When You Grow Up in China as a White Guy…

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2020
  • Sign up to Babbel today to get 50% off 6 months for a limited time only: bit.ly/Xiaomanyc Today I’m chatting with Jonny who grew up in the Chinese province of Sichuan and speaks Mandarin and the local dialect of Sichuanese at a level practically indistinguishable from an ordinary native speaker. He went to local Chinese schools in China and took classes in Chinese and made Chinese friends just like any other Chinese kid!
    LEARN A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WITH MY METHOD!
    ✉️ Join my newsletter and discover how I pick up new languages quickly
    (and learn how you can do the same):
    👉🏼 www.streetsmartlanguages.com/...
    📚 Check out my Street-Smart Language courses:
    👉🏼 www.streetsmartlanguages.com
    Subscribe to my channel: / @xiaomanyc
    Follow me on Instagram: / xiaomanyc
    Follow me on Facebook: / xiaomanyc
    If you guys like the music in my videos, you can check out all the AMAZING music Epidemic Sound has at my affiliate link here: share.epidemicsound.com/xiaomanyc
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @samsam2235
    @samsam2235 3 роки тому +8737

    This guy's English is pretty good for a Chinese.

    • @cc77111
      @cc77111 3 роки тому +107

      😂

    • @janajiang566
      @janajiang566 3 роки тому +54

      lmao

    • @deweshgoenka6111
      @deweshgoenka6111 3 роки тому +66

      I see what you did there 🤣

    • @TronG33k
      @TronG33k 3 роки тому +23

      My first thought too

    • @4oh4n0tf0und
      @4oh4n0tf0und 3 роки тому +230

      I was waiting for him to sound like a typical Chinese person who then learned English, but then my mind was blown

  • @numba3son
    @numba3son 3 роки тому +6231

    This is the reverse of an Asian-American. An American-Asian.

    • @wlong697
      @wlong697 3 роки тому +314

      Hahaha American-Chinese

    • @TheNativeEngine
      @TheNativeEngine 3 роки тому +109

      White-Chinese?

    • @numba3son
      @numba3son 3 роки тому +829

      @@TheNativeEngine Cauc-Asian?

    • @KH-pw8qz
      @KH-pw8qz 3 роки тому +100

      numba3son this one wins👆👆

    • @droidgeist
      @droidgeist 3 роки тому +49

      If he had been born in China, you could call him a CBA.

  • @xxxxhong6550
    @xxxxhong6550 3 роки тому +3845

    I am from Chengdu, Sichuan. His Sichuan accent is 100% local and his mandarin is Sichuan type 😂😂😂👍👍👌

    • @michellebecher1169
      @michellebecher1169 3 роки тому +24

      Exactly 😀

    • @Seanonyoutube
      @Seanonyoutube 2 роки тому +58

      Y’all got good beef

    • @user-qi8pp1rr2q
      @user-qi8pp1rr2q 2 роки тому +35

      Really? Actually he made some mistakes when he was speaking Sichuanese.
      上课(go to class) sounds like 丧课(lose class)
      去 should be read "qie" instead of "qu".
      His Sichuanese is understandable for native Sichuan people. But his accent sounds a bit weird for me.

    • @ameowzing652
      @ameowzing652 2 роки тому +23

      @@user-qi8pp1rr2q got it, champ

    • @zzhangwindforce
      @zzhangwindforce 2 роки тому +111

      @@user-qi8pp1rr2q There are also several types of Sichuanese. E.g., Sichuanese in Eastern Sichuan is quite different to the one in Chengdu. E.g. for me 去 should be read between "qi" instead of "qie". Also when speaking 上课 I think my tone is also similar.

  • @naokitty24
    @naokitty24 3 роки тому +2392

    It was smart of his parents to send him to a local school instead of an international school. So he can fit in the Chinese culture.

    • @VishnuQM
      @VishnuQM 3 роки тому +92

      I honestly feel that international schools should be banned. Seriously. That is the number-one way to not appreciate the culture; going to a local school forces you to appreciate the local culture.

    • @VishnuQM
      @VishnuQM 3 роки тому +7

      @@JM-tj5qm I get it. But locals have plenty of other ways to learn other languages and cultures. For foreigners, it can be a cop-out and work against integration.

    • @catto5387
      @catto5387 3 роки тому +91

      @@VishnuQM International schools have their merits. I'm Chinese-Canadian but I went to an international school instead of a local school in China. International schools have a much more flexible curriculum and are preferable if you want to go to university outside of China. They have mandatory Chinese as a second language classes during early years. You can go to an intl school and still appreciate the local culture without being overwhelmed.

    • @roselylez
      @roselylez 3 роки тому +7

      @@catto5387 if you're in a Chinese household, I think it's better to go to an international school in China so you won't be too far from the western side. Whereas foreigners from other ethnicities would benefit from learning some Chinese aspects in public schools.

    • @catto5387
      @catto5387 3 роки тому +23

      @@roselylez Yep, don't get me wrong, I think it's great for foreigners to send their kids to local schools so they can pick up another language as well. I just think that international schools have their place and shouldn't be "banned" lol. A good method is to send younger kids to local schools and have them transfer later on so they can prepare for university if they decide to go back overseas.

  • @sydosys
    @sydosys 3 роки тому +16771

    was really hoping he would have a chinese accent when he spoke english

  • @Jantsenpr777
    @Jantsenpr777 3 роки тому +12438

    It's incredible how he has a 100% Chinese accent in Mandarin/Sichuanese, and a 100% American accent in English.

    • @johnnyhshify
      @johnnyhshify 3 роки тому +195

      How that different compared to Chinese with southern American accents but also fluent in mandarin?

    • @graciasvito8067
      @graciasvito8067 3 роки тому +676

      @@johnnyhshify the difference is not everybody could do like what he do, not even you and I.
      Here's the comparison:
      This American had 100% Chinese accent and 100% American English accent and he spoke them both like it was nothing
      But some of Chinese who lived in the US would absolutely had 100% Chinese accent because it was their mother language though, but only a few Chinese managed to achieve 100% of American English accent without accidentally mixed it with Chinese accent. Being a *perfect* bilingual, or even trilingual was really tough.

    • @skibxskatic
      @skibxskatic 3 роки тому +242

      @@graciasvito8067 it's still not that incredible because there are a few tens of millions of children to immigrant parents who are bi- and trilingual who also have to codeswitch when talking at home and in public. we don't have to go to a superlative of "everybody", it's just "everybody that YOU know" isn't able to do that. I grew up with bilingual, trilingual children of immigrant families.

    • @chizhang2765
      @chizhang2765 3 роки тому +192

      There's a difference from being exposed to both languages at an early age, and learning one of them through school.

    • @MrGeorgeYbanez
      @MrGeorgeYbanez 3 роки тому +42

      Maybe he should start a UA-cam channel. Lol.

  • @a.081xx
    @a.081xx 3 роки тому +2042

    Wow he sounds 100% like an American and 100% like a native Chinese, that is SO fucking cool!

    • @KH-cs7sj
      @KH-cs7sj 3 роки тому +43

      this is what bilingual means. lots of asian people are like this.

    • @fiona7651
      @fiona7651 2 роки тому +84

      @@KH-cs7sj not really usually when we speak in chinese it doesn't sound as right as native chinese speaker

    • @harrytan5579
      @harrytan5579 2 роки тому +29

      @Send Songs He actually have some American accents in Mandarin, but his Sichuan Dialect is so on the spot. I'm surprised his Mandarin does was not influenced by Sichuan Dialect.

    • @recklessmermaid
      @recklessmermaid 2 роки тому +15

      i actually thought that the way he speaks English is not quite natural, particularly the way he hits his Rs, and certain open vowels... it's like he's a British actor auditioning for an American part, with a really terrible accent coach! Makes me wonder if he flounders between British and American accents/pronunciations; that can happen for non native English speakers or those surrounded by a lot of the same
      side note should i start a business as an English language coach? apparently im an expert lol

    • @fiona7651
      @fiona7651 2 роки тому +5

      reckless mermaid I know that in china they usually teach british english. I don’t really know how to say to like not american english

  • @vultureculture3733
    @vultureculture3733 3 роки тому +5079

    when you’re chinese and two american white dudes speak better chinese than you

    • @clandycane1771
      @clandycane1771 3 роки тому +78

      same lol

    • @kathybramley5609
      @kathybramley5609 3 роки тому +65

      It makes me sad but I wonder if that regret is the goal in some twisted way: I can't tell what the angle of this channel is, for real. It's just a repetitive weird fetishy glee or flex around white people speaking Chinese dialects that feels really off?

