I thought the same. Not sure if it was actually filmed in the order we saw, but she really connected with the kids and loosened them up. She would be great in a classroom.
@@hazbin_helluvaedits2644No,she mean latin soul because spanish,italian,portuguese,french..... are idioms that come from the latin,other thing is latin american that are also latins because they talk spanish and Portuguese. Dont wanna be offensive 👍🏼
I've heard that there's more than one language in Spain but I never knew what they were. I was recently told that the difference between Spain Spanish and Mexican Spanish is like the difference between British English and American English. I am very interested in what the other languages in Spain sound like. Like if they're similar to the sound of Spanish or not and stuff like that.
@@Musical_Pigeon Im catalan, and although its similar people outside catalonia in spain dont understand us, I mean If you speak spanish you could understand some words that are similar but others are very different, Hope I helped
For me the most fascinating part is when Andrea is speaking and you can see Ana's brain working. Mutual intelligibility is occuring here. You can see that her face is like "I think I know this, it's not Portuguese but it feels familiar". It's really cool
With the Internet, Google Translate, Siri and Alexa children are learning more languages than ever before. In Los Angeles there are plenty of people from all over the world to help with languages.
English is both a Germanic and a Roman language. Latin words were introduced when the Roman Empire set foot on the isles, then came the Angles and the Saxons, both German tribes, and finally in 1066 "French" (Normans) invaded and brought French with them, which obviously has strong Latin roots. English being such a patchwork of languages is the reason while the same letter can be pronounced in so many different ways.
Hola! 👋 How to deal with so much cuteness guys?! 😍🤩😍🫠 Ayyyyyy Ana and EunBeen are lovely treasures 💘 I was worried about how to interact with them, because they are so little 🥹 Also very smart and genuinely they put their little big heart in doing their best for all us! 🤍 It is admirable! 🙌 Have a sweet day! 🫰Andrea 🇪🇸
Hi Andrea , it was great to hear you speaking in Korean a bit , you are nearly always asked to speak in Spanish or English in the previous videos I have seen of you , I love seeing you and hearing you speak in any language !.
That Ana is a star. She is so engaging. She keeps making little sounds like her brain is working to understand the languages. EunBeen is the more reserved. She is probably learning a lot. Great video.
@residentzero I have noticed that the people on this channel west of India tend to speak English in these videos, while people east of India (except for those from countries with a lot of experience with the USA or English) tend to speak Korean.
@@anndeecosita3586 Sure. I guess that I find it less notable that so many of them speak Korean on a Korean channel, but that so many of them speak English.
I love this channel! Exposing people, not just kids, to different cultures in such a positive, uplifting and wholesome way and bringing people together regardless of nationality gets us just that little bit closer to eliminating racism and prejudice ❤
@@manloeste5555 old english is a form of low-german. Old english is especially obvious in words/language of lower social standing, since the french (norman) nobility used french/latin, while the peasantry for the most part kept on speaking their germanic languages. You can notice this for example in animals: As long as the animal lives in a forest/stands on a field and is therefore connected to the peasant live its name stays germanic like cow=Kuh (modern German), sheep=Schaf etc. But as soon as it gets on a plate to a nobleman's' feasting table it becomes french/latin: Beef= boeuf (modern french), poultry =pouletrie (old french) or latin pultria for fowls
@@10iggie English is basically a Germanic language - it's named after the Angles, who were a Germanic people who settled/invaded Great Britain (depending on how you want to look at it). But there were plenty of other arrivals after that (e.g. the Romans, the Franks) who brought parts of their own languages into English, as well as other Germanic-language-speakers like the Vikings. All that thrown together is a big part of why English is as messy and inconsistent as it is! But if you compare English words for things to their German, French and Spanish equivalents, you'll often find the German is much closer than the others. E.g. water = eau, agua, wasser drink = boire, beber, trinken book = livre, libro, buch And once you start to notice some patterns, you realise you can swap certain letter combos for a replacement and gets even closer to English! Pfeffer might not look like anything, until you realise you can treat 'pf' as 'p' and 'f' as 'p' as well. Now you get "pepper" - same thing works for "apfel". Since the two languages share a common root, and they just developed along different lines, you can see why some of the differences are really just other ways of doing the same thing You do get a bunch of Latin and French words yeah, but they're not really at the core of the language in the same way. Besides the stuff we got during imperial adventures, Latin was always seen as the language of the learned, educated gentleman, not English (Isaac Newton wrote his foundational books on physics entirely in Latin, for example). So that's a big part of why we have so many Latin words for science and science-adjacent stuff. And we also borrowed a lot of French words because it's seen as a mark of sophistication in a way that other languages aren't
Those little ones are so bright! All 4 women were so good with them, particularly Andrea who she could make a great kindergarten or primary school teacher!
