American was shocked by Spanish Differences!! (Spain, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Peru, Cuba, Ecuador)
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🇺🇸 Shannon
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🇪🇸 Irene
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🇲🇽 Lily
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🇨🇴 Daniela
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🇵🇪 Milenka
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🇨🇱 Cristina
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🇨🇺 Hayleen
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🇪🇨 Cristina
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🎧Music
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in Chile; we say Volantín or Cometa, but Volantín is more common , and we say Chalas , la chala is the singular way.
THANK YOU! I always knew it as being a 'volantin'. I wonder if people of different classes or regions tend to use 'cometa' instead.
Interesting. In Perú volantín is a type of jump. And chala means p3n3
Cometa son los plásticos… y los volantines los de papel (según yo)
@@Poln4 oh para mi es al revés, los volantines son los triangulares de plastico y los cometas los romboides de papel.
@@BSK19 pero los volantines se hacen con papel volantín! 😱
My parents were born in Chile but I was born and raised in Calgary. I grew up speaking Spanish until I got to grade school. I was in Spanish bilingual from k-12 and all our teachers were from Spain. I have vivid memories of me coming home upset because my teacher and I would get in a fight over all the word differences between Chile and Spain 😂 I remember yelling at my teacher “SE LLAMAN POROTOS!!!”. As I grew up my family just explained Chileans just made a bunch of words up, and a lot of our common expressions have no sense whatsoever but are so funny and unique. Viva chile 🇨🇱❤️
Jajaja, y qué es porotos in Chilean?
@@lucio.martinez beans in English, frijoles, judías, habichuelas en otros paises xD
@@Claushanga
Oh qué padre!
Conozco el, habichuelas y gandules, por los caribeños en EEUU.
Me gusta aprender las diferentes formas del castellano.
Yo soy nacido mexicano, de sangre mexicana, creado y vivo en EEUU.
Así qué español, es "ra-ta-ta", como dijo Cardi B.
No le salía la pronunciación de una palabra, en español, y dijo que su español era "ra-ta-ta"! Jajaja
Made words up? Porotos son porotos, aquí y en la quebrá del ají..jajajajaj
In Paraguay we say ''porotos'' as well, I think in Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay too
In Chile the Crab, can be "Cangrejo" or "Jaiba", it depends, because we have a specie in particular that we call "Jaiba" (and this has some variations depending of the color)
Nunca he escuchado a alguien decir jaibe
@@DrPlaneteer mal tipeo, era jaiba
@@DrPlaneteer es que así es más inclusivo (?
Sí, cangrejo es lo normal. La jaiba, según yo, es un tipo de cangrejo que es el que más se come en Chile.
Si yo veo esa imagen.. es claramente un cangrejo. Si lo voy a comer es Jaiba.
I find it funny they say Spain spanish sounds formal, because one of the reasons we don't use "Usted/es" as often is precisely because it's usually reserved for business speak.
You talk to people in 3rd person to put them above you and be respectful. That's why we use "Vosotros" to bring them down to 2nd person (1st - 2nd person conversation, direct conversation) to put the speaker and the listener at the same level and bring a sense of friendship and trustworthiness to the conversation, which means, to us, the other variants of spanish sound more formal.
Suena formal por la entonación, por la regularización normativa de la lengua, y porque al hablar somos tan fríos para los latinos, como los alemanes lo son para nosotros los del sur de Europa. A lo mejor no lo parece al hablar con acento en inglés, pero así se percibe.
Papalote actually comes from the language spoken by the Aztecs, it means butterfly in náhuatl 🦋
Exactly! I was waiting for the girl to explain that. Her ignorance gave me shame 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
one point to you.
Yes, I was coming on here to say that!
@@albarjas8360 bruh calm down we can’t know the origin of every fkn word chill out mijita
@@prettyeyesclef5018 No, pero sí de ésta ✌🏻
The Cuban girl is like 😐
Yeah, she seems somewhat interverted, but I could definitely chill with her I'm also mostly interverted
Viva Mexico 🇲🇽
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I thought I was the only one who noticed xd
No es de cuba
Es chicana nacida en EEUU
Ninguna de esas chicas es de latam
@@loqred5026 estás mal en todo lo que dijiste
As a Greek I'm so surprised because of how many words that they're saying are very similar or even the exact same to Greek.. I LOVE IT
Like which words? I'm curious
In high school I was surprised to see that there are many words in Spanish that come from Greek, I love it too
Oh! This is actually interesting! I once heard a Greek person speaking at an airport, and it got me curious because I thought they were speaking Spanish until I got close. So for reasons unknown, Spain-Spanish (in particular) and Greek sound like the same language, but like they’re speaking gibberish. When Greeks learn Spanish, they don’t have a foreign accent (at least in Spain).
Spanish comes from latin language
@@jarobanoy el latino tiene muchas ramas del griego
In Chile, we speak Spanish, but we have created other words, which have even been admitted by the RAE.
Obviously each country in LA has its own mods, but the basic structure of Spanish in all of Latin America can be understood
Sometimes people forget that Chile is a country that was historically separated from the other viceroyalties of Spain, geographically isolated by the Andes mountain range and the Atacama desert to the north. That is why we are so special and different. 🧐
Ahora necesito saber si es por esto o por otra causa
@Τάρτησσος que tiene que ver eso?? Chile esta muy lejos de todo, y separado por enormes fronteras naturales como la cordillera de los andes y el desierto mas seco del mundo.
@Τάρτησσος Como buen europeo que solo se mira el ombligo no entiendes las distancias que se manejan en América... Solamente Chile es tan largo como toda la distancia que existe entre Lisboa y Moscú. En Chile existen 16 Regiones, y solo 2 juntas son más grandes que toda España... En América Latina las distancias por si solas son un factor tremendo que explica las grandes diferencias culturales de los diferentes países, sobre todo en Sudamérica donde los centros de población de cada país están separados por miles de kilómetros, y por accidentes geográficos que no existen en Europa... Para que mencionar a las distintas inmigraciones de europeos que llegaron después de la independencia... Yo pensaba que era mentira lo que me decía mi profesora de universidad, que los europeos son muy ignorantes en geografía, pero contigo compruebo que es verdad.
