@@nelsonricardo3729 French Guyana is not a country, but part of France. So actually iz's a European country. In South America. And the Carribean. And the Pacific. And near Madagascar. And EVERYWHERE!
Dc Garcia We live in India, so we know. There are 32 ‘official’ languages. Indian Census of 1962 recognised 1,652 languages out of which 150 are spoken by a sizeable amount of population. I don’t think it’s something to brag about, these are just facts.
iammaxhailme yeah exactly what I tought, the second he said chinese I was like wtf? It should be mandarin #1 with like 900million something. Then there's cantonese and other dialects
@@seeyang9821 I think you're wrong. The Wu dialect is more spoken than Cantonese dialect. Wu dialect have 77 millions of native speakers and Cantonese dialect have 71 millions of native speakers in China and chinese diasporic communities all over the world. The fourth most spoken chinese dialect is Hokkien (福建話)。
@Happy Njm I mean, you're right, but romanji isn't used alongside the other writing systems, if it is being used, then it's being used exclusively, without the others. It's only used so people that can't read the other writing systems can understand what the phrases sound like. The people using Cyrillic alphabets really ran out of luck here. But I do agree
YEAH, Google's translation for sure, can't blame him though he probably has never learned any Chinese, BTW when he says 普通话 and 国语 the pronunciation was kind of emmmm he tried.
Fabulous! Croatian first because of my grandma. English for school and life. French because I'm Canadian. Spanish because I wanted to and now live on the Mexican border.
@@mepalker you said english for school and life so im guessing its day to day basis, but how often do you actually speak croatian and do any of your friends/family nearby speak croatian?
english is my native tongue but I learned spanish in school then taught myself even more once i graduated university. I think it's cool to be able to speak more than one language, more chances to meet people and make connections
This is so true I’ve made countless connections with people I probably never would’ve otherwise knowing Spanish and Polish, both very commonly spoken by minorities in my area.
@@rach6722 i wish my family had thought to teach us polish, but we kinda lost the language so im eventually going to teach myself. and exactly! there's so many different people you can meet and connect with
- king- It’s the only official language of Bangladesh but India has many official languages (mainly Hindi). It’s like saying that English is spoken in USA too so show USA’s flag.
My native language is Slovak. Only 7 million people speak Slovak. Slovak is spoken in Slovakia, which is located in Central Europe. This is the flag of Slovakia 🇸🇰
Ser hispanohablante es hablar la lengua romance más hablada, la lengua europea más hablada, y nos entendemos fácilmente entre todos los países que hablamos español. Los hispanoamericanos tenemos la historia y raíz común de haber sido colonia española, y diferencias entre nosotros las hay, y nuestra lengua nos une y facilita. ¡Larga vida al castellano!
Exacto, no es como el portugués, que los Brasileños casi no se entienden con lo Portugueses, eso hace al portugués un idioma fragmentado, así como el árabe.
@@archival9850 Yes, and we Spanish speakers also understand Portuguese for the most part. In my experience it just takes like a month or two to learn Portuguese fully 😁
@@yeetspageet6707 Highly doubt lol, french empire was quite big, it's unrealistic to say *twice* half of Africa was french, part of south america and north america was french, part of asia was french I'd say it was pretty much the same
Andromediens the British Empire 35.5 million kilometres squared, while the Spanish Empire was 13.7 million kilometres squared, and the French Empire was 11.5 million kilometres squared. Meaning the British Empire was 2.6 times larger than the Spanish Empire, and 3 times larger than the French Empire. So no, they were not roughly equal, the British were always leagues ahead.
@@yeetspageet6707 the spanish one is 20.4 not 13.7, the french empire was 13 not 11.5, also the mongol empire was arguably bigger than the british one, and your empire was not a territorial empire it was an explotation empire that's why English didn't stick as the main language in those regions To be honest english is the main language because the USA not england
I can read, write, speak and understand the following languages: 1. English 2. Spanish 3. Portuguese (if you don't use too much slang) 4. French (if you go slowly when you speak it) Learning: 1. Chinese (this one is a hard one)
Fun fact: there are more than 100 languages in the Philippines Edit : there’s a fight in the comments XD I just want to write a comment not start a war
The most spoken I feel are just Tagalog, English, and Bisaya. There are others like Cebuano, Chavacano, and others I don’t know the name of. My fiancée is from the Philippines and actually Tagalog is her third language. Her native tongue is Bisaya, then she learned English in private school, and then she learned Tagalog mostly from watching tv and going to Manila to work.
Hello everybody, I am a small TH-camr and made an interesting animated comparison video of the world's 100 most spoken languages of the world with bar graphs, if you enjoyed this video, I bet you would like that too :) th-cam.com/video/ZusQ0DLn8Hw/w-d-xo.html Cheers
When the video counted Bengali speakers, he only counted the Bangladeshis. Including the West Bengalis and others in India, there are more Bengali speakers than Arabic.
@kr tu "English speaking countries, especially the US, make up some of the most important and affluent markets in the world" *China, Japan and Germany want to know your location* I'm joking
I am a native speaker of English and French. I have reached proficiency in Dutch and Spanish thanks to high-school and college. As of right now, I am studying 5 languages Italian, Portuguese, Hindi, Arabic with my main focus language being Japanese.
You don't have to use 'aggressive' when you have 'German' already in your mind! I'm sorry if you're offended by this but you guys kind of sound slightly angry when you speak.. ehe.
@@impe898 We're not talking about native speakers, this video is talking about the 'Most Spoken Languages in the World', not 'Languages With Most Native Speakers'. 🤔
As a Bangladeshi spekaing Bangla as mother tongue, I also am fluent in English. Side by side I can speak, read and understand Japanese (still learning, maybe beginner in N3... around that level), and I can understand hindi and can speak also. 🇧🇩🇧🇩
I don't know who told people that Arab dialects are that different, I can understand all of the them except maybe for Morocco's. Besides that, all arabs speak the formal Arabic and its the same for everybody. it's used in the media, in books, schools and official cases.
So why you still not organised in to an "Arabic empire"? Not with that crazy islamic ideas, nobody in the world will allow you to do that, if you will not be capable to prosper peacefuly, but more civilised way. You all already speak the one language.
3:05 the case with the japanese writing systems is *not* that you can write it _either_ in hiragana _or_ in katakana _or_ in Chinese characters (which I think might have been the impression that you got), but rather, their writing system is a combination of all three systems. hiragana and katakana are syllabaries, they represent the pronunciation of a word similar to an alphabet, but you couldn't just use them since JP doesn't use spaces and there are a lot of homophones, especially with words derived from Chinese (in medieval times). Chinese characters, called Kanji, are a logography, so they represent a meaning rather than a pronunciation, and often in Japanese a noun or the root of a verb or adjective is spelled with Kanji and then grammatical endings like with verb conjugations, as well as words like grammatical particles are spelled in hiragana, and katakana is mainly used to spell the pronunciation of words borrowed from foreign languages (in modern times) like English.
Thanks for the tip! I'll try doing that for the next video. I use a pop filter and the video editing software implements a compressor plugin automatically, but maybe it's not enough
"Japanese use two languages, and sometimes even use Chinese characters" This is misleading. The majority of written text uses Kanji and hiragana, with Katakana used for phonetics and foreign borrowed words. To say Japanese "sometimes" uses Kanji (which has changed significantly from Chinese btw) is a vast understatement
@@ReallyRandomMe he said "sometimes they use chinese characters" but it's not true. Kanji (which only have few similarities to chinese characters) is used the most then hiragana then katakana.
@@ReallyRandomMe i know all of that. I'm learning both japanese and korean. What i said was that most of kanji is no longer the same with actual chinese characters because there are lots of kanji that doesnt hold the same meaning to the chinese counterparts anymore. It is derived from it but now it doesnt mean that if you know chinese then you can now read all of the kanjis as well. I have a chinese friend and we both compared chinese and kanji characters and a majority of similarities are only the basic ones lile numbers and elements like water, fire, etc.
@@ReallyRandomMe I never said it didnt derive from chinese characters. that's why i said a few similarities since most dont hold the same meaning anymore. That's why its now called kanji and not chinese characters
I guess “我们说汉语” is more natural mandarin. Also we Japanese people ALWAYS use Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji (Chinese characters). Without Kanji, sentences sometimes don’t make sense or would be very confusing. For instance, the word “kami” has at least 3 meanings. 神 means gods, 髪 means hair and 紙 means paper.
