Breaking ChatGPT With Impossible Geography Questions

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
  • I decided to quiz ChatGPT on geography and languages and also get quizzed by it. Here's what happened.
    ------------------------------------
    Get a shoutout in each one of my videos! / @lingualizer
    ------------------------------------
    Follow me on:
    1) Twitch - / lingualizer
    2) TikTok - / lingualizer
    3) Instagram - / lingualizer
    4) Twitter - / lingualyzer
    ------------------------------------
    Join my:
    1) Subreddit - / lingualizer
    2) Discord - / discord
    #lingualizer #chatgpt #geography
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 415

  • @Nemesis_Stormheart
    @Nemesis_Stormheart Před rokem +53

    To be fair, Austria is called Österreich in german, and Ö is often represented as Oe in simplified data. So it makes sense that "Oesterreich" gets intepreted as starting with O.

    • @yamiimax
      @yamiimax Před 8 měsíci

      And it does sound like a O especially an Austrian spell it in English like arnold would haha

  • @mottinusStradivarius
    @mottinusStradivarius Před rokem +321

    The guy that makes a living asking everyone geography questions doesn't know what an archipelago is 😂

    • @didrikmesicek4825
      @didrikmesicek4825 Před rokem +16

      Right? Like having a piano teacher who isn't sure what a chord is

    • @daniellakatos5117
      @daniellakatos5117 Před rokem +15

      I was laughing because I said outright Indonesia 🤣

    • @Mendogology
      @Mendogology Před rokem +7

      Well, but now he knows

    • @theunknownanomaly1950
      @theunknownanomaly1950 Před rokem +32

      I think it might be because English is not his first language

    • @didrikmesicek4825
      @didrikmesicek4825 Před rokem +7

      @@theunknownanomaly1950 That's funny because he also pretends to be the languages guy

  • @louthecoder
    @louthecoder Před rokem +109

    At 6:48, Chat GPT is actually wrong, because in Maltese we put the article at the beginning of the word. It is correct that we use “il-“ but that goes at the beginning, as shown by the hyphen. Eg. “Il-persuna” (“the person”).

    • @SmileyElz
      @SmileyElz Před rokem +10

      Same for Welsh. It’s correct that we use ‘y’ or ‘yr’ as the article but it is always before the word.

    • @2222ele
      @2222ele Před rokem +2

      ohh, it comes from italian, also if in italian is feminine: "la persona"
      and i noticed that you also have italian last names: "Camilleri" is sicilian and "Preziosi" is from south and central Italy
      and they're very prestigious and famous surnames both in my country and yours: in Italy, the 1st one is of a writer and film producer, Andrea Camilleri and the 2nd is of a well known actor, Alessandro Preziosi, there is also a youtuber, Amedeo Preziosi; instead in Malta, i found out your 2 surnames combined together, are the ones of a law firm (im almost sure you are related to them and you know them well)
      i already knew that in Malta there were lots of italian/descendants, but i was not aware that it's so rooted and i'm just amazed

    • @widmawod
      @widmawod Před rokem +5

      @@2222ele I know it really looks like it but it doesn't come from Italian, it's from Arabic al- and related North African variants, many Arabic dialects say il- or el- now. It's a funny coincidence :)

    • @widmawod
      @widmawod Před rokem +5

      I think it's wrong for hungarian too, it's at the beginning of the word en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_noun_phrase#Articles

    • @sam-in-a-bag.
      @sam-in-a-bag. Před rokem +3

      same for irish, we put "an/na" (the) before the word

  • @nirutivan9811
    @nirutivan9811 Před rokem +49

    2:26 It was actually talking about Namibia there. Ovambo is the biggest ethnic group there and it gained independence from South Africa in 1990.
    6:28 Bulgarian is certainly not the only language. I don‘t no about the other languages mentioned by ChatGPT (except Icelandic), but all the north germanic languages do this.

  • @AhsokaTanoTheWhite
    @AhsokaTanoTheWhite Před rokem +204

    To be fair, the Austrian name of Austria begins with an O. And I got Lake Victoria only because of a Top Gear episode years ago.

    • @minichecker4958
      @minichecker4958 Před rokem +32

      No ist starts with an Ö.
      It is an O with two points on the top.

    • @tomimarkus
      @tomimarkus Před rokem +15

      No, Austrian is not a language and Austria in German doesn't begin with O, it's 'Österreich' with Ö.

