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Weird European Pronunciation that Asian Can NEVER Understand!

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2023
  • Hi Awesome People🌏!!!
    Today, Hoseung tried to learn German French and Scottish English!
    Show us your ❤ with Subscribe, Like👍 & Comment and Share!
    🌏AWESOMEWORLD
    / awesome_world_kr
    Email/Inquires
    ➡awesomeworld.kr@gmail.com
    ★Today's Special Guests★
    Nida(German) / nidalida_
    Mitch(Scottish) / mitchcraig
    Megan(French) / shikihoshiyama
    🌏Hoseung
    / hoseung_ronnie
    #Pronunciation #Language #Education #Alphabet #European #Western #Foreign #Culture #Difference #Korean #Reaction

КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @SanSandraR
    @SanSandraR Рік тому +84

    Did someone hit the wrong button? We already watched this episode.

    • @sn....759
      @sn....759 Рік тому +6

      wondering the same thing

    • @andyle5716
      @andyle5716 Рік тому +2

      Yeah... We've watched this last time... I think it got removed and then reupload...

  • @AlfgardVicAenorDuFay
    @AlfgardVicAenorDuFay Рік тому +36

    Nida a raison sur la difficulté du coréen pour un européen... il est plus facile d'apprendre l'allemand et l'anglais car nous avons des racines communes !

  • @maredsouso
    @maredsouso Рік тому +18

    Germany: German grammar is hard because we have 5 cases...
    Hungary: Khm.. we have 17...

    • @yamiyami595
      @yamiyami595 Рік тому +1

      17??? Wow

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 Рік тому +1

      Plus, German only has 4 cases:
      Nominative (subject), Genitive (possessive), Dative (indirect object), and Accusative (direct object)
      "[Der Hund] [des Mieters] klaute [den Apfel] [vom Tisch.]" = Nom(der) - Gen(des -s) - Verb - Acc(den) - Dat(von dem -> vom)
      "[The dog] [of the tenant] stole [the apple] [from the table]." = subject - possessive - verb - direct object - indirect object

  • @Jaeler9
    @Jaeler9 Рік тому +16

    I never want to be one of those people who screams “no we don’t” at the screen but I kinda have to at this one. But then the lovely German speaker corrected the Scot on his “American” pronunciation and I wanted to hug her. But I’m a huggy person anyway. So danke!

    • @kellyh7158
      @kellyh7158 Рік тому +3

      Haha yeah I was thinking that too. The way Mitch pronounced things in Scottish like Apple, etc. we’re the same way with how I would pronounce it in American English. But going through all these different languages, I’m sure it’s easy to get mixed up with how he used to say things in Scotland vs when speaking English elsewhere.

  • @Miriam-Eve
    @Miriam-Eve Рік тому +7

    As a native German speaker, I would like to set a few things straight: we have 4 cases, not 5 (Nominativ, Genitiv, Dativ and Akkusativ). Also, as far as I know, the "sharp S" was originally a SZ. That is why it is also called an "Eszett".
    Furthermore, I do not like her saying "it's not worth (learning German)". I agree with German not being the easiest language you can learn. But that should not hold you back. We have amazing authors like Franz Kafka, Adalbert Stifter and Ursula Poznanski. We have famous musicians like Mozart, Beethoven and Bach. We have many different cultures and delicious food (Speckknödel, Wiener Schnitzel, Sauerkraut, ...). So, if you are interested in Austrian/German/Liechtensteiner/... culture and you would like to learn more about it, do not shrink back from learning German.

  • @andrewwatson9805
    @andrewwatson9805 Рік тому +9

    Many people, including native English speakers, will say the rule on whether to use "a" or "an" is that if the next word starts with a vowel use "an" otherwise use "a". But that's not quite right. The real rule--despite what the best dictionaries say--the rule is that if the following word *sounds like* it starts with a vowel, then use "an", otherwise use "a". For example, uniform starts with a vowel, but we would never say "an uniform", we say "a uniform" because uniform sounds like it sounds with a "y", as in "yew-nee-form". Similarly, it is "a" ewe (female sheep) because "ewe" is pronounced "yew". The same is true for "H" when we talk about an honourary guest, we pronounce "honourary" without the "h", making it sound like it starts with "o" as in 'onourary.

    • @alisdairmclean8605
      @alisdairmclean8605 Рік тому

      Spot on! I am a science editor and when I correct manuscripts with the indefinite article I have to give the same explanation. Incidentally in science writing abbreviations and acronyms are used a lot and the same rule
      applies. For example an F-test (eff test) for Fisher's test.

  • @Rebecca-ck8fn
    @Rebecca-ck8fn Рік тому +3

    This was both educational and entertaining 🤗

  • @user-pe4lk9uu4w
    @user-pe4lk9uu4w Рік тому +23

    didnt they already post that?

