Common knowledge QUIZ about Mexico! American vs British vs Spanish
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- čas přidán 3. 03. 2022
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Mixteco is a language currently speaking and mainly in Oaxaca. It's an old culture but still exists and one of the largest languages spoken in Oaxaca
It's pronounces like 'Mishteco', right?
Spanish is the second most spoken language in US 🇺🇲 and , yes , most of these people are from Mexico , but Mexico isn't the only one , and some States like Texas the spanish is very popular
Exactly, not all Latinos are Mexicans! I am though! Lol 😂 Greetings from Chihuahua!
That’s very interesting. 100 years ago it would have been German.
Thats so true! California and Florida spanish is very popular as well
California is filled with Mexicans too
same with florida!
"What was invented in Mexico"🇲🇽 was the most hard and tough question , especially because people usually don't believe that Mexico created all of this , Andrea 🇲🇽 is right about that
And they forgot VANILLA!! Vanilla and Chocolate!! Thanks Mexico!!
I was sure about chewing gum, I expected chocolate, but I had no idea about colored tv, I'm happy I got to learn sth new
Exactly, The color TV creator was Mexican, named Guillermo Gonzales Camarena. In fact, he didn’t sell his patients to other countries until he died and his family decided to sell it so that in 1968 it was officially installed in the rest of the world while in Mexico there was already color signal since 1930s
@@danilojoaoandrade2284 wizard of Oz: “Am I a joke to you?”
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 what?
So proud to be of Mexican heritage. ¡Que Viva México!
Yo Soy De El Paso Texas Estados Unidos Y Mis Padres Son De Mexico Mi Mama Es De Tijuana Baja California Del Norte Y Mi Papa Es De Leon Guanajuato Pero Vive En CIudad Juarez Chihuahua Mexico
Not only Texas and California were part of Mexico, but also Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Nevada ;)
But we lost most of them on the Mexican-American war, except for Texas, they claimed their independence from Mexico first.
Thank you for mentioning my home state of Arizona both my grandfather's were born Arizona when it was still a state and I'm pretty sure my great grandfather's were still living in Arizona before it became a state.
The GREAT nation of Tejas 💪🏽🤠
My partner is Mayan y habla en dialecto... tzeltal.. mixteco is a dialect i hear a lot from those in oaxaca, and my 9 year olds familia hablan en mazahua y otomi.
Very rich in culture!❤
In 1940, Guillermo Gonzales Camarena, a brilliant 17 year old Mexican inventor, was the first person to invent a mechanical color TV system with a spinning color wheel in front of the screen, and in 1941, he was the first person in the world to file a patent for it as well.
Exactly, The color TV creator was Mexican In fact, he didn’t sell his patients to other countries until he died and his family decided to sell it so that in 1968 it was officially installed in the rest of the world while in Mexico there was already color signal since 1930s
Wao con solo 17 años
Actually not, but ok
@@gonzalo20000 At least give a reason you hater
Thank you, we hear much about American, European, Asian inventors but not much about Latin america but it's a pleasure to learn something new (at least for for me)
I love Mexico, even though i from Kazakhstan. One day i'll visit this country , if i have a opportunity
It should be nuked
@@TinFoilHatConspiracy why should khazkstan be nuked🤔
Anytime amigo you're welcome to visit. 🇲🇽
_¡¡"We will be waiting for you, everyone is welcome here and Mexico will welcome you with open arms, _*_My House is your House_*_ 🇲🇽🇰🇿"!!!_
Are you Borat?
Happy Birthday to you , Christina 🇺🇲😊
Are you Henri but with a new name?
OK, I'm Polish and I went to Mexico once and I only failed at the last one. I am pretty geeky about the countries I go to (and the ones I don't go to too, actually...) but I think it's a good thing to do a little research about a country you visit or you share a border with or you simply find interesting. The world is so interesting, do it, guys!
In Spain, the 1st of november, we dont celebrate the day of the death, its a religious day we normally go to church to remmember our grandparents or any person that is part of the family that is death.
These Mexican themed videos getting really good. Christina as always so funny and with the chemestry! Greetings from Monterrey México! :)
The city of the amazing stadium with amazing views 😍
Monterrey is on my BUCKET list! I’ve been to six cities in Mexico so far. Monterrey will be next for me! What a beautiful city!
