@@juanjuan5698 How do you know? Do you still think every Asian is always Chinese? There are canadians of Asian heritage in Canada if you don’t know. So Is a Peruvian, Guatemalan all Mexicans?
Love that people in Montreal know so many languages, it’s very common for me to meet people who speak 3+ languages, especially if their parents are from two different countries than Canada. They end up knowing their languages, plus english and french. I’ll always love mtl for that.
You should do the same video in the other unis of Montreal like uqam and université de Montréal! It’d be really cool to see the differences between all the universities across Montreal. I’d be more than happy to answer your question at the university of Montreal! Great video like always 🐢 it never disappoints!
You have to come back to McGill!!! I watch all your videos and cannot believe that I missed you. I speak 6 languages, it would have been my time to shine…
As a mum I am so amazed to see all these young people speaking at least 2 languages, they are, you are the future ♥️ Merci Dan pour tes vidéos, heureuse que tu sois de retour à Montréal 👍😊
I love living in Montréal. Literally everyone I know speak at least 2 languages fluently. The québécois from Montréal usually speak 2 (french and english) and the immigrants often speak 3+ languages, having to learn french here, often already speaking english before coming and their mother language. Also, the city offers you a great motivation to learn more languages, due to the amount of different people from around the world that you could talk to, make friends and practice. I’m currently trying to better my spanish so I can speak with my girlfriend’s venezuelan family :)
Man I really have to thank you. Your videos are an inspiration for me and they were the reason why I have just started to learn French again, after I had it for seven years in school. Seeing this one keeps me motivated, you really make an impact on people. When I am going for a walk I always imagine our paths cross and beside English and my native language German, I can also proudly tell you that I'm fluent in French - à tout à l'heure ;)
Le débat sur la langue au Québec est tellement enragé en ligne et dans les médias, ça fait du bien de voir que les gens ordinaires dans la rue peuvent encore parler de la langue calmement et de façon non-politisée. Merci beaucoup pour ta vidéo Dan! Excellent comme toujours.
Le débat est simple, pour le respect aux québécois on doit privilégier la langue française, parler en français. Voilà. Si pour habiter en Chine t'as besoin de parler chinois, pour habiter au Québec t'as besoin du français.
@@mactus735 T'as pas besoin de me convaincre de ça, je suis 100% d'accord. Ce que je dis c'est que c'est l'fun de pouvoir parler de façon décontractée de quelles langues on parle et de nos différentes cultures sans que ce soit accompagné par toutes ces questions là justement.
@@Imsemble À mon humble avis, le débat sur la langue au Québec porte sur tout sauf la langue : c'est le rapport de domination d'une minorité sur une autre et l'inégalité se reflète dans la possibilité qu'ont les anglophones de ne pas avoir à apprendre le français et l'impossibilité pour un francophone d'avoir une carrière sans connaître l'anglais, d'où nos lois linguistiques pour protéger le français. Dire que le débat porte sur la langue au Québec, ce serait comme dire que le débat sur le racisme porte sur la mélanine dans la peau des gens aux États-Unis. Dans les deux cas, les causes des inégalités sont historiques et politiques, mais elles se reflètent dans des détails particuliers. Ici, en matière de connaissances individuelles des langues, il n'y a pas vraiment de débat : que chacun apprenne le maximum de langue qu'il peut!
J'ai que du respect pour les autres cultures et les autres langues, mais je trouve ça quand même désolant de voir certaines personnes dans la vidéo qui savent pas parler français et qu'ils ont pas l'air de vouloir l'apprendre. J'ai trouvé ça très le fun de voir les gens qui parlent un peu français mais qui veulent vraiment l'apprendre, mais j'ai été un peu déçu quand il pose la question : si tu apprenais une langue, ce serait la quelle? et que leur réponse soit pas le français. Par contre je comprends ton point, je suis content qu'il aie pas posé de questions du genre : "Pourquoi est-ce que tu parle pas français?" ou "Comment te sens-tu dans une province où la majorité parle pas la même langue que toi?"; la vidéo aurait été trop politique. La vidéo ici est bien plus décontractée
ces étudiants sont pour la plupart intelligents et savent s'exprimer en français. Le problème vient des Québécois qui refusent d'apprendre le Français. Il y en a malheureusement beaucoup
As a bilingual person, I would say that I love hearing about people speaking multiple languages anywhere in the world. I love learning about this stuff through Dan's videos. Language opens up many opportunities to get to know about other cultures and countries, and to meet plenty of people from around the world. I love learning English tirelessly after growing up speaking Spanish. I will come across many incredible things when I travel abroad because the planet is more interconnected, globalized and diversified than ever.
