As a french I've never heard anyone in France pronounce Philips without the S at the end. At least all my friends and family prononce it with the S, even the non-tech versed people.
I think the reason that us Europeans pronounce the brands better is quite simple. We know it's in a foreign language and most likely we know roughly how those speaking that language would pronounce it, so it's quite natural that we would try a slight french accent when we say Cartier. While the US Americans, well, they might not know how that language sounds. Or even that it exists. :)
Not all Europeans make an effort to pronounce brands correctly. As a French, I can say that most French speakers tend to pronounce brand names with a French pronunciation and don't even care if their pronunciation is the right one. Brands like Nike, Microsoft, Range Rover, Levi's, Reebok, Volkswagen and Puma are mispronounced by many French speakers.
I mean yes, there are people who are making an effort. But I've also already heard so many German people butchering the pronunciation of brands and not caring (or knowing). One good exmlample is Woolworth - very difficult here 😅
As the lady from Sweden said i also love the spanish and italian pronunciation 😂 , as they are similar to each other and how the "r" sound is more strong
They are quite different. I can tell as a Pole, because Italian sounds very much like Polish (except "gli", "sci" and some words with proparoxytonic stress) whereas Spanish is noticeably dissimilar.
That is weird, I'm born and raised in Stockholm, and everyone I know raised here pronounce the rolling R, though not as articulated as they do in Spain or Italy (såvida vi inte försöker artikulera extra tydligt, då är det rullande R:et väldigt påtagligt, och om R:et är i början eller slutet av ordet brukar det alltid uttalas med ett tydligt rullande R - t.ex ordet "rullar"). If anything I'd say most dialects from the south of Sweden use it way less. Scanians for example use a throaty R, which is completely different. @@Belnick6666
Hello from Switzerland, if I were Rolex's marketing manager and Rolex also had (specific) sports watches, I would hire the nice Spanish woman straight away, her rolling "Rrr" speaks for itself that time is ticking... Ultimately, a good job by all, in some cases the differences (or the fact that there are hardly any) are very interesting.
All the brands are very popular. Bottega Veneta is the exception. It's not hard to figure how Bottega Veneta is pronounced since Italian is spoken as it is written, but a little more difficult than Castilian.
@@RandomUser945 Castilian and Spanish are the same language. Until the first quarter of the 19 century the language was solely called Castilian. The name of Spanish for the language arose in the 1820s for the very first time. If we call it Spanish, we can't tell the Spanish spoken in Spain from the Spanish spoken in Latin America or elsewhere. If we call it Castilian, we can differentiate Spanish Castilian from Latin American Castilian, Californian Castilian, New Mexican Castilian, Guatemalan Castilian, Venezuelan Castilian, Patagonian Castilian, Equatoguinean Castilian and so on.
The double consonants are actually difficult for non Italians. As a Spaniard I always have trouble figuring out how to read those and my Italian colleagues end up correcting me xD And let's not talk about specific Italian grammar, where they write things in a totally different way than the rest of the world for the same consonant sounds. The good thing, as you said, is that, like in Spanish, their grammar is very consistent, so once you know the "new" rules, you can figure out how to read most of the stuff.
Interesting how they are limiting Switzerland to just one language out of 4 official and the one there is on the panel is Swissgerman, which will be close to German. Gladly she has mentioned at least once “in my Swiss-dialect” ! 😉
All these ladies are so beautifuul OMG😂❤. Spanish girl looks like a doll. Karijn is so cute like little kids. As the swiss lady is actually turkish, she has some middle eastern vibes and looks friendly and pretty. The french one is so fun and her smiles are cute. German and swedish ladies look kinda similar lol. The blondies always look beautiful haha. Gulia (italian lady) is so charming. Her voice and accent is so lovely too. Miss american is also nice and beatiful
The English pronunciation of Adidis is like it is in German, but with an English accent. It's Americans who pronounce it differently, not an English language thing. There may be some younger people who don't know it's a German brand, who have seen a lot of mention of Adidas in American pop culture, who now might mispronounce it, but that's a recent thing with the younger ones wanting to copy American ways of saying things. Most would say it tje same as it's said in German, but with a different accent.
I'm french and i personnally pronounce the "s" in Philips. I think that since it's a brand name and not a regular word, the rule of the silent "s" in french word doesn't apply in this case.
@@Ssandayo I think yes, at least I can't remember a brand name beggining with an H where the H is pronounced in french. H is almost never pronounced in french anyway (except maybe for "haricot", but even that depends on the person)
@@benjib2691 In spanish too in old times, but now we are contagied by english pronuntiation and we use their H in foreigner words... but old people still not... they are wise..
I'm from Spain and it's not a big deal not pronouncing the Z as a TH. Bear in mind that only 10% of Spanish speakers around the word pronounce that letter that way. The only "annoying" thing is to hear it as English Z, which is not accurate with any Spanish accent. It should be like an English S. Anyway, it doesn't really matter.
