Reading comments here made me realize the crow sound in Indonesian is literally the bird name too, thanks guys! 😂 Crow = gagak, and makes the “gak gak” sound, I never realized that! 🤣
Hahaha yeah only our fellow Southeast Asians would know the horror of hearing the gecko sound in the middle of the night 🦎😱 - Indonesian: tokek - Filipino: tuko - Vietnamese: tắc kè - Thai: ตุ๊กแก (tukkae) - Khmer: តឹកកែ (tekkae) - Myanmar: တောက်တဲ့ (tauktai) So yes, the onomatopoeia is basically the same all over the Southeast Asian region! 🙌
@@xolotlmexihcah4671tokay gecko or the average common house gecko? Because if it's the latter we just kinda ignore them. Unless they start to do something that annoyed people. Like when they're walking on the dining table or falling and landing on someone. If it's the first one, people would have more reaction to it since they are rarely found in houses (especially in big cities). Some would hunt them to sell them as pets or medicine.
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 There's a expression in Indonesian called counting gecko (tokek) which basically if you can't make up your mind, just rely on gecko. For instance, you are not sure if you want to go somewhere, then when you hear gecko, just say go, the next gecko sound, say no, then the next one go and so on until the gecko stop sounding. When it stop and you end up with go, then you go, if stop with no, then you won't go. Of course I doubt if anybody really do that but the expression of counting gecko refer to the above and it's pretty much still be used in daily conversations.
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 Indonesia is home to hundreds of cultures, each with its own unique myths and beliefs about the gecko. The Javanese, the largest ethnic group in the country, have an intricate divination system based on the number of croaks a gecko makes at a given time. For example: - Five croaks, called ꦱꦁꦒꦶꦁꦱꦸꦏ, are considered a sign of good fortune. - Six croaks, known as ꦱꦼꦁꦏꦭꦒꦼꦫꦶꦁ, indicate impending sickness or hardships.
As for the indonesian kids' song about horse which Genesia mentioned, the lyric is: _Pada hari minggu ku turut ayah ke kota_ ("at sunday i followed my dad to the city" - sounds familiar, eh?) _Naik delman istimewa ku duduk di muka_ ("using special Delman, i sit on the front" - Delman is an indonesian-style horse carriage, with a roof but with open sides) _Ku duduk di samping pak kusir yang sedang bekerja_ ("i sit besides the rider who's working") _Mengendali kuda supaya baik jalannya_ ("to ride the horse so it walks smoothly") _tukitakituk kitak kituk kitak kituk_ _tukitakituk kitak suara sepatu kuda_ ("tukitakituk kitak its the sound of the hooves")
@@0.25kimchi Thanks Jessica , yes you were particularly good at the animal impressions , in fact you led the way ! , I agree with what was said on the video about the Japanese lady though , everything she says and does is just so cute , you cannot help loving her !.
4:43 she is correct, I have a friend from Brazil and his dog doesn’t understand when I say “come here”, but she understands when I say “vem ca” cuz that’s how you say “come here” in Portuguese
regarding the question on 4:47, apparently yes, certain animals do have dialects of the same sounds on different regions. certain pets would also mimic the sound humans use to respond to them
In the realization that I'm older than dirt, and this may not apply to everyone, but did everybody have the child's toy as a kid that is wheel-shaped and has pictures of animals? You might put the setting on a cow, pull the string, and it says, "The cow goes moo." I suppose those would all have to be different around the world depending on where they are being sold. Yeah, you spend a couple of years mastering that toy, and by random chance your parents notice you playing with it, and say to each other, "Ya know, I think he's one of ours, he doesn't look like the neighbor's kid. We should probably send him to kindergarten next chance we get." That toy was pretty much a substitute for pre-school in the USA back in the day.
The sound in Portuguese (at least the Brazilian one) is: Dog: au au! Cat: miau! Pig: oinc oinc! Cow: muuuuu! Donkey/horse: irrá! (similar to the American), pocotó! (when they're riding) Rooster: cocoricó! (incredibly, kinda similar to the Japanese one) Wolf: auuuuuuu! Duck: quá quá! Snake: sssssss... Crow: AH AH! (with a VERY open A, almost a scream)
In Italy: Dog-> _woof woof_ or _bau bau_ Cat-> _miao_ Pig-> _oink oink_ Cow-> _muuuuuu_ Horse/Donkey-> _similar to English_ Roaster _chicchiricchiiii_ Wolf _auuuuuuuuu_ Duck _qua qua_ or _quack quack_ Snake _sssssssssss_ Crow _cra cra_ and it's also for the frog
This is funny to me, because I've actually done this. I went to an international University. It was me (American), Russian, Norwegian, and Japanese all laughing at each other's interpretation of animal noises.
