Mystery Languages - Can You Guess What They Are?

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2016
  • I hope you enjoy today's mystery language challenge!
    ►Learn a language with Pimsleur: imp.i271380.net/langfocus ► Get started with a free trial!
    (Disclosure: The above link is an affiliate link, so Langfocus gets a small referral fee - at no extra cost to you)
    Support Langfocus on Patreon: / langfocus
    Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov, Sebastian Langshaw, Brandon Gonzalez, Brian Michalowski, Adrian Zhang, Vadim Sobolev, Yixin Alfred Wong, Kaan Ergen, Sky Vied, Romain Paulus, Panot, Erik Edelmann, Bennet, James Zavaleta, Ulrike Baumann, Ian Martyn, Justin Faist, Jeff Miller, Stephen Lawson, Howard Stratton, George Greene, Panthea Madjidi, Nicholas Gentry, Sergios Tsakatikas, Bruno Filippi, Sergio Tsakatikas, and Qarion for their generous Patreon support.
    / langfocus
    / langfocus
    / langfocus
    langfocus.com
    Sources of mystery language audio:
    Haitian Creole: • Beautiful Haitian Girl...
    Frisian: "De Fuke" • Video
    www.languageandlaw.org/FRISIAN...
    Sardinian: • Consolata Melis, 105 y...
    Music:
    Main music: looped sample from "Roll the Top Down" by Gunnar Olsen.
    Outro: "Rollin' Back" by MK2.

Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  Před 10 měsíci

    Hi, everyone! I hope you like the video.
    If you're learning a new language, try the world-famous *Pimsleur method* in its new-and-improved subscription format: ► imp.i271380.net/langfocus ► *Free trial - Use my link to gain access*
    (Disclosure: The above link is an affiliate link, so Langfocus gets a small referral fee - at no extra cost to you)

  • @BRockandriffs
    @BRockandriffs Před 8 lety +723

    Would love for this to become a series.

  • @guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272

    Max Weinreich: "A language is a dialect with an army and navy"

    • @okiedokie56
      @okiedokie56 Před 8 lety +7

      Best quote I've ever seen

    • @elton1981
      @elton1981 Před 8 lety +4

      And the mad who said it first said it in Yiddish!

    • @okiedokie56
      @okiedokie56 Před 8 lety +5

      So Basque is not a language. They have no Navy and no Army. Same with Czech , Hungarian and Slovak, No navy so they are not languages

    • @okiedokie56
      @okiedokie56 Před 8 lety +5

      Paul Wheeler Yiddish could be classified as a very heavy dialect of German

    • @elton1981
      @elton1981 Před 8 lety +2

      +Kolynk ah the line between dialect and language.

  • @giulianol
    @giulianol Před 7 lety +129

    Yay, I'm sardinian I was surprised to hear my language in your video.

    • @allcolorsareentombedinblack
      @allcolorsareentombedinblack Před 4 lety

      It's Campidanese Sardinian

    • @bruh-zs2xp
      @bruh-zs2xp Před 3 lety

      Do u like sardines?

    • @Serendip98
      @Serendip98 Před 3 lety

      Ha ha, they spotted you.

    • @eccine7203
      @eccine7203 Před 2 lety

      @@bruh-zs2xp cittidi e abbarra cittu, ca ti cumbedini.

    • @eccine7203
      @eccine7203 Před 2 lety

      @@allcolorsareentombedinblack It's "Limba de mesania", a sort of campidanese strongly influenced by logudorese.

  • @behnamjohnson7518
    @behnamjohnson7518 Před 3 lety +17

    These are the first impressions I got hearing each of these three languages:
    1. Something close to French
    2.Something close to German
    3.Something close to a romance language * (I couldn't say it's close to Italian)
    My native language is Persian and I am from Iran!! I am almost fluent in English and have just started learning German!!

  • @rohanpandey2037
    @rohanpandey2037 Před 7 lety +44

    The last language sounds like it's coming from across the room. Scared me for a second!

  • @eduardolobato3857
    @eduardolobato3857 Před 7 lety +181

    1- Something related to French
    2- Something related to English
    3- Something close to Italian

    • @aioacasa
      @aioacasa Před 4 lety +5

      Sardinian is not close to Italian at all, it is more similar to Latin than it is to italian. Get some research done before you speak, no Italian speaker can understand it. Spanish people are the ones that could understand some of the words more because of the Spanish domination we had for centuries and the influence we got on our language. Su cunnu chi tind'ari bogau!

    • @pauvermelho
      @pauvermelho Před 4 lety +4

      @@aioacasa
      Eduardo Cunha Lobato
      probably speaks Portuguese and so do I.
      To OUR ears... it's close to Italian, since we never heard no one speaking Latin because they are all dead (and it's not even near Spanish).
      Sardinian mighty be the most similar to Latin, but Italian comes in 2 place doesn't it?

    • @aioacasa
      @aioacasa Před 4 lety

      @@pauvermelho no, It doesn't. the second more near language is Spanish, because there are words coming directly from that language although the base is different. There are basically no words coming directly from italian because we speak it probably since the ventennio of Mussolini in a widespread way so it didn't have the time to mix. It's what I am saying. I never said that Spanish is very near to latin, like Sardinian is. For exemple the Sardinian word for window is ventana like in Spanish. We had like 4-5 centuries of Spanish/Catalan domination while we are Italians since 1861. It's just a pity that we are a bit losing the language in new generations.

    • @pauvermelho
      @pauvermelho Před 4 lety +2

      @@aioacasa Some people disagree with you on Spanish being closer to Latin more than Italian
      On some sites the difference from Latin:
      Sardinian 8%
      Italian 12%
      Spanish 20%
      Romanian 23,5%
      Catalan 24%
      Occitan (Provençal) 25%
      Galician 30%
      Portuguese 31%
      French 44%
      I NEVER said that Sardinian came from Italian neither
      Eduardo Cunha Lobato, if you note he use the word "close", and on the previous options he uses the word "related". It's just close in terms of sound. Some people say that Portuguese sound like Russian, and Spanish sound like Greek and there is no relations between this languages.
      I kind of suspect that you received more influence from the Catalan than from the Spanish, didn't you?

