Took a German class in high school. Couple of buddies and I (only upperclassmen in the class) sat together. First couple of weeks the teacher was supposed to take basic demographic information everyday for some reason. When he called out our race, gender, class, etc., we were supposed to raise our hands and he’d count and write down how many people had their hands raised for each question. Buddies and I decided to raise out hands in the “no go zone” to see how long it would take him to notice. A few days in, he looked up at us, smirked, then said “You really need to be careful how you raise your hands in a German class”. We started laughing and put our hands back down. Never did that again, we’d had our fun. He got his revenge. Later in the semester he had a scale model of the German wall in the class from a play. We were the only three who ended up on the “eastern” side of it.
taking race-info in a German class? fella really should've taken the hint when you did the salute. I'd expect someone to notice the obvious fascism surrounding them, but then again, how would they if they only teach the battles...
@@Captain_Rye As far as I know its not 100% guaranteed. It is possible the salute was less animated and with a bend in the arm. Not that it matters, its not like the Roman empire wants their salute back.
As a Brazilian, we don't laugh with "jajaja" actually who laughs like that are our neighbors, we usually laugh like this "kkkkkkkkk" and if you are wondering, no, this "kkkkkkkk" laugh has nothing related about that bad group that wears those strange outfit that looks like a ghost Update: Drew said that on the video 💀
Kkkkk simulates cackling, while huehuehuehue is a more trollish laughter, used a lot to laugh at people, though not exclusively for that. Hahaha is sometimes used by the older generations, or used as sarcastic laughter by younger people, and keyboard smashing is also very common, with different types of keyboard smashing present such as the asdfgjkahl type where people drum their fingers through the mid row of the keyboard. You can tell if a person is using a keyboard a phone or a tablet depending on the kind of keyboard smash they use.
I think that Greeks and all the Cyrillic alphabet users laugh with "XAXAXA", because in both Greek and Cyrillic scripts the English "H" is translated as "X" and A stays pretty much the same in both too so it is a "HAHAHA" but on a different alphabet, kinda like the Spanish speakers with their "JAJAJA"
probably they mixed it with the norwegians (?) (i mean, they mixed Spanish jajaja with Brazil), they probably tried to say someone laughs with hæhæhæhæ or something
In Germany we actually bend our arm to call a taxi. Noone would just stretch their arm out in front of them. Same for waiters, upper arm at 4-5 o clock and then lower arm straight up.
1:00 Correction: normally the spanish countries laughs with jajajaja, us brazillians laugh with kakakaka or kk- I MEAN NOTHING NOTHING 1:24 look he actually knew this-
The dude who discovered Aluminum actually pronounced it the American way. The other British people didn't think it sounded fancy enough so they added in the extra "i".
Girls und Panzer was actually my huge discovery of 2022. I had planned on watchig it for the memes for years but I actually did in march last year and was more than pleasantly surprised by how f*cking good it turned out to be.
@@jumpvelocity3953 My opinion might not be much because I'm an anime lover myself, but I hear a LOOOOOT of history fans who considered themselves anime haters still enjoyed the show because of the sheer amount of historical references in it. Stuff like the models of the tanks being exact, the the tactics and historical events being mentioned, and if you go deeper, even the birthdates of the characters have meaning. The speed of the tanks and the lack of danger for the characters' lives are the only things you need to suspend your disbelief on.
"Høhøhø" is not the main way to write laughter in Norway... We use several, "Hahaha" (most common) "Hihihi" (more common when you giggle) "hohoho" (if you're Santa Claus) and "Høhøhø" (yes its a separate letter from o... usually used in a more mocking tone.)
my chemistry teacher told my class tears ago that aluminium it was pronounced the American way because the person who discovered it originally named it and pronounced it like that however later after he had died they changed the pronunciation to match other elements. SO I guess they are both right
0:42 "Davy suggested the metal be named alumium in 1808 and aluminum in 1812, thus producing the modern name. Other scientists used the spelling aluminium; the former spelling regained usage in the United States in the following decades."
As a brazilian, I feel outraged that it is said we laugh with "jajaja". That's our spanish-speaking comrades. We laugh "huehuehue" or "hahaha" or "kkkkkkk", sometimes even "huahuahua" 😈. But never. Never "jajaja".
