In Japanese, it really is _guguru,_ because that _ru_ on the end allows for handy use of "to Google" as a verb in Japanese. (Of course, it's difficult to mess with "OK Google" voice commands set to English if you're pronouncing it that way, which is what Luna's trying to do.)
Actually, she succeeded in pronouncing "Google" as it is "spelled" in Japan, and apart from pronouncing the "-u" at the end (which everyone has a trailed-off vowel sound that is unpronounced but is still spoken when saying "Google") she says it correctly. People in the chat were basically trolling her.
This was too wholesome lol. I completely understand her struggle as someone who had to learn English as a second language. If I were to read this in Spanish it would sound something like "Googehleh".
En español hay gente que literalmente le dice “google” tal como se lee en español (“gogle”) yyy hay gente que pronuncia “gugul” que es más parecido a como se pronuncia realmente
@@Aleclovito Jajaja, Aqui en Francia es lo mismo, hay gente que le dice Google tal come se lee en Frances "Gugeul" ... jajaja Perdoname per my espanol de mierda :P
@@LeNumidium Te felicito! Comprendí todo lo que dijiste, bueno, supongo que francés y español soy bastante parecidos (considerando que hubo un tiempo en el cual estudiaba francés uhhhh un deux trois quatre sanc..... rouge blanc noir... je me apelle Arcane????? Ohhh boy, It has been so long, I don't remember how to spell correctly......... croissant oui oui(¿)) Lo único serian los acentos, la ñ, "my" en ves de "mi" y "per" que sería "por"
@@arcanedarkling haha c'est bien ! Tu connais un peu de Français ! 😊 Gracias, hace mucho tiempo que yo no habla Espanol pero tengo un poquito vocabulario por hacerme entender per la gente Espanola y Latina. 😂
She's pronouncing it right in Japanese, In Japan Google advertise themselves as "Guguru" but keep the spelling "Google" since it's easier to pronounce in Japanese compared to "Google"
@Buddha UwU It's the same across most cultures, if you try to pronounce foreign words in the original pronunciation it's fancy and a bit condescending. No one wants to hear the croissant as the French actually pronounce it, nor things like bruschetta.
@@koyominarararagi2833 I've never heard of the word Bruschetta before, but my go-to pronunciation is broo-shet-ta. Never heard of macchiatto either, but that one sounds Italian. Pronounced Mak-ki-at-to no?
If you've ever tried to learn a foreign language from a native speaker, you should know her struggle. When you hear sounds from a foreign language, your brain processes them as sounds in your native language... so if the language you're learning has a sound that your native language doesn't have, you can't hear it or say it correctly. Your brain just doesn't process it correctly. As an English speaker, it was pretty crazy when I was learning some Eastern European languages. As an example, there's a sound I can only best describe as "dj" (like a 'd' sound and a 'j' sound mixed together)... but it's not, it's a unique sound that's not in English. I have no way to conceptualize it or explain it to other English speakers, other than putting it in terms of English sounds, since those are the only sounds most English speakers are intimately familiar with. The same thing is happening in this video. The Japanese language follows every consonant sounds with a vowel sound (except when there is an "n" at the end of a word). Aside from "n", making any consonant sound requires a native Japanese speaker to follow it with a vowel sound, because those are the only sounds in their language. That's why she went from "gugulu" to "gugo". In the chat, you see some people saying "gugol", but a terminating "l" sound doesn't exist in Japanese so that isn't something she can force herself to say. To an outsider who's never tried to learn a foreign language with foreign sounds, it might seem as easy as "Why doesn't she just say 'gugolu' but stop before making the final 'oo' sound at the end, so it sounds like 'gugol'?" But it's really not that simple. Her brain understands "lu" as a single atomic sound. When she hears "google", her brain is trying to decide if it's more correct to say "gugo" or "gugulu", because those are the closest sounds in her language. It can be EXTREMELY frustrating when you know you're not making the sound that native speakers of the other language expect, but since those sounds don't exist in your language, you're literally incapable of producing those sounds naturally. When you hear those sounds, your brain auto-processes them into sounds you know. That's why when a native Japanese speaker hears "google" and says "gugo" or "gugulu", what they heard and what they said sound the same to them. They believe they have correctly repeated the word, because they repeated it as correctly as their native language will allow, and their brain says "yup that sounds right to me". Hopefully this will give some other native English speakers insight into how these seemingly "obvious" language discrepancies happen, and also let them understand how they sound to the native speakers of other languages when they're trying to speak that language :)
Also I'm pretty sure its okay to say as it is the japanese pronunciation. In my language we say Google correct but don't use English accent and it sounds more flat.
