People Try To Pronounce The HARDEST Words in Southeast Asian Languages!!

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  • čas přidán 16. 12. 2023
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    Do you know about Southeast Asian languages?
    Do you think their language is difficult to pronounce?
    Today, they tried to pronounce the hardest words in their languages!
    Hope you enjoy the video
    Also, please follow our panels!
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @richsalazme
    @richsalazme Před 6 měsíci +5851

    As a Filipino, I'm disappointed she didn't bring in "nakakapagpabagabag". Even Filipinos struggle with that one 😂

    • @Ja_mm
      @Ja_mm Před 6 měsíci +280

      I think she was aiming for a long word that has lots of vowels that aren't the same.

    • @TheAspiringCentenarian
      @TheAspiringCentenarian Před 5 měsíci +286

      True. I'd rather say nakaka-worry 😄

    • @alunsinus_prime
      @alunsinus_prime Před 5 měsíci +149

      And her translation of "kinakailangan" is off, it's closer to "needed" and "need to".

    • @richsalazme
      @richsalazme Před 5 měsíci +112

      @@alunsinus_prime It actually depends on the context. I think it is more like "required" than "important", also what you said. Again, it depends on the context

    • @gracelynarizala9123
      @gracelynarizala9123 Před 5 měsíci +77

      pati yung "iwinawagayway"

  • @47crazed
    @47crazed Před 6 měsíci +5746

    Indonesians and Filipinos are definitely cousins.

    • @suhanjayalian5044
      @suhanjayalian5044 Před 6 měsíci +266

      Karena Indonesia dan Filipina adalah Sahabat Sejati 🇮🇩🇵🇭 Memiliki Persamaan Bahasa meskipun beberapa Kosakata 😊

    • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
      @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Před 6 měsíci +50

      @@suhanjayalian5044Ya teman saya 😊😊

    • @lucthin6245
      @lucthin6245 Před 6 měsíci +237

      They are both austronesian language. There are many words that are common to both languages.

    • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
      @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@lucthin6245 Yes 😊😊

    • @user-fw5pk5qp3q
      @user-fw5pk5qp3q Před 6 měsíci +86

      Yes... And Malaysia,Brunei, and Singapore is Indonesia's siblings , and Taiwan/Formosa indegenous tribes are our Austronesian ancestor's roots and African is also kind of our ancient ancestors too😅

  • @user-ty1rj3pc6j
    @user-ty1rj3pc6j Před 5 měsíci +2622

    As I'm a Thai native, please allow me to correct the things as following:
    The meaning of "กรกฎาคม"
    In the clip, it showed as "กรกฎาคม" means "June" but it actually means "July"
    the "คม(Khom)" end means there is 31 days in the month, not 30 days.
    The word "อุณหภูมิ" should be pronouced as "อุน หะ พูม (Oon-Ha-Poom)", according to Thai National Dictionary 2011 edition (พจนานุกรม ฉบับราชบัณฑิตยสถาน พ.ศ. ๒๕๕๔)
    The rest was correct, thank you

    • @Electric_Souls
      @Electric_Souls Před 5 měsíci +139

      I was about to comment this but thanks for doing it, ขอบคุณมากๆ

    • @vincalicia
      @vincalicia Před 5 měsíci +249

      I can tell the girl will definitely make mistakes after she underrated and said Thai is not difficult. Any Thai natives who seriously study the Thai language know that our own language is extremely difficult, especially trying to understand the root meaning of Pali and Sanskrit and Royal word use.

    • @phoompanichpat4240
      @phoompanichpat4240 Před 5 měsíci +34

      thai words are difficult, i always use google not to look stupid in group chats 😅

    • @PNate_KTrainVer.
      @PNate_KTrainVer. Před 5 měsíci +2

      What does อุน หะ พูน exactly mean? I dont use this word often when I'm at home speaking thai

    • @Astpirick
      @Astpirick Před 5 měsíci +47

      ​@@PNate_KTrainVer. อุณหภูมิ is temperature

  • @leebaemi
    @leebaemi Před 6 měsíci +371

    I am a Filipino and I noticed that there were some Indonesian words that were similar to Tagalog.. And it's easy because they were pronouced and read exactly how they were written. When I was an ESL teacher, I have taught some Vietnamese and Thai students and to be honest, for me, they have the most difficult languages to pronounce.. much even harder than Chinese.

    • @Edgar_Ramirez471
      @Edgar_Ramirez471 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I'm American🇺🇸and I see Filipinos and Malaysians similar to Micronesians and Latin Americans
      indonesians similar to negritos,Melanesians, Papuans, etc
      That's why they're dark and short

    • @Nhoel_
      @Nhoel_ Před 4 měsíci +14

      ​@@Edgar_Ramirez471 keep being racist bro if that makes you more comfortable👍💀

    • @aprilianindy3200
      @aprilianindy3200 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Mahal kita in Indonesian means "we're expensive" 😂

    • @leebaemi
      @leebaemi Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@aprilianindy3200 really? In the Philippines. Mahal also means expensive.

    • @jaydenyoutubechannel
      @jaydenyoutubechannel Před 26 dny

      I also knew that I in Tagalog is 'ako' while the Indonesian one is 'aku' or 'saya'

  • @wenderis
    @wenderis Před 6 měsíci +1543

    This Indonesian talent is so intelligent and full of confidence. I've seen her several times here and in different channels already, she can explain something that might be too complicated for this kind of channel in a very efficient way, altho not always precise (it doesn't need to be). Keep her on guys.

    • @myOpin1on
      @myOpin1on Před 6 měsíci +50

      Indonesian can easily understand to pronounce other language because we have the most neutral accent

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Před 6 měsíci +81

      ​@@myOpin1on
      He's referring to the indonesian girl in this video

    • @Hasnurridha
      @Hasnurridha Před 6 měsíci +4

      Agreee

    • @mejiihan
      @mejiihan Před 5 měsíci +1

      Do u know her ig?

    • @lionelarmand7248
      @lionelarmand7248 Před 5 měsíci +25

      @@mejiihanBro is trying to get a date

  • @AngryKittens
    @AngryKittens Před 6 měsíci +2092

    Indonesian and Filipino are both Austronesian languages. Cousins to languages in Micronesia and Polynesia. They are quite different from every other language in mainland Asia. They have multiple syllables, are not tonal, and you can basically pronounce them exactly as they are spelled. The fact that they have multiple syllables mean you can make mistakes pronouncing something and still be understood. They're both similar to the unrelated Japanese and Korean languages in this way.
    Thai is Kra-Dai and Vietnamese is Austroasiatic. Both are mostly monosyllabic and tonal, like Chinese. Which is why it's difficult to spell in the Latin alphabet. They are the most difficult because the pitch of the vowels determines a word's meaning. And being monosyllabic, words can often be spelled exactly the same. But if you get the pitch wrong, the word means something different.

    • @TheYvesDropper
      @TheYvesDropper Před 6 měsíci +33

      Very well described

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +7

      Filipinos and Malaysians are Micronesians not indonesian lmfao
      Indonesians are Melanesians/Austroloid

    • @zulthyr1852
      @zulthyr1852 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h Did you get this from WhatsApp University lmao

    • @DaveChuaa
      @DaveChuaa Před 5 měsíci +67

      ⁠@@user-zd9cv6wc8hFilipinos are not Micronesians lmao. Micronesian is already mix Austronesian and Melanesian. While Filipinos are purest Austronesian descendant. Also Indonesian is mix, some part is Austronesian, some is Melanesian. Here in Philippines we have Aeta, they are also Melanesian/Australoid too.

    • @Average401
      @Average401 Před 5 měsíci +1

      malaysian too!

  • @angnguyenha7203
    @angnguyenha7203 Před 5 měsíci +327

    The Vietnamese words you guys chose were like 5/10 in difficulty. There are much hard words to pronounce corectly. And Southern accent makes them like 20% easier🤣

    • @guardiandemonx7936
      @guardiandemonx7936 Před 5 měsíci

      actually most people said southern accent is harder then the northern accent, u grew up with the southern accent that is why is easier for u, fool

    • @4rg3s
      @4rg3s Před 5 měsíci +94

      They should have picked huỳnh huỵch, ngặt nghẽo, ngọc ngà, khúc khuỷu

    • @duyhuynh21989
      @duyhuynh21989 Před 5 měsíci +58

      Just Nguyễn, done :)))

    • @vrominill
      @vrominill Před 5 měsíci +31

      sữa chua is like 3/10 in difficulty ijbol.

    • @duyatnguyen8473
      @duyatnguyen8473 Před 5 měsíci +32

      Give Indonesians and Philippinos "Nguyễn" they will give you back "newyen" 😂

  • @awiiator
    @awiiator Před 5 měsíci +182

    The word "lưu luyến (v)" is best understood as "linger". Commonly used to describe one's feelings for their ex or "undesire to part ways". We have a different word for nostalgic which is "hoài niệm (v)" or "hoài cổ (adj)", hoài cổ usually refers to the further past with generation gap or even the ancient time.