    • @pauvermelho
      @pauvermelho Před 4 lety +1

      @@aioacasa "It's just a pity that we are a bit losing the language in new generations."
      Is it standardized ?
      Do you have signs on it?
      Does the menu of restaurants are in Sardinian?
      Do you have books, newspapers on it?
      Is it taught in school?
      Do you speak it in radios, on television? (properly not like in Galizia where they acastellianeted the language)
      If not, what are you waiting for? Waiting for Rome to do that for you?
      You guys need some lessons from the Québécois people.
      Sorry but if you don't do it no one else is going to do it for you.

  • @honeydane5646
    @honeydane5646 Před 7 lety +77

    frisian was easy, also because In the sample trxt it literally said Frisia: fryslân

    • @frzferdinand72
      @frzferdinand72 Před 7 lety +19

      Same with Sardinian, it said sardu.

    • @omarmouffok131
      @omarmouffok131 Před 7 lety +17

      Frisian is so fascinating that I'd love to learn it. It's similar to Old English.

    • @mcgoldenblade4765
      @mcgoldenblade4765 Před 7 lety +5

      I thought it was Dutch, but after I saw the writing I found it was some other germanic language similar to dutch

    • @RookSchelp
      @RookSchelp Před 7 lety +8

      Its awsome to hear that people are intrested in Frisia. I come from "Fryslan" and I never would have thought that people want to learn it. I can say that "Frysk" sounds alot like German and in the noth of Germany they kind of speak in the same way. Just saying that its awsome to see someone from another country show so much intrest in the "Fryske taal" (Frisian Language) "Lokwinske" good luck!

    • @MatthewMcVeagh
      @MatthewMcVeagh Před 7 lety +1

      When I visited the Netherlands in 1995 I bought a teach yourself book for Frisian. Unfortunately I've never used it tho!

  • @filippocontri8763
    @filippocontri8763 Před 7 lety +182

    When your 1st language is Italian and you understand Scottish people better than Sardinian😂

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 7 lety +22

      Well, I hope you do lol. Scottish English is simply a regional variety of English that any native speaker would understand. Mentre, il sardo è una lingua completamente diversa dall'italiano, e infatti è la lingua più vicina al latino xP.

    • @Octopussyist
      @Octopussyist Před 6 lety +7

      Not surprised. There is even a small minority on Sardinia who speaks Catala. In past centuries the seemingly "long" distances by sea, were actually the "shortest".

    • @0o0Vanilla0o0
      @0o0Vanilla0o0 Před 5 lety +7

      When you are Italian and South Sardinian, but you can't understand the Sardinian logudorese 😂
      When you're Italian and North Sardinian and you can't understand the Sardinian campidanese 😂

    • @daviderosu3340
      @daviderosu3340 Před 5 lety +3

      Matteo Pescio e il sardo Centrale? Beh, io sono barbaricino DOC e vi posso dire che il cosiddetto "Nuorese/Baroniese/Barbaricino" è all'origine sia del sardo Settentrionale che di quello Meridionale. Tipo: "Io ero"; Nuorese: Dego/Ego fipo -Logudorese "Deo fipo", Baroniese: "Yeo 'ipo/fipo (in alcuni paesi, tipo a Orune a quanto pare dicono 'upo come a Ollolai e a Orgosolo"; Barbaricino: dipende dal paese, generalmente la radice è "Fui"; ora "fui" si usa solo nel mio paese, Oliena, ed esclusivamente di fronte alla consonante "n" per questioni di pronuncia della "f" (in Barbagia e in Baronia abbiamo il vizio di elidere la "f", la pronunciamo solo in rari casi), nella forma positiva si dice "ipo", a volte "ui", ma è raro, lo usano anche a Ollolai, a Mamoiada e a Gavoi (non a caso, se si esclude il mamoiadino che si somiglia un po' di meno, gli altri due dialetti son molto vicini all'olianese)... Inoltre, nel barbaricino è rimasto il pronome personale "ego", in alcuni paesi è diventato "eo", "deo"/"deu" vengono usati solo a Fonni, a Ovodda e a Olzai. E, of course, a Nuoro.

    • @daviderosu3340
      @daviderosu3340 Před 5 lety +2

      0o0Vanilla0o0 ahahah, true...

  • @deeganw.8977
    @deeganw.8977 Před 7 lety +25

    1. French
    2. A germanic language of some sort
    3. I knew it was Sardinian right away cause of the word "sardu" in the written example.

  • @murplesman
    @murplesman Před 4 lety +12

    I can speak French and the Haitian Creole was even confusing for me before there were some more obvious words. The accent is just really different.

  • @jplowe2263
    @jplowe2263 Před 7 lety +42

    More history on Frisian and Sardinian please

  • @renmckinnell7693
    @renmckinnell7693 Před 7 lety +5

    This is my favorite video series! Thank you so much for making these! All of my guesses have been pretty spot on so far; these videos bring joy to a language nerd like myself :)

  • @m.pellegrini2540
    @m.pellegrini2540 Před 8 lety +17

    1) Haitian Creole, it sounds like French mixed with an African language.
    2) Old English or Old Norse. Something ancient and Germanic anyway.
    3) A language of Italy, like Neapolitan, Sardinian or Sicilian! I understood everything, it's about a woman who married and the birth of two twins!

    • @m.pellegrini2540
      @m.pellegrini2540 Před 8 lety

      Almost everything, but not all.

    • @Crick1952
      @Crick1952 Před 8 lety +1

      Frisian is intellegible with Old English, so good job!

    • @ajejebrazorf6166
      @ajejebrazorf6166 Před 8 lety

      Sei italiano? Io non avevo proprio idea di che lingua fosse (ma sono del nord, forse è per quello)

    • @stompasrule
      @stompasrule Před 8 lety

      Si, anchio! Non ho capito niente!