2:12 A more eloquent variant of Polish "haha" is "cha, cha" but since it's longer to write it's never used in texting and inretnet speech, only in books.
8:05 Drew, you misunderstood the meme. The image is the set of the Five Nights at Freddy’s movie. The reason it says it’s happening is because it was announced in 2015 yet only started filming last month.
The kanji 草 literally translates to grass. The kanji for “laugh” is 笑 and pronounced as “warau”. The Japanese use the first letter because it’s easier, and sometimes use the grass kanji because the w’s resemble grass. Might seem convoluted but tbf saying the word “laugh” in English to signify someone find something funny is also weird. That’s the equivalent of using the laugh kanji.
3:05 for a solid second I thought you was talking about a different type of coke lol. In that regard, the stuff you get in the US is better quality since we are closer to the sources (although fent laced crap is everywhere), and cuz we got wall street. The stuff in europe is getting better tho
1:23 your right here theres two main ways to laught "rsrsrs" or "kkkk", and also the leter k we say it more like cá, car is close but is not the perfect pronunciation
British chocolate contains milk giving it a smooth taste, while AFAIA, American chocolate is more bitter and powder like as it does not contain the milk element.
As a Norwegian the "høhøhø" is more creepy and gross. We normally use "hahaha". This is indeed mind numbing information that shatter your world view, but Ill just throw that out there. CRUCIAL ADDENDUM : All viking nations has the æ, a marriage of the A and E. This is done because we are special and kewl. Why the danes uses æ in laughing is because of all the viking nations they strive to be the least understandable.
As a finn, I can say that finnish chocolate is best, we have this one brand that just makes all possible chocolates you could think of, popcorn? they've got that, blueberry youghurt, well ofc there is that, green ball (a pear marmelade candy) ? there is that sort of chocolate as well!
I can explain why Thailand uses "5s" to denote laughter online. The reason si that in the thai language the word for 5 is pronounced witha "ha" sound. So... 555 would end up being "hahaha".
6:38 You should watch it. While it maybe the simple concept of "cute girls doing cute things", certainly gave them the excuse of having accurately modelled tanks (both exterior and interior) and you better have a counter ready because there are plenty of historical references. Also tank buffs might know this because Yukari is their spirit animal (a tank enthusiast).
As a member of the Gen Z community (1998) I only recall how we went from 3g to 4g, I also used to listen to cassettes, which turned into CDs which then became steaming, in my short 25 years of life, I look forward to being able to stream my music and vid's directly to my brain. Praise be to the Omnissiah.
0:11 Ok US, but you can't beat the thing that in most of languages it is aluminium or something similar, and in Polish we say that this element is *glin* (clay) while in Polish word "aluminium" exists.
5:05 That’s an historical inaccuracy. The sultan accepted it but the house representatives never accepted it so the country it self legally didn’t accepted it.
7:19 not gonna lie, NYA~ that made me create a twitter accound back in 2011 - there was this website of how long you would play that song, i think my pc ran for a couple days straight with that video in the background edit: "I HAVE NYANED FOR 104500.6 SECONDS! "
3:10 🤣There was a British-Indian comedy show called Goodness Gracious Me, one of the sketches was a group of Indian friends going for 'an English' and the Chad wannabe asking for the blandest thing on the menu.
as an oklahoman, i can confirm that when i was younger, the weather man was kind of my way of learning geography (only when it comes to which states border oklahoma and where my county and city is)
That is a Japanese net slang and pronounce "wa ra" for each "w". Usually 1~3 "w"s, but if you are LOL-ing, you might put more than 5 "w"s. And sometimes it typed "草"(literal meaning: grass) which means "laugh" in slang but with usually little sarcastic meaning.
I came for that because its always 2 letters ether ha, hæ or hi... I think thats all of them also ha is more comon (I personaly hate hæ it sound stupid)... this became longer than planed
Language names are quite contentious here in Bosnia Herzegovina, call it one way, others take issue with that and call it differently(bosnian/croatian/serbian/montenegrin, to make it truly 1 language you'd have to abolish the names, all but 1 dialect/way of pronounciation, unneccesary "h" in words (distinctive trait of bosnian, etc). Idk about the "akbar" and "serbian" part, the turkish loanword bit is true for ALL the balkan languages. The "hand height" might be contentious in the west, not so much elsewhere (or some places at least).
