Why English in Anime Sounds Different |

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024
  • English in Anime is pretty funny at times, but why does it sound the way it does? Whether it's DIO from Jojo's Bizarre Adventure saying "ZA WARUDO" or Ritsu from K-On saying "I like Sushi", it ranges from being cute to outright hilarious, but it typically sounds a bit different from standard English pronunciations, mostly due to the extra vowels. So, what is the reason for it sounding this way?

Komentáře • 5K

  • @AntwanShiro
    @AntwanShiro  Před rokem +10639

    Man it seems like a lot of comments didn't get who the "Wow gold star" comment was for lol

    • @blueotter5954
      @blueotter5954 Před rokem +88

      Beautiful

    • @midnightgalaxy432
      @midnightgalaxy432 Před rokem +91

      I didn't understand 😂

    • @AntwanShiro
      @AntwanShiro  Před 11 měsíci +957

      @@midnightgalaxy432 It’s poking fun at the people who try to correct little things that don’t matter to seem smart. Not realizing the information is summarized for simplicity or for a joke lol

    • @shevinrathnayaka6656
      @shevinrathnayaka6656 Před 11 měsíci +38

      Bro that is how u spell BOLOGNA WTH. Bro and u even said it wrong

    • @ninnikins4768
      @ninnikins4768 Před 11 měsíci +15

      It was for you

  • @rustysinner
    @rustysinner Před 2 měsíci +3812

    "English is weird"
    "Bologna" "rendezvous"
    Ah yes, English, my beloved

  • @toastybeanie
    @toastybeanie Před rokem +14348

    Joseph Joestar is literally the best example of this in all of anime. “HOLY SHIIIIT!” “SON OF A BIIITCH!” “OH MY GOD!”

    • @AntwanShiro
      @AntwanShiro  Před rokem +1743

      I can't tell you the struggle it was to not just include a million clips of Joseph lol

    • @thejackadoo
      @thejackadoo Před rokem +434

      Joseph Jostar is the best Jojo and I will die on this hill. I just think he’s very funny and overall a good character.
      And Jotoro is a close second.

    • @isthatkingkey
      @isthatkingkey Před rokem +144

      HORY SHEEET

    • @DeadBattleBrother15
      @DeadBattleBrother15 Před rokem +56

      NOOOOOOO!

    • @musicalsystem927
      @musicalsystem927 Před rokem +98

      Go aheed, mistur Joe stur

  • @CoryxKenshinxChin
    @CoryxKenshinxChin Před 3 měsíci +1010

    "SONNADA BETCCH!"
    -Joseph Joestar, 1989

    • @epicmeme3264
      @epicmeme3264 Před měsícem +77

      HORRYY SHETTTT!
      -Joseph Joestar, 1989

    • @JcTr8x
      @JcTr8x Před měsícem +44

      OH MY GODDDDD
      -Joseph Joestar, 1989

    • @Rio_Torres
      @Rio_Torres Před 27 dny +9

      3 awesome comments

    • @roronoa_zoro191
      @roronoa_zoro191 Před 26 dny +9

      "WHERE THE FUCK AM I"
      -zoro,2024

    • @ms.pirate
      @ms.pirate Před 21 dnem +2

      English sounds SOOOO much better than Japanese! Seriously. The female characters in Japanese dub makes my ears bleed, and everyone sounds the same. Its a fact

  • @RealCodreX
    @RealCodreX Před měsícem +553

    English in japanese production is what germans hear when anglo-saxon films and series try to speak german

    • @incaseofimportantnegotiations
      @incaseofimportantnegotiations Před 27 dny +32

      you can't even imagine what they do to russian

    • @faith.W
      @faith.W Před 21 dnem +2

      @@incaseofimportantnegotiations Russian in Alya San was so hilarious

    • @Max_G4
      @Max_G4 Před 20 dny +3

      And for some reason they have to scream everything. Good thing we'll at least one nice, soft-spoken "German" (Fantasy-Germany) character in an English show with the The Mighty Nein animated series.

    • @shoujahatsumetsu
      @shoujahatsumetsu Před 8 dny

      @@Max_G4 Hey, the non-screaming German alternative is the overly flamboyant German.

  • @cruzeto7171
    @cruzeto7171 Před 10 měsíci +19285

    "Why japanese ppl sound different? Lol"
    "Accents"

    • @ParadiseDB7
      @ParadiseDB7 Před 10 měsíci +70

      No.
      Edit: Bud this conversation ended six months ago stop trying to continue a non-existent argument. Read my further replies to know I'm right and then leave it alone.

    • @titan1umtitan
      @titan1umtitan Před 10 měsíci +598

      @@ParadiseDB7…yes

    • @ParadiseDB7
      @ParadiseDB7 Před 10 měsíci +31

      @@titan1umtitan literally no

    • @titan1umtitan
      @titan1umtitan Před 10 měsíci +547

      @@ParadiseDB7 but…yeah, pretty much. The reason they sound different IS accent, which is part of dialect, which covers the written/translation portion and contains accent. So yes, it is accent, because we’re talking about how it’s spoken.

    • @ParadiseDB7
      @ParadiseDB7 Před 10 měsíci +28

      @@titan1umtitan buddy the accent isn't the topic of discussion 🤦‍♂️

  • @NayyarAbbas-sh1vw
    @NayyarAbbas-sh1vw Před 3 měsíci +4325

    "Japanese does not have L"
    Death Note:

    • @nanashixii8332
      @nanashixii8332 Před 3 měsíci +169

      W.

    • @St4r_junko
      @St4r_junko Před 3 měsíci +69

      LMAO-

    • @ArklinJarvvznic01
      @ArklinJarvvznic01 Před 3 měsíci +219

      "Japanese doesn't have an L"
      Luffy:

    • @St4r_junko
      @St4r_junko Před 3 měsíci +136

      @@ArklinJarvvznic01
      "Japan does not have an L"
      Leon Kuwata:

    • @witchtoko
      @witchtoko Před 2 měsíci +129

      it doesn't, but they still use words that are loaned from the english words that have an L. like, "light" becomes "ライト raito"

  • @MisterGoose
    @MisterGoose Před měsícem +200

    My man tried to disprove English spelling and brought 2 loan words in the argument, smh

    • @normanmai7865
      @normanmai7865 Před měsícem +42

      He actually brought 3. While bologna comes from Italian and rendezvous comes from French, Schtschurowskia is the scientific name of a genus of flowers. Not only does that make it based on Latin grammar, but the name comes from a Russian professor of geology.

