How learning German taught me the link between maths and poetry | Harry Baker | TEDxVienna

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  • čas přidán 7. 11. 2016
  • In mathematics there are right answers. In poetry there are no wrong ones. Find out how learning a foreign language, especially one that can be as beautifully logical as German, taught World Slam Poetry Slam Champion Harry Baker the two were a lot more linked than he realised.
    More information on www.tedxvienna.at
    Poet and Mathematician Harry Baker has always had a love of language, and his work has taken him around the world and exposed him to many voices and languages used to express those voices. Living in Germany was no different!
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @Edgypoo
    @Edgypoo Před 7 lety +8252

    "thank you for laughing at my life choices"
    great man

    • @zenahrb8316
      @zenahrb8316 Před 7 lety +15

      Miles Edgeworth.Copy i think he actually said "life crisis"

    • @alexanderanton468
      @alexanderanton468 Před 7 lety +9

      yeah thought so too, glad I'm not the only that noticed that

    • @39abc93
      @39abc93 Před 7 lety +13

      Fuyukine no he doesn't.

    • @DanZhukovin
      @DanZhukovin Před 7 lety +1

      He was asking for it

    • @GalenMarekOfficial
      @GalenMarekOfficial Před 7 lety

      +39abc93 He clearly did, mate.

  • @acearmageddon4404
    @acearmageddon4404 Před 7 lety +7536

    The worst puns are the ones, for which you need two languages to understand them.
    like: An assassin walks into a bar and gives his target a drink.
    The target asks if he wants anything in return.
    The assassin responds: "No, it's a gift."
    Thank you, you've been a great audience.

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 Před 7 lety +166

      You seem to be good at this, please explain me the averlavine... please help me, I lack the ability to understand Puns

    • @pascalstiemer
      @pascalstiemer Před 7 lety +192

      Lord Darkon Lawine = avalanche
      avril = the month between march and may
      The pun was referring to Avril Lavigne the singer

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 Před 7 lety +145

      +CamaradeSéculière _
      I am German, I understood the gift pun, I just needed help with the avrilavine.
      But I sill don't know what a singer has to do with all that ◉_◉

    • @pascalstiemer
      @pascalstiemer Před 7 lety +100

      Die Bedeutung der Wörter ist bei puns meist Nebensache. Avril Lavigne hat natürlich nichts mit Lawinen zu tun aber ihr name passt halt einfach.

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 Před 7 lety +20

      Well, good that pascalstiemer already explained it.
      Und ich weiss natürlich dass die nichts miteinander zu tun haben, deshalb das ◉_◉
      trotzdehm danke :D

  • @Stamnessj
    @Stamnessj Před 7 lety +7237

    An English man speaking some German with his mouth,
    but screaming in Italian with his hands.

    • @PusuMera
      @PusuMera Před 6 lety +75

      Johannes Ottestad exactly now someone understands!

    • @jellyacc
      @jellyacc Před 6 lety +23

      haha thats what i love about italians

    • @proudtitanicdenier4300
      @proudtitanicdenier4300 Před 6 lety +31

      Mr.WorldWide

    • @youprobablydontlikeme3206
      @youprobablydontlikeme3206 Před 6 lety +7

      Peter Griffin: Papedu pibedu

    • @auriel6699
      @auriel6699 Před 6 lety +70

      I'm italian And I'm so offended about what he said whit his hand !
      I'm joking , he was very nice and polite!

  • @tashikamala6917
    @tashikamala6917 Před 7 lety +2586

    I am german, and I'm on an exchange year right now.
    I don't know why, but the German language is known for not being pretty or nice or anything, and it just makes me really happy to See someone liking the german language so much and getting excited about it and stuff.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +76

      Tashi Kamala I really like German! I picked it as a kid in school. :) I love how it sounds and I love its' nuances.

    • @lenascheen7634
      @lenascheen7634 Před 6 lety +59

      Deutsch wird auch die Sprache der Dichter und Denker genannt,und das es sich do blöd anhört liegt an den menschen.Ich muss sagen,das ich mich selber manchmal stoppe dinge etwas härter aus zu sprechen.Glaubst du etwa französisch hört sich so schön an,weil sie das aussprechen,was sie sagen :,)

    • @serenamadsen3278
      @serenamadsen3278 Před 6 lety +39

      I love the German language!!

    • @catriona5268
      @catriona5268 Před 6 lety +103

      Lots of people outside Germany have only seen films about WWII and base "what German sounds like" on Nazis yelling orders. They haven't heard normal people speaking normal German. Whenever I speak it, my friends are surprised and tell me "oh, the way you speak German sounds really nice." To which I reply that that's how most German sounds - they have heard the exception, not the rule.
      Personally I really like the elegance of German. It is easy to say a lot in a few words! And I think it is a lovely-sounded language too.

    • @NoName-md6fd
      @NoName-md6fd Před 6 lety +18

      I always envisionned German as passion constrained by rules. Of course it is beautiful :)

  • @Imfromjamaicaman
    @Imfromjamaicaman Před 7 lety +3418

    Agreed, if you can understand a joke in another language, you have indeed progress, and if you can come up with a joke in another language, you have progressed further.

    • @TheSassi14
      @TheSassi14 Před 7 lety +53

      But you also need humor. Without that you can very fluent at a language but never reach any of these steps.

    • @chaosgoettin
      @chaosgoettin Před 7 lety +36

      everybody has their own sence of humor. If you laugh about it, your and the other person's sence of humor fits together "Wie ein Arsch auf'm Eimer!" :D

    • @TheSassi14
      @TheSassi14 Před 7 lety +5

      chaosgoettin Ich kenne es als "Wie Arsch auf Eimer". Vielleicht variiert der Spruch je nach Region.