    • @peterm.2385
      @peterm.2385 Před rokem +4

      Not really... It's a "Ö" in Österreich 🙃

    • @ImaskarDono
      @ImaskarDono Před rokem +10

      ​​@@minichecker4958 but Ö can be represented as Oe

    • @Ultimine1
      @Ultimine1 Před rokem +2

      the sound O, the question was letters

  • @antonkiva1962
    @antonkiva1962 Před rokem +23

    I was surprised Peter does not know what is archipelago XD

  • @GourangaPL
    @GourangaPL Před rokem +36

    the thing with cases in Bulgarian is similar to German, where only these "der, die, das" words change, so "in the street" is "auf der Strasse" but via the street is "uber die Strasse", in Polish though we have 7 real cases changing the word sometimes in really weird ways, like in this example with a cat, "this is a cat" = "to jest KOT", "i see a cat" = "widzę KOTA", "i'm looking at cat" = "przyglądam się KOTU", "i'm playing with cat" = "bawię się z KOTEM" and "i'm thinking about cat" = "myślę o KOCIE", deal with it :D

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +3

      Ah, Polish the language of someone banged his head on his keyboard and said ''good to go'' So many falls friends but here is how these will be in Bulgarian:
      To jest kot (То eст кот) - Това/Туй е котарак (Towa/Tuj e kotarak) But in Bulgarian we have ''Тоест кот'' (Toest kot) which will sound weird and rather archaic
      Widzę kota (Видзѧ кота) - Виждам котарака/кота (Wiżdam kotaraka/kotkata)
      Przyglądam się kotu (Пжыглѭдам сѩ коту) - Поглеждам котарака/кота (Pogleżdam kotaraka/kota). ''Преглеждам се'' (Pregleżdam se) means ''to examine myself''
      Bawię się z kotem (Бавѩ сѩ з котем) - Играя/Забавлявам се с котарака/кота (Igraja/Zabawlawam se s kotaraka/kota). ''Бави се'' (Bawi se) means ''to slowdown''
      Myślę o kocie (Мыс́лѩ о коце) - Мисля за котарака/кота (Misla za kotaraka/kota)
      I know ''kot'' in Polish means male cat but it's rather archaic. I'm pretty sure you have ''kotka'' which is a female cat like in Bulgarian. Why Polish has to be so confusing?

    • @useruserovich5812
      @useruserovich5812 Před rokem

      Чего, блядь? Может болгарский американский одинаковые?

    • @vvalchanov
      @vvalchanov Před rokem +1

      In Bulgarian, the article does not change. Only some pronouns can have a case, but this is archaic and not used. So in practice there is no accusative and dative case. Only people names and nouns when addressing can have a vocative form /although increasingly rare/ and this is the only one that can be taken as a case

  • @module79l28
    @module79l28 Před rokem +50

    How does a geography nerd not know what an archipelago is??? 🤣

    • @butterbee2163
      @butterbee2163 Před rokem +7

      Maybe it's just a translation problem

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +6

      @@butterbee2163 Well, in German it's Archipel, so he should be able to know that 😂

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +3

      I was also surprised he didn't know synonym and antonym, which are the same in German 😬

    • @butterbee2163
      @butterbee2163 Před rokem +1

      @@MPK93 Ah, it's my first video of watching him, I didn't know he is German. His accent sounds Swedish :D

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +3

      @@butterbee2163 He's Austrian/Bulgarian from what I know✌🏼

  • @Withintassy
    @Withintassy Před rokem +26

    In norwegian the article is also at the end of the word. For example a car is en bil, and the car is "bilen" en or et (and sometimes feminine form "a") is added to the end of a word to create "the"

    • @fuchsifyl3077
      @fuchsifyl3077 Před rokem +1

      just wanted to comment that too. Thanks mate

    • @maltemoller07
      @maltemoller07 Před rokem +5

      In Swedish too

    • @alexz8849
      @alexz8849 Před rokem +3

      Same in Danish

    • @w0bbzyy
      @w0bbzyy Před 7 měsíci

      Danish, Swedish and Norwegian are all essentially the same language, just a different dialect.

  • @rzpogi
    @rzpogi Před rokem +9

    1:32 I was expecting Oztralia.

  • @mizulightblue
    @mizulightblue Před rokem +8

    So happy that Austria comes here. Maybe ChatGPT was thinking in german. Österreich, but then it's Ö, is Austria, or Oesterreich.

  • @i-0696
    @i-0696 Před rokem +4

    Austria was actually close enough since in German it's called Österreich. If you don't use Ö you could spell it Oesterreich.

