Me volaron el cerebro la chica de Austria y la chica de Alemania, hablando un perfecto español con el acento donde lo aprendieron. Español un idioma tan rico y tan variado y colorido dependiendo del pais y la region donde se hable, desde España hasta el ultimo rincon de Hispanoamerica. Saludos desde Mexico.
I've never learned Spanish, but when someone starts talking in Spanish with me its like the language is somewhere there deep in my brain cos i start talking in basic Spanish and start understanding the language straight away
Living in Spain for almost 30 years. Takes about 3 months to be able to "get by", about a year to contol basic Spanish and I would say 5 to 6 years to be fluent. I personally never had any classes, but learned by living. Only ever lived with and worked with Spaniards, so thats a huge advantage too.
Beautiful language and the difficulty of learning it depends on your own native language. If you speak a Romance language like Italian, Portuguese, French it's a bit easier. If English is your native tongue then the most difficult thing is the concept of the subjunctive mood which we no longer have in English except for very specific idioms. But once you get the hang of it it kind of clicks into place.
Se nota que todos tienen distintos niveles y llevan distinto tiempo viviendo en España. Muy identificada con la chica de Francia. Impresionante la fluidez de las chicas de Austria y Alemania 😮👏👏👏 Enhorabuena por el vídeo, me han encantado también los subtítulos 👍👍👍
La dificultad de aprender castellano depende mucho de que idioma hablas. Para los que hablan idiomas latina es muy facil. Los franceses, italiano, portugues, rumanos aprenden castellano en meses.
Si vienes a España a estudiar, trabajar etcétera,y eres extranjero y vas ha estar un tiempo,lo mejor para aprender español es juntarte con los nativos españoles,si eres de Estados Unidos vienes a España España y solo hablas ingles,así no aprendes español,ni en veinte años.
In my opinion, language learning in general is as hard as you yourself make it to be. You get as much out of it, as you invest in it. If you listen, read and speak a lot, consuming content in the target language, you will learn after some time. It is inevitable, that your brain learns that language then. But if you only invest like 2 hours a week into the language, the return will be minimal as well.
I've been here for five years. I decided to try and learn Spanish without taking any lessons at all (as a challenge - I speak other languages so I wanted to know if you could learn a new language like a child rather than an adult). Now I speak Spanish well and can fully participate in Spanish life, including friendships, groups, romance etc, but it would have been easier with some lessons. By far the easiest way to learn is by finding a Spanish boyfriend/girlfriend, and that's just the truth, and also some lessons, and, like every language, an open mind, open ears, and a rejection of any fear of embarrassment.
i like how relatable some of these ppl are. like yeah practicing the language with ppl is scary sometimes but u can always practice at home first, and it may seem weird ig but i think it was good advice that girl gave
Language exchanges can be great and there are quite a few in Madrid.. but be mindful that as a native English speaker, some people will take advantage and if you're not careful you will be speaking English for the entire evening. So it's important to make sure that it is an inter-cambio, and make sure that people also help you with your Spanish.
As the girl said, getting out of the international bubble is the KEY, I have met expats in places like Ecuador and they have been living there for 10 years and still don't speak much Spanish and are surprised why, but then all they do is hang around other English speakers in their own bubble - well, of course you aren't going to learn anything. There is this misunderstanding that simply going to a place will automatically make you a speaker, the truth is that unless you're actively trying you aren't going to make any progress.
Yeah, when there's no one to talk to, speaking to yourself is an amazing way to get the basic words and sentences (and your thoughts do, the conversations with yourself get more complex and deep and helps expressing yourself), so please don’t act as if this woman was weird. She was obviously nervous as she stated, it’s not easy to speak with an other in an other language 😅
As an American living in Spain, it took me a few months to get comfortable saying grathias, entonthes, thapatos. I finally got comfortable with it, and it makes so much sense: Las Rosas = the roses, Las Rozas = the cleared lands (where the Roman army trained).
@@Bones_Ex it's good to get a feel for what the language is like in real life at normal native speed and not in a classroom setting. Any exposure is good whether living or visiting. Depending on your country, and location, you may or may not have some spanish speaking community near you, so got to their shops or potentially volunteer for something. You can also try language exchange online like tandem, hilokal and via meetup. Anything is good and helps tune your brain into it, news online, podcasts, youtube channels etc. I would add your personality and tendencies could assist you or get in the way. For the going abroad option, If you are someone who make friends in every place you go then you likely find communication barriers a non-issue and will make mistakes without feeling like it's a problem. If you are more shy or reserved you may have to force yourself a bit to not try to be perfect and either find a job where you must speak spanish or sign up to opportunities as such. If only travelling you could easily end up only around english-speakers. For me I started to pick up things easier even with fast talkers after living in a spanish-speaking country for several months...I did not keep it up though. immersion is key, use it everyday, and that woman's suggestion of speaking to yourself is true, gives you no excuse even if there are no hispanics around. If you have no one, record yourself for 10 minutes a day speaking spanish with the aim of keeping going and write down words you need to know the word for on a notepad to find out afterwards
A nosotros nos pasa lo mismo del inglès, alemàn, francès, etc: entender la jerga (que es bien dinámica), la velocidad de los hablantes, no menos importante: la dicciòn (¿o alguien cree que todos los nativos pronuncian correctamente las palabras en su idioma? ¡Por Dios!), el contexto de los chistes o comentarios y otras màs. Aparte estàn las caracterìsticas del que quiere aprender: algunos realmente son brillantes para los idiomas. En fin, tenemos un gran trabajo por delante ... Paciencia y perseverancia.
Español es super facil. Aprendí Español en Sevilla. Estoy aprendiendo Frances. Dios mio Frances es por lo menos 10 veces mas dificil que Español, sobre todo la pronunciacion. Soy de Londres pero cuando estoy en España o Ecuador no hablo Ingles.
eso pensaba yo hasta que empecé con el francés y ahora entiendo que como no pronuncies bien no te pueden entender, porque puede significar 7000 cosas diferentes. por contexto hay cosas que si pueden pillar, pero otras ni de broma.