  • @indibindylou
    @indibindylou Před 3 lety +11

    I was so thrilled when I managed to guess Sardinian correctly 😄

  • @prototype615h
    @prototype615h Před 5 lety +13

    my guesses are
    1. Some sort of French creole, perhaps developed in Africa
    2. Afrikaans -It sounded like Dutch/German but it was written so differently
    3. Portuguese

    • @zdzisekkultywator3099
      @zdzisekkultywator3099 Před měsícem

      My guesses are 1. South african (no idea whitch) 2. Frisian 3.Sardinian

  • @mynamewhatis7254
    @mynamewhatis7254 Před 7 lety +60

    I think moun probably came from the french word, monde (meaning world) which is a word also used to mean 'people' in some contexts. For example, "est ce qu'il y a du monde ici?" which means, "are there any people here?". Or "tout le monde" which means, "everyone (all the people)". Literal translation would be, "all the world", but it's an expression that means "all the people" or "everyone". Sorry I was repetitive. I'm tired. I don't owe you anything. Goodnight xD

    • @pouletasse
      @pouletasse Před 7 lety +5

      In Cajun French "moun" also means "people" and does come from French monde. Same in LA Creole, I think.

    • @maloyaman113
      @maloyaman113 Před 7 lety +3

      mynamewhatis i think you're right. it is the same in my native language, reunionese creole.

    • @diouranke
      @diouranke Před 5 lety

      it also may be from some bantoid African languages, specifically from Congo where the word for person is muntu or mtu or something similar

    • @alainprecieux8710
      @alainprecieux8710 Před 3 lety +1

      I am Alain Précieux from Mauritius island in the Indian ocean. The words '' moun'''' or ''di moun'' is used in French based creoles in the French West Indies and French Guyana. Creole is also used 10,000 Km away on the islands of the Indian Ocean (Mauritius Reunion, Rodrigues and Seychelles). The word ''moun'' means '' person'' and comes from the French ''du monde'' . meaning ''people''. In Haiti ''moun' and ''Ti moun'' mean respectively ''person'' and ''child'' respectively.

    • @alainprecieux8710
      @alainprecieux8710 Před 3 lety +1

      I am Alain Précieux from Mauritius island in the Indian ocean. The words '' moun'''' or ''di moun'' is used in French based creoles in the French West Indies and French Guyana. Creole is also used 10,000 Km away on the islands of the Indian Ocean (Mauritius Reunion, Rodrigues and Seychelles). The word ''moun'' means '' person'' and comes from the French ''du monde'' . meaning ''people''. In Haiti ''moun' and ''Ti moun'' mean respectively ''person'' and ''child'' respectively.

  • @lucasm4299
    @lucasm4299 Před 8 lety +30

    1. French-like language
    2. Germanic Language?
    3. Sardinian

  • @gauravradioactive
    @gauravradioactive Před 5 lety

    I love the series of Mystery Languages and I am very eager to see such videos. Please keep uploading. Thanks a lot.

  • @carolameloni5627
    @carolameloni5627 Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you so much for your interesting videos!! I'm so proud you've mentioned Sardinian, which I consider to be my L2, being born in Sardinia...

  • @tommyvercetti9413
    @tommyvercetti9413 Před 8 lety +5

    You got them subs! 100k! Unbelievable! I remember when this channel used to have around 20k subs and i was sure that the amount of viewers would not get bigger. Nice to know i was wrong. Well done! :)

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +2

      +Tommy Vercetti Thanks, Tommy!

  • @henryeugenedoublehockeysti1894

    Is there any chance of this becoming a recurring series?
    There are a lot of challenge videos like this on youtube, but you breaking down the samples is very helpful, and telling the viewer what to listen for in a language to identify it could make a series like this a very useful learning tool.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +4

      Yes, there will be more. :)

  • @Rologas81
    @Rologas81 Před 5 lety

    Love it. Please do something similar again soon.

  • @haitangweiyu
    @haitangweiyu Před 5 lety +13

    Wow, Frisian sounds good...
    Anyways, I only got that the third one was related to Italy orz.

  • @Philoglossos
    @Philoglossos Před 8 lety +46

    Writing these before I get the answers...
    1. I guessed Haitian creole. The French vocab made it pretty obvious that it was some kind of French-based language, and Hatian Creole is the one I'm most familiar with.
    2. I guessed Frisian. I was originally gonna guess Norwegian but then in written form I noticed the word "Norwegian" and that it looked more like the English word than like the Norwegian equivalent (Norsk? Or something like that?).
    3. Sardinian. I speak Italian, and I immediately knew it was a regional language spoken in Italy. I saw "Sardu" (In Italian it's called "Sardo") and that was that xD. Interestingly Sardinian is actually the romance language that has changed the least from Vulgar Latin.
    You should do another one of these! It was fun! :D

    • @budidis1578
      @budidis1578 Před 8 lety +2

      Wow, you got all of them right!

    • @ledeol5605
      @ledeol5605 Před 8 lety

      your Channel is simply amazing

    • @Philoglossos
      @Philoglossos Před 8 lety +1

      Infatti, il sardo non è un dialetto dell'italiano xP. È la lingua più vicina al latino volgare da cui vengono tutte le lingue romanze xD. Un esempio è la parola "cento", che viene dalla parola latina "centum". Originariamente la pronuncia era tipo "chentum" (la lettera "c" si pronunciava sempre duro), ma questo suono ha cambiato prima delle lettere "i" ed "e" in tutte le lingue romanze a parte il sardo, in cui si dice "kentu."

    • @ChristinaAChhor
      @ChristinaAChhor Před 8 lety

      hey are you a cheater

    • @ChristinaAChhor
      @ChristinaAChhor Před 8 lety

      hey are you a cheater

  • @Onneukbaar
    @Onneukbaar Před 7 lety +39

    For my Frisian was easy because I'm Dutch

  • @usa8529
    @usa8529 Před 4 lety +2

    I really love that you included Sardinian. I really enjoyed the video. Please continue the series.

  • @annafernando6816
    @annafernando6816 Před 7 lety

    I love these. Would definitely love more.

  • @guidoylosfreaks
    @guidoylosfreaks Před 8 lety +9

    I got the three of them when I saw them written.

  • @DiMacky24
    @DiMacky24 Před 8 lety +9

    My answers:
    1. Patwa or Patois from the Caribean (Dominica maybe?) It sounds french in roots, but with a west-African intonation.
    2. Sounds low German, maybe an East Prussian dialect. Maybe Frisian?
    3. Scicilian, Sardinian or Corsican, the accent sounds quite non-standard Italian and the spelling follows conventions that fall between Latin and Arabic, so I would guess from a Mediterranean island.

