British Was Shocked By European English Accents!! (How European Pronounce English)

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  • čas přidán 20. 02. 2023
  • Our pronunciation, when we speak English, it is influenced by the accents of their language
    What do you think?
    So today we invited 4 pannels from United Kingom, Germany, Poland and Georgia
    And compare the accents
    please follow our pannels
    Svea / sveawedis
    Ryan / ryebrows.pdf
    Ania / ayliee_k
    Sophia / sophiaa_kv
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 466

  • @meganyamk172
    @meganyamk172 Před rokem +782

    As an Georgian person who lives in Poland 5 years and studies German, i can say that video was... interesting💀

    • @kaiya5142
      @kaiya5142 Před rokem +33

      as a Georgian these videos were pretty... intresting💀(also bit cringe)

    • @meganyamk172
      @meganyamk172 Před rokem +7

      @@kaiya5142 you're Georgian too? lol, yeah, i sometimes cringe too

    • @kaiya5142
      @kaiya5142 Před rokem +10

      @@meganyamk172 yeah i am, Georgian woman has her little cringe moments i guess lol

    • @meganyamk172
      @meganyamk172 Před rokem +2

      @kaiya5142 Also, don't you think her accent is not typical like Georgians have? It's kinda different 🤔

    • @kaiya5142
      @kaiya5142 Před rokem +9

      @@meganyamk172 nah i hear her Georgian accent, here Georgians that speak english have either like actually a really good accent or a really bad lol

  • @mirandakatsitadze4820
    @mirandakatsitadze4820 Před rokem +239

    As a Georgian who can speak Polish, German, English, I found this video very familiar ❤
    And amazing Sophia 🎉❤🇬🇪

    • @ukaszbakaj9706
      @ukaszbakaj9706 Před rokem +1

      Wow 👍

    • @fx1507
      @fx1507 Před rokem

      ჰელოუუ

    • @tacomillerer7365
      @tacomillerer7365 Před rokem

      მგონი გიცნობბბ, მახსოვზარ მაღლივიდან?მმ

    • @fx1507
      @fx1507 Před rokem

      @@tacomillerer7365 პატარაა იუთუბი

    • @GeorgeValkov
      @GeorgeValkov Před 10 měsíci

      How come all of the Georgian girls I've seen are so beautiful, warm and kind people? I made friends with the children ballet from Tbilisi 8 years ago 🇬🇪❤, and now see Sofia. I am also surprised you pronounce many foreign words like 'televizor' the same way we do in Bulgaria.

  • @zuzu461
    @zuzu461 Před rokem +38

    Look at how beautiful the Georgian girl is. She is just a perfection, how she talks in Korean, Georgian, or English. And accents? Are you on your mind who judge her? OMG, the world is very, very tired of Negative Comments...

    • @andrew2477
      @andrew2477 Před rokem +1

      I don't mean any disrespect or rudeness towards you but the correct expression is "are you out of your mind?"

  • @techgregory5253
    @techgregory5253 Před rokem +79

    As Belarusian I feel like Ania is just my homie, we are just like one nation in terms of mentality and pronunciation. If we spoke one language we almost would have no differencies being abroad

    • @anuskas9244
      @anuskas9244 Před rokem +16

      Bo my ( Ja jestem Polką) i wy Białorusini jesteśmy jednym narodem. Nie tylko jeśli chodzi o mentalność ale i genetycznie. Poczytaj sobie o tym czym jest Haplogrupe R1a1 (Y DNA). Mamy wspólnych przodków, mamy te same geny, te samą krew, po prostu ktoś wieki temu nas rozłączył i stworzył osobne narody. A ja do dziś jak rozmawiam z kimś z Bialosusi, czuję się tak jakbym rozmawiała z Polakiem, to samo poczucie humoru, sposób myślenia, mentalność, odwaga itd. Haplogrupe R1a1 to wiele narodowości ale tylko między a polakami i Białorusinami jest zgodność genetyczna stwierdzająca, że jesteśmy jednym związanym ze sobą narodem genami w wysokim procencie

    • @techgregory5253
      @techgregory5253 Před rokem +7

      @@anuskas9244 tak! Calkiem zgodny. Teraz czesto ogladam rozny filmiki po polsku i zauwazylem ze humor jest podobny u nas. Tak, o genetycznych podobienstwach tez wiem. Pzrepraszam za moj zly jezyk.

    • @Daan495
      @Daan495 Před rokem +2

      @@techgregory5253 jest git

    • @ukaszbakaj9706
      @ukaszbakaj9706 Před rokem +1

      Pozdrawiam ✌️

    • @recordofragnarokisapurehyp6660
      @recordofragnarokisapurehyp6660 Před rokem +2

      ​​@@anuskas9244 Co, może zaraz z ruskimi też jesteśmy jednym narodem? Ukraińcami też? W ogóle może się zjednoczmy, jak to pansłowiańscy marzyciele chcieli?
      Przypominam, że haplogrupę R1a1 mają również grupy etniczne w Iranie i Hindusi (w niektórych kastach procent dochodził do nawet 70%), akurat haplogrupa to żaden dowód (mimo że genetycznie faktycznie jesteśmy niemalże identyczni i z Białorusinami, i z Ukraińcami).