Es como el latin : solamente los mas dotados y educados pueden aprenderlo... No de verdad es facil si primero lo aprendes de maniera instinctiva (hablando con un frances) y no con libros .
Spanish and french is pretty much the same, just the way french is writen is more complicated. Like in french there is like 10 different way to write the exact same sound o. In spanish it's always writen with a o, in french it can be o, au, eau, eaux, haut, hauts, ot, ots, etc... for example the word toro in french is writen taureau but it's the exact same prononciation and meaning as toro.
At 0:44 "I am in Spain since September." Sounds peculiar to an English speaker. Here is a very easy and basic construction. If someone is looking for you and text messages " Where are you?" You would reply: I am still at work. I am on my way. I am at home. I am at the gym working out. If someone asks how long you have been doing something: "I have been in Spain since September." "I have been home sick the last 3 days." "I have been waiting for you for hours."
Spanish has many advantages to other languages that make it easy to learn. There is a reason why Spanish is spoken at very fast pace and reinforces the easy learning. Spanish have very few vocal sounds (only 5) and the vocabulary is very literal and flat of meaning, making very large sentences because of that. So you just need to listen, you don't have to think about sounds or meaning, there is no confusion. And that's the reason it's spoken at that speed.
El español tiene muchas sílabas para decir la misma palabra por ejemplo en inglés. Por ejemplo Week (1 sílaba) semana ( tres sílabas ) por lo que para decir lo mismo los españoles usamos más sílabas por minuto que por ejemplo un británico. De ahí que hablemos más rápido
It is easy, surround yourself with native speakers and force yourself to speak that language only and you will be proficient in 1 year. I did it in 8 month in English bless you all
¿Gringos? En España son guiris, ¿no?! 😅 Creo que el chico grande que le gusta paella y ver televisión sabe algo en castellano pero ¡ellxs pueden aprender mucho más si viven en un pueblo pequeño!
esta chevere el video. hay otra cosa es que los lenguajes corporales de los entrevistados dicen mucho también en cuanto a su actitud en relación a las preguntas o a ser entrevistados. la chica de Francia, de azul, es súper introvertida, casi siempre de brazos cruzados, cerrada a abrir sus opiniones (ella al final de la entrevista lo dice) en contraste con la muchacha de marruecos arriesgada, dispuesta a aprender y a expresarse. y es chevere ver como aprenden el idioma con los acentos de la zona donde aprendieron en España. si comentan que los españoles hablan rápido, hay regiones en países en latinoamérica donde sería casi imposible aprender español jejeje. y sin incluir los modismos o jergas de cada país. yo tuve que adaptarme a la jerga de México, compartiendo con norteños, chiapanecos y chilangos en un mismo curso (acentos y modismos muy diferentes) aparte de los nombres que se le dan a muchas cosas del dia a dia (escribia las palabras y lo que significaban, ej. elote es jojoto, popote es pitillo). en Chile igual. No tanto con los acentos sino con la jerga (sobre todo si hablaban de sus pololos). y los colombianos costeros hablan muy parecido a los venezolanos, pero al ir a Medellín y la zona cafetalera sobre todo, es dificil de entender el lenguaje diario jejeje. bueno, asi como cualquiera que visite las diferentes regiones de Venezuela. muy bueno el video
Lo más hermoso del español es que existe en muchos países, cada uno tiene su propia identidad y eso lo hace "casi" imposible de domesticar .Como mexicano mi lengua es el español aunque existan otras más pero además soy mexicano de la ciudad de México, del sur de la ciudad de México, mi acento, mi vocabulario, son cosas específicas, lo mismo pasa con el andaluz, yo le entiendo (a veces jajajajajja) pero cada acento es específico del lugar , a veces son pocos metros los que separan una variante de la otra y a veces como en Guinea Ecuatorial es distinto para mí, sigue siendo español pero es distinto . El español me dió una forma específica para pensar y existir, y aunque hablo otros idiomas el español es más bonito para mí, tiene algo, tiene idea , no se me ocurre algo que no pueda describir en español , qué bonito es el español y las lenguas romances 😊.
Soy español y reconozco que nuestra lengua es difícil de aprender. Muchas formas verbales, muchas frases hechas y, además, no se habla igual en ningún sitio. Tienen mucho mérito las personas que consiguen hablarlo.
Soy estadounidense y creo que español es fácil aprender si eres angloparlante.... y si te das cuenta que aprender cualquier idioma es siempre mucho tiempo y trabajo. Hay lenguas mucho más difíciles para nosotros!
I took Spanish in 7th grade, but at two different schools. The first school we were tested on everything at the end of each week and all tests were cumulative. At the second school, we were tested every six weeks and it wasn't cumulative, so I didn't learn as much as I could have. Nearly forty years later we took a trip to Spain. I tried refreshing what I learned and the best way for me was looking at the multi-national menus. I would find what I wanted to order in English, then look at what it was in Spanish and order it in Spanish. I would tell the waitresses that I spoke very little Spanish and then tried ordering. I became "fluent" in ordering from restaurants and such and even asking about books at a bookstore, but that's about all I could do in the 10 days we were there. When we returned to the US, my skills left me.
I’m fluent in Spanish (American English speaker)…but in Spain, the speed, use of ceceo, and J & G sometimes pronounced like clearing your throat (voiceless uvular fricative sound).
Best way to learn a language is to speak it at home aswell, i learnt fluent danish within a year that way. I have Romanian friends that learnt Faroese the same way, allso within a year
Como podríamos contactar con personas que quieran practicar español, para tener conversaciones por teléfono? A algunos que estamos aburridos o solos quizás nos resultara interesante.
Es una lengua de pronunciacion muy sencilla, por esa ranzon hablamos tan rapido, para un latino que habla una lengua romance es facil de aprender, lo primero que deben aprender es el silabario español que les da pistas de como se pronuncia una palabra escrita.
Acabo de encontrar su canal y lo estoy disfrutando mucho. . . . . . Lo único que me choca es que en los subtitulo usan el gentilicio equivocado para los estadounidenses. Si, yo entiendo que ellos no lo entenderían, pero está mal de todos modos...
