He could have been admitting that he sold some of the ewes and wanted to claim insurance money for them as well. No one could understand him, they just feel sorry for him and start a go fund me.
The frick ?! You’re still relevant doing UA-cam !!?? I thought you would have put that on the shelf many many years ago. But you’re still here xO the OG Chocolate Rain since the dawn of UA-cam! Finally we meet! And nice to meet you sir :0
Indeed. I was watching a documentary about the dog eating culture in east asia by some far left group and there was an old man living in a Japanese town that said when he was young dog meat would be available coupled with post war famines; he heard that the wild dogs would bark at a person that traded dog meat whenever he passed by.
County Kerry where this is filmed is one of the Gaeltacht areas - where people still speak the native Irish language. It's not surprising he speaks with a strong accent.
I saw this video 2 years ago and understood 5% of it. Now, I have already been living in ireland for 6 months, and I have watched it again, and I'm very happy to tell you I can now understand 10%!!
This man is a native irish speaker with a native irish speakers unique accent and grammar usage. English is his 2nd language, hence a bit hard for some to follow. One of the few real irishmen left in this world who's 1st language is still his irish native tongue.
@@internetual7350i’m trying to learn. i’ve always found the language beautiful in song so i wanted to learn it. i caught a few of the words you wrote but im only a few months in learning the language
@@gggfyg1038 At 0:51 the man does speak Irish. He says "San thuas! An gcíonn tú é? San thuas a bhíodar!" which means "Up there! You see it? They were up there!" Funny thing is his accent while speaking Irish is far easier to understand than his English. It's probably safe to assume that this man's first language is Irish, since he spoke Irish while not being interviewed, also he's living in a rural Kerry area (Probably Uíbh Rátha or Corca Dhuibhne).
I swear when I watched this without them I was completely lost, like it was a completely foreign language. Turned em on and read along and suddenly I could understand about 97% of what he was saying. Don’t even need the subtitles anymore.
American. Grew up knowing only English my whole life. Could not understand a word he said without subtitles. With subtitles though, it became a lot more clear instantly. Like my brain was telling my ears what sounds to look for and focus on. Some mad trippy stuff it feels like
@Anubis Keeper of the dead He has the Irish accent. You don't know what accent means,do you?Accent is basically speaking with a certain pronunciation of everything. For example ca"r" is pronounced with the American accent but car(that r is not pronounced) is pronounced with a British accent.
The funny thing is that English is probably this mans second lagnuage, he's one of the few Irish people who would have spoken Irish as their first language.
“Whoever is doing it knows what he’s doing”. Ladies and gents, we’re not dealing with a 2 bit sheep common thief here, we’re dealing with a 35 sheep a pop pro
I am from Kyrgyzstan and have herded sheeps for my whole life and learned English for the last 25 years. I can say that the former has helped me much more in understanding him from his body language unlike the latter, as I clearly did not understand a single word.
@WHy do I keep coming back here aaagh Lmaooo, that's so funny as well as expected. Btw, UA-cam algorithms are working. I've just found this video in my recommendations and the video is loaded 6 years ago, but your comment is fresh new. It was easy to find it😄
Genuine Kerry girl here. Grew up rural Kerry (family here), moved to England for my teens-early 20s (lost most of the accent, sad times) and now back in the kingdom once again... I hate to admit it and I stg it's not a humble brag but I could understand what he was saying almost perfectly. I have an uncle and I swear to god even this guy would have trouble understanding him, like *holy shit.* Sure me mam, aunties and all them understand him absolutely perfect cuz like they grew up with him and I'd be sat with him like "what the hell is he saying", I REALLY have to focus and listen carefully to understand and I feel bad cuz the rest of my family just click with it instantly. Guess I'm the outlier... But god damn to an outsider it must sound like complete nonsense lol
Took me three times to understand what he was talking about. I've been studying English for ~20 years now. The last enemy to be defeated will be the thick Irish accent of this glorious man.
I love the news in Ireland. "Old Farmer O'Shea up the road just had his whole flock of sheep stolen, we sent our man Cian in the field to cover this dramatic tale that's gripped the nation."
Same and I’ve yet to come across an accent I can’t understand or even struggle with really, of course the first one would be from a fellow countryman tho 😂
He sounds like he is simultaneously speaking Dutch and Danish with some English thrown in here and there but with an overall Irish accent... Fascinating!
The farmer lives on Mount Brandon on the South-West coast. The mountain is named after Saint Brendan…the Irish monk who was the REAL discoverer of Iceland. If you think his accent is strange you should listen to Icelandic people talking.
