🇩🇪 what i wish i knew BEFORE learning german

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • learn german, they said... (no they didn't.) either way, i love that i'm absolutely in way too deep with german and i wouldn't have it any other way. if you're thinking about learning german or have already started, let me know in the comments what have been your biggest humps to get over with the language! wishing all of you health and well-being, inside and out. ❤️
    🌟 thanks so much to Lingoda for sponsoring this video and for helping me in my german learning journey! start learning languages with Lingoda: bit.ly/ElysseSpeaks
    -----
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    ko-fi.com/elyssespeaks
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    💌 social media:
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    / elyssespeaks
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    / elyssedavega
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    💌 about me
    Hellooo! My name is Elysse, I’m from the USA and I study digital media production. I have an undying passion for linguistics, language learning, and all the beautiful experiences it has brought into my life ♥️ I hope you enjoy my videos about my journey in language learning, as well as diaries about my travels and life as a curious tree-climber.
    💌 FAQ
    How old are you?:
    20 years old
    What languages do you speak?:
    English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, American Sign Language, and now Chinese (all at varying levels!)
    Where do you live?:
    The United States, in the south.
    #learngerman #polyglot #deutschlernen

Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @momobauer3838
    @momobauer3838 Před 3 lety +7803

    I'm German and i started to understand the grammar of my own language after learning latin xD

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 Před 3 lety +227

      Das ist der Nebeneffekt...LOL

    • @tamaramorrison9220
      @tamaramorrison9220 Před 3 lety +68

      same :D Especially punctuation rules!

    • @Tawnyeyez
      @Tawnyeyez Před 3 lety +148

      Similar, I'm American but I learned more about English after I started studying French. German was intimidating at first, but I've grown to love it!

    • @pitodesign
      @pitodesign Před 3 lety +116

      Durch Latein habe ich vor allem die Bedeutung diverser Fremdwörter gelernt. :-D

    • @kilsestoffel3690
      @kilsestoffel3690 Před 3 lety +29

      Ich habe die deutsche Grammatik mit der französischen gelernt.

  • @niallsbox8590
    @niallsbox8590 Před 3 lety +5392

    honestly.. the word "doch" changes an argument completely and i am so mad that it doesn't exist in english

    • @willydominiak599
      @willydominiak599 Před 3 lety +100

      what about "yet" and "though"?

    • @lowiqhighping2239
      @lowiqhighping2239 Před 3 lety +451

      @@willydominiak599 well after you say yet or though you need to bring another argument yet with doch you don't

    • @mangleri.191
      @mangleri.191 Před 3 lety +371

      Basically it's the best word for all the ignorant kids who can't argue with you

    • @Sonkh23600
      @Sonkh23600 Před 3 lety +224

      @@willydominiak599 in some cases doch can mean yet or though, but it also has a further use. You can use doch if someone says a negating sentence and you disagree. For example if someone says "Hitler wasn't bad", you could just say "Doch!" meaning "Yes he was!"

    • @_TiredMotherfucker_
      @_TiredMotherfucker_ Před 3 lety +10

      ME TOO

  • @TerranWithCare
    @TerranWithCare Před 3 lety +3112

    German is an official language in more than one country: Germany, Austria, Lichtenstein, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxemburg, etc.

    • @selma3447
      @selma3447 Před 3 lety +130

      In Belgium and Luxemburg they mostly speak French tho

    • @_TiredMotherfucker_
      @_TiredMotherfucker_ Před 3 lety +90

      Semo actually not lol im from Luxembourg and often ppl here just speak luxemburgish... its just a few words that we say in german (english, french, portuguese, ...) bc idk ... its like when u talk in german but u just use an english word instead of an herman word just because we don't actually only talk french all the time ... and when u see someone type in french its mostly bc their french and just live here or bc luxemburger dont know how to write in their own language lol

    • @Janoip
      @Janoip Před 3 lety +12

      @@selma3447 I always thought until this is almost like in Switzerland, until there are several national languages and a mix of languages like Luxembourgish

    • @nothingreal7137
      @nothingreal7137 Před 3 lety +32

      In Belgium is mostly Flemish (similar to Dutch) or French

    • @aksb2482
      @aksb2482 Před 3 lety +47

      I believe that German has the most native speakers of any language in Europe

  • @roydengomes8660
    @roydengomes8660 Před 3 lety +1916

    No matter how kind you are, German children are Kinder.
    At first, I didn't get this joke but when I found out, I laughed till my sides hurt. 😂

    • @graceheart9913
      @graceheart9913 Před 3 lety +27

      ahahdjdjdjsj i just got this after 5 mins lmao

    • @tekoshinjuno4134
      @tekoshinjuno4134 Před 3 lety +7

      @@graceheart9913 ah i don´t get it

    • @graceheart9913
      @graceheart9913 Před 3 lety +79

      @@tekoshinjuno4134 kinder in german means children

    • @tekoshinjuno4134
      @tekoshinjuno4134 Před 3 lety +55

      @@graceheart9913 how did my native german ass not get that, i thought i was about the kinder schokolde debate etc. Thank you grace

    • @graceheart9913
      @graceheart9913 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tekoshinjuno4134 you’re welcome :)

  • @Philippoable
    @Philippoable Před 3 lety +4254

    Everybody gangsta until wenn is introduced

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +310

      ashskdnaldnk this comment

    • @Philippoable
      @Philippoable Před 3 lety +43

      ​@@elyssespeaks :D your delivery on that point was just too fitting not to.

    • @jacobrickayzen2744
      @jacobrickayzen2744 Před 3 lety +24

      Elysse Speaks the way we learnt it in school: ‘wenn ich did Zeit hatte, wurde ich viele Kleidung kaufen.’

    • @indylmc
      @indylmc Před 3 lety +5

      @@elyssespeaks say what?

    • @a.b461
      @a.b461 Před 3 lety +14

      @@jacobrickayzen2744 *hätte, würde

  • @radomori
    @radomori Před 3 lety +3031

    Germans: Look at the english people swapping our word order
    English people: Look at the germans swapping our word order

    • @KD-CD
      @KD-CD Před 3 lety +103

      Spiderman meme

    • @chetaobiefuna2846
      @chetaobiefuna2846 Před 3 lety +6

      Kristyn Clarke YESS

    • @ciaaras3448
      @ciaaras3448 Před 3 lety +3

      😂😂😂accurate

    • @destronger5313
      @destronger5313 Před 3 lety +20

      Wars have started because of swapping the order of words.

    • @eduardobaiz9931
      @eduardobaiz9931 Před 3 lety +27

      Me, a Portuguese native speaker: looks at BOTH languages swapping word order

  • @Tom-ok2vk
    @Tom-ok2vk Před 3 lety +4540

    In german "umfahren" is the opposite of "umfahren"

    • @hy3na739
      @hy3na739 Před 3 lety +153

      facts

    • @ducklingscap897
      @ducklingscap897 Před 3 lety +397

      This is called auto-antonym (or Januswort in german) and it is common in english.
      For example:
      Cleave can mean to cling or to split apart,
      Left can mean "remain" or "leave"
      Dust can mean "to remove dust (cleaning a house)" or "to add dust" (e.g. to dust a cake with powdered sugar)
      Fast can mean "without moving; fixed in place", (holding fast, also as in "steadfast"), or "moving quickly"
      etc.
      Honestly german speakers that think this is special must be bad at english otherwise I really can't explain how someone thinks that is special when you see so many auto-antonyms in the english language.

    • @Tom-ok2vk
      @Tom-ok2vk Před 3 lety +94

      Chiye why so toxic

    • @robertbretschneider765
      @robertbretschneider765 Před 3 lety +165

      @@ducklingscap897 Calm down, its a flat bad joke we like to make, who cares?

    • @leonardocsantos4651
      @leonardocsantos4651 Před 3 lety +89

      @@ducklingscap897 look at me, I'm so smart and know things that I can't even get a joke

  • @elloco9114
    @elloco9114 Před 3 lety +2631

    Thumbnail: *shows German flag"
    Germans: This comment section is property of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland
    Edit: omg thanks for the li... VIELEN HERZLICHEN DANK FÜR DIE DAUMEN NACH OBEN

    • @yonnibasik3781
      @yonnibasik3781 Před 3 lety +12

      Lachflash
      Mal jemand auf english

    •  Před 3 lety +18

      Danke. Wenn ich diese "Ein Volk.." copypasta noch einmal lesen muss, kotze ich.

    • @FeuerblutRM
      @FeuerblutRM Před 3 lety +5

      That's how it works.

    • @pickaxemainiac4805
      @pickaxemainiac4805 Před 3 lety +20

      @ ein Land
      Ein Reich
      Ein Kommentar bereich

    •  Před 3 lety +4

      @@pickaxemainiac4805 netter Versuch

  • @hikaru1675
    @hikaru1675 Před 3 lety +1391

    phony language learner: "you don't need to study grammar to master a language"
    me: *grabs all my grammar books and pets them*

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +130

      deadass

    • @kreiflow6209
      @kreiflow6209 Před 3 lety +74

      @@elyssespeaks I spent a lot of time trying to use the same approach to learning German that I used when I was learning English (which was like 90% just watching How I Met Your Mother and reading novels), but over time I discovered that, although It has helped a lot to be quicker at understanding the language as they speak, it's totally necessary to focus at least to an extent in grammar to be able to speak or write like a human being xD. I don't think you'll be able to reach fluency without focusing on grammar, or at the very least is gonna take a lot more of your time reaching it.