@@izimations Si sabes inglés el español no te va a costar nada de aprender. Y si además de inglés sabes árabe (el español tiene bastantes palabras árabes) más fácil aún. Además con el español puedes comunicarte con portugueses y aprender rápido cualquier otro idioma romance.
@@lsjaowhwbkwhwksha5926 Your name is Spanish. All FIlipino names are spanish: Juliana Jacildo, Corazón Aquino, Rodrigo Duterte, Imelda Marcos, Manuel Quezón, Emilio Aguinaldo, José Laurel, Sergio Osmeña, Elpidio Quirino, Carlos García, Fidel Ramos, Gloria Arroyo, Ejército Estrada, Benigno Aquino. You should know spanish too and where your names come from.
¡Qué guay que entiendas el español! No mucha gente sabe que Filipinas fue parte del Virreinato de la Nueva España con capital en la Ciudad de México. Los filipinos siempre serán nuestros hermanos hispanos de Asia.
Man, I would love to see philippines speaking Spanish again, I encourage you (as colombian and Spanish speaker) to keep practicing Spanish and to try to spread it more across your homeland. I'm sure we both know its Spanish influences.
CoLoNiZAtIon, you think UK was the only country that colonized or what lmao. Vikings were the first to find Americas. But ofc let's take it to the 1500's as is when the first colonizations started. 1492 - Christopher Columbus(Italian which actually colonized as spanish) bumped into the americas and started to colonize central america. 1500 - Pedro Álvares Cabral(Portuguese) arrived in south america, started to colonize brazil. 1607 (About one century later) UK arrives at his best in north america to colonize us. So I guess that power of colonization isn't the best lel. Unless you're talking about every other old world region that everyone knew about.
I don't know... But I speak both and French has a ton of silent letters, exceptions all over the place, weird grammar rules and a ton of diphtongs. Just look at how many ways you can write the sound "o"...
@@josee-annejoly6896 True enough. But I can pronounce a French word without knowing it because I know when certain letters should be silent. For English, it is impossible usually. The pronunciations are close to random.
@@tailiu223 I can speak both but I hate them both because I wasted my childhood (je peux les parler mais je déteste ces langues. Ils ont gâché mon enfance) Edit: imma try to find a new hobby which is useful.
These are the language I know 🏴 English 🇪🇸 Spanish 🇫🇷 French 🇮🇹 Italian 🇵🇹 Portuguese 🇵🇭 Filipino I'm Filipino but I don't know much Filipino words.
Dont forget MELAYU most spoken = indonesia,malaysia,brunei,singapor,timor leste, south philipines, ducth immigrant indonesia, suriname, australia, thailand south
filiphinoan and not even know Bahasa Indonesia in your entire life, but know 5 european language, i bet something wrong with your life and you must care it!
@@mrkupal333 u said "i know" its not about what you watch, but your Fckin country to close to Indonesia to close for not even know Indonesian Official language
Well... It is a way to not let you forget Spanish, specially if you don't live in a Spanish speaking country. I have friends from Brazil living in different countries where they only speak Portuguese at home. It is usually how their children learn it.
@@michaeld-21 Parts of Luxembourg,Netherlands,belguim and Denmark. Also parts of Hungary. Parts of Poland Most of South Tyrol too And overall sprinkled around Eastern Europe Keep in mind Germany alone has over 80 million Citizen
@@Astro_Guy_1 Poland? Where the hell we speak German in some part? I live in Silesia so a region which dialect has a Polish/German origin i mean we speak in polish but with some additions of German worlds like "We are in a(in Polish) zug(Train in German)" so technicly yes but no because we use only single worlds and mix it with Polish and even some Czech also ive been in almost every part of Poland excluding Podlachia which is near the Lithuanian and Belarusian border so i don`t count it as a German speaking one in any scenario.
Johan Stöve es geht hier ersten um die Muttersprachler sprich die deutsch als erste (Muttersprache) haben, wo Deutschland klar mehr hat als französisch und zweitens wird deutsch in ganz Europa und Nordamerika gerne als 1,2 oder auch 3 Sprache genommen. Klar französisch dominiert dort noch aber eben nur in Gebieten wie Afrika und in der Karabik.
It's an honorable mention because of how much the number grows if you take in account more than the "native speakers" as shown in the final list where it makes it to the 5th place worldwide.
Actually french native is way higher than 76M Half of Africa does speak french natively as second language All their bureaucracy is in french, the markets and so on, but they're listed as "non-native" which is rly weird to me
I agree with the honorable mention because French has so many non-native speakers while while German has more native speakers but overall is behind French in total number of speakers.
English works well in India, though even in the post colonial times. They have chosen to keep English since many Dravidian people don't like Hindi, etc.
@@marshmellowmoon7990 If you see, almost all the english vocabulary shares from latin origins, it's kinda easy to a Romance speaker learn english cause of this, a channel called LaguageFocus explain it better.
Japanese uses Chinese characters *sometimes*? Surely you mean all the time. I'm a native Spanish speaker. I speak English and Japanese fluently, and have picked some French and Mandarin over the years. Currently trying to learn Cantonese because my girlfriend is from Hong Kong.
I don't know why he said sometimes. Possibly a misunderstanding based on not enough research? Kanji isn't even the same as Chinese anymore. The characters have changed visually, and are different in usage
Where do you live? I'd love to become multilingual in the near future. Hablo español y tengo un nivel bastante elevado de inglés (~C1). Ahora estudiando coreano, italiano y quiero retomar el francés (:
Hey guys! My favorite language is Spanish :) I speak Portuguese, Spanish, English, French, Romanian and Polish. Learning German, Arabic, Russian and Mandarin! Peace out
Languages: Spanish (lived in spain 15 years) English (u study in school in spain) French (u study in school in spain) Catalán (actually a variant, valenciano) (u study in school in spain) Vlaams ( been born in north belgium and speak it with family) Japanese (been living in japan 8 months) 19 years pog
@WRLD actually as being from belgium my french is pretty good, and the japanese i already got a N2 (scale 1-5 5 the lowest) ^^ but ill say that i only speak 5 fluently, true
I've tried to learn at least 7 languages but ended up speaking only 2 because of my lack of motivation, at least I know a little of the other ones and when motivation kicks in it will be easier than learning from zero :p
> 10:51 "Pu-Ton-Ghuwa" It's "Pu-Tong-Hua", for those who are curious/bored. > 10:57 "Guo You" It's "Guo Yu", the 'u' sounds similar to the German 'ü'. Also, what's with the thumbnail's "我们说话中国"? XD "We speaking China." It should be "我们说中文/普通话/华文/华语". (Depends on the individual/nationality)
Mostly, I speak Malay/ Indonesia language but learn English as my secondary. I also learn French, Mandarin, Arabic and Japanese as my tertiary. I love to learn other languages as I want to communicate with foreigner.
I speak, portuguese(mother) german(native) castellano, english e a petit peu françes, je habite en suisse. I aunque un pocotino italiano. O que que tu queres mais? Une folhe paq sqip. Ben türkje conoshion.
The US is a cool place for languages. Before WW2 people were born speaking German and could go their whole lives not speaking English. But because of the hatred of Germans during the war most German speakers stopped speaking and now it’s only really the Amish communities that still speak “Pennsylvania Dutch” which is really a type of German not Dutch
Punjabi, Bengali, Hindi/Urdu, Portuguese, Russian, English & Spanish; these 7 language out of 10 (top ten) comes from Indo-European language family. French and Marathi, other two major language are also from the same language family.
I love this video. Being German myself, I learned English, Latin and French at school. I'm somewhat of a language junkie, so afterwards I treated myself with Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Finnish, Afrikaans and Indonesian. I know, some of these languages are spoken by rather few people compared e. g. to English or French, but learning them is real fun, and it's gratifying meeting people e. g. from Norway or Iceland goggling at you when they hear you talking to them in their own tongue instead of English. It's good to have a lingua franca like English that nearly everyone understands at some degree, but you shouldn't neglect all those other interesting and beautiful languages around the world that make life and mankind so rich. Learning and using foreign languages gives you the chance to not only communicate with people, but to reach their hearts and souls.
