How did you do? Don’t worry if you didn’t get them all right. 🎁 You can download the PDF with all the words, phrases, and characteristics they talked about in the video here: spanishandgo.com/learn/spanish-accents-from-different-countries-part-2
My thoughts exactly! That's what I told him too after I started watching the show. I met Diego through Lingoda. That's one of the platforms he teaches on. I told him he should start his own CZcams channel called "Spanish with The Professor" where he plays that character in all of his lesson videos. 😂 Great minds think alike. Thanks for watching, David! -Jim
I was waiting for one of them in this video or the last one to give me a dead giveaway clue like "que cajones es eso" or "que coño pasa" or "es el puto chuck norris con gafas" since I fancy myself fluent in español de la casa de papel y nunca otra. Lo siento, ninguna diciste esos.
Yayyyy! I got 3 right!!!! Somehow I knew Vicente is from España.... And I guessed the others from Mexico and Argentina.... I was really confused by the one from Colombia! 😅😂💕 Y... Soy de India y llevo 3 años estudiando español! 😄💕
I can't believe the two I missed were the two accents I hear daily -- Puerto Rico and Mexico. Equatorial Guinea was the easiest. She's even wearing the answer on her necklace. Peru's geography gave it away, as did Argentina's che, and Colombian spanish is always the clearest.
We conjugate verbs differently from most other spanish speaking countries because we use "vos" instead of "tú" to mean "you" but with enough practice anyone can learn to speak like us.
i do believe is harder for others not only for the verb conjugations but also because the slang and way of expressing stuff. We add weird stuff to words, sometimes speaks backwards and sometimes put more emphasis on certain parts of the words. Maybe you could try first having a good base of neutral spanish and then go for argentinean accent, even try watching series and listening to music (not for pronunciation, just to acclimatize to some wording). The first weird thing you will notice it's the Voseo and it's the main reason why it sounds so different. uh, excuse my english. i hope i made my point clear, lol.
@@Noriii24 Nice, btw, does the neutral Spanish Tu eres mean the same as the Argentine Spanish Vos sos? that's the voseo right? Argentine Spanish is different because its not neutral like the rest of Latin American Spanish.
@@FrannB exactly, but i think it's the same conjugation as the spanish from spain , por ejemplo en arg we say vos tenes , and in spain they say vosotros teneis , we just skip the i , but keep in mind that vosotros is the plural one and vos is singular, i hope that helps , if u wannamake an exchange language to help eachother , pls lemme know
The way the word usted was used in her country gave away colombia for me. I have a colombian friend and i always ask her why she talks so proper when speaking to me .
I like it too! It’s very unique from what I’m used to hearing. And her expressions were hilarious. “You and I are doing to wear the same underwear” for fighting. 😆 Thanks for watching! -Jim
I got all of them right. Born in Colombia but lived my entire life in the USA. I think that helps s lot bc you grow up with Latinos from all over the world. Peru and PR were a little tough bc the speakers were doing their best to sound neutral but a few intonations gave them away.
El chico Puertoriqueño por supuesto lo sabia que es Boricua, tan claro 😉👍 y muchisimas gracias 🙏 a ustedes dos, me parece que estan en mi pais (Puerto Rico) 😘
I LOVE THESE VIDS! This is where I first found you guys... I had looked up “how to differentiate between spanish accents” and found you guys! I’m so glad I did can’t wait for the live tonight😆❤️
That’s awesome, Ashleigh! I didn’t that was how you found us! We’ll definitely have to do a part 3. There’s still at least 11 more countries we can cover. See you tonight! -Jim
Me equivoqué solamente con la chica de Guinea Ecuatorial. Había adivinado que era de República Dominicana, pero la pista que debería haber recordado era su uso de vosotros. Ha sido un vídeo muy divertido, y apreciaría si pudieseis hacer más vídeos parecidos. Un abrazo, Steve
Nadie en Republica Dominaca habla ni medio parecido a ella. El Dominicano es un asento muy distintivo y caribeño más parecido al portoriqueño y al Cubano
La mayoría de los hablantes de Español no saben que en Guinea Ecuatorial se habla Español, tienen un acento con palabras parecida al de España pero una pronunciación un poco raro, supongo que será por la influencia del idioma de su Etnia, hay palabras que a una etnia les cuesta mas pronunciar que a otras dentro del mismo pais.
Yo me di cuenta que era de Guinea Ecuatorial desde que sus primeras palabras. Y vamos a ser serios, a única razón por la que pensaste que era de RD fue por su color de piel, como si en otros países no hubiera gente de ese color o en RD no hubiera gente con distintos fenotipos.
Got them all correct! Struggled with Equatorial Guinea and originally thought she was from Dominican Republic but when she said the capital was ok an island and I know DR as all islands I had to rethink my answer. Cool video!
i only managed to guess the Argentinian one caused he said Che. One funny fact i remember about the Argentinian slang is that they don't pronouce the ll in a word, they change it to a shh sound. Like pollo would be pronounced po-sho. I do hope someone tells me i'm right cos if not, i'm gonna be pissed at a friend of mine and calling him an actual boludo.