    • @DiMacky24
      @DiMacky24 Před 8 lety +8

      Huh, I feel like I did not do too bad.

    • @RCSVirginia
      @RCSVirginia Před 8 lety +1

      Your answers for number three were exactly the same as mine.

    • @erikroggeman7620
      @erikroggeman7620 Před 7 lety

      very nice!

    • @antonellobertone3903
      @antonellobertone3903 Před 7 lety +1

      great job!but actually if you listen to a single sentence in sardinian matched with a single sentence in sicilian language you'll notice that they are a lot different.(for me sicilian is so cool)
      From an Italian of the Neapolitan zone :D

  • @elisregina4428
    @elisregina4428 Před 4 lety +1

    Very nice video! I loved it!

  • @beatrizmontenario5123
    @beatrizmontenario5123 Před 6 lety +1

    Would love if this type of videos become a series at tour channel! Following from Brazil ♡

  • @plki901
    @plki901 Před 8 lety +3

    Subscribed after seeing this. More please!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +3

      Cool! I'm glad you're here. :)

  • @Golderpe
    @Golderpe Před 8 lety +6

    Please more videos like this one :). Very nice channel!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety

      Thanks, I'm glad you like it!

  • @LuvBugBlaqkHart
    @LuvBugBlaqkHart Před 7 lety +1

    I didn't know all of the languages but I was able to deduce what regions they were from pretty easily. I love these guessing videos! Please do more ♡

  • @raphcest8408
    @raphcest8408 Před 5 lety

    Paul thank you for this video please do more like this one

  • @BATMAN-gh1nf
    @BATMAN-gh1nf Před 7 lety +5

    Hi, I just discovered your site.
    Very interesting and nicely presented.

  • @mohammedjalloh7658
    @mohammedjalloh7658 Před 8 lety +36

    I got haitian creole right!
    I thought frisian was Norwegian. Close enough.
    I thought Sardinian was Swahili 😳

    • @mohammedjalloh7658
      @mohammedjalloh7658 Před 8 lety +1

      And YES you should do more videos like this...make them longer too!

    • @OliverRWeber
      @OliverRWeber Před 8 lety +2

      Swahili! hehehehe ;)

    • @mohammedjalloh7658
      @mohammedjalloh7658 Před 8 lety

      King Libra yeah, i don't where that came from...it sounded african from the audio, but i knew i was wrong the minute i saw the text, and even then i couldn't figure what sort of language that was

    • @OliverRWeber
      @OliverRWeber Před 8 lety

      +Eisen Heinrich (məʊˈhæmɛd ʤæłɔh) yeah! Audios can be quite deceiving!

    • @mohammedjalloh7658
      @mohammedjalloh7658 Před 8 lety

      King Libra what did you think it was?

  • @dominichsweden
    @dominichsweden Před 4 lety

    I definitely want more videos like this one!

  • @arallech
    @arallech Před 6 lety

    Wow! You are amazing in languages! I just can't stop watching those guessing videos, lol! I love languages, and let's say your videos are the best about it, being very complete, bringing History and etc. Thank you!!!

  •  Před 7 lety +20

    What it thought:
    1: Any french based creole language
    2: Frisian
    3: Sardinian

    • @arielp7582
      @arielp7582 Před 5 lety +1

      What is that country ball in your profile pic?

    • @simonfrederiksen104
      @simonfrederiksen104 Před 5 lety

      @@arielp7582 That would be Brittany
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brittany

  • @Unlickdbearwhlp
    @Unlickdbearwhlp Před 6 lety +5

    I guessed Haitian creole! The second sounded Germanic, and when I saw it written I took a wild guess with Frisian, only because it was in the last sentence. ^_- Sardinian sounds closer to Portuguese, but looks Italian.

  • @richardmckee8627
    @richardmckee8627 Před 7 lety

    Yes, do more of these!

  • @Ratamahatta12345
    @Ratamahatta12345 Před 7 lety

    Thank you. This was fun!

  • @Spinna720
    @Spinna720 Před 8 lety +35

    got all right

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety

      Well done!

    • @Spinna720
      @Spinna720 Před 8 lety +5

      Langfocus I knew them because in the first one it said words that sound french, in the second one it said Frysle which I think means Frisian and in the third one my native language is spanish so I could figure it out easily

    • @israellai
      @israellai Před 8 lety +6

      yeah "Frysle" kinda gave it away!

    • @allanrichardson1468
      @allanrichardson1468 Před 8 lety +3

      I figured right away from the rhythm, which is more accented than Spanish, that the third one would be either Italian or Romanian (which some linguists say is closer to ancient vulgar Latin than Italian is), and I was convinced it was Romanian when I saw the spellings ending in "u." Turned out I was wrong there. I have heard and seen Romanian but not Sardinian (or Sicilian or any other "dialect of Italian" spoken in Italy).
      The second one sounded vaguely Germanic, but that is a very broad category. Seeing what looked like "Norwegian" as the last word of the written sample misled me into thinking Norwegian, but at least I didn't fall for the obvious, modern German. Frisian was a good choice for an example; some people claim that native speakers of Frisian can read Beowulf and other Anglo-Saxon texts as easily as we modern English speakers can read Shakespeare. Certainly Friesland is close to the area from which the Angles, Saxons and Jutes came.
      The first one I thought might be Portuguese from the oral recording, but the written text was obviously Haitian Creole, which I have seen in multilingual signs in public buildings (the ones with over a dozen translations of the "if you need a translator, point to this paragraph and we will find one for you" message), and my general impression from those signs was "phonetically spelled French," so I recognized the written samples.
      Good choices for the quiz! For a future video, try Yiddish or Ladino; just when the viewer thinks this is some weird form of German or Spanish, show them written with Hebrew letters and blow their minds! In both cases, the Jews had to learn to SPEAK the Gentile tongue of their host country, but refused to use those hated "Christian" letters when writing to one another.
      Or try to tell Serbian from Croatian in speech (almost the same) and in writing (Cyrillic vs Latin alphabet), or Hindi from Urdu. I understand you have already done a video on the latter pair.

