It's also harder to compare words though. "The history of Sweden" (4 words) is "Sveriges historia" (2 words) in Swedish. Half the number of words for the same meaning. English "the X of Y" becomes "Ys X" in Swedish. In English you can also phrase it as "Sweden's history" which has the same meaning, but that's not how it's usually phrased and you can't do the other way around in Swedish.
Gutted that we have less words than France. Then realised that we are probably listed under "United Kingdom", which is barely 200 years old, and "Great Britain" is only 300. Whereas France has been "France" forever by comparison.
Comparing different language wikipedias does not make much sense, either. It may have some value only for a very few large wikipedias, say, top five. What is "large"? there are different metrics, so in the end it will be an arbitrary selection. There is no need to dig into small wikipedias run by handfuls of volunteers, or into wikipedias filled largely by bots.
@@Liggliluff I wonder, is "word count" widely used anywhere outside the English-speaking world? I first met with this strange metric almost fifty years ago, and it's still completely alien to me. Stranger than inches, yards, psi's and BTUs combined. Curiously, English-language wikipedia is completely silent on the issue.
The thing about those exported electronic goods is that they are designed and manufactured in western countries, the parts are shipped to China and Taiwan so they can be assembled with cheap labour, and then they are shipped back to be sold. It is literally cheaper for a company like Apple to ship its product all the way round the world twice than it is to have it assembled in the U.S. with its own regulations and employment laws.
Google TSMC, UMC, SMIC and Samsung, and remove manufacture from your comment. It is not only cheap labour, these foundries invested where western companies folded. Cherry on top is Intel missing out on complete nodes trying to run chip foundries on multi-patterning instead of taking the risks of implementing EUV.
my Dutch mother suddenly started using the word "Woke" 2 weeks ago and now she keeps calling herself woke without truly knowing what she's saying. I keep explaining to her its not a positive word perse but she insists on using it all the time now.
i would still say it's a positive word. The ones who are using it negatively are just mad at people's awareness because their brainwashing isn't taking
@@callnight1441 it was considered positive by woke people only, to separate themselves from ordinary respectful people, signalling they have a higher moral standard. Once the usage of the word became widespread, it also became painfully obvious how the woke cult contrasts with the rest of society. And there's good people in there of course, just like there are bad people in good groups. But yeah, the common denominator isn't good or enlightened, it's virtue signalling and moral grandstanding.
not it was per household, so does your household own a bike or more, yes or no. But still 16% of households does not own a bike at all which seems odd to me. Maybe internationals that life in the city center? maybe they walk everywhere@@Colinverp
Drew completely missed the purpose of the last map superposition. It wasn't to show the loss of green space although that was obvious, it was to show how the freeway completely destroyed the population density of the city. The city went from a densely populated core (like in Europe) to the current American divided sections of low density residential/commercial. It was a man-made thing and not unavoidable. The car destroyed the fabric of American cities and still does.
Drew, Russia has a lit of regions where it gets really warm in summer (up to 27-30 degrees Celsius). One city (Sochi) even has palm trees growing in the wild. Even better, they hosted the 2014 WINTER Olympics there! They had to use artificial snow because normal one would melt away (it could get 18 degrees celsius on some days. in February Russia). The fact that in Russia a lot of people own bikes is not crazy.
West Siberia, for instance, has a pretty crazy weather, with peaks of +40°C in the summer and -40°C in the winter not being abnormal. Here in Omsk, last week we had 0°C followed by -30°C two days later.
5:04 Actualy thé Netherlands has 1,5 times more bikes than inhabitants. Many people own more than one bycicle, thats why. For example i own 3 : city, mountain and race bike
6:11 I didn’t even know Kyiv is SO big, cuz I tought it’s very small: you can ride entire city in, like, less than two hours… +I live in the edge of town, and from my window I can see up to half of city…
If the map takes into account only searches in English and not the native language, it would make sense why some countries have "love" as the most popular "what is" search. People be looking for the Haddaway song.