I'm sure I watched some science or history video once that actually explained that when ol' Sir Humphry Davy discovered it we DID call it Aluminum like the yanks do now, however sometime later it was agreed that it should have "ium" on the end to bring it in line with the other elements in it's group and the Americans (as they often do) refused to take on the update.
2:30 American chocolate: Im better European chocolate No, im better (amateurs) American chocolate: What was that punk? Off-Brand Arab chocolate: AMATEURS!
my classmates do the nazi salute sometimes when trying to raise their hand and me and my best friend (we are the only ppl in the class who get history and geography memes ) just look at each other with the most straight face and then just look at the person that is doing it with judging eyes.
@@fdcgamingofficial In the UK people also do that kind of stuff as a joke. They also sing "Erika" really badly without knowing that it was created before Nazi Germany existed and the lyrics are actually about a flower.
@@fdcgamingofficial today, while watching a history documentary, a swasti*a came up. One of my classmates got up and said "swa*tika" (in Hilter voice) and did the hand gesture. (It happened in Germany, but I am a Pole so I just facepalmed)
Took a German class in high school. Couple of buddies and I (only upperclassmen in the class) sat together. First couple of weeks the teacher was supposed to take basic demographic information everyday for some reason. When he called out our race, gender, class, etc., we were supposed to raise our hands and he’d count and write down how many people had their hands raised for each question. Buddies and I decided to raise out hands in the “no go zone” to see how long it would take him to notice. A few days in, he looked up at us, smirked, then said “You really need to be careful how you raise your hands in a German class”. We started laughing and put our hands back down. Never did that again, we’d had our fun.
He got his revenge. Later in the semester he had a scale model of the German wall in the class from a play. We were the only three who ended up on the “eastern” side of it.
taking race-info in a German class? fella really should've taken the hint when you did the salute.
I'd expect someone to notice the obvious fascism surrounding them, but then again, how would they if they only teach the battles...
@@Captain_Rye As far as I know its not 100% guaranteed. It is possible the salute was less animated and with a bend in the arm. Not that it matters, its not like the Roman empire wants their salute back.
Yoo his revenge 😂
👍
Bro got lucky it was the berlin wall instead of the Nuremberg trials.
As a Brazilian, we don't laugh with "jajaja" actually who laughs like that are our neighbors, we usually laugh like this "kkkkkkkkk" and if you are wondering, no, this "kkkkkkkk" laugh has nothing related about that bad group that wears those strange outfit that looks like a ghost
Update: Drew said that on the video 💀
lol
Crazy, you and Drew did the same correction.
Update: UsagiInvadesWeb said it in the comment 💀
Then where does huehuehuehuehuehuehuehuehuehue come from
@@bradleydelay It was a internal meme in 2013
Kkkkk simulates cackling, while huehuehuehue is a more trollish laughter, used a lot to laugh at people, though not exclusively for that. Hahaha is sometimes used by the older generations, or used as sarcastic laughter by younger people, and keyboard smashing is also very common, with different types of keyboard smashing present such as the asdfgjkahl type where people drum their fingers through the mid row of the keyboard. You can tell if a person is using a keyboard a phone or a tablet depending on the kind of keyboard smash they use.
As a dutch-speaking person I can confirm that we do not laugh as "haehaehae, we laugh like the rest of Europe.
As a Dutch person I can confirm your confirmation
@@rif.geo_ As another Dutch person I can confirm your comfirmation to the other guy's confirmation
As a dutch speaking person, i can confirm that we now say "hahaha". But if you try to spell that in old-Dutch is would be written as haehaehae.
As a Dutch i can confirm your comfirmation comfirmation
Hæhæ
I think that Greeks and all the Cyrillic alphabet users laugh with "XAXAXA", because in both Greek and Cyrillic scripts the English "H" is translated as "X" and A stays pretty much the same in both too so it is a "HAHAHA" but on a different alphabet, kinda like the Spanish speakers with their "JAJAJA"
Came down to the comments to say that
yes, it's true.