  • @tylernass6263
    @tylernass6263 Před rokem +3

    at 2:05, chatGPT for some reason described Namibia. That's where the Ovambo people are from, and it gained independence from South Africa in 1990. It's not quite in West Africa, but it's on the west coast of southern Africa, so close enough, I guess?

  • @cuebist
    @cuebist Před rokem +3

    Hungarian here, articles go in front of the words in our langauge - if by articles u mean a(n) and the. They r called "névelő", which roughly translates to "pre-name" or "pre-word". But we do have suffixes and they do attach at the end of words like in, on, at, from etc.

  • @Cray82
    @Cray82 Před rokem +72

    Very interesting and entertaining video as usual ! I always find them interesting.
    Besides, I just learned that "jargon" was also used in English and not only in French.

    • @MetalLord717
      @MetalLord717 Před rokem +6

      Russian also has this word.

    • @Cray82
      @Cray82 Před rokem +3

      @@MetalLord717 good to know thank you!

    • @JimJakubJames
      @JimJakubJames Před rokem +5

      In polish we say "żargon" - same pronunciantion

    • @Cray82
      @Cray82 Před rokem +2

      @@JimJakubJames it's interesting to know, I had no idea that this word was also used in Polish. Thank you, as I always say, I will go to bed less stupid tonight

    • @pokerijuttuja8928
      @pokerijuttuja8928 Před rokem +1

      in Finnish we say jargon in spoken language

  • @chocolatesweetyx3
    @chocolatesweetyx3 Před rokem +9

    Most languages that don't change their nouns according to case still have cases. The role a noun plays in the sentence determines its case and this case can still affect the syntax of the sentence somehow (I don't know about Bulgarian but e.g. in English or Italian the noun doesn't change but you sometimes have to add certain prepositions or change the word order based on what case the noun is in). What you are referring to are nominal case endings or declination.

    • @VulpisInFundo
      @VulpisInFundo Před rokem +1

      This is the first time I'm hearing of this. I know that in most situations a "complemento oggetto" in Italian, would result in an accusative case in other languages, such as German or Latin, however I have never heard anyone referring to the "complemento oggetto" as being a case.
      Italian: Ottaviano sconfisse *Antonio* (chi? = complemento oggetto)
      German: Oktavian besiegte (*den*) Antonius (wen? = Akkusativ)
      Latin: Octavianus Antoni-*um* devicit.

  • @davidz3879
    @davidz3879 Před rokem +13

    I assume that you meant Sahara (a desert) when you said Western Sahara (a disputed territory).

  • @fyrhunter_svk
    @fyrhunter_svk Před rokem +5

    I believe the definite (and indefinite) article in Hungarian is actually written before a word (a fa = the tree, az alma = the apple).

  • @Gabesvault
    @Gabesvault Před rokem +24

    GPT-3.5 made the same mistake for me. I was able two regenerate it. It names two sources then considers it 2 results.

  • @that1countrieschannel
    @that1countrieschannel Před rokem +53

    Technically ChatGPT wasn't wrong when saying Austria. The German/native name for Austria is Österriech.
    (It's literally been 4 minutes and I already have 5 likes wth I genuinely rarely get more likes than 5 let alone within the first 4 minutes)
    Edit 2: ITS BEEN 16 MINUTES AND ALREADY 23 LIKES WTH
    Edit 3: what da actual hell. 43 minutes and 39 likes

    • @ellidominusser1138
      @ellidominusser1138 Před rokem +7

      Österreich

    • @ellidominusser1138
      @ellidominusser1138 Před rokem +3

      He's austrian himself btw

    • @ideiasradicaispt9772
      @ideiasradicaispt9772 Před rokem +5

      That's the problem I'm seeing with many of the people complaining about it. Most people don't know how to ask the proper questions. If you don't ask correctly, you'll get a wrong answer. For example, in this case, you should've asked "name 2 countries starting with O in English".

    • @135Zeus
      @135Zeus Před rokem

      @lingualizer this comment

    • @135Zeus
      @135Zeus Před rokem

      @@ellidominusser1138 technically correct is the best kind of correct though

  • @kamenvalkanov6937
    @kamenvalkanov6937 Před rokem +4

    accusative in Bulgarian is mainly used when refering to people. Such as your friend "Ivan" for example, when turning to them you wouldn't say "Ivan" but "Ivane" rouchly translating to "Hey Ivan". The same thing applies if you are calling your teacher in school, you would turn to them with "Господине/Госпожо" instead of "Господин/Госпожа".