It's funny when they have sounds of what an animal hitting a certain surface, not what comes through their throats.It may be very connected with a sound, like the clappering of hooves, but still, it's funny.
tokek is just straight up called toke gecko in english too, their sound is basically the closes thing we have to pokemons sounding their names. also tokek sounds are like deeply accented, like Tok--- KEK with an inflection on the kek part. also also, fun fact: in some places in indonesia the sound tokek makes has a urban legend in that real tokek would make the sound in even amount of times like 2-4-6 times, while odd amount of tokek sound 3-5-7 is believed to be either a fake tokek sound made by a ghost or a sign a ghost is near. so it would be pretty common to see indonesians counting the tokek sounds while outside just for fun or because they are scared
Listen to Ludmila Ferber, Nivea Soares, Vineyard Worship and Heloísa Rosa songs, and remember a thing: Jesus Christ loves you and wants you to live in abundance! Keep on fighting! 🙏🏻🙌🏻
See? Genesia, Violin, and Denny are good representatives for Indonesia because they can communicate their thoughts in English well. Your 'teaching Indonesian' video is a wasted opportunity. It could have been much more informative, but the rep, Elita, couldn't explain her thoughts and made quite a few important grammatical mistakes when translating some critical parts. She couldn't deliver the basics coherently, let alone the nuances. Please don't invite her again.
This is unnecessarily harsh. Just because Genesia, Violin, and Denny are better at English doesn’t necessarily mean they are better representatives for Indonesia. Being a good representative involves more than just language skills; it’s about embodying our culture, values, and experiences. If anything, Elita is a more accurate representation of the level of English proficiency of most Indonesians. She tried her best in expressing herself and people understood her, that’s all that matters. This kind of gatekeeping and elitist behavior is unproductive and unfair. We should celebrate and support all who represent our country, recognizing that their unique perspectives and experiences add value to our global image. We should all move beyond superficial judgments and appreciate the full spectrum of what it means to represent Indonesia.
elita is the accurate representation of the majority of indonesians when speaking english. maybe she lacks vocabs, but she gets her points across. she’s not trained in teaching indonesian language anyway, so she doesn’t have to speak “perfect english”.
@@kilanspeaks What are you talking about? It should never be that complicated. Can she communicate what she is supposed to as a COUNTRY REPRESENTATIVE, yes or no? Another question, in that 'learning Indonesian' video, did you not feel a tiny bit of secondhand embarrassment or the urge to take over and explain it yourself? For instance, she translated "sudah makan" to "have been eating." That's just one example of some amateurish but important mistakes that strip the phrase of its actual meaning. She didn't explain much either in general because clearly she couldn't. I am sorry, but if she's supposed to be my representative as an Indonesian, I don't feel represented.
Do you guys have any other adjectives other than shocked! Literally most videos have titled 'shocked' in the video! Do you not use or know other words?
I wish the foreign language onomatopoeia was also transliterated in English so we could see the difference. Also, the American girl didn’t get the assignment for the first 1/2 of the video.
the murican girl confuse between trying to imitate the animal actual sounds and how language using words depicting the sounds .... like the sound of a pig she try to make the pig sounds instead of saying oink oink
Reading comments here made me realize the crow sound in Indonesian is literally the bird name too, thanks guys! 😂
Crow = gagak, and makes the “gak gak” sound, I never realized that! 🤣
coba kau sebut juga bunyi kucing berantem gen
Gapjil
Actually, crows also do a "krawwwww" sound.
Hi Gene , thanks for commenting , it is great to see and hear you in the videos .
Makanya jangan kelamaan di luar negeri lupa bahasa sendiri
"Why is she so talented in this?"
"I'm a musician!" 🤣
❤❤❤
@@0.25kimchi Do u have instagram ?
in indonesia we also used "puss puss" or "meng meng" for a cat and used "petok petok" for chicken :D
Nice to see Genesia here.
Crow = Gagak is Gak Gak Gak that's where Gagak's name came from
Gak gak 3000
kadang kak pekak juga
Hahaha yeah only our fellow Southeast Asians would know the horror of hearing the gecko sound in the middle of the night 🦎😱
- Indonesian: tokek
- Filipino: tuko
- Vietnamese: tắc kè
- Thai: ตุ๊กแก (tukkae)
- Khmer: តឹកកែ (tekkae)
- Myanmar: တောက်တဲ့ (tauktai)
So yes, the onomatopoeia is basically the same all over the Southeast Asian region! 🙌
HAHA TRUE.
