😮Wow, I'm truly impressed by your dedication to learning Vietnamese! It's amazing to see how well you speak the language. As a Vietnamese, I can attest to how difficult it is to master, so your proficiency is truly commendable. 🥺Thank you for your efforts and for sharing your journey with us. You're an inspiration! 🇻🇳❣️ if you have chance to visit Paris, you will see there are many Vietnamese restaurants or Vietnamese people too 😊
Hey bro! Loving these videos. I’m a “Viet kieu” who was born and raised in Australia. Your Vietnamese is exceptional! Better than mine actually. Please post more often
As someone who speaks 4 languages fluently, 5 if you count my broken Russian, and went to school with a bunch of Vietnamese people, I salute you. Vietnamese is a HARD language.
They are so accustomed to only being with their own culture and people that it’s funny to them and shocking when someone else outside of that speaks their language. They actually seem slightly uncomfortable by it.
Been watching Max McFarlin's videos and now foudn your channel. I don't speak Vietnamese but it seems to be like you and Max speak different dialects of Vietnamese. Is that a true statement? Max's voice inflections are much different, as well as his pronunciations. Nothing wrong with either, but was just wondering if my ears were hearing things right.
Thank you for watching 💯 Yes, you're correct. Max speaks a southern dialect, and I speak a northern dialect. I speak the same dialect as 'Chris Mix Lewis' (with a 'small' main difference that his Vietnamese is way, way better without even comparison), and Max speaks the same dialect as 'Phúc Mập Vlog’. Take care mate
A few of your shorts were recommended to me out of nowhere and I somehow landed here. So now I'm really curious, where did you learn to speak vietnamese this fluently? Your vocabulary is also quite extensive, as if you were a local. Allthough the pronounciation is still a bit of I can still clearly understand what you want to say.
I used to live in Hanoi for a few years, and during my first year and a half, I spent about 6 hours a day learning Vietnamese. In the initial year, despite investing hours in daily input, I could understand almost nothing. Nevertheless, I mainly spoke to myself and watched TH-cam without worrying about not understanding anything, trusting that one day it would click in my brain as long as I kept going. I would say that after my first year, I slowly started having longer and longer chats, with length gradually increasing very organically. In terms of my 'fluency,' there's still a long way to go :)
@@ashkumar9616 I wouldn't say my way was the most efficient one. Actually, it was terrible. Basically, I used TH-cam (which is fine) with plenty of flashcards containing new words without any context. What I could have done is to create flashcards with words from videos so I could practice my listening skills at the same time, instead of learning "dry" words I wouldn't recognize even if I stumbled across them. I wish I knew back then what I know now. If I could give you some advice, it would be: A lot of patience, emotional attachment to a language, and learning materials. Don't fall for all those “How to be fluent in 30 days” scams and understand that listening is more important than speaking, paradoxically. I’m not a big fan of textbooks and apps. Speaking comes quite “fast” once your listening skills are on the right level. This is how you can learn Vietnamese, but I believe you can apply this to other languages: GRAMMAR: Find the target accent you want to learn and learn grammar and some phrases from TH-cam. For the Northern accent, check out "Tieng Viet Oi." For the Southern accent, try "How To Vietnamese" and "Learn Vietnamese With Annie." SPEAKING: What people very often don't understand is that speaking is not as important as listening. Once your listening skills are good, being thrown into speaking for a few weeks with a native speaker works like magic. So after a few months (or even a year) of TH-cam, VTV/Netflix, and shadowing (talking to yourself along with the native speaker from videos and staff), you can use iTalki with a native speaker teacher who has the target accent. ONLY use Vietnamese to communicate, even if you only know a few words, and they will try to explain in English. Quick explanations are okay, but that's about it. LISTENING: Use the VTV app for the Northern accent (no subtitles at all :/) and Netflix for the Southern accent (use ONLY Vietnamese subtitles, no English, even if you understand 0%. Make some flashcards and replay the movie). I know it's going to be hard at the beginning. Trust me; I understand the pain. When you go outside to buy something, and no one understands you even though you are 100% sure you said it correctly, it can be frustrating. We are simply not used to speaking tonal languages, but it gets easier. In a world filled with quick shots of dopamine, we struggle to focus on one task for a longer period, but those who are patient are the ones who succeed. Be patient. You will get there soon; just keep practicing every day for about 2 hours, and believe me, it's not much if you really want to learn. As for spare time, you can always find it. Good luck!
Dzięki wielkie! Co do jedzenia to niestety ja nie z tych. Polecam Ci za to kanał "Max McFarlin" który jest zdecydowanie fenomenalny jeśli chodzi o ta kwestie na wietnamskiej scenie kulinarnej ;D
your videos are always great, it's fun to watch people reactions to you blowing their mind with their fluent native language. keep posting them here.
Your videos are an instant click! I love seeing the expressions of people when you bring out that Viet.
😮Wow, I'm truly impressed by your dedication to learning Vietnamese! It's amazing to see how well you speak the language. As a Vietnamese, I can attest to how difficult it is to master, so your proficiency is truly commendable. 🥺Thank you for your efforts and for sharing your journey with us. You're an inspiration! 🇻🇳❣️ if you have chance to visit Paris, you will see there are many Vietnamese restaurants or Vietnamese people too 😊
Love seeing the reactions in your videos!
I didn't know Vietnamese is tonal language. 6 tones eh? I think Chinese has only 4. That's some hard stuff to learn coming from non tonal language.