    • @walterhii
      @walterhii Před 5 měsíci +25

      As a Chinese, I have a hard time pronouncing Vietnamese words, but once I understood the meaning I can get the pronunciation more accurately as it has equivalent words in Chinese and with similar sound (like a dialect).
      lưu luyến = 留恋
      hoài niệm = 怀念
      hoài cổ = 怀旧

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 Před 5 měsíci +8

      ​@turfleholmes5287it like English use French, Greece and latin loan word... English is full of french, Greece and latin loan word ( other word is similar to germany language with very similar grammar structure 😂😂) 😂😂

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 Před 5 měsíci +4

      ​@@walterhiicổ is 古..旧(traditional舊) is cựu 😂😂

    • @walterhii
      @walterhii Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@ucchau173 thanks for the correction. Now I learn something new. Then the more accurate term is 怀古. 🙂

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@walterhii isn't 古and舊(旧)mean old?? But why the word ancient time is cổ đại 古代( gudai) and can you explain the difference meaning 古 with 舊(旧)??😁😁

  • @TheYvesDropper
    @TheYvesDropper Před 6 měsíci +496

    Indonesian was purposely created easy and bacame the Official language because Indonesia itself has over 700 local languages across the archipelago. So, we can communicate to each other with the same language.

    • @bobbydsj
      @bobbydsj Před 5 měsíci +29

      It is in fact, hands down, the easiest language to pick up

    • @duyatnguyen8473
      @duyatnguyen8473 Před 5 měsíci +16

      yeah, i can't teach other Indo friends speak vietnamese correctly but i can speak their language easily, good for learners and connect people.

    • @kaikart123
      @kaikart123 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Yea, it was a modified pidgin language, that is why it is so easy to learn.

    • @Nhoel_
      @Nhoel_ Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@kaikart123 yeah but it takes a long time to be able to speak fluently

    • @benedictusharyanto4109
      @benedictusharyanto4109 Před 3 měsíci +18

      As an Indonesian I find proper Bahasa Indonesia is more difficult to learn than, for example, proper English just because we don’t really use proper Bahasa Indonesia in our daily conversations.
      Never once met somebody uses “gawai” to refer their smartphone.
      And even most Indonesian cannot differentiate the use of “di” or “ke” as prefixes or prepositions. We always write it “dimana” instead of the correct “di mana” for instance.
      The only easy part of learning Indonesian is, as mentioned in the video, we pronounce the words as they’re written.

  • @DanTheCaptain
    @DanTheCaptain Před 6 měsíci +977

    Indonesian and Tagalog (Filipino) were really easy for me. They both sound nice and pleasant but are indeed far removed from English. They do sound kinda European in a way. Thai was challenging but I feel could be mastered with some practice. Vietnamese on the other hand… Well, let’s just say, when people often talk about Arabic, Mandarin, Cantonese and Japanese being the worlds most difficult languages I think they should include Vietnamese in that list. The examples given weren’t thaaat bad but I’ve tried learning it and had a similar experience to the American girl learning Thai… I’ve spent about 15 mins of introductory Thai and Vietnamese and fave up on both lol

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +9

      European? Nah only Tagalog, Thai and Vietnamese are typical Austro asiatics like Khmer, Bahasa Indonesia have similiraties with Malay(well obviously because it literally originated from Malay) and Melanesian like Papuans, Solomon Islands, etc

    • @auza_af
      @auza_af Před 6 měsíci +41

      ​@@user-zd9cv6wc8hnah, bahasa Indonesia did not come from Malay, but was absorbed from several other languages ​​such as Dutch, Arabic and others, after all,bahasa Melayu originally came from Sumatra. And Sumatra is part of Indonesia

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@auza_af bahasa indonesia has no dutch or arabic words unlike Malay that has English, Arabic, Indian, Portuguese words. And literally any source you want to see it always says "bahasa indonesia originated from bahasa melayu" and i'm not even malaysian😂
      And wtf is sumatra??😂😂😂

    • @auza_af
      @auza_af Před 6 měsíci +45

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h If you don't know anything about our country, don't act like you know, Indonesian has roots in Dutch because Indonesia was colonized a long time ago, and bahasa Melayu originally came from Sumatra, which is now part of Indonesia, and now bahasa Indonesia is the 10th language recognized as the official language of the UNESCO General Conference

    • @FrozenDrone12
      @FrozenDrone12 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@auza_afIndonesian language root from malay language, A Sumatran Riau Malay to be exact what do you mean that Our language is not based on Malay? Dutch influence is for the loanwords

  • @paultube5658
    @paultube5658 Před 2 měsíci +22

    I'm from Thailand, and I can tell you that that word doesn't mean June. It means July.

    • @user-ve2bn4tu5w
      @user-ve2bn4tu5w Před 13 dny +2

      And also “Khom” is for 31 days month. 30 days month is “Yhon” 😅

  • @MahitabSalem
    @MahitabSalem Před 5 měsíci +4

    It's great to get to know friends from different countries. I really hope to have new friends from other countries and share culture and everything, how fun❤

  • @Holeros
    @Holeros Před 6 měsíci +526

    Indonesian and Tagalog are both part of the Austronesian language group. In fact, even within the larger Austronesian language group, which includes languages spoken in Taiwan, Madagascar and across the Pacific islands, tagalog and bahasa Indonesia sit in the same branch and share many similarities.

    • @BisayangdakoVlogz
      @BisayangdakoVlogz Před 6 měsíci +15

      It's because Austronesian people was first migrated in the Philippines and Indonesia so they have the same language before it's evolved

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      Saying Filipinos are similar to indonesians is like saying a Lion is similar to a rat. Rats are similar to mice like how indonesians are similar to Melanesians

    • @jenaavena9386
      @jenaavena9386 Před 5 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8hand your point is?

    • @aciloo7
      @aciloo7 Před 5 měsíci +28

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h what's his problem 🤣

    • @normaleverydayman7004
      @normaleverydayman7004 Před 5 měsíci

      It's kinda crazy how Austronesian people that more far away found Madagascar first before the African.

  • @_Pixelated
    @_Pixelated Před 6 měsíci +302

    Tagalog is pretty easy to pronounce. The difficulty comes from the letter combinations, it's usually very tongue twistery.

    • @egerajhonnamaet.2228
      @egerajhonnamaet.2228 Před 6 měsíci +59

      Tongue twistery to the point that it is nakakapagpabagabag 😂😂

    • @Kairubredcrumbs
      @Kairubredcrumbs Před 3 měsíci

      That's when you slow down

    • @Kairubredcrumbs
      @Kairubredcrumbs Před 3 měsíci

      Also I don't think she used deep tagalog words because there are some that hard too pronouce

    • @muhammadalfatih4502
      @muhammadalfatih4502 Před měsícem

      How do you pronounce Kinakailagan and Kinakailangan?
      Will it sound different? I'm curious. Why 'g' was pronounced 'ng'?

    • @Leigh_e.dits3
      @Leigh_e.dits3 Před měsícem

      ​​@@muhammadalfatih4502Yes they will sound different. Kinakailagan: Ki-nay-kay-la-gan
      Kinakailangan: Ki-nay-kay-la-ngan
      G is only pronounced as "ng" If there's an n on the left side of it

  • @jihan7450
    @jihan7450 Před 5 měsíci +27

    please keep the girl from indonesia on, she's really confident, humble, and well described every words

  • @fulan6231
    @fulan6231 Před 6 měsíci +25

    Out of many languages I've learned (Madurese, Javanese, Indonesian, English, Japanese) tonality is still a weird concept to me. I learned a bit of Arabic but yeah it's still hard.

  • @narathiphuayhuat4596
    @narathiphuayhuat4596 Před 6 měsíci +385

    I found the wrong in Thai part.
    1. กรกฎาคม (Krkḍākhm) means July , 7th month not 6th. June in Thai, we say มิถุนายน (Mit̄hunāyn)
    2. อุณหภูมิ (Xuṇh̄p̣hūmi) in Thai reads อุน-หะ-พูม (xun - h̄a - phūm). This words from 2 Pali words, อุณห (Xun-h̄a) means heat (we don’t read อุน-นะ-หะ (xun-na-h̄a) or อุน-นะ (xun-na)), and ภูมิ (phū-mi) means degree or intensity. In Thai, ภูมิ (p̣hūmi) in อุณหภูมิ. We cut /i/ sound, so the word อุณหภูมิ (Xuṇh̄p̣hūmi) should read อุน-หะ-พูม (xun - h̄a - phūm). However, if you read อุน-นะ-พูม (xun - na - phūm), Thai people can understand that you mean temperature but the pronunciation is incorrect which some Thai people are the same way.

