All Languages Ever Used in Eurovision
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- čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
- Every language used (so far) in Eurovision since 1956
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This video took too long to make, and it probably is still filled with some mistakes, but please enjoy it nonetheless 😊 - Krátké a kreslené filmy
Norway in 1973 really did their Duolingo lessons
Meanwhile Bulgaria 2012
And Turkwy 1986
And Ukraine 2005
malta 2008
italy 2017
-norway 1973, how many languages do you want to use?
-yes
That's exactly what I was going to say 😂😂😂
Bulgaria in 2012 too
English: *Pulls out the lengthy receipt*
William Tell Overture intesifies
I wonder if Norwegians will be scared of sending a song in Norwegian again after last place this year. In my opinion they definitely deserved better than last place.
For sure
No one deserves last place. But someone has to be there.
They Made it to the final, that's better than some other countries can say
@@Inzersdorf93 True but still they probably expected more
My Dad,an Italian,loved Norway and was so shocked of the last place,this year was so disappointing
Estonian 🇪🇪 is also used in 2024
and Greek!
@@keugim007greek was mention in the video
Estonia is made up language. It is not real
@@ablobfish51045:27 it’s not on list
And Portuguese
The German ??? : "Wadde hadde dudeda" is a combination of the dialect of Cologne called Kölsch and a kind of toddler language. But sometimes it takes curious ways. Stefan Raab the singer/ componist heard an old lady talking to her dog in this toddler😮 language. The dog found something on the bottom of a parc and she asked him what he had there in his mouth. Wadde = what hadde = have dude = you da = there.
Raab thought it sounded so funny and he was also the man who wrote the ESC song "Guildo hat euch lieb" some years before to open the ESC to a younger audience and end the stiffness and he used the wadde hadde plus rapping.
Also... Technisch gesehen deutsch 🤣
Er singt tatsächlich auch sehr viel Plattdeutsch in dem Lied ^^
A lot of 2024 languages arent updated
yeah
Spotted no Estonian listed for 2024...
Showing Slovenia 2023 for Slovene but it not being on the list is quite weird.
yep lets use an example jsut last yar, but not note that they were singing in Slovene LOL
every other language: Pretty short list
English: A whole fucking bible could be written
Too bad many beautiful languages are overshadowed by English
@@harunatsu6756very good!! English is the only good language
@@kubamatusek2609 I don't think so
there are so many beautiful languages out there, and yet everybody is singing in english 🤷♂️
@@harunatsu6756 English is a beautiful language
I am waiting for the Dutch to sing in Frisian.
I am waiting for UK to sing in Welsh or Scottish Gaelic. Also Ireland in Irish. More Aserbaijani.
@@ukrnikaI'm waiting for a German-language entry again. Preferably some dialect would be cool.
@@ukrnika*Azeri
@@ukrnika Or Scots, Manx, Irish or Corish!
@@Ellisepha Wonder if Denmark will ever send Faroese or Greenlandic...
I believe as of now, thanks to Electric Fields representing Australia this year with a few lines of an indigenous language from Southern Australia and not counting the Junior Contest and the Choir Contest when for a little bit we weren't competing as a single state, the UK is now the only country to have only sent songs in one single language despite having taken part in every Contest except 1956 and 1958 and holding the longest unbroken run.
Given that other than English, the BBC has a choice of Scots, Gaelic, Welsh, Ulster Scots, Irish, Cornish, Norn and British Sign Language which are all recognised languages in the UK itself. The UK also has a host of Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories across the globe, but are partly or largely self-governing and their languages are eligible too - Manx, the three part English-part French languages of the Channel Islands that are really hard to spell, Gibraltese, several Caribbean Patois languages and dialects, Pitkern from the South Pacific and a few others, that is very telling.
