It always surprises me how little some people actually know about Italy's diversity. When I tell them that Italy has some regions where people speak german, french, slovenian, even albanian or greek they think I'm trolling them :D In Sardinia people talk sardinian, which is a language by itself. That just shows that people are still very stereotypical when they think about Italy. Btw my girlfriend is also from South Tyrol (Bolzano) and she has exactly the same accent as Jannik. A couple of weeks ago we went visiting her hometown and I instantly fell in love with this place. If you ever have the chance to visit South Tyrol/Alto Adige, do it. It's one of the most beautiful and peaceful places in Italy.
@@amirfigo The op simply explained the reason for the different languages. It's the history of the country. Why does that upset you? It is what it is whether you approve or not.
Siamo il paese con più diversità in Europa, però la gente è ignorante e pensa siamo tutti pizza pasta e mandolino 😂😂😂. C'era una tizia americana che si sorprendeva del fatto che avessimo le montagne in Italia, vantiamo la cima più alta d'Europa con la Francia però non abbiamo le montagne 😂😂😂
@@amirfigo Sorry, why should I care about your irrelevant opinion? As I told, my girlfriend is from south tyrol, her first language is german and she identifies herself as 100% italian. Btw I just let her read your comment and she can't stop laughing at you. You can keep all your convictions, South Tyrol is Italy and that's a fact. Deal with it and go cry somewhere else.
So funny as a Dutch guy who speaks and understand German this is so easy to understand. I've been to Sud Tirol many times as a climber and this dialect feels like coming home to me sitting in my chair here in Portugal. Love it!
As Italian who learnt German in Switzerland I can understand him, not everything, but enough words to get the sense of what he is saying. We love you Jannick, weiter so!
As a German I can understand him quite easily, without concentrating much. He doesn't speak with a very heavy dialect. A lot of people in South Tyrol or Switzerland are much harder to understand than he is, from my experience.
I lived in Bavaria and find this easier to understand than some Bayrish. And most Swiss German is much harder, though closer regionally and linguisticly.
@@pietropoggi4126Lui ha un dialetto forte come il tedesco in Svizzera. Inoltre non capisco tutto quello che dice, anche se sono tedesco. Viva l’amicizia 🇮🇹🇩🇪🇦🇹🇨🇭✌🏼
@@pietropoggi4126You very probably learn Hochdeutsch. But he speaks dialect wich has a little bit deviating words and grammar from Hochdeutsch. I can very well understand that it is not easy to understand. I think Schwyzerdütsch is even much worse because this is hardly to understand even for a native German speaker without any preparation and training.
Grande Jannik. Da anni in vacanza a Toblach e Innichen ... splendidi posti, gente cordiale ... e ora un campioncino in erba ... ci darai grandi soddisfazioni. Grazie.
For anyone who's interested, I'm swiss, usually I speak Swiss german dialect, more specifically Bern-dialect and I understand him quite well, even though his dialect is quite a bit different to mine.
23 years old and, despite his undeniably busy schedule, he speaks 4 languages (that's four!) fluently. However, his most incredible feat, as far as idioms are concerned, is that he doesn't seem to have any discernable accent in any lanugage he speaks: well, maybe a little in English. I live in Northern Italy and I've been to Süd Tirol many times and I promise you that every local I've ever spoken to always had some kind of funny accent when speaking Italian: Jannik doesn't! Hats off to him for that.
Diese deutschen Dialekte sind sehr alt, erinnert mich auch an Donauschwäbisch meiner Mutter (Auswanderer aus Baden und Elsass nach Kroatien in der Donaumonarchie Österreich-Ungarn). Very old german dialect, helps with emotions & expression, all the best!
Jannik Sinner is Italian and speaks the Italian language fluently. In this video he speaks his dialect. The South Tyrolean dialect (Südtiroulerisch) is a German dialect widespread in Italy among the German-speaking population of Alto Adige. In Italy there are 31 dialects.
In Italia ci sono dialetti che sono lingue a parte, incomprensibili se non si è del posto....jannik parla bene italiano anche se in famiglia parlano un dialetto altoatesino, poi lui si sente italiano mi sembra abbia detto? Nel 2024 sono questioni di lana caprina.....simpatico quell'utente che parlerebbe meglio con un hamburger che con un italiano, sei di larghe vedute 😂
Si ma non è italiano, genitori tedeschi famiglia tedesca nome tedesco cognome tedesco sangue tedesco,iann sommer- jannic sinner e lui sarebbe italiano?! Di italiano ha solo il passaporto
@@dasbb2762 è italiano di cittadinanza e la sua formazione atletico-tennistica è completamente italiana, ma chi nega le sua genetica andrebbe semplicemente preso in cura da qualche bravo psico.
Italy is rich in "special and unique geographical situations", also because the Italian culture is inclusive and respectful. Nice (Nizza) was once Italian, but for the French it is unthinkable to have the same respect, so the Italians of Nice have lost their original language and speak French.