@Τάρτησσος Con lo último que respondiste, diciendo" os veo como una mezcla rara", quedas como un completo ignorante de la cultura Chilena y de lo que en verdad Somos como país. Muchos Desde el exterior nos ven como iguales, pero no es Así. Latinoamerica es Rica en Cultura, única en todo sentido. Si vas a opinar algo que no sabes, mejor guardate tu opinión.
@Τάρτησσος Si bien es cierto que chile es una mezcla rara de perú y argentina (ejemplo: palabras quechuas como choclo + voseo), te equivocas con que chile nació con los borbones: esa fue argentina. a pesar de la creación del vireinato del rio de la plata en 1776, chile nunca fue parte de aquel vireinato, y se mantuvo como una gobernación del vireinato del peru hasta obtener autonomía de éste en 1798 e independencia en 1818
Cuban girl looked so miserable to be there, haha but in a cute way, very polite too. Also , have in mind that just as in every country, we all have different accents within region or neighborhoods, etc.
I’m from cuba and I was going to say the same thing, we usually are noisy and very active people, she’s just so peaceful. I think I saw in another video that she was born in the us, so maybe that’s why.
@@Soy_dianafariasi don’t think thats why lol she probably was having a bad day
I was looking for this comment lmao
@@Soy_dianafarias my mom is Cuban and she is just like her.
@@Soy_dianafariasWe all weren't born in a cuartería
My 1st spanish teacher was puerto rican but by state or school district law, she had to use spanish from spain because it was more "formal". Id get home confused thinking my spanish was wrong lmao. My 2nd spanish teacher was african American but she studied and got fluent in it through out highschool and college. She was really cool since she would like to compare the spanish from mexico and the one she had to teach. Probably one of my favorite teachers in HS tbh
Great video! I just wish you had had an Argentinian or Uruguayan as a representative of "Rioplatense" Spanish, which can be quite different from the ones shown here.
Here's the list of the same words in Buenos Aires:
1) Kite = Barrilete
2) Popcorn = Pochoclos
3) Crab = Cangrejo
4) Pen = Lapicera or Birome
5) Flip flops = Ojotas
6) Butt = Cola, but we also have the more playful "Traste" which would be like when Americans say "fanny"
Kite -> Teki!
En Guatemala también decimos barrilete.
I am from Chile, I think we use the word Volantín much more than cometa, also hawaiana or "chalas" and I use palomitas instead of cabritas, but I think it depends on the area or region because there are also many differences in accents and words depending on which region of chile you come from 😌
👇
Para mí que soy de Chile, creo que usamos la palabra Volantín mucho más que cometa, también usamos hawaiana o chalas y yo uso palomitas en vez de cabritas, pero creo que depende del área o región porque también hay muchas diferencias de acentos y palabras según de que región de Chile vengas 😌
@@DrayNoR1 La misma wea
Poto
@@mogulhd754 el volantin se encumbra con carrete y es más ágil por que se le hacen tirantes, el cometa es más estático y no hay que tirantiar mucho por que se le amarra el hilo a un hoyo nomas
Yo igual soy de chile y ami me pasa que nunca en mi vida he escuchado a alguien decir palomitas jajaja siempre cabritas, me tinca que los programas infantiles que los doblan los mexicanos tienen mucho que ver con eso, por que palomitas es mucho mas comun en otros paises en cambio cabristas es como bien chileno.
@@mogulhd754 el cometa es plastico
Shannon comes across as a very open minded, respectful American person and it’s refreshing to see someone truly try to understand and enjoy themselves while doing it
"open minded"
Were you expecting something other than open-minded and respectful? A bit prejudiced on your part, yeah?
@@RightCenterBack321i think this person wait something different of a english speaker
Amo esto tipos de videos jaja. Recalcar que en Ecuador tambien decimos pluma, boligrafo o boli. En las sandalias tambien decimos zapatillas
I smiled but also teared up seeing that someone de Ecuador is in this video!! Growing up I never seen anyone that was Ecuadorian included in anything or even seen them around. This made my heart smile as an Ecuatoriana💜🇪🇨 thank youuuuu
I am a little bit curious about this video, I am Chilean and the Chilean woman doesn't explain that we have different words but we DO use common ones as well like "chalas" meaning flip flops but we also say sandalias for closed sandals. From my point of view, Chilean Spanish is difficult but not as hard as many people think :3 love this video, thanks to everyone involved
I think Chilean Spanish is hard because you talk so fast
@@--julian_ i wont deny that, but I am from Chile and I have a neutral accent not so fast, not so slow, it might be cause I am polyglot, no clue lol .
@Sebastián Baeza agree, dont wanna be disrespectful with this girl, but Chileans are characterized for being extroverted people or for explaning in depth our culture and customs :3 (generally)...
I’m a native Spanish speaker, born to Mexican and Ecuadorian parents in the USA and having also spent a lot of time in Spain, I’ve never found Chileans as difficult to understand as everyone likes to say…for me, some Caribbean Spanish speakers are the ones I sometimes find harder to understand
@@xavieralfonso3926 I think you have a hilarious mixture of cultures, like your comment :3
LETS BE CLEAR 🇨🇱 accent is very unique and actually very difficult to understand … we can use a neutral spanish of course but NO ESTAMO NI AHI, un tobesi 💋
Ustedes no hablan español xd
Hablamos chileno 😁🤍
Pero si queremos, podemos hablar bien, la prueba está en las empresas que hacen doblaje en Chile; varios programas de televisión de habla inglesa se doblan hoy en día en empresas chilenas con actores de doblaje chilenos, así que si, sabemos hablar español pero la verdad no nos gusta 😂.