    • @davies010
      @davies010 3 роки тому +224

      @@kathybramley5609 it’s kinda mind blowing if you think about. Particularly when he switches to certain dialects. It’s like a fluent Chinese man Randomly starting a conversation with me in Welsh. It’s unexpected, it’s a flex to some degree, but learning a non native language is tough

    • @heisernsu3813
      @heisernsu3813 3 роки тому

      sameeeee

    • @skylerpetty1530
      @skylerpetty1530 3 роки тому +25

      @@kathybramley5609 honestly, I think it’s just that it gets views.

  • @jason_zhemingzhang
    @jason_zhemingzhang 3 роки тому +1368

    As a native Chinese speaker, this is absolutely hilarious. Jonny's Chinese is indistinguishable from I would say 99% of actual Chinese people who never left the country. And the way he is seamlessly switching from standard mandarin Chinese to Sichuaness to English just kills me every time.

    • @unalarminggruty352
      @unalarminggruty352 2 роки тому +26

      my parents are from chongqing, and they constantly speak the dialect to each other. it is very similar to sichuanese (idk if its exactly like it), but because of this, i have to agree with you, my head spun throughout the video 😅

    • @ForYuable
      @ForYuable 2 роки тому

      可yeah

    • @SharinganMan
      @SharinganMan 7 місяців тому +1

      what do you mean by 99%? what's the remaining 1%?

    • @p0.c
      @p0.c Місяць тому

      @@SharinganManit’s just a general assumption. it’s never going to be 100%

    • @SharinganMan
      @SharinganMan Місяць тому

      @@p0.c hypothetically, what would the other 1% even refer to in this statement?

  • @vanessawesten4575
    @vanessawesten4575 3 роки тому +5958

    And here I am, a non Chinese speaker, watching two white Americans speak Chinese to each other.

    • @christian5327
      @christian5327 3 роки тому +22

      Sabes otras idiomas?

    • @vanessawesten4575
      @vanessawesten4575 3 роки тому +60

      @@christian5327 aprendía español y frances en la escuela y soy alemana :)

    • @pieflower6419
      @pieflower6419 3 роки тому +11

      @@vanessawesten4575 sabes muchas idiomas XD solamente hablo español e inglés ¡qué guay!

    • @pieflower6419
      @pieflower6419 3 роки тому +6

      @@christian5327 estudio español desde hace cuatro años pero aprendía un poco de francés en mi escuela jajaja

    • @enndhan7138
      @enndhan7138 3 роки тому +6

      哈哈哈哈,很好笑

  • @yanliliu8888
    @yanliliu8888 3 роки тому +1932

    omggggggg He was my classmate in my primary school

  • @nathangoddard8115
    @nathangoddard8115 2 роки тому +336

    His parents gave him a great gift by sending him to local schools. What an amazing story.

  • @Rebellen007
    @Rebellen007 3 роки тому +3236

    "White guy shocks white guy speaking fluently Sichuanese"

    • @nikogalih9260
      @nikogalih9260 3 роки тому +28

      I can't.....

    • @k.c7655
      @k.c7655 3 роки тому +6

      Is this what comedy is in 2020? Cringe

    • @dauphongii
      @dauphongii 3 роки тому +101

      @@k.c7655 you must be fun to talk with huh

    • @Dante20321
      @Dante20321 3 роки тому +5

      Lmfao

    • @greggperez2124
      @greggperez2124 3 роки тому +10

      This should have been the title. But one the guy's head blown up in the thumbnail. lol

  • @thelittlesthobo7100
    @thelittlesthobo7100 3 роки тому +2500

    I’m going to be honest, was not expecting such a natural American accent. Damn

    • @Challenges-um2zd
      @Challenges-um2zd 3 роки тому +8

      Yeah same lol.

    • @FutureAllenNL
      @FutureAllenNL 3 роки тому +45

      His parents are American so he would have taken their accent.
      My youngest brother is born in NL but he speaks with the same accent as me and my siblings because that was where he learnt English from.

    • @dopaminesoup
      @dopaminesoup 3 роки тому +30

      @@FutureAllenNL Yeah, but a lot of 2nd-gen immigrants in the States don't speak as fluently as their parents, or at least have some accent.

    • @ashina5924
      @ashina5924 3 роки тому +16

      @@dopaminesoup as a 1st gen Asian American (dont wanna specify) most of my peers me included struggle speaking our native language already lol so this guy is very impressive especially with his accent. You'd think his english accent would change a bit but nope it didnt. I mean Michael Bisping, a british mma fighter has already lost some of his british accent since moving to the US for the last 11 years. And he came here when he was 30.

    • @MaseraSteve
      @MaseraSteve 2 роки тому

      Probably his parent still taught him daily?
      I picked an accents through movies.
      I can pitch my voice just like your average joe also commercial narrator too, Pretty much indistinguishable in voice.
      there’s random person on discord confused me being either Canadian or American, the funny thing is.. English are one of many languages i speak.
      Wait till you hear that my first accent were actually British. The only one from harry potter (yes it is considered posh whatever i am rich in real life anyway) still prefer it to this day

  • @JimNichols
    @JimNichols 3 роки тому +842

    So speaking Mandarin he has little Sichuanese accent, speaking Sichuanese he has little Mandarin accent and speaking English he has no Chinese accent whatsoever..... damn it man.

    • @darrylkassle361
      @darrylkassle361 3 роки тому +16

      @William Keeper strange i can still hear the foreigner/westerner in him.
      The closest foreigner i have heard who speaks mandarin almost indistinguishable from a native mandarin speaker is DASHAN Mark Rosewel the Canadian dude. Although even with him I can hear his tones are off once every 4 or five sentences.
      I am talking about not looking at them and guessing whether they are a native speaker or not just by listening to their voice
      Xiaomanyc can say a lot and probably understands a lot but his tones are actually quite sub standard.
      Also anything he ever says is no more than a level above lower intermediate.
      His definitely no LELE FARLEY that’s for sure. He is actually an advanced level speaker. His mandarin can be considered fluent even native by any standards.. Xiaonyc should speak about topics like current affairs and deeper cultural issues to show people that he can speak a fluent advanced level. To me you are fluent if you can understand and discuss the 6 o’clock news. A lot of these guys cant. They might be able tell you what the news story is about but i doubt they could understand it even at an 80% level more like 40 or 50% level if at all.
      If i approached a native speaker in english and simply said " The parliament enacted four legislative bills today lowering the highest personal income tax rate by 10% in an effort to accord to pre election promises catering to their core demographic support base" native speakers would understand. Say that to anyone bar Lele Farley, Dashan and a handful of others and they would not know what you are talking about. I just get a bit peeved when people make out they are fluent when they are not.
      Dont get me wrong i like this guy. I obviously spend time watching his channel but I just want things to be portrayed as they really are.
      Go to China study 1 month of chinese and the locals will tell you out of politeness you speak good mandarin coupled with genuinely looking but fake surprised reactions. They will do this just to be polite even if they can't understand a single syable you sayl

    • @arys8133
      @arys8133 3 роки тому +65

      @@darrylkassle361 That's not entirely true. Being native doesn't mean you have a very advanced way of speaking, and can understand most to all super complex speaking. Being native simply means you grew up with that language, and you are part of it. Take a "peasant" for example, they are native speakers of their languages but they most likey will be illiterate and have a very poor usage of their languages, but they are still natives. A lot of countries have millions of people like this. Not everyone can get an education, and not everyone can understand what you just said as an example. Lots of non-natives can pass a C2 test and can speak more fluently than a native could, but the average native probably wouldn't be able to pass that same test.