6:12 so about the Tokyo greater area, that refers to the whole city of Tokyo AND 7 of the surrounding counties, as well as some islands. So saying that in comparison to London or Paris is like comparing them to New York the state instead of New York the city No hate towards drew though
Are they urbanized ? If there is a built up continuity between all these counties, that's relevant. For example, Greater Paris accounts for 410 'communes'* spread across 7 different 'departements'** * basically these are the smallest administrative divisions and they have a mayor ** might be the equivalent of counties, the second smallest division or 3rd if you count the EPCI that group several communes which have an unclear status... or a clear status but missions that go far beyond this status.
@@noefillon1749I could be wrong but I believe most of it is urbanised, but the point I was making was that the map of at least London that shown there, which he compared it to, was not the county of Greater London, so I assume it was not greater Paris or the European capital’s metropolitan areas, however he did show the Tokyo metro area
@@person9846 I don't really understand your point. The first maps he showed were about the built up area. The shape of Paris was clearly not this of the administrative 'commune'. At the end of this topic, he showed ANOTHER map and the shape of "Greater London" on this one looked like the administrative entity (I don't know its name) of Greater London, which, according to Wikipedia populations, more or less correspond to the built up area bot not exactly (the administrative division is a bit smaller). It's this second area, likely the administrative one, that was compared with "Greater Tokyo". I don't really get why those aren't supposed to be comparable.
And yet São Paulo is trully massive, the City has 12 millions living there, the Greater São Paulo has 20 millions but the Megalopolis of São Paulo has 33 millions of habitants.
In Finland a lot of kids bike to school in winter. You get used to the cold quickly. Road sanding makes a big difference tho, as does proper tires. Tho if you bike slowly and have good balance, some sliding is fun 😅
I think another reason the Netherlands has that many words, is because 'Netherlands' as a geographical indication, has been used since the middle ages alongside Low Countries for both modern day Belgium and Netherlands until 1830 where it only referred to the Kingdom of the Netherlands ever since. And the Netherlands has been VERY influential in European geopolitics so there's a lot to write about.
@@void_fruit212 its not supposed to be triggering. because i used to asked Drew to put up the Guernsey flag (and also to watch Deutschlandball), but since the results of the Essequibo referendum, i've changing it to Guyana because I and Guernsey stand with you!!!!!
Tbh the counties of England can also be tricky because some of the counties have been changed or created somewhat recently. I'm pretty sure the West Midlands only came about in 1974 and was previously a part of three other historic counties which is why the word count is so low compared to the surrounding area.
2:27 "Most searhed-for word definitions in every country", but excluding Iceland, Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Lithenia, Estonia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, China, Iran, Sudan and some other countries.
4:58 Hum, about 80%? I couldn't find any national numbers for Norway when doing a quick search. But a number for our urban areas where 80% in the nineties and apparently it has increased in recent years. So presumably we're not doing too bad, although I doubt that we're *actually* at 80% nationally. Also, unlike the Netherlands they're used more recreationally rather then for commuting more often then not in Norway.
While it seems only 84% of Dutch people have a bike, there are 23 million bikes in the Netherlands. (population is 17,53 million) I was very surprised to see only 84% of people owned a bike, i do not know any people that dont own a bike.
Literally a ton of counties that don't gravitate to parliamentary democracies are in the EU side and a bunch of parliamentary democracies are in the Ussr side.
Petition for Drew to make a series covering Ace Combat and its multiple universes: [Day 317] The British Rail Class 317 is an electric multiple unit (EMU) passenger train constructed by British Rail Engineering Limited in two batches: 48 sets were produced in 1981-82 and 24 sets in 1985-87. They were the first of several classes of British Rail EMU to be based on the all-steel Mark 3 bodyshell, departing from the PEP-aluminium design which had spawned the earlier Class 313 to Class 315, Class 507 and Class 508. The Mark 3 bodyshell was also the basis of Class 318, Class 455 and the diesel Class 150. The Class 317 uses overhead alternating current electrification. All units were withdrawn in July 2022.