@@Blueturtle1 As a Brazilian person: I don't think you actually know what racism feels like. But regarding the 1 year old joke, don't worry, it won't bite you. There are other things in your beautiful and rich country to worry about instead of some virtual words in your phone screen.
@@terrekgallagher7965 Europe is going to fail because of butthurts like you. There are worse things happening in your country than an old joke that's not racist at all.
As a Jamaican (we learned English from the Irish hence the similarities in accent, inflection, etc) this was a bit easy to understand. Especially the second man - sounds like a farmer from the hills here on the island.
AFAIK Jamaican Patois was heavily influenced by Hiberno-English (basically Irish-accented English), alongside West African languages like Akan and Igbo.
That's insane. I only heard that the Jamaican accent came from the cork accent like 2 months ago. I can kind of hear it though and now that I realise that it's hilarious
Or if you correctly translate, you get a cash prize and a linguistics medal. Either way as a native english speaker I maybe made out three words from this guy and I’m pretty sure some of what he was saying was in Gaelic.
Mikey's next door neighbor was far easier to understand. As for Mikey, I literally would have been convinced he was speaking gaelic if not for some of the comments.
Been to Ireland a few times. I'm from Liverpool. Didn't have much problem with the accent. He just talks fast. He complained, rightly, that nobody is doing anything about this, so he's offering the reward. The sheep go up the mountain at night, all the ewes. Somebody knows what he's doin'. The sheep are all these people have for their livelihood. May the green land of saints and legends never deprive us of tales of country folk, no matter how grey and tragic.
Yes! I'm from southern England and I could understand the 1st farmer because I thought his lilt / rhythm of speech seemed somewhat liverpudlian! Once I switched that part of my brain on, he was much easier to understand. And yes, the both talk v fast. The 2nd farmer's accent was very different; more stereotypical of what people expect an Irish accent to sound like
@@musashidanmcgrath well Liverpool is basically also a scottish city, a welsh city, a french city (that explains the throat sound), and if you're pushing it, icelandic. That's a port town for you.
I’ve lived in Ireland for two years and I am learning English, every two or three months, I get back to the video in order to realise whether I have made any progress in my listening skills or not.! 😅
@@Jack-cv4ej well you do realise nearly 40% can speak it but only 4% speak it on a daily basis. You obviously live in Dublin or Cork or some city where ya don’t have a clue what’s going on around ya. There are gaelscoils everywhere in Ireland and people do go to them, sure the only school where I live is a gaelscoil and I’m in the north of Ireland too😂
@@adammacdomhnail2014 cmon now it’s not 40% most of of Ireland can understand bits, plus Irish teachers and past Irish secondary schools but nowhere 40% wish it was though
This man's first language was probably Irish (Also known as Irish Gaelic.) At 0:51 he says "San thuas! An gcíonn tú é? San thuas a bhíodar!". He said this while looking away from the camera to someone (probably his son).
A thiarcais, canathaobh go bhfuilir ag postáil suas rudaí mar seo? Ná fuil a fhios agat beo go ngoilleann sé orm nuair a chím daoine as mo dhúthaigh féin ag magadh faoin blas traidisiúnta na Ciarraíoch? Bead ag cur is ag cúiteamh anso anois le fada an lá. I ndóthair, nuair nach bhfeiceann tú rudaí ní chuirid siad isteach ort
@@cigh7445 Eh, cathain a rabhas ag magadh? Déanaimse péinig stáidéar ar Ghaelainn na Mumhan agus tá go leor cara agam arb as Gaeltacht Chiarraí iad chomh maith. Ceapaim gur maith an chanúinn Bhéarla í Béarla Chiarraí, agus is maith an blas é leis. Tá meas agus grá agam don uile bhlas insa' tír seo, pé teanga ina bhfuil sé.
@@cigh7445 Haha, tá an ceart agat. Ní rabhas cinnte pé aca an rabhais ag caint fúmsa nó an fear eile. Aontaím leat i ndáiríribh, caithfear meas a bheith ag gach uile dhuine ar an mBéarla a labhraítear insna Gaeltachtaí ar a laighead má theastaíonn maireachtáil na Gaelainne uainn. Más rud é go leanfaimíd leis an iompair seo, a bheith ag díspreagadh agus ag déanamh stereotypes agus a leithéid desna daoine seo. Is amhlaidh go laghdaíonn sé sin cás na Gaelainne :/
Ah, so maybe you would know. What is the most common accent for those living in rural farming/ranching areas in Ireland? As in, what is it called? Like, this is a legitimate question.