Hello, I know that accents are very different in other countries and I would like you to make more videos like this one, I give it a 👍👍👍❤❤♥️🇺🇲By the way, I'm from Mexico, I speak Mexican Spanish. 🇲🇽 I want to tell you in Spanish yo quiero seguir apoyando para que haga más vídeos cómo este That was very nice see you bye bye
I'm Italian, and I've never heard the "Bottega Veneta", is not very popular... I think that it was better to choose one between Ferrari, Lamborghini, Armani, Dolce&Gabbana, Versace, Ducati or Ferrero...
I know this is a Korean-based CZcams channel, but a channel just like this but based in Japan would be really cool. I'm learning Japanese but have been picking up some Korean from watching these videos lol
BMW would have been a more interesting one as german brand. Germany, France and usa definitely say something different. I would love to hear the other countries
As a Swiss, I really can‘t agree with this girl‘s pronounciation of Rolex. It sounds very German, but in reality, it‘s pronounced with a rolled R. So, bad example here
Jaguar and Nissan are pronounced so differenty in the US, never understand it, there is an I in Nissan, but there it's Neesan, and there's no W in Jaguar
In Italy, as we have more than 20 regions, which every single one of them has a diffrent accent (for example: in Rome we (at least I) pronounce it as boTTega vEEneta (the letters in big highlights the way we/I say it)
As someone who speaks French since i can remember, you can just look for " Philips publicité " and see for yourself.. the s is always pronounced. And there's no rule such as an S in the end doesn't pronounce. The only difficult thing about French is the pronunciation because it has nothing to do with what's written.. other than that, it's not as difficult as other European languages
tbh i never heard ZARA pronounced with a hard Z. i only know the pronounciation thats more along the lines of the spanish girl. and i am from germany...
It shouldn't be like an English or an Italian Z sound in any case. It's either like an English TH or an English S (like it's pronounced by 90% of Spanish speakers around the world), which is totally fine too.
when the conversation is about "how europeans ......." an american stays apart, i also think they should stay apart more often, or better their presence is not even needed.
@@somersault4762 it’s because they go by the way, it’s pronounced in the tv commercial, Where I pronounce all words ,the way they originated from, luckily my Uncle is married to a very nice German lady, but sadly they passed away earlier this year.
Like these girls, I too had no idea that "Philips" was a Dutch brand. It sounds so American😂Never heard of Zara or the Italian one. That French girl was really sweet. She understands that French words are extremely difficult to pronounce for non-native speakers. I saw a challenge on "The Amazing Race" where teams were completely butchering a French poem, but the judge was approving them. French always make fun of Quebecois and other dialects, but they seem to be more understanding if they know that French isn't your native language. It's damn near impossible to learn to speak with a French accent.
Philips is still Dutch, however they're focusing on medical devices now. Their all their other departments are either sold to other companies or are split up. Philips TVs aren't made by them, but by a Chinese company using their brand name.
Yes, Philips is a Dutch electronics brand. It has originated in the city of Eindhoven, in the south of the country. But Philips headquarters is currently located in Amsterdam. One of Philips daughter companies, has actually become bigger than Philips itself. That company is ASML, and it is located near Eindhoven in the town of Veldhoven. This company is crucial for the microchip industry, because it builds machines that built microchips for companies like: Samsung, Apple etc.
I think this video is dumb…😅… because…(see below) I guess the real question is should everyone pronounce every word like it’s spoken in the native language where that item or thing comes from? If that was the case, there’s all kinds of discrepancies, all across the board with every single country and every language… I usually just tell people to “drop the accent” and just pronounce the word like you do it in your home country ….unless ,…you’re overseas, and you’re trying to speak another language …then , you should probably pronounce the word, the way the people in that particular country pronounce it… For example… Most western countries, call the country of Japan… “Japan“… (They may pronounce the J as a Y sound if they live in Scandinavia ) Japanese people don’t say that,… they say Nippon …. is the entire world “wrong”? No, they are not… They are pronouncing the word the way they should, as it is the vernacular in their respective country.
That's how the "s" followed by a vowel sound (e.g. "Sonne" / ZONN-UH) is pronounced in proper German: Like the "z" in English. If not followed by a vowel sound, it is pronounced like the English "s" (e.g. "Skat" / SKAHT) or "sh" if followed by "p" (e.g. "Spiel" / SHPEEL), "t" (e.g. "Stadt" / SHTADT), or "ch" (e.g. "Schule" / SHOO-LUH).
For all confused why the swissgerman girl sounds exactly like the german girl. She soeaks a very weak dialect. For Example Most people pronounce "ikea" "ickea" with a really harsh k. Like when you spit. Also like 95% of dialects actually roll the R, similiar to italian.
"PHILIPS pronounced without the S" ?!?!? Totally ridiculous!!!! Everybody in France do pronounce the S. That pseudo French girl is more than ridiculous 🥴🤮
It’s from the Netherlands. Holland, or actually North & South Holland are provinces of the Netherlands. Philips is from Eindhoven, and that city lies is in North Brabant. That’s in the south of the county, close to the Belgian border.