    • @themasterflexG
      @themasterflexG Před 6 měsíci +11

      When you breakdown อุณห from อุณหภูมิ, อุณห by phonetic rules would be pronounced as อุ นะ หะ, of which อุน นะ หะ will also be acceptable. Hence อุณหภูมิ can be pronounced as อุ นะ หะ พูม and อุน หะ พูม.
      By อุน นะ ภูมิ, Tammie was most likely referring to a casual spoken version for certain accents where glottal stops are weaker, and as น and ห using very close articulators, they can blend together and modify syllables in certain words (eg. Modern Bangkok accent).
      She’s probably from Bangkok or within the metropolitan area, of which their accent can be distinctive from other accents from surrounding areas (Nakhonpathom, Ratchaburi, Samutsakorn ones are noticeably different from the Bangkok one).

    • @banktaigen4245
      @banktaigen4245 Před 6 měsíci +44

      Another more mistake is the end of the month with "Khom" having 31 days not 30 days.

    • @Zzz-tf5mw
      @Zzz-tf5mw Před 6 měsíci +16

      Those are not even more difficult Thai words to begin with. Give them พิลึกกึกกือ, งงงวย and they must have had a way harder time.

    • @chuckbass3934
      @chuckbass3934 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@themasterflexG No, according to the Thai royal academy it’s not. Although Thai people can understand this but if ones have some basic knowledge which is in elementary school, I think. They will pronounce it as it is in the correct way.

    • @cyriljamest.bualm.d.8867
      @cyriljamest.bualm.d.8867 Před 6 měsíci +3

      As a Thai learner, the Romanization of Thai has always bothered me and I have long since stopped using it. How they use the X symbol to represent the marker for an initial vowel sound is confusing for most learners. Also, thanks for the clarifications.

  • @indriatimartiana
    @indriatimartiana Před 6 měsíci +128

    Seru bangettttt! Kayak cewek-cewek lagi ngerumpi. Mbak Yang dari USA duduknya santuy banget, haha. Mbak dari Thailand ceriwis, mbak dari Filipina accent Inggrisnya enak banget, dia juga seru, Mbak dari Vietnam kalem tapi seru juga, Violin antusias, heboh, lucu juga. Semuanya lively pokoknya. Great job 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @9serge26
    @9serge26 Před 6 měsíci +14

    the women in the panel were delightful. indonesian and filipino languages are very similar due to the fact that they come from the same root language. and we're kind of generalized under the Austronesian blanket covering the majority , if not all, Southeast Pacific islands. but man, ang cute na man sa babae galing sa thailand lol

  • @windiedokristanto9130
    @windiedokristanto9130 Před 6 měsíci +46

    So where is "mempertanggungjawabkan" this word may confuse them a lot 😂

    • @McDucker
      @McDucker Před měsícem +2

      ni bukan kata majmuk ni kata nyamuk aedes😂

    • @dayswithme733
      @dayswithme733 Před měsícem +5

      Menginternasionalisasikan😅😅

    • @arvinwidiawanbamm1361
      @arvinwidiawanbamm1361 Před 9 dny

      ​@@dayswithme733I can't find it on KBBI 🤔 but "mempertanggungjawabkan" is listed there 🤔

    • @maklogetrich2378
      @maklogetrich2378 Před 9 dny

      "makanya" pasti banyak yg sulit ngomong ini wkwkwk

  • @lemonz1769
    @lemonz1769 Před 6 měsíci +145

    Thai, Lao and Vietnamese are really the only major tonal languages in SEA. Most of us do not speak a tonal language. Also please bring back Myanamar 🙏🇲🇲

    • @aburn9891
      @aburn9891 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Agreed. Despite what people may think, Khmer are not Tonal languages like Vietnamese, Thai, Laos and Burmese are. I think if they do another video, these 4 (and perhaps a Cambodian rep too) would be great and I think we'll see better pronounciations of eachothers accents even though they are all different.

    • @reigenlucilfer6154
      @reigenlucilfer6154 Před 6 měsíci +9

      wow so in the mainland khmer is the only non tonal language? that's interesting. i wonder how did they get to that

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@reigenlucilfer6154if you exclude peninsular malay, yes.

    • @ItsPForPea
      @ItsPForPea Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@reigenlucilfer6154Burmese developed tones much more recently than other tonal SEA languages, and now Khmer started to develop using intonation to differentiate words I've heard, it's very interesting.

    • @thevannmann
      @thevannmann Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@reigenlucilfer6154 Tonogenesis is the concept. It is believed that final consonant sounds disappearing led to the formation of tones in Vietnamese. For example, Vietnamese used to have -s endings but that morphed into the high tone (á). So something like "las" became "lá".

  • @ingang8817
    @ingang8817 Před 6 měsíci +150

    Vietnamese has many tones, but you read and speak as you write, and you can speak each word separately. Unlike English I don’t know how to put “stress” in the word because it just doesn’t mark on paper.

    • @MaGariShun
      @MaGariShun Před 6 měsíci +20

      Yes this is a really cool feature of Vietnamese. When I was there, I at least tried to pronounce things correctly because I could know how from reading them. In Thailand, I just saw the hieroglyphs and immediately gave up. Then researched a bit how they work, then immediately gave up again.
      Tonal languages are very difficult to learn for us westerners, because in Indo-European, tones are already used to confer meaning that's independent of the actual words being said. They tell you something about how to interpret what's being said and are closely tied to punctuation when written. Am I assertive, inquisitive, surprised, pointing out something, unsure, is this more important or that? Coffee? Tired? Really? Really?? Maybe? Maybe. Sure! Sure...
      If I hear someone talk in a completely foreign language, I can still intuit for example that they are listing three things, adding an unimportant detail, and then asking a question about it all. Just from the melody and rhythm of the sentence.
      So when we learn tonal languages, we have to not only add tones to words, but also unlearn how we normally construct sentences, and constantly remind ourselves to not apply these overarching rhythms and melodies to the words we're saying.
      Another thing that trips us up in both directions (and you are hinting at): In Indo-European languages, the most important thing to make a word intelligible, is the stress. Where you place the accent is fundamental, the rest almost doesn't matter. You can drop consonants, add some, shift them, alter some vowels, we will still understand you. But if you place the stress on the wrong part of the word? Almost impossible to understand it intuitively. In that sense, it's not that different from tonal languages.
      But because of this not caring about exact pronunciation, we have a lot of difficulty with languages like Thai or Vietnamese, which have very particular and specific consonants. They are crucial to get perfectly right or the meaning changes a lot. But we are not used to that. T vs Th, p or ph, whatever, we don't hear a difference! To us it's all the same because we constantly "mispronounce" these in all kinds of ways interchangeably.

    • @thevannmann
      @thevannmann Před 6 měsíci +2

      However, Vietnamese today does not hyphenate polysyllabic words which can cause issues for learners. The pronunciation also differs from region to region.

    • @hanbaoki
      @hanbaoki Před 6 měsíci

      @@thevannmann I had once compared the difference between regions' pronunciation in Vietnam to different English accents - English English / American English / ...

    • @mottiengnhat8921
      @mottiengnhat8921 Před 3 měsíci

      It's called phonemic orthography, there is a close match between the letters (or graphemes) and the sounds (phonemes)

    • @29457
      @29457 Před 26 dny +1

      Language level:
      🇵🇭: lvl 3-4
      🇻🇳: lvl ∞💀

  • @yureiraida
    @yureiraida Před 3 měsíci +2

    this is great..why only now youtube..i will definitely binge watch this channel

  • @kaoruatsumi2047
    @kaoruatsumi2047 Před 5 měsíci +8

    The Thai girl pronounced "Nyanyi" exactly like Mandarin "難以", quite cute.

  • @PercySanjaya
    @PercySanjaya Před 6 měsíci +343

    Talk-active. Confident. Cultural pride. Compare to other SEA girls, She got the vibes. She is the real representative of Indonesian. We are so proud of our Indo girl:)

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Před 6 měsíci +26

      Ikr, she's the best one to represent us so far 😂

    • @rattled1557
      @rattled1557 Před 6 měsíci +15

      they're all great tbh

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      She represents the big mouth loud indonesians

    • @rjsaquian
      @rjsaquian Před 5 měsíci +2

      More on bida bida

    • @PercySanjaya
      @PercySanjaya Před 5 měsíci +1

      it's giving tell me if you are sirik without telling me you are sirik @@rjsaquian

  • @rickydimas2674
    @rickydimas2674 Před 6 měsíci +96

    I'm Indonesian, based what i saw vietnamese very hard bcos of the tonal differences, philippines just similiar w Indonesian, in Java we have "Kelangan" there the NG part, similiar word. for Thai somehow its difficult if you read the romanized of thai

    • @netizen8146
      @netizen8146 Před 6 měsíci +10

      dalam bahasa Tagalog, "kailangan" artinya "perlu". tapi mereka juga kadang nyebutnya "kelangan"

    • @aburn9891
      @aburn9891 Před 6 měsíci +9

      Thai is also tonal but I do think Viet is a lot harder with their tones cause it almost feels like some words need to come down from deep in your throat in a way.