    • @catman6435
      @catman6435 Před 8 lety

      My first guess for the first one was Portuguese too, and also Romanian for the third, it was clearly a Romance language but it obviously wasn't French or Spanish or Italian.

  • @noemiroseb
    @noemiroseb Před 8 lety +3

    Omg i live in Sardinia and it doesn't sound like that in my area! Sardinian is different in in each part of the island :)

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +2

      Interesting! Also, the ladies speaking are quite old. Maybe young speak differently. What do you think?

  • @heatherallingham7120
    @heatherallingham7120 Před 6 lety +1

    I love these...they're cool! I love your channel and subscribe...your videos are always educational and fun! Cheers@

  • @samarpanmajumdar3558
    @samarpanmajumdar3558 Před 3 lety

    Please continue this series

  • @OuterSpacedVideos
    @OuterSpacedVideos Před 7 lety +33

    1. I guessed Haitian. Reason being is that it sounded similar to French but it also had a slight Caribbean vibe.
    2. I guessed Frisian. To me it sounded Western European/Germanic, but I didn't recognise it as any of the major national languages I knew. This left me with a toss up between the 'lesser' languages that I knew in the region: Flemish, Frisian, and possibly one of the non-English languages spoken in the UK (Irish, Welsh, Gaelic). I figured that if it was Flemish, it would have a hint of French to it that I would have seen, and that if it was one of the UK languages then I'd probably be able to tell from the overall look of the language. This left me with Frisian.
    3. I guessed Sicilian or Sardinian. It sounded a lot like Italian, and I knew at least one of the islands had it's own language, I just couldn't remember which one or whether they both did.

    • @laxxius
      @laxxius Před 7 lety +1

      Outer Spaced they both do AFAIK

    • @nothayley
      @nothayley Před 7 lety +2

      For #1 I thought it was some African language with French influence, like Congo.

    • @TheDen-ec9xe
      @TheDen-ec9xe Před 7 lety +6

      Calling #3 Sardinian is kind of an overstatement, as there are many variations. Even I as a Sardinian had trouble trying to decipher it, as I'm more used to speak Italian and my local zone speaks a completely different dialect.
      I'm prone to say it was Campidanese Sardinian, the lingua franca of Southern Sardinia.

    • @frakkintoasterluvva7920
      @frakkintoasterluvva7920 Před 7 lety +1

      Outer Spaced I guessed Frisian because I've heard Frisian was most similar to Old English, and this really reminded me of OE in orthography and pronunciation (plus an occasional English sounding word).

    • @YamiBarai21
      @YamiBarai21 Před 7 lety +3

      Flemish is Dutch, and it's nowhere close to French

  • @daanwilmer
    @daanwilmer Před 7 lety +110

    1. I guessed a French based creole, that's all.
    2. Frisian / Frŷsk! Quite intelligble if you know Dutch and English, and should be recoginizable to any Dutchman.
    3. Some Portuguese based language?

    • @MarianneExJohnson
      @MarianneExJohnson Před 6 lety +3

      I guessed Haitian Creole because I just happened to have watched Paul's video about it earlier today. :-)
      As a Dutchman I recognized Frisian right away, but I have trouble understanding it. I can read it pretty well, but of the spoken example I only caught bits and pieces... which is interesting because I've also heard Frisian speakers that I understood so easily, it was like they were speaking Dutch, just with some funny words thrown in here and there. It seems like it's pretty diverse for such a small language.

    • @juniora2706
      @juniora2706 Před 5 lety +1

      I thought the same. The third seems "papiamento" for me when I just had listen it. The written form is closer italian.

    • @zimonzieclown1633
      @zimonzieclown1633 Před 5 lety +4

      Daan Wilmer: I'm fluent in both Dutch and English and I barely recognise anything in Frisian.

    • @aioacasa
      @aioacasa Před 4 lety

      How in the entire hell is Sardinian supposed to be close to Italian in its written form? It is not even related

    • @Cobalt985
      @Cobalt985 Před 2 lety

      About an hour ago I watched his Frisian video and I immediately recognized some of the grammar... as well as "Fryslan" lmao

  • @GreenNastyRabbit
    @GreenNastyRabbit Před 7 lety

    Nice videos Paul, really fun to play :)!

  • @zapiollin
    @zapiollin Před 7 lety +1

    You got me man! lolThis video was great. Thank you.

  • @EyjannaSonur
    @EyjannaSonur Před 5 lety +4

    I was all focused and ready to guess the third one (I correctly guessed that the first one was a french creole and the second some Dutch related one). And then...well I'll be damned, it was just my mother tongue. Now that's something you don't hear often on youtube. A kent'annos Paul!

  • @latinmonsieur
    @latinmonsieur Před 8 lety +6

    I only got 1 right, but I knew the second one was a nordic language and that the 3rd one was a latin derivation

    • @tomaszantochow8391
      @tomaszantochow8391 Před 8 lety +2

      The 2nd language is not a nordic language. It's West Germanic. It's closely related to Old English and Old Dutch.

    • @ChristianFS1
      @ChristianFS1 Před 8 lety

      that's true, frisian's technically west-germanic, but as a dane i thought i could understand parts of it (in a very broad, vague sense), even though it's not a north germanic language. i thought it was icelandic or old norse before i saw the written sample!

    • @tomaszantochow8391
      @tomaszantochow8391 Před 8 lety

      Christian Sand That's probably because Frisian is also pretty close to Danish. I mean, you have Frisia too, right? Frisia was a kingdom all along the coast of modern day germany, netherlands and denmark.

    • @ChristianFS1
      @ChristianFS1 Před 8 lety

      that's true, frisia used to stretch into and share borders with areas that are now danish IIRC, at least prior to 1864. but we're not taught about frisia or the frisian language in school if that's what you mean, we only get to learn german, sadly. the only reason i know about frisian is because i got curious.

  • @identifythe
    @identifythe Před 7 lety

    more mystery languages please. very nice this post

  • @lucasm9412
    @lucasm9412 Před 6 lety +1

    These are great!