@@AwesomeAxolotlt no, the problem is not being able to process/hear the sound. it is exactly what the op said. someone right above you just confirmed they can't hear the difference between "can" and "can't" too. i have a similar problem. i am fluent in a second language now but i still sometimes hear things wrong when they use the sounds that aren't in my first language. when i speak in my second language, it all sounds normal to me, but i have been asked countless times to repeat what i said because i am saying something "wrong" by unintentionally changing the pronunciation of words to use the sounds in my first language. i went through a phase where i was very very depressed and upset that i cannot speak the second language "correctly" even when it sounds perfectly correct to me. i have learned to deal with it and am ok now, especially since i found out it is very normal and expected to happen when someone learns a second language that has sounds that are not in their first language. it is one of many quirks of the human brain.
Haha, she’s so cute Btw this is the problem when converting English words to Japanese using katakana. It uses a system that should apply to every word instead of analyzing its pronunciation individually. For example, it sounds better to use instead ゴ (go) instead of グ (gu) twice. Also, it’s better to just omit the ル (ru) sound because it creates an additional sound that was not required in other to replace the sound of the “L” that is missing in Japanese. So the best way to pronounce it in Japanese would be something like グーゴ (Guugo) Yet, the official transliteration is グーグル (Guuguru)
You are not supposed to cry at this. You are supposed to wonder, because you don't know the reason behind why this happens, why she is not able to not just pronounce, but even hear the word 'google' correctly. Be more curious.
@@mascotwithadinosaur9353 it’s not rude to ask something you don’t understand. And misophonia is a strong reaction to certain sounds, mainly repetitive sounds like fire alarms, phone alarms, pencil tapping/clicking and the like.
@@mascotwithadinosaur9353 Misophonia can be more accurately described as a neurological disorder where certain sounds trigger a brain pathway that's connected to the "fight or flight" area. This leads to reactions like anger, aggression, and stress when hearing certain sounds. The exact sounds can vary from person to person, and the severity of their effects depends on the perceived origin of the sound - for example, if you are triggered by pen tapping skunds, you could have a reaction to something that *sounds* like it, until you realize it's not, like a washing machine with something stuck inside of it. The sound won't change but you'll stop feeling stress. Similarly, on rare occasions, triggering sounds don't trigger a reaction when the perceived origin meets certain criteria - for example, my misophonia is on eating sounds, but it's not triggered by certain people whom I perceive as never able to be a threat. It's not something explainable by logic because it doesn't involve thinking, it's just messed up neuron wiring, at least from what current (and very sparse) research shows. A lot of people, including mental health "professionals" tend to not take misophonia seriously for two reasons - it's a barely known condition (not even listed in the DSM-5, the widely accepted list of mental disorders) and everyone thinks it's a psychological problem, i.e. an overreaction. A lot of people will just laugh at it and deliberately ignore scientific articles because of that. I can tell you from my experience that it has caused me enormous stress during school because everyone would chew gum non-stop - it feels like hearing a wild animal that's about to attack you, but a feeling of extreme rage is even more prevalent, and it only gets worse over time. I'm taking, like, I seriously considered murdering the person chewing gum on the spot. Luckily I've learned a lot of self-control over the years, but it didn't make the suffering any better. I'm now in online school so misophonia is barely a problem. For other sufferers it can ruin lives if they have to hear triggering sounds at home and/or at work. The worst part is that if you try to tell people to stop making those noises, you're considered weird and rude.
@@tomatoguy7227 Now that sounds like a nightmare to deal with. I'm starting to think the DSM shouldn't be taken as an end all be all. We can always find new disorders and such so something not being in the DSM is like... well it can be added in the future. Anyway, lots of hugs and love. Hope you meet more and more people who understand. Also, again, I hope I didn't come off as rude.
At least it ain't guruguru. People here used to say Googol, I'm not sure which is better for the AI to understand. 3:51 "The battle of the google has started" 👏👏👏.