The really interesting detail here is that the 1970 UK entry, Mary Hopkin was actually a first language Welsh speaker, so if anyone could have done it and done it well, it would have been her. For the record, I would LOVE to see my country send something in another indigenous language but I don't think that's likely to ever happen sadly, its theoretically possible, but it just doesn't seem to accord with the priorities of the BBC and what it thinks the Contest is.
I just thought I'd mention that little detail.
I really find it a shame that the UK never sent a song in a Celtic language. There is some fantastic music in Welsh & Scottish Gaelic. Some traditional music in those languages could be something different that really makes a good change.
@@martenkats6915 I agree. I think there are 5 main reasons for this not happening:
1) The politics and mentality of the Celtic music scene which is less interested in engaging with the BBC, the 'popular' part of the industry i.e. the charts etc and being disproportionately likely to be formed anti-UK Celtic Nationalists. There are people like Julie Fowlis (Gaelic speaker) who would be an amazing partner to create a song and worked with Disney on the soundtrack for the movie Brave, but I very much doubt she'd want anything flagged as British and we are NOT funding 4 entries to give everyone their shot. This tendency makes it difficult to recruit an entry.
2) The BBC has a particular vision for the Contest that I don't think actually matches the real Contest if countries like Portugal and Ukraine keep being successful with obviously culturally-specific entries. The BBC has zeroed in hard on the Pride aspect of the Contest's identity and yes, representation is important to a lot of people, they DO NOT mean language representation. Their definition of the word "diversity" is very undiverse in actuality. I fear we are going to get something safe again next year since Olly bombed so hard with the Televote (it's rather telling that Michael Rice did better). As much as I wouldn't mind SuRie bringing one of her own songs and a stage show crafted to suit her personal needs, or another musical theatre entry, I am not convinced that's a step forward. An alternative is I think going folk rock/pop with someone like The Unthanks (two sisters called Unthank and their tour band) who are Northumbrian (the bit of north-east England next to Scotland), capable live and experienced hands. Sadly, that approach is a bit too non-London-centric for a very London-focused broadcaster.
3) The Celtic-speaking parts of the BBC, with the exception of S4C (Welsh language and funded by the BBC but legally separate from it), under-developed and minor players in broadcasting. There is no specialist provision for Scots language, Cornish and Norn are reconstructed languages with no first language speakers and Northern Ireland is untouchable for political reasons (as in we voluntarily choose not to go there because of the unique politics of the region, RTE does not have the same view). S4C is the only entity that can actually execute, BBC Alba is too small, under-funded and under-experienced to manage a project like this.
4) Language politics in the UK. Native non-English languages were frankly crushed with time. It was still legal for school-teachers in Wales into the late 1970s to beat children for speaking Welsh in the playgrounds (that went out when Mrs Thatcher was in-charge thankfully). The languages barely survived, Gaelic speakers amount to about 87,000 people in Scotland reporting some Gaelic language use in 2011 out of a population of about 5.4 million. Now imagine a world were about 90,000 Danes spoke Danish and the rest German because decades of government policy had pushed that outcome - that's basically what happened. It has made EXTREMELY clear that if you wanted to get ahead, you spoke English, indeed, some of the greatest of our thinkers, people like the father of modern economics Adam Smith and Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume went out of their ways to anglicise as much as possible and this has been successful to the point where you can tell the difference between a middle-class Lowland Scot and a working-class Lowland Scot based on whether they use the phrase "aye, a' ken" which means "yes, I know" in the a sentence. Scots language is for poetry classes studying Robert Burns or a bit of Robert Ferguson if you are lucky. It's NOT for polite or formal conversations. The London-based Delegation wouldn't understand their own entry and don't really have the framework to change that quickly.
5) I just don't see the English actually getting behind a non-English language entry that most non-English Brits can't understand, never-mind themselves. The BBC already has a major PR problem on their hands through a lot of their priorities and how they are commissioning now-a-days (never-mind that our state TV and Radio services are funded by a TV Licence, not general taxation, which is being opted out from at a record rate). I can see them just about getting behind something that The Shires, The Unthanks or Eliza Carty put together say. My personal fantasy is that the BBC says "oh f**k it" and writes Paloma Faith a cheque and tells her she can do anything she likes - which is her condition for doing it. But alas, something in English is the common-denominator.