  • @ziomziomek
    @ziomziomek Před rokem +164

    I only partially agree, I'm Polish and I don't know so many people with that accent. Maybe if they started learning at a very old age. Those who started as a child or teenager and are at the advanced or prof level would often have very posh Oxford or Cambridge accent after having listened to thousands of hours of recordings from the books. I know many people with correct pronounciation and good accent. My English has gotten worse after having spent years in international environment. When I was still learning my accent, grammarical correctness etc. was much better, now I don't care anymore.

    • @aenilies
      @aenilies Před rokem +28

      ajj niestety masa młodzieży ma mocny polski akcent, taki aż do przesady. ale z reguły są to osoby, które tak czy siak angielskiego nie potrafią za dobrze 😅

    • @fotticelli
      @fotticelli Před rokem +3

      It gets worse with age too. I learned to speak American English and after 5 years of living in the US very few people could tell that I'm not a native speaker. Now I'm sixty and it's been getting worse gradually.

    • @larrydzemorsky1777
      @larrydzemorsky1777 Před rokem +7

      XDDD the average polish student spends less than 1000 hours on English lessons in general (from primary to high school), I don't know where did you get that numbers from.

    • @ziomziomek
      @ziomziomek Před rokem +2

      @@larrydzemorsky1777 from my own experience, I know many people who have certificates, and since childhood attended additional courses. So e.g. 10x week= 520 a year x 10 years= 5200 plus double the work before matura, CAE etc, summer courses for those who could

    • @ziomziomek
      @ziomziomek Před rokem

      That's why I said I agree partially, in my environment (people around 30-40) there are no such people, my friends, etc were hard-working people and many attended additional courses, or learned at home, the ones who didn't learn too much, ok maybe that was worse but not as much as in this film, older generation who started learning at the age of 30+ have stronger accent

  • @henri191
    @henri191 Před rokem +142

    The 'R' sound from the lady Anie 🇵🇱 is very strong and causes impact in the full sentence , part could be the own person's accent and it's something that probably won't change

    • @K0L1NXX13
      @K0L1NXX13 Před rokem +15

      Yeah it's Smth just like "rrrrrrrr" In Poland readed as "rrrrry" Not as "ar"

    • @frusti1533
      @frusti1533 Před rokem +1

      But some part of people from Poland can speak soft "R"

    • @K0L1NXX13
      @K0L1NXX13 Před rokem +7

      @@frusti1533 even if, we still read it as "ry"

    • @maryperydot
      @maryperydot Před rokem +5

      Ania*

    • @fotticelli
      @fotticelli Před rokem +5

      Nah, that's not hard to do for a Polish person. It's harder to pronounce "d" or "g" at the end of words. If someone pronounces them as "t" and "k" it's almost a sure giveaway that they are Polish. Not using articles too but that's the case with all Slavic languages. Then there is the "th" but that is not that big of a deal. The hardest is an "a" or an "o" sounds in words like bat, bot, but. They all sound the same to most Polish people, especially those past their 20s.
      In this video they are trying to speak with their native accents which are more pronounced than when they try to speak proper English.

  • @dorotalipinska5696
    @dorotalipinska5696 Před rokem +32

    nie słyszałam, żeby Polak mówił z takim akcentem

    • @krystianjanik7513
      @krystianjanik7513 Před rokem +2

      Ja też nie, jest mocno przesadzony 😂😂

    • @niagazdeliani6991
      @niagazdeliani6991 Před rokem +8

      I was in Poland and everyone was speaking like this 😂

    • @dorotalipinska5696
      @dorotalipinska5696 Před rokem +3

      @@niagazdeliani6991 I was in Poland and everyone was speaking like this

    • @dorotalipinska5696
      @dorotalipinska5696 Před rokem

      who did you talk to, grandparents?

    • @fomalhaut86
      @fomalhaut86 Před 11 měsíci +1

      zgadza się, w Polszy wszyscy mówią wedżetejbyls a nie wedżetables 😅

  • @Pikachu-ez1rm
    @Pikachu-ez1rm Před rokem +31

    The German gilr sounds American when she is not imitating

  • @k.d.6068
    @k.d.6068 Před rokem +20

    As a Georgian, I would say accents differ based on persons, but most of us definitely don't say "vegetables" that way

    • @GISLJJ
      @GISLJJ Před rokem +3

      My pre-teen classmates speak like that 💀

    • @depressedgeorgianinsouthkorea
      @depressedgeorgianinsouthkorea Před rokem +10

