer que hablan dos españoles contigo con un tono pausado, así sería comprensible, ¿no?

    • @veronikaw6547
      @veronikaw6547 Před rokem +3

      @Paseos por Madrid you don't say 😂 I'm trying my hardest lol

    • @ignacioheredia9599
      @ignacioheredia9599 Před rokem +4

      @Paseos por Madrid a mi, a veces, me suena el inglés a onomatopeyas agolpadas. Lo aprendo porque no queda más remedio, pero le tengo poco aprecio. Añoro el tiempo de nuestros padres, hace apenas cuarenta años, cuando la lengua Franca internacional era el francés.

  • @johnlawrence3781
    @johnlawrence3781 Před rokem +233

    I studied German and Spanish at Uni. I found German the harder language overall, but much easier to distinguish and understand when spoken than Spanish.

    • @johnlawrence3781
      @johnlawrence3781 Před rokem +6

      Than*...

    • @lucasgattesco3148
      @lucasgattesco3148 Před rokem +27

      @KJG Olden English might be slightly closer to German than Spanish. Both languages are Germanic.

    • @scottlarson1548
      @scottlarson1548 Před rokem +19

      I found the same thing and I think it's because German is normally spoken with short pauses between the words instead of letting everything slur together like in English and to some degree Spanish. Spanish speakers (like English speakers) are usually kind enough to put pauses between the words if you're having trouble understanding them.

    • @arthurmoran4951
      @arthurmoran4951 Před rokem +3

      wow this gives more hope in continuing my learning of german then i relook at your sentence: i"i fond German language the harder overall.

    • @johnlawrence3781
      @johnlawrence3781 Před rokem +6

      Just because I personally found it harder, it doesn’t mean you will.

  • @irinaspalve8356
    @irinaspalve8356 Před rokem +157

    I love Spanish because it is so easy to read! And many words can be understood easily without learning. Never thought I would be learning Spanish, but due to I got ill with Covid last year, I suddenly realized that I have quite a few free time, so I just filled it with useful things.
    Thanks for Russian and Latvian, rolling R an Ñ were no problem for me. And English helped with c/z (th) sound.
    This year I finished reading my first non-adaptated book in Spanish. And the feeling was awesome! Reading a book of my favourite Japanese writer in Spanish - that was an adventure. It took me 3 months, but it was worth it. 😍
    By the way, Spanish Uncovered Intermediate is just awesome! I finally could learn the difference between past tenses. 😁 before I could understand the meaning but when I had to write a sentence myself, I couldn't stop thinking - which tense do I have to take. 😀

    • @victormanuellesanchezmoren9868
      @victormanuellesanchezmoren9868 Před rokem +12

      It's always wonderful to read things like this, thanks for appreciating our language, I hope you continue learning many things about Spanish.😄😄😄

    • @juanxyah
      @juanxyah Před rokem +3

      ¡Felicidades! Espero que ese escritor sea Haruki Murakami! Keep up the good work! 👍

    • @irinaspalve8356
      @irinaspalve8356 Před rokem +6

      @@juanxyah Lo siento, pero yo nunca he leído libros de Murakami Haruki. Mi escritor favorito es Higashino Keigo (東野圭吾さん). El libro se llama Paradox 13. Muy interesante y misterioso. Yo tengo 3 libros más en japonés, por eso estoy aprendiendo kanji de altos niveles para leer estos libros en idioma original.

    • @irinaspalve8356
      @irinaspalve8356 Před rokem +4

      @@victormanuellesanchezmoren9868 Español es el idioma muy bonito. I like the way it sounds, but sometimes (as I am from the northern country) I feel I'm not emotional enough to express myself in Spanish. 😁

    • @juanxyah
      @juanxyah Před rokem +3

      @@irinaspalve8356 Thanks for your answer, Irina. I’ll definitely check out Higashino. The Wikipedia entry on him vaguely reminded me of Ben H. Winters, an American sci-fi writer.
      Good luck with Japanese. I’m currently taking a break from Russian, and working a bit on Swahili.
      Have a good one. 👍
      Juan
      PS: Don’t worry about not being “emotional enough” to speak Spanish. Judging by what you wrote earlier, you already have a great feel for the language. So, just focus on having fun with it. Best of luck.

  • @j-t4436
    @j-t4436 Před rokem +134

    The word ‘se’ was the hardest part for me by a mile. It has so many uses, that when I would encounter it - I would be stopped in my tracks for a minute until I could mentally go through its list of uses, until I found the one that most matched the sentence I needed it for.
    Always heard of the horrors of subjunctive -but when it came to learning it, I was surprised how quickly it made sense to me.

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před rokem +2

      Think of it as the unknown 'one' as in: One can not know the outcome. And the better word is one you already use: None. It has the same 'function'. There are none so deaf as those that will not hear.

    • @oliverraven
      @oliverraven Před rokem +8

      @@dutchreagan3676 That only covers the passive use of 'se'. It can also be reflexive and function as an object pronoun, e.g. "Él *se* lo iba a dar (a ella)."

    • @tricks9753
      @tricks9753 Před rokem +1

      sentences
      se murió el perro
      se me cayó el celular
      but It's not very used, only some situation
      I'm from Perú 🙌

    • @dgstranz
      @dgstranz Před rokem +6

      @@oliverraven And the "pasiva refleja", as in "se venden verduras", which could be more or less literally translated as "vegetables are being sold"... even though you could see that very same sentence at the grocer's in the sense of "WE sell vegetables", just that the subject is nowhere to be seen.

    • @findingmatthew2874
      @findingmatthew2874 Před rokem

      @@dutchreagan3676 huh??

  • @kensier4955
    @kensier4955 Před rokem +97

    I used to hear my family speaking spanish and thought it sounded sooooo fast. I finally became fluent this year and it doesn’t sound so fast to me anymore. I started wondering if I just talk with a bunch of slow speakers but I realized I’m just used to it now. What’s funny is my Spanish speaking friends that don’t speak English think English is spoken way faster and I always have to explain that it’s scientifically not true.

    • @CrisTryingToBeProductive
      @CrisTryingToBeProductive Před rokem +3

      The only time I struggled with English was while working in a project with an English man, he was so fast that was easier to understand to the South Africans in the meeting call than him.

    • @english-emersonfranzuaalda5005
      @english-emersonfranzuaalda5005 Před rokem +1

      I agree, English seems fast at the beginning, but once you are intermediate it becomes too slow unless you don't understand connect speech.

    • @kensier4955
      @kensier4955 Před rokem

      @@marialuisaminervamoralesri6411 por qué debería escribirlo en español si estoy tratando de comunicarme con personas que hablan inglés?

    • @jemand8462
      @jemand8462 Před rokem +3

      science says that spanish is only fast in syllables per minute, but the information (bits per second) is pretty much the same as "slower" languages, actually the information / second is the same through all languages in the world .

    • @isaiahayers1550
      @isaiahayers1550 Před rokem +3

      Spanish is just objectively fast. Certainly faster on average than English. Some New Yorkers and other places I'm sure, speak pretty fast but your average English speakers are talking at a fairly moderate speed. Some American Southerners speak exceedingly slowly. Rarely do I ever hear a Native Spanish speaker using a slow pace. They fly through their words and some fly even faster such as those from the Caribbean.

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 Před rokem +56

    I look forward to starting my Spanish language journey in about a year's time. I've been learning my heritage language (Māori) for nearly 4 years now. I'm at a B2 level in that language and want to push it up to an advanced C level first, before I decide to start learning Spanish too. As it happens, the pronunciation of Spanish is exactly the same as Māori.