Saludos!
@@Camifer92 ustedes comercializan doblaje pero no hablan español
@@LPS-gg1gj hablamos tan bien que llevamos muchos años liderando los resultados de hispanoamérica en las pruebas PISA de lenguaje. Tenemos 2 premios Nobel de literatura...
@@deathstroke8612 PURRR 💋💋
Cometa, and Sandalias are also accepted in Mexico. As for Boli... I guess that one started as Boligrafo which is also accepted in Mexico. Pluma, was used in the past in the Iberian Peninsula and it is still in use in Mexico. We also use Plumon for markers. Culo, trasero, asentaderas, posaderas are also accepted in Mexico.
Such a great and fun video! As a side anecdote, it is pretty interesting to see differences between different places and regions inside one country. I was born in Desamparados, a city very close to San José and there, at school, everyone used the word "tajador" for pencil sharpeners. When my family went to live to Heredia, a city just around 18 km from the first location, I was pretty puzzled when someone at school, as I was always very well stocked at school, asked for my "maquinilla" and I was like: my machine what? The thing is that basically everyone at Heredia only used the word "maquinilla" for the pencil sharpener and hadn't heard the other word, which was standard for people of the southern side of the Central Valley.
In Costa Rica they would be, in order: papalote, palomitas de maíz, cangrejo, lapicero (mainly) or bolígrafo...pluma just applies to a specific type of pen, sandalias (though chanclas and chancletas are also very used, especially if they are meant to be used inside home), trasero or culo (it maybe doesn't have such a strong or slang orientation as in other countries), but also poto is used, though I heard it mainly when I was a child, haven't heard it many times since that.
"What happened with Chile ? That's why they say they don't speak spanish" this is a classic one about Chile , even during some Spanish classes this is spoken about their accent or words
We Chileans are like the Scots of the Hispanic world, only among ourselves do we understand each other
Chile is very far from everything, and separated by enormous natural borders such as the Andes mountain range and the driest desert in the world. In addition, the country experienced a process of immigration from European countries that other Latin American countries did not have, they arrived in Chile many Germans during the 19th century.
To be honest it doesn't sound that hard to me, apart from the slang and entonation it's pretty standard spanish, other regional accents in the caribbean are a lot harder to understand.
@@alfrredd you should hear chileans talking to each other.
The don't speak Spanish indeed
One of the most valuable tales I take from me being Chilean, is that we can talk as good Spanish as anywhere else, but we have a way to communicate amongst us, which no other Spanish speaking country has. We are unique. Somo lo ma bakanes de este lado del universo. 🙅🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️
grande Chilee
More of these videos! Super cool.
En Ecuador 🇪🇨 al bolígrafo o esferografico también se le dice pluma 🖋y sandalias también zapatillas.. Lo que pasa es que en la costa cambia
Pluma es lo más común que esferográfico!
@@famf90 En la Sierra he escuchado mas esferográfico en las universidades que pluma. De ahí la palabra que mas he escuchado es el esfero.
@@beixval6619 lo que pasa es que en la Costa nadie dice esfero peor esferográfico, decimos pluma, esta bien que usen terminos distintos ya que son regiones diferente pero si alguien va a representar al Ecuador como tal se deberia incluir terminos tambien de la Costa, aca usamos mas la palabra zapatillas que sandalias y no solamente cola sino también trasero
@@nohelycasquete3039 exacto y el Hecho que zandalias y zapatillas son cosas totalmente diferente en la costa.
En Bogotá le dice esfero al bolígrafo y tajalapiz al sacapuntas ☠️
Cuba seems upset... 🤣
In Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 cometa (Kite) is chiringa; popcorn stays popcorn; crab is cangrejo; pen is pluma or bolígrafo
Esto es lo que estaba buscando, muy bien! ☝️🇵🇷
Man I remember back in 2011, when my family and I traveled to 🇪🇸. We were so confused and alert by the way they spoke Spanish there compared to our 🇵🇪 Spanish. I love this video! Brought back memories of the Spanish dialect. Especially “vosotros” instead of “Nosotros”😂😂😂😂
The cuban girl just represent every introvert person
Igual la peruana, no todos los peruanos somos introvertidos 😂😂
pero es la mas bonita XD
@@fiorellauv2897 si ella hablo más que la cubana almenos
Y es bella en verdad
I find the Cuban girl very pretty.
La cubana parecía un robot 😅 creo así es su forma de ser. No todos somos iguales ❤
a mi me encanta tal como es xD
Buscaba este comentario, un poco aburrida ella 😂
@@lauradiazmendez1410But she's the most beautiful girl in there.
Por favoooor, façam um vídeo desses com pessoas de Portugal, Brasil, Cabo Verde, Angola, Moçambique, Guiné-Bissau e Macau.
Será épico!!! 🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾
🤔 I didn't know that many countries spoke Portuguese. I need to travel more😒
@@magnum567134 A día de hoy, solo un 10% de la población de Macao sabe hablar portugués
You should say: Come to brazil!
No. Solo países importantes.
@@alfredotroncosov.9214que importa la importancia del país? Lo que importa es la diferencia de los acentos. Esto no es ni un concurso ni nada que valga lo “importante” de los países
It's so crazy that voices sound kinda different when you switch languages, it's something that always amaze me
Chile , Colombia , Ecuador and Peru are geographically close to each other , but I like how they each have their own Spanish accents and words
Well a lotta German words in Germany, Belgium, Austria and Switzerland are different.
Same thing with the Russian in Russia and the dozen other former USSR nations.
Not really 😂the distance between the South of Chile and the north of Colombia a 10.000 km or 6200 miles. And the distance between the east of Colombia and the west of Peru is 4.000 km
As a Peruvian I would argue that we have more vocab in common with Chile and Ecuador than Colombia.
