It looks like the producers asked the community for hard German names, and only got troll replies 😂 These names DO NOT exist (except for Fridtjof, Jörn & Bartholomäus). I can't believe the producers fell for obvious trolls like Vaginadelheid, like wtf 😂 Krauthelm and Wurstolm straight-up sound like an American made them up 😂 These are NOT real names. Next up in the French episode: Croissantpierre, Fromagebaguettina, Vaginmarie, Capussyne 😂😂
The 1st and 2nd names are from northern Germany. Bartholomäus is not as old as you think. I still know a woman with the name Adelheid. But most of the names I've never heard.
Fridtjof exists as a name. But it's mostly used in Northern Germany. There's the actor Frithjof Vierock, for example (slightly different spelling but same name).
@@juwen7908: There are sometimes strange names, for example i nearly laughed when i read in a Museum Wildhans as name of a medieval knight, but could have been a nickname. Some Years ago , a young woman got twin Boys. I asked her, what names she will give them: Friedolin and Fürchtegott? Eggebrecht and Eitelfritz? Wunnibald and Widukind? She laughed about the Joke with real, but dated names. But you are right, this Video is nonsens, because even the real names are not really German.
As a native speaking living in Germany for over 20 years, I never heard any of these names. Maybe Jörn, but that’s it. Those names sounded like they were made up. Why did you not pick real names, which exist in German?
Brother I'm almost double that and I have never heard the majority either. Jörn is literally not sticking out because it's so close to the real version: Björn. Production bombed hard and there was zero educational substance just some lowkey offensive "haha Wurst and Kraut let's somehow implement that who cares if those aren't real names" mindsets. Just let the native of whatever country is being highlighted in the video pick out some names. Idk why this is such a hard concept. Or idk, maybe at least use google right to get some real names.
I really liked the *optics* of this video ! 😉 So you've got all the Europeans nationaties sitted up-front, and the German Fraulein is smashing their skulls with a sledge hammer. How ironic ! It suddently gave me déjà-vu vibes, for some reason. 😂
Theses names mate are jokes and pranks😅 believe in me very weeeeeeiiiiiirddd to find to read to find equivalent in others idioms, very biiiiiizaaarrrreee it's all pranks to us laugh 😂
Those aren't real German names and never were... It's made-up names based on German stereotypes. Actually disrespectful if you ask me. Not going to watch another video of this channel as you won't know what's real and whats not. This channel is definetely not for learning new languages and cultures.
Because the only real common name in this video is Jörn. Bartholomäus maybe as well but almost no one calls their kid such biblical names nowadays. Everything else sounded like made up from fantasy and children books. Fridtjof could be a real name too, but I've never heard it, sounds also more Low German/Dutch to me. Pretty strange that German girl didn't clarify that and even more strange that the video is about common German names lol.
@@KiryubelleKazuma maybe she did and they cut it out 💀 I really feel like they should let the representative people choose the words from their own languages. I don't even know where they find these names or words.
It's not about common German names, it's about the most difficult names, as it says in the title. She also says in the video that they are older names. Many of these names are from Old High German and have a meaning. For example, the female name Hildegard is very common in Germany and comes from Old High German and the Germanic language. It means “the one who protects in battle”. The name Irmgard means “the protective one”. And so forth...@@KiryubelleKazuma
@@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture No they are old high german names. Those were the hardest names, but there are many names that millions of Germans have. For example Hildegard, Eberhard, Irmgard, Siegmund, Harald, Jörn, and so on These are not Scandinavian names, but Germanic ones.
Are this name from children stories. Hatzenplotz ist Räuber Hotzenplotz and the bad guy in many puppet theater. Krautheld, Wurstolm, Bügeline sounds like fun names from puppet theater. Only the first 3 are real names and 2 of them are old names.
Actually, that's a meaningless word, I think the Koreans invented this word, it doesn't even make sense, it's a 12th category neologism.😅😅😅😅😅😅 Literally a crazy word 😂😂😂😂
12:12 "You have a lot of consonants, all together". Me as a swede thinking of: i åa ä e ö(it's a full sentence that means "in the river there's an island")
I tried to google some of these supposed names, and they don't seem to exist. They aren't even old names that aren't used anymore. You sometimes recognise parts of these names as actual words, though, and Hatzenplotz sounds familiar to Hotzenplotz, which is a fantasy figure from a fairy tail. But luckily, German isn't like English, where often you have to guess the pronunciation when you read a word. So you can still pronounce these words in German. The French girl did a surprisingly good job at that, btw. Usually, French native speakers would have a very strong accent when speaking German, unless they practice a lot. However, she pronounced some of these words perfectly. I also found it pretty funny that the French native speaker would talk about discovering new ways to use your tongue when speaking German at 11:17 :P
I think she mentioned being from the east part of France so close to the german border. With the alsacien in the region I'm not surprised she can speak german decently
Yeah this video is a bunch of nonsense and a waste of time, frankly. It's anything but a good time. It's dishonest and completely not relatable for viewers. Considering it's 100% not a german who chose these words, I'd even go as far and say it's offensive. That's just a bunch of words to get a laugh out of and slap "german" on them because "haha kraut and wurst". Get tf outta here World Friends lol. Just let the damn native german IN THE VIDEO choose the names if you are unable to use google.
with french they might have an accent a lot of times but they do have the same r as in german so just pronouncing single words can be really accurate. Especially if they already speak english and know how to pronounce the H.
The first 3 were names that actually exist and while uncommon, are actually used. Jörn probably being the most common one. Everything after what was just nonsense taken from a list of German Names on the Internet somwhere and I doubt you'd find anyone by that name in the last 50-100 years. And some of them, your parents would really have to want you to be laughed at in school to even consider them 😀
It heavily depends on region. I have never heard the first name they used (fridtjof) but Bartholomäus is quite common for older people. Some of those names are surnames like Hatzenplotz. For other names they really overdid it. Like Adelheid is quite common name for older people but i have never seen that ridiculous expansion at the front.
@@_aullikHatzenplotz sounds like Hotzenplotz from the Räuber Hotzenplotz. Never ever in my life I had thought that this was an actual name. Also I have never heard of it. And Scharzmuggel😂 what should that be? Sounds from Harry Potter
@@IIIOOOUS Namen wie "Vaginadelheid" oder "Kochtanja" sind ganz eindeutig keine deutschen Namen, sondern eher Scherze. Schon fragwürdig, dass die Deutsche da mal nicht irgendwas gesagt hat, sondern das so hingenommen hat... Dabei gibt es doch so schöne, althochdeutsche Namen, die man hätte nehmen können.