    • @michitamielcita
      @michitamielcita Před rokem +6

      Learning basic Māori from a young age has made Spanish pronunciation a breeze for me! You'll be impressing people with your Spanish skills in no time. Good luck with your Spanish journey 😊

    • @0505121968
      @0505121968 Před rokem +2

      Donde se habla eso?

    • @michitamielcita
      @michitamielcita Před rokem +4

      @@0505121968 Nueva Zelanda

    • @qwertytypewriter2013
      @qwertytypewriter2013 Před rokem +3

      I mean, as a Native Spanish speaker, I've listened to Maori several times (I actually know the NZ national anthem in Maori) and the sounds are a little different. For example, I've heard SOME 's be aspirated in Maori but that will never happen in Spanish. I've also heard the diphthong "au" which sounds like the "a" is reduced, and sounds totally different than Spanish. However, it has been very easy for me to pronounce Maori, so maybe their pronunciation isn't exactly the same but they're definitely very similar.

    • @Tehui1974
      @Tehui1974 Před rokem +3

      @@qwertytypewriter2013 Fair call. The pronunciation is similar but not exactly the same.

  • @kenshiku1
    @kenshiku1 Před rokem +2

    Soy Nativo de español. También hablo varios idiomas como vos y te sigo hace un tiempo. Muchas gracias por todo lo que subís. Y tu español es brutal, esta buenísimo. Felicitaciones.

  • @lucasrubin7862
    @lucasrubin7862 Před rokem +16

    What a great video! I love your channel. I learned Spanish as my second language, English is my first. I’ve studied Spanish now for over ten years. Without a doubt, the hardest thing for me to grasp was the subjunctive. It took months, but once I figured it out, you’re right, it was so much fun to use!

    • @user-zv7cj7mx2n
      @user-zv7cj7mx2n Před 9 měsíci

      10 years. But his spanish must be great now. Or m i wrong

  • @corinna007
    @corinna007 Před rokem +53

    I've always thought Spanish is the most beautiful Romance language. I had to take mandatory French classes for four years in school. I did well in the classes but I could never keep the grammatical gender straight, and the pronunciation was really irritating. I find Spanish much easier to learn; the pronunciation is a lot more straightforward (although the rolled R took me forever to say properly; I wasn't able to pronounce it until a couple of years ago, thanks to learning Finnish. Still waiting and hoping for a video about that language, btw), and the grammatical genders are so much easier to remember.

    • @MariaLopez-tb4fp
      @MariaLopez-tb4fp Před 10 měsíci +1

      Felicidades!!! Me da risa lo de la r enrollada jajajaja

  • @qooraf7
    @qooraf7 Před rokem +24

    I think the hardest part to me was to get good listening comprehension in Spanish. I learned Spanish from English and it took a very long time to be able to understand natives.

  • @dayanyushkadfajardonova2697

    What I see is that Spanish can be easy to learn in the basics, but hard to master and speak properly or sound natural due to the subjunctive, for some people, the use of the articles and in general to learn how to use the tenses properly can be a challenge, but, it is not impossible, what I think could help is practicing a lot with native speakers, it will help you to gather the enough practice to make the tenses more intuitive.
    Btw, I did not see anyone mentioned it, but, the conjugation of Tú pelea, should be Tú peleas* 😊

  • @jsphat81
    @jsphat81 Před rokem +4

    Your Spanish is amazing, Olly! You sound like a completely different person!

  • @hansdejamir4110
    @hansdejamir4110 Před rokem +4

    Good for you Ollie! You managed to pronounce the RR in just two years. I am Argentinian (native Spanish speaker) and I haven't been able to do it yet, some don't understand me when I say certain words like "Jarra" for example but I don't care anymore, it's part of me 🙂

  • @sherezadeetchebarne7043
    @sherezadeetchebarne7043 Před rokem +56

    Hey Olli!!! :D My native language is spanish (I'm from Perú) and this video is absolutely accurate, I agree that the best way to learn it is by reading, it's really helpful that words are pronounce as they are written and you can guess a lot of meaning through the context. And People from latin america can undersrand european spanish at 99.99% so you can learn any of them and be able to understand both of them.

    • @paulo3378
      @paulo3378 Před rokem +10

      Pero nadie puede entender el chileno jajajajajaja

    • @e5205
      @e5205 Před rokem

      I'm learning Spanish from latin american sources and I've been wondering what's the .01 I'll miss if I ever go to Spain

    • @danesgch
      @danesgch Před rokem +2

      @@e5205 The main differences are in the names of food, foreign words, and slang. All Spanish speaking countries agreed on having only one set of rules for the language, so it’s structurally the same in Europe and the americas. (Aside from differences in pronunciation like z, c, ll, y)

    • @b4sh936
      @b4sh936 Před rokem

      @@e5205 Concha in Argentina means pussy, while in Spain it means shell, there are some variations like that, but not much. Once u know spanish at a fluent level ull start to know each countries´ slangs

    • @marcianito8969
      @marcianito8969 Před rokem

      @@paulo3378 yo soy chileno y estoy de acuerdo contigo lol

  • @comelfon
    @comelfon Před rokem +1

    Thanks for inspiration, Olly, I was about to start studing Spanish as a next language

  • @jenniferw2481
    @jenniferw2481 Před rokem

    Gracias! Me encantan tus libros!

  • @dawoudalbader9337
    @dawoudalbader9337 Před rokem +19

    I’m learning Spanish for over 2 years now & I think the hardest part is conjugations

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem +4

      Thanks for admitting period that it is hard. I know the language well. There are many rules that are hard for many to grasp after even trying to grasp the basics.
      espero que no lo hayas dicho...or...yo desearía que tuvieras algo de comer...or...quedan dos cervezas en la nevera necesitamos más...This right here would take many several years to master.

    • @ylbertorrez5626
      @ylbertorrez5626 Před rokem +1

      for real. la wéa.

    • @shar6389
      @shar6389 Před rokem

      @@ylbertorrez5626 Chileno?

    • @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett
      @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett Před rokem +3

      It's those pesky radical changing verbs that are amongst the hardest.

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Před rokem +68

    "Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!" -Monty Python

    • @AlvaroGonzalez-pj2bg
      @AlvaroGonzalez-pj2bg Před rokem

      "Everybody expects the Spanish Inquisition". As the Church was a branch of the State power, the whole bureaucracy applied to them as well. Any kind of visit to a person or judgement warning was notified 1 or 2 weeks earlier. That's why everybody knew they were coming beforehand. Over 500 hundred years have passed and you can still see the same fake statement everywhere.
      Therefore "History is written by victors" is another Hollywood fake statement. Because you have to be in the mood to write about it and spread the word to as many people as possible. If you don't do it because your culture encourages you to keep it to yourself, then any victory will always be pyrrhic or as it had never existed.
      Internalizing this beforehand will make wonders to understand Spanish culture and will blow your mind if you're a foreigner as you'll learn tones of things invented, created or negociated by Spanish territories. You'll find yourself correcting other people when they refer to American countries as "Colonies" when only the French, English and Dutch had them. Discovering that in Spain (also in Portugal) those lands were really parts of the state, never colonies. You'll learn about "The Black Legend", the new rich people behaviour, the Kings and politicians, The Dollar sign with the S letter and 2 columns taken from the Spanish flag coat of arms, the cowboys patrolling Louisiana with the same horse breed, invented in Andalusia in Southern Spain as a task force against burglars, that were later adquired by the Americans as their own, etc... everything can help you out to blend with the culture, while you're learning the language.

