"German is so cute" Germans: Entschuldigen Sie? Edit: oh god i havent checked on this in 7 months and i got 3k likes wow Edit 2: i havent checked on this in a year and it still has 3k likes 🤩
@@missbroccoli4202 OH BABY ALLES WIRD AUS HACK GEMACHT, HACK SAG MAL GUTEN TAG! ICH HAB 'NE HACKFRESSE WEIL ICH GERNE HACK ESSE. KOMM MIR BLOß NICHT MIT TOFU, DAS FINDE ICH DOOF DU ein Klassiker :')
@@niki8788 An Empire. In this case it refers to the third German Empire. This was a quote referring to a Hitler quote that was "Ein Land. Ein Reich. Ein Führer." I think.
@@AlGELOGY Bro how lost are you? Are you actually initiating your flirt protocoll based on someone having a moovie character as a profile pic? That's some indian stuff right here
As a bilingually raised child (English (American) and German) i’ve noticed I mixed them up in both languages completely. Als ein Kind das bilingual (englisch (amerikanisch) und deutsch) aufgewachsen ist habe ich gemerkt dass ich die laute in beiden Sprachen komplett verwechsele.
I love this german guy. So charming and down to earth. I've been wanting to learn german forever (my grandfather was stationed in germany in the army and loved it there) and seeing this makes me want to finally buckle down and learn it
@@tonikronpass_15 No a German wouldn't say Marshalla. Only Arab immigrants say that ( and people who hang out with immigrants a lot) but Germans don't use that.
As others have pointed out: in Germany we say, crickets go "zirp zirp", but having them at home as food for our reptiles I can tell, they rather go "rrrrrriiii, rrrriiii".
@Frank William Abagnale Junior ich glaub du bist etwas älter...1.Das ist ein Meme und 2.wird es echt inflationär verwendet und ist so gut integriert wie "cool"
Turkey is "gubble gubble" in German. Baby chick in German is "ziep ziep" (at least in some dialects) and bird can also be "tschilp tschilp" "Piep piep" can also mean mouse A hen mostly is "bok bok" or "gack gack" A crow is "krah krah" A snake in German is "zisch" A pigeon is "gurr gurr"
In gernany the animal chicken = Huhn and a male chicken = rooster = Hahn 🐓 and a female chicken = kluck = Huhn and it makes boak and a baby chicken = Küken 🐣 and makes Piep piep. And a cricket is a Grille and makes Zirp zirp a horse makes hühhh or the formal word is wieren a pferd wiert hühhhh a snake mazes zzzzz but it’s more tschhhhzz and a fish makes blubb
The most animal sounds in Germany are from the child-language. Thats why they are so cute. The dove makes "Ruckedigu" in the fairy tail "Aschenputtel" (Cinderella). Turkeys did not exist in Germany, they are exotics. Thats why we don't have a sound. "Gubbel-gubbel" is from Obelix. The duck makes:"Gag gag" or "Quak quak" (or "Nag nag nag", the little ducky "Schnatterienchen" from the East-TV-Sandmann. And Mrs. Hedgehog: "Nuff nuff nuff") A bear makes "Brumm brumm", like a Teddybear. A sparrow makes: "Tschiep tschiep" oder "Tschilp tschilp". Other birds have the same sound like a mouse: "Piep piep". The goat makes "Meck meck meck". The sheep: "Mäh mäh" or "Bäh bäh": An elephant makes: "Tarööö" like "Benjamin Blümchen". A pig have some sounds: "Oink oink, Grunz grunz or Quiek quiek". A froggy makes:"Quak or quaak". A raven or a crow: "Krah krah" All sounds must be pronounced with german pronunciation!
"Baa, Baa black shep, have you any wool? One for the master, one for the fool" Oder so, hat meine englische Stiefoma mir vorgesungen, als ich noch klein war. My step-granny from the UK used to sing this to me when I was little.
I gotta be honest, if I wasn't already fluent in German, I would never learn it on my own so mad respect to you for being so fascinated with our language :)
Ich bin gebürtiger Deutscher und meine Mama hat diese Sprache studiert. Als ich meine erste Steuererklärung machen musste dachte wtf sind das für Begriffe. Und das soll dann ein Ausländer kapieren. Alles klar.