Yeah straight up bullshit. I wonder if they did this on purpose to farm engagement in the comments from the germans aka us. Milking stuff in this shitty way for the algorhythm is sadly not unheard of.
well, Fritjof and Jörn are names for guys, which would be around 50 or 60 - but rather in Northern Germany. The same for Sünje but for a woman. The rest was made-up nonsense.
Felix isn't even in the top 100 of common names for men in Sweden. I think she misunderstood the question, and thought it was just about names in her own age group, and not in general for the country. It was the 33rd most common baby name in 2002, so it's kinda common among people in their 20s. Top 30 most common names for men in Sweden are Karl, Erik, Lars, Anders, Per, Mikael, Johan, Olof, Nils, Jan, Gustav, Hans, Peter, Lennart, Fredrik, Gunnar, Thomas, Sven, Daniel, Alexander, Bengt, Bo, Oskar, Göran, Andreas, Åke, Christer, Stefan, Martin. Top 30 most common names for women in Sweden are Maria, Elisabeth, Anna, Kristina, Margareta, Eva, Linnéa, Karin, Birgitta, Marie, Ingrid, Sofia, Marianne, Lena, Sara, Helena, Kerstin, Emma, Johanna, Katarina, Victoria, Inger, Cecilia, Susanne, Elin, Monica, Therese, Jenny, Hanna, Louise.
I'm a german native speaker and have never heard of any of these names in my life (except for Jörn and maybe Bartholomäus, but they are very old fashioned). I mean they are german words but they are combined in a very weird way.
Actually the name Fridtjof is used in Sweden. I’m surprised she didn’t knew it. It’s not very common nowadays but back in the days it was more common but the Swedish pronunciation of the name is a bit different than the German.
Yeah, even if it's not common nowadays, everyone who has been to school in Sweden should at least know the Swedish author Fritiof Nilsson Piraten, and the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen.
Yeah. It was quite weird when she said it looked like random letters. And even if the name isn't common anymore, there is still a very famous song about someone named Fritiof.
When I saw that name I had to do a double take too and thought to myself, surely not. Thankfully it wasn't pronounced the same way. I do remember on a UK game show a question was asked about a German athlete Fanny Chmelar and the host absolutely lost it in laughter. That scene went viral and they actually met each other a few years later. For those that maybe don't understand, fanny in the UK and Australia doesn't mean your backside, it is a woman's genitals, although the American version would be just as funny. And obviously Chmelar sounds like smeller.
We did use the same word for the female genitals. (Vagina) As a German I had to read it as well two times. And even she was struggeling for a moment. And has pronounced it with care. As she mentioned an old name has been Adelheid. The gender would be female. So I would agree with her pronunciation try, Vagin-Adelheid still sounds wrong.
that is ridiculus: Krauthelm, Wurstholm, Hutzenplotz, Bügeline, Scharzmuggel, Kochtanja and Vaginadelheid are not real German names, but rather jokes. Wurstholm even makes no sense as a name for a person, but maybe for a long penisula. The other could be names for gnoms and fairies out of a silly children's book.
For English speakers, The German "J" is like a consonantal "Y" 100% of the time, so yoghurt→Joghurt, yes→Ja, Himalaya→Himalaja. "W" is like a "V" 100% of the time, so Wunder(wonder) sounds like Vunder, Wasser(water) sounds like Vasser, Winter(winter) sounds like Vinter. The "V" has a 50% chance of staying a "V", and a 50% of becoming an "F". So Video stays Video, Vanille stays Vanille, Verb stays Verb. But Vater(father) sounds like Fater, Vier(four) sounds like Fier, Vogel(bird) sounds like Fogel. It's typically foreign loadwords that maintain the V, but Germanic words have an F sound.
This further shows how clueless the creators of this channel actually are. Don't get me wrong I love the concept of these language videos, if only a competent team could take over the production.
Dude thank you. That's what I have been thinking for so many videos. The production and the team who do the subtitles are an absolute trainwreck and should be fired on the spot. There's some real educational value to be had as WELL as entertainment, but then you get a production team having consistent spelling errors and ignorant name choices with a common clickbait title. I wish they would wake the fuck up and treat this channel as it's supposed to be treated. So many lovely guests, they don't deserve this shitshow.
Keine Ahnung aus welcher Kiste sie diese 2 Namen rausgekramt haben. In meinem ganzen Leben habe ich diese Namen noch NIIIEEEE gehört. Nicht mal aus deutschen Sagen..auch Hatzeplotz, Bügeline, Scharzmuggel, Kochtanja, Vaginadelheid, Sünje... total abstrus.😂
Wenn du die durchbekommen hast beim Amt, vielleicht 😆😅 Aber, würde sagen die meisten hier sind Fantasienamen oder sehr, sehr alte. Schwarzwurzeln als Gericht z.B. kenne ich aber Schwarzmuggel als Name - der ist mir auch zu Gänze unbekannt. Bartholomäus oder Bartimäus ist auch eher aus Geschichten bekannt. Ob christliche oder Dämonengeschichten. xD
Nein sind sie nicht. Glaub doch nicht alles was du siehst auf einem Kanal mit einer Produktion in welcher keiner deutsch ist... Wenn irgendwas davon echt mal Namen waren, dann viele 100 Jahre vor unserer Zeit und komplett irrelevant nicht nur für den Videotitel sondern auch für sämtliche Zuschauer. Leute NICHT aus Deutschland fangen an zu glauben wir heißen hier alle Krauthelm und Wursthelm oder was fürn Scheiß die da zeigten.
As a Swede I wonder how the hell she came up with the name Felix instead of the much more common Anders, Johan or Erik. I checked Felix and it is not even among the hundred most common male names. Ans female name Julia (???) I think she is trying to sound more international. The more common names are Anna and Maria.
Felix is a fairly common name for her generation, she likely went to school with more ppl named Felix than ppl named Anders, same with the girl names, Julia is very common in her generation while Maria is much less so(more common as a middle name)
@@inotoni6148My host mother's name in Salamanca was Pilar. I think you're right; it's not a common name in Castile but you do still hear it once in a while. As for Nuria, at the University all girls' names can be heard as they come from all over Spain.