    • @snickersunddeinhungeristge795
      @snickersunddeinhungeristge795 Před 7 lety +4

      TheSassi42 ich kenne den garnicht XD gibts wohl net in meiner region

    • @TheSassi14
      @TheSassi14 Před 7 lety +5

      Snickers und dein hunger ist gegessen
      Ich komme aus dem Umland von Hannover.

  • @pirouette5212
    @pirouette5212 Před 7 lety +4002

    in my German course i immediately yelled "Krankenbruder" when asked what a male nurse is called, cause the female nurse is Krankenschwester right. I was wrong :(

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 Před 7 lety +1381

      The problem here is not that your Logical assumption was wrong, the problem is that I as a native german speaker don't know if there even is a word for a male nurse.

    • @randomdude2026
      @randomdude2026 Před 7 lety +631

      caffeineyeti 1 Ahem, there is no male german word for Krankenschwester. You can say Krankenpfleger, but this is the male form of Krankenpflegerin. So I suppose your teacher trolled you :D

    • @ritterderkokosnuss3379
      @ritterderkokosnuss3379 Před 7 lety +249

      Im german and as a kid I thougt that too. It was just logical :D

    • @stephaniei6355
      @stephaniei6355 Před 7 lety +24

      this made me LOL

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 7 lety +88

      nah, it's warmer Bruder

  • @glockenrein
    @glockenrein Před 7 lety +786

    I'm German but I live in England. I think and live mostly English and what he says about jokes is very true. But there are two things that always come out German: counting and swearing.

    • @DomqE
      @DomqE Před 7 lety +15

      glockenrein hahahaha verdammte Scheiße ;)

    • @glockenrein
      @glockenrein Před 7 lety +5

      Pretty much lol

    • @henryduma6738
      @henryduma6738 Před 6 lety +44

      I am French and feel so much the same. Swearing and counting comes easier in French.

    • @99cseni
      @99cseni Před 6 lety +7

      glockenrein for me it's just counting

    • @jhdrch2656
      @jhdrch2656 Před 6 lety

      csenge varkonyi same

  • @minaa7011
    @minaa7011 Před 6 lety +311

    Someone show this guy Rhabarberbabera

  • @ImCookiiez
    @ImCookiiez Před 7 lety +1526

    This guy is highly creative and I love his enthusiasm for the oddities that come with learning a new language

    • @philaeew4866
      @philaeew4866 Před 7 lety +3

      SHARP do you honestly expect CZcams people to understand Kappa? :P

    • @SiriusGG
      @SiriusGG Před 6 lety

      Actually quite a lot do, including you.

  • @khgdlqgsds4528
    @khgdlqgsds4528 Před 7 lety +1582

    I feel sorry for the subtitle writers of this video.

    • @sunriselg
      @sunriselg Před 6 lety +36

      Thank you. I had trouble understanding the poem, the subtitles helped a lot.

    • @trystewilber9307
      @trystewilber9307 Před 5 lety +1

      Same here!!

    • @Bizarro69
      @Bizarro69 Před 4 lety +8

      (applause).... (laughter).... (applause)... (laughter)... (laughter)

    • @Patrick89ish
      @Patrick89ish Před 4 lety +1

      Danke !

    • @dohuktube
      @dohuktube Před 4 lety

      they're automatic from YT

  • @justarandomgirlinarandomwo3698

    Hab grad einem Freund einen Limonadenwitz erzählt...
    Fanta witzig.

    • @niklas8523
      @niklas8523 Před 6 lety +234

      just a random girl in a random world
      Aber nicht sofort oder?
      Sowas nennt man tee witz
      Muss man ziehen lassen

    • @justarandomgirlinarandomwo3698
      @justarandomgirlinarandomwo3698 Před 6 lety +54

      NikName Short but unique ASMR
      Füße hoch, der kommt flach😅😂

    • @justarandomgirlinarandomwo3698
      @justarandomgirlinarandomwo3698 Před 6 lety +87

      NikName Short but unique ASMR
      Schwarzer Humor?Ok....
      Wie war die stimmung in der DDR?
      Sie hielt sich in grenzen...

    • @niklas8523
      @niklas8523 Před 6 lety +14

      just a random girl in a random world deine mudda is wie darth vader
      Stinkt und sagt „ich bin dein vater“

    • @drageekeksi
      @drageekeksi Před 5 lety +3

      Ein dad-joke hahahaha😂

  • @jk666
    @jk666 Před 6 lety +89

    This had me laughing SO hard. As an English person living in Germany, I also found all the German words for gloves, snail and slug and turtle really funny when I learnt them.

    • @jessieca6757
      @jessieca6757 Před 6 lety +6

      "Shielded toad" totally cracked me up! :-D

    • @Sookielein
      @Sookielein Před 4 lety +9

      @@jessieca6757 I'm german and I never thought anything about the word Schildkröte when using it but now it cracks me up as well lol

    • @thegoodestman
      @thegoodestman Před 2 lety +2

      When my American wife thought she had figured German out I told her that the opposite of „jemanden umfahren“ is „jemanden umfahren“

  • @Martinh1999
    @Martinh1999 Před 7 lety +4345

    I am german. But the Löffel part is hard to understand.

    • @Grayvedygger
      @Grayvedygger Před 7 lety +634

      No, the Löffel Peom is part english and part german. However he articulates some german parts in a way that it blends into the english parts which results in a very sluggish kind of expression :)

    • @steffahn
      @steffahn Před 7 lety +105

      ..felt the same, got maybe two thirds of the German and not nealy half of the English part when first hearing.
      But there are subtitles ^^

    • @InsertTruthHere
      @InsertTruthHere Před 7 lety +117

      tyler t What's hardest I think is knowing which parts are German and which are English because his accent is kinda thick.

