As a Canadian, I can translate: "right on man right on". On a side note, I found this guy HILARIOUSLY Canadian. Wearing plaid and said "eh" - couldn't fit the stereotype more imo
i am cuban and it is difficult for someone from my country to make an effort or be interested in learning english normally in the country only 2% know a little english
@@Thindoramareally? The standard Punjabi is same but real Punjabj which people speak in villages and suburbs is can't be understand by Hindi speaker? हिंदी: क्या कर रहे हो? पंजाबी: की करण डे जे? हिंदी: तूने क्या करना जान कर? ਪੰਜਾਬੀ: तें डॉके लौने? These are only two examples but there thousands
Before I watched this video, I had been hesitant to speak English with my strong Japanese accent for a very long time because I wanted to sound perfect like a native speaker. But now, I feel a bit more confident with my accent. This video made me realise that there are many accents in the world, and I don’t need to be ashamed of mine. It helped me become more confident with my English. I really appreciate you uploading this video.
Most of us do not care, especially in America, one third of us speak perfectly, the second doesn’t speak English, and the third has English as their only language and still speaks it incorrectly
The cool thing about english, and as demonstrated beautifully by this video, is that English is spoken by so many different people worldwide that any native english speaker has spoken with many people with extremely varying and different accents. So, feel free to speak with a heavy accent, its normal and english speakers see it as normal.
Dude having an accent is badass, we're all from different places and that should be celebrated. The way we speak ours, and other people's languages is amazing and just the fact that we can communicate at all is so awesome.
Americans love when anyone tries to learn English, especially Japanese people. Japan is so developed that English isn't really needed there, so it shows a lot of dedication.
@@john-ic9vj makes a point. But i learned english in school as first foreign language. Then practiced it in online gaming. Then suddenly we realised, that we can move from Kazakhstan to Germany, but we need to (no surprise) learn german too. Later in Germany you realize that there are dozens of dialects that barely similar, so you need to learn local dialect too to understand local redneck customers. Taking into account that Kazakhstan is officially bilingual too, it is already 4 languages (plus dialects), different cultures that i honored to getting know. This is a good brain gym to keep it fit, can only advice to learn languages. USA is great country too, but sometimes you want to see Europe and what's more important speak with some people that only knows one their native language.
is it just me or did she seem uncomfortable af in front of the camera. seemed as if she was wondering if it would come back to her. she even made sure to say on camera to some random stranger that "oh its nice to see him again i havent seen him in so long" in order to seem less connected to the other side. am i crazy?
My heart broke a little at the Cuban one! “I know my English is not as good as I need it to be but I’m trying!” 🥺 honestly the fact he could even communicate that emotion should be celebrated considering most English speakers can only speak English. I commend anyone making a genuine effort to learn another language 👏 Wish I could cheer him on!
I am English learner from JAPAN. Almost Japanese people hesitate to speak English because they can't pronounce English like native english speaker. But it's doesn't matter. There is a several english pronunciation. This video and channel teach me that. I take a break from my university to study english in SYDNEY. By the time I get back to Japan, I want to be able to speak english fluently!!
Your English is great by the way! Is it common in Japan to write countries / cities in capital letters? I like that and you are the first one I've noticed that.
I have been learning the English language over 7 years and I can tell it is still hard to comprehend other vernacular dialects. So fluent English is hard to achieve, C1 is more likely
8:25 Being german myself, the fact that this guy is literally the prototype german in his suit in front of a radiologist office with his Currywurst leads me to believe he's a paid actor lol All jokes aside, awesome video!
it's not that unique, it's similar to kazakh. but if you want to hear something unique hmm maybe "doske" (bro) or "azyr lagman zhep zhatam" (i'm eating lagman right now)
Ikr. Do they actually have conversations in zulu Xhosa etc or do they just add some words here and there? Cause in TV shows i only ever see them adding some words
@user-lb6tx1gx7k Its the same as in South Africa, There's the languages which are purely spoken by some people but there is ALWAYS an English Blended langauge. Eg "Ekse Cav this thing. I saw this Hun and I wad like Yho, Muhle lomntwana. Tell you i fell like like ke morata from day one nou nou. Wangkwishisha?"
Southern Africans are really something else. I was at a gas station in rural Eastern Cape, ZA and the gas station attendant said proudly that he spoke thirteen languages.
A lot of these “accents” weren’t really authentic because the people were really good at English and obviously learned how to surprise their natural accent.
Amazing video.. Clicked for the accents, fell in love with the beautiful mix of people. And personaly, the fact that you put Swahili at the end motivated me to learn it.
I, as an English French speaker from Canada, moved to Tanzania a few years ago when finishing up high school. It's a very easy language to learn. I'm not gonna lie! I took about 3 years to get to intermediate level by doing lessons once a week and doing duolingo! You should really learn! Noun classes are the only really difficult part up to what I know. It's mostly about building up suffixes and prefixes on either end of a verb. And it's like playing freestyle with language cause kind of everything is right and everything is wrong. It's fun and has a rhythm! I really recommend it giving it a shot on duolingo.
@loganfytchy-powow4580 Thank you for this information. I moved to Kenya 6months ago.. I will try duolingo, and then classes when I get the chance. It really is a beautiful sounding language.
Saying someone has a "British accent" means basically nothing. Someone from Glasgow will sound completely different to someone from London, but both of them are British.
@@kxkxsjk2There’s no such thing as ‘England English’. Even within England there is significant variation in accent, particularly between the north and the south.
