Later she said that we also call it dustbin. Don't be so hyper. Sometimes we forget what we call things😹 because most of the time we use the English words
Pick-up trucks in Malaysia are often called Hilux, no matter what brand they are. For some of the folks whose English pronunciation are a bit off, they call it "high-luck"!
I was screaming that through the screen! Also we call pick up as "goods auto" around here. And the canteen is called a "mess" (at least from where I am)
In India, the front part of the car is called bonnet. I have not heard people using hood. The back part of the car is called diggy. I am from north India.
As a Bangladeshi , I Like this Indian girl... Cuz in other videos I saw Indian girl has a little bit ego or something especially towards the Bangladeshi girl (no hate I just noticed) but this Indian girl is different, she so friendly . The Bangladeshi girl is so active. The African girl is so cool. The Filipino girl is a little bit quiet and myb shy. And the Malaysian girl is so playful, cool and active
but how the bangladeshi vocab is similar to our indian "hindi " language like she said "jutaa" ..in hindi shoes means jutta....so i just wanna know the reason.....
@@anchalsehrawat9809 Because Bengali and Hindi have the same origin..... "Sangskrit" is the origin of Bengali and Hindi, that's why Bangladesh and India have so many same and similar words......
@@SookurChandan okay but you know Bangla and Hindi have same word but different accent in Bangla it is "সংস্কৃত" which pronounced as "shongskrito" so from my point of view I'm not wrong 🙂
@@SookurChandan Pronounce the word sanskrit in Bengali like this( Sangskrit)...........According to pronunciation in Bengali it is right it is not wrong
In India we call the hood, bonnet so the Indian girl was wrong. I have never heard Indians calling the front part of the car hood. Also we call the trunk , dickie again the Indian girl was wrong.🤔🤷♀
Canteen, cafeteria 'n restaurant in the Philippines are the same thing, just a place where people eat but here's a few things to know. Canteen it is an eatery specifically for students or workers. Most of the time outsiders of the specific area can't eat there. Cafeteria is mostly a dessert public eatery. They only serve a dessert or sweet drinks. Restaurant it's a big public eatery serves a lot of food. All food are available to serve. Hi there! 🤗
In my place (Kerala), people always (almost) call 8:45, as a 'bonnet'. 'Hood' is used by very rare people. If the word 'hood' is used, it is mostly the head covering part of a t-shirt.
It was really funny to see the American girl trying to bring the “big brother” vibes, thinking she is right and everything else is “madness”. But failed miserably.. the South African girl on the other hand, owned the whole video with her confidence . Thanks and Love from India.
For Philippines: - ‘stop light’ is more used than ‘traffic light’ - sneakers or ‘rubber shoes’ - cookie, same but older gens sometimes call sweet cookies (that are not round) as “biskwit”
South African here Braai is an Afrikaans woord that means to grill. It is from the Dutch braden which is probably cognate with braze. The first time traffic lights were introduced, newspaper headlines mentioned "robot policemen." This was shortened to just robots. The shoes are called takkies and I think that it refers to their rubber soles.
8:59 actually in Bangladesh we mostly use bonnet :3 i think for some reason that Bangladeshi sister don't know that.. only in posh rich area english medium kids may use hood.. but it's usually bonnet.. :3 for car i mean..
Well many word in South Africa English all have some Afrikaans in it which is similar to Dutch , like “Braai” but I don’t know where the word “Robot” come from 😂😅
Filipino English is same with American English because we follow American English that is what is taught in the Philippines and I like American English the accent it sounds more natural to me I just like how Americans enunciate words. I like their accent it's nice to hear
But you will be surprised that we pronounce a lot of words differently compared to American English. Filipino English is really different from American English.