      აქცენტი თუ ექნებოდა ქართველს, როგორი იქნებოდა, იმას ვაჩვენებთ და არა ის, რომ ყველა ასე საუბრობს 🙂

    • @esthersolos7485
      @esthersolos7485 Před rokem

      მოკეტე

    • @nikadzaliancxeli6693
      @nikadzaliancxeli6693 Před 9 měsíci

      @@GISLJJ real shit

  • @Marie-san
    @Marie-san Před rokem +14

    Damn it was so unexpected to see Sophia here 😅💖💖💖🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪

  • @liukin95
    @liukin95 Před rokem +78

    There's a big Polish community in the UK, in fact Poles are among the biggest group of immigrants in the UK. So when I hear a Polish person speaking English I literally have no trouble understanding them because we hear Polish quite often, especially if you live in a city.

    • @inotoni6148
      @inotoni6148 Před rokem +17

      In Germany too. With 1.8 million people, they are the second largest group of immigrants after the Turks

    • @MagsonDare
      @MagsonDare Před rokem +26

      Chicago was known for decades as the "2nd largest Polish city in the world" (after Warsaw). It's lost that title now, but there's still a significant percentage of people in the area with Polish heritage, though at a guess fewer than 10% of them actually speak Polish. Still and all, I don't have a problem reading Polish names because to me they're "normal" due to so many friends, neighbors, teachers, coaches, etc having Polish names while I was growing up there. We even got Casimir Pulaski day off from school. . . .

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Před rokem +10

      Yeah, we like to travel 😅

    • @CinCee-
      @CinCee- Před rokem +3

      New York too we have lots of newly arrived Polish immigrants

    • @rozumnaistota9489
      @rozumnaistota9489 Před rokem +2

      @@MagsonDare @Jon Camp Thx for a such intresting informations. Greetings from Poland 🇵🇱

  • @mariko5370
    @mariko5370 Před rokem +11

    Wow Sophie! Unexpected to see her here 🇬🇪

  • @johnsbananas841
    @johnsbananas841 Před rokem +55

    Sophia is stunning 🔥❤️❤️

  • @anaambroladze6869
    @anaambroladze6869 Před rokem +12

    Hallo Leute ! Gergoen ist sehr schönes Madchen . Sopia du bist total cooll 🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪 hallo Georgien ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @sp9459
    @sp9459 Před rokem +103

    As a German i can confirm it’s hard to imitate the typical German accent 😅

  • @alicengreen1707
    @alicengreen1707 Před rokem +11

    As a Minnesotan I can confidently say that the German accent was actually most similar to how we talk😅😂

  • @no-pn7yp
    @no-pn7yp Před rokem +21

    სოფია❣

  • @TheSolvenceny
    @TheSolvenceny Před rokem +102

    Svea nailed the German Accent.

    • @EddieReischl
      @EddieReischl Před rokem +19

      It's Svea's flat, disinterested reading of the sentences that I think is hilarious. She sounds like a schoolteacher who's been trying to explain the same thing to her student for the last hour and has given up hope of him ever getting it, and now she just wants her day to be over with so she can go home and have a beer.

    • @peterf.4309
      @peterf.4309 Před rokem +2

      I think she overdid it a tiny bit.

  • @jfarmerswatermelon6061
    @jfarmerswatermelon6061 Před rokem +13

    სოფია როგორ გამიხარდა შენი აქ ნახვა🥰🥰

  • @lilemargvelani
    @lilemargvelani Před rokem +5

    as a Georgian i can tell that English didn't become popular because of the war, it's an international language so you NEED TO learn it, btw Russian is pretty common too

  • @adilhoxha5443
    @adilhoxha5443 Před rokem +35

    The Georgian girl is so fine

    • @EddieReischl
      @EddieReischl Před rokem +5

      Yup, she is very pretty, they are all kind of rockstar gorgeous.

  • @hybirr
    @hybirr Před rokem +79

    it would be also quite interesting to see if native english speaking person would spot the difference between Polish and Russian accent, because for us eastern europeans its very different. But maybe it would cause some trouble for them? not sure though xD

    • @deyfuck
      @deyfuck Před rokem +13

      In the UK and Ireland it would be extremely obvious. Polish is the biggest immigrant group, so everybody knows at least one Polish person, whether it's a friend, co-worker, shopkeeper, plumber, doctor (not to mention there's Polish shops, even Polish signage in particular places), so we're all quite familiar with the accent. You'd meet very few Russians over here so they'd stick out like a sore thumb. Other English-speaking countries might have more trouble, but I still think they're quite distinct accents.

    • @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS
      @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS Před rokem

      I used to work with both and I can say most of the time it's obvious, but sometimes it can be a little hard to distinguish between the two.
      Though I could be a touch biased as I can speak a little bit of both (not a lot, but a few bits to help me out if I ever get stuck/in trouble in either country).
      I also very much miss my Georgian friend, on the very unlikely event that they read this. Zurab it's Billy, get in touch with me dude, I miss you.

