Country Name Differences!! (US, UK, Germany, France, Spain)

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  • Опубліковано 24 вер 2022
  • Hi World Friends 🌏!
    Show us your ❤ with Subscribe, Like👍 & Comment, and Share!
    🇬🇧 Lauren
    / lauren_ade
    / laurenade
    🇩🇪 Alice
    / alicerosegrd
    🇺🇸 Shannon
    / shannon.harperrr
    🇫🇷 Dia
    / clem.dbn
    🇪🇸 Claudia
    / westclau
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @Noah_ol11
    @Noah_ol11 Рік тому +944

    Their reaction when Shannon said "Germany has the best food" , hilarious 😂

    • @joebarrera334
      @joebarrera334 Рік тому +216

      Germany is the undisputed bread champion of Europe.

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Рік тому +53

      True, I have really loved it

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +54

      @@joebarrera334 We French has some really good bread as well. Our pâtisserie is our highlight
      The German ones has a large various bread

    • @sbeyer17
      @sbeyer17 Рік тому +34

      Yeah sausages and Döner are beneath bread probably the best

    • @intrametaarchi1015
      @intrametaarchi1015 Рік тому +20

      if they were visiting Michellin restaurants, then it might be true. BTW, in one US 5 star hotel, the chief cook was German from Germany. And their restaurant was rated with 5 diamonds.

  • @kevinbertet3220
    @kevinbertet3220 Рік тому +481

    Okay, I need to explain, sorry for the grammar lesson:
    In French, all countries ending with an E (apart from a few exceptions: le Mexique, le Cambodge, le Zimbabwe, le Mozambique, le Belize, le Sao Tomé-et-Principe) are feminine. So, la France, l'Allemagne, l'Espagne are all feminine as they end with an E.
    The reason why we would say "MON Allemagne" or "MON Espagne" can be explained by the fact that these countries start with a vowel sound, so we have to use a masculine possessive adjective before the name of the feminine country in this case. Une amie = Mon amie.
    Finally, all countries ending with another letter other than E are masculine (Ex: Le Royaume-Uni, le Liban, etc).
    Enjoy the free lesson! :P

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +22

      I hate our French grammar. Thanks for the explanation. 👍👌

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Рік тому +6

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 mais t’es français toé🤨

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +8

      @@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 hehehe ouais Je suis Français 😁

    • @chitlitlah
      @chitlitlah Рік тому +38

      Typical French... "Words that end with e are feminine, except for a huge list of exceptions that require a lot of memorization. It's more of a suggestion than a rule, really. You know what, just memorize the gender of every word."

    • @Ssandayo
      @Ssandayo Рік тому +4

      What about the country end without vowel like Taiwan, Japan, Vietnam? They still have a gender?

  • @zeskunk
    @zeskunk Рік тому +26

    "Suede shoes" is coming from the french word Suède (Sweden in french). Originally used to name the leather produced in Sweden

  • @henri_ol
    @henri_ol Рік тому +191

    Even though i've never been there , it's kind of "easy" pass through borders in Spain , France and Germany , cause if you go to Spain and then you can go France and then Germany in this sequence 🇪🇦->🇨🇵->🇩🇪

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +18

      Our country France is bordered by Seven European countries and 2 Microstates
      Spain 🇪🇸, Italy 🇮🇹, Switzerland 🇨🇭, Germany 🇩🇪, Luxembourg 🇱🇺, Belgium 🇧🇪 and our Historic Rival the UK 🇬🇧
      But aslo the microstates such as
      Andorra 🇦🇩 and Monaco 🇲🇨
      Since I'm holding a French Passport. I can easily travel to other European countries without Visa
      And that's really awesome.

    • @sbeyer17
      @sbeyer17 Рік тому +4

      It's cool how our borders are nowadays.
      I can like walk an hour and am in france.

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +4

      @@sbeyer17 There's no custom between European borders You can freely travel in Europe in the Schengen Area
      Especially the Western of Europe

    • @Skyl3t0n
      @Skyl3t0n Рік тому +3

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 I didn't know Britain is counted as a border country. You know it's an island

    • @h-Qalziel
      @h-Qalziel Рік тому +5

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 Technically, the historic rival of France was England. France and Scotland were friends and had a treaty called the Auld Alliance/ La Vieille Alliance due to their shared rival with England. Even though Scotland has now joined England in a union (along with Wales and Northern Ireland), I still like to think that France and Scotland are friends!

  • @kranmaster
    @kranmaster Рік тому +39

    I lived in Germany for two years, and the food really is fantastic. I think one big difference between Germany and the European nations that are renowned for food is in presentation. In Germany, for the most part, presentation doesn't really seem to factor in much. It's mainly about flavour. Your dinner plate will not look beautiful, but it will taste great.

    • @yourmum69_420
      @yourmum69_420 9 місяців тому +2

      honestly I feel the same way about British food, which is also underrated

  • @henri_ol
    @henri_ol Рік тому +319

    When Shannon🇺🇸 said "Germany food🇩🇪" the reaction of Claudia🇪🇦 was relatable , especially when she said to Dia 🇨🇵 to leave with her , once Dia is from France 🇨🇵 😂😂

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +8

      "Dia" is not really a French name 😆
      Mine is 🟦⬜🟥
      By the way, France is she

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Рік тому +3

      True 👍👍👍

    • @queentar-miriel5779
      @queentar-miriel5779 Рік тому +8

      Hamburger is german and it is nice but too big for me

    • @VascarVanVamp
      @VascarVanVamp Рік тому +24

      Germany has good food. The problem is that many people - including Germans - only know the stereotypical food. Bread, potatoes, sausage, sour leg, etc. If you want to eat well in Germany, you should try the regional home cooking. It is not without reason that it is restaurants that offer home cooking that have the most Michelin stars.

    • @beageler
      @beageler Рік тому +2

      @@VascarVanVamp As if bread, potatoes and the other stereotypical foods are bad. You have to remember that we see good bread as totally normal while people in other countries barely know it.

  • @dgstranz
    @dgstranz Рік тому +38

    For Spanish-speakers learning French, the country gender thing should be easy. If in Spanish it ends with an unaccented A, in French it will usually end with an unaccented E and be feminine, otherwise it will usually be masculine.
    And in Spanish countries also have a gender, but we usually don't mark it as much. For example, we may use an adjective to describe the country, and the adjective will have to agree with the noun (in this case the country's name) in gender and number. So we can say México lindo, Japón misterioso, China milenaria, España seca, and so on.

    • @JP-en7cc
      @JP-en7cc Рік тому +1

      In Spanish we use the article with countries wich don't have a name per se, but rather a combination of diferent words. THE United States, THE United Kingdmon, THE Low Countries (Netherlands), etc

    • @tinalettieri
      @tinalettieri 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, it is. I knew Italian and French when I started Spanish in university. Level 1 was too basic with its emphasis on grammar so I asked the dept head, if I could go right into level 2 and she let me.

  • @SophineSophont
    @SophineSophont Рік тому +446

    They aren't called Romance languages because of 'love' but because they're from Latin, the language of the Romans. "Love languages" sounds silly.

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +40

      It's called Romance Language based and derived from Latin.
      Like you said the language of the Romans
      🇵🇹🇪🇸🇨🇵🇮🇹🇷🇴

    • @GeorgeVenturi
      @GeorgeVenturi Рік тому +40

      But Roma spelling it backwards is Amor❤ which is love

    • @papaspacenas
      @papaspacenas Рік тому +10

      In French , Roman is the original word. It's related to Antiquity in architecture and vulgar Latin. From Roma

    • @barawen_who
      @barawen_who Рік тому +4

      @@papaspacenas In Spanish it is "Romano/Romana", but "Romance" is only for latin languages

    • @Asher-Tzvi
      @Asher-Tzvi Рік тому +7

      @@GeorgeVenturi Just a coincidence. The original Latin word for love is Amo, Amare, Amavi, Amatus, not Amor.

  • @msmkp01
    @msmkp01 Рік тому +17

    I don’t know if the European girls picked up on it but the American girl was on fire with the accents! Both American and the sly reference to Aussie accent at the end

  • @jennyhammond9261
    @jennyhammond9261 Рік тому +18

    A lot of places in Spain use the "th" for "z", "ce", and "ci". For "s" it's still "s", although it's not quite the same "s". People mistakenly believe that they swap all "s" sounds out for "th".