Not only tennis players, in general English speakers only speak and English and Spanish speakers only Spanish, while other Europeans generally speak their own language + English and some other languages sometimes.
I studied German in college 35 years ago and can understand a fair amount of this. It’s certainly no more difficult than some of the German dialects I heard, like Bavarian or Swabian.
caro sudtirolese parla la lingua he vuoi.....ma continua a darci le gioie incredibili di questi mesi.....io adoro il SUDTIROL.....con te ho un motivo in opiu' per amare tutti voi.....Sudtirol,terra di campioni....Thoeni,Di Biasi,Tania Cagnotto,ISOLDE KOSTNER....e ora il piu'grande tennista italiano che e' anche un campione nell'animo.....auguri mitico nr.1 al mondo JANNIK SINNER
Thank you Martin and yes the fools are out in full force, the Südtirol/alto Adige question was settled long ago and Tirol was always a conduit from south to north culturally.
@@5mini5 Tirol is a historic part of Austria. Not Germany. His German sounds more normal to me as an Austrian(Even though I am from the North) than the German they speak on German Television. Imagine a Northern English person hearing a scottish person talk. VS American accent English
Ecco perchè quando l'ho sentito parlare tedesco ho pensato che parla molto meglio in italiano. Il carotino è abituato a parlare il suo dialetto! A prescindere da tutto, continua a farci sognare Jannik!!
Sinner's mother tongue, besides Italian, is not German, it is Pusterisch, one of the various dialects spoken in Alto Adige, quite different from German, Tyrolean and even from each other. Then at school they study Italian and standard German (Hochdeutsch, in some parts of the region also Ladin) I don't think Jannik knows Ladin, it's not used in his area, but he speaks all the others well.
The National idiom in Italy is of course Italian..so no matter which dialect or different languages German..Swiss etc.when it comes to tennis he represents ITALY...therefore after his many great wins he usually thanks fans and supporters in German and most often in English..however since he represents ITALY and us Italians applaude and support Jannik Sinner in all the events and each and every game..after a win he should definitely thank us in English first (Internationally speaking) but not to forget to thank everyone in the mother language I T A L I A N !! GRAZIE..Romeo
Tutta questa discussione non ci sarebbe se Alcaraz fosse un catalano. Il problema che abbiamo in Italia è che di fronte a qualche stupido invidioso che ci sfotte c'è sempre un sacco di italiani che gli danno ragione invece di ignorare la provocazione
As an Italian Australian that loves Italia I can confirm that you are 100% right,and many a times I ask myself where is the patriotism with these degenerate Italians that get a kick out of it,is bad enough when non Italians do it but it’s very sad when Italians insult our beautiful culture,mi scusi se ho scritto in Inglese ma la Mia grammatica Italian non e a alto livello ,e alcune poche volte che ho scritto in italiano I stessi italiani mi hanno insultato,i mie genitori mi hanno imparato litaliano e la loro Lingua nativa il Napoletano
The silly 'real Italian' discussion I think simply comes from the fact that the majority of the Italian diaspora (especially in the US as is the case with my family) comes from the Southern regions of the country. So the stereotypes are mostly based on the cultural characteristics of the South. I actually didn't have a clear understanding of Italy until I moved to Europe (Germany as it happens! Haha) In any case, Sinner is amazing! I'm certain he will stand out in history as the best of his generation.
As a German i can tell you, every single Word ist a german Word with the typical slang of that Region, easy to understand, If you know it just a bit. I could Not even idetify one single italian Word, which I find strange. He ist speaking extremly slow. May bei thats normal in these mountain regions
@@michi587 The Italians saw an opportunity to grab an area with highly productive people and turn them into tax cows for the Italian government and they took it.
As an American who can speak and understand German at a conversational level...I was surprised how much I could understand. The fact that he is speaking slowly helped me tremendously.
I always have been living in a central region of Italy, Marche. In spite of the fact that we are close to Tuscany, that is to say the roots of italian language and despite of the small size of the region, there are three macro areas of Marche's dialects: italian gallic, medium italian and southern italian. if I were to take a compass and make a circle with the point where I live in the center and a radius of 20 kilometers the italian word "bambino/children" would be written in, at least, six or seven different ways completely different. This is why some things I read in some of the comments are just bullshit.
In India there are sometimes 7-8 languages spoken within a single state (and we have 30 states) so this “diversity” is hilarious. I speak 3 Indian languages plus English and French
@@nagraj2k1 Glad to entertain you but you cannot compare a subcontinent with a country like Italy with a population of 58 milion people, still there are 12 recognized minority languages by law ( ex: croatian,german,franco-provenzale,sardinian,greek,albanian, catalan etc) plus all the different dialects that can be considered as Italian "sister" languages because they have the same roots of the Italian language mixed with previous indigenous languages and the languages brought by invaders.They are so variegated that it could happen that even 2 little town close to each other by few kms cannot understand each other dialects.
As a speaker of English who is studying German in pursuit of fluency, this does sound to me both definably German and also heavily influenced by Italian, particularly the accent.
