Since most of them known each other from past videos , it got way more interesting for them use blindfold , good see the funny lady from Georgia back 😄 and also Saba from Hungary
France and Germany always sitting next to each other. We sure do love each other after WW2. The Treaty of Elysée 1966 was the pact. And Founding members of EU Treaty of Rome 1957 🇪🇺🇨🇵🇩🇪
It would be interesting to put Finnish and Hungarian together and see what they think. When I am not paying attention and hear Finnish in the background I always have that moment where I'm like "wait am I having a stroke? Why can't I understand it? Oh it's Finnish." I heard some Finnish people had similar experiences with Hungarian. It has never happened with any other language because I'd just filter it out as something that I don't speak.
Finnish sounds to me if a Hungarian person was very drunk and tried to speak Swedish. Like the noises they make sound Hungarian but the cadence is kinda nordicized lol. But it’s crazy how different our languages r even tho we are in same language group
The reasons for Finnish and Hungarian sounding similar are the following: All sounds the Finnish make can be found in Hungarian (but not the other way around.) The wovels and consonants existing in Finnish are pronounced the same way in Hungarian (not the letters tough, for example Fin Y and Hun Ü are the same sound). Both languages have wovel harmony and both are agglutinative. And both of them stress the first syllable + the long wovels. Side note: for my ears perkele sound like a name for a bird species or smth.
Sophia 🇬🇪 , Anna 🇵🇱 and Svea 🇩🇪 had been on the channel before and the three together on the video but i love how hard was to guess gerogian since isn't so popular and also the polish since mostly are familiar with slavic languages such as polish
Elnézést, de csak 1 honapjá magyarul tanulok, és beszélt magyar nagyon nehez megérteni számomra a videóban felirat nélkül, meg tudnád mondani, mit mondott pls?
@@laralamagadeltuocuore Szia! Örülök, hogy ilyen nehéz nyelvet választottál mint a miénk. Ezt mondja magyarul: "Szóval, nagyon sok helyre szeretnék elmenni, de ezek közül talán Izland lenne az egyik, a másik pedig Bali, mert szeretném látni a sarki fényt, és... Nem is bali, Maldív-szigetek az. Becsobbannék a vízbe az biztos, olyan gyönyörű szép a víz."
Why is everyone arguing about the location of Georgia?Georga is in Eurasia it's part of Europe and Asia too.However, Georgian culture is closer to European than Asian Moreover,The remains of the first Europeans were found on the territory of Georgia .That's why we can say that they are Europeans.
are you that uneducated? geographics play no role. Georgian (ქართული ენა, romanized: kartuli ena, pronounced [ˈkʰaɾtʰuli ˈena]) is the most widely spoken Kartvelian language; it also serves as the literary language or lingua franca for speakers of related languages.[2] It is the official language of Georgia and the native or primary language of 87.6% of its population.[3] Its speakers today amount to approximately four million. Georgian is written in its own unique alphabet. Turks look just like georgians but got categorized in "middle east" with arabs even though we speak a different language and look like georgians. you should learn more about history, genetics and languages. this channel spreads so much wrong information its laughable.
Another reason to argue about Georgia not being European, she got that sweetness you find in Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkey etc.. but not in most of Europe. I don't agree with classifying Georgians as Europeans that's ridiculous. Also Europe a continent of the size we know rn is a recent invention. And Georgians thinking they're European is really absurd, I mean did they look at their history ? They literally share no history with France, Germany, Sweden, or even Hungary.
@@qaimaqyakh2708 It's always hilarious to get history lessons from armchair experts. No one cares, no' s even remotely interested in what you agree or disagree with. We're EUROPEANS. Go yell at the sky...
The easiest was french obviously , french was one of the easiest languages to guess in the world , the hardest is either georgian or hungarian since both aren't so common
Our French language was eventually easy to guess cuz it's beautiful. C'est magnifique et jolie Romance language, really unique one and different compared to Spanish, Italian, Portuguese
The fact that Georgian language is not related to any other language in the world is mad. It indicates so many things, but especially, that it is extremely and unbelievably old.
@@corbendallas827 Interesting I always thought Georgian was a caucasian language and only out liers in that region are Armenian (indo european) and Azeri (Turkic)
@@Ahmed-pf3lg "Caucasian languages" is not a language family, but a geographical grouping, these languages aren't related beside just being neighbors for hell knows how long and exchanging some words and even less influence on each other.
@@BETOETEI’m pretty sure both Hungary and Finland are in Europe. 😂 so they are definitely European languages, but I think you meant they are not Indo-European Languages, which is true. 😊
@@BETOETE Indeed, the Uralic Hungarians, or the Turkic Bulgarians, were originally peoples who migrated from Asia and mixed with the local populations (Slavs, Celts, Hellenes etc.). However, as the kingdoms they founded were based on Christianity, unlike Turkey for example, they are an integral part of European civilisation, which is grounded in Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity.
🇸🇪 and 🇬🇪 sounds interesting 🙂 I've never heard these languages before, so it's something new for me 😄 I have recently become interested in Scandinavian languages, so 🇸🇪 has piqued my interest 👍🙂
If you are a native English speaker, Swedish is clearly very easy to learn. It's rated as top three easiest languages together with Dutch and Norwegian. But it's actually closer to German than English. A bonus is of course that Norwegian and Danish are closely related and very easy to at least read if you know Swedish. And if we speak slowly we usually understand each other. Anyways good luck with your practice if you decide to study it. 😎
One thing i think can be hard is the pronunciation of some words and to use the in the right way. Some words i think of is: Gift, banan, plan. There are alot more but i can't think of everything 😅 But Banan can be both Banana and track depending on pronunciation.
@@hnorrstromEh, no. English and German are both West Germanic languages. The Nordic languages are North Germanic. Norwegian and Danish are understandable to Swedish in writing, and partially/with effort in speech. That has to do with pronounciation, not so much with actual linguistic heritage
Georgia, like Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey, is a transcontinental country, with one foot in Europe and the other in Asia. They're Eurasian countries, geographically and culturally. Georgia, Armenia and Russia are majority Christian countries while Azerbaijan and Turkey are majority Muslim. Georgian is a unique language, not well known or related to any well known language. Armenian is distantly related to other Indo-European languages. Azeri and Turkish are part of the Turkic language family along with Kazakh, Uzbek, Turkmen and Kyrgyz. It's an interesting part of the world.
Geographically speaking Georgia is too eastern to ever be “European”. Also culturally they are very similar to Dagestan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Iran, Syria, Iraq… These countries are not “European” culturally. It’s crazy to consider Georgia closer to culture of Sweden than culture of Syria for example! Syria is much more similar.
Tell me you've never been to Georgia without telling me you've never been to Georgia. Syria? really? the fact that they're geographically close doesn't mean we're similar. we don't consider our culture to be similar to any of our neighbors, let alone Syria, Iraq and Iran, those people are alien to us. @@Ahmed-pf3lg
I have noticed that us Europeans are quite straightforward and either brutally honest or sarcastic in conversations haha. For one example from the video, one person: can you guess my language? everyoen else: no.
Svea seems like she has an extra sensor to detect something that others cant just look when she puts all her attention and receptivity listening to Hungarian and she was right.....very intelligent.
As a Hungarian person, I'd like to informed you that I was f***ing rolling on the floor laughing cuz she talked about going to different countries and don't ask why it's funny.