Second guy was more understandable to me. "It's not all that difficult. All ya gotta do is have a good yard, have a good dragon, oh at night some moonshine light."
The only part of that I could understand was when the second farmer started speaking at about the 1:00 mark..."I'm missing about ten...ten ewes. It's not that difficult, all you have t' do is have a good dog. Have a good dog, and go at night, some moon-shine night, put the dog around 'em, put 'em on a trailer or walk 'em. And then, probably somebody has t' pick 'em up. Whoever's doin' it know what he's doin'."
I started learning english as a 3 year old ,have read ,spoken English for the last 37 years ,watched a ton of English movies and shows,all in all I assumed I had pretty good command over the language ,until finally I met this Irish Nemesis 😅 I honestly can make neither head nor tail of the stolen sheep.
This accent is worth learning in case you’re ever cross-examined in court.
hi Tay
He could have been admitting that he sold some of the ewes and wanted to claim insurance money for them as well. No one could understand him, they just feel sorry for him and start a go fund me.
The frick ?! You’re still relevant doing UA-cam !!?? I thought you would have put that on the shelf many many years ago. But you’re still here xO the OG Chocolate Rain since the dawn of UA-cam! Finally we meet! And nice to meet you sir :0
@@brokentombotexcellent
Holy shit you are the Man that Made chocolate rain
They would have a better chance interviewing the sheeps
Indeed. I was watching a documentary about the dog eating culture in east asia by some far left group and there was an old man living in a Japanese town that said when he was young dog meat would be available coupled with post war famines; he heard that the wild dogs would bark at a person that traded dog meat whenever he passed by.
😹😹😿
Im dead😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
Lmao 🤣
As a non native who learn english, this is the last boss
Man! Your comment is really accurate haha.
Just made my day!!!
I'm American andi can't understand the first guy at all, the 2nd guy is much easier.
I'm Aussie and I had no chance with that dude
Hell yeah 🤣
@@JoneThePwn bcz Americans have some Irish people's as there grand grand grandfather
His accent is so strong it made my water turn into Guinness
irish jesus?!?!?!?!?!?!?
Man's accent is so strong he ended up creating a new language
i do love it though
basically pidgin
That would be English-As-Second-Language level C3 proficiency exam.
So many people will not get that :)
lol im irish and i barely understood him haha
Extra test
C4
Lmao trueeeee hahahaha
and this is how new languages are made
Actually so accurate.
Scammers from India call this guy and be like “whoops we got the wrong country”
Accurate af
Literally
Old, how old languages were
County Kerry where this is filmed is one of the Gaeltacht areas - where people still speak the native Irish language. It's not surprising he speaks with a strong accent.
This is why we have diverse cultures; the Irish have evolved an immunity from speech to text technology; which will serve us well in the machine war.
I for one welcome our Irish overlords.
Most Irish people don't understand these guys. Most of Ireland is too anglicised to understand strong or regional accents.
@@cigh7445 I had no bother understanding these lads and I'm not from Kerry I'm from Mayo
@@cigh7445 Seems like a Dublin problem to me, Im from West Cork and can understand him perfectly
@@Bihghhjiytt what did he say?
This guy' accent is so strong that even OTHER Irish people are stumped
Mario87456 nah we got it
Especially if you are from Kerry
All Irish people outside Munster and in Munster but under twenty seven were probably stumped yeah.
I'm from Ireland and I have no clue what he's saying
@@cigh7445 I’m Connaught and under 27 and I understand it fine I kno hundreds of ppl like him once u get the lingo down I don’t forget it
I saw this video 2 years ago and understood 5% of it. Now, I have already been living in ireland for 6 months, and I have watched it again, and I'm very happy to tell you I can now understand 10%!!
Good one! 😂😂😂
I've watched it 648 times and have officially gone from 7 to 8%
This man is a native irish speaker with a native irish speakers unique accent and grammar usage. English is his 2nd language, hence a bit hard for some to follow. One of the few real irishmen left in this world who's 1st language is still his irish native tongue.
Tá sé an-mhaith ar fad. An labhraíonn tú Gaelainn féin?
@@internetual7350is that Irish?
@@vin_rouge180 Tá sé.
That was _english_ ?!?!