Shade to the Netherlands for putting Philips, an electronics brand, while everyone else's got something with fashion and jewelry. The Dutch have Scotch & Soda (although an English word), which I'm pretty sure these days you can find them in almost any major city. For really avant-garde high fashion, there are Viktor & Rolf and Iris van Herpen also.
@@abey4003 ASML is the biggest company in the world for machines that create semiconductors and if you look closely on devices for electronic payment you see from time to time Adyen
Non ho colto la differenza tra le due pronounce di Bottega Veneta italiane! Booh!!... Certo che la gente si attacca a cose davvero insignificanti eh!...
@@paolocarpi4769 ahahahah no credo l'abbia aggiunta il mio cavolo di correttore automatico, oppure le mie ditacce hanno toccato anche l'h vicino alla g sulla tastiera, sono cose che mi capitano. Comunque ora che me l'hai fatta notare... brrr mi dà un tale fastidio... che ora la cancello subito! Non ho sentito questa differenza di accenti tra le due volte in cui l'ha pronunciato. Se avessi dovuto scommettere avrei detto che era una questione di vocali chiuse o aperte (sempre insidiosissime!!), invece no... Ma di quali e stiamo parlando?
@@raffaelefederico5427 Stiamo parlando dello stesso fenomeno fonetico, mi riferivo all'accento grafico, quindi l'apertura e chiusura di è/é, non all'accento tonico. Credo che a Giulia, che è del nordest mi pare, abbiano contestato il bottéga al posto di bottèga, ma potrebbe anche essere il Vènèta o Vénéta. Oserei dire contestazioni da parte di qualche Vènèto. O Vénéto. Non oso combinare acuto e grave nella stessa parola per paura di provocare un paradosso spaziotemporale che distruggerebbe l'universo. Anche se, riflettendoci, io dico Vénèzia.
@@paolocarpi4769 Giulia l'ha pronunciata come la pronuncio io, oltretutto se lei è del nordest e l'azienda Bottega Veneta è stata, appunto, fondata in Veneto, mi sa che chi l'ha corretta ha la pronuncia sbagliata.
Bah... io continuo a dire che tra le due volte in cui lo ha pronunciato non sento differenze. In ogni caso per sapere qual è la pronuncia corretta di qualsiasi parola italiana, nell'italiano standard e quindi uguale per tutti indipendentemente dalle inflessioni regionali di ciascuno, basta consultare un vocabolario e ogni dubbio dovrebbe sparire. La pronuncia corretta è, e correggetemi se per caso ho sbagliato a interpretare il vocabolario, bottÉga vÈnÈta, quindi con la e chiusa in bottega e le due e aperte in veneta proprio come in Veneto e conseguentemente tutti i suo derivati. Tutto qui. Una cosa del genere non dovrebbe essere argomento di discussione perché esiste una risposta oggettiva uguale per tutti che è solo lì da vedere e fine. Mi meraviglio sempre della capacità della gente di fare polemiche sul nulla più assoluto!...
3:57, What? Philips is made in the Netherlands? That's interesting. 6:53, Same for me and me 3, I didn't know Philips was made in the Netherlands, that's interesting.
Philips is focusing on medical devices nowadays, most of their other products are made by other companies and just using their name. Philip TVs are made by TP Vision, Philips Hue are made by Signify N.V. etc.
when spanish people roll the "r" they are like "wow there is a feeling to it 🤩🤩 so hott" and the second a german person rolls an "r" (which they rarely do) i can guarantee you they will be like "wow so aggressive 😢"
She has blue eyes and brown hair. In Asia they have nothing different than dark brown eyes and black hair. It’s the Swiss girl that is actually from somewhere else, from Turkey
@@theofanisdargent5350 Yeah there a lot of people of Indonesian descent there so your right about people having bit asian look since Indonesia was an old colony.
as a Spanish speaker from Spain 🇪🇸 I heard my own language like aggressive (I love it) and I don’t understand when people said is melodic (it is but not that much that you need always to point it out), melodic is the spanish from Hispanic America’s countries but I don’t know maybe we are the spanish people from Spain the ones we think our accent is aggressive, and from my point of view (friends/family/people around me) German sounds so HOT like, men I don’t think is aggressive is like us but hot, so guys if you come to Spain and speak german or spanish with german accent we will say He/she is giri (European,North american or oceania tourists good looking, funny/crazy and with a hot accent that you just fall in love with) if you are looking for melodic our neighbours France and Italy are the ones 😂❤
@@su_sue_xuesueee6423me too.i love Spanish from Spain. Its melodic, spicy, hot. I love music in Spanish and the art and architecture all over that country
Don't think like that of yourself and your country, Spain is my favorite country in Europe. Food is the best, whether, landscapes, history, music, language (hot), way of living, art, architecture, people is hot and high speed trains are the best in Europe. Many countries would love to have so many good things
@@klausbriesma9050that IS a fact, can vouch for It, lived in different countries, Italy , France,Japan,(hubby Japanese) BEST food :Japanese and Spanish, great seafood among other things
An Italian getting shit from other Italians for pronouncing Italian wrong is the most Italian thing ever
Bro-
As a french I've never heard anyone in France pronounce Philips without the S at the end. At least all my friends and family prononce it with the S, even the non-tech versed people.