I'm also a Montrealer who speaks more than 5 languages, so do many of my friends, but the thing is not everyone wants to show it off and some of the extreme polyglots I know keep a low profile and only demonstrate their knowledge with a target audience.
Love this video! Went to McGill and was always so impressed with the ability of many Montrealers to bounce between English and French so seemingly effortlessly!
Thank you for starting this channel. I lived in Montreal for ten years but didn’t manage to learn French. You brought with this video some good old memories of McGill and Montreal.
I went to McGill in the early 90s! Campus looks the same except for the Steve Jobs tribute outside the Roddick gates. That's funny that the only unilingual was a professor. Music is definitely an important language. Great content!
🐢 Je suis francophone, i also speak english, i trochę mówię po polsku (tylko trochę, I'm learning) I love to see people speaking multiple languages, c'est tellement une richesse, et une ouverture sur les autres ❤
Do not speak French, it is a language that when you speak it, piss comes out of your mouth from how disgusting it is to speak it. The other languages are fine, though.
before me watching this video I already gave The like !!! your channel is ones that I use to learn english and training my listening and reading !!! God Bless you
🐢 I haven't been back to Montréal in ages so I appreciate the visit. Years ago I went into a shop on McGill College Avenue to order some food. I started in French but the McGill student behind the counter spoke only English. Hélas. It appears that today he would be the rare student there who is monolingual. That's a wonderful improvement. Merci de nouveau.
I wish you could have explored Montreal more and asked the question. Montreal is pretty much bilingual with a very high occurance of people in the street speaking three and more languages. The McGill campus does not represent the typical Montrealer. You will get Italian, Greek, Spanish, Portugese and different dialects of Chinese, Romanian, Russian, German depends on where you go.
A lot of people know some Spanish in Canada I was surprised by that , I thought it was only gonna be French and English and if someone is from a different country they would speak Chinese or Indian
70% vocabulary is shared between French and Spanish, I never learned it and can something understand some part of the sentence and even get the meaning without understand all words. Spanish is for sure a language I want to learn. From Québec !
Recently found out that Old Persian (Avestan) and Vedic Sanskrit have the same grammar & pronunciation. Blew my mind how 2 of the oldest religious books, 1 monotheistic and the other polytheistic, have ALOT of the same verses.
@@canchero724 Could you elaborate? Did they not worship Ahura Mazda? Or was it the winged kings? Im super interested in this coz it connects alot of things.
@@paulie4450 They did, but the Achaemenids never enforced monotheism on their empire and Ahura Mazda was originally a part of a pantheon of Ahuras (gods) which Zoroaster later proclaimed as the one true God. But at the same time there was also a place.for the gods Mithra and Anahita, given an equal standing going with their policy of religious tolerance. Some cults even worshipped Daevas, the sworn enemies of the Ahuras, and considered them to be their true gods and the Ahuras as impostors. Ancient Iran was a truly wild place and it's a shame there isn't much literature or remnants left as they often kept shifting their capital cities due to conflicts. If they had a Rome or Constantinople equivalent which stood until present day we would doubtless have a lot more information about what exactly went on in that period.
i love yout videos and you are an inspiration to me and find to new people to speak with and discover all the skills that thay have it really worth it your work makes a great impact the community on don´t stop ok
The expression Luca said is "mannaggia la miseria", which means damn, oh my god is "oh mio dio". Luca looked so bored about speaking italian while the other guy looked so natural speaking it, kudos to him! I made it to the end of the video btw!
Half of McGill students are from the province of Québec, half of them being Franco Quebecers and half of them Anglo Quebecers. But both groups are bilingual anyways. Also, McGill has a lot of international students, and they tend to be at least bilingual as well. But regardless, the typical Montrealer speaks at least 2 or 3 languages, which makes Montreal a very unique city in North America!
I'm from Brazil and my native language is portuguese. But, i love study languages. I can speak a little bit english, french and i'm also study german, russian and chinese...
I’ll be in McGill for two months next summer and great to see that diversity 😊 I speak 6 languages, learning the 7th and let’s see if I’m able to through some expression in my 7th language when I’m there 😂
I really love how cannadian appreciates Spanish even though they grew up with French and English influences Je aussi parler le français, c'est une difficile, unique et complexe langue haha Saludos desde Guatemala y gran video, definitivamente ire a canada jaja
I'm a native Spanish speaker and I'm impressed about the people who speak Spanish. It's kinda "why have you learned a language that doesn't pay too much money like French, English or Deutsch" I'm so proud of being a Spanish speaker. (I'm not from Spain, that's why I said it) jajajaj
Creo que una ventaja del Español y quizás también del Francés es que son idiomas que se hablan en varios países y continentes. Eso conlleva a que se pueda conocer a más gente de diversos lugares.