    • @letung932
      @letung932 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I'm vietnamese, I agree that vietnamse is hard to pronounce. We have some mark can change the tone and also change the meaning - sometime no meaning. For example:
      La - shout, Là - to be, Lá - leaf, Lả - faint, Lạ - strange, Lã - (no meaning) => 6 tone
      The ~ is the most difficult one even you are vietnamese. However, when you can speak vietnamese correctly, you can write it easily.
      To me, Indonesia and Filipino are long word, but I can pronounce it. Vietnamese word only has 1 sound only

    • @m.kzadith5487
      @m.kzadith5487 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The indonesian magic word
      Just the Indonesian Man can speak this word
      This word is very difficult to speak by The Indonesian Women
      The word is “MAAF”

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      Only Indonesians say they're similar to Filipinos. Filipinos don't give a sh*t about them

  • @biccboiii5332
    @biccboiii5332 Před 5 měsíci +14

    I think one way that would've helped the others when it came to pronouncing the Filipino words was to break it down to syllables, because the Filipino language is actually similar to Japanese in the sense that their words are also pronounced syllabically. One of them had a good idea in the way they viewed the word "Kinakailangan" where they broke it down to "kin, akai, lan, gan", but if they instead viewed the word and broke it down as "Ki - na - ka - i - la - ngan" there is a difference. That can also apply to the second word "Kumukutikutitap" where they could break down the word to "ku - mu - ku -ti - ku - ti - tap". Though still, great video!

  • @thestudentofficial5483

    I love real cultural contents like this. It really demystified the difference in cultures.

  • @KageyamaTobio-bs1wp
    @KageyamaTobio-bs1wp Před 6 měsíci +81

    I am a Filipino and I belong to the Muslim Maguindanaon tribe here in Mindanao, BARMM. And the Indonesian language has a close similarity in terms of pronunciation with our Maguindanaon dialect here in Philippines.

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +1

      Indonesians are dark and short. They're related to melanesians/austroloid

    • @radizanakiz666
      @radizanakiz666 Před 6 měsíci +21

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h your comment is so typical from netizen of Apartheid State of Malaysia, congratulations for showing us your racist tendency 👏

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      @@radizanakiz666 wrong. I'm Filipino and indonesians literally have no similarity to us unlike Malaysians that has similar feature and closer geographically to us. Indonesians are much closer to melanesians/austroloid than Southeast Asians

    • @radizanakiz666
      @radizanakiz666 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h yeah yeah keep pretending to be something else because your own country is so shameful isn't it? I understand your sentiment, such apartheid state shouldn't exist in 2023 and soon 2024, I get it

    • @rianmuhammadsofian7272
      @rianmuhammadsofian7272 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@radizanakiz666He is a moron. He acts like he knows everything, but actually he is dumb

  • @BHUMIPAX
    @BHUMIPAX Před 6 měsíci +32

    3:30
    In Thai we categorize the number of days in each month with the suffixes “คม:Khom“ 31 days and “ยน:Yon” 30 days but there is only one month that uses “พันธ์:Phan” That is February which has 28 or 29 days.
    Example: Today is Monday, December 18th -> วันจันทร์ที่ 18 ธันวา*คม*

    • @Tlefectus
      @Tlefectus Před 3 měsíci +1

      True! , Im from Thailand ❤

  • @vinhtranchi5098
    @vinhtranchi5098 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I'm Vietnamese and I love this video!
    Có ai ở đây người Việt ko ae?

  • @3wonka
    @3wonka Před 5 měsíci +2

    I really enjoyed this video! Nice to see Southeast Asians

  • @samomanawat
    @samomanawat Před 6 měsíci +56

    Don’t be afraid to learn Thai. Even the native can be wrong, just like in this video. กรกฎาคม (Karakadakhom) is actually July, not June.

    • @RobertHeslop
      @RobertHeslop Před 6 měsíci +4

      I used to live in Thailand for about 6 years, I learned the language when there but I remember a lot my students used to say July as(กะ-ละ-คะ-ดา-คม) instead of กรกฎาคม. A word I used to struggle saying for ages during the 2019/2020 protests was ประชาธิปไตย

    • @filmkungz1
      @filmkungz1 Před 6 měsíci +3

      facts 😂

    • @mr_wormhole
      @mr_wormhole Před 6 měsíci +5

      the main problem or the biggest mistake westerners make is skipping the alphabet(or trying to latinize the amazing อักษรไทย) and symbols then working with bad teachers who don't know the sanskrit roots and unable to demonstrate colors of the sound. An average english person already uses pitch accents in their life but they just don't know it consciously.
      I would admit that the hardest part is reading all stitched long texts with cluster consonant words and recognizing high/low tone but apart from that Thai is seriously relatively easy and super fun and probably best future investment
      Reading/Writing is as important as Listening/Speaking too!

    • @samomanawat
      @samomanawat Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@mr_wormhole Very true! Thai script (Abugida) suits the Thai language the best. It's logical and straightforward.
      The other reason is that they think of tones as a separate entity while it is actually inherited within the consonants, even in English, for example, the words “Bet” and “Ben” have different tones/pitches.

    • @rabbizz4318
      @rabbizz4318 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@RobertHeslopSome Thais are lazy to pronounce the "ร" or "r", so they use "ล" or "l" instead. However, this behavior can sometimes make confusion.

  • @ClaDestreza-tr5zq
    @ClaDestreza-tr5zq Před 6 měsíci +6

    The Tagalog word "nakapagpapabagabag" is still the most difficult for me. Even writing it is hard.

    • @HudaefCares
      @HudaefCares Před 5 měsíci

      Nakakapag-pabagabag. Them dashes are hella useful in this way lol

  • @toribenita_kyo
    @toribenita_kyo Před 5 měsíci +2

    One of the most difficult thing for people learning to speak Filipino is pronouncing words with the "ng" digraph, such as "pangalan" (name), "simangot" (frown), and "ngiti" (smile). One way of learning to pronouce Filipino words with the "ng" digraph is to take an English word like "singing" and break it down to its component syllables. First, prounce it as "sing-ing", then combine the middle "ng-i" into one syllable: "ngi." After that, drop the "si" and final "ng." From there, try pronouncing "nga, ngo, ngi, ngu, nge."

  • @kilanspeaks
    @kilanspeaks Před 6 měsíci +146

    9:54 she is everyone in my Mandarin class 😂 It’s difficult to wrap your head around the concept of tonal languages if you don’t grow up with it. Violin did well because she speaks Hokkien and Mandarin, but most Indonesians would struggle like Jedney did.
    As their languages are close cousins under Austronesian family, Indonesians and Filipinos would have little difficulties pronouncing each other’s words. As do Thai and Vietnamese due to the fact both of them are tonal languages, despite not coming from the same language family.

    • @Rungawayoui
      @Rungawayoui Před 6 měsíci

      Btw how did you know that she can speak hokkien???

    • @aburn9891
      @aburn9891 Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@Rungawayoui She says shes from Medan and speaks Hokkien at home. So she's Chinese-Indonesian.

    • @arhaen
      @arhaen Před 6 měsíci

      @@Rungawayouimedan chinese are known for their well proficiency in hokkien

    • @arhaen
      @arhaen Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@Rungawayouiif you say you’re medan chinese but don’t speak hokkien, you’re lying through your teeth

    • @kilanspeaks
      @kilanspeaks Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@RungawayouiIn one of the videos I hear her say the name HaiDiLao in correct Mandarin pronunciation, and because she mentioned that she’s from Medan then I just assumed that she speaks Hokkien. She confirmed these when she replied to me in one of the comments.

  • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
    @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Před 6 měsíci +98

    Here’s reason why Filipinos and Indonesians are loved each other, unlike Russians and Ukrainians:
    1.Both are same races called Austronesians and their language(Indonesian and Tagalog) are belong in this family
    2.Their relationship started very long ago before two countries became sovereign states where trade and military ties became common thing like Maguindanao-Ternate Alliance
    3.It’s easy to become friends between the two peoples not only in home countries but also many parts in the world like Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, etc. commonly domestic workers
    4.Sulawesi and Mindanao are related in language and culture because due to proximity, some Indonesians live in Mindanao like Davao Region and Sarangani majority of them are from Marore(Sangirese)
    5.Philippine-Indonesia Relationship are best diplomatic relations in the world since the establishment of two sovereign states after WW2 and Indonesian War of Independence and it was remained uninterrupted for more than 75 years
    6.Some Filipinos and Indonesians are embracing each other culture such as Filipinos loved Dangut, Si Patokaan(which is apparently a Folk Song of Indonesia) and JKT48(which is my favorite girl group because these members are beautiful) and Indonesians loved Original Filipino Music such as Jose Mari Chan and Yeng Constantino and Indonesians loved MNL48 as well
    7.Puteri Indonesia and Miss Indonesia are loved in one region in the Philippines, Calabarzon Region since 2022 because the residents are respect Indonesian Pageant Lovers and they are neutral from Pageant Fan Wars like me, which is not only a fan, but also a lover of these pageants because some candidates are my puppy love like Yasinta Aurellia and Farhana Wisandana
    8.Unlike the Western Tourists in Indonesia where some of them are rude and misbehaving resulting in arrest and deportation, mostly in Bali(such as Australians), Filipino Tourists in Bali are well behaved and law-giving and very friendly to Balinese which is one of the most behaved tourists in Bali
    9.Government officials of Two countries are well communicated with regards of agenda about economy, security and protection of each two countries
    10.Long Distance Relationship between the Philippines and Indonesia are impressive because just not only friendly but also very loved where some Filipina loved Indonesian men or Filipino men loved Indonesian woman, too and the best common word is “I Love You” exchange
    11.Maribeth, a Filipina who was popular in Indonesia with the hit Denpasar Moon in the 90s and Anjeanette Japor in the Philippines who was beauty pageant contestant representing Lucena City in Miss Universe Philippines 2022
    There are so important for me why Indonesia is my favorite country so as far as I know, I learned Bahasa Indonesia on Duolingo and other language application and they are many others:
    1.I loved Indonesian food(which is my favorite are Rendang, Satay, Nasi Goreng and Mi Goreng)
    2.Puteri Indonesia, Miss Indonesia and Miss Mega Bintang Indonesia are my favorite pageants and some candidates are very beautiful and I admire them such as Puteri Indonesia Lingkungan Yasinta Aurellia and Puteri Indonesia NTB 2024, Putri Ayu Diana(which is my favorite because my favorite song is Diana by Paul Anka dedicated to her)
    3.I like to visit some Indonesian Cities like Jakarta, Bandung, Surabaya, Semarang, Denpasar, etc. to meet some locals
    4.I love to visit Indonesian Landmarks like Monas, Borobudur, Komodo Dragon Island, Uluatu Temple, etc.
    5.I respect the President of Indonesia, Joko Widodo which is my favorite leader aside Bongbong Marcos in the Philippines
    With all my heart of Indonesia, I hope to see you in Indonesia and I will waiting for you to come if I stay much longer because I love Indonesia so much even I’m Filipino myself
    Love from Calabarzon Region in the Philippines 🇵🇭💕🇮🇩

    • @mr.i6260
      @mr.i6260 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Filipina salah satu pencetus Maphilindo. itu gagal. Kita buat lagi ASEAN, itu berhasil. Pada dasarnya kita bersaudara, ingin bersatu.

    • @johncross4642
      @johncross4642 Před 6 měsíci

      You can compliment a country without demeaning others. You didn't really need to compare them with RU and UA especially since one is currently ruled by a crazy dictator disguised as a president.

    • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
      @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@mr.i6260Ya 😊😊 Terima kasih teman dari Filipina 🇵🇭💕🇮🇩

    • @sleepyhead6468
      @sleepyhead6468 Před 6 měsíci +2

      But one of Catholic and other follows Islam... Both are extremely devout in their own religions lol

    • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
      @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@sleepyhead6468 Yes but you can meet as friends no matter what religion you are 💕💕

  • @nawapolpiamsuwan9083
    @nawapolpiamsuwan9083 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Quick correction for Thai , กรกฎาคม is "July"
    khm or Kom (คม) represent the month with 31 days
    Yon (ยน) is the one you use for 30 days

  • @kunderemp
    @kunderemp Před 6 měsíci +48

    Javanese (the majority ethnic in Indonesia) has two "e": e pepet and e taling. Indonesian language has actually three "e". In the past, we used ê for e pepet (just like "mênggonggong") and é for e taling and è for the third 'e'. And then, we discarded it to make Indonesian language more accessible to all ethnics and made it easier to be typed using QWERTY keyboard.

    • @thiya4627
      @thiya4627 Před 6 měsíci +13

      not even indonesian itself know this haha most don't. i was so shocked when learned that bebek and lele use two different e like what.... it sounds same.....

    • @ucupzja
      @ucupzja Před 5 měsíci

      Wow dude!! I just realized it 😂

    • @melissabloom8747
      @melissabloom8747 Před 5 měsíci

      What do you mean they use different "e"? W-what do YOU mean???? Bro, I'm scared. I'm Indonesian and I don't get how they're different@@thiya4627

    • @jigyjigy9182
      @jigyjigy9182 Před 15 dny

      Yes true. the amazing is, even you use wrong "e", other people still know what you want. So, don't worry.

    • @nurauliaerwin9777
      @nurauliaerwin9777 Před 3 dny

      I only know 2 e sound. What is the other one that has been removed?

  • @francoadapon7175
    @francoadapon7175 Před 6 měsíci +60

    As a Filipino, I also get the pronounce wrong on the word kumukutikutitap (twinkling). But I think there is a hard Filipino word missing. This word is called nakakapagpabagabag or (worrisome) in English. I lot of us filipino's is having a pretty hard time trying to pronounce this word 😆.

    • @sundaemix-in70
      @sundaemix-in70 Před 6 měsíci +12

      iniisip ko baka sya mismo eh nabubulol kaya di nya sinabi hahahaha

    • @Haunt888
      @Haunt888 Před 6 měsíci +7

      nakakapagpabagabag means something that makes you anxious, worrisome is nakapag-alala

    • @junjunagbayani4792
      @junjunagbayani4792 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Oh they should do tongue twisters, like pitumpu't pitong puting tupang patong-patong kasama ang tupang ina 😅

    • @darkmoney7762
      @darkmoney7762 Před 5 měsíci

      No need for nakakapagpabagabag. "Panlilinlang" can be harder to pronounce lol.

    • @KhoaTran-md5ou
      @KhoaTran-md5ou Před 5 měsíci +1

      just look at this make me worry about who created this word o-o

  • @princejowerthuerta
    @princejowerthuerta Před 3 měsíci +1

    If you want to learn to read Tagalog(Filipino), I recommend practicing reading the abakada chart which is basically an indiginized or simplified Latin alphabet adapted for Tagalog.
    Once you know how to pronounce the vowels and make the sound of the consonants it would be very easy as Tagalog is just pronounced the way it is written.

  • @duongtran2248
    @duongtran2248 Před 8 dny +1

    I'm native Vietnamese, and here is a fun fact about our language. So the girl in the video, although I'm not so sure which province/city she comes from, she clearly comes from the south. And we the south people don't exactly pronouce some syllables. The "sữa chua" for example, we say "xửa chua" instead like she did in the video. Same situation happens all along the country so some elderly, mostly the uncles and the grandfathers, can recognize your exact hometown by your voice😂

  • @hamdanyuwafi7445
    @hamdanyuwafi7445 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Violin is so confidence to speak in english, i like it.

  • @aburn9891
    @aburn9891 Před 6 měsíci +22

    In Thai, Karaoke in that context is used to mean romanization. So whne Thai people say "Oh can you just type in Karaoke" they mean that instead of trying to type out the word using Thai words, just type it with latin. One thing I constantly notice about all these channels, is they always fail to put the correct romanisation and the structure or word doesn't make sense and then they expect foreigners to pronounce it. Like Temmiie is just reading the Thai word of course, but if I didn't see the Thai word then I also would have no idea how to say it. I hope they work on this and improve it for next time.

    • @ItsPForPea
      @ItsPForPea Před 6 měsíci +2

      They use the transliteration system used by Google Translate, which is a system to map thai scripts to Latin scripts one-to-one, it does NOT care about pronunciation AT ALL so it is useless to be used in these kinds of videos. I really hope they do more research on this and use other system instead, like Paiboon or RTGS, or better yet, use IPA for all languages.

    • @thiya4627
      @thiya4627 Před 6 měsíci +1

      yeah the translation sometimes is straight up wrong. it's been like that. looks like they don't really put any effort

    • @HudaefCares
      @HudaefCares Před 5 měsíci

      I love that when she said "Karaoke", the one who immediately reacted was the Filipino.
      Filipinos REALLY love their karaoke lol

  • @gaijinph
    @gaijinph Před 5 měsíci +2

    Some of my best buds in my training and stay in Japan were Thais...and their words are so hard...even their names. Most of them don't speak English so we use Japanese to communicate.

  • @TortangTalong5899
    @TortangTalong5899 Před 6 měsíci +16

    Filipino here. I was expecting they will include nakakapagpabagabag (worrisome in English) as hardest Filipino/Tagalog word since even some of the Filipinos find it difficult to pronounce. Kinakailangan and Kumukutikutitap isn't that hard tho.

    • @emmavu09
      @emmavu09 Před 6 měsíci +1

      It’s hard even with Filipinos but very straightforward you just have to read it by syllables and in right intonation but it’s true that the “ng” in kinakailangan is very hard to pronounce especially with English speakers ..