The people from Spain, Mexico, Argentina and Equatorial Guinea were easy to recognise. The others could have been also from the countries that border their countries, e.g. Ecuador, Venezuela or even Cuba. Fun video just the same
España, Argentina, Cuba, Puerto Rico, México y Colombia son muy fáciles de identificar, soy hondureño y obvio es muy fácil identificar el acento hondureños pero de los demás países de Latinoamérica no es tan fácil de identificar
@@espanolconmaria I will never pay for this when there is a world full of opportunities, groups and apps. For English and German my groups are completely free.
come on, it was the easiest one because of her race, she doesn't look like a latin woman but like an african one and she pronounces the letters "z" and "c" like the spaniards do
Estuvo muy fácil, de hecho en el primer round adiviné todos los acentos, excepto el de Fernando pues tenía la duda entre Puerto Rico y Cuba pero después que pasaron al segundo round confirmé que era de Puerto Rico. La gran pregunta sería si un estadounidense que está aprendiendo español o ya sabe hablar español podría adivinar el acento. Saludos desde Venezuela.
@@SpanishandGo Quizás también podrían agregar a alguien del polisario que también hablan español en África y creo el español con el árabe son sus idiomas oficiales.
I'm originally from northern New Mexico that was settled by Spain via Mexico in 1600 AD. My family name, Baca is an Anglocization of the name Cabeza de Vacca. However, I have Jicarilla Apache and Tewa (Rio Grande Native American) in my DNA and love to speak Spanish a la nueva meijana! Hasta pronto. Bernard J. Baca Ph.D.
I got 3! So close with Pala, I got Chille instead of Peru due to the words per second! Happy with that with only being a beginner and using no Spanish or English captions on the video!
I got them all except Diego..that was the hardest for me. The colombian was also hard I was inbetween colombia and venezuela for the longest time but settled on colombia with the context clues. Puerto rico of course once he started talking more it was clear(Im puerto rican) but I did notice some simmilarities between cuban spanish (at least cuban american spanish here in miami). Peru I guess right the momment I saw her but her name was kinda a give away as were her features..I work with a few peruvians and she gave off that same energy. Spain is never hard to guess once you hear that TH. Maybe next time a canarian would be better able to throw people off the trail from spain.
Que buena barbota trae el portorriqueño! Muy entretenido. Aunque soy hispanohablante jamás hubiera adivinado Guinea Ecuatorial! Los demás si (en algunos estaba entre uno o dos paises).
Pude adivinar por las pistas, casi todos los acentos, (menos el de Peru 😕) Por cierto, los acentos q consigo identificar con mucho más facilidad, es el de México, Argentina y Puerto Rico. Saludos a todos 😊
As a Brazilian, everything sounds similar to me, and Spanish is easy to understand, but Argentines seem to speak the "Italian Spanish", haha. And I definitely don't understand Chileans speaking (sorry haha). And I can differentiate a little from the accent of Colombia and Peru, but maybe because I have visited these countries. I think their accent is really nice!
Sin revelar demasiado: Palu dudé un poco en la primera ronda, pero en la segunda y estuve seguro; Fernando me costó un poco adivinar el país, pero la región sí la agarré de inmediato; Vicente muy fácil; Monanga fue un poco más difícil porque no es de un país sobre el que pensemos mucho por aquí, tristemente, pero para la tercera ronda ya se me hizo evidente... Nos olvidamos mucho que hablan español por allá; María fue demasiado fácil, me tomó tres segundos, lo mismo Rubí & José, y Diego ni eso, con su cara ya me dí cuenta de dónde era XD
María habla español con acento de la capital de Colombia, y por tanto no es tropical sino andino. En sentido estricto es tropical (porque estamos en el trópico), pero en Colombia tropical significa del caribe.
Soy de Colombia y tienen todo mi apoyo para que puedan hablar español fluidamente I Am learning English but i can't have a conversation with a native because My listening is weak
As a French, this is my guess 1 Peru 2 Puerto Rico 3 Espana 4 Rép Dom 5 Mexico (and I'm actually pissed that I missed this one because I originally thought of the correct country 😭) 6 Costa Rica 7 Argentina That's where I was at just before the reveal ^^
My guess is 1. Ecuador 2. Cuba (I know this because that’s how my uncles, my dad, my grandpa and my aunt talk) 3. Spain 4. I think Maria is either from Colombia or Venezuela 5. Rubi and Jose are Mexican 6. Diego I think is either Chilean or Argentinean 7. Monanga I think is either from Panama or from this small country in Africa called Equatorial Guinea. I got half of them right. The Cuban and Puerto Rican accents are similar except that Puerto Ricans with any word they replace the r with an l for example, instead of saying Por Favor they say Por favol or instead saying Carne they say Calne.
i initially ruled out argentina (then got it form the clues) soley because i understood him more clear than what i typically understand listening to argentines lol (leaving of the "s" and cutting big parts of words off like "esta" sounding like "ta")
Me encantó este video. Qué buena iniciativa. Vicente habla un castellano perfecto. Sus informes adicionales sobre la influencia Arabe dejan suponer Andalucia como región, pero escuchandolo no me ocurre. Diego, Palu y Maria añadieron bastante información para no equivocarme. Rubi y José pude saberlo por exclusión. Esos son cinco con mucha suerte. Fernando y Monanga: un fracaso. Tampoco no sabia que se habla español en Africa. Quizàs hubiera sido más facil si el español fuera mi lengua maternal.