What about the other brands? If there’s a S at the end of a brand, do you guys pronounce it?
@@Ssandayo It depends of the brand. For Adidas and Philips yes but for Mc Donald's no (we say "Mc do" most of the time anyway)
Same here. I've always pronounced the s at the end of Philips, even as a child when I didn't know English yet.
@@CT-7567R3X Personally I still pronounce the s when I say McDonald’s fully lol
Yes Philips is pronounced with an S in french. Never heard without an S, really weird.
I think the reason that us Europeans pronounce the brands better is quite simple. We know it's in a foreign language and most likely we know roughly how those speaking that language would pronounce it, so it's quite natural that we would try a slight french accent when we say Cartier. While the US Americans, well, they might not know how that language sounds. Or even that it exists. :)
First of all, you don't say "US Americans"
Second, you're egotistical.
Yeah its definitely proximity
Not all Europeans make an effort to pronounce brands correctly. As a French, I can say that most French speakers tend to pronounce brand names with a French pronunciation and don't even care if their pronunciation is the right one. Brands like Nike, Microsoft, Range Rover, Levi's, Reebok, Volkswagen and Puma are mispronounced by many French speakers.
@@jswag3122 We need to work on your English, monsieur.
I mean yes, there are people who are making an effort. But I've also already heard so many German people butchering the pronunciation of brands and not caring (or knowing). One good exmlample is Woolworth - very difficult here 😅
As the lady from Sweden said i also love the spanish and italian pronunciation 😂 , as they are similar to each other and how the "r" sound is more strong
Same😂😂
weird thing is that rolling R are extremely common in sweden, unless she is from the capital
@@Belnick6666really?
They are quite different. I can tell as a Pole, because Italian sounds very much like Polish (except "gli", "sci" and some words with proparoxytonic stress) whereas Spanish is noticeably dissimilar.
That is weird, I'm born and raised in Stockholm, and everyone I know raised here pronounce the rolling R, though not as articulated as they do in Spain or Italy (såvida vi inte försöker artikulera extra tydligt, då är det rullande R:et väldigt påtagligt, och om R:et är i början eller slutet av ordet brukar det alltid uttalas med ett tydligt rullande R - t.ex ordet "rullar"). If anything I'd say most dialects from the south of Sweden use it way less. Scanians for example use a throaty R, which is completely different. @@Belnick6666
Hello from Switzerland, if I were Rolex's marketing manager and Rolex also had (specific) sports watches, I would hire the nice Spanish woman straight away, her rolling "Rrr" speaks for itself that time is ticking...
Ultimately, a good job by all, in some cases the differences (or the fact that there are hardly any) are very interesting.
All the brands are very popular. Bottega Veneta is the exception. It's not hard to figure how Bottega Veneta is pronounced since Italian is spoken as it is written, but a little more difficult than Castilian.
Ferrari, Piaggo, Alfa Romeo or Ferrero would have been interesting
@@RandomUser945 Castilian and Spanish are the same language. Until the first quarter of the 19 century the language was solely called Castilian. The name of Spanish for the language arose in the 1820s for the very first time. If we call it Spanish, we can't tell the Spanish spoken in Spain from the Spanish spoken in Latin America or elsewhere. If we call it Castilian, we can differentiate Spanish Castilian from Latin American Castilian, Californian Castilian, New Mexican Castilian, Guatemalan Castilian, Venezuelan Castilian, Patagonian Castilian, Equatoguinean Castilian and so on.
@@Leenapanther also Armani, Dolce&Gabbana, Ducati, Lamborghini, Versace.
The double consonants are actually difficult for non Italians. As a Spaniard I always have trouble figuring out how to read those and my Italian colleagues end up correcting me xD And let's not talk about specific Italian grammar, where they write things in a totally different way than the rest of the world for the same consonant sounds. The good thing, as you said, is that, like in Spanish, their grammar is very consistent, so once you know the "new" rules, you can figure out how to read most of the stuff.
Interesting how they are limiting Switzerland to just one language out of 4 official and the one there is on the panel is Swissgerman, which will be close to German. Gladly she has mentioned at least once “in my Swiss-dialect” ! 😉
Oh, you'd have the same with most bigger countries. Italy, Germany and the UK have local varieties as well.
Most dispronounced Dutch brand is probably Gouda.
How are they all so damn gorgeous??
Models
Ikea in Dutch the K is pronounced a bit harder, almost like having a second capitol letter in there I guess?
This is an amazing group! I hope to see many videos of them together again, hopefully longer than 8 minutes as well!