    • @khaosklub
      @khaosklub Před měsícem +14

      should have used quesadilla

    • @pilot_bruh576
      @pilot_bruh576 Před měsícem +9

      And english spelling is from the lack of updating since the great vowel shift

    • @justachilldude4356
      @justachilldude4356 Před 26 dny +10

      Even so the point still kinda stands. While yeah, the weird pronounciations and can be blamed on the original languages, it's notas though English _NEEDED_ to keep the pronounciations/spellings so weird. Japanese is another language that uses a _lot_ of loan words from other languages, but in Japanese every single loan word is spelt exactly as they pronounce it, regardless of the language it came.
      In addition, there are certain cases where English will take a loan word from another language, and pronounce it in a way that makes _less_ sense than it did in the original language, for example "Karaoke" is a loan word from Japanese. In Japanese they pronounce it "Ka-Ra-O-Kay", which makes sense because the Japanese "e" letter is always pronounced as "ay", it's consistent. But in english, for some God forsaken reason, it's pronounced "Ka-Ree-O-Kee", because, for no reason whatsoever, in this word "a" rhymes with "e". He didn't use the best examples, but there's definitely truth to what he's saying, English has few rules when it comes to knowing how to pronounce stuff

    • @ms.pirate
      @ms.pirate Před 21 dnem

      English sounds SOOOO much better than Japanese! Seriously. The female characters in Japanese dub makes my ears bleed, and everyone sounds the same. Its a fact

  • @zhet
    @zhet Před 2 měsíci +134

    I like how you has purposefully shown a bunch of loanwords from other languages with different orthographies

    • @khaosklub
      @khaosklub Před měsícem +8

      funny because english has plenty of native examples that make no sense... like read

    • @AcherontiaLachesis-m1s
      @AcherontiaLachesis-m1s Před 29 dny +5

      @@khaosklub What's wrong with read?

    • @bluelfsuma
      @bluelfsuma Před 28 dny +5

      ​@@AcherontiaLachesis-m1sYeah, what is wrong with reading the word read like the word read?

    • @AcherontiaLachesis-m1s
      @AcherontiaLachesis-m1s Před 27 dny +5

      @@bluelfsuma Are you referring to the ambiguity of the pronunciation of the word read ("riːd" and "red") when context is absent? Because if you are, that exists in almost every language- even in languages that have phonetic orthography (which means every word is pronounced as it's written).

    • @bluelfsuma
      @bluelfsuma Před 27 dny +2

      @@AcherontiaLachesis-m1s Well, I was just making a joke to try and clarify what they meant, but that's cool info. I think people probably just dunk on English all the time because it's the most widespread.

  • @crustaceanking3293
    @crustaceanking3293 Před 11 měsíci +33784

    bro forgot that English is actually several languages standing on each other's shoulders in a comically large trench coat

    • @derpfluidvariant0916
      @derpfluidvariant0916 Před 11 měsíci +2824

      This is an important part of the conversation in my opinion. A truly silly amount of words in English were taken wholesale from another language, without altering the spelling to fit English's grammatical and pronunciation rules. Most languages have more set in stone rules for clarity, but English is like an art tutorial where the teacher says "fill in the rest". A person well versed in English can cook up something wondrous as a result of the lack of restrictions, but a new speaker will have difficulty learning it due to the lack of rigid rules without exceptions.

    • @BreadLoeuf
      @BreadLoeuf Před 10 měsíci +857

      To be fair, many languages are. French is a Frankenstein's monster of Latin mixing in with the mainland Celtic tribes and then German, with a twinge of prescriptivist rhetoric making its spelling suuuper bullshit.
      Indonesian is a great example because you can draw many parallels between it and English. Both are island languages, neither are native to the island they inhabit, they both got GEKOLONISEERD/conquered by some superpower which added a bunch of loan words to their language, and they also heavily mixed with native languages on their respective islands.
      Homogenised natural languages like don't even exist anymore. I'd like an example of one existing.

    • @jasonutty52
      @jasonutty52 Před 10 měsíci +384

      English is very light Romano-Briton mixed with a lot of Germanic Angles & Saxons mixed with some Old Norse mixed with a lot of Norman French.
      And probably some more here and there. What a time.
      Language is cool.

    • @crustaceanking3293
      @crustaceanking3293 Před 10 měsíci +309

      @@jasonutty52 like i said, comically large trench coat

    • @Blanch590
      @Blanch590 Před 10 měsíci +101

      Learning proper grammar and spelling is torture even as a native speaker sometimes.

  • @turkeybywhatmeans
    @turkeybywhatmeans Před 10 měsíci +2588

    "except this guy -> ん, he's special."
    ん(n) is like the one left-handed kid in class, just kinda sits there and exists.

    • @Yes_Indeed-w7t
      @Yes_Indeed-w7t Před 8 měsíci +76

      Look dawg. I didn't need to be reminded of the time I was in fourth grade at 2:32 in the morning

    • @ideac.
      @ideac. Před 8 měsíci +55

      Believe it or not, the japanese "n" is not even originated from the latin alphabet, its its own thing, its just coincidence

    • @turkeybywhatmeans
      @turkeybywhatmeans Před 8 měsíci +20

      @@ideac. it just sits there and exists.

    • @NukeMqn
      @NukeMqn Před 8 měsíci +7

      literally me

    • @human_body_is_alive
      @human_body_is_alive Před 7 měsíci +2

      Naruto-saN

  • @shark_cat125
    @shark_cat125 Před 2 měsíci +350

    "EllO EVeRee NyAn"
    thats a classic lol
    Edit:thx! I'm kinda famous!

    • @Elysium4
      @Elysium4 Před měsícem +7

      I heard "Haro abe-minion." It doesn't help it's being said by something that looks like that lemon guy from Adventure Time.

    • @dragondan244
      @dragondan244 Před měsícem +4

      How are you? Fine thank you

    • @VijemaVati
      @VijemaVati Před měsícem +3

      @@dragondan244Oh my gaah-!

    • @Megagirus2000
      @Megagirus2000 Před měsícem +1

      I wish I were a bird

  • @TheMidnightReaper983
    @TheMidnightReaper983 Před měsícem +22

    Fuck you rendezvous ,literally got me rolling

  • @aspiring.creative.person6092
    @aspiring.creative.person6092 Před 8 měsíci +5389

    “English is weird, just look at the word rendezvous!”
    Dude that’s literally French 😂

    • @asok123
      @asok123 Před 6 měsíci +239

      I was looking for someone to comment this thank you

    • @Shadowz227
      @Shadowz227 Před 6 měsíci +86

      French is 39%

    • @Sinx-Ce
      @Sinx-Ce Před 6 měsíci +11

      Yep

    • @syotos42
      @syotos42 Před 6 měsíci +316

      It is an english word. Its just ripped wholesale from french. Still in the english lexicon, makes it an english word that doesn't follow any of our normal language conventions.