As a French person speaking English and having basic knowledge in German, Mandarin and a bit of Spanish, it was really funny to realize that almost the only language that I wasn't familiar with was the language everybody shared!
The only one I understood was japanese and a bit of the spanish. I was surprised at how little I understood the German one considering english is supposed to be related
@@emiliea4577 As a Slav (Pole), I'd say that English and German are very similiar, and if I hear Norsk or Dutch then I recognize it as a middleman between German and English.
@@a-ramenartist9734 Thats because of pronounciation. English and German have very similar structure and writing but the pronounciation is extremely different. You need completely different muscles in mouth, tounge and throat to speak German instead of English.
Ooohhh thank you! 🤍😳 I know I am not 🤪 but I receive this comment as present 🎁 I really appreciate it and its wonderful to see good hearted people, sharing lovely words towards the channel, other members (included me), helping, giving ideas, etc. so thank you 💐 And thank you Naielly, you made me smile and blush at the subway 🤭
@@andrearuizrodriguez8636 ahhh stop, you're amazing❤️❤️ and sorry for my bad english i'm brazilian😜, i really hope you have more videos about spanish culture i'm very curious and it's a country i hope to visit one day. by the way one of my favorite bands is spanish vetusta morla it's a wonderful Band with wonderful songs, and one of my favorite football teams is barcelona and i also want to know more about catalan, as you can see l am passionate about the culture and especially the music from your country ❤️❤️❤️
Ana is very fortunate. She speaks Korean, English, and Portugese, so any benefits of billingualism in children must be even stronger for her, speaking three languages that are so different. I think you can see a knack for languagds in her
Guess it was fairly easier for them to guess what the speaker was telling them when Spanish walked in. Expressiveness and body language is key to understanding sometimes.
I love hearing all the languages within this one video! 🤗 And getting the chance to practice my listening comprehension for some of the ones I'm learning. But man, I'd really like to learn Korean.
Bei mir is es andersrum! 😂 Ich kann minimal Spanisch, verstehe aber kein Wort, wenn mein Freund Portugisisch spricht! 😂 Dafür hab ich Andrea zu 50 % verstanden 👍
Why are you learning MY language. Do not learn MY language. There is no USE!!! Unless you are going to do something with MY language, then do NOT learn MY language!!!
I wish I had gotten to learn languages when I was so young as that. I was monolingual as a child and had almost no exposure to other languages at that age. I’ve learned a bit since then and I actually understood all the Spanish, English, German and Japanese in this clip, though only a little of the Chinese and just a word or two of the Korean.
Outside of the US most children learn about other languages pretty early. I started learning English in primary school and I was born in the eastern Block when it was still around. So you can imagine children nowadays learn it much earlier. They also get exposed to it much more because of the internet.
I remember being exposed to different languages and found it ENTIRELY interesting when I was like 7-8 playing games with random people online, not only did I find it fascinating that they're thousands of miles away, but hearing different accents and broken English, One day, on Omegle as a 9 yr old, a Scottish man put in perspective the amount of miles between us and that different accents come from completely different parts of the world, that realization was like fireworks in my head it was so cool, it was a subject that mystified my child brain, and his explanation (Said with a VERY thick Scottish accent) has always had a special place in my core memories.
