Thank you guys so much for the support throughout 2022. I can’t wait to film more interesting videos for you guys in 2023! Last but not least hope you guys have a wonderful holiday!
Same, even though English is my first language (and sadly the only language I know, but I’m working on learning other languages!), I still struggled with the word ‘Wednesday’ until I was like, 8 years old lol
9:59 That is a phenomenal attempt. She clearly knows her English quite well given that she spelled champagne (a French word btw) exactly phonetically correct.
"Do you speak English?" "Yes" "Spell Restaurant (a French word) Spell Godzilla (a Japanese word) Spell Sushi (a Japanese word) Spell Champagne (a French word)"
This was so fun to watch! 🥰 To be fair, "champagne" is a French word (the drink gets its name from the Champagne region in northeast France, where it's made) but it was nice to see folks try hard & do their best. You both did a great job on this video, thank you & happy holidays! 🥳
english is a bastard language with most of our words deriving from other languages 😭 which is 1. why english is difficult to learn and 2. native english speakers have an advantage when it comes to learning other languages over non native english speakers. so many of our words look and sound like their original!
English is a difficult and inconsistent language, Wednesday is not said like it is spelled, and restaurant sounds like rest a rount so soemtimes even native speakers can make mistakes.
Japanese language is phonetic, that's why they often spelled the english words the way they sound. Some of them were unsure because of certain rules in English on some cases; silent letters, double letters, and inconsistent pronunciation of some letters. That's why banana may seem simple enough and an example of phonetic, but they felt it's a trick question for a level 2, so trust issue kicked in. One group hesitated if there's double "n" on it and one group thought it might have a letter "u" in there that acts as an "a" 😂
Yeah my girlfriend is Serbian and she has the same problem. Every letter only ever makes one sound so written English can be quite hard for her. The rules for written English are very inconsistent so it really is just more about knowing them through experience rather than any particular rules.
I loved the energy of that level 2 proficiency captain! I don't think a lot of the idiomatic banter was translated literally, but you really captured their different cheerful personalities.
As someone who speaks English and writes with it everyday, it’s just surprising to see something that comes so naturally (silent lettering, double letters, and just the sounds of the letters changing through each word) be so confusing for other people who come from different countries , I just forget how stupid our language is sometimes
English is my third language but I’m fluent. It’s really all about when u start learning the language 😅 I for one started learning English since day 1 at school, along with French and Arabic 🤷🏻
I'm an Asian, I think My english is decent enough to be considered "usable" and really the only things I have problems with are the double letters like I can spell words like pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (if that's the full word I don't remember if there's more) with relative ease but the moment the word is something like Mississippi it's just a lot harder like sometimes I can't even spell bizarre (I used to always spell it as bizzare when I was like 5 years old now I know how to spell it but occasionally I spell it as bizzare) and occasionally ( I sometimes spell it as ocasionally idek how haha) so yeah. That's the difficulty of trying to speak English haha, but it really depends on what age you started speaking it, I started speaking it when I was 5 or 6, And that helped quite a bit. (Oh and if there were any spelling mistakes or grammatical errors above, Please do not hesitate to correct me because lately I have gotten worse at english and I'd like it if native English speakers could help me understand it more) Sincerely, Me.
@@ScreamingEmoji I don’t know if this was a typing error, most likely, and since it’s text language it doesn’t really matter, but the idk, was spelled as idek Yet again, I fail with the new slang these days, and I have so much texting errors, so I be not wanna come off as nitpicking
@@ihonestlydontknow7677 It's fine man, You are not coming off as nitpicking. You are correct though, as It is an Abbreviation/Slang. It stands for I Don't Even Know. And thanks for correcting me by the way.
I do not watch this man's posts this much. however when I do, I am filled with a sense of happiness. Where even in a country like a Japan that at times can be serious and maybe strict. There is the soft reminder that we are still all human and as human we can all share a tip and a laugh. It really is beautiful seeing one culture learn about another while wearing a smile and sharing happiness with one another. Or then again I may just be overthinking it.