    • @spino-ace
      @spino-ace Před 6 měsíci +30

      Thats kinda the point…

  • @elderparadoxproject
    @elderparadoxproject Před rokem +4541

    Bologna and rendezvous ah yes my favorite English words

    • @mario.gaming
      @mario.gaming Před 11 měsíci +302

      "english"

    • @jamilkamaly8452
      @jamilkamaly8452 Před 11 měsíci +87

      Thank you educated man

    • @ttpoman711
      @ttpoman711 Před 11 měsíci +377

      Almost as good as Sushi, my most favorite English word

    • @annanowak9620
      @annanowak9620 Před 11 měsíci +18

      ​@@mario.gamingyes englishh

    • @murdoc296
      @murdoc296 Před 11 měsíci +42

      Like ski and slalom are "english" words.

  • @not.a.winner
    @not.a.winner Před měsícem +12

    They nailed Franky’s “SUPERR”

    • @fenrillratz9890
      @fenrillratz9890 Před 28 dny +1

      @@not.a.winner because he always rounds he r. If you hear closely, he also pronounce luffy kinda ruffy.

  • @Sharky252
    @Sharky252 Před dnem +2

    "Rendezvous" the fact it's a french word makes it even better they literally just yoinked it 💀

  • @weebjeez
    @weebjeez Před 7 měsíci +3102

    OP: What is this English Word!?
    OP: **names several loan words from other languages**

    • @ste_v8
      @ste_v8 Před 6 měsíci +89

      Bologna Is a city of italy

    • @JoashChacko
      @JoashChacko Před 5 měsíci +15

      "Do you understand? "

    • @chocolatebar6785
      @chocolatebar6785 Před 5 měsíci +99

      kk but imagine being a non english speaker and seeing antidisestablishmentarianism

    • @weebjeez
      @weebjeez Před 5 měsíci +66

      @@chocolatebar6785 Germany and Sweden would like a word, I suppose.

    • @Discodian
      @Discodian Před 4 měsíci +14

      rendezvous is deadass an English word what?

  • @average_loser_loves_cheries
    @average_loser_loves_cheries Před rokem +2667

    joseph is the best at that shit.

  • @Singinasong
    @Singinasong Před měsícem +6

    "SANA DA BIISSHH!" is what i heard lol

  • @That_One_Furby
    @That_One_Furby Před měsícem +5

    “catch me if you can, mr holmes”
    - william james moriarty

  • @geboaebo
    @geboaebo Před 11 měsíci +1436

    My guy learned what an accent is 💀

    • @5h3i1ah_and_Nik0
      @5h3i1ah_and_Nik0 Před 11 měsíci +64

      it's not even just an accent, it's the whole way japanese transliterates english. even someone who is fluent in both languages with no quirks in their english speech will say english words somewhat like this during japanese speech, because it sounds more natural than a jarring switch to english speech mid-sentence or mid-conversation.

    • @geboaebo
      @geboaebo Před 11 měsíci +101

      @@5h3i1ah_and_Nik0 dude, that's what an accent it. When I say Spanish words in English conversation, I also say them with an English accent. Doesn't make it less of an accent just because I can choose to say them normally

    • @juanrodriguez9971
      @juanrodriguez9971 Před 11 měsíci +47

      ​@@5h3i1ah_and_Nik0that's literally what an accent is, why do you think japanese people struggle to pronounce it? Because not many of them are used to the way letters are pronounced, even less to know how to pronounce it correctly, is like when Americans try to speak Spanish and instead of saying "mexico" and "tortilla" they just say "mecsicow" and "tortila"

    • @5h3i1ah_and_Nik0
      @5h3i1ah_and_Nik0 Před 11 měsíci +30

      @@juanrodriguez9971 _struggling_ to pronounce english correctly during english speech, is english with a japanese accent. speaking japanese and using a transliterated english word is _not_ an accent, and in fact, i'd argue that an english speaker trying to speak japanese and pronouncing a transliterated english word like the original english word would be an accent. it would be _incorrect_ to, say, pronounce ソニック・ザ・ヘッジホッグ as "Sonic the Hedgehog", because it's pronounced Sonikku za Hejjihoggu. that _is_ Sonic's japanese name, a transliteration of "Sonic the Hedgehog", and the same goes for any transliterated english word. meanwhile, someone with japanese-accented english might mispronounce "Sonic the Hedgehog" as "Sonik za Hejjihog" while speaking english, and _that_ would be an accent.
      if someone is perfectly fluent and unhampered by an accent in both languages, they'll say Sonikku za Hejjihoggu when speaking japanese and Sonic the Hedgehog when speaking english. same goes for any english words transliterated to japanese for japanese speech.

    • @geboaebo
      @geboaebo Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@5h3i1ah_and_Nik0 Lil bro is delusional

  • @darkdudironaji
    @darkdudironaji Před 6 měsíci +1567

    I love that your examples for weird English words were a plant named after a Russian professor, a meat named after the Italian city it was invented in, and a French word.

    • @Bleepboop_killerducks
      @Bleepboop_killerducks Před 4 měsíci +37

      Lmaooo 😭

    • @pagatryx5451
      @pagatryx5451 Před 3 měsíci +66

      And most English words very much follow a similar structure. Vowels are either the first letter, or after a phoneme. If you ever play something like Wordle, you understand how similarly structured English words actually are.
      Japan actually has an entire alphabet for foreign words and concepts so it's not anything different.

    • @aaronlosey7201
      @aaronlosey7201 Před 3 měsíci

      there is nothing better to represent english than stolen words. English is the master thief of languages.

    • @sethb3090
      @sethb3090 Před 3 měsíci +47

      Yep, this is standard. People complain about English words and then proceed to name a bunch of Latin, Greek, and French

    • @boxycthulhu3519
      @boxycthulhu3519 Před 3 měsíci +35

      @@sethb3090yes because English is a language that evolved from and was influenced by Latin, Greek, and French . If only the words that are of Anglo-Saxon origin count as real English words, then we’re not speaking English at all but some sort of colossal pidgin language.