This video makes my smile broadening out to the ears❤ The vibes these little shiny girls give are special and so much heart-warming! Thank you, People, for being kind :))
I love seeing people learning a new language at any age. If you see at others without prejudice you'll realise how easy we as species could live harmoniously. 🕊️
I was born in 2003, (born and raised in Italy), and around 2007 (so I was like 4) my cousin went to Spain on a school trip, she was in highschool, and I remember this particular moment which stuck to my head until now I remember even tho I was so young, (I barely remember some faded images of anything happening before 2010) I was at my grandparents, and I don't know who but maybe my aunt, said the phrase, "Marisa è in Spagna" (Marisa is in Spain) and I had no idea what that was, I remember exaclty what I thought in that moment, I thought about 2 things precisely that they could mean by saying that she is in Spain, 1, I thought that Marisa went to spend a holiday relaxing behind a huge bale of hay (or something yellow because for some reason back then by hearing the name Spain I thought of the color yellow), or the second thing I thought was that she ended up being inside of a sponge cake
Anna is so smart, she is definitely using her phone the best way, learning about cultures languages and people, you don't always see this with very young kids, but i think she loves to learn, they were both so cute xD
For me, people on age 29~36 are look alike, which is the peak of youth look. And Andrea (her face, voice, and gestures) fit that age range. Clothing and the color also plays a role, because we always see people with their clothes on, most of the time. And Andrea here definitely wear younger looking clothes.
That video was really cute af. It was astonishing how fast the two Korean girls could adapt in some cases and how much they already knew about some things. Also, I find it very impressive to see how the basic friendlyness and respectfulness in so much higher in the eastern Asian languages such as Japanese, Chinese and Korean in comparison to some European languages.
Fun fact, I once took Taekwondo for half a year & had to learn some Korean words. When I learned the word for "thank you", "gamsahabnida", I was able to remember it because the "da" at the end reminded me of the German word for "thank you": "danke". Now, "gamsahabnida", plus a few numbers counting 1 through 10, is the only Korean I still know.
Given the history between Korea and Japan, it's really touching to see a Japanese woman and two Korean kids just exploring culture together and being friends.
Andrea naturally gives off a friendly teacher vibe
latin soul
@MMF1674 IKR SAME N I LOVE IT
I thought the same. Not sure if it was actually filmed in the order we saw, but she really connected with the kids and loosened them up. She would be great in a classroom.
@@koujitando3594 I think you mean, spanish (from Spain) soul
@@hazbin_helluvaedits2644No,she mean latin soul because spanish,italian,portuguese,french..... are idioms that come from the latin,other thing is latin american that are also latins because they talk spanish and Portuguese. Dont wanna be offensive 👍🏼
Andrea is a magnificent teacher...very emphatic with kids.
empathetic, emphatic means showing/giving emphasis, but she seems to be with human kids at least
@@Cassxowary glad they are human kids
a pretty hot one too!! I'd take my kids to her class everyday
@@axelpio9446 😂😂🤣🤣🤣
@@Cassxowary omg thanks for clarifying they were human kids. can't imagine what would happen if it were aliens...
The fact that Andrea mentioned that there are more than just one language in Spain is so thoughtful. Gracias por la buena representación. ❤
Hell yeah let’s go Basque ppl shoutouts to Navarra
Galician, Catalan... there are a few
I've heard that there's more than one language in Spain but I never knew what they were. I was recently told that the difference between Spain Spanish and Mexican Spanish is like the difference between British English and American English.
I am very interested in what the other languages in Spain sound like. Like if they're similar to the sound of Spanish or not and stuff like that.
Yep I loved that
@@Musical_Pigeon Im catalan, and although its similar people outside catalonia in spain dont understand us, I mean If you speak spanish you could understand some words that are similar but others are very different, Hope I helped
For me the most fascinating part is when Andrea is speaking and you can see Ana's brain working. Mutual intelligibility is occuring here. You can see that her face is like "I think I know this, it's not Portuguese but it feels familiar". It's really cool
right, she was always so close or spot on even
We need little Ana to meet big Ana in one of these videos!
@@maartenvandersteen5134yesssssss
Although Portuguese and German are in separate family trees :)
@@Svendsor they're talking about Andrea, the Spanish speaker. Spanish and Portuguese are both Latin languages
It's so good see the kids learning a new language and new cultures , this is a good way to teach our children , bring them more often
Too bad there's only one South Korea in the world
With the Internet, Google Translate, Siri and Alexa children are learning more languages than ever before. In Los Angeles there are plenty of people from all over the world to help with languages.
It's kind funny hearing the kids how they know some things and have no clue for others , also helps how both kids known more than just two languages
I wish Andrea would teach a Spanish course, she seems like a wonderful teacher!
Es un orgullo estar representado por una persona tan absolutamente increíble como Andrea.
Arriba el idioma español carajo
She's out of your league.
@@haroldcampbell3337 Callao anglosajon
@@haroldcampbell3337Lo que tú digas. Nos vemos no outro lado.
