If you have only a couple of weeks before visiting a new country, even though you can't expect to achieve any fluency in the spoken language, at least try to learn the alphabet, so that you can read signs on the road, at railway stations and on shopfronts, etc. However, if you don't actually understand the language, that learning may not stick for long after you leave the country.
Learning “please” and “thank you” is probably the most important. You can get a long way as a foreigner just saying “please” and “thank you” over and over while being friendly.
Can't expect someone to learn Georgian or Lao script in just a couple of weeks, especially when it's not related in any way to one's arsenal of languages spoken
I learned English in school, but I really learned it by watching Breaking Bad with subtitles. lol Helped me a great deal understanding the spoken word much better. Watching Hell on Wheels and their slang in there also helped me a lot understanding English when not spoken with high British clarity. And yes, sometimes I paused and looked up a word. Looking words up as they come along is how I learn new words.
When visiting another country, I think that everyone (regardless of skill) should learn to say 'hello, thank you, goodbye' in that language. It's just a sign of respect.
6:30 I have to disagree here, because Indonesian has been proven to be the easiest language to learn 😁 This is true especially for Italian or Spanish speakers, as our spelling is also phonetic like theirs. On top of that, there’s no grammatical genders, no irregular verbs, no tenses, no tones, no plurals, simple word formation, and we use Latin alphabets. We also have tons of loanwords from English, Dutch, Portuguese, and Latin to give you a head start if you’re from Europe. Of course our everyday vocabulary is totally different from the formal form you’ll learn at your language course but that’s the same with every language on the planet.
Wonderful! You answered a question I had and your recommendation was mass listening. Will do. When I was a teenager in high school no one told me not to study French and Spanish at the same time and alas, they did mix up in my brain. And of course at that time and for years after I also had no chance to practice them anyway. But now at age 70 I am beginning to learn Portuguese (Brazilian.) And you addressed that for me as well. I so appreciate your work. Both channels. love those 72 wings.
Traditionally in English schools, those who were doing well in Latin were encouraged after a couple of years to take up Greek as well: but they were not being studied at the same level until a few years later. A few schools tried it the other way round, with most learning Greek and a few going on to Latin, and they found the results were no different. However, Latin has the edge as it has (or used to have) more immediate utility in law, medicine and related occupations. Most children used to study French, and the minority who took German started it a year or two later.
I hope your language learning goes well! I'm learning Brazilian Portuguese as well, but I'm in my 20's. I'm currently at a B1 level. I would recommend the channel "Easy Portuguese" to be able to hear many natives speak. Boa sorte!
6:40 You are never too old to learn a language you want to learn. Passion is the greatest motivator, and you can still learn another language at the age of 80. All you need is motivation and will. Because that's how the brain works. You learn best with joy, and actually remember.
Portuguese has about 260 million speakers, distributed across eight different countries. That's a lot, it is indeed a "world language." But it falls quite short of English, which has around 1.5 billion speakers worldwide (according to Ethnologue)
I'd love for you to continue answering the questions we posed in that community post as a dedicated video series... and not just because I would like an answer by you to the question I posed 😅, but because it was neat to see all the varying questions that were asked and the answers that you gave!
I love your answer for the first question. I think that people who know more about etymology in general for English will be able to do what you’re describing more accurately. In my experience, most people who speak English natively do not have as much knowledge of etymology through Latin as you and I do. It is still excellent advice! I find this works for me! (:
I like the last question that you selected for this video. I've always wondered why some languages are considered beautiful, and others ugly. For me, Germanic and Slavic languages sound absolutely beautiful, but French is almost as bad as nails on a chalkboard. Of course, personal preference does play a part.
There certainly is something towards the aesthetic nature of particular phonemes, but also for the broader flow of a spoken language. Some might be naturally more melodic or poetic (eg with common suffixes or syllabic count), while others would be lesser so (eg tonality). These may or may not manifest enough for beauty in regular speaking, but be amplified while singing. Some languages are more or less flexible with word order too, which will affect their usability in poetry (eg word play or rhyming).