...e fai bene. Impegno, sacrificio, semplicità e una non comune saggezza in un giovane. Un vero influencer suo malgrado. Speriamo faccia tanti proseliti !😊
Austria lost the 1stWW, the Great War, and consequently Italia invaded and conquered a vast mountainside region where Austrian-German was, ans still is, native tongue and native culture. Besides this, Sinner was born and lived his youth in an area which lies on the northern slopes of the Alps, meaning that the rivers flowing from these mountain slopes don't flow to the Adriatic sea but they descend into the Danube; when the WW1 ended there was an agreement to split the former Austrian Sud Tyrol in Italian and Austrian territories according to the river flowing, but the area where Sinner was born was an exception and was included in Italian territory although its water flows northbound.
You know only the stereotypical Italian look, there are many Italians indistinguishable from northern Europeans even as far south as Sicily. In a YT video of 4 professional German footballers that took a DNA test, 2 had 40%, 1 had 10% Italian DNA. During the Renaissance Italian culture was imported and favored in Austria with many Austrians taking on Italian names. And the territory of Austria was under Roman rule. Don't believe the hype Austria was purely Germanic up to WW I.
@@spaniardsrmoors6817True, Italy's ethical diversity has to do with both the age of migrations and Rome's imperial history. But in the case of Jannik Sinner, it´s different. He is South-Tyrol. The Austrian region of South Tyrol was annexed by Italy in 1918 after the First World War. He is ethically Austrian, his name is Austrian and he speaks Italian and the Germanic dialect common in South Tyrol. Apart from that, I have never heard of any hype about Austria being exclusively Germanic. It has always been more or less multi-ethnical.
Please do not start the discussions "He is not real Italian...". Your language is not what defines your nationality, there is many countries with many languages. An what is even is a "real Italian"?
Excuse me sir: what you write about the nationality is wrong! Languages are the very fundament of a nationality! This is a consensed concept. I recomend to you to study beter before give an opinion. Ask südtiroler people, what they think about to be italians. Jannik Sinner depend a lot of a national financial support. He can not have another speach. But: if you born and grow in a place, where people speaks german (because they are german!), you think in german, eat german and dream jn german, you are a german, and not an Italian. It is obvious!!! The cuestion is, why Südtirol on the italian side of the border is. But this is another story; a very, very sad ones! Regards from Argentina
Er ist ein mega Botschafter, ein super symphatischer Kerl und hoch talentiert. Und dass er auch Deutsch spricht ist schön. So haben wir alle was von ihm!
@@arturolaino7846 So much BS... You can be sure a South Tyrolean is closer to Italian culture than to the culture of Hamburg. Do you also tell Swiss Italians, FinnSwedes, French Canadian that they need to change their nationality?
Which is Jannick's first language when writing? These dialects tend not to get written so I imagine German, pure and simple. He must have done his schooling in German. I have had difficulties speaking my very good German in Bozen and Brixen; they don't want to answer intelligibly. They seem to have a lot of self-imposed linguistic stigma. A lot of Swiss are inhibited about speaking Hochdeutsch. The most widely spoken language in Europe presents a number of conflicts for the native speakers in six or seven countries....
Forget about and what region and so forth. Naturally the Italian prefer the macho type which I’m happy Sinner isn’t. He’s cool, truly humble not the fakes out there…..he’s the real thing! One more thing he’s and will be Carlos nightmare, I miss one he’s the number 1 not Carlos and I promise he’s leaving that position for a while. Carlos have other idea like quickly regaining the number 1 position but he hasn’t seen the best of Sinner however during the Olympic and after he will see a Sinner he hasn’t seen.
"Naturally the Italian prefer the macho type which I’m happy Sinner isn’t". What the heck are you talking about? meaning, we in italy don't appreciating him?
A German dialect which is what people from South Tyrol use. It is different from standard German which he also speaks, but being from Italy, he also grew up learning Italian. Still confused? 😂
German. But he is speaking a dialect. To be more exact he is speaking Southern Austro-Bavarian, or even more exact Tyrolean, but Southern Tyrolean which is spoken obviously in Southern Tyrol, which today is an autonomous region in Italy. He is from the Pustertal/ Puster Valley, where most of the inhabitants speak „Pusterisch“ which is the version of South Tyrolean spoken in the Pustertal.
Non e' male la definizione tedesco e persona affidabile e precisa spaghetti un piatto (io gli adoro al pesto) amato in tutto il mondo (anche in germania😂) insieme esce jannik il massimo!!!!!!!!!🤩🤩🤩🤩
It always surprises me how little some people actually know about Italy's diversity. When I tell them that Italy has some regions where people speak german, french, slovenian, even albanian or greek they think I'm trolling them :D In Sardinia people talk sardinian, which is a language by itself. That just shows that people are still very stereotypical when they think about Italy. Btw my girlfriend is also from South Tyrol (Bolzano) and she has exactly the same accent as Jannik. A couple of weeks ago we went visiting her hometown and I instantly fell in love with this place. If you ever have the chance to visit South Tyrol/Alto Adige, do it. It's one of the most beautiful and peaceful places in Italy.
ill take your word for it lad, good shit
@@amirfigo The op simply explained the reason for the different languages. It's the history of the country. Why does that upset you? It is what it is whether you approve or not.