There's a lot of Peruvian immigration in Chile, mayor Chilean corporations have presence in Peru, and for the longest time the Ecuadorian elite used to to study in Lima.
So we have more cultural exchange with those countries than with Colombia.
@@susanasanchis9816 great , now compare that distance with Spain and then we can talk more
@@susanasanchis9816 But still in the same part of the continent , Spain is in Europe for example , Mexico in the North America , even far from Chile , Peru and others
I felt so happy when the Colombian woman mentioned how in Paraguay we say popcorn as "pororó". Actually that word is not in Spanish but Guaraní
In Uruguay older people call it pororó as well! Nowadays people just call it "pop" though
En partes de Argentina también se les puede llamar pochoclos, pororó y creo que también pururú. De lo último no estoy seguro pero creo que sí XD
I liked that too, I'm from Colombia and I think it sounds really cute ♡
That's one of the characteristics of Spanish language,wich try to adap and assimilate the local words.
That's dude to the fact that the Spanish people has been behave along the history.
Chilean Spanish takes a lot of inapiration from Mapudungún, that at the same time takes a lot of inspiration from Quechua.
As a chilean there are so many words i asume are standard and their actually exclusive to chile but most people dont say cabritas anymore and we say volantin instead of cometa
I'm from Santiago and we say cabritas, so it depends of the zone.
¡Por favor! Solo en las películas dobladas al español he escuchado referirse a "kite" como "cometa". En Chile siempre (o casi siempre) se le ha dicho "volantín".
The girl from Chile... He said words that at least in my region are not used. This depends a lot on the region where you live. For example, I call him palomitas, cangrejo
Exactly!
Quién le dice Cangrejo a la Jaiba wn, lo único que me quedó sonando fue que le dijo cometa al volantín
@@rizzard_6724 no sé porq pero uso jaiba cuando esta cocinada y cangrejo cuando esta vivo sjdjdskl
@@rizzard_6724 watafak yo le digo cangrejo, pa mi la jaiba es el nombre del plato y antes de concinarlo es un cangrejo, nunca digo voy a pasar a comprar una jaiba hoy, siempre le digo cangrejo y de ahi le digo jaiba es como al chancho, yo le digo chancho al animal vivo, a la comida la digo chuleta. Que chucha jdfqwiofjq
@@MarineSelena aquí en Conce, todos le dicen jaiba al animal y a la Comida lol
Chile y su lindo español JSJsj vamos🇨🇱 somos el mejor pais de chile
😂
No se les entiende nada 🤨
@@charlespage1985 eso mismo
Ojalá pueda traducir ese comentario al español
@@charlespage1985 y eso es lo mejor, nos entendemos entre patriotas
4:36
The Colombia 🇨🇴 girl’s expression 😳
When she heard the Ecuador 🇪🇨’s word for pen.
She was so shocked! 😂😂😂
Hay varias formas de decir las cosas de un pais a otro. Lo bueno es q dos hispanohablentes igual se entienden fácilmente entre sí (una breve explicación basta).
si hay interés de ambas partes al final todo se entiende
In Chile we don't say "cometa", we say "volantín", that's the only correction that i can do to my compatriot.
Never, in my entire life, I have heard "cometa" for kite in Chile, idk wtf she was smoking lol
We do say "cometa", but when is the plastic one, when is made of like paper we say "volantín". So she was right
@@anaistorres1955 yeah, volantines are the ones made of papel volantín🤷♂.
BTW, for you is more common "palomitas" or "cabritas"? Yo pasé toda mi infancia escuchando "palomitas", y vine a saber que les decían cabritas gracias a la tele.
No sé qué es peor (bromeando 😅) que nos respondamos en inglés o no haber escuchado nunca que le dijeran cometa 😂
@@Pangui008 Palomitas is definitely not something we would say in Chile, at least not very often. Cabritas is the standard I would say, but now I've been hearing 'popcorn' very often as well.
La cubana sólo se río cuando hablaron de culos y nalgas. Así somos los cubanos😃
✿•------•°•✿Timelapse✿•°•------•✿
0:00 - 0:08 : ̗̀➛ Preview - Avance
0:11 - 1:13 : ̗̀➛ Intro
1:14 - 2:18 : ̗̀➛ Kite - Cometa, Papalote, Volantín
2:19 - 3:37 : ̗̀➛ Popcorn - Palomitas, Crispetas, Cabritas, Canchita, Rosetas de maíz, Canguil, Pororós
3:38 - 4:19 : ̗̀➛ Krab - Cangrejo, Jaiba
4:20 - 5:36 : ̗̀➛ Pen - Bolígrafo, Pluma, Lapicero, Lápiz pasta, Esferográfico
5:37 - 6:35 : ̗̀➛ Spain Spanish is more formal? - ¿El español de España es más formal?
6:36 - 7:42 : ̗̀➛ Flip-Flops- Chancletas, Chanclas, Sandalias, Chalas
7:43 - 9:01 : ̗̀➛ Butt - Culo, Cola, Trasero, Poto, Nalgas
9:02 - 7:42 : ̗̀➛ How was today? - ¿Que tal estuvo hoy?
9:54 - 10:16 : ̗̀➛ Outro - Final
This is the first Timelapse I've ever made so I hope you like it (❤^◡^)
Este es el primer Timelapse que hago, así que espero les guste (❤^◡^)
¿Por qué no incluyes "culo"? En España "culo" no es tabú, de hecho, es la que más utilizamos
@@ivanovichdelfin8797 Disculpa, no sabía ya que no soy de España. Muchas gracias por el dato y ahora lo pongo.