He conocido a muchos italianos que en 3 o 6 meses han logrado un muy buen nivel de español y la verdad que es algo que me encanta ver cuan parecidas son nuestras lenguas. Hace unos meses hice un viaje en ferry de España a Italia y compartí camarote con un italiano. Pudimos mantener una larga conversación a pesar de que ambos solo teníamos conocimientos básicos del otro idioma.
@@roalvaredo Cierto, yo llevaba 4 años de estudio del español y no lo aprendí totalmente antes de llegar a España, el secreto es mudarte en el sitio hispanohablante, creo que es la única manera de aprender el idioma. Desafortunadamente esto no ocurre con gente Española que se mudan a Italia por un año por trabajar por cualquier cosa 😅
Esque son lenguas bastante parecidas , yo me pongo a escuchar un vídeo en italiano y entiendo bastante de lo que se dice , pero evidentemente no al 100% Igual italiano es un idioma bellísimo
@@lizzethmancilla5197ciertamente, porque somos de la misma raíz de el latín. Y para nosotros el Francés el Portugués el Catalán y el Rumano son fáciles porque compartimos en nuestros vocabularios algunas palabras que se parecen.
It is a scientific fact that learning any language gets much harder when you are over 35-40, and much easier when you are 3-5=years old, being older your voice box is shaped by the language you speak for the last 35 years, it’s why many people move back home after 18 months, their children speak it fine after 6 months, they still struggle in general 18 months on.
Es sudamericana. ¿No oyes acaso cómo pronuncia las zetas como si fueran eses? Esa es la prueba del 9 para detectar a un no español (quitando a los canarios y algún andaluz, que también sesean)
Ufff, la mujer rubia que lleva 10 años aquí, domina muchísimo el idioma. Ya solo con la expresión "buah!" apuntaba maneras jjajajaja. Pero es que luego, su pronunciación ha sido prácticamente nativa, así que matrícula de honor para esa mujer!
No hablamos demasiado rápido, hablamos a la velocidad normal de un nativo. De hecho, en palabras por minuto, el idioma inglés es bastante más rápido. Esa sensación que tienen es la que se tiene aprendiendo cualquier idioma
I am living in Spain for a year now and ofcourse I’m learning Spanish. I always try my best but my Spanish is not fluent. A lot of times people in Spain get really mad when you are not fluent in Spanish 😢. It’s weird really.
Nah can be for much more things and not be your fault. Can be because they don't have a good day or are not happy with his life right now or a ton of personal things that are bothering them in that moment and they are not in a good mood or because they are in a hurry even because they can't express what do you want or about what you are talking about well for the language barrier and for the frustation they got mad.
I learned Spanish living in Texas, Mexico, and South America. Spain spanish is a lot more dificult to understand than other spanish speaking countries. Immersing yourself really is one of the best ways to learn.
@esemota2934 I’ll disagree some. Every country has a different dialect and slang. Spain lisps “s”. Argentina pronounces “ll and y” like zsa. Cuba cuts consonants, especially “s”. Like “voy a pecar (pescar). My Colombian teacher whose first language is Spanish had problems understanding Spanish from a lot of Caribbean countries. Mexico has different regional dialects. This is the same in English in the US. Many people have difficulty understanding my southern drawl. Cajuns from southwest Louisiana are difficult to understand their English.
The standard Spanish from Spain does not lisp the S at all@@johngoerner6573. C and Z sounds are differentiated and pronounced as 'th' -not a lisp, fyi a lisp is a speech defect- as in 'thunder' with Za, Ce, Ci, Zo, Zu. So for instance, vacaciones, is pronounced like bacathiones ---> not bacathioneth. Hope this clears it up.
As someone who learnt various foreign languages before learning English, people like Austrians switching to English with foreigners drives me nuts. I'd be struggling through German which I was at least somewhat able to speak, only for them to switch to a language I didn't understand anything of. Not every foreigner is an English-speaker.
Now imagine what it's like for native English speakers, where all non-natives want to do is try to impress you with how "fluent" they are. It's a nightmare to get them to speak to you in their language. I wouldn't mind, but as a native English speaker, almost nobody is 'impressive' when they speak English as a second language. So many people can communicate, many quite well, but it's rarely impressive when you and your fellow native speakers are 10x better than even the most "impressive" foreign speakers. 😂
These Viennese people wanted to be friendly. Instead of your aggressive reaction, some very simple sentences in German might help: "Entschuldigen Sie bitte, ich bin in Wien, um Deutsch zu lernen. Könnten Sie bitte Deutsch mit mir sprechen?" Problem solved. You made your point and the other Viennese person is impressed by your language capacity. 😅
Yo haya intentado de entender los nativos del español que hablaban rápidamente, me costó un poco de sacrificio pero hoy mismo, entiendo también algunos dichos que no conocía.
What this video does not mention is that a lot of people in Spain including the Spanish do not speak Spanish. I was in Barcelona and Mallorca and people there did not speak Spanish and they refused to speak to me in Spanish. My mom is from Mallorca and she refused to speak Spanish. It is hard to learn Spanish in Spain.
I live in Houston and we have a very large Hispanic and Spanish speaking community. Hispanics make up the majority of the population at 44.8% whereas whites are at 23.6% here. Learning Spanish was easier here because of the people. If you want to learn a language you need to be around the people that speak it and that culture.. things like Duolingo and classes help but you won’t learn a language that way.
I lived in Spain for a short time. I learned very quickly that Spaniards speak one language amongst themselves and another language to tourists, etc. Basically, they talked to me like I was an idiot.🤪🤪
It's not 'hard' it's just a lot to remember (at first). ANYONE can learn how verbs conjugate, it's just that it takes a long time for automaticity. Every single language has things that are perceived to be "hard" until one day you wake up and they're not hard anymore.
I'm looking for someone who wants to learn Spanish to practice by videocall because I would like to learn English. The thing we could do is half hour to speak Spanish and half hour to speak English everyday. Please answer if you would like
“Spanish speak very fast” i think that’s a myth, because when you don’t understand any language is hard to understand and it feels like the other person speaks very fast. If you really wanna learn the language, you gotta TRY and socialise more with natives
Not a myth, though exaggerated. Studies have compared speaking speeds and data density, and spanish does come out faster than english and a bit less dense. It isn't by nearly as much as we think as learners, though, a lot of the perception is based on lack of being good at it.