Siamo il paese con più diversità in Europa, però la gente è ignorante e pensa siamo tutti pizza pasta e mandolino 😂😂😂.
C'era una tizia americana che si sorprendeva del fatto che avessimo le montagne in Italia, vantiamo la cima più alta d'Europa con la Francia però non abbiamo le montagne 😂😂😂
You're right. For example, in Alghero, Sardinia, a lot of people speaks catalan
@@amirfigo Sorry, why should I care about your irrelevant opinion? As I told, my girlfriend is from south tyrol, her first language is german and she identifies herself as 100% italian. Btw I just let her read your comment and she can't stop laughing at you. You can keep all your convictions, South Tyrol is Italy and that's a fact. Deal with it and go cry somewhere else.
Wonderful and absolutely pure South Tyrolean Dialect, wunderful to listen to.
So funny as a Dutch guy who speaks and understand German this is so easy to understand. I've been to Sud Tirol many times as a climber and this dialect feels like coming home to me sitting in my chair here in Portugal. Love it!
It's an Austrian Dialect ;-)
@@leon111333 Its a Bavarian dialect (like most Austrian dialects)
@@albertpoutsma544 Yes, I know. But if you think about the country it is an dialect from Austria (Tyrol).
@@leon111333from which language though? Austrian?
What a nice country Portugal!!
I am from Vigo in Galicia and we love Portugal!!
É unha beleza!!
As Italian who learnt German in Switzerland I can understand him, not everything, but enough words to get the sense of what he is saying. We love you Jannick, weiter so!
What?? Wie verstohsch du das?
@@Dionysos_____Alters Chumm jetz…
Me lo domandavo, ma uno di lingua tedesca capisce quello che dice? i suoni sembrano diversi dallo svizzero-tedesco, riconosco qualche parola tedesca
@@iovedo1966 Es hilft definitiv, wenn man Schweizerdeutsch kann. Er hat aber einen verdammt erdigen Dialekt.
Is he speaking Ladin?
As a German I can understand him quite easily, without concentrating much. He doesn't speak with a very heavy dialect. A lot of people in South Tyrol or Switzerland are much harder to understand than he is, from my experience.
Seine Eltern haben alles richtig gemacht. Einfach nur ein super Typ. Jannik, bleib so. Viel Erfolg weiterhin.
Wahre Worte ☺
I lived in Bavaria and find this easier to understand than some Bayrish. And most Swiss German is much harder, though closer regionally and linguisticly.
I'm italian and study german. I dont understeand anything
@@alexithymia9337 You are aware he speaks in an Interview and tried to speak easy to understand.
@@pietropoggi4126Lui ha un dialetto forte come il tedesco in Svizzera. Inoltre non capisco tutto quello che dice, anche se sono tedesco. Viva l’amicizia 🇮🇹🇩🇪🇦🇹🇨🇭✌🏼
@@pietropoggi4126You very probably learn Hochdeutsch. But he speaks dialect wich has a little bit deviating words and grammar from Hochdeutsch. I can very well understand that it is not easy to understand. I think Schwyzerdütsch is even much worse because this is hardly to understand even for a native German speaker without any preparation and training.
@@pietropoggi4126 Tirolerisch bleibt Österreichisch nicht Hochdeutsch ;-)
PROUDLY SOUTHTIROL HERE!!! Danke Jannik ❤
I find it easier to understand than some Swiss dialects. Lovely to listen to.
Grande Jannik. Da anni in vacanza a Toblach e Innichen ... splendidi posti, gente cordiale ... e ora un campioncino in erba ... ci darai grandi soddisfazioni. Grazie.
Che in italiano sono San Candido e Dobbiaco.
Ich bin aus Süddeutschland und seit über 50 Jahren in Südtirol in Urlaub. Verstehe alles. Weiter so Jannik. 😊
Kraut 😂
@@carlomartello-Molto istruito
@@carlomartello- Ma perché?
@@carlomartello- Pole
For anyone who's interested, I'm swiss, usually I speak Swiss german dialect, more specifically Bern-dialect and I understand him quite well, even though his dialect is quite a bit different to mine.
So what is his dialect - Austrian?
Same, also speak Swiss German and actually I could understand him :)
@@krinko547 interesting, how hard is it to learn the language
Its a Bavarian dialect
für mich als deutschen hört sich das aber eher an wie schweizerdeutsch als österreichisch?!
The Italian Constitution recognises and protects 12 minority language communities, Italian being the National Idiom.
Du bist einfach wundervoll. Ein Riesenschatz ❤❤
23 years old and, despite his undeniably busy schedule, he speaks 4 languages (that's four!) fluently. However, his most incredible feat, as far as idioms are concerned, is that he doesn't seem to have any discernable accent in any lanugage he speaks: well, maybe a little in English. I live in Northern Italy and I've been to Süd Tirol many times and I promise you that every local I've ever spoken to always had some kind of funny accent when speaking Italian: Jannik doesn't! Hats off to him for that.