4:20 Absolutely wrong. Bicycling in Jordan is great, especially in winter, but even summer's not too bad. The reason we don't have many cyclers is cultural: Arabs consider cars as a powerful status symbol, and cycling as an adult marks you as a failure - weak and poor. Also drivers in Jordan drive very aggressively, so sharing the road with them on a bicycle is dangerous.
I love how the Philippines most search definition is "Language". As a Filipino myself who speak 4 languages (all local except English) I can tell you I asked that sh!t many times
2:08 the Karen people, it's pronounced not like the name Karen. It's more like "Ka-ren" or "Kah-ren" if that makes sense. Some might say they are "Karenni". Just so you know 😊
As a Chilean I must say that the only reason that we searched the Soviet union it's for the memes, we don't really care about European union because we're so far away
Drew: "Almost all of the Soviet States are Googling the Soviet Union, like Central America, and... Me: "Wait stop there, SINCE WHEN WAS CENTRAL AMERICA A SOVIET STATE?!?!?!? 😂😂😂😂😂😂
"France clearly has some work they don't want to do..." You know how the Miner's Strike in the UK in 1985 was a big deal? France has one of them every 3 years or so.
The word love in english is in a way more restrict than the portuguese "amor" that might have something to do with why so much "research". Also said that our "history of" wiki page is so short, but we're accustomed to being ignored, so yeah, many people, from the US, even think we're a part of Spain, even though we're the ones that started the "discovery" era...
Drew at 7:58 Looks to Central Asia: That's a lot of Central America!
7:52 would be a better time stamp
XD
he also said that Brazil was searching up the EU more than the USSR
I mean, they are both close to Georgia...
History expert is never wrong sir.
I assume the "history of" pages used are on the English Wikipedia
If you were to look at the localized Wikipedia pages, there may be a lot more
It's also harder to compare words though.
"The history of Sweden" (4 words) is "Sveriges historia" (2 words) in Swedish. Half the number of words for the same meaning. English "the X of Y" becomes "Ys X" in Swedish. In English you can also phrase it as "Sweden's history" which has the same meaning, but that's not how it's usually phrased and you can't do the other way around in Swedish.
Gutted that we have less words than France. Then realised that we are probably listed under "United Kingdom", which is barely 200 years old, and "Great Britain" is only 300. Whereas France has been "France" forever by comparison.
Yep, you're right, this makes no sense. The History of Italy in Italian has almost 37.000 words.
Comparing different language wikipedias does not make much sense, either. It may have some value only for a very few large wikipedias, say, top five. What is "large"? there are different metrics, so in the end it will be an arbitrary selection. There is no need to dig into small wikipedias run by handfuls of volunteers, or into wikipedias filled largely by bots.
@@Liggliluff I wonder, is "word count" widely used anywhere outside the English-speaking world? I first met with this strange metric almost fifty years ago, and it's still completely alien to me. Stranger than inches, yards, psi's and BTUs combined. Curiously, English-language wikipedia is completely silent on the issue.
The thing about those exported electronic goods is that they are designed and manufactured in western countries, the parts are shipped to China and Taiwan so they can be assembled with cheap labour, and then they are shipped back to be sold. It is literally cheaper for a company like Apple to ship its product all the way round the world twice than it is to have it assembled in the U.S. with its own regulations and employment laws.
that's... actually crazy
Google TSMC, UMC, SMIC and Samsung, and remove manufacture from your comment. It is not only cheap labour, these foundries invested where western companies folded. Cherry on top is Intel missing out on complete nodes trying to run chip foundries on multi-patterning instead of taking the risks of implementing EUV.
Taiwan is actually the largest producer of microchips. There is a lot more that goes into it.
@@donaldtrumplover2254 Yes. But those are exceptions from the rule. Even China can't produce high end microchips.