    • @tyrel_c
      @tyrel_c 3 роки тому +34

      @@arys8133 I see this a lot, people from well off countries or areas will judge a non-natives accent or level of vocabulary. Forgetting that even in native speakers there is varying accents as well as vocabulary levels...

    • @zippo718
      @zippo718 3 роки тому +5

      He has a little English accent in his Mandarin, at least from what I can hear. His Sichuanese sounds good to me but I'm no expert on that.

    • @hellokitty33997
      @hellokitty33997 3 роки тому +1

      @@zippo718 His Sichuanese is good. Some tones are off. But overall sounds great

  • @tokyomootsie
    @tokyomootsie 3 роки тому +719

    I'm an American whose family all moved to Japan when I was 2 years old, and I totally relate to his story of moving back to the US and people not "getting" your cultural differences b/c you're white. lol

    • @unexpectedbreakfast5517
      @unexpectedbreakfast5517 3 роки тому +132

      Unfortunately people can’t tell the difference between race and culture.

    • @speakstheobvious5769
      @speakstheobvious5769 3 роки тому +34

      Like "Wait. You take off your shoes before you go inside your house? What's up with that?"

    • @annieevie9607
      @annieevie9607 3 роки тому +30

      I had the same problem (but less extreme) after I moved back from China after living there with a host family and attending public school there for a year as part of my student exchange. I came back to live with my Australian family and struggled a lot with reverse culture shock because nobody I knew recognised it. I still miss China in a lot of ways, and am extremely grateful for this video because I've never before seen anyone who could really related to what I experienced.

    • @Seanonyoutube
      @Seanonyoutube 2 роки тому +17

      @@speakstheobvious5769 that’s actually standard in many countries not just in Asia

    • @speakstheobvious5769
      @speakstheobvious5769 2 роки тому +15

      @@Seanonyoutube I have a suspition that the reason American's wear shoes in the house stems back to colonial times when there wasn't much urban development. I went hunting with my father one time at a cabin. I took my shoes off in the camib and they fussed at me for it. I was like "WTF?". It was due to the possibility of snakes finding there way into the cabin. So In colonial times, if this was the case, It was just a habit that carried on.. I'm of course talking out of my ass, but it makes sense to me.

  • @notthatyouasked6656
    @notthatyouasked6656 3 роки тому +2460

    I know a family in China. The father is American, the mother is from Argentina. When they had kids, the mother would only speak to them in Spanish and the father only in English. The kids went to regular Chinese schools. The kids are grown now and completely fluent in all 3 languages. If they ever came back to the USA, they would have a huge advantage in pretty much any job they could want!

    • @thiamjoo
      @thiamjoo 3 роки тому +149

      In Malaysia, a multi-racial country, it is very common for a Chinese-Malaysian to speak multiple languages. Most can speak at least 3, English, Malay, Mandarin plus a mother tongue dialect. In addition to that, some can speak more than one dialect especially when both parents are from different dialect group.

    • @TV-mn1zd
      @TV-mn1zd 3 роки тому +21

      That’s cool!

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a 3 роки тому +79

      @@thiamjoo yeah, I know a friend of mine who half-japanese, half-chinese malaysian and speak malay, english, mandarin, cantonese, japanese and hokkien, super crazy.

    • @yisiliu
      @yisiliu 3 роки тому +87

      In case you guys are interested, the period between birth and age 6 is called "critical period" in language acquisition. In this period, if you can expose yourself (or your child more specifically lol) to multiple languages with roughly same amount of time, you will be able to acquire these languages as a native speaker. Any exposure later than that won't give you the same power.

    • @lordhelmchen6539
      @lordhelmchen6539 3 роки тому +67

      @viktor hansen way cooler to not need a mobile device to communicate. Besides speaking a language gives you an insight into the culture of the country.
      As I said, way cooler to be able to speak it.

  • @seanarooni
    @seanarooni 3 роки тому +891

    "prove to me you're american." "yyeah, uhhh". well i'm sold.

  • @julienchine3498
    @julienchine3498 Рік тому +28

    As a foreigner living in China, it's hilarious to see him speak Sichuanese like a real 四川人 like that…simply amazing. Also, it's very nice how says "we" have a dialect or "we" this and that. Been living in Beijing for over 10years and this motivated me to keep improving my Chinese:)

    • @harianirudh1478
      @harianirudh1478 Рік тому

      Bonne chance! Moi aussi, mais le Français au lieu de chinois.

  • @tsubaki4412
    @tsubaki4412 3 роки тому +88

    His accent is SPOT ON!! The enunciation, the diction and the accent are everything.

    • @lamphiaalonso5341
      @lamphiaalonso5341 2 роки тому +25

      He is literally from there, of course his accent is spot on, i really dont get why people think its so impressive that a native person sounds,,, native

    • @JasmineDragonXYL
      @JasmineDragonXYL 2 роки тому +4

      @@lamphiaalonso5341 ye lol

    • @1x0x
      @1x0x Рік тому +1

      hes not imitating the language he has spoken it basically his entire life...

    • @MrNajibrazak
      @MrNajibrazak Рік тому

      agreed, i spent a couple of decades in China speaking Foochow, Fujianese, Hakka, Cantonese and Putonghua and its tricky to get the accurate accent for each of the respective dialect. Ended up only getting one dialect perfect as i hangout with Hakkas alot.
      And now i have problem speaking Japanese perfectly after a while. Everything sometimes become a mix of Japanese, Chinese dialects and English.
      LOL

    • @terrancewood9322
      @terrancewood9322 Рік тому

      @@lamphiaalonso5341 Because most people from non-english sspeaking countries don't learn the language to fluency

  • @SaintNyx
    @SaintNyx 3 роки тому +2424

    His English is even more impressive, considering he lived his entire life in China since he was a toddler. Most children of immigrants have a difficult time with the accent of their parents' language, even if they can speak it. I would never guess that he didn't grow up in America.

    • @gabrielceolato2
      @gabrielceolato2 3 роки тому +77

      But he probably spoke English with parents for the whole time

    • @fraai
      @fraai 3 роки тому +55

      I'm guessing his parents taught him English from an early age especially since they're both American.

    • @mypartyisprivate8693
      @mypartyisprivate8693 3 роки тому +55

      With two American parents, it's not hard nor rare to speak without accent. Don't know where you're getting this.

    • @agme8045
      @agme8045 3 роки тому +24

      Nyx not really, most kids in this or similar situations, usually have perfectly native accents in all the languages, because their parents talk to them the whole time in their native languages.

    • @agme8045
      @agme8045 3 роки тому +13

      Nyx plus his mother tongue is still English, he only listened to people speaking english his first 3 years of life, he learned Chinese as a second language.

  • @AkilaZhang
    @AkilaZhang 3 роки тому +3549

    i literally laughed through the whole video this guy rocks

    • @nr655321
      @nr655321 3 роки тому +38

      Next time I see a Chinese person who can speak English I'll laugh to his/her face. How about that?

    • @sangpham9871
      @sangpham9871 3 роки тому +247

      @@nr655321 I thinks its a compliment

    • @jeremychen9816
      @jeremychen9816 3 роки тому +16

      大师球!抓到ak本人啦!

    • @googlewreckedit
      @googlewreckedit 3 роки тому +62

      @@nr655321 are you not good at reading written English? OP wasn't mocking the guy in the video.

    • @wenjing3930
      @wenjing3930 3 роки тому +3

      哎哟 这里也能碰上

  • @sroberts605
    @sroberts605 2 роки тому +6

    This is fascinating! I'd love to hear more from this family actually. To get such an ambassador able to articulate the commonalities/strengths/weaknesses and misconceptions from both sides of that cultural divide. Definitely a programme there!

  • @annieevie9607
    @annieevie9607 3 роки тому +39

    I really relate to the sentiment at ~11:54 of building friendships in China via sports. I didn't grow up in China like Jonathan did, but I did go to China during high school on a high school exchange program, during which I attended a Chinese public high school for a year. At first, I didn't really speak Chinese and felt I was seen very much as a foreigner, however within the first few weeks I joined the dance club at my school and became an active member. To my friends in that club, I was just another member of the club, just another one of their dance friends. As I interacted with them and started to learn Chinese culture from them, and my Chinese got better, I began to be more accepted and seen as less of a foreigner in more and more parts of my community. I wasn't treated differently at restaurants anymore as I ordered confidently in Chinese and clearly knew what I was doing. But yeah, I really made a lot of my Chinese friends through that dance club. It was a huge part of my time in China, and forms many memories that are now extremely important to me.