    • @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS
      @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS Před rokem

      @@deyfuck also dude, you are kinda off about there not being that many Russian people in the UK. Granted it's very likely notably less than the amount of Poles over here, but it's all about where you go.
      Don't forget that after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 90s we had a large influx of people coming over trying to escape from the chaos that was going on at the time.

    • @deyfuck
      @deyfuck Před rokem +2

      @@WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS I never said there weren't that many Russians here.

    • @Kristi14.88
      @Kristi14.88 Před rokem +2

      I honestly don't know if I could discern the difference of accent.
      However, if they spoke a few sentences in their native language, I could absolutely tell if they were Polish or Russian. Ukrainian as well.
      But I love slavic languages so I'm exposed to it all the time through music, online friends and to a lesser extent, film and television. Most Americans will think it's all just Russian lol

  • @lashalursmanashvili162
    @lashalursmanashvili162 Před rokem +8

    Georgian women are the most beautiful in the world.

  • @CinCee-
    @CinCee- Před rokem +14

    The German girl sounds like she grew up in America

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Před rokem +4

      I know right. She clearly had the most flawless English (as most Germans in these videos), but then the Georgian girl with a very noticeable accent seriously decided to say that Germany has a thick accent 😂

  • @annamariazhamureli8734
    @annamariazhamureli8734 Před rokem +4

    Sophia is just perfect, sending loves from Georgia❤❤

  • @wowomah6194
    @wowomah6194 Před rokem +2

    Svea sounds TOTALLY NATURAL. Seriously, if she said she were from my State in the USA I would have believed it.

  • @hafiznurmemmedov9863
    @hafiznurmemmedov9863 Před rokem +4

    Our caucasian neighbours are europians, nice to hear that ❤️

  • @Noah_ol11
    @Noah_ol11 Před rokem +39

    "The German one was wild" , "Thank you" 😂🤣 , I think isn't just the "german accent" , since her is half albanian and it has influence

    • @sp9459
      @sp9459 Před rokem +8

      Most younger Germans doesn’t have the thick the German accent 😅

    • @ersguter1996
      @ersguter1996 Před rokem

      ​@@sp9459true

    • @wandilismus8726
      @wandilismus8726 Před rokem

      Tank ju for träveling wif Deutsche Bahn

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Před rokem +11

      No it doesn't have Albanian influence. She speaks accent-free German. Just because she has Albanian descent doesn't mean she can't imitate a stereotypical German accent, dafuq. She did very well.

    • @starryk79
      @starryk79 Před rokem

      with the pronounciation of vegetables she overdid it quite a bit. Only a german who has never heard that word spoken out before would pronounce it like that. It is not a hard word to pronounce if you have heard it before. wetchtäbls or something like that would be a german way to write the pronounciation down. Not that hard. She matched a strong german accent well with the th for example which is really hard for germans to pronounce that it doesn't sound like an s or an f or a t.

  • @aggiecat
    @aggiecat Před rokem +57

    The older generation in Poland learned Russian in schools, so English is an abstraction for most people. My millennials generation already had English in schools, but we were taught by teachers from the older generation, and in fact their knowledge of the language was based only on grammar, which they themselves learned in English philology studies or other courses. Hence, my generation speaks little English. From personal experience: I can understand English, I can write, I can read the correct pronunciation without all these special accents, but I can't think in this language. They did not teach us associations and thinking in English, only in the correct formation of sentences. Had it not been for my own extra effort and practice of English, I don't think I would remember it at all today. And our parents couldn't help us much in learning English either. Only some of them organized tutoring. And learning English with me started only from the fourth grade of primary school, that is, when the child was about 10 years old. A little late. Now is different. My generation doesn't have the same flow as generation Z, which is attacked with the language from a very young age, which I envy them a lot. And also German was taught in some schools - first it was for volunteers and then it was compulsory somewhere in Gymmasium/High School, but it was taught similarly to English and often there were no teachers, so I was taught German for 6 years, and I don't understand anything at all - thanks to school. What's funny is that I work at the Court, where I run international cooperation and thanks to it I learned how to write formal official letters and thanks to it I am still learning German more and more. The irony of fate 😉

    • @matyy_.
      @matyy_. Před rokem +4

      thats so true for example i learned by myself not because its was teacher fault but only my laziness back in primary and half of gimnazjum (high school kind of) but i know im able to speak correctly or i know the correct way but i dont know grammar like how to explain it why there is this ending and not this im just using it t use it

    • @quandaledinglenut4
      @quandaledinglenut4 Před rokem +3

      I still learn russian in Poland and i wont lie im only 12.