It's also because the Cyrillic alphabet was made by two Greek scholars as a gift to the Bulgarians
also what he called an r is a Cyrillic G or Г
though it i sometime pronounced as H, like in Ukrainian
@@cerjmedia It's also pronounced as H in Belarusian and Rusyn
We should get one person from each language into a room together, make them all laugh, and see what demons we summon.
The demons are already in the room then
@@DJ1573the demons are the french
yes
That laughing meme. As a dutch man WE STILL USE ‘hahah’SO THAT MEME AINT GOOD
Lmao, agreed 😂🤣
As a Dutch person, I've never come across someone who laughs with "haehaehae." We just use "hahaha" as most europeans
@PressTV4Life maybe in the past, but in modern dutch, no words having ae are pronounced as aa
map was weird anyways, as it used lol for the Uk, and "lach" for germany which is utter nonsense.
probably they mixed it with the norwegians (?) (i mean, they mixed Spanish jajaja with Brazil), they probably tried to say someone laughs with hæhæhæhæ or something
In Thai, the number 5 is pronounced "ha", hence "55555" is "hahahahaha."
i was going to say that!
laughing in numbers
Yeah that's cool and all but Vietnam literally laughs in ku klutz Klan
In Germany we actually bend our arm to call a taxi. Noone would just stretch their arm out in front of them. Same for waiters, upper arm at 4-5 o clock and then lower arm straight up.
Avoiding confusion 👍
I totally see why
1:00
Correction: normally the spanish countries laughs with jajajaja, us brazillians laugh with kakakaka or kk- I MEAN NOTHING NOTHING
1:24 look he actually knew this-
in Spanish kaka is 💩
Bro really lives in Zinc, Arkansas with the remnants of that one org named with 3 Brazilian laughs
Also Taiwan didn't use 233333
Vietnamese laughing 2:29
TH-cam, the kkk is a Philipino organization, I swear
The dude who discovered Aluminum actually pronounced it the American way. The other British people didn't think it sounded fancy enough so they added in the extra "i".
When your not fancy enough
Leadium
@@pootislord3112 goldium
Britaium
Forget all those flags, Drew should put a Nyan cat in his wall
Seconded
Thirded
Fourthed
Fifthed
Sixthed
Girls und Panzer was actually my huge discovery of 2022. I had planned on watchig it for the memes for years but I actually did in march last year and was more than pleasantly surprised by how f*cking good it turned out to be.
I have watched and rewatched that one. Did you know there’s a movie? It’s good, you’ll probably like it.
SAME!
I discovered in 2021 i guess
Me an anime hater reading this comment:
@@jumpvelocity3953 My opinion might not be much because I'm an anime lover myself, but I hear a LOOOOOT of history fans who considered themselves anime haters still enjoyed the show because of the sheer amount of historical references in it.
Stuff like the models of the tanks being exact, the the tactics and historical events being mentioned, and if you go deeper, even the birthdates of the characters have meaning. The speed of the tanks and the lack of danger for the characters' lives are the only things you need to suspend your disbelief on.
"Høhøhø" is not the main way to write laughter in Norway... We use several, "Hahaha" (most common) "Hihihi" (more common when you giggle) "hohoho" (if you're Santa Claus) and "Høhøhø" (yes its a separate letter from o... usually used in a more mocking tone.)
Same in Denmark, "Hæhæ" is used and pronounced the same ways as "Hehe" is in English (we also use "hehe")
You forgott the hehehe variant. Its a little less exuberant than hahaha, but still common.
@@MissCaraMint Yep true.
E
Mostly the same in swedish. Only that it's "Hehehe" instead of "Hihihi", and "ö" instead of "ø".
I must say, that “woooo” at 1:19 got me laughing way too hard. Drew, you’ve made my day, my man.
1:01 in brazil we laugh usin "kkkk", "ksksks", "rsrsrs" and kakakakaka", only spanish speakers say "jajajaja"
@@Asghar19019 ja is german for yes, spanish for yes is si
Mano toda vez isso, a gente sempre eh tratado como hispanoablante 😢lkkkk
As a thai person the number 5 is pronounced somewhat as "hah" which is why 5 in thai is used to symbolise laughter
Drew…
Г is not an R. It is a G. In Ukraine, it is more like an H.
