Fr, that got me into languages. Once i've maden a trip and it was really crazy how while i was taking with other argentinians in spanish, french people for eg didn't get a word and same for me with their friends xd
@@TruMoist Why I would abandon my native language to speak only one language? This is only good for the native English speakers that can't speak more than one language, because for the bilingual people (that's the most part of the humanity I think, because for use 100% of the Internet you need to know English) this is not so good.
@@RandalfElVikingo Yeah, I can second that too. I know for a fact my parents don't know all 93,000 words. It most likely includes regional and extinct words.
English : Alaska pollock Korean : 1. 명태 2. 생태(has not been dried or frozen) 3. 북어(dried after taking out the intestines) 4. 코다리(half dried) 5. 동태(caught in winter and frozen) 6. 황태(repeated freezing and drying) -(divided into small differences) -낙태 - 노가리 - 파태 - 흑태 - 무두태 - 짝태 - 깡태 - 백태 - 골태 - 붕태 7. 애태(baby) 8. 왜태(adult but small) 9. 꺽태(folded) 10. 망태(caught with net) 11. 추태(caught in autumn) 12. 막물태(caught in late spring) 13. 춘태(caught in spring) 14. 원양태(caught in vast ocean(???)) 15. 간태(salted) *It's a special case
Also korean has various color representation 노랗다 -> yellow 누렇다 -> yellow 노르스름하다 -> yellow 누르스름하다 -> yellow 노리끼리하다 -> yellow 샛노랗다 -> yellow 노릇노릇하다 -> yellow 빨갛다 -> red 뻘겋다 -> red 새빨갛다 -> red 시뻘겋다 -> red 발갛다 -> red 벌겋다 -> red 발그레하다 -> red 붉다 -> red 빨그스레하다 -> red
Thanks for sharing this video! While it's interesting to learn about the number of words in different languages, it's important to ensure that the information we share is accurate. In the case of Arabic, the figure mentioned in the video (120,000 words) is incorrect. This number could be a misconception based on the fact that Arabic has around 120,000 root words, which are the basic building blocks of its vocabulary. However, these roots can be combined and modified in countless ways to create new words, so the actual number of words in Arabic far exceeds 120,000. In fact, Arabic is a very rich and complex language, with a vast vocabulary that exceeds 12 million words when we consider all its different dialects and variations. It's worth noting that Arabic is not only spoken in the Arab world, but also in many other countries, and its vocabulary has been constantly evolving throughout history. It's always fascinating to learn more about the diversity and complexity of languages, and I appreciate this video for sparking this conversation.
Japanese kanji is basically ruled by government and JIS(Japanese Industrial Standard). *Educational kanji: 1026 letters studied in elementary school. *Commonly-used kanji: 2136 letters (contain all educational kanji) studied in junior-high and high school. *Kanji for personal name: 2999 letters (contain all commonly-used kanji) allowed to use for personal name. *JIS level 1: 2965 letters (contain most of commonly-used kanji) for fundamental use. *JIS level 2: 3390 letters highly used next to level 1. 漢検 (The Japan Kanji Aptitude Test) targets these about 6000 letters for highest grade. *JIS level 3 and 4: 1259 and 2436 letters less used. Totally 10050 kanjis are ruled, but there are more letters such as variant style (like 髙 and 高), so no one knows how many kanjis accurately there are.
Only reason why I can speak english is because unturned, not toxic but the server I was in back then literally had so much toxicity that you had to get fresh air after a session playing on it
@@deinpxdoxd8490 hey nice to see you fellow unturned player It was the first online pc Game i played and i have like 2500 hours on Steam, it felt good to see some fellow unturned player but i don't play the game anymore cuz it's bad now
Well “blue” in English is a really broad term that describes many different colors, if you look at the blue closest to green and the blue closest to purple, they’re completely different colors. There’s no reason they should have the same name. This is why I like it when other languages do the thing that makes sense and have names for the different “shades” of blue Also the fact that we have light green and dark green, but we don’t have dark orange(we just call it brown)
Chinese basically put a letter in their every fkg words, every word came with an alphabet ~ imagine having over 1.000.000 alphabets? “ Fk China and fk.this.shit! ” - Sejong 1418 Lmao moment indeed
@@blitzcank9482 so does every other languages lmao XD i think what you are trying to say is that for chinese, they have a character for the very same word but because it can pronounced differently for different meanings, there could be multiple variations of the word accompanied also by multiple character combinations XD
Someone: can you teach me about Vietnamese alphabet? Me: ok! Let's start with the letter "a" Someone: oh, very easy Me: a à á ả ã ạ ă ằ ắ ẳ ẵ ặ â ầ ấ ẩ ẫ ậ
It's really easy if you're Chinese, Kanji Japanese is almost written the same way as Simplified Chinese, with the same meaning, just pronounced differently. In general, all Asian languages are very difficult to learn for native English speakers. The easiest would be Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian because they use the same alphabet.
In many languages it's quite impossible to count the whole number of words. For example in Russian, using prefixes and suffixes, you can create as many words, as you wish. In dictionaries you can find: - пить - to drink - выпить - to have a drink - перепить - to overdrink - допить - to finish drinking - не допить - not to finish drinking But you'll never find: - перевыпить - to overdrink something you already drunk - передопить - to drink again something you already finished - довыпить - to finish drinking something you wanted to drink - недовыпить - not to finish drinking something you wanted to drink - доперепить - to finish overdrinking - недоперепить - not to finish overdrinking And that's only for 1 word and 4 prefixes. But russian language has much more.
Yes same for German we have Some words that describe the exact same thing. I started learning Russian and noticed that you have the same combinations of syllables to create new words. So propably all the other languages presented in the video have way more words.
@@dave_sic1365 I always like how you can put pretty much any prefix in front of "Satz" and make it a new word. Don't even know how many this will be ... Absatz, Ansatz, Aufsatz, ..., Zusatz
Вау. Вы хороший знаток русского. Но некоторые формы глагола "пить", которые вы перечислили, мы вообще не говорим в повседневной речи. И да, не думал, что иностранцы смотрят мульты от Федора (Феникс)
Slight correction for the Japanese kanji: true, there are 2136 Joyo Kanji, but these are only the kanji taught in Japanese elementary, middle, and high schools. Including the Kentei set alone ups the total number of kanji used in Japanese by a few a thousand, and include the kanji that are only used in names and you end up with an even larger, difficult to determine number. That said, I did enjoy the video.
But it has 120000 unique words because arabic is stupid and has around 100 form for every word that are same just with different grammer and writing and slightly meaning change
@@thestranger4894 First of all, grammar is difficult.... Korean has a honorific. Even if it's the same'안녕', there is 안녕하세요 / 안녕하시오 / 안녕하신가요? / 안녕하오 / 안녕하쇼.... So many kind of '안녕' (Sorry, I used Google Translate)
Daniel Clasen I believe Reigarw took the source from Wikipedia. The dictionary cited there includes South and North Korean dialects, so if it were to include only ‘standard’ words, the list would be a lot shorter.
@@danielclasen809 I'm native Korean, and I think Reigarw contained particles. Korean language does not separate particles/prepositions/some adverbs, so some phrase like "until now" is treated as one word, and numbers of words is multiplied.
@@Temu_acq it is, actually. western arabian numeral system is what people use commonly in modern times. there's no reason to exclude maghreb and al-andalus from sort of arabian region.
@@청작맘 western Arabian ! I m never hear that before🤣 " Maghreb and Andalus " is not an arab region We are Muslim but not Arabs What is the truth actually: this numbers are ١٢٣٤ indian numbers and this 12355 are Moroccan ghobari numbers
@@Temu_acq dude, the word 'Arab nations' officially means those nations who joined league of arab nations in 1945, at least in political term. and morocco is literally part of maghreb(it's just northwest africa). besides arab is sort of classification according to languages and culture, not religion. therefore there's no reason to consider al-andalus - which existed in medievel times - as non arabic region. just keep in mind that arabian peninsula is not the only arab region. and ghobari numeral system is also well known as 'Arab occidental', which literally means western arabian. i totally understand that you're a know-it-all, but could you please be more polite in online communities, without using that cocky imojis?