A googol is a number, so googol should be eaiser to understand, it's what the name google is based on anyways. (A googol is a number with 1 followed by 0s until you're too tired, lol)
Luna: Wait a minute..Google is pronounced "Gugol"? I've been calling it "Gugulu." Why didn't someone tell me?! Oh, I've been making an idiot out of myself!
That part of the stream is the cutest thing ever. I was just relaxing to this stream and suddenly: Okay, gugulu x10. Whenever I have time I always join Luna's piano streams. They're so relaxing.
2:26 *in national geographic voice * And here we here the google and Luna doing thier mating call together let's watch these majestic creatures making thier sounds together
It's funny because she's so close if she puts them together and just stops before the u. Edit: Holy shit she did it! She triggered my Google Home mini towards the very end.
Japan doesn't have words that end in consonants except the n sound. So like, even when she hears the English pronunciation, it sounds like "gu go" to her ears. Her brain isn't processing the "L" sound at the end.
Somehow I find hilarious that you can see Russian comments in the chat almost for the whole duration of the video. Didn't except Luna to be appealing to fellow comrades.
'Is my pronunciation wrong?' *changes how she pronounces 'OK'*
😂😂😂😂
She’s a child Hololive members and it shows XD this was freaking adorable
TheLegend27 Gaming well she’s not an actual child lol
Thanks obama
Spectrxi
XD I know lol
Luna was 0 years old when she finds out Google is not Gugulu. Pretty genius I would say.
I really wanted to like but couldnt, its the number
@@intmoha8 HAHAHAHAHA
@@intmoha8 so are you suffering from seeing the likes now?
666 likes
She finds out google is not gugulu but gulu gulu
That one comment saying “stop activating my google”
Timestamp?
@@mayankmallik4508 3:18
@@playerhwang Thanks
0:43 smells like teen spirit, but instead its Luna trying to say "Google"
Lol
She's a bit confused but she got the spirit.
Thats it im subscribed
@@godhasabandonedme1643 but why lmao
Lmfao...
And that 'bit' is very cute.
In Japanese, it really is _guguru,_ because that _ru_ on the end allows for handy use of "to Google" as a verb in Japanese. (Of course, it's difficult to mess with "OK Google" voice commands set to English if you're pronouncing it that way, which is what Luna's trying to do.)
This is brilliant: Google
But I like this: Gugulu
Make one then😂😂😂
glue
I like this more:Gu go
Gugu gugulu
Sometimes, if you listened carefully, you actually can hear Luna's genius
If I wasn't reading subtitles I'd think she's just making baby sounds
probably people who doesn't know can't speak japanese
I mean, she is 0 years old so she might as well be making baby noises.
She is just making baby sounds.
To be honest, when is she not making baby sounds
Same
2:28 when your Pokemon has low HP
OML LMAO
HAHAHAHAHAHA
Holy shit lmao
Ahahahahaha
Fudge can't unhear
Siri : *waiting for command*
Luna : "HEY SILLY!! "
jesus lmfao
Sorry. I cannot understand what you are saying.
Luna: "Hey, listen!"
I heard "Hey Chili"
Hey Shilly!
I just watched a woman trying to pronounce 'Google' for 4 minutes, why do I feel so at peace?
Cuz she's 2D and not 3D
I am hooked and I don't really understand why.
Go for it princess, you can do it.
I feel a bit disappointed its like i want to teach her how to pronounce it properly😂
Actually, she succeeded in pronouncing "Google" as it is "spelled" in Japan, and apart from pronouncing the "-u" at the end (which everyone has a trailed-off vowel sound that is unpronounced but is still spoken when saying "Google") she says it correctly. People in the chat were basically trolling her.
@@yohannbiimu Yes, she said that in the video.
The point is that she tried to pronounce it the original way.
"Why is my oversea fans not spelling it right?"
later
"I've been tricked this whole time"
3:18: "STOP ACTIVATING MY GOOGLE"
I'm just losing it at the visual of this person's google going berserk at the barrage of Googles.
Its moments like that which really make me enjoy seeing the English comments fly by during these streams.
I saw that too lmao. Google: gululululululu.