    • @helenemaja0912
      @helenemaja0912 Před 3 lety +13

      @@kreiflow6209 true unless you're learning japanese😋
      I love how little grammar they have

    • @hexwolfi
      @hexwolfi Před 3 lety +10

      Me: _cries in Japanese_

    • @hexwolfi
      @hexwolfi Před 3 lety +32

      @@helenemaja0912 Japanese grammar be like "ah yes, to say 'come in' you must first change 来る _kuru_ to its honorific form いらっしゃる _irassharu_ which you must then conjugate to the irregular version of the continuative _renyoukei_ form いらっしゃい _irasshai_ (means as it's an honorific verb) to which you must add the polite honorific verb ます _masu_ before finally conjugating THAT verb to the imperative _meireikei_ as ませ _mase_ to get いらっしゃいませ _irasshaimase_ which you can then shorten to いらっしゃい _irasshai_ because why the hell not."

  • @elinakristin8085
    @elinakristin8085 Před 3 lety +1025

    German is not only spoken in Germany but also in Austria and Switzerland and there is also a German-speaking part in Belgium!

    • @bloodlake4828
      @bloodlake4828 Před 3 lety +8

      I'm german and didn't know that. Knock on wood or something idk.

    • @Wazkaty
      @Wazkaty Před 3 lety +2

      @@bloodlake4828 not the same roots, but still german

    • @---zx9zf
      @---zx9zf Před 3 lety +81

      600.000 people in france (Elsass-Lothringen) speak german as a first language aswell! People always forget these people!

    • @elinakristin8085
      @elinakristin8085 Před 3 lety +6

      @@---zx9zf yes true! Thanks for reminding me :)

    • @awi1316
      @awi1316 Před 3 lety +61

      Don't forget Südtirol in Italy

  • @GGysar
    @GGysar Před 3 lety +321

    As a German I have a tip for anyone trying to sound like a real German: Open your mouth! That's just my experience but English speaker seem to no open their mouth all the way when speaking, whereas Germans do that quite a bit more. Of course, you don't want to open your mouth as far as possible but not having it almost closed helps to pronounce words like "Schmetterling". Often I feel like english speaker are saying "Schmedderling" instead of "Schmetterling". Oh, and don't be scared. I am a perfect example of a German, who doesn't speak perfect English. Well, I can understand 99.99% of everything, even scientific papers but when I try to speak by myself and make sentences all on my own I feel like a second-grader. xD

    • @sanablue
      @sanablue Před 3 lety +27

      It's kinda similar for me. but I don't really have problems writing in English; I do that for my job all the time. But the moment someone expects me to actually talk to them in English my brain just shuts down and deletes 90% of my vocabulary. I seem to forget words that I used in an email just minutes earlier and I still don't know why that is... the human mind is fascinating and sometimes dumb.

    • @leoaceves2652
      @leoaceves2652 Před 3 lety +10

      @@sanablue same I can't speak another language than spanish :'/ I feel like english speakers are going to make fun of me :(

    • @Splinter4077
      @Splinter4077 Před 3 lety +12

      @@leoaceves2652 Dude are you kidding me? I feel like spanish speakers make fun of me for not speaking spanish! Just kidding, it's all relative my dude. Even if you speak kindergarten level English we'll love you for it :)

    • @nonniperkl6273
      @nonniperkl6273 Před 2 lety +4

      My native language is Finnish. As maybe evident from the fact that I am in comments of this video, I am looking into learning German rn. However, I want to encourage you to talk more in English, nothing else really helps. Conversations are difficult and it is embarrassing to fail but it honestly gets better. And I say this as somebody whose native language has no sentence structure.

    • @ampersandcastle1091
      @ampersandcastle1091 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah lol, I’m from England so if I pronounce Schmetterling in my accent my mouth barely opens and it sounds like Schme’alin’. I definitely struggle with German pronunciation, particularly the ‘r’ sound and remembering to pronounce every letter, us Brits love to leave out our ‘t’s and ‘g’s! I feel like I sound very stupid to every native German speaker

  • @trannysaurusrex7766
    @trannysaurusrex7766 Před 3 lety +567

    I’m german and I just love the language. We literally have a word called „verschlimmbessern“ meaning making something worse, while trying to make it better😂

    • @daadaa6356
      @daadaa6356 Před 3 lety +18

      Hör auf, ich habe erst gerade 'nen Test zurückbekommen bei dem etwa 80% meiner Fehler Verschlimmverbesserungen waren :'(

    • @trannysaurusrex7766
      @trannysaurusrex7766 Před 3 lety +3

      @@daadaa6356 oof 😅

    • @liweijiao231
      @liweijiao231 Před 3 lety

      hello!! May i ask How do native speakers actually learn the german language?? Any tipsssss?? 🥰

    • @trannysaurusrex7766
      @trannysaurusrex7766 Před 3 lety +17

      @@liweijiao231 idk how to break it to you sweetie but we just grow up with it and we have German classes in school with grammar and spelling since like first grade. Idk how to explain the exact technicalities of learning it, because I spoke it since I can remember. But maybe try listening to German songs like „aesthetic playlists“ they’re pretty cool and can help with pronunciation maybe. Other than that you just have to try out apps or websites idk 😅

    • @townshipgamers9235
      @townshipgamers9235 Před 3 lety +3

      Deutsch ist Wissenschaftssprache. I started learning German for awhile its amazing for me . As first i was scared of learning the language. But now i do everyday 10 hours learning everyday. I am in love actually haha 💋🙊

  • @ATRKNGHT
    @ATRKNGHT Před 3 lety +720

    I started learning German a month ago or so. What inspired me most to learn was watching the Netflix original German series called Dark. I highly recommend that show. 10/10

    • @toanminh4159
      @toanminh4159 Před 3 lety +27

      It’s the opposite for me where I tried watching that show cuz I want to learn German but it’s super confusing for me cuz I kept mixing up the characters and the story was kinda hard to follow even when I watched it in English haha. I don’t know if it’s just me.

    • @woish771
      @woish771 Před 3 lety +21

      @@toanminh4159 mate, it isn't just you (guess who did the same) :D the show itself confusing and hard to understand even in your own language, what to say about foreign one, especially when you start from scratch

    • @joshsua19
      @joshsua19 Před 3 lety +8

      Ich bin du 😁

    • @friendy-O
      @friendy-O Před 3 lety +6

      Since I watched that series I haven't felt the same and I am currently in my second week of learning german. It's great so far :D

    • @vambabyx
      @vambabyx Před 3 lety

      Any update on your progress

  • @jkb_h7950
    @jkb_h7950 Před 3 lety +848

    Sale doesn't simply mean 'Verkauf' in German. It's just used for 'Rabattaktionen'(discounts) so it's a lot shorter to just say sale instead.

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz Před 3 lety +70

      Yes, and before they came to the idea that the english word sale would be "cooler" to use people used the word "Schlußverkauf" (Winterschlußverkauf, Sommerschlußverkauf...)or "Räumungsverkauf".

    • @ryanstarlight8018
      @ryanstarlight8018 Před 3 lety +21

      And Germany isn't the only country using that word

    • @PortCharmers
      @PortCharmers Před 3 lety +25

      Sale in english also means "cheaper than usual". Otherwise they don't need to bother putting up signs, it's just safe to assume that shops have things for sale. Else it's called a "museum".

    • @Pronuss
      @Pronuss Před 3 lety +2

      Over the years the number of english words used in german has increased but sale, as far as i remever (I´m 32) was always used in this context.

    • @dannymunch4633
      @dannymunch4633 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Pronuss Not quite, "Ausverkauf" was usually used until the mid to late 90s. But that also depends on the location, pretty sure that big cities started to use "Sale" earlier than smaller cities.

  • @passerbypassinbi
    @passerbypassinbi Před 3 lety +512

    "German is the forefather of English"
    Not quite. German and English share a common forefather, but people are often confused when they're grouped into what's referred to as the "Germanic Language Family"

    • @matthewstuckenbruck5834
      @matthewstuckenbruck5834 Před 3 lety +31

      Though because of extensive contact between english and the norman french who ruled england in the 1000-1300 century, german tends to be closer to the original proto-germanic than english.

    • @Sonkh23600
      @Sonkh23600 Před 3 lety +16

      Well old English is basically the same as old German. I think that's whats meant by "forefather"

    •  Před 3 lety +21

      They are both Western Germanic. Like Dutch is Western Germanic. But English unlike German didn't have two consonant shifts. The deeper south you go the more pronounced those are. Example. The th existed in Western Germanic but became a dh and finally a d. That's why it's "thirst" in English but "Durst" in German. P became f (ship - Schiff) and so on.
      English had other influences, like Norman French...

    • @peterkoller3761
      @peterkoller3761 Před 3 lety +11

      @@matthewstuckenbruck5834 you are absolutely right. English is a Germano-Norman Creole (showing all the processes of creolization, like simplification of syntax and morphology etc) while the structure of German has always remained Germanic.