@@청작맘 🤣 wait what ... All we know why mo Morocco joined the arab nations its clearly BCS of the problem of western Sahara 🤣 2_ wait what again . We have the same culture ! And languages 😅 are you sure about that do you eat tajine and cuscus 😂 what u know about caftan and 9achaba 😂 Language 😂 all we know u don't understand us . And we all know Morocco have own language "Berbers" even if I don't undrtsand it alot Al ghobari numbers are not Arab numeral système Mr racist , it's a Berber numeral Arabian région : from ya man to Saudi from Emirates to mecca
You probably mean that Greek, Latin, Cyrillic, Arabic, Hebrew, Tamil, Aramaic, Cherokee and more are all indirectly descended from Phonecian (probably more)
Yep. Same with Dutch, and I think some of the Scandinavian languages too. At the very least, the fact that you can glue words together to make entirely new words means that there have to be more words in German and Dutch than in English. Just as one random example, using the two English words "dog(s)" and "food" , you can make "dog food". While certainly something with a new meaning, it's not a new word. In Dutch, however, you'd get "honden", "voer" and "hondenvoer" respectively, and the last one IS a new word.
Everyone gangsta until the rapper starts speaking musical melodies and protecting his gf Sounds familiar right? Edit: Oh god i just saw this comment randomly and i just wrote this in march prob when that game wasnt even very popular but we all saw it in february also btw today is 10 October 2021
what the video shows is actually the simplified chinese invented for less than 100 years. for the traditional chinese, it is more complicated and beautiful. For example, we have 書=书, 畫=画, 齊=齐
Not true. Languages do vary in complexity because of factors like the number of phonemes, the biological difficulty of learning to pronounce some phonemes (the English 'th' sounds are notoriously unnatural for example), the complexity of writing systems, the complexity of grammar (affecting how long it might take a child or adult to learn it) and a range of other factors. Please learn before you speak.
🎵🎶🎵🎵🎶🎶🎼🎼🎶🎶🎶🎶🎵🎵🎵? Translation: Ah hello Musical Melodies speaker, its quite rare to see someone who speaks the same language as me and also know English! PS: What part of the country did you live in? Mine is 🎻
0:30 Trong tiếng Việt có dùng chữ C, chứ không bỏ đi. 4 chữ bỏ đi là F, J, W, Z mới đúng. In Vietnamese, the letter C is used, it is not removed. The four removed letters are F, J, W, Z.
You don't know the regularity of kanji, so you think it's more difficult than it needs to be. For example, these relate to movements performed with the hands. 持=have 打=beat, hit, attack 投=throw The symbol on the left is a simplified version of the hand. 道=road 通=pass through 迫=approach The symbols from the left to the bottom symbolize the road and path. I won't explain the kun-yomi, but the rules for phonetic reading (on-yomi) are easy to understand. 青=blue 清=pure, clean 静=quiet, silence 青 is the phonetic symbol, and in this case the on-yomi reading is "sei".
@@kittykittybangbang9367 There are 4 ways to express things in Korean Formal polite Formal impolite Informal polite Informal impolite Well, Korean is easy at first but if you learn more and more,it will get harder and harder . I learnt Korean for 2 years and I can only memorise Formal Polite and Informal Impolite (my brain sucks :D )
@@serra102 They pronounced alphabet how English do, but they pronounce most words like Indonesian do. Because we were the Nusantara archipelago. Until British and Dutch colonize Nusantara archipelago. The British colonize Malaysia, and neighboring country such as Brunei. While the Dutch colonize Indonesia.
Polish: Has 100.000 words. Me: Oh, at least that's manageable. Polish isn't as scary, as they present i- Complex inflection, 7 cases of speech, 3 tenses: *HELLO THERE*
@@pauloceolin o Ü conhecido como trema era o acento que transformava o "Que"em "Cue", o "Gui" em "Gwi", e outros. Por exemplo Cinqüenta, Lingüiça, Delinqüente. Sem o acento, você não tem como saber se "Queijo" se pronuncia "Keijo" ou "Cueijo" a não ser que vc já tenha ouvido a palavra antes. Fora que era um acento muito bonito que também tem também no Francês e no Alemão, mas não mais no Português :(
@@pauloceolin In portuguese, it was used as an indicator to whether you should pronounce the letter "u" or not in "que", "qui", "gue" and "gui" if the u was not stressed. Some examples: freqüente /fre'kwẽ.tʃɪ/ (frequent) queijo /'ke.ʒʊ/(cheese) qüinqüênio /kwĩŋ'kwẽ.njʊ/ (a period of 50 years) seqüestro /sɛ'kwɛs.trʊ/ (kidnap) conseqüência /kõ.se'kwẽ.sjɐ/ (consequence) aguentar /ɐ.ɡwẽn'tah/ (to support, to hold, to withstand, to endure) There were some other usages, but this was was the most important one. It was abolished in 1990 and now no word uses it, but their pronunciations didn't change, so the u in "frequente" is still pronounced but not in "queijo"
And also, ç is not an addition. The cedilla (¸) symbol is considered a diagriphic in the portuguese language (and the only consonant diagriphic in use), so ç is a modification and not an addition. K, W and Y weren't removed either - they are used only for loanwords, but they do be considered part of the alphabet still. Source: Google, Wikipedia (feel free to correct me with more reliable sources lol)
One correction: I am brasilian, so I speak portuguese. Portuguese does not have removals, and it has aditions and modifications: Adition: Ç Modifications: Á Â Ã À É Ê Í Ó Ô Õ Ú
@JP Você disse "Palavra em português", não "Palavra com origem do português", funkeiro é uma paravra que se originou no Brasil. Tanto funkeiro são palavras no dicionário de português. Logo, são palavras em português
I can't believe the numbers of javanese words is not even close to english words. I mean, they named almost every single thing javanese people have ever met. Even something unnecessary such as animal's poop & plant's seed has its own name for different species. Aside from that, there are four kinds of javanese languages (Krama Inggil, Krama Alus, Ngoko Lugu, & Ngoko Alus). Each of them has its own function depends on who we talked to. Each of them has its own words of each verbs, adjectives, and nouns ( even though sometimes can also be the same). Those can also be different depends on the subject and subject's age. And guess what? Mixing the words in different languages is disrespectful, especially when we are speaking to an older person. Yay... (So, we should prepare to get yelled when we pick the wrong words). But English language is used by almost everyone in this world and still expands. While the use of javanese language is decreasing due to the language's difficulty and people here starts using Indonesian language more often. Also, there are many words that rarely used now and I think many people don't even know if they exist (i often google some words that i don't know the meaning, but usually no result). Still, I might be wrong. I'm a javanese, but I couldn't speak with javanese language properly. I rarely use those two kinds of languages that are used to communicate with older person (krama inggil & krama alus) and use Indonesian language instead. I don't want to get yelled, and using Indonesian language while speaking to older person is the safest way :p Sorry if there are many grammatical errors. Still learning
I think it's because english includes words from various type of expertise like medicine, economy, physics, math, finance, biology, chemistry, astronomy, pharmacy, and etc. And all their subsidiary like biochemical, quantum physic, statistical math, anatomy, and so many others that we don't know except we study those. International language like english must add up so many new words every year to fill the blank vocabulary of every expertise which develop every year.
@@HNL99439 Japanese and Javanese are different things. Japanese means native or inhabitant of Japan, while Javanese means native or inhabitant of Java, Indonesia.