2:38 I really enjoyed this video! However, I'm American and I dont know anyone who says, "bark bark" for dogs. I think for some of these examples in the video there should be a difference between the verb for the animal sound and the actual sound the animal makes. To bark is the verb but the sound is "ruff ruff". Similar to how the verb is "to sneeze" but the sound is "ah-choo" Same thing, with chickens. They *cluck* but that's not the sound they make . Please correct me if I'm wrong.
I live in the U.S.A. And where we live you would say the bird is “chirping” but you would say the animal sound is peep peep, or tweet tweet. I have not really heard anyone say a bird says chirp chirp. The dog around us we say all three. As a horse rider you say ya “ja” to get a horse going, “Getty up” that’s just said in movies. And I’ve heard meh and bah as both for a sheep and a goat. Hoo(t) in our region the t is silent when you make the animal sound. I think it widely depends on who settled the region on which you are from in the US.
Follow up request. Could you make a video about different sounds Germans and Americans make in certain situations? For example when you are barely got out of a dangerous situation. American: phew German: puh same for surprise, condolence etc
Yeah? Like the sound of knuckles on a door like when you visit someone's home to get in. We say "knock knock" for that sound. I think in French they say "pan pan"
I have time go waste while watching the video so in french we say « cui-cui » for birds, « miaou » for cats, « meuh » for cows, « cocorico » for male chicken, « cot cot » for female chicken, « wouf wouf » for dogs, « groin groin » for pigs, « hi-han » for donkeys (kinda the same), « bêê » for sheeps, « glouglou » for turkey 😂😂
@@lulus8122 could be wouf or waf, depends on the feeling or the person ahahah (also i'm not french from france but from canada, could be why :thinking:)
Doves coo. The verb is coo and the sound they make is also "coo, coo, coo". Horses whinny (the verb is whinny), and the sound is "neigh". Dogs bark (the verb is bark), and the sound is "woof woof" or "ruff ruff" or "arf arf" or "bow wow" . Check out the children's book "Doggies" by Sandra Boynton.
The funniest English one is: What does the frog say? Ribbit, ribbit. How did the English language end up with that one? Never heard a frog make anywhere near that sound. In German: Der Frosch macht quaak oder quack oder quark, so aehnlich wie die Ente.
LAMBLIKE that German man you talked to on the video. I liked it very much, it is VERY NICE AND ATTRACTIVE, you think so too, friend, I fell in love with it😘💖
@@Nostalgic_4_Disaster i actually have a friend who speaks both of these languages and she has a very soft voice so even when she speaks them it sounds very calming. It's really not about the language but about how you say things and also your voice
For real!? I'm in Kansas, US - I have hummingbirds come up to me every spring and summer on my porch. My family came from Germany in the 1800's. I'm sorry you don't have hummingbirds. They are my favorite bird! Beautiful emerald green! They shine in the sun!
@@Amandadances1983 we have other fancy birds i think. When you want to call them fancy. Where I live we have like 20 species of duck, some of them look 'interesting'
This made me think of Im Radio ist ein Kücken. U know the channel on TH-cam has it in english german spanish and other languages. There they do the animals too.
This is most informative video youtube ever suggested! 😅 Ps: sheep in Russian sounds (god help me to explain this) like “be/e/e/e” - in one exhale, where each “/“ is a kind of stop in exhaling... 🙈 Same with goats - “me/e/e/e” :)
Hello Lämmchen, eine Kuh macht Muh, viele Kühe machen Mühe 😉 Der Piepmatz kann für verschiedene Dinge stehen. Das kann dir aber dein Freund viel besser erklären.🤭🤫😆 Very interesting topic, i guess that was funny idea.
I am an animal lover so I know all the ones you said differently or forgot we had
Like coo, chirp, tweet, woof, bawk, buzz, grr, etc
Oh ya I couldn’t remember the most of them so I used a list I found on Google so I blame Google 😂 thanks for the corrections :)
@@HiFromHamburg Aww, love your video btw!
Wdum? My dog makes the woof sound all the time. Like when he’s laying down but wants to bark with his mouth closed it makes the woof sound.
@@HiFromHamburg Chicken in Germany makes "Pock Pock"
@@HiFromHamburg a Cricket in Germany makes "Zirp Zirp"
Horses do "wiehern" in germany
I think they rather "wie-hern", dont they?
www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/wiehern
Native german here 😊
Andreas Mönig
No, it is „wiehern“. I’m also a native speaker.
And it literally is written like that in your link. And on the site.