Porque te sorprende?? El español es la segunda lengua más estudiada del mundo junto con el francés e inglés, en Duolingo el español es la segunda lengua más estudiada del mundo solo por detrás del inglés y casi doblando a la tercera lengua más estudiada (el Francés).
Porque espanol se aprende muy facilmente y tenemos 75% de vocabulario comun. Al contrario los hablantes de ingles inician su aprendizaje del espanol con solamente 35% de vocabulario comun. Tambien, es mas facil para un hispanohablante sin conocimiento del ingles imigrando a Quebec de empezar con el aprendizaje del frances porque despues, cuando el aprendera el ingles con su conocimiento del frances, aprovechara 55% de vocabulario comun con el frances.
Their are 2 main reasons for that. Spanish being a latin language makes it a lot closer to french than other languages like deutsch or mandarin. The other reason is a political one that involves the linguistic war between english Canada and Québec french and also business. Because Canada has(had?) a free-trade agreement with Mexico, instead of learning english as a "business language", schools use to incentivize spanish a lot more. Also, in older generation that bilingualism tends to almost disappear, those who grew up with the internet have been much more exposed to english than previous generations and there is a clear bilingual chasm between the early 80s and older generations compared to the late 80s and younger ones. As I've often said, people think that Canada is bilingual, but Canada is english, Québec is french, Montréal is bilingual(english-french). Also Ottawa, but unless you work for the government, nobody wants to live in a town where bar close at 9pm (at least that's how the joke goes).
Immersive translate is a good app for learning foreign languages especially for those trying to learn foreign languages. I suggest it since I have used it and it has served me right.
If music is a language, it would be one of the most difficult ones. To know all keys in 4 octaves is crazy and translate it to every instrument is just awesome. I would love to learn it one day.
I am not surprised. French and English are the language of Canada, plus we learn a LOT spanish here as well. Ma langue première est le français, j'ai appris l'anglais avec internet (tout est en anglais.) et l'espagnol est très apprécié à l'apprentissage également. Its a good video tho 🐢
@jlion911 it's a program thar is meant to create better citizen, you need good grades to get in so it's already pretty bad in my opinion, I think all students should have access to it but whatever, the IB students have to do volunteering work ans learn about values of the ib program ans all that stuff, ans one of the core parts of the program is a Spanish class in high school, so many of them probably went through the ib program since they're going to such a good school for university
I'm an English teacher hailing from Cuba,it's quite amazing how educated and civil Canadians are Here in Cuba people think very highly of Canada and Canadians for the beauty and high standards of living and how polite and hospitable these great country and its people are.
I live in this neighborhood, it’s fasniating how people will switch from English to French and vice-versa, sometimes in mid sentence. It’s not exclusive to Milton-Park, pretty much every multicultural neighborhoods do it. Glad to see so many polyglottes at McGill.
@@TheNewTravel London doesn’t really represent England though, it’s super multicultural and many more there will speak more languages. It’s like, New York City doesn’t really reflect the US. Try doing a vid in a smaller place up north in England (like Middlesbrough) and you’ll be lucky to find someone who speaks more than one language.
@@zzc8505yes but Portuguese, Romanian, Italian etc, are just as close to French, actually actually Italian and French are closer than Spanish and French.
I speak English , French and Spanish after this I don’t feel special anymore, although it’s interesting to see how many people want to learn Spanish and how important the language is nowadays.
definitely still special! trilingualism is still rare! quebec and especially mcgill are just in a very unique set of circumstances which make it way more common :)
They are %1 of the population. Most of them coming from different countries and getting cherry picked by McGill. If you know even one other language than your mother tongue you are special according to data.
@@batu_nosel1 A lot of Canadians speak a language other than English at home, and any international students have to know English by default in order to study there.
1:20 she's obviously a French native speaker. How else would Spanish interfere with ENGLISH in her brain. (Spanish being another romance language, thus having much more common with French) It's weird how our native language seems to occupy one part of our brain, while anything learned later shares a different compartment.
I speak and write in 5 languages, I remember in the past in Montreal, Greek was a very popular language to learn, I guess Spanish and Italian are more popular these days.
Speaking Spanish as a second language is rare indeed in Canada outside Quebec. It is widespread in Quebec for 3 reasons : - With 75% vocabulary in common with French, it is easier to learn than even English; - Hispanic Americans are not outcast nor they suffer negative prejudice related to social condition as much as in the US; - We have a policy to master French before you immigrate to Quebec to be selected. Thus, Spanish speakers have an easier time learning French and come to Quebec in bigger numbers.