All these ladies are so beautifuul OMG😂❤. Spanish girl looks like a doll. Karijn is so cute like little kids. As the swiss lady is actually turkish, she has some middle eastern vibes and looks friendly and pretty. The french one is so fun and her smiles are cute. German and swedish ladies look kinda similar lol. The blondies always look beautiful haha. Gulia (italian lady) is so charming. Her voice and accent is so lovely too. Miss american is also nice and beatiful
Julia is os cute!
The Nederlands girl is GORGEOUS!
they’re all wanna be models in SK
ofc they hot af
THARA
The English pronunciation of Adidis is like it is in German, but with an English accent. It's Americans who pronounce it differently, not an English language thing. There may be some younger people who don't know it's a German brand, who have seen a lot of mention of Adidas in American pop culture, who now might mispronounce it, but that's a recent thing with the younger ones wanting to copy American ways of saying things. Most would say it tje same as it's said in German, but with a different accent.
I'm french and i personnally pronounce the "s" in Philips. I think that since it's a brand name and not a regular word, the rule of the silent "s" in french word doesn't apply in this case.
Oui comme tout le monde c'est juste elle qui le dit mal.
However if a brand name start with letter H, you guys keep it silent no?
@@Ssandayo I think yes, at least I can't remember a brand name beggining with an H where the H is pronounced in french. H is almost never pronounced in french anyway (except maybe for "haricot", but even that depends on the person)
@@benjib2691 In spanish too in old times, but now we are contagied by english pronuntiation and we use their H in foreigner words... but old people still not... they are wise..
@@Ssandayo i don’t have exemple of brand starting with H that are from abroad tbh so idk xD
From now on I will say Thara
I'm from Spain and it's not a big deal not pronouncing the Z as a TH. Bear in mind that only 10% of Spanish speakers around the word pronounce that letter that way. The only "annoying" thing is to hear it as English Z, which is not accurate with any Spanish accent. It should be like an English S. Anyway, it doesn't really matter.
Zara*
Hello, I know that accents are very different in other countries and I would like you to make more videos like this one, I give it a 👍👍👍❤❤♥️🇺🇲By the way, I'm from Mexico, I speak Mexican Spanish. 🇲🇽 I want to tell you in Spanish yo quiero seguir apoyando para que haga más vídeos cómo este That was very nice see you bye bye
I am Singaporean and we speak British English... and i tot Phillips from UK too
what is the name of the American girl? She looks like and actress but I can't remember which movie she was in.
I'm Italian, and I've never heard the "Bottega Veneta", is not very popular... I think that it was better to choose one between Ferrari, Lamborghini, Armani, Dolce&Gabbana, Versace, Ducati or Ferrero...
I know this is a Korean-based CZcams channel, but a channel just like this but based in Japan would be really cool. I'm learning Japanese but have been picking up some Korean from watching these videos lol
I worked at Zara years ago
BMW would have been a more interesting one as german brand. Germany, France and usa definitely say something different. I would love to hear the other countries
4:45 This girl never watched a "Philips" TV commercial??? What a shame... we pronounce exactly like ITALIAN!!!
The "Z" and "R" from Spain surprising :D
A trade mark from Spanish from Europe
In Latin America, we dont pronounce Zara as Thara, we pronounce it like Sara, which is basically my mom's name. Lol.
Cool
its seseo, bad thing.@@lissandrafreljord7913
As a Swiss, I really can‘t agree with this girl‘s pronounciation of Rolex. It sounds very German, but in reality, it‘s pronounced with a rolled R. So, bad example here
For the Netherlands you need at least 10 girls, there way too many dialects hahah
true, people from the south would pronounce the word 'cartier' like the french one
Perfect posture of the spanish girl, elegant but calm. She's taking good care of her back
She's actually a model.
IKEA in Swissgerman would be a hard pronounced k..it really depends where in Switzerland you life.
Why do you have always the same subjects? You can for example compare basic words like "mother, father" etc...
Giulia ha sbroccato ma la pronuncia corretta è la seconda
I'd like to hear Nutella in Italian.
Jaguar and Nissan are pronounced so differenty in the US, never understand it, there is an I in Nissan, but there it's Neesan, and there's no W in Jaguar
In Italy, as we have more than 20 regions, which every single one of them has a diffrent accent (for example: in Rome we (at least I) pronounce it as boTTega vEEneta (the letters in big highlights the way we/I say it)
Why is the American always separated?
because they make these to make fun of the americans :-)))))))))) hehe
Maybe because sh's not european?
I can't live without Zara
❤
As someone who speaks French since i can remember, you can just look for " Philips publicité " and see for yourself.. the s is always pronounced. And there's no rule such as an S in the end doesn't pronounce. The only difficult thing about French is the pronunciation because it has nothing to do with what's written.. other than that, it's not as difficult as other European languages
tbh i never heard ZARA pronounced with a hard Z. i only know the pronounciation thats more along the lines of the spanish girl.
and i am from germany...