The Bangladeshi girl clearly grew up abroad. - We use Traffic signal, not traffic lights. No one says bati alo. - No one says sneakers in Bangladesh. We call it Keds. - Cookies don't exist in Bangladesh. It's all biscuit. - She can't remember footpath, which is near impossible for a local. - Bonnet is more common in Bangladesh, I have not heard hood at all. - Trunk is called Boot in Bangladesh. This is getting frustrating. - Pickup truck is called Lorry in Bangladesh. No one says pickup van. Van is used interchangeably with microbus.
Pickup trucks are simply called Truck, not lorry. Lorries are such big that you can't see them apart from on Highway. We say pickup trucks as '3 Tonni Truck'[small]; '5 Tonni Truck'[medium] and '7 Tonni Truck'[large] and such.
I loved the last part of the video, it was too fun to watch. Sofia's jokes about the different use of words from country to country were one of the best in this channel.
Sophia 🙂🫶 Your smile, your eyes.. Just mesmerizing. How Can i tell you, Why i love you? I can't even if i try. My eyes Express the feelings of my heart. Yet you don't realize it. Yet you don't realize it.😌❤️🩹🫳
Why is the Bangladeshi girl using Bangla words? Isn’t this video supposed to be listing out the differences in English used in different countries? I am confused
@@me0wyet Not really, all of them used their version of English. I am just disappointed because I think she missed out many things and used Bangla words to compensate.
IKR I noticed that too. Honestly kinda disappointed. I was hoping she’d represent us better. Like in Dhaka, coffee shops do call it Chocolate Chip Cookies. And almost every calls sneakers, sneakers. Traffic lights are known as Signals. And pretty sure they teach us about bonnets in school. And FYI nobody in Bangladesh uses Trunk, we just say the backside.
In the Philippines, "sneakers" are also called, mostly and usually or commonly as "rubber shoes" or sometimes as "sports shoes". Also, the English language in the Philippines - Philippine English and its varieties or dialects influenced by the other languages of the Philippines, came from, is from, is derived from, or developed and evolved from mostly, majority, or predominantly American English varieties or dialects, because the US once "bought", occupied, and colonized the Philippines from and more or less just right after Spain or the Spanish, and also more or less just right after our independence from Spain or the Spanish, and also because of the later influences from the US after our independence from them and into much more modernization and globalization from the mid-20th Century into the 21st Century, with the US still being one of the major foreign and international, especially Western, influencers to the Philippines and to us Filipinos, also with those are their American English varieties or dialects still influencing our Philippine English varieties or dialects. That's why a lot and still a lot of our English words in Philippine English are the same with American English in spelling, in most definitions and meanings, in most denotations and connotations, and in most uses or usages, and the settings, contexts, or situations on where, when, and how, and for whom, what, which, and why we use them.
African lady nailed this show ....im Bengali from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
yo me too
Net ke paise do re saale Adani ke nhi to wo bi mhi milega😂
Me too
Thank you
Same
Despite being a Bengali(🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩) I feel like very better to listen this south African girls Accent. Her accent level is so good....🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Bengali ❌
Bangladeshi ✅
Be Proud of Your country not Ethnicity , Bengali Also includes Indians who are your enemy .
Wow there are so many Bangladesh teams🤯🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
No matter who is she but I'm happy seeing her ❤🇧🇩🇧🇩
@MdMohaddisIslam1310 You are pure Bangladeshi.
@MdMohaddisIslam1310 He's correct?
Learn English yourself first before trying to correct other people.
@@rumeeyan When someone learning new word it's happened but the way he expressed was totally unexpected
@MdMohaddisIslam1310 You don't know how to spell as well so check your own sentence before correcting others.
@MdMohaddisIslam1310idiot, what’s wrong?
Any BD here?🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
Yep
@@arshidas3649 ya
Yes
Me
Moyda lagaye ashse literally 😂
Any Bangladeshi here...
I really like this channel so much...
As a malay men, that bangla girl is so cute 😊
@@boboboy8189 thanks for compliments ...🌷
Es Bengali
@@boboboy8189 r8..she is super cute
Ay bedding!