@@PatrioteQuebecois I'm from Vancouver, and lots of people here speak Spanish as a first language, but you're right. It's rare to find someone here who speaks it as a _second_ language. That would almost always be either English (for immigrants) or French (for anglos). Je suis heureux de dire que je trouve de plus en plus de gens à Vancouver qui peuvent avoir une conversation de base en français.
@@MariaLopez-tb4fp el francés es el único idioma oficial en Quebec. Sin embargo, McGill es una universidad que tiene el inglés como lengua de instrucción principal, así que muchos estudiantes vienen de otros países donde no se habla francés
I'm surprised how many Spanish speakers (or at least learners) there were considering there isn't all that much Latino influence in Canada. ¡Muy interesante!
As a Chinese, that girl's pronunciation of Mandarin is perfect even though she might be a beginner, she's so talented.
bruh she's definitely ethnically at least part Chinese.
@@juanjuan5698 How do you know? Do you still think every Asian is always Chinese? There are canadians of Asian heritage in Canada if you don’t know. So Is a Peruvian, Guatemalan all Mexicans?
@@Alien-f1lI just know. No need to question.
@@Alien-f1lno they are not, but they all speak Spanish, and Chinese are the only ones that speak Chinese.
I live in Montreal. My Québécois neighbour. 100% French Québécois has been learning mandari for the last 10 years. And he sounded pretty fluent.
Love that people in Montreal know so many languages, it’s very common for me to meet people who speak 3+ languages, especially if their parents are from two different countries than Canada. They end up knowing their languages, plus english and french. I’ll always love mtl for that.
You should do the same video in the other unis of Montreal like uqam and université de Montréal! It’d be really cool to see the differences between all the universities across Montreal. I’d be more than happy to answer your question at the university of Montreal! Great video like always 🐢 it never disappoints!
Haha it is a great idea. I wanna see, too.
my husbands a prof there and he would say only french 😊 (but he is Swiss and speaks 5)
I went to UQAM and ETS and I speak 5 languages! Bring it on baby!
@@rioriggs3568 Wow that's impressive. What are they?
Concordia is even more international, but the French unis have less linguistic diversity.
You have to come back to McGill!!! I watch all your videos and cannot believe that I missed you. I speak 6 languages, it would have been my time to shine…
As a mum I am so amazed to see all these young people speaking at least 2 languages, they are, you are the future ♥️ Merci Dan pour tes vidéos, heureuse que tu sois de retour à Montréal 👍😊
I love living in Montréal. Literally everyone I know speak at least 2 languages fluently. The québécois from Montréal usually speak 2 (french and english) and the immigrants often speak 3+ languages, having to learn french here, often already speaking english before coming and their mother language. Also, the city offers you a great motivation to learn more languages, due to the amount of different people from around the world that you could talk to, make friends and practice. I’m currently trying to better my spanish so I can speak with my girlfriend’s venezuelan family :)
Man I really have to thank you. Your videos are an inspiration for me and they were the reason why I have just started to learn French again, after I had it for seven years in school. Seeing this one keeps me motivated, you really make an impact on people.
When I am going for a walk I always imagine our paths cross and beside English and my native language German, I can also proudly tell you that I'm fluent in French - à tout à l'heure ;)
You got political inspiration from people admitting how many languages they speak. That's not good.
@@daanman-js6jo Intentional misunderstanding done right
@@MaRio-jw7fd mario be like:
@@MaRio-jw7fdMan, you’re really good for knowing 3 languages
Having so many people speaking many different languages is very nice 🙂
Le débat sur la langue au Québec est tellement enragé en ligne et dans les médias, ça fait du bien de voir que les gens ordinaires dans la rue peuvent encore parler de la langue calmement et de façon non-politisée.
Merci beaucoup pour ta vidéo Dan! Excellent comme toujours.
Le débat est simple, pour le respect aux québécois on doit privilégier la langue française, parler en français. Voilà. Si pour habiter en Chine t'as besoin de parler chinois, pour habiter au Québec t'as besoin du français.
@@mactus735 T'as pas besoin de me convaincre de ça, je suis 100% d'accord.
Ce que je dis c'est que c'est l'fun de pouvoir parler de façon décontractée de quelles langues on parle et de nos différentes cultures sans que ce soit accompagné par toutes ces questions là justement.
@@Imsemble À mon humble avis, le débat sur la langue au Québec porte sur tout sauf la langue : c'est le rapport de domination d'une minorité sur une autre et l'inégalité se reflète dans la possibilité qu'ont les anglophones de ne pas avoir à apprendre le français et l'impossibilité pour un francophone d'avoir une carrière sans connaître l'anglais, d'où nos lois linguistiques pour protéger le français.