    • @moonstar948
      @moonstar948 Před 6 měsíci

      I was looking forward for this!!
      Everytime i remember this word it takes me so LONG to pronounce and it’s always not a perfect pronunciation.

    • @meodrac
      @meodrac Před 5 měsíci

      then I'd say they should have had "nangangailangan" instead@@emmavu09

    • @HudaefCares
      @HudaefCares Před 5 měsíci

      There's a song (Sana by Gagong Rappers) where the lyrics go "Nakakapagpabagabag, kumakalabukab. Sa damdamin ko kasi ako sayo ay in love."
      I memorized that song years ago so I can in fact say "nakakapagpabagabag" without batting an eye, and I'm proud of it. 😤
      The key (for me) is to cut it to 2 parts, "nakakapag" and "pabagabag."

    • @jigyjigy9182
      @jigyjigy9182 Před 15 dny

      I do believe there are/is other most/more difficult word(s) for each language. The director probably choose not so difficult word, so the panel still have chance to spell it (so not embarrassing them too). And make less negative effect for people who interested learning the language(s).

  • @maikuj
    @maikuj Před 6 měsíci +10

    "kinakailangan" means needed, like when needed (or kapag kinakailangan). Then "mahalaga" in Filipino means important, "kahalagahan" means importance, "halaga" means value.

    • @StrawberryMilkkTeaa
      @StrawberryMilkkTeaa Před 6 měsíci +3

      Exactly! Unfortunately, it seems the Filipino representative they've chosen for this video is not very knowledgeable in her own language, lol.

    • @genrerationx
      @genrerationx Před 6 měsíci +1

      She said "important" which is totally different lol

    • @agung_bimantaraputra
      @agung_bimantaraputra Před 6 měsíci +3

      Ohww. Halaga is very similar with "harga" in Bahasa Indonesia which means Price.

    • @kzm-cb5mr
      @kzm-cb5mr Před 6 měsíci

      @@agung_bimantaraputra yes halaga means price in Tagalog as well... in some dictionaries, it was also written halga.

    • @samwan1558
      @samwan1558 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@agung_bimantaraputra"Mahal" and "mura" also mean the same in Indonesian and Tagalog...

  • @tvcolour7663
    @tvcolour7663 Před 6 měsíci +7

    it's fun, makes me smile when i look them all, thanks...

  • @tornedsky
    @tornedsky Před měsícem +1

    I like violin’s personality so much! inilah yang dibutuhkan untuk mempresentasikan indonesia dengan baik~

  • @barneyDcaller
    @barneyDcaller Před 5 měsíci +5

    They should try Filipino word "PINAKANAKAKAPAGNGITNGITNGITNGITANG-PAGSISINUNGASINUNGALINGAN".. that means a lie that makes someone in rage

  • @kylaxiii
    @kylaxiii Před 6 měsíci +16

    8:25 "Sữa chua" means Yogurt. But if you guys speak like the American girl at 8:45, it would sound like "Sữa chùa" which literally means "Milk temple" (Yeah, it doesn't make sense 😁) but figuratively a.k.a slang, "Sữa chùa" means "Free milk" 😁.
    At 9:09, when the Filipino girl said the word, she actually broke the noun "Yogurt" into 2 meaning words mean "Jellyfish Sour" (might be a food name but doesn't really make sense).
    Just some funny information from native Vietnamese if you guys interested.
    Also love seeing international friends try to speak my mother tongue 💚.

    • @yumyumlolly
      @yumyumlolly Před 6 měsíci +4

      As a Vietnamese, I always use da ua instead. I was thinking what is sửa chua lol

    • @kylaxiii
      @kylaxiii Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@yumyumlolly Yeah, I used the word "Yaua" a lot at my hometown. It's "Yaourt" in French 😊.

    • @AzianRogue
      @AzianRogue Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@kylaxiii Imagine if they had 3 vietnamese peopl up there with the 3 main dialects, Northern, central, and southern. They would all be confused.

    • @kylaxiii
      @kylaxiii Před 2 měsíci

      @@AzianRogue Yes, they sure did

    • @AzianRogue
      @AzianRogue Před 2 měsíci

      @@kylaxiii Wtf are you talking about? No they didn't.

  • @MinhNguyen-ff6xf
    @MinhNguyen-ff6xf Před 6 měsíci +10

    Try nghiêng ngã, ngoằn ngoèo, bâng khuâng… these are much more difficult

    • @thienloi01
      @thienloi01 Před 6 měsíci +2

      thẳng thắn, ngượng nghịu, khuya khoắt, khúc khuỷu, nguyệt thực or thổ nhưỡng học

    • @qu.andoiz
      @qu.andoiz Před 6 měsíci +5

      Nghiêng ngả, not nghiêng ngã 😂

  • @adeyudistira
    @adeyudistira Před měsícem

    some word with e, Indonesian often prenounce e is like é. For example the e on Rosé from blackpink, we used to have é in the olden days to differentiate how e and é sounds but now we just normalize using e but sometimes different sound, so for those who learn Bahasa they will often make mistake just because they don't know how or when to use the e sound or é sounds.

  • @somebody8215
    @somebody8215 Před 5 měsíci +16

    As thai i am sad that there is no กรุงเทพมหานคร อมรรัตนโกสินทร์ มหินทรายุธยา มหาดิลกภพ นพรัตน์ราชธานีบุรีรมย์ อุดมราชนิเวศน์มหาสถาน อมรพิมานอวตารสถิต สักกะทัตติยะวิษณุกรรมประสิทธิ์ In this video 😞😞😞😞😞😞😞😞

    • @juicyjannie
      @juicyjannie Před 2 měsíci

      I bet the girl in the video doesn't even know the full name of Bangkok. seeing that she doesn't understand that kom doesn't mean 30

  • @Withjoyfulsenescence
    @Withjoyfulsenescence Před 6 měsíci +39

    I thought they’d do :
    Nakakapagpabagabag for Tagalog, but maybe that’s a good thing coz that’s a tongue twister even for Filipinos.

    • @user-qj6tw5vp5h
      @user-qj6tw5vp5h Před 3 měsíci +1

      That’s what im expecting her also to say 😅😅

  • @derbdep
    @derbdep Před 6 měsíci +10

    The Filipino examples were a bit lame. I would have chosen "Nakakapagpabagabag" (nerve wracking)
    and "pinakamakapangyarihan" (most powerful).
    one that can trip most foreigners up is "ipinanganak" (was born). they tend to get tongue twisted between the na and nga, and pronounce it "ipinganangak" or "ipingananak" when asked to say it at speed especially with "ako" (me). this sentence will trip many up for sure (probably except Indonesians and Malays): "ipinanganak ako sa ibang bansa". say it quickly 3 times :)

    • @MrJeszam
      @MrJeszam Před 6 měsíci +1

      Eh di ikaw nalang po mag representa.

    • @derbdep
      @derbdep Před 6 měsíci +4

      sureeeee glaadlyyyy ✨⭐ kung gusto nilang tao na kamukha ni David Yuhico then lessgoo. alam tayong lahat na marami ring mas mabuting pilihan as tongue twisters sa Tagalog than "kinakailangan" at "kumukutikutitap" 💁‍♀️ and for your info, hater; I'm not even a Tagalog. so you can stop with the sarcastic "po". I'm allergic to crabs like you.

  • @a.thomas6317
    @a.thomas6317 Před 5 měsíci

    In the Thai language, both unaspirated and aspirated Ts and Ps exist. When transliterated, Thais generally add an H after T or P. So it's 'ta' (first tone) = eye, and tha (3rd tone) = if; 'pla' (first tone) = fish, and 'phad' (2nd tone) = stir fry or sautee. That's why the famous Thai-style stir-fried noodle dish is transliterated as 'phadthai'.

  • @callsignayrus4805
    @callsignayrus4805 Před 4 měsíci

    there's a road in Bandung, Indonesia called ciumbuleuit. try it.

  • @dinamakan
    @dinamakan Před 6 měsíci +17

    A small tip for non-Indonesian speakers who struggled to say the 'ng' part, it's like the 'ng' in language or English, but the placement can be either at the beginning, middle, or end of the word

    • @29457
      @29457 Před 26 dny

      It applied on filippino

  • @kzm-cb5mr
    @kzm-cb5mr Před 6 měsíci +6

    I've met Indonesians who can speak Tagalog before, they're definitely good, arguably the best ones I've met.

  • @ryantang1460
    @ryantang1460 Před 5 měsíci

    I love it when people talk malay or Indonesian it’s fun to see them struggle

  • @BCOG1691
    @BCOG1691 Před 5 měsíci

    i love their interactions.

  • @hovengutierrez2914
    @hovengutierrez2914 Před 6 měsíci +12

    The indonesian pronouncing the tagalog words sounded to me like a
    Accents here in phil. Cos alot of people here tagalog is not their mothertang.. tagalog would be 2nd or 3rd languange or no tagalog at all..