@@internetual7350i’m trying to learn. i’ve always found the language beautiful in song so i wanted to learn it. i caught a few of the words you wrote but im only a few months in learning the language
An absolute rebellion against the English language
It is an English dialect. So it's in fact English. Speaking Irish would be rebellious but no one cares to
@@gggfyg1038 At 0:51 the man does speak Irish. He says "San thuas! An gcíonn tú é? San thuas a bhíodar!" which means "Up there! You see it? They were up there!" Funny thing is his accent while speaking Irish is far easier to understand than his English. It's probably safe to assume that this man's first language is Irish, since he spoke Irish while not being interviewed, also he's living in a rural Kerry area (Probably Uíbh Rátha or Corca Dhuibhne).
The strange thing is I can actually understand him a good bit
@@leeoconnell2572 That shouldn't be strange Martha!
Support from Indian subcontinent
Plot twist:
The sheeps left coz they could not understand their owner..
excepted from british speaking sheeps
lmaooo😂😂😂
Haha tis on' cracked me up hoder than eiver 😂😂😂😂
Am British
Oh no that's terrible! 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
When they started talking about his neighbor I thought I was gonna understand the neighbor at least. Never in my life was I so wrong
They'd be hoors galavanting about the Mish and Reeks in Kerry stealing livestock been going on for centuries.
Whoever subtitled this deserves an award
i'm gonna have to pin you, that person was me
i can't pin, and i want tayzonday, I'm sorry, but I accept your award
And the award goes to... Flutters!🏆
His accent is so strong that i can't even match the subtitles to what he says
They're not 100% accurate, that's why.
@@Tammc09 there are two versions
@@flutters.mp4 and neither are enough to convey the irish power
I swear when I watched this without them I was completely lost, like it was a completely foreign language. Turned em on and read along and suddenly I could understand about 97% of what he was saying. Don’t even need the subtitles anymore.
@@xdoorx h
im irish but i still find it hilarious that this was on the news its just so irish
can you understand him?
Don't air please. Do you understand the man?
@@ayushkhadka6643 other Irish person here, the first farmer is difficult to but not impossible to understand, the second guy is fine.
@@MANTHELEXUS agreed
I love that he says, well what can ya do ‘bout it? Nothin. So why is it on the news?? 😂 😂
I understood “45 sheep” and absolutely nothing else
American. Grew up knowing only English my whole life. Could not understand a word he said without subtitles.
With subtitles though, it became a lot more clear instantly. Like my brain was telling my ears what sounds to look for and focus on. Some mad trippy stuff it feels like
I'm English and similarly lost
Poor guy. His description of how he cares for the sheep was really sweet.
Absolutely poetic it was
What did he say about caring for them? He talked about how they could be stolen fairly easily.
@@DCFelix67 he didnt.. i Think that was the joke
@@ziggylindemark4289 Haha. Maybe. Do these people think he should have babysat hill sheep? Looked like there was plenty grass for them.
@@ziggylindemark4289 Unlikely that 948 people liked that comment because they thought it was a joke. That "joke" isn't that good.
The reporter is the only one with the accent. The farmers are talking a different language.
yes
@@flutters.mp4 ok
That's it
one of the farmers is talking a different language.
@Anubis Keeper of the dead He has the Irish accent. You don't know what accent means,do you?Accent is basically speaking with a certain pronunciation of everything. For example ca"r" is pronounced with the American accent but car(that r is not pronounced) is pronounced with a British accent.
These subs are like magic it’s like i could instantly hear through the fog which is the irish accent
As an non-native English speaker, learning to speak and understand accents this strong is me ultimate goal.
Working as customer service in call center will help to develop your audio comprehension in different accent
Imagine they use this clip as IELTS listening test questions
lmfao
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
The whole room would protest tbh
Ielts is expensive and last like 2 years I got that and now it’s just a useless paper
My god... I'm about to take it!
@@Orange-ic2mp wait why that paper useless? Dont you use it for anything else?
I think you guys are missing the point. This guy is literally Shawn the sheep’s owner. Cant fucking convince me otherwise.
you get a pin
Spot on
Hahahaha.
All that's missing is the yellow dog Blitzer and his glasses.
Bingo!
Love the accents of our wee island.
its not wee at all!
Considering the size of the island, you guys do have lots of accents.
@@flutters.mp4 There are states in the US that are bigger - yes it is
Holy cow that's hard to get even one word without the subtitles 😂
The accent is so thick it sounds German.
Bluetrainer91 FireBlast right? Lol
As a native German, I have to agree even though some parts sound more Dutch to me and some just English
Every rural town has abt a hundred men like this and they’re all pure sound
It sounds medieval German!
@@Mariyanthi yea
After living in Ireland for almost 7 years, I can finally say I understood 35% of what he said!
