@@focka73 Hort doch einfach auf. Das ist doch nicht zu fassen. Ist doch abartig. Da kommt doch keiner mit. Und doch stört es nicht, wenn das Wörtchen in jedem Satz und Halbsatz doch noch vorkommt.
I'm Romanian and I lived in Germany for a while. I speak mid level German and these skits are sooo funny and make me feel nostalgic about my time there 😊❤ Keep them coming Liam! Thank you ❤❤❤
If the question is positive, and your answer is positive, you say "ja" If the question is positive, and your answer is negative, you say "nein" If the question is negative, and your answer is negative, you say "nein" If the question is negative, and your answer is positive you say "doch"
Germans and German are misunderstood, and they're lovable for it. You capture English speakers' frustrations so well. Thanks for closing the bridge 😂❤🙏🏻
In Germany we don't say: You are walking too fast, slow down a bit We say: Langsam! Wir sind doch nicht auf der Flucht! But this doesn't happen very often...
It is highly contextual. You could argue it means something like “indeed” or “affirmative” except it also can mean “but” or sometimes it is used to ‘soften’ a command, e.g. „komm doch mit“. If none of those makes sense in context, you can just ignore it because no explanation is going to make sense.
"Doch" is just like the "no" as an answer to "no", if you disagree with your interlocutor. If it has context like "geh doch", it has a different meaning.
Ich spreche mehrere Sprachen (Russisch, Deutsch, Englisch, Spanisch und Französisch.) Im Moment lerne ich noch Chinesisch dazu. Und in keiner der Sprachen habe ich bis jetzt ein passendes Pendant zu "Doch" gefunden! 😂
"Doch" is probably the most powerful word to ever exist. It can even counter the longest, most detailed explanations and the most stupid person can counter the smartest. "Doch" wins every discussion.
@@ThomasVWorm Genau. Auf Englisch gibt es immer Probleme mit: “you don’t speak German, do you?” “No.” “Wait, no you don’t speak German, or no, you do speak German?”
Das kriegen so viel Deutsche nicht hin mit dem Ja und Nein af solche Fragen zu antworten. Wenn "Sprichst du KEIN Englisch?" die Frage ist und ich kein Englisch spreche, ist die Antwort nämlich JA. Und nicht nein. Probiert es mal aus.. Die meisten Leute sagen Ja, MEINEN aber nein.
At least the Scottish and Welsh native English speakers can perfectly produce that sound. And most English people as well. The little light "ch" as in "ich" would be a different story indeed.
I, a german, spoke this with him and he got every word pronounced exactly the same way and with the same energy as I did and now I just feel caught being a stereotypical german... 😅
It's even funnier when you make a statement about yourself, like "I don't like x" and the person you're talking to is like "Doch." and then explains how they like it, but making it sound like they are telling you, you're wrong about yourself.
Germans: Our language has a wide variety of words!
Also Germans: Doch, Bitte
Was just going to point out 'bitte' 😂
Ach bitte, lass doch den Blödsinn doch mal, bitte.
Doch, bitte
man u forgot the good old *sach ma*
True 😂
Doch, bitte. The words that can sum up an entire paragraph of spoken argumentative essays (also known as argument)
😂
You even did the "Do-och" 🙄 with the change of pitch 😂😂😂 that is so characteristic if someone's already annoyed 😂 I love it 😁😄
Noticed that too 😂
😂 Ohhhh jaaaa
isso 😂😂😂
He wasn’t annoyed tho?
I dont understand how a language can even exist without this masterpiece of a word
In Hungarian it's "de", in Norwegian it's "jo" 😊
In Mesopotamian Arabic, there's a word with the same function, which is بلي pronounced beli.
Yes. It is my new word to incorporate into English for everything now.Doch.
Doch mahalo?
As a Turk it took me days to understand the usage of this word, it's the opposite for me
"One word to rule them all!"
"No!"
"Doch!!"
OH!
@@wmopp9100hahah lol wollte das kommentieren
OH!