    • @kunderemp
      @kunderemp Před 6 měsíci +3

      We understand. Most Indonesian speak Indonesian as their second language. For example, my parents first language is Javanese and Indonesian became their second language. Vio, the Indonesian girl, has hokkien as her first language.

    • @oktaviandr
      @oktaviandr Před 6 měsíci +6

      ​@@kunderemp IMHO, when I heard a Tagalog speaker say something in Indonesian. It really sounds like a person with a Banyumasan-Tegal or Ngapak accent (Javanese).
      And yeah, my first language is Manadonese, my second language is Sundanese, and Indonesian is my third language.

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      @@oktaviandr fool 🇵🇭=🇲🇾>>>>>>>🇮🇩🤢

  • @sundae3756
    @sundae3756 Před 6 měsíci +17

    In Thai, "ใครขายไข่ไก่" (kʰraj kʰǎːj kʰàj kàj), meaning "Who sells chicken eggs?" can indeed be challenging for foreigners.
    Temmie's suggestions in the video might highlight words many Thais mispronounce in their daily lives (including her). but good effort Temmie! 👏

    • @4rg3s
      @4rg3s Před 5 měsíci

      Lol it's like "Un ver vert verse un verre à l'envers vers un verrier en vair vers Anvers" in French

    • @somchaisaelee328
      @somchaisaelee328 Před 5 měsíci

      ยังดีที่พูดช้า (เทียบกับหลายประเทศในโลก) แต่พูดแล้วเหมือนเป็นโควิด

    • @somchaisaelee328
      @somchaisaelee328 Před 5 měsíci

      @@4rg3sLuckily, not a normal day sentence.

  • @Ophelialovessu
    @Ophelialovessu Před 29 dny

    Kumukutitap 🎶🎶🎶 kikindak kukurap mga mataaa

  • @AdnanDanipagieh-gl8hh
    @AdnanDanipagieh-gl8hh Před 5 měsíci +1

    Ka ra kada kung~ Kalah ngagantung?
    Men bal ngango senal, saatos kitu ningali snetron di inosar

  • @kyh_jhae4191
    @kyh_jhae4191 Před 6 měsíci +11

    Found the Filipino the easiest because it is usually phonetic until ng entered the group AHAHAHAH

  • @henri191
    @henri191 Před 6 měsíci +50

    A tongue twist with each language would be good , especially see the lady of US trying to pronounce 😂

    • @lylelaney8270
      @lylelaney8270 Před 6 měsíci +2

      They already made a tongue twister video.

    • @silent2163
      @silent2163 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Then try saying NAKAKAPAGPABAGABAG fast and thrice 😁 it means heart-pounding in Filipino.

    • @IHaveAFatherButHesAbroad
      @IHaveAFatherButHesAbroad Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@silent2163yay

    • @moymoythehappymonkey3155
      @moymoythehappymonkey3155 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@IHaveAFatherButHesAbroadif you want to say Hi in Filipino, you say " IKINAGAGALAK KO PONG MAKILALA KO KAYO". 😂

    • @moymoythehappymonkey3155
      @moymoythehappymonkey3155 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@silent2163I think you mean MAKAPAGBAGBAGDAMDAMIN.😅

  • @splitatorium
    @splitatorium Před měsícem +2

    Every Filipino knows the hardest word in our vocabulary is "NAKAKAPAGPABAGABAG"

  • @rosshaikenleonen1416
    @rosshaikenleonen1416 Před 12 dny

    I noticed that for Filipino/Tagalog, the hardest word to pronounce for foreigners is "mga". This one is used a lot as well during casual conversations. It's a word that signifies that something is plural. basically the same function as the suffix -s in most plural forms in english language, but this one comes before the word. For example "ang libro" - "The book"; "ang mga libro" "The books".

  • @qu.andoiz
    @qu.andoiz Před 6 měsíci +83

    🇻🇳 The words in this video are quite easy to pronounce. Below are some words that are really difficult to pronounce for even native Vietnamese speakers:
    - Nguyễn /ŋwiən˧ˀ˥/ - a common surname for 40% of the Vietnamese population.
    - Nguyệt /ŋwiət̚˧ˀ˩ʔ/ - moon
    - Nguyện /ŋwiən˧ˀ˩ʔ/ - pledge, vow
    - Khuya /xwiə˧˧/ - late at night. I have seen many Vietnamese people pronounce this word as “khuê” /xwe˧˧/
    - Khuỷu /xwiw˧˩˧/ - elbow; bend. Some Vietnamese people pronounce it as “khỉu” /xwi˧˩˧/
    - quặt quẹo /kwat̚˧ˀ˩ʔ kwɛw˧ˀ˩ʔ/ - frequent illness, emaciated and atrophied
    - Ngặt nghẽo /ŋat̚˧ˀ˩ʔ ŋwew˧ˀ˥/ - laughing so much that whole the body tilted. Northerners often pronounce as “ngặt nghiẽo” /ŋat̚˧ˀ˩ʔ ŋwiew˧ˀ˥/ while Southerners cannot distinguish between the final "t" and "c" sounds and cannot pronounce the "ngã" tone.
    - “Chuếnh” /ʨwəjŋ˧˥/ - Slightly dizzy like when drunk; and “chệnh choạng” /ʨəjŋ˧ˀ˩ʔ ʨwaːŋ˧ˀ˩ʔ/ - In a state of loss of balance, tilting, wobbling from side to side. These two words are not difficult to pronounce for Vietnamese people but will be difficult for foreigners. However, Vietnamese people often have difficulty spelling and writing correctly. Some Vietnamese people misspell these words as “chuyếnh” and “chuệnh choạng”
    Another word, it's not too difficult to pronounce but more and more people misread it:
    - thuở /tʰwəː˧˩˧/ - when. Vietnamese people tend to replace it with “thủa” /tʰwə˧˩˧/, maybe because pronunciation is easier.

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +1

      🇵🇭🇹🇭🇻🇳🇲🇾🔥💪

    • @thevannmann
      @thevannmann Před 6 měsíci +10

      It's not that Southerners can't distinguish c and t, it's that the word has morphed into the c ending if a word is spelt with a t ending (outside of i and ê, where the change happens in the vowel sound). The hỏi and ngã tones have also merged in the South, though it is true that the ngã tone of the North is quite weird and hard to pronounce for many Southerners. Words that end in át ắt ất ét ót ốt ớt út ứt become ác ắc ấc éc oóc (long o) ôốc (long ô) ớc úc ức in the South. However, ết and ít preserve the final t but the vowels change into ớt and ứt. The same thing happens with -n endings. án ắn ấn én ón ốn ớn ún ứn become áng ắng ấng éng oóng (long o) ôống (long ô) ớng úng ứng in the South. Similarly, ến and ín preserve the final n but the vowels change into ớn and ứn.

    • @ravenscarlet7749
      @ravenscarlet7749 Před 6 měsíci

      “Chuếnh”?? Is it “chếnh” or “chuếnh”?? Did my primary school teacher teach me wrong? Or it’s the old way of spelling that word? Being a native speaker for over two decades, never see that spelling before.

    • @qu.andoiz
      @qu.andoiz Před 6 měsíci

      @@ravenscarlet7749
      There are “chếnh choáng” and “chuếnh”. There aren’t “chuếnh choáng” anh “chếnh”.

    • @ravenscarlet7749
      @ravenscarlet7749 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@qu.andoiz my dear friend, I couldn’t find that word standing by its own in any dictionary. Could you maybe provide me any material that used the word “chuếnh”?

  • @humble_integrity
    @humble_integrity Před 6 měsíci +7

    vietnamese has 7 tones including those found in cantonese (6) and mandarin (4), thai, camboedian and sounds from indonesians languages... you're going to tell me that vietnamese is EASIER than korean which doesn't even have single tone??? there's no way in hell japanese or korean is harder than vietnamese. even the CHINESE people who can speak vientmaese fluently say vietnamese is harder than their language. korean, chinense, and japanese are only harder written... but the spoken aspect is always more important

  • @ryemiranda6800
    @ryemiranda6800 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Challenge 😈:
    Try to pronounce this word in Tagalog:
    Nakakapagpabagabag
    Or if you want something challenging try the extended version:
    Pinakanakapagpapabagabag-damdamin

  • @idtyu
    @idtyu Před 3 měsíci +2

    The most difficult to pronounce : Bangkok's full name

  • @rjfaye05
    @rjfaye05 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thai is probably one of the hardest language in Asia.. I am not Thai but seeing job postings that can speak and translate Thai languages pays a lot so I would say it is the hardest language to learn lol! 😅

  • @real_ism4636
    @real_ism4636 Před 6 měsíci +3

    4:14 กรกฎาคม(Krkḍākhm) is mean July✅ not June❎. June means มิถุนายน(Mit̄hunāyn)
    ("khm" is mean 31 days and "yn" is mean 30 days)

  • @ianskiedreymon5427
    @ianskiedreymon5427 Před 4 měsíci +3

    OMG THE LAST WORD IS VERY FUNNY IN THE PHILIPPINES LU-LU-IN 🎇🎆🎇🤣🤣🤣

  • @WutipongWongsakuldej
    @WutipongWongsakuldej Před 5 měsíci

    I think it'd would be weird if some say their language is hard to pronounce. They learned that the first thing since even they remember anything. The diffcult part usually comes from learning the second language after their own.