@@hamdahmamluatun9417 I tried to understand what you were saying and I haven't understood yet. But if you think I was mistaken seeing Japanese as Javanese, you should pause the video at 1:40 and take a look at the words. I'm sorry if that's not what you meant
10 Arabic Numberals 22 Herbew Alphabet 24 Korean Alphabet 24 Greek Alphabet 26 Latin Alphabet 28 Arabic Alphabet 30 Tamil Alphabet 33 Cyrillic Alphabet 38 Armenian Alphabet 43 Burmese Alphabet 44 Devangari Alphabet 50 Bengali Alphabet 54 Telugu Alphabet 60 Thai Alphabet 74 Khmer Alphabet 94 Japanese Kana 123 Matematics Symbols 214 Kangxi Radicals 247 Tamil Characters 1,071 Egyptian Hieroglyphs 2,136 Japanese Kanji 8,105 Chinese Characters 18,000 Filipino Words 20,300 Swahili Words 25,500 Javanese Words 39,600 Classical Latin Words 42,000 Vietnamese Words 44,800 Azerbaijani Words 51,000 Thai Words 75,000 Bengali Words 89,200 Malay Words 93,000 Spanish Words 100,000 Polish Words 100,000 Marathi Words 115,000 Turkish Words 120,000 Arabic Words 127,000 Indonesian Words 135,000 French Words 150,000 Russian Words 180,000 Romanian Words 183,000 Hindi Words 200,000 Greek Words 241,000 Serbo-Croatian Words 253,000 Ukrainian Words 264,000 Urdu Words 281,000 Gujarati Words 330,000 German Words 343,000 Persian Words 370,000 Chinese Words 380,000 Tamil Words 400,000 Dutch Words 435,000 Portugese Words 500,000 Japanese Words 500,000 Italian Words 520,000 English Words 560,000 Icelandic Words 600,000 Swedish Words 800,000 Finnish Words 1,100,000 Korean Words 68,700,000,000 Musical Melodies
Who paused and read some of the words of their own language . . . . . . . Edit:i have never got 100 likes to a comment thanks snd who liked my comment there parents should like 200+ years and be safe always
The characters were really interesting, but I feel like the word count of a language will mostly depend on how comprehensive the dictionary is and what they count as a new word.
In German for example you can just create new words by adding two or more other words together. All depends on the definition and, yes, the dictionaries
Sanskrit and German are some languages that I know can have infinite(not exactly) words as you can combine different words to form a completely new word.
Do pause the video when the "English Words" appear. What is the first word that you see?
F
where
OK cool idk
Bad word
I see the "all 10 characters in the: " label first
You forgot one language tho’
*The doctors handwriting*
Lol
Bruh
Respect+++
@@YashSingh-nx7pb r/woosh
@@YashSingh-nx7pb r/woooshh
TH-cam: Just one more video.
Netflix: Just one more episode.
Chinese: Just one more character.
I like this comment....
Lmao
@@tristirume577 Not again...
@@tristirume577
Campfire: Tribe-bago
@@tristirume577 hotal: hotel
tribago: trivago
when you realize that Iceland has more words than citiziens...
Lol
Haha!
😂
Uuhh-
Actually spanish have 100.000 words and icelandic 700.000
日本の漢字2136は中学生が卒業するまでに覚える常用漢字の数です😂漢字自体は15万程です
The basics of forming words, right? Learning all the kanji seems very difficult
“What language do you speak?”
“Mathematics symbols.”
that would be hellar cool
i speak malay
@@nurulnatasha6757 i speak musical melodies
@@dxrenz5640 do re mi
☺️Is that it or did i forgot
lolololol
So unique, crazy how people create so many different ways to communicate with each other.
They're all different but there's quite a lot of similarities too between all these ways which is also interesting
Fr, that got me into languages. Once i've maden a trip and it was really crazy how while i was taking with other argentinians in spanish, french people for eg didn't get a word and same for me with their friends xd
Exactly my thoughts
why tf cant we just all speak one language, humanity had to make things complicated huh lol
@@TruMoist Why I would abandon my native language to speak only one language? This is only good for the native English speakers that can't speak more than one language, because for the bilingual people (that's the most part of the humanity I think, because for use 100% of the Internet you need to know English) this is not so good.
And this is why learning multiple languages is an extremely respectable feat.
Feat*
Feet are your legs...
@@Duck-ch7qm Thanks
ayam indonesia
thick boy chinken in amerika
We don't learn every single word of the language. For example, I'm a native spanish speaker but I don't know all 93,000 words lol.
@@RandalfElVikingo Yeah, I can second that too. I know for a fact my parents don't know all 93,000 words. It most likely includes regional and extinct words.
English : Alaska pollock
Korean :
1. 명태
2. 생태(has not been dried or frozen)
3. 북어(dried after taking out the intestines)
4. 코다리(half dried)
5. 동태(caught in winter and frozen)
6. 황태(repeated freezing and drying)
-(divided into small differences)
-낙태
- 노가리
- 파태
- 흑태
- 무두태
- 짝태
- 깡태
- 백태
- 골태
- 붕태
7. 애태(baby)
8. 왜태(adult but small)
9. 꺽태(folded)
10. 망태(caught with net)
11. 추태(caught in autumn)
12. 막물태(caught in late spring)
13. 춘태(caught in spring)
14. 원양태(caught in vast ocean(???))
15. 간태(salted)
*It's a special case
Also korean has various color representation
노랗다 -> yellow
누렇다 -> yellow
노르스름하다 -> yellow
누르스름하다 -> yellow
노리끼리하다 -> yellow
샛노랗다 -> yellow
노릇노릇하다 -> yellow
빨갛다 -> red
뻘겋다 -> red
새빨갛다 -> red
시뻘겋다 -> red
발갛다 -> red
벌겋다 -> red
발그레하다 -> red
붉다 -> red
빨그스레하다 -> red
안단태(Sugar free)
안경태(Pollock with glasses)
나이태(An aged pollock)
은골로캉태(French pollock)
나마스태(Indian pollock)
아반태(Pollock made by Hyundai)
@@노비츠키-h2p미친ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
@@노비츠키-h2p 야이 새꺄ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
@@노비츠키-h2p아반태는 시이벌 ㅋㅋ
*Oh you're a musician?*
*Name every melody.*
_Musician is typing..._
Oh no, oh no, oh no no no no
No
Legends said he is still typing.
Do re mi fa sol la si dooooooo
Hes hand:NOOOOOOOOO IMA GONNA FUCKING DIE AAAA
Theres still this one dude that thinks English came from USA
BRUH
Does Spanish come from Mexico and Portuguese from Brazil for him also?
@@cek0792 haha lol
oh lord we all know english came from germany.
Edit: ik this is wrong technically so you can stop mentioning it.
@@LilRyRyYT21 English came from Britain but brough by West Germans which is the English peoples today
Hangul (the letters): 😌
Korean (the language): 👁👄👁
Everyone: finally a video that doesn’t end with YOU
Reigarw Comparisons: 3:31
I am beter then YOO
I mesure my IQ at 88%
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 well the way you have been spamming the comment section, it seems like your iq is of a soggy potato
What’s an 88% iq 🤔😂
Sorry, but look back at all the English Words and then pause it.
ink lol it says “YOU”
Everyone gangsta until someone speak in fluent MUSICAL LANGUAGE
Justin Beiber did it when he said “yummy” x1000 lmao
Farrokh Bulsara has entered the chat
Na na na na naw, nana na na naw, yes
To speak it you must steal from your local instrument store and play whatever you desire
G7->C
A Chinese's teacher said "don't worry about being fluent in chinese, few chinese are"
now imagine all the words that got forgotten trough time
一行行行行行 is a coherent sentence.
@@GewalfofWivia 人要是行,干一行行一行,一行行行行行
だから私はここにいるので(翻訳
@@GewalfofWivia 行行行
めっちゃ読める自分の言語来るとちょっと嬉しい
Somebody online: So what language do you speak?