Bravo Jannik, bisch a richtigo sympathischer Puschtra weiter so.
Diese deutschen Dialekte sind sehr alt, erinnert mich auch an Donauschwäbisch meiner Mutter (Auswanderer aus Baden und Elsass nach Kroatien in der Donaumonarchie Österreich-Ungarn). Very old german dialect, helps with emotions & expression, all the best!
Einfach schön zu hören, in diesem sprachlichen Einheitsbrei heutzutage!!!
Reds Dialekt Leid! ☺
Ne, Danke :D Aber jeder wie er möchte...
@@OnramRiftz
Eben 😉
@@thomasschoepf65 👍
@@OnramRiftz"Ne"… 🙄
@@david.arnold Ja, "Ne"! Und nun? Das ist kein Dialekt, sondern eine Abkürzung, welche sowohl im Dialekt, aber auch im Hochdeutsch gesprochen wird.
Jannik Sinner is Italian and speaks the Italian language fluently. In this video he speaks his dialect. The South Tyrolean dialect (Südtiroulerisch) is a German dialect widespread in Italy among the German-speaking population of Alto Adige. In Italy there are 31 dialects.
In Italia ci sono dialetti che sono lingue a parte, incomprensibili se non si è del posto....jannik parla bene italiano anche se in famiglia parlano un dialetto altoatesino, poi lui si sente italiano mi sembra abbia detto? Nel 2024 sono questioni di lana caprina.....simpatico quell'utente che parlerebbe meglio con un hamburger che con un italiano, sei di larghe vedute 😂
@@mariaantoniettabedetti2553 beh dai, vuoi non trovare tra chi commenta, hater, troll e disagiati neuronali?😆
There are more than 31. Practically every little town or area has its own dialect.
Dialetto nell'ambito delle lingue germaniche. Il Sud-Tirolo fu occupato dall'Italia in seguito alla Prima Guerra Mondiale
Si ma non è italiano, genitori tedeschi famiglia tedesca nome tedesco cognome tedesco sangue tedesco,iann sommer- jannic sinner e lui sarebbe italiano?! Di italiano ha solo il passaporto
die Melodie in der Sprache - wunderbar.
Sei forte pure quando parli nel tuo dialetto......nemmeno il traduttore riesce a starti dietro 😁, grande Jannik !!!
Dialetto? Questa è una lingua
@@danielepetrucci5274 in questo video Sinner non sta parlando tedesco standard, ma il dialetto sudtirolese.
Poi dicono che è italiano ahaha
@@dasbb2762 è italiano di cittadinanza e la sua formazione atletico-tennistica è completamente italiana, ma chi nega le sua genetica andrebbe semplicemente preso in cura da qualche bravo psico.
Super Spieler und sympathischer und bodenständiger Mensch. Italien kann sich freuen.
Lo siamo!
Infatti lo è ‼️
This is rather special and unique geographical situation he’s in !
Italy is rich in "special and unique geographical situations", also because the Italian culture is inclusive and respectful. Nice (Nizza) was once Italian, but for the French it is unthinkable to have the same respect, so the Italians of Nice have lost their original language and speak French.
Süd tiroler.. Ich bin Anton aus Tirol.. Ich mag Süd-tirol.. Sehr schön..
I like how it seems every European tennis player not from the UK or Spain speaks like 3 or more languages
Rafa Nadal speaks at least 3 languages
Not true, Nadal speaks three languages and a lot of italian tennis players barely speak english
For him it's easy because 2 are almost from default
Not only tennis players, in general English speakers only speak and English and Spanish speakers only Spanish, while other Europeans generally speak their own language + English and some other languages sometimes.
I studied German in college 35 years ago and can understand a fair amount of this. It’s certainly no more difficult than some of the German dialects I heard, like Bavarian or Swabian.
This is a bavarian dialect
It's a mix of Bavarian/Austrian and Alemannic/Swiss with a twist of their own.
He is a Tyrolian, no doubt 🙂
caro sudtirolese parla la lingua he vuoi.....ma continua a darci le gioie incredibili di questi mesi.....io adoro il SUDTIROL.....con te ho un motivo in opiu' per amare tutti voi.....Sudtirol,terra di campioni....Thoeni,Di Biasi,Tania Cagnotto,ISOLDE KOSTNER....e ora il piu'grande tennista italiano che e' anche un campione nell'animo.....auguri mitico nr.1 al mondo JANNIK SINNER
Carolina Kostner world ice skating champion 2012. Born in Bolzano, Sud Tirol
E aggiungi pure Dorothea Wierer, vincitrice di 2 coppe del mondo più diverse medaglie mondiali e olimpiche nel biathlon!!
ich habe Deutsch gelernt und ich verstehe fast alles.
Christoph Innerhofer the skier is another one.