¡Muchas gracias, Guy! Queremos hacer una parte tres con unos países que no estaban en la parte una ni la parte dos. ¡Mantente al tanto! Un saludo desde Puerto Rico. -Jim
Todos menos Guinea Ecuatorial, primera vez que oigo ese acento. Le di pa' lante a varias personas que están aprendiendo Español para que se expongan a otros acentos. Saludos desde Florida a mi hermanito Boricua representando la islita en este fantástico video!
I got: 1 ni idea, pero América del Sur por supuesto 2 Dominicana (pero es PR) 3 España, lo más fácil para mí, especialmente Andalucía 4 Guinea Equitorrial (me encanta su acento) 5 Colombia por supuesto 6 México, ahorita 7 al principio no era seguro, pero creí que el es de Argentina, con “ché” es seguro que es rioplatense
Ah lo encantada! So I got spain an Ecuatorial guinea spot on the others I had put 2/3 countries alongside my decision and I got 6/7 people correct😆 I didn’t guess Peru for the first one though but I loved this vid❤️
Wow, you did great! Some of these were pretty tough. A lot of people don’t know about Equatorial Guinea. ¡Buen trabajo! 😊 Thanks for watching! We always appreciate your support. -Jim
Solo tuve problemas con la chica colombiana y la de perú. Al principio. Después adiviné todos los acentos con facilidad. Me encanta el acento de Guinea ecuatoriana. Suena hermoso
Got tripped up by the Puerto Rican. I guessed Cuban. I have never been to the Antilles, nor do I have much exposure to Antillean Spanish. Otherwise guessed the others correctly. I detected a mild Chilean undertone (in the way the final s is aspirated) in the young lady from Tacna, which makes sense as it borders Chile. The young lady from Colombia had me stumped at first. Detected a cultured Mexican accent with Mexican phrasing, but as more clues were provided it was clear She was from Colombia. As I have been to Colombia a number of times, I speculate she could have spent some time in Mexico or associated with Mexicans at some point in her life. Once she provided an "accent tour" it clinched it. The Argentine was very easy to spot. Perhaps it would have made it more challenging to include an Uruguayan (there is a difference), a person from el Cuyo, Northwestern Argentina or a Cordobés which will be sure to have more than one person scratching their head. The very charming lady from Equatorial Guinea was a delight. Although raised in West Africa had never heard an Equatorial G accent before. But the Peninsular lisp, combined with the poetry of Africa shined through. It had to be Equatorial Guinea.
Castillamo can sound way better than what I thought. But I would still revomend people to learn the latin american spanish.. It gonna make it way easier too
¡Me encantó! Excellent video, very entertaining and informational. I got most right! Not at first, but as they progressively gave out clues and let their accents shine. All except the girl from Equatorial Guinea, I was sure she was from the Canarias Islands, because she does have a bit of the Castilian lisp and use of “vosotros”. New subscriber here 👍🏻
Hablo español y juraba que el de la guitarra era Chileno,,, muy parecido el acento... por cierto, les entiendo muy bien el ingles, pronuncian muy bien y claro... lastima que cuando voy a usa a las personas del comun,,, generalmente no les entiendo nada... jajajaja.... Seguiré practicando...
Well I got 6 of 7 correct the hardest one to guess was number 4 the girl from Equatorial Guinea but oddly the one I got wrong was the gentlemen from Puerto Rico I said he was from Cuba. Number 6 was a dead give away I recognized them right away they are Mexican and from the channel Sin Postal, saludos paisano arriva Zacatecas. Saque 6 de 7 correctas, la mas dificil fue la chica de Guinea Ecuatorial la numero 4. Pero me sorprendio que me equivoque solo con el chavo de Puerto Rico pense que era de Cuba. La mas facil fueron los del 6 son los Chavos de Sin Postal, saludos paisano arriva Zacatecas!!!!
Thank you for the video, this was very helpful. I got the one from Puerto Rico right away and the one from Spain I figured it out after a little while. The other ones I couldn’t get.
I guessed correctly Spain and Equatorial Guinea because they are so unique and Mexico from the clues. I couldn;t tell if he guy was Argentine or Uruguayan or Argentine.