Selena Gomez relatives are from there, I think.
@@TakittyLove exacto son de monterrey
Hello neighbor
The name of the Mexican inventor of color TV is Guillermo González Camarena.
Andrea's don't know that the day of the dead is November 2nd no 1st??? But she explained everything great, nice video... viva México 🇲🇽🇲🇽
Day of the Dead is celebrated over a few days depending on the region but it generally starts on November 1st and generally ends by November 3rd. Pero tal vez un tu región lo celebran el día 2 de Noviembre. :)
@@SongofBeauty Para la mayoría el 2 es día de muertos y el 1ro es día de todos los santos ( o día de los santos inocentes, o sea niños) pero obvio la fiesta comienza desde antes y termina después (como las fiestas patronales y prácticamente cualquier fiesta en México jeje)
Es que es whitexican.
It's both days since November 1st is Día de todos los Santos. But both holidays get celebrated during the same two days.
Mixteco is still spoken in Oaxaca (and parts of Guerrero and Puebla). She made it sound like it's a dead language.
Andrea has such a beautiful & energetic personality! (The one from Mexico 🇲🇽)
Mexico gave us chocolate, color tv, chewing gum, corn, rubber, chili peppers, avocados, tomatoes, vanilla…the list goes on
The birth control pill
….how do Americans not know that almost 50% of the US used to be part of Mexico, I am sorry but that is an important detail you should know about your country.
Dude that's a total lie. Maybe you should do your research first
It's only SOME parts of South West, not even near 50%
@@PsychoticAndChaotic
“55 percent of its territory, including parts of present-day Arizona, California, New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Nevada, and Utah” look at a map b^txh
50% of Mexico, not 50% of USA
@@PsychoticAndChaotic yeah, it's Mexico the one who lost the half of it's territory
Day of the dead is november 2 not 1, great video btw.
It is the first and second of November, the first is the day that the souls of children arrive and the second is that of all adults
"What's the capital of Mexico?"
"Mexico?"
"Yes"
Xd
Although in Mexico the celebrations of the day of the dead might start on the 1st of November the actual day is the 2nd of November, the 1st is All Saints Day (dia de todos los santos)
Tijuana of course!
Although Paul Nipkow in Germany invented the principle of image resolution as early as 1884 with the scanning disc named after him, the first long-distance cable television broadcast took place only in 1926 between London and Glasgow thanks to the Scottish inventor John Logie Baird.
The cathode ray tube was developed by Karl Ferdinand Braun in 1897.
Kálmán Tihanyi is credited with inventing the fully electronic charge storage type television system. He came up with the solution in 1924, his Hungarian patent application was dated 1926, after which he was approached by the Radio Corporation of America in 1928. The first regular broadcast in Germany was called Telefunken in 1935.
Dénes Mihály (1894-1953) started on a different path. In 1933, in collaboration with the physicist E.H. Traub, he was able to present a television device that he further perfected (TELEHOR). This was the Mihály-Traub rotating mirror receiver that splits the image into 240 lines, and whose image could be projected onto a surface of up to 2.5×3 meters. In the fall of 1936, the first closed-circuit television broadcast took place in the Gellért Hotel, where a television image was broadcast at a distance of about 30 meters.
In 1929, England also began experimental broadcasting under the authority of the BBC, until 1936 with John Logie Baird's device and then with the electronic image transmission system developed by the EMI-Marconi Company. In the United States of America, NBC broadcast its first television program in 1939.
In 1929, the Bell laboratory already presented the color television, and on January 12, 1940, the first TV chain began to operate.
Peter C. Goldmark (1906-1977), an engineer and physicist born in Budapest, was an employee of CBS from January 1, 1936 until his retirement in 1971 (also its director for a longer period). He developed the first usable color television standard at CBS in 1940.
Vanilla, Corn and Avocados are also from Mexico! ❤️
Wanna grab some elotes?
@@22martinez1Hell yeah!