@@TheRezro When I google that somethign different comes up.
As a Brazilian I can say, the USSR is a meme here
i think in chile too but idk i've never looked the ussr up if it wasn't for a meme or homework
It's a meme everywhere tbh
my Dutch mother suddenly started using the word "Woke" 2 weeks ago and now she keeps calling herself woke without truly knowing what she's saying. I keep explaining to her its not a positive word perse but she insists on using it all the time now.
Hey it used to be a positive word, so maybe youre mother is o to something
Here in Germany, just like in the US, it became a wildcard for everything right wingers don't like. It can literally mean anything.
i would still say it's a positive word. The ones who are using it negatively are just mad at people's awareness because their brainwashing isn't taking
@@callnight1441 yes, it was popular on some occultist sites before the media started using it. back then it meant "enlightened"
@@callnight1441 it was considered positive by woke people only, to separate themselves from ordinary respectful people, signalling they have a higher moral standard. Once the usage of the word became widespread, it also became painfully obvious how the woke cult contrasts with the rest of society. And there's good people in there of course, just like there are bad people in good groups. But yeah, the common denominator isn't good or enlightened, it's virtue signalling and moral grandstanding.
5:00 as a dutchy I am actually suprised that it is ONLY 84% I cannot name a single soul in my country that does not own a bike.
Even my dog has one 😎
Its more There are more bikes than peaple in The Netherlands
Sorry for my bad English
1,5 times more bikes than people. Some people own more than 1 bike thats the reason its 84%
Shouldn’t the % of bikes in the Netherlands be like 160%? Like I myself own 5 bikes. All at diffrent train stations.
not it was per household, so does your household own a bike or more, yes or no.
But still 16% of households does not own a bike at all which seems odd to me. Maybe internationals that life in the city center? maybe they walk everywhere@@Colinverp
I feel like a lot of students might use the OV-bikes instead
Drew completely missed the purpose of the last map superposition. It wasn't to show the loss of green space although that was obvious, it was to show how the freeway completely destroyed the population density of the city. The city went from a densely populated core (like in Europe) to the current American divided sections of low density residential/commercial. It was a man-made thing and not unavoidable. The car destroyed the fabric of American cities and still does.
Hatred of single family houses is a core premise of the American Left.
3:44 Matt Walsh:
Drew, Russia has a lit of regions where it gets really warm in summer (up to 27-30 degrees Celsius). One city (Sochi) even has palm trees growing in the wild. Even better, they hosted the 2014 WINTER Olympics there! They had to use artificial snow because normal one would melt away (it could get 18 degrees celsius on some days. in February Russia). The fact that in Russia a lot of people own bikes is not crazy.
West Siberia, for instance, has a pretty crazy weather, with peaks of +40°C in the summer and -40°C in the winter not being abnormal. Here in Omsk, last week we had 0°C followed by -30°C two days later.
18 degrees is cool or cold in Australia
We just ride a bike in summer. Not in winter. That's it. 😅
plus, the Finns seem to do fine with their bikes in winter, why wouldn't the Russians?
It is also because they can afford only bikes. And you absolutely can go with bike in the snow.
5:04 Actualy thé Netherlands has 1,5 times more bikes than inhabitants.
Many people own more than one bycicle, thats why.
For example i own 3 : city, mountain and race bike
6:11
I didn’t even know Kyiv is SO big, cuz I tought it’s very small: you can ride entire city in, like, less than two hours…
+I live in the edge of town, and from my window I can see up to half of city…
If the map takes into account only searches in English and not the native language, it would make sense why some countries have "love" as the most popular "what is" search. People be looking for the Haddaway song.