  • @Viktoria_Selene
    @Viktoria_Selene Před rokem +2

    you make me excited to learn my own language

  • @normiewoo787
    @normiewoo787 Před 7 měsíci

    Just discovered your content. Instantly subscribed. Thanks!

  • @Ramk0core
    @Ramk0core Před rokem +19

    Native Spanish speaker here. Out of curiosity, I looked up a few Spanish Language for foreigners resources and noticed how in most of them, people speak really slowly, at least in comparison to how the majority of natives speak in real life. This probably also makes the language seem harder than it actually is. I noticed the same thing with French when I took lessons a few years ago, the resources were very clear and easy to listen to, but I could barely keep up when I heard natives speaking.
    In contrast, the lessons I took in German and Japanese were a bit closer to reality. German isn't too fast, so hearing natives speaking wasn't as shocking. Japanese, on the other hand, is spoken at about the same speed as Spanish, sometimes even faster, and they don't pull any punches when it comes to speed with their resources. At least not the ones I'm using, which are often just as fast.
    Luckily, since I speak a similarly speedy language which happens to use almost the exact same phonemes, that part hasn't really been an issue, at least not yet.

    • @DerToasti
      @DerToasti Před rokem

      yeah i'm at a beginner lever of spanish and i cringe when i can actually understand what someone is saying. not even children's shows talk that slowly. i'm pretty good with french and never do you hear anyone pronounce every word the way you're supposed to in isolation. everything blends together because it's spoken so fast.

  • @arielbarbosa7337
    @arielbarbosa7337 Před rokem +12

    Portuguese is my first language.Both Spanish and Portuguese have a way more verb conjugations than English.I would not worry much about pronunciation at first,but make sure I can master the verb conjugation of the most common verbs I use in my mother tongue.

    • @NataliaHernandez-kn2ns
      @NataliaHernandez-kn2ns Před 10 měsíci

      Es verdad.

    • @patax144
      @patax144 Před 7 měsíci

      As a Spanish speaker learning Portuguese I definitely agree and you have even more tenses that us or at least that you actually use.

  • @joseandresserrano3282
    @joseandresserrano3282 Před 7 měsíci

    Mr. Olly, un video muy agradable. Muchas gracias.

  • @ryhol5417
    @ryhol5417 Před rokem +2

    Conjugation and the speed at which it’s spoken natively has been my biggest thing. Oh and different words for things in items in different regions. Dominicans were very hard to learn from. Just so fast

  • @saveddijon
    @saveddijon Před rokem +5

    It depends on background. As a Canadian I studied French in school, and that helped me with Spanish. Many concepts are the same, even if the implementation is different, and many words are the same or similar.

    • @aosoriog1
      @aosoriog1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I started learning French after English, I speak Spanish, the french grammar becomes easier because of Spanish

  • @phillip5639
    @phillip5639 Před rokem +18

    Viva el Español, también me defiendo con el Inglés pero lamentablemente hay mucho nativo del inglés que critica porque tenemos un acento muy marcado o porque a veces es difícil pronunciar algunas palabras. Yo no le diría eso a ninguna persona que esté intentando hablar Español y más bien le ayudaría a darse a entender.

    • @lizzethmancilla5197
      @lizzethmancilla5197 Před rokem +4

      De hecho muchos son así , ellos quieren que hablemos perfecto pero nosotros les aplaudimos el hecho de que intenten hablar español

    • @federicomonterorivera9842
      @federicomonterorivera9842 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@lizzethmancilla5197 típico de muchos gringos. No todos. Pero si una gran parte quieren que todo el mundo hable perfecto inglés, pero cuando hablan otro idioma yo no espero que lo hable perfecto y si dijera algo mal o le ayudo o me esfuerzo a entender a que se refiere.

  • @downtoearth5108
    @downtoearth5108 Před rokem +1

    I like this video. I love listening the spanish language. The vowels are pronounced like my polynesian languages. The spanish language has mauri (life-force) that is why it sounds beautiful. I'll start here to learn Spanish. Gracias.

  • @XZEDESZappingFun
    @XZEDESZappingFun Před rokem +1

    Omg i was just starting to learn Spanish today !! what a coincidence ! Can you do Is Danish hard to learn ? Have a nice day :)

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Před rokem +31

    As an English speaker I think Spanish is easy while you’re learning the most common grammar and vocabulary and then it’s still easy into intermediate thanks to the cognates but then you hit the plateau if you want to get to advanced then it gets hard. But intermediate is good enough for most people.

    • @Yetia
      @Yetia Před 9 měsíci

      I guess it could happen to master any language.

    • @ambersoup99
      @ambersoup99 Před 2 měsíci

      yo soy hablante española y estoy en c1 de ingles, twins 🤪🤪🤪

  • @keinnerflores
    @keinnerflores Před rokem +3

    The thing with the question marks is pretty simple: A question in english change the structure of the sentence:
    You are ready
    Are you ready?
    In spanish we don't do that, it does still the same in most cases:
    Estás listo
    ¿Estás listo?
    It helps a lot to know where a question begins.

  • @HunterNuttall
    @HunterNuttall Před rokem +2

    Learning the trilled r in two years sounds insanely fast to me!
    Despite all the difficulties of learning Spanish, it's considerably easier than just about any other language. By far the hardest part for me is making out the words when someone's speaking a mile a minute, but I guess that's going to be hard in any language.

  • @analuizahenriques1703
    @analuizahenriques1703 Před rokem +4

    Spanish comes really easy to me, since i'm Brazilian and learned italian. But even if I can already understand almost 100% of it, I want to study it properly in the future, it's so beautiful

    • @wilsonmejia6805
      @wilsonmejia6805 Před rokem +2

      O português é muito simples também para gente eu aprendi a falar português fluente só em 6 meses vc pode aprender ainda mais rápido porque o espanhol menos sons que o português às vezes eu penso que são praticamente a mesma língua

    • @AlShaykhAvichayAdraee
      @AlShaykhAvichayAdraee Před 9 měsíci

      Easy because Portuguese and Spanish are cousins..about me my mother tongue is Arabic I have been learning Spanish for six months is super hard can not catch up is something like tiki-taka
      😵‍💫

    • @federicomonterorivera9842
      @federicomonterorivera9842 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@wilsonmejia6805para mi son casi lo mismo. En 6 meses aprendes portugués y en 6 meses aprendes español. Con tantas oportunidades laborales, no entiendo porque no hay más gente que hable ambos idiomas con lo rápido que se aprende.

  • @carwhoahgamingg
    @carwhoahgamingg Před rokem +3

    I used to struggle with the subjunctivo a lot, but what really helped was turning off my brain from overthinking it, and instead just trying to see it on context over and over again through immersion. For example if you get so used to hearing "lo que quieras" or "cuando llegue, vamos a celebrar" or "espero que él esté bien" or "le pedí que me te lo mandara" or "si estuviera lloviendo, tú no estarías feliz" over and over again in context, your brain won't have any other choice but to understand it that way subconsciously so then you'll be able to speak fluently and not have to think about it! At least this is what happened to me after hundreds of hours of immersion. Y ahora estoy muy contento por poder habalar con fluidez sin tener que pensar conscientemente en lo que digo. Espero que vean este comentario y que continúen mejorando su español!