    • @TheP4LAD1N
      @TheP4LAD1N Před 7 lety +61

      bin auch deutsch aber wenn man die probleme kennt die viele nicht deutsche mit der aussprache von deutschen wörtern haben ist das "gedicht" ziemlich amüsant, diese alliterationen die eig keine sind machts noch komischer ;O

    • @glockenrein
      @glockenrein Před 7 lety +42

      The Löffel part is hilarious but I really needed the subtitles for both the English and the German.

  • @juweinert
    @juweinert Před 7 lety +1866

    8:00 I as a German would've called it "Falöffel"

    • @isaanderdonau31
      @isaanderdonau31 Před 7 lety +73

      Yep, that was my first thought as well (also German)

    • @C43P9
      @C43P9 Před 7 lety +48

      Julian Weinert Quasi wie 'n Göffel. Was, wie ich finde, übrigens das witzigste Wort dieser Welt ist. 😂

    • @xGlitzerkiste
      @xGlitzerkiste Před 7 lety +21

      Julian Weinert Same! I also immediately thought he'd say falöffel - i am German as well

    • @Lolomatikus333
      @Lolomatikus333 Před 7 lety +8

      +J. K. Ich find das Wort Göffel auch so geil, dass ich nurnoch Göffel zu Löffeln sage :D true story

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Před 7 lety +43

      It was my first thought too, and I'm French. I've been learning German for four years. I'm a mathematician too, and I find that Harry Baker describes very well my own elation when I discover wonderful or hilarious German words or expressions, such as entgegengegangen... Which must sound totally banal to a German! I feel constantly tempted to play with words, and it often works. For instance, when I learned the word Hochstapler, I immediately wondered what a Tiefstapler would be, and as it turned out the word existed and, much to my delight, meant exactly what I had assumed. Or, when I came across the word Einheitsbrei, I felt immediately compelled to combine it with Streicheleinheit to get Streicheleinheitsbrei...

  • @rosaroteseinhornregenbogen8555

    As a German this Talk was hilarious

    • @timeaesnyx
      @timeaesnyx Před 6 lety +1

      Rosaroteseinhorn Regenbogen please explain why.

    • @xypaisb8026
      @xypaisb8026 Před 5 lety +3

      as a German I still don't understand what this is about

    • @alkahina5458
      @alkahina5458 Před 5 lety +3

      @@timeaesnyx we have to learn that in english we cant just put words together. Its pretty normal to just call the things how we see them and it sound terrible sometimes to describe things in an subsentence.

    • @Zarr0c1337
      @Zarr0c1337 Před 5 lety +5

      @@timeaesnyx like @Bobo Riro said we can just add 1 word with another one and we have a new word with a new meaning e.g. Freezer = Kühlschrank, we can break it up like kühl+schrank -> eng cool+closet and the logic behind it is that it kinda make sense to "add" these words together,
      this is als the reason german words can be add up to a very very long bit single word sometimes they do exist sometimes not but even if not german speaking people will kinda understand what u mean :D (and it sounds very funny if u speak these long words veeery fast x))

    • @gtacheats1638
      @gtacheats1638 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Zarr0c1337 Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungs-gesetzesentwurfsdebattierklubdiskussions-standsberichterstattungsgeldantragsformular

  • @eb3279
    @eb3279 Před 7 lety +19

    This is almost exactly how I experienced learning German. I still think in German most of the time. Excellent, smart, logical language.

  • @behrmaus1378
    @behrmaus1378 Před 7 lety +562

    I'm going to start German classes this coming semester, I hear the grammar is tough but German is such a beautiful language I believe it is worth the effort.

    • @KeehseLP
      @KeehseLP Před 7 lety +9

      I think ist not that hard.. english russian and so on are way more complicated than german

    • @Hyonyx
      @Hyonyx Před 7 lety +134

      Spastus, Sohn des Retardus english is way more easy.. there is a reason why it is the "world language"... the grammar can be learned quite fast - in German, that isn't the case

    • @behrmaus1378
      @behrmaus1378 Před 7 lety +15

      +Hyonyx I'm from the U.S. and English is not an easy language to learn for foreigners, in fact it is the most difficult language because it is composed of so many different languages. However, many foreigners learn it because they want to integrate into society. Even if a foreigner has an accent it's acceptable because it is evident they are trying to adapt to our society. German is no different in my opinion it is just a language and like all languages it has its rules in grammar. Übung macht den Meister!

    • @Hyonyx
      @Hyonyx Před 7 lety +100

      Edith I'm a German native speaker. I have learned English, Korean, Chinese and French. English was the easiest language to learn so far, while Korean was the hardest (not chinese!)... The reason is that English and Chinese have an easy grammar compared to german, (or korean) because they don't have, tons of special cases when it comes to eg. sentence structure...
      I never hear pupils complain about English but French (and Latin or Korean) have tough grammar, and when we are allowed to drop a language class only 5% drops out of her or his English class ^^ congrats on starting to learn German btw :p

    • @KeehseLP
      @KeehseLP Před 7 lety +12

      Of course English is the easiest when you have learned korean or chinese.. But you are a german native speaker so how can you say that its hard to learn it? You never had to learn it

  • @TheSassi14
    @TheSassi14 Před 7 lety +1639

    I am German and I often think in English. In my dreams there is never any language.

    • @leayo1682
      @leayo1682 Před 7 lety +25

      TheSassi42 Same

    • @graup1309
      @graup1309 Před 7 lety +54

      TheSassi42 Same here. But yeah, I just substitute the 'dreaming in a language' part with 'just randomly and without any input whatsoever starting to think in a language' which is amazing.

    • @somegingerthings9530
      @somegingerthings9530 Před 7 lety +68

      TheSassi42 Same here. I often just randomly think in englisch without wanting to do it. And sometimes I only can think of the englisch Word for something I want to express in my native language (German) 😂

    • @leayo1682
      @leayo1682 Před 7 lety +28

      somegingerthings Me too! When I think about stuff on the internet I mostly think in english.