    • @laughingvampire7555
      @laughingvampire7555 Рік тому +3

      but the S in Latin American Spanish and European Spanish is different, I'm Mexican and to me they sound different, like the Spaniards pronounce it with a little sh in it

    • @jennyhammond9261
      @jennyhammond9261 Рік тому +10

      @@laughingvampire7555 That's why I said it's slightly different. My point was that the S in Spain doesn't equal TH, the ce, ci, and z do.

    • @robert111k
      @robert111k Рік тому +7

      @@jennyhammond9261, in fact our way to pronouce those consonants allows us not to make so many mistakes in the spelling. Latinamericans in general, even those with a degree, normally misspell lots of words because for them writing down "z", "s" an "c" is a kind of lottery.

    • @jennyhammond9261
      @jennyhammond9261 Рік тому

      @@robert111k very true

  • @eimisavageofficial9196
    @eimisavageofficial9196 Рік тому +4

    Thanks to this channel for educating us about each other better that we don't see on mainstream medias,...keep it up

  • @weekmix
    @weekmix Рік тому +3

    *Same*
    (most) Spaniards: sa, se, si, so, su, ca, co cu -> /sa/ /se/ /si/ /so/ /su/ /ka/ /ko/ /ku/
    Latin Americans: sa, se, si, so, su, ca, co, cu -> /sa/ /se/ /si/ /so/ /su/ /ka/ /ko/ /ku/
    *Different*
    (most) Spaniards: za, ze, zi, zo, zu, ce, ci -> /θa/ /θe/ /θi/ /θo/ /θu/ /θe/ /θi/
    Latin Americans: za, ze, zi, zo, zu, ce, ci -> /sa/ /se/ /si/ /so/ /su/ /se/ /si/
    P.S. In certain areas of Southern Spain (Canary Islands, part of Andalusia) people pronounce Z/C as Latin Americans do. In some localized areas of Andalusia as well, some pronounce both S and Z like /θ/, but this is generally perceived as uneducated or very rural.
    *example:* en Suecia tomé cerveza
    (most) Spaniards: /en 'sweθja to'me θer'beθa/
    Latin Americans, Canarians, many Andalusians: /en 'swesja to'me ser'besa/
    Some Andalusians: /en 'θweθja to'me θer'beθa/

  • @bre_me
    @bre_me Рік тому +62

    In Spain Spanish, only the “z” is pronounced like a “th” as well as the “c” only when followed by an “e” or an “i.” A lot of Americans have ignorant Spanish teachers teaching them wrongly about how Spaniards pronounce these words. I had one of those teachers, who I had to correct.

    • @martaotita
      @martaotita Рік тому +17

      I used to be spanish teacher and im from Spain, my boss in a school was Argentinian and she was saying actually that we in Spain say Ezpaña to the students. Had to correct her there and was a bit embarrassing for myself because then she was telling me it was a joke ... wtf why you would confuse students like this

    • @bre_me
      @bre_me Рік тому +14

      ​@@martaotita That's embarrassing. And I guarantee she wasn't joking, she was just trying to cover up her mistake. Lol...

    • @rojimyayang5857
      @rojimyayang5857 Рік тому +3

      Many Latinamericans should learn the spanish language laws, before teaching the language. Because many dont understand the difference between c, z and s when is spoken or writen. A "s" is always a "s" in Spain, México, colombia or ecuatorial Guinea spanish. Nothing to do with z or c sounds.
      I hate it when a tourist says "Grathiath", or buenoth diath. Its pronounced as "Grathias" and "Buenos días", in Spain and Grasias in latinamerica. Too much zzz sounds. If your spanish teacher says in Spain we say Ethpaña, its time to change that teacher, Bro.

    • @bre_me
      @bre_me Рік тому +3

      @@rojimyayang5857 My Spanish teacher never taught that, but a substitute we did have was telling students that in Spain they say grathiath and Ethpaña. Thankfully I was there to correct him and the class. I can't imagine how many teachers around the USA are teaching their students that about Spain Spanish, as if Americans didn't have enough confusion about Spain

    • @jordinagel1184
      @jordinagel1184 Рік тому +1

      @@bre_meabsolutely. It’s probably a case of “What? No, no, I was joking! Of course I was joking, who would ever make such a silly mistake, hahaha… *sweats in Spanish* “

  • @amomila3629
    @amomila3629 Рік тому +31

    Spain and Italy are the Best❤

  • @patrickschindler2583
    @patrickschindler2583 7 місяців тому +1

    a different perspective. Alemanni, were Germanic tribes in the southwest. In the north the Germanic peoples from this perspective derive the various names for Germany.

  • @pierreriviere9158
    @pierreriviere9158 Рік тому +2

    As a magnificent french guy i will answer that tricky question : in French "Allemagne" (Germany) is FEMININE not masculine.
    Actually it's true that it's a little bit confusing : because "Allemagne" starting with an "a" we have to use an "L" + apostrophy. With only this we cannot determine if the subject is feminine or masculine. But depending on sentence construction the feminine form reapper.
    For example :
    In 1939 Germany was at war with France. SHE invade France next summer.
    =>
    En 1939 l'Allemagne entra en guerre avec la France. ELLE (feminine here) l'envahie l'été suivant.
    BUT there another tricky part.
    In french it is grammaticaly correct to say "mon Allemagne" (my Germany). And "mon" is the masculinine form in french for "my". BUT because feminine form in french for "my" is "ma" it will be very ugly to say "ma Allemagne" (2 sounds "a" consecutively). It provoke what whe call an "élision" (breaking the flow of the sentence) then in this precise case even if the subject is feminine we use masculine form for "my". The rule still work if the word right after "my" start with any vowel.
    For example :
    My friend (here a girl) is sleeping at home tonight.
    =>
    MON amie (feminine form of ami) dort à la maison ce soir.
    Another example :
    My arthrosis hurts.
    =>
    MON arthrose (exclusively feminine) me fait mal.

  • @lategypt
    @lategypt Рік тому +2

    There is a rule actually for the countries in French. If it ends with an e, ex: France, so it's feminine --> La France, if it ends with s, so plural les --> Les Etats Unis, and for the rest it's masculine. Careful with some exceptions like "le Mexique". If it starts with vowel, then L' --> l'Allemagne, l'Iran etc ...

  • @manelsevilla7200
    @manelsevilla7200 Рік тому +29

    6:30 wrong!! 🤣 These are the 'z' (before any vowel) and 'c' (before "e" and "i"). We pronounce "España" like in Mexico, 's' sounds like an 's' in Spain too. She's a little bit confused.

    • @luisfernandez4057
      @luisfernandez4057 Рік тому +6

      👏👏👏👏👏

    • @robert111k
      @robert111k Рік тому +3

      They (the Mexicans I mean), at least the not very cultured ones (who happen to be the vast majority) think that everybody in Spain has a kind of lisp. Quite silly but real.

  • @Halicos93
    @Halicos93 2 місяці тому

    This is so cool Spanish Australia pronounciation is literally the same like Serbian we say it the same XD nice!.

  • @hoabinhnguyen8839
    @hoabinhnguyen8839 Рік тому +14

    Fair though about Germany having great food, having spent well over a month in Germany then returning to the US I miss döner( all forms of it so so much), pommes just taste so different and to me much better than "french fries", and the Vietnamese food is absolutely to die for. Vietnamese food in the US is almost entirely from South Vietnam, while most Vietnamese food in Germany especially Saxony and Berlin are from the North of Vietnam (which I prefer at least in terms of cuisine)., and a nice Käsespatzel after a rainy day does wonders.

    • @Lowlandlord
      @Lowlandlord Рік тому +1

      Doner is Turkish.

    • @hoabinhnguyen8839
      @hoabinhnguyen8839 Рік тому +2

      @@Lowlandlord Which is in Germany, as there is a huge number of Turkish people in Germany. Döner kebab in Germany is very common.

    • @keinedaten1640
      @keinedaten1640 10 місяців тому

      @@hoabinhnguyen8839 That is like saying the maltese food is great, because you like the pizza there.

    • @ledddaiuuuuuuuuuuuuu
      @ledddaiuuuuuuuuuuuuu 2 місяці тому

      @@keinedaten1640 a turkish immigrant created the dish here in germany yes the ingredients were used in turkey before but the döner from germany didn't exist 100% the same way before it came here

  • @mickaelkarakac8408
    @mickaelkarakac8408 Рік тому +8

    That reaction at 0:42 ; that's, exactly how every French reacted when she said Germans have the best food. We all know that French are the best when it comes to gastronomy.

    • @mickaelkarakac8408
      @mickaelkarakac8408 Рік тому

      @De Marco Sara Italian are also very good when it comes to food 🤝

    • @LA_Commander
      @LA_Commander Рік тому +1

      I think the Italians and Spaniards might argue with that LOL

    • @keinedaten1640
      @keinedaten1640 10 місяців тому

      Do they? I would always name Italy first.