Igen, gondoltam hogy ezt amit megértettem, de kellett lassítatom a videót nagyon mért nem az anyanyelvem van haha 😂, azért értem a biztos fékezhetetlen nevetést 😂😂😂
I am a native Hungarian but because i only speak that plus English and also understand some very basic French, i could only group their languages into groups such as Slavic, Nordic etc. I cannot tell the real difference between Slovak or Checz or Ukrainian and Russian. Same goes for Swedish or Danish. To be able to pick up on those fine things, i would need to learn some of those languages. And because i am a qualified English teacher here speaking English since i was 10, i can tell the Hungarian girl's English is pretty high level. And she knows a lot about phonetics and phonolgy. Probably she completed her English university studies. Applied Linguistics etc. ❤
1. GEORGIA - its like greek people say, (and internationally) Georgia is a land where ancient greek heros ARGONAUTS sailed; then its name was COLCHIS, (Colchida + Iberia), nowadays cities Kutaisi & Batumi east coast of Black Sea. 2. GRUZIA - its like turkish and russian people say 3. SAKARTVELO - name of country in their own language Georgia was 2. nd christianity country in the world, 1st was Armenia [ Anno Domini 301 ], 3.rd was East Roman (Greek) Empire. Local KARTVELI language has NO CONNECTION to indo-european/indo-iranian, or turkic, or arabic language groups, it belongs to CAUCASIAN group, (kartveli, chechen, ingush, avar, lezgin, dargin, kabardin, cherkess etc - more than 15 caucasian languages) Armenian & greek are distinct languages but close to indo-european group, Azeri is turkic language. Georgian [kartveli] is in caucasian group. In caucasia there are beside armenian - 2 more local languages which are indo-european - ossetins & kurds. (indo-iranian/indo-european) Other are caucasian OR turkic
In Hungary we use both GRUZIA & GEORGIA. GEORGIA is a little bit confusing, because of the US state GEORGIA. Therefore GRUZIA is much more common. Please note, that we in Hungary pronounce the country GEORGIA and the state GEORGIA markedly differently. In case of country GEORGIA we follow and pronounce every letter in it (as it is the general rule in hungarian language). While in the case of US state of GEORGIA we follow the english pronunciation.
This is so nice that they partly understand each other. I did understand many words, I'm from Ukraine and I speak 5 languages. These kind of videos remove borders between the countries 😊
@@ericsalazar3731 I think the theme of the video refers to the languages of European civilisation. Geographically, Europe is a peninsula on the Asian continent, bordered by the Ural Mountains and River and the Caucasus Mountains to the east. However, since the three pillars of European civilisation are Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity, Georgia and Armenia (the first kingdom to convert to Christianity) are two countries that belong to European civilisation, although they are located on the Asian continent. Indeed, the Uralic Hungarians, or the Turkic Bulgarians, were originally peoples who migrated from Asia and mixed with the local populations (Slavs, Celts, Hellenes etc.). However, as the kingdoms they founded were based on Christianity, unlike Turkey for example, they are an integral part of European civilisation, which is grounded in Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity.
The French language is so easily recognizable, distinctive and unique. You hear 2 words and you immediatly know, and it's not just because it's famous. It is just very unique.
because both ekavian Serbian and Slovenian are lacking "ij (iy)" for example "milk" in ekavian Serbian and Slovenian is "mleko" while in Croatian is "mlijeko"
It actually makes sense. A lot of Serbs speak ijekavian but the mainstream dialect is ekavian which is also how Slovenes speak. Besides most Croats don't differentiate as sharply, or at all, between č and ć. It really catches your ear immediately when a Croat nationalist calls you a "ćetnik". It's adorable actually. Like an angry poodle. So to an outsider who's heard both of us speak it can tell the difference if they know what to listen for. As a Serb myself I'd immediately know if someone is Slovenian but I'd have a hard time differentiating between a Croat and a Krajina Serb.
I like how this differs from the American versions of shows like that, where people try to be overly polite and trying to act proper, meanwhile Europeans be like: -So, can you guess my language? -No. 😂😂😂
I was actually surprised when Draga said "Computer", because a Serbo-Croatian speaker myself I was actually expecting her to say "Računar", basically the same as the actual German word for comouter, which'd be "Rechner" with both meaning calculator, but not in the sense of the compact calculator. The word for that'd rather be "Digitron" in Serbo-Croatian or "Taschenrechner" in German with the German one meaning "pocket calculator".
@@BETOETE why wouldn't it be European? Hungarian is not part of the Indo-European lnaguge family. But majority of our words now have roots from Germanic, Slavic and Turkic languages. Nowadays, about 30% of Hungarian is of Uralic origin. Which is why we cannot mutually communicate with Finnish and Estonian.
Georgia is a country located at the intersection of Eastern Europe and Western Asia. It is considered a transcontinental country, with a small part of its territory in Europe and a larger portion in Asia. The capital of Georgia is Tbilisi.
To End This Debate: Is Georgia Europe Or Asia? Country Of Georgia Is Located At The Intersecrion Of Eastern Europe And Western Asia, Georgia Has Territories In Both Continents, Meaning That Georgia Is A Transcontinental Country Just Like Russia, Egypt, Panama And Others. There Are More Than One Variations Of Europe-Asia Borders, There Are 5 Actually, Almost All Of Them Were Made By Ancient Greeks, Some Of Them Place Georgia Entirely In Europe, Some Place It Partially In Europe And Some Place Georgia Competely In Asia, But None Of Them Are Official, In Fact There's No Official Border Which Seperates Europe From Asia, As It's In Fact One Continent Called Eurasia, But Due To Huge Cultural, Linguistic, Historical Differences, It's Reasonable To Seperate Europe From Asia, So Today Most People Consider Them As Different Continents, But Geographically, Europe And Asia Are One Continent. But According To Anaximander Who's Theory Of Borders Is Most Commonly Used, Georgia Is Partially In Europe And Partially In Asia, Some Of Georgia's Northern Regions Lies In The North Of Caucasus, Which Is Indeed Considered Geographically As European Land, But Southern Parts Of Georgia Are Located In Asia, So Conclusion Is That Georgia Is Geographically Located In Both Continents, But Is Usually Regarded As Part Of Europe Due To Cultural And Historical Ties To Europe, That Doesn't Mean That Georgia Has No Ties With Asian Countries, It Just Leans Towards Europe More, It's Also Member Of Council Of Europe And Other European Organizations, Which Proves That Country Is Considered European By Majority Of The Population Of The World, In Fact, Chancellor Of Germany, Olaf Sholdz, Said The Following "European Family Is Stretched From Portugal To Georgia" There Is No Need To Argue About Georgia Being European Or Asian, It's Both, But Is Still Considered More European By Majority Of The People, Country Has Future In EU, And It Has Future In European Continent, In Short Georgia Is Transcontinental, Both Europe And Asia, But Is Considered European, Just Like Russia, Which Is Transcontinental, But Is Considered European By Most People, Same Goes For Egypt, Which Is Transcontinental (Africa/Asia) But Is Still Considered African By Majority Of The People. Me? As A Geographer I Do Consider Georgia European. 🇬🇪🇪🇺
*Me speaking Russian in the UK* Brits: are you Polish? I've had literally dozens of people try and guess my language, and almost all of them said Polish, with not a single one saying Russian for some reason.
@Dangel98 Even fellow romance language speakers confuse Spanish and Italian. And a lot of people confuse Dutch, Danish and German, espeically when they are not from Germanic-speaking countries. So that's just normal. You're being overly negative I think.
The Hungarian girl has quite a strong dialect, I'm pretty sure she lives far away from the capital city, Budapest. I'm curious if I'm right about that or not. :)
Swedish, I was sure of it being Scandinavian, but not 100% on it being Swedish. It sounded soft, so if pushed for a country, I'd probably have guessed Sweden, but I wouldn't have been 100% confident. Hungarian I guessed by process of elimination. Serbian, I knew was a south Slavic language, but didn't know which. Georgian, I didn't get at all (sorry). The rest I knew. I love these videos.
Hungarian girl was visibly uncomfortable when some other girl confused bell pepper with paprika. Hungarians are VERY determined when it comes to paprika.