  • @Underboy-jh6nr
    @Underboy-jh6nr Před 16 dny +1

    Joseph is a prime example of engrish to the point he is the meme in the fandom

  • @silenceofficialyt2300
    @silenceofficialyt2300 Před 6 dny +1

    That one little special guy 😌😌

  • @murderofcrows5089
    @murderofcrows5089 Před 3 měsíci +480

    Yeah English is essentially the Frankenstein’s monster of languages

    • @Skeleticalhand
      @Skeleticalhand Před 2 měsíci +10

      Ironically, it is "the" language

    • @creeperfun12
      @creeperfun12 Před 2 měsíci +2

      honestly, its not to far of minionese

  • @Shurri-Q
    @Shurri-Q Před rokem +2206

    Local weeb discovers accents.

    • @theofficialchan
      @theofficialchan Před 11 měsíci +215

      Weeb finds out languages exist.

    • @alesha394
      @alesha394 Před 10 měsíci +142

      literally what i thought when this video comes up…. such a long and exaggerated video for something that can be described with one word, accents… like was this actually asked by people did no one consider ‘hmmmm maybe because japanese and english are different languages and accents😮😮😱’

    • @ItsVab
      @ItsVab Před 10 měsíci +49

      I thought that at first too, but I found it interesting when he really broke down why the accent is the way it is, learned a fair bit about the Japanese language

    • @elpresidente252
      @elpresidente252 Před 10 měsíci +4

      More like a Unitedstatesian discovering that the world consists of not just Unitedstatesia

    • @user-qf7xj7pi9f
      @user-qf7xj7pi9f Před 10 měsíci +1

      I mean at least *one* person learned something

  • @FrogWarior
    @FrogWarior Před měsícem +4

    a better way to explain the l and r sound thing is they don't differentiate between the two sounds, and sort of just make a median sound, also resulting in some things having the wrong letter through translation (example: mario kart ds kiosk demo's version of dk pass(?) has trucks that say "flesh" instead of "fresh"). and another thing is the VA's may not know english so they read katakana, which basically just substitutes for english, also resulting in the extra vowels

  • @TheCarlosCobain
    @TheCarlosCobain Před měsícem +2

    Did this dude just make a short based entirely on the concept of different languages being...different?

  • @DieLorel31
    @DieLorel31 Před 11 měsíci +1375

    >says English spelling is the problem with the language
    >uses loan words from different languages

    • @dontburstmybubble686
      @dontburstmybubble686 Před 10 měsíci +49

      Okay what about water? Shits just uater. Loan and lone are spelled differently yet sound the same. At least when "Hana" and "Hana" sound the same, it's because the hiragana can't portray an intonation. What's English's excuse?? We have o and a make the same sound like in fall and parasol. But also y i and e can make the same sound. But also a has three different, albeit minutely different sounds.

    • @DieLorel31
      @DieLorel31 Před 10 měsíci +95

      @@dontburstmybubble686 yapping

    • @noirekuroraigami2270
      @noirekuroraigami2270 Před 10 měsíci +45

      @@dontburstmybubble686water is a Germanic word that exists in all German languages. Dutch (Low German), Austrian (High German), Germany( Depends on Region)
      English- Anglo-Saxon - Saxony is a region in Germany
      Water was part of the English language before they switched to Latin

    • @Cloaded-kc4kq
      @Cloaded-kc4kq Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@dontburstmybubble686no water is waaater.

    • @sehyun9140
      @sehyun9140 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Cloaded-kc4kqbro who says waaater

  • @MariTheNon
    @MariTheNon Před 9 měsíci +2225

    "Throwing a bunch of letters together and figuring it out later" is the most accurate description of English

    • @JoeKing7102
      @JoeKing7102 Před 7 měsíci +9

      naw

    • @NK-ns1bp
      @NK-ns1bp Před 6 měsíci +16

      Not really! It's just because you haven't learned linguistics

    • @shiro_milord
      @shiro_milord Před 6 měsíci +21

      *Go, random bullshit*

    • @JohnSmith-dz2dc
      @JohnSmith-dz2dc Před 6 měsíci +10

      You’re thinking of french

    • @shiro_milord
      @shiro_milord Před 6 měsíci +18

      @@JohnSmith-dz2dc they smoosh together letters to make new letters, it's entirely different.

  • @cheesylog
    @cheesylog Před 21 dnem

    Rendezvous is just two french words glued together💀

  • @Drexus.The.Mantled
    @Drexus.The.Mantled Před měsícem

    Joseph Joestar saying "SON OF A BITCH" is always so fucking funny to me.

  • @hylianadventurer
    @hylianadventurer Před 6 měsíci +477

    "English has this pattern of throwing a bunch of letters together and figuring it out later"
    *Proceeds to show words that come from other languages*

    • @abbadon9693
      @abbadon9693 Před 3 měsíci +52

      Yes, like half of the English language.

    • @hylianadventurer
      @hylianadventurer Před 3 měsíci +29

      The three words he showed are from German, Italian, and French in origin, they're not native English words.

    • @abbadon9693
      @abbadon9693 Před 3 měsíci +22

      @@hylianadventurer Okay, what is a "native English word" please? Because from what I can recall pretty much all of English comes from other languages.

    • @fitzmagix1047
      @fitzmagix1047 Před 3 měsíci +14

      @@abbadon9693 The origins of "native English" come from a language rooted in ancient Britain with some Nordic influences, not whatever mishmash modern English is today. If you look at the words that are derived from that old language, they are spelled and pronounced as you would expect them to be- much of the weird stuff comes from the romance languages.

    • @abbadon9693
      @abbadon9693 Před 3 měsíci +15

      @@fitzmagix1047 My question still stands. What English words are native to English, in that they don't originate from other languages. Because I'm fairly certain that most if not all of the words I've used in this comment are derived from some other language.

  • @KingLegacyGuy
    @KingLegacyGuy Před rokem +671

    The Japanese alphabet takes no L.

  • @totothepotato2794
    @totothepotato2794 Před měsícem +3

    “Son of a beeyach” 😂😂😂

  • @Cozy-Rozy
    @Cozy-Rozy Před 6 dny +1

    “Kurisumasu” sounds cooler 😂

  • @HumanfallOOF
    @HumanfallOOF Před rokem +1565

    Joseph joestar: SON O D BEEECH
    HORY MORYYYYY
    HORY SHEEEEEEET

  • @jonarbuckle2894
    @jonarbuckle2894 Před rokem +252

    English is just three languages in a trench coat

    • @ddshocktrooper5604
      @ddshocktrooper5604 Před 10 měsíci +36

      And it lurks in dark alleys beating up unsuspecting languages and riffling through their pockets for loose vocabulary.

    • @talete7712
      @talete7712 Před 10 měsíci +11

      @@ddshocktrooper5604omg this is such an accurate description actually

    • @plantboy6249
      @plantboy6249 Před 8 měsíci +4

      And what would they be? French German and Latin?