Me: *starts typing musical notes*
@Gabriel Howell dude...don't be toxic
@Gabriel Howell Rude, but understandable
Gacha has gotten to a point that its reputation is forever ruined
@Gabriel Howell it was the players, not all are annoying but ye and luni is horrible at being a creator
@Sfs rocket lab I didn't say he's bad, I said he's bad AT BEING A CREATOR. Man ppl need to read sentences twice sometimes
Teacher : " explaining "
Student: sorry we dont speak math.
1: Animals Alphabet
Wt f
quarantine making people crazy
Thanks so much
No Vietnamese :(
Kurdish albhapet has 35
Armenian has 38
Albanian has 37 why isnt it in the list
Thanks for sharing this video! While it's interesting to learn about the number of words in different languages, it's important to ensure that the information we share is accurate. In the case of Arabic, the figure mentioned in the video (120,000 words) is incorrect.
This number could be a misconception based on the fact that Arabic has around 120,000 root words, which are the basic building blocks of its vocabulary. However, these roots can be combined and modified in countless ways to create new words, so the actual number of words in Arabic far exceeds 120,000. In fact, Arabic is a very rich and complex language, with a vast vocabulary that exceeds 12 million words when we consider all its different dialects and variations.
It's worth noting that Arabic is not only spoken in the Arab world, but also in many other countries, and its vocabulary has been constantly evolving throughout history. It's always fascinating to learn more about the diversity and complexity of languages, and I appreciate this video for sparking this conversation.
نعم، كنت أفكر في هذا الموضوع لكنني بعد بحث اكتشفت أن عدد الكلمات يفوق اللغـــات الأخرى بكثير لكنني لست متأكدا أنه يصل ل12 مليونا
Song name?
gf
When you realize that Icelandic has more words than speakers
Lmao
220GB_C545 untypical no?
220GB_C545 untypical Swedish has far more speakers than words
Same for Finnish, Japanese , Russian and Ukrainian
Icelandick
Korean letters: 24
Korean words: 1,100,000
I don't know really how
Even though the longest korean word is consists of two letters I guess 😂
@@potato-q8n ok lol, nothing to be proud about
Arabic actully has 12 million idk why this video says 120k
@@mohamed4553 nope.example-Anneoyong hasyeo. meaning hello
@@vickyzabala9930 how many letters in Korean is that word?
Arabic people: "Our language is very hard to learn"
Chinese people: *_"Hold my characters"_*
Very difficult مساء الله
I study both, I can confirm
Chinese isnt so hard if you use anki.
@@w花b maybe its just me then, but I usually dont take a long time to understand the concepts. Its not easy but not very hard either imo
Thai: *amateurs*
Japanese kanji is basically ruled by government and JIS(Japanese Industrial Standard).
*Educational kanji: 1026 letters studied in elementary school.
*Commonly-used kanji: 2136 letters (contain all educational kanji) studied in junior-high and high school.
*Kanji for personal name: 2999 letters (contain all commonly-used kanji) allowed to use for personal name.
*JIS level 1: 2965 letters (contain most of commonly-used kanji) for fundamental use.
*JIS level 2: 3390 letters highly used next to level 1. 漢検 (The Japan Kanji Aptitude Test) targets these about 6000 letters for highest grade.
*JIS level 3 and 4: 1259 and 2436 letters less used.
Totally 10050 kanjis are ruled, but there are more letters such as variant style (like 髙 and 高), so no one knows how many kanjis accurately there are.
English: we have a ton of words
Korean: umm, no
Nice one
i'm korean hi
Arabic with 12 mil words: kids these days.
한국어는 다 아는데 정작 영어는 더 어렵ㄷ
alphabet
This whole video defines:
"What's the wifi password?"
"Its on the back of the router"
The back of the router:
Lol
Bruh
@k & p definitely secure
@k & p nobody is gonna read it
Very original comment
Playing games with toxic community is how you learn other useful languages
Only reason why I can speak english is because unturned, not toxic but the server I was in back then literally had so much toxicity that you had to get fresh air after a session playing on it
Pakistan is toxic comunity
CIS and SEA servers are the most toxic.
@@deinpxdoxd8490 hey nice to see you fellow unturned player
It was the first online pc Game i played and i have like 2500 hours on Steam, it felt good to see some fellow unturned player but i don't play the game anymore cuz it's bad now
u mean learning swearing words of different languages? XD
Korean like:
파랗다 -> blue
퍼렇다 -> blue
푸르다 -> blue
새파랗다 -> blue
시퍼렇다 -> blue
@Adnan_gamer1just lion bro
@@rider1921Words가 뭔 뜻인진 앎?
Red -> Blue got me so badly 💀
Well “blue” in English is a really broad term that describes many different colors, if you look at the blue closest to green and the blue closest to purple, they’re completely different colors. There’s no reason they should have the same name. This is why I like it when other languages do the thing that makes sense and have names for the different “shades” of blue
Also the fact that we have light green and dark green, but we don’t have dark orange(we just call it brown)
In Korean Same meaning word like: Komava, Komavayo.
In Korean they used to add like tha, yo, wo at the every words
Koreans: Has the 2nd to the least number of characters
Also Koreans: Has the most number of words
Technically Italian and Portuguese have less letters on their alphabets (21 and 23 respectively)
That’s another the fkn reason why Sejong midfing Chinese Alphabet and went fk it I gonna creat my own letters
@@blitzcank9482 lmao
Chinese basically put a letter in their every fkg words, every word came with an alphabet ~ imagine having over 1.000.000 alphabets?
“ Fk China and fk.this.shit! ” - Sejong 1418
Lmao moment indeed
@@blitzcank9482 so does every other languages lmao XD i think what you are trying to say is that for chinese, they have a character for the very same word but because it can pronounced differently for different meanings, there could be multiple variations of the word accompanied also by multiple character combinations XD
Someone: can you teach me about Vietnamese alphabet?
Me: ok! Let's start with the letter "a"
Someone: oh, very easy
Me: a à á ả ã ạ ă ằ ắ ẳ ẵ ặ â ầ ấ ẩ ẫ ậ
ME: OOF ima give up
@@mp9146 Vietnamese pronounciation is harder :'(
@@mp9146 oh shiet I'm bad at English grammar :'(((
@@giahanhongngoc4379 I'm worse ahhahaha
I said that looking at all these a I gave up already on learning ur language hahahaha (jk).
Very nasal like Thai and Chinese 🤣
you forgot to put binary which is computer's language with only two digits: 0 and 1
Yeah, Just 2 "letters"(digits), but infinite "words".
@@FRDDPFAL around every language words
True
Or true and false
What about estonian ?
German- 5.3 million
Arabic - 12 million
Sanskrit- 102.78 BILLION
Sanskrit : sips tea
Arabic : Should we tell them?
German : Naww... let them cook.
Tell me about arabic
Arabic numbers ١٢٣٤ no it's indian numbers
12345678 Arabic numbers what 🤣 no it's a Moroccan numbers call d ghobari numbers
Arabic numbers ١٢٣٤ no it's indian numbers
12345678 Arabic numbers what 🤣 no it's a Moroccan numbers call d ghobari numbers
Arabic numbers ١٢٣٤ no it's indian numbers
12345678 Arabic numbers what 🤣 no it's a Moroccan numbers call d ghobari numbers
Arabic numbers ١٢٣٤ no it's indian numbers
12345678 Arabic numbers what 🤣 no it's a Moroccan numbers call d ghobari numbers
Me: Trying to learn Japanese
Japanese Kanji: Allow us to introduce ourselves
Knowing around 900 as minimum would be enough :)
@@Merrymerrybun Thanks but they are so confusing lol but im going to learn it no matter what
It feels like studying in hell
Its so hard ;-;
@@C.C.Mousse I agree :(
It's really easy if you're Chinese, Kanji Japanese is almost written the same way as Simplified Chinese, with the same meaning, just pronounced differently. In general, all Asian languages are very difficult to learn for native English speakers. The easiest would be Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian because they use the same alphabet.
