I was impressed. Because it's not that easy to listen with a full helmet on. I have a motorcycle myself and even with just the helmet and no earplugs (which you should use at faster speeds to protect your ears from wind noise) it's pretty difficult to understand people when they talk to you.
@@Huell0 for sure she was travelling around the Europe on motorbike. Also living in Kaliningrad where you can meet people from Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia helps it
I guess they meant dialects Like Brazilian Portuguese, mexican Spanish, Argentinian Spanish. However, I have no idea how they would figure out difference, at least I know that there's difference between pronouncing some letters in Portuguese in Portugal and Portuguese in Brazil
@@Tankwiper It is in fact quite close to not only Estonia (where Estonian is spoken) but also several other languages and countries, including Denmark (where Danish is spoken).
I initially thought I would rock this, but oh well. Got only three right: my native language,my other native language and the one I studied 10 years at school lol
The Uralic languages form a language family, the languages of which are spoken today in a wide area on both sides of the Ural Mountains and in Europe. There are more than 30 Uralic languages and their speakers are around 20.7 million. They are spoken by the Ural peoples. The Finnish language also belongs to the Baltic Finnic branch of the Uralic linguistic group. Other state languages belonging to the Uralic language group are Estonian and Hungarian. Other Uralic languages are minority languages, most of which are spoken in Russia. The branch of linguistics that studies Uralic languages is Fennougristics. Sometimes the designations "Uralic languages" and "Finno-Ugric languages" are synonyms that refer to the entire language group. One youtube site is good in this matter: Spirit of The Urals. I understand most of it, maybe cause im from Finland 🇫🇮 and My grandparents was from Karelia💖. Btw i just start my Russian language studies, greetings from Finland 🇫🇮 !
very interesting, thanks for the information! I was born in Udmurtia(Buranovsky grandmothers!💃), being only 1/8 Udmurt by nationality, but that's not about it now😅 they are from the same language group as the Finns (I do not know exactly what about genetics), I have always wondered how foreigners(Hungarians, Estonians, etc.) relate to these Russian nationalities? I mean Komi, Mordvins, Veps, Udmurts, Karelians, etc. I will be grateful for the answer!
@@sallasundell4351 perhaps I am too intrusive and open, but in any case I would like to know about it. firsthand or just from some forums. maybe I should look for some statistics and so on. I meant cultural interaction(?), despite the state borders. anyway, thanks for your reply. and sorry for my english!
@@VOL4ARA Greetings to you too from Finland 🇫🇮 . Btw you all, I just read: "The most widely accepted theory among experts is that the Uralic languages derive from a common parent language, Proto-Uralic, which would have been spoken at least 6,000 years ago." So Let's be proud of our roots, they are really old💓.
Surprisingly few Russians recognize Estonian. For me as a Finn Estonian it is very easy, it resembles Finnish. And in fact Estonian intonation resembles more Swedish. Estonia has also been part of Sweden, not so long as Finland, but however. Almost all recognized Ukranian.
@@casper1vanes That's surprising. Finns have always had a lot of interaction with the Estonians. Easy way there by boat, from Helsinki to Tallinn. Easier than travel from Helsinki to the north of Finland, Lapland.
Ахахах, если сложить население Эстонии и Финляндии, то даже и 7 миллионов не выйдет, а в то время население РФ 146 миллионов. Поэтому ничего удивительного.
The french clip was from a politician who has a heavy accent from the region of basque country which is neighbouring Spain hence many people thought it was Spanish. Spanish people on the other side of the border usually will speak Spanish and french as well. (mostly older generation)
Ahhhhhh, that's why I didn't get it even though I speak a tiny bit of French and should have at least picked up on "aussi". Also, the intonation of his sentences didn't sound French to me. Idk if that's due to the accent or because he was very deliberately trying to make a point and therefore separating each word out like that. But when you hear the average French sentence, usually all the words flow into each other and the sentences have more of a sing-song "flowy" feel. Not chopped into single, separate words like he did. It totally didn't feel French from the overall impression.
@Dadalux I'm not talking about the words or the pronounciation of single words. I'm talking about the intonation(?) cadence(?) of the whole sentence. In German, there is this nice term for this that translates to "sentence melody". And this short example just doesn't convey the typical "sentence melody" of French, where words run into each other and the typical ebb and flow of where to stress words in a sentence. So, instead of he Now, I'm not saying that French people never speak like this, but it's not exactly a good example of what a "typical French" sentence sounds like. Maybe the app used this example to make it harder to guess the language because for German they also used someone who spoke partly "non-typical" - first she starts pretty typical "ich. trinke. jeden. Tag." but then continues "mehreTassnSchwazntee", blending the words into each other and swallowing letters. Where a typical intonation/cadence would have been "mehrere. Tassen. schwarzen. Tee." Yes, my French courses were 20 years ago and it's *extremely* rusty, but it's not like I have never heard French before. I just expected the app to use a more typical example, like they did for the Portugese clip.
@Dadalux Mais je suis Français !! Et j'habite près d'Orléans. Ce n'est pas une question d'être "vrai" ou "pas vrai". Je te parle du réel. Parce que non, parfois l'accent marseillais est si fort que certaines personnes, surtout les plus âgées, ne peuvent pas comprendre des accents. Quelqu'un d'Orléans comprend quelqu'un de Paris, bien sûr. Mais pas nécessairement de Marseille, surtout s'il vient des campagnes environnantes. Rien que d'écrire cela montre que c'est toi qui ne connais rien au français.
its weird, I don't speak or hear German & French everyday but could figure it out from orientation. I live in Moscow too. 5/10 is what I would have earned for answering right - Estonian, Polish, Ukrainian, German, French & Greek ( only after mentioning the salad & ancient philosophers)
@Dadalux Oh, Oh, oh. Well. If someone says what you said, I would not think Russia, but old Germany due to mentioning goos step like the NaZi. For Russia would be vodka, but I would not think of it as cheap. LOL
No, not Spanish Babushka but Portuguese comedian Maria Ruef and that last guy, nailed it! It was form a TV comedy show. Well done! 1420 fun fact, when someone speaks Portuguese (Portuguese from Portugal, not from Brazil) it is often confused with Russian by non Portuguese speakers... Special when the accent is from the Azorean island of S. Miguel.... People from the island tend to get mad because someone didn't recognised it as Portuguese but it is very common and I remember one time when I decided to speak with that accent and a Brazilian asked me "dude, are you speaking russian? I never realized you spoke Russian!". Of course, a russian speaker would never mistake Portuguese for russian but when the person doesn't speak either languages they often do and I have no idea why.