Ukraine being like Dutch with the g's
yeah but in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, it's a G
@@marsmarineris Same with most countries that use the Cyrillic script, which is what I meant in general.
@@hobog In Ukrainian, G is Ґ.
Next you tell me that Я is not an R in the mirror?
my chemistry teacher told my class tears ago that aluminium it was pronounced the American way because the person who discovered it originally named it and pronounced it like that however later after he had died they changed the pronunciation to match other elements. SO I guess they are both right
From what I can find the discoverer names in Aluminum first and then changed it to aluminium
0:42 "Davy suggested the metal be named alumium in 1808 and aluminum in 1812, thus producing the modern name. Other scientists used the spelling aluminium; the former spelling regained usage in the United States in the following decades."
As a brazilian, I feel outraged that it is said we laugh with "jajaja". That's our spanish-speaking comrades. We laugh "huehuehue" or "hahaha" or "kkkkkkk", sometimes even "huahuahua" 😈. But never. Never "jajaja".
7:55
I am really excited for the Movie!
2:12 A more eloquent variant of Polish "haha" is "cha, cha" but since it's longer to write it's never used in texting and inretnet speech, only in books.
Why did i think of "CHA CHA REAL SMOOTH-"
8:05 Drew, you misunderstood the meme. The image is the set of the Five Nights at Freddy’s movie. The reason it says it’s happening is because it was announced in 2015 yet only started filming last month.
2:33 Hershey used a chocolate recipe that was more sour and less sweet than European chocolate and that where the US/EUR chocolate divide comes from
Vietnam with the 3 K’s for laughing😮
Same in brazil 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
The kanji 草 literally translates to grass. The kanji for “laugh” is 笑 and pronounced as “warau”. The Japanese use the first letter because it’s easier, and sometimes use the grass kanji because the w’s resemble grass.
Might seem convoluted but tbf saying the word “laugh” in English to signify someone find something funny is also weird. That’s the equivalent of using the laugh kanji.
Touch 草
笑笑笑
9:47 I was keeping my hand on that position
2:27
No. None of Korean use 'k-k-k'
But Korean use 'ㅋㅋㅋ' in Hangeul (korean language)
2:25 thats actually a Cyrillic *G*
3:05 for a solid second I thought you was talking about a different type of coke lol. In that regard, the stuff you get in the US is better quality since we are closer to the sources (although fent laced crap is everywhere), and cuz we got wall street. The stuff in europe is getting better tho
Petition for Drew to put the flag of the German Empire in the background (Day 62)
He can put Yemeni flag and turn it
Sure.
Yes
Agreed
⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️
⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️
🟥🟥🟥🟥
8:48
I just got impaled by nostalgia I’ve forgotten about for many many years.
Japan's laughter is supposed to look like grass.
1:28 Guyana laughs in LOL😂
Petition for Drew to put the Czech Flag in the background 🇨🇿 (Day 21)
🇨🇿
🇨🇿
🇨🇿
🇨🇿
🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿
6:26 bro that’s so relatable, they should be exploding the minors with the tanks, not giving the tanks to them
3:00 when you said coke I swear to god thought that you were talking about cocaine
Columbia
Well, the thing is Britain was settling America for Gold and Land, not Spices.
0:50 this table is actually made by a Russian man
1:23 your right here theres two main ways to laught "rsrsrs" or "kkkk", and also the leter k we say it more like cá, car is close but is not the perfect pronunciation
When he said coke my mind automatically went to the other coke but I mean it still fits 🤣🤣🤣
The japanese actually spam "w" in place of laughter because it's meant to stand for the japanese word for laughter, "warau"
9:41 In thailand we call taxis that way.
AYO
3:12 Britain used the spices, but in a cup of water 💀
2:30 In Bangladesh, we don't laugh! 🤣🤣
Then what are those emojis doing?
Oh God
British chocolate contains milk giving it a smooth taste, while AFAIA, American chocolate is more bitter and powder like as it does not contain the milk element.
The Dutch actually laugh hahaha not heaheahea
6:58 but lotte was found by a Korean
As a Norwegian the "høhøhø" is more creepy and gross. We normally use "hahaha".
This is indeed mind numbing information that shatter your world view, but Ill just throw that out there.