The problem with Spanish language I have is ... That the area is beautiful but we have only old people, speaking Andaluz accent plus they talk like ak47 and get very annoyed when I pull out my phone to translate. So yeah... I'm going back to my country for a year and then coming back and smashing that Spanish language cause it's a beautiful language
@@Vamos1969 yes! and it's not just S for example Huescar ... So you don't spell H (that's normal) ... Now you don't spell S and at the end you don't spell R so you got ueca, 🙃 now take the word Granada - they don't spell D so you got Grana-A so you end up going to Grana (small pause like D you want to skip and then adding A at the end)
todos los idiomas tienen algun apartado mas dificil de aprender (en español son los tiempos verbales, q tenemos variedad para cagar), pero considero el español bastante facil de hablarlo.....el problema esq muchos paises prefieren enseñar a sus alumnos otro idioma como segunda lengua (frances, aleman, incluso chino) q son idiomas importantes a nivel de negocios global...el español solo es importante pa venir de vacaciones
In the United States, just looking Hispanic is not even a given that you speak proper Spanish. I went to ask for information about interpreting and this Spanish medical interpreter in a hospital with a badge, " INTERPRETER " asked me, "hablas español", and I said " claro que sí " and she looked at me with suspicious eyes. She made me question my existence because I know that I speak Spanish.
Se escribe SUPERDIFÍCIL, SUPERCÓMODA, jamás SÚPER DIFÍCIL o SÚPER CÓMODA. Y la leche, qué guapa es la marroquí, aunque no tiene para nada pinta de serlo.
Me volaron el cerebro la chica de Austria y la chica de Alemania, hablando un perfecto español con el acento donde lo aprendieron. Español un idioma tan rico y tan variado y colorido dependiendo del pais y la region donde se hable, desde España hasta el ultimo rincon de Hispanoamerica. Saludos desde Mexico.
En España diríamos “he flipado con la tía de austria…” 😂
I've been in Spain for 6 years and I learned Spanish in the first year of living here. It was difficult to learn, but not impossible.
I've never learned Spanish, but when someone starts talking in Spanish with me its like the language is somewhere there deep in my brain cos i start talking in basic Spanish and start understanding the language straight away
@@playthegame7445 how long have you been living in Spain?
@@Kaisforeignadventures Never lived in Spain, I live in an anglosphere nation.
@@playthegame7445Wtf, and does that only happen with spanish or other languages? Did you watch some show in spanish or something?
Lucky for you. Some people have other priorities than learning the language
Living in Spain for almost 30 years. Takes about 3 months to be able to "get by", about a year to contol basic Spanish and I would say 5 to 6 years to be fluent. I personally never had any classes, but learned by living. Only ever lived with and worked with Spaniards, so thats a huge advantage too.
Beautiful language and the difficulty of learning it depends on your own native language. If you speak a Romance language like Italian, Portuguese, French it's a bit easier. If English is your native tongue then the most difficult thing is the concept of the subjunctive mood which we no longer have in English except for very specific idioms. But once you get the hang of it it kind of clicks into place.
Se nota que todos tienen distintos niveles y llevan distinto tiempo viviendo en España.
Muy identificada con la chica de Francia.
Impresionante la fluidez de las chicas de Austria y Alemania 😮👏👏👏
Enhorabuena por el vídeo, me han encantado también los subtítulos 👍👍👍
La dificultad de aprender castellano depende mucho de que idioma hablas.
Para los que hablan idiomas latina es muy facil. Los franceses, italiano, portugues, rumanos aprenden castellano en meses.
Si vienes a España a estudiar, trabajar etcétera,y eres extranjero y vas ha estar un tiempo,lo mejor para aprender español es juntarte con los nativos españoles,si eres de Estados Unidos vienes a España España y solo hablas ingles,así no aprendes español,ni en veinte años.
@@frederic6998no sé los franceses suelen tener un acento bastante pronunciado
@@frederic6998 Completamente de acuerdo. Y si además tienes que aprender otro alfabeto, todavía más difícil
In my opinion, language learning in general is as hard as you yourself make it to be. You get as much out of it, as you invest in it. If you listen, read and speak a lot, consuming content in the target language, you will learn after some time. It is inevitable, that your brain learns that language then. But if you only invest like 2 hours a week into the language, the return will be minimal as well.
Very well said man, some people act like it's gonna be the same for every learner. Depends on how determined you are!
I've been here for five years. I decided to try and learn Spanish without taking any lessons at all (as a challenge - I speak other languages so I wanted to know if you could learn a new language like a child rather than an adult). Now I speak Spanish well and can fully participate in Spanish life, including friendships, groups, romance etc, but it would have been easier with some lessons. By far the easiest way to learn is by finding a Spanish boyfriend/girlfriend, and that's just the truth, and also some lessons, and, like every language, an open mind, open ears, and a rejection of any fear of embarrassment.
i like how relatable some of these ppl are. like yeah practicing the language with ppl is scary sometimes but u can always practice at home first, and it may seem weird ig but i think it was good advice that girl gave
7:23 vean al chaval descojonandose cuando su compi dice que su comida favorita de España es la pizza 🍕
Muchas gracias a todos los que estais haciendo el esfuerzo de aprender nuestro idioma, mucho ánimo, seguro que os va a merecer la pena!! ;)
I’m really struggling with grammar and tenses 😤😤 yo habló anglais
Language exchanges can be great and there are quite a few in Madrid.. but be mindful that as a native English speaker, some people will take advantage and if you're not careful you will be speaking English for the entire evening. So it's important to make sure that it is an inter-cambio, and make sure that people also help you with your Spanish.
As the girl said, getting out of the international bubble is the KEY, I have met expats in places like Ecuador and they have been living there for 10 years and still don't speak much Spanish and are surprised why, but then all they do is hang around other English speakers in their own bubble - well, of course you aren't going to learn anything. There is this misunderstanding that simply going to a place will automatically make you a speaker, the truth is that unless you're actively trying you aren't going to make any progress.