How did you do? Don’t worry if you didn’t get them all right. 🎁 You can download the PDF with all the words, phrases, and characteristics they talked about in the video here: spanishandgo.com/learn/spanish-accents-from-different-countries-part-2
instablaster.
I recognized five out of seven this time, basically everyone but Puerto Rico and Guinea...😅
My first impression was that Diego resembled the professor on La Casa de Papel, and then he identified himself as a professor!
My thoughts exactly! That's what I told him too after I started watching the show. I met Diego through Lingoda. That's one of the platforms he teaches on. I told him he should start his own CZcams channel called "Spanish with The Professor" where he plays that character in all of his lesson videos. 😂 Great minds think alike. Thanks for watching, David! -Jim
Jajajajaja sí!!!!!!!
I was waiting for one of them in this video or the last one to give me a dead giveaway clue like "que cajones es eso" or "que coño pasa" or "es el puto chuck norris con gafas" since I fancy myself fluent in español de la casa de papel y nunca otra. Lo siento, ninguna diciste esos.
As a Romanian, I got Colombia, Mexico & Argentina. Gracias a las telenovelas =)))
Guinea Ecuatorial 🇬🇶 ☺️
such a beautiful country
Euskadistán 💣❤
Yayyyy! I got 3 right!!!! Somehow I knew Vicente is from España.... And I guessed the others from Mexico and Argentina.... I was really confused by the one from Colombia! 😅😂💕
Y... Soy de India y llevo 3 años estudiando español! 😄💕
I got Spain and Argentina right. I think i did pretty good considering the fact that I don't even speak a word spanish lol
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
HAHAHA
Son los más fáciles de identificar
Because they are the gringoest countries
Very good
Muchísimas gracias, fue un placer❤️🇬🇶
¡Gracias por tu ayuda, Monanga!
hola monanga ??
¡Mucho gusto Monanga! Un placer conocerte y saber más de ti y tu país!
Monanga que adorable eres! Me encanta su pelo jajaja y era un placer aprender un poquito sobre GE :)
_Ser guap0/a en Euskadi es traición a la patria_
I can't believe the two I missed were the two accents I hear daily -- Puerto Rico and Mexico. Equatorial Guinea was the easiest. She's even wearing the answer on her necklace. Peru's geography gave it away, as did Argentina's che, and Colombian spanish is always the clearest.
Do you speak spanish?
Chicos les salió genial el video! Muy divertido tratar de adivinar los acentos.
¡Gracias, Palu! Esta colaboración fue muy divertida. :3 ¡Un abrazo!
Que lindo verte Palu!!!!
Eres tan adorable! Muchas gracias por participar -- era tan divertida aprender de todo!
Cómo Tico que soy… mis disculpas a nuestros hermanos y hermanas de Guinea Ecuatorial porque hoy aprendí que hablaban español! Pura vida eso!
Soy un Tico También! Pura Vida mí hermano ☺️
I'm in love with Argentinian spanish, I would like to learn it but I heard it's harder than others types of spanish
We conjugate verbs differently from most other spanish speaking countries because we use "vos" instead of "tú" to mean "you" but with enough practice anyone can learn to speak like us.
@@MaiiOrduna Yeah, for instance the word 'eres' you guys say 'sos' that's weird but cool and original
i do believe is harder for others not only for the verb conjugations but also because the slang and way of expressing stuff. We add weird stuff to words, sometimes speaks backwards and sometimes put more emphasis on certain parts of the words. Maybe you could try first having a good base of neutral spanish and then go for argentinean accent, even try watching series and listening to music (not for pronunciation, just to acclimatize to some wording).
The first weird thing you will notice it's the Voseo and it's the main reason why it sounds so different.
uh, excuse my english. i hope i made my point clear, lol.
@@Noriii24 Nice, btw, does the neutral Spanish Tu eres mean the same as the Argentine Spanish Vos sos? that's the voseo right? Argentine Spanish is different because its not neutral like the rest of Latin American Spanish.
@@FrannB exactly, but i think it's the same conjugation as the spanish from spain , por ejemplo en arg we say vos tenes , and in spain they say vosotros teneis , we just skip the i , but keep in mind that vosotros is the plural one and vos is singular, i hope that helps , if u wannamake an exchange language to help eachother , pls lemme know
Me ha encantado colaborar con vosotros :) y me encanta el vídeo, sobre todo por el alto contenido cultural.
¡Un abrazo!
¡Igualmente, Vicente! Muchas gracias por haber aceptado la invitación. 😊 El video quedó bastante bien. 👍🏻👍🏽 -Jim & May
The way the word usted was used in her country gave away colombia for me. I have a colombian friend and i always ask her why she talks so proper when speaking to me .
Lol. I guessed the Spain, Mexican and Argentinian ones before even getting to the expressions part. Very easy ones.
Even though it’s harder to understand i like the Equatorial Guinea accent, probably because its slower
I like it too! It’s very unique from what I’m used to hearing. And her expressions were hilarious. “You and I are doing to wear the same underwear” for fighting. 😆 Thanks for watching! -Jim
I thought she was fairly easy to understand. My Mexican friend agreed. He couldn’t believe she wasn’t from Mexico or Central America.