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem

      HOW DO YOU KNOW IF IT'S INDICATIVE OR SUBJUNTIVE:
      -Indicativo: para expresar acciones que se consideran reales o concretas
      -Subjuntivo: para expresar acciones que no son reales o concretas, sino que se refieren a deseos, emociones, posibilidades, hipótesis, dudas, incertidumbres, etc.
      So for example, in the sentence:
      "I hope I sing tomorrow" -> "Ojalá cantE mañana" ✅(NO, "Ojalá cantO mañana" ❌because you wish to be that way)

  • @trey8770
    @trey8770 Před rokem +7

    I’m just starting to learn but I found the words are much easier to pronounce and the accent is easy for me, the rolling Rs come natural to me.
    I took two years of German but forgot everything after a couple years. German grammar isn’t difficult but the words and accent don’t come as natural for a English speaker.

    • @alejonightwish
      @alejonightwish Před rokem +1

      German grammar is anything but easy. I don't know what level of proficiency you reached in German, but up to C1, the grammar is one of the hardest parts of the language. It's harder than the grammar in any Romance or Germanic language. Because of its grammar, it's that German is considered a level 2 language (measuring the difficulty to learn for English speakers).

  • @shamicentertainment1262
    @shamicentertainment1262 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I’m Australian but have always been able to roll my tongue and my Rs since a teen. In recent years Rammstein really helped improved my R rolling, even though I literally have only used it so far to sing Rammstein lol

  • @RoxanneJ
    @RoxanneJ Před rokem +1

    Subscribed!!

  • @Nikita35485
    @Nikita35485 Před rokem +5

    With my native Russian and English as a foreigh language I have even maybe a little bit more advantages to learn Spanish. It's plausible for some extence.

  • @yasagarwal859
    @yasagarwal859 Před rokem +3

    when i was learning Spanish
    i found is easy since alot of features are present in hindi too

  • @OrganizationXIII
    @OrganizationXIII Před 5 dny

    Your room looks so cozy ! I love your room set up ! I would never want to leave the room. 😂
    I just would want to sit in there and learn stuff .

  • @harrywensel8456
    @harrywensel8456 Před rokem +14

    I have seriously studied Spanish each and every day for no less than an hour for the last four years. I have taken all kinds of classes. I even dream in it. But still it is very hard for me to communicate with native Spanish speakers who do not also speak English. But learning Spanish is not hard in any instance it is just sticking with your studies that is hard. As for the sounds ... someone forgot to tell the spanish speakers that hablado ... is not pronounced hablou and mas is not ma. But overall it is pretty easy ... just stick with it. It is a beautiful language.

    • @waltersosa7214
      @waltersosa7214 Před rokem +5

      No se preocupe lo mismo me pasa aun con el ingles

    • @Dark_Armywr
      @Dark_Armywr Před rokem +2

      El problema es que los nativos hablamos tan rápido que parece que decimos todas las palabras juntas jajaja

    • @NataliaHernandez-kn2ns
      @NataliaHernandez-kn2ns Před 10 měsíci +2

      Me pasa lo mismo. No aprendo del todo Inglés aunque lo estudio. Y sí, algunos países del Caribe y parte de España dicen "hablao", pero son solo acentos, formas de pronunciar palabras. En Argentina y Uruguay también suelen aspirar la S en ciertas palabras para decir las cosas, en cambio, en muchos otros lugares pronunciamos todo completo. Lo bueno es que la fonética es la misma para todo hispanohablante, y ese es un punto a favor cuando se aprende.

    • @aosoriog1
      @aosoriog1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yo hablo español de Mexico y me cuesta a veces trabajo entender a los de otro pais, algunos españoles se "comen" las letras o hablan muy rapido, incluso en mi mismo pais cuesta trabajo entender a algunos de otras regiones, asi que paciencia y disfruta el aprendizaje, solo no uses mucho las malas palabras

  • @lalalalalalalalalala1119
    @lalalalalalalalalala1119 Před rokem +25

    as a native english and chinese speaker, the hardest part of spanish for me is figuring out when to use subjuntivo but to anyone who's also having trouble with that i promise it'll be fun after you get used to it :D

    • @memelesardi9497
      @memelesardi9497 Před rokem +2

      @Diego Padilla Es muy usado el modo subjuntivo en español solo que la mayoría no se da cuenta...

    • @dylansebastian9206
      @dylansebastian9206 Před rokem

      Que es un subjuntivo? XD

    • @carwhoahgamingg
      @carwhoahgamingg Před rokem

      I used to struggle with the subjunctivo a lot, but what really helped was turning off my brain from overthinking it, and instead just trying to see it on context over and over again through immersion. For example if you get so used to hearing "lo que quieras" or "cuando llegue, vamos a celebrar" or "espero que él esté bien" or "le pedí que te lo mandara" or "si estuviera lloviendo, tú no estarías feliz" over and over again in context, your brain won't have any other choice but to understand it that way subconsciously so then you'll be able to speak fluently and not have to think about it! At least this is what happened to me after hundreds of hours of immersion. Y ahora estoy muy contento por poder habalar con fluidez sin tener que pensar conscientemente en lo que digo. Espero que veas este comentario y que continúes mejorando tu español!

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem

      HOW DO YOU KNOW IF IT'S INDICATIVE OR SUBJUNTIVE:
      -Indicative: para expresar acciones que se consideran reales o concretas
      -Subjuntive: para expresar acciones que no son reales o concretas, sino que se refieren a deseos, emociones, posibilidades, hipótesis, dudas, incertidumbres, etc.
      So for example, in the sentence:
      "I hope I sing tomorrow" -> "Ojalá cantE mañana" ✅(NO, "Ojalá cantO mañana" ❌because you wish to be that way)

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem

      @@carwhoahgamingg HOW DO YOU KNOW IF IT'S INDICATIVE OR SUBJUNTIVE:
      -Indicative: para expresar acciones que se consideran reales o concretas
      -Subjuntive: para expresar acciones que no son reales o concretas, sino que se refieren a deseos, emociones, posibilidades, hipótesis, dudas, incertidumbres, etc.
      So for example, in the sentence:
      "I hope I sing tomorrow" -> "Ojalá cantE mañana" ✅(NO, "Ojalá cantO mañana" ❌because you wish to be that way)

  • @christianbarzola5377
    @christianbarzola5377 Před rokem +1

    correction en 7:09 ( you fight es tu peleas) incluye la s al final, add the "s"

  • @ZacharyKlassen
    @ZacharyKlassen Před rokem

    love your videos man

  • @optimizing_fitness
    @optimizing_fitness Před rokem +27

    The hardest part about Spanish is either verb conjugation or comprehending the message of fast speech

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před rokem +4

      the 'subjunctive'.... AARRGGHH !

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  Před rokem +4

      Definitely tricky!

    • @jooshozzono7249
      @jooshozzono7249 Před rokem +2

      Es fácil v: solo es cuestión de acostarse v,:

    • @optimizing_fitness
      @optimizing_fitness Před rokem

      @@dutchreagan3676 🤣 it’s tricky for me, too. Currently working on the present subjunctive, and I’ve started to get the hang of it. Just wait til I get to the other tenses of the subjunctive, tho lol

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před rokem

      @@optimizing_fitness : welcome to the club!

  • @qwert36130
    @qwert36130 Před rokem +6

    The hardest thing for me, is knowing which vocab word to use for something. As sometimes they are country specific, e.g el coche or el carro, la computadora or el ordenador etc.