Dire que le débat porte sur la langue au Québec, ce serait comme dire que le débat sur le racisme porte sur la mélanine dans la peau des gens aux États-Unis. Dans les deux cas, les causes des inégalités sont historiques et politiques, mais elles se reflètent dans des détails particuliers.
Ici, en matière de connaissances individuelles des langues, il n'y a pas vraiment de débat : que chacun apprenne le maximum de langue qu'il peut!
J'ai que du respect pour les autres cultures et les autres langues, mais je trouve ça quand même désolant de voir certaines personnes dans la vidéo qui savent pas parler français et qu'ils ont pas l'air de vouloir l'apprendre.
J'ai trouvé ça très le fun de voir les gens qui parlent un peu français mais qui veulent vraiment l'apprendre, mais j'ai été un peu déçu quand il pose la question : si tu apprenais une langue, ce serait la quelle? et que leur réponse soit pas le français.
Par contre je comprends ton point, je suis content qu'il aie pas posé de questions du genre : "Pourquoi est-ce que tu parle pas français?" ou "Comment te sens-tu dans une province où la majorité parle pas la même langue que toi?"; la vidéo aurait été trop politique.
La vidéo ici est bien plus décontractée
ces étudiants sont pour la plupart intelligents et savent s'exprimer en français. Le problème vient des Québécois qui refusent d'apprendre le Français. Il y en a malheureusement beaucoup
As a bilingual person, I would say that I love hearing about people speaking multiple languages anywhere in the world. I love learning about this stuff through Dan's videos. Language opens up many opportunities to get to know about other cultures and countries, and to meet plenty of people from around the world. I love learning English tirelessly after growing up speaking Spanish. I will come across many incredible things when I travel abroad because the planet is more interconnected, globalized and diversified than ever.
As always, your reports are full of beautiful and bright people. Thanks for the interesting content!)
I'm also a Montrealer who speaks more than 5 languages, so do many of my friends, but the thing is not everyone wants to show it off and some of the extreme polyglots I know keep a low profile and only demonstrate their knowledge with a target audience.
You just showed it off tho
Love this video! Went to McGill and was always so impressed with the ability of many Montrealers to bounce between English and French so seemingly effortlessly!
You gave me motivation to keep study English and Italian❤️🐢
Thank you)
These videos make me smile from the first to the last minute.
Thank you for starting this channel. I lived in Montreal for ten years but didn’t manage to learn French. You brought with this video some good old memories of McGill and Montreal.
I went to McGill in the early 90s! Campus looks the same except for the Steve Jobs tribute outside the Roddick gates. That's funny that the only unilingual was a professor. Music is definitely an important language. Great content!
i agrée ! i graduated in 1989 .
Love these videos!! 🐢
Greetings from Sweden, all the best!
Greetings from montreal ;)
🐢
Je suis francophone, i also speak english, i trochę mówię po polsku (tylko trochę, I'm learning)
I love to see people speaking multiple languages, c'est tellement une richesse, et une ouverture sur les autres ❤
Do not speak French, it is a language that when you speak it, piss comes out of your mouth from how disgusting it is to speak it. The other languages are fine, though.
i love mixing beaucoup de langues dans one sentence like you did here
c'est めっちゃ混乱 et chaotic です
@@Piikaachuu1203 yes
before me watching this video I already gave The like !!! your channel is ones that I use to learn english and training my listening and reading !!! God Bless you
I really enjoy when I watch your videos it’s really humble ❤❤
Vraiment bons ces interviews . We learn a lot too ;-)
merci :)
I'll definitely make an effort visit Montreal next year! Seems like a cool city.
🐢 I haven't been back to Montréal in ages so I appreciate the visit. Years ago I went into a shop on McGill College Avenue to order some food. I started in French but the McGill student behind the counter spoke only English. Hélas. It appears that today he would be the rare student there who is monolingual. That's a wonderful improvement. Merci de nouveau.
I'm really love your videos. They are the reason why i still really want to learn english and other languages.🐢🐢❤️
I wish you could have explored Montreal more and asked the question. Montreal is pretty much bilingual with a very high occurance of people in the street speaking three and more languages. The McGill campus does not represent the typical Montrealer. You will get Italian, Greek, Spanish, Portugese and different dialects of Chinese, Romanian, Russian, German depends on where you go.
On this video it looks like half of students are Iranian
5:45 Wow, this girl wearing Aphex Twin T-shirt. Selected Ambient Works
O Canadá me parece o país dos sonhos ❤
Parece um lugar tão vibrante, tão moderno, e tão cosmopolita.
Eu adoraria viver nesse país😢
This is Montréal, it’s different than let’s say Toronto or even Québec city.