HHAHAHS
@@gwyncrevan haha it kinda does lol
In what world is "kikiriki" more complicated than "CuCk-A-dOoDlE-dOo" ? 😂😂😂
More difficult to spell, maybe? With cockadoodledoo it has really stupid words that most people can spell.
In Romanian we say "Cucurigu", which somehow combines English and German and adds a bit of Slavic influence 😁
Kikiriki in Serbian means peanuts
@@ArissXAS In Portuguese do we say 'cocorico',it makes me believe that it has the same root like romanian...
I DON'T KNOW 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Everyone else: german is so aggressive
She: german is so cute
Kawaii Hitler
@@knighthunter1791 really?...
German is either manly or gay.
Christian Autajay um
@@knighthunter1791 or both
You can watch a song for German animals and their noises it’s called „Im Radio ist ein Küken“ and it’s very funny
Danke für den Ohrwurm
Not "I'm" it's "Im" 😁
This same song was the trend in Mexico like six or seven years ago!!! 😱
Omg dieses Lied😂
it's "Küken" :)
"German is so cute"
Germans: Entschuldigen Sie?
Edit: oh god i havent checked on this in 7 months and i got 3k likes wow
Edit 2: i havent checked on this in a year and it still has 3k likes 🤩
Haben sie Cevapcici?
Nein, ich lebe in Amerika. Ich lerne nur zum Spaß Deutsch und andere Sprachen, aber nein, ich habe kein Cevapcici.
Google cevapcici
Nejc Šmigoc i did
@@missbroccoli4202 OH BABY ALLES WIRD AUS HACK GEMACHT, HACK SAG MAL GUTEN TAG! ICH HAB 'NE HACKFRESSE WEIL ICH GERNE HACK ESSE. KOMM MIR BLOß NICHT MIT TOFU, DAS FINDE ICH DOOF DU
ein Klassiker :')
Pig = Grunz Grunz
Cricket = Zirp Zirp
Chicken: Bog :D
Pig = oink oink
Kek=lol lol
@@racecookie4358 😂
Idioten: Erster Erster
German in the title
German people: HAHAAA UNSER KOMMENTARBEREICH
HAHAHAHAHAHA
True
Das deutsche reich der deutschen komentatoren
Ja das ist richtig
True😂
Person- "what sounds does the eagle makes?"
Me- *inhales*
Also me- *SCREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEECH*
HAHHA I SPITTED OUT MY TEA
Caw
In sweden we say ka kar ka kar maybe
I did the same lol
@@alicestain9235 in Russia these are raven sounds. KAR KAR KAR (r is pronounced strongly as always in Russian)
This was very educationally adorable 🐥
German in title
Germans be like:
Ein Land, ein Reich, ein Kommentarbereich
Habe in den Kommentaren nach diesem Reim gesucht lmao
🤣
What is Reich?
@@niki8788 Reich like 3. Reich or Empire
@@niki8788 An Empire. In this case it refers to the third German Empire. This was a quote referring to a Hitler quote that was "Ein Land. Ein Reich. Ein Führer." I think.
“Do you have a Kuckuck? It makes kuckuck.” Beschreibung on point.
HAHAHA
Deutsch: Der die das wieso weshalb warum
Englisch: the the the why why why
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Thanks for the Heart♥️♥️♥️♥️
Ohhhhhh jaa 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@paulknapp4020 und ich frag mich dann so: waaaaarrrrummm???😭😭😭😭
Hä was warum
@@paulknapp4020 ja deutsch ist so schwer zu lernen
ok someone needs to say it - the german guy totally looks at the american girl as if SHE were a piece of marsmallow candy.... :-D
Lol. I didn’t see it that way.
I thought that as well
Huhn: am ehesten... put put put put put (sagt man auch bei der Fütterung)
@@imrehundertwasser7094 Only people who understand german can like your comment...
Yesss
German is so cute
Also German: Rechtsschutzversicherungsgesellschaften
🙄😂
Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz
Hochgeschwindigkeitsschienenschleifzug
@@dex8363 haha von Duden xD
Donaudampfschifffajrtselektrizitätenhauptbetriebswerkbauunterbeamtengesellschaft
Literally the first Person I hear saying that German sounds cute. Thank you, really.
Hühner gackern.
"Gack gack"
Hähne krähen.