I got all of them right. Born in Colombia but lived my entire life in the USA. I think that helps s lot bc you grow up with Latinos from all over the world.
Peru and PR were a little tough bc the speakers were doing their best to sound neutral but a few intonations gave them away.
I could tell Maria was from Colombia because she looks she could be a relative of the pop singer Shakira, who is also from Colombia.
I got 5 right! My background is Puerto rican and Spanish, so I got those the quickest. The ones I missed were Colombian and Argentinian.
I got 4! Granted, I recognized Maria bc I follow her on YT, and I know Diego bc I took classes with him on Lingoda!!!
Diego tiene menos onda que on renglón ahre jajajajja en general somos más chispa los Argentinos.
A ese man le apesta la vida 😂😂😂
Adiviné 3 correctos 😅 Peru, Mexico y Colombia. ¡Muy interesante!
Las chicas de Colombia, Mexico y Guinea Ecuatorial, divinas! El español...tambien!
This is so cool! Thank you ! Love from the Philippines 🇵🇭
Diego is one of the best teachers on Lingoda.
Uds. Educaron a muchísimos revelando que en Guinea Ecuatorial,, hablan el Castellano/Español. Buena❗🎯❗
El chico Puertoriqueño por supuesto lo sabia que es Boricua, tan claro 😉👍 y muchisimas gracias 🙏 a ustedes dos, me parece que estan en mi pais (Puerto Rico) 😘
I LOVE THESE VIDS! This is where I first found you guys... I had looked up “how to differentiate between spanish accents” and found you guys! I’m so glad I did can’t wait for the live tonight😆❤️
That’s awesome, Ashleigh! I didn’t that was how you found us! We’ll definitely have to do a part 3. There’s still at least 11 more countries we can cover. See you tonight! -Jim
Colombia has the most beautiful accent, change my mind😂
And also, you can always tell, who is from Mexico, everytime 😂😂
yup
Yess
Me equivoqué solamente con la chica de Guinea Ecuatorial. Había adivinado que era de República Dominicana, pero la pista que debería haber recordado era su uso de vosotros. Ha sido un vídeo muy divertido, y apreciaría si pudieseis hacer más vídeos parecidos. Un abrazo, Steve
Nadie en Republica Dominaca habla ni medio parecido a ella. El Dominicano es un asento muy distintivo y caribeño más parecido al portoriqueño y al Cubano
No sabía del Guinea Ecuatorial y yo también pensaba que ella era de República Dominicana pero estuvo raro porque no sonaba cómo República Dominicana.
La mayoría de los hablantes de Español no saben que en Guinea Ecuatorial se habla Español, tienen un acento con palabras parecida al de España pero una pronunciación un poco raro, supongo que será por la influencia del idioma de su Etnia, hay palabras que a una etnia les cuesta mas pronunciar que a otras dentro del mismo pais.
Yo me di cuenta que era de Guinea Ecuatorial desde que sus primeras palabras.
Y vamos a ser serios, a única razón por la que pensaste que era de RD fue por su color de piel, como si en otros países no hubiera gente de ese color o en RD no hubiera gente con distintos fenotipos.
Got them all correct! Struggled with Equatorial Guinea and originally thought she was from Dominican Republic but when she said the capital was ok an island and I know DR as all islands I had to rethink my answer. Cool video!
i only managed to guess the Argentinian one caused he said Che.
One funny fact i remember about the Argentinian slang is that they don't pronouce the ll in a word, they change it to a shh sound.
Like pollo would be pronounced po-sho. I do hope someone tells me i'm right cos if not, i'm gonna be pissed at a friend of mine and calling him an actual boludo.
You're right, we do pronounce the LL and Y as "SH" in Buenos Aires, but it can be less noticeable in some regions of the country.
Not slang, it’s the accent
Igual yo, no suena para nada argentino, seguro es de una de esas provincias lejanas de Buenos Aires.
jajaj le atinamos sólo a 4! ... saludos chicos, gracias por invitarnos :)
¡4/7 está bien! Algunos eran muy defíciles. ¡Gracias por haber participado, amigos! Un saludo desde Puerto Rico. -Jim
The people from Spain, Mexico, Argentina and Equatorial Guinea were easy to recognise. The others could have been also from the countries that border their countries, e.g. Ecuador, Venezuela or even Cuba. Fun video just the same
Lo mismo me pasó, talvez la gente que habló hablaron lento por eso no pudimos identificar a los otros.
Cuba?
Mexico, Colombia, and Puerto Rico sounded the most fimiliar to me.
Me encantó el acento de colombia😩😍
The way they pause like Dora before the reveal kills me😂😂😭😭
Immediatly knew Peru cause it's the only spanish accent i can 100% understand.
colombian and peruvian are said to be the most easiest to understand
Lol and it's the one I had the hardest time with 😅
I second guessed myself with Fernando. I had a feeling he was from Puerto Rico, but was unsure a bit.