  • @Maryann1722
    @Maryann1722 Před 3 měsíci

    Better than important, it's necessary (kinakailangan).

  • @danielnlumbantobing
    @danielnlumbantobing Před 6 měsíci +4

    One of the hardest words to pronounce in Indonesian is “ngengat”

  • @schrodinger_kot
    @schrodinger_kot Před 6 měsíci +3

    many filipino says that bahasa and tagalog are similar is kind of not true, yes it's part of Austronesian languages, but if you hear it in person they sounding like completely different language, it's like if you compare hindi and celtic language, yes they are from the same indo-european root languages but they completely different

    • @gatrakusumahidayat607
      @gatrakusumahidayat607 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Don't say bahasa use Indonesian instead, bahasa means language

    • @AsianSP
      @AsianSP Před měsícem +1

      Actually Indonesian/malay grammar are closer to mainland southeast. Which they are all using SVO order, no tenses on verbs and less particles. Just like chinese as well. While Filipino is the only VSO, also the only southeast asian language with verb tenses with a lot of particle between words. It the most complex grammar in southeast and this is not only apply to Filipino-Tagalog, interestingly across all Ph languages even the chavacano (spanish creole) is VSO.

  • @wanseu-7915
    @wanseu-7915 Před 4 měsíci

    ate girl had mercy on them when she didnt bust out the "nakakapagpabagabag"

  • @ryhnhfdz
    @ryhnhfdz Před 4 měsíci

    as I talk to foreigners as indonesian, mostly who can talk almost flawlessly is spanish people because they have similar pronunciation in the alphabet system as bahasa indonesia

  • @luthfi1742
    @luthfi1742 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Entah kenapa kalau perhatiin violin jadi inget jeongyeon twice, pembawaannya waktu ngomong sama cara ketawanya mirip2 😂

  • @radizanakiz666
    @radizanakiz666 Před 6 měsíci +65

    Here's the thing about Southeast Asia:
    Mainland SEA: tonal language
    Maritime SEA: not tonal language
    That's why both the Indonesian and Filipina talent are easily pronounced each other difficult words

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci +2

      Malaysia has more similar langauge and people to Filipinos not indonesians😂. Indonesians are closer to melanesians/Austroloid

    • @radizanakiz666
      @radizanakiz666 Před 6 měsíci +12

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h suka hati kau je la

    • @spoiledmilk5452
      @spoiledmilk5452 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@radizanakiz666 just an annoying troll, emang gajelas

    • @MikashiTamoto
      @MikashiTamoto Před 5 měsíci +1

      Nagmamataas ang ibang lahi ah. Ano akala niyo sa lahi niyo sa lahi namin Pilipino?

    • @Hasanah-cu3tt
      @Hasanah-cu3tt Před 5 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h eeh malon kasihan lu gak di ajak ....gak pernah ada di acra internasonal perwakilan malon..apa yg mau di wakilkan dari malon gomong ja inggres tu kan bukn bhsa asia tenggra ...eeh setan org indonesia bagian barat tu austronesia klw bagian timur baru melanesia....lu pikir kulit org indosia hnya satu warna banyak setan ada putih kuning sawo mateng hitam manis....kasihan tidak ada temenya malon gk d ajak...lu sereumpunya sama bangla sih rongia juga...lu ngtain kulit org indonsia paling gelap di asia tenggra mata lu buta...

  • @Chiisan.Jinn07
    @Chiisan.Jinn07 Před 4 měsíci

    Should have used “nakakapagpabagabag! Hahaha

  • @miLotsTV
    @miLotsTV Před 4 měsíci

    Yes.. I enjoyed it. And, I learned a lot. Thanks!

  • @justnorj
    @justnorj Před 6 měsíci +6

    Definitely disappointed NAKAKAPAGPABAGABAG is not on Philippines’ list 😢😅

    • @akuto17
      @akuto17 Před 6 měsíci

      Hahaha. Kanina ko pa ito iniisip, dito ko lang pala makikita sa comment section. Kahit ako nabubulol dito. 😂

    • @jyusatsu
      @jyusatsu Před 6 měsíci

      I was lowkey expecting they would try the word but maybe bcoz it's more of tongue twister 😅

  • @mwf181
    @mwf181 Před 6 měsíci +14

    Actually tagalog like sumbawa (One of the regions in Indonesia) language, There is also a dish that has almost the same name but the cooking is the same, we call it singang while the Filipinos call it sinigang 😅

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      Why are indonesians always trying to fit with Philippines? Are y'all not proud of yourselves?

    • @harold8131
      @harold8131 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h who hurt you?

    • @user-zd9cv6wc8h
      @user-zd9cv6wc8h Před 6 měsíci

      @@harold8131 no one. Just one question why are indonesians not proud of their own face, skin, height, genes??

    • @ikhsanramadhans214
      @ikhsanramadhans214 Před 5 měsíci

      @@user-zd9cv6wc8h They are fucking proud of themselves, they just find it interesting that we have a fucking similarity

    • @pad8941
      @pad8941 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@user-zd9cv6wc8h Because the tone of this channel is being friendly between your fellow SEA's folks. Is it too difficult for you to digest?

  • @-nf9vt
    @-nf9vt Před 5 dny

    Since i struggle with foreign languages, I prefer having translators. Immersive translate is the translator i have been using and it is really commendable

  • @yooxmusic_
    @yooxmusic_ Před 5 měsíci

    as an mars people, i think earth leagues was interesting to learn

  • @fatsheet2826
    @fatsheet2826 Před 6 měsíci +3

    The indonesean girl can pronounce it clearly but still sounds foreign. Also the filipino here sounds foreign to me i guess she's from that country for a long time that her accent change a little bit.
    And lastly I love how the thai girl speak korean when she's teaching thai about months

  • @bunny_playzzzzzzz
    @bunny_playzzzzzzz Před 5 měsíci +3

    As a Vietnamese,I love making my friends pronouncing words in Vietnamese like “Nguyen” my last name and they pronounce it like “win” and i laugh so hard seeing my teachers calling my name for attendants 😂

    • @yinfeng1728
      @yinfeng1728 Před 4 měsíci

      Hahahaha kalian semua adalah nguyen county

    • @a.y.102
      @a.y.102 Před 3 měsíci

      Have you ever tried to have them pronouncing Vietnamese words to Google Translate and see how Google Translate would recognise those words?
      Side note: for a fair test, you, as a native Vietnamese, should try speaking those words to Google Translate as well to rule out the cases where:
      - It's the fault of Google Translate for not being able to recognise those words.
      or
      - It's too difficult for even the native Vietnamese to pronounce those words (this second case is unlikely).

  • @fusionfallmaster
    @fusionfallmaster Před 5 měsíci +2

    I'm disappointed that the Filipino word is not Nakakapagpabagabag, which is a tongue twister in itself.

  • @sandro_the_guy
    @sandro_the_guy Před 4 měsíci

    I think most westerners (and even Việt kiều) struggle with one of the most popular Vietnamese word: “nguyễn” - the most popular surename of Vietnamese. They always pronounce it like a two-syllabel word (ngoo-win…kind of), although it’s really just one. Just found out recently that the “ng” and “uyên” sounds are actually tricky for foreigners.

  • @bloodlustfulincubus440
    @bloodlustfulincubus440 Před 6 měsíci +7

    While I am primarily of African-American descent, my family history is such that I also have some Indonesian, Thai, Filipino, and Vietnamese ancestry (mostly through my South African Coloured ancestry, but that is neither here nor there), and so hearing the language of some of my "distant" ancestors makes me feel happy, like I got a small linguistic glimpse into their world (well, sort of, since my Southeast Asian ancestry is from around the mid-19th century, maybe slightly earlier, so of course, A LOT of differences when compared to modern words lol)

  • @xsystem1
    @xsystem1 Před 6 měsíci +19

    The filipina should take the "nakakapagpabagabag" word for the challenge 😆

  • @mukhlisrachman3908
    @mukhlisrachman3908 Před 5 měsíci

    Many non Indonesian difficult to pronounce longword with prefix and postfix such as; Perikemanusiaan, ketertarikan, permusyawaratan, etc.

  • @KonyiciJarimi
    @KonyiciJarimi Před 17 dny

    You should give Bertanggungjawab 😂

  • @goldenashstar5182
    @goldenashstar5182 Před 6 měsíci +6

    "Krkdkhm" It's not June It's July lol