    • @valstrom7672
      @valstrom7672 Před 3 lety +3

      German speakers will have an easier time trying to understand old English than English speakers will

  • @BlitzWalkthrough
    @BlitzWalkthrough Před 3 lety +230

    As a native German speaker, the use of anglicisms really grinds my gears when there is a perfectly fitting German word for it. Favorite example: using „feedback“ instead of „Rückmeldung“ or „meeting“ instead of „Besprechung“

    • @user-zw6hf5xl7s
      @user-zw6hf5xl7s Před 3 lety +22

      I 100% agree. It is so frustrating and sad

    • @xjuleyx
      @xjuleyx Před 3 lety +4

      Beide deiner Beispiele haben im Deutschen 3 silben und im englischen 2... deutsche sind gern effizient

    • @nuray4774
      @nuray4774 Před 3 lety

      can you help for learning speaking with me

    • @gustavschnitzel
      @gustavschnitzel Před 3 lety +1

      @@nuray4774 do you still need someone?

    • @nuray4774
      @nuray4774 Před 3 lety

      @@gustavschnitzel hi yesss 🥺

  • @emilyanstett2113
    @emilyanstett2113 Před 3 lety +1563

    „Nobody speaks German except for Germans“- what about Austria and Switzerland😂

    • @BrandonClaridge
      @BrandonClaridge Před 3 lety +188

      Also add Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, easternmost Belgium (Eupen), South Tyrol in Italy, and Upper Silesia in Poland (near Opole) to that list as well. German is the major language in Central Europe, although several historical events in the first half of the 20th century (consequences of the World Wars) did dramatically trim back the eastern extent of Germans and the German language.

    • @littlemermaid8638
      @littlemermaid8638 Před 3 lety +76

      Yeah that was kinda rude... Sorry but for a learner of this language it's so ignorant.

    • @sro00
      @sro00 Před 3 lety +28

      I was also once in Denmark and I swear every person I met there could speak german...some only knew the basics and some were really good

    • @Kasi1899
      @Kasi1899 Před 3 lety +20

      In parts of Namibia there are still German Street signs...

    • @denises.5447
      @denises.5447 Před 3 lety +35

      It's literally the most spoken language in the EU and second in Europe after Russian

  • @kindateia
    @kindateia Před 3 lety +608

    I feel like being Russian native made me absolutely indifferent about all weird things in other languages. Like, I don't even care anymore, I just deal with it. You're on the plane? Well God be with ye, lad, guess I'll take it.

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +105

      LOLLL this one got me! yeah at a certain point you kind of get so frustrated with the "why" and you're like sure i trust you

    • @dr.dirkfranke9563
      @dr.dirkfranke9563 Před 3 lety +12

      "alles stob mit Gekreisch von dannen" three weird German words in one sentence :o)

    • @Josh-ht7ci
      @Josh-ht7ci Před 3 lety +7

      ​@@dr.dirkfranke9563 "alles", "mit" and "von" are weird words for English speakers? They're not crazy words imo

    • @dr.dirkfranke9563
      @dr.dirkfranke9563 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Josh-ht7ci "Abschätzig taxierte er sein Gegenüber." I found two more weird words: "er" and "sein" :O)

    • @kindateia
      @kindateia Před 3 lety +2

      @Kenura Medagedara the most useful one I saw is this: "a" stands for "one", "the" stands for "this". Put those instead and figure from there

  • @dauerwerbesendung7045
    @dauerwerbesendung7045 Před 3 lety +141

    The word "deutschify" is pure gold.
    The best anglicism I have heard in ages.
    deutschify deutschify: eindeutschen

    • @princehamdan8826
      @princehamdan8826 Před 3 lety

      Hello
      How are you doing today? Nice meeting you here. I'm prince hamdan I will want to know you more.

  • @nik7266
    @nik7266 Před 3 lety +977

    She: Germans! Please stop using english words
    Germans: Ich denke nicht, dass wir dies in Betracht ziehen werden.

    • @rileychan5380
      @rileychan5380 Před 3 lety +149

      Es hört sich super komisch an wenn deutsche versuchen ohne anglizismen zu reden.
      Weil dann jeder anfängt in sehr gehobenem Deutsch zu reden xD

    • @messorem6140
      @messorem6140 Před 3 lety +16

      Ich stimme zu

    • @emilyschmidt4106
      @emilyschmidt4106 Před 3 lety +32

      @@rileychan5380 sehe ich genauso! Allein wenn man sich Challenges (Herausforderungen xD) anschaut, bei dem keine englischen Wörter gesagt werden, sieht man wie schwierig das ist vor allem für die Jüngeren weil mans einfach nicht gewohnt ist

    • @neptunlp7052
      @neptunlp7052 Před 3 lety +18

      @@rileychan5380 sehr gehobenes deutsch würde ich aber auch mal gerne hören, hört sich bestimmt auch gut an.

    • @charliexayvier6903
      @charliexayvier6903 Před 3 lety +3

      @@rileychan5380 Ja das ist so wahr

  • @damondominique
    @damondominique Před 3 lety +682

    I needed this

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +41

      it's a struggle outchea. also i loved your most recent video on deutsch bb

    • @Bronnybronny
      @Bronnybronny Před 3 lety

      Me 2 I wanna learn so bad. I need to learn Spanish too which hahahaha would be much more useful than German but I’m German and I want to learn my language

  • @bloodlake4828
    @bloodlake4828 Před 3 lety +1836

    Deine Aussprache ist nahezu perfekt.

    • @JustA.Person
      @JustA.Person Před 3 lety +13

      @@unknownunknown-cy3gs lol

    • @bloodlake4828
      @bloodlake4828 Před 3 lety +10

      @@unknownunknown-cy3gs ikr

    • @Jappjap
      @Jappjap Před 3 lety +11

      @@unknownunknown-cy3gs i can't disagree.

    • @karlashmeedavlasta6365
      @karlashmeedavlasta6365 Před 3 lety +6

      @@unknownunknown-cy3gs she actually does.

    • @hikaru1675
      @hikaru1675 Před 3 lety +58

      Ikr the moment I heard her german I was amazed on who natural it sounded :o

  • @jamesmelton7637
    @jamesmelton7637 Před 3 lety +154

    I heard this "German sounds ugly" claim throughout my childhood and assumed it was true. My high school German classes never bore this out, but I still tacitly assumed it was true until reaching college. A bilingual student in a conversation responded to this claim that he felt German was an extremely beautiful language. We Americans all looked puzzled. Then he recited a poem by Rilke (sadly I don't know which) and that was the day I threw this "ugly language" lie in the trash.
    There are no "ugly" languages, only bigoted listeners.

    • @mist3r603
      @mist3r603 Před 2 lety +2

      Have you heard Danish...

    • @mikado_m
      @mikado_m Před rokem +7

      Id say its more with the people that use the language rather than the listeners.. like i am german and nice people have good german but bad people have ugly german.. i dont really know how else to explain it.. but agression is deffinitely a part of it.

    • @keeptaiwanfree
      @keeptaiwanfree Před rokem +2

      no, there definitely are ugly languages or dialects. cantonese REALLY IS UGLY sounding, i promise you. like, objectively ugly. german sounds so pretty to me though

    • @nightynightshade
      @nightynightshade Před rokem +1

      Exactly. I absolutely love the sound of German. I don’t know why is comforts me so much but it does.

    • @jeancena3556
      @jeancena3556 Před 7 měsíci

      No ugly languages? Ok, no need to butter everyone up by saying their language is equal to italian. Some languages are ugly. Vietnamese? Danish? Khoisan?😂🤣

  • @TheMrMe1
    @TheMrMe1 Před 3 lety +256

    I feel a need to set this straight:
    English did not come from German. English and German are both German*ic* languages, which is an entirely different thing.

    • @seriouskano2
      @seriouskano2 Před 3 lety +17

      @@sif_2799 It's like saying that humans evolved from apes. It's misleading at the very least.

    • @seriouskano2
      @seriouskano2 Před 3 lety +3

      @@sif_2799 That's what people usually mean when they say "German", especially non-linguists.

    • @diamacramelbeyrouti1527
      @diamacramelbeyrouti1527 Před 3 lety +2

      @@seriouskano2 that's immediately what I thought when I read this comment

    • @lady6750
      @lady6750 Před 3 lety +2

      English came from North Sea germanic language, which is the North West border of Europe. The frisian, jutes and saxons lived near Denmark.

    • @giannistaz
      @giannistaz Před 3 lety

      @@seriouskano2 We did evolve from an African species thought

  • @lonegamingwolf8239
    @lonegamingwolf8239 Před 3 lety +387

    Actually I consider "Schmetterling" one of the most beautiful German words. It is consonant-driven and yet light at the same time.

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +39

      hehe well said!

    • @davidwright9166
      @davidwright9166 Před 3 lety +11

      For english, I like the word melancholy

    • @TheCovenant2
      @TheCovenant2 Před 3 lety +11

      @@davidwright9166 Thats almost pronounced as the german "Melancholie" ^^

    • @volimNestea
      @volimNestea Před 3 lety +3

      @@davidwright9166 That's a Greek word actually.