@@Steph6Mc True, you should become a thelemite.
@@daanman-js6joI don’t understand
@@Steph6Mc what dont you under sand?
@@daanman-js6jo what’s a “thelemite”?
A lot of people know some Spanish in Canada I was surprised by that , I thought it was only gonna be French and English and if someone is from a different country they would speak Chinese or Indian
70% vocabulary is shared between French and Spanish, I never learned it and can something understand some part of the sentence and even get the meaning without understand all words. Spanish is for sure a language I want to learn. From Québec !
spanish is our third language after French and English. those r the main ones spoken in high-school. Japanese and other languages are fourth.
01:36 I love her voice, so soothing.
I made it to the end. Please do a second video in Toronto with the same question. You will definitely find a lot of tri-/multi-lingual people 😄😄
Yeah but only few people there will say that they speak french.
Why does that even matter. FYI almost 30% of Torontonianss can speak French 🙂@@angeurbain6129
7:13 The way he says "see you" reminds me of Appa from Kim's Convenience lmao
Interesting Video! Keep it up!
Recently found out that Old Persian (Avestan) and Vedic Sanskrit have the same grammar & pronunciation.
Blew my mind how 2 of the oldest religious books, 1 monotheistic and the other polytheistic, have ALOT of the same verses.
Yes, they are both part of the same branch of "satem" Indo European languages. Mind-blowing!
+
When Avestan was around, Persia was also polytheistic.
@@canchero724 Could you elaborate? Did they not worship Ahura Mazda? Or was it the winged kings?
Im super interested in this coz it connects alot of things.
@@paulie4450 They did, but the Achaemenids never enforced monotheism on their empire and Ahura Mazda was originally a part of a pantheon of Ahuras (gods) which Zoroaster later proclaimed as the one true God. But at the same time there was also a place.for the gods Mithra and Anahita, given an equal standing going with their policy of religious tolerance. Some cults even worshipped Daevas, the sworn enemies of the Ahuras, and considered them to be their true gods and the Ahuras as impostors.
Ancient Iran was a truly wild place and it's a shame there isn't much literature or remnants left as they often kept shifting their capital cities due to conflicts. If they had a Rome or Constantinople equivalent which stood until present day we would doubtless have a lot more information about what exactly went on in that period.
I enjoyed the second part very much. Kudos to you,dude.😊
Super vidéo! Continues comme ça, j'aime beaucoup ton contenu.
i love yout videos and you are an inspiration to me and find to new people to speak with and discover all the skills that thay have it really worth it your work makes a great impact the community on don´t stop ok
The expression Luca said is "mannaggia la miseria", which means damn, oh my god is "oh mio dio". Luca looked so bored about speaking italian while the other guy looked so natural speaking it, kudos to him! I made it to the end of the video btw!
as someone who speaks decent Italian I was really confused there and thought he spoke a dialect, lmao
Half of McGill students are from the province of Québec, half of them being Franco Quebecers and half of them Anglo Quebecers. But both groups are bilingual anyways. Also, McGill has a lot of international students, and they tend to be at least bilingual as well. But regardless, the typical Montrealer speaks at least 2 or 3 languages, which makes Montreal a very unique city in North America!
I'm from Brazil and my native language is portuguese. But, i love study languages. I can speak a little bit english, french and i'm also study german, russian and chinese...
I’ll be in McGill for two months next summer and great to see that diversity 😊 I speak 6 languages, learning the 7th and let’s see if I’m able to through some expression in my 7th language when I’m there 😂
WOW 6 languages!!
What are they
@@slmanmohamed English, French, German, Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese. Learning Hungarian now 😁
WOW good for you
I speak Arabic and learning English
@@peterzhou372 what do you do when you need to practice speaking??
I'm looking for someone native in English to practice speaking with him
@@slmanmohamed I do have friends speaking one or more of these languages and I just talk to them 😜
very interesting to see so many different languages spoken by so many students
Been so long! Good to have you back Dan
5:30 She said ‘like’ forty times or so 😅
I like counted like 42 times. It's like so annoying.
Nice fall colors in Montreal!
7:11 he had to put subtitles just in case hahaha
I think we all heard something else
There's a reason why he didn't try and repeat it
The french girl at 10:56 has such a lovely relaxing voice.
Would be interesting to see a video like this outside of Quebec, since most people here speak at least two languages fluently.
Like what ? english and english ?
I made it to the end. I always do. I like the videos of yours.
Спасибо!
I loved this ❤
McGill actually has a good repıtation with languages. They used to also give certificates to the students who completed a Busuu course
I really love how cannadian appreciates Spanish even though they grew up with French and English influences
Je aussi parler le français, c'est une difficile, unique et complexe langue haha
Saludos desde Guatemala y gran video, definitivamente ire a canada jaja
I loved this!