Me too when she said ok gu go it activated and full of googles
When she said “Hey Siri!”, some guy in the chat at about 0:30 said “Bruh my phone”
I thought google assistant only recognized our own voice?
Google CEO: “We need a new name for Google”
Me: “Google 2: Electric Gugulu”
It's less syllobelly and overreaching of glottal stop. I for one embrace our new Electric Gluegun.
This is a pretty good comment, needs more likes
This is my favorite comment here
This is genius lmao
Best comment.
Alternate title: "English with Luna 2: Gugulu Boogaloo"
Electric Gugulu.
Gugulu Bugulu
Comment made my day
googoo boogaloo
THIS IS MY FAVORITE COMMENT AND THE REPLIES TOO 🥺
Luna : Gugo ?
Google : Google
Luna : Gugo !?
Google : Google
Luna : Gugo !!?
Google :
YES MY PRINCESS 👁️👄👁️
To be fair I'd bet most Americans don't pronounce the L if they're in a hurry or unless they're being deliberate
Teacher: it's "Google"
Luna: it's *gugulu*
Me: *gugulu*
Waiting for this to be remixed
Hamburgaga: Say no more
Leaving this here just in case it does came out.
im work in it
REDALiCE: You called?
It's gonna be fire🔥
This is the cutest thing ive ever seen in my life and every opinion that differs from this claim is heresy and must be purged
With the name Braincell Genocide. I will not be commiting Heresy for one time in my life as a natural born heretic. It just backs up the threat
But what about if you had all this but a doggo in the background playing with a toy or something? Wouldn't that be better?
@@gaelsdaddy2341
Dude, are you that desperate to get Diabeetus'd?!!
@@sufianramli8017 yeah sounds good to me
@@gaelsdaddy2341
Dude...get help. Fedex delivers insuline by the crate
Can we all just take a step back to appreciate the effort she's putting in to connect with her overseas fans?
I love that translators really bring a lot of overseas fans to Hololive, one of the few good things of being in quarantine
@@pyrenviii3053 i'm gonna blame pewd for taking a break now I'm watching 35 vtuber
u mean the effort she's putting in to connect with Gu↑go↓?
@@PrinceJr-oj7sq Haha yeah, that too.
@@pzgamerch we all know it started with AI channel. The part2 is when pewds watched Siro screaming hysterically at her dead sheep.
She’s so genuinely confused and it’s honestly kinda precious.
This was too wholesome lol.
I completely understand her struggle as someone who had to learn English as a second language. If I were to read this in Spanish it would sound something like "Googehleh".
En español hay gente que literalmente le dice “google” tal como se lee en español (“gogle”) yyy hay gente que pronuncia “gugul” que es más parecido a como se pronuncia realmente
@@Aleclovito Jajaja, Aqui en Francia es lo mismo, hay gente que le dice Google tal come se lee en Frances "Gugeul" ... jajaja
Perdoname per my espanol de mierda :P
@@LeNumidium Te felicito! Comprendí todo lo que dijiste, bueno, supongo que francés y español soy bastante parecidos (considerando que hubo un tiempo en el cual estudiaba francés uhhhh un deux trois quatre sanc..... rouge blanc noir... je me apelle Arcane????? Ohhh boy, It has been so long, I don't remember how to spell correctly......... croissant oui oui(¿))
Lo único serian los acentos, la ñ, "my" en ves de "mi" y "per" que sería "por"
@@arcanedarkling haha c'est bien ! Tu connais un peu de Français ! 😊
Gracias, hace mucho tiempo que yo no habla Espanol pero tengo un poquito vocabulario por hacerme entender per la gente Espanola y Latina. 😂
I'm raiding google headquarters, my princess can't be incorrect if she says guguru it shall be named guguru
On your left
Let the smol potato come pls
Be careful Dr.Google himself guards the servers you must defeat him if you are to complete your task.
V-Simps
she always right even if its wrong
*GUGULU! KONLULU! GUGULU! KONLULU! GUGULU! KONLULU! GUGULU! KONLULU!*
"Holy sheet! It actually works! The Eldritch's summoning chant actually wor-"
What have you brought to these accursed lan-
SONA DA BII-
NOT AGAI-
I have a Browning machine gun I think I'm saf-
Not holy shit its
HORRY SHEIIT
I was going to comment about something she is doing that is heartwarming, but EVERYTHING she is doing is heartwarming
Meanwhile in Luna's English Class: YOU F**KING AS**OLE
@Dont mind me Just playing with a bad dog YES
@Dont mind me Just playing with a bad dog Totally, even her existence is heartwarming, she is just too cute to be an human being lmao
Simp..