    • @lingualizer
      @lingualizer  Před rokem +3

      That's not accusative, that's vocative, and yes, that is definitely a case, but I'd call it a unique one because it's 1) only used with people and 2) not even a necessity. It's totally normal to call a person "Ivan!" instead of "Ivane!"

    • @kamenvalkanov6937
      @kamenvalkanov6937 Před rokem +1

      @@lingualizer Sorry I always get these 2 mixed. However it used all the time, only people from Sofia would call you Ivan instead of Ivane, or maybe people who don't know you well. But everyone else will just look at you weirdly if you call them by their full name.

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem

      @@lingualizer В българския има доста остатъци от винителен, дателен и творителен падеж като:
      Не казвай на никого! (винителен)
      Кому го е грижа? (дателен)
      Бегом марш! (творителен)
      Но като цяло в старобългарския език са се използвали много тези падежи, които са отпаднали като например преди сме му казвали ''С нами Богъ,'' а сега ''С нас е Бог.''
      ''Сбогом'' е остатък от творителен падеж също, идващо от старобългарски ''Съ Богомъ'' (С Бог).

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +2

      @@kamenvalkanov6937 Да знаеш, че имаме и остатъци от дателен, винителен и творителен падеж също.

  • @mojaslovenija9903
    @mojaslovenija9903 Před rokem +6

    Well... Bern is not official capital of Switzerland. It is just "working out" as the capital.

  • @senge1337
    @senge1337 Před 11 měsíci

    Great video, you gotta make more of these

  • @ashadedblobfish
    @ashadedblobfish Před rokem +6

    Most languages have cases, including English - it's just that most of them don't change the word, so I think often when people say a languages has cases, they are talking about when it changes the word but I'm pretty sure it can count even if it's just word order

    • @useruserovich5812
      @useruserovich5812 Před rokem

      Заебись, правильно написал

    • @useruserovich5812
      @useruserovich5812 Před rokem

      Look at Tabasaran language in the Dagestan of Russia. But there is the problem a little bit. All of foreigner linguists was died before complete teach this language. NOT joke

    • @vvalchanov
      @vvalchanov Před rokem +1

      Prepositions are being used to replace the cases

  • @tintiniitk
    @tintiniitk Před 10 měsíci

    This was great. Please do more of these chatGpt videos. Also, give Bard a try.

  • @tomeekun
    @tomeekun Před rokem +2

    The definite article is NOT a suffix in Hungarian. Don't know where that came from, it's before nouns and is a separate word of it's own. It can be "A" or "Az" depending on if the noun starts with a vowel or a consonant.

  • @oze8855
    @oze8855 Před rokem +1

    4:17 from what I konw, the amazon river is the longest

  • @tomaspecik
    @tomaspecik Před 6 měsíci

    10:51 a funny thing is, that “onomatopoje” accually has a meaning in Slovak - “it will eat me up” :) so you can imagine this was not hard to remember in school :)

  • @The-Blue-Knight
    @The-Blue-Knight Před rokem +2

    I knew archepelago, synonym, antonym, and jargon. Nice.

  • @HoTiiiii
    @HoTiiiii Před rokem +5

    GTP-4 is much better for tricky questions

  • @qasemrimawi568
    @qasemrimawi568 Před rokem +3

    Thanks for the video! Inspired me to play a bit with ChatGPT

    • @purpletea3807
      @purpletea3807 Před rokem

      I highly recommend it, I saved like 300 hours of work with it just this year...

  • @Slinky599
    @Slinky599 Před rokem +14

    It's probably just smart enough to know that Oman is the only one (in English) so it moved onto Austria since in other languages such as Dutch, it does indeed start with O.
    It should probably tell you that in its answer though. I mean, the first time. It did mention German eventually but in German it starts with Ö ...

    • @MsJavaWolf
      @MsJavaWolf Před rokem +4

      ChatGpt is really bad at communicating its confidence in an answer or saying that it doesn't know something. I asked it to prove that the number 2 is not a rational number (of course it is rational, it's the square root of 2 that's irrational) and it confidently gave me a completely wrong proof.

  • @Abotekap
    @Abotekap Před rokem +1

    Archipelago is from Greek, it means Great Sea (lt. Leader Sea), which contains islands.

  • @meraklija316
    @meraklija316 Před rokem +2

    6:26 - I thought of Romanian... Because definite articles there stand at the end of the word (like, băiat+ul - the boy...😅😅

  • @austinholley3545
    @austinholley3545 Před rokem +1

    I knew the synonym one because my Aunt Stacy is a teacher and so is my Grandma Audie. She taught in Poteet, TX.