    • @SchmulKrieger
      @SchmulKrieger Před 3 lety +5

      Actually Schmetterling is of Czechian. Schmetter for Smetana (Butter or Cream) and -ling as in Earthling.

  • @abesapien9930
    @abesapien9930 Před 3 lety +125

    I don't care if only 3 people in the world speak German. It's beautiful and that's good enough reason for me to learn it.

    • @olasdorosdiliusimilius2174
      @olasdorosdiliusimilius2174 Před 2 lety

      Ja, weil die meisten "Leute" die Deutsch sprechen eigentlich Teil von einem riesigen Monster sind, wie ich!

  • @kevingines4345
    @kevingines4345 Před 3 lety +57

    I am from Ecuador. so my native language is Spanish, but I have a C2 level of English. Right now, I am learning German and let me tell you, German is beating me up good! So many words to learn and very confusing grammar. I am finishing B1 level and I still feel myself like a very very beginner.

    • @raoufezio1239
      @raoufezio1239 Před 2 lety

      May I ask how much time did it take you to get the B1 !

  • @jonassilvapereira7045
    @jonassilvapereira7045 Před 2 lety +20

    4:09 Learning a new language helps us learn our mother tongue. I think it was Wittgenstein who said that. I'm Brazilian, so I speak Portuguese, and when I think about certain words, propositions I use so naturally in my language, those words don't seem to make any sense, so I wouldn't be able to explain why we use this and that word and not another. This reminds me of that phrase said by St. Augustine in his Confessions "What then is the time? If no one asks me, I know; if I want to explain it to anyone who asks me, I don't know." Very interesting. Thanks for the video.

  • @jairva9776
    @jairva9776 Před 3 lety +709

    Schön zu hören, dass jemand unsere Sprache schön findet. :D Leider höre ich oft das Gegenteil :(

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +103

      aw, hör das nicht zu :/

    • @mgpich
      @mgpich Před 3 lety +22

      Also einfach öfter im Dialekt sprechen, klingt schöner und sympathischer, egal welcher Dialekt. Schriftdeutsch ist ja nur eine harte Verkehrssprache ;)

    • @aaarghh2177
      @aaarghh2177 Před 3 lety +37

      @@elyssespeaks Kleine Korrektur: Hör' nicht darauf ;-)

    • @okbelbab
      @okbelbab Před 3 lety +27

      Ich mag Deutsch auch, obwohl Ich Ägypter bin. lolo :-). Ich habe sogar angefangen CZcams video darüber zu machen.

    • @swensandor
      @swensandor Před 3 lety +13

      @@mgpich Was soll denn "Schriftdeutsch" sein? Diese Bezeichnung gibt es überhaupt nicht, jedenfalls nicht in der Sprachwissenschaft und Linguistik. Deutsch - lnguistisch korrekt: die "neuhochdeutsche Standardsprache" ist keine reine "SCHRIFT-sprache", sondern meine Muttersprache. Es existiert in Deutschland keine Diglossie, die gesprochene Alltagssprache und die Schriftsprache sind IDENTISCH (anders als zum Beispiel im Tamil oder Neugriechischen vor 1975). Sie als "Schriftdeutsch" zu betiteln ist recht beleidigend und diskriminierend für uns Muttersprachler und außerdem linguistisch schlichtweg falsch, da keine Diglossie existiert. Dialekt sprechen zu können ist sicher ganz nett - ich liebe mein Frankfodderisch auch -, aber die Standardsprache sollte schon ebenfalls auf muttersprachlichem Niveau beherrscht werden, ansonsten wirkt man schon ein wenig unterbelichtet und außerhalb der eigenen näheren Umgebung versteht einem dann niemand mehr, was für alle Beteiligten recht nervig werden kann :) Ich will gar nicht wissen, wie die Leutchen in Flensburg oder Emden reagieren, wenn ich dort versuche Frankfodderisch zu babbele :D lol

  • @malte1984
    @malte1984 Před 3 lety +86

    Althogh the english word "sale" does translate to "Verkauf" in germen. When it is written on a store it actually means "Schlussverkauf". Like "summer sale" it means that the season ends and therefore all the products are reduced in price to make space for the new collection. so it really is the "end sale", the "Schlussverkauf"

    • @arslantahir6682
      @arslantahir6682 Před 3 lety +8

      And I believe the "Sale" she meant was actually Angebot or Reduzierung. Which are very prevalent in Grocery stores.

  • @kristineb2901
    @kristineb2901 Před 3 lety +37

    I relate so much to this. I'm norwegian and learning german as my third language. I have it in school, and we were allowed to choose between learning french, spanish or german. German was portrayed as the "easy" one, by the teachers, but I don't know why. Almost everyone who took spanish found it easier than those who took german found german.

    • @chrisjames1526
      @chrisjames1526 Před 2 lety +5

      Maybe because Norwegian is a Germanic language.

    • @deerinheadlights7179
      @deerinheadlights7179 Před 2 lety +5

      i guess it depends. I am bulgarian and we had to choose between russian and german as my english teacher liked to say "if you find english easier go for german and if you find bulgarian easier go for russian"... The thing is... "easier" does not mean only the basic skills you will need. When you go to grammar you just see how german would be simpler compared to russian. It may be harder at the start and I just hope it will get better with some time and practice. Still, I hope I will get some more information other than just "intuition"
      But damn it only if I had a choice for french or spanish. They were always before german (the way every noun is written with big first latter just drives me crazy for the moment) to me. I still think about the french in the future though as well as russian. All of them are beautiful languages (not a fan of the spanish out of the fact that it is so much used)

  • @boobsiclesonaplateluv9155
    @boobsiclesonaplateluv9155 Před 3 lety +61

    PLEASE I ASKED MY TEACHER WHEN TO SEPARATE THE VERBS AND SHE WAS LIKE “intuition”

    • @elijahsmall5873
      @elijahsmall5873 Před 2 lety

      Lol

    • @thatlawnmowerguy9
      @thatlawnmowerguy9 Před 2 lety

      @@elijahsmall5873 do you know why Ryan Peterson is awesome?

    • @elijahsmall5873
      @elijahsmall5873 Před 2 lety

      @@thatlawnmowerguy9 Who's that?

    • @Schyshy
      @Schyshy Před 2 lety +5

      as a native german speaker who grew up all of my life in germany and learnt german in school for 13 years I can say:
      I still mix them up almost every time and I'm so annoyed by them that I just always or never separate them lol

  • @Hanmacx
    @Hanmacx Před 3 lety +238

    You can flip the sentence depending what your priority is:
    "Im Winter habe ich mehr Zeit"
    "Mehr Zeit habe ich im Winter"

    • @inshirah7837
      @inshirah7837 Před 3 lety +37

      + Ich habe mehr Zeit im Winter

    • @Hanmacx
      @Hanmacx Před 3 lety +12

      @@inshirah7837
      + Mehr Zeit im Winter habe ich

    • @Gandalf-fe3gw
      @Gandalf-fe3gw Před 3 lety +83

      @@Hanmacx Mehr Zeit im Winter ich habe - Yoda

    • @EldenLord.
      @EldenLord. Před 3 lety +29

      Also ich hab mehr Zeit im Sommer.

    • @TheTenguwarrior
      @TheTenguwarrior Před 3 lety +8

      Ich habe alle grammatischen Regeln aus der Grundschule vergessen, aber "Meht Zeit habe ich im Winter" hört sich für mich falsch an oder zumindest unnatürlich. In dem Fall würde ich eher "Ich hätte mehr Zeit im Winter" sagen. Es kann aber natürlich sein das ich total falsch liege xD

  • @kerehat4446
    @kerehat4446 Před 3 lety +203

    Hey, sehr schönes Video! Zum letzten Punkt, den du angesprochen hast, muss ich auch nochmal etwas sagen - die meisten Leute haben einfach keinen Plan, wie sich deutsch in der Realität anhört 😅 Ich war in der zehnten Klasse als Austauschschüler für ein halbes Jahr in Michigan und am ersten Tag in meiner High School kam ein Typ auf mich zu und wollte voller Stolz etwas Deutsches vortragen, was er auswendig gelernt hatte. Ich war total geschockt, weil er losredete und seine Aussprache total aggressiv klang, so, als ob er Hitlers Redestil imitieren würde. Aber ja, wenn man als einzigen Anhaltspunkt, wie eine Sprache klingt, nur Hollywood-Filme hat, passiert es vermutlich leicht, dass Missverständnisse entstehen. Ich wurde auch oft von Leuten gebeten, ein paar Sätze auf deutsch zu reden, und die meisten waren dann doch sehr überrascht, wie es tatsächlich klingt! 😄 Jedenfalls mach weiter so, freue mich schon auf die nächsten Videos! 👍🏼

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +47

      wow, was für eine verrückte Geschichte 😳 es stimmt, die meisten Amerikaner haben eine sehr geschlossene Idee von der Sprache.

    • @larissast9969
      @larissast9969 Před 3 lety +3

      Es heißt „schockiert“. Das Wort „geschockt“ gibt es eigentlich gar nicht bzw. Ist es falsch.