@@whosvalu Nada
The thing with latin American spanish Is that we got a lot of influence from other people that lived in the American continent. For example, If you can find some similar words used in Ecuador, Bolivia, Perú and Chile that's because they all got a lot of influence from the Quechua language. In the other hand in México you can find hella lot of different words for the same thing because we had a lot of prehispanic cultures (Not only the náhuatl language had influence) and also a lot of foreign influence as well (Like the word Troka for truck). Sometimes I feel like some of this Is missrepresented because a lot of us are biased to think that the entirety of our country has our same words and expressions
I am Spanish and I've known a lot of Native Spanish speaking people and we can communicate perfectly without any problem. For sure I would never get angry because of different vocabularies 😊😊😊
Cometa is also used in Mexico but more popular is papalote, the word comes from Nahuatl a native Mexican language that means "butterfly", basically for the natives a kite was very similar to a butterfly and that is why they called it that.
Dirás lengua nativa indígena ,no mexicana ,mexicanos somos todos
Ya veo, que interesante
Yo sí entendí lo que quiso explicar, cuando se dice native/o quiere decir como de tribus, indigenas, se refriere como los Aztecas, mayas,
@@rocklennon4362 No escribas por escribir, todas las languas nativas de México... tambien son mexicanas, no porque sean nativas dejan de ser mexicanas, de hecho por ser lenguas mexicas son mas mexicanas que el español que hablamos... ademas dijo claramente una lengua nativa mexicana, osea... ¿que alegas?
@@Vadjansama ok entonces el español y lenguas nativas es igual de mexicano ,ninguna es más mexicana que la otra ,además yo me refería al comentario pretencioso de lenguas nativas mexicanas como queriendo decir que el español no es mexicano 🙄,pero bueno talvez intérprete mal
Gringo: ahora si después de estudiar tantos años ya domino el español
Latinoamérica: cagaste
❤❤❤ the Peruvian girl!!!! My family is from 🇵🇪. Representing 🇵🇪🇵🇪🇵🇪! Let’s go!
We in Cuba also say jaiba, it depends on the place you live in. To me lapicero and pluma are different things. Pluma means fountaine pen while lapicero means pen
It seems you have forgotten your Cuban Spanish. Pluma is pen, lapicero is mechanical pencil.
Also, jaiba is a type of crab with a blueish color.
@@polaristrans lapicero means pen, portaminas means mechanical pencil.
@@ALIENOID_VISCID_CLONE Lapicero in Cuba is mechanical pencil. Pluma or bolígrafo is pen. Also, as per the RAE: Utensilio para escribir, dibujar o pintar que consiste en un tubo hueco de plástico o de metal con minas recambiables en su interior y con un mecanismo que permite hacer avanzar la mina.
Check out your stuff.
@@polaristrans dude, I´m Cuban.
Probably for people from east it´s different but this is how it works for West. Also they say ¨cutara, fongo, guineo¨ weird stuff like that (we do not understand).
Aguante Chile!
The cuban girl! She is so shy! But I like her! More videos with her!
The pen one was interesting to me. Yes, in my family and 🇵🇪, we say “Lapicero”. I never heard that term, “Boligrofo”, from my family or Peru so it could be from a region in Peru other than the capital of Lima. However, I learned Spanish in the 🇺🇸 school system, and we use the word “Pluma” instead in Spanish class, both for writing and speaking. It’s really interesting to see how the word, “pen” has so many different words and meanings in other countries.
BTW, I stopped, saying “Pluma and now use “Lapicero” in my Spanish. 😂😂😂
theyre so simple and calm
It's sometimes said that Chilean accent is the andalusian of Latín América...
Technically you’re not wrong, Andalusians were the majority of people from Spain that arrived here. The Chilean accent sounds a lot like Málaga, Jaén or Granada accents.
@@andreasmauna1445 De hecho, he escuchado muy seguido que nuestro acento (chileno) se parece al español de Las Islas Canarias, pero no sé si ellos también migraron a Chile antiguamente.
@@barbi___ han migrado más gente del país vasco , Andalucía, Extremadura , de islas canarias no tengo idea.
I always like to say that our Spanish (Chile), would be like the equivalent of a mixture between Scottish, Irish and Australian English converted into one dialect😂😂
more videos with those incredible girls, I am from Ecuador... thank you so much for this video
The Cuban girl was really pretty ❤❤
Magnifico!
In Chile is not cometa, in Chile is volantín.
I didn't know that Mexico and Cuba shared so many words, Incredible.
Cuba was part of New Spain, the capital of New Spain was Mexico City.
They are both in the Caribbean.
the girls from chile and cuba are so pretty
Especially the Cuba one ❤
I love Chile girl she got me good about that. That Cuba she beautiful. She very quiet.
Todas las niñas bonitas simpáticas pero La Niña chilena tiene un aire angelical
In Argentina "cometa" is valid, but we usually say "barrilete". Next is "Pochoclo". "Cangrejo" and King Crab is "Centolla". The pen is officially bolígrafo, but all call them "Birome" due to the name of the inventor in Argentina called Biro. And we use the trademark "Bic" for it also: "dame una bic". Pluma, instead is feather (of birds and for writing and also the stilographic pen, also called "lapicera"). The flip-flops are called "ojotas" which comes from quechua's "ulluta" which was the lingua franca of the nortwest of Argentina, Bolivia and Peru. Sandalias have leather straps and the soles are made of stronger materials, not rubber. With more straps but made of rubber may be a low level sandalia.
Traste o trasero is for butt or bottom. Cola won't be used for animals that have tails (because cola is tail). But you may say "la cola del bebé". Culo is a strong word not to be used, although in Argentinas is used in many many idioms: "Salió para el culo"=it went badly or had bad results; "está con cara de culo"=he is upset or angry.
Chile has a different Spanish because it has been more isolated than the countries to the north. And Argentina has a special spanish, with similarities in the Uruguay, due to the many influences of inmigration, specially italian. We have many word taken from the italian language.