It shouldn't be like an English or an Italian Z sound in any case. It's either like an English TH or an English S (like it's pronounced by 90% of Spanish speakers around the world), which is totally fine too.
They should add someone from Portugal because the pronunciation in Portuguese is really different than the other ones
My name is Zara!!!!!!!❤
petition to pronounce Volkswagen
ıs the amerıcan one Laufey??? if so, shes actually icelandic
My TV is Phillips with ambilight system. I recommend them to everyone
Oh ambilight! It creates a great ambience
When speaking English, many Spaniards misprounce their own country. It's pronounced "Spain" not "Es-Spain".
Indonesia " tolak angin "
4:33 She is wrong, We Frenchies pronunce the "S" at the end of Philips like the rest of the people.. She just trying to be different...
Why in many episodes is the US lady separate and directs the conversation?
when the conversation is about "how europeans ......." an american stays apart, i also think they should stay apart more often, or better their presence is not even needed.
People have complained how she pronounces Bottega Veneta WTF
It's about the word veneta, wanting to pronounce it like véneta(accento acuto, e chiusa) when it's simply vèneta (accento grave, e aperta).
In the UK we pronounce Adidas exactly the same way as our fellow Europeans do. Americans definitely divert away from the original pronunciation there.
Do not base all Americans on how she pronounced it in the video, I pronounce it , the German way as it’s a German product,
Meanwhile Brits pronouncing oregano: Oregaaaaaano.
@@marydavis5234all Americans I know pronounce it like the girl in the video.
@@somersault4762 it’s because they go by the way, it’s pronounced in the tv commercial, Where I pronounce all words ,the way they originated from, luckily my Uncle is married to a very nice German lady, but sadly they passed away earlier this year.
Same in Australia.
The dutch girl>>>>
Phillips (with two l) screwdriver type is American, Philips electronic devices are Dutch.
French people absolutely pronounce the S at the end of Philips
why girl from the middle looks like a MJ from Sam Raimi Spider Man?
The Netherlands girl is sooooo cute.
I agree
Like these girls, I too had no idea that "Philips" was a Dutch brand. It sounds so American😂Never heard of Zara or the Italian one. That French girl was really sweet. She understands that French words are extremely difficult to pronounce for non-native speakers. I saw a challenge on "The Amazing Race" where teams were completely butchering a French poem, but the judge was approving them. French always make fun of Quebecois and other dialects, but they seem to be more understanding if they know that French isn't your native language. It's damn near impossible to learn to speak with a French accent.
I love ZARA and it's everywhere, in every single city, in every single mall...
Philips is still Dutch, however they're focusing on medical devices now. Their all their other departments are either sold to other companies or are split up. Philips TVs aren't made by them, but by a Chinese company using their brand name.
Thought Philips is German.
i've always knew phillips was a dutch brand
PSV, aka Philips SportVereniging Eindhoven is named after Philips, because their headquarters are in Eindhoven.
It was named as Philips Sport Vereniging because it was founded by Philips employees.
French and german girls prononuce names the same way
Good job, World Friends, for choosing brand names that many of the guests don't even know how to say in their native languages. 🙄
deutsch stabi!!!! 😉
I love Giulia's attitude!! 😏😍😍
can u please add to a video a romanian person??
Mehtap is Turkish …..
I'm in love with the Turkish girl, and I miss the Austrian girl
You mean the swiss girl?
@@matteando1490 yup buddy
@@matteando1490 No she said that she is fully Turkish... She has Swiss Flag because her parents moved to Switzerland a long time ago
here to support my girl kida
Wasn't her name Magda in another video??
Yes, Philips is a Dutch electronics brand. It has originated in the city of Eindhoven, in the south of the country. But Philips headquarters is currently located in Amsterdam. One of Philips daughter companies, has actually become bigger than Philips itself. That company is ASML, and it is located near Eindhoven in the town of Veldhoven. This company is crucial for the microchip industry, because it builds machines that built microchips for companies like: Samsung, Apple etc.
Wow nobody knows bottega veneta 😮
I think this video is dumb…😅… because…(see below)
I guess the real question is should everyone pronounce every word like it’s spoken in the native language where that item or thing comes from? If that was the case, there’s all kinds of discrepancies, all across the board with every single country and every language… I usually just tell people to “drop the accent” and just pronounce the word like you do it in your home country ….unless ,…you’re overseas, and you’re trying to speak another language …then , you should probably pronounce the word, the way the people in that particular country pronounce it…
For example… Most western countries, call the country of Japan… “Japan“… (They may pronounce the J as a Y sound if they live in Scandinavia )
Japanese people don’t say that,… they say Nippon …. is the entire world “wrong”? No, they are not… They are pronouncing the word the way they should, as it is the vernacular in their respective country.
Wasn't expecting a Penn state shirt especially from a non American. I wonder if she went to any white out games
Maybe. She probably went to school there. She speaks with a very American-sounding accent.