In my country there's a myth, if the tokek sounds 7th time there would be a ghost over there😢
@@xolotlmexihcah4671tokay gecko or the average common house gecko? Because if it's the latter we just kinda ignore them. Unless they start to do something that annoyed people. Like when they're walking on the dining table or falling and landing on someone. If it's the first one, people would have more reaction to it since they are rarely found in houses (especially in big cities). Some would hunt them to sell them as pets or medicine.
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 There's a expression in Indonesian called counting gecko (tokek) which basically if you can't make up your mind, just rely on gecko. For instance, you are not sure if you want to go somewhere, then when you hear gecko, just say go, the next gecko sound, say no, then the next one go and so on until the gecko stop sounding. When it stop and you end up with go, then you go, if stop with no, then you won't go. Of course I doubt if anybody really do that but the expression of counting gecko refer to the above and it's pretty much still be used in daily conversations.
i dont know the gecko sound :D
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 Indonesia is home to hundreds of cultures, each with its own unique myths and beliefs about the gecko.
The Javanese, the largest ethnic group in the country, have an intricate divination system based on the number of croaks a gecko makes at a given time. For example:
- Five croaks, called ꦱꦁꦒꦶꦁꦱꦸꦏ, are considered a sign of good fortune.
- Six croaks, known as ꦱꦼꦁꦏꦭꦒꦼꦫꦶꦁ, indicate impending sickness or hardships.
That first "moo" attempt made me LOL 😂
I was mooved 🐮
Love this team, the good one👍
thank you!
In Mexico the sound of the rooster is just like in Germany: kikiriki, so funny!
Omg that’s true! Thanks for reminding me!!!
"cocorico" in french lol
imo "kikiriki" is the most accurate
I remember meme Idol said "your dog speak Chinese" 🤣
The name of the crow in Indonesian is literally the sound it makes Genesia 😂
Yeah "gagak" lol😂
As for the indonesian kids' song about horse which Genesia mentioned, the lyric is:
_Pada hari minggu ku turut ayah ke kota_ ("at sunday i followed my dad to the city" - sounds familiar, eh?)
_Naik delman istimewa ku duduk di muka_ ("using special Delman, i sit on the front" - Delman is an indonesian-style horse carriage, with a roof but with open sides)
_Ku duduk di samping pak kusir yang sedang bekerja_ ("i sit besides the rider who's working")
_Mengendali kuda supaya baik jalannya_ ("to ride the horse so it walks smoothly")
_tukitakituk kitak kituk kitak kituk_
_tukitakituk kitak suara sepatu kuda_ ("tukitakituk kitak its the sound of the hooves")
Really great video , thank you ladies , it was very funny at times .
We're so glad you enjoyed!
@@0.25kimchi Thanks Jessica , yes you were particularly good at the animal impressions , in fact you led the way ! , I agree with what was said on the video about the Japanese lady though , everything she says and does is just so cute , you cannot help loving her !.
Jessica should be a voice actress! She’s talented
Hehe thank you ❤
I was reminded of the previous animal video with Jane making the animal sounds 😂
Also of Eric Nam saying “Your dog speaks CHINESE????” 😆
4:43 she is correct, I have a friend from Brazil and his dog doesn’t understand when I say “come here”, but she understands when I say “vem ca” cuz that’s how you say “come here” in Portuguese
Animal sounds always fun
regarding the question on 4:47, apparently yes, certain animals do have dialects of the same sounds on different regions. certain pets would also mimic the sound humans use to respond to them
In the realization that I'm older than dirt, and this may not apply to everyone, but did everybody have the child's toy as a kid that is wheel-shaped and has pictures of animals? You might put the setting on a cow, pull the string, and it says, "The cow goes moo." I suppose those would all have to be different around the world depending on where they are being sold.
Yeah, you spend a couple of years mastering that toy, and by random chance your parents notice you playing with it, and say to each other, "Ya know, I think he's one of ours, he doesn't look like the neighbor's kid. We should probably send him to kindergarten next chance we get."
That toy was pretty much a substitute for pre-school in the USA back in the day.
I remember those toys 😂
seriously girls... you must do these often ...i am still laughing and the video ended an hour ago...omg ...all of u sound so cute
Yg gue tau suara burung "gagak" di indonesia itu diambil dari ujung namanya yaitu "gak gak" itu menurut gue sih, cmiiw.
Why do I feel like I am watching arrested development trying to do the chicken dance hahahaha😂😂😂
German roosters speak a dialect of Spanish? I had no idea!