Everyone after seeing their language: *I've seen enough, I'm sastified*
Yah 😂
Me, a Korean:
*phew the video ended*
I speak Esperanto. :(
Y e s
I'm learning German
Human: *Have many different languages
Villager: "You guys have language?"
Yes. Hrmm. YEAA HAHA
Hmm, hrm! Hmm, hm, hrmm?
Hrr, Hmm, Hrrmm
*HMMM HMM HMMM* *HMMM*
*excessive ‘hrrmmm’ing*
0:28 a correction, on Brazilian Portuguese k, w and y was added on last century, no removed.
So it is the English alphabet?
@@yasminakhtar4887 yes
A B C D E
F G H I J
K L M N O P
Q R S T U
V W X Y Z
In many languages it's quite impossible to count the whole number of words. For example in Russian, using prefixes and suffixes, you can create as many words, as you wish.
In dictionaries you can find:
- пить - to drink
- выпить - to have a drink
- перепить - to overdrink
- допить - to finish drinking
- не допить - not to finish drinking
But you'll never find:
- перевыпить - to overdrink something you already drunk
- передопить - to drink again something you already finished
- довыпить - to finish drinking something you wanted to drink
- недовыпить - not to finish drinking something you wanted to drink
- доперепить - to finish overdrinking
- недоперепить - not to finish overdrinking
And that's only for 1 word and 4 prefixes. But russian language has much more.
Yes same for German we have Some words that describe the exact same thing.
I started learning Russian and noticed that you have the same combinations of syllables to create new words.
So propably all the other languages presented in the video have way more words.
Same in croatian
God DAMN thats a lot of words with only a few prefixes. Wow.
@@dave_sic1365 I always like how you can put pretty much any prefix in front of "Satz" and make it a new word.
Don't even know how many this will be ...
Absatz, Ansatz, Aufsatz, ..., Zusatz
Вау. Вы хороший знаток русского. Но некоторые формы глагола "пить", которые вы перечислили, мы вообще не говорим в повседневной речи.
И да, не думал, что иностранцы смотрят мульты от Федора (Феникс)
If the world has 7.7 billion and there are 466 million deaf people so it must be 7.3 billion listeners of the musical melodies
I am once again asking you to like your own reply so that it gets to top and more people see it
arabic have 12.300.000
is it really that much people?
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 i dont think so 460 million ppl r def i think it also includes old ppl with semi proper vision
u forgot
subtitles: [music]
Slight correction for the Japanese kanji: true, there are 2136 Joyo Kanji, but these are only the kanji taught in Japanese elementary, middle, and high schools. Including the Kentei set alone ups the total number of kanji used in Japanese by a few a thousand, and include the kanji that are only used in names and you end up with an even larger, difficult to determine number. That said, I did enjoy the video.
That is true, and Chinese characters are way more than 8105 as well. Truly a fascinating logographic script
Thank you for explanation from Japan 😊
10🇦🇬🇦🇬🇧🇦🇧🇦🇧🇦🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇼🇦🇽🇦🇿🇦🇽🇧🇳0 = 그리고나서 = アショーカ大王 = でっていう = 目が痛い = अमन सांगवान = error = infifinity = infinity =10^3000004
Maybe Chinese character are same.Kanji is infinite.
But for basic purpose and conversation 5000 kanji are sufficent
I like how arabic is 28 letters only and has over 12.3 Million words.
But it has 120000 unique words because arabic is stupid and has around 100 form for every word that are same just with different grammer and writing and slightly meaning change
@@yasinneysari
That is the beauty of Arabic
Really 😮
Iceland: *nobody cares about that little nice country*
Iceland again: 5 6 0 K w o r d s
This is
Amazing
REPROGRAM yet English is 520k
Notes: i am a joke to you?
Iceland has no spiders
@@blurlover13 That because I love Iceland
You forgot the most important one of all.....
Enchanted Table
Shit ur right
Oh shit you're right-
Lmao
@Gaming gamer- the gamer Minecraft
SCATMAN MEME th-cam.com/video/YZOs_yqC8YU/w-d-xo.html
Korean
24 alphabets
Foreigners: oh, it must be easy to learn!
Koreans: **hold my words**
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
Seriously tough the hell is up with that? Korean doesn’t feel like that complex of a language. Is it the word combinations that makes it so big?
i learned the alphabet very quickly and i can read and write in 2 hrs. no kidding. but when it comes to the language itself, i can only say안녕하세요! 😅😆
@@thestranger4894 First of all, grammar is difficult.... Korean has a honorific. Even if it's the same'안녕', there is 안녕하세요 / 안녕하시오 / 안녕하신가요? / 안녕하오 / 안녕하쇼.... So many kind of '안녕' (Sorry, I used Google Translate)
@@caratweneebebe The language must be a true verbal hell for foreigners....
0:01 Arabic Numerals
0:11 Hebrew 🇮🇱
0:16 Korean 🇰🇵🇰🇷
0:21 Greek 🇼🇫🇬🇷
0:26 English 🌎🌍🌏
0:30 hecta languages
0:35 Arabic 🇩🇿🇸🇦🇾🇪🇩🇯
0:38 Tamil 🇮🇳
0:41 Russian 🇷🇺🇧🇬🇧🇾
0:45 Armenian 🇦🇲
0:48 Burmese 🇲🇲
0:52 Devanagari 🇮🇳
0:55 Bengali 🇮🇳
0:58 Telugu 🇲🇶
1:02 Thai 🇹🇭
1:05 Khmer 🇱🇦 🇹🇭 🇻🇳
1:09 Japanese 🇯🇵
1:12 Symbols
1:16 Kangxi \ Nuuk (Greenland/
1:20 Tamil CE 🇮🇳
1:23 Egyptian HOS 🇪🇬
1:27 Japanese Kanji 🇯🇵
1:30 Chinese CE 🇨🇳
Korean alphabet is too easy to learn, however KOREAN itself is quite difficult.
I was like ooh Korean seems like a simple language, im surprised. But then, I see 1,100,000 words,,and I think 'how'
Where did you got your profile picture?
Daniel Clasen I believe Reigarw took the source from Wikipedia. The dictionary cited there includes South and North Korean dialects, so if it were to include only ‘standard’ words, the list would be a lot shorter.
@@danielclasen809 I'm native Korean, and I think Reigarw contained particles. Korean language does not separate particles/prepositions/some adverbs, so some phrase like "until now" is treated as one word, and numbers of words is multiplied.
I'm native Korean, but all I know is that
I'm subscribed to PEWDIEPIE.
Musical Melodies: We have the most letters
Enchanted Table and Books: Amateurs.
how many do they have?
are you stupid its hebrew
@@damicow what
@@doublebass3858 26
@@damicow its the galactic alphabet
Me: Let's study some Japanese vocabulary
My brain: ノ
no
xD
Kanji is tremendously brain-exploded
Baka
I assume you are a weeb
놀람 포인트
1. 아라비아 숫자는 10개만으로, 모든 사람이 쓰는, 가장 보급된 글자라는 것
2. 한글의 글자 수에 비해 단어 수가 압도적이라는 것
3. 근데 한글의 단어 수는 악보 표기에 비하면 아무것도 아니라는 것 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ😂
@@Temu_acqin Korean, we call it 아라비아 숫자 but the translate sucks.
@@Temu_acq it is, actually. western arabian numeral system is what people use commonly in modern times. there's no reason to exclude maghreb and al-andalus from sort of arabian region.
@@청작맘 western Arabian ! I m never hear that before🤣
" Maghreb and Andalus " is not an arab region
We are Muslim but not Arabs
What is the truth actually: this numbers are ١٢٣٤ indian numbers and this 12355 are Moroccan ghobari numbers
@@Temu_acq dude, the word 'Arab nations' officially means those nations who joined league of arab nations in 1945, at least in political term. and morocco is literally part of maghreb(it's just northwest africa). besides arab is sort of classification according to languages and culture, not religion. therefore there's no reason to consider al-andalus - which existed in medievel times - as non arabic region. just keep in mind that arabian peninsula is not the only arab region.
and ghobari numeral system is also well known as 'Arab occidental', which literally means western arabian.
i totally understand that you're a know-it-all, but could you please be more polite in online communities, without using that cocky imojis?