    • @amelia02004
      @amelia02004 Před 3 měsíci +3

      3 languages? I thought it was a few hundred language shards held together with duct tape, hopes, and prayers. all of that hiding under a trench coat.

  • @mr.cube1103
    @mr.cube1103 Před měsícem +1

    Wait until you hear karma in assassination classroom 💀

  • @damaraland
    @damaraland Před 23 dny

    the ''hELlo EVeRYYiOnE! '' got me

  • @catthemeg336
    @catthemeg336 Před rokem +1020

    Rendezvous is french, that's why it sounds like that while being written the way it is. If I'm not mistaken, the direct translation is "you return."

    • @not_fatalis
      @not_fatalis Před rokem +101

      The translation depends on the context, ca mean either a meeting, a date, or "you go (to a place)"

    • @PlushChie
      @PlushChie Před rokem +108

      And 'bologne' is Italian, and it simultaneously is pronounced differently, and manages to sound stupid in its own language

    • @MoxxiePossum
      @MoxxiePossum Před 11 měsíci +16

      It just means "meeting" and "date".

    • @not_fatalis
      @not_fatalis Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@MoxxiePossum voilà

    • @agent00nothing35
      @agent00nothing35 Před 11 měsíci +32

      There's also Bologna, which is Italian, and I just always cringe so hard when I hear americans say it

  • @Orchid_Merryweather
    @Orchid_Merryweather Před 11 měsíci +487

    "fuck you rendezvous"
    Rendezvous, a french word

    • @davidguthary8147
      @davidguthary8147 Před 10 měsíci +15

      An English loanword from French*

    • @talete7712
      @talete7712 Před 10 měsíci +75

      @@davidguthary8147still a french word, not an english one. That’s why it’s called a loanword.

    • @softfortheme
      @softfortheme Před 10 měsíci +6

      ​@@talete7712does it count as english if you can find it in english dictionaries?? what makes it count loll

    • @Asian_Jesus.
      @Asian_Jesus. Před 10 měsíci +9

      ​@@softfortheme If its germanic in origin or a pure mix than it would be an english word, if its a loan word than its not an english word.
      It counts as part of the english language, but doesnt count as an english word. These are two different categories, if this clears up some of your confusions.
      If you need an example: Piñata, you can certainly find it in an english dictionary and is by all means part of the english language, but it is certainly not an english word.

    • @softfortheme
      @softfortheme Před 10 měsíci

      @@Asian_Jesus. ahh ok thanks!

  • @terrytheinsane
    @terrytheinsane Před 25 dny

    Sometimes I wish humanity just universally stuck with "ooh ooh ah ah"

  • @managerdante
    @managerdante Před měsícem

    “hallo evurynyan!”
    “HWUA”
    “how are you? fine tsank you”
    “ho my gaahh!!”
    “uh, ia wish i werh a bird”

  • @midas_le_foxo6336
    @midas_le_foxo6336 Před 8 měsíci +357

    The fact that Joseph Speaks English so much and somewhat decently just....Makes me think he knows more than just
    "SAN ADA BEIITCH"

    • @Tairashimuzu
      @Tairashimuzu Před 7 měsíci +34

      He does. Cause he's british

    • @meeese6_
      @meeese6_ Před 7 měsíci +22

      ​@@Tairashimuzucondolences

    • @marrav3794
      @marrav3794 Před 5 měsíci +10

      On a real note, English actually is a language that most countries learn as a required secondary language. So Joseph's Japanese VAs probably do know a decent amount of it at least. Especially in Japan where if things aren't in a Japanese dialect (hirigana, katana, etc) they're in English. You can see this in a lot of packages of Japanese snacks and drinks where they'll use the romanji (ie "english" spelling of the Japanese word) of the brand name and put it on the bottle or package.
      It's actually pretty interesting how few countries don't require the students to learn a second language while most other schools are having students learning at least two languages as a requirement.

  • @moonlighteclipse8037
    @moonlighteclipse8037 Před rokem +626

    abdul’s famous line of YES! I AM! gets me every time

  • @Artyomi
    @Artyomi Před 26 dny

    “Why does my language sound weird in another language?”

  • @AcepkaisAsar
    @AcepkaisAsar Před 8 dny

    "son of a biiiichu" is crazy 💀

  • @NINJAGOKAIPRO
    @NINJAGOKAIPRO Před 6 měsíci +132

    “ BESTO FRIENDO!”
    -Aoi Todo

    • @Flamingo48923
      @Flamingo48923 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Say what you want, that’s perfect english because we should say it like that

    • @faleilham8334
      @faleilham8334 Před 2 měsíci +2

      And funny thing is Todo voice actor born and have strong Germany gene/dna on his blood, even his face looks so foreigners compared to the same voice actor who literally born in Germany but still retains asian feature on him.

    • @gustavosauro1882
      @gustavosauro1882 Před 2 měsíci

      BRUZZAH

  • @mtn66amassuonoobpawa35
    @mtn66amassuonoobpawa35 Před 10 měsíci +154

    bro took an entire clip to say "they have an accent guys"

    • @Ventorath
      @Ventorath Před 6 měsíci +4

      I mean, sure, but that's oversimplifying it in this case. There are different accents even among the same language and it doesn't stem from these kind of differences. It's mostly that "(almost) every syllable ends with a vowel" thing that results in Japanese people speaking English sounding like this.

    • @reinhartnata47
      @reinhartnata47 Před 6 měsíci +1

      This video is funny because english dubs pronounce japanese words weirdly as well

    • @elnopo4242
      @elnopo4242 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This is more than an accent, it is about the limitation of their available syllabs

    • @billbill6094
      @billbill6094 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@Ventorath OP comment is not oversimplifying it, op video is overcomplicating it. It doesn't take a linguist to know if you pronounce shit differently in a different language you might hold on to those pronunciations in a new language.

  • @ErrorUser.808
    @ErrorUser.808 Před měsícem +1

    Tf did rendezvous do to hurt you?

  • @Alexorier
    @Alexorier Před měsícem

    The amount of joseph joestar is iconic

  • @KaiAndMaxyOfficial
    @KaiAndMaxyOfficial Před 10 měsíci +159

    "Japanese replaces Ls with Rs, leaving Words like Christmas-"
    *Me trying to find the L in Christmas*

    • @Yuukaroo
      @Yuukaroo Před 7 měsíci +9

      japanese ppl use l as well lol, it's just that r and l are the same letter

    • @lilyofluck371
      @lilyofluck371 Před 7 měsíci +2

      clitmas (sry)

    • @OnlyPedosCanTagMe
      @OnlyPedosCanTagMe Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@YuukarooWhat.