  • @selladore4911
    @selladore4911 Před 8 měsíci

    you should do more linguistics videos, these are fun!

  • @InfinitySpace26
    @InfinitySpace26 Před rokem +1

    2:27
    He was like: "know your facts before you come at me, lil' goof"

  • @maryzalipa
    @maryzalipa Před rokem +4

    I was learning Bulgarian at the uni for one semester, already forgotten almost everything. but we actually were taught that there are cases in Bulgarian just like in Ukrainian (my mother tongue), and there are prepositions to use them like честит студентски празник на всички. in this case, на is meant to define the accusative. I guess, it is easier to teach Bulgarian cases, when your mother tongue also has cases. it makes sense

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +2

      Bulgarian has some leftover cases. Most of the cases are nominative + definite article.
      Here are some examples of where cases are used:
      Не казвай на никой! ❌
      Не казвай на никого! ✅
      (accusative)
      На кой му е грижа? ❌
      Кому го е грижа? ✅
      (dative)
      С бягане марш! ❌
      Бегом марш! ✅
      (instrumental)
      Мама, къде си? ❌
      Мамо, къде си? ✅
      (vocative)
      99,9% of the time we don't use them because they are only remnaints from Old Bulgarian. Even infinitive form is considered archaic that used to be the same as Serbo-Croatian. For example:
      In Bulgarian to fly we have only ''летя'' while others have ''летети, летить, летиць'' etc... Macedonian is pretty much the same as Bulgarian and they have only ''летам'':
      Не кажуваj на никоj! ❌
      Не кажуваj на никого! ✅
      На коj му е гаjле? ❌(We have ''гайле'' too but it's a dialect word which is from Persian)
      Кому го е гаjле? ✅
      Со бегање марш! ❌
      Бегом марш! ✅
      Мама, каде си? ❌
      Мамо, каде си? ✅
      Hopefully it helps.

    • @maryzalipa
      @maryzalipa Před rokem

      @@HeroManNick132 thanks a lot, it is helpful

    • @vvalchanov
      @vvalchanov Před rokem

      Prepositions are being used instead of cases. In Bulgarian only some pronouns can have a case, but this is archaic and not used. So in practice there is no accusative and dative case. Only people names and nouns when addressing can have a vocative form /although increasingly rare/ and this is the only one that can be taken as a case

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +1

      @@vvalchanov Фактически винителният падеж е все още използва, когато се обръщаш към някого, както в този пример с някого.
      Дателният падеж е поотпаднал повече от винителния падеж, защото в повечето случаи само замества ''на + винителен падеж.''
      Забрави, че имаме няколко съществителни с остатък от творителен падеж като например ''ходом, родом, бегом, кръгом, даром, тичешком'' и т.н. Даже и местоимения имаме от него, които са супер архаични като ''нами/вами,'' които заместват ''с нас/с вас,'' както на нас ''нам'' и на вас - ''вам.''

    • @elmanzanito6244
      @elmanzanito6244 Před 7 měsíci

      @@HeroManNick132 мил приятел - мили приятелю, господин - господине, посредством, тичешком, преди Христа. Технически и обръщенията дядо, татко и др. Горе - отгоре . Ама може и да бъркам за някои.

  • @tomimarkus
    @tomimarkus Před rokem +9

    Very interesting that "котка" means cat in Bulgarian, because in Finnish "kotka" means eagle. 🦅

    • @Smok1125
      @Smok1125 Před rokem +3

      In Polish means female cat

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +1

      ''Kotka'' is female cat or the general word for cat. Male cat is ''kotarak'' or ''kot'' which is archaic but still used in Polish and Russian. ''Kote'' is a little cat

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +3

      @@HeroManNick132 and in German, Kot means 💩

    • @Smok1125
      @Smok1125 Před rokem

      @@MPK93 are you sure?

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +1

      @@Smok1125 Yes, I'm 100% sure because I am German and I speak German😉

  • @linuxmatty3420
    @linuxmatty3420 Před rokem

    danish also puts the definite article at the end of the word, for example "a head" is "et hoved", but "the head" is "hovedet"

  • @CheeseTube777Archive
    @CheeseTube777Archive Před 11 měsíci +1

    0:08 1:35 It probably thought of Österreich

  • @selladore4911
    @selladore4911 Před 8 měsíci

    8:45 "can it be considered a case if the word doesnt change" sometimes there are null case markers or case synchronism. tho if no words change then we can say the language doesn't have cases. this is what i got from my introductory syntax class so i might be wrong