    • @fanaticofmetal
      @fanaticofmetal Před rokem +2

      They usually mean the same thing so it's not really a problem

    • @qwert36130
      @qwert36130 Před rokem +2

      @@fanaticofmetal Yes, though that is true, it can still get confusing when someone says a particular word to me and I don’t understand. Only to realise it’s a word used only in Colombia but actually I do know that translated word but the version from Spain, for example.

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Před rokem

      I grew up speaking English and French, so "computadora" and "ordenador" both make sense. But some of the things with the most names are animals. Chompipe, pavo, guajolote; cerdo, cochino, cuche, puerco ...

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Před rokem

      The natives will understand you fine no matter what you use. They've been usually exposed to common words from other spanish speaking nations already, it's when you get the to the local slang that things can get tricky. A word like parche is used only in Colombia I think

    • @qwert36130
      @qwert36130 Před rokem

      @@canchero724 Yes! I agree with the slang words part. Difficult when wanting to speak quite casually with friends who are from different Spanish speaking countries 😅

  • @abrahamsito
    @abrahamsito Před rokem

    7:10 it says "Tú pelea" when you are referring to possessive context, like ""It isnt's your fight is mine". But when it is refers to an action that a person usually do it's "Tú peleas", like "You fight in the ring"

    • @seryisergiolopez6179
      @seryisergiolopez6179 Před rokem

      No. We don't add "tildes" (ú) for possessive context when it's about typing. He just made a bad conjugation.

  • @alexanderrodriguez5
    @alexanderrodriguez5 Před rokem +1

    In the minute 7:11 there is a mistake with the conjugation of "Tú" It should be "Tú peleas" with the "s".
    Great video, I'm a native Spanish speaker and I am passionate about languages, so I had fun watching this. Thank you :)

  • @Alex13724
    @Alex13724 Před rokem +20

    Thank God I come from the part of Sweden with rolling Rs. Helps a lot in Spanish, but no with English 😐. The J sound can be tricky but overall Spanish is not that bad. For us Swedes the vocabulary is the main problem, here my English helped a lot. For me English was the bridge between Swedish and Spanish. Thanks Olly!

    • @ricardorubensosaalvarez3122
      @ricardorubensosaalvarez3122 Před rokem +1

      I'm a native spanish speaker and let me tell you that I didn't pronunce the vibrating r until i was 5 years old.

    • @CHarlotte-ro4yi
      @CHarlotte-ro4yi Před rokem +2

      Same but with Germany! So glad I grew up with the bavarian rolling r😅

    • @ricardorubensosaalvarez3122
      @ricardorubensosaalvarez3122 Před rokem

      @@CHarlotte-ro4yi It's traumatic. A friend of mine was thinking about taking her daughter to a therapist but the day before the appointment the little girl started to pronounce the r.

  • @ricktaylor5397
    @ricktaylor5397 Před rokem +12

    Based on my experience, reading and writing Spanish is no more difficult than French or Italian. Spoken Spanish is another matter, due to the speed. One theory I came across is that Spanish has more polysyllabic words than French, Italian, English, or German, so Spanish speakers tend to speak faster to get their ideas across in the same time frame. Any thoughts on this?

    • @Tiqerboy
      @Tiqerboy Před rokem +2

      I would say that's true with French given the number of silent letters, so many familiar words are a syllable shorter (gato vs chat for example). But all those silent letters takes getting used to in terms of comprehension.

    • @ricktaylor5397
      @ricktaylor5397 Před rokem +1

      Agree. Spoken French is so different than the written language. The French actually have dictation contests to write down what they hear and hardly anyone gets a passing score.

    • @jandron94
      @jandron94 Před rokem

      Everybody when speaking does it with a degree of articulation and a degree of speed, both being closely related. A third element is the degree of familiarity within the language.
      What I have in mind is the sterotype of the "peasant" mumbling along at an incredible speed (sometimes with a cigarette stuck in his mouth) the same old words and expressions that are all familiar to him and the person he is talking too.
      The opposite stereotype would be the academical professor making an exposé to a large audiance, trying to nuance and vary his language by bring in new words and expressions.
      Spaniards tend to be associated with the first stereotype...
      An Argentine used to say to me that Spaniards were 'brutos"... I do get the full meaning point that the way they in general talk and behave somewhat seem to lack "finesse".
      It is also true that sound combinations in Spanish are limited compared to French or English, it surely has an impact on the degree of articultation needed to clearly deferentiate those combinations.
      Please do not see any disrespect in my comment but more a frank and direct expression of my reflexion on the subject.

    • @jandron94
      @jandron94 Před rokem +1

      @Paseos por Madrid Well you know the Argentinian society is extremely divided, some people live in slums (villas) whereas some others play polo or rugby or hockey and live in luxurious towers or private bouroughs (countries).. some of them even say that they would have been better off had they been an English or French colony rather than a Spanish colony...
      In all objectivity the level of education in Spain is not high compared to other European big nations (I just looked at indicators). That's what those "educated" Argentian have in mind : they see the typical Spaniard as a campesino or low skilled worker. Also they have in mind "brutal and stupid" traditions in Spain, the many inartuculated dialects, etc. far from sciences, progress, modernity and enlightment.
      The argentinians will prioritize their "devotion" to Italy, France, Germany rather than Spain. It's a bit odd but it's the way it is.
      Spain is coming a long way... Many Spaniards were poor and were forced to emigrate for a better life not so long ago... Argentinians also maybe have some disdain for those formerly poor Spaniards who now behave like pseudo "nouveaux riches" thanks to the EU member card (while still being less rich than other big European nations).
      And "millions of Argentians are emigrating to Spain" is a bit exagerated "... half a million is already more than the exact figure (around 300.000)

  • @SuperAustraliana1
    @SuperAustraliana1 Před rokem

    I love your videos I’m native Spanish speaker and I think conjugations are the hardest and RRs, to pronounce takes a while to dominate the skill , but speed also ,

  • @ezequielarias2557
    @ezequielarias2557 Před rokem

    7:11, in the second person of singular, the verbs are always in plural, that is like the simple present in english but in this case, always they ones must be in plural in all verb tenses. Greetings from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. 🇩🇴😌🇩🇴😌🇩🇴😌

  • @alonsochanakya538
    @alonsochanakya538 Před rokem +8

    Hola debes tener en cuenta Guinea Ecuatorial allí se habla Español y es muy curioso .depende de la etnia sonará diferente.

  • @ismaeelel-shafei3445
    @ismaeelel-shafei3445 Před rokem +3

    Hey there. I've been trying to learn Arabic for over 10 years but have been very uneventful. I was hoping, since I knew that you learned Arabic, there might be a course on your website for it. But I couldn't find one. I don't know how feasible it is to ask for you to make an entire course on one language, but I would definitely get your program if there was. Thanks

    • @Noor_Jacobs03
      @Noor_Jacobs03 Před rokem

      There are Arabic learning channels on CZcams, have you checked out any of them yet?

    • @ismaeelel-shafei3445
      @ismaeelel-shafei3445 Před rokem

      @@Noor_Jacobs03 I lot of the ones I tried were too childish

  • @lucasmolina2544
    @lucasmolina2544 Před rokem

    no se porque estoy viendo esto, pero es bastante interesante como explica para que la gente entienda, me gusta

  • @judzarintocomak9330
    @judzarintocomak9330 Před rokem +2

    I'm Judy from Philippines and Im learning Spanish and Portuguese 😁

  • @iansakalis3263
    @iansakalis3263 Před rokem +15

    Yo recientemente estoy aprendiendo los casos en alemán y puedo jurar que es imposible comparar alemán con el español.🇩🇪🇪🇸😬

    • @CHarlotte-ro4yi
      @CHarlotte-ro4yi Před rokem +4

      La vida es demasiado corta para aprender alemán 😅 Pero de verdad tengo much admiración por cada persona que se esfuerza a aprender mi idioma maternal! Es duro pero no tiene que ser perfecto, sabemos que el alemán es bien difícil…

    • @mamamelmonstruojl877
      @mamamelmonstruojl877 Před rokem

      Es verdad que tiene demasiados pronombres en segunda persona?