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Před rokem +3

      @@quandaledinglenut4 Okay, but it's not a mandatory language that was imposed on you, you just had a choice. My parents' generation had no choice and neither did mine. Only going to high school (around the age of 16) it was possible to choose a school, a class where there was a different language, and then the second additional language for learning, which was usually German, began to be introduced. I remember how hard it was to get into a school where the second language was French or Spanish, and there weren't many such schools.
      A teraz zeby było łatwiej, tłumaczenie😉:
      Ok, ale to nie jest obowiązkowy język, który został ci narzucony tylko po prostu miałeś wybór. Pokolenie moich rodziców nie miało wyboru, jak również moje. Dopiero idąc do liceum (w wieku ok. 16 r.ż.) można było wybrać szkołę, klasę, w której był inny język, a jednocześnie zaczęto wprowadzać drugi dodatkowy język do nauki, którym był zwykle niemiecki. Pamiętam, jak trudno było dostać się do szkoły, w której drugim językiem do wyboru był francuski lub hiszpański, a takich szkół było niewiele 🤗

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Před rokem +3

      @@matyy_. For me, school was a failure. Those were the times when not everyone had a computer, so I used various sources to obtain printed song texts, take a dictionary and translate word by word, and then I became fascinated by England thanks to Harry Potter, so I wrote every picture in textbooks with words what I see and then with time full sentences . Others drew in their notebooks out of boredom, I learned English in my own way out of boredom and I learned it. When you are motivated, learning is much easier
      Dla mnie szkolna nauka to była porażka. Jeszcze to były czasy kiedy nie każdy miał komputer więc z różnych źródeł zdobywałam wydrukowany tekst piosenek, brałam słownik i słowo po słowie tłumaczyłam, a potem zafascynowałam się Anglią za sprawą Harrego Pottera więc każdy obrazek w podręcznikach rozpisywałam słowami co widzę a potem z czasem pelnymi zdaniami. Inni na lekcjach z nudy rysowali po zeszytach, ja się z nudy uczyłam angielskiego na własny sposób i się nauczyłam. Jak się ma motywację to wtedy nauka o wiele łatwiej idzie

    • @MaraMara89
      @MaraMara89 Před rokem +1

      You probably around my age and I wouldn't completely agree, because it also depend of city/town/village and how much people wanted to learn - but in general you are right. "Older millennials" (born in 80') had it more difficult: because foreign language (not necessary english, it depended on region) was thought from 4th grade than "younger millennials" - I am 89' and started english in 4th grade and next year it was expanded for 3rd grade, next 2nd and then 1st, so in my primary school people born in 1992 started english in 1st grade! - so some millennials had it better ;)
      In my case it didn't really helped how often my teachers had been changing - in my school years I had 9 years of english - and the longest I got the same teacher it was 2 years! most of them had changed every year o.O so we had started from scratch more often then we should :/ and in my 3 years of high school I had: one year with good teacher (she retired after my 1st year), in 2nd grade I had a guy who wasn't too good in english (and was not interested in teaching really) /when I asked him about words for "rodzeństwo" he told me that there is "brothers and sisters", and english do not have one word for that. Later I learnt it was bs as "sibling(s)" exist... and when talking about furniture I insisted that there def is a word for "kredens" I can't remember, he told me there is not... I meant "cupboard"....all those years later and I remember about it XD and the fact that he made plural ZOOs in polish - as Zoa... jedno zoo, dwa zoa 🤣/, in 3rd grade I ended with a teacher with strong accent, she was teaching rus.ian before, but as it wasn't popular anymore, she went for english course ...
      In middle school I had 2 great teachers of german though (I mean 2 of 3 I had during 3 years of middle school as no one stayed longer then 2 years), but I didn't want to continue that language as it was harsh and hard... so I get french in high school (only 2 teachers during 3 years, but when first get pregnant it messed with our schedule and I ended in really low level english group - being bored to death)

  • @herrbonk3635
    @herrbonk3635 Před rokem +9

    Who's editing these videos? They always feel like short totally random snippets of a long conversation.

  • @helgaioannidis9365
    @helgaioannidis9365 Před rokem +31

    Us Germans have actually different German accents according to the area we come from. In Bavaria we roll the r like Italians and Polish and we pronounce some vowels differently from the rest of Germany e.g..

    • @cartier2312
      @cartier2312 Před rokem

      German is unattractive language !!

    • @helgaioannidis9365
      @helgaioannidis9365 Před rokem +7

      @@cartier2312 of course. And everybody knows it's absolutely necessary to tell that to every German on the internet.
      Is there something relevant to my comment you want to contribute or did you just want to show publicly that you weren't taught manners?

    • @haive2202
      @haive2202 Před rokem

      Des stimmt!

  • @starseed8087
    @starseed8087 Před rokem +8

    where does it come from that German people always and constantly have to tell the world that German is a harsh language (which it isn't). I've never seen, for example, Dutch or Swiss people going around the world saying their language is harsh.