A lot of famous Italian athletes are South Tyroleans, especially when it comes to winter sports.
Manfred & Manuela Moelgg, Andreas Seppi, Simone Giannelli, Dominik Paris, Alex Schwazer, Carolina Kostner, Gustav Thoeni etc..
@@gabrielzadoni2149 exactly.
@@gabrielzadoni2149some of these are Ladin
@@user-rj1kk9df6q My point was that they are all from Alto Adige
That one suspicious dialect in Inglorious Basterds.
Thank you Martin and yes the fools are out in full force, the Südtirol/alto Adige question was settled long ago and Tirol was always a conduit from south to north culturally.
Sounds like an Italian speaking Bayrisch
Wahr😂
It’s a very strange dialect, doesn’t sound like the German people speak in Germany
@@5mini5 Tirol is a historic part of Austria. Not Germany.
His German sounds more normal to me as an Austrian(Even though I am from the North) than the German they speak on German Television.
Imagine a Northern English person hearing a scottish person talk.
VS American accent English
He is literally Italian, genius
No he doesn’t. He sounds like a South Tyrolean speaking with a Southern Tyrolean accent.
Ecco perchè quando l'ho sentito parlare tedesco ho pensato che parla molto meglio in italiano. Il carotino è abituato a parlare il suo dialetto! A prescindere da tutto, continua a farci sognare Jannik!!
Parla Tedesco..... si capisce tutto.
@@albertpoutsma544 parla tutto
Sinner's mother tongue, besides Italian, is not German, it is Pusterisch, one of the various dialects spoken in Alto Adige, quite different from German, Tyrolean and even from each other.
Then at school they study Italian and standard German (Hochdeutsch, in some parts of the region also Ladin)
I don't think Jannik knows Ladin, it's not used in his area, but he speaks all the others well.
It is German
The National idiom in Italy is of course Italian..so no matter which dialect or different languages German..Swiss etc.when it comes to tennis he represents ITALY...therefore after his many great wins he usually thanks fans and supporters in German and most often in English..however since he represents ITALY and us Italians applaude and support Jannik Sinner in all the events and each and every game..after a win he should definitely thank us in English first (Internationally speaking) but not to forget to thank everyone in the mother language I T A L I A N !!
GRAZIE..Romeo
Plus facile à comprendre qu’un Suisse alémanique je trouve
100 % especially if one is used to hearing Austrians or Bavarians speak who use dialects that are more or less closely related to Southern Tyrolean.
because that's Sud Tyrol Deutsch.
by speaking italian our dear Sinner is used to spell slowly.
Tutta questa discussione non ci sarebbe se Alcaraz fosse un catalano. Il problema che abbiamo in Italia è che di fronte a qualche stupido invidioso che ci sfotte c'è sempre un sacco di italiani che gli danno ragione invece di ignorare la provocazione
Abbi fede, le schiere di (nonpossodirlosennòmicensurano) nascono qualsiasi siano le situazioni
As an Italian Australian that loves Italia I can confirm that you are 100% right,and many a times I ask myself where is the patriotism with these degenerate Italians that get a kick out of it,is bad enough when non Italians do it but it’s very sad when Italians insult our beautiful culture,mi scusi se ho scritto in Inglese ma la Mia grammatica Italian non e a alto livello ,e alcune poche volte che ho scritto in italiano I stessi italiani mi hanno insultato,i mie genitori mi hanno imparato litaliano e la loro Lingua nativa il Napoletano
Che ci vuoi fare
I tedeschi e gli italiani sono molto più diversi di quanto non lo siano i catalani e i castigliani
@@CarloRossi54523se é come dici tu perché allora i catalani vogliono separarsi dalla Spagna?
i grew up in Tirol...so i understand him very easy, even if it s a liytle bit different than Nordtirol
In ostirol they speak more similar to sinner
He comes more alive when speaking his mother tongue
The silly 'real Italian' discussion I think simply comes from the fact that the majority of the Italian diaspora (especially in the US as is the case with my family) comes from the Southern regions of the country. So the stereotypes are mostly based on the cultural characteristics of the South. I actually didn't have a clear understanding of Italy until I moved to Europe (Germany as it happens! Haha) In any case, Sinner is amazing! I'm certain he will stand out in history as the best of his generation.
Non capisco mezza parola ma sei cmq UN MITO. Grazie di tutto!
As a German i can tell you, every single Word ist a german Word with the typical slang of that Region, easy to understand, If you know it just a bit. I could Not even idetify one single italian Word, which I find strange. He ist speaking extremly slow. May bei thats normal in these mountain regions
German is his mother tongue. South Tyrol used to be Austrian before the Italian stole it after World War One.
Maybe for public speaking it's a good idea to speak slower to get your ideas right.
@@michi587 The Italians saw an opportunity to grab an area with highly productive people and turn them into tax cows for the Italian government and they took it.
As an American who can speak and understand German at a conversational level...I was surprised how much I could understand. The fact that he is speaking slowly helped me tremendously.