  • @edouardvoilavoila4247
    @edouardvoilavoila4247 Рік тому +3

    To know if a country is feminine or masculine, you can use the preposition when you speak of the country: if it's "au", it's masculine (je vais au Brésil, au Canada, au Japon ...) and if it's "en", it is feminine ( En Angleterre, en Belgique, et en Allemagne). It doesn't make any sense, but it's the French language ;)

    • @jonathanmong4927
      @jonathanmong4927 Рік тому +1

      wtf this language gets weirder every time i hear about it

    • @PG-3462
      @PG-3462 11 місяців тому

      There are also neutral countries, like Cuba. We don't say "le Cuba" or "la Cuba", we just say Cuba 😂

    • @TheEuronaut
      @TheEuronaut 8 місяців тому

      well, in German it's "das Land", so it would be neuter ("Deutschland") . But there're cases with other articles in German, such as "die Niederlande" (the Netherlands). USA is "die USA", because of "die Staaten" (the states), so feminine. But you have to learn it. I guess there's no deeper rule to it.

  • @ferhatsuatatakan5318
    @ferhatsuatatakan5318 Рік тому

    One of the best channels I've ever seen! interaction of different nationalities.. thank you so much ladies!

  • @GeorgeVenturi
    @GeorgeVenturi Рік тому +9

    I live in San Sebastián Spain, the most beautiful city in Spain and one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, and it is just 15 minutes from the border of France. We usually go there for some shopping and visit some cool beaches, but locals hate us because parking space is limited so you will hear some not very nice words ever so often.

    • @JosephOccenoBFH
      @JosephOccenoBFH Рік тому

      Wow you're lucky! 😃

    • @adr77510
      @adr77510 Рік тому +9

      San Sebastián es una cuidad muy bonita pero dudo que sea la más bonita de todo España

    • @GeorgeVenturi
      @GeorgeVenturi Рік тому +3

      @@adr77510 la mas bonita de lejos... y de cerca ha ha

    • @torrestobias
      @torrestobias Рік тому

      Mí bisabuelo era de san Sebastián, espero algún día poder conocer esa ciudad

    • @eleonorec5429
      @eleonorec5429 Рік тому

      Ohhh reading this reminds me I wanted to go to San Sebastián so much last summer as I was staying in Biarritz... But unfortunately I had an urgent appointment in Paris... Hopefully next year i can visit your beautiful city 😊🤞🏻

  • @Mr94Wero
    @Mr94Wero Рік тому +54

    OKay guys, I think we have found the German Lara Croft here.

  • @deutschmitpurple2918
    @deutschmitpurple2918 Рік тому +4

    Great video. I have really liked this topic

  • @keinedaten1640
    @keinedaten1640 10 місяців тому

    As a german vegetarian I can't say much about sausages, but we do have a lot of good food. And it is still easier to get vegetarian food in restaurants here, than it is in some other countries. I still would not count Döner etc. as german food. You also get a lot of Pizza here, but that does not make Pizza a traditional german food.
    If you like to enjoy some german traditional food, it certainly helps, if you love potatos though ;-).....which I do.
    But personally I would still opt for Italy as the best food, although they could really work at the size of their portions at times (in Italy.....in Germany they adjusted to our understanding of what a portion has to look like 😀)

  • @Casimir2811
    @Casimir2811 Рік тому +80

    The French girl is clueless about a lot of things ... "Allemagne" is feminine in french and a lot of people are completely aware of the "gender" of different countries in the french language.
    Also, she points out that the pronunciation of the country "Suède" (Sweden) and the "Suede" fabric is the same, but actually, that's because the first clothes made with this kind of process were gloves coming from Sweden.

    • @papaspacenas
      @papaspacenas Рік тому

      Alemaña es feminina también en español.

    • @donutchocolate1515
      @donutchocolate1515 Рік тому +1

      @@papaspacenas Los países no tienen genero en español

    • @sabasolivellaabuabara8156
      @sabasolivellaabuabara8156 Рік тому

      @@donutchocolate1515 asi es, tu puedes decir Alemania es hermosa, Alemania es hermoso, ambas son correctas, pero solemos usar mas el género femenino, excepto para los que son federaciones, que solemos decirlos en masculino. No hay una regla, solo nos sale así (es más común escuchar Suiza es bello que Suiza es bella, pero por ejemplo, con Argentina no habría esa duda). Perú, Japón, Egipto, Líbano, Vaticano y otros cuantos son sin duda masculinos.

    • @alejandrocosials
      @alejandrocosials Рік тому +1

      The Spanish girl is also a bit clueless. No one says "EEUU" when talking about the United States. EEUU is an abbreviation that is only used in writing speech. We usually use "Estados Unidos" or, officially "Estados Unidos de América"

    • @landsgevaer
      @landsgevaer Рік тому +5

      Yo, if those are already reasons to call someone "clueless"...
      😮
      Please entertain the possibility that you stumbled upon something you know and they didn't, and that there may be similar numbers of cases that are the other way round. These are not dumb young women.

  • @drychaf
    @drychaf Рік тому +3

    Some places in Welsh...
    France = Ffrainc
    Brittany = Llydaw
    Germany = Yr Almaen
    Italy = Yr Eidal
    Spain = Sbaen
    Belgium = Gwlad Belg
    The Netherlands = Yr Iseldiroedd
    Switzerland = Y Swisdir
    USA = Unol Daleithiau America
    (The US = Yr Unol Daleithiau)
    Wales = Cymru
    Scotland = Yr Alban
    England = Lloegr
    Britain = Prydain
    Great Britain = Prydain Fawr
    UK = Y Deyrnas Unedig
    Ireland = Iwerddon

  • @BkkBank
    @BkkBank Рік тому +5

    i love you 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇩🇪🇺🇸

  • @EinDeutscherPatriot620
    @EinDeutscherPatriot620 Рік тому +2

    Ich bin Deutsch
    Deutschland just comes from what our ancestors called ourselves as a unified group. Deutsch is literally just the name of our people and it stems from the old Proto Germanic name. Other countries call our country based on which tribe was closet to them. The Allemannii were closest to France, so that's why the French and Spaniards call us that. Up in Scandinavia, they call our country Þýskaland and Tyskland which derives from Teutschland from the medieval ages. The Finns call us Saksa because the Saxon tribe and people are closest to them. It's like that with most countries except for Slavic ones

  • @1313mmpm
    @1313mmpm Рік тому +2

    My ears bled when the american girl said eZpaña 😅🙈🙊 It was funny, anyway!

  • @starshocker
    @starshocker Рік тому +40

    I think most country names in French are feminine. We also use "mon" before a vowel. Ex : mon amie is feminine here. BTW, great videa as always, love learning those cultural differences with you.

    • @lenamorverand5626
      @lenamorverand5626 Рік тому +5

      It's also what I thought but when you think a bit more not really, le Japon, le Portugal, le Brézil, le Sénégal, le Kazakhstan, le Canada... There's actually a lot of masculine country name

    • @starshocker
      @starshocker Рік тому +2

      @@lenamorverand5626 that's why I used "most" maybe it should be interesting to check out why some are masculine and why others are feminine.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 Рік тому +1

      All countries that end in -e, except le Mexique, le Cambodge, le Zimbabwe, le Mozambique, le Belize, le Sao Tomé-et-Principe. All countries not ending in -e are masculine.

    • @AminataMBengue95
      @AminataMBengue95 Рік тому +1

      Oh and normally to say I live in France we would say “j’habite EN France” (it’s feminine) but if you want to say “I live in Senegal you would say “j’habite AU Sénégal”(masculine). It’s a good way to know if it’s feminine or masculine 😊

    • @alexmel4788
      @alexmel4788 Рік тому +4

      She just did really bad at school... Bless her....

  • @johnsarkissian5519
    @johnsarkissian5519 Рік тому +3

    In French, l’Allemagne is a feminine word. It takes the possessive article “mon” simply because it starts with a vowel, for example mon ami (my male friend) and mon amie (my female friend) both take mon. But the foolproof way to check gender in French is to qualify the word with an adjective. L’Allemagne est belle (not beau!) Besides, the vast majority of French nouns ending in “e” are feminine. As usual, there are also plenty of exceptions!

    • @WilliamAndrea
      @WilliamAndrea 11 місяців тому +1

      It actually wouldn't be «beau» anyway, it'd be «bel» since the noun starts with a vowel.
      beau Canada, belle France, bel Afghanistan

    • @johnsarkissian5519
      @johnsarkissian5519 11 місяців тому +1

      @@WilliamAndrea It would be “bel” only if the adjective came before the qualified noun.