Just some guy without a mask she’s too cute, even when she farts directly on her viewers 😭
every now and again I rewatch this video to cheer myself up
I love how it's not even the accent that's causing it, she genuinely thought it's GUGULU.
Well, cause it is 'GUGULU' in Japanese.
@@KARIAP Oof. Well, still didn't work on her part for most of it.
It's because japanese don't pronounce consonants without a vowel. So the second 'g' in google is pronounced 'gu' instead of being with the 'le'
@@cramnh0j Yeah, I know that. Watched a video about it once.
That’s IMO why it’s hard for Japanese to learn English, they’re basically learning a different language
She even almost got the "L" a couple of times lol
Google: Exists
Luna: Visibly confused
it's pronounced "Guguru" in Japanese and they advertise it like that in Japan
I'm a weeb, I understand why she's confused. You don't have to explain it.
*audibly confused
She's pronouncing it right in Japanese,
In Japan Google advertise themselves as "Guguru" but keep the spelling "Google" since it's easier to pronounce in Japanese compared to "Google"
We know🙂
@@masamune2984 i didn't know
@Buddha UwU It's the same across most cultures, if you try to pronounce foreign words in the original pronunciation it's fancy and a bit condescending. No one wants to hear the croissant as the French actually pronounce it, nor things like bruschetta.
@@Krossfyre ngl, it bugs me to hear people say brooSHetta when we know how macchiatto is pronounced.
@@koyominarararagi2833 I've never heard of the word Bruschetta before, but my go-to pronunciation is broo-shet-ta. Never heard of macchiatto either, but that one sounds Italian. Pronounced Mak-ki-at-to no?
This activated my Google home like 20 times in a row...
I demand to rebrand Google into Gugulu for our Princess's comfort!
Luna: Guguru
Viewers: Guguru
Luna: Why can't everyone type "Google" correctly?!
Whenever somebody asks me something I’ll just tell them to Gugulu it.
Then you'll be looked at like an idiot because you're not a cute anime girl
@@rey7014 lol
Gugulu actually works
@@rey7014Google compqny use Gugulu in their advertisement in Japan though.... "Google but spoken as Gugulu"
@@rey7014 wow someones salty today
I watched the whole stream. She had a rough time, and we viewers did a Grass Festival.
i wish i awake at that time😭
PPTenshi: 👀
What is a "grass festival"?
@@ashoka7273 he probably meant the chat spamming 草
@@xjan5647 that name
"Gugulu is spelled g.o.o.g.l.e"
Me:
-Impossible, perhaps the archives are incomplete
I didn't know some guy with a mustache had a baby
Hello there
Who is this "guy with out a mustache jr" ?
@@skinnylegend1542 sorry but this is just some guy without a mustache jr not just some guy with a mustache jr. very different people.
@@ninjahaz0180 yeah I'm very offended
Her laughter is so precious! ❤️
Ah yes, the Japanese inability to end a sentence with a consonant.
Gohan
Gomen
Ramen
It's only N so......
@@vincedeguzman4614 The inability of Japanese to end a sentence with a consonant that isn't n.
OMFG literally that meme where an African teacher spells Google then pronounces it as GULUGULU
This needs to be top comment!
Yeah right 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I miss Pasta-senpai!
Here's the video: ua-cam.com/video/NjXFWWgswrg/v-deo.html
2:54 That guy saying "Hello. I'm new here!" Came just on time to see the cutest princess being even cuter than usual.
AHHHH! MY SOUL IS BURNING!!!
Just tried it on my phone. "Hey Gugo" actually works lmao
it's not okay anymore?
@@eidrag both seems to work.
Lol
If you've ever tried to learn a foreign language from a native speaker, you should know her struggle. When you hear sounds from a foreign language, your brain processes them as sounds in your native language... so if the language you're learning has a sound that your native language doesn't have, you can't hear it or say it correctly. Your brain just doesn't process it correctly.
