STATES (Bundesländer)of GERMANY EXPLAINED Indians React

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Hello guys, here is our reaction on States of Germany! Watch&Share!
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Komentáře • 46

  • @FrankStaack-hr4wr
    @FrankStaack-hr4wr Před měsícem +18

    Thank you for showing. In Schleswig- Holstein we only say "Moin". The answer is "Moin" If you say more you are talking to much.

    • @julianrottmann7999
      @julianrottmann7999 Před měsícem +1

      Moin, jawoll, genauso.

    • @Arsenic71
      @Arsenic71 Před 27 dny +1

      Absolutely correct. If you say "Moin Moin" you are a chatterbox.

    • @1337Arnonym
      @1337Arnonym Před 13 dny +1

      Moin moin is a hamburger thing (i'm northern german and we only say "moin" as a greeting at any time of the day like "how are you?!", "how are you!")

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +9

    13:27 „Polish people come into Germany“ 😂 well, the Polish regions at the German border were entirely German for centuries… until 1945. So, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern is not influenced by Poles, but Poland is heavily influenced by Germany. Literally one third of modern-day Poland used to be Germany

    • @fusssel7178
      @fusssel7178 Před 19 dny

      tbf over the centuries the borders of poland moved a lot, in the 14 hundreds it was poland before it became german just as an example.

  • @thomasnieswandt8805
    @thomasnieswandt8805 Před měsícem +4

    You asked about Bremen and Bremerhaven. Bremerhaven means "Habour of Bremen". Bremen was always a trade city, however during the middleages, their habour started to sand up, so they built a new one near the cost, thats how bremerhaven happend. Also a "hanseatic city" is a city that was part of the "Hanse". Hanse was traderoute like the salt-route, or silk-road. All citys conected to that traderoute, nomatter water or land, had been allowed to call themself "hanseatic city of... Bremen etc." Some citiys still, to this day call them self hanseatic, Bremen, Lübeck, Rostock, they are proud of their past.

    • @klarasee806
      @klarasee806 Před měsícem +1

      The Hanseatic League was not a trade route but a merchant and city alliance in the Middle Ages, and only member cities were allowed to call themselves Hanseatic cities.
      Greetings from the Hanseatic city of Bremen

  • @Arsenic71
    @Arsenic71 Před 27 dny

    There's a funny story about Bremen and Hamburg. The logo (flag) of Hamburg is a gate - they call it the "gate to the world" (due to Hamburg being an incredibly important harbor for Europe). The logo (flag) of Bremen is a key. So people say that: Hamburg is the gate to the world but Bremen has the key for it.

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +3

    1:01 „a lot of times“ 😂😂😂 once a year for carnival. Seriously, he talks so much BS. The people there are completely normal and they wear completely normal clothes

  • @tobbe207
    @tobbe207 Před 29 dny +1

    The old Sachsen hast lttle to Do wich the old saxons.

  • @maylinde986
    @maylinde986 Před 29 dny

    In the south the kids have the opportunity to learn french in elementary school. Some kids from Switzerland go here to school. And the is a lot of workers traffic from one to another country.

  • @jensesau3148
    @jensesau3148 Před 13 dny

    The Anglo Saxons (Angeln+Saxons) came from North Germany. The people in Dresden at that time were Thuringers.

  • @DJone4one
    @DJone4one Před měsícem

    4:22 greetings from North sea coast Bremerhaven.👋 Or in our language: Moin
    Around 7 million people started their new life in America from here in the 19th century.
    After the Second World War until today, Bremerhaven is the connecting harbour for the Americans and the US Army.
    Even though Bremerhaven was only founded in 1827, there are neighbourhoods like Lehe that are almost 1000 years old.
    And No, we are not on the Elbe.
    We are on the North Sea, more precisely on the Weser estuary.

  • @klarasee806
    @klarasee806 Před měsícem

    5:00 The "memorial block in the street dedicated to a female serial killer" is a specially marked paving stone in Bremen, the so-called spitting stone. It is not located in a street but in the middle of Bremen's market square, at the spot where the serial killer Gesche Gottfried was executed. She poisoned 15 people with arsenic at the beginning of the 19th century. Since then, it has been a tradition among Bremen residents to spit on this spot when they pass by to express their disgust at her actions.
    Because I don't know if it is also known in India: "The Bremen Town Musicians" is a very well-known fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm, which is about a group of animal musicians consisting of a donkey, a dog, a cat and a rooster who were badly treated by their owners and came together to try their luck as music abbots. Of course there has to be a monument in Bremen that portrays them. The donkey's front legs are so shiny because it is said that touching them brings good luck or makes a wish come true.