@@haroldcampbell3337It's possible to compliment someone without having an ulterior motive bruv.
Cuteness overload! Andrea is a good teacher.
These kids are so precious, this was so fun to watch 😊 I'm very impressed with Ana's language awareness! I hope she keeps it up!
The little girl in the purple dress is so precious; so sweet and extremely clever
And the other one too!! Both are precious, sweet and clever.
@@0042skySure, I'd say they're only highlighting it because the first one is younger and was quicker to understand most things, haha.
it's not about the educational value, but more about the shock on their cute innocent faces, and their attempts to understand what they hear.
@balalabusultan IT'S ABOUT BOTH TO ME
I'm learning German as my third language and I understood everything Emilie said
Dankeschön :)
Hey, congrats! Yes, English and German are very closely related. Lots of similarities.
Weiter so.
ehre
English is both a Germanic and a Roman language. Latin words were introduced when the Roman Empire set foot on the isles, then came the Angles and the Saxons, both German tribes, and finally in 1066 "French" (Normans) invaded and brought French with them, which obviously has strong Latin roots. English being such a patchwork of languages is the reason while the same letter can be pronounced in so many different ways.
Hola! 👋 How to deal with so much cuteness guys?! 😍🤩😍🫠 Ayyyyyy Ana and EunBeen are lovely treasures 💘 I was worried about how to interact with them, because they are so little 🥹 Also very smart and genuinely they put their little big heart in doing their best for all us! 🤍 It is admirable! 🙌 Have a sweet day! 🫰Andrea 🇪🇸
¡Andrea, tú serás la madre perfecta para los hijos que algún día tendremos tú y yo! ❤❤❤
Korea debe ser bonito pero supongo que allí no habrá tortillas ni salmorejo
Hi Andrea , it was great to hear you speaking in Korean a bit , you are nearly always asked to speak in Spanish or English in the previous videos I have seen of you , I love seeing you and hearing you speak in any language !.
Why are you half naked?
Como paisana y amante de las culturas asiáticas, estoy muy orgullosa. Pareces muy simpática. Y las niñas muy kawaii!
I love their little faces processing the words they're hearing. They're so smart, I'm impressed. Haha 😊
That Ana is a star. She is so engaging. She keeps making little sounds like her brain is working to understand the languages. EunBeen is the more reserved. She is probably learning a lot. Great video.
The kids were too smart and fast learning and also polite☺, enjoyed watching this video
I'm impressed that the Spanish and German lady speak Korean!
I think that they would have to know some for having lived in South Korea for at least a few months.
@residentzero I have noticed that the people on this channel west of India tend to speak English in these videos, while people east of India (except for those from countries with a lot of experience with the USA or English) tend to speak Korean.
@@AT-rr2xwSome of the guests on this channel have been living in South Korea for years and speak the language fluently.
@@anndeecosita3586 Sure. I guess that I find it less notable that so many of them speak Korean on a Korean channel, but that so many of them speak English.
@conncetion7405 ANDREA IS THE SPANISH WOMEN'S NAME
I love this channel. It´s very warmful and friendly. It´s the kind of mankind I wish.
I love this channel! Exposing people, not just kids, to different cultures in such a positive, uplifting and wholesome way and bringing people together regardless of nationality gets us just that little bit closer to eliminating racism and prejudice ❤
Well, more xenophobia than racism, but yeah.
This was a great watch. Those kids have a brain like a sponge and absorb everything.
I love how Andrea from Spain interacts with the kids. She should be Kindergarden teacher.
not anyone can be, and being kind to them for a few minutes doesn't mean she should be one
@@Cassxowaryaren't you the positive one?
Come one Hannah Matthau 😂
Spaniards are like that. Always kind. French are the opposite.
@@johnmurphy7674 I wonder how many French people you know IRL
Interesting that they both seemed to pick up the German fastest, despite it being the most "foreign" (i.e. non-Asian, non-Romance).
Same family as English
@@javierluissantosrubio6603Really ? They keep on saying that but it has an awful lot of latin/french embedded .. that "German offshoot"
@@10iggie the closer you look, the more similar english and german gets.