  • @odotawaissaku3755
    @odotawaissaku3755 Před 8 lety +11

    1) Mayan (cuz I thought I heard ejectives, so I guessed)
    2) Frisian (it sounded almost norse, but I knew it wasn't Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, or Faroese)
    3) Sardinian (it sounded similar to Italian, and the written had "sardu" in it)

    • @rzeka
      @rzeka Před 8 lety

      I heard the ejective too, and guessed Amharic

    • @cicero1178
      @cicero1178 Před 8 lety

      +rzeka What is ejective

    • @xXSlick_JimmyXx
      @xXSlick_JimmyXx Před 8 lety

      +Nostradamus An ejective is a consonant that briefly stops or clicks. There's a chart of different ejective sounds in the Wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ejective_consonant . They're characteristic of South African, Native American, and Kartvelian languages, hence Γαλεας guessed Mayan for the first one.

    • @cicero1178
      @cicero1178 Před 8 lety

      ***** Ah thanks!

    • @venancefortunat2783
      @venancefortunat2783 Před 8 lety

      Sardinian is an verrrry old Romance Language!

  • @LightningGlass
    @LightningGlass Před 8 lety +4

    Two for three. I thought the second one was Breton, because it sounded a little Celtic.

    • @LightningGlass
      @LightningGlass Před 8 lety

      I guessed the first was Haitian Creole; because I recognized the relation to French and there were African phonological traits evident. I've also heard it before. I guessed the third was Sardinian because it was obviously close to Italian, but different enough to have to be another language I knew of that was even more closely related to Latin.

    • @emile8197
      @emile8197 Před 8 lety +1

      haha, I also thought the second one sounded a bit Celtic.

  • @oliveralvarez9927
    @oliveralvarez9927 Před 7 lety

    I loved this, Paul

  • @Elena-cq8ow
    @Elena-cq8ow Před 2 lety

    Can you make more of these videos, please? I’m such a fan, I’m a whole airconditioner!

  • @antoin2189
    @antoin2189 Před 6 lety +4

    mwen ka pale anglè, espanyòl, fransè ak kreyòl ayisyen.
    mwen renmen videos ou. mèsi! 😀

    • @toumyaccida4101
      @toumyaccida4101 Před 5 lety

      I am Haitian i speak italian, french, Haitian, portuguese, English, spanish

  • @mrmapperil8144
    @mrmapperil8144 Před 8 lety +12

    I guessed Frisian and I was like yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

  • @facugobrah2787
    @facugobrah2787 Před 7 lety

    Very nice video!!! i'd really love to see a video about the irish lenguage, and also some for the italian dialects (or languages)!!

  • @senesterium
    @senesterium Před 5 lety +2

    3/3, mostly thanks to your channel and Nativelang. I'm so proud !

  • @somerandomperson8518
    @somerandomperson8518 Před 7 lety +4

    1)Afrikaans/Baltic, then realised i screwed up
    2)Frisian: English, but a little leaning towards Dutch in sound and written word
    3)Italian or some Romantic language:Not sure if Italian or Sardinian
    result: just passed lmao

  • @thejamesthird
    @thejamesthird Před 8 lety +30

    2/3
    1. I guessed it was a french creole.
    2. I am Dutch/British and have family there. I knew it was west Friesian.
    3. Romanian? was totally wrong.
    Having grown up speaking Dutch and English Fluently it is strange hearing and reading West Friesian, as I can completely understand it all. I can't however speak it. The vocab is very similar to english only its said with dutch phonics.

    • @dustinw1391
      @dustinw1391 Před 8 lety +1

      The third one was still a Romance language so good job. Lmao

    • @tomaszantochow8391
      @tomaszantochow8391 Před 8 lety

      I've grown up with Dutch aswell and well, I speak English decently, even if I so say myself. I can never figure Frisian out though. The way they pronounce stuff definitely sounds Dutch, but I can never guess what the vocab means.

    • @austindrake4937
      @austindrake4937 Před 8 lety

      I also got 2/3, but I missed Frisian. I'm a native English speaker, but nothing sounded familiar. I thought it sounded like what I imagine Estonian sounds like.

    • @sofiaelena0901
      @sofiaelena0901 Před 8 lety

      I don't know how you guessed Romanian. it's just so goddamn different!

    • @sofiaelena0901
      @sofiaelena0901 Před 8 lety

      *****
      Dude, I don't know Greek. I just write my name in Greek because, you know, I want to be anonymous on the internet. Tho I know how to read Greek.

  • @lindafederico-degeest3589

    Ah...what an enticing challenge! I think I'm such a hot shot in recognizing at least Latin-based tongues, but hearing these more obscure languages is helping wake up my tired old brain cells. Mil gracias!

  • @easdfghlkj
    @easdfghlkj Před 4 lety

    I love the face you keep speaking about sardinian. THANK YOU

  • @HelloWorld1947
    @HelloWorld1947 Před 8 lety +17

    I failed all of them. I had no idea what any of those languages were! I knew the first had some French in it but couldn't figure it out. I initially thought it might be Afrikaans. I can't wait for you to do Ge'ez language. If you ever do i hope you do it accurately.

    • @Alcofribas83
      @Alcofribas83 Před 8 lety +6

      Afrikaans doesn't actually have any French in it IIRC. :)

    • @jide5342
      @jide5342 Před 8 lety +3

      you beautiful ethiopian. please marry me!!!

    • @CommeUnFrancais
      @CommeUnFrancais Před 8 lety +3

      Afrikaans is based off of Dutch lol

    • @HelloWorld1947
      @HelloWorld1947 Před 8 lety

      Calm down, people. I know Afrikaans is Dutch mixture. That is why i said, "Initially i thought."

    • @jide5342
      @jide5342 Před 8 lety

      Aksum አክሱም ፣ ንግሥት marry me

  • @arynees
    @arynees Před 7 lety +13

    1) a romance language close to french, i do know a little french, and i could tell that this is not french...but a romance language thats very close
    2) frisian, with my recent knowlage of german, i could tell right away its one of the germanic languages, but not german, i knew it was frisian because i was pretty sure the writing script isnt scandanavian, icelandic or dutch...so i guessed the only other germanic language i heard of...frisian
    3) a romance related to spanish...i cannot differenciate between italian, spanish and portugues..