    • @Julia-wy8et
      @Julia-wy8et Před 7 lety +37

      somegingerthings Same! It's so weird being in Class and trying to explain something in German, but you only come to think of the english explanation... and then you have to explain why you can only think in English.

  • @hannahhannah1110
    @hannahhannah1110 Před 7 lety +44

    "Es hat geklappt." (English: "It has clapped.") doesn´t mean clapping to yourself. Instead it refers to one single sound (one clap) in the moment of success. The phrase originates from hunting, especially trapping. When you hear a clap from the trap, respectively the trap has clapped, it has clapped and you succeeded.
    And by the way, telling someone else that you just perform a little dance of joy to yourself, wouldn´t be very German like.

    • @LeaLikesIcecream
      @LeaLikesIcecream Před 6 lety +2

      Hannah Hannah oh my. Das mit dem klappen wusste ich nicht :D

  • @livemusicisalive1030
    @livemusicisalive1030 Před 7 lety +88

    It's actually quite funny and I love his enthusiam about german (especially that he's not like everyone else just thinking it sounds angry but goes in depth with all the meaningful words this language has)

  • @TheSassi14
    @TheSassi14 Před 7 lety +1131

    Why would you eat Falaffel with a Löffel? XD

    • @flauschiblue7388
      @flauschiblue7388 Před 7 lety +37

      TheSassi42 maybe the falafel breaks and crumbles, or it is completely covered in dip ? :o

    • @steff7395
      @steff7395 Před 7 lety +4

      TheSassi42 made my day 😂😂😂

    • @DennisSmdFreefightTrainer
      @DennisSmdFreefightTrainer Před 7 lety +6

      Pio Day hahahhahahhah I am dying

    • @jamesgrey13
      @jamesgrey13 Před 6 lety +2

      Because you're full of foolishness!

    • @lukasbeck4421
      @lukasbeck4421 Před 6 lety +11

      TheSassi42 that's the reason he said "IF you had a spoon for falafel"

  • @jerrit20
    @jerrit20 Před 7 lety +461

    Hey! Glad to see he is still doing awesome things. I went to school with him in Germany.

  • @yesmissfrancon
    @yesmissfrancon Před 6 lety +12

    One of my favorite logical German words is Mutterkuchen. In English this is placenta. It literally means mother-cake (which nourishes the fetus). I should add, though, that placenta also means cake in Latin.

  • @KoreanwithMissVicky
    @KoreanwithMissVicky Před 6 lety +2

    He's a genius. I admire his sense of humor and passion that obviously shine through his speech!

  • @M41785929
    @M41785929 Před 7 lety +1571

    That moment when you are watching Ted Talks in English, and in the Ted Talk they start talking in German, but you don't understand that much because you don't know German, because actually you are just an argentinian person (who speaks Spanish) trying to understand an english person that isn't speaking the language you do understand.

    • @luschmiedt1071
      @luschmiedt1071 Před 7 lety +21

      Maira Robiglio ich am german and I don't always unterstand What he is talking Abort XD

    • @Hugo-pj4bm
      @Hugo-pj4bm Před 7 lety +28

      tyler t German? no way lol

    • @l.l.5948
      @l.l.5948 Před 7 lety +37

      +tyler t German is quite hard actually.

    • @miss_walderdbeere
      @miss_walderdbeere Před 7 lety +56

      Please don´t mind. My native language is german and i didnt understand his german very well... actually i needed full ttention and got only like half he was sayin´ when talking german.....

    • @dutchik5107
      @dutchik5107 Před 7 lety +10

      tyler t i think you mean dutch if you are englisch. since its like german with a lot less grammar. closest to englisch. vocabulary wise close to german. bjt the german language has its own linguistic category. a category above English, French, Dutch and all.

  • @wadwad5368
    @wadwad5368 Před 7 lety +531

    I just understand flafflaffelafell...😂

  • @joseespinoza6283
    @joseespinoza6283 Před 6 lety +2

    "Learning another language is like learning to think in another colour" Das ist sehr schön!

  • @Luxalpa
    @Luxalpa Před 7 lety +583

    Damn I want to learn German now! But I'm already German :S

    • @nacho74
      @nacho74 Před 7 lety +6

      Smaug fail

    • @costillero2189
      @costillero2189 Před 7 lety +57

      learn swiss german

    • @shaolin89
      @shaolin89 Před 7 lety

      hahahahahaha

    • @Trisador9
      @Trisador9 Před 7 lety +5

      costillero d schwoobe händ doch ken stiich schwiizerdütsch z lehre xD

    • @johannschneider6372
      @johannschneider6372 Před 6 lety +14

      Du sprichst eine der schönsten und komplexesten Sprachen der Welt, sei doch froh!

  • @YakiMasala
    @YakiMasala Před 7 lety +321

    I'm a 27 old male german and i still can't get over the word "Brustwarze". But you got to be hounest. We are more likely to say "Nippel".

    • @agnetelundvaldfisker1382
      @agnetelundvaldfisker1382 Před 7 lety +34

      Same in Danish, it's called "Brystvorte", which means the same as in German, but a lot of people (especially young) just use "nipple".

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +10

      I've been living in Austria for four years already and never heard the word Brustwarze, everyone always said Nippel. I'm pretty sure the next language reform or whatever will rule out Brustwarze and adopt Nippel. :D

    • @Niemer82
      @Niemer82 Před 6 lety +28

      There is no need for a reform because "der Nippel" is allready a proper german word. It is used for a lot of things. Mostly for small things pointing out of something bigger.

    • @johangrostkerck6046
      @johangrostkerck6046 Před 6 lety +1

      In Dutch we say tepel

    • @bonazza4476
      @bonazza4476 Před 4 lety +11

      Das gleiche mit Regenbogenhaut und Iris ,ich dachte mein Wortschatz wäre eigentlich ganz passabel aber habe noch nie von Regenbogenhaut als wort für Iris gehört.