No need to argue how to pronounce Bottega Veneta when no one even knows it. 😯
The brand needs to do something for its reputation first. 🙈
Mehtap‘s voice is nice to listen to
I agree!
Çok merak ettiğim bir soru var cevaplarsanız sevinirim. Videolarınızdaki bütün herkesin neden Kore ile bir bağlantısı var ?
Because this channel is based in Korea and all the women they feature in their Videos are models who work and currently live in Korea
I'm Mehtap's biggest fan! 😍
Actually in Germany people usually say samsung like zamzung like its pronounced as a z
I have never ever heard anyone say zamzung in Germany
That's how the "s" followed by a vowel sound (e.g. "Sonne" / ZONN-UH) is pronounced in proper German: Like the "z" in English. If not followed by a vowel sound, it is pronounced like the English "s" (e.g. "Skat" / SKAHT) or "sh" if followed by "p" (e.g. "Spiel" / SHPEEL), "t" (e.g. "Stadt" / SHTADT), or "ch" (e.g. "Schule" / SHOO-LUH).
@@somersault4762 Like an American would say Zamzung not like a German pronounces a Z.
For all confused why the swissgerman girl sounds exactly like the german girl. She soeaks a very weak dialect.
For Example
Most people pronounce "ikea" "ickea" with a really harsh k. Like when you spit.
Also like 95% of dialects actually roll the R, similiar to italian.
"PHILIPS pronounced without the S" ?!?!? Totally ridiculous!!!! Everybody in France do pronounce the S. That pseudo French girl is more than ridiculous 🥴🤮
Hello !
I never heard "Philip" without yhe "S" in France. Everybody say PhilipS. Really !!!
It's interesting people don't know philips is from holland
It isn't, it's from Brabant🙃
It’s from the Netherlands. Holland, or actually North & South Holland are provinces of the Netherlands. Philips is from Eindhoven, and that city lies is in North Brabant. That’s in the south of the county, close to the Belgian border.
Ik ben Nederlands❤❤❤maar een ding ik zeg het heeeeeeel anders maar ik kom van noord holland dus ja
as an italian i've never heard "bottega veneta" in my life but BRO JUST PICK SOME OTHER BRANDS AND STUFFS LIKE FERRARI OR MAYBE VERSACE
It's your problem if you've never heard of Bottega Veneta.
Broaden your horizons because it's not just Ferrari and Versace.
Another italian here and i've never heard this brand
I always thought Philips was a German company.😮😮😮
you ever heard of the football club PSV Eindhoven? It's Philips' Sport Vereniging and they play as well in the Philips Stadium
Shade to the Netherlands for putting Philips, an electronics brand, while everyone else's got something with fashion and jewelry. The Dutch have Scotch & Soda (although an English word), which I'm pretty sure these days you can find them in almost any major city. For really avant-garde high fashion, there are Viktor & Rolf and Iris van Herpen also.
To be fair I wouldnt know too many other international known dutch companies. Only ASML and Adyen. And they are for sure not as famous as Philips
Nobody knows those brands
@@abey4003 ASML is the biggest company in the world for machines that create semiconductors and if you look closely on devices for electronic payment you see from time to time Adyen
Heineken @@somersault4762
@@abey4003??? Sweden Ikea Fashion? Jewelry?
this swedish girl doesnt say the brands like a swede,
North Italian fury! 🤌🤌
6:31 That's not the English pronunciation, it's the American pronunciation
Hello good evening everyone
I don´t understand why Mehtap has a Swiss Flag, she should represent turkish language when she is fully Turkish...
Non ho colto la differenza tra le due pronounce di Bottega Veneta italiane! Booh!!... Certo che la gente si attacca a cose davvero insignificanti eh!...
Raffa, l’h l’hai aggiunta tu…😂 la differenza nella pronuncia credo sia l’accento sulle e…
@@paolocarpi4769 ahahahah no credo l'abbia aggiunta il mio cavolo di correttore automatico, oppure le mie ditacce hanno toccato anche l'h vicino alla g sulla tastiera, sono cose che mi capitano. Comunque ora che me l'hai fatta notare... brrr mi dà un tale fastidio... che ora la cancello subito!
Non ho sentito questa differenza di accenti tra le due volte in cui l'ha pronunciato. Se avessi dovuto scommettere avrei detto che era una questione di vocali chiuse o aperte (sempre insidiosissime!!), invece no... Ma di quali e stiamo parlando?
@@raffaelefederico5427 Stiamo parlando dello stesso fenomeno fonetico, mi riferivo all'accento grafico, quindi l'apertura e chiusura di è/é, non all'accento tonico. Credo che a Giulia, che è del nordest mi pare, abbiano contestato il bottéga al posto di bottèga, ma potrebbe anche essere il Vènèta o Vénéta. Oserei dire contestazioni da parte di qualche Vènèto. O Vénéto.
Non oso combinare acuto e grave nella stessa parola per paura di provocare un paradosso spaziotemporale che distruggerebbe l'universo. Anche se, riflettendoci, io dico Vénèzia.