8:40 for the „R“ there exist different standards in German . The uvular R back in the throat is most common in the North and West, but likely was not in the past , some say it developed under French influence . In the Southern half of Germany , and overwhelmingly in Austria and Switzerland, the frontal trilled „R“ is used , like the „R“ in Spanish or Italian .
I was thinking at work today you could make a great saga out of all these names: As it happened to be in those days, there was a young German knight, name of Wurstolm Scharzmuggel, who, while watching damsels passing fair through his town, and a couple not so fair, happened to notice one of the not so fair ones, Fridtjof, a woman from the north woods, was being pestered by a couple of the local ruffians. Wurstolm's training kicked in, and he came instantly to her defense forthwith. After rescuing Fridtjof from her situation, the young lady offered Wurstolm her father's helmet, Krauthelm. "Oh no, you shouldn't have.", insisted Wurstolm, hoping that the young lady would take his words at face value, as the helmet smelled of boiled cabbage and dragon farts. Not wanting to seem absent of gratitude, but anxious about owning the rankest piece of armor he'd ever laid eyes on, he asked Fridtjof, "Can, you do anything about the smell?" "Smell? Oh that. That's just my cat, Vaginadelheid." Things were going south in a hurry for Wurstolm. He'd decided to take his leave of the young maiden, but he just wasn't fast enough. "Oh, look! Here's dad's sword and armor as well! The zweihander is called Scheißschwert, and the armor Scheißrüstung." "Of course that's their name." Wurstolm muttered under his breath. "What was that?" Fridtjof inquired. "Nothing, nothing." Wurstolm responded. "Please, Fridtjof, you've been too generous already, and I really must be going forthwith." "Ah, yes, the busy life of a young knight. Well, don't be a stranger." Fridtjof countered in a flirtatious manner. And that is all that antiquity has spared us of the travels of young Wurstolm Scharzmuggel.
Was solln denn das für Namen sein??? Alles nach Bartholomäus habt ihr euch doch ausgedacht, oder? Ich mein, ja sie können deutsche Aussprache auch damit lernen, aber warum nehmt ihr keine Namen die tatsächlich heute verwendet werden??? Auch da gibt's doch noch welche die sehr deutsch sind. Und selbst wenn es Namen sind die es in anderen Sprachen gibt, haben wir doch häufig sehr unterschiedliche Aussprache, was auch sehr interessant gewesen wäre. Vielleicht macht ihr noch einen Part 2 mit besseren Namen? Weil, die Idee ist echt super 👍
Ja absoluter Beschiss dieses Video. Hilft doch Niemandem ausgedachte Kacke zu lernen und vorallem die glauben lassen die Leute heißen hier Krauthelm. Alter was.
Everyone who reads this. We don´t use any of this names in Germany. Jörn sometimes, but the others not in last 500 years, i think :D @World Friends WTF! If You take Harald, Gudrun or somthing like that ... would be more realistic
Are you kiddin'? The names come more from a Harry Potter novel than from German. I've only ever heard two names and no one has been called that for centuries.
My favorite girls' names are Renata, Sonia and Ürsula. I was planning to name my daughters with these names. They have a strong Teutonic vibe to them. 😄
Those were interesting names. Eddie is actually my nickname (Spitzname) I got in high school for playing guitar like Eddie Van Halen. It's also the name of my great-great grandfather who moved us to the USA. In German it is Eduard (A doo arhdt). Many German have normal names like Karl (Charles), Johann (John), and Wilhelm (William). I have to be honest, "Vaginadelheid" was not on my radar for names. Naming someone that is pretty much child abuse.
I am german, Brittas boyfriend and born in 1965. Then many children had german names, or such ones in context of holy bible. In my generation, the use of foreign names started to grow. Today a german child with a german name is rare. When i was young, now i myself become an old fart, older people had german or biblical names , few women french, italian or spanisch names. What is shown here is mostly nonsens. And yes , for many german names english counterparts exist. Gottfried/ Geofrey, Werner could be Warren, Harald is Harold, Heinrich ( Heinz) is Henry, Friedrich ( Fritz) is Frederik, Johannes/ Johann, Hannes, Hans/ John. Also some scandinavian names are revognizeable Hjalmar/ Helmut or Vidkun/ Widukind.
You shouldn't take the credibility of those "names" at face value, especially because these were obviously chosen by someone not german. Many of those are straight up BS.
In a certain Faculty of Biology there are Surnames like Ziegenbein (goat leg/thigh) and Hasenbein (leporidae leg or just call it rabbit leg). Surely they are not hard, but I just can't help laughing wiht this context.
My daughter is half Swiss. My wife and I spelled her name with a Y in it. Most people in my of the States would would over pronounce the J from the original spelling.
I agree with what others have said, most of these names don’t exist. Not as first names at least. Or maybe 1500 years ago or something. Except Jörn and Fridtjof - I knew people with that name.
As a former F1 fan 🏁, I had to pause the video and hum the 🇮🇹 Italian national anthem after Vittoria mentioned that her name is often mispronounced Victoria, because I remembered that name can be found in the lyrics. And 🇫🇮 I don't even know Italian and not that big of a fan of Italy either. 🤣 But yeah. When I lived in 🇪🇸 Spain, they called me Andrés because both they are derived from the Greek "Andreas"; even though it's a fact, I only mentioned it jokingly but they sticked to it. And one roommate said it differently in the 🇮🇨 Canarian accent. 😝
I kind of prefer this version of the game, first letting them guess on their own, then telling them the correct pronunciation, and having them attempt to imitate that, instead of having the game being them attempt to guess, leaving the early guessers struggling in the dark.
I would like a version where they are all JUST presented the word, they all pronounce it one after another, but only AFTER all are finished, the hammer would come into play. This way they can't alter what they are going to say once they saw the hammer/didn't see the hammer. So we can hear how each individually would say the name without giving premature feedback.
Tbh I don't know where you got these names from. When I was a kid in the 70s boys were named Andreas, Markus, thomas, markus, bernd. Girls names were Susanne, Sabine, Andrea, Monika, Silke.