@@manloeste5555 old english is a form of low-german. Old english is especially obvious in words/language of lower social standing, since the french (norman) nobility used french/latin, while the peasantry for the most part kept on speaking their germanic languages. You can notice this for example in animals: As long as the animal lives in a forest/stands on a field and is therefore connected to the peasant live its name stays germanic like cow=Kuh (modern German), sheep=Schaf etc. But as soon as it gets on a plate to a nobleman's' feasting table it becomes french/latin: Beef= boeuf (modern french), poultry =pouletrie (old french) or latin pultria for fowls
@@10iggie English is basically a Germanic language - it's named after the Angles, who were a Germanic people who settled/invaded Great Britain (depending on how you want to look at it). But there were plenty of other arrivals after that (e.g. the Romans, the Franks) who brought parts of their own languages into English, as well as other Germanic-language-speakers like the Vikings. All that thrown together is a big part of why English is as messy and inconsistent as it is!
But if you compare English words for things to their German, French and Spanish equivalents, you'll often find the German is much closer than the others. E.g.
water = eau, agua, wasser
drink = boire, beber, trinken
book = livre, libro, buch
And once you start to notice some patterns, you realise you can swap certain letter combos for a replacement and gets even closer to English! Pfeffer might not look like anything, until you realise you can treat 'pf' as 'p' and 'f' as 'p' as well. Now you get "pepper" - same thing works for "apfel". Since the two languages share a common root, and they just developed along different lines, you can see why some of the differences are really just other ways of doing the same thing
You do get a bunch of Latin and French words yeah, but they're not really at the core of the language in the same way. Besides the stuff we got during imperial adventures, Latin was always seen as the language of the learned, educated gentleman, not English (Isaac Newton wrote his foundational books on physics entirely in Latin, for example). So that's a big part of why we have so many Latin words for science and science-adjacent stuff. And we also borrowed a lot of French words because it's seen as a mark of sophistication in a way that other languages aren't
Andrea is so lovely with children ❤
How to not love this woman? 😍
human ones at least
Andrea is lovely, period :)
@@Cassxowarybro, whats your problem, in all the coments about Andrea you are always cometning VERY rude things.
Andrea, vales mucho 🇪🇸💓💓
These 2 little girls are so intelligent for their age. Way beyond me at that age .
Hearing Andrea suddenly speaking korean blew my mind! Great video! :D
aww, this is just so wholesome. The genuine curiosity from the kids and the sweet adults who engaged with the children just made me smile a lot.
Those little ones are so bright! All 4 women were so good with them, particularly Andrea who she could make a great kindergarten or primary school teacher!
4:49 she’s amazing. I’ve watched other episodes she participated, and her character is so attractive to me.
As a French person speaking English and having basic knowledge in German, Mandarin and a bit of Spanish, it was really funny to realize that almost the only language that I wasn't familiar with was the language everybody shared!
Same for me i'm also french ! I love this channel because it lets young kids to hear foreign languages so it's very interesting !!
The only one I understood was japanese and a bit of the spanish. I was surprised at how little I understood the German one considering english is supposed to be related
@@a-ramenartist9734 Yeah English and German are close but they really do sound different
@@emiliea4577 As a Slav (Pole), I'd say that English and German are very similiar, and if I hear Norsk or Dutch then I recognize it as a middleman between German and English.
@@a-ramenartist9734 Thats because of pronounciation. English and German have very similar structure and writing but the pronounciation is extremely different. You need completely different muscles in mouth, tounge and throat to speak German instead of English.
if i see that Andrea is in the video i will definitely click to watch she is the sweetest smartest girl i have ever seen
Ooohhh thank you! 🤍😳 I know I am not 🤪 but I receive this comment as present 🎁 I really appreciate it and its wonderful to see good hearted people, sharing lovely words towards the channel, other members (included me), helping, giving ideas, etc. so thank you 💐 And thank you Naielly, you made me smile and blush at the subway 🤭
@@andrearuizrodriguez8636 ahhh stop, you're amazing❤️❤️ and sorry for my bad english i'm brazilian😜, i really hope you have more videos about spanish culture i'm very curious and it's a country i hope to visit one day. by the way one of my favorite bands is spanish vetusta morla it's a wonderful Band with wonderful songs, and one of my favorite football teams is barcelona and i also want to know more about catalan, as you can see l am passionate about the culture and especially the music from your country ❤️❤️❤️
It makes it even more funny and entertaining if you understand that language and watching their confuse face 😂😂😂it’s so cute🥹I love the two kids
Gracias por la buena representación Andreaaa!! ❤
Ana’s cute little face 😊
We need classes like this all throughout grade school. The more children are exposed to a diverse amount of cultures, the better.