  • @bxdep
    @bxdep Рік тому

    6:35 it's so funny how she say it with that confidence JAJAHA
    Well in Spain we difference the sound between z/c and s but Hispanic American usually don't, so sometimes just invent the Spanish accent in a wrong way bc they r not used to difference the sound

  • @islamnabilnasiftaha748
    @islamnabilnasiftaha748 11 місяців тому

    جامد بشكل عبقري❤💪

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 Рік тому +5

    Hey, I think German food is great! It is like English food for me in that I wouldn't want to be limited to it or have it exclusively every day, but I'm really happy to have it every couple weeks.

  • @vtr.Lisboa
    @vtr.Lisboa Рік тому +5

    EUA - Estados Unidos da América
    Alemanha
    França
    Espanha

  • @DUARD9896
    @DUARD9896 9 місяців тому

    2:32 Esa es la forma CORRECTA Y LÓGICA cuando decimos "AMÉRICA".

  • @MarcosJuarezSanchez
    @MarcosJuarezSanchez Рік тому +1

    Eagerly waiting for another video from white friends.

  • @hideo9395
    @hideo9395 Рік тому +56

    In Spanish 'United States' is Estados Unidos, which is a literal translation. EE.UU is just shorthand for 'United States of America' and is only used on paper (not speaking). Unlike Germany and France referring to the United States as only 'America' causes big fights haha so don't do it.

    • @DerVincenzo
      @DerVincenzo Рік тому +4

      As a german i agree. I would always say USA or Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika (United states of America) or Vereinigte Staaten (United States)

    • @ennaxy5696
      @ennaxy5696 Рік тому +4

      I'm french and I never said "Amérique" for USA 😂 I usually say "les États-Unis" (the united states)

    • @sunnysaturn134
      @sunnysaturn134 Рік тому +2

      I think most french/spanish/Portuguese speaking countries learn the 6 continent model so to them America is a continent whereas in english speaking countries we can call the US just "America" bc there is no continent w that name, instead we consider North and South America to be seperate continents

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Рік тому +1

      Even though "Estados Unidos" actually applies to Mexico as well...

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Рік тому

      @@sunnysaturn134 And it's kind of ridiculous that they learn that Europe and Asia are two separate continents (???? where does one end and the other begin?!) but they consider North America and South America, two obviously distinct landmasses, to be a single continent.

  • @ethelmini
    @ethelmini Рік тому +8

    Any German's about?
    I wondered if you had any words that share similarities to Allemande or Germany?
    I can get how Deutsch had already been taken by Dutch when the English needed a name for you & I think the word Germany has Roman origins, similar to Africa or, indeed, Britain.

    • @gnampfgnarg186
      @gnampfgnarg186 Рік тому +8

      In german people call the tribes germans and dutch descended from "germanen". The "allemanen" were a germanic tribe. In finland they call germany "saksa" named after the tribe of the "sachsen" another germanic tribe.

    • @thevannmann
      @thevannmann Рік тому

      The name for Germany in other languages has some of the most diverse roots. Usually a country in other languages will be similar to each other but Germany has about several different roots referring to different tribes like the Alemanni, Germania, Saxons, Diutisc etc.

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 Рік тому +3

      In regards to the misnomer "Dutch", keep in mind that -- until the late 16th century -- most of the Low Countries (i.e. what is today the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg) had been part of the same top-level domain as the other, much bigger German lands: The *Holy Roman Empire* (HRE) -- which until 962 AD was *East Francia* (the German half of the original Frankish realm).

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini Рік тому

      @@gnampfgnarg186 I expect also as in Anglo-SAXON

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini Рік тому

      @@berlindude75 I knew that, also the Netherlands predate Germany, as the modern countries we know today, by a bit & will have greater prominence to the Brits across the North Sea.
      To us they live in Holland, which isn't exactly accurate from their perspective either

  • @meriez2892
    @meriez2892 Рік тому

    Wasnt this already done?

  • @astralau8762
    @astralau8762 Рік тому

  • @iH4z33
    @iH4z33 Рік тому +94

    that german girl over there speaks english like a pro

    • @crazykenproductions606
      @crazykenproductions606 Рік тому +2

      Yeah she has an American accent, I always thought that if you learned English in Europe you would be taught with the British accent. That surprised me.

    • @Tara_Whitley
      @Tara_Whitley Рік тому +6

      @@crazykenproductions606 We learn both in school, but can choose which one we want to write/speak

    • @ennaxy5696
      @ennaxy5696 Рік тому +2

      @@crazykenproductions606 I'm french and I learn english at school with a british accent but I couldn't even imitate it 😂 I just hear english with an american accent all day when watching youtube

    • @jal051
      @jal051 Рік тому +1

      @@crazykenproductions606 In school we tend (not always, not completely) to learn it with an english accent, but after that we tend to practice understanding by watching American tv shows.

    • @ersguter1996
      @ersguter1996 Рік тому

      @@jal051 Fr
      'Merican way > bri'ish way 😁🇩🇪

  • @sergioz536
    @sergioz536 Рік тому +6

    In Spain the S is always S. Just like in English. And Z and C is like Th sound, always. As simple as that. The confusion can only be caused by people who don't know when to write s or c or z because they always pronounce s. The z and c sound in Spain is esential to speak well. It is not the same "irse de caza" (ca/θ/a) than " irse de casa" (ca/s/a) / leaving home / goint to hunt. Seta vs zeta, tasa vs taza, ves vs vez, asar vs azar... And so on, hundreds and thousands of examples. In Spain the differentiation is clear, impossible to make a mistake, but in Latin America they would always be confused and mistaken without context.
    In an English-speaking example it would be like if a non US/UK/AUS country pronounce "I think" as "I sink" or "thunder" as "sunder" or "theme" as "seem", "birth" as "verse", "faith" as "face" etc, etc, etc, etc. Suddenly everything would become more ambiguous to understand. There is a vital reason why it must sound different.
    And it doesn't just affect single words, it affects common sentences. Examples: "Voy a ser" vs. "voy a hacer" / "I'm going to be / I'm going to do". Or "Dos euros vs Doce euros" / "Two euros / Twelve euros". In Spain it is impossible to confuse it. In Latin America they would sound the same and without more context the listener probably would not know the verb it's being use (Voyaserlo / voyaaserlo) or the correct amount of money (doseuros / doseeuros).
    To close this, if someone pronounced the following invented words:
    Sasazosu
    Zasasozu
    Sazazozu
    Zazasozu
    Zasazozu
    In Spain it would ALWAYS be distinguished with 100% effectiveness and spelled and written correctly. Even if you put a million of words. In Latin America only luck would prevent 0% because it always sounds sasasosu. Now imagine what happens with real words in the real world.

    • @floptaxie68
      @floptaxie68 Рік тому +2

      Que no distingamos ambos sonidos no nos afecta nada en la vida cotidiana, gente ignorante que no sepa hablar ni escribir la hay en España también, además el seseo vino de España, también en el sur del país se sesea y se cecea

    • @sergioz536
      @sergioz536 Рік тому +3

      @@floptaxie68 No afecta en términos generales, tienes razón, pero si es cierto que puede provocar ambigüedades sonoras más habituales. En Puerto Rico o cuba creo que también pasa con la "R" y la "L", que pueden pronunciar igual "sedar" que "sedal", por ejemplo. O el acento anglosajón hablando español cuando a lo mejor dicen algo que suena a "kese" y como pronuncian las vocales mal y además sesean no sabes si ha dicho casa, caza, caso, cazo, cosa o casi.. Al final cada uno tiene su acento, aunque el castellano original está moldeado para evitar ser ambiguo: 5 vocales, 5 sonidos inequívocos, sonido para N y Ñ, para R y L, para S y Z. Cuanto más se respete eso, menos ambiguo, porque para eso las palabras se formaron de esa manera, no para que estemos pidiendo deletrear continuamente como los ingleses.

    • @garedmorort
      @garedmorort Рік тому +1

      Hay algo que se llama contexto, en francés hay infinidad de palabras que se pronuncian igual o letras que no se pronuncian y la gente se entiende perfectamente gracias al contexto (el perro y los perros se pronuncian igual)

    • @portushit
      @portushit Рік тому +3

      Y me hace gracia cuando escucho a los latinos que hablan el inglés con el sonido 'th' pero también imitan el acento español original con ceceo, ¡y resultando que no pueden pronunciarlo!