I really enjoy this video❤️☺️
Love from Bangladesh🇧🇩❤️🤗
Bangladesh audience gather here
Edit 1: TYSM for the likes😭
Y'all stop now💀
#BD op
Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩
Meee
but bangladesh is all jihadism
Hello my fellow Bangladeshis❤
That Indian girl is so friendly and I lived for that ❤❤😂
From Bangladesh 🇧🇩
I am from Bangladesh I must say I was really impressed by our girl she was very humble, sweet, well-spoken and her pronunciation was so good to hear
Who's here after seeing own country’s flag??🇧🇩❤️🇮🇳❤🇲🇾❤🇵🇭❤🇿🇦
😂❤ me seeing Bangladesh 🇧🇩 our country
@@Rain20155 I'm Bangladeshi 🇧🇩🇧🇩 too
Bangladesh🇧🇩❤️
Me 😂...
After seeing Bangladeshi flag 🥴
🇧🇩
I am from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩and you??
same :)
same
Me too 🙋
Same broo
Yeah Bangladesh
So nice love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩❤❤❤
Normal 🇧🇩🇮🇳:Biscuits🤡
Real pro 🇧🇩🇮🇳:Biscutt 🗿
Biskoot 😂😂🇧🇩🇧🇩
It’s great to see different culture people together. 🇧🇩
Any Bangladeshi 🇧🇩💖
Yes
I've never heard a living soul in Bangladesh calling Bati Alo before 😂😂 and the hell is moylar patro bro??? It's a freaking dustbin
Later she said that we also call it dustbin. Don't be so hyper. Sometimes we forget what we call things😹 because most of the time we use the English words
More like "Moylar jhuri" yk🌚🌚
@@aerofam3527 Oh fr😂
We call is Moylar balti or Jhuri
I was thinking the same.....
@@BdStayForever yep🤣moylar balti sounds more Bangladeshi than Bangladesh itself.
Once you remember that the Philippines was an American colony, it all makes sense, the rest were British colonies.
South Africa is a Dutch colony
@@Max111-lf6tvwhich later became a British colony
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩💝
In India trunk is used maybe 5% but most common is dikki..
Exactly
No bro truck
Agreed And bonnet too
@@ashreeschannel786 Bonnet is the front part.. Dikki or trunk is at the back
Exactly how does she not know this😂
I Don't know who is she but i feel Proud of THIS Bangladeshi girl 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩☺️🇧🇩
Pick-up trucks in Malaysia are often called Hilux, no matter what brand they are. For some of the folks whose English pronunciation are a bit off, they call it "high-luck"!
sometimes we called them 4x4. because they usually is four-wheel-drive 😅
I was about to type this 😅
In Bangladesh, We're likely to use more often 'Dust Bin' than the Bengali Word.
In India we call trunk as "Dickey" 9:54
Yesss😆
Exactly
😂
I was screaming that through the screen!
Also we call pick up as "goods auto" around here.
And the canteen is called a "mess" (at least from where I am)
Yes😂
In India, the front part of the car is called bonnet. I have not heard people using hood. The back part of the car is called diggy. I am from north India.
Same
True!
NOT ~diggy~ 😅
It's "Dikki" in India 🇮🇳
Same in the south as well.
Same😂
Why thia Bangladeshi girl is so sweet..Love u❤
ayo
all girls were sweet? ur simping so hard omg
@@Sumsum-j5e i guess, but unique remains yo
random simp spawn on she will comment box
She's so irritating
In the Philippines, we also call the first and the second items as "stop light" and "rubber shoes" respectively as well. 😊
I know right. Since when do we use traffic light and sneakers? LOL
@@ShaqItGoodyou dont use traffic light?! thats strange. I use it.
Sneakers is used too, but rubber shoes is more common so anong problema?
Ikaw lang ang problema @@pidgy_poofoom
exactly!
true..