  • @Lily-zx8en
    @Lily-zx8en 3 роки тому +784

    His parents made a great decision putting him and his brothers in a public school. I love that he wants to use his language ability to help bridge the two cultures.

    • @sophieyangsmagicclassroom3392
      @sophieyangsmagicclassroom3392 3 роки тому +12

      The public school system in China is actually not bad. I would assume at the time this guy grew up, the majority of Chinese schools were public schools. Now it is more diverse of course.

    • @TV-mn1zd
      @TV-mn1zd 3 роки тому +2

      True

  • @bogao283
    @bogao283 3 роки тому +632

    It's so amazing to hear an american boy speaking Sichuan hua...

    • @todaywaspretty6309
      @todaywaspretty6309 3 роки тому +24

      He was born in chengdu! Doesn’t that make him Chinese ? Just sayin

    • @todaywaspretty6309
      @todaywaspretty6309 3 роки тому +2

      Jás Zipporah ah you right you right

    • @Phosphoros47
      @Phosphoros47 3 роки тому +16

      Today was Pretty citizenship by birth in China requires one parent with Chinese citizenship.

    • @loujr9869
      @loujr9869 3 роки тому +2

      Xiomanyc we need more reaction videos!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @alfredoalejandromartinezji4539
      @alfredoalejandromartinezji4539 3 роки тому +2

      He is chinese even he was born in usa

  • @jackrose5077
    @jackrose5077 3 роки тому +23

    Wow. This is definitely one of the coolest things I've seen on UA-cam in a while.

  • @slamdunk406
    @slamdunk406 3 роки тому +63

    Really cool how his parents got him to go a local Chinese school. That’s dope!

  • @theresaalexander5269
    @theresaalexander5269 3 роки тому +847

    As a bilingual Chinese and English speaker (who, conveniently, also speaks the Sichuan dialect) I LOVE THIS

    • @winchester37a
      @winchester37a 3 роки тому +1

      Imagine

    • @iamf6641
      @iamf6641 3 роки тому +16

      as a gay person you violated my equal rights

    • @lhn2370
      @lhn2370 3 роки тому +1

      @@iamf6641 Haha that really made me laugh :D

    • @tmcd6902
      @tmcd6902 3 роки тому +1

      👏

    • @xiwang97
      @xiwang97 3 роки тому +1

      Same here hahahaha

  • @bryceliu1955
    @bryceliu1955 3 роки тому +797

    As a Chinese, I can’t believe he is American if I didn’t see his face

    • @sdfasdkafdsjf2054
      @sdfasdkafdsjf2054 3 роки тому +8

      我听得懂前面的四川话,听不懂后面的英语

    • @proclipz8226
      @proclipz8226 3 роки тому

      Does he sound 100% native? I know he would be very close living there that long but I mean is it like ABSOLUTELY native sounding?

    • @jinhaoxiong6503
      @jinhaoxiong6503 3 роки тому +10

      @@proclipz8226 xiaoma's mandarin is 6/10(you can easily know he is a foreign speaker)
      jonny's mandarin I will give 9/10, but still can find some pronounces not like the native sound( a little bit)
      jonny's sicuanhua is amazing, cuz I am not from sicuan, so I think it's really close to the native sound,I could even imiagine how he use sicuanhua hang out with his friends.(like higher brothers)

    • @proclipz8226
      @proclipz8226 3 роки тому

      @@jinhaoxiong6503 Excellent! Thank you for the reply. 👍

    • @user-hw2vy2lg2x
      @user-hw2vy2lg2x 3 роки тому +1

      确实,四川话讲的很溜

  • @Crossword131
    @Crossword131 3 роки тому +8

    WHOA! When he switched to Sichuanese I could TOTALLY hear a difference! it sounds very different from his Mandarin, even if he has a Sichuan accent. I didn't think I would be able to spot a change. Thanks for the video, I'm subbing!

  • @ddomingo
    @ddomingo 3 роки тому +23

    I feel the same way about Catalan. I grew up in Barcelona, Spain and my whole education was in Catalan and the same thing you described about Sichuanese happens with Catalan people. If you speak to them in their language without an accent they immediately treat you differently.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak 3 роки тому +1851

    Why do you both look the same?!?

    • @jameswyl
      @jameswyl 3 роки тому +74

      good one ray

    • @raven99999
      @raven99999 3 роки тому +66

      Bro, how can you be everywhere???

    • @jameswyl
      @jameswyl 3 роки тому +28

      @@raven99999 IKR. I see him every other day

    • @pmooooh2968
      @pmooooh2968 3 роки тому +14

      Damn...bruh just know I saw ur comment somewhere

    • @raven99999
      @raven99999 3 роки тому

      @@jameswyl lol

  • @Sam-yu4ve
    @Sam-yu4ve 3 роки тому +439

    Take him with you in NYC and try and find Sichuanese speakers

    • @gregormiller4037
      @gregormiller4037 3 роки тому +8

      great idea

    • @dabking8305
      @dabking8305 3 роки тому +8

      Yessss

    • @dabking8305
      @dabking8305 3 роки тому +4

      Or go to the place he's at

    • @yamsylm
      @yamsylm 3 роки тому +14

      @@dabking8305 I'm Sichuanese living in NYC, His Sichuan dialect is slightly better than his Chinese and he definitely has a Chengdu accent.

    • @saulolacerda8181
      @saulolacerda8181 3 роки тому

      @@yamsylm When you say his chinese is slightly inferior it means that people can tell he's not native? Or it is something more related to accents only?

  • @soloflight75
    @soloflight75 2 роки тому +6

    I find myself watching these videos with a smile on my face so often. It is amazing how learning a different language builds so much respect between different people and cultures. In this current devisive US culture it seems learning languages would be such a way to level the playing field on the I am better than you attitude currently ravaging America.

  • @aleksandrasucur8615
    @aleksandrasucur8615 3 роки тому +5

    Simply beautiful. It reminded me of an Italian saying "parla come mangi" ("talk in a way you eat"), with which we invite another person to speak his/hers mind out with clear, simple and open words. In this case, he literaly talks and eats Sichuanese, soundly proud of his upbringing at Chengdu. Chapeau, Jonny!
    Tnx for uploading.

  • @heykay15
    @heykay15 3 роки тому +247

    i knew he had a chinese heart, when I heard the empty suitcase story. Only a true asian immigrant has so much dedication to fill a suitcase just with instant noodles and snacks they can't get in their adopted country.

  • @rulao2904
    @rulao2904 3 роки тому +823

    when you take the “asian” in “cauc” too literally

    • @Kebbab.213
      @Kebbab.213 3 роки тому +15

      😂😂😂 clever

    • @parthian945
      @parthian945 3 роки тому +24

      Caucasia is in Asia so...

    • @annaluizatararam2304
      @annaluizatararam2304 3 роки тому +4

      this comment just made me gasp hahaahaahhahah

    • @wamuyu887
      @wamuyu887 3 роки тому +6

      this comment had me wheezing...looooool😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @allaakiyeva2249
      @allaakiyeva2249 3 роки тому +17

      @@parthian945 i feel like people don't realize it or even have no idea about the actual geographic region 🤣

  • @jcai4824
    @jcai4824 2 роки тому +13

    As a sichuanese who lives in US right now, It feels soooooo good that I don't need to rely on CC for any of their conversation.

  • @ruiruihuang
    @ruiruihuang 3 роки тому +3

    Great video! Like to see an interview with their entire family speaking Sichuanese. It’d very fun.