Aww, that's not how language learning works though! There's never a deadline where you have to be fully fluent by then, so you can't actually fail, you can always keep learning! 💪😊
@@weirdfairy Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh are Hindu Buddhist lands under Islamic colonisation When are you vacating these lands ? There are 1.1 billion zionist hindus in the world
I had an Aussie friend whose accent was actually way closer to British RP than the stereotypical Aussie accent. I want to say she was from the Adelaide area but I don't remember for sure.
@@NormanDimmick I'm from NSW, Tamworth and have a semi-country accent. But unfortunately my accent was influenced by school, they taught "proper English" and that's what I learnt.
As Midwesterner myself, can confirm, most of us barely speak the one. xD Thankfully, I love language and want to become at least conversational in Japanese so I can teach English there.
That was not a French Canadian accent, it was very clearly French. And it makes sense; a lot of French people emigrated to Quebec, especially Montreal, so it's very easy to find around Montreal French speakers that are actually not French Canadians.
To be fair, they missed most of the interesting dialects and accents from the South and Appalachia. AAVE, Louisiana Creole, Appalachian, and 'Southern' are all quite distinct and it's sad that the closest we got was 'midwest'.
2:35 this guy's english is really really good, i think his lack of confidence in english comes from the comparison between english and the other languages he speaks
This guy also has like what almost sounds like a little bit of a western ny accent? When he says “dad,” the first syllable of “Spanish” and the second syllable of “America.” (Someone please tell me if I am laughably horrible terribly wrong. I don’t know anything about languages, I’m just a person who is from the northeast and have spent time in south Florida, and many family members who have moved from the northeast to south Florida.)
It's the "flat" American accent similar to the "media voice" you'd hear for advertising or broadcast. It's supposed to be the most understandable English accent.
2:36 he looks like quite the character, he looks like he’s going to build some crazy machine that could possibly end the world and take me on an adventure
That guy from Colombia is from my city, Medellín, he has a "Paisa" accent, which is just one of the around 14 accents that we have, which are VERY different from one another, just like being in another country. I'm an English teacher, and I can tell you that being my students from everywhere in this country, I can tell you that all of them have very different accents when speaking in English. Whatever the case, this is a really interesting video and I'm gonna show it from now on to my students. Thanks a lot and greetings from Colombia.
@@quangos9455 Well, there's also variation among people with the same background. I almost have a perfect "American" accent to the point that some American tourists think for a moment that I'm from the States, but some other people have a mild "paisa" accent, like the guy in the video, and some others have a very thick paisa accent, some even after living for decades in the States.
@alejobola its so interesting how we could tell where people are from based on how they speak english. and i think the most obvious one is paisa. im from cali living in nyc!
That's so true. I'm from the coast and I've speak English with many people of other cities, who would say that even in English our accents still remain!
British not being split up into Welsh, Scottish, English, Northern Irish is odd. The girl you interviewed had an upper class accent anyway, very few English people speak like that.
Strange how even neighbour counties of Britain can sound completely different with different words (Same with Spanish and Italian) while in Russia it's the same Russian, same sounding and vocabulary everywhere. In Kaliningrad near Poland, Murmansk near Norway or Vladivostok near Korea and Japan in 10000 km away
im surprised they didnt touch on the australian and new zealand accents. They are sort of mixtures of the british accents, and are quite interesting to compare nvm i didnt watch it all
I speak English but my parents spoke a Southern Italian dialect around the house. They never taught it to me because they used it as their secret language when they didn't want me to know what they were talking about. In high school I took two years of Italian and thought, now I'll know what they're saying. But it was formal Italian so it sounded different and my plans were foiled.
Wait, what? How it is possible? So your parents spoke literal Italian with you, but Southern accent with eachouther? What the heck? In my opinion it is a little bit weird if i understood you right
@@Вгостяхугеймера-м1к Penso che intendesse dire che i suoi genitori parlavano un dialetto del sud tra di loro, ma i dialetti non sono solo un accento, sono quasi un'altra lingua che però deriva sempre dall'italiano
Britain and Ireland both have many different regional accents. The "british accent" shown here is only found in southern England and usually only by middle class people, but in the north of england in places like Newcastle there are accents that are different enough to be from a different country. Scotland and Wales also have several regional accents unique to the rest of britain, as well as both having endemic languages separate from English.
We need more of these to remind the world we're all just people learning and living the best we can. You can see how their faces light up when they talk about or in their language and country. Wish the world was always this easy going!
Islam just had a very big impact on culture in places, where it was spread. I'm myself tatarian from Republic of Tatartstan, one of Russian region, and we have a lot of Arabic and Persian words in our language, even tho our ancestors had very different language and culture from those region. The trade changed our language and culture a lot! We were used to some muslim words from Koran without even realizing it ain't originating from ancestor language. This one is clear example
There are many borrowings in the Russian language. But the connection with the Koran by this user is too far-fetched (if he did not mean the Tatar language). Similarly, it can be associated with Latin (through Byzantium) or French (through the 19th century).
This is amazing. There are too many English accents around the world to take in. Most non-native speakers still speak it with a heavy accent coming from their native language, but it's still okay to many native English speakers. There are also countless different and unfamiliar things out there in the world awaiting me. By the way, I wouldn't like to leave my home country for the first time soon because I feel more comfortable watching these awesome videos at home. Thanks for uploading this eye-catching one, Dan. 😊
As Ukrainian who consumed absurd ammounts of content (both in British accents and American ones, additionally to few quirky ones), I can safely say that I understand my thick-accented compatriots (or anyone with particular types of heavy accents) way less than natives.