  • @erikengheim1106
    @erikengheim1106 Před 7 lety +76

    As a native Norwegian speaker, I've also noticed that my American-English speaking personality is different from my Norwegian one, even the sound of the voice. I speak in a lower register in American-English than in Norwegian. Much of this I think is because it is hard to separate the culture that goes with a language. The ways you express yourself in a language is connected to the culture which formed that language.

    • @bilvotel3119
      @bilvotel3119 Před 5 lety +5

      I also noticed that about me. I am much more open to communicate with strangers when speaking english

  • @peachsoda111
    @peachsoda111 Před 5 lety +14

    I started learning German about a month ago and last night I had my first dream in German! 😄😄😄😄

  • @LLFRA
    @LLFRA Před 7 lety +10

    I speak both German and English. But when he presented his poem, it sounded like none of these languages.

  • @susannicolasheehan
    @susannicolasheehan Před 7 lety +949

    Das ist sehr lustig und toll. I have just recently started learning German (and the word löffel yesterday)! I love it. :) Dankeschön for this video. Tschüss.

    • @yangana4099
      @yangana4099 Před 7 lety +37

      Susan Sheehan I love the german word Löffel. You should check out Schüssel.

    • @gamescept8737
      @gamescept8737 Před 7 lety +31

      Susan Sheehan I'm from Germany and I can definitely assure you that you'll find more of these funny words^^

    • @toyfabrik2993
      @toyfabrik2993 Před 7 lety +39

      Next thing to learn is "Den Löffel abgeben", so you can actually use the word in everyday life... ^^

    • @MusixPro4u
      @MusixPro4u Před 7 lety

      Or Schlüssel

    • @l.l.5948
      @l.l.5948 Před 7 lety +26

      German is such a beautiful language!

  • @voyance4elle
    @voyance4elle Před 7 lety +69

    He's lovely!! :D some of his jokes really cracked me up xD loved that outside perspective on our language and on some words like Schildkröte and Wasserkocher ;)

  • @bizdickson6561
    @bizdickson6561 Před 6 lety +13

    I had a similar experience learning German. My math skill soared and I have dreamed auf Deutsch!

  • @listocalisto8124
    @listocalisto8124 Před 6 lety +40

    as a persian-german, also being fluent in english, i also found that my personalities differ very much from each other, when using a different language. in persian, which i obviously use in conversations with relatives, i am much more polite and in self-doubt, whilst when talking german in everyday life, i am - just like harry - pretty direct and maybe even offensive to some people. on the other hand i've been told that when speaking english i do tend to be very objective and neutral towards things and sometimes even sound like i'm holding a scientific speech. the sudden change of personalities is pretty interesting

    • @GuideTheNation
      @GuideTheNation Před 4 lety +3

      Thanks for the insight. Im a german native and I made similar observations, in my mothertongue I seem to have absorbed a way of expressing myself similar to the well-structured, polite and calm way my highly educated parents would do. In some social situations this actually feels really restraining, on the contrary in more formal contexts that "framework" is giving me a confidence boost. Well, while travelling I have created an english alter ego which has become waay more relaxed, outgoing and fun for myself. This in turn has influenced my german habits ever so slightly. I guess that process is a part of coming of age and developing a strong personality. cheers

    • @HippasosofMetapontum
      @HippasosofMetapontum Před 2 lety

      i feel the same xD for me it is mostly about flirting - i feel i get girls way easier, when iam speaking or writing in English than in German :3

  • @BillyRHall-hj3jo
    @BillyRHall-hj3jo Před 7 lety +60

    ich kann nicht mehr, dieser kerl ist einfach genial😂😂😂😂, and yes learning another language is much easier when you are having fun and making jokes. huge thumbs up

  • @manboobstv3083
    @manboobstv3083 Před 7 lety +80

    Finally someone who was actually fun listening toand not as boring as the most people on Tedx Talks. Kind of an refreshing experience tbh.

    • @pixelfan7261
      @pixelfan7261 Před 2 lety +1

      I loved his entusiasm, but had to skip the foolish Falafel part.

    • @lennartbehrendt788
      @lennartbehrendt788 Před 2 lety

      @@pixelfan7261 Yes, that wasn't exactly my humour either. But he did a great job!

  • @loubest3935
    @loubest3935 Před 7 lety +497

    The title sounds like a parody of a Ted talk

  • @soulintent4129
    @soulintent4129 Před 2 lety

    This dude is so amazing, he puts every word beautifully in the sentence so that it keeps you interested and still willing to listen to the rest of his talk, he s so gifted

  • @christopherscharf8185
    @christopherscharf8185 Před 7 lety +1245

    Factual error there is no such thing as too much falafel

  • @pollyrawlings2108
    @pollyrawlings2108 Před 7 lety +32

    Well Done Harry - this is great fun (and brilliant) thank you.

  • @oyonggofomocci2078
    @oyonggofomocci2078 Před 6 lety +22

    DUDE Chinese is the same! glove is 手套 which means Hand-covering.
    I like how these languages are so analytical; you build a new concept using existent concepts until it no longer is practical, then you make another one.
    Now I want to learn German, since it seems like Chinese, but with the words stuck together instead of separated.

    • @oyonggofomocci2078
      @oyonggofomocci2078 Před 6 lety +9

      Nevermind, I scale back a bit, Chinese is not quite AS analytical as German.
      WHICH MAKES ME MORE EXCITED TO LEARN IT

    • @moonshifter0
      @moonshifter0 Před 4 lety +1

      @@oyonggofomocci2078 how advanced is your German by now?

  • @vincentm99
    @vincentm99 Před 7 lety +2

    that's exactly it. you quite literally shocked me, you synthesized the process of learning a language like no one did before. You are truly awesome, thanks ;)

  • @feitur
    @feitur Před 7 lety +5

    One of the most entertaining Ted talks I've seen in a long time. Great job mate.