I'm from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩 I love your all videos❤❤❤❤
World shocked Bangladesh rocked 🗿
As a Bangladeshi , I Like this Indian girl... Cuz in other videos I saw Indian girl has a little bit ego or something especially towards the Bangladeshi girl (no hate I just noticed) but this Indian girl is different, she so friendly . The Bangladeshi girl is so active. The African girl is so cool. The Filipino girl is a little bit quiet and myb shy. And the Malaysian girl is so playful, cool and active
but how the bangladeshi vocab is similar to our indian "hindi " language like she said "jutaa" ..in hindi shoes means jutta....so i just wanna know the reason.....
@@anchalsehrawat9809 Because Bengali and Hindi have the same origin..... "Sangskrit" is the origin of Bengali and Hindi, that's why Bangladesh and India have so many same and similar words......
It's called *Sanskrit✅️ & not Sangskrit❌️ !
@@SookurChandan okay but you know Bangla and Hindi have same word but different accent in Bangla it is "সংস্কৃত" which pronounced as "shongskrito" so from my point of view I'm not wrong 🙂
@@SookurChandan Pronounce the word sanskrit in Bengali like this( Sangskrit)...........According to pronunciation in Bengali it is right it is not wrong
The Bengali sister is literally translating 😂
In India we call the hood, bonnet so the Indian girl was wrong. I have never heard Indians calling the front part of the car hood. Also we call the trunk , dickie again the Indian girl was wrong.🤔🤷♀
True
we mostly call it dickie actually😂😂
She’s not wrong our our place we called it hood
@vinay_maurya01 I think it was supposed to be an English vocab comparison
True! I was thinking why someone didn't point that
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
We're watching this video because of that Bangladeshi girl👽
As we're from Bangladesh
I'm just shocked that girl from Bangladesh. From my country❤ I really feel proud for her🎉
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩 i like India girl and Bangali girl both are sweet ❤❤
Happy to see a Bangladeshi girl here. ❤
Finally bangladeshi eraaaa ! It's so good 🎉 go on BD peeps
Here to support Malaysian girlie!! 🎉🎉
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩 ❤️🔥 and you...?!❤
Love this episode. Thanks to all specially the one of my own country girl. Good wishes to you. Love from BD🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
Canteen, cafeteria 'n restaurant in the Philippines are the same thing, just a place where people eat but here's a few things to know.
Canteen it is an eatery specifically for students or workers. Most of the time outsiders of the specific area can't eat there.
Cafeteria is mostly a dessert public eatery. They only serve a dessert or sweet drinks.
Restaurant it's a big public eatery serves a lot of food. All food are available to serve.
Hi there! 🤗
Food court also😅
In India front of a car is bonnet, no one uses hood. I heard the word hood only in video games but in day to day life it's bonnet
Yess
All are so cute and lovely... love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
Malaysia ❤❤❤
Sophia is so funny and hilarious and I love these videos never stop these are so entertaining !!!
My name is Aksha and I'm from Bangladesh💖💝
In my place (Kerala), people always (almost) call 8:45, as a 'bonnet'. 'Hood' is used by very rare people. If the word 'hood' is used, it is mostly the head covering part of a t-shirt.
anybody watch from bangladesh, proud for bangali
love from bangladesh🇧🇩🇧🇩🥰
Banglar Bast❤❤🗿🇧🇩
It was really funny to see the American girl trying to bring the “big brother” vibes, thinking she is right and everything else is “madness”. But failed miserably.. the South African girl on the other hand, owned the whole video with her confidence . Thanks and Love from India.
Soo trueeeee
For Philippines:
- ‘stop light’ is more used than ‘traffic light’
- sneakers or ‘rubber shoes’
- cookie, same but older gens sometimes call sweet cookies (that are not round) as “biskwit”
Biskcut not biskwit
Literally the whole audience is from Bangladesh including me. PERIOD
I think first time in any interview I saw a Bengali girl without any নেকামো…
love it💕💕💕💕
Sister you are right!