@@PUARockstar ну якщо ти добре говориш мовою якоюсь ти знаєш як правильно вимовляти слова то так коли хтось каже "зис" можеш не зрозуміти одразу що він має на увазі "this" але ти напевно розумієш англійську з українським акцентом. взагалі навіть неправильна граматика, порядок слів тощо можуть бути зрозумілі тому що можна здогадатися що хтось переклав надто буквально з української на англійську
I just wanted to say that this is a really wholesome comment. Everyone is so nice in the comments on this video, it makes me happy how this kind of exploration of people and cultures brings out so much kindness in everyone
She’s probably South African born in Zimbabwe, in Zimbabwe we don’t speak Xhosa or Zulu here, just Shona, vandu, Ndebele and other languages like Makhuwa and choma
The thumbnail beautiful girl saying she loved elvish language, ironically looked like an elf herself (except those pointy ears) with extremely fair skin and moonlike shiny silvery hair, took me back to the LOTR tales. Gosh I wish she could come to your podcast or something, truly mesmerising ❤
I just wanted you to know that if you ever read this, your video is so beautiful and seeing the pure joy and interaction between you and the people you interviewed made me tear up. Thank you for documenting so many beautiful moments of people first and foremost, and also a small highlight of some of their culture through language. Beautiful and refreshing video ❤
These videos are always very interesting to watch. It is always special when you see that 1 rare person who can speak an Unbelievable amount of languages! (7 is the most I've seen)
True. I just thought it would be interesting to include a clip of a younger Chinese woman next to a woman from the older generation to hear the difference. It's in no way meant to imply her English isn't clear and fluent - it is!
Chinese Americans do have an “Asian accent” just like other racists it’s just not very different from the standard accent however overtime you will begin to notice it @choonblaze
@@chiefpanda7040 The girl on this vid isn't a part of that whatsoever, it's American accent dear. Born and raised in USA with an American accent. Not a trace of any Chinese or foreigner notes in her voice at all.
@@choonblaze people of chinese descent in the us have a slight accent like @con9244 said there is a very slight asianness similar to how other racial groups may exhibit their own accents even though living in the contry
1:42 - Your english is fine dude. You're trying really well. Luckily a lot of South Floridians speak Spanish or are used to Cuban accents and can likely understand and help you more if you get stuck on a word that's hard to remember or translate. Keep up the good work :)
12:28 really good representation of an Icelandic accent speaking English, I’m glad you found an old person because the Icelandic accent is way stronger in the older generation
This video is a priceless tool for showing children other languages, teaching about how some countries have more than one language, and getting the map out. It opens so many avenues for a teacher!
The southern France man is my opposite. I speak English and French but I struggle with French vocabulary while comprehending and conjugating verbs somewhat well.
for those interested, the International Dialects of English Archive (IDEA) has samples of over a thousand region-specific accents and dialects of English. they list not only the country, but also the city, age, and sex of the person speaking. it's such an interesting resource.
"How many languages do you speak"
"Barely one"
I felt that
timestamp pls?
@@kvassinc1:07
As someone who's nonverbal almost 80% of the day and hates people i felt that in my soul
16, 17 isn't late at all
Average angloid
0:30
“Where you from?”
“I’m from Canada, actually”
“Oh cool, me too”
“HHeyamagagahehe”
LOLL
As a Canadian, I can translate: "right on man right on". On a side note, I found this guy HILARIOUSLY Canadian. Wearing plaid and said "eh" - couldn't fit the stereotype more imo
I didn't get the last part 😂
😂😂😂😂😂
holy sh1t this comment made it even funnier lmao
8:26 the German guy is the most German guy in the world 💀
My immediate thought too
He's the Germaniest person ever
Currywurst mit Pommes and the German accent
i can't stress how on point this is
Glad I didn't have to scroll too far
"I'm from Palestine. She's from Israel"
Bro paused before the two...
Romeo and Juliet right there
@@konrad8541 WILD
Me too! That was.. something.
Ones stealing land and ones stealing hearts 🔥🔥🔥
Me too I can't 😡😡😡
2:08 Bro found english so hard he turned into a whole building
dude stop 😂
He pulled a Phil Leotardo
Bro 😂😂
😂😂
Tf 😂
The real mystery here is how you got the French people to actually speak English….
😂😂😂😂😂
By asking them questions in English.
Haha if you're a decent human being you don't have problem with the French.
For sure he's a nice guy : mystery resolved
Call them croutons
speak to them in really bad french and they give up and switch to english
An elven woman who speaks elvish. Absolutely stunning.
Imagine meeting someone like her but she says “Ego, mibo orch” ;-;
@@Kureemywhat does it mean? i don't speak legolas
@@bavi647 it’s a Sindarin insult. It means, “go away, kiss an orc”.
I do not want to imagine Legolas saying that to me.
@@Kureemy it's very cool, do you know other things in elvish?
@@VV-md3tw Le uchann
"I know I don't speak English as good as I need to, but I'm trying"
i'm CRYING at cuba
I know he was so cute bless
i am cuban and it is difficult for someone from my country to make an effort or be interested in learning english normally in the country only 2% know a little english
The punjabi guy really said "ONLY three languages"
edit: guys chill I just meant it was cool
I'd have said the same actually.
@@justsmth1 good for you bro
Punjabi is very similar to Hindi. Like Spanish and Italian, or Dutch and German. I personally would count it as almost three haha.
@@Thindoramareally? The standard Punjabi is same but real Punjabj which people speak in villages and suburbs is can't be understand by Hindi speaker?
हिंदी: क्या कर रहे हो?