As an English speaker, it was pretty crazy when I was learning some Eastern European languages. As an example, there's a sound I can only best describe as "dj" (like a 'd' sound and a 'j' sound mixed together)... but it's not, it's a unique sound that's not in English. I have no way to conceptualize it or explain it to other English speakers, other than putting it in terms of English sounds, since those are the only sounds most English speakers are intimately familiar with.
The same thing is happening in this video. The Japanese language follows every consonant sounds with a vowel sound (except when there is an "n" at the end of a word). Aside from "n", making any consonant sound requires a native Japanese speaker to follow it with a vowel sound, because those are the only sounds in their language. That's why she went from "gugulu" to "gugo". In the chat, you see some people saying "gugol", but a terminating "l" sound doesn't exist in Japanese so that isn't something she can force herself to say.
To an outsider who's never tried to learn a foreign language with foreign sounds, it might seem as easy as "Why doesn't she just say 'gugolu' but stop before making the final 'oo' sound at the end, so it sounds like 'gugol'?" But it's really not that simple. Her brain understands "lu" as a single atomic sound. When she hears "google", her brain is trying to decide if it's more correct to say "gugo" or "gugulu", because those are the closest sounds in her language.
It can be EXTREMELY frustrating when you know you're not making the sound that native speakers of the other language expect, but since those sounds don't exist in your language, you're literally incapable of producing those sounds naturally. When you hear those sounds, your brain auto-processes them into sounds you know.
That's why when a native Japanese speaker hears "google" and says "gugo" or "gugulu", what they heard and what they said sound the same to them. They believe they have correctly repeated the word, because they repeated it as correctly as their native language will allow, and their brain says "yup that sounds right to me".
Hopefully this will give some other native English speakers insight into how these seemingly "obvious" language discrepancies happen, and also let them understand how they sound to the native speakers of other languages when they're trying to speak that language :)
It's been ten years since I first came to the U.S. and I still can't quite differentiate "can" and "can't" sometimes
Also I'm pretty sure its okay to say as it is the japanese pronunciation. In my language we say Google correct but don't use English accent and it sounds more flat.
Learning the IPA allows you to bypass this problem.
no, the problem isn't not being able to process/hear the sound, but not knowing how to produce it (mouth, tongue, air flow)
@@AwesomeAxolotlt no, the problem is not being able to process/hear the sound. it is exactly what the op said. someone right above you just confirmed they can't hear the difference between "can" and "can't" too. i have a similar problem. i am fluent in a second language now but i still sometimes hear things wrong when they use the sounds that aren't in my first language. when i speak in my second language, it all sounds normal to me, but i have been asked countless times to repeat what i said because i am saying something "wrong" by unintentionally changing the pronunciation of words to use the sounds in my first language. i went through a phase where i was very very depressed and upset that i cannot speak the second language "correctly" even when it sounds perfectly correct to me. i have learned to deal with it and am ok now, especially since i found out it is very normal and expected to happen when someone learns a second language that has sounds that are not in their first language. it is one of many quirks of the human brain.
Ok kids repeat after me:
G
O
O
G
L
E
Say it now
*Gugulu*
Kid: laughs in the background
Gulugulu
jee
oh
ohh
jeee
elley
e
gulugulu
G
U
L
A
G
Gee O O Gee Ele E: gluglu
i love how she was so confident when she said the pronounciation was "GUGULU" for her lol
and also got mad when her chat keep on saying GULUGULU
its how google is advertised in japan! Shes kind of right to pronounce it like that in japanese
Haha, she’s so cute
Btw this is the problem when converting English words to Japanese using katakana. It uses a system that should apply to every word instead of analyzing its pronunciation individually.
For example, it sounds better to use instead ゴ (go) instead of グ (gu) twice. Also, it’s better to just omit the ル (ru) sound because it creates an additional sound that was not required in other to replace the sound of the “L” that is missing in Japanese.
So the best way to pronounce it in Japanese would be something like グーゴ (Guugo)
Yet, the official transliteration is グーグル (Guuguru)
Near the end of the video, Luna actually turned on my google with her "Okay, Gugo" hshshshshshshshshsh
Why am I watching this? Why am I loving it?
Is too late for you
there's no way back
You cannot escape it now
Welcome to live streamed anime. You're at the right place.