Yeah, when there's no one to talk to, speaking to yourself is an amazing way to get the basic words and sentences (and your thoughts do, the conversations with yourself get more complex and deep and helps expressing yourself), so please don’t act as if this woman was weird. She was obviously nervous as she stated, it’s not easy to speak with an other in an other language 😅
Why am I here? I’m learning Italian 🤣 Ti amo tantissimo Spagna!
La chica de Austria habla increíblemente bien. Parece de aquí en las expresiones e incluso en la entonación,solo tiene ligerísimo acento extranjero
Cierto, pero es que ademas la otra ya tiene mogollon de acento Canario.
@@Floren_Andro Supongo que su acento tiene influencias de acento Argentino.
La erre es lo que siempre delata a los alemanohablantes.
As an American living in Spain, it took me a few months to get comfortable saying grathias, entonthes, thapatos. I finally got comfortable with it, and it makes so much sense: Las Rosas = the roses, Las Rozas = the cleared lands (where the Roman army trained).
Learning the s/z,c distinction is helpful with spelling too. No more writing "el poso" like Latin Americans do.
Tremendo acento canario maneja la alemana 😂 100% integrada
Sí, la teutona habla muy bien el castellano de Canarias.
Me encanta que la gente elija nuestro pais para vivir, sois todos bienvenidos ❤
Before going I taught myself to a b1 level an after a year in Spain and some courses I am now at C1 after two more years. It’s not too hard
@@Bones_Ex it's good to get a feel for what the language is like in real life at normal native speed and not in a classroom setting. Any exposure is good whether living or visiting. Depending on your country, and location, you may or may not have some spanish speaking community near you, so got to their shops or potentially volunteer for something. You can also try language exchange online like tandem, hilokal and via meetup.
Anything is good and helps tune your brain into it, news online, podcasts, youtube channels etc. I would add your personality and tendencies could assist you or get in the way. For the going abroad option, If you are someone who make friends in every place you go then you likely find communication barriers a non-issue and will make mistakes without feeling like it's a problem. If you are more shy or reserved you may have to force yourself a bit to not try to be perfect and either find a job where you must speak spanish or sign up to opportunities as such. If only travelling you could easily end up only around english-speakers. For me I started to pick up things easier even with fast talkers after living in a spanish-speaking country for several months...I did not keep it up though. immersion is key, use it everyday, and that woman's suggestion of speaking to yourself is true, gives you no excuse even if there are no hispanics around. If you have no one, record yourself for 10 minutes a day speaking spanish with the aim of keeping going and write down words you need to know the word for on a notepad to find out afterwards
The German girl and the Austrian girl speak Spanish wonderfully.
A nosotros nos pasa lo mismo del inglès, alemàn, francès, etc: entender la jerga (que es bien dinámica), la velocidad de los hablantes, no menos importante: la dicciòn (¿o alguien cree que todos los nativos pronuncian correctamente las palabras en su idioma? ¡Por Dios!), el contexto de los chistes o comentarios y otras màs. Aparte estàn las caracterìsticas del que quiere aprender: algunos realmente son brillantes para los idiomas. En fin, tenemos un gran trabajo por delante ... Paciencia y perseverancia.
Español es super facil. Aprendí Español en Sevilla. Estoy aprendiendo Frances. Dios mio Frances es por lo menos 10 veces mas dificil que Español, sobre todo la pronunciacion. Soy de Londres pero cuando estoy en España o Ecuador no hablo Ingles.
No es que sea más fácil, es que somos majetes y nos da igual como pronuncies, hacemos por entender...
eso pensaba yo hasta que empecé con el francés y ahora entiendo que como no pronuncies bien no te pueden entender, porque puede significar 7000 cosas diferentes. por contexto hay cosas que si pueden pillar, pero otras ni de broma.
Es como el latin : solamente los mas dotados y educados pueden aprenderlo...
No de verdad es facil si primero lo aprendes de maniera instinctiva (hablando con un frances) y no con libros .
Spanish and french is pretty much the same, just the way french is writen is more complicated.
Like in french there is like 10 different way to write the exact same sound o. In spanish it's always writen with a o, in french it can be o, au, eau, eaux, haut, hauts, ot, ots, etc... for example the word toro in french is writen taureau but it's the exact same prononciation and meaning as toro.
At 0:44
"I am in Spain since September."
Sounds peculiar to an English speaker. Here is a very easy and basic construction.
If someone is looking for you and text messages " Where are you?"
You would reply:
I am still at work.
I am on my way.
I am at home.
I am at the gym working out.
If someone asks how long you have been doing something:
"I have been in Spain since September."
"I have been home sick the last 3 days."
"I have been waiting for you for hours."
🥱
🥱
Damn the Austrian lady POPPED OFF in Spanish I did not expect that after all the humble talk haha
Creo que el accento español es rapidó pero esta claro tambien.
1:54
facil, añades un "illo", surmano o pana delante y yasta
Spanish has many advantages to other languages that make it easy to learn. There is a reason why Spanish is spoken at very fast pace and reinforces the easy learning. Spanish have very few vocal sounds (only 5) and the vocabulary is very literal and flat of meaning, making very large sentences because of that. So you just need to listen, you don't have to think about sounds or meaning, there is no confusion. And that's the reason it's spoken at that speed.
"the vocabulary is very literal and flat of meaning"...totally untrue. You´re mixing things up.
@@gromenawuer1 Estaría muy bien qué argumentes, corrijas mi error y nos ilustres. Con solo negar, no se aporta.
@@evilstars No pretendo aportar ni discutir, sólo remarco el hecho de que has dicho una chorrada. El que entiende, que entienda.
@@gromenawuer1 Simplemente tu modo de contestar ya dice mucho de quien dice chorradas. Un saludo maestro.
El español tiene muchas sílabas para decir la misma palabra por ejemplo en inglés. Por ejemplo Week (1 sílaba) semana ( tres sílabas ) por lo que para decir lo mismo los españoles usamos más sílabas por minuto que por ejemplo un británico. De ahí que hablemos más rápido
The morrocan girl having a French Canadian accent when speaking English.The Chica marroquí tiene un accento Frances canadiense cuando habla in ingles.