  • @barni.815
    @barni.815 Před rokem +1

    I am Hungarian and we also put the article before the noun.
    For example: Az ajtó (the door)
    a játék (the game)
    Romanian is also not correct:
    O femeie (the woman)
    un băiat (the boy)

    • @samira1139
      @samira1139 Před rokem

      Un and o are the indefinite articles. Definite articles can be at the end (ex. suflet = soul, sufletul = the soul)

  • @eezym8131
    @eezym8131 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Lol I knew the Indonesia answer! I felt so proud that for the first time I knew something you didn't xD
    (no front tho, I really enjoy your videos)

  • @johannesmuller2956
    @johannesmuller2956 Před rokem

    3:20 Here the cut was so fast, that at first viewing I read: Lima - the captal of switzerland

  • @Britishadow
    @Britishadow Před 11 měsíci +1

    Maybe it said Austria begins with O because austria in German is Östereich

  • @ShizukuShipper
    @ShizukuShipper Před rokem

    5:15 Lake Victoria is in between Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. No where near South Africa

  • @Desmosfundraw
    @Desmosfundraw Před 11 měsíci

    You should do a live chat about us asking you geography questions 😉

  • @the_real_THlNG
    @the_real_THlNG Před rokem +2

    6:25 norwegian also has this for example "broren" = "the brother" but this is not always the case "en bror" = "a brother"

    • @IoT_
      @IoT_ Před rokem

      Yes, I forgot about that : kvinner

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem

      In Bulgarian:
      брат - a brother
      един брат - one brother
      братът - the brother (when he is the subject)
      брата - the brother (when he is NOT the subject)
      братя - brothers
      братята - the brothers
      братче/малък брат - little brother
      братчета/малки братя - little brothers
      братчето/малкия(т) брат - the little brother
      братчетата/малките братя - the little brothers
      брато/братле/брате/братко - bro
      батко - bigger brother
      бате/баце - vocative case of bigger brother
      and more.

    • @IoT_
      @IoT_ Před rokem

      @@HeroManNick132 But there are no articles in Bulgarian like in Russian, aren't they?

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +1

      @@IoT_ These are actually definite articles lol

  • @jonander1992
    @jonander1992 Před rokem

    In Basque the article goes at the end of the word "etxea" the house, "etxe" being in indefined form and the ending "-a" being "the"

  • @CharlieMile
    @CharlieMile Před rokem +1

    2:03 it’s talking about Namibia. Country that gained independence from South Africa in 1990 and most people belong to the Ovambo group. Don’t know why it describes it as a small country. Also, did some searching and there seems to be some Namibian official with the name of Tsamkxao Oma, maybe this is where GTP got confused?

    • @stephendeane7509
      @stephendeane7509 Před rokem

      Ovamboland (part of Namibia i think) was supposed to be made into an independent national at one point I believe.

    • @maximipe
      @maximipe Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah ChatGPT is infamous for making stuff up, not only doesn't really know what is telling you often can't point out sources neither

  • @arararantxa
    @arararantxa Před rokem

    Euskera also places the articles at the end of the word I think

  • @huG1481
    @huG1481 Před 11 měsíci

    Lingualizer, I have always wondered, with all the languages you speak and understand, which language do you think in?
    Vietnamese is my first language but I ever since I learned English at around 10-11 years old. I found myself only thinking in English

  • @ExPraetorianGuard-dl1pz
    @ExPraetorianGuard-dl1pz Před 7 měsíci

    5:40 Sweden with 267K islands left the chat

  • @kotchannel5084
    @kotchannel5084 Před rokem

    in hungarian the definite article is BEFORE the noun and IS a separate word

  • @ChrisW101
    @ChrisW101 Před rokem

    As a hungarian speaker, no, the article is also at the begining and not a suffix nor prefix

  • @Mendogology
    @Mendogology Před rokem

    Nice video!

  • @easilydistracted1397
    @easilydistracted1397 Před 10 měsíci

    As at least one person has noted Austria (Österreich) does indeed begin with the letter ‘O’. The umlaut over the first letter changes the pronunciation, but it is still the letter ‘O’. That person deserves the money.

  • @V0r4xiz
    @V0r4xiz Před rokem

    Declension isn't the only characteristic of grammatical case. The AI is right. Bulgarian has cases. They are simply not indicated by declension of the noun.

  • @brezza6892
    @brezza6892 Před 8 měsíci

    Austria can be spelt with an O in other germainic languages, so it's not completely wrong, but it did spell it Austria in it's example and then it's brain melted with following prompts

  • @kivitafitz8477
    @kivitafitz8477 Před rokem +1

    Cuba is an archipelago ❤🇨🇺 Greetings from Cuba.