  • @christinek.4359
    @christinek.4359 Před 5 lety

    These are fun videos! ... and I'm very late to the game and just went backwards through all of them from the 7th video

  • @kallelellacevej2234
    @kallelellacevej2234 Před 6 lety +1

    This was really fun Paul! ☺
    1. I thought it was French as I took a month of it in School & I knew you spoke French. When the text came on screen with the Ws and Ks, I knew it was a creole (but not sure of which one).
    2. I actually guessed Frisian! 😁I speak English, German & natively Swedish. Frisian just sounds like old English and Dutch had a baby. I've never seen Frisian writing before though!
    3. At first I thought it was something slavic. Latin languages have always seemed very weird to me & have a unique sound to them. I heard this towards the end of the clip. Those beefy words & the 'NON' assured to me it was a latin language. I combined them to guess Romanian.
    Even though I only got one, I think I did well at getting close. ☺I look forward to more of these challenges. Great jobb Paul! 😃

  • @fernandaroig2964
    @fernandaroig2964 Před 8 lety +5

    The first one has to be related to french somehow

  • @deanneelsen1882
    @deanneelsen1882 Před 8 lety +30

    For the first one I thought it was French the second one Swedish and the third one Portuguese 😤

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +2

      Those are all in the ballpark.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety

      +Stanley Dougé. Yes, I know. :)

    • @TyrkiaGunnar
      @TyrkiaGunnar Před 8 lety

      I cannot understand how anybody could even think that this was Swedish! It doesn't sound Swedish at all.
      (I'm a native Norwegian speaker, and Swedish and Norwegian are mutually intelligible languages.)

    • @hectora.peniche6706
      @hectora.peniche6706 Před 8 lety

      Hey pal, i choose the same that you, only i think that thought that the second was norwegian.

    • @FishcatGames
      @FishcatGames Před 8 lety

      I thought French, Norwegian, and Portuguese :(

  • @Daniavila40
    @Daniavila40 Před 7 lety

    Paul, I love languages too, and really like your videos!

  • @nongthip
    @nongthip Před 5 lety

    I used to tune into a Friesian language radio station when I lived in northwestern Germany, and if you just let your mind go can almost imagine an old sort of Germanic variety of "English". Love this stuff, keep it coming 😂

  • @rovi3833
    @rovi3833 Před 8 lety +10

    1.Haitian Creole
    2. Afrikaans
    3. Sardinian

    • @jordillach3222
      @jordillach3222 Před 8 lety +7

      Number two is wrong. I also thought it was Afrikaans :-)

    • @Feirin332
      @Feirin332 Před 8 lety +3

      I'm Afrikaans and it sounded like Dutch mixed with Norwegian to me ;-)

    • @myowncomputerstuff
      @myowncomputerstuff Před 8 lety

      I thought I heard some Slavic phonemes in the Frisian audio with the "volproye/волпрое" sound at 3:32 and "persholnok/першёлнок" at 3:40

    • @joehoe222
      @joehoe222 Před 8 lety +1

      It was an old speaker. That made it a bit tougher. And even in Frisian you have a wide variety of dialects, so no surprise ;). Modern Frisian is a bit less Nordic sounding, but more Dutch sounding.

    • @TyrkiaGunnar
      @TyrkiaGunnar Před 8 lety

      I'm a Norwegian. For me it sounded like Afrikaans :-)
      Maybe Frisian sounds like Norwegian for some of you, but for me (as a Norwegian) this wasn't easier to understand than Dutch or German.

  • @flowerflojo5
    @flowerflojo5 Před 6 lety +44

    1. French based language
    2. finnish
    3. portuguese/ someting related to italian

    • @sutanpuu
      @sutanpuu Před 6 lety +9

      2: I am from finland and can say that it does not even remotely sound like finnish. The closest langauge resembling finnish is estonian

    • @marksmith8079
      @marksmith8079 Před 6 lety +1

      The second one has strong germanic influences- easy to tell it is not German.

    • @manetho5134
      @manetho5134 Před 6 lety +1

      Saame but the second one I thought was a Scandinavian language like Swedish, Danish or Norwegian

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety

      With the second I directly thought about something Dutch-related.
      Finnish is not even close to that.

    • @ravinmarokef
      @ravinmarokef Před 6 lety

      Pretty much what I thought too

  • @californianorma876
    @californianorma876 Před 5 lety

    I was sure I knew the last one. Until I was wrong! Great info and I’ve shared it with a friend who’s familiar with ...that second language 😉. Thank you for the info on dialects v languages. I always knew them as dialects. Glad to learn.

  • @juancarlosacunahinojosa4632

    I recognized the Haitian Creole because there are many Haitian immigrants living near my workplace in Santiago, Chile ... thanks for another great video!

  • @SimHarrison
    @SimHarrison Před 7 lety +4

    OMG I freaked out when I got the first one right!!

    • @SimHarrison
      @SimHarrison Před 7 lety +1

      I got the second one too!! I guessed Corsican on the last one, so close...

  • @Vazgen_Ghazaryan
    @Vazgen_Ghazaryan Před 5 lety +5

    Frisian is so amazingly beautiful.

    • @l2516
      @l2516 Před 4 lety

      Vazgen Ghazaryan dankjewo, thank you! 🥰

  • @Madeline64
    @Madeline64 Před 3 lety

    Yay as a French speaker I was so excited to see you talk about creole !

  • @TheDen-ec9xe
    @TheDen-ec9xe Před 7 lety

    After seeing a couple of videos, I've subscribed instantly to your channel.
    1) The first I immediately recognized some French, but it felt off due to some words. The answer was flabbergasting, to say the least
    2) I went for Scandinavian - Germanic Language, like a mix of Dutch and Danish/Swedish. Basically, Frisian is like modern Old English.
    3) This last one.......I can't help but feel at home :D
    .........
    Almost.
    Actually, talking about one Sardinian Language is incorrect, as Sardinia is said to be "more of a continent than an Island". There are so many different variations and inner languages. For example, Algherese is a form of ancient Catalan. Or Sassarese is a mix of Logudorese Sardinian, Tuscan dialect and many Spanish elements. Of course, Italian is still the official Language in Sardinia, but the dialects and inner languages are still spoken among the elderly or people in villages of the innermost Sardinia.
    Even I had some trouble recognizing which kind of Sardinian this one was, being a Sassarese.
    I am tempted to say Campidanese Sardinian, the general variant spoken in the Southern part of Sardinia, as opposed to Logudorese Sardinian.
    Fantastic video. See ya next time, arrivederci al prossimo video e a videzzi ! ;)
    P.s. : If one day you'll happen to do a video on Sardinian languages and dialects, I'd be more than happy to help.