I'm From El Paso Texas and I'm Close to The Border of Ciudad Juarez Chihuahua Mexico (Well I'm In Another Part Of El Paso) But Anyway Great Video World Friends Congrats Of 1.01M Subscribers
This video was brilliant! I could not relate to her more, but as someone who is Irish and how people react when I tell them
Hello everyone, Callie here :) I enjoyed learning more about the beautiful country of Mexico! Also I will be forever grateful to Mexico for inventing chocolate 🍫🙏🏼
Mixteco originated from 3000BCE
Day of the dead is more nov 2
All the way up to British Columbia. Is that Montana, Oregon, California, Nevada,, Texas, Florida and of course New Mexico come from Spanish or Mexican
You do really well with these videos. Keep it up.
You forgot to “Remember the Alamo”. 😂
Otra cosa curiosa es que "chicle" como se le conoce a la "goma de mascar" en muchos países hispanos pero no tan comunmente en México es en realidad una palabra de origen Nahuatl es decir una palabra de origen mexicana
En España lo más común es llamarlo "chicle"
FACTS!!
nice video i love it😍
Well, the original name for chewing gum, “chicle”, sounds a lot like mexican food.
You are right, and some U.S. guy (ADAMS) make the brand chiklet’s and the rest is history.
@@ubilive7 do you like Lolis? 🤨
De donde proviene la palabra "chicle"?
@@royroger7630 de la palabra tzictli, que es náhuatl, se fue modificando hasta que quedó como chicle.
@@alexajani muchas gracias por compartir el dato. saludos
The main day of the dia de los muertos celebration is actually november 2, but, depending where you live in México, there is something to rememorate also on November 1, in my family tradition is that November 1st is dia de los muertos "chiquitos", as in the little dead ones, and is to recall the infants that passed away. In some places, like the Huastecas, the celebration for the dead (called Xantolo) last for nearly a month, it begins in october and ends on november.
In cathlocism thenday of the dead is nov2
2:28 I wouldn't know this a lot. Even tho I don't know a lot of Mexico, more or less, since it isn't teached or known here. I was confused with the chocolate, and chewing gum, because there was no all answers...second guessed like, didn't they do both? Lol. I've authentic chewing gum from there, and all natural...one of the guides was selling them, and that happened this year when our family went on a cruise.
Here's a little history in chocolate, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
Chocolate can be dated as far back as the Olmec civilization which reached from modern day southern Mexico through Guatemala to El Salvadar. The Mayans (whose civilization encompassed the Mexican States of Tabasco and chiapas to the Yucatan peninsula, all of Belize and Guatemala, and parts of El Salvador and Honduras) were also known for drinking chocolate. Back then it was a bitter drink and the cacao beans were used as a currency. Chocolate didn't become sweet until Hernando Cortes returned to Spain after visiting Mexico and being mistaken the Aztec's god king Quetzalcoatl. From there it slowly spread to the rest of Europe where the Dutch would make cocoa powder and eventually Joseph Fry, from England, would make modern day chocolate.
Exacto , pero el chocolate es náhuatl el idioma de los olmecas,no es español..
no se sabe que idioma hablaban los olmecas.@@panzonmx3443
Raw chocolate is very bitter but can be combined with vanilla or spices to improve the flavor (vanilla and many spices are native to Mesoamerica). There are currently several drinks that use chocolate as an ingredient, for example: pozol, tascalate, tejate or atole. They combine with corn to thicken and traditionally sweetened with honey or vanilla.
I knew the chewing gum. I wavered on the chocolate; the tv was a bit of a surprise. Mexico has some fabulous writers---a relatively new one is Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Her work is simply wonderful!
Algo the vainilla is from México to the World
They forgot to mention Vanilla, avocados, corn. Lots of goodies from Mexico! ❤️ 🇲🇽
chocolate=aztecs or mexicas... prehispanic food
chewing gum=mayan product (yucatan peninsula)... then it was taken by Thomas Adams and sold as a candy
color tv=Guillermo Gonzalez Camarena... mexican inventor
Good job Mexican ANDREA! ;)
fun fact: there are more Spanish speakers in the US than in *Spain*. in fact, the only country with more Spanish speakers than the USA *is* Mexico.
and, yeah, even the word "chocolate" comes from Nahuatl; the word "chocolatl" was a catchall for foods made from cacao seeds.