Ich kenns als bok bok bok bok bok
Ich kenne: Mädchen pfeifen ,Hühner krähen, denen muss man gleich Kopf abdrehehen. Lmao
Hier sagen wir 'Huehner kokeln'
wenn hähne krähen, was machen dann eigentlich krähen?^^
Hahn: Kikiriki
Henne: Gugurugu
Taube: gurr gurr
Die Schlange zischt.
Der Bär brummt.
Und die Grille zirpt
@@l.s.9487 Die braai doen wat?
"I'm dating a german guy"
aww
"and he's my german roommate"
oh :(
Oh my god...they were roommates
@@somegirl8007 vine appreciation
Right? Lol. She spends a lot of time with her German “not” boyfriend. Lol.
She seems veryyyy awkward with him lol
This made me laugh 😂
German Sound for
Cricket : zirp zirp 😂
For Horse : wieher ...😅
Wow hello beauty women, can u teach me some of ur language
@@AlGELOGY Bro how lost are you? Are you actually initiating your flirt protocoll based on someone having a moovie character as a profile pic? That's some indian stuff right here
As a bilingually raised child (English (American) and German) i’ve noticed I mixed them up in both languages completely. Als ein Kind das bilingual (englisch (amerikanisch) und deutsch) aufgewachsen ist habe ich gemerkt dass ich die laute in beiden Sprachen komplett verwechsele.
same just trilingual lol
Leon-Minh technically me too but I don’t speak much French so I don’t really count it
Relatable
@@jeremyalles1962 ich bindreisprachig aufgewachsen, thüringisch, sächsisch und deutsch xD
Jeremy Alles haha
"What does a bear sound like?"
Russians: *Is that even a question?*
what does a beer sound like?
@@Nizart No. They said bear
I don't think even we have a sound for bears.
Title: says "German"
Germans: dieser Kommentarbereich gehört nun offiziell der Bundesrepublik Deutschland.
You two are adorable. I miss hearing German since my father passed too. Thank you
I love this german guy. So charming and down to earth. I've been wanting to learn german forever (my grandfather was stationed in germany in the army and loved it there) and seeing this makes me want to finally buckle down and learn it
I can help u teaching it
In germany we Would say: "verliebt" :D
Monte sagt das halt so oft
We say "Mashalla einfach die Hübsche"
@@tonikronpass_15 No a German wouldn't say Marshalla. Only Arab immigrants say that ( and people who hang out with immigrants a lot) but Germans don't use that.
@@blackforest_fairy Du hast so Recht!
@@blackforest_fairy that's a meme, stupid
i hope some day i'll find someone who looks at me all the time like this guy looks at her.. that's the cutest i've ever seen
Is this guy in love with her? He jist can't take his eyes off her! Hahah
It can also just because nothing else to see/look at.
@blanca now, just the roommate, so soon she must move out
It would be strange if he wasn’t in love with her as she said in the beginning that they are together
@@emmawickman1196
Could be:
Dating a German+ he is my roommate.
Just my little memory is she lives in Germany and he lives in states.
I can understand him though
Cricket: Zirp Zirp. At least in Austria-
Ja in D auch🙃
Zirp, zirp... I like that! 🦗
She sounds like she would have 0 accent speaking German :O
True
There's more than one German accent 😳
As others have pointed out: in Germany we say, crickets go "zirp zirp", but having them at home as food for our reptiles I can tell, they rather go "rrrrrriiii, rrrriiii".
In german this guy would say "Mashalla einfach die Hübsche" or "Verliebt"
😂😂
ISSSSO
No German would ever say Marshalla thats an Arab thing...
@Frank William Abagnale Junior ich glaub du bist etwas älter...1.Das ist ein Meme und 2.wird es echt inflationär verwendet und ist so gut integriert wie "cool"
@Frank William Abagnale Junior also zum Einen ja,aber bei uns nehmen das echt viele Normalos her wegen dem Meme darüber und ein paar TH-camrn
sneezing is also funny in different languages
german: hatschi
english: atishoo
Turkey is "gubble gubble" in German.