@@rippergraphistandgamemaker2368 Ficou meio errado em grafia, mas deu pra entender e você não falou nada com duplo sentido tipo pão (correto) e pao (incorreto, e obsceno na pronúncia) Ended up a bit wrong grammar wise, but still possible to understand and you didn't say anything with double meaning like pão (correct) e pao (incorrect, and obscene when pronounced)
@@frnciisx it's actually just a stereotype but yes I do take Spanish classes in school cause it's originated from Spain On a separate note if you speak portuguese and mix with spanish some Brazilian might understand, but it's actually quite offensive to talk in Spanish straight off the bat just try and look for someone that knows a second language, that happened to me 3 years ago I helped a lost chinese tourist girl get to her rented apartment
11:06 Chinese characters aren't really more "ancient" than many other scripts. Just like other scripts, they have changed over time, so the characters that were used in Old Chinese for example look very different from the current ones, and other scripts like the latin script also ultimately derive from very ancient scripts
Eu falo português (nativo)🇧🇷 I can speak English 🇬🇧 Yo puedo hablar Español 🇪🇸 Je parles français aussi 🇫🇷 Ich kann auch Deutsch sprechen 🇩🇪 Parlo un po d'italiano🇮🇹 Obrigado, thank you, gracias, merci, danke, grazie mille.
@@JoaoSilva-ko2bk that's great! I think it's the same when you think about English language. Almost everyone relates English to United States even knowing that English came from England.
@@filipeborgesidiomas well but as we think and associate the English language at UK, you could associate the portuguese language to the origin country , Portugal, as I do
Your map for bengali language is wrong. You should have included the Indian states of West Bengal and Tripura. Also in case of Hindi/Urdu you should have included Pakistan.
That's wonderful and if u want to learn Arabic take careful about your Bern OK it's not that easy ... and sorry if I have a mistakes about my dictation :)
@@irvincabello7674 yo lo acabo de ver y me he quedado igual 🤣 y no pasa nada es porque sera de ahi, lo único que confundira a los extranjeros y se empezaran a creer que España esta en América🤣 (de hecho ya pasa, sobre todo en eeuu) 🤣
Great vid! Quick note: in your thumbnail you wrote “我们说话中国” which doesn’t really mean anything. It translates as “we speaking China.” You might have meant “我们说中文” or “我们讲中文” which both mean “we speak Chinese.” Hope that helps!
I speak almost the same, french is my main language, Arabic because I am Morrocan and English because, well english is almost somthing necessary to know, except that I am still learning Russian and that I don't speak Korean
A correction to "sometimes Chinese characters" on Japanese - no. Kanji is similar to chinese, but it is a Japanese writing system. Most verbs and words are written out in Kanji, with the exception of Kana [foreign non-chinese words] and particles/tenses/formalities. You need to know all three to understand written Japanese, but it is entirely possible to write only in hiragana and katakana, it'd just be weird and difficult to communicate. Edit: A side note: While texting, Japanese people do not use Kanji - it'd be too hard. So they just use Hiragana/Katakana
Another reason English is dominant in the world is due to its use in academic circles; over 90% of academic "papers" are written in and presented in English.
I think a video exploring the different dialects of Portuguese would be very interesting, but I'm super biased. Os dialetos são parecidos, mas bem diferentes ao mesmo tempo.
Spanish, Chinese (putonghua and Sichuanhua), a little Bahasa Indonesia / Malaysia (this is how to refer to their languages, bahasa means language), a little Thai, a little Hindi, a little Nepali.... when you live in a country, there’s many reasons why you should learn to speak the local language... for me, it was mostly interest- I really, really love learning new languages. In places like China, maybe a huge city like Shanghai has some English speakers, but pretty much everywhere else, no one speaks English, and obviously all signs and menus are in Chinese characters so learning the language was a must. Even if you didn’t try, you’d pick up on important or useful words and expressions. Here’s a funny little thing I’d like to say, it relevant ...once I learned the characters for “massage” I was pleasantly surprised to see that there are little massage places EVERYWHERE! I couldn’t believe how many there were up and down the streets around our apartment. Before I just saw signs, and since I didn’t know the characters I didn’t really pay much attention to them, and never noticed how prevalent they were. Lol upon learning, boom! They’re everywhere! Lol Edit to add..I forgot I learned some German in uni! I had one elective left and I could choose anything I wanted! So I took German, while also taking more advanced Chinese! “But aren’t you going to confuse them?” Asked several people Me: lol “definitely not” :)
What's YOUR favorite language?
Russian and French
Português. :)
Albanian bc Its my first language
Finnish
Finnish.
"Spanish is the official language of all South American countries, except Brazil".
*Guyana and Suriname want to know your location*
Nobody even remembers Guyana and Suriname's location.
French Guiana is putting a bounty on your head.
French Guiana: am I a joke to you
@@nelsonricardo3729 French Guyana is not a country, but part of France. So actually iz's a European country. In South America. And the Carribean. And the Pacific. And near Madagascar. And EVERYWHERE!
Suriname would be more like: *ben ik een grap voor jou?* (Am I a joke to you? in Dutch)
Chinese:- I speak only Chinese.
India:- hold my 1600 languages.
rockingalvin2012 but Indians have lots of different languages and not just dialects.
@@anonymous-fm9wp most Chinese speakers don't understand other 'dialects', so we sometimes call them different languages
That's what you wrong kid. It's only 22.
Search on Google. Or wikipedia😂
Dc Garcia We live in India, so we know. There are 32 ‘official’ languages. Indian Census of 1962 recognised 1,652 languages out of which 150 are spoken by a sizeable amount of population. I don’t think it’s something to brag about, these are just facts.
@@anonymous-fm9wp even in my state, Manipur, there are around 50 different language
Chinese really should not be all lumped into one, but mandarin would still be #1
iammaxhailme yeah exactly what I tought, the second he said chinese I was like wtf? It should be mandarin #1 with like 900million something. Then there's cantonese and other dialects
I was thinking the same way because Mandarin and Cantonese are the two most dialects spoken in China.
@@seeyang9821 I think you're wrong. The Wu dialect is more spoken than Cantonese dialect. Wu dialect have 77 millions of native speakers and Cantonese dialect have 71 millions of native speakers in China and chinese diasporic communities all over the world. The fourth most spoken chinese dialect is Hokkien (福建話)。
@@carlosmendez4209 Or you could call it Wuhounese
Honestly it annoys me when I have to write Chinese thing using the English alphabet since most things use Mandarin but my family uses Cantonese
Everybody: I speak a lot of languages!
American: *left the chat*
lmao 😹
lmao you speak all languages
I live in USA I speak English and Spanish well maybe that’s cus I’m Hispanic lol
I saw subtitles added to an Australian person speaking on an American tv show lol i didnt need it im Australian
@Treavor Alvardo That was only a stupid stereotype, but in a lot of cases is true because a lot of Americans didn't go abroad and stay in US
3:00 Japanese uses 3 writing systems; Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Not 2
he mentioned kanji as Chinese characters
@Happy Njm I mean, you're right, but romanji isn't used alongside the other writing systems, if it is being used, then it's being used exclusively, without the others. It's only used so people that can't read the other writing systems can understand what the phrases sound like. The people using Cyrillic alphabets really ran out of luck here. But I do agree
ツHa22el he said "sometimes", which is wrong
Somali
Romanji is Japanese with Latin writing. I’m learning Japanese and I’m writing down Romanji when studying
The Mandarin on the thumbnail says "We speak China" xD
**Wheezes**
YEAH, Google's translation for sure, can't blame him though he probably has never learned any Chinese, BTW when he says 普通话 and 国语 the pronunciation was kind of emmmm he tried.
ikr I was like uhmmmm ????
I KNOW I WAS SHOOK
Leon Holt he could have easily looked up how to say we speak *chinese* smh
Who else knew from the begining that Chinese would be 1st when he said "Native Speakers" ?
The video thumbnail has Chinese characters
Me.
I'm one of them
@@Mr3344555 that sentence just made me cringed because it said we speak (language) China
I did.
Fun fact: Japanese use Kanji more than “sometimes”...
Ok weeb
That fact wasn’t so fun when I was learning the language. Now I’m learning Spanish gracias a Dios,
Yep, its actually used more than the others, mostly because reading a full hiragana/katakana sentence is literally torture
@@mcfarofinha134 Ever heard of the latin script?
@@ZK-ff2ru ever heard of cultural preservation? Im sure you do yankee
Fabulous! Croatian first because of my grandma. English for school and life. French because I'm Canadian. Spanish because I wanted to and now live on the Mexican border.
Please do not swear at me
@@mepalker you said english for school and life so im guessing its day to day basis, but how often do you actually speak croatian and do any of your friends/family nearby speak croatian?
@@cookietheory where I live no one speaks Croatian. English and Spanish are fluent. I do recognize when people cus at me in Croatian......