IF they were going to go down the language route, my solution would be to bring in a woman called Cerys Matthews. She started out as a proper Welsh rocker and front-woman for a band called Catatonia who had a big hit called 'Mulder and Scully' in the 1990s and a couple of decent selling records with some international presence. She also duetted with Sir Tom Jones in the Peak Welsh modern Christmas classic 'Baby, It's Cold Outside' which is played at parties and on the radio a lot at that time of year. She splits her time between singer-songwriter and a radio DJ, ironically for the BBC. She speaks Welsh, has recorded in Welsh and there's pretty much nobody on that scene that she doesn't know or can't access. She'd be a good person to find the talent and mentor through the development process and I'm pretty sure she would defend them to the death from any BBC nonsense in the staging. It'd be an interesting challenge for someone whose been around for a while and doesn't have much left to prove.
Nevertheless, for all that, as much as I would love to send a song that isn't in English, I just don't see it happening.
@@nicolamarchbank1846 I think you are right, but I still find it a shame. France have sent a number of songs in minority / regional languages, like Breton. And politically France aren't exactly known for being supportive to language other than French to put it mildly.
@@martenkats6915 And the difference in the two positions is more than a bit peculiar.
it is fairly damning that even the French, the language snobs that they are sent a Breton (Breizh) song very recently, and it is a first cousin to Cornish (Kernow) and Welsh (Cymru)... tsk tsk
Norway 1973 apparently is built different
1973 was the first year contestants were free to choose languages other than their countries' official languages, and Norway obviously took full advantage of the new rules.
EBU: "What language do you want to use?"
Norway 1973: "Yes."
Norway 1973 was in English and Norwegian, the guy who made this video is talking nonsense
@@Axer_ no it wasn’t, it had quite a few French lines and contains words in languages from all of the participating countries in the 1973 contest
Why tf Slovenia use portuguese in 2018?
Portugal 2024 is also in Portuguese
Surzhyk is a mix of different languages. In Ukraine - it's ukrainian with some russian words.
Verka Serdiuchka used mostly English, German, Ukrainian and Russian in her song
It's a man
@minetale0707 Verka Seduchka is a drag persona. A character. That character is a woman so she is referred to as a woman. Just like how Mrs.Brown or Madea is referred to as a woman despite being played by men.
Surzhik is not a language by definition. Surzhik was mistakenly included in this video as the language used in Eurovision all time. In fact, Surzhik has the basis of one of two East Slavic languages: Ukrainian or Russian, but with borrowings.
@@mykynzy2790 But Andrey Danilko is a man,so technically she is he
no, the Ukrainian language with russian words is the Ukrainian language with “russianisms”.
Surzhik is more of a distortion of russian words into the Ukrainian phonetic manner. and in the end these are no longer russian words, but surzhik.
In 2022 we almost got a song in Galician by Tanxugueiras because it won the majority of votes from Spanish people but the jury arbitrarily sent Chanel instead. Like, not saying Chanel was bad but it was unfair and getting some representation for once would've been awesome :(
I'm also kinda shocked to see Andorra was the only country to send any song in Catalan...
Andorra is the only country that has Catalan as their official language, the rest of the countries that speaks it they are a minority so it makes sense they have it difficult to get a representation... as a catalan I would like to have a representation and I hope for the rest of minorities to have their moment too ❤ I was rooting for Tanxugueiras too 😭
Chanel wasn't sent "arbitrarily" in 2022, it was a very well thought decision. The jury votes were obviously rigged to let her win, it was already decided by the people in power that she would represent Spain no matter what.
If you research a bit about her you'll see that there were a lot of money and well-known music producers involved in her song, they couldn't allow the Spanish people to vote somebody else.