Those signs at the start had me absolutely pissing myself.. If I ever went to Japan I'd probably just end up laughing the entire time because I saw a misspelled sign, people would think I'm crazy. 🤣
This so cute haha it’s so nice to see them try to speak English especially in their Japanese accent it’s honestly so sweet!! Love this video definitely do more
nah y’all definitely deserve the 200k because your videos are so entertaining that i never want to miss a single one,, like ur literally one of my favorite youtubers fr
Its really interesting that many people have to "write" the letters in the air on their palm in order to figure it out. Lots of good attempts! Even as a native speaker english will stump me on certain words.
Spell Godzilla.. you guys are funny. Even as a native English speaker I would probably mess up spelling restaurant if you caught me out in the street without my spell check 😝
The funniest thing is some English speaking people can't spell these words correctly. I think we take it way too serious sometimes. Thanks for the video 😆😆
It's peculiar. As a non-native English speaker, I actually taught myself the working is these very words by reading them out phoneticall:. Wed-ness-day, rest-a-oo-rant, cham-pag-ne. Despite now being around the top percentile of English skill in my country, and despite majorly using my keyboard typing muscle memory to come up with most spellings, I still sometimes use the phonetic method on those few words.
Wow the way that guy tricked his friends into believing banana has a u, I'm glad they managed in the end. 😅Also if someone gets champagne you can put "psychotic" as the next level ehehe.
There are so many weird rules to English. It also has thousands of words that aren't spelled how they sound. On top of words that are spelled the same but mean different things. On top of words that sound the same but are spelled different and each spelling has its own meaning. Inconsistent ways to make words plural. The main issue of what students learn in a class usually isn't how native speakers talk on the street. English is a beast.
I can see some peple wondering why those japanese can spell "Wednesday" and can't spell "Godzilla " and "champagne". That's because "Wednesday" is the test English word while the others are not as this guy said at 6:59 . We don't pay attention to non-test English word like "Godzilla". You are welcome😉
Both "restaurant" and "champagne" actually comes from French. I am amazed to see that the elementary spelling/reading in English~occidental language are still not acquired. We can clearly see how katakana influenced their reasoning. I think if they had more opportunity to practice their writing skills at school, there would be 2 great benefits : -they can train their writting skill actively. You see and remember much better by practicing than reading -their teachers can clearly see their weaknesses and review some points that were clearly not understood by the students And also... Not gonna lie, the French writting rules are not easy and that's not something you're supposed to know as English learners. Even many English may not know it. In French "au" is read "o" (because why not, it would be too easy otherwise... But I think there is a deepest explanation that I ignore) and before m, b and p, n becomes m. The normal sound is "an" or "en" but it may turns to "am" or "em" under that specific conditions. That's what we are taught in primary school in France but there is not reason almost for Japanese people to know it. But still, their major mistake remains for "sh" instead of "ch". In French, since "sh" does not exist in our language, that appears really obvious... for us 😅
En français je crois qu’il y a une différence de tonalité entre o et au; soit le o ( o grave) et au ( o aiguë ). Il y a aussi eau qui agit comme un long o.
It’s also because English in japanese schools are often taught by Japanese who have Japanese accents. So when teaching the word “restaurant,” they still pronounce it like “resutoran.”
a ton of English words come from french. that's how english works. it's been a fixture of the language for 1000+ years. you can't discount it for where it originally came from
Restaurant and champagne is elementary spelling? What? o_O Or are you talking about other words? But in other words, they almost never made mistakes...
@@YaShoom No no, I wasn't talking about these words, which are hard because you need to know how French works primarily, which is not their case since they are not supposed to know French. So on the contrary, it is logical that they mistake those words. When I was talking about elementary spelling, I was talking about for example "sushi". They spell it "suci" or smth like that (I'm not gonna rewatch the video, but it was this kind of mistake). Like, many of them associated letters that you would not read the same way you are supposed to pronounce it. This is what I call "elementary spelling". Basically, just knowing that this letter and this letter, while associated makes this specific sound. Not talking about trap, only what you should always expect as a result. :)
The thing about silent letters is they were only "silent" because spelling was fossilized as the pronunciation of words was changing. Yes, even things like Knight and Gnome. That happening kind of in reverse is how the ass arse merger happened in American spelling. Because people weren't used to seeing arse spelled since it was considered vulgar, so the pronunciation changed until it was just like the word for the animal, and so the Americans who were first writing it decided it must be the same word.