@@Србомбоница86 ne kadem ti ja jezik i ja sam Srbini to je moj jezik, i isto mislim u sustini, ali da me ne prozivaju da sam srpski nacionalista, eto neka je "naš ili juznoslovenski" mene to ne brine, nemam nikakav kompleks niti mrznju po pitanju jezika koji zapravo svi govorimo odvajkada, ma kako sebe smatrali danas. :) )))
@@goranjovic3174 добро ја сам поносна Српска националисткиња ,ти ради како хоћеш ,само Србија ,само српски језик ,крај приче ,оставите Србе на миру , Југославија је Богу хвала мртва и Србија је једина битна мени,ако ти се не допадају Српкиње и Србија каква јесте ,ти остани на западу ,позз 😊
I enjoy these videos a lot. Please make it easier for us watching to guess as well, eg if it’s only mentioned up in the left corner then I can cover it or ignore it while watching :)
10:44 slower? I'm Georgian and what i heard from that, sofia spoke the slowest for me. And the other languages people was speaking so fast like it was a race or something 😂?
for a regular Latin American person that only speaks English and obviously all the Latin based languages ( I read and understand basic German), Slavish languages besides Russian are impossible to tell apart, don'r even talk about Hungarian or Caucasian languages like Georgian or Armenian.
Geographically Cyprus is located in Asia too, as Georgia. But it is the member of EU and European Council. Georgia is a member of European Council. If we are talking about political map of Europe, both are considered as European countries. So, calm down guys😂
@@SinarNila read once again what i wrote pls😃 What's wrong with Georgian customs?) What do you know about them? btw have you ever been to this country? I 'm curious😂
watching this video makes me wonder about the diversity of languages that would have developed in areas like latin america or africa if the languages there were given more freedom to naturally develop, without the influence of european languages. all these countries are so close to each other in terms of distance and the similarities and differences between these languages are so interesting.
Yes, it's way more harsh than other Slavic (like eastern and southern) Also it uses Latin alphabet, have A LOT of exceptions, and many foreign words. There is some love to vowels and accents.
@@TomAdam2005 Język polski jest najbardziej miękko brzmiącym , delikatnym językiem spośród wszystkich języków słowiańskich . Bardzo ostrfo brzmi język rosyjski
@@aY227all languages have loanwords, this does not only apply to Polish! Nastepny idiota ze swoimi wypocinami, sugerujacy ze polski to same zapozyczenia. Tragedia!😮
I took one semester of French in college, but the language that I understood the most words were when the woman was speaking German, and I knew when Polish was being spoken, because my dad occasionally spoke Polish (it was his first language in childhood), and his sister was fluent her whole life and was married to a Polish guy, so I heard them speak Polish whenever my family visited them in Chicago, and I lived next door to a young couple who emigrated to the US from Poland, he spoke English, but his wife didn't when they first moved in, and I'd help her when she wasn't sure about certain words and phrases after she started to learn English
15:54-15:58 Saba said: "It doesn't sound like Ukrainian, it doesn't sound like *Slovakian*, it doesn't sound like Czech." She didn't say it doesn't sound like Slavic
Is it bad that I have a crush on Cajsa? Incredibly gorgeous and elegant and chill af. Also, I wonder if one day you guys manage to actually turn on all the mics you stick on your participants' collars.
Apart from the Georgian I can recognise all without any problem. Not even difficult. The Swedish of course could have been mistaken with Norwegian and the Serbian might be the other “Serbo-Croatian languages”, but I got them all now
Draga says pirinač, and the Hungarian girl is like "definitely NOT Croatian". Every other word she said exists in Croatian language because it's the same language 😂
i guess for non Serbo/Croatian speakers these two doesnt sound the same as Draga is speaking ekavian dialect of Serbian which is lacking of "iy" sound while Croatian has plenty of "iy". Slovenian on the other hand is similar to Serbian in that aspect
@@colinafobe2152 Exactly, I'm Hungarian and I have colleagues from Croatia, Slovenia and Serbia and you can hear the differences mainly in Slovenian, but you can also hear between Serbian and Croatian
@@wenzi2283 i can imagine. I am from Banat (northern Serbia) and even i can tell if someone is from what region of Serbia by how they talk (accent) and even can tell if Croats are from Slavonia, Zagreb, Zagorje, south Dalmatia, Rijeka or Split. Despite mutual share of vocabulary that we have, South Slavic languages are very melodic and suitable for regional differences
I would guess Swedish just because of one word - dator, we use similar - "dators" - for computer in Latvia. German and French are obvious, except I wouldn't guess German from which region was spoken. Hungarian - I would guess just because it doesn't sound like other European languages I know. Polish is obvious because it belongs to Slavic family and has a very distinct pronunciation from other Slavic languages. I guess Serbian would be hard to guess (except that it is Slavic), I don't know exactly how southern Slavic languages sound. But in Georgian I know just one word - gamarjoba, and she said it a few times, so obviously - Georgian. 😊
For Swedish, I would know that it is a Germanic and Scandinavian language, but I am not sure if I would have guessed which Scandinavian language exactly because I have not been exposed to those languages much. German and French are easily recognizable languages because they they were quite popular worldwide and plus I had French in primary school. I would recognize Hungarian, they are a neighboring country. I would recognize Polish and of course my native Serbian. As far as Slavic languages are concerned, of course I would be able to recognize that they are Slavic languages when I hear them, Polish has a specific nasal pronunciation so it is easily recognizable. Polish, Czech and Slovak, although they belong to the same group of Slavic languages, sound quite different, Slovak somehow has very similar phonetics to South Slavic languages. I would easily recognize South Slavic languages because we have similar phonetics to the Italian language unlike other Slavic languages and and one of the reasons for that is that we have fewer vowels than other Slavic languages. The most difficult to identify are Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian because they have very similar phonetics, they sound similar, I would know that they are East Slavic languages, but by the sound I would not be able to guess which language it is, I would recognize them only if I saw the script because they have certain letters which are different or if I would learn one of those three languages fluently to be able to recognize the differences. I don't know if I would have guessed the Georgian language, it is the most difficult to recognize compared to the other languages in the video, but it is very interesting. We also have two words for computer "рачунар / računar" and "компјутер / kompjuter". I find it quite interesting that the Hungarian lady said that Serbian is Serbian or Slovenian, but definitely not Croatian because Serbian and Croatian are 99% the same languages while Slovenian, although similar, is a different language but I can understand why she said that probably because of the pronunciation of the jat voice. In Serbian, there are three pronunciations of the sound jat: ekavski (Serbia), ijekavski (Bosnia, Montenegro, Croatia and parts of Serbia) and ikavski (parts of Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia). Draga speaks with the Ekavian pronunciation of voice jat and Slovenian also uses the Ekavian pronunciation of the voice jat.
Its not that surprising Georgian was hardest when we dont have any similar languages but if i should say one is closest to Georgian id say Polish probably
Georgian, armenian, basque, albanesians have some common words. Poles loves study theses idioms and adopt some easy words for them too from theses langs.🍻🍻🍻🍻
We also have few thousand words from Persian, Arabic and Turkish, doesn't mean our language is similar to them though. Armenian is not similar, I don't understand a thing when they talk even if we share words. idk about rest cause I haven't interacted with those people but it's probably the same.@@SinarNila
@@aleksanderkaira მანდაური ქართველები ქართულად კიდევ საუბრობენ თუ სრული ასიმილაცია განიცადეს? მეორე-მესამე+ თაობაზე მაქვს საუბარი. ბევრი თურქეთში მყოფი ვინც წერს ქართული გენი მაქვსო ქართულად ვერ ლაპარაკობს ან არ სწავლობს, თურქად მივიჩნევ თავსო.