@@청작맘 🤣 wait what ... All we know why mo Morocco joined the arab nations its clearly BCS of the problem of western Sahara 🤣
2_ wait what again . We have the same culture ! And languages 😅 are you sure about that do you eat tajine and cuscus 😂 what u know about caftan and 9achaba 😂
Language 😂 all we know u don't understand us . And we all know Morocco have own language "Berbers" even if I don't undrtsand it alot
Al ghobari numbers are not Arab numeral système Mr racist , it's a Berber numeral
Arabian région : from ya man to Saudi from Emirates to mecca
Everybody gangstar till' one person speaks the laguage of the Gods.
Ehem
ʇɥıs ıs ʇɥə ʍoɹp oɟ ʇɥə bop
@@Wiikiizu9738 what
@@Wiikiizu9738 this is the word of the qod
Путин.
Im here before he changes laguage to language
everybody talking about Korean words:
Arabian numbers: 10
Numbers: ∞
😂
Actually infinitesss if you add negative and decimals
What about the zalgo
Actually 0 was found by an Indian named Aryabhatta.
@Vishwesh _ 12345... actually are Arabic numbers which most of languages use it, while ١٢٣٤٥... are Indian numbers which Arabs and Persians use it.
Everyone else: _made alphabet characters from Latin_
Egyptian hieroglyphs: Emojis
Not everone else.
who made Alphabet characters from latin except for those that write latin?
You probably mean that Greek, Latin, Cyrillic, Arabic, Hebrew, Tamil, Aramaic, Cherokee and more are all indirectly descended from Phonecian (probably more)
@@joshuahargrave8239 which not all of those are alphabets!
also, the latin alphabet is derived from egyptian hieroglyphs
Yellow in Korean =>
1.노랗다
2.노르께하다
3.노르끄레하다
4.노르스름하다
5.노릇하다
6.노릇노릇하다
7.노르툭툭하다
8.노리께하다
9.노리끄레하다
10.노리무레하다
11.노릿하다
12.노릿노릿하다
13. 노리툭툭하다
14. 누렇다
15. 누리께하다
16.누르무레하다
17. 누르스름하다
18. 누릇하다
19. 누룻누룻하다
20. 누르툭툭하다
21. 누르칙칙하다
22. 샛노랗다
23. 싯누렇다
In Persian too when translate
German words: Endless.
Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitänsmützenabzeichen.
Fun fact, in games with voice acting, speedrunners play with the German language as its usually the fastest language that said game is dubbed for
@@damascussteel7688 It's pointless no? since u can skip those part usually
LOL Long constructions there are posible But Rather rare
Yep. Same with Dutch, and I think some of the Scandinavian languages too. At the very least, the fact that you can glue words together to make entirely new words means that there have to be more words in German and Dutch than in English. Just as one random example, using the two English words "dog(s)" and "food" , you can make "dog food". While certainly something with a new meaning, it's not a new word. In Dutch, however, you'd get "honden", "voer" and "hondenvoer" respectively, and the last one IS a new word.
Seems the German one is longer
Everyone gangsta until the rapper starts speaking musical melodies and protecting his gf
Sounds familiar right?
Edit: Oh god i just saw this comment randomly and i just wrote this in march prob when that game wasnt even very popular but we all saw it in february
also btw today is 10 October 2021
Oh god
friday night funkin’ reference?
"Beep bo bop"
*UGH*
Boyfriend
Chinese language when it sees a random character:
"Is for me?"
what the video shows is actually the simplified chinese invented for less than 100 years. for the traditional chinese, it is more complicated and beautiful. For example, we have 書=书, 畫=画, 齊=齐
@@ameliashigurehk7835 si
250th like!!!!!
@@ameliashigurehk7835 nice.
J. L. 你在说什么?
借用語があったり概念に当て字する場合永遠に単語が増え続けるわけだけど
No language is easier guys
Only our mother tongue is easier which we use throughout life
Now thanks for 300 likes..
Me who barely knows my mother tongue:👁️👄👁️
Not true. Languages do vary in complexity because of factors like the number of phonemes, the biological difficulty of learning to pronounce some phonemes (the English 'th' sounds are notoriously unnatural for example), the complexity of writing systems, the complexity of grammar (affecting how long it might take a child or adult to learn it) and a range of other factors. Please learn before you speak.
@@ems7623 it's still tough af
Aㅏ
Nah, I make at least 1 grammar mistake in every paper I write in school
“Alright kids, are you ready to learn all 8105 letters of the alphabet?”
china be like
@@akfkml1747 kanji language
我不觉的你们可以学三千一百零五个字。
@@threeormorechars 三千还是八千
I'm Chinese and live in Hong Kong, China. We don't learn all the words at the same time and we don't have an alphabet.
Enchantment table languange: am i joke to you?
Babies words: am i a joke to *YOU*
Hindi: am I holy
Anser: yes
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 CEO of English
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 r/engrish
The Enchantment Table Language is the made up Standard Galactic Alphabet and it was first used in Commander Keen
If you use Korean Alphabet, you can describe whole of universe with only 24 letters.
If you use -Korean- Latin Alphabet, you can describe whole of universe with only -24- 26 letters.
Nah if you study Korean you become racist and shallow minded.
I'll stick to Latin it's more cooler😆
-Wait what happening to the crossing out?-
--???--
Nvm it doesn't work with numbers
Yeesh even companies are literally copyrighting MUSICAL NOTES.
Music companies: *our words*
Person: Makes a sound on a piano
Company: YOU STOLE OUR IDEA
68,700,000,000 musical melodies and 520,000 English words and mumble rappers can't even come up with either one.
No, no. He's got a point.
Imagine knowing every word...
@@diapernugget3238 lmao he tried to make the commenter look bad
hi
god damn it you again
My friends : what is your own language?
Me : 🎼¾🎵🎶🎶🎵🎶🎵🎵🎶🎶🎵🎶🎵🎶
🎵🎶🎵🎵🎶🎶🎼🎼🎶🎶🎶🎶🎵🎵🎵?
Translation: Ah hello Musical Melodies speaker, its quite rare to see someone who speaks the same language as me and also know English! PS: What part of the country did you live in? Mine is 🎻
Tamil
@@qkwincy 🎸
@@qkwincy 🎺
@@qkwincy 🎹🎹🎹🎹
0:30 Trong tiếng Việt có dùng chữ C, chứ không bỏ đi. 4 chữ bỏ đi là F, J, W, Z mới đúng.
In Vietnamese, the letter C is used, it is not removed. The four removed letters are F, J, W, Z.
Nvm
Cái này có tốt không
Everybody gangsta until the quiet kid starts speaking Mathematics Symbols and Egyptian Hieroglyphics
Stolen
@@H_N_A240 Nobody cares
*THOUGHT YOU CAN GET AWAY WITH IT?*
im a quiet kid and i speak enchanting table 💅
th-cam.com/video/-VJRY1kAub0/w-d-xo.html
**Me try to learn Japanese**
Kanji :"ima have to stop you right there"
Lol me too I was like
"What the hell did I dragged myself into?"
Oh boy I had this challenge when learning Japanese
Yep, same-
頑張って下さい!!!
I hope you will learn Japanese.😘
You don't know the regularity of kanji, so you think it's more difficult than it needs to be.
For example, these relate to movements performed with the hands.
持=have
打=beat, hit, attack
投=throw
The symbol on the left is a simplified version of the hand.
道=road
通=pass through
迫=approach
The symbols from the left to the bottom symbolize the road and path.
I won't explain the kun-yomi, but the rules for phonetic reading (on-yomi) are easy to understand.