Baby chick in German is "ziep ziep" (at least in some dialects) and bird can also be "tschilp tschilp"
"Piep piep" can also mean mouse
A hen mostly is "bok bok" or "gack gack"
A crow is "krah krah"
A snake in German is "zisch"
A pigeon is "gurr gurr"
So, nobody asked but, in French :
Bee : Bzzz
Bird : Cui cui
Cat : Miaou
Cow : Meuh
Chick : Piou piou
Chicken : Cot cot
Rooster : *COCORICO*
Cricket : Cricricri
Dog : Waf/Wouf
Duck : Coin coin
Eagle : don't have than one
Horse : Hihihi
Hummingbird : don't have that one
Pig : Gruik
Snake : Sss
Donkey : Hi han
Sheep : Mêê
Owl : Hou hou
Cuckoo : Coucou
Turkey : Glouglou
Dove : Croucrou
Does a duck say "quain quain" but without pronouncing the whole /n/ sound? I feel like I remember this from French class.
@@gennaehill9894 The "oin" sound is pretty much untranslatable but you're pretty close
In gernany the animal chicken = Huhn and a male chicken = rooster = Hahn 🐓 and a female chicken = kluck = Huhn and it makes boak and a baby chicken = Küken 🐣 and makes Piep piep. And a cricket is a Grille and makes Zirp zirp a horse makes hühhh or the formal word is wieren a pferd wiert hühhhh a snake mazes zzzzz but it’s more tschhhhzz and a fish makes blubb
Im a German learner who has wondered for soo long what the exact diff between Hahn,Huhn, Hühnchen etc was. xD Found all in one place. Dankeschön
@@alphaluna1259 Hey, nice to meet you, your welcome. If you have a question, just ask me. If I have time, I give a answer for it.
It's written "wiehern" and "wiehert" but yes
@@alphaluna1259 You can also call a female chicken "Henne" (in general) or "Glucke" (when she has little chicks).
@@alphaluna1259 a Hühnchen is a cooked Huhn. Hähnchen is a cooked Hahn
Me: sees the title
Also me: wait, animals have accents?
😂😂😂
The most animal sounds in Germany are from the child-language. Thats why they are so cute.
The dove makes "Ruckedigu" in the fairy tail "Aschenputtel" (Cinderella).
Turkeys did not exist in Germany, they are exotics. Thats why we don't have a sound. "Gubbel-gubbel" is from Obelix.
The duck makes:"Gag gag" or "Quak quak" (or "Nag nag nag", the little ducky "Schnatterienchen" from the East-TV-Sandmann. And Mrs. Hedgehog: "Nuff nuff nuff")
A bear makes "Brumm brumm", like a Teddybear.
A sparrow makes: "Tschiep tschiep" oder "Tschilp tschilp".
Other birds have the same sound like a mouse: "Piep piep".
The goat makes "Meck meck meck".
The sheep: "Mäh mäh" or "Bäh bäh":
An elephant makes: "Tarööö" like "Benjamin Blümchen".
A pig have some sounds: "Oink oink, Grunz grunz or Quiek quiek".
A froggy makes:"Quak or quaak".
A raven or a crow: "Krah krah"
All sounds must be pronounced with german pronunciation!
Bee noises in Russian: BZZZ 🐝
Bird noises in Russian: CHIK CHIRIK CHIRIK
Rooster noises: KUKAREKU
"Baa, Baa black shep, have you any wool?
One for the master, one for the fool"
Oder so, hat meine englische Stiefoma mir vorgesungen, als ich noch klein war.
My step-granny from the UK used to sing this to me when I was little.
English also has "bow wow" and "woof woof" for dogs which are closer to the German sounds. :)
‘German is so cute’
Also german: KUGELSCHREIBER
kUgeL scHrEI BÄr 🐻
In Czech Republic sheep goes: bé
And goat goes: mé
🤣
English is very similar to Czech. The sheep goes "baa, baa" and the goat goes "maa, maa".
In german the sheep says: Mäh
And the goat says: Meh 😂🤷
My brain did not go “cluck cluck” when I though of a chicken noise. Instead my brain jumped to “BAWK BAWK”
that is funny, i liked that very much....
thanks i laughed often and
made my day easier
Omg I needed this info :D
0:24 - "take a shot everytime i touch my hair"
me: YOU'RE LITERALLY TOUCHING IT THE WHOLE VIDEO WITH YOUR FACE, HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO DO THAT?
by shot, I meant a shot of alcohol :))
@@HiFromHamburg I hate you for that now. got such a tomcat from this game
So when a chicken hits puberty and his voice breaks, it turns from cheep to chirp 🐣🐥
I gotta be honest, if I wasn't already fluent in German, I would never learn it on my own so mad respect to you for being so fascinated with our language :)
Ich bin gebürtiger Deutscher und meine Mama hat diese Sprache studiert. Als ich meine erste Steuererklärung machen musste dachte wtf sind das für Begriffe. Und das soll dann ein Ausländer kapieren. Alles klar.