    • @jodinha4225
      @jodinha4225 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@Yuukaroonot the same letter, it's the same sound to them. They aren't taught how to tell the difference.

  • @Kōcho-Shinobu_Official-ཐིཋྀ

    the "OH F*CK YOU RENDEZVOUS" got me-

  • @Toxin9701
    @Toxin9701 Před 3 měsíci

    "Hello everynyan. How are you? Fine, thank you. I wish I were a bird."

  • @TheGameforestguy
    @TheGameforestguy Před 10 měsíci +537

    My man just discovered accents and NEEDED to tell everyone LMFAO

    • @JaceGameplay
      @JaceGameplay Před 9 měsíci +18

      Katakana Pronunciation isn't a accent bro. It's a way to write and pronunciate loan words.
      Every language pronounces loan words different than the original source, you can see the difference in Italian pronunciation of Bollogna and the English pronunciation of Bollogna as a loan word.

    • @blakblu
      @blakblu Před 8 měsíci +15

      ​​@@JaceGameplaythat's... What accent means in a general term? How you pronounce the word is generally called an accent? Like the meme where instead of saying "bottle of water" an Englishman pronounced it as "bo'oh o wu'ah". That's an accent to my knowledge.

    • @plantboy6249
      @plantboy6249 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@JaceGameplay They can't speak English properly. End of.

    • @felipeguedescampos851
      @felipeguedescampos851 Před 8 měsíci +3

      He is just explain why the accent is like that

    • @Themotivated1ne
      @Themotivated1ne Před 8 měsíci

      Wow it's so funny for the people who are braindead how the hell do u even find this shit funny and he is talking about why their "accent" is different

  • @EzioRaheli
    @EzioRaheli Před rokem +161

    bro Bologna is literally the name of a city, it's not the city's fault if things are mispronounced in English

    • @Kuroda786742
      @Kuroda786742 Před 10 měsíci +22

      He also leaves out three part where Americans pronounce it baloney and Italians pronounce it more like bolonya

    • @The_scrongler1978
      @The_scrongler1978 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Kuroda786742Italy isn’t real it’s just Rome but owned by a chef. Prove me wrong

    • @elnopo4242
      @elnopo4242 Před 6 měsíci +1

      He took this example to demonstrate how lazy english is. Japanese adapt prononciation AND writing.
      On the other hand, English take the word, pronounce weirdly but stay with the same writing. Which has no sense at all.

    • @fabiospasiano9885
      @fabiospasiano9885 Před 5 měsíci

      Americans be like

  • @azooloth
    @azooloth Před 20 dny

    THE LOOP IS SO GOOD

  • @anicon4981
    @anicon4981 Před 19 dny

    1. "Randevo"
    2. "Rendezvous"
    Your choice😂😂😂

  • @speedyx3493
    @speedyx3493 Před 9 měsíci +84

    English native speakers thinking every other language is just English with extra steps never ceases to amaze

    • @adrianmcbride1666
      @adrianmcbride1666 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Uh no, as a native English speaker I know that it is a stupidly complex language with way too many exceptions to it's rules.

    • @amelia02004
      @amelia02004 Před 3 měsíci +3

      nah, english is language soup, and I know it is soup. red and read and lead, read and lead and mead, their and they're and there. we are a confusing language.

  • @MaliqIbrahim-1306
    @MaliqIbrahim-1306 Před 8 měsíci +36

    "SANADABYEEECH!"
    -The guy who supposedly defeated the ultimate life form

  • @RudeusGreyrat9
    @RudeusGreyrat9 Před měsícem

    "oh fuck you rendezvous" I FEEL YOU

  • @felsiccanis
    @felsiccanis Před měsícem

    Bro mentioned rendezvous as if it's not French

  • @speedmastervrc
    @speedmastervrc Před 11 měsíci +66

    In school they basically tried to teach us that English has a bunch of rules but you aren't actually expected to follow any of them

    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Před 9 měsíci +4

      That is because American English was made by putting the world's languages into a pile and using a car crusher to smush them into a new language and 🎇🎆TADA🎆🎇 we have English. Smacks weird smooshed up languages: You can fit lot of sounds that can be used to make people from around the world understand what you are saying into this bad boy.

  • @rawrkinsrawr3007
    @rawrkinsrawr3007 Před 11 měsíci +46

    Fun fact bologna and rendezvous are borrow words or lend words, aka not actually English words! This is a problem with English, a lot of common to semi common, and a whole lot of uncommon words are all lend words and therefore bot actually English or translated even. The English language does have rules, but it's really the back alley mugger of languages

    • @F14thunderhawk
      @F14thunderhawk Před 10 měsíci +5

      lets be honest. English deploys tactical strike teams to seize lexicon from other languages

    • @engigner
      @engigner Před 10 měsíci +3

      yeah and schtschurowskia is german

    • @squashedshibber2684
      @squashedshibber2684 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Literally every language does this on earth.

    • @elnopo4242
      @elnopo4242 Před 6 měsíci +1

      More than a half of the english lexicon comes from latin or french. There were some people so mad they just decided to create a pure english with only germanic words. It's called Anglish
      In case you didn't know, english is a germanic language like dutch and german

  • @derekwestbrook9383
    @derekwestbrook9383 Před 23 dny +1

    in an alternate universe this guy does destiny 2 build videos that 50 youtubers already covered and he ends every video with “and that’s why” for the loop

  • @oluwakemiakinnawo4116
    @oluwakemiakinnawo4116 Před 2 měsíci

    The "son of a bitch" got me

  • @Homiecheese227
    @Homiecheese227 Před rokem +2342

    Nah we in the jojo’s community call it engrish
    Edit: why y’all fighting in the comments 💀💀💀

  • @TheMP3Guy27
    @TheMP3Guy27 Před 11 měsíci +46

    *Meanwhile Brazilian Portuguese:*
    I’m 4 parallel universes ahead of you.

    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Před 9 měsíci +5

      That is because American English was made by putting the world's languages into a pile and using a car crusher to smush them into a new language and 🎇🎆TADA🎆🎇 we have English. Smacks weird smooshed up languages: You can fit lot of sounds that can be used to make people from around the world understand what you are saying into this bad boy.

    • @paulista_rodrigues
      @paulista_rodrigues Před 8 měsíci

      Vowels in brazil all have at least 4 pronunciations each, depending on the context and the accent

    • @donovanperrington418
      @donovanperrington418 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Minha língua favorita. Você está certo. É muito difícil.
      Yet somehow easier for me to grasp than Español.
      Also I just wanna say rendezvous is a French word. Whoever made this video is educated and ignorant at the same time.