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Před rokem +16

      It's not us that are telling the world that we have a harsh language, smh. It's other people telling *us* and the world that we have a harsh language. It's a stereotype that exists since the first European settlers arrived in the USA. It was mostly Brits, French, Spaniards, Italians who grouped themselves together as the beautiful and romantic ones, and decided to make fun of the Germans, Dutch and Scandinavians and their ugly Germanic language because they couldn't tell the difference anyway. Then Hitler and his aggressive speeches with bad audio quality obviously made this stereotype even worse during WW2. Repeatedly showing his speeches in history class and documentary films is what kept the stereotype alive, generation after generation And still to this day there are millions of memes being made about the German language by other people who think it's the harshest and most difficult language in the world - which it is obviously not to anyone who has heard Arabic, Dutch, Hebrew, or even any of the Slavic languages before.
      When Germans in these videos say that it's a harsh language, it's merely a sign of being aware of the stereotype and the memes.

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 Před rokem +3

      Also, to publically self-castigate is a treasured national pastime for some Germans.

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Před rokem +14

    It is never a good idea to learn a foreign language with a non-native speaker. During my language learning days in college, I made sure the class I enrolled in had a professor whose mother tongue was the language he taught.

    • @aleksandra4702
      @aleksandra4702 Před rokem +13

      I wonder how many native english speakers teach english in poland or georgia 💀they are difficult to find so we dont have the luxury of having a choice haha

  • @salimwituri425
    @salimwituri425 Před rokem +2

    All of them are pretty but georgian girl is literally prettiest and she speaks so good and i love it stfu I'm also georgian and we should be proud of here instead of put hate

  • @ekabagdavadze7432
    @ekabagdavadze7432 Před rokem +2

    that's funny though😂all of them looks and sounds amazing🫶on the other hand 😌bow down for my girrrrrl sofiaaaa 💗💫grateful and proud of you my georgian queen👑👏🏼

  • @who-sk7py
    @who-sk7py Před 10 měsíci +2

    me german natuve speaker, i think our accent on chocolate would be „schocklett“

  • @N1ka
    @N1ka Před rokem +4

    The German girl is soo unique and beautiful

  • @mariapawlowicz5921
    @mariapawlowicz5921 Před rokem +5

    Und welche Sprachen, ausser Englisch ,sprechen Engländer? Keine, na dann lache ich jetzt 😂😂😂😂😂😜

  • @katharina.3107
    @katharina.3107 Před rokem +2

    hi i am from turkiye and our accent is so similar with out neighboor georgia! such a good video thanks and love from tr

  • @Foreignmonk34
    @Foreignmonk34 Před rokem

    We have this thing called Rally English which is perfectly demonstrated in Hydraulic Press Channel.

  • @WilmaWestenberg
    @WilmaWestenberg Před rokem +1

    It's the German girl saying "Germans (her age) speak English" for me 😂✨

  • @elwirawozniak5287
    @elwirawozniak5287 Před rokem +6

    Try these
    Pszczoła brzęczy
    Chrząszcz
    Trzcina
    Grzejnik łazienkowy
    Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz
    🙂

    • @ola_atiny
      @ola_atiny Před rokem +2

      Stół z powyłamywanymi nogami 💅

  • @SalomeBarbakadze
    @SalomeBarbakadze Před rokem +2

    Sophia, you are brilliant, I love you too much 💎💎💎

  • @Semmelkopf
    @Semmelkopf Před rokem +2

    All 3 Ladies are so gorgeous😊😚

  • @gordonwallin2368
    @gordonwallin2368 Před rokem

    Sweet channel. Cheers from the Pacific West Coast of Canada.

  • @mariami-7760
    @mariami-7760 Před rokem +2

    Good job! Sophie, you are a cool girl

  • @bartoszcichor4795
    @bartoszcichor4795 Před rokem +2

    I'm polish and my best friend is german

  • @useryooo
    @useryooo Před rokem +1

    I've liked the German girl's accent and I've liked her too, she is pretty😉

  • @Sebulba2000
    @Sebulba2000 Před rokem +4

    Finally this channel stopped being generic, having only German/French/Italian/English speakers

  • @robertmikicki6126
    @robertmikicki6126 Před rokem +5

    4:48 he honestly did pretty well

  • @GodnLovenPeace
    @GodnLovenPeace Před rokem +4

    Sophia’s adorable❤

  • @gravedigger301
    @gravedigger301 Před rokem +2

    Get me on the show, I can give you a good example of someone that knows Polish and English natively

  • @dul1693
    @dul1693 Před rokem +3

    If you see my comment before watch this video. Your eye keep seeing germany lady shaking her body 😜

  • @rikthym5880
    @rikthym5880 Před rokem +2

    The German one reminded me of my old english teacher

  • @mq2471
    @mq2471 Před rokem +4

    Sophia is amazing❤

  • @anndeecosita3586
    @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +2

    Happy Mardi Gras.
    Laissez Les Bon Temps Rouler 🎉
    Tomorrow we are 😇
    but today we are 😈