Ana is very fortunate. She speaks Korean, English, and Portugese, so any benefits of billingualism in children must be even stronger for her, speaking three languages that are so different. I think you can see a knack for languagds in her
wow! i'm impressed how well they understood the other languages! both of them really did well~
Guess it was fairly easier for them to guess what the speaker was telling them when Spanish walked in. Expressiveness and body language is key to understanding sometimes.
this is so cute, kids have a genuine curiosity and fascination with the world and other cultures. It's amazing to see
They should do a part two and bring in some languages from other places too! That would be really cool.
Cutest video ever!
The little girls are amazing.
The youngest one has an incredible attitude for languages!
All my love from Copenhagen. ;-)
I love hearing all the languages within this one video! 🤗 And getting the chance to practice my listening comprehension for some of the ones I'm learning. But man, I'd really like to learn Korean.
Andrea is perfect with kids! She really got their attention and both of the kids were so behave, attentive, and polite. So cute!
Andrea.... Wow. You are beautiful, and so a mom..... Total crush .
Omg they are so so so cute girls, so well mannered, love them❤
Fantastic seeing how worldly-wise these kids are. Huge respect to their teachers, parents and culture for making them aware of this.
Both girls are lovely, but Ana is, surely, a future member of World Friends, I love her ability to identify languages!
Andrea just melts my heart 😍
I'm German and I'm learning Brazilian Portuguese. It's really cool to understand many Spanish words, even though there are some false friends.
Bei mir is es andersrum! 😂 Ich kann minimal Spanisch, verstehe aber kein Wort, wenn mein Freund Portugisisch spricht! 😂 Dafür hab ich Andrea zu 50 % verstanden 👍
*remembers his german history* trap seems like being false friends gets around😂
I'm Brazilian and I'm learning Spanish I'm suffering from these false friends hahaha
Why are you learning MY language. Do not learn MY language. There is no USE!!! Unless you are going to do something with MY language, then do NOT learn MY language!!!
/s
Ana and EunBeen are freaking adorable! 🥹
Genuinely good to see something on TH-cam that is entirely wholesome :)
I wish I had gotten to learn languages when I was so young as that. I was monolingual as a child and had almost no exposure to other languages at that age. I’ve learned a bit since then and I actually understood all the Spanish, English, German and Japanese in this clip, though only a little of the Chinese and just a word or two of the Korean.
The girls did very well. And they are so cute. ❤
The children is so intelligent, they speaking 2 languages. Thi is incredible for this age.
How do the kids have so many knowledge about languages despite their age. This is insane!
Outside of the US most children learn about other languages pretty early. I started learning English in primary school and I was born in the eastern Block when it was still around. So you can imagine children nowadays learn it much earlier. They also get exposed to it much more because of the internet.
These young girls are so intelligent it’s amazing to see!
I remember being exposed to different languages and found it ENTIRELY interesting when I was like 7-8 playing games with random people online, not only did I find it fascinating that they're thousands of miles away, but hearing different accents and broken English, One day, on Omegle as a 9 yr old, a Scottish man put in perspective the amount of miles between us and that different accents come from completely different parts of the world, that realization was like fireworks in my head it was so cool, it was a subject that mystified my child brain, and his explanation (Said with a VERY thick Scottish accent) has always had a special place in my core memories.
Omegle isn't appropriate for a 9 year old though 💀
@@nah1047 lil me found that out too late lol
This was the most wholesome video ever.
OMG they're so cute!!!
Andrea is so good with those kids. And they're right, her Korean is good too!
I really wish that I could have had conversations with my dad like this.
Andreas voice is so calming, as an spanish myself i feel so glad she is in this series
The small girl is too cute.
@Ahmed-pf3lg ANA
This video makes my smile broadening out to the ears❤ The vibes these little shiny girls give are special and so much heart-warming! Thank you, People, for being kind :))
When that kid said in spanish "ni un poquito?" (not even a little bit?) was so adorable!!
I love seeing people learning a new language at any age. If you see at others without prejudice you'll realise how easy we as species could live harmoniously. 🕊️
Fell in love with spanish again ❤
With german also a bit❤
And with japenese ❤
Based
what i love is when theye would talk respectfully to the kids using honorific tenses and such i found it really sweet
This is such a awesome video . Good job World Friends .