Please do Portuguese & Spanish vs Russian & Polish
I think it would be so interesting to see different languages comparison
They should show the feets instead of talking so much bullsheet
yup, the topic is fun but the combinatiom of these ladies is I think also the cutest!
The part about the Dog cafe reminded me of the Meme from Eric Nam "Your Dog speaks chinese?! " xD
In Indonesia, the horses are apparently the cowboys. Do they ride humans too?
Yes, and they pay taxes as well.
The sound in Portuguese (at least the Brazilian one) is:
Dog: au au!
Cat: miau!
Pig: oinc oinc!
Cow: muuuuu!
Donkey/horse: irrá! (similar to the American), pocotó! (when they're riding)
Rooster: cocoricó! (incredibly, kinda similar to the Japanese one)
Wolf: auuuuuuu!
Duck: quá quá!
Snake: sssssss...
Crow: AH AH! (with a VERY open A, almost a scream)
I'm more shocked by the American capability of imitating animal sound. 😂
I'm happy to have surprised you :D
In Brazil we have an animal called Arara because it says arara every time it makes a sound
Japan selalu membuatku tertawa😂 lucu 😊
the german "kekekekek" is legit.. my cat do it all the time 😅
aww the japanese sounds were all so cute bless. ☺
10 year people be like 'WTF it doesn't sound like it all".. now "aww so cute"..
7:17
Stewie Griffin: Where? Where does the rooster say that?
I seen Tom and Jerry, they pronounce Bowl-Wow for dog hahahahahaha
there were up to 17k views and up to 900 likes, I’m sure this will become a very popular video❤
We do have an Indonesian for like umm the horse sound it's really good
Interesting 😊😊😊
pigs don't only snort. the sound can be made by breathing in throug the mouth using vocal fry and forming oi/woi(n) sounds of
God I love the Japanese Girl I’d ask her to marry me right away she has such an super cute voice I’m melting 🫠
In Italy:
Dog-> _woof woof_ or _bau bau_
Cat-> _miao_
Pig-> _oink oink_
Cow-> _muuuuuu_
Horse/Donkey-> _similar to English_
Roaster _chicchiricchiiii_
Wolf _auuuuuuuuu_
Duck _qua qua_ or _quack quack_
Snake _sssssssssss_
Crow _cra cra_ and it's also for the frog
This is funny to me, because I've actually done this. I went to an international University. It was me (American), Russian, Norwegian, and Japanese all laughing at each other's interpretation of animal noises.
Crows in Anime flying by: Aho Aho Aho ka...🤣🤣🤣
please invite genesia more!
Why I suddenly remember meme "your dog speak Chinese?" when they are talking about animal language 🤣
It's funny when they have sounds of what an animal hitting a certain surface, not what comes through their throats.It may be very connected with a sound, like the clappering of hooves, but still, it's funny.
tokek is just straight up called toke gecko in english too, their sound is basically the closes thing we have to pokemons sounding their names. also tokek sounds are like deeply accented, like Tok--- KEK with an inflection on the kek part.
also also, fun fact: in some places in indonesia the sound tokek makes has a urban legend in that real tokek would make the sound in even amount of times like 2-4-6 times, while odd amount of tokek sound 3-5-7 is believed to be either a fake tokek sound made by a ghost or a sign a ghost is near. so it would be pretty common to see indonesians counting the tokek sounds while outside just for fun or because they are scared
Me either today i was shocked of another drive exam fail. One of many other fails in my life. I am really depressed and don't know what to say
Listen to Ludmila Ferber, Nivea Soares, Vineyard Worship and Heloísa Rosa songs, and remember a thing: Jesus Christ loves you and wants you to live in abundance! Keep on fighting! 🙏🏻🙌🏻
@@lus1992 tired and exhausted
Jejak ae lah,..
im an indonesia omg we litary say that in indonesia!
やっぱ日本語って他の国とは違うオノマトペなんじゃなって思った笑
Sounds like it's an American kid thing where we learn to mimic animals before we can read or speak.
You should do one on Maori and Polynesian people ❤❤❤
5:28 Here's a bit from the old Polish comedy called "Rejs" ("The Cruise", 1970): ua-cam.com/video/15YKQtPQT3Y/v-deo.html Patataj, patataj! IHAAAA!
eehh ada Genesia 😳😳
Apaan genesia?