  • @AhmedEssam-rp1to
    @AhmedEssam-rp1to Před 6 lety +7

    Vor 3 Monaten habe ich das Video gesehen und Es hat mich inspiriert Deutsch zu lernen. Ich habe jeden Tag der letzten 3 monaten Deutsch gelernt und jetzt kommte ich hier um das Video noch einmal anzuschauen und Ich habe viel ausgelacht. Ich bin ganz völlig seiner Meinung, Deutsch ist sehr logische Sprache. Lebenslauf ist bisher mein Lieblingswort . Es ist viel besser als CV auf Englisch.Ich glaube dass ich im Lauf der Zeit mich in der Sprache verliebt habe. Ich bin erst Anfänger aber es macht jetzt echt spaß, Deutsch weiterzulernen.

    • @Graf_Leo_von_Caprivi
      @Graf_Leo_von_Caprivi Před 6 lety

      Ahmed Essam
      kommen - kam - gekommen
      "Kommen" ist ein unregelmäßiges Verb.

    • @kraenk12
      @kraenk12 Před 5 lety +1

      Du sprichst schon besseres Deutsch, als viele die hier geboren sind! Weiter so!

    • @MikhahS
      @MikhahS Před 5 lety +1

      @@kraenk12 Seitdem "hier geboren sein" keinerlei Anspruch zur Folge hat (Sprache, Sitten,...), selbstverständlich möglich.

    • @kraenk12
      @kraenk12 Před 5 lety

      MikhahS Als ob das in Marzahn oder der sächsischen Provinz anders wäre, unter den ganzen „Möchtegern-Ariern“. 😂

    • @Luk-qm2re
      @Luk-qm2re Před 5 lety

      Great!

  • @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii4222

    So good, I remember those moments when I taught myself your language.
    Satisfying and it makes sense.

  • @XxKagarwaxX
    @XxKagarwaxX Před 7 lety +26

    I had a hard time at the beginning understanding you (I am german) but after a few minutes I got used to it and I have to say: Dein deutsch ist wirklich gut!
    another great translation in my opinion:
    Sloth = Faultier (which basically means lazy animal)

  • @vivasreno
    @vivasreno Před 7 lety +161

    German also teaches you directing a musical performance.

  • @DrINTJ
    @DrINTJ Před 6 lety +8

    I was waiting for the part about the link between maths and poetry...

  • @melissa397
    @melissa397 Před 4 lety +3

    As someone who also learned German from scratch, I found this talk incredibly sweet!

  • @Widdekuu91
    @Widdekuu91 Před 7 lety +74

    I've had 4 years of German at school and about 10 years of hobby-ish reading German books.
    I still can't fully come up with jokes, but I cán eavesdrop on Germans in the train.
    And scare them afterwards, by politely greeting them in German when I left the train (and trough this action, revealing I heared all of their secrets, including; 'Hey that girl (me) is pretty, look at her legs, I like her ankleboots')
    Even if it was just for the looks of horror on their faces, it would've been worth it, learning German all those years.

    • @lulana9545
      @lulana9545 Před 5 lety +5

      lol assis will give their useless thoughts about your body no matter which language you speak. 🤦

    • @someoneelse4720
      @someoneelse4720 Před 4 lety +3

      German jokes are actually quite easy to come up with. Most times, it's just a fun combination of words. For example:
      Was bekommt ein Engel, wenn er in den Misthaufen fällt?
      - Kotflügel.

    • @gtacheats1638
      @gtacheats1638 Před 4 lety +2

      @@someoneelse4720 der ist halt leider net witzig

    • @someoneelse4720
      @someoneelse4720 Před 4 lety +1

      @@gtacheats1638 der ist halt echt witzig. Meiner Meinung nach. Die Geschmäcker unterscheiden sich eben.

    • @martinpalmer9810
      @martinpalmer9810 Před 4 lety +1

      I have always had fun doing just that - casually listening in on the foreign language conversations of others; especially when they were speaking about me and trying to decide as to what nationality I could be. When I pulled out a German language magazine and started to read it, they changed their minds on me being an American in favour of the now greater probability that I was Canadian.

  • @jony1495
    @jony1495 Před 7 lety +431

    that moment when a native english speaker learns a couple words in another language. Worth a TED -Talk :D

    • @haemse
      @haemse Před 7 lety +80

      This guy is genious, his german poetry is quite complex.

    • @urwrstntmre
      @urwrstntmre Před 7 lety +18

      Jan Haha good point. Kind of a rare thing, especially in the US

    • @Binerexis
      @Binerexis Před 7 lety +26

      Jan The title is also misleading

    • @MineArtworks
      @MineArtworks Před 7 lety +13

      no, it's not.

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 7 lety +5

      Anything that begins, "that moment when..." deserves a downvote. Too bad they don't work.

  • @lenalaatsch
    @lenalaatsch Před 7 lety +1437

    wenn er deutsch spricht klingt das wie holländisch 😂😂😂

    • @urwrstntmre
      @urwrstntmre Před 7 lety +13

      Kpopfreak 0'0 Die beiden sind ja ähnlich...

    • @lenalaatsch
      @lenalaatsch Před 7 lety +7

      Ethan G. woow no sh't bro 😂😂😂

    • @user-bj9zz3tv4v
      @user-bj9zz3tv4v Před 6 lety +60

      Kpopfreak 0'0 cause Dutch is German with the English accent

    • @arjenbij
      @arjenbij Před 6 lety +3

      Масло Масляное no.

    • @m.h.5400
      @m.h.5400 Před 6 lety +17

      Kpopfreak 0'0 Nahh ich als Niederländer kann dir da nicht zustimmen.