@@michi587 the next time Austrians should not start a war just to lose it
Sempre grande Jannik. Siamo orgogliosi di lui
Divino ❤
‘Teteski noi … no italiani mandolino!’ ‘Fantozzi la smetta con quel mandolino’
Oppure la cura dimagrante
🤣🤣🤣
Beautiful! ❤️❤️❤️
I always have been living in a central region of Italy, Marche. In spite of the fact that we are close to Tuscany, that is to say the roots of italian language and despite of the small size of the region, there are three macro areas of Marche's dialects: italian gallic, medium italian and southern italian. if I were to take a compass and make a circle with the point where I live in the center and a radius of 20 kilometers the italian word "bambino/children" would be written in, at least, six or seven different ways completely different. This is why some things I read in some of the comments are just bullshit.
What is he speaking Targaryen?
Tiroler!!
ZUWRST X ITALIENER UND DANN TIROLER.
Grüezi mittinond
Puoi fare uno con le bestemmie madre lingua di musetti?
It's very similar to German what Sinner speaks. I think a German can understand what he's saying.
yes, because Sinner mother speaks German..
In India there are sometimes 7-8 languages spoken within a single state (and we have 30 states) so this “diversity” is hilarious. I speak 3 Indian languages plus English and French
@@nagraj2k1 Glad to entertain you but you cannot compare a subcontinent with a country like Italy with a population of 58 milion people, still there are 12 recognized minority languages by law ( ex: croatian,german,franco-provenzale,sardinian,greek,albanian, catalan etc) plus all the different dialects that can be considered as Italian "sister" languages because they have the same roots of the Italian language mixed with previous indigenous languages and the languages brought by invaders.They are so variegated that it could happen that even 2 little town close to each other by few kms cannot understand each other dialects.
seems like German with an Italian accent
No it's definitely not trust me
Intanto l'italiano lo parla meglio lui di totti o cassano
As a speaker of English who is studying German in pursuit of fluency, this does sound to me both definably German and also heavily influenced by Italian, particularly the accent.
There is zero italian influence in his speaking. It’s just the tyrolian dialect
Sounds a (little) bit like Roger Federer when he speaks Swiss German. :)
What brand hat is the dude wearing people...where can i order one..?
Ich bin Badner und versteh ihn nahezu komplett. Es gibt sicher unangenehmere Dialekte.
Non capisco, ma mi adeguo.,...❤😊
...e fai bene. Impegno, sacrificio, semplicità e una non comune saggezza in un giovane. Un vero influencer suo malgrado. Speriamo faccia tanti proseliti !😊
Zvuci bas simpaticno.
Wasn’t this area originally part of Austria?
Yes
and before it was italian area from Romans era
Before being conquered by Germanic tribes.
like many other regions of Austro-Hungarian empire that eventually collapsed.
Austria lost the 1stWW, the Great War, and consequently Italia invaded and conquered a vast mountainside region where Austrian-German was, ans still is, native tongue and native culture. Besides this, Sinner was born and lived his youth in an area which lies on the northern slopes of the Alps, meaning that the rivers flowing from these mountain slopes don't flow to the Adriatic sea but they descend into the Danube; when the WW1 ended there was an agreement to split the former Austrian Sud Tyrol in Italian and Austrian territories according to the river flowing, but the area where Sinner was born was an exception and was included in Italian territory although its water flows northbound.
O sea no tengo ni idea como se escribe lo que habla pero entiendo lo que dice 👍🏻
He doesn’t look like an Italian, he looks like an Austrian.
You know only the stereotypical Italian look, there are many Italians indistinguishable from northern Europeans even as far south as Sicily. In a YT video of 4 professional German footballers that took a DNA test, 2 had 40%, 1 had 10% Italian DNA. During the Renaissance Italian culture was imported and favored in Austria with many Austrians taking on Italian names. And the territory of Austria was under Roman rule. Don't believe the hype Austria was purely Germanic up to WW I.
@@spaniardsrmoors6817True, Italy's ethical diversity has to do with both the age of migrations and Rome's imperial history. But in the case of Jannik Sinner, it´s different. He is South-Tyrol. The Austrian region of South Tyrol was annexed by Italy in 1918 after the First World War. He is ethically Austrian, his name is Austrian and he speaks Italian and the Germanic dialect common in South Tyrol. Apart from that, I have never heard of any hype about Austria being exclusively Germanic. It has always been more or less multi-ethnical.
He isn't Italian. He is From Tirol. Which is a historic part of Austria.
It was conquered and lost to the Italians in Worldwar 1
@@Goriaas 👍💯
Where are you from ?
Sono vicinity a tutti edue 💯
Please do not start the discussions "He is not real Italian...". Your language is not what defines your nationality, there is many countries with many languages. An what is even is a "real Italian"?
Dann sind Tibeter also Chinesen?
Excuse me sir: what you write about the nationality is wrong! Languages are the very fundament of a nationality! This is a consensed concept. I recomend to you to study beter before give an opinion. Ask südtiroler people, what they think about to be italians. Jannik Sinner depend a lot of a national financial support. He can not have another speach.