@@herrbonk3635 Geophysically yes, you are correct in this point. But Asia and Europe have many Wars inter them so separation in politics, credes, philosophy, economy, in humans aspects they are differents. It's all the reasons why they are separated til today. If you read EU chart, writ, they don't recognize Europe as part of Ásia as one continent and politically they don't recognize culturally asians nations as european nations, especially considering this war russia x ukraine, the separation gains a strong level, forever til future. We have many sides in this topic too🍻🍻🍻
Why don't we just end this god for saken debate about wheter or not Georgia is Europe or Asia, for god's sake it's transcontinental, at the intersection of Europe and Asia, it's both, is it that hard to understand? Georgia is Europe and Georgia is Asia, end of story ok? But due to it's more close relationship and ties to Europe, it's mostly considered more European, therefore it's in todays video, jesus
My way on guessing on Hungary, they are not a Germanic, Romance or Slavic language. How many countries do we have left? Georgia is harder, it doesn't sound like anything else.
@@reineh3477You're a smart and turned on mate, hungarians ARE loved in finnic family and lived by others idiomatics families, btw the hungarian girls is gorgeous and inteligent. Europe is diverse is mixed with Ásia, that's why Europe is so attractive for the world. I love the finnic people all asians ethnies on Europe, they have a diverse beauty If we repair with respect and attention.💙🫂🍻
@@reineh3477 because the only similar languages to hungarian in the finno-ugric family are khanty and mansi. in terms of language and genetics we seldom have anything in common with finnish or estonian people.
@@SinarNila this is controversial. hungarian language is only similar to khanty and mansi in the finno-ugric language family, finnish and estonian people wont be able to understand us at all. genetically we don't really have similarities with finns nor estonians. ancient hungarians had both turkic and ugric influences on them, we were also heterogenic back then.
I understand Scandinavians if they speak slowly, same with English and Germans, I speak Dutch, Low-Saxon, German, and some Swedish/Norwegian. My French is very very bad.
super cool for me to hear all the 3 languages i wanna learn in the same video, swedish, which i am learning (a very odd pick ik), and the ones i wanna learn one day, german & serbian (these ones because i have family from there)
Since most of them known each other from past videos , it got way more interesting for them use blindfold , good see the funny lady from Georgia back 😄 and also Saba from Hungary
France and Germany always sitting next to each other. We sure do love each other after WW2. The Treaty of Elysée 1966 was the pact. And Founding members of EU Treaty of Rome 1957
🇪🇺🇨🇵🇩🇪
Yes it's Nice to see hungary and georgia.
It's time to we ser hungary, samis, Estonians finished, komis together in this channel 💟💟💟🍻
According to another videos, both are humorous^^; | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
[ my question for a long time ] Why is Roma RomeTT?@@christophermichaelclarence6003 | Миру мир!
It would be interesting to put Finnish and Hungarian together and see what they think. When I am not paying attention and hear Finnish in the background I always have that moment where I'm like "wait am I having a stroke? Why can't I understand it? Oh it's Finnish." I heard some Finnish people had similar experiences with Hungarian. It has never happened with any other language because I'd just filter it out as something that I don't speak.
both are Uralic languages, but they separated so long ago that they don't have much in common
Finnish sounds to me if a Hungarian person was very drunk and tried to speak Swedish. Like the noises they make sound Hungarian but the cadence is kinda nordicized lol. But it’s crazy how different our languages r even tho we are in same language group
[ Finno-Ugric ] 🇭🇺·🇭🇺🇳Hungarian[Huns匈奴]🇫🇮·🇫🇮🇳Finnish🇪🇪·🇪🇸🇹Estonian·Ostyak·Vogul | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
The two are mutually incomprehensible!
The reasons for Finnish and Hungarian sounding similar are the following: All sounds the Finnish make can be found in Hungarian (but not the other way around.) The wovels and consonants existing in Finnish are pronounced the same way in Hungarian (not the letters tough, for example Fin Y and Hun Ü are the same sound).
Both languages have wovel harmony and both are agglutinative.
And both of them stress the first syllable + the long wovels.
Side note: for my ears perkele sound like a name for a bird species or smth.
Sophia 🇬🇪 , Anna 🇵🇱 and Svea 🇩🇪 had been on the channel before and the three together on the video but i love how hard was to guess gerogian since isn't so popular and also the polish since mostly are familiar with slavic languages such as polish
And Saba also
English: Cheers!
Translate: გაგიმარჯოს!
Serbian girl has been on the channel alot bro
As a hungarian it was really good to hear someone who speaks the language I speak soo yeah! It was refreshing!😊
Helna
Elnézést, de csak 1 honapjá magyarul tanulok, és beszélt magyar nagyon nehez megérteni számomra a videóban felirat nélkül, meg tudnád mondani, mit mondott pls?
@@laralamagadeltuocuore Szia! Örülök, hogy ilyen nehéz nyelvet választottál mint a miénk. Ezt mondja magyarul: "Szóval, nagyon sok helyre szeretnék elmenni, de ezek közül talán Izland lenne az egyik, a másik pedig Bali, mert szeretném látni a sarki fényt, és... Nem is bali, Maldív-szigetek az. Becsobbannék a vízbe az biztos, olyan gyönyörű szép a víz."
@ köszi szépen az átírás :))
Why is everyone arguing about the location of Georgia?Georga is in Eurasia it's part of Europe and Asia too.However, Georgian culture is closer to European than Asian Moreover,The remains of the first Europeans were found on the territory of Georgia .That's why we can say that they are Europeans.
are you that uneducated? geographics play no role.
Georgian (ქართული ენა, romanized: kartuli ena, pronounced [ˈkʰaɾtʰuli ˈena]) is the most widely spoken Kartvelian language; it also serves as the literary language or lingua franca for speakers of related languages.[2] It is the official language of Georgia and the native or primary language of 87.6% of its population.[3] Its speakers today amount to approximately four million. Georgian is written in its own unique alphabet.
Turks look just like georgians but got categorized in "middle east" with arabs even though we speak a different language and look like georgians.
you should learn more about history, genetics and languages. this channel spreads so much wrong information its laughable.
Georgia is 100% middle east, Asia
Only Turks argue about that and maybe some kartvelophobe Russkis with inferiority complex
N ALSO GEORGIA IS A STATE TOO IN USA 🇺🇸
@@KC-qi7gn I know but now we are talking about the country
I’m Hungarian
Én is😊
Me too
Me too
Me too❤❤❤
Én is
Magyarok
👇🏼
Me 🇭🇺🇬🇧🇷🇴
Szia❤
Hali
én is
Sziasztok!
I love the georgian girl. She's so sweet and nice. And she's got such a nice voice.
She has been very humorous^^; | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
Georgian people look like arabs & they are not europeans!
Another reason to argue about Georgia not being European, she got that sweetness you find in Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkey etc.. but not in most of Europe. I don't agree with classifying Georgians as Europeans that's ridiculous. Also Europe a continent of the size we know rn is a recent invention. And Georgians thinking they're European is really absurd, I mean did they look at their history ? They literally share no history with France, Germany, Sweden, or even Hungary.
@@qaimaqyakh2708 It's always hilarious to get history lessons from armchair experts. No one cares, no' s even remotely interested in what you agree or disagree with. We're EUROPEANS. Go yell at the sky...
@@qaimaqyakh2708 how f*cking Georgian people and country's history don't care what you think about it
Ahh i love how Polish sounds 😍🥰Glad Sophia is back she's fun as always
13:52 She's hillarious !🤣
The easiest was french obviously , french was one of the easiest languages to guess in the world , the hardest is either georgian or hungarian since both aren't so common
Our French language was eventually easy to guess cuz it's beautiful. C'est magnifique et jolie
Romance language, really unique one and different compared to Spanish, Italian, Portuguese
Yeah both of em are non indo European
Are Turks and Iranians Europeans?