"Meinetwegen" geht auch. 😅
Oh
Das langgezogene „Doooch“ ist absolut on point. Well done, Liam! ❤
Am Schluss fehlt noch "heul doch!" 😂
Ah stimmt, als Aufforderung kann man es auch benutzen. :)
😂😂😂
underrated 😂. Des wär wyld
😂😂😂
Hahaha 😂😂😂
The "doOch" with the double "o" is just relatable 😭🙏
That “bloody hell” was one of the MOST ENGLISH things I’ve heard him say 🤣😂🤣
*Bri'ish
*Bri‘ish
*Bri'ish
"Doch" is absolutely my favorite word in German. It deletes so many unnecessary conversations. Such a smart word...
Als er zur Tür raus ging, hätte der Deutsche Typ noch ,,Geht doch!" sagen können.
Hat er auch
@@gachakaylaj6230 Nein er meint, wenn er zur Tür raus ist: “Na geht doch”
@@el.capo728 genau
@@gachakaylaj6230 nö
@@focka73 Hort doch einfach auf. Das ist doch nicht zu fassen. Ist doch abartig. Da kommt doch keiner mit. Und doch stört es nicht, wenn das Wörtchen in jedem Satz und Halbsatz doch noch vorkommt.
How does he always manage to seriously seem like two complete different people?! Love it 😂
One is Liam Carpenter, the other Wilhelm Zimmermann.
Plus a woman and an old man.
"Babe you dont even last that long"
"Doch"
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
😂
@@someaddictedidiot2186 doch
@@someaddictedidiot2186 Doch
@@someaddictedidiot2186Doch.
Innerer Monolog des Deutschen:
,,Endlich ist der Engländer gegangen.
Na geht DOCH."😂
German kindergarten fights must be hard to understand for people learning German..."hab ich nicht!" "Hast du doch!" "Nee" "doooooch"
Und dann bringen wir noch „wooohoooool!“ rein 😂
Lügen darf man nicht sagen
@@dampframme8960 lügen darf man sagen! Nur lügen darf man nicht!
@@arianoooamari6949 Neeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
It's exactly like this
„Doch“ ist the best word ever invented. It is so much better than just saying „ja“
Nein! - Doch! - Oh!
Genau woran ich sofort denken musste. xD
Klassiker
Ich würde das eher
Nein! - Doch! - OOOOOHHHH!
schreiben😂
@Dipl. Ing. nein doch oh ist aber Louis de Funes. Französischer Humor also ;)
Non! Si! Oh!
I'm Romanian and I lived in Germany for a while. I speak mid level German and these skits are sooo funny and make me feel nostalgic about my time there 😊❤ Keep them coming Liam! Thank you ❤❤❤
„Doch“ is pure magic 🙌
Its like the word "na"
It is not pure magic it just Hass many different meanings
@@benrockstar574doch es ist pure magic
420 likes. You achieved it all
Ja doch!
Doch is THE Argument for any discussion.
Clearly the best
apprentice: bitte
advanced: doch
master: tja
Verstehe.
@@mattiprabavarian special: mei
@@lucian7490 gell
@@lucian7490 bavarian master: ollawei
Ne
Ich will bitte mehr von diesem Thema! Das ist unfassbar augenöffnend! 🙏
I love the Woerd doch. It very clearly answers a negative question in a way that yes and no can't.
Exactly
it just means shure
@@kollevinsky No.
@@LorenzJahndoch
@@feddy1103 Nah
❤Liam never disappoints😃😁💙
If the question is positive, and your answer is positive, you say "ja"
If the question is positive, and your answer is negative, you say "nein"
If the question is negative, and your answer is negative, you say "nein"
If the question is negative, and your answer is positive you say "doch"
Thanks
@@lauchiuff7062 there is no rules to doch
@@crosssizbabe doch
But that this is just one (the main) option to use the word „doch“. 😅 „Es ist doch etwas komplizierter!“
@@crosssizbabe doch
You pronounce it so so nicely I must say, I’m melting 🫠
"Doch" is a great word! It always bothered me that there is no direct translation in english😂
Doch
Keine mit nur einem Wort leider
Mit mehreren?
I think we do better without it and this video encapsulates why.
@@ferretyluv meanwhile the words "set" and "run" have like 30 different meanings.
Doch translates perfectly to the Dutch word "toch". Glad to be of help 😂 😂 😂
I was reading a book (planet germany) about germany from an hawaian and he had a whole chapter about "doch" 😂
It was wonderfull 😊
Germans and German are misunderstood, and they're lovable for it. You capture English speakers' frustrations so well.