@@mepalker When was the last time you were in croatia?
@@cookietheory in high school 45 years ago.
Portuguese= 221 milion
Brasil = 210 milion
Portugal = 10 milion
Timor, São Tome, Macau, Moçambique, Angola, Cabo Verde, Guiné Bissau = 1 Milion? '-'
Yes, it's wrong. Moçambique has 30 million ppl and Angola has 25 million. Portuguese should be 6th, not 7th
Its Cape Verde
@@Benja944 he wrote it in portuguese dude, and i'm Brazilian too.
Not all of people in brazil speak portuguese.
For example: there are 6 million lebanon(arabs) speakers.
More than the whole population of lebanon.
ABodSA21 6 million is nothing all the African and Asia countries combined would make another 50 millions the LEAST more close to 100 million but okay
english is my native tongue but I learned spanish in school then taught myself even more once i graduated university. I think it's cool to be able to speak more than one language, more chances to meet people and make connections
Yep. I'm brazilian and I speak english, some spanish and some hebrew
same, i managed learning 4 languages at the age of 14 only, and they're ENGLISH,FRENCH, MODERN ARABIC,DARGA(ARABIC)
This is so true I’ve made countless connections with people I probably never would’ve otherwise knowing Spanish and Polish, both very commonly spoken by minorities in my area.
@@rach6722 i wish my family had thought to teach us polish, but we kinda lost the language so im eventually going to teach myself. and exactly! there's so many different people you can meet and connect with
Tongue? XDxDxDxD
I'm a Brazilian who speaks
Portuguese
English
Spanish
Learning: Italian
From that i speak English fluent Italian basic and in Spanish and Portuguese i know some words
Também sou br, mas só sei português fluentemente (óbvio) e o básico de inglês e de espanhol.
@@joaquimfse9947 é assim mesmo irmão, a prática leva a perfeição, não desiste de evoluir nesses outros idiomas se for o seu objetivo!
Io mi sento... 🤔
Bravo. Complimenti! Ogni lingua che si conosce, è un universo di conoscenze in più!
I can speak 3 languages:
-🇧🇩বাংলা
-🇬🇧 English
-🇪🇸Español
I can understand a bit of German and Hindi, and I’m learning Arabic
nice, im native arabic and hebrew speaker and preety much english my next goal is italian and german
- king- It’s the only official language of Bangladesh but India has many official languages (mainly Hindi). It’s like saying that English is spoken in USA too so show USA’s flag.
Eu posso falar Português,Inglês e Espanhol.
Hola, ¿Cómo estás?
Verstehst du was ich schreibe?
My native language is Slovak. Only 7 million people speak Slovak. Slovak is spoken in Slovakia, which is located in Central Europe. This is the flag of Slovakia 🇸🇰
Slovakia
But you know English so you can communicate with rest of the world
Excpet USA average citizen, I think most of people with a proper education heard about Slovakia
@@jorgefigueroa1219 Lol that's true
Hope your doing fine over there
Been hearing about alot of crazy shit that's been going on in Slovakia in the news lately
My mother language is Tamil
I know Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, kannada, Hindi, French, English
GICHE GILI GILI
Damn that’s great but we don’t care
Ser hispanohablante es hablar la lengua romance más hablada, la lengua europea más hablada, y nos entendemos fácilmente entre todos los países que hablamos español.
Los hispanoamericanos tenemos la historia y raíz común de haber sido colonia española, y diferencias entre nosotros las hay, y nuestra lengua nos une y facilita.
¡Larga vida al castellano!
Exacto, no es como el portugués, que los Brasileños casi no se entienden con lo Portugueses, eso hace al portugués un idioma fragmentado, así como el árabe.
@@gerlautamr.656 We don't have blame the Brazilians after the independence start to modify their portuguese
@@gerlautamr.656 And portuguese have a good thing e perceive spanish
@@archival9850 Yes, and we Spanish speakers also understand Portuguese for the most part. In my experience it just takes like a month or two to learn Portuguese fully 😁
La lengua europea más hablada es el ingles...
2:37 Feels bad for all the people who have to write in another way just becuse of bad health
Fuck, I actually laughed at this
So did i
You know it's Sikh right?
@@manavgajera4985 r/woooosh
@@manavgajera4985 r/whooooosh
Maybe everyone knows English because of entreteinment and products
Let's ignore the fact that 1/4 of the world was conquered by Britain
another 1/4 was conquered by France
and another 1/4 was conquered by Spain
Andromediens the British Empire was twice the size of both the French and Spanish empires.
@@yeetspageet6707 Highly doubt lol, french empire was quite big, it's unrealistic to say *twice*
half of Africa was french, part of south america and north america was french, part of asia was french
I'd say it was pretty much the same
Andromediens the British Empire 35.5 million kilometres squared, while the Spanish Empire was 13.7 million kilometres squared, and the French Empire was 11.5 million kilometres squared.
Meaning the British Empire was 2.6 times larger than the Spanish Empire, and 3 times larger than the French Empire.
So no, they were not roughly equal, the British were always leagues ahead.
@@yeetspageet6707 the spanish one is 20.4 not 13.7, the french empire was 13 not 11.5, also the mongol empire was arguably bigger than the british one, and your empire was not a territorial empire it was an explotation empire that's why English didn't stick as the main language in those regions
To be honest english is the main language because the USA not england
Fun fact: Portuguese is the most spoken language in the Southern Hemisphere.
Claro que no
@@shailynplasencio3420 claro que sim. Brazil, Angola e Moçambique.
Claro, pero solamente falar español in Brasil y Portugal.
@@jeromefitzroy do you know what Southern Hemisphere means?
It's still English even though it isn't the most spoken first or native language.
English: i am the international language so i must be the most spoken language in the world !!!
Chinese: *WELCOME TO THE RICE FIELDS MOTHERF*CKER*
Lol
You got that joke very very wrong
Lmao I died
@@turkoositerapsidi Esperanto has no culture
@@turkoositerapsidi why don't u use w ?
I can read, write, speak and understand the following languages:
1. English
2. Spanish
3. Portuguese (if you don't use too much slang)
4. French (if you go slowly when you speak it)
Learning:
1. Chinese (this one is a hard one)
J'ai le même problème en Français.
It's nice that you can speak any language and being multilingual is great.
Because you will be able to communicate through their heart
Cool but I didn't ask
@@sexton_hale24verinaud66
En tout cas, je comprends ce que tu écris, il te suffit de demander qu'on parle moins vite, personne ne refusera.
Félicitations pour ta bonne compréhension du français !
Bonjour iu bonsoir de France. 🇫🇷
1. मैं हिन्दी बोल सकती हूं।
2. I can speak English too.
3. Je parle français aussi.
Damn gurl mai bhi hindi bol sakta hu,Yo hablo español,шщлрщ дощі володимир 🤞🏻
@Endroholic Which language is the last one?
I speak fluent English and a lot of hindi plus some French
@@cptthunderbolt5084 Oh my God! I am just one year younger than you, and can't even able to speak half of it!
sushen mvs how do you know so many languages at 13
Fun fact: there are more than 100 languages in the Philippines
Edit : there’s a fight in the comments XD I just want to write a comment not start a war
The most spoken I feel are just Tagalog, English, and Bisaya. There are others like Cebuano, Chavacano, and others I don’t know the name of. My fiancée is from the Philippines and actually Tagalog is her third language. Her native tongue is Bisaya, then she learned English in private school, and then she learned Tagalog mostly from watching tv and going to Manila to work.
@Nationalist Baller yep no country in world can match India's numbers😂.united we live💪
Nationalist Baller Actually there uses to be 1000 languages but they were lost T^T
Nationalist Baller so Not really a fail moment, maybe like a Sad moment
We have more in India
Bengali is mostly spoken in the bengal region.... Which is:
India: West Bengal, Tripura and barak velly of Assam,
and Bangladesh
+ Jharkhand and Andaman and Nicobar islands
@@learnmore3665 yes
Hello everybody, I am a small TH-camr and made an interesting animated comparison video of the world's 100 most spoken languages of the world with bar graphs, if you enjoyed this video, I bet you would like that too :)
th-cam.com/video/ZusQ0DLn8Hw/w-d-xo.html
Cheers
When the video counted Bengali speakers, he only counted the Bangladeshis. Including the West Bengalis and others in India, there are more Bengali speakers than Arabic.