He has a very pleasant yet mischievous laugh and enjoys watching her reactions. That's really cute.
Frog is also funny: english: ribbit, german: quak
2:38 I really enjoyed this video! However, I'm American and I dont know anyone who says, "bark bark" for dogs. I think for some of these examples in the video there should be a difference between the verb for the animal sound and the actual sound the animal makes. To bark is the verb but the sound is "ruff ruff". Similar to how the verb is "to sneeze" but the sound is "ah-choo" Same thing, with chickens. They *cluck* but that's not the sound they make . Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Noooo, you forgot the frog sound, it's the funniest one :)
It's Quak in German and ribbit in English xD
German in the title. The competition of long words begins. I’ll start.
Hyperintelligenzdefizit
Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz
Donaudampfschifffahrtskapitänskajütenklinkenputzlappeneimer
The sound doves and pigeons make in English is "coo".
I live in the U.S.A. And where we live you would say the bird is “chirping” but you would say the animal sound is peep peep, or tweet tweet. I have not really heard anyone say a bird says chirp chirp. The dog around us we say all three. As a horse rider you say ya “ja” to get a horse going, “Getty up” that’s just said in movies. And I’ve heard meh and bah as both for a sheep and a goat. Hoo(t) in our region the t is silent when you make the animal sound. I think it widely depends on who settled the region on which you are from in the US.
The title reminds me of the song with the Lyrics: "eine Muh, eine Mäh, eine Täterätätä..." 😅
_Im Radio ist ein Küken?_
@@danielthompson6207 nee. es ist warscheinlich ein Weihnachtslied. aber ich hab schon Im Radio ist ein Küken gehört.
Follow up request. Could you make a video about different sounds Germans and Americans make in certain situations? For example when you are barely got out of a dangerous situation. American: phew German: puh same for surprise, condolence etc
Yeah? Like the sound of knuckles on a door like when you visit someone's home to get in. We say "knock knock" for that sound. I think in French they say "pan pan"
This Video is now Staatsgebiet der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
nonono, "Das Internet ist für uns alle Neuland"
Stfu
I really like your videos because they seem to be so authentic and natural, not as staged as many TH-cam videos are. Greetings from Germany
Thank you that makes me so happy to hear that! Most of my videos are not planned and pretty spontaneous so I think this may be the reason 😁😊
I have to agree with her, German is honestly so cute, I love learning the language, it makes me smile, even the super long words 💖
Thanks a lot, it's nice to hear someone enjoys learning German. As a native speaker I imagine it to be quite difficult sometimes.
Thank you, hope you came further learning it :D
Nice video it's great to see cultural exchange on this level of friendship. Can't wait for a Fortsetzung of this Bewegtbildproduktion!
he looks at her soo cute🥰
“Peep nuts.”
I felt that.
I have time go waste while watching the video so in french we say « cui-cui » for birds, « miaou » for cats, « meuh » for cows, « cocorico » for male chicken, « cot cot » for female chicken, « wouf wouf » for dogs, « groin groin » for pigs, « hi-han » for donkeys (kinda the same), « bêê » for sheeps, « glouglou » for turkey 😂😂
You say Wouf? I'm German and in our french lessons at school we were told it was Ouah :o
@@lulus8122 Omg same😂
@@lulus8122 could be wouf or waf, depends on the feeling or the person ahahah (also i'm not french from france but from canada, could be why :thinking:)
@@Noemie112 Okay so maybe french french and canadian french differ in dog language xD
Doves coo. The verb is coo and the sound they make is also "coo, coo, coo".
Horses whinny (the verb is whinny), and the sound is "neigh".
Dogs bark (the verb is bark), and the sound is "woof woof" or "ruff ruff" or "arf arf" or "bow wow" . Check out the children's book "Doggies" by Sandra Boynton.
When you think about it, it’s really funny our cricket sound is literally “cricket”.
LOL. You’d think that pretentious 16th-century English Latin polymaths would just use a Latinate to represent the “cricket” sound, but they didn’t.
The funniest English one is: What does the frog say? Ribbit, ribbit. How did the English language end up with that one? Never heard a frog make anywhere near that sound.
In German: Der Frosch macht quaak oder quack oder quark, so aehnlich wie die Ente.