    • @donovanperrington418
      @donovanperrington418 Před 8 měsíci

      @@jordancambridge4106
      Unless they speak German, they’re not going to understand you. French, Spanish, and Portuguese speakers all have a better chance of understanding each other than understanding an English speaker. It’s even more difficult to learn than many other languages. And it’s certainly not a culmination of all languages. It borrows from other languages as many other languages do, but it’s a dialect, derivative of the native language of the settlers that colonized America, much like the Spanish spoken in Mexico compares to the Spanish spoken in Spain.

    • @trollconfiavel
      @trollconfiavel Před 8 měsíci

      O português pega emprestado do grego, latim, espanhol, francês, inglês, italiano, tupi, macrojê, iorubá, quimbundo, quicongo e outras línguas africanas

  • @user-su3xv2xs5l
    @user-su3xv2xs5l Před 2 měsíci

    i always love joseph's english with his OH MY GOD, OH NO, OH SHIIET, SON OF A BITSCH

  • @namelessresource5782
    @namelessresource5782 Před měsícem

    "Why does English sound funny when a population various oceans away tries to speak it?"

  • @RamDragon32
    @RamDragon32 Před rokem +216

    English has over 40 phonemes (the sounds that words make not accounting for accent) whereas Japanese has somewhere south of 20. It's why it is easier for English speakers to learn Japanese than the other way around (and yes, that is a commentary on the education system.)
    Now, ad in all the in-between sounds as we transition from phoneme to phoneme and English has some rediculous amount of sounds in the range of 2500 compared to Japanese's 110. (I'm not a linguist and I'm dredging up a decades-old memory from when I learned Japanese very badly the first time. the takeaway is that they really do think the English they use in Animes sounds native.)

    • @AntwanShiro
      @AntwanShiro  Před rokem +54

      Yeah I'm also pretty sure that some of the sounds Japanese has, English doesn't have, that on top of completely different sentence structures and everything else just makes for a really interesting topic to learn about while trying to figure out how to learn the actual languages lol

    • @TheDemonBrothersMeiz
      @TheDemonBrothersMeiz Před 11 měsíci +16

      ​@@AntwanShirooh I will absolutely agree on that one. I am no linguist but some of the game I play with only Japanese voice acting has some sounds that I literally can't Imagen any one sounding like it and being able to speak coherently
      I'm looking at you princess maker 2

    • @Eosinophyllis
      @Eosinophyllis Před 11 měsíci +22

      Additionally, a lot of vowels we have in English don’t have any nice equivalent in Japanese. (I’m using arpabet for simplicity, as it’s easier to type than IPA.) er is a nightmare to pronounce if your first language isn’t Mandarin Chinese or English. ih and uh are in similar spots. This isn’t even counting r, n and l when they behave like vowels, and Japanese only has one of those sounds.

    • @Burn_Angel
      @Burn_Angel Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@TheDemonBrothersMeiz Yay random Princess Maker 2 name-drop woo!

    • @larkohiya
      @larkohiya Před 11 měsíci +5

      Japanese is one of the hardest languages for english speakers to learn...

  • @lardgedarkrooster6371
    @lardgedarkrooster6371 Před 10 měsíci +224

    Slight correction: English does actually have spelling rules, they are just really really fucking complex due to the history of the English language. We tend to like to keep the original spellings of loanwords as well as being as conservative with our spelling for native words as possible ever since the 1600s. However if I write a made-up word right now like "flunge", most native English speakers would probably pronounce it something like [flʌndʒ] (at least in standard American dialects). This is why we spell "fridge" like that even though it is short for "refrigerator" which does not have a letter D in it. Also, loanwords from languages like Chinese, Arabic, Hebrew, and Zulu are written in English with a Q that is not followed by a U (Qi, Burqa, Sheqel (although it is now more commonly written as Shekel nowadays), Mbaqanga, etc.)

    • @Reized
      @Reized Před 10 měsíci +14

      Haha I see phonemic transcription, I be happy!
      Adding onto this, english has a rather complex syllable structure. (C)³V(C)⁵ if I remember rightly. That means the onset has 3 consonants and the coda has 5 consonants.
      It is quite ridiculous.
      Onto the mention of Japanese having multiple 'alphabets'. Technically correct, but terminology wise it is wrong.
      See you divide different forms of writing, not by calling them alphabets, but by calling them writing systems.
      These are as follows:
      • Alphabets (The most well known, examples include the latin alphabet and the cyrillic alphabet)
      • Abugida (This is the type of writing system that Hindi uses.)
      • Abjad (The writing system of Arabic)
      • Logographs (Like Chinese and Japanese Kanji)
      • Syllabaries (Including those of the Japanese katakana and hiragana)
      Plus an honorable mention to the writing system of hangul which is called an 'alphabetic syllabary' apparently? Its suppose to combine that of alphabets, syllabaries and logographs.
      As mentioned in the list, Japanese has one logographic writing system and two syllabary writing systems.

    • @MaximilianonMars
      @MaximilianonMars Před 10 měsíci

      Muh sheqels

    • @The_Honourable_Company
      @The_Honourable_Company Před 10 měsíci +5

      Wait, why the hell do I find "flunge" to be like an actual word
      Like, 'He flunged himself into a river"
      Also, i pronounced it as "Fl - u - n - gd"

    • @Reized
      @Reized Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@The_Honourable_Company [flʌndʒ] could also be transcripted as Flanj. The /ʌ/ is like the u in gut [ɡʌt], and the /dʒ/ is like the j in jeans [ˈd͡ʒiːnz].

    • @GalluZ
      @GalluZ Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@The_Honourable_Companyikr?? If it was actually a word, my definition would be like a portmanteau of "flop" and "plunge". While a plunge may be a planned or controlled fall, flunge isn't.

  • @florinianos8805
    @florinianos8805 Před 21 dnem

    The "niiiice" when johsep joestar was peeking on his mom got me soo hard

  • @dr.taserfaceboogerbottomfa3266

    Guy from South Park: “Herro dare!”

  • @Algia_
    @Algia_ Před 11 měsíci +341

    "English has no rules"
    Shows three words that aren't from english

    • @Temperans
      @Temperans Před 10 měsíci +28

      They are "English" they are not "Germanic." loan words are weird...

    • @Blueskiiiiii
      @Blueskiiiiii Před 9 měsíci

      i still dont understand why as soon as a european person learns that a english word that makes no sense is a loan word they turn their heads and start whistling like a cartoon character

    • @andylines8040
      @andylines8040 Před 9 měsíci +8

      They were on my spelling tests in English class

    • @exploshaun
      @exploshaun Před 9 měsíci +7

      If English has rules, they would modify the original spelling into the correct English pronunciation, instead of just stealing it directly.