  • @ArcsYT
    @ArcsYT 3 роки тому +360

    Okay.. I heard his Mandarin & Sichuanese, but when my boi switched to English...jawdrop. That's ridiculous how he could pull off both accents so smooth. Def a goal

    • @norb4152
      @norb4152 3 роки тому +6

      Very very hard to do if you didn't grow up there. But definitely a good goal to have

    • @olliert4840
      @olliert4840 3 роки тому +9

      I don't think he'd have to work hard at either accent tbh... He grew up in Sichuan and as he said that accent comes naturally to him. As for english, I'm pretty sure given his circumstances that his mothertongue is english and since he had 2 american parents he would have adopted their accent, especially since growing up he probably wasn't exposed to much english-with-a-chinese-accent, so his exposure to english would have been parents + media = american accent. The hardest thing for him is probably speaking mandarin and getting that accent right.

    • @tempestmars123
      @tempestmars123 3 роки тому +4

      @@olliert4840 but you can still hear his English accent in his Chinese. His Chinese grammar is also a little bit crude.

    • @dirkwu8443
      @dirkwu8443 3 роки тому +1

      @@tempestmars123 I suppose it's because he spent the past 6 years in the States.

    • @LexxPoisonati
      @LexxPoisonati 3 роки тому +2

      Yes I was so shocked. Definitely a goal!

  • @somethinglikethisone6635
    @somethinglikethisone6635 3 роки тому +619

    As a chengdu girl, i can tell his mandarin has exact the same accent as mine: 川普,but his English doesn’t have the same accent as mine: Chinese accent.

    • @lyadmilo
      @lyadmilo 3 роки тому +76

      His parents are English professors. Honestly, I think if he didn't speak English at all with his parents as a kid, he would have a Chinese accent in English. It was a little disappointing! But now that he is back in America, people would think he was making fun of Chinese people if he had a Chinese accent in English hahah XD

    • @lefauteuilparesseux7971
      @lefauteuilparesseux7971 3 роки тому +1

      Oh come on he does not speak 川普, not even close. He's 丁广泉学生level

    • @koreanqpatriot4595
      @koreanqpatriot4595 3 роки тому +4

      @@lefauteuilparesseux7971 English translations please

    • @dave1st299
      @dave1st299 3 роки тому +7

      @@lefauteuilparesseux7971 keep being jealous!

    • @lefauteuilparesseux7971
      @lefauteuilparesseux7971 3 роки тому +1

      @@dave1st299 of his Chinese accent ? No thanks. But I do wish you a lot of fun trying.

  • @__-bk6mm
    @__-bk6mm 3 роки тому +88

    I'm always in awe of people who have distinct accents from growing up bi-lingual and who can just hit the switch and just flow in multiple languages, it's amazing.

  • @mariocomputer808
    @mariocomputer808 Рік тому +3

    what a fascinating life story! So glad to learn about it!

  • @kpotatov
    @kpotatov 3 роки тому +1092

    My mother tongue is Chinese and I can’t even speak my mind that clearly in Chinese. DISHONOR TO MY COW

    • @Arrrstll
      @Arrrstll 3 роки тому +18

      Oky come on learn with me Chinese
      I'm African

    • @jessicaavila2722
      @jessicaavila2722 3 роки тому +16

      Ok this had me dead!! 💀😆

    • @theelysian1172
      @theelysian1172 3 роки тому +10

      Underrated comment

    • @gretelmolgora5688
      @gretelmolgora5688 3 роки тому +1

      🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂💕

    • @WarriorJournals
      @WarriorJournals 3 роки тому +10

      Haha, best comment!!!😀 "Dishonor on your cow," Mulan!!!💜💕💙💕

  • @berrygoodm6167
    @berrygoodm6167 3 роки тому +1129

    at the beginning he speaks in mandarin,
    I: that does not sound native...
    he: I grow up in Sichuan
    I: make sense now

    • @NO1xANIMExFAN
      @NO1xANIMExFAN 3 роки тому +199

      Lmao exactly my thoughts... Then when he pulled out the Sichuanese I'm like yea he's the real deal lmak

    • @kane3812
      @kane3812 3 роки тому +30

      Lmao as a native from Sichuan I feel so shame T T

    • @minhvu1184
      @minhvu1184 3 роки тому

      @@kane3812 so what do you think of his sichuanese?

    • @kane3812
      @kane3812 3 роки тому +12

      @@minhvu1184 The way of speaking is a little smilar, but the tone and style of speaking is still a little tasteless. So I wanna give it a 7.2

    • @yaos297
      @yaos297 3 роки тому +5

      川普

  • @docrobert8099
    @docrobert8099 2 роки тому +23

    This shit really freaks me out!!! I'm a chinese born and raised in Si Chuan.This guy is definitely speaking the most authentic Si Chuan Hua

  • @Ultradude604
    @Ultradude604 3 роки тому +106

    He could be a Chinese language professor in the US.

    • @tacitozetticci9308
      @tacitozetticci9308 2 роки тому +5

      He's more ambitious than that, but yeah it's a great plan B

  • @AGreyAlien
    @AGreyAlien 3 роки тому +379

    This guy seems pretty easygoing and friendly. I like him. He is set for any job knowing Mandarin and English fluently. He has no accent in English at least to the American ears. Crazy!

    • @miixvre
      @miixvre 3 роки тому +10

      a lot of people from other countries can speak more than one language. i speak chinese and english fluently and also indonesian. not sure why it's surprising for a lot of americans tho

    • @GraceAloneThroughFaithAlone
      @GraceAloneThroughFaithAlone 3 роки тому +1

      @@miixvre That's not true in the least bit, and that misnomer needs to stop perpetuating. However, I will agree that the most predominant second language spoken is English, but that is because it's the language most used inter-continentally for business. It shows the sphere of influence that England had during it's peak.

    • @pinkcloud8182
      @pinkcloud8182 3 роки тому +5

      @@miixvre the surprising part is that he grew up in china yet has no accent in english. i grew up speaking multiple languages but i sound more native in some than others.

    • @reyisawesome
      @reyisawesome 3 роки тому

      @@pinkcloud8182 Same man, same. I speak French and English (Canadian) as my first language(s) but still have an accent in at least French to the point where I've been asked if I come from somewhere else in Canada. I was born and raised in Quebec, but my whole family is French Ontarian. I can't help the accent!

    • @phil2544
      @phil2544 3 роки тому

      He has an accent when speaking English, he's clearly American! There are many accents in English.

  • @jmluc90
    @jmluc90 3 роки тому +326

    As an American born and raised in japan I similarly speak native Japanese. I have to say, after 30 years, I'm still not used to seeing a foreigner speaking an Asian language natively. When I see a foreigner with good Japanese I'm like "Whoa. Why does he speak good Japanese???" and all my friends are like, "Yeah, that's what everyone thinks about you."

    • @GXrevolution96
      @GXrevolution96 3 роки тому +4

      Why he is that surprising? Lol. I literally see foreigners speaking English everyday

    • @GXrevolution96
      @GXrevolution96 3 роки тому

      Another thing, it’s not that strange to come across someone speaking your language well. It’s like people think their language is impossible to learn.

    • @jmluc90
      @jmluc90 3 роки тому +13

      @@GXrevolution96 the difference is the one you actually highlighted of the difference of one who has learned a language and one who is a native speaker

    • @southamericunt6354
      @southamericunt6354 3 роки тому +5

      @@jmluc90 theres millions of asian americans in t
      latinamerica who speak native spanish cause they were born here lol they are racially asian but their culture is latinamerican, its not really that hard to grasp, i think north americans are just very race obsessed.

    • @jmluc90
      @jmluc90 3 роки тому +26

      @@southamericunt6354 I agree, but we’re not talking about South America, Europe, Africa, or anywhere else, but Asia. The concept of course isn’t difficult to understand, but the reality is finding a foreigner of ANY ethnicity who speaks an Asian language natively is as of yet a comparative rarity.

  • @wraithkiss
    @wraithkiss 2 роки тому

    That was really really good. If you find more stories like that to share I will definitely listen.

  • @Dezomm
    @Dezomm 2 роки тому +6

    I have no relation to China or any Chinese languages but I just wanted to mention how much I enjoyed this video. I could relate to some of it also having moved across continents as a kid, but mostly it was just an interesting story told by a very charming and kind guy. Thanks for sharing it with us!