I can confirm what you say! I now live in Vienna. Have you ever on occasion, perhaps while on holiday elsewhere, looked up as a snatch of conversation reached your ear as someone walked past and thought, "Oh! Um tuga!" but as you tune in, it's just Russian? ;-) I've also been mistaken for Afghani by a Pakistani taxi driver when he overheard my brother and me chatting. Pakistani workmates have confirmed that sometimes when I speak Portuguese on the phone it sounds like Pashtu, but only briefly. So, Portuguese phonetics may sometimes sound Russian or Pashtu to untrained ears. I'm SAfrican born and we had in our community many from Açores and Madeira and you^d think I could understand their accents better, but, nah! My parents are from Coimbra & Lisboa, while I lived and studied in Coimbra for 8 years so my Portuguese accent is very much continental, with a trace of something foreign ;-)
How is it that English from the USA and the UK has different pronunciation,but is still recognisable as English,but then there's portuguese from Portugal which sounds like an entire different language when you compare it to brazilian portuguese? I speak the latter fluently (but not like a native) and most of the time I have no clue what people in Portugal are saying . Maybe it's just me, because my portuguese sucks lol
@@YayIloveAkatsuki you just answered your own question. It all depends on your fluency and also to your exposition to it. If you rarely speak and hear a language, you can't expect to be able to understand variants of that same language. I am used to hearing both English UK and English US so that is not a big deal for me, someone only used to hear English US might have difficulties understanding English uk. At first I struggled with English with new Zealand accent. I bet you have meet more people, heard more songs and seen more movies in Portuguese (BR) than in Portuguese (PT) besides, English from UK and USA differ in pronunciation and only very slightly in grammar and syntax Portuguese (BR) and (PT) differ bit more.... But trust me, the difference isn't that great between Portugal and Brazilian Portuguese if you compar it to the difference between the Portuguese spoken in mainland Portugal and the one spoken in the Azores, in S. Miguel's (Saint Michael's, if you prefer) island.... Portuguese spoken in s. Tomé e Príncipe, Moçambique or East Timor, continents away are easier to understand than what is spoken in s. Miguel... And if someone starts to freak and replies it is not true and thst I don't know what I am saying, chances are they are from S. Miguel islands as for some reason, they get very offended when people say they can't understand them...
I've seen quite a good explanation for this, ua-cam.com/video/Pik2R46xobA/v-deo.html Basically, we have similar rhytmics and large ratio of sibilant consonants both in Russian and Portuguese
Phonetics of Portuguese and Russian are very similar. I've heard that's why it's quite easy for Russians who learned Portuguese to sound almost like native speakers, pronunciation wise.
UA-cam removed your "What rural Russians think about LGBT". I tried to leave a comment on it, and while I was typing, it was gone. Absurd, it was just trying to inform people
I'm Ukrainian. I failed to instantly recognise Estonian and Kazakh. I'm surprised they do not know Portuguese, especially since thar Por-BRA has a very distinct sound.
The Polish bit was quite weird, at first: "I was fishing and a sailor getting the worms ready for me. He was very handsome." I suppose those weren't worms for eating, but for fishing, in which case it makes sense.
Yes, FSB is watching at Danila for hour))) Very funny! They don't need this neoliberal and betrayer of his Motherland. He doesn't know any secret. He doesn't even understand Russia and Russian people
1. German, I understood whole statement. 2. Finnish, I think because of the rythm (I've never heared Estonian in my life) 3. Sounds like Italian but not entirely, maybe like between Spanish and Italian. Maybe Retoromanian? (I'm not familiar with Greek at all) 4. No idea, like a slavic language mixed with middle eastern. (I never heared Khazakh, but for Russians it should be easy I guess because they are neighbors). 5. French, thats very easy. 6. Sounds very familiar and I think she mentioned Yerevan, I think its from the news. 100% Armenian. (I have an Armenian friend and I wanted to get to know sound of this language so I watched Armenian TV). 7. Idk, its hard because she's speaking emotionally, maybe Brasilian Portugese because its familiar to me and there is ż/ж but its just a lucky guess. 8. This sounds familiar, Germanic pity that the recording is very short, I'd say Dutch. (Okay, I'm not familiar with Latvian) 9. Polish, my first language and this a fragment from Maryla Rodowicz (Polish female singer) interview. 10. Ukrainian, basically eastern slavic with Polish vocabulary.
китайский часто распознают из-за особого звучания звука "ш". в других хорошо знакомых языках гласные после него произносятся неразрывно (ship, chevrolet, sushi, шина), а в китайском есть некоторая пауза, как в русском "шьет". и в этом шестом языке тоже было подобное звучание
Gosh ! You took Jean Lassalle who has a really strong accent for the French conversation 😆 I'm impressed they've found this one. Btw the original sound where this come from is just hilarious
I'm French and I was looking for this comment. I was also impressed, his accent is really not easy to understand (even for some French people 😅), it must be hard to recognize it as a foreigner...
The French guy you choose is Jean Lasalle, a French politician from rural south west who has a VERY THICK accent. Comedians always make fun of his speeches and he often remind people that French is not his first langage (I think he was raised in Occitan). To be fair, half of the native speakers of French would have difficulties understanding him. The other half would probably think he sounds like a guy who had too much to drink. :-)
There's a video of Russian officers reading some Polish instructions on an RPG, or MANPAD or something and he said he believed it was a made up language the U.S. was using. It's pretty funny.
@@juavi6987 Yes, I understand Russian language and for me Polish language sounds similar it has similar words But Polish people cant tell the difference between Russian and Latvian songs
This is fun. We in Australia are not accustomed to any foreign languages. We have everything in English. Only English language movies and radio. And no one knows any Aboriginal languages. They are not even taught at schools.
in the last part the reaction of people actually demonstrates how related and familiar are Russia and Ukraine. they a̶r̶e̶ were much closer to each other than any other countries or cultures. which shows once again how tragic, horrible and absurd is the situation between these two right now
@@theholodomorisnttaughtinam2796the video clearly shows it's not about geography. there are other countries Russia has common borders with. only Ukranian was recognized so quickly and surely by all the people
Watching the movie "Babij Jar" from 2003. It feels similar to now, but with the difference that it's not jews who got killed by germans, but ukraines by russians.
I can speak a bit russian, but with a german-saxonian accent. People say it sounds very funny. :) EDIT: Yeah i got the estonian one right, but only because i have some estonian bands in my collection.
I’m glad I figured out estonian, they have this scandinavian pronunciation but it doesnt sound like finnish. Exept from that, i must say i was surprisingly bad at this.
Finnish wasn't too bad guess for Estonian, because those two languages have a lot of similarities. Edit: said by me- who knows neither of the two languages.
I’m worried that the content is getting less and less Ukraine “special operation” related and videos happen less often. Love your work (“special operation” related and this type of stuff) but if you are being bullied by the state or your content censored, I have an apartment in Warsaw that I will rent you (supreme channel author, please no beggars) for free, so you can make “special operation” related stuff. Anyway, best of luck from a Polish psycho who walked around Kaliningrad in a Ukraine style T-shirt last month. Incredibly totally ignored by cops or any hostile locals :)
Yes, as Ukrainian, I'm here mostly for war content. I hope it returns more. And then one day ceases to exist naturally because the war itself is finally over.