  • @Stef77777
    @Stef77777 Рік тому

    Daaaamn Shannon...

  • @TheYaq
    @TheYaq Рік тому +1

    They all look pretty

  • @nirutivan9811
    @nirutivan9811 Рік тому +5

    In my Swiss German Dialect:
    US: USA or Vereinigti Staate (vo Amerika)
    France: Frankriich
    Germany: Düütschland
    Spain: Spanie
    Italy: Italie
    Sweden: Schwede
    Switzerland: Schwiiz
    Australia: Australie

    • @LadyArachnea
      @LadyArachnea Рік тому

      und die Nachbarn 😁😁Öösterriek

    • @nirutivan9811
      @nirutivan9811 Рік тому

      @@LadyArachnea Eher Ööstriich in meinem Dialekt 😁

  • @vd5352
    @vd5352 Рік тому +67

    The "th" sound in European Spanish is the pronunciation of the letter "z". Always.
    It is also pronounced when the letter "c" is followed by a "i,e,o"
    The S is always pronounced as a normal S and never as a "th".
    Example: "caza", meaning "hunt" needs to be pronounced with "th", otherwise it could be mistaken by "casa", which means "home".
    All Latinamerica and some regions in Spain pronounce everything as an S, and foreigners tend to learn that simplicity because is easier for them instead of memorizing the rules for the Z letter. But if you really want to have a Castilian accent, you should make an effort! :)

    • @JfromUK_
      @JfromUK_ Рік тому +8

      Yes, I noticed that confusion in the video too -- I was surprised "Suiza" wasn't exemplified! I'm from the UK and my teacher was genuinely Spanish, so I got very familiar with the "th" sound before I had any idea that they don't bother in Latin America.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Рік тому +9

      I prefer the pronunciation most Latin Americans use.

    • @luisfernandez4057
      @luisfernandez4057 Рік тому +8

      @@anndeecosita3586 Spain's Spanish is better

    • @cristians.r.1681
      @cristians.r.1681 Рік тому +10

      @@anndeecosita3586 Spain's pronunciation is better for having a correct writing

    • @buscatuclon
      @buscatuclon Рік тому +5

      Se te ha colado la "O" :P
      C + O suena como una K, no como una Z o "th"

  • @PhilSmith94420
    @PhilSmith94420 Рік тому

    1:33 Haha, the UK finally regets leaving the EU. 😉 Actually it depends if the country is part of the Shengen agreement and not only a member of the EU. It is interesting to hear a US American's view to this topic.

  • @wurpat9556
    @wurpat9556 9 місяців тому +1

    En el español también usamos en algunos países los artículos "la" y "el", aunque son bien pocos y a lo mejor esta mal dicho, los únicos países en los que puedo pensar ahorita mismo son India y Líbano que decimos "la India Y el Líbano" por lo menos aquí en la CDMX

  • @CinCee-
    @CinCee- Рік тому +3

    The German girl speaks great English, almost has no accent.

  • @herrbonk3635
    @herrbonk3635 Рік тому +37

    4:00 Deutschland came from the same word as your name for Hollanders, i.e. Dutch. Germany is an equally confusing term, as there were lots of germanic tribes, of which only some lived in what's now called Germany. They were in Scandinavia, Poland, Czech republic, Holland, Austria, France, Italy, even Spain. Also, far from all tribes in today's Germany were germanic peoples. They were also romans, slavic and celts.
    Here in Sweden we use another old term: tysk=german, so tyskar (Germans) lives in tyskland.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 Рік тому +2

      The word "Allemagne" itself is based on a Germanic confederation of tribes, mostly Suevis, that occupied most of modern-day Germany. The Alamans (Alémans in french, Alamannen in German).

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +3

      Our France country is eventually a Latin European Country but with strong Germanic influence.
      Cuz if you look up the History Book
      France and Germany used to be one Nation under the Reign of Emperor Charlemagne

    • @tjaderabius7181
      @tjaderabius7181 Рік тому +4

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 that’s why we call France Frankreich.
      Empire of the Franks = Franken Reich.

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +1

      @@tjaderabius7181 Exactly. I already know that. I learned that at school
      FRANKREICH ➡️ Frankish Empire/Empire of Franks of Charlemagne
      🇨🇵🇩🇪🇨🇭🇱🇺🇧🇪🇳🇱🇦🇹

    • @tjaderabius7181
      @tjaderabius7181 Рік тому +4

      The name Deutschland came from Teutonisch. what means as much like: belong to the People ( zum Volk gehören ).
      Teutonisch->Teutsch->Deutsch
      So Deutschland means Land of the People ( Land des Volkes ).

  • @TotalRookie_LV
    @TotalRookie_LV Рік тому

    "When we were in EU"
    Wait... What?! Oh, that's right... Damn that's still unusual to hear, despite the fact it's been years since Brexit and I got some relatives in UK.

  • @Ivan-fm4eh
    @Ivan-fm4eh Рік тому +1

    Shannon's overcorrecting the "Spanish lisp". It's only for C and Z, not S, so España sounds like España, not Ethpaña (but Francia sounds like Franthia).

  • @ESC_Thomas
    @ESC_Thomas Рік тому +4

    As a french i appologize to everyone who tries to learn our language ahah

    • @umershaikh7179
      @umershaikh7179 Рік тому

      yeah... ur accent is incredibly difficult to imitate

    • @Yamizan
      @Yamizan Рік тому

      Apology accepted. C'est trop beau 😂

  • @nathanspeed9683
    @nathanspeed9683 Рік тому +3

    It’s great with World Friends, all the participants seem to be so lovely that many new friendships are made! It would be pretty cool people living in Europe have all these beautiful countries on their doorstep that are dreams of many to visit in our lifetime. Australia is so isolated in comparison!

  • @Miximixos
    @Miximixos Рік тому

    02:06 In Germany we often use the abbreviation U.S.A. Pronouciation: Uh - Ess - Ah ;)

  • @keinedaten1640
    @keinedaten1640 10 місяців тому

    Deutschland comes from thiutisk, which means "of the people" and referred to the languages (in contrast to the roman languages of our neighbors or latin of the Priests) that was spoken by the common people. Tyskland (Sweden, Denmark, Norway), Duitsland (Niederländisch) and even the italian word tedesco (german) have this root.
    Translated it is the Land of the people.
    Germany comes from latin Germania and that name was given by the romans, but it is not clear what the word means.
    Allemagne comes from the tribe of the Alemannen, which were / are situated in the southwest of todays Germany.
    In slavic countries we are often called a name with the root niemc/nemet (like in polish niemcy) which comes from a slavic root with the meaning "Foreigner".
    Other countries took the tribe of the Saxons as root for their word for Germany, like finnish Saksa.

  • @Yorgos2007
    @Yorgos2007 Рік тому +18

    It is interesting to speak out different country names but it would be even more interesting if you knew the reasons.
    For example: Germany is called Germany (EN) or Germania (IT) because of the latin word "Germania" first used by Julius Ceasar come 2000 years ago for the territory of Germanic tribes. The word itself is maybe of Celtic origin and meant "neighbours". L'Allemagne (FR) and Alemania (SP) come from the name of one of the so-called Germanic "great tribes" (Großstämme), the alemans (allemanni). The genuine German name for Germany "Deutschland" comes from the ancient German(ic) word "Þeodisk" simply meaning "people". Words like deutsch (GE), tysk (DA), tedesco (IT) or even dutch (EN, wrongfully used for the people of the Netherlands) all derive from the word Þeodisk. Fun fact: the Hungarian name for German (német) and the Slavic versions (e.g. niemiec in Polish) mean "mute", i.e. a person who is not able to speak in a way we can understand it :)

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 Рік тому +7

      Also, in Finland, the word for Germany is "Saksa" (i.e. Saxony / Sachsen) because they first met Low German people from the Germanic tribe of the Saxons (in what is today northwest Germany, the federal state of Lower Saxony / Niedersachsen). Some of that tribe also started settling on the British Isles in the 6th century along with the Angles from northern Germany and Jutes from northern Denmark. This gave rise to the Anglo-Saxons and the origin of the name "England".

    • @yorgunsamuray
      @yorgunsamuray Рік тому +6

      @@berlindude75 Allemagne of French, Alemania of Spanish, Alemanha of Portuguese and Almanya of Turkish come from the Allemanic tribes. Japanese also uses something closer to the German name, Doitsu.

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Рік тому +12

    'Made in Spain' clothing items are tagged as «Fabricado en España» while shirts made in Latin America are tagged as "Hecho en Honduras" o "Hecho en Guatemala" among others.