España, Argentina, Cuba, Puerto Rico, México y Colombia son muy fáciles de identificar, soy hondureño y obvio es muy fácil identificar el acento hondureños pero de los demás países de Latinoamérica no es tan fácil de identificar
I'm looking for meetings online in Spanish (maybe zoom or similar) because I'd like to know new friends and to know about different cultures!
I'm down.
@@espanolconmaria I will never pay for this when there is a world full of opportunities, groups and apps. For English and German my groups are completely free.
I can help!
If more people join, I can help and join so as to share my Spanish and perhaps practising my English.
Yes, I liked that. I should have guessed Maria was from Colombia. ¡Todas mujeres de Colombia parecen como modelos!
Sii 🇨🇴❤️
The only one I can’t guess was Guinea Ecuatorial, I had no idea.
Neither I lol. I learned something new 😇
come on, it was the easiest one because of her race, she doesn't look like a latin woman but like an african one and she pronounces the letters "z" and "c" like the spaniards do
@@adolfoalbornoz3730 Yo creo que sí se podría encontrar latinas así.
@@MickyBane en donde? no confundas color de piel con rasgos faciales, no es lo mismo
@@MickyBane y en tal caso ese acento no es latinoamericano en lo absoluto
Estuvo muy fácil, de hecho en el primer round adiviné todos los acentos, excepto el de Fernando pues tenía la duda entre Puerto Rico y Cuba pero después que pasaron al segundo round confirmé que era de Puerto Rico. La gran pregunta sería si un estadounidense que está aprendiendo español o ya sabe hablar español podría adivinar el acento. Saludos desde Venezuela.
I'm happy you added Guinea Ecuatoria! Africa represent!
Monanga is great! We were stoked to have her in the video. Thanks for watching! -Jim
@@SpanishandGo Quizás también podrían agregar a alguien del polisario que también hablan español en África y creo el español con el árabe son sus idiomas oficiales.
I'm originally from northern New Mexico that was settled by Spain via Mexico in 1600 AD. My family name, Baca is an Anglocization of the name Cabeza de Vacca. However, I have Jicarilla Apache and Tewa (Rio Grande Native American) in my DNA and love to speak Spanish a la nueva meijana! Hasta pronto. Bernard J. Baca Ph.D.
5/7 the only ones i couldn't guess were Guinea Ecuatorial and Peru :) but the easiest ones were Argentina, Mexico and Colombia
5/7 is great! Good job. The two you missed were really tricky. Thanks for watching! -Jim
how couldn't guess Spain? that accent is too characteristic
Qué interesante, así que en Guinea ecuatorial también "fríen huevos". Es la primera vez que escucho a alguien fuera de Cuba haciendo ese sonido.
It's definitely something you can hear in caribbean and west african cultures 😂
5/7. Might have gussed EG but forgot the name. Colombian Spanish is the one I learned so that was the easiest, especially when she said chimba lol
Mis acentos favoritos:
1. español de España
2. el argentino
That was fun! Thank you 😊!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching. 😊 -Jim
I got 3! So close with Pala, I got Chille instead of Peru due to the words per second!
Happy with that with only being a beginner and using no Spanish or English captions on the video!
Not bad. She is from a city on the Peruvian/Chilean border!
I got them all except Diego..that was the hardest for me. The colombian was also hard I was inbetween colombia and venezuela for the longest time but settled on colombia with the context clues. Puerto rico of course once he started talking more it was clear(Im puerto rican) but I did notice some simmilarities between cuban spanish (at least cuban american spanish here in miami). Peru I guess right the momment I saw her but her name was kinda a give away as were her features..I work with a few peruvians and she gave off that same energy. Spain is never hard to guess once you hear that TH. Maybe next time a canarian would be better able to throw people off the trail from spain.
Ecuador, Puerto Rico, Argentina, Equatorial Guinea, Colombia, Mexico, Spain
Omg!! 😲 I got Argentina and Spain mixed up 😢😂
Me gusto adivine Puerto Rico, España, Colombia, Mexico y Argentina.
¡Súper! Buen trabajo. 4/7 está muy bien. Gracias por vernos. -Jim
Que buena barbota trae el portorriqueño!
Muy entretenido. Aunque soy hispanohablante jamás hubiera adivinado Guinea Ecuatorial! Los demás si (en algunos estaba entre uno o dos paises).
Pude adivinar por las pistas, casi todos los acentos, (menos el de Peru 😕) Por cierto, los acentos q consigo identificar con mucho más facilidad, es el de México, Argentina y Puerto Rico. Saludos a todos 😊
Sí, esos sobresalen un poco, ¿verdad? ¡Gracias por vernos! Un saludo desde Puerto Rico. -Jim
As a Brazilian, everything sounds similar to me, and Spanish is easy to understand, but Argentines seem to speak the "Italian Spanish", haha. And I definitely don't understand Chileans speaking (sorry haha).