पंजाबी: की करण डे जे?
हिंदी: तूने क्या करना जान कर?
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ: तें डॉके लौने?
These are only two examples but there thousands
@@Thindorama Saying that speaking Italian and spanish counts as speaking ALMOST two languages is crazy
17 south of France is epitome of saying your English isn’t good then proceeding to deliver the most eloquent shit ever
It's always the most capable who are the most humble.
He just said words of latin and french origin. Doens't strike me as "most eloquent shit ever"
@@Paul-hq7gf u must lack eloquence then sadly
@@Paul-hq7gfyou scream “I only speak English”
@@phytoplankton7003 I feel like people who say that only speak English half the time
I speak English, American, British and Australian
Blimey, mate! This lorry is wicked cool, eh?
Hahaha
Why do you write in Canadian then?
How about Canadian and South African, bro?
I think you speak New Zealand as well?
“I’d probably learn braille” I don’t know why but I loved that answer
That's just a different spelling. With American English Braille you wouldn't be able to understand French braille.
@@tantuce …ok?
@@BookishDark He has quite a point. Braille is not a language.
@@aandykfhow is it not a language?
@@-meow.. it’s like sign language bc there’s braille for different languages so it’s not its own language
Before I watched this video, I had been hesitant to speak English with my strong Japanese accent for a very long time because I wanted to sound perfect like a native speaker. But now, I feel a bit more confident with my accent.
This video made me realise that there are many accents in the world, and I don’t need to be ashamed of mine. It helped me become more confident with my English.
I really appreciate you uploading this video.
Most of us do not care, especially in America, one third of us speak perfectly, the second doesn’t speak English, and the third has English as their only language and still speaks it incorrectly
The cool thing about english, and as demonstrated beautifully by this video, is that English is spoken by so many different people worldwide that any native english speaker has spoken with many people with extremely varying and different accents. So, feel free to speak with a heavy accent, its normal and english speakers see it as normal.
Dude having an accent is badass, we're all from different places and that should be celebrated. The way we speak ours, and other people's languages is amazing and just the fact that we can communicate at all is so awesome.
English is the language of the world, it helps us all connect together. Your accent is just your homeland and heritage coming through ❤
Americans love when anyone tries to learn English, especially Japanese people. Japan is so developed that English isn't really needed there, so it shows a lot of dedication.
Euroeans: i speak roughly three.
Midwest: barely one 😂😂😂
To be fair, there's much more incentive to learn more than one language in Europe than the middle of the US
@@john-ic9vj makes a point. But i learned english in school as first foreign language. Then practiced it in online gaming. Then suddenly we realised, that we can move from Kazakhstan to Germany, but we need to (no surprise) learn german too. Later in Germany you realize that there are dozens of dialects that barely similar, so you need to learn local dialect too to understand local redneck customers. Taking into account that Kazakhstan is officially bilingual too, it is already 4 languages (plus dialects), different cultures that i honored to getting know. This is a good brain gym to keep it fit, can only advice to learn languages. USA is great country too, but sometimes you want to see Europe and what's more important speak with some people that only knows one their native language.
Us Brits can relate to that
Mostly English so
don't forget countries in Asia such as India and Philippines, they speak multiple languages as well
Palestinian dude who's also half Ukranian is friends with an Israeli American lady. This guy is like the avatar of geopolitics.
ummm Ukraine and US are friends... Now if the lady was a Russian Israeli, then yes.
@@Maxmulham or if the palestinian was russian
is it just me or did she seem uncomfortable af in front of the camera. seemed as if she was wondering if it would come back to her. she even made sure to say on camera to some random stranger that "oh its nice to see him again i havent seen him in so long" in order to seem less connected to the other side. am i crazy?
I was looking for this comment!
He was not a real Palestinian.
A Palestinian can be friend with a Jew, but never an Israeli.
My heart broke a little at the Cuban one! “I know my English is not as good as I need it to be but I’m trying!” 🥺 honestly the fact he could even communicate that emotion should be celebrated considering most English speakers can only speak English. I commend anyone making a genuine effort to learn another language 👏 Wish I could cheer him on!
I am English learner from JAPAN.
Almost Japanese people hesitate to speak English because they can't pronounce English like native english speaker.
But it's doesn't matter. There is a several english pronunciation. This video and channel teach me that.
I take a break from my university to study english in SYDNEY.
By the time I get back to Japan, I want to be able to speak english fluently!!
Good luck 🤞 ❤
Your English is great by the way!
Is it common in Japan to write countries / cities in capital letters? I like that and you are the first one I've noticed that.
Thank you!!!
This way of writing is my original.
I want to emphasize the place!
I have been learning the English language over 7 years and I can tell it is still hard to comprehend other vernacular dialects. So fluent English is hard to achieve, C1 is more likely
頑張れ、今は英語がもう上手だよ
8:25 Being german myself, the fact that this guy is literally the prototype german in his suit in front of a radiologist office with his Currywurst leads me to believe he's a paid actor lol
All jokes aside, awesome video!
Thought the same. He is wonderful 😊❤
I could see him in many old movies.
Germans are cool. I dig you folk!
Jede andere Stadt außer Berlin, lol.
That and he's super tall!
i freaking love these types of videos where we can just see how diverse our planet is and much cultural value is held by these people
I wonder if long term diversity will rapidly change or remove certain cultures
@@teelo523 i hope not
@@teelo523 That is a good point and kind of scares me. If it does happen I just hope it isn't obvious in my lifetime haha.