Me fascina que "estar con cara de culo" sea común con España jajaja
¡genial!
I understand perfectly Chilean and it’s a beautiful accent. I don’t know but his girl was talking about. Regards from Spain.
Edit: don’t say potorro in Spain…
In Chile they speak Castellano and when it is done formally or "properly" it is easy to understand for those who speak Spanish. Once you add the accent, slang, and speed, comprehension diminishes drastically xD. In Chile, at least when I used to live there, we could shift between proper castellano to "Chilean" depending on the situation and people around us. For example, on TV programs like the news, presenters speak clearly and formally albeit quite fast still. Cheers!
the real chilean accent is actually hard to understand … but also is easy for us to change into a more neutral spanish … the girl in the vid is using neutral chilean spanish haha
@@marcelomunoz2390 Yes indeed! And there's a lot of different accents depending on region, coastal, country, and metroplitan areas!
escucha hablar a un huaso
@@ulvessens5902 every country and region has his own slang. I can use slang of my country and it would be harder for you to understand. But I have saw some tv shows from Chile. And I also know people from Chile I understand them. It doesn’t matter they use pololo or cachai or whatever. I understand.
6:22 it's curious that she says that "vosotros entendéis" sounds formal when it's just the opposite
tú entiendes (informal) *usted* entiende (formal)
vosotros entendéis (informal) *ustedes* entienden (formal)
if you're talking to 1 child you would use "tú entiendes" (informal) instead of "usted entiende" (formal). Therefore, following this pattern why would you use "ustedes entienden" if you're talking to 2 children? In Spain we'd use "vosotros entendéis" because that's the informal and also regular way to conjugate the verb.
It is rather curious. I wouldn’t know why in South America, the plural of “tú” and “usted” is “ustedes” and why “vosotros” just doesn’t exist at all
@@thearturo0xd803 Because when Spaniards arrived to America, there were 3 versions of speaking:
1-The version of South Spain (Andalucía and Canary Islands). They use "usted"/"ustedes" and the "seseo" way of speaking. The most of the ships arrived in America, came from the South of spain.
2-The "educated" version (from people with with a high social status, such us nobles, kings...).They use "vos" and a musically way of speaking. A lot of the ships arrived in South America, they brought important people with them.
3-The version of centre and north Spain. This version use "tú", "vosotros" and the "Seceo" (that use the sound /s/ and /z/). It's used in most Spain, Sahara Occidental, Equatorial Guinea and Andorra.
In the Philippines pen is pluma and pencil is lapis
This was really interesting.
Chile the Best country 🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱❤️
Lo bueno es que nos entendemos
Maravilloso
Its true, in Paraguay we say pororó which is a word in guaraní and an onomatopoeia because of the sound it makes when it's cooking
I laughed a lot. Already knew the word of the other countries due to internet, but seeing that you lack an Argentinian (it can vary from north to center or south):
Me reí bastante. Conocía las palabras q usan los demás x mismo internet, pero ya q les faltaba una Argentina (puede variar mucho entre norte, centro y sur):
1:14 Barrilete / Cometa.
2:19 Pochoclos (highly discussed from one place to another haha).
3:38 Cangrejo.
4:22 Lapicera.
6:36 Chancletas / Ojotas.
7:44 Cola (but there are a lot of other "ruder" words :P)
Papalote means Butterfly in nahuatl. Besides chanclas and sandalias, in México we also call sandals guaraches. And pen, we also call it pluma, lapicera, bolígrafo.
In Peru, lapicera would be the place or case where you keep the lapiceros. While lapicero, pluma or bolígrafo is what we use for pen. And for sandals there are many lol, sandalias, chancletas, chanclas, ojotas, sayonaras, chinelas, llanquis, etc. xd
The "ote" in words like papalote, coyote, sopilote, guajolote, comes from the Aztecs 🧐
and the dragon comes in the NIIIIIIIIIIIIIGHT!!! ♫
You're right, the Aztecs' language (Nahuatl) enriched the Spanish language with many words that are used today not only in Spanish, but in many other laguages.Words like "chocolate", "tomato", "coyote", etc are afew examples.I'm Mexican, so I know what I'm talking about.
Actually the Spanish enriched that (now dead and useless) language, not the other way around. Spanish is one of if not the richest language itw alongside Arabic
@@evemiam ACTUALLY...if a language is dead, then it follows logically that it cannot be "enriched" the Spanish borrowed from the Aztecs. End of story. 🧐
@@floydhill9265
What it follows logically is that if a language dies, is because it wasn't even "rich" to begin with, and that was the case then.
You making it seem like they borrowed the words for the sake of it ((although they tried their best to protect their languages and incorporate them into common speech)) when it was just the way natives referred to stuff Europe didn't have back then, such as potatoes.
How could you even borrow (a practice every language throughout history does anyways, why are you taking pride in it) anything from a dead language? The native indigenous people wanted to get rid of their language once Spanish stepped in lol. That's the way it was "enriched", by becoming an entirely new language.
That might be the case for a handful of words, (such as the ones you mentioned, which are a derivation and do not retain the original form). The majority of the words ending in -ote come from an isolated suffix with augmentative/derogatory function in nouns, and the rest come from French diminutives.
In Chile, Kite is “Volantín”. A big one is called “Pavo”. A small one is called “Ñecla”.
Cometa? En un Chile de nickelodeon lo dirán pero generalmente decimos volantín😅
Hahah the Ecuadorian girl is so true about the use of "animals words" here in Chile, I'm Chilean and I never realized it. "Pasarlo chancho" (to have fun, to enjoy a lot), "Perro" (close friend), "Aperrar" (to be up to some complicated situation or to going to a tough place), "Gallo" (man), "Galla" (woman), "Choro", "Chorito" (someone who like to fight or discuss), "Pollo" (shy, humble), "Cabras" (young women), "aleonar", "ganso" (fool), "pavo" (fool), "vaca" (bad person), "hacer una vaca" (to collect money among friends), "yegua" (crazy woman), etc.