@@armajhkc609 they're not
@@christophermichaelclarence6003
I think they are close to the Balkans Especially the Turks
The fact that Georgian language is not related to any other language in the world is mad. It indicates so many things, but especially, that it is extremely and unbelievably old.
It is a caucasian language actually and it is related to other caucasian languages
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Nope its not only proto Georgian languages are related to each other
@@Ahmed-pf3lg no, Georgian is only related to Kartvelian languages (Mingrelian, Stan and Laz).
@@corbendallas827
Interesting I always thought Georgian was a caucasian language and only out liers in that region are Armenian (indo european) and Azeri (Turkic)
@@Ahmed-pf3lg "Caucasian languages" is not a language family, but a geographical grouping, these languages aren't related beside just being neighbors for hell knows how long and exchanging some words and even less influence on each other.
I'm from Hungary 🇭🇺4. I love youu❤
Me too
Èn is
Köszonom
Finally Hungary as well! It must have been hard to find a Hungarian.
The Hungarian girl has appeared in other videos of this channel, I remember of her.
Hungarian, along with Finnish, hard to get, they are not European languages anyway.
@@BETOETEI’m pretty sure both Hungary and Finland are in Europe. 😂 so they are definitely European languages, but I think you meant they are not Indo-European Languages, which is true. 😊
i have known of her, through another videos of another TH-cam channel^^; | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
@@BETOETE Indeed, the Uralic Hungarians, or the Turkic Bulgarians, were originally peoples who migrated from Asia and mixed with the local populations (Slavs, Celts, Hellenes etc.). However, as the kingdoms they founded were based on Christianity, unlike Turkey for example, they are an integral part of European civilisation, which is grounded in Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity.
🇸🇪 and 🇬🇪 sounds interesting 🙂 I've never heard these languages before, so it's something new for me 😄 I have recently become interested in Scandinavian languages, so 🇸🇪 has piqued my interest 👍🙂
If you are a native English speaker, Swedish is clearly very easy to learn. It's rated as top three easiest languages together with Dutch and Norwegian.
But it's actually closer to German than English.
A bonus is of course that Norwegian and Danish are closely related and very easy to at least read if you know Swedish.
And if we speak slowly we usually understand each other.
Anyways good luck with your practice if you decide to study it. 😎
One thing i think can be hard is the pronunciation of some words and to use the in the right way.
Some words i think of is: Gift, banan, plan. There are alot more but i can't think of everything 😅 But Banan can be both Banana and track depending on pronunciation.
@@martinfranzen9151 there is also Swedish words like, "fart" "slut" which becomes very funny in English.
@@hnorrstromEh, no. English and German are both West Germanic languages. The Nordic languages are North Germanic.
Norwegian and Danish are understandable to Swedish in writing, and partially/with effort in speech. That has to do with pronounciation, not so much with actual linguistic heritage
Georgia, like Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey, is a transcontinental country, with one foot in Europe and the other in Asia.
They're Eurasian countries, geographically and culturally.
Georgia, Armenia and Russia are majority Christian countries while Azerbaijan and Turkey are majority Muslim.
Georgian is a unique language, not well known or related to any well known language.
Armenian is distantly related to other Indo-European languages.
Azeri and Turkish are part of the Turkic language family along with Kazakh, Uzbek, Turkmen and Kyrgyz.
It's an interesting part of the world.
Geographically speaking Georgia is too eastern to ever be “European”. Also culturally they are very similar to Dagestan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Iran, Syria, Iraq…
These countries are not “European” culturally. It’s crazy to consider Georgia closer to culture of Sweden than culture of Syria for example!
Syria is much more similar.
@@Ahmed-pf3lg What you know about Georgian culture Ahmed
@@Ahmed-pf3lg you know nothing John Snow
@@Ahmed-pf3lg Iran, Syria, Iraq, lmao 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Countries you mentioned aren't even similar with each other
Tell me you've never been to Georgia without telling me you've never been to Georgia. Syria? really? the fact that they're geographically close doesn't mean we're similar. we don't consider our culture to be similar to any of our neighbors, let alone Syria, Iraq and Iran, those people are alien to us. @@Ahmed-pf3lg
Georgian girl is the best, want to see her every video 😭😭😭
@@xohyuu what?
i agree with@@trianapark1787🤣 | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
@@trianapark1787you like them thicc
Fr
France@@ImJustRandom-z | Нехай наш Бог береже Україну
I have noticed that us Europeans are quite straightforward and either brutally honest or sarcastic in conversations haha. For one example from the video, one person: can you guess my language? everyoen else: no.
Svea is very perceptive, she instantly guessed most of languages right.
Svea seems like she has an extra sensor to detect something that others cant just look when she puts all her attention and receptivity listening to Hungarian and she was right.....very intelligent.
Yeah, that really impressed me, felt like she saw invisible notes on the other people's faces.
As a Hungarian person, I'd like to informed you that I was f***ing rolling on the floor laughing cuz she talked about going to different countries and don't ask why it's funny.
Igen, gondoltam hogy ezt amit megértettem, de kellett lassítatom a videót nagyon mért nem az anyanyelvem van haha 😂, azért értem a biztos fékezhetetlen nevetést 😂😂😂
I am a native Hungarian but because i only speak that plus English and also understand some very basic French, i could only group their languages into groups such as Slavic, Nordic etc. I cannot tell the real difference between Slovak or Checz or Ukrainian and Russian. Same goes for Swedish or Danish. To be able to pick up on those fine things, i would need to learn some of those languages. And because i am a qualified English teacher here speaking English since i was 10, i can tell the Hungarian girl's English is pretty high level. And she knows a lot about phonetics and phonolgy. Probably she completed her English university studies. Applied Linguistics etc. ❤
more georgia plz
1. GEORGIA - its like greek people say, (and internationally)
Georgia is a land where ancient greek heros ARGONAUTS sailed; then its name was COLCHIS, (Colchida + Iberia), nowadays cities Kutaisi & Batumi east coast of Black Sea.
2. GRUZIA - its like turkish and russian people say
3. SAKARTVELO - name of country in their own language
Georgia was 2. nd christianity country in the world, 1st was Armenia [ Anno Domini 301 ],
3.rd was East Roman (Greek) Empire.
Local KARTVELI language has NO CONNECTION to indo-european/indo-iranian, or turkic, or arabic language groups, it belongs to CAUCASIAN group, (kartveli, chechen, ingush, avar, lezgin, dargin, kabardin, cherkess etc - more than 15 caucasian languages)
Armenian & greek are distinct languages but close to indo-european group, Azeri is turkic language.
Georgian [kartveli] is in caucasian group.
In caucasia there are beside armenian - 2 more local languages which are indo-european - ossetins & kurds. (indo-iranian/indo-european) Other are caucasian OR turkic
One thing - turkish people call Georgia Gurcistan, not Gruzia
In Hungary we use both GRUZIA & GEORGIA. GEORGIA is a little bit confusing, because of the US state GEORGIA. Therefore GRUZIA is much more common.
Please note, that we in Hungary pronounce the country GEORGIA and the state GEORGIA markedly differently. In case of country GEORGIA we follow and pronounce every letter in it (as it is the general rule in hungarian language). While in the case of US state of GEORGIA we follow the english pronunciation.
The form "Gruzie" is also in czech language.
This is so nice that they partly understand each other. I did understand many words, I'm from Ukraine and I speak 5 languages. These kind of videos remove borders between the countries 😊
How well do you speak these languages?
and remove borders with Rossiya too?
No, russia is not european country@@BETOETE
all fluent, except German, I speak German on the B1 level and very slowly. @@CMV314
More Georgian and other Caucasian languages please
@@xohyuu We have 4 neighbouring countries: Armenia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and unfortunately Russia.
[ unfortunately Russia ] > TT@@ericsalazar3731 | Миру мир!