It is easy, surround yourself with native speakers and force yourself to speak that language only and you will be proficient in 1 year. I did it in 8 month in English bless you all
I agree, that is the best way
Much better English content to consume than Spanish though isn't there. That would ahv ehelped.
Esas dos chicas hablan español mejor que muchos españoles!!!! Wow!!!
se han esforzado en aprender.... cosa que en el caso de los 4 gringos lo dudo.
@@Jon-jn8zx esos estarían deseando irse a Magaluf.
Llevan varios años viviendo en España
@@Jon-jn8zx Creo que la argentina está en silencio porque no le cuesta :P
¿Gringos? En España son guiris, ¿no?! 😅
Creo que el chico grande que le gusta paella y ver televisión sabe algo en castellano pero ¡ellxs pueden aprender mucho más si viven en un pueblo pequeño!
Guapísima la chica marroquí. Típica casaui o rabati totalmente occidentalizada que habla inglés o español con acento francés.
Si
esta chevere el video. hay otra cosa es que los lenguajes corporales de los entrevistados dicen mucho también en cuanto a su actitud en relación a las preguntas o a ser entrevistados. la chica de Francia, de azul, es súper introvertida, casi siempre de brazos cruzados, cerrada a abrir sus opiniones (ella al final de la entrevista lo dice) en contraste con la muchacha de marruecos arriesgada, dispuesta a aprender y a expresarse. y es chevere ver como aprenden el idioma con los acentos de la zona donde aprendieron en España. si comentan que los españoles hablan rápido, hay regiones en países en latinoamérica donde sería casi imposible aprender español jejeje. y sin incluir los modismos o jergas de cada país. yo tuve que adaptarme a la jerga de México, compartiendo con norteños, chiapanecos y chilangos en un mismo curso (acentos y modismos muy diferentes) aparte de los nombres que se le dan a muchas cosas del dia a dia (escribia las palabras y lo que significaban, ej. elote es jojoto, popote es pitillo). en Chile igual. No tanto con los acentos sino con la jerga (sobre todo si hablaban de sus pololos). y los colombianos costeros hablan muy parecido a los venezolanos, pero al ir a Medellín y la zona cafetalera sobre todo, es dificil de entender el lenguaje diario jejeje. bueno, asi como cualquiera que visite las diferentes regiones de Venezuela. muy bueno el video
Lo más hermoso del español es que existe en muchos países, cada uno tiene su propia identidad y eso lo hace "casi" imposible de domesticar .Como mexicano mi lengua es el español aunque existan otras más pero además soy mexicano de la ciudad de México, del sur de la ciudad de México, mi acento, mi vocabulario, son cosas específicas, lo mismo pasa con el andaluz, yo le entiendo (a veces jajajajajja) pero cada acento es específico del lugar , a veces son pocos metros los que separan una variante de la otra y a veces como en Guinea Ecuatorial es distinto para mí, sigue siendo español pero es distinto . El español me dió una forma específica para pensar y existir, y aunque hablo otros idiomas el español es más bonito para mí, tiene algo, tiene idea , no se me ocurre algo que no pueda describir en español , qué bonito es el español y las lenguas romances 😊.
I've only had Paella once and loved it!
Soy español y reconozco que nuestra lengua es difícil de aprender. Muchas formas verbales, muchas frases hechas y, además, no se habla igual en ningún sitio. Tienen mucho mérito las personas que consiguen hablarlo.
No has conocido la lengua italiana 😂😂😂 creo que es más complicada
And the Spanish people get mad when you are not fluent within a year of living in Spain 😢
No has conocido lenguas eslavas
Pfff, no has intentado aprender finés
Soy estadounidense y creo que español es fácil aprender si eres angloparlante.... y si te das cuenta que aprender cualquier idioma es siempre mucho tiempo y trabajo. Hay lenguas mucho más difíciles para nosotros!
I took Spanish in 7th grade, but at two different schools. The first school we were tested on everything at the end of each week and all tests were cumulative. At the second school, we were tested every six weeks and it wasn't cumulative, so I didn't learn as much as I could have. Nearly forty years later we took a trip to Spain. I tried refreshing what I learned and the best way for me was looking at the multi-national menus. I would find what I wanted to order in English, then look at what it was in Spanish and order it in Spanish. I would tell the waitresses that I spoke very little Spanish and then tried ordering. I became "fluent" in ordering from restaurants and such and even asking about books at a bookstore, but that's about all I could do in the 10 days we were there. When we returned to the US, my skills left me.
I’m fluent in Spanish (American English speaker)…but in Spain, the speed, use of ceceo, and J & G sometimes pronounced like clearing your throat (voiceless uvular fricative sound).
My grandma is from Spain and my grandpa is from Mexico and I love my culture
The girl from from Morocco is so pretty
Esta chica de marruecos robó mi corazón
Quiero vivir en españa y estoy aprendiendo hablar español . . ¿Pueden recomendarmelo un bueno profesor en TH-cam Por favor?
Best way to learn a language is to speak it at home aswell, i learnt fluent danish within a year that way. I have Romanian friends that learnt Faroese the same way, allso within a year
0:22 that Austrian has an impressive American accent
Damn that morrocan girl is pretty
Underage man underage !!
Como podríamos contactar con personas que quieran practicar español, para tener conversaciones por teléfono? A algunos que estamos aburridos o solos quizás nos resultara interesante.
In the beginning Spanish is not as complicated as French for example, but later with all these tenses and subjunctive etc, it gets really complicated
I reckon that the best way to learn any language is to go to a local bar and chat with the locals whilst drinking some 🍷or 🍺
Es una lengua de pronunciacion muy sencilla, por esa ranzon hablamos tan rapido, para un latino que habla una lengua romance es facil de aprender, lo primero que deben aprender es el silabario español que les da pistas de como se pronuncia una palabra escrita.
Acabo de encontrar su canal y lo estoy disfrutando mucho.
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. Lo único que me choca es que en los subtitulo usan el gentilicio equivocado para los estadounidenses. Si, yo entiendo que ellos no lo entenderían, pero está mal de todos modos...