6:12 so about the Tokyo greater area, that refers to the whole city of Tokyo AND 7 of the surrounding counties, as well as some islands. So saying that in comparison to London or Paris is like comparing them to New York the state instead of New York the city
No hate towards drew though
Are they urbanized ? If there is a built up continuity between all these counties, that's relevant. For example, Greater Paris accounts for 410 'communes'* spread across 7 different 'departements'**
* basically these are the smallest administrative divisions and they have a mayor
** might be the equivalent of counties, the second smallest division or 3rd if you count the EPCI that group several communes which have an unclear status... or a clear status but missions that go far beyond this status.
that classification makes no sense, because all of that is still one city. there's a reason Tokyo is the world's biggest city by far
@@noefillon1749I could be wrong but I believe most of it is urbanised, but the point I was making was that the map of at least London that shown there, which he compared it to, was not the county of Greater London, so I assume it was not greater Paris or the European capital’s metropolitan areas, however he did show the Tokyo metro area
@@person9846 I don't really understand your point. The first maps he showed were about the built up area. The shape of Paris was clearly not this of the administrative 'commune'. At the end of this topic, he showed ANOTHER map and the shape of "Greater London" on this one looked like the administrative entity (I don't know its name) of Greater London, which, according to Wikipedia populations, more or less correspond to the built up area bot not exactly (the administrative division is a bit smaller). It's this second area, likely the administrative one, that was compared with "Greater Tokyo". I don't really get why those aren't supposed to be comparable.
And yet São Paulo is trully massive, the City has 12 millions living there, the Greater São Paulo has 20 millions but the Megalopolis of São Paulo has 33 millions of habitants.
In Finland a lot of kids bike to school in winter. You get used to the cold quickly. Road sanding makes a big difference tho, as does proper tires. Tho if you bike slowly and have good balance, some sliding is fun 😅
Word density per English County may have some relation to their usage as RAF airbase in the Battle of Britain
And in Cornwalls case it probably because of its long history with Dunmonia plus the Cornish language
5:01 wow, i found an interesting fact that my country(Thailand) do have that much bike although road here is not bike-friendly.
Guess the hostility are more reserved for urban region
Countryside traffic isn't as much as accident-inducing as Urban traffic
I think it's because it's just easier to go by bike when the roads are full
Karen people mention, today I feel great, I feel recognized, I’m proud of my people how far we’ve come to be commented on by Drew.
3:24 Slovakia Love might be becouse there is Love Island "reality show" that is somewhat popular and also Lovestream festival (3day music festival)
I think another reason the Netherlands has that many words, is because 'Netherlands' as a geographical indication, has been used since the middle ages alongside Low Countries for both modern day Belgium and Netherlands until 1830 where it only referred to the Kingdom of the Netherlands ever since. And the Netherlands has been VERY influential in European geopolitics so there's a lot to write about.
7:55 "that's all of central America" Typical American Geography.
Another day of asking Drew to put up the -Guernsey- Guyana flag to show solidarity
As a person from Guyana Comparing us to Guernsey triggered me
the new or the old one?
@@thorin1045 your stupid Venezuela joke aint impressing anyone
@@void_fruit212 its not supposed to be triggering. because i used to asked Drew to put up the Guernsey flag (and also to watch Deutschlandball), but since the results of the Essequibo referendum, i've changing it to Guyana because I and Guernsey stand with you!!!!!
@@void_fruit212 so be f-ing greatful
3:06 maybe its the identity?
Tbh the counties of England can also be tricky because some of the counties have been changed or created somewhat recently. I'm pretty sure the West Midlands only came about in 1974 and was previously a part of three other historic counties which is why the word count is so low compared to the surrounding area.
7:53 central ''america'' ???
2:27 "Most searhed-for word definitions in every country", but excluding Iceland, Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Lithenia, Estonia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, China, Iran, Sudan and some other countries.
Roses are red violets are blue i liked my own comment cause no one wanted to
For some reason this comment was at the top for me, so I'll like
9:28
today I learned Drew doesn't know what a black and white photo is.