I'm a native Spanish speaker and I'm impressed about the people who speak Spanish.
It's kinda "why have you learned a language that doesn't pay too much money like French, English or Deutsch"
I'm so proud of being a Spanish speaker. (I'm not from Spain, that's why I said it) jajajaj
Creo que una ventaja del Español y quizás también del Francés es que son idiomas que se hablan en varios países y continentes. Eso conlleva a que se pueda conocer a más gente de diversos lugares.
Porque te sorprende?? El español es la segunda lengua más estudiada del mundo junto con el francés e inglés, en Duolingo el español es la segunda lengua más estudiada del mundo solo por detrás del inglés y casi doblando a la tercera lengua más estudiada (el Francés).
Porque espanol se aprende muy facilmente y tenemos 75% de vocabulario comun. Al contrario los hablantes de ingles inician su aprendizaje del espanol con solamente 35% de vocabulario comun.
Tambien, es mas facil para un hispanohablante sin conocimiento del ingles imigrando a Quebec de empezar con el aprendizaje del frances porque despues, cuando el aprendera el ingles con su conocimiento del frances, aprovechara 55% de vocabulario comun con el frances.
Their are 2 main reasons for that. Spanish being a latin language makes it a lot closer to french than other languages like deutsch or mandarin. The other reason is a political one that involves the linguistic war between english Canada and Québec french and also business. Because Canada has(had?) a free-trade agreement with Mexico, instead of learning english as a "business language", schools use to incentivize spanish a lot more.
Also, in older generation that bilingualism tends to almost disappear, those who grew up with the internet have been much more exposed to english than previous generations and there is a clear bilingual chasm between the early 80s and older generations compared to the late 80s and younger ones.
As I've often said, people think that Canada is bilingual, but Canada is english, Québec is french, Montréal is bilingual(english-french). Also Ottawa, but unless you work for the government, nobody wants to live in a town where bar close at 9pm (at least that's how the joke goes).
@@PatrioteQuebecois Siiii, o seu nome e ironico, ne?
Immersive translate is a good app for learning foreign languages especially for those trying to learn foreign languages. I suggest it since I have used it and it has served me right.
Suas reportagens são muito boas .
nao
Video very good,thanks.
I was living for this part 2.
Let's hope for a 3d
Lovely series.
🐢 Always look forward to each of your videos. 👍🏻
If music is a language, it would be one of the most difficult ones. To know all keys in 4 octaves is crazy and translate it to every instrument is just awesome. I would love to learn it one day.
This makes me wanna buckle down and increase my french fluency even more
I am not surprised. French and English are the language of Canada, plus we learn a LOT spanish here as well.
Ma langue première est le français, j'ai appris l'anglais avec internet (tout est en anglais.) et l'espagnol est très apprécié à l'apprentissage également.
Its a good video tho 🐢
the number of people claiming they speak Spanish is so high in McGill.
They probably did the IB program
@tabledrawzz801 what's that
@jlion911 it's a program thar is meant to create better citizen, you need good grades to get in so it's already pretty bad in my opinion, I think all students should have access to it but whatever, the IB students have to do volunteering work ans learn about values of the ib program ans all that stuff, ans one of the core parts of the program is a Spanish class in high school, so many of them probably went through the ib program since they're going to such a good school for university
Español es hermoso 🇲🇽🇦🇷🇪🇦
spanish is the natural transition from french
🐢 love your videos!
I'm an English teacher hailing from Cuba,it's quite amazing how educated and civil Canadians are
Here in Cuba people think very highly of Canada and Canadians for the beauty and high standards of living and how polite and hospitable these great country and its people are.
I don't think so...l think l will retire somewhere in Mexico or Spain
All the best!
RACIST!
RASHIST!
Il serait intéressant de poser cette question aux étudiants de l'université Laval à Québec.
Lmao.
I always astonish ppl know so many languages, and I wish I had time, then I could learned more languages as I wanted
Can you do one in Ottawa? 🐢
wow, 你回蒙特婁啦,很喜歡你的訪談影片,我也學到一些知識。🤩😁
Waiting for the another language video from Lisbon, Portugal.
Great to see young jazz fans.
I live in this neighborhood, it’s fasniating how people will switch from English to French and vice-versa, sometimes in mid sentence. It’s not exclusive to Milton-Park, pretty much every multicultural neighborhoods do it.
Glad to see so many polyglottes at McGill.
its common on the entire island actually. It's actually quite uncommon to be unilangual in montreal
I’d love to see this one in England:
“Middlesbrough, how many languages do you speak?”