The lesson is that money always wins.
Tanxuguieras probably wouldn't make it not even 20th place. It was boring song, but a lot of people supported it just because was different, and in Galician.
@@jrivas8112 True, but in the end Chanel didn't win either, and the will of the audience was not respected, so it was a lose-lose situation
I remember Tanxugueiras, it was a great song
9:35 Hungarian is also an exotic language, especially after Hungary stopped participating in the competition
Random fun fact: This was the first time in 15 years a song in Swedish became the runner-up in the Swedish competition. It was also sung by two North Africans, which makes it even more unique.
This makes me realize how many languages do indeed exist also in Europe and not only in the south-east asia
There are a lot more since most of the minorities of each european country usually don't have any representation
Some of the languages are not native to Europe (e.g. Swahili) and some countries featured here technically do not belong to Europe
San Marino this year is in Spanish
I'm still so happy about Norway sending Norwegian this year. It was long due
You forgot:
Aramaic
Ireland 2024
Abracadabra
And almost Estonian in 2024?
Yep, it's the line "Avada Kedavra"
I mean, this phrase is in the English vocabulary.
@@D.S.handleEven so, it's still Aramaic featured within an English sentence.
In 2005, Walter and Kazha performed the chorus of their entry The War Is Not Over in Latvian Sign Language.
So another missed language 😄
No euskara ?
The Basque Country ?
Looks like something to fix for 2025…
I want euskera and catalan in Eurovision 🥲
*Zoo* must be forcibly enrolled, so they reunite in 2025. They sing in Valencian Catalan and are fcking amazing. They are well known throughout Spain, but unfortunately they are stopping at the end of the year
@@PrenonNon0same to Galician in 2022
@@engolukante6022 Quin grup?
@@b2stparadise Andorra was singing in Catalan when they were participating.
I love how Stefan Raab just has "? ? ?" And it works so well because he literally trolled Eurovision with that Song which is just some german Gibberish
Raab is a Icon in German Comedy History and a fucking MadLad
Now that Switzerland won again it's time to send a song in Swiss German. As we did it with Romansh after winning in 1988
Wer wär da ächt gued g'eigned als Schweyzerdeytsche Sänger?
Norway jumping on almost every language, my god
If i had a nickle for every time a country sang in an imaginary language i would have 4 nickles, which is not much but it's weird it happened 4 times
let me share something about Monaco in 2006 as a native from French Polynesia where Tahitian is one of the native languages I can guarantee that her pronunciation is truly terrible even me as a native I have to see the lyrics to understand what she was singing and her dancers and performance are really cliché about my home country and culture we absolutely don't dance like this here so no wonder she didn't qualify
It’s close enough, and yea they do have a close dance to it. It’s just inspired by it.
@@TotalbadassX absolutely not we don't move hips like this
2:54 you used this as the Northern Sami language representative? That’s not even Northern Sami. That part of the song is joik- the same thing the chorus of Norway’s song this year was in. It has no meaning.
Correct, that part of the song is just joik, but the rest of the song did feature several Sámi verses sung by the same guy
well, it's still sámi tho.
@@osasunaitor yeah but for the rest of the vid they showed parts of the song in the featured language
@@PAHSerCuz yep should have chosen another moment
I was wondering how much of a language was needed to "count" until the Namasté bit(love that one!)
Anyway, in that case the Dutch entry of 2024 counts as Dutch, English, French, German & Italian. And if you count the name of a dish as part of a language it also has Spanish.
Somewhere they said cha cha cha is part spanish because of pina colada and cha cha cha. This list said Norway 1973 is in finnish, there's one word in finnish.
Wadde hadde dudde da 😂 these questionmarks were legit.
Wadde hadde dudde da = Was hast du da = What do you have there… it is a own version of german
What language you want to use?