And I can differentiate a little from the accent of Colombia and Peru, but maybe because I have visited these countries. I think their accent is really nice!
Sin revelar demasiado: Palu dudé un poco en la primera ronda, pero en la segunda y estuve seguro; Fernando me costó un poco adivinar el país, pero la región sí la agarré de inmediato; Vicente muy fácil; Monanga fue un poco más difícil porque no es de un país sobre el que pensemos mucho por aquí, tristemente, pero para la tercera ronda ya se me hizo evidente... Nos olvidamos mucho que hablan español por allá; María fue demasiado fácil, me tomó tres segundos, lo mismo Rubí & José, y Diego ni eso, con su cara ya me dí cuenta de dónde era XD
[En España] "hay muchos apellidos que proceden del árabe". Garantizo que uno de ellos no es "Matamoros"
Qué vídeo más bueno. ¡Maravilloso trabajo, chicos!
¡Muchas gracias! 😊 Un saludo. -Jim
María habla español con acento de la capital de Colombia, y por tanto no es tropical sino andino. En sentido estricto es tropical (porque estamos en el trópico), pero en Colombia tropical significa del caribe.
¡Que genial! ¡Gracias! Dije Colombia, Peru, España, y Guinea Ecuatorial, pero no dije Puerto Rico, México, o Argentina.
¡Lo hiciste bien! 💪🏻 Varios eran difíciles. Gracias por vernos. -Jim
Me pasó que, incluso siendo uruguaya, no pude distinguir si el rioplatense era argentino o uruguayo, porque todo lo que dijo se aplica a ambos países.
My guesses were:
1 Chile
2 Carib (PR)
3 Spain
4 Carib (not DR)
5 Colombia or other SA
6 Mexico
7 Argentina
I thought Palu was from Ecuador! I got really tripped up! I was able to guess the rest, though some with more work than other.
Where's the DR? Maybe next time! How about Spanish mixes like Creole in Haiti? So interesting
Soy de Colombia y tienen todo mi apoyo para que puedan hablar español fluidamente
I Am learning English but i can't have a conversation with a native because My listening is weak
I knew Vincente because he sounds just like my nephew and I don't even speak one word of Spanish.
Solo falle palu la de peru. Me quedé enamorado de la simpatía de monanga. La frase de nos vamos a poner las mismas bragas me gustó jajajaj
As a French, this is my guess
1 Peru
2 Puerto Rico
3 Espana
4 Rép Dom
5 Mexico (and I'm actually pissed that I missed this one because I originally thought of the correct country 😭)
6 Costa Rica
7 Argentina
That's where I was at just before the reveal ^^
"Ahorita" needs an independent video. It might mean between now and never. You Mexicans are funny and nice people. Saludos desde Colombia.
My guess is
1. Ecuador
2. Cuba (I know this because that’s how my uncles, my dad, my grandpa and my aunt talk)
3. Spain
4. I think Maria is either from Colombia or Venezuela
5. Rubi and Jose are Mexican
6. Diego I think is either Chilean or Argentinean
7. Monanga I think is either from Panama or from this small country in Africa called Equatorial Guinea.
I got half of them right. The Cuban and Puerto Rican accents are similar except that Puerto Ricans with any word they replace the r with an l for example, instead of saying Por Favor they say Por favol or instead saying Carne they say Calne.
Si! Sabia que el era de Puerto Rico! :D Viva Borinquén’s! 🎉🎊🇵🇷
Perdóname si escribí algo mal, no hablo español mu bien ;-;.
Viva Puerto Rico 🇵🇷!!
Tienes corazon de Pato 😆😆😆😆
Tu y yo vamos a vestir la misma praga aqui 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
i initially ruled out argentina (then got it form the clues) soley because i understood him more clear than what i typically understand listening to argentines lol
(leaving of the "s" and cutting big parts of words off like "esta" sounding like "ta")
Me encantó este video. Qué buena iniciativa. Vicente habla un castellano perfecto. Sus informes adicionales sobre la influencia Arabe dejan suponer Andalucia como región, pero escuchandolo no me ocurre. Diego, Palu y Maria añadieron bastante información para no equivocarme. Rubi y José pude saberlo por exclusión. Esos son cinco con mucha suerte. Fernando y Monanga: un fracaso. Tampoco no sabia que se habla español en Africa. Quizàs hubiera sido más facil si el español fuera mi lengua maternal.
¡Muchas gracias, Guy! Queremos hacer una parte tres con unos países que no estaban en la parte una ni la parte dos. ¡Mantente al tanto! Un saludo desde Puerto Rico. -Jim
Argentina 🇦🇷 My country! Also, Monanga is one of my favorite CZcamsrs! Love her 🇬🇶
Pensé que la chica colombiana era rola.