2:23 "Zirp" ihr lappen
Dafuq nett
xD
Hahahah lol xD
this comment is pure beauty, so simple, so effective 😂
guten tag, jungs
gosh, you guys are SO ADORABLE
1:47 Eine Kuh macht Muh, viele Kühe machen Mühe.
2:27 Zirp
3:07 Hüüüh
LAMBLIKE that German man you talked to on the video. I liked it very much, it is VERY NICE AND ATTRACTIVE, you think so too, friend, I fell in love with it😘💖
Finally someone who doesn't just say "German is such a forced language!" Like every language is hard and forced if you want it to sound like it!
Hear Dutch or Afrikaans. LOL.
@@Nostalgic_4_Disaster i actually have a friend who speaks both of these languages and she has a very soft voice so even when she speaks them it sounds very calming. It's really not about the language but about how you say things and also your voice
Määähhh and baaa 😂
And woah her german is so good! I'm not from germany but i speak and live in germany
To get this straight: there are definitely no hummingbirds in Germany, or in Europe in general. This is why I'm sad
For real!? I'm in Kansas, US - I have hummingbirds come up to me every spring and summer on my porch. My family came from Germany in the 1800's. I'm sorry you don't have hummingbirds. They are my favorite bird! Beautiful emerald green! They shine in the sun!
@@Amandadances1983 we have other fancy birds i think. When you want to call them fancy. Where I live we have like 20 species of duck, some of them look 'interesting'
hmmm the crickets „zirpen“ but i know no word for actual sound 😂❤️
Turkey: in the german dub of Asterix in America Obelix said "Gubbel Gubbel" to the Turkey.
And in the book he says "Gurru Gurru".
Well, actually he sais Gurru Gurru. At least in the books and i think the movies are awfull...
Dr. Erika Fuchs once translated the sound of turkeys into "Gautera, gautera". The Donald Duck comics she translated are the best :)
Female chicken: bork, bork
Cricket: zirp, zirp
Horse: hüüühüühü
Snake: sssss
In spanish, cats go Miao. But also the Spanish word miao means piss.
i would love to make this video with you in california :3 i miss you so much and this video is very funny, hope to see you again later
One day we must make this video together! Haha I can’t wait to learn what animal sounds the French people are using :D we miss u too!
This is absolutely adorable 😍😍😍
your laugh is soooo cute🙈
First time since childhood this guy has been asked about animal sounds again xD
“Germany is so cute “ butterfly which is SCHMETTERLING 😂😂😂
In Brazil, we have a bird that sounds like "Bem te vi" it's like "Well I saw you" lol, and his name is Bem Te vi
There might be some regional differences, because I say different things on like 3 of them. (Washington State)
Wow hello beauty women, can u teach me some of ur language
That little sheep song :O We have that in Dutch: "Schaapje, schaapje, heb je witte wol?..."
German birds: ZWITSCHER ZWITSCHER
This made me think of Im Radio ist ein Kücken. U know the channel on TH-cam has it in english german spanish and other languages. There they do the animals too.
Horse = wieher, Cricket = zirp zirp
Nice video, thx for sharing. I missed the frog here with "quaaak quaaak" vs. "rrrribit rrrribit".
(German) Ich wusste nicht, was ich so kommentieren sollte. ;v;
(English) I didn’t know what to comment so uh ;v;
This is most informative video youtube ever suggested! 😅 Ps: sheep in Russian sounds (god help me to explain this) like “be/e/e/e” - in one exhale, where each “/“ is a kind of stop in exhaling... 🙈 Same with goats - “me/e/e/e” :)
Neigh?! What, never heard that before😇
Am I the only one who had the song"im radio ist ein küken" in the ear😂😂
Und dann dieses oh-oh am Ende
Hello Lämmchen,
eine Kuh macht Muh, viele Kühe machen Mühe 😉
Der Piepmatz kann für verschiedene Dinge stehen.
Das kann dir aber dein Freund viel besser erklären.🤭🤫😆
Very interesting topic, i guess that was funny idea.
Für was steht es denn sonst?🤔
My dad: talking about chipmunks
My German Grandpa: shitmunks
Butterfly..
Papillon..
Mariposa..
SCHMETTERLING!
"German is so cute"
Every time I ask siri what a fox say; it will tell me a different answer, like Wa-pa-pa-pa-pa-paw, Fraka-kaka-kaka-kaka-kaw etc 😂