Amanda personallity so cute very lively.. always very beautiful
Watching from Bangladesh! 🇧🇩
The American girl is so simply nice and gorgeous. She is classy.
South African Accent is excellent 😍
This is really great conversations. I liked this 🥰🥰
In the Philippines, most people will call traffic lights as stop light. And for sneakers, most people will call it rubber shoes.
I loved the south african girl.
- How do you call an eraser?
- Robot
Back of the car. We also use “COMPARTMENT”. 🇵🇭
Tysm for adding Bangladesh 🇧🇩 ❤
South African here Braai is an Afrikaans woord that means to grill. It is from the Dutch braden which is probably cognate with braze. The first time traffic lights were introduced, newspaper headlines mentioned "robot policemen." This was shortened to just robots. The shoes are called takkies and I think that it refers to their rubber soles.
It is actually tekkies not takkies.
I'm from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩💖
For me i think for the back part of the car that opens in Malaysia we call it bonnet...but idk about the front part
Really? Usually the front part is the bonnet not the back
@@maryam.haque302 idk but usually all of my friends and families also call the back part is bonnet
I said bonet depan / bonet belakang (front bonnet / rear bonnet).
Masa ambil test JPJ dulu pun sebut bonet depan / bonet belakang ja😂
@@nanayuuki7472 HAHAHA ye eh betul la tu kot..Ty for the tips mana tahu 2 tahun lagi amik lesen🤣
Front part of the car is bonnet while rear one is boot
If you are Bangladeshi, give like here ❤❤
বাংলাদেশ ❤❤❤❤
8:59 actually in Bangladesh we mostly use bonnet :3
i think for some reason that Bangladeshi sister don't know that.. only in posh rich area english medium kids may use hood.. but it's usually bonnet.. :3
for car i mean..
I just focused on the beuty of the left girl😂😂🥰(US, Sophia❤)
😮lam from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩 4:17
I am from Bangladesh and i love this show. This show is very nice ❤❤❤
Malaysia here❤
There are many different accents in South Africa but this is one of the best.
In India we say bonnet 8:50
For both sides😂😂😂
@@adityasharma-yh8tr no the back is boot or diggi/dikki
Bonnet for the front, Dickie for the back.
@@ShivagamiDevi oh yes u r right
I'm from bangladesh🇧🇩🇧🇩❤️
1:10 braai is from Dutch 'braden', meaning 'to roast'.
Braai is also in Afrikaans meaning roasting
Hi, I am From Bangladesh. 🇧🇩💖
Well many word in South Africa English all have some Afrikaans in it which is similar to Dutch , like “Braai” but I don’t know where the word “Robot” come from 😂😅
Coz it’s electric and automatic
This is so fun to watch 😂 love these girls.
Filipino English is same with American English because we follow American English that is what is taught in the Philippines and I like American English the accent it sounds more natural to me I just like how Americans enunciate words. I like their accent it's nice to hear
But you will be surprised that we pronounce a lot of words differently compared to American English. Filipino English is really different from American English.
+++ even a lot of vocabularies are different. :)
Filipino English is like an American English with a unique Filipino influence and accent
The Malaysian girl 💯% correct for me..i used all the words she said
How about the front car part?we call it bonnet? HAHAHA confused sat bukan belakang ke
@@Jetty06 I selalu guna Bonet dpn and Bonet blkg/boot..tu kali yg ramai confused 😅
Love from my dearest motherland Bangladesh and u guys?😊❤
Malaysian here. I thought bonnet is the back of a car. The front one..... I cannot remember
That's wrong.
Test JPJ sebut bonet depan / bonet belakang ja
Actually bonnet is come from British English
out of all the vids of them, this was the best!! i laughed too much here, it was really funnn
Me: Saw our flag 🇧🇩
Brain: click it immediately 🤟
fr
It's me
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩❤❤❤❤❤❤
The Bangladeshi girl clearly grew up abroad.