  • @siriuspyramid7441
    @siriuspyramid7441 Рік тому +3

    Love from 🇫🇷 France

  • @81naixy
    @81naixy Рік тому +9

    Who did the montage on the french part ? It's so wrong 🤣🤣🤣

  • @zarrouguilucas2585
    @zarrouguilucas2585 Рік тому +13

    Korean and Japanese sound so authoritarian to me! (French native speaker). I'd be interested to know whether Japanese and Korean natives think other languages are more "soft" than theirs.

  •  Рік тому +6

    01:19 -> I thought german had only 4 cases (nominative / dative / accusative / genitive) . wich one is the 5th?

    • @berlindude75
      @berlindude75 Рік тому +2

      There is no 5th case, German indeed only has 4 cases:
      Nominative (subject), Genitive (possessive), Dative (indirect object), and Accusative (direct object)
      "[Der Hund] [des Mieters] klaute [den Apfel] [vom Tisch]." = Nom(der) - Gen(des -s) - Verb - Acc(den) - Dat(von dem -> vom)
      "[The dog] [of the tenant] stole [the apple] [from the table]." = subject - possessive - verb - direct object - indirect object

  • @irisflower9030
    @irisflower9030 Рік тому +3

    Russian with seven cases that apply to adjectives and nouns and change based on tense and article, and 3 articles: hold my vodka.

  • @HeloiseEliot
    @HeloiseEliot Рік тому +2

    YESSSSS!

  • @glcnornes3783
    @glcnornes3783 Рік тому

    "Wee" is also used over the water on the Emerald Isle ;)

  • @Trika0103
    @Trika0103 Рік тому +4

    O Hoseung falando "informação" em português.... derreti de amor 🥴🥴🥴🥰

    • @pxKappa
      @pxKappa Рік тому

      só q não... era o francês quebrado dele lol

    • @Trika0103
      @Trika0103 Рік тому

      @@pxKappa Depois que eu postei é que eu percebi kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk

    • @andreiamendes9116
      @andreiamendes9116 Рік тому

      Ele é tão fofo , não é? 😊

  • @samruddhimore-rj8ni
    @samruddhimore-rj8ni Рік тому +1

    i can relate with that german girl so much like i am half blind without my spects and its so embarrasing 😅😅

  • @planetwasabi
    @planetwasabi Рік тому +7

    lmao mitch's "american" accent

  • @HeloiseEliot
    @HeloiseEliot Рік тому +4

    re-upload?

  • @tiredbylife.5589
    @tiredbylife.5589 Рік тому +5

    German > French > English in terms of difficulty. But, while English is one of the easiest languages to learn. English is quite difficult to master. French is nonsense with a bunch of exceptions. I hate everything about having to learn. (Native French here). I tried to learn German and, after 1 year in college, I gave the F up. The grammar in German is from hell.

    • @brendyagnesita
      @brendyagnesita Рік тому +7

      From polish perspective French>German>Englisch (from hardest to easiest). German grammar is quite logical in my opinion. :)

    • @Miaina77
      @Miaina77 Рік тому +1

      @@brendyagnesita I agree with you German grammar is logical very few exceptions. French is difficult because of lack of logic and too many weird exceptions (I'm French).

    • @guigui78340
      @guigui78340 Рік тому

      the reason why french grammar doesn’t make no sense to foreigners is because, there is no difference between written and spoken language. so the grammar has literaly been developed around natural spoken language to match it as close as possible. there are tons of examples where you write in a certain way because of the way it sounds rather than the meaning of it.

    • @aizuni
      @aizuni Рік тому

      English is absolutely the easiest language to master bro... it is way more spoken in the world, so you meet English people more often and learn it quite easily, even if it's a hard language.

  • @dunanub8725
    @dunanub8725 Рік тому +3

    reupload?

  • @Agathe.May...
    @Agathe.May... Рік тому

    It s the 3 languages i speak with japanese 😄 not so hard.

  • @DavidCruickshank
    @DavidCruickshank Рік тому +1

    Repeat??

  • @inotoni6148
    @inotoni6148 Рік тому +1

    No Nida on the thumbnail? Srtainge!

  • @Theias_27
    @Theias_27 Рік тому

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @Candy30498
    @Candy30498 Рік тому

    Reupload?

  • @user-pp9ok1jv8w
    @user-pp9ok1jv8w Рік тому +1

    🇬🇧(🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿)we ken
    🇫🇷nous comprenons
    🇩🇪Wir verstehen

  • @charles-nm3sc
    @charles-nm3sc Рік тому

    7.10 nida la bonne copine !!

  • @deepgotft2741
    @deepgotft2741 Рік тому +1

    Didn't knew french people use grammar lol

  • @golbinnom
    @golbinnom Рік тому +1

    when you make these videos please dont skip korean, its also interesting to see please. most views are non korean speakers anyway

  • @gky93
    @gky93 Рік тому

    bruh u shouldn't read the subtitles

  • @parveenbegum253
    @parveenbegum253 Рік тому +2

    Can i get pin?without any reason?☠

  • @user-fe5vs4oy8s
    @user-fe5vs4oy8s Рік тому

    the girl with brown hair is sucha pick me bro

  • @diggity1039
    @diggity1039 Рік тому +3

    Re-upload?