  • @jiangwu2680
    @jiangwu2680 3 роки тому +1074

    This guy is 100% Chinese. He speaks Mandarin better than me lol

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter 3 роки тому +45

      Surprisingly for me, I found that many Chinese do not speak Mandarin very well.

    • @diwu9163
      @diwu9163 3 роки тому +69

      Peter Kroll the thing is we speak dialects most of the time. Mandarin is only used when you are in school or traveling to other provinces.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter 3 роки тому +5

      @@diwu9163 ... and then it's such a complex language

    • @xxnelliexx
      @xxnelliexx 3 роки тому +26

      Peter Kroll you either know ur dialect or know mandarin XD its one or the other haha...then theres that one golden child....

    • @ericshang7744
      @ericshang7744 3 роки тому +10

      一口川普。

  • @user-un9bd2gj7v
    @user-un9bd2gj7v 3 роки тому +716

    As a Chinese. That's all I can say: "OMG".

    • @zli6538
      @zli6538 3 роки тому +7

      aka 亲娘嘞

    • @bay2176
      @bay2176 3 роки тому +4

      额滴神儿

    • @wahwah3204
      @wahwah3204 3 роки тому +12

      Yea when a white guy speaks Chinese “OMG” when a Chinese speak English that’s nothing special.

    • @screm1746
      @screm1746 3 роки тому +18

      @@wahwah3204 Furthermore, when a Chinese American speaks Chinese: "it's a shame he can't speak perfect Chinese" -_-

    • @wahwah3204
      @wahwah3204 3 роки тому +4

      @@screm1746 Well it’s just depends on the individual the place they grew up in needless to say they are all Chinese doesn’t matter if they are Chinese from China or in US ain’t no shame in having an accent and by the way this video is about a white guy speaking Chinese so everybody seems to be so shocked and surprised by this.

  • @bdonnajpvw
    @bdonnajpvw 3 роки тому +22

    I love how someone described him as American-Chinese. I'm not surprised he speaks English without an accent. It's his first language, since he was raised by American native speakers of English. It's great his parents sent him to Chinese language schools, that ensured his bilingual native fluency. Fantastic, all around, this video.

  • @cheesecurd100s
    @cheesecurd100s 2 роки тому

    These are my favorite types of videos. You should do more of these

  • @tobiaszhang8802
    @tobiaszhang8802 3 роки тому +609

    I guess one of his brother‘s name is Chen De Ning, cause we studied in the same class when we were in primary school. What a coincidence 😂

    • @RJ-us1hg
      @RJ-us1hg 3 роки тому +5

      omg

    • @caninelynx0747
      @caninelynx0747 3 роки тому +9

      送你上去👀

    • @yunying8944
      @yunying8944 3 роки тому +1

      How did they get their Chinese last names?

    • @tacocatt6808
      @tacocatt6808 3 роки тому +28

      @@yunying8944 you can legally change your last name in many countries. I’m guessing since he and his siblings were all growing up in China, his parents maybe decided to use Chinese names for them to help them integrate.
      However, it could also be that that is his Chinese name, and his legal name could be his english name (incase you don’t know, many people will have both a Chinese name and an English name when they’re Chinese learning English or English speaker learning Chinese or going to countries to speak the other language. It’s common and convenient 👍)

    • @haxhali3547
      @haxhali3547 3 роки тому

      所以你们俩肯定讲川话了

  • @SamSam-jp9mx
    @SamSam-jp9mx 3 роки тому +232

    He is actually the whitest Asian that I've ever seen

    • @graciasvito8067
      @graciasvito8067 3 роки тому +19

      What do you expect from a Cauc-Asian huh
      *I know it's copied don't whoosh me lads*

    • @hyperplayability6290
      @hyperplayability6290 3 роки тому +4

      not as white as my friend at school xD

    • @MariaNI-yf1bz
      @MariaNI-yf1bz 3 роки тому

      Than you are uneducated about the matter. Lol@you

    • @MariaNI-yf1bz
      @MariaNI-yf1bz 3 роки тому

      Asia is a continent and there are people who are much much blonder and phenotypically 'more' caucasoid than him. You are uneducated

  • @miamyy4
    @miamyy4 3 роки тому +37

    i‘m from Sichuan too and his sichuanese is better than mine lol

  • @marlenedeleeuw5508
    @marlenedeleeuw5508 3 роки тому +1

    This is amazing. I wish I could have had this experience.

  • @pkerpylon2244
    @pkerpylon2244 3 роки тому +524

    When he switched from mandarin to English it surprised me lmao

  • @serenajasmine10
    @serenajasmine10 3 роки тому +342

    i’m more surprised at his american accent than him speaking mandarin/sichuanese

    • @emilt.m.6418
      @emilt.m.6418 3 роки тому +15

      honestly American accents are pretty hard to lose. I was born in Boston but my dad is Taiwanese and mom is Danish and we moved from the US when I was 5 to Taiwan. I attended public school there and learned mandarin and everything, moved to Denmark when i was 16 and attended an international school there. Still have my American accent despite having first generation immigrant parents. It should be easier for Jonathan since he does have actual American parents.

    • @GOREMAXXX
      @GOREMAXXX 3 роки тому +4

      well his parents are american, and they probably spoke english to him, and just picked up on their accent when he was young

  • @hokudadog7637
    @hokudadog7637 2 роки тому

    This guy is amazing!!!! Love his insight into the culture and language

  • @suzanne5971
    @suzanne5971 2 роки тому

    Fascinating interview! I really enjoyed it.

  • @chenchen9224
    @chenchen9224 3 роки тому +365

    I was a little bit skeptical at the beginning when he speaks mandarin, even though his mandarin is pretty good, but there is clearly some accent that I thought because of he is a foreigner. But the moment he speaks sichuanhua, I was like: damn this dude is definitely a "Chinese" xD

    • @bjb0808
      @bjb0808 3 роки тому +8

      That's so funny. Thanks, Chen Chen.

    • @TV-mn1zd
      @TV-mn1zd 3 роки тому +1

      True

    • @jamessmith_321
      @jamessmith_321 3 роки тому +5

      这哥们的普通话都是带西南口音的其实。。。。

    • @cynthiasrecommendations6004
      @cynthiasrecommendations6004 3 роки тому +6

      yes, so do I. While i heard he spoke Sichuan dialet. He is a really Chinese!!!

    • @LuxPsy
      @LuxPsy 3 роки тому +13

      I think his accent when speaking Mandarin is more like a southwestern accent 西南口音than an English accent. (I'm a native Chinese speaker and I have a southern accent.)

  • @mothatuck
    @mothatuck 3 роки тому +97

    Hahaha I taught him in school 😁 he was in my choir. Glad to see how well he’s done after graduating. His story is amazing and I can tell he’s going to make a significant impact in the world.

    • @bballerryday
      @bballerryday 3 роки тому +1

      Did you teach in China?

    • @TheBjameso
      @TheBjameso 3 роки тому

      Actually I taught Hannah Tucker how to teach this guest. I taught Donald Trump how to troll the universe. I taught your mom how to play trumpet.

    • @mothatuck
      @mothatuck 3 роки тому +1

      @Irish Lu Yep :) Still do

    • @mothatuck
      @mothatuck 3 роки тому +1

      @@bballerryday Yep :) going on 7 years now.

    • @mothatuck
      @mothatuck 3 роки тому

      @@TheBjameso hahahahahha

  • @getreadywithmemamma6973
    @getreadywithmemamma6973 3 роки тому

    This messed with my mind in a great way!! I’m half Thai and Half American. You guys are so great!

  • @YuanyuanLuo
    @YuanyuanLuo 2 роки тому +16

    His Chinese even has a Sichuanese accent. Love it! When he speaks Sichuanese, he sounds like my neighbor from Chengdu.

  • @soccerbreath
    @soccerbreath 3 роки тому +215

    haha I actually know Jonathan in real life, we went to the same college. I can definitely say, i had no idea he knew any Chinese or lived in China when we first met. But we were in the same China studies class and thats when I found out

    • @dezhiliu1687
      @dezhiliu1687 3 роки тому +1

      What’s his insta

    • @TheHailstorm77
      @TheHailstorm77 3 роки тому +11

      This guy can play a phone prank with a Chinese girl and when they meet, she will be stunned that he speaks fluent Chinese!