- We use Traffic signal, not traffic lights. No one says bati alo.
- No one says sneakers in Bangladesh. We call it Keds.
- Cookies don't exist in Bangladesh. It's all biscuit.
- She can't remember footpath, which is near impossible for a local.
- Bonnet is more common in Bangladesh, I have not heard hood at all.
- Trunk is called Boot in Bangladesh. This is getting frustrating.
- Pickup truck is called Lorry in Bangladesh. No one says pickup van. Van is used interchangeably with microbus.
I completely agree with you👍🗿
I call it Ketch though.
Pickup trucks are simply called Truck, not lorry. Lorries are such big that you can't see them apart from on Highway. We say pickup trucks as '3 Tonni Truck'[small]; '5 Tonni Truck'[medium] and '7 Tonni Truck'[large] and such.
"English is not my first language" that is hilarious 😂
From 🇧🇩
Love from Bangladesh ❤❤❤
I loved the last part of the video, it was too fun to watch. Sofia's jokes about the different use of words from country to country were one of the best in this channel.
Im from bd but🇧🇩🇧🇩,, the south africa one is too good than others
Sophia 🙂🫶
Your smile, your eyes.. Just mesmerizing.
How Can i tell you, Why i love you?
I can't even if i try.
My eyes Express the feelings of my heart.
Yet you don't realize it.
Yet you don't realize it.😌❤️🩹🫳
Anyone from India 🇮🇳
Aksha, you represented Bangladeshi culture very well.
Why is the Bangladeshi girl using Bangla words? Isn’t this video supposed to be listing out the differences in English used in different countries? I am confused
She just added something.... Any problem???
@@euphoria_munThis video is about the differences in English that’s why
Well if you notice all of them are saying words in their language
@@me0wyet Not really, all of them used their version of English. I am just disappointed because I think she missed out many things and used Bangla words to compensate.
IKR I noticed that too. Honestly kinda disappointed. I was hoping she’d represent us better.
Like in Dhaka, coffee shops do call it Chocolate Chip Cookies. And almost every calls sneakers, sneakers. Traffic lights are known as Signals. And pretty sure they teach us about bonnets in school. And FYI nobody in Bangladesh uses Trunk, we just say the backside.
আমি বাংলাদেশী I am is a Bangladeshi 🇧🇩🇧🇩❤ আমি বিশ্ব বন্ধু দেখতে পছন্দ করি I like to see world friend 😊😊
I m fome Bangladesh
The video was super knowledgeable and interesting, i like all the girls, they're funny and sweet too, Love from a Bangladeshi 💕
In the Philippines, "sneakers" are also called, mostly and usually or commonly as "rubber shoes" or sometimes as "sports shoes".
Also, the English language in the Philippines - Philippine English and its varieties or dialects influenced by the other languages of the Philippines, came from, is from, is derived from, or developed and evolved from mostly, majority, or predominantly American English varieties or dialects, because the US once "bought", occupied, and colonized the Philippines from and more or less just right after Spain or the Spanish, and also more or less just right after our independence from Spain or the Spanish, and also because of the later influences from the US after our independence from them and into much more modernization and globalization from the mid-20th Century into the 21st Century, with the US still being one of the major foreign and international, especially Western, influencers to the Philippines and to us Filipinos, also with those are their American English varieties or dialects still influencing our Philippine English varieties or dialects.
That's why a lot and still a lot of our English words in Philippine English are the same with American English in spelling, in most definitions and meanings, in most denotations and connotations, and in most uses or usages, and the settings, contexts, or situations on where, when, and how, and for whom, what, which, and why we use them.
We say Sneakers or rubber shoes too in Kenya
Except for some words like salvage, rest back etc.
In English there is the battle "kookies" x "biscuit" and in Brazilian Portuguese it is "bolacha" x "biscoito".
What do they say in Portugal?