Camello🐫 (person who is fond of or spends a lot of time doing an activity)
marca chancho 🐷 (article of dubious origin of poor quality or little-known brand)
Andar pato 🦆(no have money)
@@Bonaeceniohb "Caracolear" (walking by shorter routes in order to arrive faster than if you'd do it by the "normal" routes/streets/ways
Nah, she just doesn't get that Chileans are just good at having idioms that involve animals and that's what makes it fun.
😂 I’m Chilean too.
In Puerto Rico me make a ¨caballo¨ to collect money among friends to buy something (food, drink) or to do something (party, trip)
El lenguaje corporal de cada chica llamó mi atención.
Queda claro en los lugares donde se trabaja ése aspecto en comparación con el resto de países.
Aprecio mucho las cultura y formas de ser de nuestros herman@s vecin@s 🙏🙌♥️
Saludos.
Puedes ser un poco más específico por favor.
@@eckosns busca en net lenguaje corporal y como trabajarlo.
Es más que todo actuar de forma inquieta o actuar de forma tranquila.
Entiendes quien lo hace y quién no?
Saludos
@@pipe97531 entiendo pero algunos lenguajes son inconscientes, por ejemplo una chica brasileña es mucho más cálida y extrovertida que una mujer boliviana, que no tiene nada de malo sino es el ambiente y entorno que los rodea que las distingue, gracias y buscaré más info al respecto.
@@pipe97531 pero cual es tu conclusión? Aparte que Cristina es la más bella en ese templo a la zoofillia.-
@@gvaras mmm como digo más arriba, concluyó que en unos países se trabaja más que en otros.. hasta darse vuelta a mirar al resto de chicas demuestra o sub comunica cosas. Pero sólo percepción y opinión mía...
No entendí lo del templo, a qué te refieres? Jajaja que risa.
Incrível como o português e o espanhol podem ser tão diferentes quando se trata de frutas,animais e certos objetos.
Native Spanish speaker here. I find it fascinating that even if I've never studied Portuguese, I can still understand most of it.
2:30 - 2:34 actually "rositas" kinda makes sense , because the popcorn is shaped like a flower : the seed inside is the nectar and the white flakes around are the petals
Spanish is so rich, widespread and diverse. Lovely language
It's frustrating how underrated the language is in many countries, even though it's still the second most spoken language in the world.
I've seen many yankees who'd rather learn Japanese before Spanish. Simply atroucious.
@@dannyjorde2677 in the US learn more Spanish
@@dannyjorde2677 the truth is spanish really is third world language, Not being mean, But I mean what comes from it??? Japanese is more benefits, Japan is a rich country with a cool history good for making business
@@corymiller536 Spanish world is ancient and richer than english one, keep crying. So happy uk and usa are going under...So really happy!
@@larrsan bro who's mentioning USA and england??? I'm not from either of those countries, I'm just being honest
es increíble que pude haber entendido todo
The Cuban girl (middle front) was kinda cute but shy. I think I liked her accent the most. I wish she laughed or spoke more.
Here's a Venezuelan list
Kite - Papagayo
Popcorns - Cotufas
Crab - Cangrejo
Pen - Lapicero
Plip-Flops - Chancletas/Chanclas/sandalias ( We only use sandalias a LITTLE bit)
Butt - Here in Venezuela We say it in so much forns😅
Culo (not that much)
Nalgas
Trasero
There are a bit more but I don't remember more😅
And That's all :D
I hope you liked my list 😁
en chile no es cometa es volatin xd
Lo mismo iba a comentar jaja qué clase de chileno le dice cometa al volantín 😅
Sí, y al lapiz pasta también se le dice "lapicera"
el volantin es el cuadrado, eso es una cometa
@@bzzzztnh2 Pero muy poca gente le dice cometa a un volantín, sea del tipo que sea, pa mí cometa es una estrella fugaz, como el Halley (aún sabiendo que en otras partes le dicen así)
@@TeboAndrew el mismo que le pone el tomate arriba de la palta en el italiano?
You should have asked them to tell you how you say straw in each country, then all hell would of broke loose.
The girl from Chile is beautiful.
We did ... It was cut off to strong for CZcams hahahah
Context that nobody asked for: "Paja" in informal language, refers to the fap 💀
This is super interesting as an English speaker who has been trying to learn Spanish since childhood lol taking classes in school as a kid, pluma was the norm - relearning as an adult, every program wants to give me bolígrafo - which I knew from school too but pluma was used more. It’s also interesting to see that one app I’ve been using has given me a LOT of these words as alternatives, so they weren’t all complete surprises. It’s hard to figure out, as a nonnative speaker who seeks instruction from a lot of people from different countries, which slang/words/accents im using. From school as a kid, I picked up the habit of pronouncing “ll” as “ja” instead of “ya”, so my pronunciation of “Calle” would be “ca-jyeh” instead of “ca-yeh” - I guess that’s more Colombian? Supposedly? Lol I’m going to sound like a maniac if I try to talk to anyone
I also have been studying since childhood, to learn Spanish. I learned most from Mexicans then I joined the Army and met Puerto Ricans and I lost my mind. The the Cubans I really have trouble understanding. But don't stop trying and keep practicing.
Mi amigo y yo hicimos un video preguntando a la gente acerca de Colombia en este canal. Miralo es chevere.
In Paraguay we say "Pandorga" to the kite, to the popcorn "Pororó", for pen we do say bolígrafo but also "birome", to the flip-flops we say "zapatillas" and I know in Argentina is "ojotas" but it can get confusing because in Argentina zapatillas are like sport-shoes but to those we say "champion" and the rest are pretty similar with the other countries😅
Jazmín, in Perú we also use ojotas, but for an specific design of sandals. (and the word ojota comes from the quechua language). 🙂👋
@@vivihua8681 I didn't know that! That's very interesting 🤔
@@jazminsegovia4029 Birome was the guy who created the pen who was a Hungarian-Argentine.