  • @nicoliz4249
    @nicoliz4249 Před rokem

    The cases things can be true, it was a valid point infact.

  • @shyper17
    @shyper17 Před rokem

    The description of Austria though: "...art..."
    We all know what he meant.

  • @animusDK
    @animusDK Před rokem +4

    That was fun and interesting, thanks for the video!
    By the way, the cat in Russian is "кот" [кот] (:

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +1

      Male cat* Female cat is ''кошка'' which is 1 letter difference from Bulgarian. ''Кот'' exists in Bulgarian but it's archaic, nowadays we use ''котарак.''

    • @MPK93
      @MPK93 Před rokem +1

      Kot in German means 💩

  • @Brennende_Rose
    @Brennende_Rose Před 9 měsíci

    My guy raised exestential crisis for the Bulgarians

  • @elizabethhearts189
    @elizabethhearts189 Před rokem

    Lithuanian also puts the article at the end of the word and has cases.

  • @harshal.karadkar
    @harshal.karadkar Před rokem +2

    Ask chatgpt about lingualizer and his videos question 😂

  • @macakucizmama831
    @macakucizmama831 Před 11 měsíci

    Lake Victoria was pretty obvious one, I am sure you heard about Victoria waterfalls

  • @SoloPerICommenti
    @SoloPerICommenti Před rokem +2

    How did you not know what an archipelago is?

  • @ianthehunter3532
    @ianthehunter3532 Před rokem +1

    I asked it for ALL four letter capital names and it only named a few then it gave a lot of wrong.

  • @xXxbiia14xXx
    @xXxbiia14xXx Před rokem

    Hungarian article is never at the end of the word if I understand correctly that article is "a/an" or "the" in English. We put many things at the end of the word but not the article.

  • @rootof3vil
    @rootof3vil Před rokem

    You should try GTP-4 , 3,5 is quite bad

  • @Antuan2911
    @Antuan2911 Před rokem

    10:55 -> I said "Technical"... but Jargon is more common...

  • @ricsiplays
    @ricsiplays Před 11 měsíci

    8:21 yea you make walid point but ther are leanguigeis that are weard whit the this thing you say

  • @SGilles919
    @SGilles919 Před rokem +1

    You've never heard of Ostria? 🤣

  • @boterham323
    @boterham323 Před rokem +1

    Not sure about other languages, but ChatGPT is just wrong about Irish Gaelic. In irish the article goes before the word, not at the end of it.

  • @somerandomfolk
    @somerandomfolk Před rokem +1

    Bro broke ChatGPT in just 1:30 minutes into the video

  • @yashraman5808
    @yashraman5808 Před rokem

    I asked chat gpt to ask me geography questions to and I also learnt something new that vilnius it the city located at the geographical centre of europe

  • @bambisblume
    @bambisblume Před rokem

    Kennst du nicht? Ostria mit der Hauptstadt Why-Anna? 😊

  • @pingui6242
    @pingui6242 Před rokem +4

    6:26 that is wrong lol (I am learning Hungarian)

    • @66tom41
      @66tom41 Před rokem

      it's also wrong about welsh

    • @beaucaspar3990
      @beaucaspar3990 Před rokem

      Why would anyone in their right mind learn Hungarian. What are you a masochist?

    • @pingui6242
      @pingui6242 Před rokem

      @@beaucaspar3990 i love the language, might be my favourite together with german, and also i like challenges. I have been learning it since the 23rd of april of 2022 and it is my seventh language (having nine up my sleeve so far, with still a low level in danish and lithuanian as I have been learning them recently)

    • @beaucaspar3990
      @beaucaspar3990 Před rokem

      @@pingui6242 Why don't you just stick to being good at like one other language, like German for instance, if you're already conversationally fluent in German learn Danish.
      I can actually give you some advice on how to be able to speak Danish if you're interested?

    • @pingui6242
      @pingui6242 Před rokem

      @@beaucaspar3990 well i usually focus on 1/2 languages before moving on to another one. Yes I would like some advice for danish since its phonology isn't the easiest out there

  • @remaster1849
    @remaster1849 Před rokem

    8:20 In russian cat is "кот"/"кошка", so it changes in a sentence like that: "i see a cat" - "я вижу кота" / "я вижу кошку".