CRUCIAL ADDENDUM : All viking nations has the æ, a marriage of the A and E. This is done because we are special and kewl. Why the danes uses æ in laughing is because of all the viking nations they strive to be the least understandable.
hahahhaha dansk er norsk med potet i kjæften
Can you please confirm whether or not using a Viking helmet with horns actually dramatically improves Wi-Fi & cellphone network signal reception??
As a finn, I can say that finnish chocolate is best, we have this one brand that just makes all possible chocolates you could think of, popcorn? they've got that, blueberry youghurt, well ofc there is that, green ball (a pear marmelade candy) ? there is that sort of chocolate as well!
lol you say my name
My favorite IS The milk chocolate (sininen suklaa)
Fazerin sininen on hyvää.
White chocolate is better cheap
Fun fact: the not-so-cool-germany salute is very similar to how people from Buenos Aires call for the bus.
XD
As a person for buenos aires I try to twist my hand a bit or put it at a 0° angle due to sheer anxiety
How come “not-so-cool”??
1:04 norwegians laugh inn the same way as the rest of Europe.
I have never seen someone say høhøhø its all ways hahahahahaha.
arabic also uses one letter for laughing
2:30 if you're wondering why thai say 555 its because 5 in thai is ห้า (ha) which sounds like a laugh so its 55555
I can explain why Thailand uses "5s" to denote laughter online. The reason si that in the thai language the word for 5 is pronounced witha "ha" sound. So... 555 would end up being "hahaha".
6:38 You should watch it. While it maybe the simple concept of "cute girls doing cute things", certainly gave them the excuse of having accurately modelled tanks (both exterior and interior) and you better have a counter ready because there are plenty of historical references. Also tank buffs might know this because Yukari is their spirit animal (a tank enthusiast).
"American coke isn't as good as coke from Mexico"
-Drew Durnil, 2023
Yeah but colombian coke is better
It’s true
Hold up mmh!?
As a member of the Gen Z community (1998) I only recall how we went from 3g to 4g, I also used to listen to cassettes, which turned into CDs which then became steaming, in my short 25 years of life, I look forward to being able to stream my music and vid's directly to my brain. Praise be to the Omnissiah.
0:11 Ok US, but you can't beat the thing that in most of languages it is aluminium or something similar, and in Polish we say that this element is *glin* (clay) while in Polish word "aluminium" exists.
Well, the English (and some other languages too) call the element Kalium for some reason Potassium. Even though the Element has "K" as its symbol.
Tagalog: aluminyo
5:05 That’s an historical inaccuracy. The sultan accepted it but the house representatives never accepted it so the country it self legally didn’t accepted it.
Imagine writing a entire novel using only the numbers to element letter(s)
Gigachads only use 🤣and😂,
and meanwhile "Platinium" 🤣
3:06 ooooh, Coca-Cola from Mexico
What did you think he was talking about? 🤨📸
My lawyer has advised me not to answer this question.
Nein!
1:49 as a Dutch guy I can say; we don’t laugh like Haehaehae, we also laugh like hahaha there is literally no difference. So yeah…
7:24 the my god 😂
1:01 - actualy Brasil lols huehuehuehueBR
Jajajaja belongs to our hermanos spanish speakers
Petition for Drew to put the Chola Empire flag in his background (Day 16)
Me watching my German Grandpa raise his hand to the 3 o'clock Hand: 💀
Hola, amigo, yo soy de Bariloche, ¿y vos?
As a person from misery or Missouri I learned where most states are because of the chance to of tornadoes.
Some people in Poland laugh 'cha cha cha'.
The thumbnail perfectly defines my classroom
7:19 not gonna lie, NYA~ that made me create a twitter accound back in 2011 - there was this website of how long you would play that song, i think my pc ran for a couple days straight with that video in the background
edit: "I HAVE NYANED FOR 104500.6 SECONDS! "
3:10 🤣There was a British-Indian comedy show called Goodness Gracious Me, one of the sketches was a group of Indian friends going for 'an English' and the Chad wannabe asking for the blandest thing on the menu.
as an oklahoman, i can confirm that when i was younger, the weather man was kind of my way of learning geography (only when it comes to which states border oklahoma and where my county and city is)
as a Missourian we love our weathermen especially Gary lezack, I also did learn a bit about the county borders too.