That one lady rlly said she wasn't confident in her English and then spelt Wednesday and restaurant correctly, I've been speaking English my whole life and I need autocorrect to be able to spell those words right 💀
To be fair to them, most words with odd spellings are loaned/derived from French words, but champagne (the drink) specifically comes from the name of Champagne the place in France, so it's essentially a spelling bee trap tbh. I'm even gonna go as far as to say 1 out of every 3 native English speakers couldn't even spell that right.
"Why they didn't just make the spelling the way they are pronounced?" That's the question i ask everytime i mispelled a word or pronounced word incorrectly
Try this with native English speakers, I'll bet we are as bad at spelling some words as they are at writing some Kanju! English spelling is not the least bit intuative with all of it's weird rules and exceptions and seemingly arbitrary letter combinations! If you have never encountered a word before, you kinda just need to guess! Just pick some obscure words with unusual spellings and watch us fail miserably!
You got a relatively easy one wrong even though you seem very educated. It could also be that your spell checker changed it from the correct one to the wrong one. It's not surprising that anyone has trouble with English spelling as a second language.
You should try it in Greece lmao but idk if it would be fair bc as kids people are forced to take English classes after school or else they can’t get a job
I think shows like Sesame Street would help the Japanese learn English like it did for me!😁 Edit: I had to laugh at "restaurant" because there was a bus driver who would ask us to spell words and that was the one he asked me! I haven't forgotten about it for forty years!
I am an English-as-a-first-language straight-A student with a bachelor's degree in English and I STILL type "restaraunt" and have to go back and move the u nearly every time I write it. So if anyone's ever feeling down about your language skills, your learning, or your usage, quit worrying and have fun. That's what editors are for. If anyone tries to put you down for anything, they're wrong and a jerk.
Thank you guys so much for the support throughout 2022. I can’t wait to film more interesting videos for you guys in 2023!
Last but not least hope you guys have a wonderful holiday!
we’re looking forward to it :))
You too. Merry Christmas Jesse 👍
Restaurant and champagne are French words though....
良いお年を🎍🎉
Champagne is not English it's French that 1 wasn't fair
8:30 How did they spell "Wednesday" with such ease? They even said they weren't confident in their English abilities. I'm thoroughly impressed.
I thought the same! I think because with language learning, days of the week come fairly early
Same, even though English is my first language (and sadly the only language I know, but I’m working on learning other languages!), I still struggled with the word ‘Wednesday’ until I was like, 8 years old lol
English is hard for Asians because it doesn't make sense, not like MATH .LOL
I cant even spell Wednesday
@@liability443 Same, I have no idea how to spell Wednesday.
9:59 That is a phenomenal attempt. She clearly knows her English quite well given that she spelled champagne (a French word btw) exactly phonetically correct.
"Do you speak English?"
"Yes"
"Spell Restaurant (a French word)
Spell Godzilla (a Japanese word)
Spell Sushi (a Japanese word)
Spell Champagne (a French word)"
@@digital-nomad this hahaha..especially godzilla, its their own language, and they say it as 'gojira'
@@digital-nomad To be fair, about 80% of words in English aren't actually germanic, so you could do this all day long if you wanted.
@@magoomania6278 he defo knew how to fk with their heads choosing that as the last word
@@digital-nomad I didn't know Restaurant was a French word before now! Interesting
This was so fun to watch! 🥰 To be fair, "champagne" is a French word (the drink gets its name from the Champagne region in northeast France, where it's made) but it was nice to see folks try hard & do their best. You both did a great job on this video, thank you & happy holidays! 🥳
Isnt Restaurant as well?
@@Tom-el3nm yes it is
english is a bastard language with most of our words deriving from other languages 😭 which is 1. why english is difficult to learn and 2. native english speakers have an advantage when it comes to learning other languages over non native english speakers. so many of our words look and sound like their original!
Well it's also an English word. It's a loanword but it's still English.