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem

      In Bulgarian is similar:
      ''кот'' is male cat but it's archaic and no one uses it nowadays. Nowadays we use ''котарак''
      ''котка'' is a female cat and it will be:
      (Аз) виждам котарака/котката. (which is more likely as ''I see the cat.'')
      While:
      (Аз) виждам котарак/котка. is ''I see a cat.''
      (Аз) виждам един/една котарак/котка. is ''I see one cat.''
      We have also:
      ''коте'' - little cat
      ''котенце'' - baby cat
      Overall we have also many dialect words like ''мацка, мачка, мачор, мачур...'' but the most used ones are ''котарак, котка, коте, котенце.''

  • @edank1510
    @edank1510 Před rokem +1

    That's funny that it said the correct answer was Antarctica, because it asked me the same question once, and I put antarctica and it said it was wrong. I then corrected it, it apologized, and it ended up saying Antarctica was correct

  • @maikpalaios8049
    @maikpalaios8049 Před 11 měsíci

    Can you come to Greece again plz

  • @DubCmusicTV
    @DubCmusicTV Před rokem

    Researchers going measure Amazon and Nile

  • @MrBenedictus25
    @MrBenedictus25 Před rokem

    I think chat gpt used the german alphabet for austria. And as you know we start with Ö

  • @Dan_Novotny
    @Dan_Novotny Před rokem

    We were.always taught that the longest river is Amazon woth total length over 7000km, Nile has "only" 6600km, am I wrong when I say that the longest river is Amazon?

  • @denizsincar29
    @denizsincar29 Před rokem

    wow! is chatgpt producing answers letter by letter? i thaught it's api returns the whole answer at once

  • @francoisevassy6614
    @francoisevassy6614 Před 3 měsíci

    Actually, in latin Rosa can be accusative, vocative or ablative : three different cases anyway.

  • @Zenjohnny
    @Zenjohnny Před rokem

    Ovamboland is what chatgpt is talking about with the 2nd Oman hahahaha

  • @badaboum2
    @badaboum2 Před rokem +2

    Interesting to see that despite having great knowledge of human geography, you're pretty much a noob when it comes to natural geography. The Antartic desert is such a common trick question!

  • @francoisevassy6614
    @francoisevassy6614 Před 3 měsíci

    In France, we talk about « Ouganda » !

  • @DogeGames1
    @DogeGames1 Před rokem

    Chatgpt was right about Austria starting with O because in dutch or other languages it's called oosterijk and osterreich so you didn't specify

  • @angel_1911
    @angel_1911 Před rokem +2

    Make another video with harder questions using GPT 4

  • @dimon37
    @dimon37 Před rokem

    Wow, I got African lake and Archipelago questions :)

  • @birjarq
    @birjarq Před rokem

    I guess as a second O-country Oʻzbekiston / Uzbekistan could be eligible, since also it has no umlaut

  • @marinpetrinski986
    @marinpetrinski986 Před rokem

    I don’t know if someone explained it, but in Bulgarian cases exist only in the pronounce. For example: “the person who is angry” is “човекът, който е ядосан”, but “the person who they insult” is “човекът, когото те обиждат”. This is the only time we learn cases in the Bulgarian language.

    • @HeroManNick132
      @HeroManNick132 Před rokem +1

      Всъщност имаме и в някои съществителни имена като в израза ''Бегом марш!'' (С бягане марш!) като остатък от творителен падеж. Българският език най-често използва именителен и звателен падеж, макар че имаме доста остатъци от винителен, дателен и творителен падеж. Местният и родителният падеж са единствените загубени падежи из времето.

  • @Tarcon_Vaagh_69
    @Tarcon_Vaagh_69 Před rokem

    6:26 it's extremely wrong LMAO. Like, I didn't even know that phenomenon exists and why would any languange use the definite article like that. And it's definitely not hungarian, I can assure you about that LUL

  • @aaronpressler8282
    @aaronpressler8282 Před 11 měsíci

    fast 2 Millionen, Glückwunsch im Voraus

  • @donwald3436
    @donwald3436 Před 11 měsíci

    User
    Ask me an invalid arithmetic question.
    ChatGPT
    Certainly! Here's an invalid arithmetic question for you:
    What is the result of dividing a pineapple by a bicycle?
    User
    Pineapple chunks with a remainder of bicycle.
    ChatGPT
    I apologize for the confusion, but arithmetic operations are typically performed on numerical values. Dividing a pineapple by a bicycle is not a valid mathematical operation since they are unrelated objects.

  • @Peggles13
    @Peggles13 Před rokem +1

    1. Oman
    2. Oman
    3. Oman
    4. Oman
    5. Oman