@Ikram232 I have seen it in london. It's very diverse, but a lot of the English culture has gone in many parts of it. That's just 1 example
Cringe
Man: "The Brooklyn accent is gone"
The caption: "Brooklyn USA Accent" 💀
😅😅
He ain't young.
That Florida man had a surprisingly enjoyable accent/voice and seems so genuinely kind.
That a south Floridian accent. If he used my dad who has lived in the same town for 67 years, most people wouldn't understand him. Very southern.
@@NandRthere's also the Miami area Hispanic accent which sounds ESL but they're native English speakers
ikrr it sounds so yummy
@@NandRtrue, the more north you get the more southern the people are when it comes to FL lol
Bros just a jolly fellow
Me: I bet Kyrgyz is really unique, I’d love to hear something I’ve never heard before
Kyrgyz: Assalamu Alaikum
Me: 😑
hahaha
Same thing for Kazakh and Tatar broskiy 😂😂😂
it's not that unique, it's similar to kazakh. but if you want to hear something unique hmm maybe "doske" (bro) or "azyr lagman zhep zhatam" (i'm eating lagman right now)
that guy doesn’t speak Kyrgyz, he even mispronounced the name of the language
It's like a French person saying 'Allo'
9:16
"I speak [click]osa"
I love how Xhosa has the click when pronoucing the language's name. 😀
🤣🤣🤣
Love from South Africa🇿🇦❤
So interesting
Its so satisfying
Amazing how natural it is for her
This is such a beautiful video. It's like a documentary/art
The Zimbabwean woman is awesome! 7 languages!!
Ikr. Do they actually have conversations in zulu Xhosa etc or do they just add some words here and there? Cause in TV shows i only ever see them adding some words
@user-lb6tx1gx7k Its the same as in South Africa, There's the languages which are purely spoken by some people but there is ALWAYS an English Blended langauge. Eg "Ekse Cav this thing. I saw this Hun and I wad like Yho, Muhle lomntwana. Tell you i fell like like ke morata from day one nou nou. Wangkwishisha?"
@@lunariousmoon ahhh, thank you so much for the explanation
I know right
Southern Africans are really something else. I was at a gas station in rural Eastern Cape, ZA and the gas station attendant said proudly that he spoke thirteen languages.
This video brought to light my love for everyone. People individually are actually sweethearts when you think about it. They get mean when in crowds.
This! Humans are so sweet.
sure!
Lol this exactly what George Carlin felt when he said this on a Conan interview. You should check it out
people with strong german accents speaking english always throws me off its so amusing and i love it
I know, it is cringe af 😅
@@Coldvader Not cringe, it's awesome
Ikr i love it
It sounds so awful, but it's kinda funny. Like something you'd hear in a cartoon
@@FreeBirdMurphy I hate my accent 😂
A lot of these “accents” weren’t really authentic because the people were really good at English and obviously learned how to surprise their natural accent.
shuuuuuuuuuuuuuush
*suppress
Amazing video..
Clicked for the accents, fell in love with the beautiful mix of people.
And personaly, the fact that you put Swahili at the end motivated me to learn it.
I, as an English French speaker from Canada, moved to Tanzania a few years ago when finishing up high school. It's a very easy language to learn. I'm not gonna lie! I took about 3 years to get to intermediate level by doing lessons once a week and doing duolingo! You should really learn! Noun classes are the only really difficult part up to what I know. It's mostly about building up suffixes and prefixes on either end of a verb. And it's like playing freestyle with language cause kind of everything is right and everything is wrong. It's fun and has a rhythm!
I really recommend it giving it a shot on duolingo.
@loganfytchy-powow4580
Thank you for this information. I moved to Kenya 6months ago.. I will try duolingo, and then classes when I get the chance.
It really is a beautiful sounding language.
Yeah. The blonde women
9:51 that compliment and "thank you!" was so sweet 🫶
not australian bot
@@killua6968it’s not even Australian accent
@@AUS6267 oath
9:31 the popping noise she made is so cool!
It is very neat.
the Xhosa language from south africa has this sound, as well as other clicking sounds, it sounds beautiful
They are called click languanges and they are mostly form Southern Africa
@@nubia2408 I think the term is Khoisan languages.
The way you’ve approached all these people is really beautiful
Saying someone has a "British accent" means basically nothing. Someone from Glasgow will sound completely different to someone from London, but both of them are British.
There are a lot countries where you can say this.
I think people refer to England English by saying that
@@kxkxsjk2There’s no such thing as ‘England English’. Even within England there is significant variation in accent, particularly between the north and the south.
British accent it's literally RP or CSEE
I live in the south west of england and we have distinct dialects from city to city. Someone from london speaks like they're from a movie.
6:48 THIS GUY could save the world
All he has to do is learn Chinese and he'll be able to do it
Mr worldwide
HOLY WHAT IN THE FU
Gawddamn
Palestine and Israel as well as Russia and Ukraine
9:16 LOVE this “Xhosa” pronunciation SO MUCH
4:30 this guy has escaped from an animation movie ❄️
Why?
@@SLavaluChinang5 He looks like Jack Frost from " Rise of the guardians " .
@@oliver_jackson hardly
Jack Frost OMG!
@@juninighthome yeah , hehe
8:37 ofc the dutch guy is on a bike🇳🇱😂
cycling is as Dutch as it gets
6:47 this is so precious, feeling both warm and sad watching this bit
ikr
They represent a world that could be if hate wasn’t in so many people’s minds
yes, it shows how people are never just defined the politics of their nation states. anyone can be friends if we see each other as people first
@@yggdrasil4986 your comment hit hard 😭😭😭
@@yggdrasil4986there are a lot of religious fanatics there, I think that's as much a reason as territorial strife.