青=blue
清=pure, clean
静=quiet,
silence
青 is the phonetic symbol, and in this case the on-yomi reading is "sei".
Nobody:
France’s Modification: ÀÂÆÇÉÈÊËÎÏÔŒÙÛÜŸ
Spanish Addition: Ñ
Edit: 300 LIKES IN 1 YEAR
ĘÓĄŚŁŻŹĆŃ DŹ DŻ DZ CZ SZ CI RZ Polish :p
They are speaking the language of the gods
Lala la
Vietnamese modifications: oh, ypu approaching me??
Hungarian: Are you challenging me?
한국인으로서 한국어를 외국어로 번역할 때 한국의 여러 단어가 외국에선 한 단어만 존재할 때 답답함을 느낄 때가 많습니다
그 단어들은 서로 비슷하지만 엄연히 다른 단어인데 외국어로 번역을 할 때 그냥 똑같은 단어가 되어버립니다 😢
@@모든아가는귀여워 나도 그렇게 생각하는
심지어 표준어가 내가 말하고픈 바를 명확히 표현하지 못하면 그 뉘앙스의 은어를 만들어냄ㅋ
김, 파래, 미역, 다시마... -> 다같이 퉁쳐서 영어로는 Seaweed 무식한 놈들임 ㅎㅎ
_When they said Korean was easy to learn_
@BaconShadow well korean’s grammar is really hard if you go deep
haha yeah Korean grammar has about 20 different ways to represent a letter lol
@@abrahamlincoln5631 Could you maybe give me an example of that, so I can understand it better.
@@kittykittybangbang9367
There are 4 ways to express things in Korean
Formal polite
Formal impolite
Informal polite
Informal impolite
Well, Korean is easy at first but if you learn more and more,it will get harder and harder . I learnt Korean for 2 years and I can only memorise Formal Polite and Informal Impolite (my brain sucks :D )
@@yallneedjesus1609 well, thats not bad
at least you could be polite to people ;)
Portuguese actually has the addition "ç" and the modifications "á, ã, â, à, é, ê, í, ó, õ, ô, ú"
true , verdade
Não só isso, mas a gente não remove mais K, W e Y, tá no nosso alfabeto agora
Finalmente alguém percebeu também k
a à á â ã b c ç d e é ê f g h i í j l m n o ó õ ô p q r s t u ú v x z
PORTUGUESE ALPHABET
I dont think diacritics count as an idependant letter
As a Korean I was full of proudness until 7 billion musical language came out
I'm Japanese i felt the same lol
It's 68.7B not 7B
@@keira6754 Nani!
Felt in Chinese
it's misleading, since Korean language has tons of borrowed words from Chinese and now also English and other foreign loan words.
0:30 in Vietnamese, the unused letter is z, not c
There are some "you"s and "the"s scattered in the Chinese Words section
I see "the"s only, but just how u see it? (Also there's "you"s I believe cuz that's what Reigarw is like to drink)
你
You mean these?
You=
你 for common
妳 for women
您 for common with respect
尔 old word for 你 or 妳
君 old word for 您, still in use in Japanese
@@helenwong5936 Hey, that's good.
I saw “you”, “the” and “a”
Mandarin: i am complexity!
musical language: forgetting someone?
minecraft enchanting language: hold my letters.
Underrated comment
👆✌️💧❄️👈☀️ ☹️✌️U👇👆💧 ✌️❄️ ✡️✌️
@Kai Li its called the galactic alphabet. mojang made it just for minecraft.
the sri lankan guy no, it was created for an old adventure game, but was used in Minecraft
@@andrewzgherea2206 oh
You forgot:
Binary code: 010101
Morse: .__._.__
Edit: i made mistakes
. . . _ _ _ . . .
@@maksbid5631 SOS
._.
@@МішаКарпенко
R
- .
0:29 You forgot the portuguese modifications ÇÀÁÂÃÉÊIÍÓÔÕÚ (and we used to have Ü until 2009 in Brazil).
Malay Language: who... who are you?
Indonesia Language: I'm you. But bigger.
As a malaysian
I think this one is better
Indonesian language: I'm you but more international
There's no differences at all
@@serra102 There are, mostly malay pronounce "a" as "e" If it is the last letter of the word, while Bahasa Indonesia pronounce what is written.
@@arifyesehehehehhewahahahah3445 I think malaysian pronounce the characters just like how english pronounce the characters
@@serra102 They pronounced alphabet how English do, but they pronounce most words like Indonesian do. Because we were the Nusantara archipelago. Until British and Dutch colonize Nusantara archipelago. The British colonize Malaysia, and neighboring country such as Brunei. While the Dutch colonize Indonesia.
God: how many modified letters do you want
Vietnamese: yes
:)) I am Groot (tree language)
Is Vietcong meme
As someone learning Vietnamese, this is truly a problem yet a fascinating challenge at the same time!
@@priciliar.s.simarmata2373 Yeah but the grammar is so easy. at least easier tha Deutsh
Xin chào, tao là cái cây
trans: Hello i'm a tree
VietCong meme lol
@@the1224-duh :v
Polish: Has 100.000 words.
Me: Oh, at least that's manageable. Polish isn't as scary, as they present i-
Complex inflection, 7 cases of speech, 3 tenses: *HELLO THERE*
but i realize that Spanish is easier than i thought
Filipino is even worse, 4 verb tenses, the Austronesian Trigger System, affixes prefixes and suffixes everywhere, homophones everywhere, accents
as a polish person, I think you just need a little bit of practice and thats it
O kurwa
@@przemko_gurson8539 nie
Reigaw, I like your videos very much, but why no Arabic or burmese:(
Portuguese
addition: ç
Modifications: à á â ã, é ê í ó ô õ ú
I miss *ü* in Portuguese, I wish it made a comeback :(
Dark Libertário what was that for?
@@pauloceolin o Ü conhecido como trema era o acento que transformava o "Que"em "Cue", o "Gui" em "Gwi", e outros. Por exemplo Cinqüenta, Lingüiça, Delinqüente. Sem o acento, você não tem como saber se "Queijo" se pronuncia "Keijo" ou "Cueijo" a não ser que vc já tenha ouvido a palavra antes. Fora que era um acento muito bonito que também tem também no Francês e no Alemão, mas não mais no Português :(
@@pauloceolin In portuguese, it was used as an indicator to whether you should pronounce the letter "u" or not in "que", "qui", "gue" and "gui" if the u was not stressed. Some examples:
freqüente /fre'kwẽ.tʃɪ/ (frequent)
queijo /'ke.ʒʊ/(cheese)
qüinqüênio /kwĩŋ'kwẽ.njʊ/ (a period of 50 years)
seqüestro /sɛ'kwɛs.trʊ/ (kidnap)
conseqüência /kõ.se'kwẽ.sjɐ/ (consequence)
aguentar /ɐ.ɡwẽn'tah/ (to support, to hold, to withstand, to endure)
There were some other usages, but this was was the most important one. It was abolished in 1990 and now no word uses it, but their pronunciations didn't change, so the u in "frequente" is still pronounced but not in "queijo"
And also, ç is not an addition. The cedilla (¸) symbol is considered a diagriphic in the portuguese language (and the only consonant diagriphic in use), so ç is a modification and not an addition. K, W and Y weren't removed either - they are used only for loanwords, but they do be considered part of the alphabet still.
Source: Google, Wikipedia (feel free to correct me with more reliable sources lol)
One correction: I am brasilian, so I speak portuguese. Portuguese does not have removals, and it has aditions and modifications:
Adition: Ç
Modifications: Á Â Ã À É Ê Í Ó Ô Õ Ú
Sem falar que tem uns trilhões de fonemas
@@kapi3590 Exato
@JP E a palavras "funkero" e "skate"? Não tem "k" não?
@JP Você disse "Palavra em português", não "Palavra com origem do português", funkeiro é uma paravra que se originou no Brasil. Tanto funkeiro são palavras no dicionário de português. Logo, são palavras em português
eu reparei isso, fiquei incomodada
He capitalized “YOU!” On the English alphabet. If you can pause at 3:31 or 3:30 you might be able to see it...