Tons of words come from them so knowing Chinese characters can be helpful to understand the etymology and aid memorization, but they use almost only the Korean alphabet in everyday life
I dig the question and answer about age - caregiver to both adopted parents ( meaning I am not worried about their genetics effecting me) dementia father made me think about doing something to keep the ‘brain’ active so began to try a language ( if one continues with crossword puzzles etc - to me it’s just rehearsing what you already know - so- at around 50 trying is fun( I was 48-at the time) cannot speak much of anything but English - can understand French Spanish - Italian-Russian (sorry Metatron- don’t care for Italian) learning helps the mind
I speak English and it is my language I speak that speak fluent in. I'm learning Welsh, Arabic and Turkish at the moment Welsh as it my home country. Turkish as we have a Turkish community here in my home town of Bridgend, I had been to Turkish twice Arabic see if I can get use to something a different writing system, however even if I had the money, I couldn't go to countries with poor human right records, especially if I have to becareful what I have to say. I love to be fluent in the language above but also fluent in languages that asylum seekers are coming from that you might have a lack of translators and if people from those countries a majority of them don't speak English.
I would have a question about how to keep a conversation partner in a state of being aware that they are talking to someone for whom the language is foreign after all. I'm talking to a Russian friend of mine. The longer the conversation lasts and the better we understand each other...the faster she speaks, stops intoning clearly, mixes into her sentences laughter, emotions and especially phrases from movies, books that I don't know but are common knowledge for Russians...and I stop understanding. For example, if he wants to ironically express respect, he says after the person's name "three times ku" which refers to a well-known Soviet film... Such a conversation not only requires knowledge of the language, a good ear, but also a high knowledge of the culture.
You could learn to speak the language of the EWOK language instead of elf language. It is a real language (Kalmyk). I keep hoping to see your opinion on reading for learning a foreign language. I have used your original tips for GREAT results by the way.
9:52 Maybe this person got confused with the little known fact that Portuguese is the most spoken first language in the southern hemisphere (definetely not in the world). Also, thanks for answering my question!
I speak Mandarin Chinese, I'm a native English speaker, and I want to learn Mongolian, Russian, Ukrainian, Greek, and Burmese, but I want to go to Taiwan or China
Metatron, I'm telling you this with love and with native ears. You can't pronounce the short "i" sound in isolation, lmao You can do it perfectly within the context of a word, like "thin," but when you pronounce it by itself, you say it more like the French "e" as in "que." Not that it matters at all-just a funny little observation.
Can you use escusi (bad spelling? I got this from Aziz Ansari on TV) in the same way as "excuse me"? Scenario: I'm asking someone to please move as I'm trying to get off a train.
I know it's not related to this topic, but I think a lot of your audience as well as myself would like to get your take on Matt Easton from Scholagladitoria turning his back on Shad Brooks from Shadiversity and cutting off all association with him, over his apparent "far-right' content on his secondary culture channel Knights Watch. I know your friendly with both, and it's a really sad situation. I'd been subscribed to both for years.
I don't know why people would care about Metatron's opinions on this. He isn't an involved party. I think people should let it go. It's not like Matt name dropped Shad causing his army of goons to go and harass him.
There's a lot of reasons. I mention one in the comment, they're something like peers in the UA-cam medievalist community. Let it go? It happened abrubtly a day ago, people who are fans of both channels are bound to be curious. And, its highly likely that fans of those channels, will be fans of other adjacent channels. I'm aware Metatron is an uninvolved party, that's why Im curious about his opinion. Uninvolved parties can in fact have thoughts or opinions on occurences that they aren't personally involved in.
Like 👍 Number 100. 6:27. "No Asian language which is easy to learn." True 👍 for a monoglot like Americans 🇺🇲, Australians🇦🇺. But in your case, Metatron, and for anybody who speaks a Romance language, there is an Asian language which is easy to learn: Chavacano. It is a Spanish 🇪🇸 creole spoken in The Philippines 🇵🇭. And I traveled there last year, 2022. I, a speaker of Mexican Spanish, understand 80+ percent of it. Indonesian 🇮🇩 or Malay 🇲🇾 is not as easy as Chavacano. But Indonesian or Malay have no verb tenses and no conjugations! Some of the words appear in Tagalog and other languages of The Philippines 🇵🇭. Tagalog is harder but not as hard as Mandarin or Japanese. I am learning Tagalog now. It code-switches to Spanish 🇪🇸 and American English 🇺🇸 often. Example. Tagalog permits 3 number systems: Tagalog, Spanish and English! 🤯🤯🤯 You are right ✅ More English speakers than Portuguese speakers. India 🇮🇳 has 1 billion people. English is an official language there. Because the population of India 🇮🇳 is more numerous than that of Brazil 🇧🇷, English has more speakers than Portuguese.