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    9:13 Rheinland-Pfalz has enough culture to be recognised as its own entity. It’s not just a sidekick of Nordrhein-Westfalen

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +3

    10:10 okay stop ‼️ the German state of Saxony has NOTHING to do with the Germanic tribe „Saxons“. It’s a weird story why the state even received the name but that’s another thing…
    The Anglo-Saxons that migrated to England were from northern Germany, to be specific from Lower SAXONY.

  • @u.z.9383
    @u.z.9383 Před měsícem +1

    The fairy tales collected by the Bros. Grimm are not from the Black Forest, but from Hesse north of Frankfurt, with the weirdest dialects and traditional costumes. The Amish speak Pennsylvania Dutch, which is similar to Palatinate dialect

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    13:04 only if you live at the border. If you don’t, you don’t really have a connection to the neighbouring countries. Germans care much more about other countries like Spain, Italy, the UK, the US… but not about Belgium or Luxemburg 😂

  • @xehanotmelodic7696
    @xehanotmelodic7696 Před 29 dny +2

    Fun Fact: Germany has the most Friends in the World, you can travel with a German passport to more places than with any other one.

    • @Ingrid-wf4cl
      @Ingrid-wf4cl Před 27 dny

      Not true,one can travel with other passports to even more or the same number of countries.And the fact that Germans travel everywhere ,doesn`t mean that people like to see them in their countries.Germans are not known for their good behaviour.So have just to check what they do in places like Mallorca.

    • @xehanotmelodic7696
      @xehanotmelodic7696 Před 27 dny +1

      @@Ingrid-wf4cl You should really research before you make a comment something.
      Fine I accept my knowledge has been a few years outdated, we had been ranked one, but then the war between Russia and Ukraine began and we sank from 196 visitable countries to 194 and now we share that position with France, Italy, Spain, Japan, and Singapore.
      We are still the country with the most friends in the world, we are just not the only ones.
      And, what do you mean that has nothing to do with that, Countries only allow people from other countries to visit them if they want that, or would you like to have someone in your home who you don't like?
      If the people in Mallorca don't want us Germans there, we couldn't reach the island.
      You know why we Germans will always be welcome there because we not only bring a little chaos when we want to party in the summer paradise, as we see it, we also bring quite a LOT of our money.
      The people from Mallorca live of tourism nowadays, and the Germans are the main group of tourists that visit the island.

  • @nairolfmackebrecht
    @nairolfmackebrecht Před 29 dny

    Greetings from Swabia. I hope you can understand this with my crazy dialect.

  • @klarasee806
    @klarasee806 Před měsícem +1

    There are many different Low German dialects that have their origins in the North Sea Germanic languages ​​and are particularly common in northern Germany and the east of the Netherlands.
    Pennsylvania Dutch, which many Old Order Amish and Old Order Mennonites in the USA speak, is not a Low German dialect! This was wrongly stated in the video. It developed mainly from Palatinate dialects and is still quite similar to Palatinate today. It has nothing to do with Low German.

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    2:55 OUTDATED!

  • @leobeck8074
    @leobeck8074 Před měsícem +1

    12:53: There is a spelling mistake. They are called "Klöße". The letter ß is not a b. The pronunciation is more like an "s".

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    0:57 a lot of (young) Germans can’t understand any dialect simply because no one speaks them anymore 🙄 that’s not a particular Swabian thing

  • @Inf0H3ld
    @Inf0H3ld Před měsícem

    Hello you two! You're doing a great job - I love watching you! Greetings from Hamburg!!!

  • @frankishempire2322
    @frankishempire2322 Před 29 dny

    "Love it or hate it."
    Most germans choose the later..

  • @arthur_p_dent
    @arthur_p_dent Před měsícem +1

    7:20 this is false, the Amish don't speak a Low German dialect. Their dialect is more from the South of German, mostly from the state of Rheinland-Pfalz. And most certainly High German, not Low.

  • @Icelandchan
    @Icelandchan Před 14 dny

    I don't really like that video. He could have mentioned that Brandenburg has the most lakes in Germany. There is a very famous film studio in Potsdam that does not only do German productions but is also involved in international productions. People in Brandenburg are actually very hardworking. The airport was an accumulation of many different factors and none of them were the fault of the people who live in Brandenburg.
    Saxony has two major cities (he mentioned so many in Western Germany but those two were too much, I guess): Dresden which is the capital and has castles and is very much the city the king resided in; and Leipzig which has a university that is over 600 years old and a book fair in the spring that is hundreds of years old. Furthermore, they is the Erzgebirge, the Elbsandsteingebirge and the Vogtland with many mountains. Absolutely beautiful. But I guess it is more important that the people here are right-wing...
    Btw: Thuringia has the Thuringian forest and mountains, as well. It is so beautiful. All the small towns. He showed a picture of a cave in "Saalfeld". I lived there for three years and it was so nice (a little small for my taste).