My gran from Kilkenny had a thick brogue. She used to call me a bold article 😂
The funny thing is that English is probably this mans second lagnuage, he's one of the few Irish people who would have spoken Irish as their first language.
@@oisinocSo this isn’t English then? It’s crazy I have to ask this
@@onlybetasgetoffendedbystri8030 It is
@@onlybetasgetoffendedbystri8030just a couple lines when he was speaking to his son :)
“Whoever is doing it knows what he’s doing”. Ladies and gents, we’re not dealing with a 2 bit sheep common thief here, we’re dealing with a 35 sheep a pop pro
Thank you flutters for this video! It is really gonna help me in learning the accent. I appreciate it!😊
I am from Kyrgyzstan and have herded sheeps for my whole life and learned English for the last 25 years. I can say that the former has helped me much more in understanding him from his body language unlike the latter, as I clearly did not understand a single word.
I've been speaking English my whole life, and I wouldn't have understood them without the subtitles.
@WHy do I keep coming back here aaagh Lmaooo, that's so funny as well as expected. Btw, UA-cam algorithms are working. I've just found this video in my recommendations and the video is loaded 6 years ago, but your comment is fresh new. It was easy to find it😄
A person who herds ships is something like a harbour master or pilot.
haha legend, I'm visiting Kyrgyzstan on august :)
I'm a non English native, and for me the latter is actually talking much more clearly, if you listen close enough.
The place looks like a medieval battlefield.
same
British isles look like that all the time lol
@@cuddlemuffin.9545 Be careful using that term. A lot of people get offended by it
Yes looks like place where u find mongols hiding waiting for u to get ambushed
@@tomasjoconnel5367 Someone’s offended? Here’s a question: Who gives a shit?
Genuine Kerry girl here. Grew up rural Kerry (family here), moved to England for my teens-early 20s (lost most of the accent, sad times) and now back in the kingdom once again... I hate to admit it and I stg it's not a humble brag but I could understand what he was saying almost perfectly. I have an uncle and I swear to god even this guy would have trouble understanding him, like *holy shit.* Sure me mam, aunties and all them understand him absolutely perfect cuz like they grew up with him and I'd be sat with him like "what the hell is he saying", I REALLY have to focus and listen carefully to understand and I feel bad cuz the rest of my family just click with it instantly. Guess I'm the outlier... But god damn to an outsider it must sound like complete nonsense lol
There’s a video about a beached whale in Ireland and even the Irish have no idea what the man is saying ;)
Skye are you replying to comments for me lmao
The only word I can hear from this guy is "Sheep" and "45 sheep missing" lmfao!!!!!
Translated, you're welcome.
0:11 Wehlai finaflum dusreiden youndoin eneywun frum sei fainaflum...
0:24 Yeht! Sehyt!
0:34 Posuboi naie letbyeia foomuda arabownai n'tenshot meebrait ouwt owcood enewun gupinda mouwtin fuda naitshot?
0:43 Welderwas fohrtey fiyve sheep missin likin myliamfo noweth anthe sheep s'scount... s'count outenize bitween oyumwike.
0:49 Tem... dilabowtem nat'n.
0:52 Th'ntho oth, eedroah, tho tho theemila.
0:59 Comba comba comba! Einmithin abowt ten, ten youws. Isth not ahl thadifficult. Ahlyagadda dew ishava gud dawg. Hava gud dawgun goet nait, sum moonshienlite, jusput tha dogarowndem. Putumonatrayler er walkem. Anthen, probablee sumbudy elth topickem oup. Hooevrs duinofer nohwat hesduin.
🙏🏻
Exactly how I hear em' too👍
Dead 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
thanks mate
Sincerely this is literally what I hear, word by word
Took me three times to understand what he was talking about. I've been studying English for ~20 years now. The last enemy to be defeated will be the thick Irish accent of this glorious man.
This man is a legend in Brandon LOL. I’ve met him a few times in the village and can confirm he’s a tad more legible in person 😂
No. The final boss of learning English is a drunk Scot. Wonderful people, but ya can't understand a word 😂
Congrats because I speak English fluently and I only understood maybe 2 or 3 words.
I don’t know why this was in my suggested videos but I loved it. Only understood about 5% more with each listen. Brilliant
My favorite part was that I understood him, but the subtitles that weren’t included were very helpful
You had to enable CC
As a non native speaker from Germany I wouldn't be suprised if I hear this guy in the listening part of my English exam...
Wahr. Fehlt nur noch der einfahrende Zug im Hintergrund.
You germans always shout in irish german listening exams
@@IrelandAbu 😂
@@IrelandAbu He said he's from Germany, curious how he didn't say he was German. Probably an Arab invader.