@@NicoDoesLP Sushi is also a loanword and so is restaurant and many other English words so it's not really unfair.
I’m American, and you’d be surprised how many adults were born and raised here but can’t spell Wednesday OR restaurant, so I’m thoroughly impressed 😆
Americans when geography and spelling: 😭 💀
English is a difficult and inconsistent language, Wednesday is not said like it is spelled, and restaurant sounds like rest a rount so soemtimes even native speakers can make mistakes.
Actually jewelry is a pretty hard word 😭 but English isn't my first language
Restaurant is pretty simple bc we use that too
@@UnicornBySprinkledude ya sent it twice, idk if you wanna delete the second one
Well restaurant is a french loanword
Japanese language is phonetic, that's why they often spelled the english words the way they sound. Some of them were unsure because of certain rules in English on some cases; silent letters, double letters, and inconsistent pronunciation of some letters.
That's why banana may seem simple enough and an example of phonetic, but they felt it's a trick question for a level 2, so trust issue kicked in. One group hesitated if there's double "n" on it and one group thought it might have a letter "u" in there that acts as an "a" 😂
Yeah my girlfriend is Serbian and she has the same problem. Every letter only ever makes one sound so written English can be quite hard for her. The rules for written English are very inconsistent so it really is just more about knowing them through experience rather than any particular rules.
Dutch, indonesian, malaysian, and japanese has this kind of language. Exactly what they sound.
That reminds me that in some anime they wrote “GAY” instead of “GUY”
@@floptaxie68 That's an honest and innocent mistake XD
Indonesian language is the same but they are way better at english than japanese people somehow
I loved the energy of that level 2 proficiency captain! I don't think a lot of the idiomatic banter was translated literally, but you really captured their different cheerful personalities.
It’s so cute how Japanese people are still happy and laughing even after getting some words wrong aw 😢😢 part 2 please !!
they dont care about the money thats why
@@lemonke5341 not the heated argument in the comments
are they supposed to be mad or sum 💀
Japanese people tend to laugh in awkward situations to lighten the mood so they're just laughing because they're embarrassed
They care more about anime plot twists and not a challenge with insignificant mortals from the human species.
As someone who speaks English and writes with it everyday, it’s just surprising to see something that comes so naturally (silent lettering, double letters, and just the sounds of the letters changing through each word) be so confusing for other people who come from different countries , I just forget how stupid our language is sometimes
Yeah....
English is my third language but I’m fluent. It’s really all about when u start learning the language 😅 I for one started learning English since day 1 at school, along with French and Arabic 🤷🏻
I'm an Asian, I think My english is decent enough to be considered "usable" and really the only things I have problems with are the double letters like I can spell words like pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (if that's the full word I don't remember if there's more) with relative ease but the moment the word is something like Mississippi it's just a lot harder like sometimes I can't even spell bizarre (I used to always spell it as bizzare when I was like 5 years old now I know how to spell it but occasionally I spell it as bizzare) and occasionally ( I sometimes spell it as ocasionally idek how haha) so yeah. That's the difficulty of trying to speak English haha, but it really depends on what age you started speaking it, I started speaking it when I was 5 or 6, And that helped quite a bit.
(Oh and if there were any spelling mistakes or grammatical errors above, Please do not hesitate to correct me because lately I have gotten worse at english and I'd like it if native English speakers could help me understand it more)
Sincerely,
Me.
@@ScreamingEmoji I don’t know if this was a typing error, most likely, and since it’s text language it doesn’t really matter, but the idk, was spelled as idek
Yet again, I fail with the new slang these days, and I have so much texting errors, so I be not wanna come off as nitpicking
@@ihonestlydontknow7677 It's fine man, You are not coming off as nitpicking. You are correct though, as It is an Abbreviation/Slang.
It stands for I Don't Even Know. And thanks for correcting me by the way.
I smiled all way through. The vibes seem so fun. Everyone laughing and having a fun time. Thanks for the video Brotha. I needed a smile today.