@@ericsalazar3731 I think the theme of the video refers to the languages of European civilisation. Geographically, Europe is a peninsula on the Asian continent, bordered by the Ural Mountains and River and the Caucasus Mountains to the east.
However, since the three pillars of European civilisation are Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity, Georgia and Armenia (the first kingdom to convert to Christianity) are two countries that belong to European civilisation, although they are located on the Asian continent.
Indeed, the Uralic Hungarians, or the Turkic Bulgarians, were originally peoples who migrated from Asia and mixed with the local populations (Slavs, Celts, Hellenes etc.). However, as the kingdoms they founded were based on Christianity, unlike Turkey for example, they are an integral part of European civilisation, which is grounded in Greek philosophy, Roman law and Christianity.
@@N0Time 100%
Greetings from a Pole living in Hungary.
Love 💟 to poland and to hungary too
Slavic + Finno-Ugric subfamily of the Uralic family of languages^^; | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
I am from Hungary
@@xohyuu Slavic is not a Uralic language. The Uralic languages-wikipedia.
The French language is so easily recognizable, distinctive and unique. You hear 2 words and you immediatly know, and it's not just because it's famous. It is just very unique.
Slovenian or Serbian, definitely not Croatian was the funniest sentence in this video.
Yeah for real 😂 That's like saying: "German or English, definitely not Austrian German" 😂
@@andyx6827 or like it's dutch or american english, definitely not canadian english
because both ekavian Serbian and Slovenian are lacking "ij (iy)" for example "milk" in ekavian Serbian and Slovenian is "mleko" while in Croatian is "mlijeko"
It actually makes sense. A lot of Serbs speak ijekavian but the mainstream dialect is ekavian which is also how Slovenes speak. Besides most Croats don't differentiate as sharply, or at all, between č and ć. It really catches your ear immediately when a Croat nationalist calls you a "ćetnik". It's adorable actually. Like an angry poodle. So to an outsider who's heard both of us speak it can tell the difference if they know what to listen for. As a Serb myself I'd immediately know if someone is Slovenian but I'd have a hard time differentiating between a Croat and a Krajina Serb.
I like how this differs from the American versions of shows like that, where people try to be overly polite and trying to act proper, meanwhile Europeans be like:
-So, can you guess my language?
-No.
😂😂😂
I was actually surprised when Draga said "Computer", because a Serbo-Croatian speaker myself I was actually expecting her to say "Računar", basically the same as the actual German word for comouter, which'd be "Rechner" with both meaning calculator, but not in the sense of the compact calculator. The word for that'd rather be "Digitron" in Serbo-Croatian or "Taschenrechner" in German with the German one meaning "pocket calculator".
Računar | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
I think that it is because "Racunar" means (is used for) Device, it can be a phone, a computer, a tablet and much more
Yep, Serbian gotten that word from German.
Croats don`t say "računar" but "računalo".
Wow it's quite rare to see Draga and Anna with non-slavic countries
It is because Austria-Hungary Empire dominated the Balkan Peninsula? | Миру мир!
this format is actually pretty fun would love to have that also form other continents & parts of the world :)
yay! Hungarian is back to provide some variety to the the European languages! And to throw everyone off, what language are they hearing lol
🇭🇺·🇭🇺🇳 may belong to Asian language | Миру мир!
Love Hungary from Poland ❤
Love when Hungarian is included. Can't wait to see more European or central European videos like this 🤩
yes, definitely, but sadly Hungarian is a mess language, not very attractive and not European.
@@BETOETE why wouldn't it be European? Hungarian is not part of the Indo-European lnaguge family. But majority of our words now have roots from Germanic, Slavic and Turkic languages. Nowadays, about 30% of Hungarian is of Uralic origin. Which is why we cannot mutually communicate with Finnish and Estonian.
@@a.balazs4413 yeah, right, but the grammar is not European as in Finnish, is more related to the Turkic and east Asian languages.
@@BETOETE where are you from?
@@a.balazs4413 Colombia, South America, live in USA
Sziustok Magyarok!!❤❤
Georgia is a country located at the intersection of Eastern Europe and Western Asia. It is considered a transcontinental country, with a small part of its territory in Europe and a larger portion in Asia. The capital of Georgia is Tbilisi.
Serbian also has a word for computer and it's računar.
Yea more accurate
What's funny, is that the French girl doesn't even need to speak Frech, you can just tell by her accent.
Hearing these kind of vids, makes me happy im living in europe with all the different langauge.
I love how Polish and Serbian could understand alot of what they were saying ❤
Ja też,mamy wspólne korzenie.W serbskim języku jest dużo staropolskich słów.
To End This Debate:
Is Georgia Europe Or Asia?
Country Of Georgia Is Located At The Intersecrion Of Eastern Europe And Western Asia, Georgia Has Territories In Both Continents, Meaning That Georgia Is A Transcontinental Country Just Like Russia, Egypt, Panama And Others.
There Are More Than One Variations Of Europe-Asia Borders, There Are 5 Actually, Almost All Of Them Were Made By Ancient Greeks, Some Of Them Place Georgia Entirely In Europe, Some Place It Partially In Europe And Some Place Georgia Competely In Asia, But None Of Them Are Official, In Fact There's No Official Border Which Seperates Europe From Asia, As It's In Fact One Continent Called Eurasia, But Due To Huge Cultural, Linguistic, Historical Differences, It's Reasonable To Seperate Europe From Asia, So Today Most People Consider Them As Different Continents, But Geographically, Europe And Asia Are One Continent. But According To Anaximander Who's Theory Of Borders Is Most Commonly Used, Georgia Is Partially In Europe And Partially In Asia, Some Of Georgia's Northern Regions Lies In The North Of Caucasus, Which Is Indeed Considered Geographically As European Land, But Southern Parts Of Georgia Are Located In Asia, So Conclusion Is That Georgia Is Geographically Located In Both Continents, But Is Usually Regarded As Part Of Europe Due To Cultural And Historical Ties To Europe, That Doesn't Mean That Georgia Has No Ties With Asian Countries, It Just Leans Towards Europe More, It's Also Member Of Council Of Europe And Other European Organizations, Which Proves That Country Is Considered European By Majority Of The Population Of The World, In Fact, Chancellor Of Germany, Olaf Sholdz, Said The Following "European Family Is Stretched From Portugal To Georgia"
There Is No Need To Argue About Georgia Being European Or Asian, It's Both, But Is Still Considered More European By Majority Of The People, Country Has Future In EU, And It Has Future In European Continent, In Short Georgia Is Transcontinental, Both Europe And Asia, But Is Considered European, Just Like Russia, Which Is Transcontinental, But Is Considered European By Most People, Same Goes For Egypt, Which Is Transcontinental (Africa/Asia) But Is Still Considered African By Majority Of The People.
Me? As A Geographer I Do Consider Georgia European.
🇬🇪🇪🇺
"Polish is a very distinctive slavish"
**Me speaking polish in germany**
Germans: Are you russian?
*Me speaking Russian in the UK*
Brits: are you Polish?
I've had literally dozens of people try and guess my language, and almost all of them said Polish, with not a single one saying Russian for some reason.
@Dangel98 really? u from germany? on my work every computer, software, machine program is in english
@Dangel98 Even fellow romance language speakers confuse Spanish and Italian. And a lot of people confuse Dutch, Danish and German, espeically when they are not from Germanic-speaking countries. So that's just normal. You're being overly negative I think.