Most of these are made up bullshit but quite funny for germans😂. The german woman was either in on the joke or was to surprised to call them out on the spot. The american woman was exactly right, Krauthelm contains Kraut (german "herb") as in "Sauerkraut" which could be translated as "sour herb/cabbage". The -helm part is present in some old fashioned names like Wilhelm (same as Wiliam or Guillaume) or Friedhelm. Wurstolm same thing, take a german word most people know like Wurst or Kraut and add -olm, which is present in a few surnames. Hatzenplotz was probably supposed to be Hotzenplotz, which is a characters name in one the most famous german children's books "Räuber Hotzenplotz". But its just a funny sounding fantasy word with no meaning. Bügeline is also nonsense as the only meaning you could make of it is with "bügeln", which means "to iron" and if you really want to stretch it here Bügeline could be the nickname of a "woman that always irons" as -line is a typical part of female names like Celine or Caroline, which are very common in germany. In Scharzmugel neither syllables have any meaning in german. Schartzmugel is a name that appears in the game Terraria. Ragenhild exists in Norwegian as Ragnhild, in german there's the uncommon name Reinhild with the same meaning/origin. Kochtanja was probably intended that someone would say cock accidantly. She said in the video, it would mean cooking Tanja and would even be considered bullshit as a nickname. Vaginadelheid next troll attempt as Vagina is exactly the same thing in german, as in many latin languages. To mix it with Adelheid aims at the same joke as Mike Hunt. Sünje is a real frisian name. How did that one end up in there? In Germany it is by law prohibited to give your child a name that ridicules or mocks the child, so you couldn't even get away with these. The producers of the show should probably do a little research to not get trolled so easily😂
As a Swiss Person I know how to pronounce it correctly like my moms name is maja maybe you Americans would spell it “Maya” but in Swiss y is j and w is v
It looks like the producers asked the community for hard German names, and only got troll replies 😂 These names DO NOT exist (except for Fridtjof, Jörn & Bartholomäus). I can't believe the producers fell for obvious trolls like Vaginadelheid, like wtf 😂 Krauthelm and Wurstolm straight-up sound like an American made them up 😂 These are NOT real names.
Next up in the French episode: Croissantpierre, Fromagebaguettina, Vaginmarie, Capussyne 😂😂
😂
lmao
lol and the german girl just went along with it
I'm wheezing. That's just great
Omelettedufromage !
only Bartholomäus and Jörn are real, the other ones if not at least 1000 years old names, then purely invented 😂
The 1st and 2nd names are from northern Germany. Bartholomäus is not as old as you think. I still know a woman with the name Adelheid. But most of the names I've never heard.
Fridtjof exists as a name. But it's mostly used in Northern Germany. There's the actor Frithjof Vierock, for example (slightly different spelling but same name).
I just saw to the rest. Wurstolm? Vaginadelheid? 🤣 This is straight up comedy.
what time machine did you use to get these?
Haha I'm German and I was like wtf are these, this is like ancient germanic or smth :'D
@@Sunrunner663 yeah they’re really weird
Not all. My Doctors Name in Germany is Jörn
@@inotoni6148every name after Bartholomäus seems to be fantasy names, even for german viewers. 😉
@@juwen7908: There are sometimes strange names, for example i nearly laughed when i read in a Museum Wildhans as name of a medieval knight, but could have been a nickname. Some Years ago , a young woman got twin Boys. I asked her, what names she will give them: Friedolin and Fürchtegott? Eggebrecht and Eitelfritz? Wunnibald and Widukind? She laughed about the Joke with real, but dated names. But you are right, this Video is nonsens, because even the real names are not really German.
As a native speaking living in Germany for over 20 years, I never heard any of these names. Maybe Jörn, but that’s it. Those names sounded like they were made up.
Why did you not pick real names, which exist in German?
AGREE
Brother I'm almost double that and I have never heard the majority either. Jörn is literally not sticking out because it's so close to the real version: Björn. Production bombed hard and there was zero educational substance just some lowkey offensive "haha Wurst and Kraut let's somehow implement that who cares if those aren't real names" mindsets. Just let the native of whatever country is being highlighted in the video pick out some names. Idk why this is such a hard concept. Or idk, maybe at least use google right to get some real names.
Die haben uns gef**** HAHAHAHAHAHHAHA
I really liked the *optics* of this video ! 😉
So you've got all the Europeans nationaties sitted up-front, and the German Fraulein is smashing their skulls with a sledge hammer. How ironic !
It suddently gave me déjà-vu vibes, for some reason. 😂
I love Vaginadelheid 😂
This group of girls is very good tbh. They are all so nice and funny. It's been a while we haven't got a group that good in those videos
Sorry, but I‘m German and I Never heard these names. Are these from year 1800?
1800 before christ maybe.
@@Tenseiken_ yeah right 😂
Yess true
I'm from Germany and never heard 80% of these names!
Theses names mate are jokes and pranks😅 believe in me very weeeeeeiiiiiirddd to find to read to find equivalent in others idioms, very biiiiiizaaarrrreee it's all pranks to us laugh 😂
Same
Parents must really hate their child to name it Krauthelm or Wurstolm 😂
vaginadelheid is the worst to be honest
I pretty sure the name registration would deny there entries like they do for Pumuckle or Dragonlord.
Those aren't real names, they're made up
Those aren't real German names and never were... It's made-up names based on German stereotypes. Actually disrespectful if you ask me. Not going to watch another video of this channel as you won't know what's real and whats not. This channel is definetely not for learning new languages and cultures.
those are beautiful names what are you guys on about? My son was named Frankenstein and he loves it
As i studied german and still studying , sorry , but none of these words i've heard before , i don't even know they pronunciation 😂
Because the only real common name in this video is Jörn. Bartholomäus maybe as well but almost no one calls their kid such biblical names nowadays.
Everything else sounded like made up from fantasy and children books. Fridtjof could be a real name too, but I've never heard it, sounds also more Low German/Dutch to me.
Pretty strange that German girl didn't clarify that and even more strange that the video is about common German names lol.
@@KiryubelleKazumaI would also say possibly Frisian.
@@KiryubelleKazuma maybe she did and they cut it out 💀 I really feel like they should let the representative people choose the words from their own languages. I don't even know where they find these names or words.
It's not about common German names, it's about the most difficult names, as it says in the title. She also says in the video that they are older names. Many of these names are from Old High German and have a meaning.
For example, the female name Hildegard is very common in Germany and comes from Old High German and the Germanic language. It means “the one who protects in battle”.