@@padlizilikram1186 nama orang
You should put the flag of Animal Kingdom beside US flag on Jessica's name😂
Japanese sound is like a cute anime female character all the time
Haha mantap bahasa Indonesia
Genesia, wkwkwk 🦆 😅😂
❤💛🧡💚💙مرسی
See? Genesia, Violin, and Denny are good representatives for Indonesia because they can communicate their thoughts in English well. Your 'teaching Indonesian' video is a wasted opportunity. It could have been much more informative, but the rep, Elita, couldn't explain her thoughts and made quite a few important grammatical mistakes when translating some critical parts. She couldn't deliver the basics coherently, let alone the nuances. Please don't invite her again.
I agree with you
This is unnecessarily harsh. Just because Genesia, Violin, and Denny are better at English doesn’t necessarily mean they are better representatives for Indonesia.
Being a good representative involves more than just language skills; it’s about embodying our culture, values, and experiences. If anything, Elita is a more accurate representation of the level of English proficiency of most Indonesians. She tried her best in expressing herself and people understood her, that’s all that matters.
This kind of gatekeeping and elitist behavior is unproductive and unfair. We should celebrate and support all who represent our country, recognizing that their unique perspectives and experiences add value to our global image. We should all move beyond superficial judgments and appreciate the full spectrum of what it means to represent Indonesia.
elita is the accurate representation of the majority of indonesians when speaking english. maybe she lacks vocabs, but she gets her points across. she’s not trained in teaching indonesian language anyway, so she doesn’t have to speak “perfect english”.
yang beginian aja di ributin, malu sama negara lain woy
@@kilanspeaks What are you talking about? It should never be that complicated. Can she communicate what she is supposed to as a COUNTRY REPRESENTATIVE, yes or no? Another question, in that 'learning Indonesian' video, did you not feel a tiny bit of secondhand embarrassment or the urge to take over and explain it yourself? For instance, she translated "sudah makan" to "have been eating." That's just one example of some amateurish but important mistakes that strip the phrase of its actual meaning. She didn't explain much either in general because clearly she couldn't. I am sorry, but if she's supposed to be my representative as an Indonesian, I don't feel represented.
Cow in Indonesia is NGAHHHH, and Hen is Petok petok😁
Some says she's still shocked
Japan is so cute
yes, so natural
Old macdonald had a farm hiyaa hiyaaa yoooo
I'm actually throw my phone on the snake part cuz it's so scary
It would’ve been nice to have bring a Brazilian to this video because we have some funny sounds for animals 😅
Now I know what kikeriki means
crow in indonesia sounds like ngaaakk ngaaakk ngaaak
Tge crow sound in Indonesian I think it's Koak...koak...
if animalas are speaking different languages? good question and i think yes :)
you should get there a slavic girl :D
indonesian looks much similar xD
@blazejflorkiewicz9698 looks, or sounds?
😂😂😂😘👏👏👏🥂🥂🥂
Di indonesia kucing berantem suara orang nangis..
Kalo kuda ngiek..
Ad ayam ketawa mbak..
Am I the only one who have seen that Indonesian girl from somewhere?
Ayam kokokpetok
Sapi mooo
Gagak koak koak / kwak kwak
indonesian crow 'ngak ngak' or 'gak gak'
🦆: awokawokawok...
oh mungkin ayam betina petok petok ya atau kokopetok
😂😂
Do you guys have any other adjectives other than shocked! Literally most videos have titled 'shocked' in the video! Do you not use or know other words?
1:53
Hello I'm from Indonesia 🇮🇩, Aku suka kucing = I like cats
Aku tidak suka anjing = I don't like dogs
But...what does the fox say?
*I think nobody know the pronunciation of ant.*
😂
he looks like Dami
Japanese is the most original
If you watching Demik Animal, life gona be changes 😎
Sexy Crow 😂😂😂
Entah kenapa jepang itu selalu punya gesture untuk sesuatu..
Turkish could be funny here but I don't know what a gecko is, if lizards are meant, they don't make a sound in our country.
I wish the foreign language onomatopoeia was also transliterated in English so we could see the difference. Also, the American girl didn’t get the assignment for the first 1/2 of the video.
What does the fox say?
dingdingdingdingdingdingdingdingdingdingdingding🤣🤣
Tokek is gecko
bau bau mogojyaannn
❤️🇺🇲🇰🇷🇨🇳🇯🇵🇩🇪 From Indonesian🇮🇩
❤
Why is American always shocked 🙂
American dog sound super? It is just weird instead... Oink in English is just stupid for a pig sound, how that can be German as well is a big mystery!
the murican girl confuse between trying to imitate the animal actual sounds and how language using words depicting the sounds .... like the sound of a pig she try to make the pig sounds instead of saying oink oink
She did say oink oink. She used both.
Oh American, keep on being shocked! 🙂
2nd