Như vậy, sau khi bạn đã nói được tiếng việt rồi thì học các ngôn ngữ khác sẽ nhanh hơn.
@@ocmanga5685Chắc chắn là ngôn ngữ có dấu kiểu như là tiếng Trung Quốc. Biết thì có lẽ bắt đầu học chữ nôm 😁
Hãy cố gắng nói nhiều hơn nữa Peter nhé. Người Việt Nam rất rất quý trọng những bạn nước ngoài mà biết nói tiếng Việt 😊
Hey bro! Loving these videos. I’m a “Viet kieu” who was born and raised in Australia. Your Vietnamese is exceptional! Better than mine actually. Please post more often
Thank you 🙏 Actually I’m gonna post a long video next week finally 😁
As someone who speaks 4 languages fluently, 5 if you count my broken Russian, and went to school with a bunch of Vietnamese people, I salute you. Vietnamese is a HARD language.
Ten wietnamski kelner na koncu byl taki uroczy 💜🌝
They are so accustomed to only being with their own culture and people that it’s funny to them and shocking when someone else outside of that speaks their language. They actually seem slightly uncomfortable by it.
Been watching Max McFarlin's videos and now foudn your channel. I don't speak Vietnamese but it seems to be like you and Max speak different dialects of Vietnamese. Is that a true statement? Max's voice inflections are much different, as well as his pronunciations. Nothing wrong with either, but was just wondering if my ears were hearing things right.
Thank you for watching 💯
Yes, you're correct. Max speaks a southern dialect, and I speak a northern dialect. I speak the same dialect as 'Chris Mix Lewis' (with a 'small' main difference that his Vietnamese is way, way better without even comparison), and Max speaks the same dialect as 'Phúc Mập Vlog’. Take care mate
A few of your shorts were recommended to me out of nowhere and I somehow landed here.
So now I'm really curious, where did you learn to speak vietnamese this fluently?
Your vocabulary is also quite extensive, as if you were a local. Allthough the pronounciation is still a bit of I can still clearly understand what you want to say.
I used to live in Hanoi for a few years, and during my first year and a half, I spent about 6 hours a day learning Vietnamese. In the initial year, despite investing hours in daily input, I could understand almost nothing. Nevertheless, I mainly spoke to myself and watched TH-cam without worrying about not understanding anything, trusting that one day it would click in my brain as long as I kept going. I would say that after my first year, I slowly started having longer and longer chats, with length gradually increasing very organically.
In terms of my 'fluency,' there's still a long way to go :)
Could you break down on how you split the 6 hours of learning? Was it half textbook half vocab or you had a tutor etc?
@@ashkumar9616 I wouldn't say my way was the most efficient one. Actually, it was terrible. Basically, I used TH-cam (which is fine) with plenty of flashcards containing new words without any context. What I could have done is to create flashcards with words from videos so I could practice my listening skills at the same time, instead of learning "dry" words I wouldn't recognize even if I stumbled across them. I wish I knew back then what I know now. If I could give you some advice, it would be:
A lot of patience, emotional attachment to a language, and learning materials. Don't fall for all those “How to be fluent in 30 days” scams and understand that listening is more important than speaking, paradoxically. I’m not a big fan of textbooks and apps. Speaking comes quite “fast” once your listening skills are on the right level. This is how you can learn Vietnamese, but I believe you can apply this to other languages:
GRAMMAR: Find the target accent you want to learn and learn grammar and some phrases from TH-cam. For the Northern accent, check out "Tieng Viet Oi." For the Southern accent, try "How To Vietnamese" and "Learn Vietnamese With Annie."
SPEAKING: What people very often don't understand is that speaking is not as important as listening. Once your listening skills are good, being thrown into speaking for a few weeks with a native speaker works like magic. So after a few months (or even a year) of TH-cam, VTV/Netflix, and shadowing (talking to yourself along with the native speaker from videos and staff), you can use iTalki with a native speaker teacher who has the target accent. ONLY use Vietnamese to communicate, even if you only know a few words, and they will try to explain in English. Quick explanations are okay, but that's about it.
LISTENING: Use the VTV app for the Northern accent (no subtitles at all :/) and Netflix for the Southern accent (use ONLY Vietnamese subtitles, no English, even if you understand 0%. Make some flashcards and replay the movie).
I know it's going to be hard at the beginning. Trust me; I understand the pain. When you go outside to buy something, and no one understands you even though you are 100% sure you said it correctly, it can be frustrating. We are simply not used to speaking tonal languages, but it gets easier. In a world filled with quick shots of dopamine, we struggle to focus on one task for a longer period, but those who are patient are the ones who succeed. Be patient. You will get there soon; just keep practicing every day for about 2 hours, and believe me, it's not much if you really want to learn. As for spare time, you can always find it. Good luck!
I'm from Thailand , Do you like Thailand ? Welcome to Bangkok Thailand
I love Thailand
which camera is used here?
Zycze ci szybkiego miliona na kanale, pokaż trochę jedzenia będzie szybciej pozdrawiam z Torunia hihihi
Dzięki wielkie! Co do jedzenia to niestety ja nie z tych. Polecam Ci za to kanał "Max McFarlin" który jest zdecydowanie fenomenalny jeśli chodzi o ta kwestie na wietnamskiej scenie kulinarnej ;D
I speak 29 languages
Peter phai tap noi nhieu hon, chua nghe ro rang duoc
Wietnamski to naprawde trudny jezyk
Muszę się zgodzić. Pisanie, czytanie oraz gramatyka jest łatwa, ale mówienie i słuchanie to istny koszmar