“About half”
Haha. I did a London episode which you can find on my channel :p
@@TheNewTravel London doesn’t really represent England though, it’s super multicultural and many more there will speak more languages. It’s like, New York City doesn’t really reflect the US.
Try doing a vid in a smaller place up north in England (like Middlesbrough) and you’ll be lucky to find someone who speaks more than one language.
Even though I love listening to Bob Mortimer's tales of his youth, I found that hilarious.
Come to Santiago Chile
دیدن هموطنانم که حداقل ۲ تا زبان بلدن خیلی افتخار آمیز است موفق باشین :))) 🐢
I’m surprised many guys speak Spanish! Great surprise!
Yes my Montreal episode also had a lot of Spanish. It's secretly the third language up here 😁
Toma en cuenta los casi 600 millones de hablantes es un aliciente para que muchos jóvenes se sientan motivados a aprenderlo.
Spanish and French are very close. So those who speak French can learn Spanish easier. Nothing surprising.
@@zzc8505yes but Portuguese, Romanian, Italian etc, are just as close to French, actually actually Italian and French are closer than Spanish and French.
I speak English , French and Spanish after this I don’t feel special anymore, although it’s interesting to see how many people want to learn Spanish and how important the language is nowadays.
definitely still special! trilingualism is still rare! quebec and especially mcgill are just in a very unique set of circumstances which make it way more common :)
They are %1 of the population. Most of them coming from different countries and getting cherry picked by McGill. If you know even one other language than your mother tongue you are special according to data.
remember as well that people have their own very subjective idea of when they can 'speak' a language.
@@batu_nosel1 A lot of Canadians speak a language other than English at home, and any international students have to know English by default in order to study there.
1:20 she's obviously a French native speaker. How else would Spanish interfere with ENGLISH in her brain. (Spanish being another romance language, thus having much more common with French)
It's weird how our native language seems to occupy one part of our brain, while anything learned later shares a different compartment.
🐢 these videos are really interesting
I love your content man, 🐢 🐢
11:27 she's so pretty and seems really sweet
I speak and write in 5 languages, I remember in the past in Montreal, Greek was a very popular language to learn, I guess Spanish and Italian are more popular these days.
I wanted to go to McGill when I was younger😢 it was so cool to me
🐢 Thanks!
I am South African living in Canada, and I speak six languages
I adore people in Canada for their ability to speak many languages
As an Italian native speaker, I can say Luca was spot on! Specially with his hand.
Shoutout to the girl wearing the Apex Twin shirt.
Very surprised how many french Canadians know Spanish. Spanish dominates the US, but I thought it was super rare in Canada.
Speaking Spanish as a second language is rare indeed in Canada outside Quebec.
It is widespread in Quebec for 3 reasons :
- With 75% vocabulary in common with French, it is easier to learn than even English;
- Hispanic Americans are not outcast nor they suffer negative prejudice related to social condition as much as in the US;
- We have a policy to master French before you immigrate to Quebec to be selected. Thus, Spanish speakers have an easier time learning French and come to Quebec in bigger numbers.
Usa is latino country
@@PatrioteQuebecois I'm from Vancouver, and lots of people here speak Spanish as a first language, but you're right. It's rare to find someone here who speaks it as a _second_ language. That would almost always be either English (for immigrants) or French (for anglos).
Je suis heureux de dire que je trouve de plus en plus de gens à Vancouver qui peuvent avoir une conversation de base en français.
As i expected, there are many people who speak french but didnt expect that there are iran people here quite
Es más sorpresa que muchos hablen español.. porqué el francés es cooficial con el inglés.
@@MariaLopez-tb4fp what are you talking about? I don't know your language at all.....
@@MariaLopez-tb4fp el francés es el único idioma oficial en Quebec. Sin embargo, McGill es una universidad que tiene el inglés como lengua de instrucción principal, así que muchos estudiantes vienen de otros países donde no se habla francés
I'm surprised how many Spanish speakers (or at least learners) there were considering there isn't all that much Latino influence in Canada. ¡Muy interesante!
conpared to LA, they give me 80s vibes
Cool vid
🐢
1:30 I know cannabis is legal in Canada,but can students smoke weed at the university?? Or maybe that wasn’t weed… 🤔
İm waiting in bodrum. Turkey/Bodrum. Bodrum is a very great place
I saw you walking on the street filming this
I started watching your videos when I was still in South Africa, I am now in Montreal. I would be nice to meet you in person. How can I contact you ?
Are you South African? I am, and I live in BC
When I saw the thumbnail I honestly first thought that that was Eddy from TwoSet Violin wearing a wig...