@@paolocarpi4769 Giulia l'ha pronunciata come la pronuncio io, oltretutto se lei è del nordest e l'azienda Bottega Veneta è stata, appunto, fondata in Veneto, mi sa che chi l'ha corretta ha la pronuncia sbagliata.
Bah... io continuo a dire che tra le due volte in cui lo ha pronunciato non sento differenze. In ogni caso per sapere qual è la pronuncia corretta di qualsiasi parola italiana, nell'italiano standard e quindi uguale per tutti indipendentemente dalle inflessioni regionali di ciascuno, basta consultare un vocabolario e ogni dubbio dovrebbe sparire. La pronuncia corretta è, e correggetemi se per caso ho sbagliato a interpretare il vocabolario, bottÉga vÈnÈta, quindi con la e chiusa in bottega e le due e aperte in veneta proprio come in Veneto e conseguentemente tutti i suo derivati. Tutto qui. Una cosa del genere non dovrebbe essere argomento di discussione perché esiste una risposta oggettiva uguale per tutti che è solo lì da vedere e fine. Mi meraviglio sempre della capacità della gente di fare polemiche sul nulla più assoluto!...
3:57, What? Philips is made in the Netherlands? That's interesting. 6:53, Same for me and me 3, I didn't know Philips was made in the Netherlands, that's interesting.
Philips is focusing on medical devices nowadays, most of their other products are made by other companies and just using their name. Philip TVs are made by TP Vision, Philips Hue are made by Signify N.V. etc.
Where is Azerbaijan 🇦🇿?
East of Turkey. ;)
❤
@@HenrikJansson78lol I was going to say next to Armenia and Georgia
@@Hard.candy_34235. I'm happy that I could help. ;)
@@bre_me Yeah, there were a couple of options. :)
Mehtap w
Plz invite some guys who speak Urdu plz
Compare Turkish with persian
I love how u take apart the US girl, as if she were the weirdest, u should put them all in one group.
The swedish girl. 😅She is totally my type🙈😍
when spanish people roll the "r" they are like "wow there is a feeling to it 🤩🤩 so hott" and the second a german person rolls an "r" (which they rarely do) i can guarantee you they will be like "wow so aggressive 😢"
It's about recent history, no matter what German people say, "it's so aggressive!"
@@henhaooahneh literally. a german person just has to breathe and people are like "oMg sO aGgReSSiVe" 😂 it's tiring
It's a trade mark
@@davideva8640 nah it's a trade mark for stupid people
Danke fürs Zuschauen! A thousand apologies for rolling my "r" there, I don't know any better, I'm from the US.
Free palestine, save innocent children in gaza 🇵🇸
Then don't allow Hamas to rule Palestine
@@davideva8640 america and israel are real terrorists
Free humanity, save innocent children from war
That girl isn't from Netherlands, she looks like from Korea or China...🤔😡😠
She has blue eyes and brown hair. In Asia they have nothing different than dark brown eyes and black hair. It’s the Swiss girl that is actually from somewhere else, from Turkey
@@xxmunriztzxx3073maybe the Dutch girl is had-blood with asian, but you are right the swiss girl looks like Arab or Turkey.🧐🤔🤷🏼♂️
@@theofanisdargent5350 Yeah there a lot of people of Indonesian descent there so your right about people having bit asian look since Indonesia was an old colony.
As a Dutch person, I can say see looks like a normal Dutch girl. In a group of Dutch girls, she wouldn’t stand out.
Her name is tszi gin pin chaow mao and you need a doctor
as a Spanish speaker from Spain 🇪🇸 I heard my own language like aggressive (I love it) and I don’t understand when people said is melodic (it is but not that much that you need always to point it out), melodic is the spanish from Hispanic America’s countries but I don’t know maybe we are the spanish people from Spain the ones we think our accent is aggressive, and from my point of view (friends/family/people around me) German sounds so HOT like, men I don’t think is aggressive is like us but hot, so guys if you come to Spain and speak german or spanish with german accent we will say He/she is giri (European,North american or oceania tourists good looking, funny/crazy and with a hot accent that you just fall in love with) if you are looking for melodic our neighbours France and Italy are the ones 😂❤
I live in Spain and I very much prefer Spain Spanish, so elegant and vibrant.
@@su_sue_xuesueee6423me too.i love Spanish from Spain. Its melodic, spicy, hot. I love music in Spanish and the art and architecture all over that country
I don't agree with you at all. I'm from Sweden and I find Spanish from Spain the most beautiful language.
Don't think like that of yourself and your country, Spain is my favorite country in Europe. Food is the best, whether, landscapes, history, music, language (hot), way of living, art, architecture, people is hot and high speed trains are the best in Europe. Many countries would love to have so many good things
@@klausbriesma9050that IS a fact, can vouch for It, lived in different countries, Italy
, France,Japan,(hubby Japanese) BEST food :Japanese and Spanish, great seafood among other things