The Hungarian girl has quite a strong dialect, I'm pretty sure she lives far away from the capital city, Budapest. I'm curious if I'm right about that or not. :)
I'm hungarian❤
Swedish, I was sure of it being Scandinavian, but not 100% on it being Swedish. It sounded soft, so if pushed for a country, I'd probably have guessed Sweden, but I wouldn't have been 100% confident. Hungarian I guessed by process of elimination. Serbian, I knew was a south Slavic language, but didn't know which. Georgian, I didn't get at all (sorry). The rest I knew. I love these videos.
i would guess all of them except for georgian (i would say albanian) and serbian (i would say a south slavic language, but couldn't give more details)
Hungarian girl was visibly uncomfortable when some other girl confused bell pepper with paprika. Hungarians are VERY determined when it comes to paprika.
I don’t know if Serbian also uses it, but in Croatian we also sometimes use another word for computer, “računalo”
Računar se ovde koristi. Tj.pravilnije je računar ali svi govore kompjuter.
Računar i mi koristinmo i to je naša južnoslovenska izvorna reč od računati za kompjuter. :)
@@goranjovic3174не постоји јужно словенска реч ,већ српска ,молим да ми не крадете језик
@@Србомбоница86 ne kadem ti ja jezik i ja sam Srbini to je moj jezik, i isto mislim u sustini, ali da me ne prozivaju da sam srpski nacionalista, eto neka je "naš ili juznoslovenski" mene to ne brine, nemam nikakav kompleks niti mrznju po pitanju jezika koji zapravo svi govorimo odvajkada, ma kako sebe smatrali danas. :) )))
@@goranjovic3174 добро ја сам поносна Српска националисткиња ,ти ради како хоћеш ,само Србија ,само српски језик ,крај приче ,оставите Србе на миру , Југославија је Богу хвала мртва и Србија је једина битна мени,ако ти се не допадају Српкиње и Србија каква јесте ,ти остани на западу ,позз 😊
12:13 Everbody : "Hello"
Hungarian Girl : "Csááá" 🤣🤣🤣
Sometimes she be making it difficult for no reason cuz in Hungary even older people say “Szia helo”
Üdv
Sophia ❤ 🇬🇪
I enjoy these videos a lot. Please make it easier for us watching to guess as well, eg if it’s only mentioned up in the left corner then I can cover it or ignore it while watching :)
And the thumbnail could be more cryptic too :))
🇭🇺
If you guys can find someone who speaks Basque, Breton or Maltese for these challenges it would be such a good twist for the participants.
10:44 slower? I'm Georgian and what i heard from that, sofia spoke the slowest for me. And the other languages people was speaking so fast like it was a race or something 😂?
Not true, she talked so fast
for a regular Latin American person that only speaks English and obviously all the Latin based languages ( I read and understand basic German), Slavish languages besides Russian are impossible to tell apart, don'r even talk about Hungarian or Caucasian languages like Georgian or Armenian.
Geographically Cyprus is located in Asia too, as Georgia. But it is the member of EU and European Council. Georgia is a member of European Council. If we are talking about political map of Europe, both are considered as European countries. So, calm down guys😂
Yeah most comments here are Georgia is in Asia
Relax, and stop, break forever Georgia antropologically is forever Asia, customs talk louder than politicishes.....
🤭🤭🤭😁😁😁🤠🤠🤠🤠🤠
@@SinarNila read once again what i wrote pls😃 What's wrong with Georgian customs?) What do you know about them? btw have you ever been to this country? I 'm curious😂
@europeforeuropeans14 why I should cry? Ah, ok. I checked you profile, Polish nazi? loool😝 What a shame🤣
Cyprus in Europe
Polish sounds a bit Finnish...
She who speaks Hungarian
I have to say I think she is beautiful!
/Sweden
O wow, guessed the hungarian instantly. Impressive
15:14 Draga is like a cute student while lifting her hand
watching this video makes me wonder about the diversity of languages that would have developed in areas like latin america or africa if the languages there were given more freedom to naturally develop, without the influence of european languages.
all these countries are so close to each other in terms of distance and the similarities and differences between these languages are so interesting.
I'm from hungary, so it is so cool!
Does Polish 🇵🇱 really sounds different than other slavic languages for foreigners? How can you guess?🤔
Its because for foreigners its sound more harsh than the other slavic languages its sound like mix of german accent with russian Words that's why
Yes, it's way more harsh than other Slavic (like eastern and southern)
Also it uses Latin alphabet, have A LOT of exceptions, and many foreign words.
There is some love to vowels and accents.
@@TomAdam2005 Język polski jest najbardziej miękko brzmiącym , delikatnym językiem spośród wszystkich języków słowiańskich . Bardzo ostrfo brzmi język rosyjski
@@elazach6881 für die meisten ausländer klingt polnisch härter als russisch, die wörter haben oft weniger vokale
@@aY227all languages have loanwords, this does not only apply to Polish! Nastepny idiota ze swoimi wypocinami, sugerujacy ze polski to same zapozyczenia. Tragedia!😮
The swedish woman is so stunning!
MAGYARORSZÁG MENTIONED 🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺 RAHHHHH
It's a so nice challenge to guess each other's language 👌🏻😊
As I know, only possible relation of Georgian language to any other language is Euskera (Basque)
No
@@mariambe1527 Yep.
@@Nichollaa Nikush, stop if you believe in God!
@@mariambe1527 What?
@@mariambe1527 Hell's Nikush lol
I took one semester of French in college, but the language that I understood the most words were when the woman was speaking German, and I knew when Polish was being spoken, because my dad occasionally spoke Polish (it was his first language in childhood), and his sister was fluent her whole life and was married to a Polish guy, so I heard them speak Polish whenever my family visited them in Chicago, and I lived next door to a young couple who emigrated to the US from Poland, he spoke English, but his wife didn't when they first moved in, and I'd help her when she wasn't sure about certain words and phrases after she started to learn English
Toda vez que tem vídeo com a polonesa eu venho ver, sem erro!
gostei da húngara,no caso
15:54-15:58
Saba said: "It doesn't sound like Ukrainian, it doesn't sound like *Slovakian*, it doesn't sound like Czech."
She didn't say it doesn't sound like Slavic
I fell in love with the amazing German Girl ,love u ❤️
5:36 Magyarok🇭🇺
Svea, Draga & the Swedish girl speak perfect english. They barely have an accent.
Not me eating "punjene paprike" right now.😂😂😂
Living in europe sounds fun but a hassle at the same time
Thumbs up from Croatia to our dear Hungarian neighbour!❤👍😃
She immediately recognized that Serbian is definitely not Croatian.
Is it bad that I have a crush on Cajsa? Incredibly gorgeous and elegant and chill af. Also, I wonder if one day you guys manage to actually turn on all the mics you stick on your participants' collars.
Concour mate. She has super sexy voice both in swedish or english.
Apart from the Georgian I can recognise all without any problem. Not even difficult. The Swedish of course could have been mistaken with Norwegian and the Serbian might be the other “Serbo-Croatian languages”, but I got them all now
Draga says pirinač, and the Hungarian girl is like "definitely NOT Croatian". Every other word she said exists in Croatian language because it's the same language 😂
i guess for non Serbo/Croatian speakers these two doesnt sound the same as Draga is speaking ekavian dialect of Serbian which is lacking of "iy" sound while Croatian has plenty of "iy". Slovenian on the other hand is similar to Serbian in that aspect
@@colinafobe2152 Exactly, I'm Hungarian and I have colleagues from Croatia, Slovenia and Serbia and you can hear the differences mainly in Slovenian, but you can also hear between Serbian and Croatian
@@wenzi2283 i can imagine. I am from Banat (northern Serbia) and even i can tell if someone is from what region of Serbia by how they talk (accent) and even can tell if Croats are from Slavonia, Zagreb, Zagorje, south Dalmatia, Rijeka or Split. Despite mutual share of vocabulary that we have, South Slavic languages are very melodic and suitable for regional differences
Oh, ekavian?@@colinafobe2152 | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
What are [ berry, strawberry, blueberry, Thank you, Thank you very much ] in 🇷🇸·🇸🇷🇧 language?@@colinafobe2152 | Нехай наш Бог береже Україну
Kocham nasze słowiańskie pochodzenie i starą historię ludów słowiańskich.