  • @gardenshed6043
    @gardenshed6043 Рік тому

    I wish I lived in the Schengen area.

  • @givorsthomas4235
    @givorsthomas4235 Рік тому +1

    The French girl was a bit misleading in several ways...
    Apart from the feminine vs masculine which has already been explained by other commentators, she was wrong in presenting how we say the USA in French.
    I'm French, and I do confirm that we almost NEVER say 'L"Amérique" to refer to the country, unless maybe if you wanted to describe it in a symbolic, romanticized, or cliché kind of way.
    Otherwise in common everyday language, "l'Amérique" would only be used to designate the continent, and then again, we would hardly ever say "l'Amérique" on its own, we would specify "l'Amérique du Nord" or "l'Amérique du Sud", maybe even "L'Amérique centrale", and then we would use "Les Amériques" for the entirety of it.
    The country would be designated by "Les Etats-Unis d'Amérique", most often abbreviated to simply "Les Etats-Unis" (in the news on TV it would almost always be described like this).
    In familiar slang, amongst friends, we sometimes use "Les States" or "Les USA", or even "Les US", but this is grammatically incorrect, and would almost never be used in the medias, and never on official documents.
    So to sum it up, the most frequent would simply be "Les Etats Unis".

  • @aheat3036
    @aheat3036 Рік тому +9

    Germany has good food she says in the presence of a French and Italian girl! 😂.

    • @DerVincenzo
      @DerVincenzo Рік тому +4

      Spanish, and depends on what you want to eat, everything meat based ist pretty good and bread is just 🤯 but most countrys have something in which their the best in

    • @ersguter1996
      @ersguter1996 Рік тому +2

      @@DerVincenzo Me, as a german: mediterrane kitchen > german kitchen 🤝

    • @javierslytherin9898
      @javierslytherin9898 Рік тому

      There was no Italian in the video

    • @hyenalaughingmatter8103
      @hyenalaughingmatter8103 Рік тому

      Germanic people in general never have focus on food. Thats why our food is not that good we Germanic people have other skills.

  • @floptaxie68
    @floptaxie68 Рік тому +9

    In Spain Spanish Z is pronounced as “th” and C when is in front of “e,i”
    “Cerveza” (beer) is pronounced “Ther-Beh-Thah”

  • @rayzzen3181
    @rayzzen3181 Рік тому +2

    Ptn même nous on galère avec notre langue c'est trop grave

  • @user-fr3uw5xj4l
    @user-fr3uw5xj4l 6 місяців тому

    🥰🥰🥰

  • @ChikunVA
    @ChikunVA Рік тому +26

    Kinda love how the German one had trouble correctly pronouncing the German words.
    You don't pronounce Spanien in that way, you really don't.
    (Edit: Okay so it seems that there's people that actually do pronounce it that way?? I just never heard it and it should be gramatically wrong but yeah, seems I'm in the wrong here)

    • @esunisen3862
      @esunisen3862 Рік тому

      It's something like shpaninn right ?

    • @ChikunVA
      @ChikunVA Рік тому +10

      @@esunisen3862 The key difference is that she pronounced it with a short A, which in German, you only do when it would, in this case, be followed by a double N, as in Spannien. But that's simply not the case, it's Spanien, so you have to stretch the A longer. It may sound insignificant, but it does make a huhe difference in how the word sounds.

    • @esunisen3862
      @esunisen3862 Рік тому +1

      @@ChikunVA Oh i see. There is something similar in norwegian.

    • @maggypieelsterlein8491
      @maggypieelsterlein8491 Рік тому +3

      But that is kind of common with Germans who are fluent in English. If you lernt to speak English with little German accent it's incredibly hard to switch back to the real pronunciation for a single word in a whole sentence

    • @fiprosha
      @fiprosha Рік тому +8

      The way she pronounced it didn't really sound wrong to me. Different regions in Germany will pronounce some words slightly differently. Doesn't really make it "wrong."

  • @samwisegamgee6532
    @samwisegamgee6532 Рік тому +45

    Even Alice was shocked when Shannon said Germany has the best European food 😂😂
    Imagine if Italy had been there too 😂

    • @beageler
      @beageler Рік тому +15

      Just because people know two or three good dishes from the other countries but none from Germany doesn't mean that Germany doesn't have any. Only shows how ignorant people are. And to be honest, any person who only knows the meager spread of good bread in other countries is to be pitied. Not to mention not knowing Döner, the kebab styles that are known in other countries are just sad. And I haven't even mentioned german cuisine, only bread and fast food.

    • @Aoderic
      @Aoderic Рік тому +5

      There's some amazing restaurants in Berlin, they are going strong on the new food wave in northern Europe.
      People have this old stereotypical view of German food, it's far more than Bratwurst, Sauerkraut, meat and potatoes.

    • @jajaL926
      @jajaL926 Рік тому +2

      @@beageler true Most people Just know the stereotyps of other countries... But I Hope that these videos help people to open their minds about othor countries cultures

    • @samwisegamgee6532
      @samwisegamgee6532 Рік тому +3

      @@Aoderic I think you get me wrong, I was just reacting to the fact that Alice was surprised because food quality isn’t usually mentioned as a German quality.
      And I was talking about Italy because an Italian would have added even more outrageous cliche reactions to the French and Spanish ones.
      And being French having worked in Alsace and with people from there, I can confirm what good German influence can be on gastronomy.

    • @Aoderic
      @Aoderic Рік тому +2

      @@samwisegamgee6532 Oh I wasn't speaking to you personally, more to the common cliché as you say.
      So I was more adding to what you said, not trying to argue against it.

  • @ckaams1758
    @ckaams1758 Рік тому +1

    4:20 le determinant "mon" n'est pas forcément masculin. On utilise aussi "mon" avant un nom ou un adjectif qui commence par une voyelle. Ex: mon abeille; mon ingénieuse découverte.

    • @ckaams1758
      @ckaams1758 Рік тому

      Pour savoir si Allemagne est masculin ou féminin, on peut ajouter un adjectif. En l'occurrence, on dirait "ma belle Allemagne" et non "mon beau Allemagne". Donc c'est féminin.

  • @manusolmateo
    @manusolmateo Рік тому

    Suede is mostly called DAIM in french: the wrong side of leather. Allemagne is feminine it's just that it starts with a vowelk and in french you should never have a word ending with a vowel next to a word starting with another vowel that is why you say l'allemagne in stead of la allemagne and mon allemagne on stead of ma allemagne. Bisou

  • @elemos_
    @elemos_ Рік тому +5

    I would love so much to be with you guys cause there's so much Word that we don't Say like that in Canada! (Québec) So people can see the difference (with French for France especially) And you girls seems so funny and Nice.

  • @I_Carnage_I
    @I_Carnage_I Рік тому +3

    There is nothing better than 'Sauerbraten' in the World.

  • @NureniKol
    @NureniKol Рік тому +2

    Great video. You reference the uk as a country though but its a collective of countries; England, Scotland, North Ireland and Wales, which are very different. We even speak different languages.

  • @markpaterson2260
    @markpaterson2260 Рік тому

    I think Shannon's misunderstanding of 'th' as 's' in spanish is one I've learnt about recently. I _believe_ Catalonian Spanish uses this th in their dialect and that's where the misconception comes from . Probably most famous Catalonian city being Barcelona, so a popular tourist destination. I don't know if it's related to the Catala language or just a regional dialect/accent thing though. So in Barcelona you might hear 'Grathias' rather than 'Gracias'.

    • @paulagali652
      @paulagali652 Рік тому +2

      "The lisp is a phonetic phenomenon in the Spanish language that consists of pronouncing the letter s with a sound similar to that of the letters z and c" . This happens ONLY in some cities in the very South of Spain, not in Catalonia. In the whole peninsula we don't pronounce S like Z. Catalan has nothing to do with it. I am Spanish, and I have studied many languages I hope I have helped you.
      Btw: Gracias is pronounced Grathias' otherwise if it was to be pronounced like grasias should be written as "grasias" which is not. But in the Spanish taught and spoken in South America they pronounce GRACIAS like - grasias.

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Рік тому +2

      No, it's because the TH sound is only for C and Z, not S. España is spelled with an S, so it's España (not Ethpaña), but Francia is pronounced like Franthia because it's a C.
      The point about Catalonian is that Catalonian does not have the TH sound whatsoever (C and Z are pronounced like S, like in Mexican Spanish), so the proper pronunciation of Barcelona is NOT Barthelona but Barselona, because it's a Catalan city.