Mexico, and Latin America more broadly, have far more robust Indigenous language communities and many more people living according to pre-Columbian folkways, because Spanish colonists (especially the commoners) tended to intermarry and assimilate into the Indigenous cultures to a far greater degree than in Anglophone and Francophone colonies. Don't get me wrong, there was no lack of oppression, genocidal policies, forced conversion, and more, to say nothing of the literal tons of gold straight up stolen from the Incas in particular, but it's why there are Indigenous languages of Central and South America that have millions of speakers, including many monolingual communities.
facts
My guy chocolate was perfected nondescript in the Amazon long before nahuatl was a thing.
@Siobhán S Another fact is that the vast majority of the Spanish speakers in the U.S. are of Mexican descent. For both historical and geographical reasons.
@@xyreniaofcthrayn1195 One thing is the cocoa tree, and another totally different thing is the chocolate, which is the product of a process, and just like the nixtamalization comes from the corn kernels, the chocolate requires actual labor and a certain degree of knowledge to attain. And both, the chocolate and nixtamalization were discovered in what is known today as Mexico, which also happens to be the cradle of various ancient Mesoamerican civilizations.
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 you have misunderstood Mexicans weren't Mexican when the tribes of the amazon were sipping on a sweet chocolate beverage made with sugar cane and imported llama milk from Peru and is what we would call milk chocolate, Aztecs simply figured a way to have it solidify into blocks.
The president of Mexico at the time did not sell those northern territories. Texas was lost due to their independence movement and the other portion was lost due to war. The Gadsden purchase was the only territory sold to the United States
Exactly lol
_"Independence",_ sure, that's one way to say it... Another little detail that Is often "forgotten" is that Mexico opened its borders to his Northern Protestant neighbors and allowed them to keep their language, religion and traditions (with the exception of sl*very, which was totally banned in Mexico, but not for our Northern amigos) in exchange to work the land. And how did the pay to their Mexican landlords? Well, after a few years they claimed independence from Mexico, then they joined into the U.S., but that of course wasn't a premeditated move by our lovely neighbors _(of course not!);_ and later it was used as an excuse to expand even further into the Mexican West. Mexico basically gave the hand to his neighbor, but uncle Sam took the whole arm.
Eee me gustó jajaja
But "el día de muertos" is actually on november 2nd, november 1st is "el día de todos los santos" (november 2nd "el día de los santos difuntos")
Actually Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California, Nevada, Colorado, Utah and Montana were part of the Mexican territory.
Here in Brazil by my sight Mexico is famous for spice foods and tacos and mainly by Chaves
El chavo del 8 for the rest of the world
@@comphysync9084 do you have it in your country?
@@TimeToSingChannel any country of the American continent
@@comphysync9084 coool
@@TimeToSingChannel even in parts of Asia and Europe mainly spain. But with CZcams is global now
hahah its always hilarious with that blonde American girl
Excellent video, I like the chemistry there is with the girls. In fact, the mexican cocoa is gotten from the states of Chiapas and Tabasco (the state where Mr. McIlhenny got the chilis for his Tabasco Sauce, and it's my home-state hehe). Greetings to all the world 😉
Oregon was also part of mexico..
Same as wa n california
Not Oregon not, didn’t see The Simpson’s sketch featuring Sacajawea about Oregon-Pacific descovery?
En México tambien inventamos las quesadillas sin queso 😎🇲🇽
Capitol of Mexico 😂 Washington D.C.? 😎
2050: Washington D.C
2100: Ciudad de Estados Unidos
Color TV inventor: Guillermo González Camarena
As a Texan, I'm a little surprised the Texas Revolution isn't more well known. Obviously it's Texas History, but it's another revolution against a major power that's very similar to the American revolution. Everyone knows the Alamo so I thought most people would know the war that it was in.
That's because it was basically another American revolution. It was scarcely populated and Americans began immigrating to Texas and eventually took over sparring the Texas revolution. Mexicans wouldn't have revolted.
@@XY-mc6zjYou don’t know enough about Mexican cultura/historia to come to the conclusion that they won’t have revolted. The revoluciones are a great part of Mexican history.
Thats Mamorial Day for us..