@@IrelandAbuin my year 11 listening I had an indian taxi driver telling us something over traffic by phone haha
Stop stealing sheep
How the fuck did this get pinned
Lmao what
LOL
@@F3llNouzy why the fuck not?
@@flutters.mp4 hahahahahaha ikr
My native is Spanish, I'm so glad to read that Americans, Aussies, Canadians and more couldn't understand either, I got like the 20% or less
Any English speaker can understand him
The man at @0:40? I deny to believe that
@@swimfootball6597I had a tough time understanding everything he was saying.
Been living in Ireland for a year, It's nice too see the progress I've made......and still to be made
wait till you realise there are people who only speak irish
I love the news in Ireland. "Old Farmer O'Shea up the road just had his whole flock of sheep stolen, we sent our man Cian in the field to cover this dramatic tale that's gripped the nation."
-now people you're about to get the listening test for C2 in English
The listening test:
"before the second playback, try drinking a pint of this: it's called 'Guinness'. It should help".
@@yesimb2137 if the Guinness doesn't work, try some Jamison. It should bring everything into alignment.
I would believe this man is German if there is no subtitle.
as a non native speaker, I tried to comprehend what he was saying without subtitles, it was the hardest time in my life.
i made subtitles for a reason
Even as an Irish person I am struggling to understand this man.
Same and I’ve yet to come across an accent I can’t understand or even struggle with really, of course the first one would be from a fellow countryman tho 😂
As an American I can understand about 40-60% of it
Yeah I could make out something about a full moon.
@@oopsydaizi3s824 Yeah same, something about bumming sheep under a full moon.
@@beardymcbeardface69 That was the second guy who was easier to understand haha
He sounds like he is simultaneously speaking Dutch and Danish with some English thrown in here and there but with an overall Irish accent...
Fascinating!
Frisian
As a dane, where do you get the danish Sound?!? Theres nothing on the sounds i somewhat Can recognize from the danish language-Sound
@@vintereventyr_ as a Norwegian, it’s clearly because danish is also illegible like this guys accent
The farmer lives on Mount Brandon on the South-West coast. The mountain is named after Saint Brendan…the Irish monk who was the REAL discoverer of Iceland. If you think his accent is strange you should listen to Icelandic people talking.
No surprise so many languages originated on mountain surrounded valleys...
Looks like his native language is Irish, not English, so it is absolutely ok that he speaks English in that way!
The first fella still has a Scandinavian accent after so many centuries...
Props for this guy successfully subtitling this man speaking in fluent leprechaun
aye
As an Irish person: shut up. If you’re gonna make a joke don’t be straight up racist about it
@@Blueturtle1 As a Brazilian person: I don't think you actually know what racism feels like. But regarding the 1 year old joke, don't worry, it won't bite you. There are other things in your beautiful and rich country to worry about instead of some virtual words in your phone screen.
@@OBryanAguiar don’t make racist jokes when if you want to complain your country is poorer
@@terrekgallagher7965 Europe is going to fail because of butthurts like you. There are worse things happening in your country than an old joke that's not racist at all.
As a Jamaican (we learned English from the Irish hence the similarities in accent, inflection, etc) this was a bit easy to understand. Especially the second man - sounds like a farmer from the hills here on the island.
AFAIK Jamaican Patois was heavily influenced by Hiberno-English (basically Irish-accented English), alongside West African languages like Akan and Igbo.
That's insane. I only heard that the Jamaican accent came from the cork accent like 2 months ago. I can kind of hear it though and now that I realise that it's hilarious
Yeah also if you look up the black irish of monserrat it's a Cork accent the man has
I understood every word on the first listen too and was wondering why it's so hard for others
The second guy speaks english. It's the first one that's difficult.
As a native english speaker, I'm convinced this is indeed the last boss
I want to see those two farmers having a deep philosophical conservation together.
After a year of listening to this, I've finally come to understand it (a 70%)
Nick Nikolayev after a year listening to this, i’ve not changed my errors in my subtitles
Some how i heard around 75 to 80% of this first time and im not English very wierd lol
@@javierhillier4252he’s not English, either.
@@javierhillier4252 you must have been raised between his sheep
@@flutters.mp4 ironically, I've understood the most part of his speech despite the fact I'm not English
As an Algerian, I feel like it's an IELTS exam in which if you understand what he's saying, you'll get the citizenship, straight away 😂😭
That would only be fair…
ong 😭😭😭
But he obviously speaks mostly Gailic. You can tell when he speaks to the boy. Which is nothing like English
@@noirekuroraigami2270 An Irish born pal doesn't call it "Gailic". It's just Irish. Of course, they call Ireland by their name "Eire".