In triprura there are many bengali which is also call as refugge 2ho inter illegally
"That is because the world consumes a lot of entertainment in English"
*Me an Indian, watching this video*
"ThAt'S Not tRUe"
Okay mr cow. Where’s my tea?
USA: we make the biggest part of world entertainment.
Bollywood exist: really ?
@kr tu "English speaking countries, especially the US, make up some of the most important and affluent markets in the world"
*China, Japan and Germany want to know your location*
I'm joking
@@stantorren4400 are you asking for tea from mr cow? Really? What an idiot you are.
Real Human No it’s that the British empire got a lot of leaves for tea but also, in Hindu tradition, cows are very sacred
I am a native speaker of English and French. I have reached proficiency in Dutch and Spanish thanks to high-school and college. As of right now, I am studying 5 languages Italian, Portuguese, Hindi, Arabic with my main focus language being Japanese.
I have a question if I was born in the US and English is my first language does that mean I'm a native English speaker lol
im dutch
If you learn hindi
You can automatically speak urdu
Official language of Pakistan
Hello, I would like to know what tools you used to learn Spanish. Thanks for any help!
I was born and raised in Brazil, moved to the US when I was 10, so I can speak Portuguese, English, and Spanish.
8:55 "especially when compared to its main rivals, spanish and chinese"
Me: now i know whats in #1 and #2
ˋ…replaced German in the top tenˋ
Me: Sad agressive sounding German Noises
I'll learn and add it to in top ten
"Sad agressive sounding German Noises" -> also known as "words in German" hahaha
My mother would say that German is angry English when teaching me.
You don't have to use 'aggressive' when you have 'German' already in your mind! I'm sorry if you're offended by this but you guys kind of sound slightly angry when you speak.. ehe.
German has about 30 million native speakers more than french🤔
@@impe898 We're not talking about native speakers, this video is talking about the 'Most Spoken Languages in the World', not 'Languages With Most Native Speakers'. 🤔
Everybody: I speak 3 languages.
Me: I speak with the mouth
You mush be from the USA
I speak Hindi, English the most and a know a but of Sanskrit, Japanese and French!
@@manjushreesrivastava6929 wow sana ol
@@manjushreesrivastava6929 I can speak, understand, read and write hindi punjabi urdu english sanskrit Bengali Tamil arabic and greek fluently
Lmao
As a Bangladeshi spekaing Bangla as mother tongue,
I also am fluent in English.
Side by side I can speak, read and understand Japanese (still learning, maybe beginner in N3... around that level), and I can understand hindi and can speak also. 🇧🇩🇧🇩
i speak brazilian portuguese, and it's good to know that we are on this list
All Portuguese is on the list, not just Brazilian.
@@lonestarr9751 Brazillian Portuguese is the most spoken Portuguese, if it wasn't for Brazil, probably Portuguese wouldn't be in this list
Virto obviously, the same is truth of English and Spanish hahaha these languages are widely spoken thanks to European countries ex-colonies.
But your Family name is German ;)
@@LHollan fuck Europe the colonies are better than colonizators
Should I turn "we speak China" into a t shirt?
General Knowledge yes
Yes
Definitely
General Knowledge yez
🅱️ecc yeah
I don't know who told people that Arab dialects are that different, I can understand all of the them except maybe for Morocco's. Besides that, all arabs speak the formal Arabic and its the same for everybody. it's used in the media, in books, schools and official cases.
Betrayer Arabs....
I didn't quite understand it either, all Arabic speakers can speak to each other without any difficulty if they use Standard Arabic.
Sea Shell even with dialects we can understand each other
My father is from Lebanon and I from Spain and my father can not understand the morrocain but the another's can
So why you still not organised in to an "Arabic empire"? Not with that crazy islamic ideas, nobody in the world will allow you to do that, if you will not be capable to prosper peacefuly, but more civilised way. You all already speak the one language.
3:05 the case with the japanese writing systems is *not* that you can write it _either_ in hiragana _or_ in katakana _or_ in Chinese characters (which I think might have been the impression that you got), but rather, their writing system is a combination of all three systems. hiragana and katakana are syllabaries, they represent the pronunciation of a word similar to an alphabet, but you couldn't just use them since JP doesn't use spaces and there are a lot of homophones, especially with words derived from Chinese (in medieval times). Chinese characters, called Kanji, are a logography, so they represent a meaning rather than a pronunciation, and often in Japanese a noun or the root of a verb or adjective is spelled with Kanji and then grammatical endings like with verb conjugations, as well as words like grammatical particles are spelled in hiragana, and katakana is mainly used to spell the pronunciation of words borrowed from foreign languages (in modern times) like English.
You should consider applying a hi-pass filter (at around 400 Hz) on your audio track to get rid of those annoying "p" pop sounds.
Thanks for the tip! I'll try doing that for the next video. I use a pop filter and the video editing software implements a compressor plugin automatically, but maybe it's not enough
@@General.Knowledge Yeah those tend to leave the low end pops, anyway thanks for answering and great videos!
This video/channel is garbage
"Japanese use two languages, and sometimes even use Chinese characters"
This is misleading. The majority of written text uses Kanji and hiragana, with Katakana used for phonetics and foreign borrowed words. To say Japanese "sometimes" uses Kanji (which has changed significantly from Chinese btw) is a vast understatement
@i wonder if you're reading this This is a video about languages so...you should expect it.
@@ReallyRandomMe he said "sometimes they use chinese characters" but it's not true. Kanji (which only have few similarities to chinese characters) is used the most then hiragana then katakana.
@@ReallyRandomMe i know all of that. I'm learning both japanese and korean. What i said was that most of kanji is no longer the same with actual chinese characters because there are lots of kanji that doesnt hold the same meaning to the chinese counterparts anymore. It is derived from it but now it doesnt mean that if you know chinese then you can now read all of the kanjis as well. I have a chinese friend and we both compared chinese and kanji characters and a majority of similarities are only the basic ones lile numbers and elements like water, fire, etc.
@@ReallyRandomMe I never said it didnt derive from chinese characters. that's why i said a few similarities since most dont hold the same meaning anymore. That's why its now called kanji and not chinese characters
@@ReallyRandomMe yawa kakapoy ba sig balik2 kasabot naman tana sa akong buot pasabot
I guess “我们说汉语” is more natural mandarin.
Also we Japanese people ALWAYS use Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji (Chinese characters).
Without Kanji, sentences sometimes don’t make sense or would be very confusing.
For instance, the word “kami” has at least 3 meanings.
神 means gods, 髪 means hair and 紙 means paper.
The hardest part of learning Japanese was the kanji. I don't know why, it just always confused me.
@@angryfilmgamer570 what do you mean you don't know why? You struggled to learn it because is the hardest part of the Japanese language hahaha
abolish kanji or be part of Great China
кайцарь каталонский lol, why should they listen to you
WOW I didn't know that
thank you for the information :D
Languages I can speak
1) Bengali/Bangla 🇧🇩🇮🇳
2) English🇬🇧🇺🇲🇨🇦🇦🇺🇳🇿
3) Hindi🇮🇳
4) Urdu 🇵🇰🇮🇳
5) German/Duetche🇩🇪🇦🇹🇱🇮🇱🇺🇨🇭
6) Esperanto🌐
Learning
1) Arabic🇸🇦🇰🇼🇦🇪🇧🇭🇶🇦🇰🇼🇮🇶🇸🇾🇯🇴🇪🇬🇱🇾🇩🇿🇲🇦🇸🇩🇹🇳
2) Assamese/ahomiya 🇮🇳
Do you speak spanish?
@@LorePRomeroSalavarria no
@@izimations Si sabes inglés el español no te va a costar nada de aprender. Y si además de inglés sabes árabe (el español tiene bastantes palabras árabes) más fácil aún. Además con el español puedes comunicarte con portugueses y aprender rápido cualquier otro idioma romance.
Cool I am similar, I can speak
1) 🇧🇩 Bangla
2) 🇬🇧 English
3) 🇸🇾🇱🇧🇵🇸 Arabic (Levantine)
4) 🇫🇷 French
5) 🇮🇳 Hindi
Learning 🇺🇦 Ukrainian
I’m a Russian who knows English learning Spanish.
I'm a Filipino who knows English, tagalog, Hiligaynon and a little bit of chinese, and learning french
@@lsjaowhwbkwhwksha5926 spanish would be easier and would help wit French
@@lsjaowhwbkwhwksha5926
Your name is Spanish. All FIlipino names are spanish: Juliana Jacildo, Corazón Aquino, Rodrigo Duterte, Imelda Marcos, Manuel Quezón, Emilio Aguinaldo, José Laurel, Sergio Osmeña, Elpidio Quirino, Carlos García, Fidel Ramos, Gloria Arroyo, Ejército Estrada, Benigno Aquino.