7:54 and thats all of Central America
thats some gigachad geography bro
2:51 but aren't these just translated to english? I doubt they're originally in english
Most words are almost the same between Spanish and English, searching for the meaning of this particular English word would be weird
I'm pretty sure portugal and others are just googling "What is love" i.e. the song, not the definition
Drew is such a W when it comes to politics and countries
He doesn't talk about politics tho lol
@@RealMrBruh Still
4:58
Hum, about 80%?
I couldn't find any national numbers for Norway when doing a quick search.
But a number for our urban areas where 80% in the nineties and apparently it has increased in recent years.
So presumably we're not doing too bad, although I doubt that we're *actually* at 80% nationally.
Also, unlike the Netherlands they're used more recreationally rather then for commuting more often then not in Norway.
3:17 Portugal is just partying hard "What is love ?" style
Drew "Who even uses bikes in fridge temperatures?? It's not even fun 😅😅😅"
"Finns have left the chat"
We would ride our bikes even if it was -45°c and snow would reach your crouch. The americans will never understand the power of perkele.
@@Brash_Candicoot Moikka Pohjanmaalta! :)
But those temperatures not last whole year. There is a period in northern hemisphere called "summer"
@@aresnir2725 oh, what's that? In Finland, there's, with good luck, about 2 weeks of hot weathers (20-30°c). And rest of the summer, it rains...
ngl Finland sounds like a very nice country to live in
5:01 wait...
Doesn't spain also love their bikes?
(Reasoning: Cyclizar: bike lizard Pokemon from that universes iberia)
Netherlands has so many bikes they have to store the excess ones at the bottom of the canals.
1:31 Manchester is massive so not suprised tbh
The History of Germany page isn't that long when you realize that's it's only one word per country in the Holy Roman Empire.
😂👌
4:43 huh, u guess Spain's love for motorcycles (see: cyclizar, a Pokemon from their counterpart to apain)doesn't carry to bike ownership
7:54 to 7:57, i believe that this part of asia is not central america
He said that by accident lol
@@pudgesnextturnaround3112 ik
0:03
Finland having the most words out of the Nordic countries 😂
3:18 Portugal: What is love? Baby don't hurt me...
Bro’s bike got thanos snapped
0:50 *check articles in different languages*
3:16 Portugal probably googled "What is love, baby don't hurt me"
“What is a woman, New Zealand asking the real question… wait…”
Love how he slowly realized why they were googling that 😂
While it seems only 84% of Dutch people have a bike, there are 23 million bikes in the Netherlands. (population is 17,53 million)
I was very surprised to see only 84% of people owned a bike, i do not know any people that dont own a bike.
The European Union/Soviet Union split makes perfect sense.
Countries that gravitate towards parliamentary democracies vs. those that don't.
Literally a ton of counties that don't gravitate to parliamentary democracies are in the EU side and a bunch of parliamentary democracies are in the Ussr side.
9:25 most of them are not parks. Most of them are backyards of home. Homes in which people (used to) live
3:07 I relate with Puerto Rico
3:17 Plot twist: Portugals searching for the song
7:55 why
7:56 that's definitely central America 😂
Petition for Drew to make a series covering Ace Combat and its multiple universes: [Day 317]
The British Rail Class 317 is an electric multiple unit (EMU) passenger train constructed by British Rail Engineering Limited in two batches: 48 sets were produced in 1981-82 and 24 sets in 1985-87. They were the first of several classes of British Rail EMU to be based on the all-steel Mark 3 bodyshell, departing from the PEP-aluminium design which had spawned the earlier Class 313 to Class 315, Class 507 and Class 508. The Mark 3 bodyshell was also the basis of Class 318, Class 455 and the diesel Class 150. The Class 317 uses overhead alternating current electrification. All units were withdrawn in July 2022.
I love how Denmark was cut from the bikecycle chart
new fear unlocked: dutch people riding the bike towards me
8:40: US was bulldozed for cars.