Your name is in the cover 🤣
adınız küçük resimde
@@Tia-zk1jz 😂
2:06 "a g?" Lmao, he realized how stupid English is
it's french
I genuinely love seeing how this channel has grown from I started watching about a year ago. Here's to a great 2023 👍
I do not watch this man's posts this much. however when I do, I am filled with a sense of happiness. Where even in a country like a Japan that at times can be serious and maybe strict. There is the soft reminder that we are still all human and as human we can all share a tip and a laugh. It really is beautiful seeing one culture learn about another while wearing a smile and sharing happiness with one another. Or then again I may just be overthinking it.
That was really fun, Jesse and Shota! This should be required viewing by all English language teachers in Japan!
Those signs at the start had me absolutely pissing myself.. If I ever went to Japan I'd probably just end up laughing the entire time because I saw a misspelled sign, people would think I'm crazy. 🤣
If you can read them, most stores actually has misspelling names all over the place lol
No smorkey!! Lol
This so cute haha it’s so nice to see them try to speak English especially in their Japanese accent it’s honestly so sweet!! Love this video definitely do more
Ew delete this.
@@Kazoku4 lol what😭😭😭😭
I like hearing the Japanese try out English. It’s cute to hear them struggle😂❤
@@remirusaikiYou mean having children with their locked-up daughter
@@SkpalTube you just made it weird
The guy at 6:24 was actually SO funny. In English he's hilarious but in Japanese it was even funnier 😂
Yeah, that dude was cool
enstarrie ..
“Yeah some people dont make it this far”
“Such dumbass ”
😂im dead
But didn't he spell B A A N A N A ?? I hear double A 😱
@@GothicGame he just stressed the letter A there. Like D at 7:57
8:36 I DON’T EVEN REMEMBER how to Wednesday😂😂
We need part 2 Jess 😁
Those ladies deserved the money. I'm English and worked in the restaraunt industry for 5 years and I still have to check I spell it correctly
Spell what?
shampain @@alukuhito
first guy really vibing lmao
2:12 🤣🤣 Hey... in all fairness... I was born and raised here in America. Been here all my life and I STILL spell that word wrong! 🤣🤣👏👏👏
nah y’all definitely deserve the 200k because your videos are so entertaining that i never want to miss a single one,, like ur literally one of my favorite youtubers fr
The guy who was utterly devestated at getting godzilla incorrect has my heart😭
Really enjoyed this. Maybe you could make a similar challenge about geography. Fantastic content thanks for sharing
Its really interesting that many people have to "write" the letters in the air on their palm in order to figure it out. Lots of good attempts! Even as a native speaker english will stump me on certain words.
This was so much fun! We need Part 2 plss!!!
This is why I love living in Japan. Such laid back people 😂
We need more of this 😭😭🙌🙌🙌
Spell Godzilla.. you guys are funny. Even as a native English speaker I would probably mess up spelling restaurant if you caught me out in the street without my spell check 😝
I only recently learned how to spell it cuz its written form is basically nonexistent for me, most of the time.
I think if a random youtuber decide to interview me I would panic and forget how to spell anything, forget my own name and even forget what 1+1 is
that's because restaurant is not an english word
The funniest thing is some English speaking people can't spell these words correctly. I think we take it way too serious sometimes. Thanks for the video 😆😆
Love the vibe, love this ❤️😂
Too wholesome! This was so much fun to watch, im subscribing!
"I underestimated this, I didn't think fucking godzilla would come up"
I died laughing at this part lmao
It's peculiar. As a non-native English speaker, I actually taught myself the working is these very words by reading them out phoneticall:. Wed-ness-day, rest-a-oo-rant, cham-pag-ne. Despite now being around the top percentile of English skill in my country, and despite majorly using my keyboard typing muscle memory to come up with most spellings, I still sometimes use the phonetic method on those few words.
Something else peculiar, as a native English speaker I spell those words using the exact same method lol.
man this is by far the best video you've made, I loved it all the way through
I love your vibe bro, you actually have a ton of charisma yourself lol
I just started watching your videos yesterday. Very top quality content and both of you seem to have great personalities. Subscribed!
Dude the stroke on the end when entering the challenge yourself floored me 💀
lmao champagne papi 😭😭 i literally love love ur videos sm they’re awesome, please always make videos for us. ❤️ i enjoy ur content
So cool ! Keep up guys!
this was hilarious, i kept replaying every scene because i was smiling and dying of laughter. keep up the good work, love these types of interviews.