Todos menos Guinea Ecuatorial, primera vez que oigo ese acento. Le di pa' lante a varias personas que están aprendiendo Español para que se expongan a otros acentos. Saludos desde Florida a mi hermanito Boricua representando la islita en este fantástico video!
#1 Perú
#2 Puerto Rico
#3 España
#4 Republica Dominicana
#5 Colombia
#6 México
#7 Argentina
The way Diego pronounced "Chamullar" gave him away for me. I knew Vicente was from Spain right off the bat lol.
I got:
1 ni idea, pero América del Sur por supuesto
2 Dominicana (pero es PR)
3 España, lo más fácil para mí, especialmente Andalucía
4 Guinea Equitorrial (me encanta su acento)
5 Colombia por supuesto
6 México, ahorita
7 al principio no era seguro, pero creí que el es de Argentina, con “ché” es seguro que es rioplatense
I only got colombia and mexico right
Ah lo encantada! So I got spain an Ecuatorial guinea spot on the others I had put 2/3 countries alongside my decision and I got 6/7 people correct😆 I didn’t guess Peru for the first one though but I loved this vid❤️
Wow, you did great! Some of these were pretty tough. A lot of people don’t know about Equatorial Guinea. ¡Buen trabajo! 😊 Thanks for watching! We always appreciate your support. -Jim
I did quite well. The only ones I didn't get were Peru and Equatorial Guinea. I completely forgot that Spanish is spoken there.
Me encanta mucho el acento de los Ecuatoguineanos!
Solo tuve problemas con la chica colombiana y la de perú. Al principio. Después adiviné todos los acentos con facilidad. Me encanta el acento de Guinea ecuatoriana. Suena hermoso
All were easy to recognise instantly. 👌🏽😁 Muy fácil de reconocer cada acento. Monanga se me hizo la más divertida.
Got tripped up by the Puerto Rican. I guessed Cuban. I have never been to the Antilles, nor do I have much exposure to Antillean Spanish. Otherwise guessed the others correctly. I detected a mild Chilean undertone (in the way the final s is aspirated) in the young lady from Tacna, which makes sense as it borders Chile. The young lady from Colombia had me stumped at first. Detected a cultured Mexican accent with Mexican phrasing, but as more clues were provided it was clear She was from Colombia. As I have been to Colombia a number of times, I speculate she could have spent some time in Mexico or associated with Mexicans at some point in her life. Once she provided an "accent tour" it clinched it. The Argentine was very easy to spot. Perhaps it would have made it more challenging to include an Uruguayan (there is a difference), a person from el Cuyo, Northwestern Argentina or a Cordobés which will be sure to have more than one person scratching their head. The very charming lady from Equatorial Guinea was a delight. Although raised in West Africa had never heard an Equatorial G accent before. But the Peninsular lisp, combined with the poetry of Africa shined through. It had to be Equatorial Guinea.
Castillamo can sound way better than what I thought. But I would still revomend people to learn the latin american spanish..
It gonna make it way easier too
¡Me encantó! Excellent video, very entertaining and informational. I got most right! Not at first, but as they progressively gave out clues and let their accents shine. All except the girl from Equatorial Guinea, I was sure she was from the Canarias Islands, because she does have a bit of the Castilian lisp and use of “vosotros”. New subscriber here 👍🏻
I loved this!!! Thanks for sharing! It's wonderful to know. I could not recognize Equatorial Guinea. Wow! They all are so bright!
El acento de la hermosa Colombiana Maria me suena como el acento de un tipico Méxicano educado. Divertido video!
I really enjoyed this video!!!! Keep up the good work!!!
I got 2 right answers, Spain and Colombia
Hablo español y juraba que el de la guitarra era Chileno,,, muy parecido el acento... por cierto, les entiendo muy bien el ingles, pronuncian muy bien y claro... lastima que cuando voy a usa a las personas del comun,,, generalmente no les entiendo nada... jajajaja.... Seguiré practicando...
Well I got 6 of 7 correct the hardest one to guess was number 4 the girl from Equatorial Guinea but oddly the one I got wrong was the gentlemen from Puerto Rico I said he was from Cuba. Number 6 was a dead give away I recognized them right away they are Mexican and from the channel Sin Postal, saludos paisano arriva Zacatecas.
Saque 6 de 7 correctas, la mas dificil fue la chica de Guinea Ecuatorial la numero 4. Pero me sorprendio que me equivoque solo con el chavo de Puerto Rico pense que era de Cuba. La mas facil fueron los del 6 son los Chavos de Sin Postal, saludos paisano arriva Zacatecas!!!!
im Nigerian and at 8:25 as soon as i heard her kiss her teeth i knew lmaooo all us Africans do that
Thank you for the video, this was very helpful. I got the one from Puerto Rico right away and the one from Spain I figured it out after a little while. The other ones I couldn’t get.
I think the Tom Cruise imitation is spot on...
I guessed correctly Spain and Equatorial Guinea because they are so unique and Mexico from the clues. I couldn;t tell if he guy was Argentine or Uruguayan or Argentine.