Same thing in Nebraska
As a Portuguese person, I can confirm that Portugal is not part of the Balkaans. (referencing the outro, and yes I know he says that every video)
5:50 Putin never said it was going to take 3 days. It was the US that said so.
Anyway he still made bad decision
we know from the catastrophic logistics of the attack on Kiev that Putin didn't think it would take over a week.
2:30 we don’t talk about Vietnam
That is a Japanese net slang and pronounce "wa ra" for each "w". Usually 1~3 "w"s, but if you are LOL-ing, you might put more than 5 "w"s. And sometimes it typed "草"(literal meaning: grass) which means "laugh" in slang but with usually little sarcastic meaning.
Pearl Harbor ptsd intensifies
7:21 You sir, have caused a PTSD attack in several of your viewers.
1:58 fun fact: that is not ‘ae’ but instead ‘æ’ which is just one character, and I believe it is pronounced as a long e.
Ash
I thought it was a long A sound
I came for that because its always 2 letters ether ha, hæ or hi... I think thats all of them also ha is more comon (I personaly hate hæ it sound stupid)... this became longer than planed
Whait he
HE HE
wait, in church we raise our hand to bless someo- oh, oh god
Language names are quite contentious here in Bosnia Herzegovina, call it one way, others take issue with that and call it differently(bosnian/croatian/serbian/montenegrin, to make it truly 1 language you'd have to abolish the names, all but 1 dialect/way of pronounciation, unneccesary "h" in words (distinctive trait of bosnian, etc). Idk about the "akbar" and "serbian" part, the turkish loanword bit is true for ALL the balkan languages. The "hand height" might be contentious in the west, not so much elsewhere (or some places at least).
1:54, we are using: "hahahaha". But the guy who made the meme just had it wrong. :/
Petition for drew to put the of Ireland 🇮🇪
In the background (Day 1)
Didn't expect you here
@@Asghar19019 me either 😂
@@Asghar19019 lol
5:16 as a swedish/dutch person i can confirm i just talk swedish and the furnature is done
As a norwegian speaking person i can confirm that we do not laugh like that
Agreed.
Santa Claus nationality confirmed
I'm sure I watched some science or history video once that actually explained that when ol' Sir Humphry Davy discovered it we DID call it Aluminum like the yanks do now, however sometime later it was agreed that it should have "ium" on the end to bring it in line with the other elements in it's group and the Americans (as they often do) refused to take on the update.
Brazil laughs like this: kkkkkkkkkkk
1:12 Indonesia is a bit similar with "wkwkwk"
And awokawokawokawok
The Danish Way is hæ h and æ Love the videos keep the wounderful work op:)
day 36 of asking drew for a countryballs show with mrspherical animating and drew voicing
2:25 I'm pretty sure that's not an "r" 😂😂
DAY 38: Petition for Drew to put the flag of Wisconsin in the background 🧀🐮
Platinum comes from Spanish - "Platina", and means "petty silver". They thought it was fake silver and used to dump it in rivers.
7:05 Meow in what? American's speaking American now? Not English?
2:30
American chocolate: Im better
European chocolate No, im better
(amateurs)
American chocolate: What was that punk?
Off-Brand Arab chocolate: AMATEURS!
1:26 That is in spanish not in brazilian
The thing is, it’s actually spelt Aluminum. So Britain is in the wrong, not the American Empire.
my classmates do the nazi salute sometimes when trying to raise their hand and me and my best friend (we are the only ppl in the class who get history and geography memes ) just look at each other with the most straight face and then just look at the person that is doing it with judging eyes.
Tip: make your arm slightly bent so it won't look bad.
Where are you from, this sounds really like German schools in 2023
@@fdcgamingofficial In the UK people also do that kind of stuff as a joke. They also sing "Erika" really badly without knowing that it was created before Nazi Germany existed and the lyrics are actually about a flower.
@@yougoslavia guess it's just modern culture at this point. This is literally how it happens in the Netherlands too
@@fdcgamingofficial today, while watching a history documentary, a swasti*a came up. One of my classmates got up and said "swa*tika" (in Hilter voice) and did the hand gesture. (It happened in Germany, but I am a Pole so I just facepalmed)