Ok but the guy in 11:36 "I tried French but I failed miserably" represents me when I tried to learn Icelandic 💀💀😭
ég tala íslensku >:D
I went to an icelandic group and they all were racists so it discouraged me to learn it
Aww, that's not how language learning works though! There's never a deadline where you have to be fully fluent by then, so you can't actually fail, you can always keep learning! 💪😊
@@AyeletZuckerAz Exactly!! He didn't "fail", he just gave up
French is easier to learn than Spanish.
This feels like something that belongs on old TH-cam
"Can we hear some Kyrgyz?"
"Sure, bro; أسلم عليكم"
هذا شيء مضحك جدا
lol
That was a dissappointment...
@@benjaminflash1108lol😂
The guy literally replied with a sentence how more than half of the middle east salutes :)
6:59 not every day you find a palestinian-ukrainian man with an israeli girlfriend👍👍
Hes probably jewish (zionist)
Nothing actually says that they are in a relationship
@@varoonnone7159
Lmao what a pathetic pfp 😂
@@weirdfairy
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh are Hindu Buddhist lands under Islamic colonisation
When are you vacating these lands ?
There are 1.1 billion zionist hindus in the world
@@weirdfairy
Jews win bucketful nobel prizes in science. Muslims slit thoats
Not hard to pick sides
10:00 he is so nice, such a nice man
He's just happy someone is praising his religion
Finding the midwestern guy next to a pawnshop is the most midwestern thing I have seen
The 'Aussies' at 9:51 sounds suspiciously British, to my British ears
Probably South Australian or just British. South Australians still speak "the King's English"
@@LtGhost-tb3kq i am south australian... we dont sound that posh
@@ioannis7833 Yeah I know, but it'd be the only explanation.
I had an Aussie friend whose accent was actually way closer to British RP than the stereotypical Aussie accent. I want to say she was from the Adelaide area but I don't remember for sure.
@@NormanDimmick I'm from NSW, Tamworth and have a semi-country accent. But unfortunately my accent was influenced by school, they taught "proper English" and that's what I learnt.
“Barely One” caught me off guard 😂 1:06
As Midwesterner myself, can confirm, most of us barely speak the one. xD
Thankfully, I love language and want to become at least conversational in Japanese so I can teach English there.
@@Bulldogg6404same lol 😭 english wasnt my first language but i can speak it more than spanish and yet i still struggle…😆
@@Bulldogg6404pfft try Australian, it's borderline another language.
These videos are so interesting to me. Hearing these accents is almost like stories being told.
Nice interpretation. The accents do tell a bit of story.
That was not a French Canadian accent, it was very clearly French. And it makes sense; a lot of French people emigrated to Quebec, especially Montreal, so it's very easy to find around Montreal French speakers that are actually not French Canadians.
thanks for saying it! as a french canadian, it made me a bit sad that they took a french guy to represent our accent hahah :(
The ridiculous part is that you've added multiple varieties of American English accents, but only one you label British.
To be fair, they missed most of the interesting dialects and accents from the South and Appalachia. AAVE, Louisiana Creole, Appalachian, and 'Southern' are all quite distinct and it's sad that the closest we got was 'midwest'.
i guess if the interviews were done in the u.s it makes sense why there would be most american english speakers found
Well, there was one English-Scottish (as opposed to Scots) speaker
“British” accents are more similar than American accents
You'd have to make an entire video dedicated to just british accents because they vary not across regions but towns.....
This video reminded me how different people are from each other and for some reason it makes me happy
2:35 this guy's english is really really good, i think his lack of confidence in english comes from the comparison between english and the other languages he speaks
He clearly said his vocabulary is the problem not his ability to speak properly.
10:22 “What’s your name?”
“Dan”
“Your a very clever Dan” 😂😂
This video is so amazing, it shows so many different cultures across the english speaking world and the people represent those cultures so well
1:19 this guy has damn good voice
This guy also has like what almost sounds like a little bit of a western ny accent? When he says “dad,” the first syllable of “Spanish” and the second syllable of “America.”
(Someone please tell me if I am laughably horrible terribly wrong. I don’t know anything about languages, I’m just a person who is from the northeast and have spent time in south Florida, and many family members who have moved from the northeast to south Florida.)
It's a pretty normal voice lol.
wait really? that one out of the all the other voices?
german guy is the best
It's the "flat" American accent similar to the "media voice" you'd hear for advertising or broadcast. It's supposed to be the most understandable English accent.
4:27 Bro looks like a grown up Jack Frost
they're both so cute
@@cormaca7069yeah
really
2:36 he looks like quite the character, he looks like he’s going to build some crazy machine that could possibly end the world and take me on an adventure
That guy from Colombia is from my city, Medellín, he has a "Paisa" accent, which is just one of the around 14 accents that we have, which are VERY different from one another, just like being in another country. I'm an English teacher, and I can tell you that being my students from everywhere in this country, I can tell you that all of them have very different accents when speaking in English. Whatever the case, this is a really interesting video and I'm gonna show it from now on to my students. Thanks a lot and greetings from Colombia.
My parents are both from medellin and their english sounds different then his
@@quangos9455 Well, there's also variation among people with the same background. I almost have a perfect "American" accent to the point that some American tourists think for a moment that I'm from the States, but some other people have a mild "paisa" accent, like the guy in the video, and some others have a very thick paisa accent, some even after living for decades in the States.