Oxfordshire in the middle of the uk that you said doesn’t have lots about is due to it being part of its neighbour until recently
As a bike person, thanks for showing actually nice bikes! 04:12
5:09 during ww2 germany actually took most of our bycicles so they weren’t that usefull
4:20 Absolutely wrong. Bicycling in Jordan is great, especially in winter, but even summer's not too bad. The reason we don't have many cyclers is cultural: Arabs consider cars as a powerful status symbol, and cycling as an adult marks you as a failure - weak and poor.
Also drivers in Jordan drive very aggressively, so sharing the road with them on a bicycle is dangerous.
4:57 As a German, I can confirm. I don't any person that doesn't have a bike. We are 3 but we have 6 bikes and actually we used to have even more 💀
4:38 Wow! In Spain we are 47 million people and in the US you're like 500 million, however, we have similar %s, Amazing!
there u see the reason of the housing crisis 9:00
I love how the Philippines most search definition is "Language".
As a Filipino myself who speak 4 languages (all local except English) I can tell you I asked that sh!t many times
What is a woman
4:34 But Russians are tolerant to cold?
5:12 yeah that's why the germans stole a lot of bikes during the occupation of the netherlands
3:17 Many countries really be like: _What is LOVE_
7:54 central america?
Jordan makes sense - a large swathe of the population live in Amman, which is notoriously hilly
3:43 that wait… 😂
All these countries asking "what is love"
"baby don't hurt me"
7:54 Ah Yes, Central America.
I had a bike when I lived in Jordan. Albeit.. It isn't safe for biking there.. Especially in the cities..
6:15 Meanwhile Marseille (2nd/3rd city of France) being twice as big as Paris :
Im shocked its only 84% of households who own a bike in the netherlands. Since we have more bikes then people.
Number of times Drew used the word “literally” in a ten-minute video: Thirteen.
2:08 the Karen people, it's pronounced not like the name Karen. It's more like "Ka-ren" or "Kah-ren" if that makes sense. Some might say they are "Karenni". Just so you know 😊
Yo thanks I didn't know
2:34
Drew choosing violence: no way this is the US's number one word you're making this up aren't you no ones gonna believe you.
Portugal is asking the real question: what is love? Baby don't hurt me
Don't hurt me, no more!
These figures make no sense. The History of Italy in Italian has almost 37.000 words.
3:17
"what is love"
As a Chilean I must say that the only reason that we searched the Soviet union it's for the memes, we don't really care about European union because we're so far away
Drew: "Almost all of the Soviet States are Googling the Soviet Union, like Central America, and... Me: "Wait stop there, SINCE WHEN WAS CENTRAL AMERICA A SOVIET STATE?!?!?!? 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Should have been Central Asia
3:17 aren't they just googling the song "What is love" ?
1:49 I REMMEBR READINGA BOUT THE KARENS YESTERDAY !
3:37
MALTA NO, DON’T DO IT
Petition for Drew to put an Imperial Dutch flag on the wall ( day 11 )
7:54 ah yes central america
"France clearly has some work they don't want to do..."
You know how the Miner's Strike in the UK in 1985 was a big deal? France has one of them every 3 years or so.
around 90% owns a bike in Denmark.... so Denmark for the win. 4:59
The word love in english is in a way more restrict than the portuguese "amor" that might have something to do with why so much "research". Also said that our "history of" wiki page is so short, but we're accustomed to being ignored, so yeah, many people, from the US, even think we're a part of Spain, even though we're the ones that started the "discovery" era...
1:22 subdivisions finally subdivisions in balls
7:55 "Central America" rip as an Uzbek
81% of adults in Denmark have a bicycle. Where are we in that list?:(
7:01 oh come on the forgot Madagascar
My theory about bike ownership is that China and India have been historically poor, so many families have just 1 mode of transport, bicycle
6:57 I cringe every time Drew says 'Austrarya' instead of Australia.
Dude, this is such a good video. Thanks for putting this together!
Ah yes the former members of the Soviet Union Central America!!😂😂