    • @jonathansims3283
      @jonathansims3283 3 роки тому +17

      @@dezhiliu1687 Jonathan_Sims47

    • @logansmith2771
      @logansmith2771 3 роки тому +7

      @@jonathansims3283 the man himself, pretty cool

    • @soccerbreath
      @soccerbreath 3 роки тому +2

      @@jonathansims3283 hahahah u boutta be famous bro

  • @Pacl-zn6il
    @Pacl-zn6il 3 роки тому +94

    I can relate to him sooo much.
    I lived in Mandeog Busan from the age of 2 to 22. So I speak 사투리 (satoori) which is the regional dialect spoken in the Busan region and I also speak 표준어 (pyojuneo) which is regular Korean. My family is from western Germany, so I speak the normal German (Hochdeutsch) and the regional dialect (Ruhrpott), which is located near Duisburg as well.
    I learned Englisch in an international school in Busan. I also speak some french and fluent Spanish, since I had to learn it for my job now.
    Being able to speak local accents is such a blessing and you also feel at home in two totally different cultures.
    You can get some funny looks from people sometimes, but that’s just amusing.
    For me, when I speak in a German dialect to a friend in a restaurant in Busan and then order in perfect satoori..... peoples faces are just so funny to watch.
    The same is in Germany, when going to a Korean restaurant and feeling at home, because of the food.

    • @mahfuzkabir7812
      @mahfuzkabir7812 3 роки тому +1

      That’s amazing

    • @xChaRee
      @xChaRee 3 роки тому +3

      Damn that's so cool! I love satoori, a childhood friend of mine was from Andong, gyeongsanbuk-do so her satoori is a bit similar to that of Busan and her mom always spoke dialect with me while I was learning regular Korean but I can't say that I speak it well in any case. Also I was born and raised in Switzerland so I speak the swiss dialect of German and Standard German too!
      My mom is Thai, from the northeastern region (Isan) where the locals also speak a heavy dialect and I grew up with the dialect and standard Thai too, even though I can't read.
      Are you living in Germany now?

    • @Pacl-zn6il
      @Pacl-zn6il 3 роки тому +2

      @@xChaRee that’s awesome! Now I live in Germany right now and I work here as well. Normally I would visit my childhood friends in Busan every three to six months but since the pandemic, I haven’t been there since January..... but planning to go again soon.
      Do you like to visit Isan as often as possible?

    • @weareallgodschildrenlovefr9556
      @weareallgodschildrenlovefr9556 3 роки тому +1

      Multi language skills will bring you more happiness in life! 😂😂😂👍👍👍

    • @kaynesheenan
      @kaynesheenan 3 роки тому +2

      I fell in love with a Korean and now I'm studying the language. It's tricky but interesting

  • @binarioloco
    @binarioloco 2 роки тому

    Seriously... I have been in love with learning foreign languages for a very long time and this is the coolest video I have watched on the subject so far.
    Well done!
    Un grandissimo abbraccio dalla Toscana, caro.
    Muy obrigado! ;-)
    Chapeau. 😊

  • @jimmylopez433
    @jimmylopez433 2 роки тому

    Mandarin is so cool to me. I used to speak a small amount. I had studied for a few months before a school trip to China and I will never forget that experience. This makes me want to learn again. Great video. 👍🏾

  • @sichingchow3297
    @sichingchow3297 3 роки тому +379

    I am Chinese and Cantonese and I laughed so hard listening to a white guy speaking so well Sichuan dialect! Impressive! So great to see people of multilingual!

    • @scarlett9665
      @scarlett9665 2 роки тому +4

      I’m Chinese too. but I live in Russia, and I can speak Russian and Chinese. Nevertheless I think my native language is Russian

    • @kirihara147
      @kirihara147 2 роки тому

      @@scarlett9665 как так вышло что китаянка живёт в России? И из какого вы города, если не секрет?

    • @scarlett9665
      @scarlett9665 2 роки тому +1

      @@kirihara147 Я родилась в России, если вы имеете в виду из какого города в Китае, то не из какого, потому что я родилась в России. А родители из Шанхая.

    • @kirihara147
      @kirihara147 2 роки тому

      @@scarlett9665 из какого города в России я имел в виду) Вы же написали, что тут живёте. Хотя судя по тому что родители переехали, то скорее всего это Москва или Питер.

    • @konpeitosama
      @konpeitosama 2 роки тому +11

      How is it impressive when he literally grew up in China? He's been there since a toddler to adult. It's not impressive, it's normal if you grow up there.

  • @MarcleYTClashRoyale
    @MarcleYTClashRoyale 3 роки тому +462

    I first I thought his English was going to be bad but damn he can speak Chinese and English fluently.

    • @nordleuchter3041
      @nordleuchter3041 3 роки тому +15

      He has american parents...

    • @montexic5201
      @montexic5201 3 роки тому +6

      it’s damn impressive! I immigrated from China very early, and I still have the faintest Chinese accent. Ig my vocal cords never adapted. He’s amazing!

    • @zerothehero3426
      @zerothehero3426 3 роки тому +6

      My dad is egyptian and my mother italian. I can understand, type and read arabic but I'm not fluent in it despite having been there many times in my life, sometimes for months. Speaking arabic at home, having both parents speaking arabic, would definitely have helped a lot.

    • @teemun3979
      @teemun3979 3 роки тому +1

      @@nordleuchter3041 I know someone who is the oldest sibling in his large family who can't speak Spanish. Everyone older than him can speak Spanish and both of his parents are from Mexico. In fact that he rarely speaks English as well, given that he is more of a listener than a speaker, so that may play a role.

    • @kgao7294
      @kgao7294 3 роки тому

      @@montexic5201 true, even if they are ABCs talking in the radio, I can tell they are not white Americans just by their slight accent. I dont know why, maybe asians use the tongue differently

  • @e2rqey
    @e2rqey 3 роки тому +45

    Xiaoma reacts to him speaking like everyone else reacts to Xiaoma speaking

    • @Sasfoot
      @Sasfoot 2 роки тому +2

      Yeah, he totally marked out.

  • @user-bm3ed4ci8f
    @user-bm3ed4ci8f 3 роки тому +3

    wow, speechless 😊I can understand his dialect so fantastic

  • @conniehe2116
    @conniehe2116 3 роки тому +99

    HOLY his 成都话 (chengdu dialect) is totally legit! His dialect is even better than mine haha! (I’m also from Chengdu but I grew up in the west)

    • @iceomistar4302
      @iceomistar4302 3 роки тому +3

      I am in shame after hearing him speaking chengduhua

  • @mhmoran85
    @mhmoran85 3 роки тому +200

    I'm a US expat living in Beijing. My wife is Chinese and we are going to be having a kid soon and I really hope my kid turns out like this guy. He's brilliant.

    • @ibrahim-sj2cr
      @ibrahim-sj2cr 3 роки тому +2

      do you speak english at home?

    • @mhmoran85
      @mhmoran85 3 роки тому +14

      @@ibrahim-sj2cr English and Chinese

    • @mistereearly1141
      @mistereearly1141 3 роки тому +15

      Your kid will be healthy and super smart. What a great opportunity and bragging rights for a parent.

    • @jewelswang6461
      @jewelswang6461 3 роки тому +4

      Takes a lot of hard work, determination and will cost a bit money too.. when they grow up, they will thank you heaps tho

    • @mhmoran85
      @mhmoran85 3 роки тому

      @@mistereearly1141 Thank You!

  • @ernipang
    @ernipang 3 роки тому

    both you incredible !!

  • @MajorPayne175
    @MajorPayne175 2 роки тому

    Wow! What a breadth of life experience and fluidity between the languages.

  • @JourneyDestination
    @JourneyDestination 3 роки тому +208

    My wife is from Sichuan. She said his mandarin sounds like hers.