Ukraine 2005: yes
Also norway 1973
And Bulgaria 2012
Tons of 2024 entries missing. Albania went in English in 2024, not in Albanian. Lots of inaccuracies
the original song of albania '24 is actually in albanian!
@@tim.qoa. yes. But it's not the oficial song they used at Eurovision. Their entry for Eurovision, the topic of this video, is 100% in English.
Any language exists.
...
...
Norwegians: Let's make a song with this language.
as a Turk, I understand completely Crimean Tatar 🥰🥰
Interesting. I read that they are from different branches, Crimean Tatar - Kipchak, Turkish - Oguz.
@@trymai_kavun yes true, but all words, whole sentences completely Turkish. "ben bu yerde yaşayamadım, yaşlılığıma doyamadım, vatanıma doyamadım" so clear and that suprised me too.
@@trymai_kavun all Turkic languages minus Siberian ones are more similar than unfamiliar people typically expect. Even Kazakh or Kyrgyz are only about as different from Turkish as English is different from German.
Btw fun fact: kavun is a Turkic word; though it means melon, not watermelon.
@@B13.B13 It doesn't say "Yaşlılığıma" yaşlık means gençlik/youth in Crimean Tatar. Yaşlı/old is kart which we also use in Turkish. I understand it's easy to mix them up but think of it like the yaş in "Ağaç yaşken eğilir." So in Turkish yaş means young as well.
@@zeynepiremgunes7302 thanx, you are right 🙏🏻
3 songs in Luxembourgish? That's a very rare language, it seems.
2 songs in Irish. Even less songs?
A single song in Romansh and Antillian Creole, languages I have never even heard of.
Sranan Tongo, 2021 from Suriname.. I think the native name is Leutzeburgisch
luxembourgish is a dialect of german and most people in luxembourg speak french over their native german dialect, but standard german also is spoken in luxembourg too. since it’s spoken by such a small amount of people as a daily language no one else is really going to speak it other than luxembourgers. romansh is the native latin language of switzerland, antillian creole is a creole languages from the lesser antilles
Irish is a dying language that a lot of people do not know exists. Luxembourgish is not endangered, but most think they speak German or french there, and I think both are also used there. Romansh is an Indo-European language, I think, and I think it's spoken by gypsies, not sure tho, and I have no idea what is Antillian creole
romansh is one of the languages of Switzerland if i'm not wrong...
Romansh is the fourth language of Switzerland and it’s a Latin language with quite some German influence, sound really cool !
so it has nothing to do with the gypsies
11:26 I think that might *technically* still qualify as the Cologne dialect of German. It's a ridiculous string of words but you *could* still translate it. 😅😂
Something to the effect of:
Does he have something there?
And if yes, what does he have?
Does he have something smooth there?
Does he have something hairy there?
Does he have something there which nobody else has?
Or does he have
On that which he has there.
Its just what an old lady sad to her dog with baby talk
Colonge dialect baby talk @@Bifelin
I baby tslk is a bit dofferent i dialects as well kot just the ususl lsnguage
I supose any high german spesker would still hsve said
" ja was hast du den da " with sn high pitched animal voice 😅
@@YukiTheOkami Not so sure about that. Even teachers use the incorrect "Komm hier!" instead of "Komm her!" when talking to their dogs. 😂
If New Zealand makes it Eurovision debut, I hope they have an entry that includes the Māori language 🇳🇿
they dont have broadcaster that has a 30 year connection to EBU, like SBS has. THAT is the reason they were invited. That long committed link to EBU.
My nerdy heart is rejoicing! Thank you for all the effort you've put into that video!
Wadde Hadde Dude da is basically gibberish. There’s a few passages with a coherent number of words in there but it’s really just gibberish for the most part. And it is NOT Kölsch as many people like to claim. It sounds like Kölsch a bit but it is not Kölsch
Its paired with baby talk or pet tslk
U know how people speak high pitched and simplyfied with their dogs an cats sonetimes but also add random sybles to it so it stsrd sounding hilsrious 😅
You forgot many 2024s and Albania didn't sing in Albanian 2024.