6:18 the fact that u need to check before spelling banana💀💀
Wow the way that guy tricked his friends into believing banana has a u, I'm glad they managed in the end. 😅Also if someone gets champagne you can put "psychotic" as the next level ehehe.
Soliloquy for a 10000 yen challenge haha
Read that as psychic 😅
As a native English speaker i can’t even spell that most of the time
11:50 I like this guy's vibrato as he reads out the vowels, adds some flair
This video was gold😂 Merry Christmas,Jesse🎄
“I didn’t think fucking Godzilla would come up.” They never do.
2:32
"Finar ansar?"
"Yesu."
I can't 🤣😭😭😭
After a while, most of people end up speaking like that...even the grammar order, their special use of some words in English
Its funny how almost all of them write in an imaginary paper.
There are so many weird rules to English. It also has thousands of words that aren't spelled how they sound. On top of words that are spelled the same but mean different things. On top of words that sound the same but are spelled different and each spelling has its own meaning. Inconsistent ways to make words plural. The main issue of what students learn in a class usually isn't how native speakers talk on the street. English is a beast.
I can see some peple wondering why those japanese can spell "Wednesday" and can't spell "Godzilla " and "champagne".
That's because "Wednesday" is the test English word while the others are not as this guy said at 6:59 .
We don't pay attention to non-test English word like "Godzilla".
You are welcome😉
Asking a French word is a dirty trick, I like it.
another reason to hate France
I REALLY like these types of videos. Do more of these english spelling quizzes😂
Wow! The lady who spelled Wednesday correctly is amazing! Some native speakers can’t even spell that one right
This is fun lol ~ i am addicted to hearing all the laughs in this video too cx
Good content I've seen alot of Japanese in English youtubers but very few can actually get Japanese people to laugh
Bro! Thank you for doing this! Im currently learning kanji from japanese, ありとがう!
As a Japanese who speaks both languages fluently, this was so funny
I Just today discovered this channel and I already in LOVE with it!!
Both "restaurant" and "champagne" actually comes from French.
I am amazed to see that the elementary spelling/reading in English~occidental language are still not acquired. We can clearly see how katakana influenced their reasoning.
I think if they had more opportunity to practice their writing skills at school, there would be 2 great benefits :
-they can train their writting skill actively. You see and remember much better by practicing than reading
-their teachers can clearly see their weaknesses and review some points that were clearly not understood by the students
And also... Not gonna lie, the French writting rules are not easy and that's not something you're supposed to know as English learners. Even many English may not know it.
In French "au" is read "o" (because why not, it would be too easy otherwise... But I think there is a deepest explanation that I ignore) and before m, b and p, n becomes m. The normal sound is "an" or "en" but it may turns to "am" or "em" under that specific conditions.
That's what we are taught in primary school in France but there is not reason almost for Japanese people to know it.
But still, their major mistake remains for "sh" instead of "ch".
In French, since "sh" does not exist in our language, that appears really obvious... for us 😅
En français je crois qu’il y a une différence de tonalité entre o et au; soit le o ( o grave) et au ( o aiguë ). Il y a aussi eau qui agit comme un long o.
It’s also because English in japanese schools are often taught by Japanese who have Japanese accents. So when teaching the word “restaurant,” they still pronounce it like “resutoran.”
a ton of English words come from french. that's how english works. it's been a fixture of the language for 1000+ years. you can't discount it for where it originally came from
Restaurant and champagne is elementary spelling? What? o_O
Or are you talking about other words? But in other words, they almost never made mistakes...
@@YaShoom No no, I wasn't talking about these words, which are hard because you need to know how French works primarily, which is not their case since they are not supposed to know French. So on the contrary, it is logical that they mistake those words.
When I was talking about elementary spelling, I was talking about for example "sushi". They spell it "suci" or smth like that (I'm not gonna rewatch the video, but it was this kind of mistake).
Like, many of them associated letters that you would not read the same way you are supposed to pronounce it. This is what I call "elementary spelling".