    • @patax144
      @patax144 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Cada idioma tiene su problema y los casos son un poco complicados pero no se si después de tener clases en las que me tocaba analizar frases en español los complementos y los componentes al igual que aprender otras lenguas romances le tengo mucho respeto a las personas que aprenden español.

    • @federicomonterorivera9842
      @federicomonterorivera9842 Před 2 měsíci

      Yo soy de CR, igual estoy aprendiendo el aleman. Realmente los casos son complejos y demasiado específicos en la gramática. Tambien cosas como el plural, artículos definidos, no llevan una regla estricta que debas seguir sino que hay varias excepciones. Ahora si lo pienso, el español tiene sus casos gramaticales solo que no son tan específicos como en el aleman ni tan confusos. Siempre me he preguntado, por que un pronombre sie - ella, pero también sie para ellos o ellas, también Sie para usted pero formal, 3 pronombres iguales😅

  • @hagianghoang5783
    @hagianghoang5783 Před rokem +5

    I am from Vietnam, I would love Spanish and try to learn it daily. Imagine in future I can speak this language fluency

    • @rafainc9273
      @rafainc9273 Před rokem

      I can help

    • @hagianghoang5783
      @hagianghoang5783 Před rokem

      @@rafainc9273 how you can help me?

    • @rafainc9273
      @rafainc9273 Před rokem

      @@hagianghoang5783 I'm Spanish native as long as you can help me with Vietnamese basics at least, I'm up for that like an language enchange... It's up to you saludos

    • @hagianghoang5783
      @hagianghoang5783 Před rokem

      @@rafainc9273 oh really. So appreciated for that. But how can we exchange language each other?

    • @rafainc9273
      @rafainc9273 Před rokem

      Maybe discord or I don't know, you name it

  • @DWilliams1707
    @DWilliams1707 Před rokem

    Love your channel Olly, it is so interesting and informative. Two things not mentioned. First the preterite tense. English speakers (especially those who have learned French) will always fall back on using haber + past partciple. However any Spaniard will tell you that using haber + past participle when you should be using the preterite immediately marks you out as not being Spanish. The other thing that gets me is the flipping of subject/object. For example 'I have forgotten the keys' becomes 'Las llaves se me han olvidado' (the keys forgot themselves to me'. Don't get me started on then subjunctive, especially in the imperfect tense...

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem +1

      También puedes decir "He olvidado las llaves"
      -Pretérito imperfecto de indicativo: equivale al "...used to" -> Yo estudiaba/Yo solía estudiar: I used to study (puede también traducirse como "I studied")
      -Pretérito imperfecto de subjuntivo: equivale al "...were to"-> Yo estudiara/Yo fuera a estudiar: I were to study (puede también traducirse como "I studied")

  • @archygrey9093
    @archygrey9093 Před rokem +2

    I had no idea rolling your R's is hard for some people, it feels perfectly normal and easy for me to do despite speaking only english

    • @shamicentertainment1262
      @shamicentertainment1262 Před 4 měsíci

      Same lol, useful if I end up doing Spanish

    • @nahomisanchez3
      @nahomisanchez3 Před 2 měsíci

      I'm Mexican, I have a brother who, at 16, still doesn't know how to say the double rr properly hahaha. He couldn't, but the good thing is that he still learned to hide that detail very well.

  • @gaelon532
    @gaelon532 Před rokem +4

    Ver a Gente aprendiendo Espanol es mi pasion

  • @memoirsofanimperfectbaritone

    The hardest part has to be verbs changing meaning in the reflexive form.

    • @optimizing_fitness
      @optimizing_fitness Před rokem +4

      Like quedar and quedarse. Just learned the difference last week. Been practicing them, and I’m getting the hang of the differences

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem +1

      @@optimizing_fitnessabsolutely confusing for beginners...short version:
      quedarse...me quedo en casa...anoche ellos se quedaron en casa...quédate! aqui...quédense! aqui todos.
      quedar...quedan dos cervezas en nevera...la casa queda cerca mi escuela.

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem

      @@uusfiyeyh de

  • @rodesigne
    @rodesigne Před rokem

    I am a native Spanish speaker, I think your video about Spanish is very interesting. If someone wants to learn or practice Spanish I can help and they can help me with my English :)

  • @carlosanarvaez2221
    @carlosanarvaez2221 Před rokem

    7:12 i don't know if someone else told you this yet, but with "tú" (you) the verb fight is "peleas" with s at the final, apart of that you did a great video

  • @invadergame
    @invadergame Před rokem +4

    My difficulty understanding comes from the combination of words when spoken fast rather than the speed itself. Lots of the vowels blend together. Example, va a la playa turns into vayalaplaya in my head which tricks my brain into going hey wait did they say vaya or va a and then I'm behind the rest of the sentence. I had to watch a lot of subtitles to get used to the pacing. It only gets worse in Andalusia because they just eat all their words like pescado turns into something that sounds like "pay-cow" and it takes too long to decipher that in fast dialogue

    • @Ines_23
      @Ines_23 Před rokem +1

      OMG that's so true 😅
      I do that very often and it changes with countries and even regions. Sometimes natives have to ask for clarification. Un special between South American, Caribbean and Spanish people.

  • @funkleburger1
    @funkleburger1 Před rokem +3

    I've been learning Spanish for five years and I still don't understand a lot. I can sort of understand when reading but when I hear Spanish spoken I haven't got a clue what's being said apart from picking out the odd word.

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem

      You have to be around it every day!

  • @AkiraElMittico
    @AkiraElMittico Před 9 měsíci

    The "V "depends on the country , some people say it with a gentle short sound like in English or Portuguese

  • @Jr-ft9ii
    @Jr-ft9ii Před rokem +1

    7:09 "Tú peleas" 😘 "Tú pelea" could be the imperative form 👍🏼
    Great video!

    • @BGM16
      @BGM16 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Or "tu pelea = your fight.

  • @incognitohacks4850
    @incognitohacks4850 Před rokem +3

    After four years of learning spanish i can finally read a few spanish sentences.

  • @tmhc72_gtg22c
    @tmhc72_gtg22c Před rokem +4

    Because I always have the most difficulty with pronunciation when studying foreign languages, to me Spanish is the easiest foreign language to learn. Italian may be the next easiest. French grammar is easier than Spanish grammar, but I have known a lot of people who after spending many years studying French still can't understand what the actors are saying when they try to watch French movies. I also have known some people with doctorates in French literature who say that they still have difficulty with the French u and ou sounds.
    Of the Spanish dialects, most native English speakers seem to find the Caribbean dialect to be the most difficult to understand.

    • @Doing_Time
      @Doing_Time Před rokem

      In my opinion, French is a language that is best learned by attaining conversational fluency before being exposed to its written form...quite the opposite of Spanish in that regard. The easiest language to hear for me is Swahili, but the grammar is very different because it's built more around altering prefixes and suffixes than around sentence formation.