    • @tiberius8390
      @tiberius8390 Před 3 lety +17

      @@larissast9969 Um ein bisschen klugzuscheissen... geschockt gibt es schon. es ist Partizip II von "schocken" ^^
      www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/schocken
      Wird in der deutschen Umgangssprache sehr häufig eingesetzt.... mehr als der Ausspruch "ich war schockiert" würde ich sogar sagen.

    • @Manie230
      @Manie230 Před 3 lety +6

      TiberiuS jo. Ist ja auch verständlich das man im privaten Leben eher weniger hochgestochen spricht. Ich war schockiert klingt als hätte dir jemand nen Stock in den Arsch gerammt.
      Das wäre so als würde ich sagen: Als mir Justus erzählte das ihm sein Hund weg gelaufen sei war ich schockiert.
      So redet man nicht man sagt da ja eher: Als Justus mir sagte sein Hund sei weg gelaufen war ich geschockt.

    • @kerehat4446
      @kerehat4446 Před 3 lety +5

      Jo also ein CZcams Kommentar ist doch kein deutsch abitur lol

  • @ItsMiireen
    @ItsMiireen Před 3 lety +387

    I mean "umfahren" and "umfahren" are spelled the same, but you pronounce them differently. Also they are the exact opposite of each other.
    One means (basically) hitting someone with your car, the other one is driving around someone.

    • @flagstake
      @flagstake Před 3 lety +45

      There is also "abdecken" and "abdecken" both are pronounced the same but one means uncovering something while the other one means covering something

    • @rayalulu5475
      @rayalulu5475 Před 3 lety +18

      @@flagstake hmm i would rather use Aufdecken rather than abdecken to uncover something

    • @ducklingscap897
      @ducklingscap897 Před 3 lety +8

      This is called auto-antonym (or Januswort in german) and it is also common in english.
      For example:
      Cleave can mean to cling or to split apart,
      Left can mean "remain" or "leave"
      Dust can mean "to remove dust (cleaning a house)" or "to add dust" (e.g. to dust a cake with powdered sugar)
      Fast can mean "without moving; fixed in place", (holding fast, also as in "steadfast"), or "moving quickly"
      etc.
      German people who think this is special are just bad at english...

    • @Serra-Chan
      @Serra-Chan Před 3 lety +5

      @@rayalulu5475 that is simply wrong, for example: "could you clear the table after eating" in German is "kannst du nach dem Essen den Tisch abdecken" and not "aufdecken" that would mean something totally diffrent and is used for something diffrent like " kannst du die Karten aufdecken"/ "could you uncover the cards" and for "setting the table" it would be "den Tisch Decken" or "den Tisch eindecken".

    • @peterkoller3761
      @peterkoller3761 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ducklingscap897 German people that think this is special are just bad in english... /// ....who think... ...bad at English ;)

  • @morumoto
    @morumoto Před 3 lety +2

    I really like you sharing your experience in this personal way. I am actually German and tried posting some German learning the fun way, so was interested to see what's out there. This is really encouraging to watch. Hope there will be more of this online. Keep going!

  • @lauren808
    @lauren808 Před 3 lety +118

    The short hair is gorgeous???? What a queen 👑

  • @nirfz
    @nirfz Před 3 lety +26

    We learned german (native) and english (foreign language) grammar in school. But as soon as i had answered the exams those rules had left my brain. I do get the sentence structure right in both in most cases, but i do it by instinct (how it sounds) more than remembering any actual rules. At some point i was asked by an english teacher in technical school if i would be willing to give coaching lessons to another of her students, and she was quite surprised at my reasoning why i refused. I told her that i could not teach anything usable, as i did the sentence structure and times ect by feel and that is nothing i could teach anyone. So from my perspective: just form a sentence the other way around as in your own language ;-)

  • @marki_pro2323
    @marki_pro2323 Před 3 lety +15

    Nice Video!
    You should try Yarrak sometime it is a very delicious kind of food

    • @ok-lr7ud
      @ok-lr7ud Před 3 lety +10

      Oh yes! thats a very nice opinion!
      Greatings

    • @eliasschote4417
      @eliasschote4417 Před 3 lety +9

      Yes, you should absolutely do that! It is by far my favourite food and I eat it at least 3 times a week

    • @eliasschote4417
      @eliasschote4417 Před 3 lety +8

      Especially at familly reunions

    • @christophschmidt9243
      @christophschmidt9243 Před 3 lety +7

      Hey, Nice Suggestion,
      Its not hard to make it, its easy!
      im german and i love this food so much!
      best wishes, Christoph

    • @marki_pro2323
      @marki_pro2323 Před 3 lety +8

      @@christophschmidt9243 I really like it being crunchy and hot!
      May I ask you how exactly you make them?
      I usually leave them in the oven for a short time and then put some sweets on it

  • @GlobalLocals
    @GlobalLocals Před 2 lety +2

    Great insight! Whenever learning a language, genuine curiosity for the idiom and culture and getting rid of our preconceived ideas are essential aspects of our journey.

  • @hassanalihusseini1717
    @hassanalihusseini1717 Před 3 lety +72

    I love the German language. And I think these anglicisms are only used by a minority of people in Germany, mostly young people. I always tried to avoid them when living in Germany.
    One thing you have said is very right: Germans don't correct you a lot (even then if you ask them to do that), but they are happy when you speak their language, but most of them even come up with very decent English if you are struggling to find the right word. :-) I think in this way Germans are more tolerant than French or Spanish.
    And related to difficulty of learning German: I think for English speakers it probably is more difficult than learning Dutch or French or Spanish, but easier than to learn a Slavic language (as Russian) that has so much declination and so many cases. I do not talk even about languages as Chinese or Thai or Arabic, were there even is not a recognisable vocabulary.
    Thanks for your video!

    • @ellohappy
      @ellohappy Před 3 lety +2

      I think it also really depends where you are when it comes to anglicisms! In Berlin I hear them much more often than I do I Munich. Then you go to the countryside and it’s a whole other world once again.
      Germans never do correct you but I think that’s rather because they don’t know if you’re using der/die/das/dem/den/usw in the spoken language it can be difficult to tell and I think that’s why it’s so essential to learn the grammar from the books. You’ll basically only master it from writing, reading and formal spoken language. I could easily chat with friends without ever getting my genders or cases right- they don’t give a shit and often don’t even seem to notice much. It only bites you in the ass once you do a lückentext ^^

    • @jejo4911
      @jejo4911 Před 3 lety

      Well that true that French people do correct you right away lmao 😂. But there is a lot that are good in English or just a second language (lessons are quite useless, they should change the program seriously ). So when foreigners come, they are like 'if you come to the country you should talk the language' and critic a lot. We even do that between us 🤣.

    • @undeadwerewolves9463
      @undeadwerewolves9463 Před 3 lety

      @@ellohappy oh god that sounds complicated haha

    • @arturodiaz8018
      @arturodiaz8018 Před 2 lety

      Tienes razón con respecto a los españoles , pero con los latinos , estamos más que felices por ayudar con el idioma , saludos brother 👍👍👍

  • @FeinesFabi
    @FeinesFabi Před 3 lety +368

    Naja, die Anglizismen sind schon nervig, aber das Gegenteil ist noch schlimmer: Wenn jemand von Elektropost anstelle von E-Mail spricht.

    • @thiesschroder5587
      @thiesschroder5587 Před 3 lety +39

      Anglizismen sind für mich nur eine Bereicherung für eine Sprache, wenn sie Wörter nicht ersetzen, sondern neue Wörter zu einer Sprache ergänzen.
      Beispiele:
      Gute Anglizismen:
      E-Mail
      Cool
      Internet
      IT
      PC
      Rock (Musik)
      Und andere solcher Sachen. Besonders in der IT Fachsprache gibt es viele davon.
      Unnötige Anglizismen:
      Chillen
      Viben
      Random
      Nice
      Fresh
      Und ähnliches.

    • @carmenmonter1050
      @carmenmonter1050 Před 3 lety +1

      😂

    • @Manie230
      @Manie230 Před 3 lety +16

      Sauerländer chillen finde ich persönlich nachvollziehbar. Random da erwisch ich mich häufig bei kommt vom vielen zocken. Ist teilweise echt schwer sich das ab zu gewöhnen.
      Aber ich nehme an das Anglizismen in der näheren Zeit nur vermehren werden. Ich persönlich benutze schon krass viele. Vor allem beim zocken. Und da ich echt viel in englischen Videos abhänge schreibe ich dem entsprechenden viel auf englisch und vergesse manchmal die Übersetzung von englischen Wörtern ins deutsche. Dann sag ich so was wie: Da kam einfach so total random nen Hund um die Ecke. An statt da kam dann total zufällig nen Hund um die Ecke.
      Und ich glaube das wird nur schlimmer mit den Jahren. Je mehr englisch ich spreche desto schlimmer wird das.

    • @thiesschroder5587
      @thiesschroder5587 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Manie230 passiert mir oftmals genauso. Also auch vom vielen Zocken. Besonders, wenn man viele Leute hat, die aus anderen Ländern kommen. Das nimmt oft und schnell Einfluss auf den eigenen Sprachgebrauch.