You should know spanish too and where your names come from.
Learn portuguese.
@@RGalindoM Corazón Aquino
I can speak:
-Romanian🇷🇴
-Spanish🇪🇸
-English🇬🇧
Romanian is close to Spanish
@@majesuhernandez3965 yeah I know, I can speak them both
@@dari1510 Are you Romanian?
@@majesuhernandez3965 yeah, but I lived like 10 years in Spain
@@dari1510 Sweet! Romanians blend in so quickly wherever they go.
"The large speakers out of Japan is USA, Brazil, and Philippines"
Indonesia Weebs: NANI?!
The only Japanese word that I know the meaning is nani (it means *apa* in Indonesian and *what* in English right or am I wrong)
@@twocraftingbunny1792 It's accurate
@@AliansyahKevin :)
@Sebastian Paredes It's not about that
@Sebastian Paredes Neverminf
Turkish is spoken almost 135M people in the world. 86M in Turkey, 10M in Azerbaijan, 25M in Iran, 4M in Iraq, 2M in Syria, 1,5M in Balkans, 5M in EU.
Yo soy Filipino pero entiendo y hablo español un poco😊 Glad to hear es en numero dos.
Espero que algún día Filipinas pueda volver a tener español como uno de los idiomas oficiales ✌🏻🐼😊
¡Qué guay que entiendas el español! No mucha gente sabe que Filipinas fue parte del Virreinato de la Nueva España con capital en la Ciudad de México. Los filipinos siempre serán nuestros hermanos hispanos de Asia.
Man, I would love to see philippines speaking Spanish again, I encourage you (as colombian and Spanish speaker) to keep practicing Spanish and to try to spread it more across your homeland.
I'm sure we both know its Spanish influences.
Jacel Hanna hablas tegalo?
@@juandiegoparales9379 No way! I don't want to speak the slaver's language
8:50 *You can feel the power of colonization and fancy hot water with a leaf floating through your vains.*
You must be depressed
But not in your "veins?"
CoLoNiZAtIon, you think UK was the only country that colonized or what lmao.
Vikings were the first to find Americas.
But ofc let's take it to the 1500's as is when the first colonizations started.
1492 - Christopher Columbus(Italian which actually colonized as spanish) bumped into the americas and started to colonize central america.
1500 - Pedro Álvares Cabral(Portuguese) arrived in south america, started to colonize brazil.
1607 (About one century later) UK arrives at his best in north america to colonize us.
So I guess that power of colonization isn't the best lel. Unless you're talking about every other old world region that everyone knew about.
Stupid dick head
🏴🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🏴🏴🏴
English is easy to learn
Cries in phonetic inconsistency
French has joined the chat 😈
@@josee-annejoly6896 French is not as crazy as English.
I don't know... But I speak both and French has a ton of silent letters, exceptions all over the place, weird grammar rules and a ton of diphtongs. Just look at how many ways you can write the sound "o"...
@@josee-annejoly6896 True enough. But I can pronounce a French word without knowing it because I know when certain letters should be silent. For English, it is impossible usually. The pronunciations are close to random.
@@tailiu223 I can speak both but I hate them both because I wasted my childhood (je peux les parler mais je déteste ces langues. Ils ont gâché mon enfance)
Edit: imma try to find a new hobby which is useful.
These are the language I know
🏴 English
🇪🇸 Spanish
🇫🇷 French
🇮🇹 Italian
🇵🇹 Portuguese
🇵🇭 Filipino
I'm Filipino but I don't know much Filipino words.
Dont forget MELAYU most spoken = indonesia,malaysia,brunei,singapor,timor leste, south philipines, ducth immigrant indonesia, suriname, australia, thailand south
orang filipina kehilangan jatidiri
filiphinoan and not even know Bahasa Indonesia in your entire life, but know 5 european language, i bet something wrong with your life and you must care it!
@@ytrendcheck7453 I only watch English speaking TH-camrs.
@@mrkupal333 u said "i know" its not about what you watch, but your Fckin country to close to Indonesia to close for not even know Indonesian Official language
I got a feeling that in 200 years the US will be speaking a hybrid of english and Spanish
I hope its just straight spanish
@@hanyu_dada why straight spanish lol both english and spanish are from colonialism
I've just remembered B.E.P. jingle: "That night gonna be a good night".
Espanglish
“Cabrówn”...
My native language is Spanish, and whenever I speak English at home my dad starts yelling at me to speak in Castilian/ EN CASTELLANO
Me pasa lo mismo 😢😂
ste men xd
Los insultos mas que todo "madrazos"
Gwynbleidd they don’t understand and yeah they probably don’t like it
Well... It is a way to not let you forget Spanish, specially if you don't live in a Spanish speaking country. I have friends from Brazil living in different countries where they only speak Portuguese at home. It is usually how their children learn it.
Then why isn't German a honorable mention?
exactly.
We have around 30 million more native speakers than french has
Who speaks German (except the germans, austrians and northern swiss) ?
@@michaeld-21 Parts of Luxembourg,Netherlands,belguim and Denmark.
Also parts of Hungary.
Parts of Poland
Most of South Tyrol too
And overall sprinkled around Eastern Europe
Keep in mind Germany alone has over 80 million Citizen
@@Astro_Guy_1 Poland? Where the hell we speak German in some part? I live in Silesia so a region which dialect has a Polish/German origin i mean we speak in polish but with some additions of German worlds like "We are in a(in Polish) zug(Train in German)" so technicly yes but no because we use only single worlds and mix it with Polish and even some Czech also ive been in almost every part of Poland excluding Podlachia which is near the Lithuanian and Belarusian border so i don`t count it as a German speaking one in any scenario.
because french is a common second language
The title should be "The Most Native Spoken Languages"
Honorable mention french: 76million native speakers.
100mio+ native german speakers are we a Joke to u ?
Naja man muss halt sagen das deutsch quasimur in deutschland gesprochen wird und in Österreich/Schweiz und nicht auf der ganzen welt wie französisch
Johan Stöve es geht hier ersten um die Muttersprachler sprich die deutsch als erste (Muttersprache) haben, wo Deutschland klar mehr hat als französisch und zweitens wird deutsch in ganz Europa und Nordamerika gerne als 1,2 oder auch 3 Sprache genommen. Klar französisch dominiert dort noch aber eben nur in Gebieten wie Afrika und in der Karabik.
It's an honorable mention because of how much the number grows if you take in account more than the "native speakers" as shown in the final list where it makes it to the 5th place worldwide.
Actually french native is way higher than 76M
Half of Africa does speak french natively as second language
All their bureaucracy is in french, the markets and so on, but they're listed as "non-native" which is rly weird to me
I agree with the honorable mention because French has so many non-native speakers while while German has more native speakers but overall is behind French in total number of speakers.
Actually,the history of languagues is also the history of colonization.
That is so obvious.
English works well in India, though even in the post colonial times. They have chosen to keep English since many Dravidian people don't like Hindi, etc.
and civilization
اسلّمووالکوم وابراکاٹو
@@georgeinjapan6583 But other people cannot understand their english because they have the thickest accent ever ahahah
Me alegra que el español sea una de lenguas más usadas en el mundo.
😊
y en el futuro va a ser mas fuerte aun
@@piedrablanca1942 pero en el futuro de algunos países como usa, en el resto del mundo se pierde poco a poco
Piensa a un italiano, el discunriò las Americas pero nadie lo habla afuera italia, disculpenme por mi malo español
No one cares
See as someone who speaks almost fluent French and English, I get the gist of what you’re saying in Spanish without any formal teaching.
Português, español, English, française: makes it on to the list
Rome: *happy Latin noises*
English is Germanic though.
@@marshmellowmoon7990
If you see, almost all the english vocabulary shares from latin origins, it's kinda easy to a Romance speaker learn english cause of this, a channel called LaguageFocus explain it better.
@@shockhs7371 but it’s still a germanic language
@@treeman12815
Of course, our dailly english conversation in almost full of germanics words.
@@shockhs7371
It shouldnt be counted as a latin language tbh.
Japanese uses Chinese characters *sometimes*? Surely you mean all the time.
I'm a native Spanish speaker. I speak English and Japanese fluently, and have picked some French and Mandarin over the years. Currently trying to learn Cantonese because my girlfriend is from Hong Kong.