The name Irmgard means “the protective one”.
And so forth...@@KiryubelleKazuma
@@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture No they are old high german names. Those were the hardest names, but there are many names that millions of Germans have. For example Hildegard, Eberhard, Irmgard, Siegmund, Harald, Jörn, and so on
These are not Scandinavian names, but Germanic ones.
I lived in Germany my whole life and never met anyone with that kind of names. Very weird
I met some of them. My Doctors Name is Jörn. And Fridtjof is more a Scandinavian name
You have a football player named Matthäus.
@@reineh3477 That's his last name, not really used as first name. You will rather encounter A Matt(h)eo in Germany than a Matthäus.
@@KiryubelleKazuma isn't Mattheus a book from the Bible? In German at least? Only time that name occurred in my life
Almost like as if most of these names are bullshit or not even german. They bombed hard with this one sadly.
Are this name from children stories. Hatzenplotz ist Räuber Hotzenplotz and the bad guy in many puppet theater. Krautheld, Wurstolm, Bügeline sounds like fun names from puppet theater.
Only the first 3 are real names and 2 of them are old names.
Old names? What does that mean? All names are old. What are new names?
@@ThomasSamoth-ls8ed old names = not used anymore. And probably some names never existed
I think so too. I was like are these Characters names. Like I know Räuber Hotzenplotz but why with an A 😂
I really hope I'm not the only one that laughed like an immature 13-year old when I saw the name "Vaginadelheid"
Actually, that's a meaningless word, I think the Koreans invented this word, it doesn't even make sense, it's a 12th category neologism.😅😅😅😅😅😅 Literally a crazy word 😂😂😂😂
lol that was me. Lmfao my English ass saw vagina first💀💀
I'm German, but I've learned many new German words that I had never heard before.
My favorite is Vaginadelheid
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Is this comedy?
12:12 "You have a lot of consonants, all together". Me as a swede thinking of: i åa ä e ö(it's a full sentence that means "in the river there's an island")
You missed the first Å. Å i åa ä e ö. "And in the river there's an island." :)
I tried to google some of these supposed names, and they don't seem to exist. They aren't even old names that aren't used anymore. You sometimes recognise parts of these names as actual words, though, and Hatzenplotz sounds familiar to Hotzenplotz, which is a fantasy figure from a fairy tail. But luckily, German isn't like English, where often you have to guess the pronunciation when you read a word. So you can still pronounce these words in German.
The French girl did a surprisingly good job at that, btw. Usually, French native speakers would have a very strong accent when speaking German, unless they practice a lot. However, she pronounced some of these words perfectly. I also found it pretty funny that the French native speaker would talk about discovering new ways to use your tongue when speaking German at 11:17 :P
I think she mentioned being from the east part of France so close to the german border. With the alsacien in the region I'm not surprised she can speak german decently
Yeah this video is a bunch of nonsense and a waste of time, frankly. It's anything but a good time. It's dishonest and completely not relatable for viewers. Considering it's 100% not a german who chose these words, I'd even go as far and say it's offensive. That's just a bunch of words to get a laugh out of and slap "german" on them because "haha kraut and wurst". Get tf outta here World Friends lol. Just let the damn native german IN THE VIDEO choose the names if you are unable to use google.
with french they might have an accent a lot of times but they do have the same r as in german so just pronouncing single words can be really accurate. Especially if they already speak english and know how to pronounce the H.
I used to have a German friend named Dörthe back during my study abroad days. According to her, the name was given to a sheep.
Krauthelm? Wurstold? Who the ffff trolled you here? 😂😂😂 These aren't actual name 😂😂😂 It's like Clydia and Vaginia 😂
The first 3 were names that actually exist and while uncommon, are actually used. Jörn probably being the most common one. Everything after what was just nonsense taken from a list of German Names on the Internet somwhere and I doubt you'd find anyone by that name in the last 50-100 years. And some of them, your parents would really have to want you to be laughed at in school to even consider them 😀
Like what the fuck was "Scharzmuggel" XD huge cap - halt ehrlich einfach schlecht gegoogled.
It heavily depends on region. I have never heard the first name they used (fridtjof) but Bartholomäus is quite common for older people. Some of those names are surnames like Hatzenplotz. For other names they really overdid it. Like Adelheid is quite common name for older people but i have never seen that ridiculous expansion at the front.
@@_aullik: Fridjof Nansen was a norwegisn polar explorer of 19th century So may be Common in Scandinavia.
@@_aullikHatzenplotz sounds like Hotzenplotz from the Räuber Hotzenplotz. Never ever in my life I had thought that this was an actual name. Also I have never heard of it.
And Scharzmuggel😂 what should that be? Sounds from Harry Potter
Jörn is also a Swedish name
Not one of this names I have heard as a German in Germany except for Bartholomäus.
Ich schon. Grüße aus Deutschland
@@inotoni6148 Trotzdem komisch so aeusserst seltene Namen zu nehmen.
@@IIIOOOUS Namen wie "Vaginadelheid" oder "Kochtanja" sind ganz eindeutig keine deutschen Namen, sondern eher Scherze. Schon fragwürdig, dass die Deutsche da mal nicht irgendwas gesagt hat, sondern das so hingenommen hat... Dabei gibt es doch so schöne, althochdeutsche Namen, die man hätte nehmen können.
Yeah straight up bullshit. I wonder if they did this on purpose to farm engagement in the comments from the germans aka us. Milking stuff in this shitty way for the algorhythm is sadly not unheard of.
well, Fritjof and Jörn are names for guys, which would be around 50 or 60 - but rather in Northern Germany. The same for Sünje but for a woman. The rest was made-up nonsense.
Felix isn't even in the top 100 of common names for men in Sweden. I think she misunderstood the question, and thought it was just about names in her own age group, and not in general for the country. It was the 33rd most common baby name in 2002, so it's kinda common among people in their 20s.
Top 30 most common names for men in Sweden are Karl, Erik, Lars, Anders, Per, Mikael, Johan, Olof, Nils, Jan, Gustav, Hans, Peter, Lennart, Fredrik, Gunnar, Thomas, Sven, Daniel, Alexander, Bengt, Bo, Oskar, Göran, Andreas, Åke, Christer, Stefan, Martin.