Ecatepec! XDDD
Happy Birthday Christina ❤️🙈 🎉
😀
Excellent girls ! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I have to wonder where in the US those 2 girls grew up in the US, that they had even a moment's hesitation with Texas.
Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada,
as well as parts of Oklahoma, Colorado, and Utah all once belonged to Mexico.
Much, much more once belonged to Spain, but that was before Mexican independence.
Bruh... The fact that they couldnt figure out most of these answers with confidence was irritating the hell out of me!
Bigmac? Whatever, I couldnt tell you the price of a bigmac in the US (price varies location to location anyways). But everything else besides the last question were just lob balls!
I did my study abroad in Mexico many years ago and really enjoyed my time there. I lived in a small town with a family. Most people were very nice to me. One thing I didn’t like was a tendency for mestizos to look down on and say nasty comments about indigenous people. (and it’s not just Mexico where I noticed this) But I feel like that attitude is changing nowadays in the wake of Trump and with younger people from what I’ve seen on Facebook. I see more young people becoming vocal about being proud of their native ancestral roots and them calling out discrimination.
No, most of mexican and latinamericans don't like natives or indigenous bc there are a mind complex about white people better or something just like that in society..
Very true .. Funny thing is indigenous looking Mexicans even look down on "being indigenous" and have a tendency to favor having more "White" features ..
Es un lastre del pasado compartido del virreinato. Lo más irónico, es que una minoría de españoles hispanistas fanáticos dirán que, ese lastre que se viene arrastrando desde hace siglos en América es parte de la "leyenda negra" y tal discriminación sistemática jamás existió durante el virreinato, y que los españoles trataban de igual a igual a los americanos indígenas en la práctica. Pero cuando se ve a través de la historia los hechos duros, todo esa mitificación de la discriminación española durante el virreinato se viene abajo, como por ejemplo quiénes ocupan los cargos de poder y administración, que en su mayoría fueron nepotistas peninsulares (españoles) y criollos (hijos de españoles nacidos en América).
@@gabrieljosefg6289 Here in México we call them "Withexicans".
@@omarn1946 I was gonna say that xD
I like callie.😉👍
Andrea from Spain ❤️
El Chavo del 8!
I think it’s odd Callie and Christina didn’t say Texas. Americans study this in school. Did they forget to Remember the Alamo. 😂
Andrea’s accent is so cute. She says e-Spain. I notice a lot of Spanish speakers but e in front of English words that being with s.
There's a great video by Intervenciones Gringas that speaks about the Alamo and how texas was basically conquered by ILLEGAL AMERICANS IN MEXICO. Quite a curious story btw
NUESTRA PAISANA ES BIEN CHINGONA SE GANÓ LIKE Y SUSCRIPCIÓN, GRACIAS
Spain, give us back the gold
¿Quién se lo quedó según tu?
No por favor, no empieces con esas sandeces, te ves mal
Hahaha fue hace 500 años superemoslo 🤣🤣
there are many things about Mexico that the world does not dare to find out ✌️
I want a chilean video 👀
november 1TH haha
The day of the dead is not on November the 1th it’s actually on the 2th ( on November 1th we celebrate el día de los santos )
El día primero es cuando llegan los niños y el dos es cuando llegan los adultos
On the day of the dead question, the answers have typos. Lol it’s cute tho 😂😂
Yay Andrea 🇲🇽 Andrea 🇪🇸Callie and Christina 🇺🇸❤️ you’re all awesome!!! Don’t forget vacanora and 🫔🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻 and lucha libre aka wrestling
It's interesting that blond Andrea didn't even know some of those facts. It was funny when she covered her flag pin!
The question about what state was part of Mexico should have been three different ones and the answer ALL ABOVE😂
Man I really want to go to Mexico but I'm literally afraid to to go there
There are a lot of safe places you can come to!