I don't know why he said sometimes. Possibly a misunderstanding based on not enough research? Kanji isn't even the same as Chinese anymore. The characters have changed visually, and are different in usage
Yeah, I think most words in Japanese use Kanji so "sometimes" is a huge understatement
cantonese I feel like hs a lot of sounds like Singapore, im a native cantonese speaker and say so many sounds its kinda ridiculous
Where do you live? I'd love to become multilingual in the near future. Hablo español y tengo un nivel bastante elevado de inglés (~C1). Ahora estudiando coreano, italiano y quiero retomar el francés (:
Falantes de português se manifestem, sei que estão aí kkkkk
Kkkk
kek
Sup homie I'm Brazilian too
Toma no cu todo dia isso kkkkk
Opa kkkk
Hey guys! My favorite language is Spanish :) I speak Portuguese, Spanish, English, French, Romanian and Polish. Learning German, Arabic, Russian and Mandarin! Peace out
Very impressive...Español is also my favorite language
Which is your native language?
@@philipuslll portuguese. He has a brazilian name and a portuguese surname and put portuguese 1st
Did someone realized the thumbnail "我们说中国" actually means we say China not we say Mandrin?
Languages:
Spanish (lived in spain 15 years)
English (u study in school in spain)
French (u study in school in spain)
Catalán (actually a variant, valenciano) (u study in school in spain)
Vlaams ( been born in north belgium and speak it with family)
Japanese (been living in japan 8 months)
19 years pog
@WRLD actually as being from belgium my french is pretty good, and the japanese i already got a N2 (scale 1-5 5 the lowest) ^^ but ill say that i only speak 5 fluently, true
I've tried to learn at least 7 languages but ended up speaking only 2 because of my lack of motivation, at least I know a little of the other ones and when motivation kicks in it will be easier than learning from zero :p
@WRLD yeah but in spain normally children start learning English since they're 2-3 years old to 16/18
I love your videos, and answering your question I speak Portuguese (my native language) and English. And I'm studying German now.
Carlos Vinícius
Tja, ich wünsch dir viel Glück dabei.
@@vonKraehe Danke
Legal
Viel erfolg
Hablo Inglés
Je parle espagnol
I speak french
Amo foreing langues
Mon dieu, esto is actually a putain dolor of cabeza
Ils sont the idiomas que I hablo
Azerbaijan,turkey,north cyprus,kazakhstan,türkmenistan,kyrgyzstan these countries speak in TURKISH and 150m+ people!?
> 10:51 "Pu-Ton-Ghuwa"
It's "Pu-Tong-Hua", for those who are curious/bored.
> 10:57 "Guo You"
It's "Guo Yu", the 'u' sounds similar to the German 'ü'.
Also, what's with the thumbnail's "我们说话中国"? XD
"We speaking China."
It should be "我们说中文/普通话/华文/华语". (Depends on the individual/nationality)
那個"我们说话中国(We speak China)"算是一個梗吧
世界上最难的事情可能就是叫老外中文了hhh
"@i wonder if you're reading this"
I am.
Eh, since there's a "jk", I'll let it pass XD
@i wonder if you're reading this
?????What?????
Can you make a video about Slavs?(Russians, Ukrainians, Slovaks, etc.)
I'm not Slav but this is an excellent idea!! - except you know the same old guys will trash whatever you do
@ftarno, oczywiście
@ftarno Dont comment in Polish under an english video
Russians aren't slavic but assimilated finns/turks
@@supergalo4135 Russia has many Uralic and Turkic peoples, but slavic Russians are still the majority.
I'm Timorese, l can speak English
EU posso falar Portuguese
Saya bisa bicara bahasa Indonesia.
No Timor Leste tem muitas pessoas que falam português??
nem todos, apenas que cerca de 30 % dos timorenses falam portugues.
@@marquesvcenti1882 já é um bom número, á percentagem está aumentando??
Não é portuguese é português but you are very good.
@@guilhermedinis2285 pode ser q eles falem assim lá
I am speaking
Kannada(ಕನ್ನಡ )
Hindi
Telugu
English
LOVE FROM INDIA
🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
Do you speak spanish?
Mostly, I speak Malay/ Indonesia language but learn English as my secondary. I also learn French, Mandarin, Arabic and Japanese as my tertiary. I love to learn other languages as I want to communicate with foreigner.
Why u ignore Indian languages? There r nearly 20 official languages in India.
I speak English and spanish.
Yo hablo ingles y español.
Hablo espanõl,
Falo português,
Je parle français (natif),
I speak English
Я немного говорю по-русский
Ivienen 246571 Igual, twin
Ivienen 246571 i understand it even tho im not spanish or english
I speak, portuguese(mother) german(native) castellano, english e a petit peu françes, je habite en suisse. I aunque un pocotino italiano. O que que tu queres mais? Une folhe paq sqip. Ben türkje conoshion.
Bien por ti super arriba el inglesyespañol
Born in the US grew up speaking Spanish and then English
Same but i was speaking english then spanish lol
The US is a cool place for languages. Before WW2 people were born speaking German and could go their whole lives not speaking English. But because of the hatred of Germans during the war most German speakers stopped speaking and now it’s only really the Amish communities that still speak “Pennsylvania Dutch” which is really a type of German not Dutch
Inquisitormaster Did The Same Thing!
Build the wall :D
Alienated Alien That’s some dumb shit
Punjabi, Bengali, Hindi/Urdu, Portuguese, Russian, English & Spanish; these 7 language out of 10 (top ten) comes from Indo-European language family. French and Marathi, other two major language are also from the same language family.
Urdu is the national language of Pakistan!!! Should've added Pakistan in that map too if you combined Hindi and Urdu...
#pkmkb...
@@kartiksolanki5400 india ki maa ka bhosda
@@kartiksolanki5400: #pkmkb ✌️
Its about native speakers, when it comes to native speakers only 7 percent of pakistan speaks that languahe
Vive la France 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
I speak french, English, Spanish, arab and I’m learning Italian
Yasmine - Life and Travel
Good for you! :)
تحيا ليبيا والمغرب والجزائر وتونس ^_^
I speak english, chinese, filipino, and im learning spanish
That’s amazing! I speak English, some French, and very little Dutch and Italian, but looking towards learning more :)
Do you know Tamil 🙂
I can speak English
Yo puedo hablar Español
Também eu posso falar Português
你好(⊙o⊙)🤭👍
Kiwy Cale I understand all of these😂
tio dá uma moedinha aí
Thanks to google translate
Grâce à Google Traduction
शुक्रिया गूगल ट्रांसलेट
شكرا لترجمة غوغل
תודה לתרגום בגוגל
Google மொழிபெயர்ப்புக்கு நன்றி
On the last one it's says "Hello" not "I can speak chinese(mandarin)" XD
@@nuck477 Não véi, si fude que até eu tô querendo!
I love this video. Being German myself, I learned English, Latin and French at school. I'm somewhat of a language junkie, so afterwards I treated myself with Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Finnish, Afrikaans and Indonesian. I know, some of these languages are spoken by rather few people compared e. g. to English or French, but learning them is real fun, and it's gratifying meeting people e. g. from Norway or Iceland goggling at you when they hear you talking to them in their own tongue instead of English. It's good to have a lingua franca like English that nearly everyone understands at some degree, but you shouldn't neglect all those other interesting and beautiful languages around the world that make life and mankind so rich. Learning and using foreign languages gives you the chance to not only communicate with people, but to reach their hearts and souls.
Nice!
9:29 (on the map) Equatorial Guinea: Am I a joke to you?
Hello! I'm from Brasil so I speak Portuguese
Um beijo do Brasil
Olà ! Aprendo como falar português, estou francês, beijo do Paris :P
@@rippergraphistandgamemaker2368 Ficou meio errado em grafia, mas deu pra entender e você não falou nada com duplo sentido tipo pão (correto) e pao (incorreto, e obsceno na pronúncia)
Ended up a bit wrong grammar wise, but still possible to understand and you didn't say anything with double meaning like pão (correct) e pao (incorrect, and obscene when pronounced)
do you also speak spanish i heard that brazilians can speak portuguese and spanish, some brazilians
@@frnciisx it's actually just a stereotype but yes I do take Spanish classes in school cause it's originated from Spain
On a separate note if you speak portuguese and mix with spanish some Brazilian might understand, but it's actually quite offensive to talk in Spanish straight off the bat just try and look for someone that knows a second language, that happened to me 3 years ago I helped a lost chinese tourist girl get to her rented apartment
@@ValenteXD i see many brazilians who speak portuguese and spanish so i was just asking.
thanks
My language is தமிழ்( tamil )
My language is বাংলা (Bengali)
Very cool
дцьцвщаткжызхфцтвзйжюыызыбы
فارسی
Naanu bro
11:06 Chinese characters aren't really more "ancient" than many other scripts. Just like other scripts, they have changed over time, so the characters that were used in Old Chinese for example look very different from the current ones, and other scripts like the latin script also ultimately derive from very ancient scripts
Great video! Congrats!!