  • @shibro33
    @shibro33 Před 7 lety +4

    funny how the first one sound more like canadian french than french

  • @baevus
    @baevus Před 8 lety +7

    1. finnish
    2. dutch or a scandanavian language
    3. maltese
    :s kinda similar

    • @AndrishhRS
      @AndrishhRS Před 8 lety +6

      Finnish haha

    • @AbsoluteMalarkey
      @AbsoluteMalarkey Před 8 lety +9

      2 and 3 were close, but 1 was way off!

    • @Ignoscis
      @Ignoscis Před 8 lety +8

      Finnish sounds nothing like that lol

    • @MsMimo07
      @MsMimo07 Před 8 lety +1

      wow I thought i was the only one who guessed that the first language was finish^^ i have no idea why and it doesnt make a lot of sense to be honest.

    • @daniiiba2633
      @daniiiba2633 Před 8 lety +1

      At first I thought the second one was Afrikaans, because as a Dutch speaker, I could understand it very well. Then I saw how it was written and knew it was Frisian. The first one I knew was a French creole, but didn't know specifically that it was Haitian. And the last one was obviously a form of Italian, at least for me.

  • @JeanLoupRSmith
    @JeanLoupRSmith Před 7 lety +1

    As a French speaker Creole was easy to pick out. It's worth noting that in colloquial French (at least the one I grew up with) "T'es pas cap" means "Betcha can't" so it's interesting to see some parallels here.
    Frisian was a wild guess but that's mostly because the written text mentioned it and it definitely wasn't Norwegian
    I got Sardinian too because it's close to Italian but not close enough to French to be Corsican.
    Fun videos Paul, I enjoyed that :)

  • @bwalle
    @bwalle Před 6 lety

    Loved it!!!
    We want more!
    I thought the first was definitely French influenced and kept thinking African influence, maybe even French Guiana, New a World.
    The second I knew was some form of Dutch and guessed it might be Flemish?
    The last was definitely Italian-like and I guessed it correctly!

  • @Excaliburhope
    @Excaliburhope Před 8 lety +32

    DO Elvish too!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety +13

      That's from Lord of the Rings, right?

    • @9d8fb79fd8gb
      @9d8fb79fd8gb Před 8 lety

      yes

    • @Excaliburhope
      @Excaliburhope Před 8 lety

      Langfocus Yup

    • @OsefKincaid
      @OsefKincaid Před 8 lety

      Funnily enough you could do elvish if you wanted. It's a completely formed language, Tolkien put a lot of work into it.

    • @douchenozzle4484
      @douchenozzle4484 Před 8 lety +2

      You could also do Klingon and Dovahzul

  • @HyukBurgersTV
    @HyukBurgersTV Před 7 lety +37

    lol you should do one of these but with languages i've actually even heard of 😂

    • @sage7296
      @sage7296 Před 5 lety

      ScreamToASigh I didn't know Frisian and Sardinia I just guessed Dutch and Italian.

  • @NikhileshSurve
    @NikhileshSurve Před 5 lety

    The last one had me startled as it started fast due to playback speed & sounded very real the way I heard it in my earphones. I felt I was hearing someone near me speaking something fast.

  • @aylinshahari9293
    @aylinshahari9293 Před 5 lety

    I am proud to say that I had two right out of the three: Creole and Sardisch.... the third one I thought was Norwegian. Thank you for this amazing channel, Paul. Greetings from Germany

  • @jg4369
    @jg4369 Před 8 lety +3

    I got Creole and started freaking out when I got it XD

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 8 lety

      +Jakob Germain Nice work!

    • @jg4369
      @jg4369 Před 8 lety

      Langfocus haha thanks! and I was wondering if you would please do a video on the celtic languages,I am just so fascinated by them

  • @iandrsaurri625
    @iandrsaurri625 Před 7 lety +5

    Frisian sounded like English but i couldn't a word

  • @skitt42
    @skitt42 Před 7 lety

    When I worked in a retirement plan call center years ago I had a person call in who spoke what sounded like French and no English at all. I got dialed in a French translator but she had no clue what he was saying. He kept saying what sounded like "ah ee tee" and finally it clicked that he was speaking Haitian Creole and I was able to get an appropriate translator for him. I'm so proud I was able to help him and made notes in his file as to what kind of translator he needed because I doubted my coworkers would have figured it out! I still didn't guess correctly for your video though :)

  • @thenerdywonder
    @thenerdywonder Před 7 lety

    You should make a part three! Maltese ( It's an actual language, well known in Malta) is a good mystery language to know. Icelandic and welsh are good examples as well since no one knows how they should be spoken and can be very confusing to others.

  • @juvnal
    @juvnal Před 5 lety +4

    for later:
    Haitian Creole
    Greek
    Occitan

  • @fernandaroig2964
    @fernandaroig2964 Před 8 lety +5

    Last is sardinian?

    • @fernandaroig2964
      @fernandaroig2964 Před 8 lety +4

      OH YAS

    • @konplayz
      @konplayz Před 7 lety

      I guessed Sicilian. c:

    • @robespierrey
      @robespierrey Před 7 lety

      The daughter is talking with her mother. She said the best happened to her mother after got married was that she gave birth to her and her twin, then the mother answered that she was a good girl (when she was a child), but the daughter then said that her mother's marriage was a happy one too and the mother agreed.

  • @lovelifemd
    @lovelifemd Před 6 lety

    I did great this time around. Lots of fun!

  • @sdmarciano19
    @sdmarciano19 Před 7 lety

    How about a video on Italian dialects and distinct "Italian" languages? That was an intriguing point you made!