México is not only drugs and narcos, the world news talk onñy about that and thay have gave that image, you should try coming to Mexico and experience by yourself, you'll see that Mexico is not as bad as they say
@@kayasaki86 Yes
I encourage people with that mind set to come to Mexico. You will have the time of your life. Really good food, nice weather, friendly people, that’s what we have to offer.
when talking about chocolate, well it depends, because cacao is a natural thing that you cannot invent, the proper way of say it would be "domesticate"... I know the mayas or aztecs, i dont remember, they used to drink a beverage made out of cacao, but it was not sweet and not with milk. And the chocolate bars and drinks they were invented in Europe, here we can use the word "invention". So yeah because of that, I wouldn't say the chocolate we are used to consume nowdays was invented in "Mexico".. If we say the cocoa was domesticated in Mexico, than we'll have to give credit to Guatemala as well because at the time of the domestication, they were not countries, they were just civilizations that were in the territorie that now comprehends those countries, and also the inka civilization from what now is part of Peru and Ecuador, they also domesticated the cacao.
what better safe place between brasil and mexico ? :D
Mixtecos are actually current mainly in Oaxaca, and there's different variations of the same language. But my favorite sound in mexican original languages is the zapotec, also current in Oaxaca.
Yo soy de Oaxaca conosco a varias personas que hablan mixteco pero yo no logro comprender nada
@@user-qf9km6xm2t saludos!
Usually the name of cities give out their Spanish roots. Such as El Paso, Los Angeles, Las Vegas etc. And also states like Nevada, Colorado, Florida, Montana, which these names have a meanings Spanish.
Lo que pasa es que muchos esos territorios fueron parte de España, no llegaron a ser todos parte de México cuando este se independizó.
Este canal Tendría más Suscriptores si tuviera "Subtítulos en ESPAÑOL".
PORFAVOR ponganlos 😭😭
Solo Medio entiendo el inglés.
Mejor síguelo viendo en Inglés, y te ayudas con los subtítulos en Inglés simultáneos y un traductor online por las palabras que no entiendas, después de dos años verás.
@@omarn1946 ni tanto, en mucho menos tiempo lo vas a entender, yo voy un año aprendiendo inglés y entiendo el 95% de lo que dicen, asique en 6-8 meses capaz que entendés casi todo leyéndolo
@@lucag.9313 Que bien y ¿ solo practicabas input?
@@omarn1946 Sisi, output la verdad que no he practicado solamente por ahí con canciones o leyendo en voz alta pero en conversaciónes todavía no
@@lucag.9313 Solo leyendo y escuchando y traduciendo cuándo era necesario..
Just love it! 😃 Waiting for part 4 ..
Happy Birthday Christina!
Thank you! 😄
“Día de Muertos” it’s on November 2th; in November 1st it’s “Día de todos los santos”
I knew most of them except the mixteco, color tv, gum. As someone who enjoys history, not only was Texas and California, but Arizona, New Mexico, Utah , Nevada and Colorado were all part of Mexico.
En el lugar donde yo vivo el mixteco es muy común, incluso tengo conocidos que lo hablan, pero creo que solo es común en la parte de la republica donde vivo y dependiendo de la parte del país cambian las lenguas tradicionales comunes del area
Me sorprende que no sepan la historia de su país (usa), ya ni siquiera es necesario conocer la de México para saber qué territorios eran parte de este.
Bueno, no me sorprende que quizas no sepan de ello debido a que en muchas escuelas se niegan a enseñar esa parte de su historia. Recuerdo que hace unos años un gobernador en Texas o Arizona, no quería que las escuelas hablaran sobre ese periodo en su historia, por que si no los mexicanos "reclamarian" ese territorio, o algo así, era su argumento.
La verdad
Es por eso que la gran mayoría de los gringos son ignorantes, se sienten superiores cuando más de la mitad de "su" territorio fue robado.
Callie is so beautiful 😍.
Mexico didn't sell half of its territory. The US took it the "American" way. And it was not only Texas. It's actually a little less than half of US territory.
1:15 distrito federal... ಠ‿ಠ
8:43 ING. Guillermo González Camarena... En su honor, el canal cinco de la ciudad de México usa las letras XHGC; y la mascota del canal: "el gatito GC"
que significan la x y la h?
@@--julian_ son indicativos de Canal o señal de transmisión, internacionalmente a México le corresponden las xh (entre otras). Son como el prefijo de llamada +52 o el .MX en internet. Tiene su origen en la época de las comunicaciones vía telégrafo.
(◠‿◕)
Para más información, busca en la UIT (unión internacional de telecomunicaciones).