We got him fam
THIS IS ONE OF THE PURIEST THINGS I'VE EVER SEEN. CRYING.
i feel ya
You are not supposed to cry at this. You are supposed to wonder, because you don't know the reason behind why this happens, why she is not able to not just pronounce, but even hear the word 'google' correctly. Be more curious.
@@Makes_me_wonder Why wonder if you already know? It's adorable though.
Her pronunciation is cute, but it sounds like an alarm that it’s tripping up my misophonia.
I don't wanna sound rude, I'm just asking out of curiosity, but what is misophonia?
@@mascotwithadinosaur9353 it’s not rude to ask something you don’t understand. And misophonia is a strong reaction to certain sounds, mainly repetitive sounds like fire alarms, phone alarms, pencil tapping/clicking and the like.
@@burningfox4974
@@mascotwithadinosaur9353 Misophonia can be more accurately described as a neurological disorder where certain sounds trigger a brain pathway that's connected to the "fight or flight" area. This leads to reactions like anger, aggression, and stress when hearing certain sounds. The exact sounds can vary from person to person, and the severity of their effects depends on the perceived origin of the sound - for example, if you are triggered by pen tapping skunds, you could have a reaction to something that *sounds* like it, until you realize it's not, like a washing machine with something stuck inside of it. The sound won't change but you'll stop feeling stress. Similarly, on rare occasions, triggering sounds don't trigger a reaction when the perceived origin meets certain criteria - for example, my misophonia is on eating sounds, but it's not triggered by certain people whom I perceive as never able to be a threat. It's not something explainable by logic because it doesn't involve thinking, it's just messed up neuron wiring, at least from what current (and very sparse) research shows. A lot of people, including mental health "professionals" tend to not take misophonia seriously for two reasons - it's a barely known condition (not even listed in the DSM-5, the widely accepted list of mental disorders) and everyone thinks it's a psychological problem, i.e. an overreaction. A lot of people will just laugh at it and deliberately ignore scientific articles because of that. I can tell you from my experience that it has caused me enormous stress during school because everyone would chew gum non-stop - it feels like hearing a wild animal that's about to attack you, but a feeling of extreme rage is even more prevalent, and it only gets worse over time. I'm taking, like, I seriously considered murdering the person chewing gum on the spot. Luckily I've learned a lot of self-control over the years, but it didn't make the suffering any better. I'm now in online school so misophonia is barely a problem. For other sufferers it can ruin lives if they have to hear triggering sounds at home and/or at work. The worst part is that if you try to tell people to stop making those noises, you're considered weird and rude.
@@tomatoguy7227 Now that sounds like a nightmare to deal with. I'm starting to think the DSM shouldn't be taken as an end all be all. We can always find new disorders and such so something not being in the DSM is like... well it can be added in the future. Anyway, lots of hugs and love. Hope you meet more and more people who understand.
Also, again, I hope I didn't come off as rude.
She's much cuter when she speaks GUGULU. I'd rather listen to it everytime.
That initial "Dame?" melt my heart EVERYTIME!
I like how she still says “hey Google” in her new streams
At least it ain't guruguru. People here used to say Googol, I'm not sure which is better for the AI to understand. 3:51 "The battle of the google has started" 👏👏👏.
Just call it gulag.
That "started" sounded really good. Well, all the sentence actually.
A googol is a number, so googol should be eaiser to understand, it's what the name google is based on anyways. (A googol is a number with 1 followed by 0s until you're too tired, lol)
now she's speaking like a true one year old, "gugu go gu" gugu gaga yes yes
GOO GO
Fairy princess; Guguru! guguru!
so cute.
This is literally the most wholesome thing I’ve ever watched and heard with my ear holes
Nonononono, i like it better the other way.
Gugulu sounds way cuter
Luna: Wait a minute..Google is pronounced "Gugol"? I've been calling it "Gugulu." Why didn't someone tell me?! Oh, I've been making an idiot out of myself!
Somehow i misread "idiot" as "idol" and thought it meant the same xD
She lives in Japan, make sense.
I live for a simple reason: Luna’s angry noises.
this has been stuck in my head for so long I love it
I swear, she legit got one of the cutest Hololive voices there is
A baby saying, "Okay GUGU" Noice.