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    6:35 inaccurate description of Hessen. What he said only applies to Frankfurt but not to the entire state. Because Frankfurt is literally the opposite of the rest of Hessen. And Frankfurt contradicts itself. One the one hand, it’s the economical powerhouse… you see many people with suits on the streets… and 200 m away you see prostitutes and junkies. Frankfurt is known for its ghettos, therefore it’s also called „Crackfurt“.
    The rest of Hessen is really beautiful though. Many small towns with half-timbered houses between hills…

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    3:50 the state of Brandenburg had not to much to do with the construction of the airport. Don’t blame them!
    4:03 hilarious 😂 the Cottbus „castle“ is a theatre. And it’s so obvious that this is not a castle. It’s not even a relevant sight of the state.
    4:05 he shouldn’t have mentioned that. No one knows it and the states has more to offer.
    4:13 there’s no place in Eastern Germany with many migrants 😂
    4:20 WORST description ever😂 Brandenburg is completely different from Berlin and doesn’t wanna be like Berlin at all! Brandenburg has nature, Berlin has party, action, chaos, too much bullshit,… that doesn’t work well together

  • @elid9960
    @elid9960 Před 16 dny

    Saxony-Anhalt is missing?

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +1

    10:23 the state of Saxony is not exactly known for good universities… AND the largest city of Saxony (Leipzig) is extremely leftist! Not right-Wing-extremist or stuff… he clearly doesn’t know the state at all because it has much more to offer.

  • @michaelklaes8887
    @michaelklaes8887 Před měsícem +1

    Why didn't you finish the video? There are 2 more things at the end that get mentioned! Surprise

  • @melchiorvonsternberg844
    @melchiorvonsternberg844 Před měsícem

    Not everything here was golden... There were a lot of small mistakes and spelling errors. If you want to understand the close ties with neighboring countries, you have to look into German history, at the latest from the Thirty Years' War onwards. Due to its unique geographical location, Germany is a kind of special case in Europe.

  • @bertjafn
    @bertjafn Před 29 dny +1

    You choose a bad video, this time. A lot of wrong informations and/or misconceptions. What he said about the connection between Saxony and England actually applies to Lower Saxony, Saxony got nothing to do with it. About half of the sorbic minority lives in Brandenburg, why didn’t he mention it when he was talking about that state? Polish influence in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern? No, when Germany formed more than 1000 years ago, Mecklenburg was not part of it but an independent country, settled by slavic peoples (known as Obotrites) who resisted german conquest for nearly 300 years. When they lost their independence, they kept their own rulers (until 1918), their language (which fell out of use about 300 years ago) and culture. The „polish influences“ are actually remains of that native slavic culture from several hundred years ago. Bavaria at one time even had a king? Seriously? At the time that guy lived he was one out of four ruling kings in Germany, just like his father before him. There were three Kings of Bavaria before him, and two more to follow. The other three Kingdoms were Saxony, Württemberg and Prussia.

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem +3

    Guys, you really need to start questioning what you see on CZcams. Because half of it is misinformation! It’s just not true. It’s either a personal judgment of the creator (weird because he’s never even been to Germany) or it’s bar research .

  • @Zentralrat-der-Schwaben
    @Zentralrat-der-Schwaben Před měsícem +1

    16 States? Where is Mallorca? We have the weirdest dialects? We are not Bavarian.

    • @NicholasCorvin
      @NicholasCorvin Před měsícem

      *Take that back....Apparently you confuse us with yourselves. Even the Saxons are easier to understand than you.*
      🤬🔥😈🔥🤣🤣🤣

  • @Tristan_Anderwelt
    @Tristan_Anderwelt Před měsícem

    8:45 Your are very welcome in my home state
    By the way is there a PO Box or something to send you something. I have had the idea so many times while watching your videos

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 Před měsícem

    13:27 „Polish people come into Germany“ 😂 well, the Polish regions at the German border were entirely German for centuries… until 1945. So, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern is not influenced by Poles, but Poland is heavily influenced by Germany. Literally one third of modern-day Poland used to be Germany