As a foreigner that doesn't speak Portuguese. I can usually pick out Brazilian Portuguese. But Portugal Portuguese sounds soo different. Like French combined with Slavic sounds, idk.
Not too bad, I understood Portuguese, German, French, and Greek easily enough (I^m Portuguese, living in Austria :-| ), I guessed Armenian only because I heard Yerevan, its capital, mentioned,.I grew up with Poles but I didn't catch Polish :-( Nor Kazakh, Ukrainian, Latvian and Estonian; the last I thought was Finnish.
@@surfnturf7832Fluently? 3. Portuguese, English, and Afrikaans. My German is at a B1 level and improving, I understand written Dutch (had passed 'level 2' in 1990! 😐) and [Castilian] Spanish because of its similarity to Portuguese, although there are major differences between the two languages, of course; if they are spoken I would need them to be spoken really s-l-o-w-l-y. 🙂
How can they possibly think those Roman languages are Asian, like Japanese and Chinese? This makes no sense to me. It’s impossible to mistake an Eastern or Western European language…let alone Hispanic…for Chinese or Japanese.
If it sounds like a mess and you can't make out any familiar words or grammar structures then any language can sound Chinese. It's basically a synonym for "unintelligible" (not for native speakers and those familiar with the language, of course)
I can't believe that I guessed Armenian right. I wasn't sure if it even was a language, and I've never heard it before. I just couldn't think of anywhere else that language could fit, so it was a lucky elimination game. It seems to have a very minor resemblance to Russian, but doesn't really sound like anything I've ever heard.
Armenian is one of the Indo-European languages. 7000 years ago, Armenian and Greek separated and developed until today. That is why Armenian is not like any other language, even Greek.
Interesting how some of the people recognise Latvian as Czech. These languages have surprisingly some similar words but the diction is different, Czech sounds bit softer.
Love 😍 this video. I speak Romanian, Spanish, French, English. I understand some Hungarian, Italian, Portugal, catalán and German. I star to see videos from Correa and Asian Boss China 🇨🇳 .. so I star to made difference between some asiatic languages. Also know how sound Moroccan langue because of my brother in low. It is amazing how all this aprarently different language always have same commum words.
Wow I can recognise Ukrainian from the sound now, I got it straight away. Got Armenia too because Yerevan. I'm French and the French accent was terrible 😂
Тесно общаюсь с армянами, на улице узнаю армянский. Здесь включили что-то непонятное на ускорении, видимо чтобы никто не догадался. «Хорошую» рекламу сделали ребята👎
@@northernlights6984 Это просто армянская новостная передача. Там много слов, не использующихся в регулярной речи. И армянам, не живущим в армении, не сразу удаётся понять о чём там идёт речь. Даже по лицу армянки из видео видно, что она не без труда поняла речь из записи
I thought I would have the latin / Germanic languages in the bag, but Portuguese still doesn't sound Latin. When they guessed Czech I felt that, cuz Portuguese sounds kind of Slavic ngl
Yes, that happens far more often then one would assume and people that don't speak any Slavic languages or Portuguese tend to mistake the 2 but I can assure you, Portuguese is as Latin as it gets.
@Dadalux when heard by people who don't speak Portuguese nor a slavic language, they often assume it is russian. Completely normal, just notice how in the video a lot of people took one language for another completely different. Of course if you ask someone who speaks an English or Slavic language, they will not say it sounds alike.
@Dadalux before this goes any further, what is your native language and what is your level of fluency in Portuguese and is it Portuguese PT, BR or from any other place? Thanks.
@Dadalux really, I would like to understand why you make such an obvious statement "Portuguese is a Latin language like French, or Spanish or Italian", why do you ignore the fact that I very clearly said it can sound like russian to a non russian, non Portuguese speaker or even a non Slavic, non Portuguese speaker and what is your degree of expertise in language to say that as I don't want to passa as arrogant and pretensious by contradicting someone who might as well be a scholar or even the world leading expert in phonetics or rqmance languages while I am only qualified as a native Portuguese speaker, who also speaks French, Spanish and Italian, and only had 16 years of formal school training in Portuguese and a simple degree as a Portuguese teacher, that I don't even use for a profession.... You know, as we say in Portuguese "cada macaco no seu galho". Wish you all the best.
@Dadalux oh! And post scriptum, if you read my comment again, you will even realise that I said it has happened to me and not just anyone but another Portuguese native speaker thinking I was speaking in Russian and I have seen it happen many times, and I will add, it has happened to my friends a lot... But hey, what do I know? 🤷
Russians please do what you can to stop this bloodshed upon your neighbor. Westerners and everyone who would like to see the Russian agression stopped, let's keep up the support for Ukraine. We can not waiver. Please contact your representatives in government for more assistance to Ukraine.
The entire modern world, built on the basis of Western degenerateocracy, will be destroyed at the dawn of time in the near future by the sacred army of Shambhala, which, according to the ancients, is waiting for the hour of maximum and total fucked up in the world, and then the king of Shambhala (aka the last Avatar of Vishnu - Kalki) with his sacred army will destroy this dirt and the spiritual forces of Asia and Eurasia with their legions, hordes and armies will defeat the forces of darkness and evil, and eternal order and a golden age will reign on earth.
no, after the corpses in personal messages and insults to the people, the majority supports Putin's idea personally, there is no question of any actions, I'd rather go to rest in Russian Odessa, after the end of a special military operation
@fleshnbone187 Russia gives back any land that belongs to Ukraine. Pro-Russians can get out of there to Russia, if that's a problem for them and demilitarisation of Russia's West border to Moscow and Kyiv trials for the war criminals in the Russian army and government who committed crimes against humanity. That would be a fair deal and Ukraine shouldn't negociate with anything less.
Cool! I would say also Finnish should be ok answer for Estonian. They are closely related and you have to be proficient to hear the difference. The biker lady rocked, and so weird that she didn't take off the helmet! :'D
They do sound exactly the same. But same words have totally different meaning. LIke not even close. Estonian sounds hilarious to a Finn, and probably vice versa. Because it sounds familiar, but doesn't make any sense
This was so much fun to watch, hope we can see more kind topics just like this one, not only war :) I love russian ppl, they have the guts to be them selves and not trying to be america...like the other half of the world. Respect from the west. Hope I can someday learn Russian and explore Moscow, maybe live there for a while
"Not trying to be american like other part of the world" - my man, now i know that, unfortunetly, youve never been abroad. Im from Ukraine, so "russian have guts" Its just no comments. I wish you really gonna visit Moscow one day, it is really a good expirience. But please, honestly, check russians for a guts. And dont be shy, just do it. I promise you it will be life changing expirience for you, as for me too. Good luck to you
You think not? They love MacDonalds and other fast food, supermarkets, dress and style their hair like the wackierAmericans draw musical inspiration in the form of rock music, and other influences, in many ways America and Russia are the mirror of each other. Both love super expensive brand names, as status symbols. The measures of success, cars, cosmetics, clothes, education, and aspirations are veryAmerican influenced. By comparison many other smaller countries are much more their own selves and stick out as being individual.