    • @Temperans
      @Temperans Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@exploshaun oh english has rules, its just that those rules are not followed by any of the loan words. So you have exceptions for the exceptions. I think only linguists actually know what the real rules are.

  • @FinnishArsonist
    @FinnishArsonist Před 10 měsíci +257

    In simple terms, it's called: "an accent"

    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Před 9 měsíci

      Its called dialect and can change the meaning of a word like (truck driver) to (sailboat) or (moon scratcher) or (dog anal rapist) or (super frog tasty sandwich) or even (math smasher). Japanese is a really fucked up language.

    • @Frozenstone72
      @Frozenstone72 Před 9 měsíci +2

      🤓

    • @JoJoAeghao
      @JoJoAeghao Před 9 měsíci +3

      I don't think was that the problem

  • @SpagetDrive
    @SpagetDrive Před 2 měsíci

    People at Nintendo thinking what should their main character in the legend of Zelda be called:

  • @rjay_x
    @rjay_x Před 25 dny

    Ngl if you're coming from another language when learning English you really do just have to draw the rest of the owl

  • @OpalBeams
    @OpalBeams Před 11 měsíci +48

    “SUN UV A BEACH”
    “HORY MORY!”
    “OWWWW NOOOO!”

  • @Only_Rory
    @Only_Rory Před 11 měsíci +15

    Bologna being an italian word:

  • @UhmMusicBoi
    @UhmMusicBoi Před 3 měsíci

    I thought bro is chill but he ain't really 💀

  • @adoremei
    @adoremei Před 3 měsíci

    "son of a bittt !!!" LMAO

  • @Sponandi
    @Sponandi Před 10 měsíci +78

    I love how the English examples are a plant genus that is the Germanized spelling of a Russian professor, a sausage named after an Italian city (also, it can be pronounced both bolohnee and bolohna), and a French word.

  • @necrocomicon8
    @necrocomicon8 Před rokem +77

    I like how your examples of FUBAR words are anglicized versions of other European language (German, Italian, French, respectively). So, of course, it's messed up it is supposed to be pronounced differently.

    • @LilyUnicorn
      @LilyUnicorn Před 11 měsíci

      English....is a Germanic language belonging to same family as...German.

    • @informer2142
      @informer2142 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yeah, this dude really needs to take a short linguistics course

  • @michaelblauvelt3138
    @michaelblauvelt3138 Před měsícem

    "U follows Q" Scrabble players: yeah imma have to pass on that

  • @GalxZ-
    @GalxZ- Před 2 měsíci

    "SANATA BEACHT!!" "Hallo everynyan!! (it was supposed to be a cat so it gets a pass)"

  • @Chrosteellium
    @Chrosteellium Před 10 měsíci +289

    "Oh fuck you rendezvous"
    *sweats profusely in French*
    (That's not an English word)

    • @RNG-esus
      @RNG-esus Před 9 měsíci +32

      Neither were the other two that proceeded it lol

    • @Vexxy197
      @Vexxy197 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Neither are most of our words 💀

    • @cooper10182
      @cooper10182 Před 8 měsíci +16

      Modern English is a weird mix of Anglo(a Germanic dialect), Saxon(a French dialect), with a little Celt(Gaelic dialect), Britons(another Gaelic), Norman(another French), some Norse dialects, and little Latin. Then throw in the more modern loan words from half of Europe. Then it gets more complicated with the 3 major English dialects(British, American, and Australian) and all the minor dialects in those three. No wonder it's a pain to learn lol.

    • @JaxonHumphrey-lw1gs
      @JaxonHumphrey-lw1gs Před 7 měsíci

      😂

    • @thezackast2752
      @thezackast2752 Před 7 měsíci +5

      ​@@cooper10182modern English is a massive middle finger to regularity and the concept of following its own rules

  • @theorixlol2018
    @theorixlol2018 Před 6 měsíci +37

    Ah, yes, the floor here is made out of floor.

  • @roguestorm2136
    @roguestorm2136 Před měsícem

    Bro threw in an SAO clip. Respect.

  • @Harshstew21
    @Harshstew21 Před měsícem

    If you wrote my full name in japanese you will be writing forever

  • @RobertBrown21
    @RobertBrown21 Před 11 měsíci +9

    It's almost like people who speak a different language have that languages accent🤯

  • @ivyum6976
    @ivyum6976 Před 10 měsíci +10

    Wait till this guy finds out that rendezvous is french

  • @PanAm747_20
    @PanAm747_20 Před měsícem

    That "OH FUCK YOU!" was personal💀

  • @L1K3-ANT3NN4S-TO_HEAV3N
    @L1K3-ANT3NN4S-TO_HEAV3N Před 3 měsíci

    "hallo everynyan"
    ":0"
    "how are yu fine thankchu"
    "OHMYGAEH!!1!1!"

  • @elfi643
    @elfi643 Před 11 měsíci +64

    Ah yes. Rendezvous. A famously English word.

    • @talete7712
      @talete7712 Před 10 měsíci +14

      bologna too. It’s literally the name of a city in italy lol

    • @frogsecretaryofswamp452
      @frogsecretaryofswamp452 Před 9 měsíci +5

      try to find a word that isnt a loanword or calque

    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Před 9 měsíci

      @@frogsecretaryofswamp452 That is because American English was made by putting the world's languages into a pile and using a car crusher to smush them into a new language and 🎇🎆TADA🎆🎇 we have English. Smacks weird smooshed up languages: You can fit lot of sounds that can be used to make people from around the world understand what you are saying into this bad boy.

    • @marivcenteno9444
      @marivcenteno9444 Před 9 měsíci +1

      try forecastle

  • @Kira-wants-quiet
    @Kira-wants-quiet Před 3 měsíci +30

    'Go ahead Mr joster'
    -darby

    • @VijemaVati
      @VijemaVati Před měsícem +1

      He was so close…
      Kinda like:
      F-MEGA!!!
      Serect yer kerr!

  • @Eklipseeii
    @Eklipseeii Před 2 měsíci

    Not 17 but this song gives me feelings of coming out of a loop, a place of isolation into an ocean of emotions, finally coming back to your old self for the better and not for the worst. Where you can actually enjoy life again without feeling alone.🤞😋

  • @VegitoBlue32
    @VegitoBlue32 Před 10 dny +1

    English : stand
    Japanese : standoda/stando 😭🙏