"Buah, es que no sé", solo por usar ese "buah" ya tendrían que darle el C2 directamente jajaja
Hello Morocco!
Yo soy italiano y creo que hoy me cuesta más hablar inglés en vez de Español.
😂😂 Podría ser una locura pero es la verdad ajajaj
He conocido a muchos italianos que en 3 o 6 meses han logrado un muy buen nivel de español y la verdad que es algo que me encanta ver cuan parecidas son nuestras lenguas.
Hace unos meses hice un viaje en ferry de España a Italia y compartí camarote con un italiano. Pudimos mantener una larga conversación a pesar de que ambos solo teníamos conocimientos básicos del otro idioma.
@@roalvaredo Cierto, yo llevaba 4 años de estudio del español y no lo aprendí totalmente antes de llegar a España, el secreto es mudarte en el sitio hispanohablante, creo que es la única manera de aprender el idioma.
Desafortunadamente esto no ocurre con gente Española que se mudan a Italia por un año por trabajar por cualquier cosa 😅
Esque son lenguas bastante parecidas , yo me pongo a escuchar un vídeo en italiano y entiendo bastante de lo que se dice , pero evidentemente no al 100%
Igual italiano es un idioma bellísimo
@@lizzethmancilla5197ciertamente, porque somos de la misma raíz de el latín. Y para nosotros el Francés el Portugués el Catalán y el Rumano son fáciles porque compartimos en nuestros vocabularios algunas palabras que se parecen.
Al revés ocurre exactamente lo mismo..
It is a scientific fact that learning any language gets much harder when you are over 35-40, and much easier when you are 3-5=years old, being older your voice box is shaped by the language you speak for the last 35 years, it’s why many people move back home after 18 months, their children speak it fine after 6 months, they still struggle in general 18 months on.
La entrevistadora debe ser asturiana con ese acento. Las asturianas siempre tan 🥰
Asturiana???😂😂😂
Asturiana diciendo recomendasión?
Jajaja
Es sudamericana. ¿No oyes acaso cómo pronuncia las zetas como si fueran eses? Esa es la prueba del 9 para detectar a un no español (quitando a los canarios y algún andaluz, que también sesean)
Vivo en Asturias, no hablo mucho en inglés con la gente aquí pero su acento aparece un poco simular al acento asturiano en inglés.
¡Puxa Asturies!
Ufff, la mujer rubia que lleva 10 años aquí, domina muchísimo el idioma. Ya solo con la expresión "buah!" apuntaba maneras jjajajaja. Pero es que luego, su pronunciación ha sido prácticamente nativa, así que matrícula de honor para esa mujer!
1:45, fuck i fell in love
No hablamos demasiado rápido, hablamos a la velocidad normal de un nativo. De hecho, en palabras por minuto, el idioma inglés es bastante más rápido. Esa sensación que tienen es la que se tiene aprendiendo cualquier idioma
I am living in Spain for a year now and ofcourse I’m learning Spanish. I always try my best but my Spanish is not fluent. A lot of times people in Spain get really mad when you are not fluent in Spanish 😢. It’s weird really.
Nah can be for much more things and not be your fault. Can be because they don't have a good day or are not happy with his life right now or a ton of personal things that are bothering them in that moment and they are not in a good mood or because they are in a hurry even because they can't express what do you want or about what you are talking about well for the language barrier and for the frustation they got mad.
im in spain for 2 years and half and ilearn nothing beacuse im kinda a introvert person so ihad 0 contact with others
La alemana y la austríaca tirando "vale" y "mola", esas ya son de aquí.
My favorwita la pizza como comida española 😂
Ese gringuito desubicado...
I learned Spanish living in Texas, Mexico, and South America. Spain spanish is a lot more dificult to understand than other spanish speaking countries. Immersing yourself really is one of the best ways to learn.
@esemota2934 I’ll disagree some.
Every country has a different dialect and slang. Spain lisps “s”. Argentina pronounces “ll and y” like zsa.
Cuba cuts consonants, especially “s”. Like “voy a pecar (pescar). My Colombian teacher whose first language is Spanish had problems understanding Spanish from a lot of Caribbean countries.
Mexico has different regional dialects.
This is the same in English in the US. Many people have difficulty understanding my southern drawl. Cajuns from southwest Louisiana are difficult to understand their English.
Cecear = " C " , " Z " en lugar de la s
Sesear = " S " en lugar de la z o la c
The difficult one is the one from Chile, not Spain🤦🏻♀️ Most Latinos know that’s the hardest one to understand.
The standard Spanish from Spain does not lisp the S at all@@johngoerner6573. C and Z sounds are differentiated and pronounced as 'th' -not a lisp, fyi a lisp is a speech defect- as in 'thunder' with Za, Ce, Ci, Zo, Zu. So for instance, vacaciones, is pronounced like bacathiones ---> not bacathioneth. Hope this clears it up.
This sounds funny, but is an effective strategy 5:50
That's pretty ironic. At Germany if you don't speak PERFECT German people is very mean, not to say USA "speak English you're in America"
As someone who learnt various foreign languages before learning English, people like Austrians switching to English with foreigners drives me nuts. I'd be struggling through German which I was at least somewhat able to speak, only for them to switch to a language I didn't understand anything of. Not every foreigner is an English-speaker.
Now imagine what it's like for native English speakers, where all non-natives want to do is try to impress you with how "fluent" they are. It's a nightmare to get them to speak to you in their language. I wouldn't mind, but as a native English speaker, almost nobody is 'impressive' when they speak English as a second language. So many people can communicate, many quite well, but it's rarely impressive when you and your fellow native speakers are 10x better than even the most "impressive" foreign speakers. 😂
These Viennese people wanted to be friendly. Instead of your aggressive reaction, some very simple sentences in German might help: "Entschuldigen Sie bitte, ich bin in Wien, um Deutsch zu lernen. Könnten Sie bitte Deutsch mit mir sprechen?" Problem solved. You made your point and the other Viennese person is impressed by your language capacity. 😅
La mujer Alemana muy bien pero la Austriaca impresionante......si no me dicen que es Austriaca yo habría dicho que es Española 👍👍👍.
la austriaca y alemana hablan muy bien
I have been in colombia for almost two months i know more than fifty words of span8sh i have more to learn but I am proud of that
Cuando alguien dice "hablan muy rápido" significa que no ha intentado aprender el idioma.