    • @zoevoigt3263
      @zoevoigt3263 Před 3 lety +9

      Ne ne ne der echte Deutsche schreibt nen Fax

  • @cheyenne_khn5587
    @cheyenne_khn5587 Před 3 lety +270

    If I wasn’t a German I sure wouldn’t want to learn that language 😂

  • @ReaverEngel
    @ReaverEngel Před 3 lety

    I literally paused right when you pulled out the German grammar drills book!!
    I got it and didn't get too far cause as usual life got in the way of my German practice but I remember within like 10 pages it helped me understand atlewst 2 grammar concepts that had me TOTALLY baffled before then.
    So glad you made me remember that book, trying to get the time to get back into learning again.
    Over the years I've been so broke but I've always put away a little money for German books here qnd there and now have quote the collection of workbooks and stuff.
    Thank you for the awesome video, you got me excited to dig back into my German learning all over again!
    You rock!!

  • @TomWaldgeist
    @TomWaldgeist Před 3 lety +61

    I'm german and I also chose the german equivalents in case there are angliscisms. Not because I dislike English, i just like german as well so I use it when speaking "german". :)

    • @KristinaTravelina
      @KristinaTravelina Před 3 lety +1

      I always find it so similar

    • @faultier1158
      @faultier1158 Před 3 lety +1

      Native English speakers (especially from the US) use so many loan words as well. :D Sometimes it feels like 30% of their words are either French or German.

    • @TomWaldgeist
      @TomWaldgeist Před 3 lety

      @@faultier1158 England was under french crown for a very long time thus the french influence and the german equivalents are just based in the close linguistic relation :)

  • @hierodulamembranacea
    @hierodulamembranacea Před 3 lety +12

    these are really interesting insights for me as a native german speaker. It helps me understand better whats students need to know and where certain problems come from. And yes, german sentence structure is...interesting, to say the least :) thanks for this vid!

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +4

      hahaaaa we found a teacher! i’m glad it could be helpful to you, we’re struggling very much 😂

  • @barbarradevlin9111
    @barbarradevlin9111 Před 3 lety

    With EVERY language, learning grammar is important. I’m so glad you touched on that!

  • @CaffieneMan
    @CaffieneMan Před 3 lety +1

    I want to thank you for this post. I am trying to learn German at age 56, and it has not gone so well. I do nearly daily practice on Duolingo, but struggle with grammar and vocabulary, and not having much opportunity to actually practice speaking in conversations. I am very glad I found you and encourage you to continue with your posts, they are very helpful and encouraging!

  • @matthewsmith6913
    @matthewsmith6913 Před 3 lety +54

    An interesting thing I found with grammar. Is when I started to learn German I barely touched it because I found it really hard at the beginning and a lot of the grammar made no sense so I avoided it and only looked at enough to get me by. But I also used a lot of immersion techniques like watching, reading and listening to things in German as my main method of learning. Infact I currently almost exclusively listen to German music cause I like it so much, and the show Dark is now one of my favourite shows. And through time I found myself starting to use correct structures and grammar without really realising it, although I still made a heap of mistakes. I also found myself starting to think in German. And now I find that when I study grammar, it's relatively easy because it explains what I already half know, I have a large vocab to work with and I have have been exposed to a lot of the language. It's also fixing the majority of the mistakes I was making.
    So I hole heartedly agree grammar is very important to study, but never underestimate the power of supplementing that with immersing yourself in native level content, regardless of how much you understand.
    Also great video it highlighted almost everything I found and discovered when learning German.

    • @Howtogetfluent
      @Howtogetfluent Před 3 lety +3

      Totally agree with this. Grammar makes a lot more sense to "tune up" on the basis of a lot of experience. I still like to get a basic map of a lingo in my head and a core vocab though before I start on immersion....I think it's partly down to a learner's character... I'm a studies, preparer type. Others do better just diving in. We all do have to dive in at some point, though....

    • @ricardopietrobon1222
      @ricardopietrobon1222 Před 3 lety

      I am still learning German, and trying to jump head first into grammar was really confusing. So, i went back and took the input-based learning approach and am now experiencing exactly what you described: grammar clarifies the mechanics of what I’m already doing in a kind of intuitive way. I guess our brains are just programmed to infer language rules without grammar patterns necessarily being concious.

    • @AfroLinguo
      @AfroLinguo Před 3 lety +1

      It was the same for me. I think once you immerse yourself enough in German content, you just know what grammatical structure is correct and cringe once it is used wrongly.

    • @JustSeiyin
      @JustSeiyin Před 3 lety +6

      Dark inspired me to learn German last summer! When she said "It's weird that german is a father language to english and now english influences german" I was like "Alles ist miteinander verbunden"

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před 3 lety +2

      Immersion and mass input is the natural way to learn. That's how we learn our native language.

  • @nicovalarte3265
    @nicovalarte3265 Před 3 lety +6

    i swear to god, i'm getting obsessed with your videos, i mean, i love ur content and ur vibe😩😭

  • @Marunylos
    @Marunylos Před 3 lety +127

    i honestly wouldn't count Deutsch-Rap as german music
    most of it i personally encountered is/was 50/50 german/english or idiots insulting each other in denglish

    • @selma3447
      @selma3447 Před 3 lety +7

      Deutsch und englisch??? Wohl eher Arabisch/Türkisch/Kurdisch/Polnisch

    • @twentypaphnies108
      @twentypaphnies108 Před 3 lety +6

      there's alot of amazing deutschrap or other genres of german music out there, but shirin david definitely isn't one of them

    • @twentypaphnies108
      @twentypaphnies108 Před 3 lety +3

      (only some recommendations i can think of off the top of my head: die orsons (also maeckes' and tua's solo stuff), tj_beastboy, k.i.z. (probably really hard to understand for foreigners tho, since many germans don't even get their lyrics/the satire), older stuff like die ärzte und freundeskreis, marteria, casper, og keemo, goldroger)

    • @twentypaphnies108
      @twentypaphnies108 Před 3 lety +1

      this is mostly rap, and sadly i don't like most of the deutschrap women make (except for some juju songs), but i don't feel entitled to recommend pop artists because i dislike most of it

    • @lucy4103
      @lucy4103 Před 3 lety +3

      Dude Deutsch rap is a crime in my eyes xD

  • @sprachinstitutberlindeutsc8985

    I definitely agree, Grammar is crucial when learning German! Thanks for the video, you have a really interesting outlook!

  • @alternativo537
    @alternativo537 Před 3 lety +129

    German sounds so beautiful to me, maybe I can learn after Italian

    • @alexandratheodoulou2956
      @alexandratheodoulou2956 Před 3 lety +8

      I'm in the exact same situation hehe!

    • @franargen1928
      @franargen1928 Před 3 lety +9

      Saaaame. I'm learning Italian right now, but I have plans for German once I reach fluency in Italian

    • @eloisecastonguay5237
      @eloisecastonguay5237 Před 3 lety +4

      Same here

    • @iRosati
      @iRosati Před 3 lety +11

      I'm in the opposite situation. Lerning Italian after reaching proficiency in German

    • @DaniArt
      @DaniArt Před 3 lety +4

      In my case I’ve learned Italian, and now I’m learning German.

  • @nouran939
    @nouran939 Před 3 lety +28

    I'm Egyptian and I study German at the faculty of languages in Egypt. So German is supposed to be my specialty I'm still a beginner, but to me the hardest part is the inversion because we also don't have that in Arabic and I thought that German was just like English 😅 (stupid me)
    and I would be Fluent easily , because I wouldn't find difficulty pronouncing some letters that some non-German speakers might experience,but it turned out that the pronunciation doesn't determine whether the language is difficult or not.

    • @derarzt4490
      @derarzt4490 Před 3 lety +4

      احلى مسا عليك ي فخر العرب 😅💙🧡

    • @nouran939
      @nouran939 Před 3 lety

      أهلا أهلا 🤣🤣

    • @kencollins1186
      @kencollins1186 Před 3 lety

      I imagine part of the problem is that Arabic has 3 vowels, Spanish has 5, but German is very vowel-heavy with 18 vowels: “long”: AH EH IH OH UH ÄH ÖH ÜH, “short”: A E I O U Ä Ö Ü, plus light schwa (as in bitte) and dark schwa (as in bitter). "Long" and "short" vowels are actually separate vowels: Staat/Stadt; Beet/Bett, bin/wir, and so forth.

    • @tharakir1328
      @tharakir1328 Před 3 lety

      @@kencollins1186 actually, we also have long and short vowels in Arabic

    • @kencollins1186
      @kencollins1186 Před 2 lety

      @@tharakir1328 Thanks. I didn't know that.

  • @hv4285
    @hv4285 Před 3 lety +1

    You've definitely reinforced my decision to learn German. My first tongue is Vietnamese but English took over because I was raised in Oregon, so I figure I should learn another language since I've just turned 25 and it will only get harder. I also smiled when you brought up Nietzsche as he's one of the reason why I wanted to learn German haha

  • @joelmunoz8000
    @joelmunoz8000 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the advice I didn't understand some parts about your german phrases but I'm glad to know about Lingoda and the book, regards!