    • @juliakrystal19
      @juliakrystal19 3 роки тому +2

      This is awesome

    • @qiangxiong7476
      @qiangxiong7476 3 роки тому +9

      Totally agree.. I'm from Sichuan.. I am just unable to say the very standard mandarin, but always with a little dialect accent... 特别是前后鼻音太难了

    • @gangli6669
      @gangli6669 3 роки тому +3

      Im from Sichuan too. Think his mandarin is better than mine haha coz I didn’t speak mandarin till I went to college in Canada

  • @Petrock2
    @Petrock2 3 роки тому +242

    ah i love the "tsk's" he adds only when hes thinking and speaking in chinese.
    it's super cool how even unconscious speech filler/ habits get picked up on when speaking.
    8:05

    • @simgewassong5083
      @simgewassong5083 3 роки тому +7

      Is this a Chinese behavior?

    • @cillalaw1816
      @cillalaw1816 3 роки тому +1

      Zek hahaha

    • @onlyleon855
      @onlyleon855 3 роки тому +2

      in germany we do this do

    • @heyjohna
      @heyjohna 3 роки тому +7

      I noticed that but thought it might be a type of fricative. But I guess it’s the Chinese version of um. Thank you for explaining.

    • @jojo5544
      @jojo5544 2 роки тому +5

      @@simgewassong5083 us Sichuan ppl do that especially a lot lol

  • @kimslau
    @kimslau 2 роки тому

    A fascinating video. Thanks Xiaoma

  • @slowly5.436
    @slowly5.436 3 роки тому +13

    I expected when he spoke english for him to have more of a chinese accent still but both accents for all three are spot on

  • @monkeyslap
    @monkeyslap 3 роки тому +1487

    And this is why it's called CaucASIAN.

  • @dmanakell
    @dmanakell 3 роки тому +980

    When speaking Sichuanese with his siblings, I'm wondering if other white people tell them to speak English cuz they are in America

    • @BearingMySeoul
      @BearingMySeoul 3 роки тому +41

      HA!!! I want to know too!!!!

    • @bzbzbzbzbzbbbz94
      @bzbzbzbzbzbbbz94 3 роки тому +5

      HAHAHAHA

    • @AndresGarcia-hu8ij
      @AndresGarcia-hu8ij 3 роки тому +223

      Of course not. He's white. That "you're in America, speak English" is racism used against minorities. A white person speaking a language other than English would probably lead to one of those stupid "omgggg I'm 1/1000000th German on my mom's side I almost understood what you said!" discussions.

    • @naria2224
      @naria2224 3 роки тому +74

      @@AndresGarcia-hu8ij Not always actually, it often happens to almost anyone that it’s obvious their nationality is different. My mother was told that a ton of times and we came from a country in Europe and aren’t racially minority. And not only have we been told to speak English but also to go back to our country.

    • @DantalionNL1
      @DantalionNL1 3 роки тому +37

      @@AndresGarcia-hu8ij Thats so painfully true, and kinda same here in The Netherlands whenever for example dutch born kids speak turkish because thats how they speak from home allot would say "speak Dutch, because you're in The Netherlands" but whenever a white person would speak Turkish they're like "Wow thats so awesome, I'm actually 0.000012% russian "privet comerade"".
      It's pretty much in every country I guess.

  • @MadaoAU
    @MadaoAU 2 роки тому +2

    I have had very similar experience with Greek. There are too many dialects in Greek from modern Greek that you speak at school, so you would have to adjust your dialect and clear up your cadence when you spoke in class etc. Quite unique experience.

  • @topherno
    @topherno 3 роки тому

    Awesome video. Heart-warming ending too

  • @blizzle1
    @blizzle1 3 роки тому +120

    To explain this situation and why it’s unique. 1) there are many more Asian immigrants to the U.S. then the reverse. As he said, he was the first foreign person ever in his public school. 2) English is considered a global language so many people in China are learning English but not so much the other way around. As he mentions, a lot of international kids in Asian also end up going to international schools where English is spoken. 3) from an linguistic perspective, it’s just not that common to hear people speaking multiple languages without a notable accent. I’m an ABC (American born Chinese), and I can’t really speak mandarin. Even my friends that speak mandarin usually have notable American accents. I actually imagine that even though his parents are American, if he didn’t study in the US, his English would either be lacking some vocab or be slightly accented at times.

    • @TheZenytram
      @TheZenytram 3 роки тому +4

      he study in a internatinal high school, so he picked english vocabs there, plus speaking and hearing english with his parent at home, not suprise he is native good at both.

  • @TravisBandManAndy
    @TravisBandManAndy 3 роки тому +1091

    How do we know he's legit?
    When he pronounces "For" like "Fur".
    Midwestern Me: Yup he's a native.

    • @xiaoyuanhu6036
      @xiaoyuanhu6036 3 роки тому +37

      Wait that’s a Midwest thing?! I learned English from friends in the US (and I live in the Midwest) so I automatically assume all Americans pronounce for as fur lmao

    • @natetinker1602
      @natetinker1602 3 роки тому +32

      @@xiaoyuanhu6036 it’s not specifically Midwestern but Midwestern accent is kinda like an extremely American accent lol

    • @bjb0808
      @bjb0808 3 роки тому +16

      Yeah, it's simply American. I've lived out of the States so long my English has a mix of accents thrown in. People never know where I'm from. But when you're really babbling with others from your area, you do slip back into the local vernacular. You can take the girl out of Pittsburgh, but...

    • @TV-mn1zd
      @TV-mn1zd 3 роки тому +1

      Good to know

    • @Timothy-su9fj
      @Timothy-su9fj 3 роки тому +1

      My God, I wondered for a while how I always cannot speak this word well. I'm going to try to pronounce it this way, thanks haha .

  • @dannyhardesty3692
    @dannyhardesty3692 3 роки тому +2

    You mentioned you are studying Italian! Keep it up as it is an awesome language! Va bene! :)

  • @MrTraveller.
    @MrTraveller. 3 роки тому

    Very cool, been living abroad 15 years. That last 9 yrs here in a Taiwan 🇹🇼. Love speaking mandarin, Thai, French, English & limited Spanish + learning some basic Taiwanese greetings & other basics in other languages. The world is amazing. Thx u 4 the video

  • @Libraryladee28
    @Libraryladee28 3 роки тому +199

    I agree! What a gift your parents gave you to learn another language and dialect plus English. Your life has been expanded in so many ways! Loved hearing your story! Thanks for sharing!

  • @FervoYT
    @FervoYT 3 роки тому +37

    Here I am, a spanish native person reading english subtitles from two american guys speaking mandarine

  • @Matt-by3yd
    @Matt-by3yd 2 роки тому

    That’s so cool lol what an interesting video. Major props to that guy speaking about his life in such a coherent way too

  • @sveng5319
    @sveng5319 Рік тому

    Nice story! All the best for getting the best out of both worlds.

  • @JV-ys8fd
    @JV-ys8fd 3 роки тому +263

    His Mandarin is so clear, when he speaks English I feel like he's lying because there's no accent 😂

  • @ritchiesanford6125
    @ritchiesanford6125 3 роки тому +178

    I'm an American who grew up in Hong Kong, and yes I speak fluent Cantonese flawlessly.

    • @filmhk177
      @filmhk177 3 роки тому +9

      但你識唔識睇中文,寫中文

    • @bkcalvine
      @bkcalvine 3 роки тому +14

      All the Asian Americans are doing a slow clap for you.

    • @viuhn9621
      @viuhn9621 3 роки тому +10

      Being American, I doubt it’s actually flawless lol. Typical cockiness

    • @milanhrvat
      @milanhrvat 3 роки тому +5

      I lived in hong kong for 15 years. I do too. Can't read for crap but can speak like local people

    • @user-pc9rz2tl7l
      @user-pc9rz2tl7l 3 роки тому +25

      @@viuhn9621 why would it not be flawless if he was born and raised in Hong Kong? And how does you being american make any difference?

  • @Atreides217
    @Atreides217 3 роки тому +1

    This was sooooooo interesting!! What awesome parents to put him in public Chinese schools so he would better understand and love the Chinese people and culture!

  • @mikeeforma2281
    @mikeeforma2281 3 роки тому +1

    It was a great relief when both of them switched to English! I can say that for sure as Russian who has just started to learn Mandarin. 😅😉