  • @adrianp.3193
    @adrianp.3193 Před rokem

    I really liked the german girl very beautiful and very funny😁

  • @ivanovichdelfin8797
    @ivanovichdelfin8797 Před rokem +21

    What language do you speak?
    Georgia: +2
    Germany: +2
    Poland: 2
    England: 1 🤡

    • @jfarmerswatermelon6061
      @jfarmerswatermelon6061 Před rokem +12

      Georgian girl also speaks Korean fluently

    • @no6odys8fe90
      @no6odys8fe90 Před rokem +4

      Georgia is not in europe

    • @rrss7212
      @rrss7212 Před rokem +2

      @@no6odys8fe90yes, its the state of us of a

    • @rrss7212
      @rrss7212 Před rokem +1

      typical russian bs

    • @Dominika-nv6pk
      @Dominika-nv6pk Před rokem +14

      ​@@no6odys8fe90 it is. Georgia is a transcontinental country (Europe/Asia)

  • @abdurakh9
    @abdurakh9 Před rokem +5

    София любит хачапури)))

  • @mauriaraujo1994
    @mauriaraujo1994 Před rokem +1

    🍌🍒🍇🍋🍊🍉Of lenguages

  • @KseniiaTymoshenko1
    @KseniiaTymoshenko1 Před rokem

    У них такий гарний рівень англійської мови, напевно щось між С1 і С2

  • @mariami7356
    @mariami7356 Před rokem +1

    სოფ რა საყვარელი ხარ მეამაყები ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @skyflower2572
    @skyflower2572 Před rokem +3

    6:25 - / Maj favrit ice krým fléjvr is čokolid /
    Yea literally
    German English accent is sometimes confusing 😅
    But I had to laugh when she said it 😂😂

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Před rokem +15

    Second and third generation Polish in Chicago speak Polish fluently (with the right accent) unlike other immigrant groups whose kids forget how to speak in their parents' language. Polish in Chicago can always revert back to standard Midwestern American English when needed to speak English. First generation immigrants usually retained the heavy accent the way Ania described it.

  • @ltcol2005
    @ltcol2005 Před rokem +1

    in America it is the same as in England. grammar is taught while you are young then literature follows during your later educational years.

  • @randychampion184
    @randychampion184 Před rokem +5

    They need to bring that UK guy back for all the videos lol

  • @MrNici14
    @MrNici14 Před rokem +1

    6:25 It is kinda funny, the "strong" accent from the German sounds more like a native English speaker who tries to do the German accent, than an "actual" German speaking English.

  • @OrangenBlues
    @OrangenBlues Před rokem +1

    😍😍😍Our baby girl ❤ 🇬🇪❤🇬🇪❤🇬🇪

  • @directserwis
    @directserwis Před rokem +11

    Polska najlepiej wychodzi 🇵🇱❤️💪

  • @justsimplegamer
    @justsimplegamer Před rokem

    As spongebo, much love from sea

  • @vietle1479
    @vietle1479 Před rokem +1

    LOL Polish style has a lot of "r" like India :D

  • @sandraperlstein79
    @sandraperlstein79 Před rokem

    There are different types of English. In the States as in England there are different accents and slang.

  • @annd5702
    @annd5702 Před rokem +1

    Young people speak English fluently in Georgia.

  • @matyy_.
    @matyy_. Před rokem +17

    3:51 first of all our language isnt not based on R sound yes we roll the R and use it strongly at least when we speak diffrent language but of any letters Polish is mostly based is Z its most common letter in our languge when we write it because when we speak its not a lot but its used for "sz" - strong sh and same goes for cz - ch also rz - ż its almost its like 98% same sound because ussualy ch and H have same sound but words with solo H are softer than with ch same goes for rz - ż but its less noticable than ch - h but yeah thats a fact if im wrong please educate me because at least its what i know and think

  • @Adriano70911
    @Adriano70911 Před rokem +3

    How are we to defeat Masonry if we are forced to speak their language?

  • @EddieReischl
    @EddieReischl Před rokem +8

    In love with all of the ladies' accents. Svea's was really cute, reminded me of being a kid, my parents trying to get us to eat our veggies. "Ve haf vays of makingk you consume die vegetables. It vill schtart vit die tickling, und you do not vant to find out die udder vays if die tickling does not vork..."

  • @Corialtavi
    @Corialtavi Před rokem

    They should work on the "schwa" and start the next word as you finish the previous. Including that bloke from London.

  • @ilar10N
    @ilar10N Před rokem +1

    სოფია მაგარი გოგო ხარ

  • @mariamikuprashvili
    @mariamikuprashvili Před rokem +2

    🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪💞💞💞💞💞💞💞

  • @dimdaman
    @dimdaman Před rokem

    British accent guy reminds me of Dave Lister, the last human, from the television series Red Dwarf.