  • @gingerstarksyoble8261
    @gingerstarksyoble8261 Před 3 lety

    alles was du hier gesagt hast, hat mir total getroffen. Ich bin Deutschlehrerin in Colorado and am always trying to explain to my students what you have demonstrated hier. Brilliant.

  • @gerrie001
    @gerrie001 Před 7 lety

    This is by far the best talk I've ever seen!

  • @cajsalindqvist5042
    @cajsalindqvist5042 Před 7 lety +9

    I just Love Harry baker. Best poet ive ever seen.

  • @elchkeksfwf7901
    @elchkeksfwf7901 Před 4 lety +67

    Since that day he is known as the Falafel Rapper.
    Diese Kommentarsektion ist Eigentum der BRD.

  • @dagmarsigridmanondenijs-bl7156

    Vielen Dank! Dein TED-Gespräch war wirklich wundervoll. Ja, ich habe wirklich unterschiedliche Persönlichkeiten in verschiedenen Sprachen. Nochmals vielen Dank!

  • @o0blubblub0o
    @o0blubblub0o Před 4 lety +2

    he captures pretty well the reasons why i love this language. i really love to take the things that i say apart and rethink what it really could mean. i guess it is a good execise for your mind and german is perfect for this.
    and a few moths ago i had a conversation with some people about why gloves are called "handschuhe" and not "handsocken" which means handsocks.

  • @lealippard1045
    @lealippard1045 Před 4 lety +8

    It took me almost the whole joke to understand that he was trying to say "Vier Löffel voll Falafel."

  • @Dafoodmaster
    @Dafoodmaster Před 7 lety +8

    in dutch it's also waterkoker (water cooker) handschoen (hand shoe) schildpad (shield toad) and naaktslak (naked snail)

  • @atutalor
    @atutalor Před 6 lety

    wow this is a brilliant crossover between english and german language

  • @creativegermanlearning

    This was great! I just started learning German and yesterday I was learning oven mitt, Ofenhandschuhe. I loved the hand shoe part! Great job!

  • @dekay183
    @dekay183 Před 5 lety +12

    the only dude eminem is afraid to make a disstrack against

  • @SaschaHusenbeth
    @SaschaHusenbeth Před 7 lety +111

    I just love british people that are open minded and learn other languages. They don't have to, so the fact that they still do it says alot about them.

    • @calinho7689
      @calinho7689 Před 5 lety +4

      Sascha Husenbeth sadly there aren’t that many of them...

    • @BernhardKistner_dice45
      @BernhardKistner_dice45 Před 4 lety +9

      @@calinho7689 openmindedness is a collector's item, a rare one ...
      oder wie Einstein gesagt haben soll: Viele Menschen haben einen geistigen Horizont mit dem Kreisradius Null. Und das nennen sie dann ihren Standpunkt.

    • @calinho7689
      @calinho7689 Před 4 lety

      MrDice45 dem kann man nicht widersprechen

  • @darrylwhitefeather207
    @darrylwhitefeather207 Před 6 lety

    I had to put on subtitles for the poem and it was brilliant.

  • @RoRo91xx
    @RoRo91xx Před 7 lety

    Adding this to a Playlist and cannot wait to watch! :) I love both Foreign Languages and Science.

  • @leonardreidiess9777
    @leonardreidiess9777 Před 7 lety +205

    This guy is 98% Calcium.

  • @19NineLives95
    @19NineLives95 Před 7 lety +45

    "I dont know what to do with my hands"

  • @fredanskyi
    @fredanskyi Před 4 lety +1

    To an English speaking German like me that poem was pure brilliance

  • @yuppyprolepaste4926
    @yuppyprolepaste4926 Před 6 lety

    I love Harry Baker, he is wicked poet. This has cemented my esteem for him - I have read a poem in German side-by-side with it's English translation, but I cannot imagine reciting a poem in two languages. Really awesome. Incidentally, Loefel is my favourite German word.

  • @osnapitzwill
    @osnapitzwill Před 6 lety +4

    I am a completely different person in Spanish, so I really get where he's coming from. I'm at least 90% more sarcastic, a bunch more likely to flirt, and direct in a way that I wouldn't dream of being in English. Man I love learning languages.

  • @ric112
    @ric112 Před 7 lety +106

    "if a falafel for little filipino awful so it's just annoying what the f falafel is the fluffy people actors have been iffy'
    I recommend turning subtitles on.

  • @Camila-do8ot
    @Camila-do8ot Před 6 lety +1

    I loved it!! It was really funny and thank you for "the nerd rush" I always wanted a word to define that absolutely glorious feeling

  • @Naturmuslima
    @Naturmuslima Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks so much. So cool hearing this about my native language. This Polyglot idea changed my life so much. Language is simply a key to soooo many things. It pushed me to an extend İ couldnt dream of before

  • @moonshine6542
    @moonshine6542 Před 7 lety +22

    There are some German kinds of tongue-twisters/storys, which also plays with merged words. One of it ends with the word: Rabababerbarbarabarbabarenbartbabierbierbarbärbel

  • @healthandspirit3238
    @healthandspirit3238 Před 6 lety +5

    " thank you for laughing at my life choices " lol :3 poetry !

  • @stellamarisgallardo487

    I feel exactly what he described while learning German, it has so much logic and it is enjoyable to learn...!

  • @greywolf271
    @greywolf271 Před 6 lety

    Great talk, not just about learning the language but about the "Nerd Rush"

  • @skaaads
    @skaaads Před 4 lety +16

    when he tells them to repeat after him, it sounds like in every church in germany. kinda dead xD

  • @Albinopfirsichsaft
    @Albinopfirsichsaft Před 7 lety +4

    When I talk English I'm much more informal than in German. It's really interesting, the pure use of the language makes me sound and feel kinda calm.

  • @sasuke22dante
    @sasuke22dante Před 6 lety

    what a nice way to wrap up the talk!