@@imacalderon6156 Ohhh qué interesante!
Ya no existe el distrito federal, no recuerdo cuando dejó de llamarse así, ahora solo es ciudad de México
Was el chapo from Mexico?
"You were conquered by Spain"? You are the ancestor of the people who came from Europe and conquered these lands, not the natives who lived here before
You don’t know her personal ancestry, she probably is mixed native and Spanish like most Mexicans
Día de muertos is November 2 not the first
El día de muertos es el 2 de noviembre 👀👉👈
Pre-Hispanic Mexicans invented the custom of chewing gum, not the chewing gum itself.
There is a type of tree that produces a resin that out of the tree gets the consistency of gum, and some people liked chewing it. The type of tree is called "el árbol del chicle". Chicle is the word we use in Spanish to refer to the chewing gum because originally, chicle came from that tree.
Yes n no....so chewing gum was founded. In mexico from th3 arbol de chicle n it was chewed my the whores that stood by the canals thats how ppl knew who they were and to give the gum flavor they would take mint leaves n chew it wit the gum
In the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa people have also chewed gum for probably thousands of years. It comes from the resin of trees that also produce what later is used as frankincense. It's amazing how cultures that didn't have contact with each other developed similar traditions!
@@andiehernandez1995 2 completely different trees the gum trees are native to the Americas same trees that were used to make rubber
@@eliseoreyes1858 I get your point, but olibanum is also chewed. In practical terms they're both similar.
Andrea (🇲🇽) is so cool
They missed out on putting 5 de mayo for independence day that would of been funny
American girl in this video no worries about learning other languages, unlike people from Spain, Mexico, German, etc, must speak English 🙄
Where's the one from Britain?
😎
Never knew so much interesting facts about Mexico. Guess I was wrong about Mexico, about what I saw on TV and in the movies and also being brainwashed with wrong information like there are alot of drug dealings going on in Mexico and high crime rate in Mexico. Sorry, Mexico ! There are in fact many positive things to talk about Mexico. I had always wanted to visit Mexico to learn Spanish and eat authentic Mexican food but was afraid for my own safety.
Don’t worry, media always exaggerate news to make them sound more interesting.For example,in Mexico many people are afraid of mass-shootings.
I love it, I'm mexican and I didn't know some of the answers xD
So sad..
So, you didn't go to school...
How do you pass history?
@@justk.3537 En su defensa he de decir que parte de la culpa la tienen los maestros. Esos mismos que andan haciendo manifestaciones porque se retrasó su quincena 2 días, son los mismos que no terminan de explicar los libros de sus materias porque se la pasan incapacitándose a cada rato y/o por los cientos de puentes que tenemos.
En secundaria, yo terminé mi libro de historia sola porque la maestra nos enseñó hasta un poco más de la mitad y es hasta las últimas páginas donde viene lo bueno de los inventores y más gente chingona de México.
@@eunbyeol7096 humm pues a mi no me tocaron esas manifestaciones, y las preguntas que dieron la mayoría las dieron en primaria, bueno tal vez hablo desde mi privilegio de la CDMX por así decirlo, donde siempre oigo que hay manifestaciones es en Oaxaca y Guerrero pero son de nivel preparatoria y licenciatura, entonces...
Me cuesta creer que algunas no las haya sabido
Living in California, there is so much Mexican culture infused in our lives that it doesn't feel so separate. Mexicans are our friends, neighbors, and family. Still, there is a lot to learn. I knew about the Olmec connection to chocolate, but the invention of chewing gum and the color TV was news to me. Kudos!
My dad told me all of these facts. I was a kid and while we were watching a movie he just casually said “you know a Mexican invented colored television”. Not too long after I found out my great great great G-pa fought alongside with Pancho Villa the same age I was as a kid. So many countries wanted to claim us, but the people stood firm.
Only Spain wanted Mexico, France was in cooperation with Mexicans for the Second Mexican Empire (Emperor Maximiliano) and the U.S. only wanted the northern territories.
Pancho Villa and his people killed my great-great grandfather, so thanks a lot lol He didn’t like rich people
The 2 Americans disappointed me... Oregon? Really? Really!? And August 2nd??? For crying out loud, these were all tee ups except for the last one!