  • @katerpese
    @katerpese Před rokem +1

    Wow, finally some Eastern Europeans on. Though it would’ve been much more interesting to hear the Albanian speech since it rarely appears on the channel.

  • @malikovajana
    @malikovajana Před rokem

    Invite mey I´m from Czech we have funny accent :D

  • @esrohm6460
    @esrohm6460 Před rokem +2

    it would be funny instead of accent you go full on chaos mode: english sentences but said like they would be if all the words where part of another language, the pinnacle of accent you don't even try to speak english. who needs vegtables we have we-ge-ta-bles

  • @ArtFc-uc9vj
    @ArtFc-uc9vj Před rokem

    Well done

  • @nieczerwony
    @nieczerwony Před 26 dny

    Yeah never met Pole who speeks with accent presented here.
    As a Polish millennial myself I started American English classes when I was 7 years old, and I had to give them up due to personal circumstances.
    I live in Ireland for many years now in county Donegal with a lot of Scottish heritage and people here.
    When I go for holidays I am being taken for a Scott (yes I sound like a pigeon) 😅.

  • @MikaKaiosei
    @MikaKaiosei Před rokem +1

    I dont really think in Poland teachers have Polish accents, most of eng teachers lived in uk or us so.. Mehh idk

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Před rokem +8

    About the only accented English that gets incomprehensible is from India. Dealing with tech support from India gets to be “what was that, again?”

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 Před rokem +5

      If you are getting tech support phone calls from India then id hang up the phone at once mate. 😂😂

    • @GdzieJestNemo
      @GdzieJestNemo Před rokem

      have you heard people speaking english with hard french accent? :)

  • @anndeecosita3586
    @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +2

    I have a different accent when I speak English vs when I speak Spanish to where people assume I’m a native speaker either way. That’s not the norm though even among people who speak more than one language fluently. I have noticed many times the children of immigrants or who are from another region of the same country will still sound somewhat like their parents as far as accent even if they grew up in a different area.

  • @mariruseishvili-zx9rv
    @mariruseishvili-zx9rv Před rokem +1

    İts was so funny 😂❤ Georgia

  • @maxkllxxx4317
    @maxkllxxx4317 Před rokem +10

    Why don't you add the Albanian language? Kosovo is very beautiful

  • @houby1632
    @houby1632 Před rokem +1

    im georgian and i believe the biggest thing that like makes new learning english students in georgia get an accent is that we unlike english pronounce our letters exactly as it is like for english A is more like [Ei] for us its just A its hard to explain without sound yea

  • @likakostava3822
    @likakostava3822 Před rokem

    I love our georgian girl sophia

  • @Ninnieee
    @Ninnieee Před rokem +1

    Georgian accent and sophiaa 🫶💜

  • @momusia3260
    @momusia3260 Před rokem +1

    I live georgja

  • @cernismirtkamennoeserdce9221
    @cernismirtkamennoeserdce9221 Před 11 měsíci

    "Fresh" to call a newcomer, it reminds me to Scarface there is a scene where the blonde lady called Al Pacino "you are a FOB" fresh off the boat

  • @jan4802
    @jan4802 Před rokem +1

    Mulat

  • @tikagogodze6248
    @tikagogodze6248 Před rokem +1

    In our era accent does not matter, it only matters in toefel and ielts’s tests

  • @puchi2699
    @puchi2699 Před rokem +2

    Sophia😍😍

  • @connorward2400
    @connorward2400 Před rokem +15

    I like when foreigners keep an accent, its useful to know where people are from. If you have a good enough ear you can tell which town any British or Irish person are from. The lad in the video was very London RP, mine is a fairly strong South Yorkshire. Considering how much grammar can alter by region most people don't get that hung up on proper grammar in speech. For example if I type out my accent there is an ungodly amount of apostrophes. Eg: tha dun't want t' go in't shop.

    • @GdzieJestNemo
      @GdzieJestNemo Před rokem +3

      the thing is that you are often judged based on the accent and in working environment it can be really annoying. I work in a global corpo and my team has mix of people from around the word. It's fine within the company and external teams that get to know you, but once you need to call clients or vendors who never interacted with you are often looked down upon. We had cases where the call recipients straight up hung up hearing eg. polish or indian accent and their attitude was completely different if a person with british, american or irish sounding accent made the call instead.

    • @rozumnaistota9489
      @rozumnaistota9489 Před rokem

      @@GdzieJestNemo So sad. 😥 And I'm curious if they had a strong accents or light?

    • @minimax7716
      @minimax7716 Před rokem

      What's the point of it if someone is capable of reproducing most foreign sounds in a native-like manner (e.g. by starting to learn at a young age)? From my experience (also when speaking of foreigners who have learnt my language), the more fluent one is, including the accent, the more professional or serious they seem.

  • @autumnthriller
    @autumnthriller Před rokem +1

    The german gal sounds quite American!