Eu falo português (nativo)🇧🇷
I can speak English 🇬🇧
Yo puedo hablar Español 🇪🇸
Je parles français aussi 🇫🇷
Ich kann auch Deutsch sprechen 🇩🇪
Parlo un po d'italiano🇮🇹
Obrigado, thank you, gracias, merci, danke, grazie mille.
Why the flag of Brazil and not the portuguese?
@@JoaoSilva-ko2bk because Brazil has the majority of Portuguese native speakers of the world
@@filipeborgesidiomas well...
I speak English 🇺🇸
@@JoaoSilva-ko2bk that's great! I think it's the same when you think about English language. Almost everyone relates English to United States even knowing that English came from England.
@@filipeborgesidiomas well but as we think and associate the English language at UK, you could associate the portuguese language to the origin country , Portugal, as I do
Your map for bengali language is wrong. You should have included the Indian states of West Bengal and Tripura.
Also in case of Hindi/Urdu you should have included Pakistan.
@@TheNTDote Tripura because the medium of education there is bengali.
IKR.at least west Bengal should have been added.
@@ABHISHEKGHOSHfcb refugees
I am fluent in 3 of the top 10 most spoken languages.
Urdu/Hindi
Punjabi
English
The thumbnail says "We speak China."
It should say 我們會說中文。
Ooooooo 繁体字
Yeah try simplified chinese, which he is using. I myself do not understand traditional
LOL WUT 我们会说中文
@@chrisding1976
I learned traditional before simplified, and I prefer traditional
Sure
China #1
I can fluently speak Bangla 🇧🇩 and English 🇬🇧 language. I'm learning spanish-language 🇪🇸. ♥ Also I'm able to understand Hindi🇮🇳/Urdu🇵🇰 a bit.
Damn!
I have some bangali friends who taught me "khanki magi and khankichele,"
@@zobr0s77 haha! Where are you from? Those two slags have different fan base 😅
@@zobr0s77 🤣😂😅 LMAO
@@zobr0s77 O my dear!!These are obscenities words in "Bangla" language.
@@zobr0s77 Omg 🤣🤣🤣 Not your friends teaching you curse words- 💀💀💀
I can speak English 🇺🇸
Puedo hablar español 🇲🇽
한국어를 말할 수 있어요 🇰🇷🇰🇵
Je peux parler un peu de français aussi 🇫🇷
But I want to learn Arabic next
That's wonderful and if u want to learn Arabic take careful about your Bern OK it's not that easy ... and sorry if I have a mistakes about my dictation :)
English🇨🇺
Va a ver un español que pusiste la bandera de México en vez de la de España y le va a dar un infarto 😂
I speak Arabic and English
@@irvincabello7674 yo lo acabo de ver y me he quedado igual 🤣 y no pasa nada es porque sera de ahi, lo único que confundira a los extranjeros y se empezaran a creer que España esta en América🤣 (de hecho ya pasa, sobre todo en eeuu) 🤣
I can speak 3 languages:
-🇧🇷 Portuguese (my native language)
-🇪🇸 Spanish
-🇬🇧 English
-🇯🇵 Japanese (learning)
So you´re able to speak to 1 billon people in their mother tongue, pretty impressive.
Great vid! Quick note: in your thumbnail you wrote “我们说话中国” which doesn’t really mean anything. It translates as “we speaking China.” You might have meant “我们说中文” or “我们讲中文” which both mean “we speak Chinese.” Hope that helps!
thank you
I blame google translator! But thanks for the correction :)
對啊。
We speaking china now boys
He also could have written "我们说汉语" to say "we speak Mandarin"
Like se falas Português. ^_^
Kk eae men
eu sei um pouco portuguê
Um poco
No, no falo portugues
Português do Brasil rapa
I speak Arabic, French, English, Russian, Korean
I speak almost the same, french is my main language, Arabic because I am Morrocan and English because, well english is almost somthing necessary to know, except that I am still learning Russian and that I don't speak Korean
هلا والله
@@miirajy4731 I non-non-non **plays mario theme**, I speak [DATA EXPLUNGED]
@@mustafajouda4411 زسل الله؟
¿OH?؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟
A correction to "sometimes Chinese characters" on Japanese - no. Kanji is similar to chinese, but it is a Japanese writing system. Most verbs and words are written out in Kanji, with the exception of Kana [foreign non-chinese words] and particles/tenses/formalities. You need to know all three to understand written Japanese, but it is entirely possible to write only in hiragana and katakana, it'd just be weird and difficult to communicate.
Edit: A side note: While texting, Japanese people do not use Kanji - it'd be too hard. So they just use Hiragana/Katakana
Equatorial Guinea also speak spanish, should be on the map.
Agree
It is mentioned
I'm American, native language is English, second language is Spanish, I'm also working on Japanese and French.
Bien chaval, sigue así.
Such a great video! I am native in Serbian, but English is my second language. I also speak Norwegian and Portuguese🇷🇸🇬🇧🇳🇴🇧🇷
Nebojsa Utvic nossa, você nasceu aonde?
@@hueytlahtoani1304 Eu sou Sérvio. Mas vivi na Noruega nos últimos 4 anos. Eu estou no Brazil agora 😊
Nebojsa Utvic que legal, é bem raro achar um estrangeiro que sabe falar português
@@hueytlahtoani1304 é verdade. Meu português não é perfeito mas eu posso conversar. Além disso, estou aprendendo mais todos os dias
@@hueytlahtoani1304 aliás, eu compartilho minha experiência no Brasil no meu canal😊🇧🇷
Another reason English is dominant in the world is due to its use in academic circles; over 90% of academic "papers" are written in and presented in English.
I'm fluently a bilingual native speaker of both Spanish and English.
Ok amigo
if you're 'fluently' a speaker of English I sincerely doubt that you're native :p hihi. but. great! both awesome languages.
Your brutal honesty absolutely appreciated! Domo arigato, JN!
😃! 🇺🇸🤝🇯🇵!
🇲🇽&🇺🇸 🤝 🇯🇵!
@@LodiJP Most of native English-speakers are monolingual
In Equatorial Guinea, Spanish is the native language of 98% of its people.
Ahí se habla español?
@@albertocarlosfigueroa9558 si, habla re bien , de hecho hay varios videos
Yes they do speak Spanish believe it or not
I think a video exploring the different dialects of Portuguese would be very interesting, but I'm super biased. Os dialetos são parecidos, mas bem diferentes ao mesmo tempo.
Felizmente, apesar da diversidade dos dialetos, na maioria dos casos a comunicação é feita sem problemas e essa diferença reduz-se na escrita.
Agree 💯
@@copadiamante Acho beeeem mais fácil entender português europeu escrito do que falado... Só digo isso.
Spanish, Chinese (putonghua and Sichuanhua), a little Bahasa Indonesia / Malaysia (this is how to refer to their languages, bahasa means language), a little Thai, a little Hindi, a little Nepali.... when you live in a country, there’s many reasons why you should learn to speak the local language... for me, it was mostly interest- I really, really love learning new languages. In places like China, maybe a huge city like Shanghai has some English speakers, but pretty much everywhere else, no one speaks English, and obviously all signs and menus are in Chinese characters so learning the language was a must. Even if you didn’t try, you’d pick up on important or useful words and expressions. Here’s a funny little thing I’d like to say, it relevant ...once I learned the characters for “massage” I was pleasantly surprised to see that there are little massage places EVERYWHERE! I couldn’t believe how many there were up and down the streets around our apartment. Before I just saw signs, and since I didn’t know the characters I didn’t really pay much attention to them, and never noticed how prevalent they were. Lol upon learning, boom! They’re everywhere! Lol
Edit to add..I forgot I learned some German in uni! I had one elective left and I could choose anything I wanted! So I took German, while also taking more advanced Chinese!
“But aren’t you going to confuse them?” Asked several people
Me: lol “definitely not”
:)