But: if you born and grow in a place, where people speaks german (because they are german!), you think in german, eat german and dream jn german, you are a german, and not an Italian. It is obvious!!! The cuestion is, why Südtirol on the italian side of the border is. But this is another story; a very, very sad ones!
Regards from Argentina
@@arturolaino7846 thank You! That's so true. Best regards from South Tirol.
Er ist ein mega Botschafter, ein super symphatischer Kerl und hoch talentiert. Und dass er auch Deutsch spricht ist schön. So haben wir alle was von ihm!
@@arturolaino7846 So much BS... You can be sure a South Tyrolean is closer to Italian culture than to the culture of Hamburg. Do you also tell Swiss Italians, FinnSwedes, French Canadian that they need to change their nationality?
I pin aanfoch waasche glicklich mit diar ❤❤❤
Now, he lives in Monte Carlo (🇫🇷-speaking) and his language is the dollar💲
Ha saltato pure le olimpiadi, se ne fotte altamente Dell Italia, ma gli italioti continuano a lodarlo
His name is a giveaway 😂
Germans: das ist doch nur deutsch mit accent
geilo puschtra!!!
Super Jannik, du mochsch inz olle a groaße Freid...!
Quando parla in italiano è più sintetico
perchè si sente limitato, questa è la sua lingua
Very interesting, its like a combination of German and Italian.
100% German (Tyrolean Dialect) 0% Italian
Not really it’s just the South Tyrolean dialect nothing Italian about it just something most people aren’t that used to
I understand him just fine, so it is German 'enough' for me. I do not speak Italien
Which is Jannick's first language when writing? These dialects tend not to get written so I imagine German, pure and simple. He must have done his schooling in German. I have had difficulties speaking my very good German in Bozen and Brixen; they don't want to answer intelligibly. They seem to have a lot of self-imposed linguistic stigma. A lot of Swiss are inhibited about speaking Hochdeutsch. The most widely spoken language in Europe presents a number of conflicts for the native speakers in six or seven countries....
Forget about and what region and so forth. Naturally the Italian prefer the macho type which I’m happy Sinner isn’t. He’s cool, truly humble not the fakes out there…..he’s the real thing! One more thing he’s and will be Carlos nightmare, I miss one he’s the number 1 not Carlos and I promise he’s leaving that position for a while. Carlos have other idea like quickly regaining the number 1 position but he hasn’t seen the best of Sinner however during the Olympic and after he will see a Sinner he hasn’t seen.
"Naturally the Italian prefer the macho type which I’m happy Sinner isn’t". What the heck are you talking about? meaning, we in italy don't appreciating him?
welli whats his mother language than???????
A German dialect which is what people from South Tyrol use. It is different from standard German which he also speaks, but being from Italy, he also grew up learning Italian. Still confused? 😂
@@billiey36 gave up...just forget it 😂😂😂
@@emremladic4486 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Sounds very Germanic.
Ya think? 😅
Ha veramente detto "se vuoi diventare ricco"?
Se sì, è una delle cose che in italiano non direbbe mai 😅
Tsounds ppretty shtraaingge
vincesse na partita pure
La droga fa male
This is Bavarian?
Kind of
That's definitely Dutch 😁
yikes when i hear anything other than hoch deutsch, i just estimate what he said
is it dutch or german?
German. But he is speaking a dialect. To be more exact he is speaking Southern Austro-Bavarian, or even more exact Tyrolean, but Southern Tyrolean which is spoken obviously in Southern Tyrol, which today is an autonomous region in Italy. He is from the Pustertal/ Puster Valley, where most of the inhabitants speak „Pusterisch“ which is the version of South Tyrolean spoken in the Pustertal.
To me this sounds like Swiss-German
Romanisch?
Man nennt es Deutsch 🫣😅🤣
He sounds like an American to me, which is great, because we finally have a men's Grand Slam champion again after 20 years!
😂
ma e ladino questo o un po diverso ?
gongz gongz dialekt
Sound like idis!
L'ho sempre detto...vi esaltate per uno che non è italiano.ahahah
il commento di quello sveglio :)
@@MarioMarinomolven piu di te e' facile...:-)
German Spaghetti.
Non e' male la definizione tedesco e persona affidabile e precisa spaghetti un piatto (io gli adoro al pesto) amato in tutto il mondo (anche in germania😂) insieme esce jannik il massimo!!!!!!!!!🤩🤩🤩🤩
At the end it was German
Si, il nonno del trisavolo. Austriaco per la precisione.
His mother tongue is the Ladino language, which is a language and not a dialect. It comes from latin, like italian, spanish and rumenian.
@@alberto-os1bx inform yourself before writing wrong comments. He is from Pustertol which is not Ladino speaking.
@@martinschmidt1652 you're right....my bad!
It sounds like hill billy German has a family with a hill billy Italian.
sounds far away from the typical German pronunciation if we consider the musical intonation. his accent is near those of north-east Italy (triveneto)