I can see without using any change in speed.
in Chinese words there is also "YOU" 3:05
An Easter egg
So?
H o w did you see that
2:22 Not true, according to sources, references, and dictionaries of the Arabic language, the number of Arabic words is 12,302,912 without repetition.
I can't believe the numbers of javanese words is not even close to english words.
I mean, they named almost every single thing javanese people have ever met. Even something unnecessary such as animal's poop & plant's seed has its own name for different species.
Aside from that, there are four kinds of javanese languages (Krama Inggil, Krama Alus, Ngoko Lugu, & Ngoko Alus). Each of them has its own function depends on who we talked to. Each of them has its own words of each verbs, adjectives, and nouns ( even though sometimes can also be the same). Those can also be different depends on the subject and subject's age. And guess what? Mixing the words in different languages is disrespectful, especially when we are speaking to an older person. Yay... (So, we should prepare to get yelled when we pick the wrong words).
But English language is used by almost everyone in this world and still expands. While the use of javanese language is decreasing due to the language's difficulty and people here starts using Indonesian language more often. Also, there are many words that rarely used now and I think many people don't even know if they exist (i often google some words that i don't know the meaning, but usually no result).
Still, I might be wrong.
I'm a javanese, but I couldn't speak with javanese language properly. I rarely use those two kinds of languages that are used to communicate with older person (krama inggil & krama alus) and use Indonesian language instead. I don't want to get yelled, and using Indonesian language while speaking to older person is the safest way :p
Sorry if there are many grammatical errors. Still learning
I think it's because english includes words from various type of expertise like medicine, economy, physics, math, finance, biology, chemistry, astronomy, pharmacy, and etc. And all their subsidiary like biochemical, quantum physic, statistical math, anatomy, and so many others that we don't know except we study those. International language like english must add up so many new words every year to fill the blank vocabulary of every expertise which develop every year.
@@HNL99439 Japanese and Javanese are different things. Japanese means native or inhabitant of Japan, while Javanese means native or inhabitant of Java, Indonesia.
I think you are not true..that is japanes not javanes..im indonesian n from java but in vidio just mean to languange for country
@@hamdahmamluatun9417 I tried to understand what you were saying and I haven't understood yet. But if you think I was mistaken seeing Japanese as Javanese, you should pause the video at 1:40 and take a look at the words.
I'm sorry if that's not what you meant
@@HNL99439 Javanese is a real word...
Interesting learning about all the languages, this now replaces school.
Hindi is the onlee good langwich
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 no it isn't
Gunsz123 yes bootifull langwich
Gunsz123 that guy is new pajeet bro
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 your English though
1:17 "Does anyone truly understand?"
Me: *cries in mathematician*
∫∀⋔∑
¥√÷¶
At a certain point, math starts looking like those wash instructions on shirt tags
π√=•!!
The symbols,what do they mean!?
10 Arabic Numberals
22 Herbew Alphabet
24 Korean Alphabet
24 Greek Alphabet
26 Latin Alphabet
28 Arabic Alphabet
30 Tamil Alphabet
33 Cyrillic Alphabet
38 Armenian Alphabet
43 Burmese Alphabet
44 Devangari Alphabet
50 Bengali Alphabet
54 Telugu Alphabet
60 Thai Alphabet
74 Khmer Alphabet
94 Japanese Kana
123 Matematics Symbols
214 Kangxi Radicals
247 Tamil Characters
1,071 Egyptian Hieroglyphs
2,136 Japanese Kanji
8,105 Chinese Characters
18,000 Filipino Words
20,300 Swahili Words
25,500 Javanese Words
39,600 Classical Latin Words
42,000 Vietnamese Words
44,800 Azerbaijani Words
51,000 Thai Words
75,000 Bengali Words
89,200 Malay Words
93,000 Spanish Words
100,000 Polish Words
100,000 Marathi Words
115,000 Turkish Words
120,000 Arabic Words
127,000 Indonesian Words
135,000 French Words
150,000 Russian Words
180,000 Romanian Words
183,000 Hindi Words
200,000 Greek Words
241,000 Serbo-Croatian Words
253,000 Ukrainian Words
264,000 Urdu Words
281,000 Gujarati Words
330,000 German Words
343,000 Persian Words
370,000 Chinese Words
380,000 Tamil Words
400,000 Dutch Words
435,000 Portugese Words
500,000 Japanese Words
500,000 Italian Words
520,000 English Words
560,000 Icelandic Words
600,000 Swedish Words
800,000 Finnish Words
1,100,000 Korean Words
68,700,000,000 Musical Melodies
he forgot native arabic
As a native speaker of musical melodies, I can confirm that this is the number of words we have.
lol 😂
Sanskrit has more 102 billion words
@@Fut7gaming It has infinite
this RUSSIAN VODKA 🥤
Bro speaks ♩♪♫♬♪♪♫♩
As a Malaysian, I'm actually fascinated on how many words of my country's main language do they have. Thanks for making this video. Stay safe,bro!
Nobodee cares
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 no u
Dogimidh Sundahh i do care 😗
Stay safe? What you mean 🤔
I think it all depends on how you count.
Who paused and read some of the words of their own language
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Edit:i have never got 100 likes to a comment thanks snd who liked my comment there parents should like 200+ years and be safe always
Me,in Tagalog(Filipino)
Me (Romania)
@@soraideso4020 great i am from india
@@luisbernales6336great by the way i am from india
me in javanesse(Indonesian)
As a Korean I totally didn't imagine having 1.1M words while having only 24 alphabets
The characters were really interesting, but I feel like the word count of a language will mostly depend on how comprehensive the dictionary is and what they count as a new word.
"I" is a word?
@@dalicyisusalejogaspar7809 in English? yes
Exactly
Damn that's a good point.
In German for example you can just create new words by adding two or more other words together. All depends on the definition and, yes, the dictionaries
Everyone: you can see the word "YOU" in the English words
Me: you can see the word "you" and "the" in the Chinese words (it's hard to see them)
Lol i paused the video and i saw "you" and "the" 🤣🤣
I saw *a*
我不会说中文。我喜欢吃汉堡包。我有一个大大的狗。再见小朋友。
What the ?!
I saw you but no the though but still impressed of that
@@hillerychan9483 why did you say, you don't know how to speak Chinese, and wrote it in Chinese? 你为什么要做那个丘陵?
Sanskrit and German are some languages that I know can have infinite(not exactly) words as you can combine different words to form a completely new word.
Yes totally agree with you; Till now researchers have recorded almost 102,78,50,00000+ words. My sanskrit teacher told me.
Yes, actually i have heard that German and sanskriti are similar
Yes, actually i have heard that German and sanskriti are similar
@@shrutidivekar7955 cuz they're related
@@Shreya...1 They are both proto indo european
You might want to add Inuit Syllabics to your list. They're pretty cool.
Imagine if the final one was "YOU" alphabet/words
~This comment was made by You Gang
Me is beter
I am the best ixcept India 🇮🇳
If you pause the English words at the right time one of them actually says "YOU"
@@dogimdhsundahh3511 k
In the english language if you pause when the full box is in view there are “you”s scattered around
Korean: I'm the one with the most words!
Musical Melodies: *amateurs.*
Actually korean is not the language with most of words, it is Arabic, but here & mostly everywhere, they only show you the roots, idk why they do that
@@historymappingnotme8267 it was a joke
@@kerwwyngonzales9547 who
@@historymappingnotme8267 HUH!?
Tf? It was supposed to be a joke
2:23 Arabic: 12,3 Million words.
Google to be sure.
Right
RIGHT 2
Right 3
Right 4
Right 5
3:24 高速で流れているようで、実際には同じ文字列の繰り返し
俺にはサッパリだよ…
君の動体視力は素晴らしい👍