As a language enthusiast, did you ever consider learning any endangered or dying languages, if for no other reason than to help them be remembered by someone? Personally, I have been captivated by Ainu and want to learn it, a nearly extinct language isolate which just so happens to be where I want to live.
A fictional language that nobody speaks,like Esperanto?😉.Just joking but I will always associate Esperanto with Arnold Rimmer.lol.Yup, I think I pointed out you slide into a certain kind of English accent now and then.German is my least favorite so far.Germans always seem angry.I went to school with Germans,so I know they can be quite jolly people,but it's the sound of the language.
If you listen to a regular German speak it isn't a particularly harsh or angry sounding language. Especially since Germans tend to be more quiet and soft spoken.
My lab partner was ,I think,Bavarian, and soft spoken but mostly you hear speeches and stuff.I imagine those are like BBC newsreaders,not how regular people talk.@@minutemansam1214
If you have only a couple of weeks before visiting a new country, even though you can't expect to achieve any fluency in the spoken language, at least try to learn the alphabet, so that you can read signs on the road, at railway stations and on shopfronts, etc. However, if you don't actually understand the language, that learning may not stick for long after you leave the country.
Learning “please” and “thank you” is probably the most important. You can get a long way as a foreigner just saying “please” and “thank you” over and over while being friendly.
Can't expect someone to learn Georgian or Lao script in just a couple of weeks, especially when it's not related in any way to one's arsenal of languages spoken
I learned English in school, but I really learned it by watching Breaking Bad with subtitles. lol
Helped me a great deal understanding the spoken word much better. Watching Hell on Wheels and their slang in there also helped me a lot understanding English when not spoken with high British clarity.
And yes, sometimes I paused and looked up a word. Looking words up as they come along is how I learn new words.
When visiting another country, I think that everyone (regardless of skill) should learn to say 'hello, thank you, goodbye' in that language. It's just a sign of respect.
Yes, and 'I'm sorry'. The basics of politeness.
6:30 I have to disagree here, because Indonesian has been proven to be the easiest language to learn 😁 This is true especially for Italian or Spanish speakers, as our spelling is also phonetic like theirs. On top of that, there’s no grammatical genders, no irregular verbs, no tenses, no tones, no plurals, simple word formation, and we use Latin alphabets. We also have tons of loanwords from English, Dutch, Portuguese, and Latin to give you a head start if you’re from Europe. Of course our everyday vocabulary is totally different from the formal form you’ll learn at your language course but that’s the same with every language on the planet.
Cool yo
Indonesian is Malay
Wonderful! You answered a question I had and your recommendation was mass listening. Will do. When I was a teenager in high school no one told me not to study French and Spanish at the same time and alas, they did mix up in my brain. And of course at that time and for years after I also had no chance to practice them anyway. But now at age 70 I am beginning to learn Portuguese (Brazilian.) And you addressed that for me as well. I so appreciate your work. Both channels. love those 72 wings.
Traditionally in English schools, those who were doing well in Latin were encouraged after a couple of years to take up Greek as well: but they were not being studied at the same level until a few years later. A few schools tried it the other way round, with most learning Greek and a few going on to Latin, and they found the results were no different. However, Latin has the edge as it has (or used to have) more immediate utility in law, medicine and related occupations.
Most children used to study French, and the minority who took German started it a year or two later.
I hope your language learning goes well! I'm learning Brazilian Portuguese as well, but I'm in my 20's. I'm currently at a B1 level.
I would recommend the channel "Easy Portuguese" to be able to hear many natives speak. Boa sorte!
6:40 You are never too old to learn a language you want to learn. Passion is the greatest motivator, and you can still learn another language at the age of 80. All you need is motivation and will. Because that's how the brain works. You learn best with joy, and actually remember.
Portuguese has about 260 million speakers, distributed across eight different countries. That's a lot, it is indeed a "world language." But it falls quite short of English, which has around 1.5 billion speakers worldwide (according to Ethnologue)
I'd love for you to continue answering the questions we posed in that community post as a dedicated video series... and not just because I would like an answer by you to the question I posed 😅, but because it was neat to see all the varying questions that were asked and the answers that you gave!
Agreed!