Thanks for closing the bridge 😂❤🙏🏻
the "do-och" was so flawlessly german... 👍🏻
Just like the "Geh doch."
You nailed the tone of each of them. Muss man doch zugeben
Er hat das dohoch gelernt. Applaus! 😄
I can't imagine how languages can exist without this word. It's really important.
Ein sehr nützliches Wort. Mir fehlt es sowohl in meiner Muttersprache als auch in Englisch!
Welche Sprache ist deine Mutterspracje? :)
"Doch" ... The one German word that has dozens of meanings and none can be explained in a single word. 😂
Alas.
But the Betonung has to be different in every „Doch“!! 😂
indeed, there there be some variation in the "melody" of Doch ;-)
Doch, actually, you may learn mein whole Muttersprache by just watching and repeating each of Liam's lectures. I am not kitting hier!
Doch is a holy word. Im so happy that it exists
Not sure - ‚Tja‘ could be even more powerful..
@@reesofraft4166 😂😂😂😂 You can't forget the mighty "so."
@@Luzifer- so so!
I love this word too. And I'm not even German.
@@weissemagierin nice to hear that! 😂😂
Ich kann gar nicht in Worte fassen wie glücklich mich diese Filmchen doch machen xDD
In Germany we don't say: You are walking too fast, slow down a bit
We say: Langsam! Wir sind doch nicht auf der Flucht!
But this doesn't happen very often...
😂
Ihh, wer bist du denn
@@AndreBigBoi einer auf der flucht
Ja genauso ist es wirklich
Aber wenn du dich beschwerst dass du läufst: "Wir fahren gleich Bus." "Mit welchem denn?" "Fußbus."
Doch is such a great and unique word. 😂
Gets back after someone had explained it to him: „Sags doch GLEICH!“ 😂
Saying Doch just give you the Power to end every conversation
Gibt wirklich kein Wort im Englischen, dass das Wort komplett ersetzten kann.
"Yes" kann es größten Teils aber wir Deutschen sind einfach besonders 😂
Doch
Doch
Though?
Doch.
After he's gone: "Der ist doch ein Spinner!"
I as a German myself can‘t explain what „doch“ means💀 It just means doch✨
Das geht mir ja doch ganz genau so 😅
So it's a highly context based word?
Ich hab auch keinen Plan was es heißt
My guess is it's an affirmative expression that can be used in any situation involving a yes or something similar
It is highly contextual. You could argue it means something like “indeed” or “affirmative” except it also can mean “but” or sometimes it is used to ‘soften’ a command, e.g. „komm doch mit“. If none of those makes sense in context, you can just ignore it because no explanation is going to make sense.
"Hmm... was it something I said"?
Doch. ;)
„Nein.“
„Doch.“
„Oh.“
Der klassiker, der in jedes Soundboard reingehört ^^
Me when I first moved to Germany and everyone's responses were "doch" or "genau" 😭
One more version to cover: “Doch doch”! 😅😂
Anyways, love your work!
Ich liebe diese Wörterspielerei, super gemacht, Danke
"Doch" ist the most effective way to counter any negative reason or argument with german ease;)
This Chanel is kinda helping me learn more words (I have not learned German for 2 years and I still remember the basics quite well)
I never thought about the sheer randomness of this word 😂 it still makes so much sence 😂
"Ich wollte doch nur ja sagen."
A versatile word for any situation. 😅
Oder doch nicht... 🤔😅
Das ist doch Quatsch.
„Doch“ ist das perfekte (d.h. an Effizienz nicht zu überbietende) Wort für die beliebte deutsche Freude am Widersprechen. Besser geht’s nicht 😂
"Doch" is just like the "no" as an answer to "no", if you disagree with your interlocutor. If it has context like "geh doch", it has a different meaning.
ist doch klar
@@feranks3211 I say "nein" you say "doch". Nein, nein
Ich spreche mehrere Sprachen (Russisch, Deutsch, Englisch, Spanisch und Französisch.) Im Moment lerne ich noch Chinesisch dazu. Und in keiner der Sprachen habe ich bis jetzt ein passendes Pendant zu "Doch" gefunden! 😂
The French language has the word "si" used exactly as "doch" to answer positively to negative questions.
"Doch" is probably the most powerful word to ever exist. It can even counter the longest, most detailed explanations and the most stupid person can counter the smartest. "Doch" wins every discussion.