Our latest video about LGBT has been taken down because of the hate speech.
We can't post new videos until 20th of August 😅
Can you make a video "Should Germans (or other country) freeze in winter?"
Jesus, UA-cam is so crap.
Good so. There will be less anti-russian propaganda on UA-cam
You could create a Dailymotion account and post videos that are taken down on there? They tend not to take videos down as easily as UA-cam.
That's totally insane!
Biker lady was absolutely NAILING it! 👏👏👏
Loved her ponytail coloring too, matching her jacket!
I was impressed. Because it's not that easy to listen with a full helmet on. I have a motorcycle myself and even with just the helmet and no earplugs (which you should use at faster speeds to protect your ears from wind noise) it's pretty difficult to understand people when they talk to you.
Yeah she must have been a linguist or something similar or well travelled she was the best
@@Huell0 for sure she was travelling around the Europe on motorbike. Also living in Kaliningrad where you can meet people from Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia helps it
she is MOTOMAMI
"brasilian", "mexican", "argentinian" 😂😂😂😂 these are all not languages
I guess they meant dialects
Like Brazilian Portuguese, mexican Spanish, Argentinian Spanish. However, I have no idea how they would figure out difference, at least I know that there's difference between pronouncing some letters in Portuguese in Portugal and Portuguese in Brazil
@@yerzhankhadim7979 You're right
@@yerzhankhadim7979 dialects isn't something that most people think about when they give ignorant answers like that lol
@@yerzhankhadim7979 no😂 I’m like Russian can say what they think about brazilian, Mexican languages😂
I guessed Armenian because they said Yerevan 😄
same haha.
Ditto! At least we know our capital trivia! :-D
me too lol
Same
You read the text
I actually got Armenian right because I saw the word Yerevan and remembered it was the capital of Armenia.
Same
То же по этому слову угадал армянский язык.
same
🤣
The biker girl is quite smart. Probably travelled a lot/has many friends worldwide.
Kaliningrad is nowhere near Estonia though lol.
@@Tankwiper It is in fact quite close to not only Estonia (where Estonian is spoken) but also several other languages and countries, including Denmark (where Danish is spoken).
@@Tankwiper she's probably toured the Baltics as a biker
@@Tankwiper well i think germany is not getting back its Königsberg then, if its that far away ;)
@@Tankwiper it is nearer to Estonia than Kazan, Perm, Arkhangelsk, Omsk, Novosibirsk, the Caucas republics.... should I go on?
The Latvian audio is talking about robbery in slot machine place with 5 armed men :D
I initially thought I would rock this, but oh well. Got only three right: my native language,my other native language and the one I studied 10 years at school lol
Yeah Daniel, you made it. You were on Dutch tv today for quite some time. So proud 💪
oh where? im dutch and i'd like to see
@@appleloaf me too
The Uralic languages form a language family, the languages of which are spoken today in a wide area on both sides of the Ural Mountains and in Europe. There are more than 30 Uralic languages and their speakers are around 20.7 million. They are spoken by the Ural peoples. The Finnish language also belongs to the Baltic Finnic branch of the Uralic linguistic group. Other state languages belonging to the Uralic language group are Estonian and Hungarian. Other Uralic languages are minority languages, most of which are spoken in Russia. The branch of linguistics that studies Uralic languages is Fennougristics. Sometimes the designations "Uralic languages" and "Finno-Ugric languages" are synonyms that refer to the entire language group.
One youtube site is good in this matter: Spirit of The Urals.
I understand most of it, maybe cause im from Finland 🇫🇮 and My grandparents was from Karelia💖.
Btw i just start my Russian language studies, greetings from Finland 🇫🇮 !
very interesting, thanks for the information!
I was born in Udmurtia(Buranovsky grandmothers!💃), being only 1/8 Udmurt by nationality, but that's not about it now😅 they are from the same language group as the Finns (I do not know exactly what about genetics), I have always wondered how foreigners(Hungarians, Estonians, etc.) relate to these Russian nationalities? I mean Komi, Mordvins, Veps, Udmurts, Karelians, etc.
I will be grateful for the answer!
@@ClarkinFlame49810 Well, I can only speak for myself or the experiences of my relatives/those close to me, not others😊.
@@sallasundell4351 perhaps I am too intrusive and open, but in any case I would like to know about it. firsthand or just from some forums. maybe I should look for some statistics and so on. I meant cultural interaction(?), despite the state borders. anyway, thanks for your reply. and sorry for my english!
Greetings from the Urals!
@@VOL4ARA Greetings to you too from Finland 🇫🇮 .
Btw you all, I just read:
"The most widely accepted theory among experts is that the Uralic languages derive from a common parent language, Proto-Uralic, which would have been spoken at least 6,000 years ago."
So Let's be proud of our roots, they are really old💓.
When the interviewer started doing that lil greek dance lmao😂🥺
Surprisingly few Russians recognize Estonian. For me as a Finn Estonian it is very easy, it resembles Finnish. And in fact Estonian intonation resembles more Swedish. Estonia has also been part of Sweden, not so long as Finland, but however. Almost all recognized Ukranian.
I am from Moscow and tell the truth, i never heard an estonian speech =)
why is that surprising? Estonian has very few speakers.
@@casper1vanes That's surprising. Finns have always had a lot of interaction with the Estonians. Easy way there by boat, from Helsinki to Tallinn. Easier than travel from Helsinki to the north of Finland, Lapland.
@@rongike Estonia is however Russia's neigbour. Maybe that's why.
Ахахах, если сложить население Эстонии и Финляндии, то даже и 7 миллионов не выйдет, а в то время население РФ 146 миллионов. Поэтому ничего удивительного.
The french clip was from a politician who has a heavy accent from the region of basque country which is neighbouring Spain hence many people thought it was Spanish.
Spanish people on the other side of the border usually will speak Spanish and french as well. (mostly older generation)
Ahhhhhh, that's why I didn't get it even though I speak a tiny bit of French and should have at least picked up on "aussi".
Also, the intonation of his sentences didn't sound French to me. Idk if that's due to the accent or because he was very deliberately trying to make a point and therefore separating each word out like that. But when you hear the average French sentence, usually all the words flow into each other and the sentences have more of a sing-song "flowy" feel. Not chopped into single, separate words like he did. It totally didn't feel French from the overall impression.