Portugal, Israel and Armenia in 2024 also used their languages in their songs.
French entry from 2022 was one of my fav french Eurovision ever. And I'm still mad that we didn't won with the imaginary language or Sanomi. This song is lit
are you calling Breton an imaginary language?
@@impossiblynice Sorry for the confusion, I was talking about Belgian entries in my second sentence (I'm from Belgium)
I hope Spain (my country) some year sending a song in Euskera, Galician and Catalan. This will be amazing becasue all this languages are beautiful.
Casi lo hicimos en 2022 (donde, por cierto, me da igual lo que digan, las tanxugueiras ganaron) y en 2024 donde quedó segunda una que incluía catalán, quien quita que en 2025 se logre, ya van dos veces en la que se quedó a las puertas
According to polish wikipedia Poland in if I remember 2006 used sign language.
Idk, if it was Polish sign language or english or something else.
They were using it during the English part, so it was either English sign language or non-language specific one
Eurovision: How many languages you wanna use in your song?
Ukraine 2005: Yes
Greek 2024, Hebrew 2024? Serbian 2024?
Greek Marina Satti with Zari
Israel Eden Golan with Hurricane (she sings in Hebrew at the end)
Serbia Teya Dora with Ramonda
Hebrew was since Israel started attending the Eurovision until like the 90s or something when they started singing in English and sometimes including one line in Hebrew. I don't why it wasn't included in here :)
11:26 Raab sang a kind of mumbled german back then
Nah its dialect paired with animal/ baby talk
Imagine sayin " ja was hast du denn da" if ur dog brings an random object ut now put dialect to it lmao
@@YukiTheOkami no matter what he sings it is a German ESC classic🙌
I like to call it "german gibberish"😂
Im glad you picked Aven Romale for Romani. That song is a guilty pleasure of mine😂😂 I love it
Why guilty? 🤔
@@panadocoughsyrup It was in last place in the semi with zero points and has been talked about as one of the worst Eurovision songs ever but I absolutely love it. Its so catchy and those costume they wore are just perfect
@@BrynjarReynisson One of the worst!? Huh? God, here I was getting to the end of the video thinking “shit, that Romani song was the only good one” 💀 I’m sure Europe has other great musicians but yoh, as a South African, I don’t think Eurovision is to my taste!
Funny how you put Carpe Diem for Slovene, but forgot to include it in the list :)))
The last closing lines in Israel's latest entry are in Hebrew.
Same language 🇧🇬♥️🇲🇰. Thank you for including the best song about Bulgaria 🇧🇬♥️
The girl of Macedonia is singing serbian or slavic.
Nah it's seperated language !
Macedonian is an independent language just like how Bulgarian is !
For the Junior Eurovision, the UK (or more so, Wales) did send a song in Welsh. I've yet to hear a Welsh song in the main Eurovision Song Contest.
If France could send two songs in Breton, Andorra in Catalan, and Ireland in Irish (Gaelige), then what is stopping the UK from sending a song in Welsh?
I’ve never heard of a welsh musical artist but I’m sure they’re out there
one thing: San Marino 2024 is in Spanish
3:25
I remember hearing "rock me" on the radio every single day
I'm happy to see you included 2020 and Amharic!
And Twin Twin for France in 2014 just sang "quería un bigote" in spanish.
Great video.Thank you very much.
Arabic is also use in 1991 by France
And Israel 2000
Гораздо интересней слушать родной язык, на котором поют люди, ради этого и был создан этот фестиваль
I wonder if there´s any country who have NEVER sent a song in english?
Technically speaking, Morocco
Monaco is the only country that had the option but didn't. not counting Serbia & Montengro.
There is not single czech word in Ukraine´s 2005 entry.