  • @anavm823
    @anavm823 Před rokem

    es tu peleas, no tu pelea... pero he de decir que me encanta tu canal :) y te sigo encantada

  • @gwp71
    @gwp71 Před 6 měsíci

    This is a great video! It covers some problems that I can see a learner could find. (but i did spot a small mistake on 7:10, in the context where you're using the verb "pelear" 'You fight' would be written as 'tu peleas')

  • @hollyhockgod
    @hollyhockgod Před rokem +4

    One of the most challenging parts of Spanish is the many meanings the word "cojones" can have.

  • @NicoSleepyLeen
    @NicoSleepyLeen Před rokem +3

    As a native spanish speaker i believe it's easy to learn but hard to "master"
    I'm currently studying Japanese, which has a similar phonetic, and every word is pretty well marked, but there're dozens of diminute things changing the meaning of the whole sentence and sound similar to others, so if you have an understanding, you can grasp most of it
    In spanish we have the same diminute changes but the language tends to be fluid and has a pretty ambigous pronunciation, like if instead of having 3 words you have 1 long word stiched together
    So you might be able to comunicate easily with little knowledge, but getting to that conversational point can be a pain, specially adding how every hispanic country speaks completely different and inside each country there're like 20 different dialects

    • @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett
      @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett Před rokem +1

      Mastery is a difficult term. I don't know what the official definition would be. I've been speaking, reading and writing English for about 50-odd years and I often query my mastery over that. 🤔

    • @NicoSleepyLeen
      @NicoSleepyLeen Před rokem

      ​@@FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett Indeed, i don't know if the term would be correct but it marks the idea pretty well, it might be easy to learn the basics but hitting the "sweet spot" would take a lot of time
      And regarding the English mastery, a huge number of natives don't know the difference between "Were" and "we're", perhaps we're being too hard on ourselves

    • @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett
      @FrauDrSophieLouisaBennett Před rokem +1

      @@NicoSleepyLeen hitting the 'sweet spot' would take a lot of time. Full stop. 🤭🤭🤭🤭🤭🤭🤭

  • @rosejasminegwyn-willis824

    Love your videos💜. Would you mind making a video about the Persian language in the honor of the recent events in Iran?

  • @CarmenGuerrero-tl4nh
    @CarmenGuerrero-tl4nh Před měsícem

    Me alegra saber que hay tanta gente interesada en aprender Español.
    Solo puntualizar algo a Olly; en Andalucía, a parte del "seseo" existe el "ceceo" que es pronunciar las "s" como "c". Aún así he de decir que no todos seseamos o ceceamos, yo soy andaluza y no hago ninguna de las dos....las "s" del final sí que me las como o las pronuncio como "h" aspirada.
    Un saludo a todos y mucho ánimo a todos los que estais aprendiendo el español!!.

  • @Dark_Armywr
    @Dark_Armywr Před rokem +4

    Yo creo que el español es difícil porque tiene muchas reglas gramaticales a la hora de escribir, hay muchas personas que son hablantes nativos y no saben escribir bien sin errores ortográficos.
    PD: también el "que"y el "se" son difíciles. Yo soy hablante nativa y hasta a mí se me hizo complicado.

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem +1

      Qué = pronombre interrogativo
      Que = conjunción
      ¿QUÉ estás haciendo?
      Lo QUE quiero

  • @NMalteC
    @NMalteC Před rokem +20

    I've been learning Spanish on my own since February. It's the easiest language I've ever learned, and I'm fluent in 7 languages. Knowing English and German is a huge help. I also took Latin and French in school some 55 years ago.

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem +2

      Then you are probably speaking wrong to say how easy it is. I have been in many classes and the proof is in the pudding.
      There is a difference to saying and understanding:
      espero que tengas dinero vs yo desearía que tuvieras dinero...or...quedan dos cervezas en la nevera y tenemos que irnos a la tienda para comprar más.
      Again most who say it is easy more than likely speak it wrong.

    • @NMalteC
      @NMalteC Před rokem +1

      @@kcorpora1 I don't take classes. I spend 2-3 hours a day using communication apps and freely available online resources. Am I speaking fluently and correctly? Of course not. Is Spanish the easiest language I've ever attempted? Yes! If you're, say a native Mandarin speaker, Spanish is probably going to be more difficult than, say Japanese.

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem +2

      @@NMalteC cool but the language is not an easy language...I am fluent and I remember when I first started...I also remember so many struggle in the classes and many dropping the classes.
      Just think how many people use the verbs that are related wrong...
      jugar tomar...to play.
      saber conocer...to know.
      quedar quedarse...to remain.
      dejar salir...to leave.
      etc.
      Using the the subjunctive moods, etc.
      Learning the verb then its meaning.
      Conjugation.
      Commands.
      The list goes on. So without comparing it is a difficult language to learn outside of saying a few basic words.

    • @vick.8671
      @vick.8671 Před rokem +1

      @@kcorpora1 it depends on someone. It's easy for an Italian ot Portuguese speaker, but definitely hard for a Japanese or Korean speaker. Therefore, difficulty is relative.

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem

      @@vick.8671 I have been in many classes with different nationalities. Many drop the class. Again it is doable of course but not easy.
      There are several aspects of the language that are not easy to grasp. Therefore most that say it is easy more than likely are speaking spanish words yet speaking incorrectly.

  • @thenormalhumanperson
    @thenormalhumanperson Před rokem

    When I learned Spanish I was instantly able to do the r trill
    can't get over the ll sound though I've recently come to learn most speakers these days, besides in spain just pronounce it as y

  • @koku_10
    @koku_10 Před rokem

    7:09 Keep in mind that here it is You fight, not You fight, that doesn't make any sense except if you take the tilde out of it, but doing that already gives it a different meaning.

  • @zainabbarakat9566
    @zainabbarakat9566 Před rokem +3

    So the subjunctive is like the vosotros form: not too easy but fun af

  • @xose9160
    @xose9160 Před rokem +4

    a native Spanish speaker here :)

  • @PRHWoolly80
    @PRHWoolly80 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Learning Spanish is fairly straight forward, I can write and understand it written down fairly well. Understanding it when it's being spoken however is a whole new level of complexity.

    • @reinaroja2024
      @reinaroja2024 Před 3 měsíci

      Has mejorado en la habilidad de escucha y comprensión oral?.

    • @PRHWoolly80
      @PRHWoolly80 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@reinaroja2024 desafortunadamente no. Lo escribo a mis amigos hispanohablantes y lo escucho las serias de Netflix con subtítulos, pero no lo entiendo bien. Necesito practicarlo en las conversaciones.

    • @reinaroja2024
      @reinaroja2024 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@PRHWoolly80
      ¡No te preocupes, con el tiempo vas a mejorar y será fácil, intenta tener amigos online hispanoparlantes, con práctica será pan comido escucharlo, como comprenderlo, no te desanimes! ¡Saludos!

  • @mikesraci1689
    @mikesraci1689 Před 10 měsíci

    it is in the same way how you learn english as well, the more media you consume the easier is going to be for you to get into the way how words are pronounced, you get it firstly from an academic source then you move towards media and your will to master the whole thing out, at least how it worked for me, is whenever I'm writing or saying something clarification comes to my mind on how something is said, sometimes I do recall some gramatic rules and all that stuff but most of the times it just pops up based on what I have heard on a movie, song, youtube video, etc, yet I wouldn't dare to say I'm fluent I enjoy spending around 80% of the time getting content in this language rather than my native one. (Had to double check on google translator once I wrote all this and did I had corrected a sentence or two 😆)

  • @timupton5625
    @timupton5625 Před rokem +4

    In my experience, the hardest thing for native English speakers to get right 100% of the time, is the pretty random noun gender of Spanish and its effect on adjective endings. I've been learning and speaking Spanish for more than 35 years and I still make mistakes with the gender of nouns. To give you an idea of how tricky it is, I've even heard my Spanish wife make mistakes with gender endings.