Top 30 most common names for women in Sweden are Maria, Elisabeth, Anna, Kristina, Margareta, Eva, Linnéa, Karin, Birgitta, Marie, Ingrid, Sofia, Marianne, Lena, Sara, Helena, Kerstin, Emma, Johanna, Katarina, Victoria, Inger, Cecilia, Susanne, Elin, Monica, Therese, Jenny, Hanna, Louise.
i'm german. i never heard many of these names once in my life.
they just took mideval biblical fantasy names that no german has ever heard of. wtf :D
"Haha Kraut and Wurst let's make names out of these and feed them to the oblivious viewers".
I'm in love with Spanish women on this channel 😍😍
Only reason to watch these vids.
I'm a german native speaker and have never heard of any of these names in my life (except for Jörn and maybe Bartholomäus, but they are very old fashioned). I mean they are german words but they are combined in a very weird way.
Actually the name Fridtjof is used in Sweden. I’m surprised she didn’t knew it. It’s not very common nowadays but back in the days it was more common but the Swedish pronunciation of the name is a bit different than the German.
I've met a few Fridtjof but all of them were 70 or older.
Same with Ragenhild, in Sweden its Ragnhild. Also an old name thats not used anymore.
Yeah, even if it's not common nowadays, everyone who has been to school in Sweden should at least know the Swedish author Fritiof Nilsson Piraten, and the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen.
@@theretardclub4949 I google and found some young Norwegian athletes with that name so I guess it's still popular in Norway.
Yeah. It was quite weird when she said it looked like random letters. And even if the name isn't common anymore, there is still a very famous song about someone named Fritiof.
"Vaginadelheid" if said something like that in my language would be a really , i mean REALLY , bad words 😂
Kkkkk
not as chocking as the french name Clitorine. 😂
When I saw that name I had to do a double take too and thought to myself, surely not. Thankfully it wasn't pronounced the same way.
I do remember on a UK game show a question was asked about a German athlete Fanny Chmelar and the host absolutely lost it in laughter. That scene went viral and they actually met each other a few years later. For those that maybe don't understand, fanny in the UK and Australia doesn't mean your backside, it is a woman's genitals, although the American version would be just as funny. And obviously Chmelar sounds like smeller.
I feel sorry for every person with that name.
We did use the same word for the female genitals. (Vagina)
As a German I had to read it as well two times.
And even she was struggeling for a moment. And has pronounced it with care.
As she mentioned an old name has been Adelheid. The gender would be female.
So I would agree with her pronunciation try, Vagin-Adelheid still sounds wrong.
that is ridiculus: Krauthelm, Wurstholm, Hutzenplotz, Bügeline, Scharzmuggel, Kochtanja and Vaginadelheid are not real German names, but rather jokes. Wurstholm even makes no sense as a name for a person, but maybe for a long penisula. The other could be names for gnoms and fairies out of a silly children's book.
They probably typed in to AI: give me the most uncommon and ridicolous german names you can come up with 😂😷
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer. That would have been a challenge. And it is a real name 🙂. Even Germans abbreviated it to AKK.
I had problems with the "J" , "W" , "V" sound of german , i still wanting to learn , totally understand the girls 😅😅
For English speakers, The German "J" is like a consonantal "Y" 100% of the time, so yoghurt→Joghurt, yes→Ja, Himalaya→Himalaja.
"W" is like a "V" 100% of the time, so Wunder(wonder) sounds like Vunder, Wasser(water) sounds like Vasser, Winter(winter) sounds like Vinter.
The "V" has a 50% chance of staying a "V", and a 50% of becoming an "F". So Video stays Video, Vanille stays Vanille, Verb stays Verb. But Vater(father) sounds like Fater, Vier(four) sounds like Fier, Vogel(bird) sounds like Fogel. It's typically foreign loadwords that maintain the V, but Germanic words have an F sound.
The Spanish girl is so cute (:
This further shows how clueless the creators of this channel actually are. Don't get me wrong I love the concept of these language videos, if only a competent team could take over the production.
Dude thank you. That's what I have been thinking for so many videos. The production and the team who do the subtitles are an absolute trainwreck and should be fired on the spot. There's some real educational value to be had as WELL as entertainment, but then you get a production team having consistent spelling errors and ignorant name choices with a common clickbait title. I wish they would wake the fuck up and treat this channel as it's supposed to be treated. So many lovely guests, they don't deserve this shitshow.
In Germany we say „ich küss dein Herz, denn diese Leute scheißen auf Etymologie“ and I think it’s beautiful
Where did you get these neanderthaler names??
😂
😂
12 km East of Düsseldorf?
Did you go like 1500 years in the past to get this names? They're like old Germanic/Norse.
Carolina is so cute !❤
I'm german and i haven't ever heard of half these names
German names are also words in Italian like Otto or Anke.
Someone found a time traveling machine 😅
11:20 very nice
00:30 In Italian is Sara and Giulia not Sarah and Julia
Yes, I also noticed that
Krauthelm und Wurstolm sind Namen ????
Keine Ahnung aus welcher Kiste sie diese 2 Namen rausgekramt haben. In meinem ganzen Leben habe ich diese Namen noch NIIIEEEE gehört. Nicht mal aus deutschen Sagen..auch Hatzeplotz, Bügeline, Scharzmuggel, Kochtanja, Vaginadelheid, Sünje... total abstrus.😂
Ja, bei Harry Potter. 😂
vaginadelheid auch?
ist kochtanja die Schwester vom bratmaxe von meica?
Ist die bügeliene eigentlich eine Lügebiene?
So viele Fragen 😂
Wenn du die durchbekommen hast beim Amt, vielleicht 😆😅
Aber, würde sagen die meisten hier sind Fantasienamen oder sehr, sehr alte.
Schwarzwurzeln als Gericht z.B. kenne ich aber Schwarzmuggel als Name - der ist mir auch zu Gänze unbekannt.
Bartholomäus oder Bartimäus ist auch eher aus Geschichten bekannt. Ob christliche oder Dämonengeschichten. xD
Nein sind sie nicht. Glaub doch nicht alles was du siehst auf einem Kanal mit einer Produktion in welcher keiner deutsch ist...
Wenn irgendwas davon echt mal Namen waren, dann viele 100 Jahre vor unserer Zeit und komplett irrelevant nicht nur für den Videotitel sondern auch für sämtliche Zuschauer. Leute NICHT aus Deutschland fangen an zu glauben wir heißen hier alle Krauthelm und Wursthelm oder was fürn Scheiß die da zeigten.