@alejobola its so interesting how we could tell where people are from based on how they speak english. and i think the most obvious one is paisa. im from cali living in nyc!
That's so true. I'm from the coast and I've speak English with many people of other cities, who would say that even in English our accents still remain!
Yes!! I'm from Bogota and the accent (both in spanish and english) is super distinct, it's really amazing how much variety Colombia has :)
British not being split up into Welsh, Scottish, English, Northern Irish is odd. The girl you interviewed had an upper class accent anyway, very few English people speak like that.
Definitely quite confused that they included both Ireland and Scotland but not us
Strange how even neighbour counties of Britain can sound completely different with different words (Same with Spanish and Italian) while in Russia it's the same Russian, same sounding and vocabulary everywhere.
In Kaliningrad near Poland, Murmansk near Norway or Vladivostok near Korea and Japan in 10000 km away
im surprised they didnt touch on the australian and new zealand accents. They are sort of mixtures of the british accents, and are quite interesting to compare
nvm i didnt watch it all
Yep people don’t understand we maybe a small island but there are so many different English accents.
@@garsifeld4510the Welsh people probably kept refusing to be on camera maybe lmao
6:48 Un couple israelo-palestinien quelle belle preuve de possibilité de paix. ❤
I almost cried at that couple- so sweet!
J'étais en train de regarder les commentaires pour voir si quelqu'un avait remarqué aussi, c'est tellement beau de voir ça ❤
❤
They aren’t a couple but it’s still beautiful
i would like to know more, i bet they have their own opinions on the situation
'I speak only 3 languages'
ONLY?!? 😭
I speak English but my parents spoke a Southern Italian dialect around the house. They never taught it to me because they used it as their secret language when they didn't want me to know what they were talking about. In high school I took two years of Italian and thought, now I'll know what they're saying. But it was formal Italian so it sounded different and my plans were foiled.
Wait, what? How it is possible? So your parents spoke literal Italian with you, but Southern accent with eachouther? What the heck? In my opinion it is a little bit weird if i understood you right
@@Вгостяхугеймера-м1кu didnt
Ueee cumpa'
@@Вгостяхугеймера-м1к
Penso che intendesse dire che i suoi genitori parlavano un dialetto del sud tra di loro, ma i dialetti non sono solo un accento, sono quasi un'altra lingua che però deriva sempre dall'italiano
@@Leo_G. I dialetti italiani nella maggior parte dei casi derivano dal latino.
That guy is the most Canadian archetype , down to not being a ginger but having a ginger beard.
Right on!
Missing the turban though lol
@@RhombusProductions😂😂😂
10:01 that sir is so wholesome lol i liked his energy
They're also not australian
@@gabrielb5387 ? hes a moroccan man in a moroccan city and it says moroccan accent. Wtf who says hes australian?
Britain and Ireland both have many different regional accents. The "british accent" shown here is only found in southern England and usually only by middle class people, but in the north of england in places like Newcastle there are accents that are different enough to be from a different country. Scotland and Wales also have several regional accents unique to the rest of britain, as well as both having endemic languages separate from English.
This video makes me so happy. It’s so nice how different people can be.
We need more of these to remind the world we're all just people learning and living the best we can. You can see how their faces light up when they talk about or in their language and country. Wish the world was always this easy going!
-"could you speak something in kyrgyz?"
proceeds to speak arabic
"Salama alleikhu"
Islam just had a very big impact on culture in places, where it was spread. I'm myself tatarian from Republic of Tatartstan, one of Russian region, and we have a lot of Arabic and Persian words in our language, even tho our ancestors had very different language and culture from those region. The trade changed our language and culture a lot! We were used to some muslim words from Koran without even realizing it ain't originating from ancestor language. This one is clear example
@@いするぎみおthat was so interesting I would have never associated Russia and Islam, спасибо
Yeah he didn't really speak Kyrgyz when you think about it hahaha, no Turkic words there!
There are many borrowings in the Russian language. But the connection with the Koran by this user is too far-fetched (if he did not mean the Tatar language). Similarly, it can be associated with Latin (through Byzantium) or French (through the 19th century).
As Malaysian, I can speak 7 languages : Malay, English, Mandarin, Teochew, Hokkien, Cantonese, little bit Japanese
As a Filipino, I can speak Fluent English, Bisaya, Tagalog, Japanese. Moderate Bahasa Indonesia, Spanish and a little bit of Arabic and German
4:17 this guy is straight outta of a anime.
if the word alex come out of a body, it should be him
@@matrakcnasuhefendi8208LOOOOOOL
Jack Frost
Which one?
@@SLavaluChinang5 wdym each one
This is amazing. There are too many English accents around the world to take in. Most non-native speakers still speak it with a heavy accent coming from their native language, but it's still okay to many native English speakers. There are also countless different and unfamiliar things out there in the world awaiting me. By the way, I wouldn't like to leave my home country for the first time soon because I feel more comfortable watching these awesome videos at home. Thanks for uploading this eye-catching one, Dan. 😊
As Ukrainian who consumed absurd ammounts of content (both in British accents and American ones, additionally to few quirky ones), I can safely say that I understand my thick-accented compatriots (or anyone with particular types of heavy accents) way less than natives.
@@PUARockstar ну якщо ти добре говориш мовою якоюсь ти знаєш як правильно вимовляти слова то так коли хтось каже "зис" можеш не зрозуміти одразу що він має на увазі "this" але ти напевно розумієш англійську з українським акцентом. взагалі навіть неправильна граматика, порядок слів тощо можуть бути зрозумілі тому що можна здогадатися що хтось переклав надто буквально з української на англійську
I just wanted to say that this is a really wholesome comment. Everyone is so nice in the comments on this video, it makes me happy how this kind of exploration of people and cultures brings out so much kindness in everyone
9:23 The Zimbabwe girl takes away the cake for me. What an exotic, energetic language!