Those kids are so intelligent. They'll go a long way
I would love to see Andrea dance the Flamenco. 💃🌹 Olé !! 😃
To dance flamenco it’s very difficult. All Spaniards know how to make some move but we don’t really know how to dance. It’s a very difficult art.
If I remember correctly she said flamenco isn’t popular in the part of Spain she is from.
@@anndeecosita3586, flamenco isn't popular almost anywhere in Spain.
@@robert111k it is most popular in andalucia
@@anndeecosita3586 I heard she's from Mallorca, so it isn't really famous here, we have other typical dances and art.
These kids are super bright!
I was born in 2003, (born and raised in Italy), and around 2007 (so I was like 4) my cousin went to Spain on a school trip, she was in highschool, and I remember this particular moment which stuck to my head until now I remember even tho I was so young, (I barely remember some faded images of anything happening before 2010) I was at my grandparents, and I don't know who but maybe my aunt, said the phrase, "Marisa è in Spagna" (Marisa is in Spain) and I had no idea what that was, I remember exaclty what I thought in that moment, I thought about 2 things precisely that they could mean by saying that she is in Spain, 1, I thought that Marisa went to spend a holiday relaxing behind a huge bale of hay (or something yellow because for some reason back then by hearing the name Spain I thought of the color yellow), or the second thing I thought was that she ended up being inside of a sponge cake
Pan di Spagna 😂
The two girls are so smart and precious 😊
Gotta love the fact that the lady from Germany is dressed like the German flag 😂🇩🇪
Upside down.
but she should have stayed upside down for that lol
Ces petites sont tellement intelligentes, les jeunes de nos jours sont incroyable!
Te quiero Ana, me hace imigando mi hija en futuro 😂
Absolutely adorable
I used to tell the waiter in Madrid, "Una ración de paella y Coca-cola. 😄 Paella 🥘 is life! 😋
the little girl is the most adorable thing ever
The girl in purple is so smart. She'll probably be a polygot later on
@dreavmin497 ANA N WHAT IS A POLYGOT?
Anna is so smart, she is definitely using her phone the best way, learning about cultures languages and people, you don't always see this with very young kids, but i think she loves to learn, they were both so cute xD
There's no way that Andrea is 34, she looks so young! I guess being a cheerful person makes you younger
...she doesn't. She looks 34. 34 year olds *are* young, 34 *isn't* old and she absolutely, 100% looks her age. And that. is. not. a. bad. thing.
@@schwammiOP’s probably a teen
@@Cris18Martinez so am I
For me, people on age 29~36 are look alike, which is the peak of youth look.
And Andrea (her face, voice, and gestures) fit that age range.
Clothing and the color also plays a role, because we always see people with their clothes on, most of the time.
And Andrea here definitely wear younger looking clothes.
@@anomalousdeliriumShe ain't gonna sleep with you bro.
That video was really cute af. It was astonishing how fast the two Korean girls could adapt in some cases and how much they already knew about some things. Also, I find it very impressive to see how the basic friendlyness and respectfulness in so much higher in the eastern Asian languages such as Japanese, Chinese and Korean in comparison to some European languages.
so happy that andrea is teaching the kids about basque. it's a very small detail but it makes me seen
My name IS Andrea, I'm from Spain and loved this Woman. She feels so nice, and very good at kids and teaching :D
Pueden ser más monas las dos 😊. Sus voces son súper dulces.
Purple girl seems to be very intelligent and adorable 🥰
This is SO CUTE!!!!!!!! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Cutest little video! Inquisitive kids!
Andrea tiene alma de profesora, me cae muy bien
Omg these two kids are soooo cute 😂 and also very Intelligent and curios to learn ❤ was really fun to watch this Video .
Fun fact, I once took Taekwondo for half a year & had to learn some Korean words. When I learned the word for "thank you", "gamsahabnida", I was able to remember it because the "da" at the end reminded me of the German word for "thank you": "danke". Now, "gamsahabnida", plus a few numbers counting 1 through 10, is the only Korean I still know.
The little girl in purple is a citizen of the world.
Given the history between Korea and Japan, it's really touching to see a Japanese woman and two Korean kids just exploring culture together and being friends.
I’m actually melting. This is so cute!
They are so adorable. This should be a trend on TH-cam.
I love how she said "ni un poquito" 1:13 =)
The girls are so sweet.