    • @paulagali652
      @paulagali652 Рік тому

      @@Ivan-fm4eh I am Spanish, from Alicante, we don't say "Barselona" we say "Brathelona." That is why I said that the "S" sound is generally heard on the South of Spain. You can always come to check it. :D

    • @paulagali652
      @paulagali652 Рік тому +1

      BTW in Alicante we are taught Valencian which is a dialect of Catalan and when we speak Valencian/Catalan we pronounce it like: "Barselona" with the S sound, in this case because of the language. Not the phonetic phenimenon I was referring to.

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Рік тому

      @@paulagali652 I've been to the south of Spain (near the village of Montefrio - it was gorgeous) but I've also been to Barcelona. The predominant language of Barcelona is Catalan, and they pronounce it Barselona.

  • @annathevideoviewer
    @annathevideoviewer Рік тому +6

    0:26 Ich weiß nicht, was da zu lachen gibt: Bier, Brot, Süßigkeiten, .... Länder wie USA oder England sollten, still sein und "da mal den Ball flach halten" Ok, Spanien und Frankreich "dürfen" lächeln und evtl. noch Italien. Ernsthaft jedes Land hat seine Küche und Kochkunst und es ist immer subjektiv.
    Grüße aus Deutschland
    I don't know what to laugh about: beer, bread, sweets, .... Countries like the USA or England should be quiet and "keep the ball flat". Ok, Spain and France "may" smile and possibly Italy. Seriously, every country has its own cuisine and it is always subjective.
    Greeting from Germany

    • @christophermichaelclarence6003
      @christophermichaelclarence6003 Рік тому +2

      This is all stupid stereotypes Don't worry about it. Your German cuisine is pretty good.
      Very similar from the Eastern of France
      I'd rather your specialities than American/British
      Europeans food is one of the Best.
      Be happy of it
      From Frankreich 🇨🇵♥️🇩🇪 Deutschland

    • @annathevideoviewer
      @annathevideoviewer Рік тому +2

      @@christophermichaelclarence6003 Ich mach mir keine Sorgen. Bei uns sagt man. "Froh zu sein bedarf es wenig und wer froh ist, ist ein König". Deutsche Küche kann so unterschiedlich sein, auch da gibt es sehr viele regionale Unterschiede. Genau wie in Frankreich.
      Ich mag nur keine Stereotypen und Vorurteile.
      I'm not worried. With us they say. "It takes little to be happy and whoever is happy is a king". German cuisine can be so different, there are also many regional differences. Just like in France.
      I just don't like stereotypes and prejudices.

  • @dailyteen2219
    @dailyteen2219 Рік тому +17

    It's so similar the way we say these country names in arabic as in Spanish. Switzerland in arabic is sweesra and sweeden is also swuede and germany is said exactly as in Spanish. I just love being able to compare my language and the languages i've learned to other languages and the similarities and differences it's so fun

    • @hueypautonoman
      @hueypautonoman Рік тому +3

      Spain is very close to North African Arabic-speaking countries and was, of course, part of Al-Andalus for 800 years. Even in English, we have words we borrowed from Spanish that originally came from Arabic.

    • @SeranPC
      @SeranPC Рік тому +3

      @@hueypautonoman NO

    • @Fati.Ferreiro
      @Fati.Ferreiro Рік тому +9

      @@hueypautonoman yeah we have some words that come from that origin, but i wouldnt say we are influence by an african country (we are only close geographically with Morrocco dont really understand why you say "countries").
      and about the Al Andalus is a topic that foreginers dont really understand but if you see the DNA of a person from Spain you would see an small amount of northafrican blood or nothing really, because we really didnt mix with the muslims.

    • @ponyxaviors4491
      @ponyxaviors4491 Рік тому

      My sister recently started learning Arabic, and when I heard the Spanish name for Germany, I thought, "That sounds like Arabic!" I was going to ask my sister if I was right, but your comment confirmed it for me 😁 I also love comparing languages. It's so much fun.

    • @lofdan
      @lofdan Рік тому +6

      @@ponyxaviors4491 the Spanish name comes from the Germanic tribe of the Allamanni.

  • @Q-Bits8
    @Q-Bits8 Рік тому +2

    3:30 "El France" in French...ok...Americans strike again

  • @01ivi3r
    @01ivi3r 9 місяців тому

    For "my Germany" you'd say "mon Allemagne" because of the liaison, as "ma Allemagne" wouldn't flow as well (like "el agua fresca" in Spanish).
    A better way is to look at it is by using "a Germany" (e.g. a warm and welcoming Germany), which would be "une Allemagne". That means Germany's feminine in French😁

  • @gregorweihbrecht3415
    @gregorweihbrecht3415 Рік тому +6

    From the countries here, Germany has the best food in my opinion.
    Obviously it always depends what your taste best fits to.
    I would rank Foodwise: Germany-Spain-France-USA-UK. It was close between the first three

  • @darkgrandpriest1645
    @darkgrandpriest1645 Рік тому +3

    I’m trynna marry Shannon. She’s gorgeous.

  • @rs1389
    @rs1389 Рік тому

    Would love to hear them say the names of eastern countries 😀

    • @Dreagostini
      @Dreagostini Рік тому

      That's not even one thing only, because China can be pronounced in Germany as Tschina, Schina, China or Kina.

  • @emilyruder5957
    @emilyruder5957 Рік тому +1

    Turn the background music down. Hard to hear them.

  • @nevermind3520
    @nevermind3520 Рік тому +11

    Excuse me, but why would you go from Germany to France to buy bread?! I do not agree that we have the best food here in Germany, but German bread is the best! 😂

    • @linaxx6942
      @linaxx6942 Рік тому +8

      I mean France is still the best adress when you want a baguette or a croissant

    • @nevermind3520
      @nevermind3520 Рік тому +3

      @@linaxx6942 True, but in my German bread is just something very different 🤷😅

    • @beageler
      @beageler Рік тому

      @@linaxx6942 Why? One can make those anywhere. But the world at large just seems to be incabaple to make bread nearly as well as Germany.

    • @eleonorec5429
      @eleonorec5429 Рік тому +4

      My cousin is German and when he comes to France he eats a whole baguette with cheese because he can't find such a good one in Germany 😂

    • @hyenalaughingmatter8103
      @hyenalaughingmatter8103 Рік тому

      @@eleonorec5429 Still German bread is better also more varity of differen types of bread.

  • @adjetyann2095
    @adjetyann2095 Рік тому +15

    I am from French-speaking Africa.
    In our country, contrarily to france, we never say "les US".
    We say (as the majority of French speakers) "les États-Unis", or "States" (the last with an English accent) as in the sentence , which means "go to United States".

    • @ritsuspendstoomuchtimeonth7907
      @ritsuspendstoomuchtimeonth7907 Рік тому +16

      I am from France and I have never heard anyone say "les US" before, it's either "les États Unis" or "Amérique"

    • @alexlim6300
      @alexlim6300 Рік тому +2

      in Canada, I say les États-Unis. sometimes les States , but thats just plain English.

    • @Pikachu-ez1rm
      @Pikachu-ez1rm Рік тому +2

      @@ritsuspendstoomuchtimeonth7907 you say "Amerique"? But wouldn't that be the whole continent?

    • @Nathan_Avril
      @Nathan_Avril Рік тому +8

      @@Pikachu-ez1rm "Amérique" is supposed to be the continent, but some people say it to speak about the US. If the context is not clear enough, it can create confusion, so it's better to say "les Etats-Unis".

    • @Pikachu-ez1rm
      @Pikachu-ez1rm Рік тому +2

      @@Nathan_Avril right. Merci friend. In Spanish, its always America for the continent never for the country.