La "pasta" es una sustancia "pastosa" que significa que es lo suficientemente blanda para moldearla y lo suficientemente dura para que no se derrame, eso es una pasta (pasta comestible, de dientes, de calzado, etc). Los lápices que usan tinta tienen que ser herméticos porque la tinta es muy fluida y se derramaría con facilidad, por eso se creó la "pasta" que es una tinta más ESPESA para evitar que se derrame. Por eso los bolígrafos comunes no son herméticos, porque usan tinta PASTOSA o PASTA, de ahí "lápiz de pasta". No es que los chilenos hablen raro, es que nuestros representantes, por su juventud, no siempre conocen las razones de nuestro preciso e ingenioso lenguaje chileno.
Dale color kl
pastita llica
Pastita llica
Exactamente, pero lamentablemente las generaciones actuales son progretontas y por ende conceptos así no lo entenderían por causa de escuchar mucho reggaetón y ver videos en Tik Tok de tipos haciendo bailes raros. XD
@@Xxxx-xm5qu ofendete nomas ql
In Mexico, popcorn is called “palomitas , literally little pigeons because they are white and they fly. “Volar” (literally to fly) Can also be used metaphorically when something runs out very quickly, as if it flew away, which normally happens to popcorn as everybody starts eating from the same box or plate.
Muy buen video, felicidades a las chicas que lo hicieron muy bien, me reí mucho ya que son muy simpáticas todas. Soy ecuatoriano y como en todos los países, en cada región hablamos o utilizamos palabras distintas. La chica ecuatoriana es de la Sierra y bueno, yo soy de la Costa y existen muchas cosas a las que llamamos de forma diferente.
Bueno la cometa se le dice así en todo el Ecuador, igual que el canguil (lo que en otras partes le dicen palomitas de maíz o crispetas). El cangrejo le decimos así aunque la jaiba es una especie de cangrejo, de un tono verdoso y de carapacho achatado, tiene más carne y sabe distinto al cangrejo común (más rico para algunos que el mismo cangrejo) al menos acá en las costas ecuatorianas.
Ahora las diferentes, aquí le decimos pluma y de forma menos común lapicero o bolígrafo. He escuchado que algunas personas le dicen Esfero pero Esferográfico jajajajaja casi nunca. Como dijo una chica allí, suena como sicodélico, a mi me suena como que vas a dar la vuelta al mundo jajajaja. Al menos acá le decimos pluma. A lo siguiente le decimos comúnmente zapatillas o sandalias, chanclas no se utiliza ese término. Después y lo último que dijeron las chicas, aquí se le dice nalga o poto (de forma graciosa). Decirle qlo es una forma grosera de decir, incluso lo escribo así (qlo) para que CZcams no me elimine el comentario como ya me ha pasado antes. y eso, muy buen video la verdad. Felicitaciones nuevamente. Saludos desde Ecuador 👋🤙👍
Gracias por esta maravillosa explicación
@@ynelypelez5979 Gracias a ti por leerme jeje, pensé que nadie lo iba a hacer. Muchas gracias también por comentarme y por tus buenas palabras. Saludos 👋🙏🤙👍
Kite in chile is "volantín" 😵😵😵
Yo he escuchado las dos formas dependiendo de la parte de Chile y la clase social. Yo que soy de Santiago he dicho "volantín" toda mi vida, pero tengo familia en la Región de los Lagos que dice "cometa" y sus amigos también.
Does the cuban girl want to be there????
She representing all the introverts out there.
@@codeone8195 well than she shouldn't be there
Me encanto la diversidad! Hubiera agregado a una argentina, para sumar en variedad de palabras jajaja. (Por ejemplo, "pop corn" = "pochoclo" 😄)
Sí, lo mismo pensé, faltó una argentina en ese grupo.
Hubiera servido para que los chilenos no hubiésemos sido los únicos divergentes
😂😂 good video⚡️
The Cuban girl looks so unhappy
Some people just have R.B.F , she's representing all the introverts.
In Brazilian Portuguese we would say:
1 - Kite = Papagaio (is also an animal, the parrot) / Pipa
2 - Popcorn = Pipoca
3 - Crab = Caranguejo
4 - Pen = Caneta
5 - Flip-flops = Chinelo / Sandália
6 - Butt = (note: there are several words for it, the ones I will quote are less strong or offensive. 🙂) Bumbum / Bunda / Popô / Traseiro
im from the peruvian amazon and we also say chinela!!
Bunda is worldwide famous
My mother and grandmother (pueretoricans) used to call flip flops or sandals, chinelas. Only persons Ive heard use the term.@@noface____
Kite: Probably with the influx of immigrants to Chile in recent years, the word "cometa" has been incorporated into our Spanish variety, but "volantín" is definitively the typical word for kite.
Popcorn: In Chile could be both "palomitas" or "cabritas".
Pen: "Pasta" in "Lapis pasta" refers to the ink that is actually a paste and not ink. Also, we use "lapiscera" (female version of "lapiscero") where "cera" means wax. Fountain pen is "pluma fuente" or just "pluma".
Flip-flops: In Chile "chala" is really sandal ("sanadalias"). Flip-plots are called "Condoritos" because a Cartoon character, Condorito (literally meaning little condor), uses sandals similar to flip-flops. However, there are other names for this, like "hawainas".
No sabía que en Cuba también le decían papalote que bien que no somos los únicos 😃👍
2:34 Rosetas de maíz
6:21 Vosotros entendéis
8:38 Mono poto rojo**
Mono poto rojo.
Mono poto rojo*