"Na geht doch!"
I was expecting a "geht doch" at the end [triumph of getting rid of the tourist] 😂
Fr you made a really good job in saying doch because many English speaking people can't pronounce the ch sound
Wenn dir jemand auf ne Ja-Nein-Frage mit Doch antwortet, solltest du das Gespräch beenden. 😂
Warum? Man drückt damit nur aus, das man von einer gegenteiligen Meinung beim gegenüber ausgeht.
@@ThomasVWorm _Sprichst du kein Englich?_
_Ja._ → _Genau._
_Nein._ → _Doch._
@@ThomasVWorm Genau. Auf Englisch gibt es immer Probleme mit: “you don’t speak German, do you?” “No.” “Wait, no you don’t speak German, or no, you do speak German?”
Das kriegen so viel Deutsche nicht hin mit dem Ja und Nein af solche Fragen zu antworten.
Wenn "Sprichst du KEIN Englisch?" die Frage ist und ich kein Englisch spreche, ist die Antwort nämlich JA.
Und nicht nein.
Probiert es mal aus.. Die meisten Leute sagen Ja, MEINEN aber nein.
@@AlexandraVioletta Deshalb sollte man stattdessen mit _genau_ oder _doch_ antworten. Dann versteht es jeder.
Der wo da die lustigen Videos macht hat da noch viel Material!
I missed that word in English when I decided to buy tea in London "doch"
The annoyance conveyed by do-och was on point.
I think we Germans don't appreciate the words "doch" and "bitte" enough. I mean we could literally drive a non-German insane just by answering.😅
depends. if the non-german is english, yea. other languages have similar things to doch and bitte.
The singing "doch" is my favorite 😂
It was the best pronunciation of the “ch” sound I have ever heard from a native English speaker.
He is a native German speaker or bilingual.
At least the Scottish and Welsh native English speakers can perfectly produce that sound. And most English people as well.
The little light "ch" as in "ich" would be a different story indeed.
@@norbertfleck812nein, doch gelernt 😋
You should probably have a look at the german picturebook „Das Neinhorn“. There is a whole doch-character in there 😂
average german discussion
person 1 : * well planned argument *
person 2 : no
person 1 : DOOOCH
spot on!
You just confused me about my own language hahahah
as a german, i can confirm that we can use "doch" for anything
Ich dachte er sagt am Ende: „Na geht doch“ 😂
I love thatg word, it makes so many things easier!
I, a german, spoke this with him and he got every word pronounced exactly the same way and with the same energy as I did and now I just feel caught being a stereotypical german... 😅
Doch the best word
Make a loop at the end.
The guy wants to ask another person at the end and the other person is this ""Doch-Guy" again
The ,,dohoch“ so accurate!😂
Ich würd gern einen Sketch von dir über die drei deutschen Pflichtgewürze Salz, Pfeffer und Paprika sehen 😂
The sing-song "do-ooch" was perfection😂
"What does that word even mean?"
Whatever you want it to mean 😅
Das weiss man doch😊
Loooove the word doch! It conveys real emotion 😂
Actually my favorite word out of all the German language
Doch is one of the most amazing words in German !!
The best ending would've been: door closes "heul doch".
Short for „Heul doch, wenn du es nicht ausstehen kannst!“
Translation: „I dare you to cry if you can‘t stand it!“
@@nerdineverythingnerdinnoth4984 Good bot.
Ist einfach praktisch so ein wort
Hmmm... Lief doch gut 😂😂😂
Haha me as a German didn’t thought about that
Legends say He is still saying "doch"
Same thing with fei and gell 😂 Multi usable, wonderful words right there
It's even funnier when you make a statement about yourself, like "I don't like x" and the person you're talking to is like "Doch." and then explains how they like it, but making it sound like they are telling you, you're wrong about yourself.
That's not part of the german language though. It's a mental health issue.
@@oculiquattuor Doch.
Dis reminds me of the movie the dictator with the word “Aladdin”
Mit "Doch" beginnt und endet alles.
Doch das erzählen wir niemand oder doch ?
The "doOch"
as a german i really miss that there is no "doch" in the english language
We do. It's "though". It's literally the same word but unlike the German version, "doch", it only means however/despite.
Was fully expecting a close up smirk, theres always one.