@Dadalux "slightly different accent" ? My grand-mother (from Orléans) could not understand at all someone from Marseille.
@Dadalux I'm not talking about the words or the pronounciation of single words. I'm talking about the intonation(?) cadence(?) of the whole sentence. In German, there is this nice term for this that translates to "sentence melody". And this short example just doesn't convey the typical "sentence melody" of French, where words run into each other and the typical ebb and flow of where to stress words in a sentence.
So, instead of he Now, I'm not saying that French people never speak like this, but it's not exactly a good example of what a "typical French" sentence sounds like.
Maybe the app used this example to make it harder to guess the language because for German they also used someone who spoke partly "non-typical" - first she starts pretty typical "ich. trinke. jeden. Tag." but then continues "mehreTassnSchwazntee", blending the words into each other and swallowing letters. Where a typical intonation/cadence would have been "mehrere. Tassen. schwarzen. Tee."
Yes, my French courses were 20 years ago and it's *extremely* rusty, but it's not like I have never heard French before. I just expected the app to use a more typical example, like they did for the Portugese clip.
@Dadalux Mais je suis Français !! Et j'habite près d'Orléans. Ce n'est pas une question d'être "vrai" ou "pas vrai". Je te parle du réel. Parce que non, parfois l'accent marseillais est si fort que certaines personnes, surtout les plus âgées, ne peuvent pas comprendre des accents. Quelqu'un d'Orléans comprend quelqu'un de Paris, bien sûr. Mais pas nécessairement de Marseille, surtout s'il vient des campagnes environnantes. Rien que d'écrire cela montre que c'est toi qui ne connais rien au français.
C'est Jean Lassalle ! 😀 Au début, j'ai cru que c'était le journaliste italien qui passe aux Informés sur France-Info.
its weird, I don't speak or hear German & French everyday but could figure it out from orientation. I live in Moscow too. 5/10 is what I would have earned for answering right - Estonian, Polish, Ukrainian, German, French & Greek ( only after mentioning the salad & ancient philosophers)
hi
Ha! Ha! That guy should have guessed its Greek after the hint was given. I guess the hints were Greek to him. LOL
@Dadalux именно.
@Dadalux Oh, Oh, oh. Well. If someone says what you said, I would not think Russia, but old Germany due to mentioning goos step like the NaZi. For Russia would be vodka, but I would not think of it as cheap. LOL
This is a good one for promoting international awareness.
No, not Spanish Babushka but Portuguese comedian Maria Ruef and that last guy, nailed it! It was form a TV comedy show. Well done!
1420 fun fact, when someone speaks Portuguese (Portuguese from Portugal, not from Brazil) it is often confused with Russian by non Portuguese speakers... Special when the accent is from the Azorean island of S. Miguel.... People from the island tend to get mad because someone didn't recognised it as Portuguese but it is very common and I remember one time when I decided to speak with that accent and a Brazilian asked me "dude, are you speaking russian? I never realized you spoke Russian!".
Of course, a russian speaker would never mistake Portuguese for russian but when the person doesn't speak either languages they often do and I have no idea why.
I can confirm what you say! I now live in Vienna. Have you ever on occasion, perhaps while on holiday elsewhere, looked up as a snatch of conversation reached your ear as someone walked past and thought, "Oh! Um tuga!" but as you tune in, it's just Russian? ;-) I've also been mistaken for Afghani by a Pakistani taxi driver when he overheard my brother and me chatting. Pakistani workmates have confirmed that sometimes when I speak Portuguese on the phone it sounds like Pashtu, but only briefly. So, Portuguese phonetics may sometimes sound Russian or Pashtu to untrained ears.
I'm SAfrican born and we had in our community many from Açores and Madeira and you^d think I could understand their accents better, but, nah! My parents are from Coimbra & Lisboa, while I lived and studied in Coimbra for 8 years so my Portuguese accent is very much continental, with a trace of something foreign ;-)
How is it that English from the USA and the UK has different pronunciation,but is still recognisable as English,but then there's portuguese from Portugal which sounds like an entire different language when you compare it to brazilian portuguese? I speak the latter fluently (but not like a native) and most of the time I have no clue what people in Portugal are saying . Maybe it's just me, because my portuguese sucks lol
@@YayIloveAkatsuki you just answered your own question.
It all depends on your fluency and also to your exposition to it.
If you rarely speak and hear a language, you can't expect to be able to understand variants of that same language.
I am used to hearing both English UK and English US so that is not a big deal for me, someone only used to hear English US might have difficulties understanding English uk. At first I struggled with English with new Zealand accent.
I bet you have meet more people, heard more songs and seen more movies in Portuguese (BR) than in Portuguese (PT) besides, English from UK and USA differ in pronunciation and only very slightly in grammar and syntax Portuguese (BR) and (PT) differ bit more....
But trust me, the difference isn't that great between Portugal and Brazilian Portuguese if you compar it to the difference between the Portuguese spoken in mainland Portugal and the one spoken in the Azores, in S. Miguel's (Saint Michael's, if you prefer) island.... Portuguese spoken in s. Tomé e Príncipe, Moçambique or East Timor, continents away are easier to understand than what is spoken in s. Miguel... And if someone starts to freak and replies it is not true and thst I don't know what I am saying, chances are they are from S. Miguel islands as for some reason, they get very offended when people say they can't understand them...
I've seen quite a good explanation for this, ua-cam.com/video/Pik2R46xobA/v-deo.html
Basically, we have similar rhytmics and large ratio of sibilant consonants both in Russian and Portuguese
Phonetics of Portuguese and Russian are very similar. I've heard that's why it's quite easy for Russians who learned Portuguese to sound almost like native speakers, pronunciation wise.
As an argentinian TIL "argentinian" is a language
@arena luxin yep!
Great video as usual. Greetings from Estonia!!🥳
UA-cam removed your "What rural Russians think about LGBT". I tried to leave a comment on it, and while I was typing, it was gone. Absurd, it was just trying to inform people
The german girl is speaking really fast ... she's drinking too much black tea ... she's close to a caffeine shock 😂
War das Shirin David?
I. Can't make out what she said
@@jeremyemilio9378 dann lerne Deutsch
@@ehmha3641 I can , but there's that word where she sounded like she was rapping. Couldn't make it out
she didn't speak that fast
Brazilian , mexican 😂
And Argentinian.... 🤣
@kooseye In Russian the name of the language is gollandsky, and the country is Niederlandy, I can see why some people are confused
I'm Ukrainian. I failed to instantly recognise Estonian and Kazakh. I'm surprised they do not know Portuguese, especially since thar Por-BRA has a very distinct sound.
it seems to me that they could not recognize it because they had never heard this pronunciation. one of the versions!
Not just that but it was given away by the speaker saying Rio. Same thing about Armenian with Yerevan.