I just repeated this out loud and it activated my phone's Google Assistant.
@@WingedAsarath Lol
That part of the stream is the cutest thing ever.
I was just relaxing to this stream and suddenly: Okay, gugulu x10.
Whenever I have time I always join Luna's piano streams. They're so relaxing.
2:26
*in national geographic voice *
And here we here the google and Luna doing thier mating call together let's watch these majestic creatures making thier sounds together
Am i the only one that is dying from laughter when she just keeps repeating the same fucking sentence lmaooo
Some days Luna saying Gugulu over and over just pops in my head and puts a smile on my face.
Luna-tan really look and sounds like a baby.. Thats too cute
My heart can't take this any further...!
This is the most adorable thing Ive ever witnessed.
The guy in chat that said "Hello. I'm new here!" must be very confused
Can someone make a video where its "smells like teen spirit", but instead its Luna trying to say "Google"
0:43
Nevermind i did it
@@KikonSketches where
@@KikonSketches please where
@@moonrise6806 I made a very short version on my channel, when I have time someday maybe ill make a longer one or someone else may do it
Himemori Luna 2: Trapped in the Electric Gugulu
3:50 Thanks for subtitling it, I honestly thought she was speaking in japanese
It's funny because she's so close if she puts them together and just stops before the u.
Edit: Holy shit she did it! She triggered my Google Home mini towards the very end.
She looks like a fairy type gym leader in Pokémon
This tbh
When her pokemon is about to be knocked out by the challenger 2:28:
Japan doesn't have words that end in consonants except the n sound. So like, even when she hears the English pronunciation, it sounds like "gu go" to her ears. Her brain isn't processing the "L" sound at the end.
Watched this while half asleep. 4 minutes of "gugulu" and "google" is a sweet melody.
Luna: "GUGULU"
GoogleTranslate-sensie: "Google"
Luna: "GUGU"
GoogleTranslate-sensie: "Google!"
Luna: "GUGO"
GoogleTranslate-sensie: "GOOGLE!!!"
Luna: "GU GO!"
Ah yes, the difference of Nihonggo
GuGel
Nihongo
Sensei
I can feel alexa cringing on the background
Mission: eliminate 3 sinner who disliked our hime
Bravo 6 going dark
For fuck sake, she activated my google assistant...
Lol me too, 3:30 is actually activated my google assistant
This was the clip that made me start watching Vtubers thank you very much
"Google 2: Electric Googaloo"
It's times like this where she wishes she could speak in her natural voice.
natural voice?
*Arghhhhh So cuteee wryyyyyyyyyy*
This is the best thing ever.
Not just the best Hololive clip.
Not just the best UA-cam video.
But the best *ANYTHING* _...EVER._ 😎
How the fuck did my google activate with "Gugulu"
I love how she tried to change the tone of her voice to see if google would recognized it XD
Luna is so cute. She has really been growing on me lately. I'm looking forward to her 3D debut! I'm guessing she will be after Watame.
THE VIDEO STOPPED FOR ME AND I WAS LIKE "????????"
AND THEN MY GOOGLE ASSISTANT SAID "Colorado. You're welcome"
AND I'M SCREAMING WHY COLORADO
Ughh she's adorable & this is the cutest thing I've watched
My google home wouldn't go off until she finally started saying "okey gugo"
//Luna repeating gu go 10 times in a row-
“This is the content I crave.”
Somehow I find hilarious that you can see Russian comments in the chat almost for the whole duration of the video. Didn't except Luna to be appealing to fellow comrades.
Gulag-u
My Google Home actually turned on, and responded in Japanese.
That was SO CUTEEE!!!!!!!! I just want to hug her and tell her she did a good job~
Even to this day, occasionally i keep thinking 'gugulu ja nai'
The more she say the proper pronunciation, the more it sounds like baby talking...wait
It’s actually “グーグル” or Gūguru if you use the Japanese voice for google translate
Japanese is a really restrictive language.
@@jekblom123 It's nowhere near Hawaiian. Mali Kalikimaka, in July!
I just noticed the lenght of her neck and now I cant unsee it damnit
my google home was already screaming at me in the first 10 seconds
The reaction when Luna hears the correct pronunciation.
My life is a lie...