  • @vooides
    @vooides Рік тому +2

    Ethpaña 😵
    Parece maja pero...🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @SebHaarfagre
    @SebHaarfagre 11 місяців тому

    I'm from Norway and I don't know where that German stereotype comes from. Germany has excellent cuisine. I could say a lot about every nation's cuisine, mock it or praise it. But we'd be here for hours.
    Sea and berry products is always disappointing outside Scandinavia and I could also miss reindeer, but every country has its own local flora and fauna.
    Everything else just depends on who makes it.
    So in that regard, Italy is SSS tier. There's just a whole other culture when it comes to making (and serving) food, if you want a family dinner, that's where you go (to have a family? lol, well, at least to have that potential cozy experience). I know other countries has a bit of that too, but I've never experienced it like in Italy. Also Italian small town markets have insanely good sausages/serrano, parmiggiano etc. and ICE CREAM OH MY GOD THE ICE CREAM. How, I don't know, no country has better milk than mine lol (NONE!) but Italians - at least those family businesses you know - make ice cream like nobody else on the planet (and I can eat 2L ice cream in one sitting I'm not even joking so yeah I like ice cream)(but they don't have liquorice ice cream so have to go to Finland for that!) But I digress!!
    Uh where were we yeah Germany has great grill-type food and some great home cooking! It just depends on what you want or like.
    Lapskaus is the simplest and most typical Norwegian home cooking dish (using the term "home cooking" deliberately, we call it "husmannskost" and it specifically denotes simple/rest dishes)
    "Scousers" (from Liverpool) got their (nick)name from our Lapskaus.
    Fish is our staple and crazy cows who can climb mountains (literally) and other animals too that roam free and there's strict rules (and much love) from the relatively few farmers we do have.
    We also have a metric ton of different (and some excellent) greenery but it had/has to be revitalized because it got drowned in the fast food and Tupperware culture/period.
    There's little natural spices, but fresh chives grow naturally and randomly and you can grow your own spices here.
    Apples and berries are natural here. Sweden and Norway has the best berries in the world. (And *TRUE* blueberries, not the ones which are actually _not_ blueberries which most people buy and call "blueberries") Finland and Denmark too, but not as large variety.
    Our most popular junk foods/easy foods must be pizza, kebab and noodles. So we're quite worldly when it comes to food but maybe lost some of ourselves along the way and need to refind it.
    (Fish is fish, won't ever lose the fish LOL fish fish fish)
    I like different foods from all countries represented in this video. I don't consider either's in this video "superior" in any way, as I said that depends on the cook (and don't get me started :P)

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre 11 місяців тому

      forgot tortillas as a junk/easy food! We even have "taco friday" (always a discount in major stores, cause, well, it's friday, and time for taco (tortilla))
      And I've only been to Tuscany, may be important, Italy is large.

  • @MacGyver5AF
    @MacGyver5AF Рік тому +14

    Lauren and Claudia are together in this show for a long time. I would say they could become really good friends.

  • @asfodem
    @asfodem Рік тому +4

    Rhâaa... ! Shannon... we actually don't say "el France", and even "el smth", because "el" DOESN'T exist in French! It's a Spanish word! In French it's "le" !

    • @JosephOccenoBFH
      @JosephOccenoBFH Рік тому

      She almost broke my heart 😆
      I know she's smarter than that ..

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Рік тому +2

      She probably has either only studied Spanish or she got confused. I took a French class once and my teacher had to repeatedly correct me for slipping into speaking Spanish. In French you don’t have el but you have elle which sounds the same as he in Spanish but but means she in French. And les in French sounds like le in Spanish. Makes my head spin to keep it straight. 😢

    • @salmonetesnonosquedan8345
      @salmonetesnonosquedan8345 Рік тому

      She is Americam, you know?

    • @salmonetesnonosquedan8345
      @salmonetesnonosquedan8345 Рік тому

      @@anndeecosita3586 right, "les" sound "le", but means nothing in Spanish

    • @asfodem
      @asfodem Рік тому +1

      @@salmonetesnonosquedan8345 actually it means "him": "le veo" = "I see him".

  • @lerigoureux6474
    @lerigoureux6474 9 місяців тому

    Guys, please don’t listen to the French girl about French grammar. I’m a teacher and she almost only said nonsense.
    1) Articles : Every noun in French goes with its article, just like “the” in English. The difference is that there are more than one article in French, depending on the gender and the number of said noun -
    - « Le » precedes the noun if that noun is masculine. « Le matin » = “The morning”.
    - « La » precedes it if it’s feminine. « La vérité » = “The truth”.
    - « Les » precedes it when it’s plural, regardless of the gender. « Les États-Unis d’Amérique » = “The United States of America”.
    That being said, this is grammar, nothing else. Unless you’re specifically talking about people, these articles don’t mean anything. Tables aren’t féminine any more than clouds are masculine. It’s literally just grammar. The language essentially took these genders from Ancient Greek and Latin.
    2) Germany. She was right, in French countries are preceded by an article, depending on the gender of the word ; the same goes with countries. « La Grèce », « le Pérou », for instance.
    The issue is that “Germany” starts with a vowel, in French (Allemagne) and the rule says that if the noun starts with a vowel, the article will not be LE or LA (obviously not LES since it’s not a plural noun) but simply « L’ » -> L’ALLEMAGNE. The idea is to strip the initial article (LE or LA) off its last letter so as to pronounce both words smoother and easier. As far as Germany is concerned, and in spite of the article L’, the word “Germany” is feminine grammar-wise so, if not for this rule, it would have been « la Allemagne ».
    3- Her checking method. In order to verify wether the country, grammatically speaking, was masculine or feminine, she asked herself whether she’d say « mon Allemagne » or « ma Allemagne » (understand “my Germany”) since, very often, the article you put before a noun will sort of spontaneously and intuitively tell you its grammatical gender. Essentially, every single French speaker will say « ma table » and « mon cinéma ». MA is the feminine for MY and MON is its masculine iteration. The rule that she doesn’t seem to be aware of is that when the noun starts with a vowel, then that MY word will always be MON regardless of the gender. See it like this :
    - ARC (bow) in French is masculine so MY BOW will be « mon arc »,
    - ÂME (soul) is feminine but because it starts with a vowel, MY will still be MON -> « mon âme ».
    There were TONS of other things but I’ve already typed too much, I think. 😅

  • @OhWaker
    @OhWaker 10 місяців тому

    7:29 Shannon sounds like she's speaking with an Australian accent when she's talking about it

  • @oscarberolla9910
    @oscarberolla9910 Рік тому +3

    En tiempos pasados tambien se usaba mucho ponerle articulo a los paises, solo basta leer periodicos del siglo XIX y veremos como escribian sobre "La Prusia", "La Argentina", "La Italia", etc..

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Рік тому +5

    Germany, Allemagne, Deutschland. The founding of the state was quite late so that these names denote the various German tribes. Deutsch means those who do not speak Latin or Frech but the language of the people. The term Dutch is closely related to it. Deutsch and Dutch are two siblings who separated a long time ago.
    Frankreich still refers to the kingdom of the Franks and the legendary Charlemagne. His sons divided the empire and only the western part remained: France.
    The eastern part divided into many principalities that only became Germany much later. But this was not possible without Napoleon's imperialism and the will of Prussia to resist. But also Napoleon's reforms.
    Too bad that identity is often created through wars. It is often overlooked how mutually beneficial both nations have influenced each other.

  • @PhilSmith94420
    @PhilSmith94420 Рік тому +2

    German also say "USA" but pronounced in German letters.

  • @TyLeJack
    @TyLeJack Рік тому +1

    Ye Lauren, when WE were in the EU 😅

  • @Pikachu-ez1rm
    @Pikachu-ez1rm Рік тому +17

    Cool video. It was a good opportunity for Claudia to mention that in Spanish we don't say America to refer to the US because America is a continent in Spanish.

    • @MrsLizziee
      @MrsLizziee Рік тому +1

      She said that...

    • @Jade-xw2ur
      @Jade-xw2ur Рік тому +1

      When I went to Mexico, a few people on the street said “Arriba América” to me. 😂 I know they were referring to my country.

    • @Pikachu-ez1rm
      @Pikachu-ez1rm Рік тому

      @@Jade-xw2ur really? What part of Mexico?

    • @Jade-xw2ur
      @Jade-xw2ur Рік тому +2

      @@Pikachu-ez1rm Monterrey. Honestly a lot of my Hispanic friends say “America”. I’ve only seen a couple of Colombian and Venezuelan people that I know get offended, which I don’t know why…their nationalities are Colombian and Venezuelan, not American. I also remember learning from my Costa Rican teacher in elementary school that my nationality is Americana, then I think I had a Colombian teacher who got offended once again when I said that the next year. I don’t get why they care…well I do actually.

    • @Pikachu-ez1rm
      @Pikachu-ez1rm Рік тому +1

      @@Jade-xw2ur maybe the ones living in the US or North Mexico (rare) say America but for most native Spanish speakers including myself America is a single continent. I do know people use America to refer to the US because I speak English so again, to me, America is both a country and a continent but even in English I dont say America. Only US, USA, the states.

  • @videomailYT
    @videomailYT Рік тому +4

    Wouldn't be a problem if someone from Italy also get invited

  • @The_Environmental_Consultant

    Girls flower garden 🙂

  • @MatthiasDrinksH20
    @MatthiasDrinksH20 Рік тому

    Fun fact: in german germany is the Vaterland aka maskuline, but Germania (the personification of germany) is feminine.