  • @prithwirajpal4212
    @prithwirajpal4212 Před 5 lety

    One of the best TEDx talks!

  • @notAshildr
    @notAshildr Před 7 lety +68

    Four spoons of Falafel is not too much Falafel. Weil vier Falafellöffel voll Falafel vielleicht voll machen, für viele fühlt es sich aber nach zu wenig an

    • @calinho7689
      @calinho7689 Před 5 lety +1

      Me (No, not Ashildr, I had the name before Doctor Who, and I'm not changing it!) du musst uns Lauchs und seine lyrischen Künste verstehen...

  • @Apostate_ofmind
    @Apostate_ofmind Před 7 lety +54

    its so wonderful to start dreaming in another language! Problems arise when you cant speak your first language well anymore cause you think in English XD My sentences structure is all fucked up now XD

    • @thonktank1239
      @thonktank1239 Před 7 lety +19

      Same problem, sometimes I don't even remember words in German anymore and my brain keeps pushing the English word into my head... so instead of speaking good german and okay English, I speak mediocre German and mediocre Englisch...

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety

      I feel you, oh dear I feel you xD my Bulgarian is so alien...

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +2

      Lord Darkon DUDE! XD
      I'm even better/worse than you - I do this with three languages. XD That moment when you realize you speak *no* language like a native. XD

    • @js6271
      @js6271 Před 5 lety +4

      when I first learned English, I dreamed in English with subtitles in Spanish!

    • @lisa_vxng
      @lisa_vxng Před 4 lety +1

      @@thonktank1239 I'm a native german speaker and just regularly stop mid-sentence coz I cant remember the german translation for the english word in my head and my parents' english is not good enough for that (fine with my sister tho)

  • @drk_fi
    @drk_fi Před rokem +1

    I literally had my first German dream last night. I laughed myself awake and remembered hearing myself say "This dream is in German" as I was opening my eyes

    • @luken136
      @luken136 Před rokem +1

      Omg luckyyyy praying 🙏 that I get mine soon

  • @emerwalsh2627
    @emerwalsh2627 Před 7 lety +1

    As an Irish person who speaks English as a first language who is also learning German I can really relate to this, love this guy!

  • @jlr177
    @jlr177 Před 7 lety +151

    I am waaay more passive while speaking german than I am while speaking english. It's so weird.

    • @playrisk7928
      @playrisk7928 Před 7 lety +19

      J LR i know! it's the same for me (I'm a native German speaker)

    • @knecht6974
      @knecht6974 Před 7 lety +67

      J LR I can express critisism so much better in english than in german, but in german talking about politics or insulting is much more fun. Calling somebody a fucking facist in english is boring, calling somebody a *DRRECKKSS FASCHISTTTTT!!!!* is fun

    • @stellaw3620
      @stellaw3620 Před 7 lety +4

      Adam Moer why do I Agree so much with this xD but non-political insults to me are way funnier in russian tho, coz you can Just put them all after each other without anything in between and it still makes perfect sense

    • @meg136
      @meg136 Před 7 lety +13

      J LR im german and I can speak english very good. its weird that Im so much nicer to other when Im speaking english

    • @zoltansafran8
      @zoltansafran8 Před 7 lety +10

      potato.just.in.underwear awh you might be good but youu speak WELL, I know you dont have this in german but it really hurts my eyes :D

  • @blub2121
    @blub2121 Před 4 lety +7

    Strength: 2
    Agility: 4
    Constitution: 3
    Intelligence: 9
    Wisdom: 10

  • @siddharthkrishnan3317
    @siddharthkrishnan3317 Před 6 lety

    I love this guy! He is the guy who got me into poetry!

  • @ormchaitrakulthong282
    @ormchaitrakulthong282 Před 4 lety

    This guy is the best speaker I’ve ever watched in ted

  • @Felixkeeg
    @Felixkeeg Před 7 lety +15

    The poem sounds like having a stroke, but these puns are amazing!

    • @martinpalmer9810
      @martinpalmer9810 Před 4 lety

      I hope that his math is better than his poetry. The guy is obviously not a romantic.

  • @wuloki
    @wuloki Před 4 lety +5

    When I learned English as a German, I remember when during some english conversation I suddenly thought in english. This was probably the moment I started to get the language.
    The difficult thing about German I think is that you can take two random words and put them together on the fly. In German you do this so often that you don't think about it, and a lot of German jokes work just becaue of that. This leads to the situation however that you tell someone learning German that the word you just used was a "makeshift-word" which isn't in the dictionary.
    That's also the reason why some German words are ridiciously long.

  • @MsKatiable
    @MsKatiable Před 6 lety

    Such an amazing talk! Thank you

  • @TheFren
    @TheFren Před 6 lety +2

    For some reason this was one of my favourite Ted Talks ever 😂

  • @grandadrian522
    @grandadrian522 Před 5 lety +6

    Yeah, dreaming in another language. I'm from Germany and when I participated in an exchange to Poland (to improve my English), I suddenly started to dream in Polish the 3rd day. I never learned Polish and did not know any of the words they said in my dream but somehow I understood everything.

    • @Wazkaty
      @Wazkaty Před 3 lety

      Fantástic!

    • @Dankschon
      @Dankschon Před rokem

      Well that's because Polish and gibberish are undistinguishable from one another.

  • @juliaelric3180
    @juliaelric3180 Před 7 lety +42

    I saw title and I was oh my God I love german (I'm learning), I love poetry, I have to watch that!

  • @LB0206
    @LB0206 Před 4 lety +1

    8:40 Oh, thank you whoever wrote the subtitles. My head was spinning the first few seconds until I realised they were there...

  • @martijndevis
    @martijndevis Před 7 lety

    some onne form the netherlands here that understands german it took me only 3 times to undderstandd what you where talking about.
    and i think its AWSOME wel done