I love your answer for the first question. I think that people who know more about etymology in general for English will be able to do what you’re describing more accurately. In my experience, most people who speak English natively do not have as much knowledge of etymology through Latin as you and I do. It is still excellent advice! I find this works for me! (:
I very much enjoyed this upload Maestro....more please😊
Thank you so much for answering my question
there was a study on what make a language more beautiful and their conclusion was breathyness the speakers gender and how close it is to you language
I like the last question that you selected for this video. I've always wondered why some languages are considered beautiful, and others ugly. For me, Germanic and Slavic languages sound absolutely beautiful, but French is almost as bad as nails on a chalkboard. Of course, personal preference does play a part.
There certainly is something towards the aesthetic nature of particular phonemes, but also for the broader flow of a spoken language. Some might be naturally more melodic or poetic (eg with common suffixes or syllabic count), while others would be lesser so (eg tonality). These may or may not manifest enough for beauty in regular speaking, but be amplified while singing. Some languages are more or less flexible with word order too, which will affect their usability in poetry (eg word play or rhyming).
I really enjoyed this. Would love to see more of these Q&A videos for sure!
I would (and probably the community too would) like to hear your speaking-to-a-friend accent! :D
WTF was that goofy *ss intro? 🤣🤣🤣🤣 This guy is so random and weird sometimes, f*cking love it. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Mabey its an old statistic portugese is now listed as the 5th or second but many nations especially in Africa use it as a second language. My bad.
You have presented excellent advice and answered my question!
Thank you for answering my question. 😊
Korean also uses Chinese characters. It made trying to use the language that much harder
Tons of words come from them so knowing Chinese characters can be helpful to understand the etymology and aid memorization, but they use almost only the Korean alphabet in everyday life
I like Hangul
I dig the question and answer about age - caregiver to both adopted parents ( meaning I am not worried about their genetics effecting me) dementia father made me think about doing something to keep the ‘brain’ active so began to try a language ( if one continues with crossword puzzles etc - to me it’s just rehearsing what you already know - so- at around 50 trying is fun( I was 48-at the time) cannot speak much of anything but English - can understand French Spanish - Italian-Russian (sorry Metatron- don’t care for Italian) learning helps the mind
So interesting! Thank you again.
I like this question roundups!
I speak English and it is my language I speak that speak fluent in.
I'm learning Welsh, Arabic and Turkish at the moment
Welsh as it my home country.
Turkish as we have a Turkish community here in my home town of Bridgend, I had been to Turkish twice
Arabic see if I can get use to something a different writing system, however even if I had the money, I couldn't go to countries with poor human right records, especially if I have to becareful what I have to say.
I love to be fluent in the language above but also fluent in languages that asylum seekers are coming from that you might have a lack of translators and if people from those countries a majority of them don't speak English.
Hello Metatron. This channel must be especially useful for all those who need elf with their language studies.
I would have a question about how to keep a conversation partner in a state of being aware that they are talking to someone for whom the language is foreign after all.
I'm talking to a Russian friend of mine. The longer the conversation lasts and the better we understand each other...the faster she speaks, stops intoning clearly, mixes into her sentences laughter, emotions and especially phrases from movies, books that I don't know but are common knowledge for Russians...and I stop understanding. For example, if he wants to ironically express respect, he says after the person's name "three times ku" which refers to a well-known Soviet film... Such a conversation not only requires knowledge of the language, a good ear, but also a high knowledge of the culture.
I will love your view and analysis of Bahasa Indonesa
14:27 that’s just me and my brother. My brother hates how French sounds and I love it.
oh I see, thank you for letting me know!
You could learn to speak the language of the EWOK language instead of elf language. It is a real language (Kalmyk). I keep hoping to see your opinion on reading for learning a foreign language. I have used your original tips for GREAT results by the way.
I didn't know this was your 2nd channel until you said so
Funny start ... not sponsored... 😂
Lmfao yeah that was funny
9:52 Maybe this person got confused with the little known fact that Portuguese is the most spoken first language in the southern hemisphere (definetely not in the world). Also, thanks for answering my question!
I speak Mandarin Chinese, I'm a native English speaker, and I want to learn Mongolian, Russian, Ukrainian, Greek, and Burmese, but I want to go to Taiwan or China
Metatron, I'm telling you this with love and with native ears. You can't pronounce the short "i" sound in isolation, lmao
You can do it perfectly within the context of a word, like "thin," but when you pronounce it by itself, you say it more like the French "e" as in "que." Not that it matters at all-just a funny little observation.