The Polish bit was quite weird, at first: "I was fishing and a sailor getting the worms ready for me. He was very handsome."
I suppose those weren't worms for eating, but for fishing, in which case it makes sense.
Also, the person saying this is one of the most popular Polish singers- Maryla Rodowicz
Dont lie. That what it was said in polish doesnt even make sense,and was cringe af.
And yeah, im polish, so i know what she said
@@Skull.man00 What do you mean don't lie? You're saying she didn't say what I said she did? What did you think you heard her say then?
I like how FSB is already chasing Danyla but he keeps it profesional and transform himself into moderator in exile 😂
Yes, FSB is watching at Danila for hour))) Very funny! They don't need this neoliberal and betrayer of his Motherland. He doesn't know any secret. He doesn't even understand Russia and Russian people
Be careful, UA-cam is moderating you. You will demonetized at every moment
nah I think he's just traveling, last chance, Estonia already stopped issuing tourist visas to Russians.
@@rongike exactly! I thought it’s going to be the last chance, so here I am 😄
@@daniilorain yo
Bro, I am Brazilian, and this Portuguese person speaking is not easy to understand even for us hahaha
1. German, I understood whole statement.
2. Finnish, I think because of the rythm (I've never heared Estonian in my life)
3. Sounds like Italian but not entirely, maybe like between Spanish and Italian. Maybe Retoromanian? (I'm not familiar with Greek at all)
4. No idea, like a slavic language mixed with middle eastern. (I never heared Khazakh, but for Russians it should be easy I guess because they are neighbors).
5. French, thats very easy.
6. Sounds very familiar and I think she mentioned Yerevan, I think its from the news. 100% Armenian. (I have an Armenian friend and I wanted to get to know sound of this language so I watched Armenian TV).
7. Idk, its hard because she's speaking emotionally, maybe Brasilian Portugese because its familiar to me and there is ż/ж but its just a lucky guess.
8. This sounds familiar, Germanic pity that the recording is very short, I'd say Dutch. (Okay, I'm not familiar with Latvian)
9. Polish, my first language and this a fragment from Maryla Rodowicz (Polish female singer) interview.
10. Ukrainian, basically eastern slavic with Polish vocabulary.
7. She's a Portuguese comedian saying some jokes.
@@Mpl3564 allright
Я носитель китайского языка.
Не знаю почему они думают, что шестой язык китайский или японский, но это интересно.😂
Probably, because they had not any clue when they were listening to it. 😄
Из-за интонации
@@человекженскогопола-ц4о Окей я понял!
китайский часто распознают из-за особого звучания звука "ш". в других хорошо знакомых языках гласные после него произносятся неразрывно (ship, chevrolet, sushi, шина), а в китайском есть некоторая пауза, как в русском "шьет". и в этом шестом языке тоже было подобное звучание
The German one says: I drink EVERYDAY several times a day tea, (tf?) ummm for me its importand with black tea that..." and then it stops
Danke mein deutscher Erklärbär. Jetzt muss ich nur noch rausfinden was die anderen 8 Sprachen gesagt haben.
@@m4rsianer true😆
Gosh ! You took Jean Lassalle who has a really strong accent for the French conversation 😆 I'm impressed they've found this one. Btw the original sound where this come from is just hilarious
I didn't even recognize that as French. : /
Je confirme ce n'est pas le plus simple à comprendre mais chinois ? 😭
I'm French and I was looking for this comment. I was also impressed, his accent is really not easy to understand (even for some French people 😅), it must be hard to recognize it as a foreigner...
Les premiers mots j'ai même pas compris mdr
Je pense que le "r" aide à deviner
Languages - a topic after mein own Herz 💙
Bidde was?
@@blattsee6095 ..."Ein Thema, ganz nach ihrem Herzen"
@@dieterdodel835 after?
A+ russian aber F- Deutsch
Cringe ey
@@ehmha3641 I know, right? Good thing it's not German I teach 🤪
The French guy you choose is Jean Lasalle, a French politician from rural south west who has a VERY THICK accent. Comedians always make fun of his speeches and he often remind people that French is not his first langage (I think he was raised in Occitan).
To be fair, half of the native speakers of French would have difficulties understanding him. The other half would probably think he sounds like a guy who had too much to drink. :-)
I legit thought it was an obscure dialect like catalan or something i was like that sounds close to french but the accent is like almost Spanishy
I've studied French for three years now and I had doubts
There's a video of Russian officers reading some Polish instructions on an RPG, or MANPAD or something and he said he believed it was a made up language the U.S. was using. It's pretty funny.
I suppose it sounds like Dutch to a German, does. Maybe...
@@Rblock777 No.
@@Rblock777 And I thought Belarusian sounds like Russian mixed with Polish 😅
@@juavi6987 Yes, I understand Russian language and for me Polish language sounds similar it has similar words
But Polish people cant tell the difference between Russian and Latvian songs
News from today: two Ukrainian Army soldiers from Zakarpatia were talking in Hungarian on the radio to confuse the Russians.
I guess the ones that decided to take part in the interview are the ones more fond of linguistics. I notice a very high level recognition of languages
People in this video mention Mexican, Brazilian and Argentinian. They need to go back to school.
Great to see you are safe in 🇪🇪, great channel and intresting video ❤️
5:11 we found the Gopnik
The written words are hilarious, they're not even come close to the actual writing 🤣
3:26 Wow, I've never known that there is a Brazilian language...
I am German and i speak Russian too and this is my first Video well that i fully watched lol
This is fun. We in Australia are not accustomed to any foreign languages. We have everything in English. Only English language movies and radio. And no one knows any Aboriginal languages. They are not even taught at schools.
Nice video as always!😉❤️
Estonian sounds like Finnish . This is much more difficult than I thought.
Estonian is close to Finnish...so Scandinavian is close to correct
чудесное видео, друзья!
in the last part the reaction of people actually demonstrates how related and familiar are Russia and Ukraine. they a̶r̶e̶ were much closer to each other than any other countries or cultures. which shows once again how tragic, horrible and absurd is the situation between these two right now
It just led Russians to think they personally own Ukraine unfortunately and that's not a good thing.
In what way were you ever close, other than circumstantially from a geographical perspective lol
@@theholodomorisnttaughtinam2796the video clearly shows it's not about geography. there are other countries Russia has common borders with. only Ukranian was recognized so quickly and surely by all the people
@@theholodomorisnttaughtinam2796 Many people have relatives and friends in Ukraine and vice versa.
1932-1933 Holodomor. 💔🇺🇦🕯️
Watching the movie "Babij Jar" from 2003. It feels similar to now, but with the difference that it's not jews who got killed by germans, but ukraines by russians.
Ah so Ukrainian is a real language, known to Russians...
