@@leon-set As a native in the language that the guy speaks, I find it quite hilarious that someone probably from an other continent finds this random video and comments it this way XD
@@leon-set It's basically one of the last men in this neighbourhood called Weimeschkierch or (Weimeschkiirch) who speaks Yenish, a variety of the German language spoken almost extinct today. And apart a few expressions and words that this man says to quote us as examples of his language, there is no real dictionary, traces or even books about his jargon, thus making it difficult to reconstruct the language alone. Actually I don't even understand much myself because he mixes a lot of Yenish with Luxembourgish (and probably some old Luxembourgish words too), which if you understand Yenish and Luxembourgish, you'll see that both the languages are actually very similar linguistically (examples in the description of the video) but if you speak the standard Luxembourgish that we speak nowadays without knowing Yenish or even the old Luxembourgish words, you'll be probably quite confused like me.
Amazing Content Vro!!!
dédicace stp
What the fuck did i just saw
Did I just see.
@@maxgeorgalbers7294 sorry mate I was 13 when I commented this
@@leon-set As a native in the language that the guy speaks, I find it quite hilarious that someone probably from an other continent finds this random video and comments it this way XD
@@cyrildewaha so could you please explain what is being said?
@@leon-set It's basically one of the last men in this neighbourhood called Weimeschkierch or (Weimeschkiirch) who speaks Yenish, a variety of the German language spoken almost extinct today. And apart a few expressions and words that this man says to quote us as examples of his language, there is no real dictionary, traces or even books about his jargon, thus making it difficult to reconstruct the language alone. Actually I don't even understand much myself because he mixes a lot of Yenish with Luxembourgish (and probably some old Luxembourgish words too), which if you understand Yenish and Luxembourgish, you'll see that both the languages are actually very similar linguistically (examples in the description of the video) but if you speak the standard Luxembourgish that we speak nowadays without knowing Yenish or even the old Luxembourgish words, you'll be probably quite confused like me.
Supi!