She's GORGEOUS
She’s probably South African born in Zimbabwe, in Zimbabwe we don’t speak Xhosa or Zulu here, just Shona, vandu, Ndebele and other languages like Makhuwa and choma
The Zimbabwean really made this video😂
The thumbnail beautiful girl saying she loved elvish language, ironically looked like an elf herself (except those pointy ears) with extremely fair skin and moonlike shiny silvery hair, took me back to the LOTR tales. Gosh I wish she could come to your podcast or something, truly mesmerising ❤
I just wanted you to know that if you ever read this, your video is so beautiful and seeing the pure joy and interaction between you and the people you interviewed made me tear up. Thank you for documenting so many beautiful moments of people first and foremost, and also a small highlight of some of their culture through language. Beautiful and refreshing video ❤
These videos are always very interesting to watch. It is always special when you see that 1 rare person
who can speak an Unbelievable amount of languages! (7 is the most I've seen)
the question is how well they can speak each one of them
Really cool video! I love seeing how happy some people are to talk to you, especially to teach you a little of their language.
I love that a lot people from all over the world learn different languages! Smarter people and that helps make them less ignorant.
Wow, an Israeli and a Palestinian together and no one's losing their minds in the comments.
Free Palestine❤❤❤
Free Israel 🇮🇱
This shows just once again that war isn't between ppl but between governments
War can totally be between people. Democratic governments are supposed to represent the people.
@@XVI_rome it kind of is between people. The people in Israel WANT the rest of the land.
7. That's not Chinese American accent. That's just normal American accent spoken by an American girl of Chinese descent.
True. I just thought it would be interesting to include a clip of a younger Chinese woman next to a woman from the older generation to hear the difference. It's in no way meant to imply her English isn't clear and fluent - it is!
Chinese Americans do have an “Asian accent” just like other racists it’s just not very different from the standard accent however overtime you will begin to notice it @choonblaze
The sino-american accent is linguistically proven
@@chiefpanda7040 The girl on this vid isn't a part of that whatsoever, it's American accent dear. Born and raised in USA with an American accent. Not a trace of any Chinese or foreigner notes in her voice at all.
@@choonblaze people of chinese descent in the us have a slight accent like @con9244 said there is a very slight asianness similar to how other racial groups may exhibit their own accents even though living in the contry
That blonde English lady is actually wholesome and adorable.
She's just like a princess of elves ☘️
Tipical women are wonderful complex.
@@baffinsansterre ??? so people can't compliment a woman?
Time stamp?
@@baffinsansterrecope and seethe
2:24 I wondered for a second if I was on the right site.
1:42 - Your english is fine dude. You're trying really well. Luckily a lot of South Floridians speak Spanish or are used to Cuban accents and can likely understand and help you more if you get stuck on a word that's hard to remember or translate. Keep up the good work :)
Beautiful vibes from him.
His English is not that good
1:06 damn this guy's presence hits like a truck lmao
Like in a good or bad way ?
@@adrobestia262 in a midwestern way
@@UrianErreErre that means nothing to me, im from Argentina,i dont undestand 😟
@@adrobestia262 LOL he's joking saying it's neither good or bad, just that it stands out 😆
12:28 really good representation of an Icelandic accent speaking English, I’m glad you found an old person because the Icelandic accent is way stronger in the older generation
This video is a priceless tool for showing children other languages, teaching about how some countries have more than one language, and getting the map out. It opens so many avenues for a teacher!
Beautiful video...really highlights subtle differences Ive never noticed before
The kind of simple video that makes you love people.
What an incredible video! Thank you!
The southern France man is my opposite. I speak English and French but I struggle with French vocabulary while comprehending and conjugating verbs somewhat well.
I love this video, it’s calm and makes me happy
The Algerian guy at 12:38 is BEAUTIFUL 😍🥵
Was waiting for someone to say it 🤭
Aladdin
I was taken aback too lol
Gay
@@henriquegodinho4655 Pride 🏳🌈
for those interested, the International Dialects of English Archive (IDEA) has samples of over a thousand region-specific accents and dialects of English. they list not only the country, but also the city, age, and sex of the person speaking. it's such an interesting resource.
amazing, i've got to check that out.
Otw
this is so much more than listening to how people speak. It shows people. Really appreciate this video.
6:48 is the thing that should make this video viral!
6:49 what we needed right now! ✌🏼
1:56
"I just got head today actually"
how beautiful it's this kind of content where we can see sooo many different lifes in only seconds, diversity it's amazing
love this kind of videos! thanks for sharing
6:47 is amazing in our time
Thats disgusting ngl, not hating on jews but saying israel means ZIONIST.
@@weirdfairyno, it really doesn’t, just because someone is Chinese doesn’t make them a socialist
@@weirdfairyShut up please
@@LegoSnoopDoggI can't tell if you're joking cuz this comparison doesn't make sense
@@frayze5142 my point is that the place you live in doesn’t always mean you have the same beliefs as the government
7:04 peace
Not until the land is back to its people. 🇵🇸
@@weirdfairyFrom the river to the sea 🇵🇸
@@weirdfairy the land is for everyone
@@chilichinashop the WORLD will be free
8:37 duTCH, engliSH, SHpaniSH and german.. _bikes away_
Tell me you're dutch without telling me😂