Basically, just knowing that this letter and this letter, while associated makes this specific sound.
Not talking about trap, only what you should always expect as a result. :)
6:52 when people from another space-time continuum call you dumb 5:49 🤣😭
5:46 "banana" left the chat 🤣🤣
" If They Can Spell English Words Correctly"
Bro: "Champagne"
That killed me ngl 🤣
Iv been speaking English my whole life and I can’t even spell champagne 😭😭
Champagne is not an English word, it's french.
The thing about silent letters is they were only "silent" because spelling was fossilized as the pronunciation of words was changing. Yes, even things like Knight and Gnome. That happening kind of in reverse is how the ass arse merger happened in American spelling. Because people weren't used to seeing arse spelled since it was considered vulgar, so the pronunciation changed until it was just like the word for the animal, and so the Americans who were first writing it decided it must be the same word.
This is so entertaining and funny.
Thanks for the video and Merry Christmas :)
I love the first guy's English confidence! I hope he keeps studying and practicing^^
That one lady rlly said she wasn't confident in her English and then spelt Wednesday and restaurant correctly, I've been speaking English my whole life and I need autocorrect to be able to spell those words right 💀
This is awesome content man keep it up
To be fair to them, most words with odd spellings are loaned/derived from French words, but champagne (the drink) specifically comes from the name of Champagne the place in France, so it's essentially a spelling bee trap tbh.
I'm even gonna go as far as to say 1 out of every 3 native English speakers couldn't even spell that right.
This is so wholesome
Yeah, I wanna watch gozzila😭💛
I came across with your channel and your videos are amazing, entertaining and informative. Keep it up! 🙌
Ah yes, my favorite food, suci
Hello man I'm your new subscriber I love your videos very much so entertaining a
6:53 man is funny without even trying to be funny lol
This video was really cool I immediately hit the smash button after watching
"Why they didn't just make the spelling the way they are pronounced?"
That's the question i ask everytime i mispelled a word or pronounced word incorrectly
This is hilariously entertaining 😂😂😂 do more
As a fellow Japanese its soo funnny to watch them 😂😂😂😂
Such a great video man thanks for the laughs!
11:41 that tone when hes spelling R-A-N-T
It wasn’t until I started learning Japanese that I realized how hard these must be for native speakers
Imagine he just pulls out the “Supercallifragillisticespidocious”
"I didn't think the fucking Godzilla would come up" 😂😂😂😂
1:52 I'mma leave it to captain Levi
The first guys laugh 😂 I love it!
Knocked it out of the park with this one man! この企画もっとやってほしいです!!
🍙
Am watching this cuz it's fun to watch you speak Japanese, am also learning
Try this with native English speakers, I'll bet we are as bad at spelling some words as they are at writing some Kanju! English spelling is not the least bit intuative with all of it's weird rules and exceptions and seemingly arbitrary letter combinations! If you have never encountered a word before, you kinda just need to guess! Just pick some obscure words with unusual spellings and watch us fail miserably!
You got a relatively easy one wrong even though you seem very educated. It could also be that your spell checker changed it from the correct one to the wrong one. It's not surprising that anyone has trouble with English spelling as a second language.
You should try it in Greece lmao but idk if it would be fair bc as kids people are forced to take English classes after school or else they can’t get a job
7:51 NOO HE WAS SO CLOSE
"Hit the smash button" LOL😂✨
Amazing vid to watch!
Have a Great Day/Night!
When this guy at 1:32 heard the last word and he was like: Champagne! 😂
So fun to watch!
I like how he needs to check the spelling for the answer 😂
End smorking today!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Mr. Smork does not approve
I think shows like Sesame Street would help the Japanese learn English like it did for me!😁
Edit: I had to laugh at "restaurant" because there was a bus driver who would ask us to spell words and that was the one he asked me! I haven't forgotten about it for forty years!
I am an English-as-a-first-language straight-A student with a bachelor's degree in English and I STILL type "restaraunt" and have to go back and move the u nearly every time I write it. So if anyone's ever feeling down about your language skills, your learning, or your usage, quit worrying and have fun. That's what editors are for. If anyone tries to put you down for anything, they're wrong and a jerk.