No, significa que aún tienen un nivel bajo, pero no que no lo hayan intentado.
Yo haya intentado de entender los nativos del español que hablaban rápidamente, me costó un poco de sacrificio pero hoy mismo, entiendo también algunos dichos que no conocía.
La mujer de Austria habla tan bien español con un leve acento de su idioma pero no es como si importara
Brutal lo bien que se expresa
Lots of Europeans, but the Moroccan chick is the cutest.
What this video does not mention is that a lot of people in Spain including the Spanish do not speak Spanish. I was in Barcelona and Mallorca and people there did not speak Spanish and they refused to speak to me in Spanish. My mom is from Mallorca and she refused to speak Spanish. It is hard to learn Spanish in Spain.
I live in Houston and we have a very large Hispanic and Spanish speaking community. Hispanics make up the majority of the population at 44.8% whereas whites are at 23.6% here. Learning Spanish was easier here because of the people. If you want to learn a language you need to be around the people that speak it and that culture.. things like Duolingo and classes help but you won’t learn a language that way.
They say spanish people speak very fast and well, i live in germany learning german and sometimes they speak like eminem really
French girl is so cool.
I lived in Spain for a short time. I learned very quickly that Spaniards speak one language amongst themselves and another language to tourists, etc. Basically, they talked to me like I was an idiot.🤪🤪
Verb conjugation is the hardest thing for an English speaker. My guess.
It's not 'hard' it's just a lot to remember (at first). ANYONE can learn how verbs conjugate, it's just that it takes a long time for automaticity. Every single language has things that are perceived to be "hard" until one day you wake up and they're not hard anymore.
So cute
I discovered that Spain used to be the real Game Of Thrones.
Not really, mate. EnglandGermanyAustriaGreece is europes glorious incest cycle
¡Qué Viva el Reino de Pamplona Navarra por siempre y para siempre! ⚔️🇪🇸🇺🇲🇲🇽⚔️
I think Spanish is slept on. It’s very difficult to learn. Especially because there are different varieties of Spanish.
I'm looking for someone who wants to learn Spanish to practice by videocall because I would like to learn English. The thing we could do is half hour to speak Spanish and half hour to speak English everyday. Please answer if you would like
I can do , i will start learning it in November , so please give me your Instagram so that I can contact you 🙏
8:25*
Most people talk fast in their native language!
Rien à voir mais la Française est trop belle 😍
“Spanish speak very fast” i think that’s a myth, because when you don’t understand any language is hard to understand and it feels like the other person speaks very fast. If you really wanna learn the language, you gotta TRY and socialise more with natives
No they do speak really fast. I understand when they speak slow not when they speak dast
Spanish people speak faster than Latin American people. And Andalusians speak faster than most other Spanish people!
Not a myth, though exaggerated. Studies have compared speaking speeds and data density, and spanish does come out faster than english and a bit less dense. It isn't by nearly as much as we think as learners, though, a lot of the perception is based on lack of being good at it.
@@Tokahfang It's not the language, it's the cadence.
I feel you girl, it is very difficult to understand someone when she or he is choking. Totally seeing it
😂
6:34 Esa chica habla mejor Español que yo xD
The problem with Spanish language I have is ... That the area is beautiful but we have only old people, speaking Andaluz accent plus they talk like ak47 and get very annoyed when I pull out my phone to translate. So yeah... I'm going back to my country for a year and then coming back and smashing that Spanish language cause it's a beautiful language
Yes, I understand what you mean, some people from Andalucía talk rather quickly😂
@@HomeCookingSpain I need to learn, I feel so bad not being able talk with anyone 😔 shit
The people in Andalusia cut the S of a lot of words. They don't pronounce the J like they do in Madrid. That's for sure.
@@Vamos1969 yes! and it's not just S for example Huescar ... So you don't spell H (that's normal) ... Now you don't spell S and at the end you don't spell R so you got ueca, 🙃 now take the word Granada - they don't spell D so you got Grana-A so you end up going to Grana (small pause like D you want to skip and then adding A at the end)
todos los idiomas tienen algun apartado mas dificil de aprender (en español son los tiempos verbales, q tenemos variedad para cagar), pero considero el español bastante facil de hablarlo.....el problema esq muchos paises prefieren enseñar a sus alumnos otro idioma como segunda lengua (frances, aleman, incluso chino) q son idiomas importantes a nivel de negocios global...el español solo es importante pa venir de vacaciones
"Solo es importante para venir de vacaciones". Madre mía el nivel de Internet.
I find Argentine and even Castilian Spanish easier than some Central American and Caribbean dialects.
@GeneralGIR343 no, colombian and the area is harder but you get used to it.
@GeneralGIR343every time I hear a chilean I find myself wondering if they are even speaking spanish 💀
Spanish is much more phonetic than English. You can self-learn by reading, not so much in English.
But grammar in english is easier
Spanish easy peasy ! No idea why they say its hard. Just go out and talk !
Their English is good as well, that's at least 3 languages.
In the United States, just looking Hispanic is not even a given that you speak proper Spanish. I went to ask for information about interpreting and this Spanish medical interpreter in a hospital with a badge, " INTERPRETER " asked me, "hablas español", and I said " claro que sí " and she looked at me with suspicious eyes. She made me question my existence because I know that I speak Spanish.
P.S. they dont even use all the letters, for no reason.
Bro they complaining of us speaking fast. Everytime i try to understand to an English speaker i get more confused than my math Classes.
2:14 mispronounced, is not pronounce lenguich, it’s lenguichis
Se escribe SUPERDIFÍCIL, SUPERCÓMODA, jamás SÚPER DIFÍCIL o SÚPER CÓMODA.
Y la leche, qué guapa es la marroquí, aunque no tiene para nada pinta de serlo.
2:40
preguntadle a la gente que idea tienen de algún país latinoamericano y guinea ecuatorial.
PD:La belleza de las entrevistadoras es inconmensurable