There is Ukranian, Russian, English, German, French, Spanish and Polish
Impresive job
Slovene is also used in 2023, which is the song played in the video
Not a single entry in swiss German. Come fucking on Switzerland…
Really well made video !
11:29 dude is clearly singing in Simlish 😂
i really appreciated all the songs that sang in native/non english languages this year
Waiting for basque, gaelic and galician
Какие же всё таки красивые и разнообразные языки в Европе (и не только в Европе конечно). Мне очень нравится,когда страны поют на своих родных языках
to every person saying that one country used a lot of languages I can't wait for the year when Australia sends in a song with like 30
(yes there is enough)
given that milkalila is the first song to use one of the aboriginal languages I think it will be a chain of them for a while
I’m super impressed by your research!!! Greetings from Israel, one of the countries who used Arabic and the only one used Hebrew & Amharic
I wish we'll have something like this in Asia
Well done!
English is also used by Cyprus 2024, Croatia 2024 and Poland 2024
Congrats anyway, well done :D
I will never forgive that "Aijā" didn't qualify, made me fall in love with that beautiful language ❤ Went to Riga last year, beautiful place and people!
Norway used 15 languages in Eurovision over the years and 12 of them in 1 year : 1973💀
France 2022 was in Breton, a local dialect from the region of Brittany (Bretagne) in north-west France
Shoutout to the guys that sang in ancient greek
Why does the sound keep cutting out? Is that my laptop being shit or is there a problem with the video's sound?
Due to copyright some songs are muted for a bit :)
Copyright ;)
Ukraine in 2005: "I'm going to sing in all the languages I can find!"
18:07 pretty sure Carpe Diem is Latin and that was the name of Slovenia’s 2023 entry. Not sure if that counts.
I'm thinking no because that line is never sung in the song
Still waiting for acts to sing in Welsh, Gaelic, Cornish and Manx.
Denmark song in 2019 was also in French. 😊 Not all of the song but a part of it.
I love that Denmark used Icelandic in 2018 but it was just so wrong😂 It was clear that they just used Google Translate. The Icelandic that the backup singers sang made no sense.
Suuden Ligts were singed in english and latgalian language
Monaco in 2006: “Lets visit Moana before her great movie that doesn't even exist for another 11 years!”
I see you counted sign language in 2011, but Latvia also used sign language in 2005
The Greek song from 2016 was sung in the Pontic Greek dialect
Where did San Marino go in Spanish? I didnt see its 2024 in the list
Bulgaria 2012 had Serbian as well
Latvia also used sign language once
Spanish was also used in 2024 by San Marino!
We clearly need more regional languages (yay Breton) and definitely more sign languages. Why Lithuania used ASL instead of Lithuanian Sign Language (or any other European sign language) is a mystery.
I’d assume because the sung part was in English? Could have used British Sign Language though.
11:26 It's German. But it's a heavy dialect/slang/slurred German and on top of it the kind of German that some people would use when talking to little children or to a dog.
So it's a bit hard to understand...even for most German native speakers. But you can understand that it's German and most of the song is simply "What do you have there?"
and a few puns with words that sound similar (tongue-twister) like "I knew he had something there but I didn't know that he had this there" in a weird "slang"/dialect.
6:54 Italy risked to take the second Neapolitan singer ever to Eurovision
What was the song Bulgaria had in 2012? When did they have enough time to pack that many languages in it? 😳
I didnt know Slovenia sang in Portuguese in 2018. Was that just because they were in Portugal?
Wasnt that Hvala ne? She could wel lhave thrown inaa few words/phrases because of Lisbon, yes.
@@ZakhadWOW at the very end she sang "Obrigada, na"
Yes the very last part was changed to Portuguese for the live shows. Turkish for Germany in 2004 was a similiar case where Max Mutzke sang one chorus in Turkish because the show was in Türkiye.
Can you make a video evry Language used in junior Eurovision
Slovene one is so funny, because the video playing is literally 2023 entry, but the list of entries doesn't include 2023.