    • @erkenbrandiii7335
      @erkenbrandiii7335 Před rokem +4

      Hahha your Spanish wife is a child??Make mistakes with the ending gender? No sense with a native speaker. I am spanish and is so easy, I suppose that she make mistakes for confuse English and Spanish, this tipicaly happens when you are bilingual but one person that speaks all the time in Spanish is near to the impossible make that mistakes..

    • @danieldebelen1995
      @danieldebelen1995 Před rokem +1

      if your wife makes those silly mistakes that not even children make, then she is not native

    • @timupton5625
      @timupton5625 Před rokem +2

      @@danieldebelen1995 She is native. She was born to a Spanish family and grew up in Spain. All native speakers make mistakes in their own language.

    • @felipecardonabb6543
      @felipecardonabb6543 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@timupton5625it doesn't happens,the native spanish speakers who make that kind of mistakes could be retarded people or may have a mental illness.

    • @limawhisky
      @limawhisky Před 5 měsíci

      Don't worry, even for me that I speak Spanish I aknowledge the grammar complexity of the language.

  • @victorpk8009
    @victorpk8009 Před rokem +4

    Im Spanish and a thing i have trouble with is to understand latin american countries, maybe not mexicans or colombians but chileans are just impossible to understand, they have completely different words, a difficult pronunciation to understand and too many slangs which makes it really hard even for native speakers. Sorry for my english btw, im working on it

    • @salasrcp90
      @salasrcp90 Před rokem

      Los chilenos son dificiles de entender principalmente por su pronuncia desidiosa que a veces los hace sonar como unos ebrios hablando en una barra

    • @lizzethmancilla5197
      @lizzethmancilla5197 Před 8 měsíci

      Tranquilo , nadie les entiende 😂

  • @LilyTree
    @LilyTree Před rokem

    I'm going to make 'passionate outburst in the street' one of my learning goals 😄

  • @bellezayverdad
    @bellezayverdad Před 7 měsíci

    Consistency of the spelling system and pronunciation, very standardized and simple phonetical system. These are the main advantages in comparison to other Latin languages but, for example, verbal tenses are more challenging than in French or Italian.

  • @jordibernal3488
    @jordibernal3488 Před rokem +7

    I’m a native Spanish speaker and I think the hardest things about Spanish is rolling R’s and verb endings. Many of my friends and coworkers just can’t pronounce the R correctly as much as they sincerely try. And they often get the wrong verb ending or tenses because of how many there are and when to use them.

    • @moranag209
      @moranag209 Před rokem +2

      Never learned Spanish, but, as for me, "r" sound is quite easy, it is a little bit easier than english or french "r" and I LOVE how it sounds. My favorite sounds is spanish and french [r] (don't know which one I like more)

    • @b4sh936
      @b4sh936 Před rokem +1

      @@moranag209 Yeah, english r is harder tbh

  • @alfred6272
    @alfred6272 Před rokem +7

    I’d love to see a “is Portuguese hard to learn”

    • @alexanderrodriguez5
      @alexanderrodriguez5 Před rokem +1

      Same here I'm studying Potuguese and I love it :)

    • @DerToasti
      @DerToasti Před rokem

      how do you even read and pronounce the words? the rules are so convoluted.

  • @cristinabouvier
    @cristinabouvier Před rokem

    Excelente ❤

  • @arnulfo267
    @arnulfo267 Před rokem +6

    Learning the difference between Ser and Estar is a fun trip isn't?

    • @fanaticofmetal
      @fanaticofmetal Před rokem +1

      Nah it's easy

    • @hollyhockgod
      @hollyhockgod Před rokem

      Not too difficult, but if you get mixed up, results can be hilarious, because a lot of slang comes from it: "ser buena" (be good) vs "estar buena" (be smoking hot) / "ser retrasado" (be retarded) vs "estar retrasado" (be delayed)/ "ser verde" (be green) vs "estar verde" (be unprepared) / "ser jodido" (be difficult) vs "estar jodido" (be in a dire situation).

    • @kellymiller7986
      @kellymiller7986 Před rokem

      The weirdest thing at first is that the location of things uses "estar". I mean, the school and the hospital are pretty much stuck in one place.

    • @hollyhockgod
      @hollyhockgod Před rokem

      @@kellymiller7986 Not in a human lifespan, but given enough time, even mountains and rivers can change places, so "estar" seems appropiate. After all, the location of something is not an inherent and perpetual characteristic of it. "Ser" means you always have it and never can get rid of it. "Estar" means it's just a state, you weren't always like that, even if that state could be irreversible (as in "estar muerto").

  • @emmanuelfrattini5313
    @emmanuelfrattini5313 Před rokem +3

    Spanish is very hard to learn but not impossible, it's a beautiful language!

    • @kcorpora1
      @kcorpora1 Před rokem +2

      A realest! Thank you!

    • @gaston8269
      @gaston8269 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes Spanish is one of the best languages of the world, greetings from Argentina ✋😅

  • @DanielCurti
    @DanielCurti Před rokem +1

    Not everywhere "b" and "v" are pronounced in the same way. About difficult things is the use of the verbs "ser" and "estar". BTW, love your channel!

    • @ivanovichdelfin8797
      @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem +1

      Ser = identidad/esencia
      Estar = estado
      Soy guapo = I am handsome (doesn't matter, I am handsome, no matter what I wear)
      Estoy guapo = I look handome (maybe now I look, but tomorrow don't)

  • @Zambineaux305
    @Zambineaux305 Před rokem

    As a native Spanish speaker, I know I’m not the only one that’s lazy about rolling the r’s. I’ll do it when necessary, but not for day-to-day conversations. Greetings from Miami. 💪🏽💯

  • @Joseph80201
    @Joseph80201 Před rokem +56

    Object prunouns in spanish are probably the hardest.
    "lo llevo, la dijo, hazlo"
    As a non-english native speaker verb conjugation came quite easy. It took some memorization, but if you keep in mind that verbs *should* be conjugated the shifts are actually quite intutive and have clear and easy rules.
    The "rr" is beautiful. I can travel to spanish speaking countries just so I can be rrring all day.

    • @rebekahblesi7526
      @rebekahblesi7526 Před rokem +5

      Yes, this is what I’m working on right now. But I’m starting to understand and it’s very exciting to be able to finally get a sentence that you wouldn’t have understood before.

    • @rafabloops8188
      @rafabloops8188 Před rokem +16

      I'm afraid "La dijo" is grammatically incorrect, since the verb "decir" is transitive. In this case the direct object would be WHAT/THAT she was said. It's a common mistake (at least in Spain) everyone will understand though. "Lo llevo" would depend on the context. Have a nice day!

    • @dr.evegleton
      @dr.evegleton Před rokem +1

      Our RR is making you so happy.
      Sigue viajando por todos nuestros países siendo feliz con la RR.
      Mazel Tov.

    • @Tinoco1x
      @Tinoco1x Před rokem +14

      "La dijo" is not correct sounds really weird. It should be "Le dijo"

    • @CrisTryingToBeProductive
      @CrisTryingToBeProductive Před rokem +5

      @@rafabloops8188 la dijo looks like laismo.