I can speak a bit russian, but with a german-saxonian accent. People say it sounds very funny. :)
EDIT: Yeah i got the estonian one right, but only because i have some estonian bands in my collection.
gag dähhbja sawud?
Да!Немцы очень смешно говорят на русском
@@exxgosj5142 I'm not that good at reading kyrillian letters. But thanks for the compliment. :)
I’m glad I figured out estonian, they have this scandinavian pronunciation but it doesnt sound like finnish. Exept from that, i must say i was surprisingly bad at this.
that's a very rare one to get right tho!
@@rongike Not, if you're Scandinavian.
@@lukemchugh719 it's still rare to be Scandinavian 🤣
I love it how by the end of the video you tie up nicely with the main theme of this channel... Sort of like a trick. That was brilliant!
Finnish wasn't too bad guess for Estonian, because those two languages have a lot of similarities.
Edit: said by me- who knows neither of the two languages.
They have this dance. Tata Tata Tata🎵 Polish? 😂
I’m worried that the content is getting less and less Ukraine “special operation” related and videos happen less often. Love your work (“special operation” related and this type of stuff) but if you are being bullied by the state or your content censored, I have an apartment in Warsaw that I will rent you (supreme channel author, please no beggars) for free, so you can make “special operation” related stuff. Anyway, best of luck from a Polish psycho who walked around Kaliningrad in a Ukraine style T-shirt last month. Incredibly totally ignored by cops or any hostile locals :)
What was Tolstoy saying about the Poles? Idiots? Or something similar?
@@lukei6255 He said they have quite a few pretty women with long legs.
@@lukei6255 No, wait. That was me. I always get myself mixed up with Tolstoy.
@@dixonpinfold2582 😂😂😂
Yes, as Ukrainian, I'm here mostly for war content. I hope it returns more. And then one day ceases to exist naturally because the war itself is finally over.
the portuguese part is from big brother portugal 😂
Ahhahahaha
As a foreigner that doesn't speak Portuguese. I can usually pick out Brazilian Portuguese. But Portugal Portuguese sounds soo different. Like French combined with Slavic sounds, idk.
Not too bad, I understood Portuguese, German, French, and Greek easily enough (I^m Portuguese, living in Austria :-| ), I guessed Armenian only because I heard Yerevan, its capital, mentioned,.I grew up with Poles but I didn't catch Polish :-( Nor Kazakh, Ukrainian, Latvian and Estonian; the last I thought was Finnish.
Finnish is a close guess, the languages are related and have no other relations in the world (aside from languages in Russia that are dead or dying)
Out of interest how many languages can you speak?
@@surfnturf7832Fluently? 3. Portuguese, English, and Afrikaans. My German is at a B1 level and improving, I understand written Dutch (had passed 'level 2' in 1990! 😐) and [Castilian] Spanish because of its similarity to Portuguese, although there are major differences between the two languages, of course; if they are spoken I would need them to be spoken really s-l-o-w-l-y. 🙂
Lol, I was only able to guess Armenian because of the person mentioning Yerevan
The same for me gg
I was so confused when i heard my German language🤣🤣🤣u you just wrote ,,haidbwkjeks"
P.S. good last language!😉🤗
@Jerry Joffer wut?
@Jerry Joffer Mein niederländisch ist leider auch nicht besonders gut 😕
@@Nils.Minimalist oh moin Meister
@@blattsee6095 Moin aus FL
Why did it have an english-sounding 'r' sound? She said like 'jeden Targ', is this some accent?
Ayrtom rocked it.👍♥️🇱🇸🏴🇦🇺
They’re more knowledgeable than most people in Western Europe and the US that’s for sure.
They are brainwashed, absolutely not.
Argentinskij, meksikanskij, brazilskij - netu takih jazikov. Nu russkie dajote!!!!
5:35 там сказали Ереван можно было понять
Estonian sounds like Finnish, but not. 🇪🇪🇫🇮😁
How can they possibly think those Roman languages are Asian, like Japanese and Chinese? This makes no sense to me.
It’s impossible to mistake an Eastern or Western European language…let alone Hispanic…for Chinese or Japanese.
If it sounds like a mess and you can't make out any familiar words or grammar structures then any language can sound Chinese. It's basically a synonym for "unintelligible" (not for native speakers and those familiar with the language, of course)
no turkish ? turkic language very famous tho
Everything good #1420?
I sure hope so. I'm beginning to worry, they've been quiet for awhile.
Yes, we’re just banned until 20th August
@@1420channel THANKS, I can stop worrying now. I've grown to love you guys. I can stay busy with your older content, until then. Stay safe.
Oh, wat jammer geen ☹️
Nederlands 🇳🇱🌷
But an Educational Video 💭🤔
🇵🇱 🇫🇷 🇵🇹 🇺🇦 🇬🇷
😊💯%👍
4:45 lmao i wasn't ready to hear jean lassalle
interesting!my language "see you"→"また明日 Mata Ashita"
"また明日Daniil"( ⸝⸝•ᴗ•⸝⸝ )੭⁾⁾
I can't believe that I guessed Armenian right. I wasn't sure if it even was a language, and I've never heard it before. I just couldn't think of anywhere else that language could fit, so it was a lucky elimination game. It seems to have a very minor resemblance to Russian, but doesn't really sound like anything I've ever heard.
Armenian is one of the Indo-European languages. 7000 years ago, Armenian and Greek separated and developed until today. That is why Armenian is not like any other language, even Greek.
💙💛💙💛💙💛💙💛💙💛
The fonetic texts are funny.
Interesting how some of the people recognise Latvian as Czech. These languages have surprisingly some similar words but the diction is different, Czech sounds bit softer.
Estonian is like Finnish but they shorten every word, or that's how it sounds like😂😄
oh yes... Finns love their double vowels 😀 But it sounds cute, I always loved how Finnish sounds
i got 0 for that test. Just like when my doctor sends me for tests I always fail.
Love 😍 this video. I speak Romanian, Spanish, French, English.
I understand some Hungarian, Italian, Portugal, catalán and German.
I star to see videos from Correa and Asian Boss China 🇨🇳 .. so I star to made difference between some asiatic languages. Also know how sound Moroccan langue because of my brother in low. It is amazing how all this aprarently different language always have same commum words.
My only mistake was Latvian (I guessed Hungarian). I wasn’t 100% between Estonian and Finnish, but guessed Estonian.
lol. love the text that make no sense in any of those langeages
I got every language right. Have I won a donut now? 🍩
No, a Gold Star, so it can sparkle in the middle of your moniker.
Did you really get Estonian? :D
Я понял что Армянский только потому что там сказали Yerevan (столица)
Super hilarious video. I love Russian people so much, they are open and friendly. Why did this all started? :/
Because when the masters fight, the slaves die
Because of the ambitions of the dictator, as always in world history
German ambassador to Ukraine: Undeniable parallels between Putin and Hitler
Wow I can recognise Ukrainian from the sound now, I got it straight away.