  • @davidwise1302
    @davidwise1302 Před 3 lety +11

    Having learned German in Southern California, I had similar problems of finding language opportunities as you had in Florida. Plus, I started learning it in high school in 1967, long before there was such a thing as "on-line". Even when video rentals came a long, most of the foreign language movies were in Spanish or French and extremely few in German. I was lucky to find a German book store in Los Angeles and a German shopping center mit einem Kino, neither of which exist anymore (the shopping center still does, but not its Kino). Now the Internet and streaming services (eg, Netflix) offers us language learners so much more opportunity and material.
    Studying grammar is necessary in learning all new languages; it's just that some are a bit more involved. German was almost my first foreign language (I had tried conversational Spanish a few years before, but it didn't take) and I learned far more English grammar in 2 years of high school German than I ever did in 12 years of English. German's intact case system actually makes the language much easier to understand, such that dialogue in movies can be just single words when the equivalent English would require many more words. And having learned about case, I know how totally wrong "with you and I" is.

  • @lisamusterman106
    @lisamusterman106 Před 3 lety +26

    English does not stem from German, however they both have a Germanic ancestor and both derive from West Germanic (as opposed to Danish or other Scandinavian languages for example).

    • @devenscience8894
      @devenscience8894 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you, I scrolled to see if someone else covered this. Both came from proto-Germanic.

    • @verstone2486
      @verstone2486 Před 3 lety

      @@devenscience8894 same

  • @deutschmitpurple2918
    @deutschmitpurple2918 Před rokem

    I really love your all videos. They are so useful for me

  • @lukitsu8258
    @lukitsu8258 Před 3 lety +1

    I just got this in my recommended and I think your pronunciation is awesome

  • @rfishe
    @rfishe Před 3 lety +6

    so inspired by your channel! sending good vibes your way :)

  • @carolgomez3706
    @carolgomez3706 Před 3 lety +30

    German is such a beautiful language😭😭😭 yo amo aprender todos los días algo nuevo del alemán 🥺💗

  • @selahrodgershicks6716
    @selahrodgershicks6716 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for sharing this! I want to learn German to connect with my family and this helped!!

  • @rolandfunk4022
    @rolandfunk4022 Před 3 lety +6

    First of all: You made my day by saying, that German is a beautiful language! 😀 Secondly, I hope you'll have as much fun with learning German as you already seem to have. Great video.

  • @mary97kopylova
    @mary97kopylova Před 3 lety +3

    You have such a nice voice, just can’t stop listening

  • @matheusdelacela3195
    @matheusdelacela3195 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for this, as a Brazilian struggling with German and Italian on his own...

  • @marysak
    @marysak Před 3 lety

    Wow I'm definitely going to watch more of your videos, loved it!!

  • @alexwlf8434
    @alexwlf8434 Před 3 lety

    Ok, so you are AWESOME! I was an exchange student that went Bremen, Germany when I was in High School. I am from Chugiak, Alaska and we exchanged with Gymnasium Vegesack in Bremen. Now I live in Richmond Virginia and want desperately to find native speakers in order to practice my dwindling German skills. I appreciate your video and love your personality. The tips were excellent as well I and just ordered the German Grammar Skills book. I had not heard of Lingoda and look forward to checking that out in between studying for med school and work. Thanks. Keep being awesome.

  • @Qwairy
    @Qwairy Před 3 lety +4

    I learned that german was beautiful from the start...that's why I'm trying to learn it :) I just loved the experience of the small austrian music festival which was my first introduction to the language. I hate not being able to sing songs that I like haha. Thks for the tips!

  • @merik14
    @merik14 Před 3 lety +6

    I am german and I used to hate the language but I regained my appreciation for it. Once you see the art, the complexity and complicity of it and find alle the unique things you can only and solely say in german you will have to admit that German is an art.

  • @chrisvangelder7612
    @chrisvangelder7612 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for this video. I found it both informative and funny. My wife and I moved to Vienna earlier this year and are struggling to learn German; so, again, thank you for this video.

  • @peachfuzz7991
    @peachfuzz7991 Před 3 lety

    I am really impressed by how amazing your pronunciation is!

  • @silviadelafuente6793
    @silviadelafuente6793 Před 3 lety +15

    Du hast viel Recht. Deutsch ist so eine schöne Sprache. 💜 saludos desde México, hermosa!!

  • @Bakingmiles
    @Bakingmiles Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you so much for putting our language into perspective. Our language might not have the flow, rythm or melody that Spanish, French or English have, but it is excellent if you want to sound high-class, as we have so many ways to express the same things without repeating the same words over and over again. There are a lot of options to built a sentence and make that same sentence express sth. entirely different, depending on which word you pronounce the strongest...German can be incredibly rewarding once you have learned it, as it is not easy (Grammar) but really interesting, once you understand the main things. For example we have the option of creating a new word and it is considered a grammatical rule to do so. Once you know that, it gets so much more easy. You will notice, that we use a lot of words and just put 2 words together to form a new one. Example: Tischbein -> Tisch (table) Bein (leg) -> "tableleg" aka the thing a table stands on.... easy, right?

  • @maikensollien6888
    @maikensollien6888 Před 3 lety

    Okay I literally just found your channel, and I absolutely love your style of videos and way of speaking I dunno❤️ I’m trying to learn German because of my boyfriend and his family, and I could relate to a lot you talked about in this video😆 and I’m also studying Chinese and Spanish which is just so funny to me that you mentioned both of these languages in this video😂 I hope 2021 is going well for you!❤️

  • @Tony-ow3if
    @Tony-ow3if Před 3 lety

    Brilliant Stuff !!! Thanks this video is hugely motivational

  • @pumukliszabo1696
    @pumukliszabo1696 Před 3 lety +27

    I"ve been learning german for more than 8 years now, and I'm still not that good at it. Maybe because I learned it in scool, and didn't put a lot of effort into learning for a long time. English came naturally, because we are surrounded with the language, and I listened to a lot of English songs, and watched a lot of videos, movies etc. But it's ture, that finding German resources is way harder, but not impssible. Only lately I started to watch German videos on CZcams, and I already see the progress. Now I'm preparing for the German B2 exam, which I'm going to take in September. In Europe everyone learns German tho, or at least in my country :)
    The German grammar is hard, for sure. But that's, what i like about it. I find the complexitiy of the language beautiful, and I love learning the little details. I have problems with the prepositions too. The sentence stucture is easy for me now, and I really like the 'wenn' sentences, cause I only have to think about the verb and the conjugation at the end of the sentence.
    To the separable verbs part: You separate them, when you conjugate them (so it's not in Infinitiv) and you have a 'Hauptsatz', that means, the verb stands on the second position. Then the prefix goes to the end of the 'Hauptsatz. For example: Ich komme morgen bei dir vorbei.
    When you have a 'Nebensatz, that means the verb stands at the end of the sentence, then you don't separate them: Wenn ich morgen bei dir vorbeikomme, ...
    I've read in a grammar book, that the 'bang' of the german sentence is always at the end in cases like this. That helped me to remember, and understand the structure. I hope this helps. :)
    Goog luck with your German learning journey.
    Also, if i made any mistakes in the comment, feel free to correct them, English is not my native language, and I'm still learning it.

    • @0topon
      @0topon Před 3 lety +1

      Schreib mir mal ein paar Dinge für die du dich interssierts und ich such damit passende deutsche Kanäle für dich raus.

    • @johnrogan9420
      @johnrogan9420 Před 3 lety +1

      SCHOOL

    • @ryanstarlight8018
      @ryanstarlight8018 Před 3 lety

      Madsen is a German rock band. They do most of their songs in German and it's really good :D

  • @catlinboy
    @catlinboy Před 3 lety +65

    I personally wouldn't consider German the 'father language' of English, as they are both descended from a separate language, proto-germanic. And whilst German has retained some details of protogermanic that English has lost, for example grammatical gender and the case system, you can equally point to changes that have occurred in (high) German that haven't occurred in English and some other germanic languages. For example, the high german consonant shift.

    • @sgab
      @sgab Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you! I hear so many people saying that German is the father of English, and it always nags me just a little.

    •  Před 3 lety +1

      catlinboy Dutch too

    • @STFU2142
      @STFU2142 Před 3 lety +3

      So basically your point is that you don't like the historical fact that english derives from german? But why? What's the big deal about that? 🤷‍♂️

    • @teletek1776
      @teletek1776 Před 3 lety +6

      @@STFU2142 No.. Proto-Germanic and German are NOT the same thing. English is a Germanic language. German is a Germanic language.

    • @STFU2142
      @STFU2142 Před 3 lety +1

      @@teletek1776 "Proto-Germanic and German are NOt the same thing."
      No shit, Sherlock!
      I wasn't even talking about proto-germanic or germanic. I was talking about the simple historical fact, that english heavily derives from german.

  • @buggybooze
    @buggybooze Před 2 lety

    I've been trying to learn German lately and this helped, thank you.

  • @robertoa.m.3984
    @robertoa.m.3984 Před 3 lety +1

    You have such a good ear!
    Your pronunciation is superb,
    which brings me back to your singing: go to Berlin, learn how to sing, make a cd of sefardí songs.
    Besides all that, you are so lovely.