Or if you correctly translate, you get a cash prize and a linguistics medal. Either way as a native english speaker I maybe made out three words from this guy and I’m pretty sure some of what he was saying was in Gaelic.
Mikey's next door neighbor was far easier to understand. As for Mikey, I literally would have been convinced he was speaking gaelic if not for some of the comments.
I would just shake my head and agree
Been to Ireland a few times. I'm from Liverpool. Didn't have much problem with the accent. He just talks fast. He complained, rightly, that nobody is doing anything about this, so he's offering the reward. The sheep go up the mountain at night, all the ewes. Somebody knows what he's doin'. The sheep are all these people have for their livelihood. May the green land of saints and legends never deprive us of tales of country folk, no matter how grey and tragic.
lol bloody scouse
Você fala coisas muito sérias e importantes vou anotar tudo para meditar.
for the sake of argument, you scouse are also just as hard to understand 😂
Yes! I'm from southern England and I could understand the 1st farmer because I thought his lilt / rhythm of speech seemed somewhat liverpudlian! Once I switched that part of my brain on, he was much easier to understand. And yes, the both talk v fast. The 2nd farmer's accent was very different; more stereotypical of what people expect an Irish accent to sound like
@@musashidanmcgrath well Liverpool is basically also a scottish city, a welsh city, a french city (that explains the throat sound), and if you're pushing it, icelandic. That's a port town for you.
Farty five sheep?
fAURTY fOIVE
This is like the final boss for someone learning the accents
Here was I closing the subtitles thinking I could comprehend the deep accent, no english is enough to understand this
I’ve lived in Ireland for two years and I am learning English, every two or three months, I get back to the video in order to realise whether I have made any progress in my listening skills or not.! 😅
now learn irish
@@flutters.mp4 i live in ireland and i can safely say about 90% of us dont have a single fucking clue how to speak irish
@@Jack-cv4ej well you do realise nearly 40% can speak it but only 4% speak it on a daily basis. You obviously live in Dublin or Cork or some city where ya don’t have a clue what’s going on around ya. There are gaelscoils everywhere in Ireland and people do go to them, sure the only school where I live is a gaelscoil and I’m in the north of Ireland too😂
@@adammacdomhnail2014 limerick
@@adammacdomhnail2014 cmon now it’s not 40% most of of Ireland can understand bits, plus Irish teachers and past Irish secondary schools but nowhere 40% wish it was though
This man's first language was probably Irish (Also known as Irish Gaelic.) At 0:51 he says "San thuas! An gcíonn tú é? San thuas a bhíodar!". He said this while looking away from the camera to someone (probably his son).
This means, "Up there! Do you see it? They were up there!" Funnily enough, his accent is far easier to understand while speaking Irish lol.
right i’ve been learning irish recently and i feel stupid inputting “Shushuash”
A thiarcais, canathaobh go bhfuilir ag postáil suas rudaí mar seo? Ná fuil a fhios agat beo go ngoilleann sé orm nuair a chím daoine as mo dhúthaigh féin ag magadh faoin blas traidisiúnta na Ciarraíoch?
Bead ag cur is ag cúiteamh anso anois le fada an lá.
I ndóthair, nuair nach bhfeiceann tú rudaí ní chuirid siad isteach ort
@@cigh7445 Eh, cathain a rabhas ag magadh? Déanaimse péinig stáidéar ar Ghaelainn na Mumhan agus tá go leor cara agam arb as Gaeltacht Chiarraí iad chomh maith. Ceapaim gur maith an chanúinn Bhéarla í Béarla Chiarraí, agus is maith an blas é leis. Tá meas agus grá agam don uile bhlas insa' tír seo, pé teanga ina bhfuil sé.
@@cigh7445 Haha, tá an ceart agat. Ní rabhas cinnte pé aca an rabhais ag caint fúmsa nó an fear eile. Aontaím leat i ndáiríribh, caithfear meas a bheith ag gach uile dhuine ar an mBéarla a labhraítear insna Gaeltachtaí ar a laighead má theastaíonn maireachtáil na Gaelainne uainn. Más rud é go leanfaimíd leis an iompair seo, a bheith ag díspreagadh agus ag déanamh stereotypes agus a leithéid desna daoine seo. Is amhlaidh go laghdaíonn sé sin cás na Gaelainne :/
"One of the farmers is offering award for person(s) who can understand what he's saying ... "
Second farmer I understood completely. First one all I got was that it'd cost him a 'bit of money' !