Welcome back Megan❤🇫🇷
Merci
+¹ | Миру мир!
I am Georgian 🇬🇪
I would guess Swedish just because of one word - dator, we use similar - "dators" - for computer in Latvia. German and French are obvious, except I wouldn't guess German from which region was spoken. Hungarian - I would guess just because it doesn't sound like other European languages I know. Polish is obvious because it belongs to Slavic family and has a very distinct pronunciation from other Slavic languages. I guess Serbian would be hard to guess (except that it is Slavic), I don't know exactly how southern Slavic languages sound. But in Georgian I know just one word - gamarjoba, and she said it a few times, so obviously - Georgian. 😊
Of course the Serb is going to talk about food 😂
For Swedish, I would know that it is a Germanic and Scandinavian language, but I am not sure if I would have guessed which Scandinavian language exactly because I have not been exposed to those languages much. German and French are easily recognizable languages because they they were quite popular worldwide and plus I had French in primary school. I would recognize Hungarian, they are a neighboring country. I would recognize Polish and of course my native Serbian. As far as Slavic languages are concerned, of course I would be able to recognize that they are Slavic languages when I hear them, Polish has a specific nasal pronunciation so it is easily recognizable. Polish, Czech and Slovak, although they belong to the same group of Slavic languages, sound quite different, Slovak somehow has very similar phonetics to South Slavic languages. I would easily recognize South Slavic languages because we have similar phonetics to the Italian language unlike other Slavic languages and and one of the reasons for that is that we have fewer vowels than other Slavic languages. The most difficult to identify are Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian because they have very similar phonetics, they sound similar, I would know that they are East Slavic languages, but by the sound I would not be able to guess which language it is, I would recognize them only if I saw the script because they have certain letters which are different or if I would learn one of those three languages fluently to be able to recognize the differences. I don't know if I would have guessed the Georgian language, it is the most difficult to recognize compared to the other languages in the video, but it is very interesting. We also have two words for computer "рачунар / računar" and "компјутер / kompjuter". I find it quite interesting that the Hungarian lady said that Serbian is Serbian or Slovenian, but definitely not Croatian because Serbian and Croatian are 99% the same languages while Slovenian, although similar, is a different language but I can understand why she said that probably because of the pronunciation of the jat voice. In Serbian, there are three pronunciations of the sound jat: ekavski (Serbia), ijekavski (Bosnia, Montenegro, Croatia and parts of Serbia) and ikavski (parts of Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia). Draga speaks with the Ekavian pronunciation of voice jat and Slovenian also uses the Ekavian pronunciation of the voice jat.
Akkor most milyen nyelven írok neked?
omg french girl why you standing like this, i thought you have no arms
Its not that surprising Georgian was hardest when we dont have any similar languages but if i should say one is closest to Georgian id say Polish probably
Georgian, armenian, basque, albanesians have some common words.
Poles loves study theses idioms and adopt some easy words for them too from theses langs.🍻🍻🍻🍻
We also have few thousand words from Persian, Arabic and Turkish, doesn't mean our language is similar to them though. Armenian is not similar, I don't understand a thing when they talk even if we share words. idk about rest cause I haven't interacted with those people but it's probably the same.@@SinarNila
@@LukaMamukelashvili yeah im half Turkish and living in Turkey
@@aleksanderkaira მანდაური ქართველები ქართულად კიდევ საუბრობენ თუ სრული ასიმილაცია განიცადეს? მეორე-მესამე+ თაობაზე მაქვს საუბარი. ბევრი თურქეთში მყოფი ვინც წერს ქართული გენი მაქვსო ქართულად ვერ ლაპარაკობს ან არ სწავლობს, თურქად მივიჩნევ თავსო.
@@SinarNilaAlbanesians?
🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗adorable video 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Interesting. I'm from the Americas and when I think of Georgia (beside a US state) I think of a country in Europe not Asia :/
But Geophisycally Georgia is Asia forever 🥂🥂
It is European country
@@SinarNila k
@@SinarNila Most of Europe is on the euro-asian continent. So there is no physical or geographical barrier between Europe and Asia.
@@herrbonk3635
Geophysically yes, you are correct in this point.
But Asia and Europe have many Wars inter them so separation in politics, credes, philosophy, economy, in humans aspects they are differents.
It's all the reasons why they are separated til today.
If you read EU chart, writ, they don't recognize Europe as part of Ásia as one continent and politically they don't recognize culturally asians nations as european nations, especially considering this war russia x ukraine, the separation gains a strong level, forever til future.
We have many sides in this topic too🍻🍻🍻
It's funny that the Polish girl calls Germans pretentious because that's exactly the vibe she has in this video...
It’s the mistake in the subtitles lol I said “a big country”
Ania z Polski najpiękniejsza 💘💘💘💘💘
Ewww
@@chinavirus841 china
@@xohyuu Ania is Anna in Polish :)
What are [ Thank you very much / in Polish language / Polish person / Polish people ] in 🇵🇱·🇵🇴🇱 language?@@Marcin-L | Миру мир!
ÈJEN A MAGYAROK 🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺
Why don't we just end this god for saken debate about wheter or not Georgia is Europe or Asia, for god's sake it's transcontinental, at the intersection of Europe and Asia, it's both, is it that hard to understand? Georgia is Europe and Georgia is Asia, end of story ok?
But due to it's more close relationship and ties to Europe, it's mostly considered more European, therefore it's in todays video, jesus
ქართული და ინგლისური ძალიან ლამაზი ენააა❤❤❤georgian and inglish is very pretty ❤❤❤
My way on guessing on Hungary, they are not a Germanic, Romance or Slavic language. How many countries do we have left? Georgia is harder, it doesn't sound like anything else.
Hungarians are Ugric, finnic, ogric related to Estonians, komis,chuvash, samis and finnishes
@@SinarNila yes i know. I live in Sweden so I recognize Finnish, Estonian and Sami, but Hungarian sound so different.
@@reineh3477You're a smart and turned on mate, hungarians ARE loved in finnic family and lived by others idiomatics families, btw the hungarian girls is gorgeous and inteligent.
Europe is diverse is mixed with Ásia, that's why Europe is so attractive for the world.
I love the finnic people all asians ethnies on Europe, they have a diverse beauty If we repair with respect and attention.💙🫂🍻
@@reineh3477 because the only similar languages to hungarian in the finno-ugric family are khanty and mansi. in terms of language and genetics we seldom have anything in common with finnish or estonian people.
@@SinarNila this is controversial. hungarian language is only similar to khanty and mansi in the finno-ugric language family, finnish and estonian people wont be able to understand us at all. genetically we don't really have similarities with finns nor estonians. ancient hungarians had both turkic and ugric influences on them, we were also heterogenic back then.
Me hungari
Sophia 🇬🇪❤️
Computer should be Računar in Serbian
@@xohyuu Beacouse that is the Serbian version of the word
I understand Scandinavians if they speak slowly, same with English and Germans, I speak Dutch, Low-Saxon, German, and some Swedish/Norwegian. My French is very very bad.
Me, hearing all of them: Too easy😎😁 I know some Hungarian and Georgian words and the sounding of this languages😊
In germany we called Rechner not Computer
super cool for me to hear all the 3 languages i wanna learn in the same video, swedish, which i am learning (a very odd pick ik), and the ones i wanna learn one day, german & serbian (these ones because i have family from there)
Today > Slavic , Germanic , Finno-Ugric , Georgian languages | Миру мир!
@@xohyuu Your comments are so weird. Are you a weirdo?
@eliseivanica Good luck with that. It's always interesting to learn the languages.