  • @linajurgensen4698
    @linajurgensen4698 Před 3 lety +19

    Fun fact: German and Icelandic are the hardest *germanic* languages.
    Also your pronunciation is almost perfect! :0 wow. And thank you that you mentioned the point with anglicisms, I‘m german and I hate anglicisms.

  • @lillysthoughts4402
    @lillysthoughts4402 Před 3 lety +28

    My mind is simple, I see the German flag, I click.

  • @tonidue9317
    @tonidue9317 Před 3 lety

    Wow this was so interesting to watch as a German teacher! Btw your pronunciations is super clean! keep it up :)

  • @humanthedapperfolk8165

    love how you talk of grammar. after spending a semester on Latin, i can confirm that grammar is a MUST with languages. though i think me learning Latin first has made German infinitely easier, based on what i've heard xD

  • @varaidzoguvaza5410
    @varaidzoguvaza5410 Před 3 lety +4

    Forming sentences has been a challenge but I have to remain positive. Viel Erfolg in your Deutsch lernen everyone ✨

  • @GlobetrottingPolyglot
    @GlobetrottingPolyglot Před 3 lety +60

    Totally agree about Germans pretty much always having perfect English. I actually find it so hard to practice with native speakers because of this unless I've met them on an app for learning languages. Usually when I just meet Germans by chance and try to practice, as soon as I mention I'm English they just start speaking perfect English too me. I find it really frustrating because I'm like I clearly need to practice German more than they do English 😂 That being said, I'm obviously happy to help them with their English and speak English for a bit, I just wish they didn't all speak such good English so that I could just practice my German 😂😂

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +15

      exactly... sometimes wanting to practice a european language is a nightmare because they have such better programs for foreign language than in the US! there definitely has to be a switch mid-conversation at least

    • @industriouspolyglot1976
      @industriouspolyglot1976 Před 3 lety +2

      Just sady you’re Russian or Swedish. Problem solved.

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Před 3 lety +9

      @@industriouspolyglot1976 Schwedisch hilft nicht. Wir wissen, dass alle Schwede hervorragend Englisch sprechen. So we switch to English (•‿•)

    • @whattheflyingfuck...
      @whattheflyingfuck... Před 3 lety +11

      germans love being blunt .... just tell us: Auf Deutsch bitte!

    • @suen5006
      @suen5006 Před 3 lety +4

      You have to persist, that's the only way.

  • @lucasjnogueira
    @lucasjnogueira Před 3 lety +7

    1. Sentence inversion exists (0:47)
    2. Grammar is a must-have (1:54)
    3. Others have the same difficulties you have (???) (3:18)
    4. It's more time-intensiv than other languages (4:44)
    5. Anglicism are so prevalent (6:09)
    6. Germans have perfect English (8:53)
    7. German language is beautiful (9:45)

  • @ImageJPEG
    @ImageJPEG Před 3 lety +6

    I’m currently learning German. Actually it’s my first language that I’m learning as a second language. I used to have issues learning definite articles. I’ve been told it’s best to remember the definite article with the noun you’re learning.

    • @isadoraoli6003
      @isadoraoli6003 Před 2 lety

      As a person that is going to start learning german, i'm terrified.

  • @sidedish-potato
    @sidedish-potato Před 3 lety +13

    How much English affects my life: I am from Luxembourg and speak Luxembourgish, German, French and English. My best friend and I talk Luxembourgish with a mixture of many English words like: literally, like, especially, or even whole phrases in English. We talk Luxembourgish but 80% of the time we text in English. My boyfriend and I only text in English but only talk Luxembourgish but it is the same case with mixing Luxembourgish and English. Most of the time we forget Luxembourgish words because English is so present in our lives. Most people my age mix Luxembourgish and English a lot.

  • @FantasyPNTM
    @FantasyPNTM Před 3 lety +82

    I feel like at every turn, German chooses to be as difficult as possible. Adjectives and articles that change depending on the four cases, three classes of gendered nouns, and then a sub class of “weak” and “strong” nouns within those genders... I feel like I’ll be able to hear German soon, but speaking is extremely difficult

    • @AfroLinguo
      @AfroLinguo Před 3 lety +5

      In order to get of hang of all those rules, you need to use them. If you use them in writing and get corrected often enough, you would master them. I did that as I was learning German. I was giving my Teacher everyday, Text to correct and today, I use all the rules automatically.

    • @linajurgensen4698
      @linajurgensen4698 Před 3 lety +1

      True... also that there are so many versions of plural words.

    • @KiraFriede
      @KiraFriede Před 3 lety +1

      But at the same time, adjectives and adverbs are the same. I never grasped what the difference was in english class, I finally got it when we covered it in french class.

    • @jejo4911
      @jejo4911 Před 3 lety +1

      @@KiraFriede I'm French and I don't understand anything ( most of my classmates too). I might be dumb. English was easier 😭

    • @bonedrewd8241
      @bonedrewd8241 Před 3 lety +1

      could you please stop making me feel like an idiot. What you said sounds right but i have no idea, what half the stuff you said means.

  • @aa35dd24
    @aa35dd24 Před 2 lety

    Loved this video!!

  • @gabrielreyes8809
    @gabrielreyes8809 Před 3 lety +2

    German is beautiful - I agree! Its why I started learning it, it is such a beautiful language that I just fell in love with it- Rammstein may have helped too - I only started recently so I do not know much, as I am a native english speaker, I can agree with everything you`ve just said. I am learning it just because I love it and wish to speak it and read it, so I take my time and don`t stress, I just have fun.

  • @GabeSurtos
    @GabeSurtos Před 3 lety +20

    I'm 15 and Brazilian, so I already speak Portuguese and english, and I'm trying to learn german. It is really hard XD. I'm still a beginner in the language, but love studying it. I started learning german because I want to study and live in Germany. Well, wish me luck ;-;

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +5

      força!! 💪 i know you’ll get there someday

    • @GabeSurtos
      @GabeSurtos Před 3 lety +4

      @@elyssespeaks Thanks a lot!! Muita força para você também!

    • @renybermudez3551
      @renybermudez3551 Před 3 lety +4

      you've totally got it!

    • @GabeSurtos
      @GabeSurtos Před 3 lety +1

      @@renybermudez3551 Thanks a lot! Sorry for the late reply xD

    • @renybermudez3551
      @renybermudez3551 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GabeSurtos no worries,but you could make it up teaching me some portuguese.

  • @danield1303
    @danield1303 Před 3 lety +3

    10:26 I'm German and when I'm tired or lazy or something I also say "Schmedderling" and not "Schmetterling". It's a common "low effort form" of the word in my opinion and honestly I don't mind at all. Also I think that in some German accents you do actually say "Schmedderling" as part of normal speech.
    And yes I do really appreciate that you put the effort into learning my mother tongue and yes I think you're speaking German very well!

  • @user-dw2tn9wv5j
    @user-dw2tn9wv5j Před 11 měsíci

    this video was very helpful. thank you elysse🩷

  • @gigixparadise
    @gigixparadise Před 2 lety +1

    My and my best friend are learning German together. This is so useful!

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 2 lety

      Hell yeah! i wish i had someone like that 😭

  • @Chiyo1994
    @Chiyo1994 Před 3 lety +4

    The fact that you complimented the German language that much means a lot for some german speakers.
    Like German people themselfes dont even know how good and detailled you COULD articulate and express yourself!
    You have soooo many options to add and describe certain things. You could literally take a simple hot dog and could describe it as the most beautiful, breathtaking thing in a german sentence.
    It is a really lyrical language. For myself i must say im not the best in terms of the mode of expression in german but like you said, a lot is just personal preference style.
    I like this video a lot :] thank you for that. hehe.

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 3 lety +1

      such sweet words! i'm vegetarian so i don't expect writing hot dog poetry any time soon, but i'm glad that german would allow me to if need be. cheers queen

    • @Chiyo1994
      @Chiyo1994 Před 3 lety

      @@elyssespeaks What a bad example i gave there then.. the luck i have everytime was strong in this one :'D im terribly sorry about that.

  • @martinstubs6203
    @martinstubs6203 Před 3 lety +18

    Fun fact (or so I heard): Of all the Germanic languages - German, Dutch, Scandinavian languades - English is the only one not to have this inversion word order.

    • @freyaelliott3120
      @freyaelliott3120 Před 3 lety +1

      @ukkr I don't know about Danish, but I do speak a tiny bit of Norwegian (and a decent amount of German), and in Norwegian although generally the word order is Subject, Verb, Object as in English, they do still have verb second idea, so in that case things are inverted as they are in German when you use time phrases or places etc. I don't know whether they have subordinating conjunctions/boot words (weil, obwohl etc.) which send the verb to the end like in German though...

  • @sofia-ut3rc
    @sofia-ut3rc Před 3 lety

    I GOT THE GERMANGARMMAR DRILLS BOOK BC OF YOU AND ITS SO AMAZING ??? Like omg THANK YOU

  • @aylin1999
    @aylin1999 Před 3 lety

    I learnt that English is your mother language from the video but honestly your English sounds super clear, I didn't miss a single word with no subtitles (eng is my 2nd language). Most of the natives are mumbling when they're speaking -drives me crazy- but you... just tysm you're amazing