Got Armenia too because Yerevan.
I'm French and the French accent was terrible 😂
Where ar you? You have not uploaded any new on a week? Hope everything is ok
Тоже не все угадала, но армянский это вообще 🔥🔥 думала тайский язык. Как будто в Сочи армяне на другом языке говорят пхахахах
Тесно общаюсь с армянами, на улице узнаю армянский. Здесь включили что-то непонятное на ускорении, видимо чтобы никто не догадался. «Хорошую» рекламу сделали ребята👎
@@northernlights6984 Это просто армянская новостная передача. Там много слов, не использующихся в регулярной речи. И армянам, не живущим в армении, не сразу удаётся понять о чём там идёт речь. Даже по лицу армянки из видео видно, что она не без труда поняла речь из записи
@@northernlights6984 Не-а, ничего не было ускорено, и у девушки очень понятная речь. Привет из Армении.
@@multus_liber Слова были не правильно раздроблены, вот и показалось что они длинные😂
Nonsense.
That example wasn’t French, and that example wasn’t Portuguese.
You guys screwed up here big time.
Blyattttt
Bro
Wtf, mexican, brazilian and argentinian arent even languages 🤣
The German is perfect, but reading it in acoustic writing was very strange! Also Ελλάδα΅Ελλενικα but for me any Slavic language sounds the same
Greek isn’t a slavic language despite its proximity to south slavic languages.
I thought I would have the latin / Germanic languages in the bag, but Portuguese still doesn't sound Latin. When they guessed Czech I felt that, cuz Portuguese sounds kind of Slavic ngl
Yes, that happens far more often then one would assume and people that don't speak any Slavic languages or Portuguese tend to mistake the 2 but I can assure you, Portuguese is as Latin as it gets.
@Dadalux when heard by people who don't speak Portuguese nor a slavic language, they often assume it is russian.
Completely normal, just notice how in the video a lot of people took one language for another completely different.
Of course if you ask someone who speaks an English or Slavic language, they will not say it sounds alike.
@Dadalux before this goes any further, what is your native language and what is your level of fluency in Portuguese and is it Portuguese PT, BR or from any other place?
Thanks.
@Dadalux really, I would like to understand why you make such an obvious statement "Portuguese is a Latin language like French, or Spanish or Italian", why do you ignore the fact that I very clearly said it can sound like russian to a non russian, non Portuguese speaker or even a non Slavic, non Portuguese speaker and what is your degree of expertise in language to say that as I don't want to passa as arrogant and pretensious by contradicting someone who might as well be a scholar or even the world leading expert in phonetics or rqmance languages while I am only qualified as a native Portuguese speaker, who also speaks French, Spanish and Italian, and only had 16 years of formal school training in Portuguese and a simple degree as a Portuguese teacher, that I don't even use for a profession....
You know, as we say in Portuguese "cada macaco no seu galho".
Wish you all the best.
@Dadalux oh! And post scriptum, if you read my comment again, you will even realise that I said it has happened to me and not just anyone but another Portuguese native speaker thinking I was speaking in Russian and I have seen it happen many times, and I will add, it has happened to my friends a lot... But hey, what do I know? 🤷
Got them all except for Kazakh and Ukrainian. I recognised Kazakh was a Turkic language but I was too slow figuring it out.
Russians please do what you can to stop this bloodshed upon your neighbor. Westerners and everyone who would like to see the Russian agression stopped, let's keep up the support for Ukraine. We can not waiver. Please contact your representatives in government for more assistance to Ukraine.
The entire modern world, built on the basis of Western degenerateocracy, will be destroyed at the dawn of time in the near future by the sacred army of Shambhala, which, according to the ancients, is waiting for the hour of maximum and total fucked up in the world, and then the king of Shambhala (aka the last Avatar of Vishnu - Kalki) with his sacred army will destroy this dirt and the spiritual forces of Asia and Eurasia with their legions, hordes and armies will defeat the forces of darkness and evil, and eternal order and a golden age will reign on earth.
Bruh. Tell me you know nothing about dictatorships without telling me you know nothing about dictatorships.
@@Kokurorokuko pretty much...
no, after the corpses in personal messages and insults to the people, the majority supports Putin's idea personally, there is no question of any actions, I'd rather go to rest in Russian Odessa, after the end of a special military operation
@fleshnbone187 Russia gives back any land that belongs to Ukraine. Pro-Russians can get out of there to Russia, if that's a problem for them and demilitarisation of Russia's West border to Moscow and Kyiv trials for the war criminals in the Russian army and government who committed crimes against humanity. That would be a fair deal and Ukraine shouldn't negociate with anything less.
5:09 The guy in the background LOL
gopnik
Интересно, автор прикалывается разговаривая с таким акцентом по-английски или это для устрашения? Или это не специально? х)
I guess the heat must finally be on….could be time to tone down the jackets and lose the hat 🤔😉☹️ …oh and probably avoid the tea
Wow, how interesting concept Ukrainski right next to other cultures!
So you know how Ukrainian sounds like!
Cool! I would say also Finnish should be ok answer for Estonian. They are closely related and you have to be proficient to hear the difference. The biker lady rocked, and so weird that she didn't take off the helmet! :'D
They do sound exactly the same. But same words have totally different meaning. LIke not even close. Estonian sounds hilarious to a Finn, and probably vice versa. Because it sounds familiar, but doesn't make any sense
@@shredd5705 They are not the easiest languages to learn! :'D But they sound very cool.
I can't believe they used Jean Lasalle for the French language ! Hilarious !!!
This was so much fun to watch, hope we can see more kind topics just like this one, not only war :)
I love russian ppl, they have the guts to be them selves and not trying to be america...like the other half of the world.
Respect from the west.
Hope I can someday learn Russian and explore Moscow, maybe live there for a while
"Not trying to be american like other part of the world" - my man, now i know that, unfortunetly, youve never been abroad.
Im from Ukraine, so "russian have guts" Its just no comments.
I wish you really gonna visit Moscow one day, it is really a good expirience.
But please, honestly, check russians for a guts.
And dont be shy, just do it.
I promise you it will be life changing expirience for you, as for me too.
Good luck to you
You think not? They love MacDonalds and other fast food, supermarkets, dress and style their hair like the wackierAmericans draw musical inspiration in the form of rock music, and other influences, in many ways America and Russia are the mirror of each other. Both love super expensive brand names, as status symbols. The measures of success, cars, cosmetics, clothes, education, and aspirations are veryAmerican influenced. By comparison many other smaller countries are much more their own selves and stick out as being individual.
@@lindyashford7744 well said
@@dentechnix2578 так подыми, и подай своему хозяину, раб мой
Estonian sound so much like finnish imo. So strongly affected by it. NOT EASY AT ALL BTW!!!