As a Swede I wonder how the hell she came up with the name Felix instead of the much more common Anders, Johan or Erik. I checked Felix and it is not even among the hundred most common male names. Ans female name Julia (???) I think she is trying to sound more international. The more common names are Anna and Maria.
Felix is a fairly common name for her generation, she likely went to school with more ppl named Felix than ppl named Anders, same with the girl names, Julia is very common in her generation while Maria is much less so(more common as a middle name)
Loved the past few videos with this group. Where has Hanna been all my life? 😅
Common girl names i used to hear when I lived in Western Spain were Elena, Maite, Rocío, Pilar, Nuria
Pilar and Nuria are more Catalan names.
@@inotoni6148My host mother's name in Salamanca was Pilar. I think you're right; it's not a common name in Castile but you do still hear it once in a while. As for Nuria, at the University all girls' names can be heard as they come from all over Spain.
As a german, I have never heard most of the names used... must be very old ones, or somebody at World Friends got very creative ;-)
Where did you get these names from??? Some medieval poetry? A Richard Wagner opera? Or AI? Only know Jörn and Bartholomäus.
8:40 for the „R“ there exist different standards in German . The uvular R back in the throat is most common in the North and West, but likely was not in the past , some say it developed under French influence .
In the Southern half of Germany , and overwhelmingly in Austria and Switzerland, the frontal trilled „R“ is used , like the „R“ in Spanish or Italian .
E brava Vittoria
I was thinking at work today you could make a great saga out of all these names:
As it happened to be in those days, there was a young German knight, name of Wurstolm Scharzmuggel, who, while watching damsels passing fair through his town, and a couple not so fair, happened to notice one of the not so fair ones, Fridtjof, a woman from the north woods, was being pestered by a couple of the local ruffians. Wurstolm's training kicked in, and he came instantly to her defense forthwith. After rescuing Fridtjof from her situation, the young lady offered Wurstolm her father's helmet, Krauthelm.
"Oh no, you shouldn't have.", insisted Wurstolm, hoping that the young lady would take his words at face value, as the helmet smelled of boiled cabbage and dragon farts.
Not wanting to seem absent of gratitude, but anxious about owning the rankest piece of armor he'd ever laid eyes on, he asked Fridtjof, "Can, you do anything about the smell?"
"Smell? Oh that. That's just my cat, Vaginadelheid."
Things were going south in a hurry for Wurstolm. He'd decided to take his leave of the young maiden, but he just wasn't fast enough.
"Oh, look! Here's dad's sword and armor as well! The zweihander is called Scheißschwert, and the armor Scheißrüstung."
"Of course that's their name." Wurstolm muttered under his breath.
"What was that?" Fridtjof inquired.
"Nothing, nothing." Wurstolm responded. "Please, Fridtjof, you've been too generous already, and I really must be going forthwith."
"Ah, yes, the busy life of a young knight. Well, don't be a stranger." Fridtjof countered in a flirtatious manner.
And that is all that antiquity has spared us of the travels of young Wurstolm Scharzmuggel.
Absolut underrated 😂😂😂😂
The German names are Not Common at all except jörn. I don’t know why but they could be names from Harry Potter 😂😂😂
😅😅😅😅😅😅 or elgosesvamenjaralasevamare it's gonna be perfect ever 😂😂😂😂😂
Was solln denn das für Namen sein??? Alles nach Bartholomäus habt ihr euch doch ausgedacht, oder?
Ich mein, ja sie können deutsche Aussprache auch damit lernen, aber warum nehmt ihr keine Namen die tatsächlich heute verwendet werden??? Auch da gibt's doch noch welche die sehr deutsch sind. Und selbst wenn es Namen sind die es in anderen Sprachen gibt, haben wir doch häufig sehr unterschiedliche Aussprache, was auch sehr interessant gewesen wäre.
Vielleicht macht ihr noch einen Part 2 mit besseren Namen? Weil, die Idee ist echt super 👍
Jörn gibts auch, aber der Rest ???
Ja absoluter Beschiss dieses Video. Hilft doch Niemandem ausgedachte Kacke zu lernen und vorallem die glauben lassen die Leute heißen hier Krauthelm. Alter was.
Vorschlag für die nächste Folge:
Pippilotta
Viktualia
Rollgardina
Schokominza 😄😄😄
Everyone who reads this. We don´t use any of this names in Germany. Jörn sometimes, but the others not in last 500 years, i think :D @World Friends WTF! If You take Harald, Gudrun or somthing like that ... would be more realistic
Most aren't even names. Their just made up words.
As a German, I can guarantee that none of the names have been used since the Middle Ages.
That's a really weird collection of names 😂
Maybe Low German? Probably even Old Saxon? 😆
it’s soo funny😂😂 these names are 90% trolls😂
at 10:10 a.m., the American blinks reflexively, she expects in advance to take a hammer blow. 😅
Hatzenplotz? And now I know how uncultured the suggestors were! It's Hotzenplotz! 😆
Very cool video! Especially because I'm from Germany 😂🎉 so cute! Nice 👍! Freya would also be interesting or Konstanze 😂
😅😅😅😅
Here in Austria there is a village named after Bartholomäus. It‘s called Bartholomäberg.
I just love Elysa's accent.
It starts okay, Fridtjof, Jörn, Bartholomäus....
then it escalates quickly and drifts into sheer fantasy.
Aus welchem Fiebertraum kommen denn bitte diese Namen? 😂
Are you kiddin'?
The names come more from a Harry Potter novel than from German. I've only ever heard two names and no one has been called that for centuries.
Sorry but I’m sure they just looked into a German dictionary and put random words together😂 something stereotypical like „Wurst“ and „Sauerkraut“
Yup. Just some lowkey offensive shitshow of a video.
Ragenhild almost sound like Ragnhild (Sweden/Norway).
I love the fact that the pewdiepie's name and his son's name were mentioned in the video
Sünje is from Northern Germany, it emans something like little sun.
Someone was taking the piss when sending them names, but I like it. Sadly our girl didn't clarify for the others 😅.
My favorite girls' names are Renata, Sonia and Ürsula. I was planning to name my daughters with these names. They have a strong Teutonic vibe to them. 😄
The last name is spelled Ursula though, without the dots.