I'm writing this 1000th comment to say that I love to come back to this kind of video, as there is something genuinely warm and kind about them
thank you for being here 💖💖
I'm learning Irish and the regional accents. These lads are the final bosses.
Nah this is the guy you fight in the tutorial to figure our how to play the game
Ah, so maybe you would know. What is the most common accent for those living in rural farming/ranching areas in Ireland? As in, what is it called? Like, this is a legitimate question.
Oh my god with subtitles i suddenly understand every word woowww
He might have been saying "help me, I'm having a stroke ..."
"Well, there was 45 sheep missing..." And thats about everything i understood 😂
Second guy was more understandable to me. "It's not all that difficult. All ya gotta do is have a good yard, have a good dragon, oh at night some moonshine light."
“It’s not all that difficult. All you’ve got to do is have a good dog. A good dog and go at night, some moonshine night.”
A dragon!!! 😂😂😂
dawg not dragon lad
all you have to do is have a good dragon haha
Comodo?
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂lol thats what i heard too and i was like what ?! A dragon .
Still more comprehensible than half of my engineering professors.
This is the final boss for testing voice recognition software
i wouldn't be surprised if 100 years later this is a totally different language
Protect your culture, protect your language. Diversity is what makes this world beautiful.
What culture? Lol.
@@Convolutedtubules pohtaytoes
Well many languages are results of languages and cultures mixing in the past. Cultures are never static.
@@Convolutedtubules Irish culture. Did yer mammy drop ya?
@@Wulfjager Very funny, mate.
I sent this video to my English teacher. He's British and he couldn't understand.
“You need a good dog, walking in the moonshine light. Whoever did it knew what he was doing “
I'm an older Irish woman and not even I can understand this one!!🤭🥰🇮🇪🙏
Without the subtitles this man doesn't even sound like he's speaking English
0:51 here he's speaking Irish...
5 years later i seem to understand what he is saying more
The accent is so thick and strong..it's almost Bullet-proof
As a french trying to learn some english accents, I genuinely didn't get a word of what that good man said
moi aussi, mais tout va bien pour nous.
Don't worry, I'm a native EN speaker and neither did I.
I'm not sure even most Irish people would understand this man hahaha
I'm Irish and I'm getting the odd word French is more understandable to me
Pareil 😂😂
I hope that regional accents will always be with us. Love this!
If they stay away from the media their accents will survive. In the US, regional accents have suffered due to radio and TV over the decades.
@@helenhighwater5313yet the New York, Boston, and Southern accents are all still alive and well despite the media
@@geoplanetaireNew York just has bunch of slang words any English speaker can understand them, this right here is different level
I remember when this was on the news and thinking they really need to do subtitles.
When your neighbors ask for your wifi password, so you had to break out the accent..
The only part of that I could understand was when the second farmer started speaking at about the 1:00 mark..."I'm missing about ten...ten ewes. It's not that difficult, all you have t' do is have a good dog. Have a good dog, and go at night, some moon-shine night, put the dog around 'em, put 'em on a trailer or walk 'em. And then, probably somebody has t' pick 'em up. Whoever's doin' it know what he's doin'."
I'm not irish, I'm sorry
neither am i lol
I understood almost all. All except “and go at night” part.
The first farmer’s accent is more intense.
Many thanks.
Now try and translate the first farmer interviewed.
I always show this to my Japanese colleagues who are worried about their level of English. It always f*cks them up.
be nice to them tho
That is so cruel
Why?
@@kareem-dg4cz whynotshurelike whogivesabollox
Someone get whoever did the close captioning for this a medal.
im northern irish and could understand about 60% of what he was saying
Shotout to the goat Who wrote the subtitles
yep that's me!
0:24 0:24 0:24 “BRE-XIT!!”
Imagine this was yer drunk grandpa at 2 AM telling you an emotional story
I started learning english as a 3 year old ,have read ,spoken English for the last 37 years ,watched a ton of English movies and shows,all in all I assumed I had pretty good command over the language ,until finally I met this Irish Nemesis 😅 I honestly can make neither head nor tail of the stolen sheep.
Lmfao, the closed captions at 0:26 "farmer in background: SITDOWN!!!"
S I T D O W N
It's not that their accent is strong it's that the Irish have transcended so their speech is on a higher level than us mortals.
*As a Brazilian, I wonder if I have practiced English in a wrong way because I couldn't understand anything he said.*
não
This is the final boss for court stenographers.