Can you use escusi (bad spelling? I got this from Aziz Ansari on TV) in the same way as "excuse me"? Scenario: I'm asking someone to please move as I'm trying to get off a train.
I know it's not related to this topic, but I think a lot of your audience as well as myself would like to get your take on Matt Easton from Scholagladitoria turning his back on Shad Brooks from Shadiversity and cutting off all association with him, over his apparent "far-right' content on his secondary culture channel Knights Watch.
I know your friendly with both, and it's a really sad situation. I'd been subscribed to both for years.
I don't know why people would care about Metatron's opinions on this. He isn't an involved party. I think people should let it go. It's not like Matt name dropped Shad causing his army of goons to go and harass him.
There's a lot of reasons. I mention one in the comment, they're something like peers in the UA-cam medievalist community.
Let it go? It happened abrubtly a day ago, people who are fans of both channels are bound to be curious. And, its highly likely that fans of those channels, will be fans of other adjacent channels.
I'm aware Metatron is an uninvolved party, that's why Im curious about his opinion. Uninvolved parties can in fact have thoughts or opinions on occurences that they aren't personally involved in.
Question:
What do you think of the German language?
Cmon Metatron.....please investigate the links between Old Latin and the beginnings of Ancient Celtic languages. 2,000 BC or older.
What is the correct translation of Exodus 3:14?
Mas mas mas por favor! 😂
Like 👍 Number 100.
6:27. "No Asian language which is easy to learn." True 👍 for a monoglot like Americans 🇺🇲, Australians🇦🇺.
But in your case, Metatron, and for anybody who speaks a Romance language, there is an Asian language which is easy to learn: Chavacano. It is a Spanish 🇪🇸 creole spoken in The Philippines 🇵🇭. And I traveled there last year, 2022. I, a speaker of Mexican Spanish, understand 80+ percent of it.
Indonesian 🇮🇩 or Malay 🇲🇾 is not as easy as Chavacano. But Indonesian or Malay have no verb tenses and no conjugations! Some of the words appear in Tagalog and other languages of The Philippines 🇵🇭.
Tagalog is harder but not as hard as Mandarin or Japanese. I am learning Tagalog now.
It code-switches to Spanish 🇪🇸 and American English 🇺🇸 often. Example. Tagalog permits 3 number systems: Tagalog, Spanish and English! 🤯🤯🤯
You are right ✅ More English speakers than Portuguese speakers. India 🇮🇳 has 1 billion people. English is an official language there. Because the population of India 🇮🇳 is more numerous than that of Brazil 🇧🇷, English has more speakers than Portuguese.
I use a Taiwanese accent in Mandarin
All all you want, but if you aren't fluent enough to understand the answer, it won't help
As a language enthusiast, did you ever consider learning any endangered or dying languages, if for no other reason than to help them be remembered by someone? Personally, I have been captivated by Ainu and want to learn it, a nearly extinct language isolate which just so happens to be where I want to live.
I think there is a fictional language that you could learn and actually use from time to time. Klingon.
A fictional language that nobody speaks,like Esperanto?😉.Just joking but I will always associate Esperanto with Arnold Rimmer.lol.Yup, I think I pointed out you slide into a certain kind of English accent now and then.German is my least favorite so far.Germans always seem angry.I went to school with Germans,so I know they can be quite jolly people,but it's the sound of the language.
If you listen to a regular German speak it isn't a particularly harsh or angry sounding language. Especially since Germans tend to be more quiet and soft spoken.
My lab partner was ,I think,Bavarian, and soft spoken but mostly you hear speeches and stuff.I imagine those are like BBC newsreaders,not how regular people talk.@@minutemansam1214
Oh, a knife-ear fan. That's it. Unsuscribed.
Just joking. Great video. But elves, really? cheers Metatron!
Well, in Asian countries, you can speak English as many educated people speak some degree of English.
British Commonwealth 🇬🇧 nations and The Philippines 🇵🇭, where I was last year, 2022, have English as an official language.
I think Mandarin is the most beautiful language, second is Greek, and third is Russian... that's just my opinion though, and I think French is ugly
fictional language Japanese
True, people really be learning anime language