Those were interesting names. Eddie is actually my nickname (Spitzname) I got in high school for playing guitar like Eddie Van Halen. It's also the name of my great-great grandfather who moved us to the USA. In German it is Eduard (A doo arhdt). Many German have normal names like Karl (Charles), Johann (John), and Wilhelm (William).
I have to be honest, "Vaginadelheid" was not on my radar for names. Naming someone that is pretty much child abuse.
And Sepp (Joseph)
I am german, Brittas boyfriend and born in 1965. Then many children had german names, or such ones in context of holy bible. In my generation, the use of foreign names started to grow. Today a german child with a german name is rare. When i was young, now i myself become an old fart, older people had german or biblical names , few women french, italian or spanisch names.
What is shown here is mostly nonsens.
And yes , for many german names english counterparts exist. Gottfried/ Geofrey, Werner could be Warren, Harald is Harold, Heinrich ( Heinz) is Henry, Friedrich ( Fritz) is Frederik, Johannes/ Johann, Hannes, Hans/ John. Also some scandinavian names are revognizeable Hjalmar/ Helmut or Vidkun/ Widukind.
Forgotten: Ede or Edi can mean in german both Eduard ( Edward) or Edgar.
You shouldn't take the credibility of those "names" at face value, especially because these were obviously chosen by someone not german. Many of those are straight up BS.
@@Tenseiken_ : Sehe ich genau so.
In a certain Faculty of Biology there are Surnames like Ziegenbein (goat leg/thigh) and Hasenbein (leporidae leg or just call it rabbit leg). Surely they are not hard, but I just can't help laughing wiht this context.
I’ve studied German for a year but I still could not roll my “R” especially if it’s in the beggining of a word 😂
Vaginadelheid? Lmao you guys definitely got trolled 😂😂
My daughter is half Swiss. My wife and I spelled her name with a Y in it. Most people in my of the States would would over pronounce the J from the original spelling.
I agree with what others have said, most of these names don’t exist. Not as first names at least. Or maybe 1500 years ago or something.
Except Jörn and Fridtjof - I knew people with that name.
As a former F1 fan 🏁, I had to pause the video and hum the 🇮🇹 Italian national anthem after Vittoria mentioned that her name is often mispronounced Victoria, because I remembered that name can be found in the lyrics. And 🇫🇮 I don't even know Italian and not that big of a fan of Italy either. 🤣 But yeah. When I lived in 🇪🇸 Spain, they called me Andrés because both they are derived from the Greek "Andreas"; even though it's a fact, I only mentioned it jokingly but they sticked to it. And one roommate said it differently in the 🇮🇨 Canarian accent. 😝
I'm from Germany and I have never heard one of these names
As a German, I do not believe for a second that "Fridtjof" is a name that originates from germany... sounds more like a Norwegian or so name.
That's literally the way how teachers teach in German: If anyone says something wrong they hit you with a stick (common practice back then)
Traditionally they hit you with a Schweinshaxe.
Good job they’re pretty.
My name is John
I kind of prefer this version of the game, first letting them guess on their own, then telling them the correct pronunciation, and having them attempt to imitate that, instead of having the game being them attempt to guess, leaving the early guessers struggling in the dark.
I would like a version where they are all JUST presented the word, they all pronounce it one after another, but only AFTER all are finished, the hammer would come into play. This way they can't alter what they are going to say once they saw the hammer/didn't see the hammer. So we can hear how each individually would say the name without giving premature feedback.
German girl have french accent 🤷
You seem to have visited a chivalry festival 😂
i think both the people in the video and the commenters were expecting FIRST names, not LAST names, 75% of those names were last names.
These are not real names😂
The first one is the name of a famous artic explorer from norway
Im the real explorer🙃😂
Tbh I don't know where you got these names from.
When I was a kid in the 70s boys were named Andreas, Markus, thomas, markus, bernd.
Girls names were Susanne, Sabine, Andrea, Monika, Silke.
world friendship , world funny 😊🤝 but every language is difficult pronunciation words
So true 🙂
Europe at its best :)
Yeah 😎
those are no common names in Germany
I am German and my kid are named Felix, Leonie, Marie, Zoé and Zara ❤
Most of these are made up bullshit but quite funny for germans😂. The german woman was either in on the joke or was to surprised to call them out on the spot.
The american woman was exactly right, Krauthelm contains Kraut (german "herb") as in "Sauerkraut" which could be translated as "sour herb/cabbage". The -helm part is present in some old fashioned names like Wilhelm (same as Wiliam or Guillaume) or Friedhelm.
Wurstolm same thing, take a german word most people know like Wurst or Kraut and add -olm, which is present in a few surnames.
Hatzenplotz was probably supposed to be Hotzenplotz, which is a characters name in one the most famous german children's books "Räuber Hotzenplotz". But its just a funny sounding fantasy word with no meaning.
Bügeline is also nonsense as the only meaning you could make of it is with "bügeln", which means "to iron" and if you really want to stretch it here Bügeline could be the nickname of a "woman that always irons" as -line is a typical part of female names like Celine or Caroline, which are very common in germany.
In Scharzmugel neither syllables have any meaning in german. Schartzmugel is a name that appears in the game Terraria.
Ragenhild exists in Norwegian as Ragnhild, in german there's the uncommon name Reinhild with the same meaning/origin.
Kochtanja was probably intended that someone would say cock accidantly. She said in the video, it would mean cooking Tanja and would even be considered bullshit as a nickname.
Vaginadelheid next troll attempt as Vagina is exactly the same thing in german, as in many latin languages. To mix it with Adelheid aims at the same joke as Mike Hunt.
Sünje is a real frisian name. How did that one end up in there?
In Germany it is by law prohibited to give your child a name that ridicules or mocks the child, so you couldn't even get away with these. The producers of the show should probably do a little research to not get trolled so easily😂
Could have used names that are actually used in Germany to be honest.
I am german. But I don't know almost all words/names. This where bad examples I guess.
Manuel and Maria were common names in like 1960 lol
I'm German and I have never heard the 1st and 3rd name😂😂😂
As a Swiss Person I know how to pronounce it correctly like my moms name is maja maybe you Americans would spell it “Maya” but in Swiss y is j and w is v
Me as a German never heard this Words xD
Fridtjof? You sure you cat didn't run over the Keyboard lol
Also Names mhh I don't know, besides Jörn not really XD
Krauthelm Wurstholm lol